THE EMPTY CROWN TRILOGY by ROSEMARY EDGHILL All rights reserved All characters and events in this book are fictitious. t...
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THE EMPTY CROWN TRILOGY by ROSEMARY EDGHILL All rights reserved All characters and events in this book are fictitious. to persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.
Any resemblance
Published by arrangement with DAW Books, Inc. 375 Hudson Street New York, New York 10014 ISBN I-56865-342-5 PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA CONTENTS The Sword of Maiden's Tears The Cup of Morning Shadows 255 The Cloak of Night and Daggers 539
AUTHOR'S NOTES Many things can happen in the time it takes to write a book. For example, when I began this one, the Columbia Library School was still open and the underground sections of the World Trade Center were still intact. If I had to try to revise these sections to reflect the Real World of Now, this book would have been set somewhere else. And so I beg your readerly indulgence. The heart has its raisins which the kumquats know not of, as the French don't say.
Special thanks to: Neil Christiansen Kate Elliott Bonya Far-Rider Esther Friesner Nicole Jordan Daniel Sifrit and the Ladies' Proofreading and Cookery Consumption Society (you know who you are) without whom this book would have more commas.
CONTENTS Never Trust Anyone Over 30 9 2 The Elf-Lord's Tale 28 3 Ruth Amid the Alien Corn 32 4 In the Hall of the Mountain King 48 5 Pard-Spirit on 34th Street 55 6 My Dinner with Melior 66 7 Fractured Fairy Tales: Hansel and Grendel 78 8 Gather, Darkness 91 9 Through a Glass Menagerie, Darkly 96 10 Bread and Roses 107 "The Looking-Glass War II2 12 When the Magic's Real 125 13 The Dream You Never Found 129 14 Darkness at Noon 141 15 The 111-Made Knight 159 16 Love Among the Ruins 169 17 Judgment Day 186 18 One Flew Over the Basilisk's Nest 200 19 A Candle in the Wind 209 20 The October Subway 218 21 The Bloody Chamber 229 22 And Back Again 245 Never Trust Anyone Over 30 IT WAS APRIL 30TH and it was raining. Naomi was at kendo, Michael was at the gym, Philip was (probably) torturing small animals, and Jane was at New York Public doing passionate in-depth research on a subject of which nobody'd ever heard, and about which she would insist on telling all of them the next time Naomi made dinner. Which would be, now that Ruth came to think about it, tomorrow. As for Ruth, Ruth was alone. Ruth was tall and blue-eyed, brown-haired and sensible, with a face, as Naomi often said, which made her look like the better class of Flemish Madonna; oval and even, with regular unexciting features and a small
pink mouth. Ruth was rather vain of that mouth, and bought it lipstick far in excess of that which is deemed needful by proto-Librarians. People had told Ruth she was sensible from the moment she had first fallen into the toils of the educational system; so much so that by now Ruth was ready for actions senseless and insensible. Unfortunately, she didn't seem to have any talent for them at all. After all, wasn't she on her way toward a Master's in library sciencelibrary science, for God's sweet sake, was there anything more sensible than that? Sensible Ruth. Sensible Ruth was out walking in the rain. Today was her birthday, and Ruth was thirty. Thirty. All alone, and on the threshold of the rest of her entire life, which would be spent solitary, virginal, and depressed in some minuscule upstate New York library where the book was on view between the hours of three and three-fifteen every other Wednesday. Such a depressing future called for ice cream at the very least, and there was a Hdagen-Dazs shop on Broadway. Ruth's Columbia-sponsored housing was on 116th Street between Broadway and Riverside Drive, but the streets were fairly safe this close to the college, even at night. Marooned by the changing demographic currents of New York City, Columbia University stood like a last bastion of Gilded Age Gotham in a sea of late-twentieth century chaos surrounded by a moat of chichi restaurants and donut shops. Ruth hesitated between ice cream and going to the Hunan Balcony and really pigging out, but when Naomi got back from her martial arts class she sometimes liked to cook. So Ruth contented herself (sensibly!) with a pint of something that ought by rights to be called Death by Chocolate and turned back toward the apartment. The fine spring rain haloed clothes like heavy dew. It glass, and Ruth's attention the ice cream as she wended
everything and dampened her skin and made the slope of 116th Street slippery as was divided neatly between her footing and along.
But a New York pedestrian is nobody's fool. left over to spot the body.
She had enough attention
Ruth Marlowe, after some practice, was a good New Yorker. She'd lived in New York since she'd come to Columbia three years ago with a fistful of equivalency credits that let her collect a shatteringly inconsequential B.A in History on her way to the Master's of Library Science that might actually let her earn a living. She knew the rules: If you see a supine-or-prone body, run-or at least walk fast-in the opposite direction. Never interfere. James T. Kirk would not have found a lot of sympathy here in New York City for his darling habit of breaking the Prime Directive. But this body was different. For one thing, it didn't look like your average muggee. Even from here, in the rain-misted streetlamp light, Ruth could see he (he?) was
dressed in a bright-colored tunic and boots-maybe a medievalist wandered over from St. John the Unfinished, and thus more likely to respond favorably to an offer of help. Unless he was dead. Ruth tried not to think about what she'd do if he were dead, but as she minced closer she saw that he was breathing. He'd crawled out of-or into?-the narrow alley that ran between her building and the one behind it. If he hadn't been so fair, she might not have seen him. So fair-and dressed in linen and cramoisie, though the linen was stained and there was blood in the long silver-blond hair. She crouched and leaned forward, shying away from touching him for fear of hurting him further. Her heart hammered with near-exposure to violence. But at least he was alive. He rolled over on his back then, moaning, and with the improved angle and visibility Ruth could see that his skin was not only fair, but albino-fair. He wore a belt and baldric of silver-studded leather, luxurious and theatrical. His ears were pointed. Good makeup, but not period costume, Ruth was thinking, when he opened his eyes. They were bright leaf green, and when the pupils contracted in the streetlamp's glare she could see that the pupils were slitted. They flashed in the dark like a cat's. Ohboyohboyohboyohboy. Jane is going to kill me for being here instead of her, Ruth thought automatically. His hands roved over his body, obviously in search of something. Ruth repressed a wince of sympathy-they looked like they'd been stepped on. Mugged.
Definitely.
Whatever he was looking for, he didn't find. and he moved, painfully, to sit up. "My sword," the stranger said.
His eyes focused on her
"Where is it?"
Ruth stared into his eyes and couldn't think of a single thing to say. Mistaking her silence for a number of things it probably wasn't, the stranger-elf began the laborious process of attempting to get to his feet. Ruth backed away and looked wildly around for someone, anyone, even Philip, to enlist in the solution of her peculiar problems. Finding none, she looked for the sword. Ruth's experience with swords was not as limited as that of other women her age. She'd never joined the Society for Creative Anachronism (though Naomi, who cooked for the local revels, had suggested it often)
but Ruth had been a medievalist by inclination all her life-and she'd practically lived in the Hall of Arms and Armor at the Met. So Ruth looked around for a two- to four-foot piece of metal with a handle, with X- or cross- or basket-shaped hilt, in a scabbard or without one, covered with gold and jewels and enamel or just very plain. She saw nothing fitting the description. When she looked back at him, the elf was standing. He was taller than she was but not as tall as Michael, which was a good height to be. Standing, his clothes were covered with a long dark cloak, making his face seem to float unsupported in the shadows. He met her eyes. Fair, that face; fair as a flower despite the puffiness around the jaw, the split and still bleeding lip. Fair, and ageless as a nun's. "It isn't here, is it, human girl?" The elf brushed back his hair and winced. A large plain ring on his finger flashed mirror-bright. His hand came away wet with blood, black under the streetlamps. "Are you hurt?" Ruth asked, since one must say something, no matter how stupid. The elf sighed. "I am hurt; I am slain; I am- Where am I, precisely?" Reality, Ruth kept herself from saying.
"New York."
("O." Plainly this meant nothing to him. He looked around again-looking up, as no native-or-acculturated New Yorker would think to, and his mouth settled itself into harsh lines having little to do with the drubbing he'd received. For a moment Ruth saw the world through his eyes: a perfidious Albion of dark satanic mills, frighteningly alien. "It seems a large place," he said. He tried to keep his voice even, but the sound of it made Ruth revise her estimate of his age downward. Younger than she, and therefore less threatening. "Eleven million plus people-as of the last census." He looked quickly at her, as if hoping to catch her in a lie, and she saw the quick cat-in-darkness flash of his eyes. It was the eyes, perhaps, that decided her, with the backward wistful logic of "If a mad ax-murderer pretending to be an elf has gone to all the trouble of getting mirrored tinted contact lenses, why don't I let him get away with it?" That, and the fact that it was her birthday, and she was thirty, and all her hopeful attempts to climb up to the imagined sanity and perks of the adult world didn't seem to be worth the trouble. Like Oakland, California; when you got there, there was no there there. Or so Gertrude Stein had said.
"Look," said Ruth, with firm calmness. "Why don't you come back to my apartment? You can at least get cleaned up. I'll make you a cup of tea." "I thank you, mortal girl." He looked pleased, but not surprisedand more relieved than pleased, as if good manners would have kept him from asking for what he desperately hoped for. "Ruth," said Ruth steadily. one of Naomi's shinai. " I am . . . Melior." been going to be more. head and winced.
And besides, she could always hit him with
He hesitated over the name, as if there had "Melior," he repeated firmly. He shook his
"Come on." Ruth, belatedly awakening to the fact that where there had been muggers there could still be muggers, glanced up and down the hill. She took a few steps toward home and sanity, meaningfully. Melior followed. He had long since lost track of how long he had sought the Sword, for the time changed with each Borderland he crossed, but he thought it had been long indeed. But never yet, in all his years of war and wandering, had Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences been so caught between joy and despair. Despair, because the Sword was lost to him again. For a brief moment he had held it in his hands, and even though it had been spellbound to carry him into this city of dreadful night, Melior had found and passed many Gates, and with the Sword's aid he could win free of even the Last World itself. But through foolishness, through inattention, through the cursed luck that had dogged every step of his quest, the Sword was ravished away, stolen by a brace of common footpads. If that were all, despair would be his only companion. Ruth.
But there was
He had never known her name until this moment, but it seemed to him that he had always known her face. It had been his companion on the blood-soaked battlefields of his homeland; a promise that he had once been too young to understand. Her image had burned in his heart like the brief bright lives of humans, only awaiting her presence to kindle itself past all extinction. But to find her here, in this world, human and mortal and with no idea of the greater worlds that held her own in nested embrace It was difficult at times, Melior reflected, to know when you were well off. Was it better to search for his heart's-ease forever, or to find her like this? And the worst of it was, she did not know him. The lobby of the building that held Ruth and Naomi's shared apartment was one of those typical New York glass air locks, requiring for its navigation two different keys and the agility required to ski through a revolving door. Melior acted as if he'd never seen one before, which
made things difficult. He watched Ruth's every movement with a grave courtesy, as though he expected to be quizzed on them later. The building's elevator alternated between dysfunctional and homicidal , and the apartment was only on the seventh floor. Ruth opted for the stairs. Melior followed her, limping slightly, the authentic signs of a recent beating turning flushed and red. Deliberately she did not think. Why borrow trouble when the universe gave so much of it away free? She achieved her door (7A), unlocked two more locks, and was in. One carpet, indifferent khaki. The entryway was a clutter of inadequate mismatched bookshelves covered with trinkets, souvenirs, and just plain junk. The living room was an antiseptic horror of "furniture-provided-by-the-college"; vinyl-covered and mended in tape. She and Naomi had put throws on the couch and chairs; fake fur and patchwork, tie-dye and corduroy. Melior stepped into the middle of it like an insulted cat, senses straining at normalcy. In the overhead light of her own living room, Ruth got her first good look at her rescue project. Forced herself to look; confronting the unwelcome head-on with iron determination, just as she had every day for the last four years. Beyond which point lay that undiscovered country from which no traveler returneth, thank you very much, and this was a hell of a time for her thoughts to lead her down that particular primrose path. She turned her attention back to her guest. This was nothing ordinary in the way of Upper Manhattan mugging victims. Where it wasn't bruised, Melior's skin was as smooth and blemishless as a child's; pale as the lily. He looked foreign to this place, but whether his own place was Graustark or Elfland Ruth wasn't prepared to say. It began to seem even less likely that this was a long, careful entrapment, a way to gain access to a woman alone, and Ruth felt herself begin to relax. "Make yourself comfortable," Ruth said. Belatedly she became aware of half a pint of Haagen-Dazs, unconsumed, slowly melting in her hand. "I'll put on tea," she said, retreating. The kitchen, bereft of elves, was soothing. She put the ice cream carton into the tiny freezer compartment of the antique refrigerator and put the kettle on the stove, then sluiced one tea towel to sopping and filled another with ice cubes. She put both into a bowl and returned, reluctantly, to the living room. Melior was standing in the middle of the living room, his back to her. He'd removed his cloak and belt, and had pulled up his shirt to inspect reddened ribs that would probably be gloriously black by morning. When he heard her come in, he smoothed his clothes down and turned to greet her. "Ah," he said, eyes on the bowl.
"Probably more than I deserve."
"You're lucky you weren't stabbed," Ruth said. The words came out more harshly than she intended. She skirted around him and put the bowl on the table. Now that he'd removed his cloak, Ruth could see him better. Melior looked gaudily medieval in red tunic and white undertunic and high leather boots, but slender rather than broad; a dancer's body. He picked up the towel full of ice and pressed it gingerly to his jaw. "I'll get the tea," Ruth said, and fled. Back in the safety of her kitchen-Oh, Ruth, this is NOT a good idea-Ruth concentrated on providing tea. Besides, she was safe, Naomi would be home soon, and Naomi was authentically dangerous with hockey stick or frying pan. And Melior was hurt. You couldn't spend your entire life not helping people out of stark raving cowardice But was it cowardice or common sense? Tea. Probably-still-okay milk and Demerara sugar. mugs.
Big stoneware
The kitchen supplies were Naomi's: if Ruth was sensible, Naomi was competent. Perhaps Naomi and Michael should get together and beget a master race of tidiers; perfect secretaries and chiefs of staff. Ruth found half a Zabar's cake and sliced it. She puttered desperately in the kitchen, unwilling to go back to the living room and Cope once more. Who was he? What did he want? How much of her scant time, money, and emotional energy was he going to need-and how guilty would she feel if she didn't provide them? The teakettle shrilled. Ruth dumped loose Russian Caravan into the pot and poured water over it. Anonymous white stoneware, safe to drop. But that meant the tray was loaded and the Minotaur must be faced. Ruth went back into the living room. Melior was sitting at the table by the window now-the one she and Naomi used both as dining table and desk-by-courtesy. His skin was reddened from the application of ice packs, but he looked better. He looked up as she entered with the tray, and not the shadow of a suspicion crossed his face that he should leap across the room and take the tray from her. She set it down on the table.
Melior looked at it.
"I guess you'd better tell me what you were doing just before you got jumped," Ruth said grudgingly. "Gladly. But first-forgive me if I offend-is it possible, in this establishment, to bathe?" Ruth poured out tea, black and fugitively iridescent.
"You want to take a shower?" "Yes, if- If that is traditional," Melior said hesitantly. Ruth spooned two heaping servings of Demerara rock into Melior's tea-for treatment of shock, give sweetened hot liquids and wrap up warmand pushed it toward him. He took it and sniffed at it cautiously, then sipped. "If it is an imposition-" he began. "Oh, sure. I mean, no. Go ahead-I'll get you some fresh towels and stuff." Ruth fled once more. Why does he make you so nervous?
You're the one who invited him in.
Ruth rummaged through the closets to find something he could wear when he came out of the shower. After some thought, she sacrificed Naomi's black kimono to the Cause. Naomi was tall, and the kimono was wide. It should do. Because he's going to be trouble. I know he is. And my capacity for handling other people's trouble is somewhat overextended just now. Ruth took the kimono and towels into the bathroom and piled them precariously on the edge of the sink. She made one quick tidying swipe and caught a snapshot glimpse of her reflection in the mirror: long brown hair worn in a fashion ten years out of date hanging sheepdog over her eyes; blue eyes the only vivid thing in her face, which was pleasant, sensible, and unexciting. You're the one who was tired of being sensible, her mind maliciously reminded her. But that was before she'd met elves, or persons purporting to be elves. When she went back to the living room, the cake, the milk, and most of the sugar was gone. Melior was standing, looking out the window, through which could be seen Riverside Drive, the Hudson River, and (in daylight) Fort Lee, New Jersey. "I have to find it," he said without turning around. "Your shower's ready," Ruth said. She pointed. He walked past her into the bedroom, picking up his cloak and swordbelt as he went. There was a suitable interval, and then Ruth heard the sound of the shower. Apparently he'd figured out how to work it-assuming he didn't really know how. She tiptoed to the bedroom door. Ruth might know armor in passing, but her real passion was clothes. She would have embraced far more socially risky acts than inviting a strange elf in for a shower, just to be alone with his clothes. His clothes-garb, the SCA always called it-was laid out neatly on one of the twin beds: cloak, tunic, pants, and boots (on the floor nearby), all from the later TSR period. Gloves-well, one glove anyway; the
other must have been lost. For undergarments there were a pair of knee-length drawers knitted out of a soft shiny beige yarn, knee socks and muscle shirt of the same material, and a long-sleeved shirt with a shorter hemline than the tunic. The shirt was the pale beige color of real linen and embroidered around the sleeves with an entire wildflower garden in silk toss; the front was smocked to narrowness with a thousand tiny tucks. She turned all three pieces of knitted underwear inside out and found neither seam nor maker's mark: apparently it had been knitted all of a piece, and to size. She set them aside. The smocked shirt yielded more clues: hand-sewing, and of a sort that ought by rights to have driven an entire convent blind. Nothing storebought or modern about this. The pants were-it took her a moment to make up her mindleather. Buckskin, she thought, and soaking wet, but buckskin was famous for retaining its flexibility no matter what you did to it. They'd still been making men's trousers out of it as late as the English Regency-those snow-white inexpressibles so beloved of Beau Brummell. This particular pair was flapped at the front and closed with four sterling silver buttons set with small sapphires. Ruth sat back, aware of the chilly buzzing in her head that she associated with late nights and too much coffee-a dizzy dazzled vacation from common sense. Silver jeweled buttons? Pointed ears? Maybe they'd wash off while he was in the shower. Speaking of which, she'd better hurry up. The scarlet tunic was wool-that was an easy one-with appliques of felt and leather on the breast and at the elbow-length sleeves. The front laced shut, the vexed grommet question having been settled by interleaving a thin piece of punched leather between the two layers of wool so that the rawhide theng wouldn't cause the wool to stretch. Once more the fabric was sumptuous, the workmanship superb. As in "several thousand dollars of custom tailoring" superb, and even if you could afford to buy it, who could you find to do it? It was too much money to spend playing dress-up for a joke. She turned her attention to the cape. It was a dull blotchy thing, green and gray and brown, contemptible until you realized that pure white wool had been carefully painted with these very colors, because a man wearing such a cape-no matter how scarlet his tunic-would not be visible in a woods or from any great distance. It was half-lined with sheepskins and fastened shut halfway down its length by a system of horn buttons and leather loops sewn to the inside face. It was thick as a blanket in her hands; she could not imagine how Melior could have stood up in it, especially once it had gotten wet.
Carefully she spread it over the back of a chair to dry and turned to the boots. High soft Errol Flynn style boots, reaching above the knee and notched so they could be folded over to cuff in proper buccaneer style. Soft and silky as a well-oiled Coach bag. And strapped to instep and heel, spurs of bronze and jeweled gold. She was sure about that. Ruth had haunted enough craft fairs to know the look of handmade jewelry. She set the boots down carefully, soberly, heels together. That left, for her delectation, a baldric and swordbelt, both top-grade harness leather. The belt was at least six inches wide and riveted with small silver roundels, each of which supported a silver ring. The forsoothly equivalent of the sadly-defunct Banana Republic photojournalist's vest: a ring for everything, and everything on its ring. A regular utility belt. Still attached to rings were a knife in a metal scabbard and a small pouch. Reluctantly forsaking the knife-which looked to be lovely with enamel work and rock crystal-Ruth opened the pouch. "Were you afraid I couldn't pay for my lodging?" her. Ruth jumped back, agonized. possessions."
Melior said behind
"I was just-" "Searching my
Melior finished. Naomi's black kimono came very close to not meeting in front at all. Wearing it, Melior looked like some perilously exotic Kabuki dancer; a paragraph from the lost language of cranes. "Let me help you." He took the pouch from her nerveless fingers and upended it on the bed. "Signet ring-useless-sixteen taels in copper for chummage-useless-a useless earring, a map of no place I'm ever likely to see again, flint and steel, tinderbox, perfume, dice-useless. "All useless.
Have it if you like," he said in a deadly tired voice.
Ruth was saved from having to answer by the jingle of keys in the lock. "Ruth?"
Naomi called.
Naomi Nasmyth was about Ruth's age, but then, Naomi was deep in the toils of acquiring a Doctorate in Library Science and had been at Columbia, woman and girl, since the age of eighteen: B.A in English, Master's in Library Science, Teaching Certificate, and now back to the erebean regions of the Library School's Doctoral Program. As was often the case with roommates thrown together by fate, Naomi was
all that Ruth wished to be: tall and vivid and poised and serene and organized. Black hair and hazel eyes and sangfroid that Emma Peel would envy-not to mention good at games. Ruth could have easily hated her, if not for the fact that Naomi had looked her up and down on the day she moved in and decided Ruth was in need of tidying, thereby smoothing Ruth's way enormously through the freshman maze. If there were two kinds of people in the world-Teflon and Velcro-then Naomi was definitely a Teflon person, the sort to whom trouble never stuck. Ruth hoped it wouldn't stick now. "She's back from the dead and ready to party!
Ruth!
You here?"
Naomi called cheerfully. Ruth could see the reflection of Naomi's voice in Melior's eyes. And to their mutual surprise it was Melior who moved, sliding away from one confrontation into another. Ruth barely had time to register his absence before she was moving herself, following him. She looked past his shoulder into Naomi's eyes. Naomi's face was utterly still, entirely calm. "Are you all right, Ruth?"
she said.
Ruth stared at her, as dumbstruck as if she hadn't been hoping all night that Naomi would come back. Melior stepped aside so that Naomi could see her clearly. "Speak, Ruth.
Your friend desires to know if I have harmed you."
"He's an elf," Ruth blurted out, and the rest of her strange stasis was swamped in a burning sea of humiliation. "I mean, he was mugged, Naomi." "Right the first time," Naomi said. "And the second," Melior said. "I was 'mugged,' if that is the word for being assaulted by priggers and cutpurse varlets." And that was why you decided to take up cross-dressing. almost hear the words, but Naomi didn't say them. "Well," said Naomi, "maybe we can help. Ruth swallowed hard.
Ruth could
Right, Ruth?"
"Right."
Naomi heard the story of how Ruth had found him. She heard Melior's story-which, now that Ruth had a chance to hear it over a second time and while being told to someone else, consisted of little more than his name and the statement that he had been mugged and his sword stolen. After he had told Naomi that much, Melior retreated into the bedroom and emerged a few minutes later in his white undertunic, buckskins, and boots. Naomi looked at his clothes, and at Ruth's face. She did not ask any further questions. "Looks like the first thing you need is some more inconspicuous clothes," Naomi said. "And anyway, I'm making ginger stir-fry chicken; you'll have to stay for that, so why don't I see if Michael's home and
can loan you a sweatsuit or something?" It was Ruth's personal belief that if the Creature from the Black Lagoon itself showed up in the living room gnashing its gills and dripping slime, Naomi would hand it a towel. Ruth had seen her outface most of the forms of street weirdness that New York had to offer, as well as a number of the more offensive forms of college bureaucracy, and had yet to see Naomi flapped-if that was what you called the opposite of being unflappable. Melior gave Naomi a smile that instantly made Ruth unreasonably jealous and inclined his head. "I would indeed be churlish did I despise such well-captained hospitality," Melior said gravely. "I pray you, Lady, be aware that I only bring peace to this house." "That's fine, then," Naomi said. "Kitchen's too small for three, so why don't you make yourself comfortable in the living room-and get ready to tell your life story once more with feeling." "I am utterly at your disposal," said Melior, with only the faintest hint of mockery. Ruth, absorbed in their interplay, actually jumped when Naomi took her arm in a firm grip and pulled her toward the kitchen. Once there, Ruth was occupied-in the same sense that an enemy city in wartime is occupied-with the task of chopping fresh ginger root into even, coin-thick slices. Naomi took the wok from the top of the refrigerator and set it on the stove. Formidable cleaver in hand (and incidentally barring Ruth's escape), Naomi set about reducing an entire helpless chicken to raw boneless gobbets suitable for stir-frying. "So," Naomi said over the metronomic thud of the cleaver on the chopping block, "what is it this time?" You would think to hear her talk, Ruth thought with a flash of unreasonable irritation, that I was forever getting into predicaments that Nai was getting me out of! She allowed several slices of ginger to elapse before she answered: "I was up to the Hdagen-Dazs on Broadway, and when I came back I found him lying in that alley behind the building." "Dressed like that?" "No," Ruth snapped, "I took him shopping before I brought him home." Naomi's only comment to that was a faint snort and a raised eyebrow that made Ruth unreasonably cross with herself. "And?" Naomi prompted. "He said his name was Melior, he said he'd been mugged, he said they'd taken his sword." And he asked where he was, just as if he didn't know, and his ears are pointed, and his eyes glow in the dark. "So I brought him back here," Ruth said, beginning to feel that this course of action was hardly defensible. "And he asked if he could take a shower. He really was mugged, Nai-he's all over bruises." "And he's got genuine Mr. Spock ears that don't come off with water," Naomi said flatly. She took a double handful of chicken gobbets and dropped them into the wok, then scooped the remaining debris into a plastic bag and knotted it shut before dropping it into the trash
can. Plopwhick-thump-bang. "And you're usually more careful than that. So what do you think is going on, Ruth?" Naomi turned back to the refrigerator and began divesting it of scallions, garlic, bok choy. She pulled out a bottle of peanut oil and sprinkled it generously over the chicken, and then lit the gas stove. "Ready for the ginger in a minute," Naomi warned. Ruth continued her careful cutting. "I don't know what's going on," she finally said. "If I said I thought he was a Tolkien elf, you'd say I was crazy. There isn't any such thing as an elf," Ruth added, carefully grammatical. "There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio-as the actress said to the bishop," Naomi said cheerfully. She swiped the pile of ginger from beneath Ruth's knife and dumped it on top of the chicken. "Watch that for a minute, will you?
I'm going to go call Michael."
Michael Harrison Peacock-to give him his full name, rank, and title-was not the sort of person who would be called "Mike," even if you knew him very well. He sometimes reminded Ruth of an enormous friendly dog-a black-haired, green-eyed, friendly dog with eyelashes much longer than hers, far too ebullient to be contained by anything less than a full two-syllable "Michael" (or, as was often the case, "Oh, Michael, HONestly"). Michael was somewhere around Ruth's age, which was oldish for a Master's program, and stood out by being one of the few men in her Lib Sci classes, but Michael would have stood out in any lineup-except, perhaps, a Chippendale's revue. Michael was six feet, two inches tall, had a body purchased by extended work at the gym several nights a week (and in fact Michael worked there four mornings a week as one of the instructors), and a face so flawlessly gorgeous that it was always a surprise that he could speak intelligible English. He was far too imposing for any normal woman to entertain thoughts of having a romantic relationship with him, and if Naomi hadn't been assigned as his Student Adviser, Ruth could easily have gone through her entire two years at Columbia without ever speaking to him-which would have been her loss, as Michael was genuinely, uncomplicatedly nice. As for why he was in library school instead of working as a model, gigolo, or exotic dancer, Ruth couldn't imagine-nor why he was studying for an M. L. S. at the age when he ought by rights to have been clawing his way up the corporate ladder somewhere. She'd even asked him once, and only days later realized that "I'm trying a number of different things and this one was next," was hardly an informative answer. But Michael managed to make even mysteriousness seem wholesome, and once Ruth had managed to stop being dazzled by his wholesale gorgeousness, she found that Michael made a perfectly nice friend and study partner. If he had any flaws at all, Ruth reflected, it was only that he was a little too nice and accommodating. There was, after all, the fact that Michael let Philip hang around with him.
"Got him!" Naomi announced triumphantly. "He'll be over here in about- Ruth! I told you to watch that!" She deftly elbowed Ruth out of the way and began stirring furiously at the smoking wok. "Well. Not too much harm done. But honestly, Ruth-" "If God had meant me to cook, She would not have invented the telephone," Ruth said solemnly. "I could start the rice," she added, knowing what the answer would be. "Oh, no you can't. You can go out and be nice to our guest. preserve my remaining pots from Grievous Bodily Harm. Go." Thus dismissed, Ruth went back to the living room.
I will
And the elf.
Melior was sitting at the table by the window, his back to her and his attention concentrated on the window. Ruth knew that he must know she was there, but he didn't move a muscle in acknowledgment. " Ahem," Ruth said.
Melior turned his head.
"What a wonderful place your new York city is," he said disparagingly. His voice stressed the name in odd places. with me, mortal maid."
"Come, sit, and peruse it
"Naomi wants to know who you really are," Ruth said, sitting down opposite him. "And you do not? been born so."
It must be wonderful to be incurious-I wish I had
"If you're going to be nasty, you can leave," Ruth said sharply. Melior turned and looked at her. As his head moved, Ruth saw the iridescent flash of cat's eyes, and watched, fascinated, as the pupils contracted to vertical ovals in the lamp's glare. "I am sorry, mortal maid-Ruth. My temper is not good-through my own stupidity I have lost so much more than belongs to me alone that I am sick with it. But you are not my enemy." "Who is? said.
What have you lost?
If you tell me, maybe I can help," Ruth
Melior smiled. "I owe you the round tale-I do not see where the harm in the telling lies, only the urgent need. But that may wait until this "Michael" the warrior-maid Naomi has summoned comes to us. It is not in me, I think, to tell this tale twice." Ruth smiled, a little distantly, wishing someone would call her a "warrior-maid." But Melior, apparently, called them as he saw them, and Ruth knew perfectly well that she was nobody's idea of an Amazon. The conversation flagged.
Melior went back to gazing out the window.
From the kitchen Ruth could hear the incomprehensible sounds of culinary sorcery.
Just about the time Ruth suspected she'd been dismissed, Melior swung around sharply to stare in the direction of the hallway. As Ruth gazed at him blankly, there was a familiar banging on the door. MichaeL Someone must have left the street door open again-that's why he didn't buzz. Melior mustve heard him. Ears like a cat, too. But even convinced it was Michael, Ruth looked out through the peephole first. And saw what she had subconsciously expected to see. And sighed.
And opened the door.
"Come on in, guys. surprise.
Nai!
Michael's here-and with Philip."
Quelle
Michael came in, smiling at Ruth and looking around until he saw Melior. Tucked under one arm, football-wise, Michael held a brown plastic trash bag, undoubtedly full of clothes. Philip scuttled past Michael and flung himself onto the couch, from which he surveyed the room through white-reflecting round glassesbifocals, in fact, and only one of the many surprises Philip held in store for the uninitiated. Ruth looked at Philip, who gazed blandly back before devoting himself to the portable computer that he usually-and tonight was no exception-carried with him. Ruth didn't much care for him and they both knew it, but Philip LeStrange was a de facto part of their group, grandfathered in under the umbrella of Michael's indiscriminate good will and Naomi's optimistic tolerance. "Hi, Ruth," Michael said. "You must be Melior," he added, looking past her. He held out his hand. Melior stood, and gazed at Michael's outstretched hand in the blankly helpless fashion with which polite people greet the unfamiliar. As Ruth had originally estimated, he was not quite as tall as Michael, and the sight of the two of them together-dark and fair, fantastic and mundane-made Ruth imagine a weird sort of mirror that reflected opposites. After a pause too slight to be insulting, Melior stepped forward and grasped Michael's hand above the wrist in an oddly formal gesture. "And you are Michael, whom Naomi has summoned," Melior said. "And this is Philip." Whom Naomi has NOT summoned, added Ruth with mental uncharity. "Philip, this is Melior." "Okay," said Philip. He glanced up and then away, the flash-flash of the overhead light on his steel-rimmed glasses making a jarring crossreference to Melior's cat-glowing eyes. Oblivious to the social graces, Philip went back to tap-tap-tapping on his computer, a true wannabecyberpunk, poised to leap right into the future. "Naomi says you got pretty beat up. I know a little bit about sports medicine-I can at least tell you if you're going to need to make a trip to the emergency room," Michael, all shining rational competence, said.
"And I brought some street clothes for you to try." Michael jerked his head toward the bedroom, whole body language indicating that Melior should accompany him. After another socially-baffled pause, Melior acquiesced gracefully and was led away. Which left Ruth alone with Philip-which was the same as alone, unless Philip was in one of his chatty moods. Well, worse, actually. Ruth liked being alone, which was more than she could say for being with Philip. Ruth Marlowe was a charter member of the sane, reasonable, people-can-get-along-if-they'll-just-try contingent of the Silent Majority, and having never been really popular in her life, saw no reason to disparage people simply because they weren't cool enough to hang with. But there were, she felt, limits to that kind of social tolerance. Putting up with Philip, in Ruth's opinion, was carrying tolerance to self-destructive extremes. Philip LeStrange (Jane had told her-and God alone knew how Jane had found out-that his middle name was Leslie, and Ruth hoarded this information against a day of great need) was weedy, blond, short, twenty-two, and the product of respectable (and, Ruth felt, overindulgent) parents who were sure that his health was too delicate for anything more than a quiet respectable career as a librarian. It was something to do with a heart murmur, Michael had told her once, and if she had been Philip's parents and in possession of this knowledge she would have encouraged her only chick and child to take up lumberjacking. Philip LeStrange had pale blue eyes and no mercy and if he did not idolize Michael he would have been impossible to tolerate. As it was, he was merely difficult. Philip was wonderfully ill-suited to the library field, having no particular interest in any writing that did not appear on a computer screen, and was already planning to specialize in the electronic databases that were encroaching (like mold) on the traditional library resources-for in his own small and illegal way Philip was brilliant. At least, amended Ruth, Philip was illegally brilliant if you believed half of what he said about his computer hacking and other anarchic activities, but since she had no talent in that realm herself and did not take any particular vicarious delight in random lawbreaking, she had no idea how much of what he said he did Philip actually did and how much was just retold urban folklore with himself cast in the starring role: an amoral Robin Hood of cyberspace, unfailingly successful. It was a pity he was so unprepossessing. Perhaps that was why Michael put up with him-and why Ruth herself did. Philip rapped the rap of a darkling prince of the city, soignd and dangerous, when what he resembled was a pink-eyed laboratory rat, sickly, hopeful, and fatally out of synch with true hipness. Clothes that would look gloriously macho on Michael-blue jeans, black high-tops, white T-shirt, and red (James Dean) Lands End windcheater (not that Philip had ever heard of James Dean)-made Philip resemble some alien life-form unconvincingly impersonating a Real Human Being. But Philip's utter inhumanity did not breed compassion in Ruth's bosom-which was odd, considering what she put up with from Jane.
"Somebody want to set the table?"
Naomi called from the kitchen.
"don't suppose you want to help?"
Ruth said punctiliously to Philip.
"No," said Philip, smiling his most irritating smile. Naomi, on the whole, handled Philip better. She was perfectly willing and able to make him look ridiculous-a talent Ruth lacked, and the only thing Philip hated enough to mind. When Ruth went into the kitchen to collect five plates, Naomi sailed out the other way, and when Ruth came back into the living room, Philip had just finished dragging the table into the middle of the room and was flipping the tablecloth over it. "Hi, Ruth," he said, as if he'd just now seen her for the first time. Ruth set the plates on the table and dealt them like a poker hand. "Hello, Philip; suborned any good governments lately?" The trouble was, she ought to like Philip; she never had to define the words she used for him. 61 Nope. Been down at the dump, shooting rats." nastysweet.
Philip smiled,
"That's not original," Ruth said. The trouble was, she didn't like Philip. Plain and simple, and somewhere underneath it all she felt it was her social duty to try, as if anything she did or didn't do could change the future course of Philip LeStrange's theatric self-referential life. "But it's good." "The trouble is," Ruth observed to the ceiling, "that the good parts aren't original and the original parts aren't good." Philip walked off into the kitchen. He came out again with a large bowl of rice, following Naomi who bore a large bowl of ginger stir-fry chicken that smelled wonderful at eleven o'clock at night and far too many hours after a supper Ruth hadn't eaten anyway. The table service was assembled with the ease of long practice; Naomi liked to cook and the rest of them liked to eat, and that-as much as any mysterious agenda-was what held the five of them together. That, and, perhaps, the fact that all of them were equally unsuited, somehow, for the space and time they were in now. Even Jane. Or maybe especially Jane. "Michael!" muttered.
Naomi called.
"Food!"
("Slop the hogs," Philip
"Oh, shut up, wetbrain," snapped Ruth.) The bedroom door opened, and Melior emerged, the gorgeous embroidered linen shirt replaced by one of Michael's navy and khaki striped rugby shirts, making Melior look even more exotic, if possible. Michael followed, no sign of unease visible. "Ribs cracked, maybe, but the rest is just bruises," Michael announced to the room at large with a charming lack of self-consciousness. "Ro here was real lucky."
Ruth saw Melior's mouth curve in on itself,
ever so slightly.
Melior didn't think he was lucky.
And no one among these lunatics she called her friends had said anything about cat's eyes, pointed ears, or any elvish thing whatever. Ruth began, ever-so-slightly, to doubt her personal grip upon sanity. Seating five at the table meant using the two chairs, the step stool from the kitchen, the high stool with the straw seat from the living room, and arranging the table so that someone could perch precariously on the arm of the couch. Out of consideration for Melior's ribs, he was given one of the chairs. Ruth had the other. "Just a minute," said Michael, before they were all settled. He got up, went into the bedroom, and came back bearing a bottle. "Happy birthday, Ruth," he said, grinning. Ruth felt her eyes begin to tear; she forced her mouth into a smile before it could bend in another direction. "Bet you thought we'd forgot," crowed Naomi. "I didn't," Ruth protested.
"But I didn't tell anyone."
"I hacked into your records," Philip explained. "Thiny he let his voice trail off, as if unable to imagine such senescence. "Someday, my son, you, too, will be thirty-maybe," Michael said to Philip. "Well, open it and let's eat," Naomi said briskly. "And for dessert, there's birthday cake. I hid it behind the real food in the freezer because you and the roaches never look there." The wine was poured-even Philip took a little, and Philip disliked alcohol in a ll its forms. "A toast," Michael said, when the glasses were ready, but it was Melior who stood and raised his glass. "To the Beltaine child," Melior said.
"May she find what she seeks."
Ruth felt rather as though she had been given a very great gift-and one that she didn't know how to unwrap. That's right, Ruth thought. It's Beltaine. May Eve-the 30th of ApriL Walpurgisnacht. But if he's from Elfland, how did HE know? Then Melior drank, and the moment of strangeness passed. "Now the story," Naomi said to Melior, once the dishes were scraped and the cake was sitting on the table thawing. "Lose the ears," Philip suggested. Melior raised an eyebrow in Philip's direction but said nothing. He looked around at the other three. "Is it your will that this tale be told?" he asked. "For know ye this: Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences is a prince and a king's son, and the son of a prince and a king's son and so on to
the beginning of time, and the words that he speaks are not without power in whichever of the worlds he speaks them." Philip smirked, caught Naomi's eye, and didn't say anything. "I think we all appreciate that, uh, Melior," Michael said courteously. "Why don't you tell us what happened, and maybe we can do something to help." Melior stretched-and winced-and smiled ruefully. "Very well, Friend Michael. But this is not a tale for high words, as it is not a tale of high deeds, merely of stupidity, overconfidence, and pride." "That we can handle," Naomi said. Philip leaned forward-really paying attention, Ruth realized, and not out of a desire to help, but more because if he were asked to help it would give him a chance to do what Philip loved to do best-meddle with permission. "Well, then," Melior said. "First the tale, then you may ask what you will-for as strange as you are to me, I warrant you have never seen my like as well." "Not since Star Trek was canceled," Philip said.
Ruth kicked him.
Melior began to speak. He spoke as clearly and as fluently as if he were reciting an old and familiar story. The others became as still and silent as an audience spellbound by a play, and soon, listening, Ruth lost all sense of anything beyond the tale he told. The Elf-Lord's Tale "MY NAME IS Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences, and that House is one of the seven Great Houses of the Twilight which rule a land so far from this land that the World of Iron in which you dwell is barely a myth for our scholars. As we rule over the Men of our land, so does a High King rule over us, and that he shall have died is the cause of tragedy both in my world and your own. "Yet it is not the death of the one who is known now in death as Rainouart the Beautiful, High King of Chandrakar, which is the tragedy, though the Sons of the Morning and the Daughters of the Evening Star do not die in the time and season of Men. The tragedy came once the funeral games were ended, and Rainouart's funeral boat was set upon the bosom of the wave, and it was time to say who from among the Seven Houses would be High King thereafter, for Rainouart had ruled long and left no son or daughter behind him, and of the Lords Temporal, our Barons, there was none among them whose puissance and courtois was greater than his fellows'." ("I saw the miniseries," Philip said under his breath. Ruth put her foot on top of his and pressed.) "At first it seemed that all might be settled with reasoned councilthat it was not, you may know when I tell you the High Ywing died when my mother was but a child, and from that time until I grew to manhood his successor was not chosen. "The way of it was this: "There was a lady among the Houses whose name
was Hermonicet, who was the most beautiful lady born to the Houses of the Twilight in the memory of the Morning Lords or the reckoning of bards. To the sorrow of all and the envy of some, her father had betrothed her when only a child to the Lord of the Western Marches, who lived in wild solitude at the very edge of the sea. "That her father was wise and kind the barons only knew later. Then, they knew that the Marchlord her husband had lately died, and so the Lady Hermonicet was free to remarry how she would. "Many hopes were pinned upon her choice-for I have seen her, and I tell you truly she is all they said she was; as beautiful as the stars, and as cold. And when it seemed that the Barons-among them my fathermight come to agreement on who now would rule them, the Lady spoke from her sea-tower and said she would take no one to spouse save he who would now be High King, and open the gates of her tower never, save to that one lord. "The lords who were met in council at the place of the High King's death tarried not one moment more over their deliberations but went forth to arm and to raise their troops, and there was thereafter in that time such a war and travail that it set brother against brother and father against son-aye, and sister against brother, and cast-out Lady against her once-loved Lord-and none of this for the High Kingship, nor any reward more lasting than the sea-cool kisses of a heartless elphen jade with nothing in her save trouble and despite." ("So there was a war," Philip said. "How long did it last-and what happened next?" asked Michael.) "At last, and this an undertaking of years, and with many good men slain, Lord Baligant, a younger son from an undistinguished house, and not even of the line of one of the Treasurekeepers, took the High Kingship-by force and by guile, and partly, so I believe, because all who might depose him were sick and weary with war, and took good care that they should not come again to the sea-tower and there become englamoured of Hermonicet's beauty once more. So Eirdois Baligant of (by courtesy) the House of Vermilion Shadows became High King-Elect over the Houses of the TWilight and future husband to Hermonicet the Fair. "But the wounds of that long war were not healed, nor was Baligant a forgiving suzerain, and despite the fact that law and custom compels that the High King may not go to war with any of the Great Houses, nor condemn a Son of the Morning without a trial before all his peers, I fear me that Eirdois Baligant has found a way to punish those he will not forgive." (Here Melior paused for a long moment, and refilled his glass, and drank. Ruth, roused by the silence, glanced quickly to right and left, but the others were merely listening, as nonjudgmental as a movie audience.) "And the way of that is this: In our land are Twelve Treasures: Sword and Cup; Lance and Shield; Harp; Mirror; Cauldron; Comb; Cloak; Horse; Book; and Crown. Each is a talisman of surpassing magical power; all conjoined defend us from our enemies and ensure the peace and fertility of the land. Each one of these Treasures is separately entrusted to one of the noble families of Chandrakar for safekeeping, lest, possessing them all beneath his own hand, the High King's power grow
too great and his spirit too haughty. No one of the Great Houses may have more than two in its keeping for the same cause; should such a thing fall out through death or wedding, the present guardian of the Treasure must find someone willing to guard that which he has guarded. "Line Rohannan is guardian to the Sword, called the Sword of Maiden's Tears, which renders its possessor infallible in battle, with an insight into his enemy's heart as keen as a sword's edge." ("Excuse me, Melior, but that really doesn't explain how you came to be mugged on 116th Street," Naomi said. Melior nodded. "Forgive me, Mistress Naomi, but I had rather tell too much than not enough-and this is not a tale I care to tell twice.") "Be such things as they will-the Treasures are twelve and in the wardship of the Seven Houses of the Twilight, and the particular care of Line Rohannan of the House of the Silver Silences is the Sword. "But never had I seen the Sword, though I was much past the age when its secrets ought to have been entrusted to me. Our land had been at war, and lest any be tempted to bring the Treasures to the field of battle and use them, brother against brother, they were hidden away in various wise, and only a few knew their hiding. "So Baligant was proclaimed, and the date for his wedding and accession set, and those with Treasures in their care set themselves to retrieve them, as my father set me. "And thus was Baligant's subtlety and guile made patent, and the way to his revenge made clear, because the Kingmaking is a ritual that requires all the Twelve Treasures to be present, and the lineage that does not come before the High Seat upon that day with the Treasure entrusted into its care may never come before it again: all rank and seizin are forfeit, and that line is forever banished from the Twilight Lands." ("And when you got to the wherever-it-was, your sword wasn't there, right?" Michael said. Melior nodded. "I could write this turkey by mail," Philip said. "Get a new scriptwriter, Philip," Ruth said. "Now, children," Naomi said.) "The Sword of Maiden's Tears was not where my father had left it. I sought it within and without the land, always aware that the time draws near that Line Rohannan will be called upon to present it to the High King, and aware of what will befall us do we not. "And thus, in the end, such fear made me overhasty. I achieved the Sword at last, but in my haste allowed myself to be whelmed by magic and cut loose from the worlds; so loosed, I fell, as I must, down through the worlds until I reached the World of Iron, than which there is none lower that we know of. "The Sword fell with me; such is its magic that even then all was not lost-though the way be filled with hazard, it was not impossible that in the end I would regain my own fair Chandrakar." ("But you were mugged," said Ruth, speaking out for the first time.)
"But I was mugged, as you say, when I was not above half-an-hour in this world, and the villains, charmed by what ill stars I know not, took from me the one thing I would not willingly have given them. "And here, in the ruin of all my hopes and the destruction of my Line, begins your own horror, my mortal friends. "The Sword of Maiden's Tears is forged with a great magic, that no one save the Morning Lords can wield it. Yet it has been taken from me by a man of mortal kind, and so I tell you that soon he will begin to prey upon his former kindred, shunning the light, and unslayable save by that very sword which shall be until his death his dearest treasure. "There are no others of my kind in this world, I fear, yet only my blood may wield the Sword safely. I do not speak of the disaster fallen upon Line Rohannan, for its weaving none of the Seven Houses had a hand in and that weaving may even now be past all unraveling. I speak only of the evil to fall upon your kind, here and now in this new York city, should the Sword remain in those hands which have stolen it, and do I fail to recover it. "Do I not regain the Sword of Maiden's Tears, my friends, your race is doomed." Ruth Amid the Alien Corn "GREAT GOING, GUY-and I bet Ruthie here believes every word," Philip said, with a wholly spurious enthusiasm. "So you're an elf with a magic sword, huh?" he added, smiling patronizingly. Ruth prepared to leap to Melior's defense, but she needn't have bothered. "Were I an elf with a magic sword, young Philip, I would have no despite save that my visit to your pleasant realm was to be so short. And do you choose to call Rohannan Melior liar and warlock, pray do so openly, lest he call you coward." "Hey, nothing personal, Elfie," Philip said, holding his hands up in a mocking gesture of surrender. "Get a life, Philip," Naomi said without heat. "Now, Melior, as far as I understand it, you aren't here by choice. You ran into a booby trap of some kind that dropped you in the middle of New York, and then you got mugged, and when you were mugged you lost this ceremonial sword which, according to you, will do something pretty awful to whoever has it." "That is the essence of my tale, Mistress Naomi. I must regain the Sword, before it is too late. And then I must try to return to my own place-before it is too late." "I think the cake's defrosted," said Philip ingenuously. He bounded to his feet, the image of helpfulness, and sprang off to the kitchen in search of plates and forks. "Have you any ideas about how to, uh, regain this sword?" Michael said carefully. Ruth, looking at him, had no idea how much he believed of Melior's story-but she believed, defiantly determined to hold Melior to
it no matter what mundane apostasy he contemplated. "In the lands I know I would seek aid at the nearest castle. Were I within the boundaries of a town, there would be magistrates to inquire of-as well as taverns, and receivers of stolen goods who might inform upon their patrons. Here-" Melior sighed, and bowed his head, suddenly looking very tired. "Here every building is a castle, and I know not where to begin." "There is also the possibility that the magic doesn't work here, Melior," said Naomi, very gently. The elf-lord looked up at her through ice-crystal lashes. "And perhaps I am no prince of Chandrakar, but a mad mountebank trying your charity," he finished. "But no." He slipped off his ring and set it on the table.
Ruth picked it up.
Instead of the carved intaglio suitable for sealing letters that she had expected to see, all she saw was a round-edged rectangle of some mirrorblack stone. Hematite?
"Signet ring?"
"Here." Melior ran his thumb over the stone. For a moment colored lights sparkled just beneath the surface, then faded away again. All of them had seen it.
Melior turned back to Naomi.
"There is too much iron in the air for this small a magic to work. But the Sword was enchanted with a greater magic than any living thing can wield; if the ring works even so much as this, the Sword will work well indeed." Michael picked up the ring next, and when Philip came back with plates and forks, Michael flipped it at him. Philip looked inquiring. "It lights up," Michael said. Philip tapped with a thumbnail; weighed it in his hand. "No, it doesn't," he said positively. "It's magic," said Naomi helpfully. There was a knock at the door. "I'll get it," said Ruth to no one in particular. "It's the Thought Police," said the door when she approached it. Ruth took a quick peek through the peephole, then opened the door. "Hi, Jane." "I hope it isn't too late. I know it's one in the morning, but I saw your lights, and anyway, it's May Day and I forgot your birthday, so I thought I'd bring you some flowers," Jane said, still hovering on the doorstep, daffodils outstretched rather in the manner of one offering a poisonous snake.
"Come on in. Everyone's here-Naomi made me a cake-and there's someone here I'd like you to meet," Ruth said, quasi-mendaciously, falling back full-length on trite, timeworn, hackneyed clichds. She accepted the flowers with an overpowering sense of cusp; she'd thought no one remembered her birthday and it seemed that everyone had, and if she'd known in advance that they would, would she have gone out at all-and if she hadn't gone out, would Melior even have been there? Flowers in hand, Ruth went off to the kitchen. There must be a carafe somewhere in there that she could use for the daffies. Daffies, daffodils, da)yy-down oillies. . . . She saw the container she sought, high on the topmost shelf, and strained, tiptoe, to reach it. "Let me." Melior, behind her. He reached past her, over her shoulder, and plucked the vase down deftly. She turned. He held it out to her, brows quirking. "And are you sorry, now, that you rescued me? And do you think me, as the others claim to, mad, or misled, or larcenous?" Melior said softly. Ruth took the vase. "I think you're a long way from home. And I think the first thing to do is get back your sword." She filled the vase and put the daffodils in it, and stared firmly at Melior until he moved and let her go back out into the living room. Michael and Philip, heads together, were conferring over the mysterious signet ring. Jane was sitting in the chair Ruth had occupied, back perfectly straight (rather as if she were auditioning for a role as one of the better class of Egyptian hieratic statues) while Naomi, draped over the couch, filled her in on the evening's events with swooping theatrical gestures. Melior brushed past Ruth and walked out to join Philip and Michael. Jane looked up as he approached, face carefully neutral, and Ruth was seized by a sudden, heart-clutching, irrational panic-a panic that somehow this was the last good moment they would all have together, that, irrespective of normal fears of madmen and con artists, somehow an evil angel was watching over everyone here, marking them for his own. Honestly, Ruth, you'd think the lights were going out all over Europe or something. It's late, that's all. Shrugging her shoulders at her own silliness, Ruth walked over to the table. "Oh, good," Naomi said, "Michael, go get another plate, there's a good lad, and then we can cut the cake and decide what we're going to do with Ro, here." Naomi, unflappably competent. "Melior is my name," Melior corrected her gently. Rohannan."
"My Line is
"Chinese," Jane said cryptically. Another plate was brought, and another glass, and the more-chocolate-than-thou cake was scrupulously divided into six
enormous pieceswhich might not go with red wine in anybody else's opinion, but Ruth found nothing to complain of. "What were you doing out so late, Jane?" of cake.
Naomi asked around a mouthful
"Whatever it was, you shouldn't do it." Michael said firmly. "And don't the dorms have curfews? You could get mugged, you know." Jane elevated one shoulder, face studiously blank. It didn't matter what you said to Jane: if she listened, it was because she already intended to do what you were telling her anyway; if she did not have such an intention, it was a waste of time. Ruth had found that out a long time ago; she saved her breath. "I was mugged," Melior offered with wary pride. warrior of Line Rohannan."
"And I a blooded
Jane gazed at him for a moment, thinking it over. "Yeah," she finally said.
"But you're from out of town."
Philip whooped with laughter, spraying crumbs. "Anyway," Michael said with firm persistence, "Ro-Mel and I will walk you back to the dorm. I thought he could stay with me; I've got the most room." And are of the right gender, Ruth added mentally. Michael lived alone in off-campus student housing; Ruth wasn't sure where Philip lived, but she knew it was with several other people. She and Naomi were overcrowded as it was, and Jane lived in the dorm, expensive and cramped though it was, because with one thing and another, at nineteen to Philip's twenty-two, she was the youngest of them, the result of skipped levels in grade school. From the vantage point of eleven years' seniority Ruth was not sure that all that skipping had been a good idea, no matter how gifted and accelerated Jane was. Jane was glib, Jane was verbal, Jane was never at a loss for a witty rejoinder, but Ruth suspected that the child Jane had been had suffered from being forced into adulthood too soon. Emotionally she lagged far behind the people with whom she had been thrust, willy-nilly, into peerdom, and coped with this estrangement by permitting herself no emotions at all, lest they turn out (incomprehensibly) to be the wrong ones. Jane, in short, had perfected the fine art of glib superficiality. Bring on what elves you chose, they would not faze Jane Treasure Greyson of Patroon County, New York. She'd be too certain it was some form of extended malicious practical joke. And Jane, so far as Ruth could tell, had wit but no real sense of humor. Which made her a refreshing change from Philip, in case anyone was interested. One would think, all things taken into account, that Jane and Philip would consider themselves soulmates. One would be wrong. If there was one person in her circle of acquaintance whom Jane bestirred herself to
have open feelings about, it was Philip. And the feeling was murderous revulsion, which was too bad as everyone else thought they would be perfect for each other. They were, after all, both short and blond with bad eyesight, Jane slightly plump and moon-faced to Philip's thin and weedy, but with nice gray eyes behind the ghastly horn-rimmed thick-lensed glasses. And, Ruth thought wearily, if she would wear clothes fashionable or even suitable she would look very well. But either she didn't care or she didn't notice: Jane was still wearing the shetland sweaters, plaid pleated skirts, and polycotton blouses with Peter Pan collars that her mother had picked out for her in high school, and she would probably still be wearing them when she went for her first job interview. Jane came from a family that could (and did) trace its lineage back to the Signers (of the Declaration of Independence) on both sides and who (Ruth gathered, mostly by omission) felt that a library degree was the height of intellectual attainment for womankind; their collective psychic feet firmly mired in a past where the two professional tracks for nonmarrying daughters were nurse and librarian. So here Jane was, massively unready to cope with Real Life in any form, and being hustled neatly down a greased chute to neuterhood and intellectual stagnation. Ruth looked at her wineglass suspiciously. much to drink? It's turning thihy.
That's what it is.
Surely she hadn't had that
Oh, Ruth, you ARE a goon.
-and then tomorrow after class we can roust some of the local pawnshops," Michael was saying, "and I'll ask the Scadians on campusnot making out like it was stolen, you understand, just misplaced." "Your kindness does you much honor, Michael Peacock, but I fear you draw that covert in vain. Who takes the Sword will not relinquish it, did his dearest kinsman beg him for it," Melior said sadly. "Yeah, well, you don't know earthlings very well, Elfie. Probably he ditched it in the trash somewhere after he pried all the jewels out of it. But if you want to offer a reward or something like that for it, I could post it on the Internet and some of the local BBSS." BBS stood for Bulletin Board System, and there Ruth's knowledge of cyberspace ended. "He hasn't got any money, Philip," Ruth said, all the while calculating how much cash she could divert from her overtaxed savings account to cover reward, and food, and the dozen hundred things Melior would need. "But if there are pawnbrokers in this city, I can get money, Ruth," Melior said. "If your world still trades in gold and precious gems, I have that which I can sell." Ruth thought of that exquisite earring; the spurs; the delicate wicked crystal and enamel knife. "I'll buy them," she began.
"Get together what you want to hock," Michael said, interrupting her. "I'll take it and get it valued-then Ruth gets first crack at it. Philip, you can post a reward of twenty for information leading to, and fifty for the thing itself." "That's too low!" wailed Philip, rather as if he were hoping to claim the reward himself. "Yeah, well, if you offer more than twenty you're going to have to chase down a lot of false leads, and if you offer fifty for the return you'll at least get people negotiating," said Michael, as if he did this all the time. "Settled, then," said Naomi briskly. Briskly was the way Naomi did things, keeping meetings and discussions and planning committees moving steadily forward, never getting mired in attitude and argument. "Today's Friday, right?" "Six more weeks of class," Jane said, as if announcing the weather. "But none tomorrow.
So I'll see everybody here for dinner."
And that was that. It was about two o'clock Saturday morning when Michael, in the company of Rohannan Melior, left Naomi's apartment for his own. He carried all of Melior's wordly possessions bundled under one arm in the bag he'd brought his own clothes to Naomi's in. Their study might prove something. Then again, it might not. Michael was prepared to withhold judgment indefinitely in default of cold hard proof. Just the facts, ma'am. And meanwhile, the guy had been beaten and did have to sleep somewhere. Michael wasn't worried about trouble from his chance-met house guest; Michael knew his own worth; the worth of 200 pounds of well-sculpted beef on the hoof. A big impressive body, so that nobody, ever, would try to start up something with him. And so nobody would ever get hurt. Michael not only abhorred violence, he dreaded it, with the fey certainty of all his Irish blood that the thing which had already destroyed his life once beyond all recovering must certainly come again. But not tonight. And not for him. And not from some wimp elfwannabe that talked like a cross between Alistair Cook and the Lais of Marie de France. But Ruth, now.
. . .
Michael liked Ruth. Michael had always liked Ruth, from the moment Naomi had first introduced them, banging them together repeatedly like half-spheres of plutonium which refused, stubbornly, to react. There was something about Ruth that was less-than-right, but it did not
affect any of the fundamental Ruth-qualities that Michael liked, and everyone, God knew, was entitled to his own secrets. But maybe not now. Michael regarded his companion. Melior walked unselfconsciously beside him, eyes flicking left and right, scanning the territory before him as if he thought that at any moment it might burst out into violence. There was something familiar about that, and after a moment Michael identified what it was. The cop look.
Melior had it.
Whoever he was.
Whatever he was.
And that made things, if possible, worse. Ruth had it bad for this guy; Michael could see that even if nobody else could. Had it bad for Mel the Elf, who, bad actor or no, had blown into town like some sort of con man, telling them there was trouble right here in River City, roping them all in and stringing them along in the name of some kind of obscure payoff. A psychic payoff, maybe.
Contracts signed in blood.
Michael shivered. It didn't matter-or, maybe, the worst of it was-that Mel the Elf really was authentically strange. Pointed ears and glowing eyes, maybe he was just a space alien who thought he was an elf. (As if that were a more sensible approach to the problem.) "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy," Michael quoted to himself. "We're here," he said aloud. Michael's apartment was small (which is to say, large by New York standards) and neat, paid for by scrupulous saving and a number of rotating part-time jobs (including one summer that had indeed been spent dancing in an all-male revue) that-along with his life in New York City-would be over by graduation. In six weeks' time (without elvish intervention) he would be a new-made Master of Library Science with a major in children's literature, ready to take some library somewhere by storm. There were few enough men in the field-and the bad old sexist bias so strong-that even in today's "recovering" economy Michael Harrison Peacock, Male Librarian, could very nearly take his pick of jobs. He had six interviews scheduled for the last two weeks of June, and after that he'd know. It wasn't the future he'd wanted, but it was the future he was going to get. And Michael had seen enough of real life to be grateful rather than disappointed. He stood back as Melior entered the apartment, watching for some clue that would tell him more about Melior. Crazy or just lying? Or, worse, real? Melior walked to the center of the living room himself, then back at Michael. Michael closed three ways: chain, snap-bolt, and the deadbolt first week because the other two wouldn't stop housebreaker more than ninety seconds.
and looked around the door and locked it he'd bought after the a professional
"And?" Melior asked, when Michael turned back. eyebrow.
Michael raised an
"There must be more, Michael-my-friend. You have said so little before opening your home to me." Melior watched him narrowly, and Michael found himself looking for the iridescent flare of light reflecting silver-green off the retina, scientific cause for the folk belief that cat's eyes glowed in the dark. But human eyes didn't. "I think your story's bunk," Michael said bluntly. "Ah." Melior might not understand the word, but the tone was clear enough. Nevertheless, he did not seem to be particularly hurt by Michael's disbelief. "Would that I could string a convincing warp of fancy for you. I cannot." "What is it you really want?"
Michael asked.
"I want the Sword," Melior said simply. "I want to take it to my own hall. And I should like a private word with he who stands as High long," he added mildly. "Violence never solved anything," Michael said, and regretted it as Melior turned and stared right into his eyes. Green and silver, flickering like flames. Like flames . . . Like FLAMES "You know better, warrior," Melior said flatly. Michael, released from whatever spell Melior had cast, looked away, shaking with reaction. Lucky guess. Lucky question. Gypsy tricks. Leave it. "You can have the couch; I'll get out the extra blankets. Tomorrow we can see about getting you some clothes that fit a little better-" Michael talked on, filling the air with words, putting space between himself and the ancient scar that Melior had so casually ripped open. And somewhere inside himself, Michael Peacock began to believe. Ruth lay awake after everyone was gone, gazing out of westward windows while the sky slowly paled toward dawn. Saturday. May Day. And maybe Melior had already vanished with the dawn. Maybe the whole evening had been some bizarre form of hallucination caused by turning thirty. Because if it hadn't been-if the world had suddenly turned into the sort of place that could encompass both war in the Balkans and war in Elphame; pipe bombs and fairy knights with gilded spurs-Ruth wasn't sure she really wanted to have anything to do with it. At last she gave up trying to sleep at all. Rising quietly, tiptoeing past the other bed where Naomi slept as sweetly as if she had not been hostess just last night to an elf-lord from nowhere, Ruth gathered up skirt and sweater and sensible walking shoes and slipped into the living room to dress. The living room window shades were half-drawn, and the early morning
light sliding beneath them made the room mauve and chilly. Michael had taken away Melior and all his possessions; there was nothing here to prove either that he existed or didn't. 'And I awoke and found me here on the cold hill side." Ruth struggled quickly into her clothes; thrift shop and antique store finds, they saved her from the need to confront the twentieth century head-on. Wearing secondhand cashmere and heirloom lace, she was saved from defining herself by this retreat into others' definitions and others' selves. And-sensible Ruth!-a cashmere twin-set was undeniably warm, warm enough, even, for a chilly, early-morning May. Soft blue sweaters and retro kiltie skirts; sometimes Ruth wondered if there was as much difference between her and Jane as she thought. But she had chosen her own clothes, piece by piece, out of her own needs for her own purposes, and the clothes Jane was wearing were not her own; new in themselves, but fostering a secondhand image-sense of other, not of self. Selfness was very important. To be yourself Even if, as it turned out, you didn't like who that was, you just couldn't live your life to suit someone else's definition of who you were. And if that meant coming down four-square in favor of reckless insanity, then that was what it meant. Ruth slung her purse over her shoulder and took her keys firmly in hand. She closed the door very quietly as she went out. Michael lived twenty blocks south, on Riverside at 96th. It was not, Ruth insisted to herself, that she was going there-who'd be up, at quarter to six in the morning?-but rather that it made a convenient destination. Down to 96th, back up on Broadway, coffee and a bagel somewhere along the way as reward for the early morning walkabout. And besides, the walk would clear her head. Elf or not? The morning air was sharply cold, with only the faint promise of later warmth to make it bearable. Regretting her absence of coat, Ruth walked faster. Elf or not? Magic or not? Ruth amended conscientiously, thinking of Edward Eager, of children's books fame, whose characters always seemed to be getting into situations just like this. Only Eager's creations were fictional children, not real adults, and their imaginary garden of bright images had no room for the thousand razor-edged horrors of contemporary urban life. But Melior seemed so reasonable, so radiantly sane.
. . .
Ruth walked faster. This section of Riverside Drive still echoed some of New York City's lost gentility. Across the road there was a grassy berm sloping toward the fence which guarded balls and small children from the precipitous drop to the river; where they hadn't been vandalized into oblivion, park benches stood, facing the water. Some were occupied by sleeping homeless, some by early joggers doing stretches. A fifteen minute walk brought Ruth to the block that Michael's apartment was on. She looked up but wasn't sure which windows were his. Time to cut over to Broadway, in search of that bagel that was her ostensible reason for coming out.
Melior was sitting on one of the park benches. At first she wasn't sure it was him. In New York such brilliantly silver hair was not uncommon, even if achieved by unnatural means. But she felt compelled to make sure, and by the time she crossed the street he had turned to look at her and she knew it was him. "Michael kick you out?" she asked, sitting down. Melior smiled. He was wearing black sweatpants, ill-fitting canvas Chinese slippers, and a heavy wool sweater that Ruth recalled being a favorite of Michael's. Its oatmeal color made Melior's skin and hair seem even paler and it could have accommodated an additional person without any particular strain. "No." Melior smiled. "But I am not so fond of being perched in such a hot and sealed height. The door locks of itself if you pull it shut. I came out here to think." "About what?"
Ruth asked.
Melior hesitated, then sighed, leaning forward to rest his hands on his knees. His long hair spilled forward, hiding his face. "He speaks, does this Michael who means me no harm in all the world, of what money my small goods will fetch, of purchasing for me suitable raiment at some gap. He speaks of what use I may be, and of what employment my hand may be turned to-in short, Ruth, he speaks of how I may fit myself to this world! And I cannot stay here! I will not!" Melior took both of Ruth's hands in his, holding them strongly as if her belief could make some difference to him. "I must find the sword-I must!
And once I have-" "You'll go home?"
Ruth said. "I will try. It is not as easy as that-if it were, I would leave now and return with an army to help me in my search. It is-" he stopped and shook his head, amused at himself. "And here I sit, trapped perhaps forever in the Last World, arguing magical geography with a mortal maid who is quite certain that I am plain and simply mad." "You're not mad," Ruth said resolutely. She was conscious of his hands on hers, strong and warm and firm. "Maybe you aren't an elf, but I don't think you're mad." "And your companions?
Michael and Naomi and Philip and Jane?
Do they grant any truth to the full-moon tale I have told them? does not matter-they will have proof soon enough." "Proof?"
It
said Ruth, suddenly wary.
"Ruth, do they think I prate of cursed swords for simple pride alone? The Sword of Maiden's Tears is cursed The human who wields it will
become grendel-losing all humanity, he will become a monster that lives to slay, and subsists upon the flesh of what once were his fellow men." "So all we have to do is wait for the bodies to start turning up-and follow them back to your sword?" Ruth said. Melior stared at her as if she were suddenly mad. "I had not thought to find in you such a stony heart, Ruth. Do we but wait, it is true, the monster's predations will lead us to our prize-but what of the innocents who must die for such convenience?" "These are the nineties. No one's innocent anymore. all the time," Ruth said, nettled.
And people die
"Then I will be glad to leave here," Melior said flatly. ride only to join my bloodline in disgrace and exile."
"Even if I
Ruth pulled her hands free abruptly. "'Welcome to New York-now go home,"' Ruth quoted harshly. Unreasonably, Melior's words hurt-and why should she value Melior's good opinion so much, only having known him half a day? "I'm sorry this place doesn't fit your fairy tale notions of good behavior-but then, you're a prince anyway; what would you know about real life?" "I know about war, for I have seen it," Melior said somberly. "And I know that when war is over, and peace comes once more, then even soldiers put away the arts of war and live as peacefully as they may." "Then you don't know very much." Ruth thought of the horrors she could rattle off without a pause, the catalog of poisoning, abuse, random shootings, bombings and mutilations, greed and madness. And that without leaving the United States; worldwide she could add civil wars and famines, plague, treachery, and cruelty beyond the imagination of ancient tyrants. So much badness everywhere, and no one allowed to believe, even for a moment's respite, that things were better than they were or ever had been. "I have abandoned my search for truth and am now looking for a good fantasy." "No," said Melior, breaking into her thoughts, "perhaps I do not. But I know that I do not want to stay here, and I know that every life the grendel ends is a life I have ended. If not for me, those who may die-and may already have died-would not have done so." "Wrong," said Ruth. Melior laughed.
"They'd just be killed by something else."
"What an odd way you have of cheering me, Ruth!
Come, before you have heartened me into a black melancholy, let us waken Michael and persuade him to feed us-and disclose to me what gap holds my future garb. The day is well advanced, and I am persuaded it will be a busy one." Michael answered the door on the first knock, his worried look
vanishing at once when he saw Melior and Ruth. Though not as skilled as Naomi, Michael was a better cook than Ruth-who wasn't?-and over scrambled eggs and toasted bagels he explained the mysterious "gap" in Melior's conversation. "Since you're here, I figure you could take Mel here down to The Gap and get him some stuff. Shirts, toothbrushes, that kind of thing." "They don't sell toothbrushes at The Gap," Ruth said, just to be difficult. "Use your imagination. Just get him a few things so he won't look like an escapee from the Christmas Revels," Michael explained, naming the large, Medievalist, and largely amateur production put on every December to raise money for charity. "Sneakers. Jeans." "Using what for money?" Ruth asked patiently. "You're talking about a couple of hundred dollars, Michael, even if I only get one of everything." Michael squirmed around in his chair until he had freed his wallet. He pulled out a sheaf of twenties and handed them to Ruth. "Oh, Michael, I can't!"
she said.
"It's a loan. I'll get it back. stuff; I'll get it back easy."
Mel says it's okay to sell his other
"Not his clothes," Ruth said dangerously. "Well, sure," Michael said. "Ruth," Melior began, "they are only clothes, and-" "Fine. If you don't want them, I'll buy them. Shirt and tunic, two hundred dollars, fair price." She shoved the money back at Michael, who had the baffled look common to men when the subject of clothes was raised. "We can hit up a cash machine on the way down to Macy's," she added, looking fiercely at both of them as if they contemplated disputing her. Neither one did. "You can pick them up when you get back," Michael said meekly. And so it was that, at ten of the clock on a bright sunny morning that was the first Saturday in May, Ruth, a list of Melior's probable sizes in one hand and Melior's wrist in the other, was leading her charge down the slippery narrow steps on the I.N.D and into the New York Subway. She had decided on Macy's 34th Street for this expedition partly because she could put Melior's clothes on her charge card (and pay on the never-never, as they said in England), and partly for the fun of showing Melior a bit of New York. Melior's existence was impossible to deny, but Ruth found the magic and the cursed sword he feared equally impossible to credit. Magic swords were for Saturday morning TV, not real life-and Melior had said himself that magic worked poorly here, if at all. So the sword wouldn't work, and he wouldn't find it, and so he'd have
to stay. It was such an unworthy selfish thought that it didn't even make its way entirely into Ruth's consciousness, but it was there just the same. Melior didn't balk at the stairs, though he did wrinkle his nose eloquently once they had descended far enough to smell the ambient perfume of the subway system, composed in equal parts of urine, rotting garbage, and unwashed bodies. Ruth handed over money and received tokens, and carefully guided her charge through the turnstiles and onto the platform. Melior's face was bland and expressionless. His hair was neatly bound back at the base of his neck, covering those ridiculous, impossible ears. He stood near the edge of the platform, head down and body relaxed, lost in his own thoughts, and if Ruth had seen him all unknowing she would have thought him a student perhaps, a dancer, something lithe and graceful and focused on his art. The train came before she knew it. Melior heard it first; head up, face turning toward her to gauge her reaction to this new experience. Then he stepped prudently back from the platform as the train came rushing in to fill the entire platform space with battered silver cars that rocked and wheezed. It was late morning on a Saturday and Ruth was not quick enough to gain them seats; all the way down to the 34th Street Station she and Melior stood, clutching the centerpole facing each other, Ruth's nose occasionally buried in the oatmeal wool of Melior's sweater as the rocking ride jammed them together. She'd expected him to be irritated or upset; frightened, haughty, any of these were proper reactions if-as he said he was-Melior was an elflord from some feudal fantasyland who had never seen a Manhattan subway before. In intermittent glimpses of his face, Ruth saw nothing of that sort; Melior turned a countenance smooth and bland to all assaults and sensations. And so Ruth had no clue to how angry he actually was becoming, until it was much too late. The 34th Street Station was located in what the announcers liked to call "Lower Midtown" and realtors swore was the heart of the business district. Penn Station was a block away on Seventh Avenue, Macy's occupied an entire city block, and most of the letters and numbers of the New York subway system crossed below, in a sprawling multilevel madhouse of arcade shops and misleading signs and people, people, people. Ruth, clutching Melior's wrist tightly, plunged into that chaos with the ease of long practice, towing Melior behind her because needs must and dodging creeps, panhandlers, and incense salesmen with the obliviousness of the habituated New Yorker. Melior was not so habituated. He did not ignore any of these myriad new sensations-each was brand new, any might be a threat, and so all required investigation. Dazzled and exhausted and cross, he followed Ruth as best he could, but something was bound to happen, and it did. Ruth automatically veered left to avoid the annoying and semidangerous
gaggle of loitering teenagers with their bizarre hairdos and equally peculiar shoes. Never get involved was still Ruth's motto, and the kids-impossible to guess ages when she was working so hard at not making eye contact-were looking for trouble. Anyone could see that. Melior couldn't. She felt the sharp yank on her arm as he jerked back, tripped by one of the kids; heard all of them start yelling at once, jabbering in apatois she couldn't make out over the echoes and the noise. Heart starting to hammer, she pulled harder on Melior's wrist, and found herself yanked sharply back, forced to confront the situation. Melior was facing the leader, gazing challengingly into his eyes. The boy was poised on the balls of his feet, bouncing back and forth, poking at Melior's chest and talking very fast. Out of the corner of her eye Ruth saw hurrying pedestrians glance over and then look away, unwilling to be involved. "You godda pro'lem? You godda pro'lem wit me? you godda-" the leader of the Lost Boys said.
Hey?
Hey?
Hey, geek,
Melior moved, capturing the wrist of the trespassing hand and twitching it. Ruth heard the pop of dislocated bone as if there were no other sound in the world, then Melior tore his other hand free of her hold and shoved the leader in the chest, hard enough to send him sprawling into his fellows. The boy's wail of pain was high, supernaturally falsetto. No one stopped, or even looked his way. "My problems are no concern of yours," Melior said clearly. understood?"
"Is that
If they had been professional thugs, they would have finished himrash defiance cows the hardened criminal only in bad fiction. Knuckling under was the only defense; the daily papers were full of the obituaries of those who tried to fight. But probably they were, indeed, only schoolkids, and Melior terrified them as much as they frightened Ruth. They looked away, unwilling to face him, an animal submission as abject as a dog's. She could see tears running down the face of the boy whose wrist he'd broken; the flesh was already swollen and shiny. "Good," said Melior, as if they had answered. He took Ruth's hand and allowed her to lead him away, but he never stopped looking back. "What did you think you were doing?" Ruth demanded as soon as they reached the street. "You could have been killed!" "They were not armed," Melior said dismissively. Ruth grabbed a double handful of his sweater, and shook him, spent fear transmuted to anger. "And how do you know, Mister Elf-prince? Do you know what a gun is? Have you ever seen one? How about a switchblade? How about being arrested for assault and sent to Bellevue for observation and never getting out?" "I will not be handled by rabble," Melior said flatly.
He looked down
at Ruth, leaf-green eyes bright and sparkling now with fury. "Do you think I do not understand violence and imprisonment? Yet I will not truckle cowardly to gutterspawn such as they. The laws of your world are not mine and I will not grovel before them." "I don't understand you!"
Ruth wailed.
"No," said Melior, "you don't. But that is of no moment-come, we will-" he broke off suddenly and stepped backward, staggering as if his balance had deserted him. "The Sword-" Melior whispered. Ruth looked around wildly, but nowhere in the busy street and bright sunshine did she see the sword that Melior had described to them the night before. "It is gone," Melior finally said, sighing. here."
"Perhaps it was never
Gently he unknotted her clutching hands from Michael's sweater. "What do you mean?
Did you see it?"
Ruth demanded.
"I- Perhaps to say I felt it would be best. I have held it, remember, and all Great Magic has its own unmistakable aura." Melior shook his head, dispelling the last of his preoccupation. "But I don't know where. And it has passed out of range." In the Hall of the Mountain King HE'D NEVER BEEN anyone worth being, and he wasn't now. Kevin, and yesterday-April 30th-had been his birthday.
His name was
Yesterday was the day things had gotten bad-bad the way you read about in books, and always thought you could face better when it happened to you. Last night, an hour after sundown, Kevin Shelby found he couldn't face it very well at all. Be a man, Kevin. His mother's remembered voice echoed through his head. Be a man, Kevin, she'd always said, just as if there were alternatives. He wished there were.
He really did.
When he was just a kid-yesterday he'd turned thirty-his teachers always used to tell him that he was bright enough to go far. The higher education didn't matter if you were smart-or maybe higher education would somehow magically appear if you had brains and manners. But it hadn't. People talked about scholarships, when what they meant was that you'd get some money, a little money, not even enough for a whole year's tuition and there might be other ways, better ways, full scholarship ways, but on his own he could no more locate them and unravel their mysteries than he could fly to the moon. And so all of a sudden he was out of high school, just another bright boy with good
grades and potential and a shiny new diploma that didn't matter, and all of a sudden the higher education mattered very much and there was no hope of getting it. Kevin was a bright boy. He knew what "slipping through the cracks" was, and that it happened in the educational system all the time, and that he had "slipped through the cracks" but there were ways around that. There had to be. From eighteen to twenty-five there were jobs-small jobs at first but getting better, only there wasn't any way to save much with the bills always mounting at home and his mother and his brothers always needing something. But he had five thousand dollars in the bank and a catalog from Pace University in his underwear drawer on the day his mother decided his space was more valuable than his company, and it was time a big boy like him-be a man, Kevin-got a place of his own. So he did. Somehow he thought it'd help. But the money melted away and then so did the nice clean upscale job; he scrabbled for workany work-and took in roommates just so he could pay the rent. It had seemed such a low rent, such a manageable rent, when he moved in. He thought his luck had turned when he went to work for the T.A as a track worker. A job with the city was secure, the risks of working on the underground railroad didn't bother him, and the money could be good. Only now he was twenty-five, then -six, then -seven, and the money went . . . he wasn't exactly sure where the money went anymore. Beer and weekend movies, bets on sure horses, fine clothes to impress women he didn't see twice, and once even on a motorcycle, stolen before it was insured, and leaving nothing behind but eighteen months of payments. And slowly Kevin Shelby came to realize that some vital turning point had been bypassed; the signpost to that deserved future of respect and higher learning had been changed from "soon" to "never" some night while he slept. "Got any college?" the interviewers always asked, and now, forever, the answer would be no. And he was still smart: a reader of newspapers and magazines, of history and fiction. Smart enough to see now that he would never do anything lasting, anything important; never do something that no one else could do, or, even, touch the lives of those around him in any way that he could be proud of. And some day he would die, and he might as well never have been born. And much as if it had been party to his inner deliberations and wished him to know it endorsed them, the T.A in its fickle wisdom laid off a good ten percent of its loyal work force-which included him-and at thirty, when he searched for jobs, Kevin did not possess that aura of youth and possibility that he now knew he once had worn like a cloak; that potential for success that had gotten him hired. It was one thing to contemplate the inevitable fall into welfare and the gutter at three in the morning, safe and warm and well-fed in your own bedroom. And it was quite another, Kevin learned as the weeks went
by and the unemployment benefits trickled down to nothing, it was indeed quite another thing to face a cold and hungry future on the streets without money or food or even a place to sleep when a young and healthy body and pampered sensibility insisted there must be another way. There was.
Kevin met Roy.
As the old joke goes, Roy was living with him at the time. Roy Turpin was the latest in the series of roommates who seemed constantly to come and go, one taking half the bedroom, one sleeping on the couch and with rent and utilities split three ways the apartment was possible-just. But that was before the lost job and the tiny fractional unemployment checks and the scant savings dwindling. The stereo, the VCR, the television itself, all the luxurious toys of past prosperity trickled away, sold for too little cash, each sale shredding a little further the cloth of hope. And then there was Roy. Roy who never had any difficulty coming up with his two bills for the monthly rent, Roy who worked various odd jobs and odder hours, Roy who when the last roommate left had picked up the slack without either comment or complaint, Roy who one day asked Kevin if he wanted to pick up some money-not a lot, just a little-for a few hours spent loading a truck up in Queens. Roy offered a hundred dollars. If it had been more, Kevin probably would not have taken it, would have done the right thing Be a man, Kevin. -would have continued riding the downward economic spiral until he fetched up against something, anything, that would give him salutary shock enough to make him look, make him see and feel and do something. But it was not to be. In a lifetime of luck just faintly sour, never good enough to be heroic or bad enough to be romantic, Kevin took one more fractional step down the wrong road entirely. The truck's cargo was stolen, of course, and even when he believed that absolutely, Kevin went on loading boxes, because if he didn't, if he made a fuss, Roy was sure to get mad, and move out, and Kevin needed the money desperately and besides, he didn't really know for sure. . . . But that night, after the truck drove off and Roy clapped him on the shoulder and steered him to the nearest bar, Kevin felt as if he had lost something worth keeping, some talisman that, retained, would have shielded him from all the dark he saw ahead. Be a man, Kevin. That was only the beginning. There was more loading and unloading, daytime pickups and deliveries, all compensated in cash, and Kevin spent half his time worrying about how far he was in-dreaming fantastic
Maria dreams swagged in bloody tinsel-and the other half swearing he was in no trouble at all. Roy had never said they were breaking the law, had he? Well, then, they weren't. And slowly the hope of an orderly real life dwindled. Kevin stopped looking for work at all. Roy always had some project he needed a little help on, and Roy became the center of Kevin's universe, replacing all other gods and ethics and futures, until Kevin Shelby (be a man, Kevin) measured every act not by legal and illegal, good and evil, but by whether Roy would like it, and whether he would be caught. And then, in the end, it all came down to violence. Yesterday had been Kevin's birthday. Thirty, the age you didn't trust anyone over. He would have liked to celebrate it-or mourn-but instead he and Roy had spent the evening with some of Roy's friends uptown. Kevin didn't like them much, but what could you do? And besides, the casual talk was of dark knights and illegal acts, vicarious romance and self-determination, the refuge of the road. And a thousand dollars'worth of counterfeit subway tokens to take away, to package up and sell fifteen for ten dollars to a grateful public tired of fare increases. They were almost heroes, Kevin told himself. But then, on the way out, walking down Broadway, hungry for Chinese and beer and trying to think of nothing at all, it happened. "Hey, Key, wouldja lookit that?" Kevin followed Roy's gaze without difficulty and saw a big blond in a red dress and a cape, holding something long and thin that glittered as if caught in a spotlight shining for it alone. Then the figure turned, rotating slowly as though determined to see everything at once, and Kevin realized it was a man, not a woman-a man with long silvery hair streaming over his shoulders, wearing strange clothes that had the insistent familiarity of something seen in a dream. "Damned faggot," said Roy. "Hey, Key, let's have some fun. Let's have some fun here, boy, whaddya say?" He put an arm around Kevin's shoulders and hurried him toward the man. Accompanied by the staccato tocsin of outraged car horns, the man in the red dress and cape crossed Broadway. That the motorists stopped at all was perhaps a tribute to what he held in his hands-five feet of dan erous glittering metal and gem-studded hilt. Less reckless, Kevin and Roy had to wait for the light. and down, jittering as he waited. "Oh, boy-oh, boy!
Roy bounced up
Now there's a sword just like in that Conan movie.
I know somebody'd give me a thousand bucks for a sword like that, custom-made and everything." And Kevin knew suddenly just what Roy planned, and crossed the street
with him anyway. Possibly if Roy had been alone, he would have changed his mind; as they followed their dreamwalking quarry down the slope of 116th Street, it became clear that he was one of the body-building kinds of faggot and not the wimpy kind of faggot. But Kevin was there as witness, and so Roy went ahead. "Hey-you! Girlieboy!" Roy said, and the faggot turned around and his eyes shone red and green and he looked like something you'd see in a nightmare of a movie but never in real life. And then Roy swung at him with one of the sweatsocks full of bootleg tokens-aiming not for the head, but for the wrist of the hand holding the sword. And the sword fell to the ground in a brassy tintinnabulation because the sock had burst and scattered bootleg largess everywhere and the faggot, girlieboyBe a man, Kevin. -was reaching for the sword when Roy hit him again, knocking him to his knees. "Get it, Key!" And Kevin grabbed the sword. There in his hand was everything he'd ever wanted. The chance to make it right, to make amends, to take back the life he was supposed to have had. And the nightmare thing lying in the street reached for it, grabbed at Kevin's leg, and filled with revulsion and terror he struck out, bringing the sword down, the flat of the blade hitting the white-blond head with the sound of an ax on wood. The man tried to get up one last time, and Roy kicked him down and went on kicking as if he wanted to be sure he'd done it right. "Gimme that, Key." "I don't want-" "You put him in with those trash cans-come on, hurry up." And Roy pulled the glorious renascent sword out of Kevin's shocked fingers and shoved him toward the body. Kevin was strong. The health and strength that had first commended him to Roy's attention served now-he hauled their prey upright and slung it carelessly into an alleyway. The sound the body made when it fell made him smile. Some sort of balance had been regained, some eternal adjustment made. The silken-swift. The gloriously fair . . . He'd read that in a book once It and that guy/thing/creature/girlieboy they'd mugged made Kevin think of it now: beautiful in a dangerous inhuman way, but what right did that thing have to be beautiful when Kevin's world had all gone wrong? He turned back to his partner, and the sight of the sword in Roy's hands was jarring, unwelcome. "Hey, Roy, give that here, okay?" an ugly knowing grin.
Kevin said.
Roy's face twisted in
"The hell, Key. This's mine-I saw him first, didn't I? You wouldn't a hit on him without me. You want something, you go back and see what
else he's got." blade.
Roy pulled off his jacket, began to wrap the naked
"Hey, Key, you gimme your jacket, okay?
Gotta get this covered up."
And Kevin, thinking and planning for the real world for the first time in his life, eyes and mind and heart fixed on a goal that was for the first time in his life something he could not bear even to think of not achieving, ready, willing to be-a-man and intent now with a will of a passionate intensity, that Kevin shrugged off his jacket and handed it to Roy. To his good buddy, Roy. For the sword. For Being A Man. They got out of there then, walking quickly up the sidestreet through the light April rain that had begun to fall, heading for home. Kevin had always hoped for better things; each time he saw his apartment he winced a little inside, knowing he could have, ought to have had, better. Be a man, Kevin. But tonight he didn't waste a moment's mourning on the worn, the shabby, the walls overdue for painting and the wiquitous roaches. Tonight he followed Roy in meekly, locking the three locks, the deadbolt, and the chain, and went off to his room to see if what he thought was there was still there. It was. And when he came out, Roy had unwrapped the sword, had laid it out upon the once cheap and new and now worn and shabby couch. It did not contrast with its surroundings, shaming them by its perfection. It simply dismissed them, as if in its presence nothing else could be important. It was a little over five feet long, with a yard of blade that tapered gradually from the hilt to the point, as if it had been drawn out so, taffy-soft in the child-time of its forging. The blade had a soft rich sheen, promising sharpness; not mirror-bright like the daggers in the Hoffritz window, rhodium-plated against tarnish, but softer somehow, soft and sharp at the same time, like gold. Precious as gold, with its soft white sheen. Later Kevin would come to know the rest of it well: the crosspiece, an undulating wave of the same white metal, seeming to change form each time he looked at it, now serpent, now woman; the hilt, long enough for him to put both hands around, ornamented with tiny gold beads later revealed to be the pulls of drawers he could never open, set against a dark swirling richness that seemed now wood, now stone, now goldsmith's lacquer. And then the pommel, the counterweight that moved the center of gravity up the blade so that a man holding it as it was meant to be held would feel only its lightness, the pommel was a globe the size of an orange, an opal or a diamond or perhaps a sphere filled with swirling summer smoke, always changing.
"Hey, lookit this, huh, Key? Lookit this-sure is something," Roy said prayerfully. His hands hovered above the blade, making might-be mystic passes, unwilling to touch it. Wildfor to hold. Other scraps of poetry came to the surface of Kevin's mind, relics of a time when he believed in the power of intellect. Now he had abandoned intellect, and all he had left to voice his feelings and his fears were borrowed words, clumsy of fit. Wild for to hold. Wild for to hold. Was the wildness in the sword, or in him-or in some New Wave mixture of objects and life history? "You got to give me that, Roy," Kevin said, sweet reason forcing the words out through the expanding lightness in his chest. "You got to give me that sword right now, Roy," he said, as his lips pulled back in a smile that made his jaws ache. Roy turned away from the sword. "Right now, Roy!" Kevin shouted on an upskirl of laughter, of a fine joke, the best joke ever, or certainty and rightness like champagne bubbles in his blood as he brought the bat, his Louisville Slugger from childhood days, down, and down, and down again. And then he laughed until the tears came, kneeling there on the floor beside Roy, waiting for the labored, concussed breathing to stop as if its silence were his permission to go on. And he thought that all his life had led him to this moment, that it had given him as little choice as it gave the bullet fired from the gun's barrel, and as he waited for the breathing to stop he filled his eyes with the sword, with the sight and fire and tainted certainty of it. "Be a man, Roy.
Be a man," Kevin said to his dying friend.
He was afraid, and he was alone. And worse.
He had no choice, and he knew it.
He knew what he was going to do next.
Pard-Spirit on 34th Street RUTH FINALLY CONVINCED Melior to go on into Macy's as, even if he had sensed its presence (Ruth was inclined to doubt this), Melior's magic sword was nowhere he could get at it just now. Once she'd succeeded in getting him into the store she wished she hadn't. Ruth had lived in New York for three years, and had long since forgotten the dazzling rush of sensory overload brought on by her first exposure to The Big Apple. And even so, Ruth had come from another city; a smaller city, but still a city, Urban America at its best, the twentieth century. Melior hadn't. For a moment she saw it through his eyes: the golden marble, the sixty-foot ceilings, the space filled with people all rushing at top speed to no discernible place. The glittering piles of Things, all
displayed to catch the eye, and over all the roar of conversation, the pong-pong-pong of the callbells, and the Muzak of some alien and unconsidered civilization. Melior took a step back, pushing her into the influx of shoppers from the street, dazzled and blinded and completely helpless. Ruth clutched at him, too. She took a deep breath, forced the sense of vertigo and helplessness away from her, and pulled him aside into a quiet backwater of the eddying onward torrent of trade. And this isn't even Christmas Rush, Ruth thought to herself. Macy's was a little crowded, sure, but not impossible to navigate this early on a Saturday. But what must it look like to someone who came from a realm of knights and castles, forests and quiet green fields? If he did. If this weren't all some long elaborate hoax. But how, otherwise, to explain those eyes, those ears, except by the tale that Melior himself told, of war, treachery, and elfin magic? Beware, bewarelhis flashing eyes, his floating hair, Ruth thought sourly. But if he froze up like hell's own autism poster child at the sight of a department store, how in heaven's name was Melior of the Silver Silences going to be able to get enough of a grip to search for a demoninfested magic sword in New York City? But it was less than five minutes later that Melior released his death grip upon Ruth's arm and sighed. "This is a marketplace?" tones.
he asked, in even, if faintly disbelieving,
"It's Macy's. The world's largest department store," Ruth added apologetically. "I know it's a zoo, but we can get everything we need here." "Except the Sword," Melior said with a ghost of a smile. "Except that." Without Michael's checklist it would have been harder, since neither Ruth nor Melior had any idea of Melior's sizes. But socks and underwear were achieved without difficulty, and they went on to the next thing on Ruth's list. "Shoes.
You'll feel better once you've got proper shoes that fit."
Ruth said hopefully. She consulted the store directory and headed them in the direction of the shoe department. Melior's head was constantly in motion, turning to look at this and that, watchful, all of him moving with a kind of frantically-achieved stillness, a suppressed kinesthesia that made Ruth's jaw ache in sympathetic tension. He restricted himself to brief questions, all his will directed toward learning the parameters of this world he was trapped in. In the shoe department Melior was discouraged from his first choice"Not those."
"Why not, Ruth?" "They're rain boots.
For women."
-and became the proud owner of a pair of black leather high-tops (for which Ruth paid, wincing at the price, but this had been her idea, dammit). Michael's Chinese boxing slippers went into the bag; Melior wore the sneakers, looking somehow even less normal the closer he came to being properly clothed. Next they recrossed the store to the men's clothing department. Ruth had been thinking of something casual, yet conservative: clothes, she vaguely thought, like Michael wore, bland and inoffensive. She headed for the display of blue jeans. This won't take long, she thought hopefully. Melior followed her. "Here we are: Levis for It. We'd better try a few different sizes; Michael wasn't sure, but he thought a thirty-four inseam......... "No." Ruth looked up. Melior ran his hand over the mound of folded clothing. He held up one pair-heavy folded cotton de Nimes, as it was once called, denim indigo-dyed, stiff and harsh-and shook his head. "I cannot wear this, Ruth," Melior said. "What's wrong with them?" she burst out. "They're jeans, dammit. wear them, Michael wears them, everybody wears them!"
I
"Michael's are not like this." Melior reached out and stroked the fabric of her wool plaid skirt. "And you are not wearing them now." Melior tossed the jeans back in their pile, not appearing to notice Ruth's flustered retreat. The jeans hit with a thump like a book being tossed down-heavy and unyielding. "They'll get like Michael's with time," Ruth said, half-stammering. "I do not have time," Melior said flatly. He reached out and put a hand on Ruth's shoulder, pulling her toward him. "You say I must have clothing of this world so that I may move freely in it. I understand thatand believe me, Ruth, I am grateful for the time and silver you expend in my service." "Plastic," muttered Ruth. upward.
The corner of Melior's mouth quirked
"But I do not dress this way for my own joy, but to serve an end. And I cannot serve that end rasped bloody by peasants' canvas trousers." "Well what do you want-silk?" Ruth snapped. It was true that jeans had begun as work clothes, cheap and long-wearing for ranchers and farmers, but they had long since become (with all inconvenience retained) the universal dress of the twentieth century. She knew Melior wasn't from here, but when faced with Levis, empathy faltered. If he would not wear jeans, what would he wear? "want suitable clothing for this time and place," Melior corrected her
softly. "Everyone does not wear these-and there are so many things for sale here. Let us but search a little farther, my friend, and try if we may not find something that suits both our needs." Melior gave her his light of the "Young that his teeth were rest, slanting down lower jaw.
most dazzling smile, and in the dim strange neon Actives" department Ruth saw for the first time pointed; curved canines a little longer than the to meet the upward thrust of pointed teeth in the
Great.
Just what I need A vampire elf.
"Okay.
We'll keep looking."
Now it was Ruth who followed Melior as he prowled the aisles of the "World's Largest Department Store." Suddenly he stopped, fairly quivering, taut as a bowstring. Ruth followed his gaze. "Oh, no.
Not that.
Anything but that."
This particular department swore that it sold clothes for men 18-25. Ruth imagined that those numbers must refer to their IQs, as she couldn't imagine any sensible person shopping in a department lit primarily by red, green, and amber key lights and the glare from a dozen monitors all tuned to different music videos. The mannequins were flat silvery cutouts, headless and ostentatiously jointed and wearing clothing that Ruth had never seen on any living body that wasn't on television. Melior went up to one mannequin and felt the fabric of the baggy batik-printed rayon pants. "Yes, Ruth, here.
If you please," Melior said.
In the end it was jeans they settled on-but jeans as soft and pliant as Melior's own buckskins; acid washed, frayed, and artistically patched. Melior ran his fingers over them and then held them up to his narrow hips, looking questioningly at Ruth. "After all this you want jeans anyway?" Ruth jibed. The light made her eyes hurt and the music made her teeth hurt; she wondered why the management didn't just set off smoke pots if their aim was to drive customers out of the store. "These are different," Melior said inarguably. here wearing garments such as these."
"And I have seen many
"Well, you'd better try them on," Ruth said grudgingly. Armed with a range of sizes-as Michael's list contained approximations, nothing more-Melior vanished into the dressing room. Ruth took advantage of his absence to collect for his future use a red snakeskin belt with a faux-silver buckle. Thank God she'd talked him out of the pinkand-turquoise baggies. Or the red, acid-washed, overdyed jumpsuit. Or the tie-dyed spandex jodhpurs.
Or Honestly, Ruth, get a life.
You're going on like you're dressing up a doll. Buying clothes like this-spending all this money-and it isn't even for yourself. You'll be paying this off until the Last Trump, and for what? "It's worth it," Ruth muttered back at herself.
"And he's worth it.
And I don't want clothes like this for me, I want-" She ran the sinuous length of the supple leather through her hands, ran the ball of her thumb over the cold hard sculpture of the buckle. I want someone who dresses like this for me. "Is this suitable, Ruth?" Melior had come out of the dressing room while she daydreamed; he stood before her-a ghost of rags and patchesin artistically-frayed and very tight jeans that molded the entire swell and sweep of calves and thighs and anchored Melior firmly in the twentiethcentury world. His hair had come loose of its tie and flowed over his shoulders. He looked like a particularly delectable rock star; silvery and shining and insulated from mortal touch. "Ruth?"
Melior said again.
"It's good, it's fine, let's go pay for it, okay?" Melior regarded her closely. "What is wrong, Ruth? Is this so unsuitable? I admit that I find this department store very strange, but surely you should not?" "Go on. Take them off so we can go pay for them, okay? After all, they don't matter-they're just part of your equipment for this impossible mission, right?" She looked away in frustration, and when she looked back, Melior had retreated to the dressing rooms again. "I do not withdraw my question," Melior said, once this new purchase had been added to their growing store and he and Ruth were out in one of the main aisles again. "I'm so glad to hear it.
Why don't we go get lunch-my feet hurt."
"I will not be toyed with," Melior said, stopping dead. Shoppers detoured around him, giving him wary and resentful looks. A small child, towed away by its uninterested parent, cried: "Ears, Mommy!" pointing up at Melior. Ruth stopped, too, and looked back at him. Fine. Nobody's toying with you. God knows I'm not stupid enough to do something like that, great big dangerous interdimensional vampire elf as you are, and there's nobody else here. Whatever the problem is, it isn't you, and you wouldn't be able to understand the explanation anyway, so why don't you get off my case and let's go get some lunch?" Melior took the time to think this through, giving her entire speech his active consideration for possibly two minutes while Ruth stood, glaring and irritated all out of proportion to the offense, and waited. "We have not finished our shopping yet," Melior offered.
Ruth took a deep breath. oblivious. "Fine.
Other shoppers swirled around them,
We will finish our shopping.
And then we will go get lunch.
And so we can go get lunch before the next glacial age is on us, we are going to buy what I pick out and what I think you ought to be wearing and you are not going to argue with me. Is that clear?" "Perfectly clear, Ruth," Melior said, with the corner of his mouth quirked in that maddening half-smile. And that, of course, was how they wound up in possession of the black leather motorcycle jacket (on sale). Ruth swept back through the menswear department like an avenging angel with a mission to shop and a tight deadline. She picked out a black turtleneck sweater, a white "river diver's" shirt with twelve tiny silvery buttons down the placket, and an orange-cotton T-shirt that said "It's not my planet, monkey-boy" in raised black paint-spatter letters. Along the way she collected a pair of Ray-Ban aviator sunglasses with a beetle wing mirrored finish, in the hope that they'd help to make him more normal looking. She thrust them at him as soon as they were paid for. "Here!
Put these on!"
Melior did, and was instantly transformed into an F.B.I. agent from Betelgeuse. But at least his eyes were hidden. His flashing eyes, his floating hair-oh, stop it, Ruth! And having filled out Michael's list and gotten Melior as much in the way of clothing as your average (male) freshman brings to college, she saw the jacket. There were three of them left, hanging on one of those movable stands that retailers use to tempt the unwary. Ruth went closer and looked. "Sale," the sign said. "End of Season." Ruth ran her hand over the sleeve. Hard and slick, acrid with the chemicals of its tanning. Lined in a slick acrylic satin, almost as black. A thing of studs and buckles, zippers, flanges, pulls, and straps. Twentieth century armor for a realworld dark knight. He'll need a jacket, Ruth argued to herself with insane practicality. It'll be useful But that wasn't why she wanted to buy it and she knew it. "Melior?
Come over here; I want you to try something on."
He wore it so she wouldn't have to carry it. It meshed with the mirrorshades and clashed oddly with the dobby sweater. They were almost out of the store when Ruth remembered one last thing. "Hat."
"I beg your pardon, Mistress?" "Hat," said Ruth. "We'll get you a hat. Covers a multitude of sinsand ears," she added, remembering the little boy. They'd been lucky so far. They retraced their steps. Macy's was always changing its groundfloor layout. All the impulse purchases were there-and the luxuries. Jewels and perfume, silk scarves . hats.
. . and in this day and age,
Ruth led him toward the haberdashery display. "It doesn't have to be much," she said. "This?" Ruth held up a watch cap, silky black cashmere, and looked at Melior hopefully. "No. That." Melior turned away and reached for the hat: black, fur-felt with a low crown and a wide, sweeping, oval brim. He picked it up. "That's a woman's hat," Ruth pointed out. "I don't care. I like it." He put it on, settled it on his head and looked in the mirror, gazing at his reflection, face half-hidden by the sweep of brim; a cipher in mirrorshades and leather. And he didn't look silly at all-he looked fine, better than fine, like a fey horseman riding out from the other world to claim What? Not me, Ruth thought, firmly bundling her imaginings away. know what he wants. "Okay.
Fine.
You want to look like Doctor Who?
I already
We'll take it."
"Do not bother to pack it," Melior said with his new command of idiom, "I shall wear it out of the store." "Don't you think you'd better take the tag off first?" And so they emerged, blinking and ravenous, from the underworld of the consumer-driven marketplace at about 2:30 of a fine Saturday afternoon. Ruth led them down Broadway until she found what she was looking for: a Blimpie's, chosen on this occasion because it had both seating and table service. She led Melior to a table in the back and handed him the menu. Melior stared at it for a moment, then handed it back. "I cannot read this, Ruth." She stared at him in surprise. She had just naturally assumed Melior could read-he seemed so civilized, that it was just ridiculous to think of him as illiterate. "There was little time for scholarship during the War, but I can write a passable hand in Court and Common, read those and half-a-dozen more, and spell a passable dweomer in the alphabet of high sorcery," Melior offered in response to her blank look.
"But?"
Ruth prompted, knowing there must be more.
"But here in the World of Iron I cannot read your sighs. them." "But you speak English!"
Any of
Ruth protested.
"Do I? I imagine I would speak the common tongue of whatever land I found myself in. It is the way of things when one goes Gatewalking." "Well this land hasn't got a common tongue! read. Mostly."
And everyone here can
"So I gather. And so can I read, though not here. Perhaps you will teach me, if there is time." Melior took her hand across the table. World enough and time. Had we but world enough, and timelTIly coyness, Lady, were no clime. . . . "Hey, uh, excuse me. autograph?"
I saw you come in, and-could I have your
Ruth jerked her hand away from Melior and looked up. The boy was standing in front of Melior, looking at him hopefully. He had on jeans and scuffed white sneakers and a sleeveless denim jacket open over an indeterminate heavy metal T-shirt. He thrust a copy of the restaurant's take-out menu at Melior. "I really love you, man.
I love you a lot," the boy said.
"Ah." Melior looked from the boy to Ruth and back. pen, please, Ruth."
"Certainly.
A
Ruth took the precaution of uncapping the pen before she handed it to him-no matter how sophisticated he was, Melior could never have seen a pen like her 89-cent Flair. But he took it without a bobble, and signed the menu in swooping curlicues of florid purple that matched no alphabet Ruth had ever seen. "Hey, man, thanks-I saw you in concert last year. Got all your albums." The boy departed, still talking over his shoulder, and hit only one table and the trash can on the way out. Ruth held out as long as she could and then burst out laughing. "And what," asked Melior when she had subsided somewhat, "was that about?" "Oh, wait till I tell Nai! He thought you were a rock star, Melior-it must be the jacket. And he- And you-" The thought was too much for her; the previous tension too great; Ruth began to laugh again. "What did you write?" she finally managed. "My name. It was what he wanted, was it not? And now, will you read this ordinary to me so that we may be at meat?" It was fortunate for Ruth that, lifelong anachronist that she was, she was aware that an ordinary was the bill of fare at an inn. After some consultation Melior chose a chicken sandwich and herb tea. Ruth had a tuna salad and coffee. The waiter who brought them smiled as if they
were all in a conspiracy together. Now that she was habituated to it she could see it: Melior acted like a rock star, a celebrity, and people treated him as one. Or perhaps it was the other way around, but now that she was looking it was impossible to miss the aura of anticipation, of charisma, of grand seigneur expectation that even New York roused itself to meet. Melior was famous, Melior was news-whoever they thought he was. They dawdled over lunch. Ruth took the time to organize all the purchases into two large shopping bags; Melior removed Michael's borrowed wet-sheepdog sweater and put on the new orange T-shirt. Ruth saw herself reflected in his sunglasses as she read its printed slogan once more. "It's not my planet." Right. And what if it isn't? If this were happening in a book or a movie, Ruth would have had her expectations ready. Whoever had tripped over this wonder should take it directly to the authorities. Fictional people rarely did, of course, and Ruth, reading or watching, was always vastly indignant with whoever allowed the strangeness to simply slip away unrecorded; to keep it selfishly and not add it to the universe's store of marvels. But it wasn't as easy as that. k never is. . . . If she believed Melior was a lord out of Faery-and I do, Ruth promised herself fiercely-who could she tell? The Mayor? The President? Faced with the personal task of making someone notice the unlikely truth about reality, Ruth realized she wasn't up to it. And Melior was not some abstract cultural phenomenon; not an Elvis sighting in a 34th Street deli. Melior was a person, with things that he needed. And she would rather give Melior what he needed than pay homage to some ideal of civic-mindedness that was as much a dead issue as the White Man's Burden. In the end, what Melior was didn't matter. world no wider. "Come on.
His existence made Ruth's
Let's go find a subway."
Melior held his tongue until they reached the street. look at him; Melior looked back. "Subway's this way," Ruth said. "I know. said.
"Come on.
Heads turned to
We've got to get back."
I will not go in those ways again.
I will walk," Melior
He looked up-taking his bearings from the sun, Ruth realized-and set off. By the time they reached 42nd Street Ruth realized he was completely serious. He strode down the sidewalk perfectly possessed of both himself and it-nobody would ever guess he'd been mugged flat last night, Ruth thought admiringly-gazing openly around himself in a fashion no New Yorker would be caught dead doing, with the cold May sunlight glinting on the silvery spill of his unbound hair; flashing off the oil-slick surfaces of his sunglasses' lenses, and glinting upon
the innumerable chrome widgets of his black leather jacket. Jaded New York crowds parted for him as if they were the Red Sea. Ruth, soldiering on behind with two shopping bags full of underwear, was less fortunate. She put up with this as far as 79th Street-Museum Row, and lovely and dangerous Central Park on her right hand. The pedestrian traffic was thinner here, and Melior had slowed down enough about an hour before for her to keep up with him. "It's only a couple of stops on the subway to Michael's from here," she offered, having finally called a rest. She dumped the bags on one of the green wooden park benches that lined the sidewalk here and collapsed beside them, throwing a wary protective arm over them. Melior showed no sign of flagging. "No.
You may take the subterranean way, if you will.
I shall walk."
"Walk? How are you going to walk? You can't find Michael's by yourself-you can't read the street signs!" "I know the way lies north, and that the river is to the west of us. If I follow the river I will find it-and that I will do gladly, rather than venture into your underworld again." Underworld is a good name for it, Ruth thought wryly. She did her best to remember that, no matter how frazzled she felt, she was at least in her right world, with no particular sins of omission hanging over her. Melior was not. "All right. Okay." She rummaged in her purse and dragged out her wallet, scrabbling through it until she located the remains of her cash machine advance. She counted it carefully. "Fine. Let's take a taxi, then-I'm not going to walk another forty blocks carrying your underwear." Hailing a cab was a difficult process-at least until Melior properly understood what a taxi was and why it was wanted. Then he simply stepped out into the traffic in front of one, bringing it to a horn-blaring stop. "You could have gotten killed!" inside. "Yeah-you tell 'im, lady. agreed.
Ruth said once they were both
Crazy foreigners.
Where to?"
the cabdriver
"One-sixteenth and Riverside, please." They might as well go all the way up to her and Naomi's place, so long as they were taking a taxi. "But I was not killed, Ruth.
And one can be killed in so many ways.
Every exercise of skill is a risk," Melior pointed out as the taxi began to roll.
"You don't know how things work here-you can't just take it for granted-" "That the hired car will stop?" Melior smiled. "Ruth, I do not. And though this is a ghastly place, it is not entirely different from some places I have seen. It is only more so." Only more so. things.
What a convenient and time-saving way ofputting
The ride uptown was brisk and uneventful. They stopped right in front of Ruth's apartment; the fare was seven-fifty, and Ruth, unwilling to argue, gave the cabby a ten. This left precious little in her wallet, and she hesitated even to total the Macy's charge slips lying like a nest of vipers at the bottom of her purse. But it was worth it. By dressing Melior in earthly raiment she made him hers, sort of. Or maybe it was a way of giving him all the help she could in regaining his sword. The Sword of Maiden's Tears. Every time she tried to think about it sensibly, her mind skittered away, as from something too God-knowswhat to take seriously. But the Sword-and its absence-was the central problerrf that had to be faced. He'll neverfind it. Never. This is New York. It's gone. And it would be a minor life triumph if Ruth could figure out whether that made her happy or sad-and why. My Dinner with Melior RUTH COULD SMELL the powerful fragrance of baking bread and Something-with-Burgundy the moment she arrived on the seventh floor. Melior's nose twitched, too; he looked at her, eyebrows raised questioningly. "Oh, God, I forgot. here."
Saturday dinner," Ruth said.
"Everybody will be
"With such an ornamental puzzle presented for their delectation, how could they not be?" Melior said. "Don't flatter yourself. anyway," Ruth said.
Naomi's cooking.
Everybody'd be here
Saturday-or sometimes Sunday-dinner at Ruth and Naomi's (Naomi's, really) had become something of an institution. Even splitting the cost of the raw materials four ways (Naomi provided the kitchen and skill) it wasn't as expensive as a no-holds-barred dinner out, and it was light-years above the cuisine de scholastique available in the Columbia dining hall. More important even than that, Naomi's dinners took hours to prepare, and anyone who wished could profitably spend the day in the apartment, mincing garlic and the reputation of absent friends in an atmosphere of togetherness. And that, thought Ruth with a cool dispassionate intelligence, was something none of them could get anywhere else, wasn't it? The thing that drew them all together was that all of them, each of them, was alone.
Alone, but not loners. Just people who didn't fit in anywhere, which by some merciful alchemy made them more tolerant of others who somehow didn't'fit. How unlike life, Ruth thought cynically. When she opened the front door, the first thing she saw was Janesurrounded by books, of course. Jane's guitar in its case sat propped primly against the wall under the window. Jane looked up as Ruth entered-and looked wholly disapproving as she saw Melior. I wonder what that's about, Ruth thought. "They're ba-a-a-ack," Jane called toward the kitchen. She made one more entry in her notebook, closed it with a slam, and began stacking the books in a neat pile to one side of the table. Ruth glanced at the spinelabels: 398 and 291-Folklore and Mythology. "Ruth?
Is that you?"
Naomi called from the kitchen.
"No, it's Jack the Ripper," Ruth called back. She thrust the bags at Melior. "Why don't you go put on your jeans so everyone can get the full effect?" Ruth said, and headed for the kitchen without looking back. Naomi was there, bending over and peering into the oven, which gave forth its lovely scent. She looked up when Ruth entered. "Beef with Burgundy. how was your day?" "Vertical?"
It's cheap, it's stupid, it'll feed fifty.
And
Philip added sweetly.
"You're not tall enough for that gesture, Mrs. Siddons." Ruth shot back. Philip was crouched gnomelike on the step stool shoved under the window. One of Naomi's mixing bowls was on his lap; he stirred the contents intermittently with a long wooden spoon. She wondered how Naomi had ever gotten him to help. "Melior thinks he saw his sword." Although, looking back on those crowded few minutes outside Macy's, she wasn't sure that "saw" was the word she wanted. Sensed? "Fine," said Naomi. She peeled up the foil on the pan in the oven and prodded mystically beneath it. Satisfied, she closed the oven. "We can talk about that after dinner. Michael's going to be a little late; he called." "Off hocking Elfie's stuff," Philip added, surprisingly helpful (for Philip). His glasses flashed as he looked down at the bowl and started stirring again. "Faery gold vanishes in the light of the sun." Jane edged into the kitchen beside Ruth. Jane herself looked as though she might vanish in the light of the sun, assuming she ever saw it. For one still cursed with the puppyish roundness of unshed baby fat, Jane gave a surprising air of insubstantiality. Her mouse-blonde hair (indifferently long), straggled down over the shoulders of the "pretty in pink" shetland sweater she wore. She shoved her glasses up on her nose again.
"It's just a good thing that the sunlight never reaches street level, or Michael'd be in trouble. I wish he'd go away," she added under her breath. Ruth knew it wasn't Michael she meant, but Jane had barely met Melior. What could he possibly have done to tick off Jane? "Okay, you guys, get out of my kitchen. Ruth, why don't you go see if Mel would like a cup of tea, or something? Dinner won't be ready for an hour or so. Michael said you went clothes shopping, so I dug out an old suitcase to donate to the cause; it's on my bed." "What's that?"
Ruth pointed to the bowl Philip was stirring.
"Wouldn't you like to know?"
Philip said.
"Out," Naomi insisted. Jane preceded Ruth into the living room. Ruth, blissfully unwary in the comfort of her own home, looked up to see Jane's back stiffen into silent, long-suffering disapproval. Melior had taken Jane's guitar out of its case. One would not necessarily think of Jane in connection with the guitar. Guitars seemed so frivolous, somehow. Jane's whole nature cried out for nothing less than a grand piano, funereal in black lacquer, but as eal Life is conducted without an art director, Jane had come among hem with an entirely ordinary acoustic guitar that reposed, when not in use, in a black fiberboard case innocent of paint or decals. In Melior's hands, the guitar became a different thing entirely. He had slung the strap over his back, but held the instrument almost vertically, his long pale fingers wrapped about the neck. His free hand stroked the strings and the sound box as if the guitar's whole shape were faintly unfamiliar but one that he was learning fast. His head was lowered, his face turned toward the guitar. In jeans and T-shirt, sneakers and sunglasses and long silver hair, he could be taken for any normal student at Columbia-and that made him just as much an outsider in this room as being an elf-king did. "You shouldn't take things that don't belong to you," Jane said in a tight voice. Melior looked up and focused on her.
"I beg your pardon, Mistress."
He dipped his head to slip the strap over it and held out the guitar. "My reckless curiosity has ever been my sin." He looked at Ruth. does this habiliment meet with your approval?" He held out the guitar.
"And
"You look just like all the other kids," Ruth said. "But you don't wear sunglasses indoors unless you want people to think you're a junkier" Jane added. "Are there guitars in Elfland?" The question could have been either offensive or ingenuous, but Jane's perfectly-controlled tone gave no clue as to which it should be.
"Things similar," said Melior, still holding the guitar toward Jane. "And do you play?" "No," said Jane, "I just carry it around for fun." She plucked it out of his hands, giving the impression of a small field mouse skittering around a large lion, and went to replace it in its case. Children, thought Ruth, from the vantage of a decade's seniority. "Naomi says that dinner won't be for at least an hour. some tea?" "Yes, I thank you," Melior said. city?"
Do you want
"And is there perhaps a map of this
"I've got maps," Jane said surprisingly. "I'll get the tea." She flipped the locks of the guitar case shut and went off to the kitchen again. Ruth looked at Melior. "I am strange here, as well as a stranger," he observed. "Is it true, Ruth, that of all the Five Races only humans abide in the World of Iron? I had heard that was true, but it is always desirable to have firsthand information." He removed the sunglasses carefully and set them on the table. The silvery lenses reflected back at Ruth like a second set of eyes. Ruth sat down on the couch, and got the benefit of the westering sun full in the face. "And what are the Five Races?-by which you may understand that, yes, as far as I know nothing but humans live here. There are rumors, of course," she added darkly, "but they're only fairy tales-myths." "I am put in my place," Melior observed. "The Five Races are those peoples able to use magic. They live in the World That Is, though not all live together in one Land. In my own, humans and my kind live-and perhaps the Sea People, although they are wild and canny and dislike to meddle in the affairs of landsmen unless they can do so to their own advantage." "How like life," Ruth muttered. tails?"
"So there are mermaids?
Melior raised his eyebrows and looked amused.
With
"I have not enquired.
But to summarize," he went on, his tone of voice putting Ruth forcibly in mind of some of her duller professors, "the Five Races which abide in the lands of the World That Is are these: the Earth Born, which are called humans; the Sea Born, called merfolk and ceildhe,- Night's Children, who have as many names and forms as the stars cast shadows; and my own kind." "The elves," Ruth supplied.
"And that's only four."
"Ah," said Melior, "but you are not a scholar of the mysteries, and I will not burden you with gossip you will never have a use for. And
"elves" is only what the Earth Born call us." "Elf. In German, Erl. From the Old Teutonic Eorl, meaning 'Lord,' which passed into English from Saxon as'Earl,' " Jane said. She set down the tiny tray with the brown Rockingham teapot and the sugar and creamer. "So you do remember," Melior said. "Not personally," Jane said.
"And that has to steep."
Melior withdrew his hand from the teapot. "So what do you call yourselves?" Ruth asked. She half-suspected she was being made the butt of an elaborate joke, with all this highfalutin taxonomy of races and titles. Modern anthropology had proven that every society called itself Us, and everyone else it met, Them. "The Folk of the Air," Melior said quietly. "The Sons of the Morning and the Daughters of Twilight. The Star-Begotten." "Twinkle, twinkle," said Philip mockingly from the safety of the doorway. If Melior had done what Ruth half expected-flayed Philip where he stood with a backlash of hauteur and pride-it would have been possible for Ruth to successfully dislike him (even though she, herself, frequently felt that Philip would have been a good deal better company if he had been drowned at birth). But instead, unexpectedly, he laughed. "Perhaps all peoples-if they were honest-have too high an opinion of themselves! But I think it must be far stranger to think there are no other peoples in all the wide world-although this world is not so very wide," Melior said. "What do you know about it?" Philip said aggressively. "You guys are still fighting with cavalry and swords-what do you know about guns and bombs-and airplanes? Or computers? Or spaceships?" "Nothing," said Melior, in tones that suggested he did not grieve for his lack. "And what do you know, my fine mannikin, of horsemanship, or sorcery, or Gatewalking; of the treaties that bind the Five Races-" "Of which there are four," Ruth muttered. "Or cars-" said Philip, adding to his list. " 'In the time twixt the dark and the twilight/%When the night is beginning to lower/Comes a pause in the day's occupations/That is known as For God's Sake, Shut up, Philip,"' Jane misquoted strenuously. "We agreed; we could discuss this when Michael gets here." Ruth realized that some agreement had been reached by the others while she and Melior were out; through a childish pang of hurt feelings at being excluded she wondered what exactly the agreement was. The talk turned quickly and briefly to school; Ruth and Michael would graduate this June, but Philip and Jane both had another year to go. Ruth thought guiltily about her master's thesis, still unbegun.
"The
Role of the Librarian in the Illiterate Society." She wondered if there were elf-librarians, and what sort of books they guarded. Having settled that he and Jane were both behind in their coursework and that it was a waste of time anyway, Philip flipped on the TV. The late-afternoon sunlight bleached the picture to oblivion, but the sound worked fine. "A Bronx man is being sought in connection with the death of Roy Turpin, 36, of North Queens Avenue. The body was discovered early this morning by-" Ruth tuned out the sound 'and the pastel image of a shrouded body being bundled into a waiting ambulance. Just another beautiful day in Fun City. "Your tea, Ruth." into her hand.
Melior sat down beside her, pushing a teacup gently
She took it, but when she looked up to thank him he was not looking toward her. Melior was staring out toward the setting sun, his mouth set in a grim line. Michael arrived at a quarter of eight, when the brownies that Philip had been mixing were long since baked and only perilously preserved from the depredations of starving students (or persons purporting to be starving students), an entire loaf of French bread had been anointed with garlic butter, toasted, and devoured, Ruth had removed the tags and staples from every one of the day's clothing purchases and stowed the clothing itself in a green vinyl suitcase of surpassing hideousness (she did not, even now, total her charge slips), and Naomi had finally said "the hell with it" and set the table. "Hello, all," said Michael. "It's about time you got here," Philip said. "Oh, honestly, Philip, don't you ever think about anything but food? Don't answer that," Jane added. "Hi," said Ruth and Naomi in ragged chorus. Michael flung his windbreaker through the bedroom door and advanced on Ruth. "Okay, how much did you spend?" he asked. "Why?" Ruth demanded suspiciously. Melior made a sound that could be taken (by the suspicious nature that even such a sensible person might be supposed to have) as amusement. "You may understand that it must be a very great deal, my friend, or else she would tell you," Melior suggested. "It couldn't be," Michael said. of money."
"Ruth doesn't have a very great deal
"Oh, thank you so much, Michael Peacock. For your information, I followed your list exactly-" "Almost exactly," said Melior. "She got him a leather jacket," said Jane.
"It was on sale!" cold."
Ruth pointed out.
"And he'll need it.
He'll be
"No he won't," said Philip with a smirk. "Philip, dear, if you ever do find out what the facts of life are-" Ruth began. "A leather jacket?"
Michael said in tones of pained disbelief.
"What's he going to do with a leather jacket?
It's May."
"Join the road show of Shakespeare's Punk Elves in Bondage Revue," Jane said, looking as if it were nothing to do with her. "You can wear a leather jacket in the summer." "I beg you will all stop discussing me as if I weren't here," Melior said. He did not raise his voice, but it cut efficiently through the crosschatter. "I now possess a leather jacket, which was purchased at my insistence. It remains for Ruth to be reimbursed for this and for the other items." "Right." Michael's face assumed an expression of studied disinterest, which would have been believable if not for the quirk in his mouth and the slant of his eyebrows. He pulled his wallet out of his hip pocket and pulled out a sheaf of bills bound together with a paper tape. It was not a terribly impressive sheaf until you realized that the "one" on each of the bills was followed by two zeroes. "Five thousand dollars," Michael said. "Who'd you mug?"
"Cold, hard, legal tender."
Philip asked with interest.
"Sold the earrings and all the sterling. Except this-" Michael dug deep into a pocket and flipped Melior's signet ring at him. Melior plucked it deftly out of the air and slipped it onto his finger. Michael dropped the sheaf of bills into Ruth's hands. as if it were a book she didn't want to read.
She stared at it
"I took the spurs down to the Met," said Michael, referring to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. "I've got a friend down there. Stephen Mallison. He's Arms and Armor, but he knows something about forgeries." "Like the Cellini salt cellar," Jane said. "I don't see why they had to take it off display just because it was fake," Ruth said. "It was an old fake-and besides, it was pretty." "Beauty our only criterion," Naomi said. "Pretty is Truth and Truth is Pretty-" Jane began. "But anyway," Michael said, heaving the conversation back on track by dint of main force, "T showed him the spurs and told him Id been told they came from Ancient Atlantis." "And he believed you?"
said Naomi with interest.
"Patience, my child. I didn't believe me; I made that clear. What I asked him was what they were really; I hinted I thought they were stolen." "As a deception only," Melior clarified firmly. (Philip: "What do you care, Elfie?" Naomi: "Philip-") "I had to give him some reason why I'd come to ask him about them. Museums know what's old, expensive, and stolen-they have to in order to keep from buying it and then losing what they paid when they turn it over to the rightful owner. Anyway-" "Dinner's getting cold," Naomi said. There was a brief interruption as food was brought from the kitchen and distributed. Ruth offered the money to Melior; he shook his head. She set it on top of the television set as a last resort and hoped nobody would forget about it, although how you could forget about fifty one hundred dollar bills was something beyond her capacity. When plates were full and most of his audience occupied with beef burgundy instead of airy badinage, Michael resumed. "So he told me they were no more Atlantean than my grandmother and didn't look offhand to be very old. The workmanship was top drawer and they'd cost somebody a brick to make-solid gold rowels and all that-but Ancient Atlantean or ancient anything else they were not. He begged me to remind whoever I'd gotten them from that only mounted cultures which had invented the stirrup would have any use for spurs." "I had a horse," Melior said.
"It died.
And the spurs?"
"I left them there; he said he'd show them around. so I didn't think you'd mind." "Indeed not.
You said sell them,
You may keep them for all of me."
"So leaving aside however much Ruth spent on clothes-" "Six hundred and eighteen dollars and thirty-five cents," Melior said. Everyone at the table stared at him. been caught in secret sin.
Ruth's cheeks flamed, as if she'd
"You told me it was a decimal currency, Ruth. One hundred cents to the dollar. The lackey recited the total each time you paid. I added it up," Melior explained. "Part of that is tax," he added. "And the jacket was necessary," Naomi said, poker-faced. "It was only-" Melior began. "It was on sale!"
Ruth interrupted.
"And that leaves," said Michael, who intended to become a children's librarian when he graduated and so had a great deal of practice in being heard over other conversations, "about four thousand dollars and change." "Is this a great deal of money?"
Melior asked.
Michael shrugged. "Depends on what you try to do with it." himself to his dinner.
He applied
Four thousand dollars. Ruth was old enough to know that this wasn't the enormous amount of money it seemed-not when her and Naomi's joint rent and household expenses were nearly a thousand a month-but surely it was enough to last Melior until he found his sword. And if he doesn't find it? He doesn't have a birth certificate, or a high school diploma, or a Social Security card. Or a passport-and where could they deport him to, anyway? Dinner, having been so long delayed, was a swift, brutal business, accomplished mostly in silence. Finally Naomi cleared the plates away. " And now, for dessert," she said. "Damn! I forgot the ice cream!" Michael burst out. "It's in the freezer at my place. Look, Mel, I'll give you the keys-could you go down and pick it up for me?" "That was the most unconvincing con job I've ever seen in my life," Ruth said, once the door had shut and the sound of Melior's footsteps on the stairs had been heard. "Why didn't you just say, 'Melior, why don't you get out of here so we can talk about you behind your back'?" "Because doing it this way is what is called manners, Ruth dear," Naomi said. She sat down at the table. "I hereby declare the first meeting of the New York Council on Elvish Affairs in session." "Right," said Michael. "And the first question is, who is this guy Ruth rescued last night really?" "What's the second question?" "Do we believe his story?"
Jane asked helpfully.
Naomi said.
"But if he's an elf-" Ruth began, and stopped. "Very good," Michael said to her. story."
"He could be a real elf with a fake
"Or a fake elf with a fake story," said Philip, who was, in his own small way, a completest. "Or a fake elf with a real story," said Jane, "although that means we still have to believe in some elves, just not this elf." "Okay," said Naomi. Ruth?
"Reasons for believing he's an elf.
Anyone?
You've spent the most time with him."
"Well," said Ruth.
"He's got pointed ears."
"Plastic surgery," said Philip.
"Makeup SFX."
"You'd see the line," Jane pointed out. "Shut up, guys," said Michael.
"Let Ruth think."
"And slit pupils, like a cat's," Ruth went on.
"They reflect, too,
like a cat's, and I've seen them change shape. People don't have eyes that green, and while that could be contact lenses, they don't reflect or make your pupil change shape like that. And his teeth are pointed," she rushed on, "like a-a wolfs. And it could be dental bonding, but why?" " 'Why' comes later," Michael said. "Okay, he's got pointed ears and fangs and his eyes glow in the dark. And probably that isn't makeup; SFX makeup is meant to fool a camera, not a human eye; it just isn't that good. And something that isn't makeup is that beating he got last night. I looked him over then-it was pretty raw. But today his bruises are almost healed-and another thing. I looked him over pretty carefully twice. He's got a good set of muscles on him-and scars like you wouldn't believe. If you showed me that and told me this guy'd been off to a war where they fought with swords, I'd believe you." "There's one other thing that isn't on your list," Jane said. could be a not-a-human-being and still not be an elf."
"He
"Occam's razor," Naomi said. "Or in English, cut to the chase," Philip added. alien, why say he's an elf?"
"If he was a space
"Why not?" Jane shot back. "If he's a space alien, he doesn't think like an Earth person-and aliens are a lot more likely than elves. " "Would you listen to yourself?" Philip said. "Space aliens are likely?" "What reason do we have to not think Melior is an elf, after he's said he was one?" Naomi said pacifically. "Jane, you were looking through folklore today-what does it say about elves?" Solicited in the area of her competence, Jane subsided. "First, there are no reports of elves in America, only some unproven sixteenth century reports of 'weird black dwarves,' which lets our guy right out. Most of the folklore lumps elves right in with fairies, and it sort of boils down to: 'No force, there I was, out after dark and I saw this Real Weird Guy who took me home with him and we got to drinking and that's why I've been gone a week."' Jane shrugged. "Elves and UFO stories have a lot in common: time distortion, missing days, memory loss, and strange ailments suffered by those who've met them. In fact the descriptions of elves and of space %aliens are almost identical, allowing for there being about seven hundred years between them, and this guy doesn't match any of them. What he really is, is a prime specimen of genus Tolkienus, the fictional elf. You know: tall, glowing, noble-" "With a palantir strapped to his forehead and a long gray cape," supplied Naomi. "He didn't say he was an elf. He said humans called his kind elves," Ruth pointed out, with a scrupulous regard for the facts. "So we have a certain amount of physical evidence that Mel is Not From Around Here," Naomi summarized. the contrary?"
"Anything else?
"The clothes and jewelry," Michael said.
Or opinions to
"It cost a lot to put that
outfit together. If this were a con job that would net him a couple million, I could see a few thousand going to prime the pump. But it's us he's working this on-if it's a sting. There's no way he could get back his initial investment. So there's no reason to waste the money. And he was really thumped.
Don't forget that."
"It's more than a few thousand.
All those clothes were hand-sewn.
Every stitch. They don't even do that for movie costumes anymore," Ruth said. She flung out her hands helplessly. "I can't even imagine what it would cost to make them." "And don't forget the ring," Michael said. it.
"It glowed.
We all saw
No lights, no wires." "Not a dream, not a hoax, not an imaginary tale," Ruth said. "And besides, I was looking around in cyberspace today. He wasn't there," Philip added. He dug around in the pack at his feet and laid something out on the table. Photographs. Four Polaroid shots of Melior, looking pale and interesting, his eyes glowing like red moons in the flash. "Just in case we want to fake him up some ID," Philip said. decided not to have heard him.
Naomi
"Okay, show of hands: does everybody agree that Melior, who and whatever he really is, all semantics aside, doesn't come from here?" Naomi asked. Ruth raised her hand, feeling a little ridiculous. everyone else. Michael winked at her. "Great. more.
Slowly, so did
That subject's closed and isn't going to be debated any
Saves time.
Now, what about his story?"
"Which story?"
said Jane.
"The one about the elf-war?"
"I don't think we need to worry about that," Ruth said, after a pause. "I think the only thing we have to worry about is whether or not we believe that he lost a sword that he has to get back." "Never mind that he's got a hope in hell," Philip said sweetly. "Yeah, right, never mind that," Michael said. "I think the question is, what would he want us to do to go looking for the sword?" Jane said. She fiddled with the hem of her sweater, staring off into space. "And what would happen if he didn't get it back?
Really, I mean, and not just in elf-space.
Here."
"He said," Ruth said, cudgeling her mind for scraps of a conversation that had seemed less important at the time than her own feelings, "I think he said that if a human had the sword, it was cursed-I mean, the sword was cursed whether a human had it or not, but its curse was, if a human had it, it-the human-would turn into some kind of monster." "Tolkien again," Jane sighed. "Gollum, gollum, what has it got in its pocketses-can't these people ever be original?" "Tolkien did it because it was an archetypal theme," Michael said. "The cursed thingummy that turns its owner into a beast. pretty thick on the ground in folklore and mythology."
They're
"We'll just have to wait and ask Melior about it," Ruth said. "You will not have to wait," said Melior. Fractured Fairy Tales: Hansel and Grendel NONE OF THEM had heard the door open. Melior stood there, with the bag containing the ice cream in one hand, and Ruth's keys on their brass ring keychain in the other. He took those out of my purse! indignation.
Ruth thought on a rising flare of
"You know," Naomi said with commendable calm, "you really shouldn't be back yet." Melior smiled, wolf-teeth gleaming.
"I ran," he said.
"Both ways."
Ruth stared, with guilty complicity, at Melior's black high-topped leather sneakers. "You spied on us," Jane said, as univolved as if she were reporting the weather. "How did you get the door open without us hearing you?" asked.
Philip
"Guile has its uses," said Melior, "and you were greatly involved. since your councils were bound to affect me, I wished to know what their result was."
But
"You got back too soon," said Ruth. "We were just trying to figure out how you could possibly benefit by lying about the sword." "We'd already decided you were an elf," said Naomi. "I do not lie," Melior said. "Catch." accuracy, straight at Michael. He caught it with a thump.
He threw the bag, with fastball
"I guess this means dessert."
" And then you can tell us all about your magic sword," Jane said.
Philip sniggered. Ruth kicked at him but only succeeded in dislodging her precarious perch. She slid backward off the arm of the couch, but Melior was there to support her. "You stole my keys!"
she whispered to him in an accusing undertone.
Melior shrugged and released her. steal."
"I brought them back.
I do not
"Just like you don't lie?" Ruth shot back. Melior's eyebrows rose, a Mr. Spock gesture he could have no way of knowing was associationally hilarious. "Exactly the way I do not lie, Ruth. "And would you borrow the truth?"
I borrowed the keys."
Ruth shot back.
Something made her look sideways then, to meet Philip's china-blue gaze. "Oh, go on," Philip said.
"This is fascinating."
"Shut up, Philip," said Ruth and Melior in unwitting chorus. Philip made an obscure handsign and slithered off his chair to follow Michael and Naomi. Melior watched him go. "Privacy," he said, "is a state devoutly to be wished for, and, like all wishes, unlikely to materialize." "Look," Ruth began uneasily, "no one meant-" Melior waved her to silence. "Of course you did. Who would not? Is that not true, Jane?" "Sure." Jane was gazing aimlessly out the window, her lank mouseblonde hair falling in snake-locks against the pink shetland sweater. To all intents and purposes she was paying no attention to Ruth and Melior. "We all voted you're an elf, so that's settled. you're a nice elf," she added, turning around.
But it doesn't mean
"If he was nice, would he be hanging out with us?" Naomi said, coming back with brownies. "But seriously, Melior, none of us has any experience with sword-quests, or magic-" "Or elves," interrupted Michael helpfully. He was carrying four dishes of ice cream, balanced perilously. Philip had the other two. Jane jumped up and went to unload Michael. "So naturally we're a bit curious," Michael went on. Melior favored Michael with a crooked smile. "And you wonder how I twist my nets to lure you in. I cannot deny that I do, friend Michael. The stakes are too high; I need allies." "Yes," said Michael carefully. "And we were sort of all wondering just what the high stakes are, you see." "For myself, I lose all if I cannot present the sword when Baligant summons it. Myself, my kinfolk, all that I am or wish to be-gone." There was a pause, then Melior added, "I cannot imagine this tugs on
human heartstrings greatly, and your charity in aiding me in this cause alone is rightly limited. Yet there is a matter that I would have-at least yesterday-held to be of your deepest self-interest." "Why yesterday and not today?" Michael asked, getting his question in before Naomi elbowed him for interrupting. "Because yesterday I believed you valued the life of your fellowsand today I see that this is simply not true. If hundreds, if thousands, if tens of thousands of your kind were to die, you are so many here you would not even notice." "Way to go," breathed Philip. "Why don't we just go back to pretending it's yesterday, then?" Ruth asked. She took a brownie and bit into it, distracted for a moment by pure chocolate ecstasy. "Very well," said Melior. He prodded delicately at the mound of vanilla melting in the dish before him and obviously decided to leave well enough alone. "If you don't want that, I'll eat it," Philip offered. "Pig," said Jane. " Slug." "Louse." "Maggot." "Children, " said Naomi. "Wormhole," Jane said, getting in the last word. dish and dug in, oblivious. "About the end of life as we know it?"
Philip took Melior's
Naomi prompted helpfully.
Melior looked around at them all-wondering, Ruth suspected, why a group of mere humans took so little interest in a real live elf and his enchanted passions. Little did he know how wondrously the real world concentrated the mind-after a go at page one of the Times no one had much emotional energy left for any one else's problems, no matter how exotic the anyone. Other people's problems were distractions. And distractions made you lose your place on the ladder-not even of success, that would be too venal, but of simple garden variety survival. Of course, after an eon or two of being, well, sensible, you got the reckless urge to gamble. To trade on other people's good natures, as they had so long traded on yours. In short, thought Ruth crossly and personally, one day you decide to chuck it all and get stupid. "The end of life as you know it," Melior repeated. "Perhaps. Perhaps only the ending of a great many lives. You did not, either of you, find word of the Sword in your travels?" He looked hopefully at Michael and Philip.
"That's another reason I went down to the Museum with your spurs today. I'm guessing that if the sword is hocked, sold, restolen, or just sent off to be appraised, Stainless Steve'll get a hold of it at some point, or hear about it. As of today, he hadn't." "Nothing on the boards," said Philip. something will turn up."
"I posted the reward.
Maybe
"No," Melior said sadly. "If this-" he gestured with his signet ring, "-has even a little magic, the Sword's wards will be in full effect. At least for a while, and this while is far too long for whoever has it." "You keep saying that," Jane said, from the corner into which she was barricaded. The Coke-bottle lenses of her horn-rims turned to silver coins in the light as she tilted her head. "You keep saying that, but could you be a little more specific?" "Very well, Mistress Jane, since you most particularly ask it. The Sword of Maiden's Tears is, from a human's point of view, cursed. One of the oldest and simplest spells-and most powerful. Powerful enough, I fear, to work even here. "Once a human seizes upon the Sword, he will begin a transformation. A metamorphosis into a monster whose only food is the flesh of the humans who were once his own kind, and whose only desire is to retain possession of the Sword. A reasonable desire, that, as once the transformation takes place, the Sword is the only thing that can kill him." "What about an atomic grenade?"
asked Philip.
"Have you got an atomic grenade, Philip?"
asked Jane.
"The only thing," Melior repeated. "Not fire, not sorcery, not boiling lead nor cold iron. The Sword alone will slay the grendel There was a pause. "Beowulf," said Jane. "By the shore of Gitche Gumee/By the shining Big-Sea-Water?" Michael inquiringly. "Wrong poem," said Ruth.
quoted
"That's Longfellow."
"Grendel is a proper name," said Jane. "The name of the monster who slew-and ate-King Hrothgar's warriors every night until Beowulf slew him. By ripping his arm off," Jane added, with gloomy relish. "It's an epic Olde English poem from around 1000." "Grendels are bespelled humans," Melior said. "They are often used as guards. The transformation cannot be reversed, as it feeds upon a human's inmost heart to find the fuel for its work." "Real scientific, Elfie," breathed Philip. "Never mind the details," said Naomi just a little sharply. "So you're saying that whoever has that sword of yours will turn into a cannibal
monster?" "No. Only any human who seizes it. Against the Morning Lords this magic will have no effect. It was thought, at the time, to be a security measure," Melior said disgustedly. "Okay, one monster. Height, weight, distinguishing marks? address?" asked Michael.
Last known
Melior looked at him as if he suspected, for a moment, that Michael might be joking. Then he relaxed with a visible effort. "If I knew where it was, Friend Michael, I would go there and take the Sword back. Each hour it possesses the Sword renders it more powerful. And each kill. As it kills-and feeds-this hapless human will begin to grow, and change. A grendel never ceases to grow; some I have seen are enormous. The larger they are, the less human their form; they begin to go about on all fours......... Melior roused himself from what appeared to be a private memory. "You will know the grendel because it will not look elvish or human. And because it will be trying to kill you." "Terrific," said Michael. "Could you be a little more specific?" said Jane. "Like, how stupid is it? And if it walks around in broad daylight munching people, somebody's going to notice." The grendel is cunning, but is said to lack human reason. They shun the light; the older ones can stand it for short periods, but a man when he is first made grendel will instinctively retreat to a cave or other cover of darkness. As for the kills-" again Melior shrugged, and an expression of helpless frustration made a mask of his features, "-I had hoped they would be noticed, and reported to the magistrate or mayor of this town-" Philip snorted. "-but now I know they will not be." hands.
Melior put his head in his
After a moment's hesitation, Ruth put an arm about his shoulders. "That isn't true." Everyone looked at Naomi. There was a frown line between her eyes, as if she were trying to reason something out. She ticked off the points on her fingers as she spoke. "We have a mugger who has your sword. Having it-you say-will turn him into a monster, a grendel that will murder-" " And eat," said Philip helpfully. "And eat people, hide during the day, and can't be killed by anything but your sword. What does that suggest to everybody? Come on: the category is Fairy Tales and Folklore." "I'd like to buy a vowel, Vanna," Michael said. him.
Naomi made a face at
"Werewolves?"
said Ruth finally.
"Got it in one. And do you think werewolves won't make the six o'clock news? He'll turn up," Naomi said grimly. Melior looked at her, suddenly hopeful. "One could wish," he said carefully, "that it did not require so many deaths to reveal his presence." "It's okay," Jane said comfortingly. them, they'd probably die anyway."
"If your werewolf didn't kill
"Almost certainly, given enough time," Ruth said editorially. "But it would be nice to catch our elvish Godzilia before he started racking up a body count," Michael said, "if only for neatness' sake." "How?" voice.
said Philip, in his best "imitation of someone being helpful"
"Consider his airs and his graces/And the way he kicks over the traces/The shape of his head/And the width of his bed/And be sure that you cover all bases," singsonged Jane from some lost mine of doggerel. "For the Snark was a boojum, so you see," added Naomi. Melior looked from one to the next, baffled. "Don't worry about it." all the time."
Ruth squeezed his shoulder.
"We're like this
"Except when we're worse," Philip said, grinning evilly. "But we'll help," said Michael firmly.
"Right, guys?"
There was a pause, during which no one disagreed. "What else have we got to do with our time," said Philip. higher learning?"
"Pursue
"Okay," said Naomi. "I declare the first official meeting of the New York Council on Elvish Affairs closed. We help Melior find his sword." And what then? Ruth wondered, almost twenty-four hours later. The party the night before had broken up late; Melior departing with Michael and the maps of New York City that Jane had brought. Ten miles by two and home to eleven million people-how were they going to find one enchanted werewolf in all that? Especially since it's so full of neighborhoods that I don't think even a werewolf would enter alone, Ruth thought. She stared at her textbook. She'd been staring at the same page for half an hour and had yet to make sense of it. She had no real reason for believing that Melior would come to the apartment today. He'd gone home with Michael. Ruth fingered the
bundle of currency on the table before her.
And forgotten his money.
Why should Melior think anything more of her than he did of any of the others? So she'd taken him shopping, for God's sake. It wasn't as if it were the equivalent of a formal proposal. Just because he was the most exciting, exotic thing to happen to her ever. . . . Didn't mean that the reverse was true. The phone rang. "Hello?" "I wish to speak to Ruth." uncertain. "Melior?
It's me.
Ruth.
Melior's voice, sounding small and
How are you?"
"I am arrested. They have said I may make one telephone call. not know who else to call, Ruth."
I did
Ruth had never been any closer to a police station than an episode of Hill Street Blues and she didn't want to be here now. She had the wholly unfair superstitious feeling that she would be arrested, too; not for anything she had done or not done, but simply at some draconian whim. Ruth had been under the grindstone of the system; it was not an experience she cared to repeat. "Excuse me," Ruth said carefully to the receptionist, "I'm here to pick up somebody." I hope. And there civilized converse ended, because she had no idea what sort of name Melior might have given-if any-and she knew he didn't have any ID on him. But the receptionist, if not exactly gracious, was patient with Ruth's patent bewilderment, and soon Ruth found herself talking to a uniformed sergeant who was equally disinterested, and equally patient. What was her relation to the individual? When had he been arrested? Did she know the charge? "I don't know," Ruth repeated helplessly, beginning to want to cry. She wished that she'd waited for Naomi, or called Michael, or even asked Jane to go with her. She'd never felt so helpless. "I don't know; he called me maybe an hour ago. Do I need a lawyer? Can I see him?" There were none of the comfortable courtesies of Televisionland available here; when she saw Melior again, it was in the middle of a crowded hallway, and his hands were cuffed in front of him and he was sitting on a crowded bench with a number of other people, all under the watchful eye of a policeman. The black leather jacket that had made him look so trendy yesterday was scuffed now and only made him look hoodish; the mirrorshades lent his face an alien reptilian coldness. "Ruth!" sent for handcuff snapshot
he exclaimed, and, to the uniformed patrolman, "There! I have my hostage-now release me." He jumped to his feet and the chain jangled as Melior pulled on it. Ruth had a sudden vision of the links breaking outright. The cop put a hand on
his baton-and who could blame him?, Ruth thought with a dash of desperate empathy. "Nice to see you, too," she said, her voice shaking only slightly. "Good thing you remembered my number." "Are you his sister, ma'am?" "Yes.
Yes, I am.
the policeman asked.
Please, what has he done?"
"Tried to beat the fare. Refused to take his summons. pay his fine now, you can both go home."
If you want to
Ruth felt her knees go weak; the giddy relief was like half a bottle of Scotch. "Yes. Yes, thank you. I'll pay the fine." The officer took a clipboard off the wall and sorted through the papers on it. He removed a sheet and handed it to Ruth. "Room 202, ma'am. The clerk will give you a receipt to bring back here." Ruth took the paper. The policeman pointed off down the hall. Melior started to follow, and the policeman put a hand on his shoulder, warningly. Melior looked ready to explode. "Sit down," snapped Ruth, as to an erring collie. your manners. I'll be back as soon as I can."
"Wait here and mind
Luck; oh, blessed luck. Oh, don't let the fine be more than I've got on me, Ruth prayed to herself, but surely it couldn't be more than five thousand dollars if they were willing to let him go without booking him. She looked at the page in her hands, but all she could make out in that handwritten hash were the typeset words at the top of the form. "Arresting Officer's Report" it said. But he hasn't been arrested He I-L4SN'T And I can get him out of here. And then I'm going to kill him. The fine, counting everything, came to seven hundred and sixty-eight dollars. Ruth received a computer-generated receipt that listed dollar amounts next to citations from the New York Civil Code. A few hours in the library tomorrow and she could find out everything that Melior had done. She already knew the worst. "Fare beating," the clerk said. She wasn't wearing any uniform, just a photo ID with a name Ruth couldn't make out; she looked freeze-dried into some eternal senescence, Ruth's own nightmare of what she herself would resemble in twenty years' time, brought to Madame Tussaud life. "Cheaper to pay the fare than the fine." It's not his fault. He didn't know. He's from out-of-town, Ruth wanted to say and didn't. Even as she chose not to argue it, she
wondered if there might be some mistake. Yesterday Melior had flatly refused to go back into the subway tunnels. Why, today, should he be trying to beat the fare? Mutely Ruth handed over currency and received her change and receipt. She went back downstairs with her paperwork and handed it to the uniformed officer, who inspected it carefully before reaching for the key to Melior's cuffs. "Tell him to behave himself-next time we might not be so backed up. This is in the computers, even if we didn't book him," the cop said in a weary voice. "Thank you," Ruth repeated, her own words giving her a sense of inanity, as if she were some kind of celluloid puppet; one of those springloaded things with a head eternally nodding. "Thank you very much." Finally they let her take Melior away. It was Sunday, May second, a drizzly gray evening on 42nd Streetand probably the rest of Manhattan-when Ruth and Melior emerged from the Transit Police station. The sense of freedom was overpowering; even though Ruth had been in no danger, she was trembling with exhaustion and the aftereffects of stress. And I've got a nine o'clock class tomorrow.
Terrific.
"Would you like to tell me just what that was all about? It's a damn good thing you had my number-and just how did that happen, by the way?" Ruth asked. "Michael told it to me.
He said I might have need of it."
"He was right. And I'm still waiting for an explanation. If I hadn't had that cash from last night, you'd still be in there, you know -and if you had to go before a judge, I really don't think he'd be impressed with your More Tales From Elfland biography." "I saw it, Ruth," Melior's voice vibrated with utter conviction. "I saw the grendel I was this close." He measured a space in the air with his hands. "So you jumped over the turnstile to follow him," Ruth said flatly. Melior nodded. "There was shouting. There was a man on the platform-I know what your guardsmen's uniforms look like, now, but I did not then and he seized me. The grendel got into a subway car. And I did not," Melior said, rubbing the back of his head. "And nobody noticed they were in the same car with a grendel?" Ruth asked.
"No. It does not look any different yet, but the stink of high sorcery is on it. It is a scent your human noses do not catch, I think, for no one else remarked him. Yet it was he. So close-I sensed it-!" "I sense the presence of Bellevue if you're not more careful!" Ruth snapped. "What if I hadn't been home? What if you'd gotten hurt?" "Hurt?" Melior cried, stopping to stare at her. already!
"I am slain
Don't you understand? I'm lost-thwarted at every turn by the World of Iron, by the thousands who choke the streets of your city! He hunts where I am helpless, thwarted by his kindred! I'll never catch him-never! This beast hasn't a single throat-" Melior was shouting, now, and even in Times Square people were stopping to look. "The people-that great beast!" that.
Ruth tried to remember who'd said
Alexander Hamilton? It was like him-the elitist of his day. Maybe Alexander Hamilton would have understood Rohannan Melior; God knew, Ruth didn't. "Oh, will you shut up? weary anger. "How?"
Things can get worse-trust me," Ruth said with
Melior turned on her savagely.
"How worse than my failure?"
"Well," said Ruth viciously, "you might have to live with it.
Here."
And it was unholy what a shameless pleasure that thought gave her. "Ah. Yes." Melior struggled with his surging emotions and won through to a white-lipped calm. "Very well. Walk with me, Ruth." Bridled by guilt, she walked up Broadway with him as the day darkened. A mingy rain began to fall again; both of them ignored it. It sparkled on Melior's hair like crystal heading, too light yet to soak in. Late afternoon on a Sunday, and raining besides-the streets were almost empty (for New York). They jagged sideways, onto Fifth Avenue, and after a while Melior began to speak. "I began where I had sensed him once. I spent all night studying maps-I was certain I could find him, no matter his resort. It is a handful of days since he and his fellow shamefully defeated me; weak yet. As weak as he will ever be. Perhaps, even, he has not yet.
the only he is fed
And he escaped me." Melior's voice was flat, uninflected. "And so he will continue to do, in this bizarre land where everything is out of joint. Whereas he, though a beast out of nightmare, knows what I do not, and can thereby twist the unjust laws of this insane realm to thwart me at every turn." "Now just a minute, Hamlet," Ruth began.
"Tell me wherein I am in error, Ruth," Melior purred silkily. "Tell me how well I manage myself in this place. I am taken into custody for an offense I do not recognize as I commit it, children stare at me upon the streets, I cannot even read the handbills that are posted." Melior gestured at a passing bank window, filled with posters advertising its services. "Okay," said Ruth. up.
"You've convinced me.
You're a failure.
Give
Go home." They walked on in silence. Ruth wondered if she'd hurt him, or offended him, or if he'd even noticed what she'd said. The sky continued to darken. Twilight. Evening. Night, in an hour or two. Sunset was at 6:48, if she remembered rightly. Ruth Marlowe, compulsive memorizer of vital statistics. Today, unencumbered by packages or places to be, she was willing to walk, yea, even unto 96th Street, where Michael lived. They were passing 50th Street now. Rockefeller Center, Saks, Saint Patrick's Cathedral. "How?" "What?"
Melior said at last. Ruth said.
"How shall I give up-and go home? Sorcery sent me here, to this place where sorcery goes awry. Without the Sword I cannot begin to hope of returning." "And with the Sword?"
Ruth asked.
"With the Sword, I may hope, " Melior said, choosing his words precisely. He sighed. "I play with words and try your patience, Mistress Ruth. I cannot give up.
I shall blunder on, hopeless, until I die."
""There's just no word to describe your behavior at times, Don Quixote,' " Ruth said, quoting the caption from a long-ago New Yorker cartoon. Melior shrugged. "You do have local help," Ruth said, trying again. Silence. Ruth grabbed his sleeve and hauled Melior to a stop. "Look, just what is it that you want me to say? 'Give up'? You've already-" Melior seized her in turn. And kissed her. Ruth was not a cloistered nun. In her lifetime she had certainly been kissed and more than kissed on enough occasions that the act itself did not come as total surprise. On the majority of those occasions, however, Ruth's consent and cooperation had at least been solicited. Melior solicited neither. With expert efficiency he pulled her close, pressing her body against him as if he were trying to drown in it. And for one moment Ruth was willing to help him. But "Not here!" She pushed him furiously away-Melior let her go-and uttered the first words that came to her. "Are you out of your mind?" She looked quickly
around, but no one seemed to have taken advantage of this momentary lapse to pickpocket, mug, or worse, either of them. Madness, to become so distracted on a city street. "Yes," said Melior. "No. If not here, Ruth, then where?" His intensity had no leavening gleam of mockery now, and Ruth's mind steadfastly refused to make any sense of the situation. Suddenly she felt as if New York was as alien to her as it surely must be to Melior. Why had he done it and what should she do? Her mouth felt bruised, sensitized, tingling and tender and naked. That it was beyond silly-what would a lord of Faery want with Ruth Marlowe-did not, somehow, ameliorate the physical sensations one whit. It took nearly all of her fast-fading store of common sense to pull free from the remains of Melior's grip and start walking once more. She ducked her head and strode as if her life's ambition were to outrace Melior. Unfortunately, he had no trouble at all keeping up. "Do you reject me?"
Melior asked, coming up beside her.
"You can't just go and kiss someone on a public street," Ruth countered. "Something could happen." "I did not kiss 'someone."
I kissed you."
"Well, why don't we just forget about that, okay?" Ruth's cheeks burned; her heart rattled its ivory cage far faster than brisk walking could account for. Melior had added a fresh and unwelcome dimension to the puzzle he presented, and wide new vistas of ghastly humiliation opened before her. "Why don't we not?" he said in her ear. "Hold yourself my guide and preceptress; do you not, who knows what harm I may get myself into? I might, perchance, kiss young Mistress Jane," he added lightly. Despite everything, the mental image so conjured made Ruth giggle. "She'd kill you," Ruth said. And then, more soberly, "Don't. She wouldn't like it." Not quite against her will Ruth slowed to a normal walking pace. 59th Street. Columbus Circle. Central Park. "Even I has yet time?" despite
know that," Melior chided her. "The paladin for Mistress Jane to win his spurs. While I-" "You're just looking for a good Ruth said. She'd meant it to be light, nonthreatening, but herself her voice skirled and flattened, exposing pain.
"No!" Melior protested. "I want-I meant-" he stopped. passing fair, Mistress Ruth."
"I find you
The opening was too good to miss; without conscious volition her internal monologist took over." 'Passing fair, passing strange-sorry, just passing through,' " Ruth quoted airily." "The same thing happened twice last week: O' heaven help the working
elf."' "Do you reject me, Ruth?"
Melior softly repeated.
Oh, heavens no; just what I need to round out my year; a one night stand with a passing elf-king. "I think," Ruth said carefully, "that we come from two different worlds-" Melior was surprised into a bark of laughter; only then did Ruth realize what she had said. She laughed, too, the sound a little strained with tension. "Right," she said. "Literally true. But you may be taking things for granted that we don't-here; and just maybe this isn't such a good time to rush into things? Besides, shouldn't you be thinking about how to off this grendel? You can do it; of course you can." She chattered on, hating the sound of her own voice and the way she was talking so he wouldn't, because she was more afraid of what Melior might say than of what he would leave unsaid, because, because, because. . . . You wanted an adventure, Ruth told herself brutally. You wanted things to be different, a chance to be . . . senseless? Insensible? Well, whatever the opposite of sensible is. You wanted it. You got it. Now quit whining. "And with you beside me my fortune is assured," Melior agreed ambiguously into the silence. "Is there ever a good time to rush into things?" he added rhetorically. "But there is no time, Ruth. There is no time left at all." Sheer moral cowardice and the passionate desire to end this discussion kept Ruth silent; but even through her confusion a faint traitorous voice insisted that she, that Melior, that all of them were overlooking something vitally important. Gather, Darkness IN SCATTERED MOMENTS of lucidity Kevin Shelby labeled Friday night the Last Good Time. Friday night-before. Before he had done what he did not have the strength to avoid doing, before he had firmly and irrevocably overstepped the line that separates the Okay People from those who have Really Bagged It. Without knowing it, Kevin had always valued his self-esteem; his own good opinion of himself, the certainty that he'd always been right; justifiable. Now that sweet self-content was gone. It was as if some warm covering had been stripped from his ego, and something raw and red stood snarling in the chill. But he had the sword. The sword, and nothing else. He'd held it in his arms all that horrible Friday night, clutching at the hilt and staring into its jewels in order not to see Roy's body lying on the floor. He'd thought it would be bloodier, somehow.
More blood, and redder.
The way it was in the movies. It wasn't like that, but Roy was still dead. Did it matter? Did it maybe not count because it had happened all wrong? Would the ever-present all-seeing They forgive it and forget it because he hadn't meant it to come out quite that way and besides it was all Roy's fault to begin with? Would someone, anyone, please give him a second chance?
No.
Bright, educated, admonished all his life to Be a man, Kevin.
-accept responsibility, Kevin Shelby knew the truth. No excuses. No second chances. Roy was dead and it was Kevin's fault. He'd killed him, and the weight of self-loathing, self-contempt, slid like a stone curtain between his life before and life after, cutting him off from contentment and filling his vision of the world with poison. But he still had the sword. And to make all of this, any of this matter, to ensure that Roy Turpin had not died for nothing at all, Kevin had to keep it. He could not stay here. Toward dawn that simple fact of self-preservation penetrated Kevin's consciousness. He became aware of what he had been smelling for some time-the thick organic scent of Roy. The body on the floor.
Nothing to do with me.
Nothing!
Roy who was dead as a doornail, as last year's elections, as history. Roy was dead, dead, dead and decomposing, the blood on the floor pooled and drying to black jelly, the shards and gobbets dried and starting to look like any meat you'd accidentally left out of the fridge overnight, the smell of piss and shit transforming the body on the floor into just another Bowery bum. A disposable wreck. Human garbage. And eventually even the super in this building would bang on the door and then use his key, wanting to find out just what trouble his tenant was making for him now. Then there would be police. And police would almost certainly want to know how Roy, how the body on the floor had come to be here. They would find Kevin's sword, and take it away, and then everything that had happened to Roy, that had happened to Kevin, would all be for nothing. So Kevin got up. He pulled down the window shades because the glaring pink light gave him a headache. He turned back, and without thought the sword flickered in his hand like summer lightning, carving through . . . it as if it were hot butter, and when it had struck, Roy Turpin's head rolled free, gathering motion from the canted floor until it banged gently into the television set. Kevin carefully wiped the blade of the sword on the couch and went into the kitchen, already forgetting what he had just done. He drank a glass of water, holding the sword point down like a dangerous walking stick. He threw up the water and everything else left in his stomach all over the dirty dishes in the sink and the clean ones in the drainer, and felt a certain cheap exultation because he didn't have to clean it up-he never had to clean anything up again. Then he drank some orange juice right from the bottle, and dropped the bottle to shatter on the kitchen floor as the juice came right back up in a pang of cramping nausea, still orange, in a vaulting are that spattered the opposite wall. Kevin choked and spat, gagging, until his mouth was free of the rotten-sweet taste. Enough of this. He went into the bathroom-carefully not looking in the mirror and turned on the shower. And when the hot water had come up and the roaches been put to flight, Kevin took off all his clothes, gleefully popping buttons, and stood under the hot water and scrubbed and
scrubbed until no possible trace of Roy remained on his skin or in his hair. Through all this the sword stood propped against the wall, glinting faint rainbows in the gelid dawn light. Then Kevin stepped out of the tub-not bothering to mop uptoweled himself off, and went into his bedroom. He pulled the blinds in here, too, a faint pang of worry breaking through for the first time. It was so bright out there. He felt the pounding behind his eyes already, the foretaste of a really bad headache. What if going outside gave him so bad a headache that something happened to the sword? But he wouldn't think about that now. He'd think about that when he was ready. He polished the sword clean on the bedsheets, but once that was done and the covers had been pulled straight to provide a suitable backdrop for it, only the sword's presence proved that anything strange had happened in Kevin's life at all. That was when Kevin had his great idea. Maybe it was the light, or the memory of the last hopeful point in his life before the slide down to the Last Good Time. Maybe it was that, down deep under it all, Kevin Shelby was no fool, and smart enough to know how much anonymity a uniform gives. And knew, too, a place where he could vanish, far away from the light of the sun. Kevin took down his track worker's uniform; the steeltoed safety boots, the gray work pants, the long-sleeved gray shirt with its sewn-on patches. He found his photo-ID and clipped it to his pocket. The authorization was out-of-date, but he wouldn't be needing to show it. And when he finally stood and looked in the mirror, he looked-ordinary. Kevin smiled. room.
He picked up the sword and crossed the hall to Roy's
Probably if he'd known he wasn't coming back, he would have been neater. The thought made Kevin smile; with a swift gesture he stabbed the sword down, two-handed, at the center of Roy's unmade bed. It slid smoothly through mattress and box spring, stopping as its point touched the floor. Kevin released it, and it wobbled gently back and forth, held upright in place by the mattress stuffing. Kevin thought it looked just like Excalibur in all the movies. this one was his. He was King Arthur. 'Awyight.
But
. . . " Kevin breathed to himself, momentarily distracted.
Then he searched the room and the closet, and when he was done he had Roy's blue nylon bomber jacket, worn on those outings when Roy wanted to convince someone he was a police officer or at least a security guard. It had an American flag patch sewn on one shoulder and a Seal of New York patch sewn on the other, and neither of these easily-obtainable things by itself conferred legitimacy, although they looked very convincing.
Then there was Roy's secret store of cash-five hundred dollars, stuffed in an envelope taped to the back of the dresser. But Kevin hadn't grown up with five brothers without learning about hiding places like that. He put Roy's money into his wallet and looked for the last thing that must be here, because he knew Roy had a pair and because Roy hadn't been wearing them last night. He found them at last, pushed to the back of a drawer he'd already checked twice. Ray-Ban sunglasses, just like the Terminator wore. Kevin put them on, and the light dimmed to a much more acceptable level. His mouth was dry and cottony, and his stomach growled with unfulfilled hunger. But he was ready to leave. Almost. With shaking hands, Kevin carefully withdrew the sword from its mattress anvil. It glowed, whispering promises to him alone. If he carried it openly like this, they would take it from him. Kevin frowned. He rested the point of the sword on the floor. Upright, its length measured him to mid-chest; the pulsing jewel of the pommel resting over his heart. He had to disguise it somehow. A guitar case might have concealed it-if there were guitar cases that were five foot long, and Kevin didn't think there were. A rifle case, maybe, only the crosspiece wouldn't fit inside and anyway, a rifle case was just as bad a thing to try to carry through the streets of New York. He thought about it very hard, and then sacrificed his record collection to sheathe the entire sword, blade tip to pommel, in album covers. He wrapped that in newspaper, and the newspaper in garbage bags, and strapped the resulting package in every conceivable direction with heavy silver duct tape. A friend of Kevin's had once said that duct tape was the force that held the universe together. Well, maybe it was. He hefted the final package experimentally. It was clumsy, but no one would suspect it contained a sword-his sword. No one would suspect it and no one would take it and it would be safe, he would be safe. . . . If he could only get to the subway. Dressed and ready to go, the bundled sword balanced precariously under one arm, Kevin lifted one corner of the living-room shade and peered out. The sunlight made him hiss-even through the sunglasses the light was a blue-white hammer of pain. He dropped the shade. He couldn't go out in that. He was hurt, he was sick- Kevin rested the sword gently against the wall and used both hands to clutch his temples. He whimpered, deep in the back of his throat. He had killed Roy-and Roy was his friend-and in that one irrevocable act he had wiped out all future content. But he'd had to. Roy'd been going to take the sword away. They'd see that. They'd have to. And it was only Roy, and Roy (let's be honest) was just a cheap hood, a mugger; and compared to all that Kevin could
achieve, would have achieved already if he'd only had the luck, just a little luck, a little. . . . It took him an hour to convince himself to leave the apartment, and in his pumped-up desperate haste to go and be gone before he lost his nerve, he left the door unlocked. Encouraged by the uneven slant of wall and floor in the ancient apartment building, the door drifted slowly open. When the super came upstairs to mop the hallway at nine o'clock, he found it open. He called out. Then he looked inside. Then he called the police, but by then Kevin Shelby was already far away, riding the underground railroad, his own private newly-renovated carousel, round and round and round. His train passed through the 34th Street station for the umpteenth time a few hours later, and Kevin had no inkling how close he'd come to last night's victim. Last night's first victim. Kevin had other problems of a more pressing nature. and thirst and guilt. And fear.
Problems of hunger
That he was losing his mind. Or that he wasn't. Through a Glass Menagerie, Darkly IT WAS PITCH-DARK and her feet were tired by the time they reached Michael's apartment, but even so Ruth hated to leave Melior here and begin her lonely walk farther north. From her sidewalk vantage point she could look up and see that the lights were on in Michael's apartment. No fear of leaving Melior to a chill and empty room in an alien land, then. The window was surrounded by ornamental bands of molded concrete; old, gray, baroque, and prewar. The shades were raised, giving Ruth an unimpeded view of the livingroom ceiling five stories away. "He's in," Ruth announced. "Come up," Melior urged. "Michael will have to know of this, and undoubtedly you can tell him of that which I will omit." For one paralyzed moment Ruth thought Melior meant the incident of the kiss; then her mind unstuck itself from that broken record track and she realized that he meant the arrest and what had preceded it. With a charisma that undoubtedly commanded troops in Elfland, Melior led Ruth through the front door and up the five flights of stairs to Michael's apartment. Swept along by the force of his personality, Ruth did not even stop to wonder if Michael might not be alone. Fortunately Philip was in plain sight as Michael swung open the door in answer to Melior's knock. Like the bad fairy in the tale, one forgot about Philip LeStrange at one's peril. "I am arrested," Melior announced, as one wanting to get the ill news
out of the way at once. Michael stood back to let them enter. Philip was lying at full length on the living-room rug and staring spellbound into the tiny screen of his laptop-or, tonight, carpet-top. Two wires led from it. One was a phone cord. In the background the television babbled self-referentially, volume turned down low. "Way to go," said Philip, removing one fist from his chin to hammer one-fingered at the keyboard. It was impossible to tell whether he was addressing Melior or the computer. "Arrested? Hi, Ruth. What happened?" them. There was a rattle of locks.
Michael closed the door behind
"Hi. I'm dead. Melior was arrested." Ruth walked across the room on legs that suddenly felt like lead to collapse on Michael's couch. She carefully did not look at Philip's keyboard. Where Philip was concerned, total ignorance was the better part of valor, in Ruth's educated opinion. "Pepsi. Diet Pepsi, ere I die," she enunciated, closing her eyes dramatically. "You're already dead," Philip reminded the ambient air punctiliously. Melior entered the room cautiously (Ruth could see from beneath lowered lashes) and perched on the edge of a chair, a hard-edged contemporary figure of black leather and mirrorshades. Only the sensuous curve of a pointed ear beneath the fall of platinum hair proclaimed him something else entirely. Michael went off to the kitchen, returning with those two staples of modern life, Diet Pepsi and potato chips. He deposited both beside Ruth. "Arrested, you said," Michael informed her inquiringly. "As in, police-arrested?" He sat down on the arm of the couch, which creaked but seemed resigned to such treatment. "Fare-beating," Ruth said comprehensively. She grabbed the nearest ice-cold recyclable aluminum five cents deposit in the following states can, popped the top with expert fingernails, and quaffed nonnutritive sweeteners to the full. Thus refreshed, she was able to sit up. "The transit cops nicked him." "Good going, Elfie," Philip said. Melior removed himself from his high seat to crouch beside Philip, watching whatever was going on in liquid-crystal cyberspace. "It isn't as if he doesn't have the fare," Michael said off-handedly. "Plus about four thousand and several hundred more dollars." "Not any more," Ruth said. "And besides, he'd left it at my housewhich was lucky, since I was his one phone call." Quickly, then, Ruth explained the rest: her trip down to the station, the good luck that let her ransom Melior without his ever really being booked, the ruinous cost of that one heedless turnstile vault.
"And he doesn't even like the subway. So we walked back," Ruth finished, leaving out great gobs of the story and hoping Michael wouldn't notice. "If you are quite through with inessentials," Melior said crossly, prove your teeth on this truth: if not for that guardsman's interference, I might have captured the grendel So close to me it was, and still in the form of mortal man-and the Sword with it, though I saw it not." "Yeah," said Philip in a meant-to-be-overheard aside, "but you didn't. You got caught.
Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades."
Something must be going less than well for Philip; Ruth registered the fact clinically without having the slightest interest in finding out what it was. But for Philip to pick on Melior, who had a good six inches and a number of pounds on him, argued a more than usually complex death wish on Philip's part. Ruth opened the potato chips with a loud snap and crunched a handful furiously, following this with a second Diet Pepsi from the six-pack Michael had brought out into the living room. "And what," asked Melior with icy punctilio, "do you suggest I do?" In the corner some sitcom Ruth had never heard of revolved around its sacred couch in living color. Philip tapped some key that seemed to signal an end to the evening's computer activities. He looked up into Melior's face, oddly anachronistic bifocals gleaming. "Learn the rules.
Then break them."
"Which brings us to something I guess we should have covered earlier," Michael said on a deep breath. "Tactics." "As in'How We Do What We've Already Made Up Our Minds To is Strategic,' " Philip said in an "aching-to-be-slapped" voice. Melior rocked back on his haunches and rose to his feet. "Correct.
You know'What'but not'How,"' Michael said to Melior.
Suddenly Ruth was aware of a sudden upswing of tension in the room. Had she and Melior wandered into the middle of a fight between Michael and Philip? But Michael never fought with anyone; he was a great big infinitely tolerant teddy bear who practically bent over backward to avoid confrontation. That was why he and Naomi were so much alike. "Not so," Melior said evenly. "You forget, Friend Michael-I know precisely 'How." I must track the grendel to his lair, claim the Sword, and kill him with it." "Which you cannot do from Sing-Sing," Michael said. "Or Bellevue," Ruth added. She was completely exhausted and she hadn't studied and now there was going to be some kind of ugly sceneshe could taste it. Which meant she was going to feel like death on toast in the
morning.
Good-bye, one third of the final grade.
"You see, Melior, the, uh, real world has rules," Michael was saying, still with that charged politeness. "If you don't follow them, you're going to attract a lot of attention. And that is something you can't beat, believe me. They'll catch you, and if you're lucky they'll just think you're crazy and lock you up." "If I am lucky," Melior repeated in an inflectionless voice. "And if you're not lucky," Michael said, "they'll believe you. And then, my friend, you'll disappear into some five-sided room down in Washington, while they try to find out who you really are and where you come from." "And how they can get there," Philip said unexpectedly, while Ruth tried not to stare at Michael-or indeed, at anything at all. Was this Michael spouting Oliver Stone conspiracy theories? Michael? Philip folded up his computer and unhooked it from the phone. glanced at Ruth, then away, his shoulders hunched familiarly. think of all those taxpayers," he added obliquely. "Aren't you both being a little pessimistic?" happened to Klaatu barrada nicto? Or IDIC?"
Ruth said.
He "Just
"Whatever
"Star Trek, " said Philip with the scorn of one who was born the year it was canceled. Michael had the grace to look at least a little embarrassed. "Well, maybe that wouldn't happen," he admitted. "But whatever happens once you're discovered, you're here illegally, and you're not human, Melior, so you've just got to be real careful-" "That the soulless drones you call your landsmen do not know me for what I am, lest I suffer the same unwelcome fate as any other intruder into an ant's nest." There was a brief silence. "Yeah," said Philip, "something like that. So make up your mind, Elfie, whether you want to do it your way-or do it." On that note, Philip got to his feet and reached for his jacket. He tucked his computer back into his knapsack and slung that over his shoulder. "This is going to be a stupid conversation. See you tomorrow, Michael. Coming, Ruth?" Ruth was so surprised to be considered by Philip that she let the moment pass her completely by. Not getting an answer he shrugged, turned, and left, pulling the door shut with a jingle of hardware behind him. Michael went to lock it. Melior sat down at the opposite end of the couch from Ruth, taking Michael's place. "What I like about Philip," observed Ruth after a moment, "is his unstudied naturalness; his total freedom from the toils of worn, outmoded, convention. For he is a child of Nature, and takes after his mother." It wasn't quite fair; but on the other hand, Philip wasn't here any more either. "But is he right?"
asked Melior.
"Yeah," said Michael, coming back. "He is. That's the problem." He pulled up the stool to make the point of an invisible triangle halfway between Melior and Ruth, and sat down on it. "Your problem," Ruth added, with a mean-spiritedness that surprised her. But Melior did not seem to be able to understand that, Ruth realized with a sinking feeling about half an hour later. This was what the strange "before-a-storm" feeling was all about; this particular argument must have been building since Michael took Melior home with him on Friday night. Over and over again Michael explained about how big the city was, how intolerant this particular civilization was of error or transgression, how different from a land with elves in shining armor where men made war on horseback. Melior was a stranger here; his only hope of moving freely about the city-of moving freely at allwas to not be noticed, not really. Once he was seen for what he was, it would be all over, and the possibilities after that ranged the Gothic gamut from guest appearances on Oprah to being winkled down some Alphabet Agency rabbit-hole and never being seen again. Along with all the rest of them, of course, just to make things interesting. Ruth believed him. he was right.
Why not?
Michael made perfect sense-and besides,
And over and over Melior patiently explained that these things did not interest him-that all he wanted was the sword, and given that, he would give them also his solemn word to trouble them no more. "Look," Michael said finally, long after the time when Ruth would have been reduced to interrogative screaming. "You've said you want our help. That you need it. And, frankly, you owe Ruth here a helluva lot. So. Bottom line.
How reasonable are you going to be?"
"I am being reasonable, Friend Michael," Melior began once more. "You are not being reasonable!" Michael's full-throated bellow sent the adrenaline of shock rinsing through Ruth's overtaxed veins. She stared at him in horror. He was on his feet, and, as she watched, Melior got to his feet also. The two of them faced one another like mirror images. "You-are not-being reasonable!" Michael shouted. "You are saying we're all going to do it your way-and I am here to tell you, my pointy-eared elf-boyo, as you seem to be a little hard of hearing, that your way Will-! Not-! Work-!" Sheer volume flattened Ruth in her seat. She heard him, Melior heard him, probably everyone else in the building heard him. "Now the question you have got to ask yourself is whether you believe me. Are you saying to yourself this mere human has an agenda of his own'? You're right. I don't want to be arrested or any other thing
for having anything to do with you when you run right smack up against a system that's just too alien for you to understand. Because you do that and you're going down, my friend, and it just might be that you don't know how far down Down can be." Michael was breathing very hard and talking very fast, low now and intense with his face flushed and his breathing ragged. Ruth watched him with the spellbound intensity of one who has seen a teddy bear turn into a wolverine right before her eyes. In the spaces between his words the television, unregarded, whispered its gibberish below the level of the senses. "But there's another way. Our way. My way. You do it that way and it just might work. You might get what you want. But there's no more going off alone. There's no more plans that you try without clearing it with one of us. This is going to have to be a team effort, and if the way we do things looks silly to you, it's just going to have to look silly and you're just going to have to do it anyway, because our way-my way-is the only way things are going to get done." Ruth continued to stare at Michael as if she'd never seen him before-and in some sense of the word, she hadn't. Not this Michael. "And if I do not do things your way?"
Melior asked.
"Then walk right out that door and keep on walking, elf-lord. us wants anything to do with you."
None of
Ruth would have opened her mouth to protest, but some pang of self-preservation kept her silent. With clinical detachment she noted unconnected things. The beads of sweat rolling down Michael's face. The tightness of his clenched fists. The brilliant green of Melior's eyes, open very wide and fixed unblinkingly upon Michael, as if Melior were some strange cockatrice that could slay with a gaze. The moment stretched, until Ruth thought the tension of waiting to see how it would end would make her scream. "Then, it seems, I must accede to your terms, Michael of the World of Iron. And I wish you joy of them." Melior's voice was so even Ruth nearly missed the capitulation. When Michael turned away, she actually twitched; a jump dying stillborn. "That's okay, then," Michael said in a voice that only shook slightly. He ran a hand over his forehead. Ruth handed him a Diet Pepsi. He popped the top and poured the entire contents of the can down his throat; a masculine gesture Ruth envied even while wondering how it was that men could do things like that and she couldn't. "The first thing you've got to do is, always pay your fare in the subway. And the second thing is, when you go out looking, you've always got to take a native guide." "And the third thing is, when I see my lawful prey, I should turn away again and pretend I do not." Melior's voice was flat.
"Maybe." Michael's voice was equally uncompromising. "Because it might just be that if you jumped him just then, he'd get away. Or a bunch of people'd get killed. Or you'd get dead. You don't know the rules, man, and if anything you've said is true, you don't have time to learn them." "It is you who do not have time, Michael. The grendel preys on manflesh. His appetite is as endless as the ocean, and as he feeds he grows. With so many tempting morsels for his plate, soon he will be immense. But his appetite will be greater." It was too much tension; Ruth had to focus on anything other than them. And so she was staring at the television when the ten o'clock news came on, and the screen flashed red with the display graphic for the lead news story. "Shut up!"
Ruth hissed.
Michael looked where she was looking and lunged for the volume control. The newscaster's accentless midlantic diction filled the room. -errant case of cannibalism in the New York Subway, Spokesman Dale Werther of the Transit Authority explained." The screen jumped to the image of an anonymous bureaucrat in a suit standing on a vaguely familiar subway platform. He was the sort, Ruth thought, that you would automatically decide was lying, no matter what he said. Thirty years of selective nonstop disinformation in the form of high-pressure advertising had produced an American consumer so savy that he wouldn't even believe the truth. "Every year over two hundred riders expire while in the subway, for reasons having nothing to do with the subway services." "Like being mugged," Ruth said. "The tunnels are also home to a number of animals, one of which may have had access to the body before it was found. We are investigating-', "But the witnesses who found the body tell a different story," the news reader intercut smoothly. The news clip this time was of an older woman, indignant tears streaming down her face. The images were bleached and grailly, not the careful PR lighting of the spokesman. "I don't care what nobody says-somebody ate on him, and I don't think it's no rats, and he didn't just die there in the car!" "This footage was taken by one of the witnesses," the news reader said. "Transit officials could not be reached for further comment." Last image of all, and the strongest saved for last: the inside of the subway car, jiggly with a hand-held Minicam, the color grayed almost to black with poor light and bad film. The unaccustomed eye took a moment
to adjust, then enhanced the images to lucidity: the black streaks on the walls were spattered blood. The horribly altered bundle on the floor of the car was a body. (l Authorities are continuing their investigation." The screen went bright with the network logo. "And in Queens, a dyslexic woman teaches her daughter to read, back after this." Michael flipped off the television. Silently, he began to pace the length of the apartment, reminding Ruth of a caged leopard and making her wish she were somewhere else. The televised images-more vivid in retrospect-made Ruth's stomach churn in helpless fury. This was the dark side of the fairy tale: the monsters to match the princes. "And now he has gone to ground, in the trackless caves that lie beneath your city, and you say I may not hunt him?" Melior said bitterly. "The World of Iron is only a fable for sorcerers, but even so I did not think its men were mad." "Yeah, right," said Michael, who wasn't really listening. "But it isn't trackless," Ruth said in the over-reasonable tones of shock. Both men stared at her. "It's got plenty of tracks. Michael, Melior's talking about the subway. The monster's in the subway. And the subways are mapped " But strangely now it was Melior who held back. "The grendel has fed, and will be more dangerous with each passing hour. I must know its territory before I seek it out. I am no coward, but much rides upon my life: if I am slain, then the chance of the grendel's death dies with me." "I thought you said the sword was what would kill it?"
Ruth said.
"Aye, sweet Ruth, and who will wield it if I do not? For any mortal who takes it up will change as well, and another grendel will take the place of the first." "You have a point," Michael said.
"Do you have a plan?"
"I must go once more into the subterranean way, " Melior said seriously, "and travel its byways and turnings. Perhaps I will sense the Sword's nearness again. In any event, I shall gain an understanding of the ground over which I must fight." Michael thought about this. But one of us goes with you.
"Okay.
Tomorrow you ride the subway.
Ruth?"
Ruth hesitated. It seemed vastly mean-spirited to protest that she had her final exam in Cataloging tomorrow-except that she did, and if she missed it she might as well blow off graduating in June. And that meant the summer to get through without a job-maybe more if the course weren't being repeated until spring-and all of that meant money, time,
trouble.
. . .
"No; I forgot; we've got the Cat final tomorrow. And Naomi's rehearsing for her orals. That leaves Philip or Jane to go with you," Michael said inarguably. Just about then the phone rang. While Ruth was still looking around to try to find where it was this week, Michael grabbed it. "Hello? . . . yeah, she's here." ("Naomi," he mouthed at Ruth.) yeah, we saw the news. Mel thinks it's his grendel,- he wants to go check it out . . . of course not. I'm going to send Jane with him." After this last statement there was an extended pause, through which Michael listened with patient good humor. Which had been the only emotion Ruth had thought him capable of, before tonight. What was happening to all of them-was it Melior who was making them all unravel like badly-rolled string? "She can skip that," Michael said at last. More pausing, then: "Yeah, I know that, Nai, but do you think I ought to send Phil with him?" Ruth grinned to herself, and in truth that seemed to be a clinching argument, because soon after that he hung up. "Naomi says I'd better call you a cab. said agreeably.
So okay; you're a cab," Michael
"Gee, thanks," said Ruth. She stood up; looked around for coat and purse. The day had been full of too many strong emotions for her to feel anything at all now. The thought of the additional distance she had to cover was daunting, but Ruth had that vague distrust of taxis which a certain class of New Yorker feels, as if traveling by some means other than the preordained paths of buses and trains is somehow fraudulent and dishonest. "But seriously, folks," Michael said. He dialed another number and gave instructions to the dispatcher. "Be here in about fifteen minutes," he told Ruth. "Which gives us more than enough time to call up Jane and tell her she's cutting classes tomorrow-and why." Michael began again to dial. Ruth and Melior stood on the sidewalk in front of Michael's apartment, waiting for the cab. The spring darkness had closed in entirely, but here it did not frighten, instead lending the riverside the charm of unclarity. "Michael thinks my quest in vain; it angers him," Melior said. "Something did," Ruth pointed out. Her figurative ears still rang; who would ever have thought Michael could lose his temper? "He fears to know himself a coward, and twice fears to test the knowledge," Melior said simply. Michael a coward? Ruth shook her head in bafflement. She didn't think he was, but then she didn't think he was especially brave, either.
Cowardice and bravery, like honor, were not concepts that came up very often in daily conversation. "And do you, Ruth, also think I ought not seek the Sword?" Yes, thought Ruth before she could censor herself "New York is an awfully big place," she began, hesitantly. "And I should content myself with securing my own happiness," Melior suggested, looking sideways at her. "Though I admit I had never thought to find it here. But what use is happiness when one is dead?" "Dead?"
Ruth echoed.
She stared at Melior.
"If I remain here in this World of Iron I will die, Ruth, whether I face this grendel or not." "When? I mean-" "In fifteen years. Perhaps twenty." Ruth's shoulders sagged as relief replaced tension, and Melior smiled bitterly. "You think it a sufficient time, but even you, Ruth, would outlast it. And it is not so very long a time to one who was not born to die." Furious with her own transparency, Ruth turned away. She still had her back to Melior, staring at the river with every evidence of fixed interest, when the taxi arrived. "Ruth, I want-" Melior began, but Ruth didn't wait to hear it. She leaped into the taxi as if pursued by devils. It pulled away, leaving Melior standing alone on the street. "Where to, lady?" told him.
the question came, and numbly, automatically, Ruth
Coward, coward, coward, Ruth thought bitterly. Always afraid of what people will think. Always. Still. After everything. She didn't remember her last night on earth, but she'd seen pictures. Her prom dress had been pink: pale satin spaghetti-strapped bodice, the skirt yards and yards of pale-pink tulle tinted darker pink at the edge of each asymmetric layer. Mom had snapped her picture just before she and Jimmy'd left the house. But she didn't remember that. She didn't remember buying the dress, or why she would have bought something that, in retrospect, made her look so much like a flamingo. She didn't remember going to the Senior Prom, nor Jimmy Ramirez getting drunk, and most of all she didn't remember why she'd gotten into the car with him again. He had to have been very drunk, drunk enough so anyone could tell. The coroner's report said so. So her father said. June 7th, 1981. And early on the morning of June 8th Ruth Marlowe's world ended, as she and three other kids hit a tree at something in the vicinity of eighty miles per hour. Ruth graduated in absentia while on total life-support in the County Hospital. She'd been thrown clear; broken arms, broken legs, broken collarbone, but nothing that wouldn't heal.
Except that Ruth wouldn't wake up. Coma, they said, and, as time passed, irreversible. They unhooked the respirator. Ruth slept on. Time passed and the world went on. woke up.
And then, eight years later, Ruth
Woke up five years ago to find her mother dead, her father dying, the house she'd grown up in sold long since to pay the medical bills and all the world changed. Not beyond recognition. That would have been kinder. But changed just enough that everything seemed like a reflection in some cruel looking glass. Her father died about the time Ruth learned to walk again; it was almost a release from those painful interviews, each of them in their respective wheelchairs, when he tried not to blame her too openly for destroying his life and Ruth searched vainly for her father in this ailing, bitter, widower. Seventeen going on thirty, and the only thing left for her to do was cobble together some kind of adulthood and pretend she agreed when the nurses called her lucky. Lucky, with what people called "the best years of your life" vanished in a night. She hadn't even had to go into Elf Hill to lose them. All she'd had to do was . . . whatever she'd done, that night. Something stupid, something cowardly, something that cared more for what people-Jimmy-would think than for life itself No wonder she'd been ready, ripe, and reckless for the first stray elflord who came along. Who didn't treat her like the thirty-year-old she wasn't, or like a raree show, or a science project, or like someone who should be grateful-! Oh, yes, Rohannan Melior was something worth having. something that wonderful want with her?
But what did
Bread and Roses HE WAS HUNGRY. Hungry, and thirsty, and he knew the only thing that would ease him. Kevin Shelby rode the subway, a magic sword from Elfland concealed in the awkward bundle at his side, and planned. The run through the sunlight had been bad, very bad. Bad enough that Kevin did not wish to contemplate a repetition of it. By the time he had reached the subway entrance three blocks away, tears of pain were streaming down his face beneath the Terminator sunglasses. He'd retained enough presence of mind not to vault the turnstile into the subway: Transit cops lay in wait for fare-beaters and if they caught him they would take him back toward the sun. No, even in his pain and hunger, Kevin made himself worthy of the sword. He flashed his out-of-date ID at the token booth clerk and was buzzed through the "Employees Only" gate. The gate clicked shut behind him and he moved down the platform. Then Kevin was free-free in the system. Even though the subway system itself was lit up bright as night indoors, the light wasn't nearly as bad. The blue-white pain behind his eyes receded and the sense of impending doom left him. He was in the New York Subway System, with hundreds of miles of track. It ran twenty-four hours a day, and all he had to do was avoid the parts of the subway lines that ran above ground and he'd be fine. He could transfer across platforms from Uptown to Downtown lines; he could even
buy food, hot dogs and stuff, without ever leaving the system. At the thought of a hot dog, Kevin's stomach lurched. His mouth was dry and cottony, a torment of an entirely different order than the pain behind his eyes, and his midsection was occupied with a sick numb cramping that testified to a too-long emptiness. But a hot dog was not the answer. The train came and he got on-a car near the middle; safest place to ride the train. The doors shut with their familiar two-note chime, and the train started to move. Kevin braced himself against the rocking with the ease of a lifelong New Yorker and headed for a seat. This early in the morning he had his choice; he chose one of the corner side seats at the front of the car, near both the doors to the platform and the doors that led between cars. Carefully he propped the sword, sheathed in record jackets, against the fake woodgrain veneer of the car's bulkhead and leaned back on the gaudy orange plastic seat. Safe. But immediate physical safety only left Kevin with the leisure to think of all the ways in which he was not safe, and of all the things he lacked. He rode the subway hour after hour, up and down and around, while the thought of food came to obsess him even more than it nauseated him. He had to eat. And that understanding became the anvil upon which his fear was hammered, because that which he desperately must do was that which he could not do. He tried. He bought sodas, candy bars, potato chips, mustard pretzels, soft-serve ice cream, candied popcorn, gyros, falafel, and hot dogs. He threw all of them away before taking even a bite. He couldn't even drink water. The hours passed. The cars filled up with weekend ridership, a seething mass of assorted humanity that remained constant throughout the day. The car filled, but somehow there was always an empty seat beside Kevin, huddled in his peculiar misery, guarding the sword and riding the subway. He was there when Roy Turpin's body was discovered, though he didn't know it. The story broke in time for the evening editions; he could have picked up a copy of the Post or its sister papers at any number of newsstands on platforms serving the I.N.D and the I.R,T lines. But his head hurt too much to read, and television and radio did not penetrate the layers of concrete, stone, and steel that separated Kevin Shelby from the light of the sun. By eleven-thirty Saturday night the cars were empty once more. By that time all of Kevin's fear and guilt were distilled into the particular horror of need. His mouth watered constantly, though that did nothing to alleviate his thirst, and for the first time he began to understand how it was possible to go mad with hunger. The worst part was, he didn't have to be hungry.
He didn't know when the knowledge came to him. Sometime during that long dim suffering day he had roused into brighter awareness and knew the solution. He knew what he could eat, what would soothe him and nourish him and not fill him with sickness, nausea, and pain. He knew. In some dying corner of his mind the part of Kevin Shelby that had tried to be good rebelled. Frantically it built barriers of impossibility against the sweet seductive reasonableness of that inner knowledge. It would be dangerous. It would be messy. He might get caught, or hurt, or it might not work. The only defense he did not use was that it was wrong, for Kevin had forfeited the right to that defense sometime late Friday night. And eventually sheer privation wore him down. It was very late. He didn't quite remember how long he'd been here, or what he'd done before that, but he knew it was late. The car he was riding in was empty. His entire body vibrated with an unwholesome dishonest energy imposed from without, as much destroying his body as enlivening it. His hands shook. The vivid images of his intention painted themselves against his eyes, offering heat but no warmth. And then The Other One boarded the car. The Other One was a person of the sort that Kevin, in better days, would have avoided out of an instinctive sense of self-preservation. For one thing, anybody riding the trains at this hour had to be crazy. For another thing, he looked like the sort of person that somebody riding the trains at this hour would naturally run into, which was why nobody who wanted to keep their wallet and their neck rode the trains at this hour. The Other One wore a long green raincoat and high-topped sneakers and hummed to himself as he selected a seat at the opposite end of the train. Kevin watched with hungry fascination. The train began to move, pulling out into the tunnels and the relative darkness. The Other One got up and moved to a seat in the middle of the car. Kevin was on the "A" Line now, and the Uptown stations were several minutes apart. He clutched at the Sword in its clumsy wrappings. Sometime during the day he had picked through the plastic and tape and newspaper sealing one end. If he reached inside he could touch the cool curve of the jewel in the Sword's pommel. He had to be strong. That was the important thing, the most important thing. If he failed, if he died here, it would all have been for nothing. His life would have been for nothing-all the things he might be, all the things he could have been . . . gone.
His mind hurt in a muddled, painful way. There was something wrong with his reasoning, somewhere-but he felt so bad. The thirst was the worst, worse even than the hunger. And there was only one food that would appease the hunger and thirst. "Hey, man, you got any spare change?" Kevin said nothing. Now The Other was close, very close; Kevin could see him, smell stale breath and stale sweat and beneath it all the living aroma of food "Hey, man, I'm talking to you. What's the matter with you?" The Other was his chance for life. die.
If he didn't take it, he would
It was that simple. And so Kevin Shelby took the final step that made his own life more important than right or wrong. He stood up, forcing The Other back, and thrust his fist through the hole he had made in the cardboard record cover. His hand closed over the roundness of the pommel and slid farther to the ridged hardness of the heft. "Hey, man, you got a problem with me?" "No problem," said Kevin, and yanked to pull the sword free. But it slid out only a little way, and then tangled in the tape and newspapers that Kevin had so carefully wrapped around it. And The Other laughed, and pulled out something small and shiny. A knife. Roy had always said-when there was Roy-that a knife would scare people more than a gun up close. Because a gun really didn't look like much, if it wasn't one of the ones too big to hide, but a knife always looked like exactly what it was. Something to cut. "Give me that," Kevin said reasonably, and The Other laughed. His eyes were on the jeweled pommel and Kevin knew he had made a mistake. "Give what you got there and I let you keep your money." The Other reached for the Sword. Kevin grabbed the knife. The blade slid along the palm of his hand. wrist.
It bit deep into his
Kevin didn't care. He knew what he wanted. He clawed The Other's fingers open, getting at the knife, and now The Other was trying to get away, but that didn't matter; Kevin was pushing him back, and back; The Other's body hit one of the poles in the center of the car and he tripped with Kevin on top of him trying to get the knife right way round in his hand.
The train pulled into a station. the empty station platform. "Help!
Help me!
Help!
After a moment the doors opened onto
I'm being mugged!"
Then Kevin found the right way around with the knife. It slid in so easily at first it didn't seem that it could have worked, but The Other was suddenly silent, and lay quietly beneath Kevin as the doors shut and the train began to move again. And then there was the cutting, which was good, and the eating, which was sweet relief. But even the eating wasn't enough somehow, so there was cutting and cutting and cutting. And when it was over, Kevin's skin felt stiff and hard, and with the new bright energy he felt he ripped the coverings from the Sword. It was simple, then, to jam the switchbox so the doors of the car wouldn't open. And around five o'clock in the morning, when the train was on standby in a tunnel, it was simple to use the Sword to lever open the doors again, so that Kevin could step out of the train and into the tunnel. The Looking-Glass War AS AN ELF he was a total washout. comprehensively stupid.
And as a way to spend Monday, it was
Jane Grayson had few illusions about Life and was willing to get by with fewer. She had no idea why people insisted on making the best of things, as transformation was a concept unknown to her philosophy. Hers was a policy of Things As They Are, and if something wasn't best there was no point in trying to pretend that it was. In that context, whether or not the person called Melior was an elf as defined in the Oxford Unabridged Dictionary New Revised Edition was of much less importance (as less subject to logical proof) than the fact that Ruth and Michael and Naomi had all agreed to treat him as an elf and to do what they could to help him. Once that was settled, Jane had something to work with, secure in the knowledge that her opinions would not be consulted. Thus it was that Michael and Ruth had not really had to explain that Melior couldn't be trusted to run around loose. In Jane's opinion nobody could be. The world was too endlessly inventive; if your number was up, it would get you, and that was that. But Ruth especially had insisted that Melior had to have somebody with him who knew the ways of the world, and though Jane knew that the others regarded her as an unworldly little incompetent whose sole recommendation lay in that she was not Philip Leslie LeStrange, she supposed they felt she had at least enough sophistication to guide a pointy-eared whatever-he-was around the subway system. He wasn't an elf. Jane clutched that cockle-warming knowledge to herself with all the surely of one who has read several very good translations of several very elderly Eddas. The Aelfvar were a race of Norse demigods who lived in Aelffieim and stayed out of the affairs of Men.
Furthermore they were dark-skinned and short, and probably didn't have pointed ears at all. And most of all, they didn't exist. But nobody would have believed him if he'd said he was a Vulcan. Jane considered this carefully and decided that probably Ruth would have believed him, but would never have admitted it to the others. And possibly it would have mortified her so much that she would even have tried to conceal him from them, too, so all in all it was just as well that he'd said he was an elf. Even if he wasn't one. But they'd all voted to let him be an elf, so Jane abandoned the ultimately fruitless question of what Melior really was, and concentrated on what they were doing. Which, on this fine Monday morning in May, was almost precisely nothing. The record time for traversing every last inch of the transit system is somewhere just under twenty hours; every year an impromptu "subway rally" is held to try to better that time. Today she and Melior weren't even trying to come close to it; they'd ride as much of the subway as they could cover until around three-when Michael and Ruth would be done with their exams-and then go back and try to figure out what to do about the creature that Melior said was down in the subway. Personally, Jane couldn't see what the fuss was about. She understood that Melior wanted his sword back-Jane understood about wanting to retain ownership of one's own possessions-but she really couldn't see that one more crazed cannibal roaming New York could make a difference one way or the other. So what if he ate people? Stone cold dead hath no fellow, Jane quoted to herself. If they were dead, who cared what happened afterward? They didn't. Still, taken all in all, the day was a wash. After the phone call last night, Jane had spent some time planning out a suitable route. Fortunately, the book on subways that mentioned the subway rally also mentioned enough about the paths taken for her to reconstruct it. This morning, bright and early, at the ghastly hour of 7:00 a.m. she had presented herself at Michael's apartment and prepared to be bored. Melior was living up to her expectations in that respect. hadn't tried to talk to her. And she had brought a book.
At least he
Ruth chewed on the end of her regulation Number 2 lead pencil and wished she were somewhere else. Anywhere would do, but specifically she wished she were the one with Melior on the subway instead of Jane. The room where she and thirty-five other bored and nearly-graduated student librarians were being tested to destruction did nothing to improve her mood. Vast, chalk-scented, dusty, scrupulously silent, and seemingly devoid of all human life, it seemed to be a dress rehearsal for the buildings in which she would spend the rest of her working
life. Ruth noticed the test proctor looking her way and quickly bent her head to the test paper again. She hated library school. She hated her life. No, worse, she was bored with her life, and being bored with your life before you'd really even started it led to chilling speculations on the whichness of what you would do for the rest of it. No, not even bored.
Dissatisfied.
The right word at last. Ruth stared at her paper and tried to summon up some interest. Cataloging: Dewey or don't we? Back to work. The questions were multiple choice, but that didn't make them any easier. All the answers were almost right, but in the eyes of God and Columbia there was only one really right answer. Melior. Not an answer, no, not even a question, and not a problem she could avoid, after last night. The defiant fact of his existence was an assault upon the fabric of her world, was a wound she would carry with her forever, and in all honesty and good conscience she still had to deal with his problem: the missing sword, and the monster that had been caused by it. What if it was a coincidence? Ruth's logical mind insisted. Murders are horrible, but they happen. None of us had inside information about that killing. What if it's just an ordinary lunatic and not a GRENDEL? Melior thought it was a grendel But Melior, Ruth realized with a chill, standoffish clarity, wanted magic to work in this world. If magic didn't work here, he would remain here until he died. But would that be so bad? He said his world was at war; here he'd have years of peace. WED have years Which was the root of the matter, really. She loved Melior-how could she not? And she thought, maybe, that he loved her, but if he found his sword, he was going back to Elfland. If he could. And Ruth, who wanted his happiness more than she wanted her own, suddenly wished he couldn't. The Computer Department of Columbia University had, until quite recently, occupied the basements of several scattered buildings. Only last year, in a series of shuffles reminiscent of Three-Card Monte, had the Powers That Were consolidated their mainframes, their LAN-servers, their free-standing PCs in one location. The students called it Hacker Heaven. But, of course, nothing like that went on there. The Age of the Hacker was past: penalties were too high if you were caught, safeguards were
too stringent. media.
Cyberpunks existed only in the imagination of the
Right? Michael knew better. And so, while Ruth, who was no morning person, slogged slowly through her Cat Final, Michael checked answers with the reckless abandon of one who only needs to graduate to become employed, and finished the three-hour exam in forty minutes flat. And went looking for Philip, knowing where he'd be. unknown to the others, agreed that Philip would be.
Where they'd both,
"You know that this is illegal?" Michael Peacock said, mostly because he knew it would give Philip such pleasure to hear it. And it had been his own personal wonderful idea, too. "I know, I know," Philip muttered, not really listening. wonderful?"
"Isn't it
His laptop reposed on the table beside the computer reserved for student database searching, connected to the bigger computer-and its modern-by arcane means. The big screen was currently welcoming them to Columbia's Electronic University Services. At intervals Philip hit a key on his laptop, to no apparent effect. Suddenly the database computer screen went blank and the laptop emitted a small, self-satisfied beep. Philip sat back and looked at Michael. "It's showtime," he said. "Okay, kemo sabe, where do we go from here?"
Michael asked.
"Anywhere," Philip said. "Okay," he added, in his voice for lecturing the mentally deficient. "What goes in here-" he indicated the laptop, -goes up there-" the computer, "-but we can use the programs stored in here to modify there." He sat back, smug. Michael had long since given up wondering what Philip was doing in library school. There was no point in asking, because Philip didn't seem to know either. There was going to be trouble there, ten-fifteen-twenty years down the line, sure as taxes. And there was more hope of avoiding taxes than of derailing the trouble for his friend. Michael Peacock knew something about human nature and inevitability. "Okay, Phil. The first one should be easy. of Motor Vehicles database."
Get us into the Department
After five hours on the subway, Jane felt that lunch was in order. mentioned this to her companion.
She
"How do you live like this?" Melior responded. He had been staring out the window almost the entire time-except when they changed trains-watching the interplay of light and shadow and the alternation of station and tunnel that were familiar-bordering-on-invisible for Jane. "Consider the alternative," Jane said.
"Do you want to stop for
lunch? Because I do, and this grendel-thing is as likely to be in a McDonald's as anywhere else." Now Melior looked at her. He'd taken off the mirrorshades that Ruth had bought him, and Jane stared into eyes of a green found only in coloring books, with slit pupils that waxed and waned in the light. Jane felt her stomach lurch with more than hunger; with an instinctive rejection of the unnatural. Of Melior. "Come on," she said. Once she'd gotten him moving, they could find some place to eat. First things first. "You do not believe, do you?" Melior said, showing no inclination to shift himself. He smiled, showing pointed teeth. "Were I in my proper place, I could show you magic to freeze your young blood; wonders to lift the heart. Then you would believe." "You really don't get it, do you?"
Jane said.
"It doesn't matter.
Magic or not-who cares?" "'Who cares'?"
Melior echoed blankly.
"I don't care.
Nobody cares.
"But, child, it is magic."
And I'm hungry," Jane said flatly.
"Then we shall eat, of course." Melior rose to his feet in a perfect motion that made Jane sharply aware of her own clumsiness. The comparison did not make her like him any better. Since Melior had the window seat, she got up and moved to the center of the car. They were just coming in to a station now-someplace in Brooklyn she'd never heard of. But there had to be McDonald's even in Brooklyn, didn't there? "But tell me, Mistress Jane," Melior said to her back. Jane stopped but didn't turn around. She knew what came next. Now he was going to say something witty and obscure that was supposed to make her feel like a jerk. "If you do not believe in me, why are you helping me?" There it came.
Jane's view of the universe was reconfirmed.
"Because Ruth asked me to." "And would you do anything for Ruth?" Melior asked, still in the tone of one who hopes to play verbal trumps. "I'd do this," Jane said, conceding nothing. The doors opened on yet another unfamiliar platform. Jane walked out through them without looking back to see if he followed. In the computer room, the screen was filled with endlessly scrolling lines. "Don't worry about it," Philip said.
"I'm downloading everything to
the capture buffer." "Great," said Michael, who wasn't absolutely sure what all this meant but it sounded good. From the DMV computer they had progressed by easy stages into the Coroner's Office computer for New York County (which is to say, for Manhattan and Brooklyn). If there were a grendel, and if it were killing, the resulting bodies would be entered here. It hadn't been that hard to get in.
Michael had been surprised.
"The thing is," Philip had said, "people lock up the information they think is valuable. Too bad they don't know what it is. How do they know what I'm going to want to know? Or they leave it unprotected but scattered, which really isn't going to slow anybody down. You can always put it back together. A librarian is a synthesist, isn't that what they're always saying in class? A specialist in general knowledge? People are such dorks," Philip added, on a sigh of pure disgust. The screen scrolled up into darkness, leaving only a flashing square of cursor. "What's wrong?"
Michael asked.
"We're done. All the homicides since April thirtieth. Of course, we've only got Elfie's word for it that that's when he showed up-" Philip pointed out sneeringly. "If this is a scam, it's a scam like I've never seen," Michael said. Philip looked at him curiously and shrugged. flash-flash in the light.
His bifocals went
"Look, Michael-I don't care. Elfie's a moron and he's going to get us all killed. But who wants to live forever, especially at these prices?" It was better away from the train.
The train was too bright.
Too .
. . dry. It was better here, in the lay-bys and access tunnels of the underground railroad. There was rest. And there was food. If only his skin didn't itch. When he had been human, Kevin Shelby had been a track worker in his underworld kingdom, and perhaps some of the knowledge he had gained then remained to him, but it was more a matter of instinct now that led him to the deeper and less traveled sections of the line; to the storage cupboards, the equipment depots, the niches for a man to stand in as a train passed by. The prey. Only hours after that first, well-publicized kill, Kevin-who still, for
a while longer, remembered that he had once had a name-found his second subterranean victim. It was dark in the tunnel. The air they pushed ahead of them in their headlong flight warned him well in advance each time a train was due. There was plenty of time to find safety; to crouch in a niche designed for the purpose until the heedless glass-and-metal worm was gone. Eventually he reached a place in the system where the tunnels opened up: four, five, six sets of tracks running parallel for a few yards before diverging to their separate lines once more. And in the vaulting darkness on that quiet Sunday, Kevin could sense movement. He could smell food. He did not have to debate within himself for very long before killing; the maddening hunger that had left him so briefly had returned again, stronger than before; the hunger that was the Sword's true legacy to humankind: an unslakable and very specific appetite. And about the time his last victim was discovered, Kevin killed again. Somewhere between the subway car and here he had unsheathed the Sword from its makeshift scabbard. There was no need for concealment any longer; he carried the Sword naked in his hand. He heard a voice call out to him, and flinched momentarily away from the beam of a weak flashlight, but whether this new Other was track worker or fellow interloper Kevin did not choose to care. Between recognizing the prey and lashing out with that killing engine was no more than a heartbeat. And then again there was food; warm glorious soft sweet fulfilling food. He gorged until he could eat no more, crouched there between the pillars. He was safe; such trains as passed in the distance carried no one who would see him for what he was. At last, satiated, he stopped groping toward unfamiliar delicacies in the intermittent darkness. What he left behind would be finished by rats; it was unlikely that this body would ever be found, no matter who it had been. Kevin wandered on, with a vague certainty that his journey now led to some definite destination. It was then that his skin began to itch. The dark glasses had gone long since. Now the militaristic nylon bomber jacket was discarded; its heat and weight maddening to skin gone suddenly raw and sensitive. He paused again and again to scratch every where his hands could reach, until his nails drew fresh native blood to mingle with the dried blood that caked his clothes, and found no relief. Eventually shirt and undershirt were abandoned in the tunnels as well. He folded them neatly and set them aside carefully, out of the damp.
Perhaps, at the time, he even meant to come back for them. And some unreckonable time later, what was left of Kevin Shelby found the cure for the itch, just as it had for the hunger. She'd known he wouldn't do something as sensible as go to McDonald's. Melior caught up to Jane just as she was about to go through the antique yellow-painted wooden turnstile that led to Darkest Brooklyn. "Wait," he said, and like an idiot, a worldling, a mundane, she did. "Stay a moment," he said, just as if he thought he was Shakespeare and she was PBS, "there is something I wish to see." And then he went back to the edge of the platform, to the sheer drop-off that led only to the tracks below-and jumped off. "Hey," said Jane. Her voice sounded weak and unconvincing, even to her. If not for the fact that she felt completely unequal to the task of explaining this to Ruth, she would have gone off and left Melior-the-elf right then, and if she had held out any hope that he would have stayed put she would at least have had lunch before she dealt with him. But since she knew perfectly well he would not, and equally she knew that Ruth would not be satisfied by even the best and most reasonable explanation of events, Jane abandoned lunch and egress and went back to the edge of the platform and looked down. Melior was nowhere in sight. Jane was methodical; she looked both ways. She even looked behind her, back toward daylight and sanity. Nothing. "Hey!"
she cried, a good deal louder this time.
Two glowing green orbs of the cat-in-darkness sort appeared out of the blackness. They flashed and vanished as Melior looked away. "Mistress Jane?" Melior said. His voice, pitched low to carry, sounded weirdly as though he were standing just beside her and not several yards away. "It is just as I thought. Come and see for yourself." Jane looked all around, but this station was not one of the ones with a manned token booth (or any sort of token booth at all, to be brutally accurate), and apparently this quarter of Brooklyn was not particularly well-traveled at 12:45 Monday afternoon. She looked up the tracks. She didn't see an oncoming train, but uppermost in her mind was the fact that if Melior here was to get himself creamed by a train, she didn't even have to bother to go back to Ruth and the others. She could just jump in front of the next one. "Where are you?" ridiculous.
Jane called, trying very hard not to feel
Melior came out into the light of the platform, looking like a fifteen
second clip from the next thing in horror films. He'd taken off his mirrorshades, and in the shadows his eyes flared green-yellow and silver, reflecting all the light there was. H is pale skin seemed to pluck up shadows from the surrounding air, making him look not only unearthly pale, but white in the way of mushrooms and fishbellies and things far better left unexamined. His leather jacket hung open, his shirt was smudged with tunnel grime-a thousand innocent things conspired bizarrely to form one snapshot image of horror. Jane jumped backward, emitting a mouselike and inelegant squeak. She gritted her teeth. certain.
He'd done that on purpose, she was almost
But either Melior was a very good actor (granted) or innocent of such subtle plottings as Jane assigned him. He walked up the railbed to the edge of the platform and heaved himself up. "I could not be certain from inside the cars-" Melior's distaste gave the word a foreign and unfamiliar flavor, "-but now I am certain. This is such a place as a grendel would lair." " just the place for a SnarkII have said it thrice: lawat I tell you three times is true." Lewis Carroll. Charles Dodgson, if you prefer. He saw fairies at the bottom of the garden," Jane added expansively. "Which doesn't mean there were any." "But there is a grendel-and it has been here, at least recently", Melior said. #%at did it do, leave graffiti?
Jane thought, but did not say it.
Offensively smartass remarks were Philip's speciality. All Jane did was state the obvious. They couldn't get you for reporting the facts. "Or so I think," said Melior, with sudden suspicious humility, "but, as I have been told far too many times for my liking that I do not understand this World of Iron, I wish you to see what I have seen as well, and tell me, if you may, wherein lies my error." "You mean I'm supposed to tell you if you've made a mistake. And I have to go down there to do it." I can hardly contain my rapture. It was spring, so it had been raining recently, and, as after every rain, pools of water had collected at the bottom of the faintly-curving floor of the railbed. The tunnel was littered with garbage tossed from the windows of passing trains or flung from the platform itself, and from where Jane stood she could see the busy and entirely unworried-and large, and well-fed, and nothing-at-all like Stuart Little-rats saunter to and fro. Melior vaulted down off the platform again and held up his hands, obviously ready to assist her. "We're all gonna die," Jane muttered. Hissing curses between her clenched teeth, she sat down on the edge of the platform-wincing at the
filth-and slid off into the unknown.
Without help.
The drop was farther than she had expected, and jarring. The first sensation she registered was the soft but not treacherously moist squish of compacted litter beneath her sneakers. The second was the wind that heralded an oncoming train. She flattened herself against the she had no hope of climbing up it tall; the lip of the platform was was streaked with grease and soot thousand rush-hour suicides.
platform, but without Melior's help again. Jane was not particularly a foot and more above her head. It and probably the entrails of a
And Melior stood there, oblivious. "It's a train, " Jane said, in a voice that refused to be either steady or audible. She knew she had to do something, but terror held her still. Movement was a surrender to fear. And now Melior reacted, but slowly, slowly: where every instinct screamed at Jane to run, he had to reason out the danger with instincts honed to something entirely other. The light was a faint spark in the distance now. The trainman had seen them, or seen something; the despairing wail of the seldom-used whistle echoed through the tunnel. And Melior caught her by the arm and began to run. They ran. Wet garbage slid beneath Jane's feet. They ran away from the lights of the platform and into the darkened tunnel where there was no light to see by, and despite this Jane's greatest fear was that she would lose her glasses and be blind in truth. They passed the end of the platform and ran on. The smooth close walls of the tunnel mocked their efforts, providing them no place to hide. And even if there were a place for one, there would not be a place for two. The train's klaxon was constant now, and with some unoccupied portion of her mind Jane recognized that it was not slowing as it neared the station: an express, or some other line running on the Double-L's tracks. The roadbed beneath her feet pitched sharply downward; she would have fallen if not for Melior's inflexible grip on her arm. And then, miraculous-though also what Melior was running toward, having seen it in his previous explorations-the tunnel intersected with another, and in the safe hollow where the rails crossed, Melior dragged Jane to her knees and threw his arms around her. The train thundered by instants later. Sparks sprayed up from its wheels; there was a teeth-setting scream of metal on metal. The wind of its passage stank of burning oil and liquid rot. And it was loud, a rhythmic thunder that terrified by
sheer disorienting volume, even while the reasonable mind insisted that the sound came from a machine that was bound by Man's laws, incapable of transgression. It seemed to go on forever. At last the train, with one last wailing tocsin, fishtailed its way to its next destination, and left them behind. Slowly Jane became aware that Melior was holding her in an embrace so tight it hurt. His face was buried against her neck; the upraised collar of his leather jacket tickled her nose. He was shaking. She wondered if he was crying and desperately hoped not. But of more immediate interest was the knowledge that she, Jane Treasure Greyson, had survived a genuine urban myth folk legendary experience and was now invested with bragging rights. Melior raised his head. Jane saw with sincere relief that he was not crying. Maybe elves just didn't, but Jane was thankful for small favors, whatever the genesis. "Have you taken hurt, Mistress Jane?"
Melior said.
"No, I'm fine." Which, whether it was true or not, was one of those automatic dumb things people always said to prevent true communication from taking place. Although on this occasion it was more true than not. than fine. She was exalted.
Jane was more
She had won. She wasn't quite sure what game they were playing, but she knew she had won. She'd done it. She'd been competent. She hadn't tucked up. Melior seemed a bit taken aback by her matter-of-factness. Slowly, stiffly, he unwound his arms from about her and got to his feet. Jane scrambled after, inelegant but unwilling to be assisted. She realized with dismay that she had been kneeling in something not only gross but wet, and the palms of her hands were greasily black from their contact with the tunnel walls. She wiped them defiantly on her powder-blue corduroy slacks. "So," she said, with a dawning delight at how cool she sounded, "what was it you wanted to show me, before we were interrupted?" "Forgiving me for my foolishness; it seems that Friend Michael was right, and I do in very truth need a keeper. I did not wish to place you in such mortal jeopardy, Mistress Jane, I did not realize-" Melior broke off in the manner of someone who realizes they're about to be less than politic. "I did not precisely understand the nature of these conveyances"' he finished instead. I wonder what he was going to say before he stopped? less than urgent curiosity.
Jane thought with
"Well, now you know," she said equitably. Self-confidence swelled like a golden balloon in her chest. She had done it. "Yes," said Melior, "now I know.
And I fear that when Mistress Ruth
discovers how I have used you, she will be less than kind." Melior sounded more upset by that than by his recent brush with trainicide. And Philip will be sure to say something disgusting. intervals.
At regular
For years. "I wouldn't, you know, mind if you didn't mention it," Jane suggested carefully. She looked up the tracks the way they had come. The platform was a surprising ways distant. There was no train in sight. She looked back at Melior.
He was smiling.
"Then we shall not trouble the mind of Mistress Ruth with inessentials, by your leave. And for this day's grace, Mistress Jane, know that you have some claim upon Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences, who has incurred a debt that he shall repay." Yeah, right.
That and a dollar-fifiy'll get me a fide on the subway.
But Jane smiled back.
"So what was it you wanted me to see?"
What Melior had wanted her to see lay some distance farther down the tunnel, where the light from the platform dwindled to inconsequence and only the red-and-green of the lights in the tunnel gave any illumination to see by. Now that she was habituated to them, the subway tunnels took on a weird beauty, almost as if they were caves instead of human creations. Every surface was covered with the furry flat blackness of greasy soot, and the signal lights did little to illuminate the space. Once they had to pause for the passage of another train, but there was plenty of warning, and plenty of space to slide into. Jane estimated that they had walked the equivalent of about two city blocks when Melior stopped. "Here," he said. "Where?" They were standing almost beneath one of the signal lights. It was green, indicating that a train might pass with impunity, but even in its ghastly viridian light the interior of the tunnel was only shadow-shapes. "Here," Melior said again, and now Jane could see that he was pointing downward, at something wedged between two of the girders that held up the roof and divided the sets of tracks from each other. "I can't see in the dark, you know," Jane pointed out. "I do not want to touch it. behind."
The grendel has been here, and left this
Jane took a step forward and poked at the bundle experimentally, then pulled it out before Melior could stop her. It wasn't that much of a gamble; the thing looked dry, and if it turned out to be stuffed full of human hearts she was already braced not to squeak.
But it wasn't, and she didn't. "Mistress Jane!" up.
Melior protested, but Jane was already holding it
She felt cold zippers, nylon, and acrylic fur. the police wore.
A bomber jacket like
"Get a life, will you?" she muttered under her breath. Something on the jacket flaked off as she ran her hands over it, but the darkness was too deep to see. "Don't touch that.
Put it from you; it reeks of evil."
"I don't smell anything." But who could, down here? The mingled smells of urine and rotting garbage had long since put her nose on overload. Jane could no longer smell them, and lair du subway was only a burnt-rubber taste in the back of her throat. Or maybe Melior was feeling metaphorical? "I said leave it!" To Jane's surprise, Melior grabbed the jacket and flung it away into the outer darkness. There was a squeaking and a scuttling that would have played havoc with Jane's delicate nerves if she'd happened to have any. "If that was your proof, you've just thrown it away," Jane said after a pause. "'If?" Melior demanded. "The creature sheds its varied skins; I show you proof and you mock at it." "Oh." Understanding came with a jolt, the way it often does when a companion's bizarre actions suddenly make luminous sense. "But it wasn't proof, Melior. Not of anything. to Ruth." It was only somebody's jacket.
Not to me.
Not even
And there never would be proof, Jane realized suddenly, and there probably wasn't a grendel, either. Because whether Melior was an elf or not, he was also crazy. "How can I make you see, before it is too late?" Jane, galvanized to honesty, answered.
Melior groaned, and
"I don't know." When the Magic's Real ALONE IN THE apartment after Ruth's hasty departure, Naomi pulled the notebook she was keeping out of its storage place and glanced through it. A cup of tea stood at her elbow, spiraling steam into the air. Nothing had changed. Everything was just as it had been the last time she'd looked: what he'd told her, what they'd done. She'd even sketched pictures of his clothes and jewelry-the clothes and jewelry of a self proclaimed Prince of Elfland. And hadn't Michael said there was just too much of it to fake? Those eyes, those ears, those teeth My,
what big pointy teeth you've got, Grandma. None of it helped.
She'd seen the same news broadcast Ruth had.
The murder in the subway. Melior thought it was his grendel And what else, after all, could it be? Almost anything. Too real for me. Naomi shook her head in sad self-rebuke and closed the book again. In the children's books she loved things like this never happened. She believed Melior (with reservations) but what she'd really been expecting was for his sword to turn up in the window of Sotheby's. Or something, anything, just so long as it wasn't this cross between The Taking Of Pelham One Two Three and Silence Of The Lambs. Naomi shuddered. Did the murder make this more real, or more fantastic? She didn't know. She only knew that she resented it deeply. 'A real toad in an imaginary garden." And she was worried about Ruth. "Sensei, I have a problem." Master Paul Robillard was Naomi's sensei, or teacher, in the gentle art of kendo. His dojo was located on Broadway a few blocks south of her apartment, in a bright corner space two flights up from a greengrocer's. There, three evenings a week, Naomi and seven others took master classes in the Way of the Sword. "If you'd stop dropping your wrist when you attack, you'd be fine." Mornings, no one was here, except Sensei. "It's not that sort of a problem," Naomi said. "Well, why don't you get dressed and we'll talk about it?" There were windows in three walls of the dojo; the huge square space with its white-painted walls and bare wood floor, was drenched in light. The back wall was still mirrored, and a barre ran around all four walls, legacy of its one-time use as a dance studio. Naomi padded out onto the floor in her hakama and slippers, and bowed to the altar with its photos, oranges, and lit candles. Then she turned and regarded herself in the mirror. She'd come to Sensei Paul for help, but what could she say? the one with the problem, not her.
Ruth was
Since the fall semester, with graduation suddenly on everybody's mind, Ruth had been, well, looking for a way out. Advanced coursework wasn't the answer-as it had been in her case, Naomi thought wrylysince Ruth
had to get out there and earn a living before the Student Loan Officer decided to take the debt out in white slavery. But if Ruth were using Melior as a form of escapism, it was going to backfire, badly. Sensei Paul came out onto the floor, holding two masks in one hand and a pair of bokken in the other. Paul was tall and handsome, with skin like polished teak. He looked like a poster boy for street crime and was the gentlest soul Naomi knew. He even made Michael look aggressive. He crossed the floor and handed her the mask. Like most of the senior students, Naomi kept the bulkier items of her kendo costume here. She put the mask on, settling its familiar contours against her face, then took her sword. It was shaped like a rough sketch for a katana; light brown wood and a plastic sword-guard. Almost harmless. But even a toy sword could kill. Paul Robillard put on his mask, and Naomi's friend vanished. All that was left was Sensei, who would whack her severely if she made a mistake. It settled the mind wonderfully. Naomi bowed. Sensei bowed. And then she let the sword-mind flow into her as Sensei slipped easily into position and began circling her. Part of her mind watched, waiting for her own opening, but, flying high above the room, the other part considered Ruth. Things could be worse than they were, of course. Ruth could have fallen for some guy and gotten married as an escape from reality. Only Ruth never dated. Naomi had known her for almost three years and would have been happy to make suitable introductions. For a while she'd thought Ruth and Michael might pair up, but Ruth had made friends with him instead. But if Naomi were any judge of human nature, Ruth was falling for Melior. And that would not be a good thing at all. Whack! "You're not paying attention," Sensei said. Naomi wanted to rub the stinging welt on her hip where the blow had landed, but didn't dare. She raised her sword again, but Sensei did not raise his. moment he straightened, and pulled off his mask.
After a
"It must be a very bad problem, to make you so stupid," he observed mildly. Naomi sighed.
She'd deserved that.
"It is a bad problem. worse." "Ah.
A friend?"
It's not mine, you see, and that makes it
"Yes." And the only thing Naomi couldn't decide was whether it would be worse for Ruth to fall for Melior-or for her to be the sort of person who never fell in love at all. "You cannot solve the problems of others. problem, and his own solution." "Thank you, Master Po.
Each person is his own
If I want Zen, I can go to the library."
Sensei Paul smiled. "Well, if "no-mind" won't work, why don't we see if we can beat it out of you with a good workout? And after that, you can tell me what's wrong." I have this friend," Naomi said. She was wrapped in a terrycloth robe, hair still damp from her shower, sitting on a stool in Paul's tiny New York kitchen while he whisked a bowl of green tea into an opaque froth. "She's getting really attached to this guy, and I think he's going to be a lot of trouble." "That isn't a very detailed outline of the problem," Paul observed. "I think details would get in the way of the facts," Naomi said. "And how much trouble can this guy be for your friend?" Paul said after a moment. He set a bowl of tea in front of her. Naomi sipped and thought about it. "I suppose he's what you could call the "attractive nuisance" type. No job. No money. In fact, he's sleeping on Michael's couch at the moment. He's got a ... problem he wants help with. The help could turn out to be pretty costly, in the long run, but he's so gosh-darned cute it's hard to remember that when he's asking for just one little thing. It's like chasing a dream. it wouldn't be enough."
She could pour her whole life into him and
And wouldn't Melior's dream be preferable to anyone's reality? Who wouldn't rather live in a world of evil emperors and magic swords, of monsters and heroes? Everything clear-cut and obvious. The perfect escape, with a side order of moral rectitude. "And how does this come to be your problem? You aren't your brother's keeper, as a great Zen master once said." Paul regarded her steadily, his hazel eyes allowing for no evasions. Naomi studied her tea a while longer. "I think it's my problem because I'm not objecting to what he's doing," she said at last. "If I see something that I don't like, and I say nothing, then it's the same as endorsing the thing I don't like. Isn't it?" "That could be a hard philosophical position to live with," Paul said, as if addressing the bonsai in the window. Naomi sighed.
"It could be a hard position to live without."
The Dream You Never Found
RUTH FINISHED HER exam, handed it in, and went off to check her mail. She stood in front of her mailbox in the Student Union with its contents in her hand. A letter from Carol in Idaho. A Macy's bill. Her student discount rate copy of Library JournaL Five crisp, bland, and forbidding envelopes-the fruits of her most recent spasm of job searches. Pray that they were all at least invitations to interview. One of them would be her future. Suddenly the sight of them revolted her utterly; she crumpled them in her hand and stuffed them into her purse, seeking for the bottom, knowing that her defiant gesture was only empty theatrics, that later she would open them and read them out. But she did throw the Library Journal in the trash. Safe, sensible, prudent Ruth. Who never did anything drastic. never made a gesture that mattered.
Who
With the crumpled letters still at the bottom of her purse, Ruth walked out of the Student Union. She was contemplating wildness-or at least another pint of HdagenDazs Double Chocolate-and blinking in the unexpected May sunlight when she was hailed from below. Squinting down the steps, she peered until she made out Michael and Philip. Philip's backpack was crammed to even more overstuffed proportions, and his laptop was balanced (with an accompanying sheaf of papers) upon his hip. Michael stood beside him, towering over Philip as usual and looking faintly uneasy. He was not the one who'd shouted. "Hey, yourself," Ruth said, descending the steps. "Looking for another line of work, yet?"
Philip asked.
"I'll leave that to you," she said which, if feeble, was at least something. "I understand that there are positions in license-plate technology opening up every day." And where was "Seen Jane?" Michael asked, and Ruth's nagging disquiet kindled into six-cylinder life, even though she had a close concept of where Jane must be; she'd gone off to the subway to be Melior's Keeper-For-A-Day at an hour when Ruth was still doing her best to prop her eyes open. They'd been supposed to be back by one or two, but it was only the subway, for heaven's sake, and if she wasn't here she had every reason to be late. Ruth looked at her watch. 'Rvo-thirty. Not so very late, but the unfocused fear still cut through her like a knife. "No," she began. "Lucky you," Philip said, but Michael quelled him with a glance. "She's probably with Nai," Michael said. on, then why had he asked? "If she didn't get arrested," Philip said.
But if she was, Ruth worried
"That social refinement we leave to you," Ruth said with gracious poison. "Would you guys cut it out?
I want to talk to Melior," Michael said.
Philip produced an eloquent subvocal rumble but said nothing. headed across the street and the other two followed. "How did the exam go?" motion.
Michael
Michael asked her when he had them both in
"How does any exam go? And yours? I hate cataloging, I hate cataloging exams; everybody buys LC cataloging nowadays which means that some gnome in the basement of the Library of Congress or probably his computer is making us all file Outlaws of Sherwood under Folklore and books on the Miss America pageant under Beauty Aids and what's the point?" Ruth finished in a rush. "Take it easy," Michael said. "The point is, there is no point." Philip spoke up surprisingly. "No one here gets out alive. And over a sufficient period of time, all choices tend to normalize on a curve of random distribution." "You mean if you wait long enough, nothing happens?" "In a hundred years, who will care?" terribly happy smile.
Ruth said.
Philip smiled a lopsided and not
But I don't even care now, Ruth thought forlornly, and wondered what evil she had committed in the lost hours of that long-gone summer's night that was enough to poison all the rest of her years. Naomi turned out not to be home either, though in her case a scribbled note proclaimed her out of eggs for the cake and back in ten. Ruth, putting on the kettle for tea, saw the cramped utilitarian student housing as if for the first time; a clarity of sight she was unable to ameliorate. Vinyl couch patched with plastic tape and draped with a length of tattered fabric. Threadbare sage-green carpet. Age-yellowed, obscurelystained shades; each object a blatant letter of an alphabet in an unfamiliar tongue. Shabby, threadbare, rock-bottom, bone-weary. . . . Ruth stared blindly at the spotted paint behind the stove and realized, with horrified clarity, that she was going to cry. Over the couch, for God's sake? She must be losing her mind . . . And there was no one here but Michael and Philip. Snuffling only a little, Ruth lit the stove, and in the soft bloom of blue gas flame set the kettle on the stove and turned around to the sink. She splashed water on her face, but the sense of despairing dread still hung over her, like foreshadowing in a bad novel.
Heavens. How perfectly Celtic, Ruth thought mockingly. I'll do is sit down and howl at the moon.
The next thing
But that wouldn't be sensible, some ghostly interior counterpoint inserted. Ruth sighed sadly over her inability to carry off a really good dramatic interior monologue and turned away from the sink. Michael was standing in the doorway. Things always tended to look too small around Michael; he was large enough to make even Ruthwere she so inclined-feel small and kittenish, which was no mean feat when you stood five foot eight in your stocking feet. "Feel better?"
Michael asked.
"No," said Ruth honestly. She waved the unspoken words-hers and his-away. "I don't know. Melior. What if-" "What if there isn't a sword?" Michael finished. "Or what if we just don't find it? What if he's stuck here forever? What if he dies?" Ruth stared, struck reasonably speechless. "Why is it you women always think that guys don't ever talk about anything but sex and fast cars?" Michael smiled, to take the edge off it. It I , even if only a little. "He's been sleeping on my couch for-what?" "Three days," Ruth supplied automatically. Sunday." "And if he stays here, he's dead.
"Friday, Saturday, and
He said he told you."
"He did." Michael shrugged, uncomfortable. "What is it, Michael-mine, that you found out between breakfast and lunch and aren't telling?" Ruth, goaded, pounced. Michael met her gaze squarely. Michael always looked everyone in the eye, no matter what he had to say. "The people whore supposed to be being killed, aren't being killed," he said simply. It took Ruth a moment to shift mental gears from interior monologues to homicide and figure this one out. "Which means his grendel doesn't exist," she said flatly. "If," said Michael, leaning back against the wall and blowing out a breath of pure exasperation, "if his grendel is a magical creature, and if this world is the World of Iron his mythology talks about, and if elf-magic works as badly here as Mel seems to think it does, then he might not be right about his sword working better than that." Ruth took a moment to puzzle all that out. "No grendel, no way to find the sword." "The real question is," Philip said, pushing his way past Michael to
enter the kitchen and the conversation, "how long are we going to look for it before we give up?" Philip's hair was pulled back into the thin queue that always reminded Ruth of a white rat's tail. His steel-rimmed bifocals made his eyes alternately distant and flat featureless coin-mirrors in his narrow mustelid face. He stood with shoulders hunched and both hands jammed into the pockets of his red windbreaker and seemed to be addressing his remarks to the refrigerator. But for once he wasn't trying to score verbally off anybody. "How long?" Philip repeated. "He's sleeping on your couch" -to Michael- "and you've spun major plastic on him" -to Ruth- "and yata-da ya-ta-da and ill-met by moonlight proud Titania-" Ruth stared in shock. She hadn't known Philip ever read anything but software manuals. "But the bottom line is: how long?" Silence. "After a certain point, finding the sword is like finding the kidnap victim: impossible. At least with what we've got to work with," Michael observed. "Six hundred bucks and a leather jacket," Philip footnoted. question is, 'can he type?"
"So the
" "What?" Had Philip been out in the sun too long? (In May?) Was he trying a new designer drug? (He didn't even drink coffee.) Was he all there? (But in his own sweet sociopathic way, Philip LeStrange was always all there.) Philip turned away and hunched his shoulders even higher, as if denying the existence of his ears. "After the ball is over, Cinderella. And we pack it in. You and Michael are graduating this year, y'know. After that." "I don't think," Michael said slowly, "that he's going to give up." Philip shrugged angrily and stalked back to the living room. moment Ruth heard the tap-tap-tap of his keyboard.
After a
But the obvious last line remained, as clearly as if he'd said it. So when are YOU giving up, Ruth? It was a morose and disaffected party which greeted Naomi's return. A brown Rockingham pot of infused but undrunk tea sat in the middle of the living room table. Michael was sprawled on the couch. Philip was sprawled on the floor. Ruth was curled, feet up, in a chair almost too small for the gesture, paging through an old exhibition catalog and pretending neither of the others was there. Naomi put down one of the sacks and shifted the other one to her hip. "Who died?" taste?"
she asked.
"Or is that remark not in the best of
"No one died," said Michael, "and that was the curious incident." "I see," said Naomi. "Do I take it, then, that the customary trappings of the wake are in order?" She lifted the lid off the teapot and pulled out the tea ball. The liquid running from it was almost black. "I think it's done," she commented, heading for the kitchen. She returned a moment later with four mugs strung on her fingers like useful rings and the remaining necessities for tea gripped precariously among remaining fingers. She extracted the tea ball and poured tea. "We were trying to think of what kind of job Melior could get," Ruth volunteered, at last, into the silence. "Male model?" Naomi suggested at last, which at least drew a snicker from Philip. "But seriously, folks-is Jane all right?" Ruth kept herself from snarling with an effort, and as a result Naomi's question stood unanswered when the buzzer rang. Michael uncoiled from the couch with surprising violence and lunged for the buzzer. "Yes?" he barked, and the hash of street noise he got back seemed to satisfy him, because he hit the unlock button and held it down for a long minute. "They're back," he announced, looking at Naomi's startled expression. "You kids lead such interesting lives," she commented, and went on into the kitchen with the bag. It was Michael who held the door open, allowing the sounds of sneakers on stair treads to fill the apartment. Ruth stared at her hands, as if she were being paid good money not to look. And eventually they got there. Jane came through the door first, and for a moment Ruth didn't recognize her. The white turtleneck with the blue flowers, the matching blue cardigan, the pale blue corduroy slacks which were the closest Jane ever got to jeans were streaked and barred with black grime. The knees of her pants were literally black, with a polished-cotton sheen of ground-in dirt. There were even smudges on her face, painting on a faint faux glamorie of trompe loeil cheekbones. "What the hell happened to you?" recognized as hers.
Ruth demanded in a voice she hardly
Melior entered behind Jane. The black leather jacket, the artisticallydistressed jeans, showed the dirt far less than Jane's once painfully-neat ensemble, but when you looked for it, it was there. Ruth got up.
Jane ducked past Michael and fled to the bathroom.
Melior ran a hand through his hair. "We have been in the subterranean ways, Ruth. And as I foretold you, the grendel is there. I have found proof." He set down the bag he'd been carrying; Ruth saw a familiar fastfood logo. Michael shut the door behind him.
"And did you, ah, bring this proof'
with you?" Melior regarded him with schooled blandness, and once again Ruth felt that ghostly echo of clashing wills between the two men. "And how does one bring the scent from the earth, or the track from the mud? Yet they are no less real for that. The grendel casts off its human seeming, and becomes more powerful with each passing hour." Melior advanced into the room, wrapping the leather jacket around himself as if he were cold. "And we are here." "Everybody's gotta be someplace," Philip commented. leaned back against the couch.
He sat up and
"And I and thou are here," Melior said. "And yet I am forced to wonder, Master Philip, why should this be so?" "Come again?"
Naomi said from the kitchen doorway.
Melior turned toward her and favored her with a smile of dazzling charm. "I would not forgo your company easily, Mistress Naomi, nor yet the table you set. But I have learned, as you wished me to, that this world is wide. And so I wonder: when I fell prey to the traps which bespelled the Sword of Maiden's Tears, why should my place in it be here, and not some other place?" "Well," said Naomi slowly, "there's no place like this place anywhere around the place, so this must be the place." "Why?"
said Melior.
"Why not?"
said Philip to his shoes.
"Because things do not happen save for reasons," Melior said patiently. Naomi laughed.
"Brother, are you a long way from home."
"Yes," said Melior seriously, and smiled. He walked across the room to Ruth, and looked down at her. "But as you see, I have gone and come back again, unimpeded by the city guard." "On Earth we call them policemen," said Philip. Jane came out of the bathroom, damp and hostile. Her face was scrubbed pink and her cotton cardigan buttoned up demurely over the worst of the grime. She glanced at Melior; Ruth saw her do it and felt a flash of reasonless jealousy. Melior's hand closed reassuringly over Ruth's shoulder and squeezed warmly. "So exactly where in the subway were you?" Again Melior and Jane exchanged glances. said finally.
Ruth asked. "Somewhere in Brooklyn," Jane
"And that's where the grendel is?" Michael said, working very hard to keep his voice neutral. From the kitchen there was a momentary whine of an electric mixer and a clatter of pans.
"No," said Melior patiently. "That is where the grendel was. But, so I am told, the tunnels are all linked, and it will not venture forth into the light willingly again." "So it's in the subway?" Michael repeated again, as if it were very important that this question be answered. There was a rattle and bang of the oven door, and Naomi came back into the living room. "Forty minutes," she said cryptically. She sat down on the arm of a chair and swept the room with a glance, very much as if they were all books and she were about to catalog them. "So. Why don't we all tell each other what kind of a day we all had?" There was a moment's silence. Ruth felt again that strong sense of peril; as if the words spoken here would serve as choices; would set paths that all of them here would have to follow. She was almost spooked enough to warn the others; to suggest it, making it a joke, when Philip spoke. "Well, Michael and me hacked into the Coroner's Office and found out that whatever else this grendel's doing, it isn't leaving a bunch of bodies lying around. Guess it isn't very hungry, huh?" Philip shoved his glasses back up on the bridge of his nose. Ruth felt Melior go very still behind her. "This is Monday afternoon," Jane said, getting all of her facts straight. "We heard about the last kill Sunday night, but it had to have been killed Saturday night at the latest, because it was found Sunday afternoon. But this grendel's supposed to be hungry," she added, looking half-challengingly toward Melior. "It starves from what it battens upon," Melior agreed. "The hunger that was a man's in life for glory or fame is transmuted by the curse into unslakable appetite." "Betcha can't eat just one," Philip muttered. "So if there is a grendel, as you believe," Michael said, "there should be more victims." "Should there?" said Melior. He stepped away from Ruth now, and all five of them watched him. "How do you know there are not?" "We didn't find any," Michael said. He sounded as if he'd looked personally, but Ruth knew he meant that it hadn't turned up in Philip's, urn, hacking. Philip's hacking. Melior's?
Was Michael really taking Philip's word over
Was she willing to take Melior's word over Philip's? When was she going to "call it quits"? Was she going to? "With your machines," said Melior, as if it were a personal insult.
"The machines see nothing, so you say there is nothing. machines know only what men have told them."
But these
"In the nonexclusive sense of the word 'men,"' Naomi added. "So you're telling us there's something we've missed," Michael said, carefully neutral. "I am saying I beg your trust, Friend Michael. For a time-a short time-more. You say there is no magic-" Melior raised his voice and spread his arms. The sweeping gesture was meant for a cape but somehow did not look silly when performed in a leather jacket. "I say there is. And I say that the creature I seek is there. In the subterranean. It hardly matters if you believe, you know. You are not worldlings for me to beguile with tales of sorcery, nobility, and gold. I ask you now for one simple thing-" "This is something more substantial than buying a ticket, isn't it?" Naomi said, cutting through the spell of Melior's words. "Yes," said Melior. "I do not need the cars. I need to get into the tunnels. On foot. I need your aid for that." Jane shifted where she sat, but only Ruth noticed. She thought Melior might have tried to go down into the tunnels today, but probably Jane had stopped him. "Into the tunnels," said Naomi. platform. Sounds easy."
"Just jump over the side of the
"And get creamed by an oncoming train," said Philip. "I would need provisions. or a boar-spear."
Lights.
And weapons; a good club; a sword
Philip made a noise. "In the first place you can't do it. In the second place, they'll arrest you. And in the third place, there isn't anything down there to chase. Period." Now it was out and all of them had to face it. Melioras-he-was; only disbelief in his goal.
Not disbelief in
"If there is nothing there, then no harm can come, can it?" said. "We could be arrested," said sensible Ruth. Ruth.
Melior
Sensible traitorous
"We could get killed-by the third rail, by rats, by passing muggers. And if we got caught down there they'd fine us to death. "Bye-bye Columbia," Michael finished. "You got a better idea?" Melior.
I mean-"
said Jane, surprisingly defensive of
"Not getting creamed by an oncoming train leaps instantly to mind," Philip said helpfully.
"I do not propose that you do," Melior said. battle.
"This is not your
Only provision me, and I shall go alone." "That'd look great on the six o'clock news. 'Dead Elf Found In Subway, Pictures At Eleven."' "If you can't say something helpful, Philip, would you please go home?" Jane asked long-sufferingly. "I know that you do not believe," said Melior, "and this makes no difference-not to me, and certainly not to the creature I hunt. And I must hunt it-with your help or alone." Melior looked beseechingly toward Naomi. She ran a hand through her short black hair. "With us or without us," she said. "But, Melior, you just don't understand-" "I think you should let him do what he wants, even if it is stupid," Jane said flatly. "It isn't that it's stupid," Ruth began. "Although it is," Philip said. "But there's the little matter of unlawful trespass, breaking and entering, little things like that. It's illegal," Michael said, a hint of truculence in his voice. "Illegal?" frowned.
Philip said.
"Get down on the tracks. it all the time."
"I sure hope so."
He laughed, then
There's got to be ways.
The subway guys do
"The 'subway guys' are trained to do it," Naomi said. "They know all the nooks and crannies of the system. And the train schedules. And everything." "The trains-and the schedules-are on computer," Philip said sweetly. "No," said Naomi flatly. Everyone looked at her.
"Not without proof-real proof." "This is not a game.
This is not 'for-fun."
And it sure isn't the steam tunnels at Michigan State University," Naomi said. Her face was set, determined, and her voice vibrated with conviction as she spoke. "Everything Ruth's said about the third rail and the trains and everything is true. And it isn't just a matter of Melior not getting hurt-what if he caused a train wreck? Hundreds of people killed or injured-and our fault?" "You'd have to do it at night," Philip said. trains then."
"There aren't as many
Ruth had always suspected Naomi of being soft on Philip, for some unbelievable reason, but the look she riveted him with now was filled with such contempt that even Philip noticed. He ducked his head quickly, ears red, and didn't say anything else. "I'm sorry, Melior," Naomi said. "We can't just go off and play in the subway on your word that there's something down there. This is real
life, and this is dangerous.
There isn't enough proof.
I'm sorry."
That was that, and they all knew it. Even Melior didn't bother to argue. "I thank you, then, for all the patience you have shown me, Mistress Naomi. In my own place, I do not think that such kindness would have been shown to strangers." He inclined his head, acknowledging his defeat. And then he turned and walked out the door. "Hey!" In the moment Ruth realized he was really gone she lunged up out of her chair and flung-she'd never realized the description could be correct before-herself out the door. She thought someone tried to stop her, but if that was so, they didn't try as hard to keep her as she did to go. Melior was waiting for her just outside the street door-or, if not waiting, then at least not leaving very fast. "Wait," Ruth gasped, clutching at the edge of the door for support. "Isn't it amusing, in a quiet way, that a Prince of the House of the Silver Silences, whose blood is filled with silver and starlight, who has commanded men in the field, and broken the Successor Lords on the Field of Glass, cannot entreat a moment's fealty from humans? Humans, Ruth. Can you credit it?" "I'm human," Ruth said. "Then perhaps you can explain it to me." He took her arm and drew her onto the sidewalk. He put an arm around her shoulders, and she leaned into him. The late-afternoon sun was just warm enough, and no one looked at either of them as they walked south on Riverside Drive, with the glassy swell of the Hudson beside them. "I'm right," Melior said softly after a while. "So what?" said Ruth mournfully. "It doesn't matter. thing to ask, you know. It's dangerous down there."
It's a big
"I asked no one to accompany me," Melior reminded her. "That wouldn't stop them," Ruth said darkly. "But it's-I know it's important to you, Melior, but it-It's just another chanson geste to you, and for us it's real. It's our lives." "And when I am dead, and you are grendel-ridden; when the House of the Silver Silences is cast into the Outer Darkness forever and the balance of power in the Morning Lands slides inevitably toward Night, then, then you will say that you had no inkling of its import." His voice was quietly bitter. "That isn't fair." "I'm not in a mind to be fair." "You want us to throw over everything-on your word alone-for something that probably isn't even there! What's in it for us?" "Ah."
They walked on for a few moments in silence, past skateboarders
and a hot-dog stand, past frisbee-throwing kids and joggers. if it is there?" Melior said.
"But what
Once again it was Ruth's turn to be silent. Because much as she wanted to believe in the grendel, even with Melior's technicolor presence to bolster her faith, she couldn't. Not when it was so much more likely to be the forlorn delusion of a dying exile. Not when cynical twentieth century probability said that was the way to bet-against monsters and heroes, bright promises and valorous deeds. "If it is," Ruth said, coward compromise in her voice, "there'll be proof, won't there? More killings? Michael said there weren't any, and. . . ." "He said the machines had recorded none, not that there were none. This city of yours is vast beyond imagining, and rich beyond the dreams of madmen, but it holds its poor who sleep in doorways. I have seen them. And I think, were I such a poor man and did I have the coin, I would choose to sleep in the subterranean where the rain and wind come not. If such a man dies, who mourns him?
Tell me that, Ruth."
"Well, maybe," Ruth said irritably. just another fairy tale."
"But it isn't proof, Melior.
It's
"And you, Ruth? Will you do for love what they will not do for reason?" Melior stopped and pulled her gently around to face him. Conflicting emotions spun through her panic-stricken brain, but topmost of all was the sick certainty that there was no grendel, and that if Melior went down into the tunnels the inevitable They would catch him and trap him and put him in a cage, and then even frustrated hope would be dead. "Love?" love?"
said Ruth, through a choking throat.
"Who said anything about
Melior stared at her for a long moment, his pupils dark vertical flicks against the light of the setting sun. "I did.
But it seems that I misspoke myself."
He let her go and turned away, and left her with a long loping stride that she could not have matched, even if she'd cared to. She sat on a bench, and eventually the unwelcome and low-comic certainty came to her that she was going to have to go back home and tell them all something, and that undoubtedly by then there wouldn't be any chocolate cake left, either. Darkness at Noon THE LAND HE passed through had neither sun nor moon. Its voice was the roaring of the distant ocean, and the water through which he walked was as warm and fecund as blood. Kevin Shelby had come into his kingdom at last. Only he didn't know it-or to be perfectly precise, the one who
possessed all these fastnesses did not precisely remember that once he had been a man who dreamed of glory. The One who was now would have thought Kevin Shelby's ambitions laughable if it had been confronted with them. The One who was now wanted only two things: food and the continued safety of The Object. It was always hungry. There was still plentiful food available here in its realm, but with the focused facility of extreme paranoia The One knew that this soft sweet comfortable food was-still and also-a source of danger to it. A time would come when to hunt would be to imperil the safety of The Object, and The One did not want that. It was making arrangements against that day. Provident arrangements. And there was one other source of danger. An Other, unlike either The One or The Object, an Other who wanted The Object for himself. But The One was making arrangements for that, too. Determined to pretend that nothing had happened, Ruth went back up the hill, away from Melior, toward Broadway and the Columbia campus. There she spent most of the afternoon, until twilight and a rumbling stomach made her admit that what she was really doing was trying to avoid her friends. And feeling as if she wanted to avoid them wasn't fair, dammit, it wasn't Ruth who'd done anything to blush for. It was Melior who'd been so unreasonable; in fact, all of this was All Melior's Fault. She wished she believed that. She wished she knew what to believe. But Melior had asked them-all five of them, Ruth and Michael, Naomi and Jane and Philip-for something they couldn't give him. It was all of their futures on the line here, and this wasn't some convenient fairy tale where the price of their mistakes would be death. No, it was worse than that: any mistakes any of them made would be mistakes they'd have to live with, all down the gray cheerless years of quiet desperation that were shaped by those mistakes. You're a bundle of cheer tonight, Ruth told herself But it was true. It was a lot easier to gamble when the stakes were Success or Death. Half a century of being an impoverished failure was a little harder to swallow cheerfully. She didn't believe in the grendel And she didn't believe Melior would ever stop looking for it. And sooner or later he was going to run splat into the power structure and they'd take him and lock him up and Her hands were shaking. And her mind was, as it always did when she was upset, trying to push into the gray space that lay between eighteen and twenty-six, trying to find reality in what was actually and always would be a long gray vast shapeless expanse of nothing. And that was the real joke, if Melior only knew it. She had so little to lose that she would gladly have gone into the subway with Melior bearing only an are lamp and a machine gun-if she'd been able to believe.
In anything.
Anything at all.
Ruth swallowed hard and wondered what he was doing and where he'd gone. Melior believed; good God, he had enough belief for any three normal people; he'd believe in something at the drop of a hat; just watch him and you could get yourself convinced of anything from the Doctrine of Signatures to the Ninety-Five Theses of Luther to the importance of tossing after meals. Melior had passion. Passion. And wasn't that what everyone thought was such a hands-down terrific lifestyle accessory? A sensibility that went for the gusto like a starved pit bull? Mind, it might not know enough to come in out of the rain, but. . . . If it had hurt less, she might have cried. Some time later she looked up, conscious that someone was watching her. Jane was standing about three feet away, wearing a pink denim jumper (she must have changed her clothes) and balancing a load of books on her hip. "I thought you were probably here," Jane said, sitting down. "Welcome to previews of my post-collegiate depression," Ruth said mockingly. "There wasn't anything there," Jane said simply. "In the subway?"
Ruth guessed.
Jane nodded, and sighed.
"And he's going to go look for it anyway."
Their glances locked, in wry complicity over the utter predictability of none-too-bright Tyrant Man. Ruth shrugged, weary to the bone. So much for reaching out to grasp at magic. All it left you with was a handful of ashes. "So we've got to stop him," Jane said stubbornly. "What do you suggest, a straitjacket?"
Ruth shot back.
"The New York Subway System has twelve hundred and fifty-seven miles of track and over ten thousand units of rolling stock. And somewhere in there he thinks there's a grendel and a magic sword. The grendel guards the sword. The sword is the only thing that can slay the grendel, Jane said pedantically. "Right so far," Ruth said. Jane leaned both elbows on the table, her lank hair swinging forward over her cheeks. "So the only thing the grendel (if it really did exist) has to do to not get killed is hide the sword, right?"
Ruth stared at Jane and tried to find some flaw in her reasoning. Unfortunately it was seamlessly logical, as Jane's reasoning always was. Ruth wondered if the (probably nonexistent) grendel was as smart as Jane Greyson. "Right," she said hesitantly. "And even if it's too stupid to think of something like that, strategy requires that you act as if it will think of it, in case you get caught flatfooted. So whether the grendel thinks of hiding the sword or not, Melior has to." "And?"
Ruth prompted.
"So Melior," said Jane with a sour expression, "has to make an enormous pounce. He can't give the grendel time to know he's hunting it, because that would give it time to hide the sword. He has to move fast." Light dawned. Ruth.
"So he has to know exactly where he's going," said
"Right?" Jane nodded. "And if he has a chance of getting accurate tactical intelligence, he won't move without it," she finished matter-of-factly. If Melior had enough information to know where the grendel was, wouldn't that mean that there'd be enough information to constitute proof of its reality? "But he isn't going to believe we'll do it! Not after-" "He'll believe Philip will do it. Because Philip will do anything for money. And you've still got Melior's money," Jane said. Ruth made a guilty grab at her handbag, but Jane was right: there it was, a little over thirty-six hundred dollars, all that was left after the shopping expedition at Macy's and the run-in with the Transit Police. "I couldn't.
. . ."
Ruth began.
"He doesn't care what you do with it. And I bet you can't get Philip to do it for free. And if you did, it wouldn't give you-" there was a pause while Jane hunted for lemot juste, "-plausible deniability." Ruth made a face. Jane was undoubtedly right about that. Only Naomi-and sometimes Michael-could induce the spirit of cooperation to inhabit the breast of Philip Leslie LeStrange. But it could work. It might work. Bribe Philip, and have him go to Melior, and "So it's a deal?" Jane prompted. "Sure," said Ruth, recklessly promising. find Philip?"
"But where are we going to
None of them had much interest in hanging around after Ruth and Melior had left, even with the promise of one of Naomi's cakes in the offing. Jane had left almost immediately, and Philip had lingered only long enough to repack his laptop and rucksack. He'd left the printouts behind, the printouts that proved that the killer that Melior said was loose, could not be loose. So not very long after Philip left, Michael left, too. Monday was one of his nights at Lundgren's Gym; he walked downtown a dozen blocks and spent a couple of hours that afternoon working out with the free weights. A healthy mind in a tired body. But at last it was ten o'clock, the last of the customers gone and the last of the weights racked and machines reset and towels bagged and vacuum run and all the hundred and one little chores by which Michael paid for his gym time accomplished, and the only thing left to do was go home. And hope he didn't dream. "I could be bounded in a nutshell, and count myself a king of infinite space, were it not that I have bad dreams. . . . " So he went home to his adequate apartment and opened the window for night air as fresh as New York's ever got, and he popped a beer and was flipping channels looking for something amusing on the public access channels when the door opened and Melior came in. He wasn't wearing that stupid movie-star hat he and Ruth had been so pleased with, and the mirrorshade aviators dangled from one of the pockets of the S&M Biker Slut jacket. His hair stood out around his head like a movieland special effect, and he looked as if he and the clothes were only coincidentally in the same place. 'may I come in?" shut.
Melior said, although he was already in and the door
Michael sat up and put both feet on the floor. He had four inches and at least thirty pounds on the elf-guy and ought not to feel this sense of threat every time he faced Melior. But most guys would back down from somebody Michael's size, or do their best to let him know they didn't have to. Melior just seemed to take it for granted that if there was a fight, he'd win it. Except there'd been a fight today.
And Melior had lost it.
Badly.
"You're already in," Michael pointed out. "Two questions: Are there any hard feelings about today? And where's Ruth?" "Mistress Ruth left me shortly after I left you. And as for your refusal of aid......... Melior sighed and shook his head. "I do not understand, but I must accept it. You have sheltered, fed, and clothed me, even if only for Ruth's sake and the amusement of the thing. That alone is more generosity than I could rightfully lay claim to in these lands," "Uh-huh." There were any number of half-insults in Melior's speech, if Michael wanted to take him up on them. Michael didn't. "So, what are you going to do now?"
Melior regarded him with an exasperation that was very near the end of its patience. "I am going to take such of my possessions as I require, and bid you farewell, and go to hunt the grendel, which lairs in the subterranean way and has stolen the Sword of Maiden's Tears. If, upon discovering it, I took the Sword and slew it, then I would take the Sword and go to my own place, and pray I was in time. That is what I am going to do now, Michael Peacock." "And, ah, what if it isn't there?" Michael said, very carefully, ignoring the fact that Melior seemed to have lost his grasp on the concept of present tense. "It is there," Melior said flatly. "Look," Michael said, getting up. "I didn't want to say this before, in front of the others, but whether it's down there or not really isn't the issue. What matters is that you can't just play Peter Pan in the subway tunnels without getting caught. If you go down there, they're going to catch you and lock you up somewhere the sun don't shine, if you take my meaning, and that isn't going to do you a whole lot of good." "And doing nothing at all is?" Melior demanded. "Michael, try to understand. I swore an oath upon my father's head that I would find the Sword and bring it back. I swore." "I swore an oath once," Michael said. Melior's attention sharpened, focused on Michael as if the words Michael was about to say were the words Melior had been waiting for since the moment they'd met. And because of that, Michael swallowed hard, forcing all the words that might have been back into silence. "I broke it. End of story." "No. Not the end, Friend Michael. And this oath I have sworn I will die in attempting. I want to go home, MichaeL " The words were uttered in a tone very like a wail, and Melior threw himself into the chair that stood beside the door. "When Baligant is vested, and the Sword is not among the Treasures, Line Rohannan of the House of the Silver Silences will be cast out, wolfshead. Doomed, and it will be my fault, who could not see the trap or, having sprung it, retain possession of that which it was death to relinquish." "If you go down into those tunnels, you are going to hit the wall, Mel, and then it isn't going to be a case of won't. There won't be anything in God's Creation we can do for you." And you're going to break Ruth's heart either way, my friend, and there's nothing to do about that but watch. "There is nothing else I can do now," Melior said bitterly. "I cannot compel your aid, and it is little consolation to me to know that the grendel will fatten itself upon the bones of my failure, growing in power until all this land is in despair, and no hero will come from the Morning Lands to succor you." "That's a chance we're going to have to take." Thus spoke Michael Peacock, child of his times, growing up with A-Bomb drills in school and calluses on his neglected soul from living beneath the shadow of Armageddon.
"And you could have stopped it," Melior said. "That knowledge you will carry with you into the next life: you could have stopped it." Suddenly something occurred to Michael. as if it's already happened?"
"Why are we talking about this
Melior stood up. "Because I will not kill the grendel This much I know for truth," Melior said, and walked into the kitchen. Michael gave the remark about three beats' worth of thought and followed him. Melior was hanging over the open refrigerator, gazing into its electric depths. He'd had several rude things to say about New York America Earth beer when Michael had introduced him to the stuff, and passed it by now in favor of the two-liter bottle of unfiltered apple juice. "You aren't going to kill the grendel, " Michael said uninflectedly. Melior removed the cap from the bottle with the innocent pride of a recently-learned skill and raised the bottle to his lips. "I am not going to kill the grendel, " he agreed, and drank. A powerful sensation of being the straight man in an old Abbot & Costello routine took strong possession of Michael. "Maybe you could explain why it was you decided not to share this little factoid with us this afternoon?" "You already do not believe in the grendel when Melior pointed out reasonably enough for an elf sandwiches shy of a picnic in the first place. the apple juice. "Why should you give any more facts I might relate?"
I have told you of it," who was a few He put the cap back on credence to any other
"In the first place they are not facts and in the second place would you mind explaining this new theory of yours?" He was actually going to lose his temper, Michael realized with a distant amazement. Again. Melior replaced the apple juice and closed the refrigerator door. waved his hand; the gesture of an elf-prince who is at a loss for words.
He
"It is not a 'new theory,' Michael. It is a fact; an ability of my kind. I was not certain at first that it would work in this world, even though I had found my heart twin here, but now I know that it does. The future is not fixed," Melior went on, launching well and truly into his explanation, "it spreads like the fingers of a hand, of a hundred hands, each finger growing from all the choices that precede it. And when there are so many branchings-when any thing is as possible as any other-our kind is as blind as any human to what Will Be. "But there are times when the choices do not matter, when the branchings of the future are few, and the road we must take is inevitable. Then the Sons of the Morning can see farther into What Will Be than those of mortal blood. The branches of my future are narrow and few.
And I do not see the grendel's death upon them." Michael heard this speech out in a respectful silence, and then gave the silence a little more elbow-room while he thought about it. "You aren't going to kill it." "True." "But you're going to go out and try to kill it anyway." I 'Yes." "That is the stupidest thing I've ever heard," Michael announced. "Then you haven't heard much, Friend Michael," Melior told him. A few hours earlier, but in much the same area, Ruth and Jane, soldiers of the same side, plotted their next move. "First we've got to find him," Ruth said helplessly. She could not imagine where to begin. Michael might know, but Ruth did not feel like seeing Michael just now. Where would you go to hang out, if you were as strange as Philip LeStrange? "Come on," said Jane, no indecision at all in her voice. and strode off. Ruth shrugged and followed.
She got up
They drew cover first at Hacker Heaven and came up empty; Monday night and the first week in May, and the only people in the computer center were harried students engaged in legitimate pursuits. I 'Maybe he's at Michael's," Ruth said reluctantly, but a quick resort to the pay phone in the hall outside the computer lab revealed that no one was at Michael's, or if they were, they weren't answering the phone. Jane hung up the phone and turned to Ruth.
"Maybe he's at home."
For a moment Ruth thought Jane meant her dorm room, but that wasn't possible. Then she realized Jane had to mean Philip's home, and the dazzling possibility that Philip actually had an apartment somewhere struck her speechless. What sort of an apartment would Philip LeStrange have-and how did Jane know where it was, anyway, when none of the rest of them did? Ruth said something to that effect. "It's on his ID," Jane explained simply, which left only the question (better unasked) of what Jane had been doing with Philip's wallet. In an orderly universe (or even at a college in the Midwest) Philip would have been in on-campus housing, subject to the laws of the Dean and the watchful scrutiny of his more stable peers. But Columbia was a campus in a city where space was at a premium and the students were encouraged to find any other place to live than the campus. "Here?" said Ruth doubtfully. They were up above 120th Street, east of Columbia, and Ruth felt as if she were wearing a large sign with the words "Mugger Bait" blazoned on it. The street was dark, and dirty
even by New York standards, and the doorway was one of those deep cubbyholes in the shadows of which anything might be hiding. Jane didn't even hesitate. Up the steps, yank the handle (the outer and supposedly-locking door's lock was permanently sprung), and into the New York Urban Airlock. There was a round hole in the doorframe of the inner door where the electric lock was supposed to be, but at least the lobby lights worked. Nobody had attended to basic daintiness in the lobby for quite some time. "Sixth floor," said Jane. The journey was accompanied by the distinctive grace notes peculiar to an unloved New York apartment building: rotting garbage, urine, antique grease, cooking spices, disinfectant, multilingual quarreling, dogs barking, the insistent bass thump of an overcranked canned music source. Poverty. Or as it was called these days, low-income housing. The economies of depleted resources. Ruth thought of coming home every night to a place like this and recoiled inwardly. But some people had no choice. And for some it was only a way station. "Here we are," said Jane. If she disliked this place as much as Ruth did, she didn't show it. Her face behind the heavy horn-rims was as stolid as a plaster saint's. She raised her hand, and banged on the door with a vigor that made Ruth jump. The noises within that had been making their feeble reply to the backbeat ceased. Jane thumped again. The door was finally opened-on the chain-by a black-haired boy with a haircut that couldn't make up its mind whether it was punk or unkempt. He had on a black-washed-to-gray T-shirt that seemed to be a homemade advertisement for necrophilia. He looked at Jane, then past her to Ruth, and his eyes widened in disbelief. "Uh, you got the wrong address," he said finally, which made Ruth grin inwardly. "Is Philip here?" she said, knowing that Jane would simply argue the question of was-this-or-was-this-not the right address for Jane's purposes. "Uh," said the boy again. "Phil!"
He slammed the door.
they heard him yell, "It's somebody's mother!"
"I resent that remark," Ruth muttered. If she were a character in a movie she'd spin around now and kick the door open. The chain would break, and The small peephole in the center of the door went dark as someone looked through it, then there was a rattle as the chain was taken off.
Philip opened the door. He was, Ruth was relieved to see, not in the state of undress that the inhabitants of all-male housing usually were. Philip looked, as usual, clean, neat, composed, and nonnecrophilic. "What do you guys want?"
he asked.
"Ruth had an idea," Jane said. "Would it be okay if I had this idea inside?"
Ruth asked.
"Um," Philip seemed nonplussed by this suggestion.
"Just a minute."
The door closed again. "I could have gone home," Ruth remarked to the ambient air. "I could have stared at my own front door in perfect comfort and safety." "They're probably all naked," Jane said grimly. Which was apparently pretty much the case, judging by the hurried retreats and slamming doors that followed once Philip came back and opened the door again. By then Ruth was interested enough in getting out of the hallway that her standards were appreciably lower than usual. Which was just as well.
This was a Never-Never Land without Wendy.
Sleep all day, pansy all night . . . Ruth thought grimly, as Philip relocked a series of chains and deadbolts behind them. The (empty) living room seemed to be decorated in Early Cardboard Box. There was a mattress and a pile of drawers sans chest-of- over beneath the windows, which were obscured only by ancient roller blinds, some with posters taped to them. The floor was covered with a medley of newspapers, books, album covers, and rug scraps. Linoleum showed through in places. The walls were their original color of utilitarian gray, except where someone had made the attempt to redecorate, apparently with a can of glitter-purple lacquer. There were the remains of a couch, without cushions, up against one wall, buttressed by two more stacks of boxes and an array of cognitively-dissonant high-end stereo equipment perched on a set of college-traditional books-and-bricks shelving. Male student housing, as per the norm. "What do you want?" asked Philip. He seemed nervous, and Ruth could imagine why. Personally, she expected troglodytes to come lurching out from behind the bundled heights of paper. "It's about him, " Jane said. "Oh." There was a pause, while Philip reluctantly made the ultimate concession. "Come on." When this had been a prestigious address, this had been a luxury apartment; left over from that halcyon era was the room that you got to by going through the kitchen and pantry: the maid's room, where once upon a time before color TV, some (Irish) cook or maid had wiled away
her leisure hours. There was a combination lock on the door. Philip worked it quickly, without explanation or apology, and opened the door. The long-ago maid had made do with a room about six feet by eight-and it had probably been spacious in those days, Ruth thought, or at least seemed that way. She squeezed in beside Jane to the eighteeninch walkway which was all the free space she could find. Philip slid in beside her and shut the door. The ululation-and-static of a police band scanner broke the silence. Ruth looked upward at piles of junk on racks of gray steel industrial shelving, and located the source, but barely. Some of the junk was lit and humming, and some of it wasn't, and Ruth was certain on very little evidence that Philip had every form of semielicit listening device known to Man jammed in here. There was another scanner, tuned to the car-phone frequency, and a CB that seemed to be putting out mostly static. By then Jane had edged around the first redoubt of technology and into an open space fully three feet square. It contained half a door balanced on top of two buckling file cabinets and supported a computer whose monitor was scrolling lit lines of gibberish. In front of this mesalliance was what seemed to be the room's only chair. Ruth sidled into the open space and turned around. Jane moved down next to a tidy bookcase completely crammed with impersonal technology. Ruth glanced around from her new vantage point. There was no sign of a bed anywhere. She looked back at Philip. Philip looked as embarrassed as if they were reading his personal love letters. "Well?" he said. "This had better be good." "How much would you charge," Ruth said, choosing her words with care, "to track all the disturbances of the kind Melior is looking for in the subway?" On her right, various scanners warbled and blatted. Philip looked suspicious and interested; which was to say, his face went completely blank. "Why?"
he said.
"Why not?"
said Jane.
"There aren't any," Philip said. "Did that ever stop you before?"
Jane shot back.
"What's he going to do?" Philip asked. Dear Philip, with no sense of social responsibility anywhere in sight; he'd been one of the votes, Ruth remembered suddenly, in favor of the expedition to Downbelow Station. "He's going to go get it." knows where it is."
Jane shrugged.
"If he thinks we're looking for it. amended.
"But he'll wait until he
If we are looking for it," Ruth
"So you want me to look for something that isn't there?" Philip asked, with a certain air of exasperated superiority. Beside Ruth the computer finished doing whatever it was doing, emitted a satisfied queep, and covered the blanked monitor with a rotating starfield. "Which word didn't you understand?"
said Jane.
"The part about how you want me to do an illegal hack for money," Philip said, smirking. "Oh, come on, Philip, would you do it for free?" exasperatedly.
Ruth snapped
Philip fixed his gaze on a point three feet above her head and an indefinite distance away. "You want to string him. Okay. I can do that. I won't even charge you for it, much, just expenses. Because it isn't going to work for very long. And then he isn't going to pay any attention to anything any of us says." "You mean like he does now?" "How much for expenses?"
Ruth said.
Jane said.
Philip bit his lip and figured. "Two hundred. connect time. That's the truth."
That's just for the
Ruth took out her wallet and started counting twenties. Philip took them and stuffed them in his pocket. "Done deal. So why don't we go get some Chinese? I'm starved. Mel can pay." "What makes you think we want to buy you dinner?"
Jane said.
Philip smiled, his typical nasty smile; techie in the catbird seat. "Because you want me to explain to Elfie what he just bought." Michael Peacock stared at Mel the Elf across the kitchen, and running on through his mind like an idiot refrain was the phrase: this changes things, this changes things . . . Melior not only believed there was a nonexistent grendel haunting the subway system, he believed he was foredoomed not to kill it. This changes things, this changes things .
. .
Michael came from a large and aggressively Irish family, and, besides the usual collection of bluff, no-nonsense uncles, he had an accumulation of long-haired bookish aunts who, in addition to collecting advanced degrees at European universities, knew the folklore of their own particular ethnic group rather well indeed. Even if he didn't believe in them, Michael was more than familiar with doomed heroes who could see the future. Having one of them in his own kitchen changed things, though. This changes things, this changes things. "Mel, that makes it even more stupid. thing . . ."
. . .
If you know you can't kill the
"I swore I would retrieve the Sword. Melior said simply.
I will fulfill my oath or die,"
Whwhich might make YOU sleep well at night, boyo, but doesn't do much for the rest of us, Michael reflected. "There are-" he began. There was a knock at the door. "Christ, it's after eleven."
Michael looked at his watch.
The knock came again.
Melior flowed out of the kitchen like cats and rivers and any number of other apposite similes. He placed himself behind the door and looked at Michael. A cold hackle of foreboding whispered down Michael's spine. himself, he shook his head and went to the door.
Angry with
"You going to open up or am I going to stand here all night?" came Philip's voice, only slightly muffled, from the other side of the door. And Michael, who always had to know how the story came out, opened the door. Philip wandered in, looking, as always, like a cat checking out a new accommodation that he might not choose to approve. He looked around. "Where's.
. . ?
Oh.
Hi, Elfie.
Slain any good orcs lately?"
Philip came the rest of the way in, gazing about himself like a visitor to the Prado, and only then did Michael realize that Ruth and Jane were with him. "Hi," said Ruth uncomfortably. "Oh, what the hell," said Michael, standing back to let them enter. "I better call Nai," Ruth said as soon as she was in. Michael looked at Melior. The elf s face was scrupulously composed, as if he were a cat trying very hard not to laugh. "I suppose you're wondering why I called you all here," Philip said. "The suspense is nearly bearable," Jane commented. She glanced at Melior, then away. In the kitchen, Ruth's voice was a low expository mutter on the telephone. "It's after eleven," Michael pointed out with a certain amount of sweet reasonability. "It's Monday." "Yeah, well, first you weren't here and then if it waited until tomorrow he wouldn't be here and that's the whole point, isn't it?" Philip said. "Is it?"
Michael asked.
"Look," Philip continued, Sweet Reason at its most arch. "You don't believe in grendels. I don't believe in grendels. There aren't any grendels." Ruth came out of the kitchen at the end of this speech and looked rather stunned at this intelligence. But what else had she expected Philip to say? "There are," Melior said.
He did not look at Ruth.
"But what we all-I-I-I-I-I-I agree on is that if there were a grendel, it'd leave tracks, " Philip continued. "Cut to the chase, wetbrain," Jane muttered. "Thank you for sharing this with us," Michael said. "Phil, it's late, we all have things we'd like to do with our tomorrows, we know all this already." "Fine.
You can leave.
Him I'm here to cut a deal with."
"It's his apartment," Melior explained to Philip. "Everybody needs a straight man," Jane said in an aside. Michael walked ostentatiously over to the couch-his own couch, if anyone was interested-and sat down. "Tea?" he said to Ruth. "That would be lovely," Ruth said, and went to make it. "You want to find that grendel, right?"
Philip said to Melior.
"I will find the grendel, " Melior corrected him. "Right." Jane spoke up. "But you've got to find it without it knowing you're coming, otherwise it's got options and you don't." Melior looked from Jane back to Philip, an expression of bland wariness settling over his face. "So you say the grendel's going to start killing people. does, someone'll notice," Philip said.
So when it
"It has already begun, and no one has noticed," Melior reminded him. "Maybe," admitted Philip. "Maybe not. But if there's a Creature from the Black Budget in the subway eating people, there's all kinds of ways it can get noticed. Not just corpses, which, hey, you already know I didn't find. But ways." "Name them," Melior said sternly. Philip smiled, all cherubic innocence.
"Transit police overtime.
Changed train schedules. Missing persons reports. Thefts, burglaries, love letters to the Animal Control Officer. Everybody always wants to cover his tracks. And most of those tracks get stuck in some computer or other. And I can find them. you're looking for."
All it takes is time, money, and knowing what
The teakettle began to whistle; a hoarse, off-key note. in that direction, following Ruth. "And you would do this for me?" you do not believe?"
Melior said tonelessly.
Jane went off
"Even though
And you are going to stand there and let him, Michael thought, even though you're convinced it won't do you or any one else a damn bit of good. "Hey," said Philip, doing his best to look like a used-car salesman. "I'm a believer in free enterprise. with."
Rent my time and I'm yours to play
Ruth came out of the kitchen holding two mugs. She handed one to Michael and, bracing herself only a little, crossed to Melior to hand him the other. Melior took it without removing his attention from Philip. "I am to pay you to discover the grendel's lair?" "Yeah, something like that," Philip said. "With what?"
Melior said.
One look at Ruth's face was enough to tell Michael whose idea this originally had been. And this was something she hadn't thought of, either. "Well, that, for starters."
Philip pointed at Melior's ring.
Jane came out of the kitchen and nudged Ruth hard, handing her a teacup. Michael watched her take it, and wondered if she was going to pour it over Philip. Melior looked down at his hand. He spread the fingers wide, and the strange flat oval in its baroque silvery setting flashed in the living room lights. "This?" he said. Philip's grin widened. There was an almost imperceptible pause, and then Melior drew it slowly off. "Done," he said, flipping the ring through the air to Philip. "Fair bargain, Child of Earth, and silver and gold to bind it." "Philip LeStrange, how could you?" Ruth advanced upon Philip where he stood upon the sidewalk in front of Michael's building. Twelve o'clock. Witching hour. And Ruth didn't intend to leave enough of Philip for a good broom to sweep up. "I had to make it look convincing, didn't I?" Philip demanded. "I can always give it back later." He flipped Melior's ring up and caught it. Flash, went the stone in the streetlight. All of the replies she wished to make were cut short by Melior's unexpected arrival. He turned a glowing basilisk gaze on Philip. "You will see Mistress Jane safely to her door. I will accompany Ruth."
Philip opened his mouth to comment but couldn't think of anything to say. He looked at Jane. " 'Night," Jane said, and strode off dormward with an air that said Philip might follow if he liked. Philip shot one last look at Melior and scuttled after her. Melior looked at Ruth. "And you will accompany Ruth," Ruth said. "Yes," said Melior.
They started north.
"It feels strange to go about unarmed," he commented after a while. "I cannot remember a time that I went unweaponed before." "I'm sorry about today," Ruth said tightly. Even while she said it she hoped they weren't going to restart any conversation containing words that started with L and other discredited romantic notions. "But you did not fail me, even though you do not trust me. bribe young Philip to discover the truth I require?"
Did you not
It is a peculiar sensation to feel your jaw drop from shock; Ruth filed the sensation away for later cataloging. "You-!" she said. You knew. "An idiot, perhaps, but not a fool. You have hired him-but I have sealed the bargain." Melior's mouth curved in a private amusement. "And while awaiting my vindication, I shall acquire those items which are most likely to amuse a grendel " Ruth glanced sideways. Melior's mouth was grim again. "If you knew I'd put him up to it, why did you let him chouse you out of your ring?" Ruth finally said. "It is of less value to me than his cooperation. It is, after all, as easy to lie to me as to actually seek the truth. But he has made a bargain with me, and will give me that which he has said he would give. Philip is an honest creature." "Phili,r?" "A poor servant, but mine for this while." He stopped, and took Ruth's hand. "And it is of some value to me to have . . . more time, Ruth." "Time?" what?"
Ruth was baffled; flustered by his nearness.
"Time for
"For everything; for nothing. For you, my Lady Bright, my heart twin-but fear not, Ruth; I recall your dislike of being courted in the open," Melior said. He walked on, not releasing her hand. "I have a dislike of being made fun of, too, if anyone is at all interested," Ruth said in a tight voice. She yanked on her hand, but it was not relinquished. Perforce she matched her pace to his. After
a moment Melior slowed to accommodate her shorter stride. "And do I have an interest, even at the best of times, which this is not, in making sport of mortal girls?" Melior shot back. "That's 'mortal women."
'Girls' is politically incorrect, you know."
Stop, I'm from the Language Police. Surrender all your adjectives and come out parsing "My Line has never taken overmuch interest in politics. But how, my lady, shall I court you, if I may not speak you fair, and costly gifts are beyond my power?" "Cut it out," said Ruth. This time she pulled so hard she pulled him to a stop. Such a common sight of urban New York; a lovers' quarrel, but they weren't lovers nor were ever likely to be. "I do not care if your heart is given to another," Melior went on, "though I do not think it is. I ask only the chance to incline your thoughts to me; why should I not hope?" "Because you don't want me!" This time Ruth managed to get her hand loose; she would have slapped him if she felt she had either the coordination or the moral authority to carry through the gesture. "It's just a game to you-" She stopped when she saw the look on his face. "Game?"
Melior repeated dangerously.
"Do not want you, mortal girl?
You mock me at peril-" He lunged for her. his intentions. She ran.
Ruth didn't wait to discover
It was New York. No one noticed. And it took him less than half a block to catch her. One moment she was running; the next he simply lifted her off her feet and yanked her into the shadows. "Is everyone here blind and deaf as well as mad?" Melior demanded crossly. Ruth felt the poky parts of a building pressing against her back and hoped it looked as if she were being mugged. "This is no game, Lady Bright," Melior said. thought he was going to bite her, but no. This time was not like the last time. was likely to object to being kissed. she wanted to object.
For one mad instant she
For one thing, Melior knew she For another, Ruth wasn't sure
Melior kissed her. She could feel the zipper on his jacket where it pressed against the back of her hand. She could feel Melior's body, warm beneath the T-shirt and every muscle tense. A faint scent of cinnamon and bergamot clung to him, making absurd cross-circuited ideas skitter across her preoccupied brain. Finally she was able to work one arm free and put it around him beneath the jacket. When he felt her touch, he broke the kiss and stared down at her. "Necking in doorways," Ruth said breathlessly, "how juvenile." Her heart was a jarring staccato in her chest and she found it ridiculously hard to breathe.
"I no longer regard you as a reliable source of information," Melior informed her. He bent his head to kiss the side of her neck, and Ruth closed her eyes to the sensation of being in a rapidly-falling elevator. Fortunately, he wasn't likely to go any further than this in a doorway. She hoped.
At least she thought she did.
"Ah, Ruth, were it not for the Sword, even exile and death at your side would be bearable," Melior groaned. How sweet. I wish I believed it. Hesitantly, she raised her hand to stroke his hair, just as she'd wanted to from the moment she'd first seen him. It was soft and fine, dandelion silk beneath her fingers. "You don't even know me," Ruth said, voice whisper-soft. "I have always known you," Melior said quietly. "I saw your face in my dreams and sought for you in the Morning Lands all my days. I did not know I would find you here." Which was lovely to hear, but what they never told you in the books was that Capital-L Love didn't solve any problems, it just added more to a life that already seemed more than ordinarily overfull of them. And what did he mean by it? Not a long white dress and orange blossoms, 2.5 kids, a Volvo, and a house in the suburbs-or, probably, anything else she could instantly imagine. "Well, here I am. And it- It's cold, okay? she wasn't cold. Not even a little.
I want to get home."
But
He pulled her away from the wall, but only to put both arms around her and hold her as if someone were trying to take her away. When Ruth began to feel that he really might not be planning to let go, he released her and looked away. "I forget my manners," Melior commented. by.
Ruth let that remark sail
"If only there were more time," he said wistfully. He put an arm around her shoulders. Ruth looked around to see if there was anyone to notice. There wasn't. "But Naomi waits," Melior added, looking up the curving slope of street. "Yeah," said Ruth, sighing. No time? Waiting for me? It was hard to think with her thoughts skittering through her brain like self-willed butterflies. But butterflies or not, she and Melior were going to have to have more than a little talk. Because if he meant half of what he said, maybe she could use it to keep him from being killed. The 111-Made Knight
IN ADVENTURES, RUTH reflected sourly, there were not longeurs during which everyone stood around waiting for something to happen. Not that Ruth was standing around, by any stretch of the imagination. The Country of Mundanity wouldn't leave her alone long enough. the adventure that was standing still.
It was
And the real world was strangling her. Last night it had been Naomi: was she okay, how was she feeling, did she want to talk? Ruth, distracted by Melior's avowals on the walk home, had been safe in bed and halfway to sleep before the similarity of those questions to the ones the psychiatrist she'd quit seeing used to ask made the penny drop. Naomi thought there was something wrong with her. For which (Ruth admitted with scrupulous honesty) she had some grounds; Naomi was her best friend, and Ruth couldn't remember a single conversation they'd had since Melior had shown up. Nonetheless, it was unreasonably annoying. And since Ruth knew the questions that Naomi would ask were all the ones Ruth knew were unanswerable, she was going to continue to avoid her. Or would have, except for the fact that Naomi's first and last words to her at 8:30 this morning were: "Don't you have a nine o'clock class on Tuesdays?" Heroines of fiction would have laughed off nine o'clock classes and gone on mapping their rich emotional landscape. Ruth leaped up like a galvanized frog and made it to her class only ten minutes late. And this afternoon, when heroines of fiction would go off for tyistesse trusts with their lovers, Ruth was pretty sure she was going to keep the appointment she'd made three weeks ago with the Placement Office and answer those letters she'd shoved to the bottom of her purse. Why, why couldn't she ever do something random and wild and burn all bridges behind her without looking back? Because the one thoughtless act she'd committed-must have committed, although she had no memory of it-half a lifetime ago had cost her everything she had. The bell rang, the class was over, and for all her punctilio in attending it, Ruth could not remember what had been discussed. She stood up, grabbed her books and purse, looked up. Melior was standing in the doorway. Curious students eddied around him, leaving; Ruth was glad to see his hair was loose, carefully covering those fatal Spockian ears. He saw her and smiled. "Michael knew your schedule, Ruth. here."
He said he thought you would be
"Yes." Simple mortification turned her words to monosyllables. walked out of the classroom with Melior beside her.
She
"So I will company you," Melior said, his speech making one of its strange slides into an archaism that was mere precision for a society
not hers. "And lend to Philip the hours to spin his webs. divulge to me where the beast hides."
And he will
Only even with the best will in the world, nothing Philip did would do that. And then what would Melior do? And what would she do? They walked down the hall together. The sunlight blinded her momentarily as Melior pushed the door to the outside world open. Ruth started to speak, found her throat was suddenly dry, and tried again. "What if- He might not find anything, you know.
For reasons."
"Then I must search without the aid of his malicious engines, much though I would joy to have it. But I expect him to find things, Ruth. The grendel's appetite grows with what it feeds upon. murders continue undetected?" "And if they do? If he doesn't?" one she needed the answer to.
How can its
There it was, the hard question, the
"Three days, Ruth," Melior said, answering the question she'd asked and all the ones she hadn't. "Today and tomorrow and the day next, and when the next day's sun dawns, I shall go." Into the subways, chasing monsters. A giddiness that ought to have been strong emotion but was probably actually a missed breakfast made her lurch into him. His arm was steady, a welcome pressure about her shoulders. Who are you, Melior, and who have you been? What's your favolite color and who did you want to be when you grew up? Tell me all about Elfland and the girls back home and why just because you're the most beautiful thing that's ever walked into my life I should believe that you want me as much as I want you? "Breakfast," said Melior firmly. "And then, perhaps, you will show me, Ruth, where in this city I may purchase a weapon." It was late afternoon when Ruth (who had canceled her Job Placement Counseling interview) got back to the apartment. She'd left Melior with Michael, having exhausted all the (licit) avenues of weapon purchase in The Big Apple. And Melior didn't even want a gun. He wanted a sword. Or, failing that, a stout spear, or even a crossbow and a quiver full of bolts, as he had explained helpfully. They had gone to sporting goods stores, antique stores, camping supply stores, and any store Ruth could think of that might hold something that could be adapted to Melior's needs. The results were less than encouraging. And three days from tomorrow-win, lose, or draw-Melior was going off to the subway. And getting arrested, if he was very lucky. She turned her key in her lock and went in-both actions overlaid with a
touch of strange, now, because her mind kept imagining these acts as Melior would view them. She went through to the living room and found Naomi waiting for her. "Did it ever occur to you, Ruth, that we could all have been wrong? Naomi said. Naomi was sitting in the comfy chair beside the window. She wore a white polo shirt and khaki pants and looked as though she'd been sitting there waiting to ask the question since Ruth had left that morning. She hadn't been, of course.
Ruth took comfort from that thought.
"Wrong about what?" Ruth asked. She heard the defensive edge in her voice and hated it, and covered her feelings by turning away and painstakingly making certain that all the locks on the door were, indeed, locked. "About.
. . . Where's Mel, by the way?"
" At Michael's gym. can get for him."
He- There's some stuff he wants that maybe Michael
"Uh-hum." Naomi picked up a mug of tea and stared into as if it were some form of caffeinated teleprompter. "You remember we all agreed that Melior had to be an elf. Nobody could do makeup that good......... Her voice trailed off. Slowly, unwillingly, Ruth advanced into the middle of the room. She looked down at the top of Naomi's head, still bent over the tea. "They can't. Seamless. Waterproof. Glows in the dark. And the stuff he came with: emeralds, rubies, fine hand-embroidering? Come on." Hesitantly Ruth pulled out a chair from the table and sat down next to Naomi. "He's real." Just how real is he?" Naomi looked up from her tea and turned to face Ruth. "Philip thinks he's a science project, Michael'Il rescue any stray kitten that meows, I've never been able to figure out why Jane does anything, and I'm just waiting to see what happens. What about you?" "Me?" The word was emitted as an inelegant squeak, and Ruth felt her cheeks go hot. "Yesterday I told him we weren't going to play any more, and he took off-and you took off right after him. I suppose it isn't any of my business, but-" "Oh, Naomi," Ruth said, half amused, half exasperated. Naomi smiled. "Well, what if he turned out to be an escaped serial killer with plastic surgery? If I lost you, they'd make me buy a replacement before I could graduate, and after six years I'm just about out of money." Ruth snorted. "And then you'd have to travel door-to-door, selling Chocolate Suicide Brownies and rum-orange butter cookies to make up the difference. For heaven's sake, it isn't like that, Naomi, it- It just isn't," Ruth finished lamely, and stared at her friend.
Naomi smiled sadly. "I know; one elf appears out of nowhere and I go all over Sigmund Freud on you. It's just that I've had too many friends who went and did the damnedest things when they should have been thinking." "And you think I'm one?"
Ruth said, striving for lightness.
"You're about to graduate. You've hit the Big Three-Oh. And youSomething happened to you before I met you, Ruth; I wish you'd tell me what it is. But don't let it push you into being in love with this guy just because you can't think of anything else to do with your time!" Naomi finished up in a burst. She looked away, cheeks flushed. "Now you tell me I'm a jealous, interfering jerk." "You're a jealous, interfering jerk," Ruth said obligingly. Naomi swatted at her; Ruth laughed, then sobered. "No; you're right; I don't know what's been wrong with me lately; one birthday divisible by five and I go all to pieces. And I'll tell you about what happened someday, I promise-but that isn't it with Melior." Ruth took Naomi's hand; for whose comfort, she wasn't certain. "why is it so hard to say? "when I was eighteen I became a Movie of the Week. Simple. Batman.
The word is "coma."
It would be easier to confess to being
"With Melior, the thing is, he says he loves me, Naomi, and I'm not sure what I feel. He's like a book I'm reading; I don't know whether I like it or not, but I don't want to stop before the end." Even telling the bare truth made Ruth feel the blush-heat on her cheeks again. The silence might have stretched if she had let it; but Ruth jumped up and fled to the kitchen. The teapot was still half full. She poured a cup and drizzled honey into it, and stood drinking the tepid brew while staring out the window at the twilight. The Seven Houses of the Twilight, and if Melior doesn't bung the sword home there's going to be six, not seven, and it doesn't seem real at all. Of course, why should it. . . ? "Have you considered, when you think about him like this, that the reason he's so fascinating is because he's crazy?" Naomi said from the kitchen doorway. She threw the rest of her cold tea into the sink, took Ruth's mug from her hands, made a face, and slid it into the tiny microwave perched precariously on top of the refrigerator. "I'm a librarian, I know these things. 614.58: Mental Health, all you have to do is look it up. Melior's insisting that things are a particular way because he wants them to be that way, not because they are or aren't or are even likely to be or not. And leaving aside sanity, he's on a collision course with the real world and there isn't anything you can do . . . except decide whether to jump ship or crash with him." The microwave pinged; Ruth's eyes filled with tears.
"Oh, Naomi, why isn't it that simple?" Forty blocks south of Columbia (give or take the odd block) and across Central Park on the Upper East Side-Fifth Avenue in the Eighties, to be more precise-lies a district variously called Museum Row or Museum Mile. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim, as sorted foundations and very expensive galleries deck the tree-lined street; Museum Mile is the natural habitat of money: physicians, psychiatrists, expensive psychics. . . . And of the largest collection of people with obscure knowledge out side of a college campus. "And do you think your friend can help us?"
Melior asked.
"If it was forged, Stainless Steve knows where. go to an expert."
If you want a sword,
Michael Harrison Peacock and Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences walked up the steps of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. His friend Michael walked over to a guardsman in uniform, seated at a podium which, Melior supposed, must indicate his purpose and allegiance . But if there were letters upon it, Melior could not read them. The sorcery that had given him command of the local tongue (a common enough magic, useful when one traveled between the Lands) had not taught him to read its letters. The others forgot that, often; as young scholars, their lives revolving around books, must. Ruth was such a scholar. And if he brought her to his world and stripped her learning from her, would she hate him, or would she feel their love was worth that price? Folly, to think of a future when his life ended here. "Come on, Mel.
Steve can see us."
Stephen Mallison's work area was behind and below and in back of any number of exhibits, and reaching it was made particularly difficult because half the floors of the museum were closed for reasons ranging from installing frescoes shipped halfxvay around the world to recreating an Egyptian temple. They had to go all the way up to the fourth floor before they could find an elevator that would take them down to the right side of the basement. It was, Michael realized as the doors closed, the first elevator Melior had ever been in. The doors shut. Melior, seeing nothing but a small empty room, turned to Michael for explanation. And the elevator began to descend. Michael stared at him, mouth half open and several reasonable explanations jammed in his throat. Melior flung himself back against a wall, scrabbling for a dagger that wasn't there. His pupils dilated, flashing red; he snarled, and Michael could see the long canid teeth gleaming in the faint fluorescent elevator lights. "Hey; it's just-" Michael began helplessly.
Melior saw him; saw Michael's ease and knew there was no danger; and worse, knew that he'd looked like a fool. His green gaze fixed on Michael, and for a moment Michael felt the fury that raged against the bars of Melior's will like a separate thing. Then Melior looked away and pretended neither of them was there. It was the longest four floors of Michael's life. When the doors opened, it was on the unlovely subbasements of the Met, and before the doors were fully open Melior had reeled through them. He turned and faced Michael defiantly; a creature caught between two fables in a land undeniably mundane. "It's an elevator," Michael said lamely. Melior said nothing. Michael sighed inwardly, knowing Melior would be especially difficult now. Well it only stood to reason, as the spaceman said of the alien computer. Michael didn't like looking like a fool, himself, and he guessed an elf-prince in exile didn't either. "Steve's this way." Stephen Mallison's office was at the end of the narrow brown and yellow corridor. A tall narrow oak door marked "Properties" barred the way; Michael rapped on it twice and opened it. The chamber the door opened onto was both vast and crowded. Smells of rust and iron, dust and paper and oil and myriad alien scents assailed Melior's nostrils. He followed Michael into the space. There were glass cases filled with artifacts; standing armor, racks of long-unused weapons, wooden crates scribed with glyphs that Melior couldn't read. The space had the orderly disarray of an archivist's. In the largest open space available was a broad white table. To one side was a glowing box of the type called computer. There was a man sitting at the table. His pale red hair was as long as Melior's own, held back with a scrap of leather. His back was to them. On the table before him were Melior's spurs. "Hi, Steve," Michael said.
"Don't bother to get up."
The man addressed as Steve spun his chair around on its large shining wheels. Still seated, he wheeled his chair to where Michael stood. "Took you long enough. This your friend from Ancient Atlantis who wants the sword? Hi, I'm Stephen Mallison. I'm a Cataloguer at the Met, which is to say I'm a glorified packrat and work mostly with the computer." He held out his hand. Melior knew this custom.
He extended his hand for Stephen to grasp.
Stephen's grip was warm and dry; a little rough and much stronger than Melior had expected. "I am Rohannan Melior," he answered only, for to be so brief was not rudeness, not among humans and not here.
"And those are your spurs. Terrific. You know they've been driving me nuts for days? My real specially is Restoration and Re-Creation of period weapons, and I've even got a degree to that effect stashed around here somewhere, but they don't look like anything I've ever seen. Where'd you get them?" He turned his chair on its wheels again and went back to the table. Apparently he was not going to get up. "They were my father's," Melior began, but Michael interrupted him. "Steve, do you know of anywhere around here we could lay hands on a sword?" "Or a boar-spear?"
Melior added helpfully.
Stephen gestured to the crates and cases in their serried ranks. "We got fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth-lots of seventeenth; there was a war on practically everywhere in Europe-some eighteenth, mostly ceremonial . Take your pick. It's no trouble; it all belongs to the Museum, and they're never going to display or deaccession it. And if they were important pieces, they wouldn't be left down here to rot." "You, uh, are joking, right?
About giving away Museum property?"
Michael said. "Probably," Stephen said. "But on the - other hand, if your friend's a collector, it is usually possible to pry something loose quasi-legally. I could kick it up to Doctor Bonner." "No," said Melior. "These won't do." He touched the glass lid of a case and then wiped his fingers on his jeans, making a face. "Well, what is it that you want them to do?" obligingly.
Stephen said
"I wish to kill a grendel, " Melior said seriously, before Michael could stop him. "These would break." Stephen looked at Michael. "A reproduction," Michael said hastily.
"He wants a new sword."
"I take it we are not talking SCA-hit-them-with-rattan-wrapped-induct-tape type sword here?" said.
Stephen
"Live steel," Melior said, and Stephen smiled. "Now you're talking my language. Let me consult my files; we should have a list of the smiths we use to do our Re-Creation work." Stephen Mallison turned in his chair and wheeled over to a bank of two-drawer file cabinets that supported shelving stuffed with long, paperwrapped parcels.
"Why does he not rise?"
Melior said to Michael, in puzzled tones.
The chair stopped and turned around. Melior saw the look that passed from Stephen to Michael and knew that somehow he had made another strange World-of-Iron error. "Steve, it's just that he-" "A horse fell on me, spinal nerves don't grow back, the miracle cures you see on television are the exclusive province of people with good health insurance and money to burn, and there isn't much call for a blacksmith who can't stand up. I go to Therapy three times a week and that takes all my spare cash. Now can we change the subject?" "Ah," said Melior as understanding dawned.
"You are crippled."
Michael groaned. But, Melior's strange charisma worked even here, and amazingly, Stephen smiled. "That's right. I am not challenged I am not differently able. I'm a cripple. But at least I've got my health." Stephen smiled a crooked smile. "I think you are very able," said Melior, as if he had given the matter considerable thought, and as if his opinion mattered. "Yeah.
Thanks."
Stephen turned back to his file cabinets.
"You've got a big mouth," Michael said under his breath. "Michael, if you had told me he was a cripple, I would not have asked," Melior said reasonably. "But it is wonderful, that chair with the wheels. I wish-" He stopped. "I wish I could tell my sister that such things exist. I think we could make one." Now it was Michael's turn to stare. He'd never thought of Melior having a sister, let alone a sister who would be grateful for a wheelchair. A sister who was going to die because Melior wasn't going to be able to bring The Sword of Maiden's Tears home. "Here we are," said Stephen. He bent sideways awkwardly, and straightened up with a thick manila file folder in his hands. "Two guys in California, one in South Carolina, one in Maine. They all do custom work. TWo grand and two years, and you can have a sword that Conan the Barbarian would be glad to call his own." He spun his chair around and wheeled over to Melior. Melior took the folder, and gazed down at glossy colored pictures of swords laid on velvet as if they were jewels. "But I cannot wait two years," he said helplessly. tomorrow's dawn."
"I must have it by
"Then you're out of luck," Stephen said flatly. "Steve," said Michael. "Fine.
"There's got to be something."
Go down to Acme Rent-a-Sword and give them your credit card.
Nobody uses swords any more, Mike-this is all custom work for
collectors.
And it takes time."
"Well, what about secondhand?" willing to loan one?" Stephen looked from Melior to backward until he reached the came up with a canvas-wrapped places with twine. He picked twine.
Michael heard himself say.
"Or someone
Michael for a long moment. He wheeled table. He reached around behind it and bundle about a yard long, bound in three up a knife and began sawing through the
"Do you know what a gladius is?"
he asked Melior.
"No." "Roman short sword. Sword of the legions. They conquered half the world with an oversized pocket knife cast out of a metal so soft that iron can chop it right in half: bronze." The twine was gone. Stephen flipped the canvas open. He'd called it an oversized pocket-knife. Michael estimated it at about thirty inches long. It had a wide straight blade that came to a spade-shaped point. The quillons were narrow. The heft seemed to be wrapped in braided horsehair. Melior stepped forward and picked it up. balance.
Hefted it, testing its
"It's the last thing I ever made. Beryllium in the bronze instead of tin-ain't nothing going to chop that baby in half. You take that. I'll keep the spurs.
Deal?"
Melior looked down at Stephen, saying nothing. Michael, standing behind him, suddenly realized that Melior's pupils would have narrowed as he walked into the light. "I will return this if I can.
The spurs are yours."
"No biggie. And now why don't you guys get out of here, and leave me alone so I can get some work done before this place shuts up shop for the night, okay?" Stephen said. Melior rewrapped the gladius in the canvas and tucked the bundle under one arm. He walked past Michael toward the door. Michael waved good-bye to Stephen and followed him. Stephen's last words reached them at the open door. "And I hope you get home safe, Rohannan Melior." Love Among the Ruins TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY were replays of Monday, with Ruth getting edgier by the hour. Melior's plans for Thursday morning hung between them like the Sword he was looking for, keeping them from talking about any of the things that really mattered. He bought a canteen and a flashlight to go with the sword he and Michael had come back from the Museum with, and now in a few short hours he would be gone, and Ruth
would have to try to make sense of a world in which the book that was Melior would go forever unfinished. And the two of them had no privacy at all. Melior slept on Michael's couch. Ruth shared a one-bedroom apartment with Naomi. And the moments and half-hours of privacy they'd snatched had been enough to make Ruth heartily regret that fact and not enough for her to be able to do anything about it, even if she could manage to find the nerve. And he said he loved her. Said that she, Ruth, was the woman he had searched for, to woo and win, all through the Morning Lands-whatever they were (but, thought Ruth wistfully, they sounded pretty). "If," said Melior, drawing the word out lazily. They sat in perfect propriety and chaperonage in a forgotten inglenook of the big main library down on 42nd Street. Melior sat across the table from her; mirrorshades and leather jacket and an expression of faintly rueful longing that made Ruth want to. . . . "If," Melior began again, reaching across the table and taking her hand, "If the Sword were mine, and you and I were set upon the high road to Chandrakar-" "'You and l'?" Ruth quoted back to him. "Did I go, I would take you with me, would you come," Melior parsed carefully. "They say the lower world holds the memory of the higher; did you never dream of Chandrakar the fair?" "And if I did?"
Ruth bandied back.
"Then you would go, did you hold me in fond affection or not. But if you have never dreamed her green hills and silver rivers, I must assume that it is I alone who am the attraction." "If I went," Ruth pointed out prosaically. "Oh, Ruth, do!" Melior leaned across the table. "Say you would come to Chandrakar for Rohannan Melior's asking. He would do you all honor, and set you at his right hand. It is not true that no human blood runs in the Houses of the Twilight; such alliance is a thing done, aye, and done before; you will see-" "If I come," Ruth said. "And when did you develop a twin brother?" Melior smiled instead of answering, and Ruth felt her innards go custard-pudding weak. Go to Elfland, like the man was asking-it would sure as hell get her out of finals week, wouldn't it? And Melior's Chandrakar could be no more strange to her than the modern world was now. Eight years. Not quite a decade. But in that time there'd been another Star Wars movie, almost half a dozen Star Trek movies, something called AIDS, two terms of President Reagan. . . . And somehow, as if Life were an exceptionally boring book, Ruth had lost her place. Lost her place and all desire to regain it. I try to take things one day at a time, but lately several days have attacked me at once.
Eight years of days, served up in one moment of awakening that Ruth, honest now, realized she would never recover from. Melior said he loved her. And Ruth knew she wanted him. And if both of them turned out later to have been mistaken, well, lots of people were. "Okay, Rohannan Melior. Take me to Chandrakar." go, if and if and if and IF. . . .
If you can, if you
Wednesday evening. Ruth supposed she'd missed classes. She didn't care. She'd spent the day with Melior at New York Public again, consulting all the maps her skill could find for him. Maps of New York, to be laboriously compared against the subway maps. Geo-survey maps of the island Manhattan, its stone and water-table, marl, schist, and aquifer. Maps of such terrain as the place had left to it after four centuries of building. But most of all, the subway. Where Melior was going to go. And die, in all probability, even if it was only through being hit by a train. A proper heroine, Ruth supposed glumly, would have spent the time begging him not to go. But she'd known it wouldn't do the least bit of good, and so she'd-sensibly!-done what she could to help him and let the rest go unsaid. Everyone knew he was going after the (unproven) gi-endel Thursday morning. Michael was particularly upset-twice she had caught him and Melior arguing in corners-and Ruth had cherished a traitorous hope that Michael would stop him; do something splendidly male and physical and knock Melior over the head, tie him up in the closet, do something until the fit passed and sweet reason prevailed. But when they'd left the library and gone back to Michael's, all Michael had done was propose Chinese at Naomi's, and Melior had volunteered to pick up the order Michael had already phoned in. And all her idiotic purchase of Philip's cyberstealth had gained her was these three days. Ruth wasn't quite sure how she'd ended up going with Michael, but she had, and now she was back at her own apartment, and he and Naomi were watching her with close fond anxiety; her dear friends watching over her to make sure she didn't do something stupid. Like go with Melior. asked.
Into the subway, if not to Elfland as he'd
She hadn't told anybody about that. Only there wouldn't be much point to following him into the subway, now, would there? They probably wouldn't let them have connecting rooms at Bellevue. Ruth fiddled with the glass in her hand. Red wine; a good bottling, a special treat; or was it just cheap and sleazy nepenthe? She swirled the liquid around in her glass and stared down into it. Red as blood.
The language of fairy tales. Naomi fidgeted.
Michael fidgeted.
"What in God's name is taking him so long?" Ruth snarled as, with perfect timing, the downstairs buzzer buzzed. "He was going to stop by Philip's tonight," Michael said. the way."
"Probably on
He didn't tell me, Ruth thought, unreasonably jealous. Of their last hours together, even if spent in company. And maybe tonight . . . "Then he's lucky he isn't stuffed and on display in an antique shop on East 57th by now. Michael, have you ever been to Philip's apartment?" Naomi said. ,. I have denied myself that pleasure," Michael said gravely. "I haven't," Ruth said sadly, her mind elsewhere. "It's probably cold," she added, meaning the Chinese food. She stood in the open doorway listening to the elevator rise, waiting to see Melior again. And after tomorrow morning you won't see him any more. the world ends. . . .
This is the way
You couldn't see the elevator from their corner apartment. the doors open, and waited.
Ruth heard
They say it settles a man's mind wonderfully knowing he is to be hanged in the morning. If that's true, why am I so jittery? Philip LeStrange came around the corner. the Chinese take-away in each hand.
He held a shopping bag from
He wasn't Melior. He saw Ruth and stopped, and some of the pleased expression vanished from his face. It probably hadn't occurred to him until that moment that he was going to have to face Ruth. "Where is he?" Ruth said. hesitant step backward.
Philip set down the bags and took a
"Philip?" Naomi brushed past Ruth and went out into the hall. felt a hand on her arm. Michael.
Ruth
"Come and sit down," Michael said gently. "But it's Philip," Ruth said with the bewilderment of someone who has taken a mortal wound and doesn't quite realize it yet. "Come on, Ruth," Michael said. It was at least five minutes before Philip and Naomi came into the apartment. Philip still hung back, glancing sideways at Ruth as if she were a houseplant unexpectedly turned carnivorous. For once he had
neither backpack nor laptop with him. "He's already gone, hasn't he?" Her voice was remarkably even, Ruth noted with a certain pleased vanity. "That's right," Naomi said. "Come and have dinner, Ruth." Her voice had the careful tone one associated with speakers to the hysterical. Or the mad. "No, thank you," Ruth said, equally carefully. With careful, measured steps she left the living room. She passed through the bedroom into the bathroom. There she shut the door tightly, and turned on the shower as, after all, the walls of even the best New York apartments are rather thin. Ruth had been in there long enough to get over the worst of her tears and to begin to notice that the spray from the shower had soaked the left side of her skirt. The hammering on the door was enough to make her jump. "Ruth!" Michael's voice, raised in a bellow to bring sinking ships to mind. "Get out here!" She unlocked the door. He shoved it in on her. He grabbed her and yanked her out into the living room, without giving her the opportunity to make even the most elementary repairs to her tear-blotched complexion. "-irst footage of the Subway Snatcher. The footage you saw was shot by a rush-hour passenger who had intended to tape his daughter's sixth birthday party. Transit officials still will not say whether this . . . amazing occurrence has any connection to the closing of six Lower Manhattan I.N.D stops earlier this week." The living room television was on. Half the screen was filled with a graphic of a red claw superimposed over a black silhouette of the front of a subway car. Beneath it in yellow, jagged letters screamed: "Subway Snatcher." "Kelly Groen is standing by live at City Hall. Kelly?" the perky newsreader (male) said. toward the graphic. Nothing.
Let's go to her now.
He turned expectantly
"While we wait, Rob, why don't we run that clip again?" perky newsreader (female).
said the other
"Ladies and gentlemen," said Rob, "we would like to remind you at this time that what you are about to see has not been authenticated. We prefer to let you judge for yourselves." He spoke in the hushed tones of a very expensive mortician. The screen went dark and cinema-verite jiggly; the symptom of home movies through the ages. The watchers took it on faith that this was a
subway station; it might as easily have been any of a dozen hundred other things. Whatever was happening was already in progress. The people moved with frightened pointlessness. The image on the viewfinder of the invisible cameraman veered wildly; at one point the image bleached out as the camera pointed directly upward into a light. Finally the picture stilled. The dark blobs resolved into bodies at the edge of the frame. At the center of the picture was a hand, grayish-black and far too large for any proper hand, splayed on the subway platform as it levered its possessor up onto the platform from the tracks. Blackness, as someone got between the camera and the picture. A sharp discontinuity as the camera was dropped. The platform's surface filled most of the frame, but off at one edge a hominid figure could be seen, blurred as footage of Bigfoot, walking away holding an awkward pale burden. Then the film stopped. "The victim has been identified as twenty-six-year-old Theresa Scarlatti, a secretary for Burford, Foote, and Hoo. Relatives-" "We're ready to go to Kelly now," said Perky Two, and the picture did another two-step dissolve to a windblown blonde against a late-afternoon backdrop of rescue equipment, holding a microphone beneath her chin and prepared to tell the world at great length that she knew nothing, nothing at all. Ruth looked at Michael. His face was pale, stretched with shock; it seemed almost as if she could look down into his skin and see through it to the skull beneath. "There's a monster in the subway," Naomi said. She'd thought she was tired before, but now a weariness beyond bearing stole over Ruth. She leaned against Michael. He put his arms around her and held her. "Yeah," Ruth said. do any good."
"It's real.
Too bad we didn't know when it would
Kelly-Groen-at-City-Hall spent two minutes explaining that nobody knew anything, including when subway service would be restored, before the inevitable cut to a commercial about Life on the Edge with your favorite soft drink. Ruth pushed Michael away and walked over to a chair with lagging, ungraceful steps and dropped into it. The Chinese food still sat, virginal and untouched, in its bags. She reached in and extracted a fortune cookie. "It is better to travel hopefully than to arrive, " it said. was. Welcome to the Outer Limits City Limits.
Sure it
"Philip," Naomi said in a voice of soft and dangerous gentleness, "what did you tell Melior when you saw him?" Ruth looked up, curious-rapidly-becoming-appalled as inspiration
struck. Philip was sitting in the big chair under the window with his arms wrapped around his knees. He looked like he'd been kicked in the stomach. He didn't look up. "Philip."
Naomi's voice, still soft, but demanding.
A mumbled response. "Phil. You were checking the police reports to find the grendel, Michael prompted. "What did you tell him?" head.
Naomi repeated, and finally Philip raised his
He wasn't crying-that would be too much, even for Philip, Ruth observed with glassy detachment-but behind the silvery bifocals his eyes looked red and irritated. He pushed them up, rubbing his eyes, reminding Ruth once again of a white rat grooming. "He paid me," Philip said, only slightly muffled this time. There was a hint of desperation in his voice; a trace of actual feeling that must be as stunning to Philip as it was unbelievable to his friends. "Yeah," said Michael. "He paid you to find the grendel Well, it was on the six o'clock news, so-" "I paid you," Ruth's voice cut across Michael's; banked coals on the edge of flaming. "I paid you to find it out, so tell me what I paid for." Philip stood up and dug in his pocket. After much digging he produced a crumpled wad of twenties and set them on the table. Melior's signet ring gleamed on his finger. "He paid me," Philip said. His voice was rough, slightly hoarse. "He paid me to tell him, not anyone else." Philip's entire body vibrated with the tension of futile resistance. "He gets what he paid for." Michael had a look on his face indicating he'd bitten into a peach, only to find it rotten inside. "You made a bargain to look for the information for him. But it isn't a secret, is it?" Michael said coaxingly. Philip closed his eyes. Ruth had problems of her own; only behavior as out of character as this of Philip's could draw her notice now. "We made a bargain," Philip said, his voice strained. "What sort of bargain exactly, Philip?"
Naomi asked gently.
Philip rubbed his eyes again, and stared at the television as if the sports and weather could save him. When he spoke, he chose his words as if they were footsteps through an invisible minefield. "He came and got . . . what there was to get. And he told me to pick up the stuff from Hunan Balcony and bring it here. And he told me not to tell you anything else until tomorrow," Philip sounded exhausted at having told them this much. "But he doesn't think he's going to kill it," Michael said. Michael's words didn't quite sink in.
"If anyone else makes a stunning
revelation," Ruth announced, "I shall burst my bud of calm-" "And blossom into a copyrighted quotation," Naomi agreed. "If Philip feels honor-bound to do what Melior said we can talk him out of it later. After Michael explains who isn't going to kill what." Michael didn't bother to tell them what he suspected; that it was magic, not honor, that motivated Philip's reticence. If they had doomed heroes, why not a geas as well? And speaking of which "Melior isn't going to kill the grendel, " Michael said. "He said so." He hadn't been here before, but the passersby were glad enough to furnish the information. And he had memorized the workings of the telephone. "I know where I must go now," he said when she arrived. accompany me, Mistress Jane?"
"Will you
It took Michael a while to explain elvish precognition to the othersespecially as, he suspected, he hadn't understood Melior's explanation very well himself But what he did manage to make very clear was that Melior believed that he could see into the future, and that Melior couldn't see himself killing the grendel anywhere in the future he saw. "But why would he go if he knew he wasn't going to kill it?" said in frustration.
Philip
"Because nobody else would go with him," Ruth said bitterly. "None of us believed in him, none of us trusted him enough to-" "Hold on, Ruth," Naomi said. "Just how detailed is this vision of Melior's, Michael? Does he see the grendel at all? know it's there."
Does he see someone else kill it?
We
"Now," Philip added. "When I get my hands on him," Ruth said in a low voice of promise, "I am going to kill him. The grendel isn't going to have anything to worry about." "I don't know," said Michael. "He just kept saying we'd all be sorry later that we'd missed this chance." "But anybody who has Melior's sword can kill the grendel, " Ruth protested. Her head hurt, and thinking was an effort. Her brain hurt. But underneath the exhaustion and pain was hope, because if Melior's grendel was real after all that meant there was a way for the hero to win. "Not quite," Naomi said.
"The Sword of-what was it?"
"Maiden's Tears," supplied Michael. "-is what kills it, but any mere human who touches the sword is going to turn into another grendel You might kill that one, but there it'll be to do all over again." "A woman's work is never done," Ruth said, with a faint attempt at
humor. "So where is it?" tamale?"
Michael said.
"The sword, the grendel, the whole
All eyes turned to Philip. "No." Philip's voice was quite determined. "And I wiped the disks and tapes and shredded the papers." He looked grimly unhappy, as anyone might who was in the process of alienating his only friends. " But, Philip," Naomi said coaxingly, "You've got to tell us. help him if we don't know where he's gone."
We can't
"We had a bargain," Philip said wearily. "Leaving aside how we could help him if we knew where he'd gone," Michael said. "Well, this has got to be the first time you ever did something because somebody asked you to," Ruth snapped Philip-ward. "It's just a stupid promise-he won't ever know and I don't care if he does. "%ere is he?" "If promising is stupid, then so is going down there when he knows he won't kill it," Philip said with desperate logic. "Granted," said Naomi.
"It was stupid."
"No," said Philip. "It was a covenant. If you don't do what you say you're going to do, nobody can ever trust anybody." The words were obviously Melior's, and Philip's look of anguish was proof of the indigestibility of the concept. Ruth would have been less surprised if he'd started spouting Classical Greek. "You ought to know better than to make promises to elves," Michael said sternly to Philip. "Leave him alone, Nai. I don't think he can say. I hope Melior had a good reason for making him promise." "To get himself killed," Ruth said miserably. Naomi bounced to her feet.
"We've got to do something."
"We are doing something," Michael said. Twelve-oh-one. wait?"
Tomorrow.
"We're waiting for midnight.
So why don't we have dinner while we
Their train was stopped at 34th Street. "What are we supposed to do now?" Jane said. The station was jammed with angry commuters, jammed as if it were peak rush hour. The PA system was repeating helpful information over and over again with its speakers turned to "High Distort". Useless. "I must get to the Down Town," Melior said.
"The grendel is there."
Stephen Mallison's sword was carefully wrapped in brown paper with a
red-and-white mailing label on the front. Melior carried it, hoping it would be as inconspicuous as Jane thought. He wore a nylon backpack slung over one shoulder; it was heavy with trailbread and chocolate and a two-quart canteen filled with brandied water. He carried a small lantern, and in the backpack were a dozen candles to power it. And behind him stood his squire. It might have been Ruth. It ought to have been Ruth. But Ruth loved him and Jane did not. Jane could bear to watch him die. In fact, thought Melior, she might even enjoy it.
He looked at Jane.
Jane's head swiveled as she regarded stalled commuters, backed up trains, and the indefinable air of Great Events in the wind. "The grendel is downtown," she said, wanting to be clear on this one point. "Philip's scrying has told me so. There have been vanishments and tales of prowling beasts, and now I will seek it at the center of its web of destruction." That was the information Philip had given Melior, the information that made this work. The pattern of the kills. Jane did not waste time wondering if the information was true or false; it didn't really matter to her. This was the data they were using, and the rules of the game were that it didn't matter if the data were true or not. It simply was, and on its basis Melior would go to a certain place and begin his hunt. She had already been prepared when he called her-not hoping she would be asked, because hope was not a word in Jane's personal lexicon, but, rather, being ready if he did. No one else had to know, after all. And so Jane, always so neat and ladylike, had real denim jeans and waterproof boots, a military surplus pullover, and a black watchcap pulled down over her hair to hide its telltale gleam. No one had seen her leave her room dressed that way; there was no one to ask her what she meant by it and no one to laugh; Melior had no clothes-sense anyway. And everything she had could simply disappear once this adventure was over, even the backpack, with its freight of food and water, flashlight and map. Disposable. Deniable. Assuming they ever went anywhere at all. "The trains aren't going downtown," Jane pointed out. She did wonder why the trains had been stopped, but not very much. How to get to where Melior wanted to go, following the laws of this world, that was Jane's puzzle. "There is a way. urgently.
There must be a way.
Find it for me!"
Melior pled
Jane thought hard for a moment.
The trains weren't going downtown.
Fine. "Come on. Center."
Let's get out of here.
"She isn't there," Naomi said. its cradle.
We're going to the World Trade
She set the telephone receiver back in
"Quarter to ten. They shut the phones into the dorm down at ten," Michael said. "I could run over there." "No, leave it. said.
Why shouldn't she get a good night's sleep?"
"Even if we don't," Ruth said. hunched shoulders.
Naomi
"Twelve-oh-one," she said to Philip's
Philip shook his head and said nothing. He'd already told them that "tomorrow" meant dawn at the earliest-the start of day in a society with no clock but the sun. Ruth thought he was probably right, but had no intention of letting that stop her. "And what then?" Naomi said. "Think, guys-Melior's in the subway chasing a monster. The monster's real. What do we do?" "Call CNN," suggested Philip, but his heart wasn't in it. "Where do we start?" said Michael to the air. "Even when we know where to start," he added. Philip winced, very slightly. "I think you're making this too complicated," Ruth said slowly. "You're looking for a grendel in the subway. Okay. It's grabbing people in Lower Manhattan, fine. But where is it living? Not on the tracks. This grendel's supposed to be not-too-bright, right? But it's managed not to get hit by a train-and even if a head-on collision didn't kill it, it'd still do a number on the train, right?" "And make the six o'clock news. And the pages of all the newspapers," said Michael. "And this hasn't happened." "So the grendel, " said Ruth logically, "hasn't been hit by a train. Or seen by one, because that'd be on the news now, you'd better believe." "Right," Naomi said. "But it hasn't been. And the first thing anybody's heard was the news tonight," Naomi said. "The first thing most people heard," she emended. "Not quite," said Philip, and clammed up suddenly. "So where in the subway system do the trains not run?" "We can start looking there.
Ruth asked.
Simple."
"Break into the New York Subway System and she calls it simple," Naomi said.
"It beats working for a living," said Michael. "New information on the Subway Snatcher. television.
Details after this," said the
He found he did not like the subterranean way any more this time than he had the last time he had been here. Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences stepped, with painstaking caution, onto the subway tracks. Mistress Jane had been correct. Far south, in the World of the Trade Center, was the terminus for the Double-E line. Commuters, forewarned, had made other arrangements. They had reached that place by surface means. Once there, the unguarded platform there had been empty. And he and Jane had descended. Jane shone the light down along the tracks, careful not to blind Melior's dark-adapted eyes. And as she walked she thought, trying out Melior's plan for practicability. Walk down to Wall Street. Track the grendel to its lair. Grab the sword, which Melior was sure would be there. Cut the grendel into collops. Leave. The difference between a plan like that and wishful thinking was small, if even extant. And it required luck of a staggering order of improbability to work. But Melior wasn't asking for Jane's opinion. could give that.
Only for her help.
She
"If someone sees you, they're going to stop you," she offered at last. Melior stopped and turned back to her. Jane flicked the beam of the flashlight away as he moved, shining it away from him. In the darkness his eyes were metallic changeant moons; the light flashing from dilated pupils. Melior waited. "The platforms. You can't get near them without being seen. could be someone up there. Subway cops," Jane said.
There
A map both accurate and representational of the subway system was hard to find, but Jane had one. She peered at it. Down here the intervals between the stations were shorter. The flashlight's beam turned her map into a paper lantern; lighting the paper and turning the lines to gray scrimshaw. "Or commuters. If there are any. trouble," she added. Melior saw no reason to doubt her. it.
If they see you, you'll be in
Jane was not lying, and he knew
"These commuters," he said after a pause, "there is one time more than another when they are likely to be here?" "Sure." Jane looked at her watch. "Gone by ten, maybe, especially this far downtown. But you still can't get past the platforms without being seen."
"When the time comes," Melior said, "you may leave that to me. For now, we must find a place to occupy the time until we may proceed." It was twelve o'clock, and Philip hadn't told. He was neither triumphant nor defiant about it, and even through her anger Ruth sensed that Philip was as frustrated by his refusal as they were. "We've gone about this all wrong," Naomi said. She cradled a large earthenware teacup in her hands. She wasn't looking at Philip. " Red hot needles, maybe?" Michael said. It was hard to tell if he was making a joke. Maybe Michael wasn't sure himself. "About Melior," Naomi said. have just said 'no."
"He came to us for help.
We shouldn't
" "He wanted to go hunting space-alligators in the subway," Michael pointed out. "Grendels. Whatever. But-" he sighed and rubbed the back of his neck. "Too bad we didn't know then what we know now." "We don't know anything," Ruth pointed out wearily. "But that isn't the point," Naomi said. "Going down into the subway is a stupid idea, take it all in all. It doesn't matter whether what's there is fictional or real. And we should have found another way for him." "But you didn't." It was Philip who spoke. For the last several hours he had been all but silent, as the strange game he had played with Melior went from being a joke, to a business proposition, to a tragedy, and on to a contest of wills. "No," said Naomi.
"We didn't."
"And what are you going to do now?" "What are you going to do, Phil?"
Philip asked her.
Michael said.
Philip's mouth twisted mockingly. "Me? When did I ever do anything that mattered, Michael?" He shrugged angrily. "All you've got left to do is take up a collection for the funeral." "It's May 5th.
Sunrise is at five-oh-five a.m."
She put the newspaper down. paused.
Ruth blurted out.
"And at five-oh-six a.m. . . ."
She
"We have to figure out what to do," Naomi said. She regarded her companions. "Think about it, guys. There really is a monster in the subway. It's killing people. Melior's gone after it, but he doesn't think he's going to do very well. It's up to us. What do we do?" Anything was better than thinking about where Melior might be and what he was doing. "He asked for a sword," Ruth began. "But only The sword will kill it. So he says. But since we don't have anything better to go on, we might as well take Melior's word for it," Michael said.
"So we get The sword," Ruth said slowly. The rules. All magic had rules. A story where the magic didn't have rules was no fun for the reader. There were rules to everything if you could only find out what they were. "But the grendel's guarding it-isn't it?" "Well," said Naomi consideringly, I would be. It sounds like first we've got to get the grendel " The One no longer slept. The One guarded The Object; guarded and fed and waited the day that The Other foretold to it would come and be destroyed. Insofar as it could be, in the grip of its monstrous and eternal hunger, The One was content. It had purpose; the thing which its human chrysalis had always lacked. It had a function to perform, and, as far as its truncated intellect could perceive those abstractions, a sense of achievement, of honor, of glory and struggle. And triumph. The Other could come as he chose. The Other could come down into The One's kingdom and search as he chose. The Object was secure. And The One could disappear at will. But The One did not choose to. At this moment there were Men in The One's domain, and The One remembered Men. Men meant food Jane had explained the third rail and its lethal properties to Melior very carefully twice-the second time once she realized that he didn't have the faintest idea what electricity was. She was pretty sure now that he knew that if he touched it he would die. She had not bothered to enumerate the scant exceptions to that rule; they were unlikely enough to occur, and since he probably thought the whole thing ran by magic anyway, there was no point in confusing him. The tunnels weren't so bad once you got used to them. They spent the waiting time sitting against the wall of the tunnel, near a cubbyhole they could retreat into if a train came. Jane had brought extra batteries for her flashlight; she spent the waiting time reading a book. And no trains did come. It was strangely silent here in the tunnels beneath the bottom tip of Manhattan; only a faint suck and sough of wind from a place miles away where the tunnels broke out into moonlight. Even the ventilation grates which marked some of the older tunnels were absent here. A separate world, an underground dominion where there was neither sun nor moon Abruptly Jane sat up straighter. Neither sun nor moon. Sun nor moon. . . . And there was neither sun nor moonland all the roaring of the sea-" Suddenly Jane wished for her guitar, the words of the old ballad mocking her. Neither sun nor moon. A sound like the sea roaring, or what you heard when you put a seashell to your ear, or wind. Rivers of blood, or something at least as disgusting. Fairyland. By all the laws of ballad-land, the New York subway tunnels were Fairyland.
Was this the actual answer, the unriddle that would solve Melior's quest? The knowledge that the Real World-Melior's World of Iron, possessed all the landmarks and appurtenances of Faery, if only you looked at it just right? "I'll met by moonlight, proud Titania." "How many miles to Babylon?l Threescore miles and ten." "Oh, where are you bound?lsaid the false knight is witherd.from the lakeland no birds sing." A ravished sword, a monster monstrous through its there in that baggage of twice-told plain tales that could help now?
on the road" "The sedge faery knight, a own cupidity. What was from the hollow hills
"It is past midnight," Melior said suddenly, "and those who travel are safe within doors. It is time for us to travel, Mistress Jane." She looked at her watch. Almost one o'clock in the morning, and a couple of miles of tunnels to cover before they got to the place where Melior wanted to be. "Whassamatter you guys? to her feet.
Ya wanna live forever?"
Jane quoted, getting
Now that she had made the connection, new evidence kept presenting itself; images from the ballads Jane loved to play without reposing the least belief in them. For Jane, normally unfanciful, these associations clothed the prosaic ugliness of the subway tunnels in faery. Once, in a place where A and C crossed 4-5-6 and several sets of tracks ran parallel, there was a faint mournful wail in the distance, and Jane and Melior retreated into concealment to watch the passage of a yellow-and-black flatcar. It did not rely on the third rail to power it; the watchers in their hiding place heard and smelled the workings of a gasoline engine. Three men stood on its open surface, peering out into the dark. carried a rifle. A Border Patrol for the line between fact and fantasy.
One
When it was gone, Jane and Melior went on. They reached the first platform. Harsh blue incandescence like a special effect spilled out along the tracks. The pools in the center of the tracklied were silver footprints, and every soda can and discarded wrapper was an elphen horde. It was at this point that the first faint disquieting sensation came upon Jane that things weren't precisely right. The time is out ofjoint. She had the sneaking suspicion of the teetotaler that there might have been whiskey in the whiskey, a feeling that the description "self-controlled" was no longer Truth in Advertising. Melior stopped just short of the point where anyone standing behind the yellow line which passengers are urged not to cross when a train is not in the station could see him. He held two fingers to his lips in an almostfamiliar gesture and motioned Jane closer. She put out her flashlight and came over. The soot on the wall was the black matte softness of velvet and the slick untrustworthiness of grease.
"First I will go, and mark you well how I do it. Then follow, and haply no one will reckon us," Melior said. He looked over his shoulder at the platform. "And should the alarm be raised, do you draw them off and I will make my way as best I might." And leave me to take the rap. But from Melior's point of view it was reasonable. He was best equipped to kill the grendel She was just the spear carrier. If Melior'd happened to have a spear. And Jane was very well equipped to deal with any question that began with "why." Why did you, why don'tyou, why willyou, why won'tyou, why do you. . . . Tolerated everywhere she'd ever been. As opposed, perhaps, to being wanted, welcomed, valued. Not noticed enough to be disliked; in a world where isolation kills and science has shown that any attention is preferred to none, Jane Treasure Grayson was tolerated; not even noticed enough to get rejected. Tolerated. And what is there in that to connect with enough to fight it? Tolerated. Blandly unseen, glossed over, endured. Until any one who dared communicate was forced to pay the teind for all those who never tried to. And driven away, so that she could keep the one thing she had. She knew exactly what she did. Pitiless insight isn't called that for no reason. Pity makes allowance and turns its face away. Intellect does not. And so the same thing that let her see their neglect, that caused their neglect, made certain that they would never simply leave her alone, because such a clever little thing, such an earnest, forever hopeful of being loved little thing, such a biddable little thing must surely be useful, somehow But Melior valued her, without ever trying to know her. Without using her, except in such a blatant and obvious fashion that it was almost as if she gave her help freely. And for that Jane would provide the one gift in her ken. Loyalty. "You'll need the map," she whispered back, and transferred it, carefully folded, to his waiting black-gloved hand. But all was anticlimax, as after that Melior crossed the open space, crouched low and moving swiftly, crossing directly beneath the platform, hugging it closely to minimize the time when he would be visible. To discover whether there were watchers in truth would have revealed them; they could only go on as if there were and hope that there weren't. His silver hair was a bright flag in the darkness; the sword a golden sparkle at his hip. And Magic was afoot in the world. Melior crossed, safely, making his way into the other darkness, hidden again. It would not have surprised Jane if he had gone on and left her there; after all, he had almost warned her. But instead he stopped, turned back, and waited. And now it was her turn.
She hesitated.
It had looked easy when he
did it. There probably wasn't anyone up there anyway. All she had to do was walk, very fast and crouching optional, across the space that was the open front of the platform. And still she wavered. What if she slipped, what if she fell, what if there was someone up there after all? What if she looked stupid? Go. The demand was almost a spoken word; clear enough to have been heard. Jane let it gaivanize her; push her forward without thought. Her shoulder slid along the soot, a featherwhisper scraping that told her she was going rightly. She watched her feet, chary of the bottles, the wrappers, the noisy treacherous footing beneath. A subway platform is at least the width of the street above, sometimes the length of a city block and more. A distance hardly thought of when choosing which car to enter or stairs to exit by. A tiny eternity to cross through the gloom of the railbed below. Her heart hammered; consciousness was suspended in the throbbing silver of the Eternal Now and for once Jane Grayson lived in the moment. Melior faded back into the darkness as she advanced, preserving the distance between them until she was safely past the point where she might be seen. Then he allowed her to catch up to him. They went on. After a few yards the darkness closed in again and Jane flicked on her flashlight. A few blocks to the next platform, and then a little beyond that the crossing of tracks where they changed from uptown to crosstown lines as they navigated this web of angles toward their goal. "Can I get there by candlelight? Yes, and back again. Judgment Day DAWN WAS A white sheen over Fort Lee, New Jersey. No one had slept. Not Michael, not Ruth, not Philip looking red-eyed and stubborn like a mutant Spartacus of laboratory rats. The excitement of plotting how best to go after Melior's grendel had foundered on the complete lack of information and-on Ruth's part-a worry for Melior that was literally, surprisingly, paralyzing. He was facing the grendel The grendel was real. Melior was foredoomed to die and he'd cut out on her without giving her a chance to make a real nuisance of herself, just like a paperback hero. And she knew, with sharp and annoyed certainty, that her life was in suspension and would hang fire forever if she could not see Melior again and ask him What? "Wall Street," said Philip in a flat, tired voice. "The attacks all center around the City Hall Station, down by Wall Street." "Attacks?" Michael seized on the word. The morning sun was shining on his face, lighting his eyes to a brilliant green. But not the impossible green of Melior's. "Attacks," Philip said.
"Six or seven people that they know of are
missing-presumed-history and about a dozen more are incommunicado, a small town in New Jersey. Trackworkers, and like that. And the street people are avoiding the Lower Manhattan stations for sleeping and panhandling." "How did you find all this out?"
Naomi asked, honestly curious.
Philip pushed up his bifocals. "Stats. Missing person reports. I cracked BlueNet, the cop BBS, and pulled the local gossip for the last week or so. Everybody's jumpy, but it could look like just a lot of coincidence, you know?" "Until last night," Ruth said bleakly. "Which brings us back to Topic A: what do we do?"
Naomi said.
"We could, of course, let the trained professionals handle it," Michael said. "That is what they're there for. They've got manpower, resources, access to tools. They can get an animal control officer in there with a net and drag the thing out." "You're no fun," Philip said under his breath. "Before it kills how many more people?"
Naomi asked.
"That's a cheap shot, Nai," Michael said. "They're doing what they can right now, and telling them what we know isn't going to change that. Every whack in New York and the five boroughs is already calling up and confessing to being the Subway Snatcher. We'll sound like just one more nutcase." "So we just say "What is Truth?" said. "What about Melior?"
and wash our hands of it?"
Ruth
"Well, what do you think we could do to help him-walk up to the grendel and refuse to let it graduate?" Michael asked. "If he isn't going to kill it, and if all your damned trained professionals are so hotshot, why don't we get him out of there?" snapped back.
Ruth
"Getting Melior Down and Not Hurting Anybody," Naomi said, gazing at the ceiling. "Does it matter whether the grendel's dead if it's captured and Melior has his sword back?" she asked. "Not to me," Ruth said. Suddenly the gears were turning in her head again. "I think we've been going at this inside-out. We've been concentrating on the grendel, because that's what Melior thinks is important. But the grendel isn't as important as the sword-" "So forget the grendel, " Naomi finished for her. "Find Melior, hold him off until the police catch the grendel-" "And then find the sword," Michael finished. "Which will be one of two places," Naomi said. "Either where the grendel hid it," Ruth added. "Or somewhere in Washington crated up next to the Lost Ark from Raiders, " Naomi finished, "which may be difficult to get to but not
impossible-" And burglarizing the CIA or searching the MTA will be a lot easier without playing Bullets and Bracelets with the Thing from Forty-thousand Plotliness" Michael said. "So all we have to do is get our hands on Melior and convince him. "That's Ruth's job," Naomi said. Everybody looked at Ruth, and Ruth had the panicked feeling of having been asked to speak in public. "He'll listen to her," Naomi added inexorably. "He won't do it," Philip said, not about Ruth. "He wants the sword, not the grendel, " Michael pointed out. "This is a way to the sword. If he doesn't get picked up. We didn't turn Melior over to the cops in the first place because if we did, he'd disappear into a little underground room somewhere. Which he still could, if we can't get him out in time." " "The mistake was in not forbidding the serpent,"' Ruth quoted. ""Then he would have eaten the serpent." "So how do we find him?"
Mark Twain."
Naomi said.
"Come home, Elfie, all is forgiven," Philip muttered. "Go where he's gone," Michael said. that.
"And there's no good time for
"Right," said Naomi. "Come on, Ruth, let's get dressed for a little nightcrawling. Michael, we'll meet you at your place in about forty minutes. Check the radio to see if they've started running the Lower Manhattan lines again. We'll have to figure out how to get onto the tracks somehow. 71 "Jane was," Ruth said suddenly. "Down on the tracks, I mean. The day she went on the subway trip with Melior and came back all over soot. They were down in the tunnels somewhere.
They have to have been."
"Fine," said Naomi. "They turn on the dorm phones at six." She looked at her watch. "It's almost that now. We can call her. Get going," she added, as Michael stood up. "And you," she said to Philip, "had better get back to your computers. I think this time you're going to work for free." It took them four hours of painstaking subway crawling, backtracking, and waiting, to reach the stalking ground. In the pauses Melior told Jane as much as he knew about the nature of grendels. "Their food is the flesh of their kind, and their whole nature is to hoard beyond their use and spoil what they cannot take away. And their appetite grows with what it feeds upon, until at last their hunger lays waste to all that is near." Jane had pondered this as a lifestyle choice and then asked: "Well, just how much area can they lay waste to?"
Melior had smiled. "Anything within their reach, and their reach grows with time. If they could ever bear to abandon their hoard, they would be even more dangerous. But it takes much to dislodge a grendel from its place, and then the creature only lairs again as soon as it may." "If it can stand the sun," Jane had added, and Melior had agreed. "But this one may be strong enough to do that even now. And if it is not, there is so much darkness in your city that its choices are many." But Melior had not spoken for the last half hour or so. At their last stop he had made Jane put away her flashlight, and handed her, in exchange, one of those small camping lanterns that is simply a candle enclosed by glass. How many miles to Babylon? Now she followed him by the light of the candle Threescore miles and ten and tried to ignore the words that circled round in her head Can I get there by candlelight? Yes, and back again. "Hist," said Melior, and Jane was so keyed up that it was only much later that she registered that the archaism should have been funny. "It is very near." The scent of evil that these Ironworlders refused to ken hung in the tunnel like sickly marsh mist. The beast was near, and Melior hoped without knowledge that Mistress Jane would run when he bid her, when the grendel turned first to him, ancient enemy, and he made his futile assault upon it. Twisted product of magic gone wrong-elphen magic-it was his responsibility as March-Lord of the Silver Silences to undo what his kind had wrought. Perhaps the little magic he hoarded against this moment could harm it; cripple it so that those who came after would find the grendel easier prey. Stephen's sword hung naked at his hip; there had been no time or chance to contrive furniture for it, but the weight was welcome-oh, to hold a sword again; to die a clean death with it in his hand-! But he was so very far from home. And his failure loomed dark and tangled across all the leys of the future, strangling his Foresight in its single asseveration: that the grendel would not die by his hand. So it must be that he would die, and when he died the Sword would be lost here forever, and Baligant who had plotted his Line's downfall would reign triumphant. He could see no way to escape that. Ruth and her friends would accept no proof he could offer that this danger existed. And even when Philip spread out all his truths to them as he had to Melior, would they say any different? He did not know. He had not dared wait to find out. Each time he had brought them proofs they had thought him mad. Perhaps this greatest proof would have seemed to them only the greatest madness, and then they, lovingly and with kindness, would imprison him to keep him from doing what he must.
Perhaps he was mad. But as the humans of this land said: even though you were paranoid, it did not mean you had no enemies. Jane wasn't there. Naomi put down the phone and looked at Ruth, who was just pulling on her jacket of choice. Merrie Month of May or not, it was going to be cold down there. Ruth had scoured her wardrobe, as Naomi had, for clothing she wouldn't mind throwing out as soon as she got back. She wore a sloppy long-sleeved singlet that was already the shade of gray it would otherwise turn, gray-green cargo pants, and an Army Surplus windcheater that had seemed like a much better idea in the store than it had when she'd got it home. The black canvas hi-tops on her feet were another such purchase; impulsive and impossible and too much like the ones Philip wore. She'd pinned and braided her hair up into a hard knot on the back of her head and covered it with a crocheted black bun-doily that Naomi had dug up from somewhere. When she looked in the mirror Ruth decided she looked like the Terminator's fashion-victim sister. Naomi, of course, looked as if she'd been shopping for months with the aim of schlepping through subway tunnels. She had on tightly-laced green rubber duckblind halfboots into which were tucked crisp poplin suntans (ironed . . . ) over which was a no-nonsense bush jacket. She was even wearing gloves, and Ruth, thinking of what she'd have to touch down there, wished she weren't the sort who regularly lost her winter gloves every March. "You look like an outtake from King Solomon's Sewers, " she'd said, as Naomi was dialing Jane. "Just trying to bring a fashion sense to urban fantasy," Naomi had answered as she listened to the phone ring on unanswered. Now she looked at Ruth, hand still over the receiver. "We can worry about her or about Melior," Naomi said to Ruth, as if she were offering her a choice between chocolate and vanilla. "And personally I think Jane could be lots of places in no trouble while we know exactly how much trouble Melior is in." "Right." Ruth drew in a deep breath, which did her exactly as much good as the last one had; none. "Come on," Naomi said.
"Let's get Michael."
A long time afterward Jane decided that what the problem had been was that it was too easy. It was true that Melior behaved as if the situation was dangerous, but then, Melior behaved as if walking the streets of New York was High Adventure. And it had been hour on hour, and all they had done was walk, through an environment that lost all of its terror and much of its charm through long acquaintance. Now that changed. It was after four o'clock in the morning, an hour in which Jane's body was asleep even if she wasn't. The first candle had burnt down and she had changed it by flashlight. Melior had given her his pack and canteen to carry as well as her own and panthered forward on flexed
joints like a dark and dangerous balletomane. And she wasn't paying attention to much of anything beyond following him and wondering if they could stop soon. There was a hiss.
A clang as the gladius rang off the subway wall.
Melior sprang sideways, landing directly in the center of the railbed. The sword flashed in the light of Jane's lantern and Melior's every gesture spoke of fearful threat. She backed away, icy with the uprush of fight-or-flight chemistry, and in that instant there was a "tok" sound like the Babe hitting one over the fence and the scunnering ring of the sword sliding away into the dark, both combined with the snapshot image of Melior flung boneless to the ground. It had happened so fast. Facts. Jane dealt with them, the momentary chemical alarm pushed back to unimportance. New information reached another of her senses. Jane looked up, beyond the silver flame of Melior's hair being slowly extinguished by blood and black water. She raised the lantern higher, but even so the light barely reached what stood in the shadows, that had struck Melior down so casually. Jane looked at the grendel The grendel looked at Jane. lay between them; vulnerable.
Melior's body
It was so much taller than she was that there was no point in assigning it a height. It smelled of excrement and rotting meat, thickly and insistently; as she stared, she saw it more clearly. Its skin was the livid purple-gray of gangrene, wrinkled like a raisin and beginning to scale. Patches of what might have been mold spotted the skin here and there; exotic fauna known only to pathologists. The grendel's eyes were small white globes set in an angry weeping expanse of scarlet flesh; abraded sockets swollen and peeling. If she had screamed, if she had run, if she had shown any reaction to it at all, things might have gone differently. If it had not eaten, recently and well, it might have taken more interest. But she was not The Other, and she was not The Object, and soon The Other would not be able to hurt it at all. Jane stared at the grendel Her heartbeat did not race; it was possible she was not thinking of danger at all. She simply looked, and recorded what she saw, and waited for what she saw to change. There was a blast of sound; an eerie, flatulent howl. Startled, she dropped the candle and could still see; Jane looked behind her. Far but not far enough she saw the flatcar they had seen earlier; but this time it was on the tracks behind her, sweeping the tunnel with its spotlight. The over-amplified yowp of an electronic bullhorn stunned her with pure noise, its message lost to distortion. She looked back.
The grendel was gone as if it had never been there.
Melior raised one hand; a feeble gesture. "Run," he whispered. There was only one direction possible. Melior on the tracks would delay the flatcar, moving at its stately 35 mph. She could get away. This time Jane did not pause to think. carried and ran.
She threw away everything she
The bullhorn squawked. The spotlight drilled into her back, but it had not cost her much of her night vision. Down here the lines converged again, and in the underground cathedral vastness warning lights burned like the stars of an earthbound constellation. On her left, across a noman's-land of third rails, she saw the pale gleaming refuge of a station platform. She heard the change in engine pitch as the flatcar stopped at Melior's body. If she was quick, she could reach the platform and a state of plausible deniability. She didn't think the grendel would follow her to the light; more precisely, she didn't think of the grendel at all; that was something for later, after she had performed the function for which she now knew Melior had chosen her, and brought back the truth of her own eyes to the only people left on earth who might be able to act upon it. There was a monster loose in the New York Subway. It was on a May morning, and just determined to be beautiful enough had the edged feeling of too much like wild silk and the light like in reality.
like in any ballad the day was to make Pollyanna suspicious. Ruth tea and too little sleep, and the air raw honey did nothing to anchor her
Michael was waiting for them on the corner. Philip was nowhere in sight. Conversation was superfluous. They walked over and caught the A Train downtown. New Yorkers are a blasd lot. Once, many years ago, for a bet, to prove a point, or on some esoteric scientific raison a man undertook to walk stark naked (except for shoes) the length of Fifth Avenue. Extant photos (snapped from behind) show him passing among New Yorkers who are neither looking nor not-looking, strenuously proving themselves sangfroidian even at the cost of common sense. This, combined with Warhol's heart-held dictum that there is a fifteen-minute time limit on fame, assured that no matter who had been dragged by what off a subway platform at the height of the rush hour the night before, today the trains were running and nobody would be so gauche as to wonder whether making the morning commute was worth the personal hazard. The only trouble the three of them had was finding standing room on the rush-hour trains. It took them more than an hour to reach West Fourth Street from 116th, in between the profit and the loss, in the T.S. Eliot where the dreams cross. When they reached it, Michael gestured and they were borne onto
the platform in a tide of Thursday morning lemming ballet. "Now I know why I don't work for a living," Naomi panted as they fought their way to freedom. "Where now?" "Phone call," said Michael. "Coffee. And maybe one of you professional geniuses can figure out how we're going to get down onto the tracks in the middle of all this without being either seen or creamed." "Easy enough if Lower Manhattan's still stopped," Naomi said. "There's only six or seven ways to find out," Ruth pointed out. "Come on.
Let's find a phone that's working."
On the way out, Ruth glanced at the clock overhead. seven-twenty-eight.
The time was
It was eight-thirty-five when Jane let herself into Ruth and Naomi's apartment with her spare key. It had been a little before five well she finally reached the surface of New York, at a station and line she'd never seen, somewhere in the depths of Wall Street. She'd struck out first for Broadway, and had seen the red warning flashes of emergency lights before she'd seen anything more. Paranoid as a lifestyle choice, Jane had not had to think twice about heading south, toward Battery Park and away from police vans, emergency vehicles, firetrucks, minicams, and anything else containing someone who might ask her questions. She had a pretty good idea that the grendel wasn't Melior's little secret any more-which would account for the fact that there'd been no subway traffic until the flatcar full of fuzz showed up-but she didn't know how much of what version anybody knew, and she didn't intend to be the one to lighten the load of their ignorance. Jane had other plans for her Thursday. Having gone south as far as was safe she headed east, having no desire to be mugged, either at any time or before she'd delivered the news to the others. Melior'd been right all along, and that should just about fry Philip to the ultimate max. Earliest morning broke about twenty minutes after Jane came above ground; bright and clear, one of those mornings that seem almost to be safety-sealed for your protection; too good to be true. Vintage season, and like the C.L. Moore story, only the overture to the most select form of apocalypse. But up-and-coming Gotterdammerungs weren't Jane's affair, and frying Philip LeStrange was. Philip Leslie LeStrange. At the hour and in the area she had chosen, Jane's tatterdemalion appearance was not too much noticed. Just another strange street person, this one young enough to be a runaway. She knew what her few observers thought and it suited her fine; Manhattanites weren't a charitable people. It took her until about six a.m. to hoof it clear of the media circus pitch and find a phone that worked.
It did not occur to her that she was already missed, that there was already videotaped proof of the grendel's existence and that the others were already trying to figure out how best to save Melior from himself. She thought there was all the time in the world, and that Ruth would hardly relish being awakened so soon after dawn. And so, hesitating, trying to decide not only what Melior wanted her to do but what a reasonable person would do, Jane waited until six-thirty to phone Ruth and Naomi. The phone rang. And rang, and rang, until Jane was quite certain no one would answer. She phoned Philip's number. Whoever answered hung up the phone without speaking, and after the third time, Jane gave up. Served Philip right for not giving them any of hisprivate phone numbers. Michael was out, too. But that was reasonable; Michael liked jogging, and morning classes, and other masochistic pursuits. She found a McDonald's and ordered breakfast, simply because it was the sort of thing that normal people did and Jane, perhaps, had new doubts about her ability to fake normalcy. She ate it walking back up the street, wondering whether she was going to have an attack of nerves about going down into the subway again. She decided she wouldn't, and caught the "A" Uptown at Canal. She tried Ruth and Naomi once more, while waiting for the train. one answered. Jane did not speculate; she went home. It is entirely possible that fulcrum point on the A Line. apartment (a better place to more of that tiresome tribe, buzzed for admittance, there
No
Jane passed Ruth and the others at some It is certain that when she reached their go than the dorm, where there would be nosy people with awkward questions) and was no answer.
There was nobody home. Without any particular sense of guilt, Jane investigated the apartment thoroughly, but the scribbled notes and lists in Ruth's and Naomi's handwriting conveyed very little. Except that they were both gone, at a time when they ought not to be gone. She phoned Michael again, but after fifteen unanswered rings she gave it up. After much thought, she even phoned Philip again, but all she got for that was a shouted "Not here!" and the receiver slammed down. Curiouser and curiouser. The television only had late-morning happytalk news to offer, and Doubleyew-ten-ten-Wins News Radio was spending its time on things with "East" in the title, like the Near East and Eastern Europe. She could, of course, dash off and try to rescue Melior. Only she had no idea how badly he'd been hurt, or whether he'd been arrested, and whether anyone claiming to be his friend might just be arrested in turn. She was pretty sure that rescuing Melior would require extensive and
creative lying, a skill she knew she lacked, and if she were detained in any fashion Melior's message might not get delivered. Besides, people might call her parents, and then there'd really be trouble. And she knew that Michael or Naomi would be much more efficient at dealing with the mundanes. And success was to be preferred over speed, if you had to choose just one. Jane gave up and took a shower, scrubbing until the water ran clear. She borrowed a skirt and sweater of Ruth's and a garbage bag for her subway-crawling clothes. Then she headed back for her own dorm room, trying to form a criterion for deciding when she'd have to do what she could without the others. And then, having walked nearly twelve miles and been up for more than twenty-four hours, she fell asleep on her dorm-room bed before she began to wonder precisely how trustworthy Philip's roommates were in the matter of phone messages at eight-forty-five in the morning. "Nothing."
Michael hung up the phone.
:'What kind of nothing?"
Ruth wanted to know.
'No police reports. Philip says Downtown subway lines are on a halfhour delay, but they're running. No sign of Jane," Michael elaborated. "Is he sure?"
Naomi said.
"He called her again while I was on his other line, and he's got the computer scanning continuously in several places I don't even want to think about. No Jane." "Dear Philip," Ruth said. "Three phone lines, no waiting. even want to think about how he does that."
I don't
"Illegally," Naomi said. "And if he weren't feeling so guilty right now, you still wouldn't have the phone numbers." "Well I do have them," Michael pointed out unnecessarily, "so come on. I think I know a way to get to where Melior is." "And then we can play Dodge 'Em cars with real subways. said.
Cute," Naomi
"Especially when you pause to consider that there's no place to dodge to," Michael answered cheerfully. Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences, firstborn of his Line, of the line of the sons of the Morning Stars, Marchlord and Swordwarden, had had better days. Much better days. As it was, he had luck of a sort on his side. The Guardsmen had not seized him armed, and much as he grieved over the loss of Stephen's sword, things that Ruth had said had convinced him it was a better
thing in this land to be found unweaponed. The second point in his favor was that he was injured. In fact, his captors had used him with much solicitous concern upon finding him hurt, and Melior had let them, knowing that every moment spent on him was one more in which his squire might win her freedom. They asked a number of odd questions about his name and their fingers, about who took precedence and what state he was in. "Utter confusion," Melior had answered honestly to that last, and after that they left him alone with the throbbing pain and sickness in his head until a litter could be brought. Until it came they would not move him, Melior had discovered, and as he lay across the tracks their machine could not proceed. He realized, listening to them speak among themselves, that some felt he might be a mere thrill-seeker, whatever that might be, but others that he might be victim to the creature that they hunted, which had taken human prey in sight of many only the previous day. Melior closed his eyes against the pain in his head. Now Ruth and the others would have their proof, but Melior was no longer certain it would do any good. These humans who seemed to place too much emphasis upon maintaining the surface illusion at any cost did not seem to have the knack of hunting grendeL He did not think their race would survive. But at the moment it was Melior who wanted to survive, and not to be taken away to rooms without windows by tribes with meaningless barbarian names like Seaheyah or Etheyah and tortured there to give up the secrets of his Line. It was not hard to seem hurt and wearied when the lackeys came to carry him off. When they shifted him onto the litter they had brought, a bright light seemed to dawn behind his eyes and he lay only faintly aware until the cool morning air washed over him. Straps held his body to the pallet; it steadied and jarred as its handlers shifted it, and then began to roll forward on wheels. Melior opened his eyes once and closed them again. Lights in a spectrum of colors, some flashing, some not. Barking voices, men's and women's both, and a constant howling as of war-horns. So much strangeness, and no Ruth beside him to show by her example that things were proceeding in the normal fashion for the world. They lifted him into a small hut of the sort that moved and he did not fight them. He did not think he could stand, much less break the straps and run, and innocence was his only defense now that he had fallen into the toils of those his young friends feared more than grendel A Guardsman got in behind him, and the hut began to roll forward. It increased the sickness in his head, and he only hoped he'd made the right choice and not once more done something that Ruth would think was foolish. The Guardsman spoke to Melior, his voice hard and barking. A woman's voice interrupted his, telling Melior that this wouldn't hurt, and asked again the meaningless questions about names and fingers and precedence while she shone a light in his eyes. His eyes.
Ruth said they betrayed him.
He stared at the white-clothed
woman in alarm. "Reflexes normal," the woman said. "Hi, my name is Holly Kendal, and I'm your E.M.T for the morning." She brushed his hair back, very carefully, regarding the ears which his lady Ruth had been pleased to call beautiful but entirely wrong. He watched Holly Kendal, who was his E.M.T, as she sank white teeth into her lower lip and hesitated the briefest instant, and it came to him that she would not betray him. "How are you feeling?"
she asked carefully.
"Do you speak English?"
"Dizzy," Melior said, closing his eyes in relief. Holly pressed cool fingers to his wrist. She said she was taking his vitals, that he was being admitted to Bellevue, and a number of other things that Melior simply did not find worth the trouble of remaining conscious to hear. Michael took them downtown. It was after nine by now; the great commuter crunch had eased, and they had the weekday morning subways almost (comparatively speaking) to themselves. Ruth hadn't counted on the rubberneckers and licensed gawkers. The station that Therese Scarlatti had been taken from yesterday was locked, iron gates and all, and removed temporarily from the roster of subway stops. The train might be running, but half the Lower Manhattan I.R,T stops were closed. "Worry not," Michael said, and proceeded to take them around a number of crisscrosses and shortcuts that made Ruth exceedingly glad that she was doing this in the company of a six-foot-two weightlifting student librarian. "Here we are," said Michael finally. It was a passageway of the sort that let you transfer between uptown, downtown, alphabets, and numbers without paying another fare-assuming, always, that you thought being mugged was worth the trouble. The walls were white tile, the ceiling was claustrophobicly low, and Ruth wouldn't have touched the paving beneath her feet with her bare hands for anything short of life-threatening incentive. The corridor smelled strongly of unpoliced bodily functions. Interrupting the white tile was a green metal door with a padlock and hasp. Michael pulled out something that was not quite a key and jiggled it in the lock. After a moment the padlock popped open. "If anyone is going to break any more laws, I don't want to know about it," Ruth said faintly. "This is next to last," Michael said reassuringly. "Ladies and, urn, ladies, allow me to present to you the jewel in the T.A's crown; a littleknown access corridor to take you directly-do not pass 'Go', do not collect two hundred dollars-to I.R,T track-level. If we're caught in here or on the tracks, it's B&E-that's Breaking and Entering to you civilians-but we'll probably get off with a fine providing nobody mentions elves, which will get us a complementary seventy-two-hour commitment for observation in the nearest loony bin. Just keep your mouths shut, okay?"
"I love it when you go all macho," Naomi said. that was here?"
"But how did you know
"A friend of mine in Transit told me about it," Michael said, which made Ruth wonder until his opening the door made her forget. He hustled them inside quickly, which made her think this might be even more illegal than it looked. There was a deadbolt on the inside of the door, and Michael dead bolted it. He hung the outside padlock on the inside lock and gestured theatrically. This corridor was smaller than the last, marginally cleaner, and lit by 40-watt light bulbs placed at the longest possible intervals. "After you," Michael said. " Idiocy before beauty," Naomi answered, and Michael started down the corridor, ducking. One Flew Over the Basilisk's Nest THAT PLACE WHICH mortals named Bellevue Emergency caused Melior to revise his opinions about this world's humans. If they maintained such places as this for their sport, surely the grendel could not seem so evil to them. The sliding doors of the ambulance entryway opened for the lackeys who bore Melior's wheeled cot. Holly Kendal walked beside him, carrying the board and papers upon which she had written. Within the citadel the light was uncharitably bright, and harsh mechanical stinks burned Melior's nose while doing but little to conceal the odors of pain, fear, sickness, and blood which lay beneath. There was a harsh wailing and the polyphone of voice raised in a fashion which he had never heard outside of a battlefield. Holly-his-E.M.T placed a clipboard carefully on his chest and patted his shoulder. "You'll be all right," she said, but Melior could hear the unsureness in her voice. She stared at him a moment longer and then walked away. The last Melior saw of her was her waist-length russet braid bouncing as she strode. Then he was brought to another place, with no more interest shown him than if he had been as inanimate as the bed he was bound to. The Guardsman stayed with him, and there was much incomprehensible talk of preserving his simple rights and of someone named Miranda, who seemed to be the matriarch whose name must be invoked to solemnize his detention. Lackeys in white lifted him onto a metal table and off again, his chest was prodded with cold instruments, and through it all he forced himself to wait, muscles limp and face impassive, lest they put him back into the iron cage from which Ruth might not rescue him twice. They kept him bound upon the pallet, called gurney among them, lest he damage himself before they could see the damage done him, and asked him many questions. His name. His age. His address. His occupation. To all of these except his name he gave answers that were true for
Michael. They asked about his assurance, which puzzled him, and when they asked for his assurance card he said he had lost it. The Guardsman asked him again and again what he had been doing in the subterranean way and how he had gotten there, and Melior answered as Michael had coached him for some other long-ago occasion: "I do not know. I do not remember." The white-robed ones came and went for an hour's Guardsman never left his side. They spoke, when much to one another of pictures coming back, and sense Melior did not question it. To expose his fatal.
time, though the they were present, though this made no ignorance would be
At last a minion came, waving blackened sheets of flexible glass, and said things like "mild concussion" and "absence of subdural hermatoma" and called him lucky. Melior did not feel lucky. But they unstrapped stand for a moment, that he would go he swallow from a tiny the same material.
him and was cup The
from the moving bed after that and let him though he thanked them for their help and said told that he might not. They gave him pills to of paper, and gave him water in a larger cup of Guardsman stood by, watching.
And so Melior submitted tamely to the removal of his clothes, to their replacement with a smock he would have blushed to see the meanest of his servants wear, and permitted them to bind up the wounds which the grendel had made. One minion laved the blue-black place on his cheek where the grendel had struck with burning evil-adored lotions. Another came and bound the edges of the wound together with painful sorcery, and then covered his work with pads and ointments and a swathing of pale cloth. His hearing was very keen, and he did not miss the whispering in corners about his physical differences. His ears, his eyes, the beat of his heart; they had sampled all of these and liked none of them. At last Melior was let to stand, but only so long as it took for them to bring a wheeled chair such as Michael's friend Stephen possessed. To the mean smock they had granted him they added a tattered blue robe of the material called tenycloth, which served to cover him more acceptably. It was probable, Melior thought, that they meant to keep his own clothes as payment for their services, and he was sorry for Ruth's sake, but there was little there he valued. His backpack and Stephen's sword were still in the tunnel, and the sword he did miss, but just as well to lose it there if he were to keep it only to lose it to jackals such as these. He wondered if they would loose him now, but thought there must be more, and in this much he was right. Frank wanted to talk to him, it was said, and so once more Melior marshaled all his patience and waited for Frank, though his head still ached. But Frank was not to come to him.
He was to go to Frank.
They would not let him walk, but pushed him in the wheeled chair and
brought him to a room that smelled of bitter smoke and poisons. In it was a couch, much like Naomi's couch, and there they bid him wait for Frank. Part of The Object was missing. The One had reasoned this out slowly, taking painful hours to reach that conclusion. Part of The Object was missing-some essence, some informing spark. At first The One had wailed its rage, hot and blinding, but The Object had not kindled. Then The One had mourned over Its loss, knowing It could never venture out into the hot bright Destruction to seek the missing part. Even striking down The Enemy had not cheered it, for The Enemy was not Food and was not dead. But surely The Enemy must have died soon thereafter, else why had such a great benison been granted? The One did not have to find a way to survive the great Destruction to seek the part of The Object which had been lost. It was coming here. The missing piece of The Object was coming to The One. Coming here.
Seeking its other self Coming within his reach.
"Yeuch." Ruth slid gingerly along the tunnel wall and wished with all her might that she possessed the transcendent nobility of spirit that would allow her to ignore the fact that it was absolutely filthy. She had never held an ambition to schlep around in the subway tunnels. Vincent of Beauty and the Beast held no fascination for her. If sensibility was an aversion to cheap theatrics, well, then, let it be so; Ruth was sensible. But her heart was a sick weight in her chest and she desperately wanted to find Melior. All of Melior-and soon. "We're inside the target area," Michael said softly, ticking off their blessings. "Grendel country. The disappearances-allowing for the layout of the tunnels-form a rough circle. We're inside it." "Wonderful," said Naomi.
"But where exactly is the "target area"?"
"Somewhere near City Hall," Michael said. of his jacket and shone it around. "What do we do if a train comes?"
He pulled a flashlight out
Ruth looked around nervously.
"See these?" Michael shone his flashlight into a nook built into the wall, a door-shaped alcove that Ruth had seen but thought just for decoration. "Duck into one." "Oh, thanks," Ruth breathed. "If the trains were running half an hour apart during rush hour, they may not be running at all now," Naomi pointed out. "Half an hour! Usually it's five minutes." "Come on," said Michael.
"And keep your voices down.
Sound carries.
We're looking for Melior, not trouble." "Who writes your dialogue?" followed.
Ruth muttered under her breath.
But she
Naomi was the one who found the sword. It was fifteen minutes later, long enough for Ruth, who brought up the rear, to become inured to walking through a cylindrical garbage heap filled with rats which might at any moment chose not to scurry the other way and not long enough for her to stop flinching every time she heard a sound that might be the herald of an oncoming train. The three of them walked in single-file along the rail-bed, spread out far enough that only two of them would have to crowd into any one-person niche. Ruth was desperately trying to keep from asking Naomi, who might actually know, just how much wider the tunnels were than the trains that ran through them. If at all, Ruth emended mentally. For some reason her hands were shaking badly, making the beam of her flashlight jump in ragged Morse along the ground ahead. It was that, more than anything else, which her mind had chosen to fix on, insisting that it meant she would probably faint, fall down in the muck, contract hepatitis, and die. Melior might be dead already. And everything he'd told them about the grendel was true. She was concentrating on that bleak prospect so hard that Naomi's sharp indrawn breath of surprise hit Ruth with the violence of a shout. "Michael-Ruth-LOOK!" Ruth saw it then: the gold gleam of the gladius, lying neglected and unlooked-for directly beneath the third rail. Melior's sword.
Ruth felt sick.
Michael started across the tracks toward it. For God's sake, Michael!
Ruth thought but didn't say aloud.
Michael knelt on the tracks, shining his flashlight on the blade, carefully making certain the sword nowhere touched the rail that carried its multi-thousand-volt freight of raw power. Then, still kneeling, holding the flashlight in his left hand because there must be, could be, no mistake, Michael began, very slowly, reaching out for the sword. Ruth felt the gentle puff of breeze on the back of her neck. breath of time.
Like the
Like the wind from an oncoming train. How trite, Ruth thought. She saw the white oval of Naomi's face as Nai turned toward her; knew that Naomi had felt it, too. Michael went on reaching for the sword.
Ruth had to force herself to
see what was there, not the bright are-welding halations that imagination conjured so vividly. Oh, God, Michael, RUN. But Michael didn't run, and Ruth herself stood paralyzed, sick with fear for him, and wondering with giddy self-contempt if a little thing like breaking into a subway tunnel to chase a cannibal theriomorph at the word of an elf-prince-now almost certainly dead-from Otherwhere and finding herself caught in the path of a subway train was enough to induce a nervous breakdown in her, frail vessel that she was. Naomi reached her and grabbed her arm, pulling her toward one of the niches. Behind Naomi, Ruth could still see Michael. He had his hand around the sword-hilt and was carefully, painstakingly, pulling it free. It's Melior's sword, the one that Stephen Mallison gave him. wouldn't just go off and leave it.
He
The train's headlights were a glow around the curve of the tunnel. Its horn sounded, not that it could have seen them, and the sound boomed off the tunnel walls like a peal of thunder. "Ruth!" Naomi shook her, pushed her, dug sharp nails into her arm, and finally Ruth broke free of the paralysis enough to move. They reached the alcove with an eternity-ninety seconds at leastto wait before the train reached them, time enough for Ruth to invent and discard a dozen better plans for safety. Then the train began to pass. Ruth stood with her face pressed into Naomi's shoulder, both of them huddled tightly into this technological priest's hole as the train thundered by, and for all her terrorized anticipation, all Ruth felt as its passage hammered her with sound was annoyance that it would not leave and let her deal with whatever new horror awaited. But when the train had gone, rocking and wailing as it retreated down the tunnel, what Ruth saw was Michael. He was holding the replica Roman short-sword as if he didn't want to be anywhere near it. "Steve'd want this back," he said simply. "What about Melior?" For a moment Ruth was surprised that her voice sounded so steady, then realized it was Naomi who'd spoken. "This doesn't prove he's dead," Michael said quickly, watching Ruth. "All it proves is that Melior dropped it and couldn't pick it up. There could be a lot of explanations for that. jail."
He could be back in
"How do we find out?" Naomi asked calmly. Once more Ruth envied her friend that. Oh, to be one of those self-possessed people. "Get out of here and call Philip.
Call the police."
" 'Excuse me, have you arrested any elves lately?" " Naomi suggested, and Ruth, stifling a hoot of laughter, felt the tightness in her chest ease. "Or something," Michael said. "Or he could still be down here with a busted ankle. I want to finish looking around." And so they went on, faster now, knowing that their target must be blatantly obvious or absent altogether. Through the still-damp-from-lastweek's-rains-but-drying tunnels Naomi, Ruth, and Michael hurried; interlopers by need but well-aware of their precarious legal position; flashlights flickering off things that gleamed , scurrying crouched past the empty prosceniums of deserted stations at a New Yorker's walking pace. There was suddenly a curious absence of rats. And Ruth was about to mention this; was tormented afterward by the certainty that had she only mentioned it things would have been different, different altogether. "I don't think-" Michael began, and his words overlaid the slithering sound Ruth heard behind her. She turned toward the sound. Shock; her body understanding terror and filling her blood with nightmare cocktails long before her blinkered modern mind could react. Then realization, and-oh, God-the smell! "Muh-uh!" Ruth stammered, skittering backward, flashlight falling from fingers numb, nerveless with an extremity of terror never felt before, not even in nightmares. And the grendel, it had to be the grendel-oh, God, so that's what it looks like-reached out for her; slack-jawed drool and yellow twisted teeth. Ruth, pedaling backward, fell. The sudden unexpected slap of the ground at her back was baffling more than anything else; her eyes teared with the unfairness of it all as the grendel shambled toward her. She saw Naomi vault over her as she lay on the ground; saw the upraised golden flash of Stephen's sword and heard Naomi grunt as she shoved it into the grendel's unaffected flesh. The grendel shrugged Naomi off and Ruth heard her fall and roll; heard the low hu! of expended air and knew Naomi was attacking again. She saw the lights of the tunnel walls blotted out as the horror stooped over her, ignoring the attack. She felt the grendel's hand upon the side of her face and then Ruth, with some relief, recorded nothing more. Michael had turned back when he'd heard the noise. Still talking, he turned the flashlight automatically to follow his sight and saw Ruth. And saw the grendel It was nearly eight feet tall, and seeing it Michael knew that Melior must be dead. He could not believe that this was something that had ever been human. Its arms were ape-long, and wicked horn-colored claws gleamed at the end of short fingers on blunt pawlike hands. Its skin was blackish green and toxic, cracked and
scaled and shredding, its head an insignificant neckless bump between shoulders broad to the point of parody. Nose was lost in the swelling thrust of muzzle, giving its bluntfeatured earless face a vaguely saurian look; cartoon dinosaur until it opened its mouth, then frightening impossible extension and jutting yellow fangs. The stink waited from it like a fog; morgue and mass burial, blood and murder. How could anyone hope to kill it? Michael wished-desperately, unreasonably-for a flamethrower, knowing that if he had it in his hands this instant he could not use it, because the thing was close to Ruth and coming closer, reaching out one moist unclean hand like all the parodies of Frankenstein that ever were, unfunny at last. It seemed an eternity before Ruth began to move, backing away slowly when Michael knew that what she should do was turn and run. And then she fell. He started protesting do nothing they knew,
forward, slow underwater-seeming motion with every muscle at the movement, knowing he would not be in time and could if he were. They'd come down here unarmed, knowing what and Michael hated himself suddenly for that stupidity.
Naomi moved faster. She'd been standing a little behind Michael, now she ran to him, pulling Stephen's sword out of his hand while Ruth was still falling. Michael grabbed vainly at empty air where the sword had been and ran at last, but not as fast as Naomi. She sprang over Ruth's body, sword in her right hand and her shouted kiai echoing in the tunnel like a sea-bird's cry. His last sight of her was of Naomi poised in midair, golden sword gleaming in the light of the flashlight that Michael had somehow managed not to drop. The grendel raised its head and looked at him, its eyes like cankers of burning phosphor. And then, without transition, Michael was standing, not running, standing staring and wide-eyed off into space, as still and dazed as if he had just awakened from a deep sleep, and all three of them were gone. "No-! " He ran forward, waving his flashlight, but there was nothing there. Not Ruth. Not Naomi. Only Stephen's sword lying on the tracks, and Ruth's flashlight, and the broad wet footprints of something that never should have existed at all. What had happened? One moment he'd been running toward it, the next I want to die. Oh, God, please let me die. Not again. NOTAGAIN. There was silence in the tunnel. After a long hesitation, Michael picked up the sword, then turned away and slowly began to leave. "How are you feeling?"
That inane question humans liked to ask each other, this time from the mouth of a man dressed as no man Melior had seen yet: gray his strange garb was, gray as all the colors of smoke and morning mist. "I'm Detective Lieutenant Frank Catalpano, N.Y.P.D. I'd like to ask you a few questions about what you were doing down there on the tracks, if you don't mind." Melior knew that tone. The courtesy of princes; empty words, as no one would dare to refuse their orders. And this man was a prince of a sort, Melior guessed; only a ruler would dare show such arrogance, even to a wounded foe. The gray man sat down upon the cheap couch and brought out a notebook and stylus from his pocket. "Am I arrested?"
Melior asked.
The detective lieutenant regarded him gravely. "Let's say we aren't making any charges at this point. The subway's a dangerous place to go, you know." "So I have been told." Melior's first instinct was to lie, and he would have followed it without compunction, save that a lie must always be convincing, and Melior did not know what words were plausible and what words would betray. "Just how did you get down there?"
The gray man asked.
Ah, this was simple enough. "I do not remember," Melior said. He touched his bandaged head and winced. "I was going home," he added, which was truth of a sort. "And you don't remember anything other than that?" palfntly did not believe him.
The gray man
Melior shook his head and winced; and that at least was no act. "I fell," he suggested, putting uncertainty and guessing into his voice. "And where is home, exactly?" the gray man asked. No prince, this, Melior realized now, but a prince's man; brutal with the trust his sovereign reposed in him; elegant with a simplicity that disdained courts. Not even a warrior, this, but that which was much more fearsome. A manhunter. Melior gave him Michael's address once more. "Lived there long?"
was the next question.
"Only a short time. I am staying with a friend." Half-truths and simple statements. Melior began to hope they might let him go. "We didn't find your wallet."
Prompting, helpful and encouraging.
Looking for him to reveal something-but what? The silence stretched, achingly. fill it and spoke none of them. "Your friend got a name?"
Melior wondered.
Melior thought of a hundred ways to
the grey manhunter asked.
"He is Michael Peacock," Melior said. "And surely he will wonder at my absence. If you do not arrest me, you must let me go to him." "Hold on just a minute," the manhunter said. "With a knock like the one you got, you shouldn't be wandering around alone. What were you doing riding the subway at that hour, anyway?" "It was rush hour," Melior suggested.
"It is later now."
"What were you doing for the last twelve hours?" Questions again and again, and now Melior knew they were merely a veil for a certainty he could not guess at. "May I call Michael now?"
Melior asked.
The manhunter to princes pushed the stylus and a sheet of paper over to Melior. "Write it down here and we can have one of the nurses notify him," he said. "I've got just a couple more questions." Melior stared at the blank sheet of paper. The gate to this land had given him knowledge of its spoken tongue, but nothing more. He could neither read nor write. But a good commander-and Melior had been one-must be able to draw a map, however crude. Carefully Melior rendered the twisting angular symbols that were on the buttons one must push to activate the spell that would reach Michael. Detective Lieutenant Frank Catalpano looked at the paper, folded it carefully, and put it in his pocket. "I'll be sure to have one of the nurses call your friend for you, but before that, maybe you could tell me what you were doing in the subway," he said with polite insistence. A Candle in the Wind "HAVE YOU HEARD from Melior?" and abrupt.
Michael's voice on the phone was harsh
"No." Philip did not bother to glance up at the endlessly-searching computer. He already knew the answer. No elf. And it wasn't his fault, but the girls weren't going to see it that way. "I've seen the grendel It's got Ruth and Naomi. there."
Stay there till I get
The phone went dead in Philip's ear before he could think of a reply. Above his head the police scanner continued to broadcast its cryptic shorthand of 10-codes and civil citations. The grendel had Naomi and Ruth? Philip had thought things were already as bad as they could be. He'd been wrong. They'd just gotten worse.
His name, as it happened, really was Frank (For Francis Marion) Catalpano, although he was not with the N.Y.P.D. He was, however, on the side of the angels, if you defined the side of the angels as the side of the law. Laws, it must be noted, can be rewritten, from time to time, for expediency's sake. Frank worked for a mostly-unknown agency with the curious distingtion of being the only private-sector service provider in a field usually reserved for governments friendly and un-. This agency (which had a fine, vague-but-impressive-sounding name) leased its services to the United States Government, which paid very well indeed for an exclusive lien on the agency's time. This was not to say that Frank's employers did not have other clients, only that they did not do for these other clients what they did for the United States Government. At least in theory. And, being an exclusive private-sector subcontractor to the biggest employer there was, it was easy for Frank's bosses to move mammal-fast around the ankles of the Federal dinosaurs, so that almost before the first report had come in, Frank had been on the scene, complete with convincing ID and plausible cover-story, appropriate warnings-off to appropriate bureaus, and people in every New York City department who would say that Frank Catalpano was exactly what he appeared to be. And as for the man in the room Frank had just left.
. . .
The flashing eyes, the floating hair (as Frank's former wife Denise, a space cadet who'd held a liberal arts degree from Vassar, would surely have characterized them), and even the pointed ears of his prisoner did not faze Frank. He had seen them before. This was another one. And as soon as the right people and the right equipment arrived, this one would vanish, too. Maybe the killings in the subway would stop, then, but Frank Catalpano neither knew nor cared. His agency was paid well by its biggest account to remain very focused. "Detective?" Frank turned to face the doctor. He looked at the name-badge on the rumpled white coat. Jenkins. The admitting physician. "Yes?" He pulled his persona around himself like a cloak; worldweary New York 'tec who'd seen it all, done a lot of it, and could never on any account be forced to explain. "Are you going to charge him? clipboard, "-Ronald Melon?"
This-" Jenkins squinted at his
Rohannan Melior, Frank corrected him silently. Of one of the Seven Houses of the Twilight. I'll bet my quarterly bonus on it. He's got the look.
"No," said Frank, as soft and heavy as a fall of graveyard dust. "We're not going to charge him. Yet. But your patient, Doctor, is very upset. He needs rest. He needs to stay here for the seventy-two-hour observation period permitted by law so we can see what it is he's going to do." Jenkins opened and closed his mouth. Frank plucked the clipboard out of his hand. He glanced over the crabbed hieroglyphics, and then took a pen from his inside pocket and wrote "Violent. Delusional. Do Not Approach." diagonally across the page. "You got that, Doctor?"
Frank said.
"The man's got civil rights," Jenkins muttered. "We have to notify the family, let him telephone-" "You're real busy here, Doctor Jenkins." Frank gave the name full weight. It was wonderful what you could do with a name. Say somebody's name in the right way, and all of a sudden they got nervous, just as if you might take their name away from them as a prelude to other horrors. Frank smiled. "I'm sure you're too busy to pay too much attention to one violent whack. Just give us a break, Doctor. Let us do our job for once, okay? Seventy-two hours. Okay?" Frank watched Jenkins, as he'd watched so many others, looking for the moment that Jenkins would choose the easy way over the right way. They almost always did, and Frank was waiting for them on the other side. It would be incorrect to say that Frank Catalpano didn't know right from wrong. In fact, Frank had a highly-developed sensitivity to right and wrong, and could always tell them apart. What he was doing was wrong. What he was asking Jenkins to do was wrong. But for Jenkins it was the easier way. And for Frank, it was legal. "I don't suppose it could do any real harm," Dr.
Jenkins said.
Frank Catalpano smiled. Jane awoke with the sudden start of one who has overslept, forgetting important business. Recent memory slammed into place with a nearly audible thud. Melior. The tunnels. The police. The grendel The police had Melior now, and Ruth and the others didn't know about the grendel And even if they did, they could look forever and not find it. But Jane knew where it was hiding. She threw on the first clothes that came to hand and ran across the campus and down the hill to Ruth and Naomi's apartment. She let herself in, panting only slightly with the exertion of her run. Late afternoon sunlight streamed through the window.
Two p.m. And Ruth wasn't here, nor Naomi, though by all the laws of all the odd gods at least one of them should be. If they weren't here, where were they? Jane sat down on the couch, an unaccustomed feeling of let-down washing over her. They weren't here. She'd been counting on them being here. Someone to tell.
Someone to save Melior.
But there was no one. They did not mean to let him go. Melior accepted this with a resignation he did not extend to his confinement; he had not expected his luck to change. He was in a small room with a bed and an unopenable window. "Held for observation," the white-robed monk-physicians had said when he had asked, and "seventy-two hours." But he would not wait seventy-two hours until they discovered more pretexts upon which to detain a lord of the House of the Silver Silences. He would escape this place and warn his companions, if Jane had not already done so. Melior did wish he knew if Jane had escaped in truth and not merely in his hopes. He wished he knew how far news of the grendel's existence had spread. He wished his head did not hurt, and that he had his clothes, and that he did not feel so helpless in the face of an evil that the humans of the World of Iron would scoff at until the last of them had been hunted down and made food for its endless appetite. This city held more humans than Melior had ever seen; soon, feeding upon them, the grendel would be strong enough to burgeon until in all the land there was nothing more to eat. The grendel must be slain. The grendel could be slain only by The Sword of Maiden's Tears. Which could only be wielded by one of the Sons of the Morning, lest some human paladin's attempt make him grendel in his turn. And the only Morning Lord in all this world, to the best of Melior's knowledge, stood here in this room. Ruth and Naomi were gone. Dead, probably, but Michael could not make himself believe it. People died in a thousand ways every day, but they did not die at the hands of monsters created by magic swords. Melior must be dead, too. Michael could think of no other reason, now, for him to have dropped Stephen's sword. Melior dead, and Ruth and Naomi, too. And he hadn't done a single thing to save them. Failure and coward, and safe, now, which somehow hurt the worst.
That, and the thought of having to explain to Jane and Philip how it was that he'd just stood there and watched Melior's grendel do . . . whatever it had done. Michael had learned long since in the roughest school of all that true life was nothing like fiction. He'd believed it, and asked nothing more of life than never to be reminded of the truth again. But he hadn't gotten his wish. He could think of nothing he could do, no course of action he could pursue, and retained enough presence of mind to know that he was shocky; his judgment was gone. All he'd do now was mess things up further-if that were possible. He called Philip and took a taxi home. He could hear the phone ringing from the floor below, and when he got to his own front door he could still hear it, only faintly muffled. How like life, Michael thought as he dropped his keys. The phone went on ringing. Michael swore, and fumbled with his key ring. On the fourteenth ring the phone went silent. Michael, who had just gotten the door open, snarled and kicked the door shut. It slammed with the sound of a gunshot, flat and final. Jane put down the phone.
No Ruth, no Naomi, and now no Michael.
And it was almost four, too, on a Thursday; someone should be home. Philip. Her hand hovered over the receiver for a moment, then she drew back. It occurred to her that Philip, having double-crossed Ruth in the matter of finding out about the grendel, might be lying extremely low. Maybe later, she temporized, and went to see if there was any news. The Subway Snatcher was the lead story on the four o'clock news broadcast. Jane listened with interest to the story of the "alleged" disappearance of Therese Scarlatti from the platform of the City Hall Station yesterday evening. But if that had been yesterday, Michael and Ruth and Naomi already knew about it. They'd known there was a real live grendel since yesterday night. Jane puzzled over what to do with this new information, trying to decide what they would have done with the knowledge. Then, resolutely, she picked up the phone and began to dial Philip. Philip LeStrange was in a quandary-which, as he would be happy to tell you, was a small wheeled cart used to transport lepers. He'd even phoned the dorm, but no one had answered; which would be reasonable enough if people hadn't been trying to reach Jane-the-Pain since seventhirty yesterday night. Philip's nature was paranoid, not suspicious. It did not occur to him that Melior had confided in Jane instead of, say, him. And now Michael said that the grendel, which had been only intellectual
exercise even while Philip had been gathering the positive proof of its existence, had taken Ruth and Naomi. Taken them how? Taken them where? And how were they going to get them back? They had to get them back. Of course they did. Naomi was tough; she could beat up just about anyone Philip could think of. Of course they'd get them back. It would be an adventure. But he'd feel a lot better, he really would, if he was absolutely sure of where they were now and that they were safe. Someone hammered on his door. "Phone!"
Alex shouted.
Not Michael if he was calling on the communal line. "Tell them I'm not here," Philip shouted back. There was a pause while Alex retreated.
And returned.
"She says you got her pregnant," Alex shouted through the door. This was peculiar enough to investigate. door. "Hello?"
Philip went and opened the
Philip said into the communal phone.
"Where are Michael and the guys?" Jane. "Michael's home.
Probably by now.
"Michael didn't answer his phone. again, very cautious. "Why would Melior call?"
Where've you been?" Has Melior called?"
Jane asked
Carefully; there were people listening.
"He's been arrested, probably," Jane said with the lugubrious satisfaction of being right. "Where are you?" "I'm at Ruth's.
Philip, defeated, asked. Where is she?"
Even if the watchers had not been there, Philip couldn't say, despite what Michael had told him. Some fastidious revulsion to saying the words, or perhaps merely simple self-preservation, to refrain from speaking the sentence that must come out either callous or maudlin. And perhaps, after all, he'd only misheard what Michael'd said over the phone. "I'll be over there in a few minutes. instead.
We've got to talk," Philip said
He met Michael on his front steps. "Where did you think you were going?"
Michael demanded dangerously.
This was a new sensation for Philip, and he didn't like it. He annoyed people, he revolted them, he made them envious. He did not make them angry. Michael was angry, now, just as if this weren't an adventure. He didn't think, though, that Michael would appreciate enlightenment just now. Philip chose diplomacy as the wiser course. "Jane's at Ruth and Naomi's place. something about Melior."
She just phoned.
She knows
"Come on," Michael said. There was nothing he could do to gain his freedom, save wait until that unbroachable door should open. Melior accepted this, just as he had accepted the foreknowing of his own helplessness to stop the grendel, and let his mind turn on the only thing left that mattered besides escape. Why here? In the Art Magic there were no coincidences; if the spelltrapped Sword had delivered him to this spot, such delivery had been purposed. To kill him and put the Sword beyond his kindred's reach forever would have been a simple thing, did he only appear at the bottom of a lake or the bottom of the ocean or the furnace-maw of a volcano. It had been the new York city that he came to for a reason. Find the reason, and find perhaps the knowledge that would arm his human friends in their fight. What did he know of magic? Not so very much; the swords that Melior fought with were physical things. But he was a prince of the House of the Silver Silences and the Heir of Line Rohannan, and he knew more than nothing. He had assumed all along that it was mere accident that landed him here in the World of Iron, but what if the spell-trap laid upon the Sword was the trap of pulling it here? He had not fallen through all the other worlds on his way to the Last World. He had been brought here, as the spellbound Sword snapped back along its invisible tether, cleaving tightly to its other part. The part that was native to this place. But what was it, invisible and yet so tightly-binding, native to the World of Iron and yet capable of being drawn into the higher realms where magic worked? Melior knew. A child's riddle, that, and in turn a child's answer, so simple that he was filled with momentary fury at having been blind so long. When fury gave way to hope, he crushed the dawning emotion savagely. To hope would only make him careless; he must set forth his theory as painstakingly as a rhetor his argument, and solve it for his truth as any alchemist. The mad logic of his enemy-vindictive, and clever merely-seemed to mock at him, and Melior knew now there were no
puzzles left, only answers that he prayed he would be able to prove in time. Souls. Souls wander in sleep as every wizard knows; wander and return to their source, having gone only a little way in their own world. And death is the longest journey of all, to a land so distant the soul does not retrace its way. But there are states between sleep and death, when the transmigrant soul of even a mortal from the World of Iron could journey outside its native land; could even, if the time were long enough, journey to be trapped in a soul-cage and used, by an evil and bloody-handed wizard, as an ingredient in a spell-trap. A spell-trap to bring the Sword of Maiden's Tears to the World of Iron. The mortal thus riven would be bound to seek his other part, the part that was bound up in the Sword. The mortal whose soul had been wizardthieved would be linked to the Sword. Would be able to find it, as a compass needle finds True North. One of his human friends must be the key; all Melior's knowledge of the rules of magic said it. The Law of Contagion, of Consanguinity, the Doctrine of Signatures . . . each in its own way assured him that he had already met the mortal whose life had been Sword-touched by some rogue artificer of Lord Baligant's. All Melior need do was find the one among them who had journeyed in the twilight land between Sleep and Death and set that one to following the faint soul-call of The Sword of Maiden's Tears. And to do that, Melior must be free. Something was exceptionally wrong.
That much was perfectly clear.
Because Ruth and Naomi were not here, and Philip wouldn't say where they were. Because Melior wasn't here either, and because Melior knew enough to make the one phone call they always had to give you, and would call Ruth or Michael. Because everybody in New York seemed to know about the grendel now, and that complicated the equation of its slaying in ways Jane had not yet had time to reason out. Because Melior had faced the grendel armed only with a bronze sword, after telling them all time and again that only the Sword of Maiden's Tears could slay it. That was stupid. And Melior was not stupid. The downstairs door buzzed. "Who is it?" Jane demanded, punctilious no matter what temporal blandishments beguiled. "Oh, come on," Philip said, at the same time Michael said, "Knock it off, Philip."
Jane buzzed them in. She knew beyond question that something bad had happened as soon as she saw Michael's face, and, Janelike, demanded the worst at once. "Where are they?" "They're down in the tunnels with the grendel, " Michael said. Jane sat down, thinking about the creature she'd seen. She refused to think past that vision and on to the brutal horror Melior had dressed so grandly in iambic pentameter. Down there. La has. But not dead. Michael had not said they were dead and Michael was generally reliable about telling you the whole truth. "Melior's been arrested," she offered. "How do you know?" "I was there." at her now.
Philip shot back.
That was a little better.
At least Michael was looking
" Melior and I went down in the tunnels last night and found it. hit him. The cops showed up and he stalled them, so I came back here. It took off.
It
I don't think they saw it."
"He's alive." an emotion.
Michael's voice wavered, its owner unable to settle on
"He hasn't been arrested," Philip said positively. looking?"
"You think I wasn't
"That isn't very useful information just now, " Michael snarled, rounding on him. Philip took a step backward. "This is your fault," Michael went on. "If you'd told us what you knew, when you knew it-" "It wouldn't have made any difference," Jane interrupted. She might dislike Philip, but the satisfaction of seeing Michael slam Philip was not worth the sight of Michael losing his temper. Michael rounded on her, red-eyed and numb with a dangerous grief. "It wouldn't," it is Melior's told you. You grendel lives,
Jane insisted magic sword. wouldn't have Michael. And
stubbornly. "The only thing that can kill It wouldn't have mattered if Philip had had the sword. But I know where the the sword has to be there, doesn't it?"
The October Subway THE ALFRED ELY Beach Tunnel (most recently immortalized, after a fashion, in Ghostbusters II) was constructed-no surprises here-by Alfred Ely, who built it in 1870 in strictest secrecy (having rented the basement of a nearby department store for his project headquarters), tunneling clandestinely beneath Broadway to prove so
far beyond a shadow of a doubt that a subway was feasible, lucrative, and safe, that the violent and semi-legal opposition of Boss TWeed and the Tammany Tiger (one of the first and greatest of the political machines in the days when politics was a sport but not a regulated one) would have its interfering fangs pulled forever. Mr. Ely tunneled nearly 360 feet beneath and along Broadway, and, since the idea of an Underground Railway was still new and frightening, did everything that Victorian sensibilities could to ease the public's mind about its safety. The waiting area of his tunnel-which led from nowhere to nowhere, being only a pilot project-was adorned with crystal chandeliers, fountains, and murals. There was even-for reasons known only to the post-Federalist mind-a tank full of fish. The single subway car was a miracle of plush velvet and rare woods, and everyone who rode the subway spoke admiringly of its comfort, pleasure, and safety. It is almost unnecessary to add that Alfred died in obscure poverty: so obscure that when the tunnel was rediscovered in 1912 during excavations for the Broadway BMT line-New York having finally got its subway system a mere thirty something years later-no one remembered who had built the tunnel or how it had gotten there. When next you stand at the City Hall Station on the BMT line, spare a thought for Alfred, one of history's most organized, dynamic, visionary failures. Ruth wished she could. things.
But at the moment her mind was on other
She had come back to reality lying on the ground; or, rather, in a nest of Snapple bottles and Pepsi cans that scattered noisily when she moved. It wasn't dark, not entirely; a faint reddish glow came from somewhere and convinced her, for some seconds, that she was still dreaming. Then everything came back; Melior dead and the grendel Ruth sat up with a jerk, gasping as one does out of nightmare. Chilled stiff muscles protested, but Ruth didn't care. She stared around wildly. The grendel And no merciful providence had chosen to intervene during the scene change, whisking her back safely to her own warm, dry, clean apartment to have the denouement explained to her by Michael and Naomi who would have seen everything but be, nevertheless, safe. Ruth got stiffly to her feet and looked around. Scrapes and abrasions she didn't remember getting protested; her jacket was torn and her hair had long since come down out of its tight careful knot. It clung around her face, stiff and damp and foul as though it had been dipped in ink. Ink would be a godsend. Then she saw the sword. It stood a few feet from her head, propped against the wall, pointdown in a pile of bizarre winnowings from some punk-twisted Borrower. Hazard lamps-the source of the light-pop cans; liquor bottles; lunch boxes; curled bits of subway posters; anything that was even slightly shiny.
A magpie's midden. The sword towered over all this, pristine and gleaming and fakelooking as a special effect. It had a jewel in its pommel the size of a baseball and seemed itself to shine with a faint light. And if it wasn't Melior's magic sword, Ruth had been grossly misled about magic swords in general and the Sword of Maiden's Tears in particular. She wondered what it would be like to hold it. She reached for it"Don't touch that." Naomi's voice, behind her. Ruth squeaked, startled, and shot a confirming glance over her shoulder. But she withdrew her hand. "Hi, stranger, how's tricks?"
Naomi said.
Ruth stepped gingerly out of the trash. crookedly.
Naomi smiled, a little
"Long time no see, and all that." "Naomi!" Ruth flung her arms around her, glad to see her even if she wouldn't wish her worst enemy in this mess, hugged and was hugged hard in return. "Oh, God, you're still alive!" "Yeah," Naomi said. Reluctantly Ruth released her and took a good look. Naomi was now nobody's idea of a fashion plate. Her short dark hair was matted, her face was bruised, and her clothes looked as if she'd been dragged through a canebrake backward. "Welcome-in the words of the popular broadsheet ballad-to my nightmare," Naomi said. But she was still alive. They were both still alive. For now. The room they were in was big-huge-at least a hundred feet by sixty, maybe more. The floor still gleamed dully in patches, and the light was just enough to show Ruth the shadowy pattern of marble parquetry beneath her feet. The wall against which the sword rested was lavishly ornamented, a bewilderment of niches, coffering, and crumbling plaster medallions still faintly gilded. "I know what you're going to say. It looks like an outtake from Phantom. But it gets better," Naomi said. Ruth completed her survey of the room and looked back at Naomi. Naomi's eyes were feverishly bright; her mouth was set. "I read the book.
So why don't we leave this party and go home?"
And despite all her best intentions, Ruth felt hot tears prickle as past and present injustice mingled. Not fair, oh God, nothing at all fair, and if she'd been marked down to die why couldn't it have been a dozen years ago instead of now, in the dark, where being eaten alive wasn't just a sick joke but a probability?
"Good idea," Naomi said.
"How?"
Ruth just stared at her. "I've been looking around here. Miss Havisham's subway station. They just stop.
It's the damnedest place; looks like But the tracks don't go anywhere.
Solid rock."
Ruth took a second and more careful look, and this time she saw what her eye had missed before; the carving in the shadows there was not carving but a tiny antique railway carriage; and ahead of it were curiously narrow and delicate railroad tracks. "I've already walked them. The tunnel goes about a hundred yards and stops. I don't think it ever went through. But there's no way out that way," Naomi said. "We got in here somehow." She was calmer now, but now that instant panic was past, Ruth was feeling other things. Like cold, and hungry, and tired, and scared, and pretty beat up when you came right down to it. "Yeah." Naomi looked back toward the delicate half-scale car. In the sword's glow Ruth could see her mouth set hard. "You were out a long time, Ruth; I was worried about you." Oversleeping our specially. But even that macabre joke couldn't raise Ruth's spirits in the face of the horror of reality. "How long?" "About six hours. It's about seven o'clock Thursday night, if you're keeping track. Assuming my watch hasn't gone wonky after what it's been through." Naomi brandished her wristwatch, guaranteed waterproof, shockproof, and, now, grendel-resistant. Ruth wondered if the manufacturers would care. ",&d .
?"
"Our host isn't back yet," Naomi added dryly. be. 71
"But he-she-or-it will
Ruth's stomach lurched involuntarily; she looked toward the sword. "And whoever picks that up is going to be just like him, her, or it," Naomi finished fair-mindedly. "We don't know that," Ruth said desperately. sword in her hands-she was sure of it.
She'd feel safe with the
"Ruth." The tremor of fear in Naomi's voice riveted Ruth's attention as nothing else could have. "Everything else Melior's told us has come out true, so why don't we go ahead and believe this one? Touch that sword and you'll be the new grendel on the block. And I don't think the other one wants to share." I don't care! breath.
Ruth wanted to scream.
Instead she drew a deep
"Okay. We'll leave it for Melior. If he-If he's-" "I haven't seen him," Naomi said, and something in her voice cut Ruth's incipient
crying jag off sharp. flatly.
"He wasn't with the others," Naomi added
It wasn't very hard to figure out where Melior was, once Michael put his mind to it. He'd been injured in Lower Manhattan, he was in police custody, and even at his best Melior was a few sandwiches shy of a picnic by Earth-plane standards. Where else would they take him? It was seven o'clock Thursday night when Michael, Philip, and Jane walked into Bellevue Hospital. Carefully-phrased questions got them th rected to where, by mutual unspoken consent, they all felt they ought to start: the Psychiatric Wing. There, as on other floors, there was an information desk or something that looked like one. "May I help you?" asked a nurse, in tones that plainly translated the question into: "Oh, for Christ's sake what do you want now?" "Well, you see, ma'am, we're looking for a friend of ours. might be here."
We hoped he
Michael Peacock, wearing a suit jacket for the occasion, did his best to sound and look friendly, honest, and sincere, just like they taught you in Library Public Relations Courses, even though, beginning his second twenty-four hours of uninterrupted consciousness, he felt none of these things. "Why don't you check with Information, downstairs?" the nurse said, but more kindly this time. She had never met Frank Catalpano and did not know that one of her observation patients was supposed to be held incommunicado, nor would she have cooperated with the notion if she did. "Well, you see-" Michael began. "No, Michael, it's okay." Philip pushed past him to stand in front of the desk and the nurse. "He's my brother, okay? Mom and Dad left him with me when they went to visit Grandma. I was sure it'd be okay." Philip said plaintively. "He's your brother.
. . ?"
I'melvil. Melvil LeStrange. But he might not have said so, especially if he got excited. He's just a little different," Philip added, putting just the right note of defensiveness into his voice. "He's got a card he usually carries, but I guess he left it behind this time." To Michael's amazement Philip dug around in a pocket and produced a battered wallet, one that Michael was pretty sure had once been his. Philip offered it to the nurse. Over Philip's shoulder Michael could see a battered and carefully-typed card containing his name and address. It even had Melior's picture, clipped from one of the Polaroids Philip had taken that first night. "Sometimes he says his name is Rohannan Melior. I think he got it out of a comic book. Is he here? Please, could you just let me take him
home?"
Philip said.
"He didn't do anything wrong, did he?"
The charge nurse wavered visibly. " Just let me see him, then," Philip pleaded. "He'll be so scared," he added, as if the confession had been dragged from him with hot irons. "Well, all right," she said, "but just for a minute." So Philip was borne away, and Jane and Michael remained behind. Fifteen minutes later Philip was back, looking properly chastened. "They won't let him go," he announced in the tones of a forlorn oboe. "They think he's messed up in some kind of police thing. Mom is going to kill me," Philip added, sottovoce but playing to the gallery. "Why don't you come back tomorrow during the day and talk to the supervisor?" the charge nurse suggested. Philip nodded and shrugged, obviously biting back tears of manly emotion. "Yeah," he said. "Yeah. You'll take care of him, won't you?" Jane wanted to kick him. Philip was overplaying as usual. Subtlety was better, and then people could read into it anything they liked. But the nurse didn't seem to notice. "Of course we will," she said, and even patted Philip on the arm. Philip didn't try to duck away as he usually would; he just gave her a brave little smile and then turned away. "C'mon, guys," he said. So Michael and Jane followed him back out to the elevators. Once inside, and safe from inopportune viewing, Philip once more became his old self. He rocked up on his toes and whistled tonelessly. "Helpful so far," Jane said. own cleverness.
Philip smirked, still enchanted by his
"Look, what exactly did you do back there?"
Michael demanded.
Philip turned to him, bifocals flashing. "He's up there, he's locked in, they aren't going to let him go while they're waiting for him to turn into a two-car garage. But the doors up there are all spring-locked, so I slipped him a credit card and told him we'd meet him in the parking lot." It was half an hour before Melior joined them. He was wearing a long white coat, tattered slippers, baggy green pants, and a baseball cap that seemed to be advertising the roman numberal "ten." He carried a clip board and looked like the White Rabbit (medical division) on his way to being terribly, horribly, late. When he saw them, he burst into a run, stripping off the jacket as he ran. He bundled it together with the clipboard and slung both beneath a car. He kept the cap. Michael could see bandages beneath.
"Are you all right?"
Michael said.
"No," Melior answered. finds the Sword."
"But I think I have the answer, and the answer
"It better," Michael said grimly, "because the grendel's got Ruth and Naomi." Their stories were exchanged on the run, heading north and west from the hospital. Ruth and Naomi, gone in an eyeblink. The grendel, real beyond controversy. "You must not think hardly of yourself, Friend Michael. The grendel has the power to spellbind its foe if it chooses, holding him dreaming, yet awake. Thus it kept you harmless while it made its escape." "Hypnosis," Jane said. "Do you know the art?" Melior asked. "It will make the next task easier, can we but command a few of the grendel's arts." "I did not ask the question I ought to have sought the answer to most of all," Melior told them, once they were forgathered (for safety's sake, as Melior had given the police and the hospital Michael's address) in Ruth and Naomi's apartment. "Melior, we really don't have time for another one of your stories," Michael said with ragged patience. "Peace, Friend Michael, this is the last of my stories and it will be brief It was not chance that brought me here, or caused you to befriend me. The Sword was compelled here, by a magic which entrapped some part of the soul of an Ironworlder within the Sword. Falling through the worlds it sought its other part, and so came to you." "Or to the muggers," Jane said. "I pray not, but it could be so. you."
Melior's face twisted in pain. I hope, rather, that it is one of
"Friends, are you feeling pale and listless? Write now for our free brochure describing the seven warning signs of your soul being stolen by a magic sword. Get a continuum, Elfie," Philip said. "What is it you mean, exactly?"
Michael asked.
Melior hesitated. "One among you, by accident or design, will have fallen, some time agone, into a state between sleep and death. There, helpless, with your soul caught between making and unmaking, you-" But Melior did not get to finish this sentence. Philip sat down on the couch at the other end. He leaned back, staring at the ceiling. "Ruth," he said.
"It's Ruth."
The other three stared at him. Melior's eyes were wide with horror, as if a number of things were suddenly clear. "Ruth," he said.
"My lady Ruth."
"Ruth was in a coma for eight years," Philip elaborated. Michael looked disbelieving; Jane looked blank. "She never told me," Jane said. "Well, she didn't tell me, either," Philip shot back waspishly, "but it made the news in a lot of papers when she woke up. I searched her name through a database," he added. "Fine," said Michael. all."
"This gets us absolutely no-more-where at
"But now we know she is alive-oh, yes, Michael, the grendel will not kill such as she, who shares the nature of his treasure. Ruth is still alive, and will continue if we are in time." "The place you want to go is the City Hall Station," Jane said. Everyone looked at her, and Jane wished, for a faint moment, that she'd said nothing. But if she didn't, Ruth would die. "The subway there crosses an old tunnel. The grendel's got to have somewhere to be, doesn't it; somewhere it can sleep and not worry about getting hit by a train? Somewhere it can-put things?" Even Jane's voice wavered a little on that last phrase, knowing too well what those things were. "Look there. You remember the map," she said to Melior, "I showed you." "Yes," Melior's voice held a faint hiss; a blood-hunger kin to the grendel's. "We will seek it there. And though I will not kill it, you, Michael, will be my sword-hand." "I can't." Michael's voice was low. cateyes green in the darkness.
Definite.
Melior watched him,
Philip's face twisted; he held a hand up as if to ward off the words, and Jane, watching him, was suddenly certain he knew what Michael was going to say. Of course. If he'd searched Ruth's name through a database, he'd searched all of them. Philip did nothing by halves. "I killed somebody," Michael said.
"I killed a kid."
Then, again, as if he needed to convince even himself, "I killed a child." The words were ugly, heavy, clinched and waiting for their frame: their explanation and their meaning. "I was a cop." This explanation, like the other, bereft of meaning, pregnant with emotion. "I was almost a cop." Another pause, longer than the last. "I was going to be a cop.
My dad, my uncle-Irish, you know?
Hereditary cop families, right? I grow up and shave, get married and did the whole thing-scholarship to Police Academy on Long Island, the "So I get out, and I get a job. pin-up boy. I was twenty-four.
knew it like I knew I was going to have kids. Grow up and be a cop. I John Jay, the two-year course, the works.
My first. Rookie cop. Six years ago.
Police Academy
"Did I ever tell you my family came from Newark? A lot you care, Mel; you wouldn't know Newark if you were standing in the middle of it. Which you wouldn't be long. Visit beautiful downtown Newark, New Jersey; a city halfway between a joke and a war zone. You talk about twenty minutes into the future. Okay. That's Newark. I've seen the future and it sucks. And my folks being from there, it meant I was a rookie cop on the Newark PD. For two weeks. In the ghetto. "The ghetto kids, they've got a sport you might not have heard of. It's hitting the news now. They had it then. Doughnutting, they call it. What it is, a kid steals a car, goes joy-riding. Looks for a cop car to ram, maybe run down a couple officers. Fun. And they'll be back on the street again in twenty-four hours, because they're kids. Eight, ten, twelve." Michael stopped, staring off into a specific place and time that was not here. His voice was even, patient, testifying for the thousandth time to an indifferent truth that was incapable of causing him either pleasure or pain. "What they do most copshops-what they did there-is pair up a rookie with a veteran. Let some practical knowledge rub off. My partner's name was Sam DeHorst. Of course by the time I met him everyone called him Hoss. So every night for two weeks I spent eight hours in a unit with Hoss, hearing about life, cops, and Newark. The other guys called us Animal Farm-as in, Horse and Peacock. It was one of those things that was meant to be. "And one night- And one night-" Michael took a breath and went on. "It was late. End of shift, end of tour. Quiet, clear, hot, summer. And we pull a vehicular D&D-Drunk and Disorderly, DWI-Driving While under the Influence, Reckless Endangerment, every little thing that makes life a joy. So we head off to the area where the report's from. Bad neighborhood. And all there is are these two cars piled on each other. Recent. look.
Gasoline all over the street.
So Hoss gets out to take a
"I should have gotten out, too. I should have. But it was late, I was tired. He told me to stay in the car. Didn't look like there was anyone around. "I should have remembered that doughnutters travel in pairs. It came out of nowhere, and hit him, and the I did all the right things, make on the car, partial on the plates, "Officer Down" code. And while I'm doing that it goes right into a bunch of parked cars-having too much fun to drive, I guess.
"I can see Hoss. He's down, and he's hurting bad-broken hip, broken pelvis-but he's stable. The crash car could blow any second. So I do some more right things. I head off to the end of the block to try to get them out. By the time I get there the heap's clean. Six of them in it, probably. Swarmed out like rats out of a flooded sewer. Kids. No way I'm going to chase them.
So I turn back.
"Hoss was lying in the street. He couldn't move. I could smell the gas from where I was. He was lying in it. In the gutter. And out of nowhere this little black kid shows up. Six-eight-with malnutrition who can tell? He was wearing a red and white striped T-shirt and tan shorts. Black high-topped sneakers. He was holding his hand out funny. And then I saw why. "He was holding a cigarette lighter. He flicked it on. And then he threw it on my partner. Hoss went up like a torch. And I shot that baby in the chest. "That's all. And that is why I'm not going down there with you. I won't do you a damn bit of good. That's life. That's the way it is." Michael stared off into the distance at nothing at all. Jane risked a glance at Philip; to move meant the possibility of being noticed, but she had to know. There were high spots of color in Philip LeStrange's cheeks; he looked like a china doll that had been rouged with a lavish hand. Upstaged, and in no possible way the baddest dude in the Valley. Jane looked at Melior, but all his attention was on Michael. "And your partner?"
Melior said.
"He died after four weeks in the Burn Unit. Hero's funeral. Wife and three kids. I got a whitewash job and a psych discharge. And that's all," Michael's voice was flat, telling over the ancient maiming as if it had happened to somebody else. "No," said Melior.
"That is never all."
"Why did you have to tell him?" Philip cried. "Don't you see, Michael-he's going to use it, now, just the way he uses everyone to get what he wants!" Philip gestured.
The ring on his finger flashed.
"And did I not keep my side of the bargain, Child of Earth?" asked. "Silver and gold."
Melior
"Shut up," Philip said. Philip, Jane noted analytically, was about as flustered as she'd ever seen him get. He glared furiously at Melior through bifocal lenses. "I was going to leave you there.
I should have.
You aren't worth the
grief you're handing Ruth. You aren't worth Nai taking the trouble over you. But you've got them in trouble now, so I guess you'd better get them out. I hope it kills you," Philip said viciously "It may well," Melior said. "And as I believe so well in your hopes, Michael must come with me." Michael stared at his feet. "Michael, my friend," Melior said softly, "you must come with me. Who will wield the Sword, do you not? I do not think that Master Philip would prevail; the blade is not his weapon. The man who seizes it must be able to slay with it. Who will slay the grendel, if you do not? I ask much of you, I know, but rest assured: once you have slain the grendel I myself will slay you in turn." "What?"
Philip said.
Melior turned to him. LeStrange.
"The enchantment is yet death, Philip
Any of humankind which touch the Sword will yet become grendel. And since I ask Michael's help to wield the Sword, I promise him release also." "Well, why can't you do it?" answer as well as any there.
Philip demanded, even though he knew the
"I will try," said Melior. He spread his hands. "And perhaps I will die. I know no longer; the future I can see is dim, and perhaps only my fancy. I am no longer sure." "What a great time for your elf superpowers to wimp out," Philip said, falling back into superiority as an only refuge. Jane sighed.
"Leslie, " she drawled, in bored, long-suffering tones.
Philip's head whipped around toward her. eyes narrowed furiously. "Michael, will you aid me?" them.
His ears turned red, and his
Melior asked again, ignoring both of
"There is little I can promise you-" " 'But blood, toil, tears, and sweat,' " said Jane, from some oftdredged store of quotations, " 'and gentlemen in England now abed/ Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here/And hold their manhoods cheap while any speaks."' "And if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years men will still say, 'This was their finest hour." Henry the Fifth. And Churchill." "Don't you understand?
I can't do it."
Michael said.
"If you're going to be a failure, Michael, you might as well be one underground where nobody can see you," Philip said brutally. "He won't leave you alone until you do." Philip's face was set; for a moment he almost looked majestic. "And if nobody wants me for anything else, I'm going to see if I can shut the system down so maybe Elfie can get himself killed in peace. See you
around." The sound of the door closing was not particularly loud, but Michael still flinched. "I blew that one, didn't I?" about you, Jane?"
he asked of no one in particular.
"What
Jane considered the matter. "If you give me your keys, I can get your stuff from your apartment, because the police are probably looking for you or Melior. And I've got another copy of the map I had in my room. I'll bring that, too. And I guess Naomi wouldn't mind if you make yourself dinner or something." Michael ran a hand through his hair and looked at Melior. "I'll go with you," he said, and stopped. He made a gesture that somehow encompassed the whole bleak quixotic situation. "Like Philip said. might as well."
I
The Bloody Chamber NAOMI HADN'T WANTED her to look, but Ruth flashlights in the magpie midden, and the unshipped from their moorings. There was explore every byway of their prison, even explored.
had, of course. There were hazard-lights could be light enough to see by, to those which Naomi had already
To Ruth and Naomi, accustomed to modern New York subway plat forms, this strange Victorian subway platform-as if The Wild Wild West had chosen to set an episode in New York City, and this were some construction of the evil dwarf Miguelito Quixote Loveless-was lavishly deep; the short trackspace leading from nowhere to nowhere almost an afterthought. The engrimed, damp-rotted walls had once been gay with frescoes-allegorical depictions of the marriage of science and hedonism. Beneath the arched cathedral space of the groined vaulting, from which hung shattered and plundered chandeliers, an alabaster fountain, dry forevermore, placed Phaeton and his fiery team in eternal and improbable juxtaposition with naiads spouting water. Even the car that had made its brief pointless journey into the darkness and back remained; moored at one end of the platform like a time-rotted but still improbably baroque gondola. Ruth started toward it. "Don't go in there," Naomi said, but, like Bluebeard's wife, Ruth had to see. There were bodies. Ruth stood in the open doorway. This was the source of the sick sweet heavy smell that she had noticed-without-noticing. Her emotions seemed cut away from intellect by an impermeable shield. On one side there was measured gratitude: that the grendel had been in existence only a week; that the temperature here, so far underground, was cool. On the other, there was horror, and the power of something experienced with the eyes and mind to reach out and assault. The photographs this scene resembled did not, by their existence and by
her memory of them, dull the intimate edge of it. It was no more atrocious than those sights which the generation just preceding hers had imbibed with their dinners, nor than the images brought home from a declared war to their parents. But it was here, in front of her, and what Ruth's heart cried out against was not its horror, nor the pain it represented, but the reality of it; as if the realness of this one experience might cause all the rest of the world to match it in intensity. The interior of the car had long since been reduced, by time and damp and mice to the bare shell of what it had once been: Victorian underground railway car. Only the iron skeletons of the seats remained. But at one end of the car, piled up against the bare rock face in careful husbandly fashion, there were bodies. There were enough bodies that there were too many to count, stacked as they were, but not so many that the situation was distilled into its own guignol sort of farce; less than a dozen. Several of them had been neatly beheaded, and the heads jumbled to one side. Most of the bodies had been at least partially undressed, and the ones on the top of the pile were dismembered to some extent. Blood had leaked from the bodies at the top of the pile onto all the ones beneath, and the ones at the bottom of the pile had been pressed, by the weight of their fellows, quite empty of fluids. A blackish, shiny trail led from the pile across the floor of the car, and drained, through a hole in the side, onto the railbed. And perhaps even that could have been contemplated in quietude, except for the fact that the rich and varied underlife of the city was not absent from this part of it. There were ants, and some kind of large black beetle, and rats made tunnels through what was, after all, when all was said and done, meat. Ruth backed away, bumped into Naomi, and screamed. She turned away, staggered half-a-dozen steps, and retched with dry mouth and empty stomach, eyes and nose running. Naomi held her up, and offered her a handkerchief when she was done. "No," Ruth said. "No," Naomi agreed.
"But there's something else you ought to know."
Ruth looked at her, exhausted, numb. "It brought us down here and left again. junk around the sword."
It left you in that pile of
Ruth thought about that. "It left me in the car," Naomi finished. Ruth saw for the first time that Naomi's clothes were black and clotted with something other than subway grime, and began weakly, undramatically, to cry. It took Jane about two hours to make her various rounds and return. She carried Michael's duffel bag, stuffed full, over one shoulder, and
her guitar case in her hand. When she came back into the apartment, she turned the duffel upside down, and out tumbled a strange mix of Michael and Melior's possessions: gray cape and flak jacket; high-topped boots of stamped and gilded leather and battered combat boots; scarlet tunic and black T-shirt. Abandoning this pile, Jane turned to her guitar case. She opened it carefully, and equally carefully removed the original of the ancient survey map, illegally removed from one of the New York Library's map files in a coup worthy of Philip LeStrange. She spread it out on the table and smoothed it carefully. Melior had been in the kitchen, eating as Michael had been unable to. Now he came out and sorted through the clothes on the floor. He picked up what was his and walked past Jane and Michael into the bedroom. Jane continued straightening what was by any standard a very large map, never meant to be folded as Jane had folded it. "Urn, Jane . begin.
. . ?"
Michael said hesitantly, wondering where to
"I'm not going with you," Jane said, as if finishing his sentence. "Where you're going I can't follow, and what you're going to do I can't be any part of. And besides, I'd just get in the way," she recited with sarcasm so and Michael wasn't entirely sure he was hearing it. "Right," he settled for. Melior returned, dressed once more as an elf-king out of Faery. The only thing that marred the illusion was the very real-world bandage on his forehead. Michael bundled up the clothes he'd asked Jane to get and went off in turn. Jane sat down on the couch and began tuning her guitar. Her face was tilted to watch her hands; the pale fall of hair hid her face entirely. "There's something you should know," she offered to Melior, "even if it's stupid." "But you are not stupid, Mistress Jane," Melior said. Jane regarded him, while, all unregarded, her right hand picked out, note by note, the first bars of "True Thomas." "The way to Fair Elphame," said Jane light, with neither sun nor moon, no and a river of blood to cross to get Subway System. You can get there by she hadn't meant to. "Ah," Melior inclined his head. Mistress. I shall remember."
Grayson, "is neither dark nor wind but the roaring of the sea, there. And so's the New York candlelight," she added, although
"Fair word and fair warning,
He went back into the kitchen.
"I said it was stupid," Jane said under her breath. She pressed the fingers of her left hand down and began to weave the melody into slow mournful chords." And there was neither sun nor moonIBut all the roaring of the sea. . . . ' " Michael came out, flak-jacketed and steel-toe booted, holding something in both hands as if he were afraid it would bite. A gun. Naomi's gun. It was a long-barreled .38 revolver, looking like an Old West six-gun if you didn't know better. The six-inch barrel made it a good choice for target shooting, which was what Naomi used it for. Michael had helped her pick it out. When not in use, it lived in a steel box with a combination lock that Naomi kept in a drawer. "It's loaded, but I couldn't find any spare ammo," Michael announced to no one in particular. He slipped the gun into the waistband of his jeans and pulled his shirt down over it. Melior came out of the kitchen with a teacup into which had been poured the last of Ruth's birthday wine. "That we three shall meet again," he said, offering it around. "That's not the way to bet," Jane said, and drank. It was ten o'clock Thursday night, six days from the day of Melior's arrival. Suicidal disregard for consequence lent their actions a bitter elegance. Rohannan Melior and Michael Peacock moved directly, profligately, toward their goal. A taxi to Wall Street. A quick few blocks walk to the City Hall Station, closed still, but easy enough to force its iron gates if you simply didn't care if anyone noticed. Down the steps. nightmare.
Into the station.
The gun felt right in his hand. you. The cop walk.
The cop talk.
And for Michael Peacock, into
It's funny how it all comes back to
The cop MIND.
Michael watched as Melior leaped lightly from the edge of the platform-covering his partner-down into the tunnel and crouched, looking about himself. Michael followed more slowly, sitting on the edge first and then sliding over it. He held the .38 up, near his face, where it could not be knocked aside or fouled by something below eye-level. And when he saw the grendel again. . . . He still didn't know if he could pull the trigger. But the cop inside-never dead, never quite disavowed-assured him that he could pull the trigger if he had to. It didn't say whether he could live with himself afterward. he didn't have to, did he?
But then,
All he had to do was find the grendel Jane's maps were detailed but not precisely clear. The I.R,T line sliced through the Alfred Ely Beach 'Ibnnel at this location, but how much of the tunnel-if any-was left after the construction, and where and how it connected with the tunnel they were in, Jane hadn't been sure. And, in the end, they were only guessing that the grendel was hereand not, say, in the Second Avenue Subway, which had lain unfinished and awaiting habitation since 1975. To know, apparently, they needed Ruth. If she was still alive. If Ruth and Naomi were still alive. And there was just one other thing. "There's something I've been meaning to talk to you about," Michael said, pitching the half-whisper to carry down the tunnel to Melior ahead. Melior stopped and turned back, and Michael saw, with a certain bleak satisfaction, that Melior was glowing, a faint silvery aura that served to light the tunnel far better than Michael's flashlight. "You aren't exactly as deficient in magic as you've been claiming, are you?" Michael asked, catching up to him. "I should have caught on sooner. The sword works here. And that precognition thing of yours, that works, too. And you did something to Philip." "We had a bargain," Melior protested mildly. "With silver and gold to seal it, as one must with a Child of Earth. I did not lie to you, Friend Michael; in comparison to what I could call upon in my own place the magic I have is small, and weak, and once it is expended in this place I may not find more," Melior answered, a response that was oblique at st. "I use it now to draw the creture, if it can be drawn. You I leave to im the Sword." It was a sentence of death and Michael knew it, but it made him )usly happy. "All we have to do now is find our way in," he said. Ruth's tears did not last long; the time they had was precious. The grendel might come back. She hugged Naomi and said nothing, and they went on with their search. Neither of them quite wished to try the narrow tunnel, to see if it was not as much a dead end as it looked. It was too easy to imagine being trapped in that narrow cut with nowhere to run. hey found the stairway to the surface from the days of this place's long-ago construction. The ornate brass rail and green marble steps-still bearing shreds of a carpet once red-disappeared after less than ten feet behind a pile of bricks and rubble; trash from the long-ago era of its construction.
"I wonder what this was?"
Ruth said.
"Jane would know," Naomi answered. "I wonder where she is?" "I hope she's all right." "I hope somebody's all right," Ruth said, with an attempt at bravery. It was hard to be brave when you were buried alive and your future looked like being eaten ditto. Neither of them ventured nearer the sword than they had to. It glittered balefully amid its dragon hoard, promising any number of things. "That thing gives me the creeps," Naomi said. Ruth agreed, slowly, but she didn't really agree. Some inward imp of perversity assured her that she could handle the sword and take no harm; that in this one thing the magic would not work as Melior had sworn it would. They carefully explored their prison: the platform which, if this were only a book, Ruth would demand be described in all its perversely beautiful detail. The stairway to the surface (blocked). The car with its hideous contents. The sword with its trash at that end of the platform. No escape. The car blocked half the platform. The railbed was sunk only eighteen or twenty inches below the edge of the platform; easy enough to get down to the tracklied, walk the hundred yards to the bare rock of the other end. No escape. "There has to be a way out!"
Ruth cried in a strangled voice.
"We just haven't found it yet," Naomi said, sounding calm where no calmness was possible. And so Ruth tried to be brave, in a situation where no bravery was possible. They even, in the end, went down to the far end of the where the dressed stone gave way to the raw rock face, and foul at all. It began to seem, to Ruth, more and more possible that simply walked through walls, but if that were so, how did he get all these bodies here? She had never felt so tired. All last night spent waiting up for Philip to tell them where to look; Ruth couldn't really remember how many hours it had been since she last slept, and thirst was a growing ache at the back of her throat. Maybe they would die of thirst before the grendel had them for dinner. "Maybe," Naomi said, and Ruth realized she'd spoken aloud. "There's something that looks like a canteen in that pile of junk around the Sword. I didn't grab it before because I thought it might attract the grendel somehow, but maybe it's worth the try." Ruth hesitated. me.
"I'll go," she finally said.
"And don't argue with
If-it-put me on that pile in the first place, it can't have any objections to my going near it. And I'm thirsty." "There might be nothing in it," Naomi warned. "Then I'll swipe a bottle and cut my wrists," Ruth said. "Just don't touch the sword." The platform space seemed wider when you were crossing it waiting for a grendel to pounce at you. She'd made Naomi stay at the other end, back by the blocked staircase. Victorian decorator logic said that there should be one at this end, too, but there didn't seem to be. Perhaps they'd forgotten it. The large round orange hazard light in her hand made an unwieldy lamp, but Ruth carried it doggedly. To be down here in the dark would be a thousand times worse. She reached the trashheap. No grendel, and the sword still there like a brand plucked from the burning, infinitely alluring. Ruth dragged her attention away from the sword and studied the trash. Yes, there was the canteen, and what looked like a sealed box of granola bars next to it, although you could never really trust those things to be what they seemed. My mind is wandering, thought Ruth with an air of discovery, just as if it were an achievement. She'd better hurry. She set the lamp carefully on the floor and was reaching for the canteen when she heard the sound. Metal on metal, and, impossibly, the subway car shifted a few feet. And there it was; the grendel; spider-spread on the top of the subway car, squirming its way toward her, mad eyes gleaming. Ruth snatched the canteen-and the box-and ran. Both were heavy in her hands, and a part of her mind must have registered that fact; why else had she not dropped them in her mad flight to simply get away? It was darker but not quite black without the light, and Ruth already knew the floor was clear. She ran. Naomi grabbed Ruth as she caromed off the wall beside the stairwell. Terror modulated Ruth's shriek to a frightened whimper. It was only as Naomi grabbed her that Ruth realized the grendel was not behind her. But if it had wanted to, it would have had her. Naomi drew her up the stairwell. "Wh- Wh- Wh-" Ruth demanded, still clutching her prizes. "It didn't follow you. to her and shook. The canteen was full.
It went into the car," Naomi said.
Ruth clung
Naomi tested it cautiously, emitted a snort of
disbelief and passed it to Ruth.
Ruth sniffed at the opening.
"Brandy," she said. "Brandy-and, I think," Naomi said. "Drink up." She tore the lid off the box of granola bars, trying to make as little noise as possible. The contents were both fresh and dry. Ruth drank, and felt the bite of brandy, even though it was reassuredly diluted with a great deal of tap water. She knew exactly how much. And she'd bought the little bottle of Courvoisier to spike it her very own self. "This was Melior's," she told Naomi as she handed her the canteen. "Yeah," the word came on a long exhalation of disgust. Ruth. You loved him."
"I'm sorry,
"He never stood a chance," Ruth said in a small voice. Her eyes burned, but this time no tears would come. She leaned back against the smooth marble of the stairwell and wished, desperately, that she were anyplace but here. "It explains why Philip never found anything about the bodies," Naomi said after a while. "What?"
Ruth felt groggy; exhausted beyond bearing.
"The grendel It's been grabbing people all right; anyone it could find; maybe even homeless; and bringing them here-to its larder. No wonder there were never any clues." Naomi sounded more disgusted than anything else at her inability to have reasoned out this simple fact. "So how come it left us alive?"
Ruth asked unwillingly.
"Maybe it left them all alive at first," Naomi answered remorselessly. "They'd keep better that way. runs out of supplies."
It'll probably leave us alone until it
"We'll be dead by then." "And you're complaining?"
Naomi asked.
They huddled together in the stairwell and tried not to think about the grendel and its dinner arrangements. "Now we know where the way out is.
Behind the car.
Maybe.
. . .
When it's asleep," Ruth said hesitantly. "I don't think it sleeps. And I don't think we could be quiet enough to not wake it up. And I don't think we could move the car enough, or climb over it, to get out." "We have to try," said Ruth, who was trying to believe this.
"Maybe," said Naomi. She put the cap back on the canteen and tucked away the last of the granola bars. "C'mon. I know it sounds idiotic, but why don't we try to get some sleep? I'll wake up if we hear it coming." "And there isn't any place to run anyway," Ruth said. She snuggled up next to Naomi. Naomi put an arm around Ruth's waist, and Ruth put her head on her friend's shoulder. They settled themselves as best they could against the marble wall. And Ruth, assuring herself that she'd give it about ten minutes before telling Naomi that sleep was impossible under these conditions, fell asleep. Dark on dark; they would have missed it entirely except that Melior's fingers, skimming lightly along the subway wall, abruptly met thin air. Too regular to be a crack, it was as if the subway wall simply stopped and started again; an eighteen-inch gap in the concrete. It seemed impossible that the hulking grendel body that Michael had seen could have forced its way through such a space, but Melior's expression, eloquent of loathing, seemed to say that it could. "Is it.
. . ?"
Michael said.
"A way the grendel uses, if not the path to its lair," Melior said in answer. He reached his arm into the crevice as far as it would go. "Bare rock," he pronounced. "Were this a castle in my own world, I would call this perhaps a ventilation shaft to the lower levels." "That would fit with Jane's map," Michael said, hesitating. He shone his flashlight directly into the cut. Rat-eyes flared red and vanished. The walls were rough rock, the passage narrow. Getting down it would be a long process, and all they might get for their pains was stuck. But they had to check it out.
Like an alleyway door hanging open.
Like a wrecked car that might blow. "You want to walk point or drag?"
Michael Peacock asked.
When Ruth woke up, it was dark. Naomi must have turned the flashlight off to save batteries. In the darkness the distant light from the sword was deceptively intense. And Naomi was talking. "When I was a kid," Naomi said, "growing up in Brooklyn, and that's another story, which I guess you're not going to get to hear, no loss; everybody had relatives-uncles, aunts. I used to ask my mom, 'so where're all my relatives?" because I didn't have any, and for a Jew not to have any family, well, that's really unusual. But we had nothing. And one day when she got tired of me asking she pulled out a family tree she'd put together when she was about the age I'd been then and showed me my family. She was the youngest of eleven-I'd had six aunts and four uncles, and they'd all had families. . . .
"She had the tattoo; she'd been in one of the camps for kids. Sponsored over here in '48. Her foster parents helped her look for her real family, but. . . . Anyway. You know. "Two hundred generations of European Jews. All gone, just as if they'd never been. It was the first time it was really real for me-just as if I were standing at the top of a ladder and somebody yanked the ladder away-and I was still standing there, only now it was possible to fall, because all my connections had been cut away, and there I was looking down into empty space, thinking about how I'd come this close to just not existing at all." Ruth sat up straighter and shifted away. awake now, but her tone never altered.
Naomi must be certain she was
"I don't know if you can understand that, Ruth. Understanding it is not something I would wish on anyone. But in a weird way it made me realize that I was personally responsible for continuing my own existence-for not getting erased or swept under cover as if I'd never existed. And I vowed to myself that I'd be real, that I'd be big and important and noticeable. Because I wanted to live. Because it's not enough to remember. You have to make certain that no one forgets." "Naomi?" Ruth said hesitantly. Naomi pulled away and stood up.
She reached for Naomi's hand, but now
"And sometimes, Ruth, the only way to live .
. . is to die."
Before Ruth could react, Naomi was on her feet, skipping down the half-flight of stairs as if they were brightly lit. Ruth, groggy and now personally terrified, followed her, but she was too late. In the silence the scuffing of Naomi's feet on the marble sounded like large hisses, and in the faint radiance of the larger room Ruth saw her, a darker shadow, dashing the length of the platform to where the sword stood upright in its nest of glittering trash. And Ruth, who had never really forgotten it, remembered that Naomi's martial art was kendo. The sword. There was an earsplitting roar from inside the remains of the subway car. The grendel stormed out, rearing up in a terrifying bearish gesture that made the sweat of terminal fear well up in Ruth's skin. Her mouth was so dry it hurt; when she opened her mouth, no sound came. But Naomi reached the sword. Reached it, gripped it, and pulled it free in a clangor of rolling five cent deposit cans, holding it as if it were a katana and facing the grendel No, please, thought Ruth in sick terror, because the intellectual sophistry of accepting inevitable death is a far cry from watching it happen in front of you. Not Naomi. No. The grendel reached out to take its Sword back, to slay this impertinent trespasser, but all there was to grab was blade-blade which
cut, and stung, and flickered out of its grasp to cut again. Naomi backed frantically, trying to stay out of reach, making useless parries at the grasping taloned hands. Parries which did not kill. But at last the grendel did what every lesson swore it would, and rushed her so heedlessly that Naomi had time to step aside; presented its unprotected ribs when there was time and all the world to strike, to shape the blow that struck and sank deep, deeper, and the monster hurt at last; turning, raging, swatting at the beloved object which had become its tormentor. Then it was possible. Then the grendel was weak; gushing thick black fluid from its gaping side, sliced about the arms and chest, and, finally, sinking to its knees, misshapen arms dragging limp upon the ground as Naomi struck, and hard, at the scaled folds of flesh between head and shoulder. Struck once, and again, and then again, until that hideous head hung suspended only by a flap of skin. Dead. Then Naomi stood, exhausted and triumphant, bleeding and gorespattered, resting the tip of the sword on the ground. Ruth ran toward her. "Get back!" Naomi whirled around to face her, holding the sword en garde as if it were weightless. Drops of liquid flew from the spinning blade. Her voice was high, her eyes wide and mad. "You can't have it!"
Naomi shrieked.
Ruth stopped dead. Naomi retreated a few more steps, but even so Ruth could see the gleam of tears in her eyes. "So this is how it is," Naomi said, her voice softly wondering. "You can tell Melior he was right about everything, Ruth. It works just like he said-and it's fast. Oh, God, it's so fast. Don't let anybody else-" she broke off. "Naomi?" Ruth said. "Don't do-" "What you know damn well is the only thing I can do, now?" Naomi's voice was ragged; her breathing faster now than even exertion had made it. "Get out. Go on. There's a way out around the car. Use it." "Come with me," Ruth said. "Naomi-" "God dammit, Ruth." The words were evenly spaced, inflectionless, read off like the ingredients of a recipe. "Melior was right. The sword wants-" She broke off. Ruth could see sweat trickling down Naomi's face, her teeth bared in a grimace of effort. "Anyway. This is no time toto be as Ruth and Naomi, Ruth." Naomi managed a ragged laugh. "Get out of here. Go on." It should have been me! Ruth shook her head, wordless with the pain, but Naomi retreated into the shadows with the sword, leaving Ruth access to the way out. If she could take it. The grendel's-the FIRST grendel's-body was already liquefying, melting like a Popsicle dropped on a hot summer's sidewalk. The stench was
unbearable. In the silence of this man-made cave, the only sounds were Naomi's ragged panting and the drip-drip-drip of fluid over the side of the platform. Ruth looked back. She could not see Naomi, except as a deeper darkness surrounding the Sword. She jumped down onto the tracks. There was less than a foot of space between and the tunnel wall. Ruth pressed her back along it, into the darkness, eyes closed so what was inside. There was a bare two foot the gondola and the wall.
the body of the carriage against the wall and slid she would not have to see expanse between the nose of
At first Ruth was sure the wall was solid, but then her groping hands reached an opening, a window onto nothing, rough-hewn into the solid rock. Ventilation tunnel, the certainty from her recent reading came. But whether it reached the surface, or whether Ruth could follow where the grendel had been able to lead, she did not know. And she would not leave Naomi. The conviction-as stupid as it was comforting-steadied her nerves and stopped her hands shaking. She was not going to leave her friend. And besides, the sword would be sharp. "I have a little neck-" Anne Boleyn's reputed words mocked Ruth's nobility. It wasn't easy to die. But she wasn't leaving Naomi alone. She had already made up her mind and turned back when she heard Naomi's indrawn gasp of pain, amplified by an architectural trick of acoustics. She groped her way back around the end of the car, then along its length, and at last was in view of the platform with its scattershot harlequin lighting. She could see Naomi now. Naomi knelt on the damp-splotched marble next to the fountain that stood beneath the rotunda. The sword's hilt was balanced on the carved lip of the fountain, the blade pressing awkwardly against Naomi's lap. And even in that dimness Ruth could see the bright red welling; the running of the fast blood. Ruth climbed up onto the platform again. "Get the fuck out of here!" next?"
Naomi snarled.
"Do you want to be
Ruth started toward her. Naomi warded her off with glistening red hands. "It hurts," she whimpered. "It slipped. It hurts, Ruth." And it wouldn't kill her, Ruth thought with sickening clarity. The sword's spell was too clever for that. It would keep her alive, somehow, and incapable of breaking free before the sword finished the
work of binding her will to its. Or to something. "I'm going to get you the canteen."
Ruth said.
Melior had gone first, and even taken Michael's flashlight to light the tunnel. Both men moved crabwise, crouching, muscles of head and neck and shoulders screaming protest. If the grendel came upon them from either direction, they were dead. Left alone, Michael might have turned back-not from cowardice, precisely, but from a growing feeling of futility and time wasted-but Melior forged on; if not tireless, at least determined. Slowly the passage changed its shape, from a slit eighteen inches wide in which a man might almost stand upright to a square box-shape, angling perceptibly downward, through which they must creep upon their stomachs. Now Melior put out the light and passed it back to Michael; there was simply no point. Even the rats had deserted them, and all the world dwindled to the excruciating, abrading procession through the dark. At last Michael ran, face-first, into Melior's boot soles. shoved.
He
Melior kicked back, an irritated semaphore of caution. After a pause, he slid swiftly forward, the intermittent rasp of his swordbelt on the rock escalated to a continuous singing rasp. Then he was gone. "Come, Michael." Melior's voice, low, from what must be the tunnel's end. The silvery radiance, absent in the tunnel, grew about him again, and in the light Michael could see the opening, square-cut like a picture frame, showcasing Melior. There was a scream. Ruth. Michael dragged himself forward. She had pushed the canteen toward Naomi-pity, if nothing else, kept Ruth from coming too close. Naomi drained the canteen, and then worked the Sword away from the wound in her side. That done, she lay with her forehead pressed against the cool marble, cradling the Sword of Maiden's Tears as if it were a child. Ruth sat, as close as Naomi would allow her, and waited with her. There was nothing else to do. "You know what my middle name is?" Naomi said after they had sat there a very long time. Ruth jumped, but her voice was steady as she answered. "No.
What?"
"Francesca. Naomi Francesca Nasmyth. I guess I got off lucky; Mom married some Wasp yuppie from Connecticut named Caldwell Kettering Chesterfield Nasmyth the Third. Duration: seven years, product: me;
and then we went back to being Jews.
What about you?"
"Ten generations of Ohio Methodists," Ruth replied. Her secretthe truth she had always owed Naomi-swelled in her throat, but to tell it now in the face of this disaster would seem like plea-bargaining for sympathy; a consumer-comparison of dooms. "Nothing special. I was an only child." "So was I. You should have seen what he sent for my bat mitzvah. Barbie and three trunks of clothes."
A
She must mean her father, Ruth guessed. Naomi's voice was slurred, now, sleepy. Perhaps she would bleed to death after all. Maybe they'd get lucky. And maybe they wouldn't. The pool that Naomi's blood had made on the marble was beginning to dry. It had gotten no fuller. The bleeding had stopped. "You can tell Paul......... There was a long silence, until Ruth thought Naomi had forgotten she'd spoken. "Tell him I figured out the answer," Naomi said. "I will," Ruth said. stretched again.
She wasn't sure Naomi heard her.
The silence
Then Ruth heard the sliding, dragging sound; scales against rock; and all her battered nerves could imagine was that the grendel, before it died, had somehow managed to reproduce. There was a flare of white light. Ruth screamed. She saw the dark winged figure lunging for her and screamed again, scrabbling backward on palms and heels, but then Melior-Melior shockingly returned from death-had grabbed her, pulling her to her feet and holding her close. Ruth struggled against him.
"Naomi-" she cried, trying to pull free.
Melior turned and looked. He saw everything in a rush. Naomi, on her knees but trying to rise, face twisted in an unconscious grimace half of pain, half of hate as she regarded him. In her hand, glittering as she plied it as her makeshift crutch, was the Sword. The Sword. "Ah," said Melior, all on a breath. He held Ruth even more tightly, retreating into the darkness that was not dark to him. The cold silver light on his body flickered and died. "Michael," he called softly. but come warily."
"Michael, I have Ruth and she is well,
Michael came around the end of the subway car. He had his flashlight in one hand and, Ruth saw with some surprise, a gun in the other. He flicked the light around the platform, highlighting first Ruth, then Naomi.
And the sword. "Oh, Christ-" Michael breathed. "Hi, Michael." Perhaps the worst thing of all was that Naomi's voice was still recognizably hers; weak, but holding to its casual tone by a gallant exercise of will. Michael stopped. Dangerous, the cop instincts assured him. dying! another part of his mind protested.
But she's
"Hi, yourself," he said back. He stopped where he was. The important thing now was to find out who could be gotten out, and how, without anyone else being hurt. "Anything going on down here that you want to talk about?" "I killed the grendel I- But the sword slipped," Naomi said, leaving Michael to piece the truth together. Then I tried to kill myself, but the sword slipped "Would you guys take Ruth and get the hell out of here, please, okay?" "No." Melior's voice was low and regretful. didn't turn toward him.
Michael twitched but
"Never take your eyes off the perp for a second, Cockle. Hoss had said that. "She will not die, Michael. "What if you take it away?
The Sword has her," Melior said. What if you take it back to Elfland?"
Michael's voice was even; concealing desperation with an effort. "It will not save her," Melior's voice held infinite regret. your weapon, Michael." "No." Ruth's voice was small as the realization sunk in. can't. Melior, it's Naomi." "Michael."
"No you
Melior's voice was patient.
"Where'd you get a gun, Michael?" curiosity, nothing more.
Naomi's voice held friendly
"I helped you pick it out, remember?" to be another way," to Melior. "There is none," Melior said. friend."
Michael said, then: "There has
"She is grendel I am sorry, Naomi, my
"Will you guys stop talking about it and do it?" "Please.
"Give me
Naomi said wearily.
Huny."
"Oh, please," whispered Ruth, meaning just the opposite. Melior turned her against his chest and she buried her face in his tunic. "The gun, Michael," he said.
"You can't do it." For a moment Ruth wondered who'd spoken, then realized the ragged voice must be Michael's. Michael drew a sobbing breath. "You've never fired a piece before. six rounds. You'd miss!"
It takes practice.
I've only got
His voice rose to an anguished shout, and over the echoes of his last words came the crashing sound of gunfire. "You'd miss," Michael repeated. There was a sound, small and far, of something thrown striking rock far along the tunnel. Ruth tried to turn and look, but Melior would not let her. And when he let her go, it was only so that Michael could take her, gripping her arms as if he did not know his strength, dragging her away toward the shaft in the rock. Melior stood until they had gone, until the sound of Michael's voice as he forced Ruth into the shaft had faded. Then he reached for the Sword, still lady-bright despite being slicked along half its length with blood and ichor. Only the Sword of Maiden's Tears could slay the grendel it had made. Michael's weapon could stop it for a time, nothing more. But at least the one who had been the warrior-maid Naomi, who, for a brief time Melior had called "friend," would not know what he did now. He took the Sword, and did what must be done. And when he had finished he wiped it clean, and slid it into its place in his swordbelt. Then Melior turned, and began to follow the other two. light.
Back toward the
And Back Again RUTH DIDN'T HAVE any truly clear memory of the time between entering the ventilation shaft and the time she'd seen open sky; a clear blue trapezoid at the top of the subway steps. There had been no trouble reaching it, and no one to see them, since, oddly enough, the entire Lower Manhattan system seemed to have lost power. And somehow Thursday morning had become Friday noon without Ruth's noticing-the sky was bright, the buildings pristine, the air clear and fresh and open as she walked through the concrete canyons of Wall Street. Reality was mocking in its normalcy. Do what you like, Lower Manhattan seemed to say, it doesn't matter to me. In fact, nothing you can do will make any difference at all. Exhausted, battered, the three of them had caught a taxi back to Ruth's apartment. The driver hadn't wanted to take them, especially when he
saw the sword, but Melior wasn't the only one who never wanted to see the subway again. Michael had convinced him. And then there was the silence of the long ride uptown, with Ruth feeling Naomi's absence like an abscessed tooth; renewed pain with each rediscovery. She'd reached out, cautiously, for Michael's hand, and held it. He gripped her fingers as tightly as if he were trying to crush them, and she could feel him shaking. None of them had very much to say. Jane was waiting for them in the apartment. She'd been watching from the window and saw the taxi stop, seven floors below. She'd been holding the door open for them when they crested the last of the stairs, and had gone to put the water on for tea without saying a word. She hadn't asked any questions. But later, after showers and blistering hot tea with brandy and too much sugar, Michael had reluctantly realized that Philip must be called, for mercy's sake, to tell him they were safe. That most of them were safe. "What do you MEAN she's dead?
You must have made a mistake!
You should have brought her back! have to leave her there!"
We could have fixed it.
You didn't
Philip stood in the middle of the living room, face red and white with incredulous anger, having broken all land speed records getting there from Amsterdam Avenue. Michael turned away and walked off. Philip stared after him, still furious and now hurt as well. He looked around for someone to blame and saw Melior, sitting quietly in a corner. The light flashed off Philip's glasses as he turned. up and saw him.
And Melior looked
Ruth, grieving and exhausted as she was, was brought to painful alertness by the lightning-flash of unleashed emotion. But Melior, as he spoke, was gentle. "Naomi was dead, Friend Philip. was no other way."
All that remained was grendel There
And no one, Ruth vowed, was ever going to know what that way had been. Not from her. Philip's eyes were very wide, and for a moment Ruth held her breath, although what could Philip possibly do that would raise a ripple after everything else they'd been through? "Mistress Naomi is dead, Friend Philip," Melior repeated with firm gentleness. "She gave her life in exchange for Ruth's and all who
dwell in this realm, if that is any comfort. your sorrow."
I and all my Line share
Philip still regarded him, unspeaking, and it came to Ruth, in a slow horrified dawning of realization, what the reason had really been that Philip hung around so much. The real reason that he listened to Naomi when he didn't listen to any of the rest of them. Naomi. Naomi. Philip took a deep breath. "Well, sure," he said in a bright spurious voice. "That makes it all right. Since Nai turned into a grendel, I guess you had to do it. Considering her hobby was cooking, she'd probably have opened a restaurant or something. To Serve Man. Yeah, Elfie, I guess you didn't have any choices." Philip didn't even bother to slam the door when he left. open until Jane came out of the kitchen and closed it.
It had hung
That had been Friday. And Saturday, following a notion of Melior's that seemed to be perilously close to wishful thinking, they-even Philip-had come down to the Brooklyn Subway Yards to see Melior off home. And one of them was going with him. "Why here?" Philip wanted to know. He hunched his shoulders against the chill, wearing a black leather jacket Ruth couldn't remember having seen him in before. "If the subterranean way is Faery, then the approach to the subterranean way is the approach to the Morning Lands. And the Morning Lands are where we wish to go," Melior explained, patiently, for what might have been the first time. In fact, it was closer to the ten millionth time, and Philip hadn't liked the answer yet. The moon was the traditional ghostly galleon, ducking behind cloudwisps and painting the sky chill midnight blue. Jane and Michael, Ruth and Melior and Philip-and never Naomi, never again-stood outside the chain-link fence guarding the Brooklyn Subway Yards. Through the fence they could see acre upon acre of subway cars; some resting, some waiting for repair, some obviously beyond repair. That was where they were going. Jane and Melior, Michael and Philip and Ruth, all went down to the railway yards. To dance by the light of the moon, the moon, to dance by the light of the moon. Have you danced with the devil in the pale moonlight? from? Batman? No, something older.
What was that
The devil in the pale moonlight . . . Ruth looked at Melior beside her and thought of Coleridge: For he on honey-dew had fedland drunk the milk of Paradise. "I still wish you wouldn't do this," Michael said. "I know." Michael."
Ruth brushed her hair back; a nervous gesture.
"I'm sorry,
He'd spent all morning-once she'd revealed that when Melior went home
to Chandrakar she, Ruth Marlowe, intended to go with him-trying to talk her out of it. He'd called it running away. "Naomi was my friend, too, " Michael had said. True. And it might be running away from people who, in their own perverse dysfunctional way, loved her, but Ruth didn't think so. And if it was, she was doing it anyway. She had her biggest purse, and her toothbrush; four cans of Diet Pepsi, a dozen Hershey Bars, and a paperback copy of Gone With the Wind All the things you'd take if you were leaving home forever. And over her favorite cashmere sweater and the Liberty print skirt she never wore because it was "too good," there was Naomi's Kinsale cloak, taken for a thousand reasons. "When we are home, Ruth, my father's artificers will unbind the spell from the Sword, and you will be whole once more." Melior, trying to be comforting, and all his words did was evoke more strangeness. Her soul. The silver cord that-so Melior said-had pulled the Sword of Maiden's Tears into the World of Iron: her soul, loosed from her grip while she lay in her eight-year coma. She thought she could believe in everything else before she believed in that. She could even believe that Melior loved her. He was dressed again as she had seen him first, and wore the clothes that soon would not stand out in their strangeness, but would be the everyday garb of everyone. Melior was going home to Elfland, and Ruth was going with him. "How close do you have to get?" Michael asked. Who would be practical, who would be organized, now that Naomi was gone? Would it be Michael? Ruth would never know. "Upon the iron road itself, I think, Friend Michael. We must go within these gates." Melior gestured, off handedly, at the high chain-link gates, held together with chains and multiple padlocks, designed to keep trespassers out. "What the hey; what's one more breaking and entering among friends?" Philip said. Why, feeling as he seemed to about Melior, Philip was willing to be here at all was a Philip-mystery that Ruth would never solve. Melior's signet ring still gleamed on Philip's hand. "You'll never know," Jane pointed out. The paper bag she was holding crinkled slightly as she held it. of them knew what was in it. "Well, come on, then," Michael said heavily. cutters? Phil?"
None
"Who's got the wire
The padlocks were beyond Michael's skeleton-key skills; in the end they
went over the fence. The wire cutters had been only to remove a section of the razor-wire spooled along the top, and even in its absenceand with Michael's help-it was a difficult climb. Ruth was already battered from being dragged-twice-through the grendel's tunnel less than two days ago. When she fell and skinned he r knee, it infuriated her almost beyond speech. Well, hell, it's been a rough week. "Here?"
said Michael.
"As good a place as any to begin," Melior agreed. "And get this over with before somebody sees us," Philip muttered. Melior turned and strode-there was no other accurate word for it-a dozen paces away. He stood between the iron rails-silver only where the rust had been scraped away-and looked expectantly back at Ruth. Ruth looked at her friends. "Here," Jane said. She thrust her paper bag into Ruth's hands. heavy. As the top gaped open Ruth caught the honeyed smell of beeswax. "Candles," Jane said. too."
"For the spell.
It was
There's a lighter in there,
Her round pale face gleamed in the moonlight, and it struck Ruth that of all the rest of them she'd miss Jane most. That Jane had wanted to be her friend, as much as Jane wished for anything she wasn't likely to get; Ruth's best friend, and not just one of a gang that happened to be all in the same place at the same time. Jane looked at her, knowing what she knew, perhaps, or simply assuming that she knew it out of a lifetime's practice at informed assumptions. And not caring, because no amount of love and knowledge and caring and effort was going to make any difference now that the terms of Jane's reality had been set and the mind had been formed. Knowledge was powerlessness. "Thanks," Ruth said, and then, awkwardly, because this was not the sort of gesture there had ever been between them, she pulled Jane against her and hugged her tight. "Take care of yourself," she whispered, wishing there was someone, somewhere, who would make it their business to take care of Jane. "Come, Ruth, we must away while the moon rides high." Melior's cape billowed slightly behind him; his scarlet tunic was wineviolet in the cold blue light. He held his hand out to her. "I'll met by moonlight, proud Titania." The tag was irresistible, but not apt; Ruth was no elf-queen, only cold and feeling irritable and foolish, just as she had when it had all begun. She trudged over to where he stood, hoping she would not sink High Romance entirely below the level of farce by tripping on the wooden cross-ties. She put one
hand in his and held out the bag in the other. "Candles," Ruth said. "'O." Melior held his cape wide to shield the Bic lighter from the wind while Ruth struggled to light Jane's present, juggling two candles too thick to hold in the one hand she had to spare for them while trying to operate the lighter. In the end it was Philip who rescued her, jerking the candles out of her hands and holding them like Frankensteinian electrodes while Ruth lit them. "You're being a jerk, Ruthie," Philip said, low enough that it was meant for her ears alone. "Shut up," Ruth answered wearily. pocket.
She dropped the lighter into her
"Conservation of mass," Philip answered obliquely. He thrust the lit candles at her, and Ruth had to grab them hurriedly or drop them and have it all to do over again. Then Philip turned his back on her and walked back to join the others. And though the night was not cold, Ruth felt cold, as if she were making some mistake she hadn't already taken into consideration and accounted for. Nerves, nothing more. And who has a better right to them? Ruth demanded of no one at all. Hand in hand and each carrying a flickering beeswax candle, Ruth and Melior started down the tracks, toward the tunnel at the end of them. There should have been more sound. Wind, carrying the far-off rhythm of subway trains on elevated tracks. Car alarms, emergency sirens; the sounds of the City, even in Brooklyn. There was nothing. Only the prickling over her skin that Ruth associated with thunderstorms, and terror, and the last few minutes before the worst possible headaches. Melior's hand burned like cold fire over hers. After a few moments of walking Ruth tried to look around and found she couldn't turn her head. Her muscles were suddenly painfully stiff and her field of vision had narrowed as abruptly as if she wore blinders. Magic! And even the sudden realization that she, Ruth Marlowe, was smack in the middle of Real Magic was not enough to outweigh the fear. Walking. Was she still walking? She couldn't remember how long this had been going on. She could not feel the weight of the candle she must still hold in her right hand. She was freezing cold, and the sweat was running off her skin like shower water.
Frightened, Ruth tried to open her mouth. Lips and tongue and palate were stuck together, immobile as if with the dust of the grave. And Melior's hand burned, cold enough to scar flesh. With a great effort Ruth jerked her head to the side and saw Melior a little ahead, walking with her hand in his down the tracks toward the tunnel ahead; blurred and shining; trailing luminous afterimages. He turned his head toward her and smiled; she saw the hot phosphor white of his teeth and the burning red of his eyes. His lips moved, though she couldn't hear what he said. Demon lover, Ruth thought, and as swiftly another thought supplanted it. Tam Lin, and the lover claimed no matter what monstrous disguise he was enchanted into. She closed her left hand tighter over his. Everything was fogged with halos; crisscrossing and multilayered in colors until she could hardly make out the subway cars that must be their basis. Everything was blindingly bright and much too dark to see all at the same time, and the rails of the tracks were a glittering hot-forged silver arrowing irresistibly toward a frozen nova terminus. Now the ground-which had been perfectly flat the last time she had been able to see it clearly-was slanting upward beneath her feet. Now the footing was less certain than it had been before; still not treacherous, but a little slidey underfoot, and the gravel she kicked loose tended to roll -where? -downhill. Toward the World of Iron, which Melior was trying to climb out of Hadn't he said he'd fallen, that the Sword of Maiden's Tears had fallen, here? And now he was trying to climb out. Morning. Home.
Back to the Lands Beyond the
Ruth gritted her teeth and walked on. Soon the road she and Melior followed-the Iron Road-was steeper and the air was winter-chill. Ruth was glad of Naomi's cloak; the bare skin of her hands and face burned, chapped raw by some maleficent Frost King's breath. The frigid air was thin and painful in her laboring lungs: the clouds of her expelled breath added to the glittering ice-burning illusion which surrounded both of them. But beneath it all, like cake under icing, she could see the Real World-the subway yards, the tracks and the tunnel. They weren't even halfway there. Although she had never really been able to tell they were moving, Ruth was now aware they weren't moving as fast. Now Melior's grasp was nearly as much to pull her along as it was for comfort; without it, Ruth didn't think she would have been able to take another step. Her head spun giddily, and each step was a lead-weighted effort to defy gravity. Her mouth tasted of rust, metal, and salt, and her eyes stung with sweat. Another step. Another. Ruth's arm ached as if her whole weight was suspended from it; as if Melior was drawing her up out of a well infinitely deep. And if she felt this way, what must it be like for Melior, who had not
only to carry himself out of the World of Iron, but her, too? Ruth felt his muscles shudder as he fought to accomplish one more dragging step. Now progress was slowed to a series of halting baby steps, each bought at the cost of several seconds of agonizing labor. Could he do it at all? He'd said his magic was weak. He'd said that his only hope to return home was to ally his magic with that of the Sword of Maiden's Tears, and Ruth knew to her cost that the Sword's magic was cruelly strong. But was it strong enough to take not only Melior back to his rightful place, but carry someone with him who didn't belong there at all? Thin fires lanced up Ruth's arm to her neck; bruised muscles, pulled tendons. Melior would not give up. She knew that. He would not leave her behind. He would go on trying. Could he do it? What if he couldn't? Did she have a right to let him risk his entire future? And not only his, but his family's, everyone who depended on him to come home with the Sword? It was his decision to make. And sometimes you had to decide things for yourself. Ruth set her feet and hauled back hard against his grip. She felt him check and stagger, almost sliding backward, and that alone told her all she needed to know. Carrying her weight as well as his own, Melior wasn't going to make it home. And he wouldn't leave her. Ruth shouted at him, and could not even hear the sound of her own words against the clamoring silence. In the corner of her vision, the candle in her right hand glowed inferno bright. "Can I get there by candlelight. Ruth concentrated.
Hard.
. . ?"
And finally succeeded.
She dropped the candle. And suddenly there was a roaring void on her right side, chill blackness, savage and razor-edged, and here inside was her sensible cowardly self shrieking that there were bad things, worse by far than she had yet imagined, that could happen to her in these forsaken spaces if she got careless. But now Melior's hand was not quite so solid on hers. when she pulled, her fingers slipped free.
And this time,
"Ruth-!" Sound returned; she heard Melior's voice; terror and fear, longing and heartbreak, all mixed into one anguished howl but it was far too late to change her mind. She felt him rise; soaring as if a
great weight had been lifted from his shoulders.
Going home.
And Ruth fell, fell for hours, fell forever, fell as the Sword had fallen, down into the World of Iron. Philip was the first one to reach her; crouched on hands and knees Ruth was treated to an intimate panoramic view of his shoes. "You're alive, right?"
he said.
Ruth sat back and looked up at him. Her face burned, her nose was running, and her lungs felt filled with pulmonary equivalent of hot green chile salsa. "I'm alive, right," Ruth said. She located a handkerchief and blew her nose noisily. Around her the rail-yard had returned to rust, entropy, and iron. Melior was nowhere to be seen. "What happened?" right?"
Michael, arriving, demanded.
"Physics," said Philip inscrutably. isn't she?"
"Ruth, are you all
"Sure she is.
She's breathing,
Yes. And Melior was going home. And there was too much riding on him for him to turn back, now that the hard choice had been made. And it had been Ruth who had made it. "So now it's really all over." Jane, last of all to reach her, the statement flat and uninflected and just faintly accusing. "Don't bet on it."
Philip's voice had regained its accustomed sneer.
"In books, magic strikes three times." THE Cup of Morning Shadows
CONTENTS Prologue: "%en the Magic's Real 259 The Game of Kings 261 2 The Glass Ceiling 264 3 In Your Heart No Love Is True 273 4 Between the Darkness and the Light 281 5 Bad Blood and Risky Business 290 6 Cold Steel and Loaded Pistols 294 7 Fancies and Goodnights 299 8 Into the Woods 304 9 High Noon in Elphame 309 10 A New Way to Pay Old Debts 312 "Adventures in the Greenwood 325 12 When the Deal Calls for a Sacrifice 329 13 Traveling in an Antique Land 334 14 The Fox and the Hounds 339 15 The Road Goes Ever Onward 343 16 The Unfair Faire Affair 346 17 Midnight Is a Place 352 18 The Broken Swordsman 354 19 Shop Till You Drop 359 20 For the Love and for the Glory 370 21 The Fall Is All That Matters 391 22 The Manor of Roses 402 23 Between the Knife Edge and the Skin 422
24 Queen's Play 436 25 Dress in Black and Lose Your Heart Beyond Recall 440 26 So You Want to Be a Hero 454 27 Cold Steel and Chance Encounters 475 28 Love in a Faithless Country 487 29 Hymn to Breaking Strain 507 Epilogue: The Court of Illusion 534
Prologue When the Magic's Real THE WAY TO Elfland was neither easy nor straight, nor yet easy to find, but it was a road he could travel. He had paid the price. How many miles to Babylon? Threescore miles and ten. Can I get there by candlelight? And never go home again. He lit the first candle, and the world warped; a bright flash like a coin dropped into water. He lit the second, and there was a sizzle like ice and boiling oil. Perfect. He left them where they were, reflecting light from their pedestals of silver and crystal, and shouldered his pack. Leather, and custom-made, and it and its contents together weighed over eighty pounds. He was glad he'd done so much weightlifting. He was glad of everything; of all the skills he'd had to master. And now intended to use. He ran his hand over the hunting knife strapped at his thigh. Cold iron breaks all magic. Then he stooped, carefully, and picked up the first candle. The vertigo hit like an attacking shark. Cold wind whipped up from nowhere, threatening the flame of the second candle. Quickly he grabbed that one, too. It jiggled; hot beeswax spilled out over the back of his hand. It hurt, but not enough to make him drop it. He'd learned to live with pain. The pain of stretching his body beyond its limits. The pain of forcing his mind beyond its boundaries. The pain of having no heart-no, not any more, his heart had been cut out with a magic knife one night and he hadn't even been there. But he was going to be there now. And return the favor. He lifted both the candles; five pounds each, confectionery-grade beeswax with red linen wicks. As they were in the lais, the gestes, the old tales The truth. The wall shimmered liquidly and seemed to tilt drunkenly askew in every dimension at once. And beyond it, he saw the road. The High Road.
The Iron Road. The Road to Fair Elphame. candles. He set his foot on the road.
He tightened his grip on the
One step, and he was already gone from the World of Iron. Two steps, and the ghost-wind had sharpened to a tidal roaring, insistent as the calling of his blood. Three steps, and the road began to slant upward, toward the Morning and the Lands Beyond the Morning. Four steps, and the iron in his bones was an aching weight, calling him back to the Last World, the World of Iron. Five steps, six, and the Road was the only reality; the Road, and the clamoring darkness on either side. The Road, the fire, the pain. to be.
And the chill ache where his heart used
But he was used to pain. THE ESCAS SET was quite old; so old, in fact, that the pawn pieces were carved in the likeness of elves. The great pieces were the Treasures, twelve in coral, twelve in amber-a lie, in a way. There were only twelve Treasures, unique and irreplaceable. But vulnerable. Very. No one now living knew how the Seven Houses of the TWilight had come to possess the TWelve Treasures. They had come with the Folk of the Air into the land they had renamed Chandrakar, and forever after had been the cornerstone of the Morning Lords' power. The tales of their wielding were many, but it had been long and long since Chandrakar's borders were less than secure, or since the title "Marchlord" had been anything other than a convenient honor to bestow upon an eldest son. Even the long war following Rainouart High King's death had not changed the essential security of Chandrakar-not a small thing in a universe where worlds and lands were made and unmade in a careless thought. That the Treasures had the power to shatter worlds was understood by all. What was less well known was that the majority of each Treasure's unique abilities were lost beyond the power of their Keepers to regain them. Only the least of the Treasures' gifts-formidable in themselvesremained: the power of the Sword to see into its opponent's heart; the power of the Cup to brew a posset that would kill or cure. These small tricks, and the mandate to guard the Treasures carefully, lest Chandrakar itself be lost, were all that was left. Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences sat in his father's solar in his father's castle, both of which he must learn to think of as his own, and brooded, wine cup at his elbow. One day's work was done, another would soon begin. In a few days he must leave for the Twilight Court, to be confirmed by the Lords Temporal in his succession, to make known the recovery of the Sword of Maiden's Tears, to. . . . To tell them that Eirdois Baligant, their new High )Ung, was trying to kill them all? Melior set out the chess pieces.
Each Treasure-and its shadow-self.
Conscientiously Melior lined them up in pairs down the jade-and-silver board. The pawns he left in their case. The Sword.- Line Rohannan, and safe. The coral sword and the amber one he placed to one side. They glinted in the varicolored light of candles and fire, so unlike the cold white light that came at nightfall in the World of Iron. The Cup: Line Floire, and . . . in doubt. Jausserande had not spoken to him of her attempts to regain the Cup, but if they had been successful, she would not still be here. And that they had not been successful in three full moons gave Melior even greater worry. She is too young for this burden! Melior protested. that was all that was left: children-and survivors.
But in Chandrakar
Like me. Melior took a sip from his goblet and wondered how the grape harvest fared on his southern holdings. You couldn't just let a vineyard lie fallow for a handful of seasons and have anything you wanted at the other end. He hoped, nevertheless, for a good harvest. More than half the grain would have to be reserved for seed, which would mean a shortage of beer and ale, but they should at least be able to drown their sorrows in the new vintage. Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences; Swordwarden and Marchlord; with his mind as earthbound as any of his human serfs'. Amusing in a quiet way, but not really helpful. And what of the other Treasures? Melior sighed. Every day brought new reminders of what the war had taken from them. In the reign of King Rainouart, everyone had known who held which Treasure-it was a source of pride. But now? Lines destroyed; cadet branches ruling; Treasures hidden for safety and their guardians slain before passing on the secret . . . Melior wondered if the Burning Lance and the Horse of Air were anywhere in any of the Nine Worlds: Line Rivalen and Line Tantris, which had held them, were gone to the last fighter. Even the peace-bonded women and children of Rivalen had died in the Red Peace; surely at least one mother would have taken her children and fled if Tantris had still possessed the Horse. Perhaps Baligant already held the Horse and all the rest. Chandrakar's High King had died, and Eirdois Baligant had been chosen to succeed him, but that was not where the tragedy lay. The tragedy lay in the fact that Eirdois Baligant had been chosen by the Lords Temporal to become High King over the Seven Houses of the Twilight much too late. For Baligant, passed over as a claimant before, shunted aside in the endless intriguing for alliance and advantage, was not now willing to forgive. And despite the fact that law and custom both decreed that the High leng might not go to war with any of the Great Houses, nor condemn a Son of the Morning without a trial before all his peers, Eirdois Baligant had found a way to punish those he would not
forgive. Sword and Cup, Lance and Shield, Harp, Mirror, Cauldron, Comb, Cloak, Horse, Book and Crown. The Twelve Treasures of Chandrakar, each separately entrusted to one of the noble families of Chandrakar for safekeeping. All of which must be present at the crowning of the High lCng-and the lineage that did not come before the High Seat upon that day with the 'Measure entrusted into its care would never come before it again: all rank and seizin were forfeit, and that line forever banished from the Twilight Lands. And Baligant, it seemed, meant that to be all of them: Line Rohannan, Line Floire; all the Treasurekeepers. Driven from the land. By law. Carelessly Melior swept all the pieces back into the box. The safety of the Realm Eternal hung teetering in the balance, and what occupied his time? Farming and tax-collecting. . . . But if the crop is not gathered and the rents distributed, we shall all starve come winter, and that with no help from Baligant. If only there were some proof to show. . . . But there was proof.
Melior straightened in his chair.
And slumped again, passing a hand over his brow. His proof was where he couldn't possibly reach it-trapped in the World of Iron. Ruth.
Ruth.
The Glass Ceiling "CHRISTMAS JUST WON'T be Christmas without an alarm call from the library," Penny Canaday grumbled. She was one of those people who appear self-contained and selfconsistent: plump, nonthreatening, and brown all over: brown skin, brown hair in a restless ponytail, brown eyes. Reminiscent of a gingerbread woman, and of that intermediate age (as she said) between graduation and death. Penny was wearing a set of grass-green OshKosh B'Gosh overalls with a white cotton shirt and bore a faint but determined resemblance to Mr. Greenjeans. She was also the Chief Librarian at the Ryerson Memorial Library in beautiful downtown Ippisiqua (Queen City of the Hudson) New York, at which Ruth Marlowe had been the newest librarian for the last three months. "Try to imagine it," Ruth coaxed automatically, although the thought of the last three months-and all the three months' to follow-was almost enough to send her out into the storm and back to her own apartment. Interpersonal relationships were not her strong suit these days, but Ruth dutifully did her best. And now it was Christmas, and she'd been dragooned into spending it with Penny and Katy and Nic. Ruth wasn't sure she wanted to be here, even as insistent as her new friends had been. There were too many different horrible Christmases in her past for her to want to add one more.
Her first Christmas after coming out of the coma, spent in the nursing home. Braces on her legs and a body that wouldn't obey her-and a mind rebelling against the knowledge that it had been eight years-all her life from eighteen to twenty-six-since the last thing she could remember. Her first Christmas after Naomi died. Spent even more alone, in a hastily-rented studio apartment in Brooklyn. She'd lost track of Michael-she didn't even know if he'd graduated-but Philip and Jane were only a phone call away, finishing up their degrees at Columbia Library School. She hadn't called them. Naomi's death had driven group apart, as if they were all co-inheritors of secret that made them unable to face each other. tolerance had been what bound them all together. been nothing left.
the once close-knit some ghastly guilty Naomi's cheerful Without it, there had
Pulling her mind back into the present, Ruth looked out the window of Penny's and Katy's neat, restored-Victorian living room at white horizontal streaks of unseasonable late afternoon wind-driven snow. No, Christmas was not an especially good time for Ruth these days, but then, face it, the other three hundred sixty-four days were no picnic either. "C'mon, Ruth, smile," Penny urged. "Katy's cooking dinner, the library isn't open, and we're going to have a white Christmas." Ruth shook herself out of her reverie and forced the real world into focus. There was no point in pining after things she couldn't have. After things, in fact, that she'd thrown away with her own lily-white hands. Love and honor, courage and loyalty. . . . Love. "And anyway, if there is an alarm, you can pretend you don't hear it," Ruth said, valiantly keeping the conversational ball in play. "Why bother?" Penny groaned theatrically. "Nic's going to have to go, and if Nic goes I might as well go, and that leaves you and Katy here." " With a twelve-pound goose and a plum pudding with hard sauce," Ruth said, trying hard to make it sound as if they were something she wanted. Naomi had cooked, and the memories roused in Ruth by the kitchen aromas were not kind. "But really, Penny, if the alarm goes off, it's sure to be a false alarm, and it's only two blocks away, anyway. We can all go," Ruth said, trying to keep herself firmly anchored in the here and now. She couldn't spend the rest of her life in mourning, however justified. "It's the principle," Penny told her loftily. Ruth was saved from riposte by Katy Battledore, Penny's clerk andlibrary gossip had it-the secret master of library services in the fivecounty area, who paraded out of the kitchen, bearing a large platter.
"Announcing the turkey," Katy said, with pardonable pride. "It's a goose, actually," Nic Brightlaw added apologetically. He entered behind Katy, shirtsleeves rolled up and collar buttons undone, holding twelve pounds of thoroughly-cooked goose on an Armortel platter. Nicodemus Brightlaw, the Ryerson Library Director, was one of those librarians who, Ruth thought, existed only in the fevered imaginations of Hollywood casting directors. Nicodemus Brightlaw was at least six foot two, and had eyes of blue, hair the shade of rich insistent gold rarely achieved without reference to Lady Clairol, perfect white teeth, and muscles in places most other men only had T-shirts. By rights he should have been drop-devastatingly handsome. Ruth had distrusted him on sight. Nicodemus Brightlaw, the Library Director from Central Casting. The man with a past and no future@r possibly that was the other way around. In any event, it was pretty obvious after the first week that it was Penny, not Nic, who was running the library. The only useful function Ruth had yet seen Nic perform was to sign her paycheck. Now, three months later, she liked him (it was hard not to at least put up with the friends of your friends) and still didn't trust him. It was puzzling. "It's delicious," Penny prophesied.
"Dinner, then presents.
Yum."
"I thought you just said that Christmas wouldn't be Christmas without-" Ruth began. There was the sound of a beeper. Penny swore.
Nic headed for the phone.
"You had to say it," Katy said to Ruth. Katy's mop of bright yellow curls and big brown eyes-and five foot two frame-always gave Ruth a shock when combined with the voice of Lauren Bacall and the diction of a cigar-smoking carnival barker. She looked like the star of the Shirley Temple remake of The Exorcist. "You had to go and say it. If you hadn't said it-" The secret of Katy's survival into adulthood was that she was also a world-class cook who felt unable, so she said, to cook for less than six people at a time. Since she lived alone with Penny in a restored Victorian on the edge of the Historic District, this meant the two of them ate a lot of leftovers. It was Katy's avowed hatred of leftovers (she said) that had first caused her to badger Ruth until Ruth accepted a dinner invitation. After that, it had simply been taken for granted that Ruth's place was at Penny's and Katy's house, for as many meals as Katy could wangle excuses to cook. Nic came back from the phone. sigh.
"It's the library," he said with a
"It's just a false alarm, but......... He shrugged. without me; I'll be right back."
"You guys start
"Yeah, sure," jeered Katy. "C'mon and help me carry this damn bird back into the kitchen, and why they couldn't have called ten minutes ago and saved us all the trouble I'm sure I don't know." The weather was settling down to snow in a sullen determined manner as the three librarians (and one clerk) walked down (mostly deserted) Market Street in the direction of the library. At this time of year, even four o'clock in the afternoon was twilight time. The front of the library was nearly the same color as the sky. "Looks okay to me," Ruth said. "Fine, let's go home," said Katy. "It won't take that long to reset it," Nic said pacifically. "Come on," said Penny. Nic pushed open the inner door of the library and flipped on the first bank of lights. Ruth and the others followed. The familiar scent of wet boots, chalk, and sweetly-decaying books filled her nose. Library smell. The Ryerson was a library of "a certain age"-about a hundred years old, Ruth had once guessed, looking at the ornate plaster medallions of the cupola-and dated from the first great flush of the American love affair with public works and high culture. Buildings like the Ryerson were the legacy of Rockefeller, Carnegie, Mellon, Vanderbilt: conscienceless robber barons who had lived like princes and acknowledged no law but themselves-and despite this had left their country an enduring heritage of public sector Arts. Many lesser plutocrats had imitated them: almost every city in America could boast a turn-of-the-century culture temple like the Ryerson. And it hasn't gotten a good square endowment since, thought Ruth automatically, looking at the missing patches of plaster and the rusty watermarks that stained the plaster that was there. When the Ryerson was built, the area beneath the rotunda had probably been meant to be gracious and spacious; an architectural overture to the literary treasures within. Now it was jammed with desks, files, on-line catalog terminals, and tipsy racks of paperbacks. Study carrels vied with a massive oak card catalog for floor space on Ruth's left, and the charge desk at her right was almost completely concealed behind book racks, CD cabinets, and importunate signs listing the variety of late fines for assorted media. Not much, but I call it home. At least I do now, Ruth said to herself, ien while an inner voice told her that she lied. Home now was where .ohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences was, but Chancar was worlds and lifetimes away. Ruth hadn't set out to befriend a lost elvish prince-but then, she hadn't meant to turn thirty either, and the two things had happened more or less simultaneously. She'd been living in New York City, going to Columbia Library School, all set to graduate and unleash one more overqualified hyperlexic on the world, when she'd tripped over Melior. Literally.
He'd been mugged. Welcome to New York, now go home, Ruth had thought. She'd also thought he was a lost-stolen-or-strayed medievalist, but one look at his pointed ears-and pointed teeth-had cured her of that hopeful notion. But by then it was also too late to step back into the safe normal world: she'd already offered to help him, and that impulsive offer of aid to a wounded stranger had become an adventure that Ruth, all things considered, would rather not have had. Ruth, Naomi, Philip, Michael, and Jane. Five unlikely friends, student librarians drawn together by a mutual sense of not fitting in. And before they had completed Melior's quest, and retrieved the beautiful and deadly Sword of Maiden's Tears, one of them was dead. There were days when Ruth felt that it would have been better for everyone if she had died in Naomi's place. Or, at least, better for her. Because she had fallen in love with Rohannan Melior, and he with her. And when the Sword was safe, he had wanted her to walk the Iron Road with him, back to his elvish land. And Ruth had agreed to go, settled her affairs, said good-bye to her friends. And then had been forced to choose. Melior's magic, taxed by the battle to regain the Sword, was too weak to open the Iron Road enough for Ruth to pass. And Ruth faced a simple and terrible choice: between keeping Melior with her, in the World of Iron so deadly to his kind, or tricking him into returning to his land alone, knowing that when the Iron Road closed behind him, it would separate them beyond all power of elvish magic to reunite them. :'Come on," Penny said.
"Let's round up the usual suspects."
'Because the sooner we do," Katy said sepulchrally, "the sooner we can get back to the goose." Her comrades' voices jarred Ruth back to the present once more. They fanned out, not bothering to turn on most of the lights. As she walked deeper into the library, Ruth could hear Nic in his office, flipping switches to clear and then reset the alarm system. Sixty thousand dollars. Twenty-four hours notice of batt and sudden death. Not to mention notice of changes of huin passing mice, trucks rumbling by in the street outside, and an, her of other interesting ephemera, necessitating midnight visits from Nic, or, failing Nic, Penny, at least once a month. Given the approximately fifty false alarms in the three years of the system's installation, it was hardly surprising that Nic Brightlaw maintained such a cavalier attitude toward it. Ruth went down the stairs toward the Children's Room. False alarm or no, a good check over in bad weather wasn't a bad idea. If a window had come open-or been forced-or if, God forbid, the ancient roof should start leaking, it was better to catch it now rather than after a
hundred thousand dollars' worth of books had been ruined. She took a quick tour of the Children's Room: the bricked-up fireplace with the painting of the Half Moon floating at anchor; the halfheight bookcases with row after row of beloved classics-Eager, Nesbitt, Norton (Mary and Andre both). All windows closed, no suspicious drips. All right and tight. Then, as if compelled by the sort of literary device found in bad fiction, Ruth's attention slid unwillingly toward the door to the Second File. She really ought to check the Second File. She should. There were windows down there, too. Ruth hesitated.
She'd been in the Second File.
Once.
A long time ago-say, a year and a half or so-Ruth had been a normal student librarian. She hadn't had any fear of dark enclosed places or what might live there. That was then. Oh, don't be a walking clichd! Ruth told herself furiously. You know what's down there: spiders, snakes, and rats. Nothing to be afraid of She walked out of the Children's Room, through the Meeting Room (in one door and out the other), and down the hall that led to the Second File. Nothing to be afraid of After all, you've already faced the worst Life has to offer, right? Too true. And capitulated utterly. in that, come to think of it.
There was a certain dour comfort
The Second File was-more or less, and rather less than more-in the basement, down the hall that ran behind the Children's Room. Up three stairs, open the iron door. There you were, down in the basement. Welcome to the M.C Escher Memorial Library . . . Ruth thought in wry self-mockery. She propped the iron door open with a brick. With an expert flick of her wrist she twisted the timer on the light switch to its ultimate max and then stepped inside. Ruth tasted acid and copper as the smallness and darkness pressed in on her like wet rancid velvet. But there was no Sword, no grendel, no slain friend. There was only the solitary dark, and the memory of the cold equations that had led to the murder of her best friend. Naomi's dead You're alive.
Act like it, Ruth told herself brutally.
She took another step inside, keeping a wary eye on the door. The basement-idealistically called the Second File, though not even Penny had been able to tell Ruth where the First File was-was illuminated in its entirety by one forty-watt bulb suspended in the
middle of the space, giving the entire basement the indefinable air of a Ridley Scott movie. Piled tangles of ancient fixtures made inkblot shapes in the wan winter light from the high, narrow, and filth-opaqued windows at the back of the room. Ruth looked around, ducking her head to avoid being brained by a couple of low-flying pipes. The basement of the Ryerson Memorial Library was, like the library, in Ippisiqua, New York, and (again, like the library) of an 1890s vintage. In the case of the basement, this meant that it was dug, unfinished, into the rocky bank of the Hudson River. It was cold, damp, and dirty, infested with bats, squirrels, and God knew what else. For all of these reasons, the Library Gods had chosen to store their bound copies of old magazines and newspapers down here; hundredyear-old copies of the Hudson Eagle going to mold and dust alongside seventy years of National Geographic, proceedings of the State Legislature, random government documents, antique maps, and other exciting ephemera. They said we had to have them. They didn't say they had to be accessible. Or usable, Ruth thought, staring at the shelves of magazines stored against what had been the back basement wall of the original library building; half-smoothed rock evened in places with plugs of brick and (now crumbling) mortar. The ceiling was low here; the beams of the first floor supports just scant inches above her head. In the farthest corner, where ceiling and wall made a mad rush at each other and met in a non-Euclidean tangle, several volumes of Life magazine lay stacked in the middle of the floor, gathering more damp (if possible) than they would elsewhere. Ruth, a librarian to the roots of her soul, went over and picked them up. Yes, here was the space on the bottom shelf they'd come from, but what moron had pulled them out and left them on the floor? Ruth reached to put the books back and stopped. The light shifted, and suddenly there was sunlight spilling into the room where she stood. Hot summer sunlight in the dead of winter, from a direction that ought to be solid rock. Suddenly Ruth's heart was hammering and her mouth was dry. unbidden, rose up to remind her why.
And memory,
In memory it was always raining, although Ruth knew that May evening had been clear. Clear and cool, and the present dissolved and left her in what Ruth thought of as the last real moment of her life. Hand in hand and each carrying a flickering beeswax candle, Ruth and her elphen pyince, Rohannan Meliorfrom the Morning Lands, stood in a rail yard in Brooklyn, spinning the magic that would take Melior home-and take her with him. Melior started down the tracks, toward the tunnel at the end of them, and his hand burned like cold fire over hers. Melior, who had fallen out of his world into her own, and now was climbing back. Soon the Iron Road was steeper and the air was winter-chill. Ruth's head spun giddily, and each step was a lead-weighted effoil to defy
gravity. Her mouth tasted of rust, metal, and salt, and her eyes stung with sweat. The way was hard for one. Impossible for two? Melior would not leave her. Did she have the courage to leave him? would she, through inertia and moral cowardice, condemn the man she loved to a slow death in the World of Iron?
Or
No. Ruth knew she wasn't a heroine, but she had enough courage for this. She dropped the candle that bound herfate to his. And suddenly there was a moating void, chill blackness, and the sensation, more terrifying by far, of her fingers slipping from Melior's grasp. . . . And so Melior was gone, and Ruth was left behind, and the knowledge that Melior would come back for her if he could was balanced by the cold truth that he could never reach the World of Iron again. And she, she had thrown away her one chance to reach Chandrakar. But now here was a second chance.
Maybe.
There wouldn't be a third.
Ruth knew it in her bones. With trembling hands she tore at the hardbound volumes of Life 1920-1950. Hot summer sun played across her hands, light from a land where it was always summer. The half-remembered sensation of Magic tingled along her bones. Yes.
Here it was.
"Ruth!"
Yes.
Nic's voice, raised behind her in a horrified bellow.
A second chance. Never a third. to wriggle through the opening.
Ruth dropped to her belly and began
Darkness and sunlight, and the tang of the salt sea. A roaring, and a chill burning, and as vertigo tilted down to up and Ruth felt herself slide forward in the grip of no earthly gravity, cowardly sweet reason reasserted itself and yammered that there were far, far worse things than anomie. But it was far too late for a thirty-one-year-old librarian whose soul had been stolen to guard a magic sword out of Elphame. Ruth felt the grasp of fingers on her ankle slide free as she tumbled inexorably into magic. In Your Heart No Love Is True FLOIRE JAUSSERANDE OF the House of the Silver Silences, Warrior and Treasurekeeper, had been born and bred for war, and in the seventeen years of the warrior's lifetime which was all she had to measure time by, Jausserande had learned more than the casual observer might think about the rhythms and textures of waiting. She knew good waiting from bad waiting, the unbearable from the merely
boring, and, most subtle of all, the necessary from the entirely useless. This waiting felt like useless waiting. In the New Peace, Jausserande had no duties for her Line but to recover the Cup of Morning Shadows, hidden in the Vale of Stars. Dawnheart was the nearest castle to the Vale, and so she was here: had been since Floire Glorete had passed the Cupbearing to her, the oldest in Line Floire willing to live untouched that she might touch the Cup. She had been here to see Rohannan Lanval die and his death barge launched upon the river. She had been here to see Rohannan Melior return from the World of Iron a month later, bearing the Treasure he had been sent to recover and a mare's nest of allegations against their newfound High King: allegations he would not repeat to anyone with more political power than a middle daughter of a subordinate Line of a House now in eclipse. Would not repeat, and could not prove. Jausserande leaned her chin on her arms and gazed out over the battlements of the castle. The wind blew her shoulder-length silver hair against its confining golden fillet. Jausserande was tall and fair-haired, as all of Melior's House were, and her eyes were the hot jewel-violet of twilight over the Vale of Stars. Despite her youth she was a blooded warrior, a captain of cavalry. Jausserande's Ravens had led many a charge in Chandrakar's civil wars, where loyalties shifted like shadows in candlelight. Born in war, she had never known what it was to spend a summer other than in arming for war. Until now. Harvest Home began in just two weeks; one of the reasons Jausserande had chosen this windy perch was to evade the hordes of guests and visitors that filled Dawnheart nigh to bursting. Every reaped field for half a league was filled with pavilions, tents, and lodging carts, and even at this height the uneven music of the carpenters hammering together the booths for the Harvest Fair on the meadow below reached her ears. In a fortnight the Home would begin-just as the Twilight Court would convene at Citadel-but this year the games and gauds of neither Court nor Home would mask the maneuvering for advantage and alliance that was prelude to a winter's war. This year they had peace. And they would have peace, Jausserande realized with a frustrated uneasiness, even if everything Melior said about Eirdois Baligant of the House of the Vermilion Shadows was true and he could prove it at the Twilight Court. Jausserande shook her head sharply, refusing to follow that train of thought to any conclusion. She would leave the cloud-castle building to her strange cousin, and thank all the vague lucks and soldiers' gods that the House of the Silver Silences did not look to Line Rohannan,
but to the Regordane of Line Regordane. And Regordane would choose the next head of Line Rohannan, if Melior held to his mad fancies that the High King chosen by the barons after a century of war was a murderous lunatic who wished to see the land laid waste. But her cousin's sanity was not Jausserande's immediate problem. The Earl of Silver, the Regordane of sure of her Treasure before TWilight three months she had been frustrated reach the Vale of Stars and work the Cup into her hands, and now her time
Line Regordane, had bid her make Court convened. For the last in every attempt she had made to small spell that would deliver the was running out.
Tomorrow would be her last chance. And that was all very well, and no more than she had expected from a short life spent learning that luck could not be trusted and fortune was a myth, save for the fact that, like all the heaven-born, Floire Jausserande had her rightful inheritance of the elphensight that allowed her to look a little way into the most probable of all the possible futures. Not for her was her cousin's greater gift, that could show more futures than one, nor yet an Adept's pitiless Sight, that showed all the possible futures sharp and clear and allowed the sorcerer some chance to choose which of these futures would become the only reality. Jausserande could see only a little way, before the fog of "might be" closed in and left everything as mazy as it would be to one of the humans who followed the plow on Line Floire's demesne. But the little way that she could see did not contain anywhere within itself the recovery of Line Floire's Treasure, nor, indeed, anything other than a peculiar tangled suspicion of battle, murder, and sudden death. Which was ridiculous. They were at peace. The rulers of the Seven Houses of the Twilight-Silver, Vermilion, Saffron, Azure, Crystal, Indigo, and Emerald-and their vassal lords-Rohannan, Floire, Rivalen, Gauvain, Amarmonde, Eirdois, Calogrenant, and the dozen-something others-had sworn. They had all chosen Eirdois Baligant of the House of the Vermilion Shadows for the High King, and bound themselves with fearful oaths to support him and no other. The thin shouts of the laboring mud-born on the field below drifted up to her. Happy mud-born, to have no cares beyond the next full meal and a warm place to sleep, both provided by their elphen overlords. For a moment Jausserande almost wished she were human: finite, limited, untroubled by such dreams or visions as made even Jausserande's waking hours restless. The Morning Lords had sworn peace. And as that had been only a few seasons ago, and Baligant was not yet even crowned, it was a bit soon to be looking for treachery, in Jausserande's opinion. Thus, there could not be war from within. And Chandrakar was fortunate in its location among the Morning Lands: it lay between no two things of any strategic importance whatever, nor held any Gate that led so. Any invader of Chandrakar would do so for
what lay within it, not through it. And at the moment, Chandrakar was much too poor to tempt even the most whimsical empire builder. Thus, there would not be war from without. But there was going to be trouble from somewhere. And all Jausserande could do was wait. Knowing that waiting was the wrong thing to do, and knowing there was nothing else she could do. But if waiting perturbed Jausserande's mind, she was nearly unique in her ability to do nothing but wait. This was the height of the harvest; the grapes, the barley, the wheat, and the apples-all the produce of the Rohannan lands needed to be harvested, the herds thinned, preparation for winter made. And when the preparation was done, the Home would begin: the fair that had been the prelude for war since Jausserande's earliest memories, but which this year would bring peace instead. Delegates to the Twilight Court, Advocates to the High Court . . . and no war. Why, then, did her memories of the future hold the clash of steel? Jausserande shrugged and turned away. The battlements had brought her no peace, and so her frustrated ramblings brought her at last to a room that, no matter how overcrowded the castle became, would remain unencroached upon. The door swung inward before she had a chance to knock. "A small magic, but still impressive, do you not think, Jauss?" said the voice within. Jausserande shrugged and stepped through the door. Dawnheart was a castle built for war, without any large windows in its outer walls, and so the windows in this curtain-wall tower were narrow unglassed slits barely a handspan wide. The sun's rays struck through them for only a few brief minutes each day; for all the rest the sun fell at a slanting angle upon all the three-foot thickness of good white granite that formed Dawnheart's outer walls, spreading its light a little way along the stone and leaving the room itself in darkness. The room's occupant did not mind. It was always night here, in the small room to which the Lady Vuissane had withdrawn after her last battle; Rohannan Vuissane of the House of the Silver Silences, Adept and Scout of her brother's infantry. Like most of the elphenkind born during the wars, Jausserande had little training in the Great Art; enough to avoid ruining a spell, or becoming trapped in one, but that was all. Vuissane had been Adept of the Low Magic, with only the simplest tricks of fire and wind available to her from the High. The Low Magic was, so Vuissane had said, so nearly indistinguishable from common sense that it had been no burden to her to let it merge with her huntscraft and that with the ability to walk softly in another's footsteps to make her the most valuable of her brother's spies. Vuissane had been able to walk into an enemy camp and spy out its disposition down to the last barrel of ale on the sumpter's wagons, and
slip away as silently as she had come. But then, once the Lady Vuissane had been able to walk. "Come in-and sit down-and stop jittering-and tell me what is going on in the world." The door behind Jausserande closed with a thud. forward into the room.
Jausserande stepped
There were coal fires burning at each end of the small room, and the light they shed was further augmented by the illumination from two bronze candle trees, each as tall as a standing man. One stood at each end of the high carved bed that, save for a chair, two stools, and a low table covered in books, was the only furniture in the room. Lady Vuissane lay upon the bed, propped upright upon a mound of brightly-colored pillows. Her useless legs were stretched beneath a dyed fur coverlet, carefully bolstered with pillows to keep them straight. "Well, here's a surprise," Vuissane said. "Three months in Dawnheart and this your second visit. What marvels may attend upon this rare visitation, eh, Equitan?" The immense human in Rohannan livery stood impassively in the corner, saying nothing. Castle gossip said that he was as much jailer as servant; certainly Vuissane had tried many times to end her life when she saw what she had become. To lose the use of one's limbs was, alas, not unique in Chandrakar, in all the years of war. Even elphen magic could do little to palliate the pains of those who suffered maimings and worse. Only the far frontiers of the High Magic, where such regeneration could be purchased at the cost of lives, and the twisted labyrinth of the Wild Magic, where the price was even higher, offered repair, and there were many who wouldn't-or couldn't-pay the price demanded to be whole once more. But for the Adepts of High and Low Magic, there was not even that chimerical hope of renewal. Their years of study and sacrifice barred them by custom and oath from ever accepting another's magical help, and their training held that the powers they wielded were focused through the lens of the body And a broken body meant powers broken forever, beyond all hope of mending. Vuissane shared her brother's pale silver hair and cat-green eyes. Younger than he, she was still some years older than Jausserande, and where Melior's face showed the stamp of a wary kindness and acceptance of the folly of elphen-kind, Vuissane's fox-bright eyes and pain-grimmed mouth seemed to say that the worst her people could do was only what she expected. "Wine for the guest," Vuissane said, and Equitan went to fill his mistress' command. "Sit," she said, and Jausserande moved uneasily toward the stool indicated. The close heat of the room made Jausserande profoundly uncomfortable and if it disquieted her, how much more must it grate upon Vuissane,
who had been as free of wood and forest as any wild thing. Before the House of the Saffron Evenings' one unwise experiment with cannon had ended all her freedom. "Well?"
Vuissane said.
"Everything's going all wrong!" Jausserande burst out. She drew breath to say more, but at that moment Equitan returned and Vuissane held up her hand for silence. "Go outside and close the door," Vuissane told him. "As you can see," she said, making a bitter face, "I shall be well guarded in your absence. And you may serve us," she added to Jausserande, as Equitan set down the tray. Jausserande poured wine into both cups, wondering why she had come. There was little enough Vuissane could do for anyone, and her company was not exactly cheering. "But speak to me of the greater world," Vuissane said, taking ruthless control of the conversation. "How is my brother?" "He swears he still pines for the Ironworlder-Heruthane?-and that the High King lusts to kill us all." "Ruth, not Heruthane. is follow the law."
And Baligant need not kill, when all he need do
"That the Line which cannot produce its Treasure at the Kingmaking is tainted and banished? That would-" Jausserande's brow furrowed with thought. "Destroy twelve Lines, among them the ruling Lines of six of the Seven Houses of the Twilight: Regordane is the only ruling Line which does not ward a Treasure. And for that matter, who has the others now?" Jausserande had no idea; so many Treasurekeepers had died in the war. She concentrated on the immediate fact that Vuissane seemed to take Melior's nonsensical theory seriously. "It's nonsense," Jausserand said bluntly. langwhat would he gain?" "Maybe he's bored.
"Baligant's the High
But undoubtedly you're right, Floire Jausserande.
Baligant Baneful makes no designs. His honor is pure. already reclaimed the Cup from the Vale of Stars."
And you have
Jausserande flung herself to her feet with a hiss, her hand upon her dagger. "No?" Vuissane's smile was bittersweet. Jausserande sat down again, slowly. It would not do to let Vuissane bait her. "I do not have the Cup," Jausserande admitted reluctantly, although it was no secret. "But that is nothing to do with the High King! The roads are filled with bandits, and every wood and coppice holds some
bully who would rather pillage honest men than do honest work!" "It must be hard, when one has been a captain of hundreds, to meekly bow your head to some unblooded clerk not even of your own race," Vuissane said. It took Jausserande a moment to realize that she was not being agreed with. "If they dispute their rightful should be punished as such! If rule, they're certainly welcome Gates, or use them," she added, "Oh, do be reasonable, Jauss. them to go Gatewalking?"
overlords, then they are criminals and they prefer a kingdom where humans to look for one-if they can find the sneering.
Humans have no magic-how do you expect
If they have no magic, then they should do as they are told and like it, " Jausserande said stubbornly. Vuissane sighed. "Very well. Humans are all that you say they are, and it is their malice, not Baligant's, that has kept you from the Cup. And doubtless you, now being prepared, will achieve it on the morrow." Jausserande hung her head, and Vuissane regretted, if only a little, her biting tongue. It was true that Jausserande's sublime faith in her present virtue and future victory could wear down a sword blade's edge, but Jausserande was Cupbearer, and that was more important than her infuriating arrogance. Besides, if she lived long enough, she would learn that Life betrayed everyone in the end. That would be revenge enough, if Vuissane wanted any. "I don't know," Jausserande said in a low voice.
"I cannot See."
"You see well enough to find tomorrow's sunset," Vuissane pointed out, kindly enough for one whose own elphensight had been broken to meaninglessness. "Nothing I like," Jausserande said, and managed a wry smile. that makes any sense."
"Nothing
There was a scuffle at the door, and both women's heads turned toward it. "My lady is therein, churl, and do you not afford me entrance I shall prove your discourtesy upon your body!" The young voice was raised with cockerel outrage; furious with entitlement. Jausserande coughed. effort.
Vuissane held her countenance still with an
"Let him in, Equitan. I should so hate to replace you." Vuissane snapped her fingers and the door flew inward, revealing Equitan and his assailant. Gauvain Guiraut of the House of the Crystal Wind was Jausserande's
squire. He was young enough to have been too young for the battlefield, but like all the children in Chandrakar, Guiraut had been born into a land at war. He took three long steps into the room and flung himself at Jausserande's feet. His dagger-for Guiraut was not yet a knight, and thus could not bear a sword-grated lightly upon the tiles of the floor. "My lady!"
he announced, and Jausserande ruffled his pale hair.
"Guiraut." The boy darted a wary glance at the Lady Vuissane, whom everyone from the chief cook to the stable boys knew to be an Adept of undimmed and malevolent power. "My lady," he said again.
"All is prepared for our journey tomorrow.
A party of the Guard will ride with us to the edge of the Vale Road and wait there until our return." "You-" Jausserande said, and stopped. There was no reasonable reason she could give to forbid Guiraut to go, and he had done nothing to deserve so visible and humiliating a mark of her displeasure. "You've done well," she said at last. "There is a tisane I can brew to mend that other matter for you," Vuissane said. "But it will leave you with a dreadful headache. And if you ride tomorrow......... "I will have it," Jausserande said shortly, almost as if she still ordered her Ravens into battle. "I thank you." Vuissane looked from Jausserande to Guiraut. "I wish you fortune on the morrow," she said, in tones that dismissed Jausserande from - her presence. "You will come again," she added, and it was impossible to'tell if it was request or prophecy. Between the Darkness and the Light SICK. THE CAR. Jimmy- Aching fragmented memories blurred and danced, masking pain. Ruth. Her name was Ruth, and And what was she doing here? There was no car. That had been fourteen years ago. Ruth opened her eyes, and felt a sliding disorientation in her stomach as her preconceptions rearranged themselves. This was none of the places she had expected to wake up in. Half an inch from the end of her nose, an iridescent beetle climbed a stalk of green glowing grass. The hot green scent was strong in Ruth's nostrils, and sunlight made rainbows in her eyelashes. She moved her tongue experimentally. There was earth in her mouth. Not earth. Ruth, ever scrupulous, made the last connection as memory fell into place. Not earth. Not Earth. Elphame. She tried to move, and couldn't. Laggardly sensory information, checking in from the jumbled array of her body, announced that her legs were pinned under a crushing weight.
Ruth kicked. And struggled free, panting, from beneath the prone body of Nicodemus Brightlaw. She got to her knees, then to her feet, and stood there, trembling. For a moment the sight of him blotted out everything else. She was baffled; she was indignant; she was jealous at the thought of having to share her adventure; she was glad to have someone familiar with her. She wondered what the hell he was doing here. By a number of the cardinal rules of magic, he shouldn't have been able to follow her through at all. Never mind that now. Ruth brushed her long light-brown hair back out of her face. She'd lost one of her thick winter gloves going through the Second File to Elfland and this wasn't really the weather for them anyway. She pulled off the other glove and, lacking pockets, dropped it on what Ruth, a stickler for accuracy, felt one must really call the greensward. Next, she undid the clasps at the neck of the dull green wool Inverness cloak she wore. The cloak joined the scarf and glove on the ground. The summer sun, no matter how untimely, was glorious. Belatedly, Ruth realized she ought to see if Nic was all right, but just as the thought came to her, he rolled over onto his back. He must have left his trench coat and gloves in his office back in the library; he was dressed as always in a conservative wool fade-to-black suit and forgettable silk tie. The tie was askew; the white oxford-cloth shirt was streakity gray with Second File dust. He did not groan and mutter his way into wakefulness. His eyes came open, their stare as sudden and fixed as an awakening vampire's. There was a moment of nerve-stretching stillness. Then the muscles of his face came into play, assuming an expression, Ruth suddenly knew, that was both false and practiced. There was a moment while she watched him evaluate the impossible: the noonday sun, the faery glade. Ruth, watching him watch the world, heard birdsong somewhere behind her and the murmurous plash of a running stream. Her skin prickled stickily beneath the baby-blue vintage cashmere twin set and wool Black Watch plaid kilt she wore. Her heart fluttered with emotions too complex to be named. "Ah." Nic seemed to be trying out his voice. He arched his back and caught sight of Ruth, and got to his feet as it was occurring to Ruth that it might actually have been better to ditch her companion and take her chances on her own. "Ruth," said Nic Brightlaw, and paused. As if she were observing an actor preparing to go on stage, Ruth watched Nic armor himself in amiable vagueness, and the sight unnerved her far more than naked threat might. He smiled.
"Ah, any idea where we are?"
"I don't know if you're going to believe this," Ruth began in careful tones. There was a large-animal-sized crashing through the wood. "Damn," Nic said conversationally. Without seeming to hurry he crossed the clearing toward Ruth, scooped up her scarf and cloak from the ground, and grabbed Ruth herself with his free arm. Her squeak of surprised protest was cut short when he thrust her cloak at her; blinded by winter-weight wool she followed where he dragged her. "Down. Don't move," Nic said softly in her ear. Ruth sank to hands and knees in the second-growth scrub that ringed the clearing, willing for the moment to do what he said. But there was no command that could keep her from looking. She saw something large and white moving through the wood at the other side. Saw it turn, in her speculation, from bear, to deer, toMagic. The unicorn was a little larger than a white-tailed deer; horse-shaped (as much as anything) with a mane that stood on end like a white silk Mohawk and a tufted lionish tail that it lashed as if it were a cat about to be bathed. Its hooves were pink and cloven. And its horn, set with taxonomic irregularity in the center of its forehead, was spiral pearl and white gold, opal-shot. Ruth made a sound in the back of her throat. hard between her shoulder blades.
Nic's hand pressed down
The unicorn stopped in the middle of the clearing, head up, pink nostrils flaring. Its head swung from side to side, questing. It found Ruth's glove, lying on the ground where she'd dropped it. Ruth heard Nic draw breath in a frustrated hiss. The unicorn nuzzled the glove, pawed at it, and finally picked it up in its teeth and shook it, giving itself a momentary ludicrous resemblance to a terrier. It dropped the glove and bugled plaintively. It's looking for me. Ruth knew this with the certainty of a suspension of disbelief that had strained to its limits and then snapped. It's lookingfor me. She started to get up. Ruth struggled.
Nic shoved her down.
The unicorn cried out once more, then bounded away.
"Let me go!" Ruth demanded in a furious undertone. Nic released her, and she struggled to her feet, but the unicorn was gone. "Don't you ever grab me like that again!" "That was a unicorn," Nic said in a flat voice. Ruth stared in the direction it had gone, longing superseding all other emotions. "The silken-swift she quoted from some long-ago fantasy.
"The gloriously fair . . . " "Ruth, we have to talk," Nic Brightlaw said, in a voice that was not quite steady. Ruth wadded the cloak she carried into a more practical bundle and tied it up with the scarf. Ignoring Nic, she walked back out into the clearing. The croquet-course smoothness of the grass was scarred by the unicorn's hooves, and Ruth, who should have been numb with shock, found herself thinking clearly for the first time since she could remember. Forget the question of how she and Nic had gotten here; those answers could be found later. Meanwhile, they were here. What exactly had Melior told her about his world? Ruth furrowed her brow, racking memory. Melior's land, Chandrakar, had just achieved generation of civil war. Chandrakar was one which Ruth vaguely construed to be something collection of little Graustarkian kingdoms. Iron Road which led to the World of Iron or, it, Earth.
a shaky peace after a of the Morning Lands, on the order of a All were connected by the as its inhabitants called
She knew she wasn't on Earth right now, but that didn't necessarily mean, Ruth realized, that she was in Chandrakar-Melior's conversations had implied that there were a number of mail stops between his world and hers. So where was she? And how did she get to where Melior was, without falling back to Earth? How, in fact, did she get anywhere at all from here? Especially since the people she met here were likely to be both strange and overexcitable, as well as living in universal ignorance of the fact that she, Ruth Marlowe, was the heroine of the story. Added to which, she didn't know what enemies Melior had made lately, let alone how to recognize them if she met them. Ruth gazed around the clearing, excitement cooling slowly toward puzzlement, when there were more sounds from the woods. She turned hopefully in the direction the unicorn had gone. It was back. But it wasn't alone. "Get back," Nic said, at a volume meant only for her to hear. Ruth edged behind him, trying to watch two fronts at once. On her left hand, the unicorn sprang and skittered at the edge of the glade, its dark blue gaze fixed unwaveringly on Ruth, but unwilling to approach any closer. There were five men. Three on foot, two on horses, dressed in a mock-medieval style straight out of Maxfield Parrish. The ones on foot carried nets and spears. Ruth was painfully aware of her bare knees and sensible shoes. "A maid!" one of the riders exclaimed, jerking a thumb at the unicorn in clarification. His companion laughed.
"Come here, pretty maidey, we won't hurt thee," the one who had spoken coaxed uconvincingly. Ruth looked at the unicorn. It flung its head up and down in an agony of indecision, frantic to flee but obviously not quite able to bring itself to. "Come, maidey; a gold ring for a few moments' work." Ruth took a step toward the unicorn. It crouched on its haunches, poised to run as soon as Ruth had reached it. She sensed as much as saw the riders shift their weight; to run her down; to run it down. "Gentlemen," Nic began. "Get her now; talk later."
The second rider spoke.
"Run!" Ruth shrieked at the unicorn, and threw her bundled cloak at it with all her might. The unicorn reared and fled. Ruth turned and ran at right angles to its path, into the brush where-please, God-a horse couldn't follow. But she was leaving Nic behind. Terror and self-interest screamed at her to keep running; unwillingly Ruth stopped and looked back. She saw a flash of metal. Nic had one of the spears in his hand and one of the footmen was on the ground. As she watched, the spear began to spin in Nic's hand-like an airplane propeller but faster, and glinting with that deadly gleam of metal. Quarterstaff, Ruth realized in wonder. quarterstaff. The others realized it, too. him.
He's using the spear as a
They spread out, trying to surround
Ruth watched, knowing she was their next target once Nic was down, dry sickness in her throat as she realized this was not a dream, not a hoax, not a special effect. The blood and broken bones would be real. There still back, crack
was a scream, following a movement that Ruth, watching closely, hadn't been alert enough to see. One of the footmen staggered clutching his arm. There was a second blow, a baseball-sharp of wood on bone. The wounded man went down.
The second footman closed, jabbing with his spear in a fashion even Ruth recognized as amateurish. The horsemen spread and circled, but one of the cardinal tenets of war is that a man on horseback is at a disadvantage against the close work of a man on foot. Ruth saw the flash of teeth and realized that Nic was smiling. Thenagain she did not see the actual moment of the move-he was in beneath the spearman's guard. She saw the flicker of the falling spear, and then Nic was lying on the ground, one leg raised, and the ex-spearman was flying ludicrously and theatrically through the air.
Nic bounded to his feet again. One of the horsemen rode forward, leaning sideways out of the saddle. Nic moved, not fast enough, and went down. They were both on him now, blocking his attempt to rise with their horses' bodies. And Ruth, in despair, knowing this could not end other than badly, was running through the brush toward Nic. "Stop it- Stop- Leave him alone!" She'd had to sunlight she twisted; and sword in his
take her eyes off them to run; as she burst out into clear could see that Nic was on the ground, lying still and that one of the horsemen was afoot, and stood with a naked hand.
"Leave him alone!" muster.
Ruth screamed with all the volume she could
Her voice stuck and cracked, and her throat felt raw. very still, eyes closed.
Nic was lying
"I'll do what you want," Ruth said in a small voice. "No point to it now," one of the riders said. probably halfway to the borders."
"The losel beast's
The other rider studied Ruth. His eyes were mismatched; pied; one blue, the other a brown so pale it was almost amber. His skin was a coarse, leathery, outdoor brown, deep-furrowed about the mouth. And he was regarding her, Ruth realized with a sick chill, the way she was used to regarding a package of pork chops at the supermarket: was this worth the trouble? He turned his head to speak to his companion, confident she wouldn't run. And where, exactly, could she go, anyway? Ruth knelt by Nic's side, not knowing what else to do. He wasn't dead, and the relief of knowing that was so great she nearly wept. But he was hurt-how badly Ruth couldn't tell, but the skin was broken and the blood was a shocking scarlet against Nic's blond hair. Gingerly she touched the side of his head. She got blood all over her hand and achieved no other particular result. Ruth gulped back nausea. Head wounds bleed a lot. It doesn't mean anything, Ruth told herself desperately. He could still be fine. "We've two men dead and nowt to show for it." A conversation she ought to have been paying more attention to broke into Ruth's consciousness at last. "Take the gel. nail head."
Have the beast at least; there's a round thaler on the
The local dialect seemed to be Monty Python Northumbrian, Ruth noticed with shocky indignation. And it looked like they'd kill the unicorn after all. All her brave mad gesture of defiance had done was get Nic
hurt, maybe even killed. again.
Ruth blinked back tears and looked back down
Nic's eyes were open. His gaze held hers. And slowly, making sure she saw, he moved his hand down toward his belt. She didn't know how she could have missed it before. What had to be the handle-the butt-of a gun nestled, small and brown and deadly, in a flat leather holster tucked inside Nic's waistband. The jacket had covered it. What kind of library directorpacks a piece? the universe. But she reached for the gun.
Ruth silently demanded of
"Come on now, maidey; fair is fair. We'll even give you a pfennig or two of the horn price to holpen you on your way-aye, and feed you, too. Come now, maidey, don't be shy. fair, too."
Leave the jarl for wolf-bait; that's
Ruth, staring up at the horseman, felt the gun butt hard under her hand. She curled her fingers around it and the gun slid into her hand as if it belonged there. She pulled; it resisted for a moment then came free of the holster. Nic nodded ever so slightly. Ruth stood up and backed away. "I want you both to go away now. I said I'd help you, but you hurt my friend and you were going to leave him here to die. I've changed my mind. Go away." As speeches of heroic defiance went, it wasn't much. Pied-eyes laughed and growled something to his companion that Ruth felt fortunate not to be able to hear. He flicked his reins at his horse and moved forward at a walk, obviously intending to make a game of running her down. I am tired of being moved here and there and treated like a china doll as if what I want doesn't matter! Sudden alchemical fury-witch-fire struck alight by lucifer matches-rinsed through Ruth's veins like a drug. She brought the gun up threateningly in hands that shook, even though she hardly knew where she pointed it. The gunshot was loud and flat; deafening, and apparently all the gun's own idea. She nearly dropped the little pistol in surprise. But surprised as Ruth was, she was not nearly as surprised as the hunters' horses. They didn't stop to rear and whinny; they simply sought the straightest path away from the noise and took it, running flat-out and heads down. Within moments they were lost to sight, then to sound. She was lucky, Ruth supposed, that their riders had stayed on and not remained behind to make trouble. Later she would Colt "Bulldog"; for pulling the ditch the noisy
discover that what she had fired was a double action a .38-caliber revolver that would cock and fire just trigger. Now she only wanted to find some place to dangerous thing.
"Ruth, do me a favor .
. . point that thing somewhere else."
Ruth looked back at Nic, and realized she was pointing the gun right at him. Nauseated reaction replaced the hot bright anger of a moment before. Carefully she placed the gun on the ground and stepped back from it. "Good girl.
Now come over here, and let's see how hard they hit me."
His voice sounded frayed around the edges, but not nearly as frightened or angry as he had a right to be. Correction: as a normal person had a right to be. Her sweater was ruined, Ruth thought with gloomy relish a few minutes later, but at least Nic was sitting up now. Beads of perspiration stood out all over his face, and his mouth was very set, but he was halfway to his feet and had assured her he was fine. "I've been hit that hard before," he said wryly, "but usually with a chair. Never mind now. One question, Ruth, and I'd like a straight answer: do you know where we are?" She met his eyes. Their gazes crossed like a romantic cliche with nothing of sex in it; only knowing. Knowing that Nicodemus Brightlaw, boy library director, was something from which all human contradiction had been carefully edited away, leaving behind something powerful and focused . . . and perhaps not quite human any more. She wondered what he saw when he looked at her. "No," said Ruth. "I don't know where we are. Would it help at all if I said I think I know how we got here, and where we ought to be, but not how to get there?" "You forgot to say that it's a very long story," Nic added. as if it hurt, which it very likely did.
He smiled
"Well, it is that," Ruth admitted. "Fine. You can tell me while I recuperate. C'mon. I think I heard water over that way. Help me up. You can catch me when I fall over." "Sure," Ruth said, relieved, all things considered, to be let off so easily. "And, Ruth?
Get the gun.
We're going to need it."
Ruth went back to where she had laid it down and gingerly picked up the gun. She slid it carefully into the pocket of her skirt, hoping it wouldn't go off and shoot her in the foot. Or worse. Then she went to see if the man that Nic had thrown was all right. Part of her knew already what she was going to see. Hadn't Pied-eyes said Nic had killed two of their own? But part of her hoped it wasn't true. It was. The man who lay on the emerald greensward stared sightlessly into the sun, mouth agape. His neck was broken. Ruth turned away. Nic had killed him.
Nic had killed both of them.
And it didn't matter
whether they were in Elfland or Ippisiqua, it was still murder. She turned back to where Nic sat.
He was looking at her.
"Yes, they're dead," he said, as if she'd spoken. "I intended to kill them, I used deadly force, and they died. Once I'd seen the unicorn, I didn't think they'd recognize the threat of a gun. Shaving the odds until they ran was the only other choice." His voice was neutral, as if he were discussing the weather. "You could at least be sorry about it," Ruth said weakly. "I'm not sorry about it," Nic said flatly. "I didn't care whether they killed the unicorn or not, but when you scared it away, they were set to ride both of us down. That isn't the behavior of the rule of law." "So you killed them." like an accusation.
Ruth hadn't intended for it to sound so much
"defended the . . . personal integrity . . . of both of us," Nic answered mildly. "If you didn't like it, don't use me as a playing piece next time." He shrugged. Where anger and outrage-some honest human feelings-should have been, Ruth only felt sick blankness; the northless spinning of a moral compass. She hadn't wanted to be hurt. Nic had saved her. To do that he'd had to kill two men. Was the fair market value of her safety too high? "Who .
. . are you, actually?"
Ruth said at last.
Nic smiled without joy. "The one who survived," he said. He began the painful process of getting to his feet, and Ruth, without further inward consultation, rushed to help him. Bad Blood and Risky Business "I am sorry, Baron Rohannan."
The speaker's voice was regretful.
"Are you certain?" He could not keep himself from asking, though Melior knew that Gislaine No-House-once, long ago, Rivalen Gislaine of Line Rivalen, of the House of the Saffron Evenings-would have made sure. Rohannan Melior looked without seeing about the solar of Dawnheart. There had been peace in the land for long enough that the windows' bronze-bound wooden shutters had been replaced with airy winged glass shapes that filled the room above the Great Hall with alltumn daylight-the room where rents and tithes were gathered and fee service was ordained, where one could have a private word or spy upon one's nobles with equal facility. His father's place-his, now that Rohannan Lanval was dead. And he had not even been here to lay the last-fruits upon his father's barge for its unaccompanied journey to the sea. . . .
Gislaine sighed, bringing Melior back to the here and now. "I am as certain as may be, my lord. Through all the wide Border, from Counterpane to Amalur-there is no passage to the World of Iron." He picked up the jeweled wine cup before him and stared into it as if hoping to find another truth there. Involuntarily Melior looked to where the Treasuresword hung upon the wall of his solar. The enormous jeweled counterweight of the pommel glowed with more than the pale autumn sunlight that touched the stones of Dawnheart with gold. Ruth Marlowe's soul, wizard-bound into the Sword of Maiden's Tears, kept it balanced only precariously in Melior's world. At any moment the sword might slip free and back to its other self; to Ruth Marlowe in the World of Iron. If only things were that easy.
If only that were true.
The Sword of Maiden's Tears had fallen from Chandrakar into the World of Iron; fell because it was bound to the human soul of an Ironworlder: Ruth Marlowe. Her soul stretched between her body and the Sword; a bond unbreakable till her death. A wizard-forged bond. A bond whose history could be resurrected, made visible for all to see. A bond whose forging might even implicate Baligant, or one of his favorites. There were only two problems-or three, or half a dozen-with putting this plan into action. "I do not know what else to try," Gislaine admitted. "As you know, my business lies along that border; my traffick in those things the Last World makes that the Morning Lands do not. Passage across the Border is an easy thing, do you merely know the trick of it." "Until now?"
Melior asked.
Gislaine nodded sadly.
The moment Melior had reached Dawnheart's walls, he had sent a proxy back down the Iron Road, charged with a message that he prayed Ruth would believe and heed; a proxy mounted on a milk-white stallion, leading a blood-bay mare, and loaded down with encouraging gifts and suitable clothes for Melior's Lady, Ruth of the World of Iron. He returned within a fortnight, to tell the story Gislaine was telling now; the story Melior had heard from Adepts of the High and the Low Magic; the most powerful whose service Melior could command. The way to the World of Iron was closed. Gislaine had been his last hope-a hope that one whose trade lay along the Border could succeed where Melior's own vassals could not. "If there is nothing more," Gislaine said delicately, rising to his feet. It was only a boyhood friendship, no longer acknowledged, that had brought him to Melior's aid at all, for Gislaine had lost more in the war than most. And now he wished to be gone from Chandrakar again, and Melior could
not find it in his heart to keep him. Melior stood as well. "I thank you for all you have done, friend Gislaine-" "Even though there was no issue?" Gislaine's voice was quietly mocking. "Well, and that is the way of the world in these dark times. Keep well, Baron Rohannan." He turned and strode from the solar, a tall and slender figure dressed in a forester's dark leathers, both older and younger than his years. Melior stared into the fire, barely hearing the door close. It had all been for nothing. Two interminable months since he had walked the Iron Road-away from Ruth-and come home to find his father dead, himself the head of his Line, and the situation more tangled than it had been when he left. Two months. And how many months and years in the World of Iron, where time sped giddily and lovers were mortal? How long until Time wore Ruth away at last and his only link to his lady would be her soul burning brightly in the Sword of Maiden's Tears? How could the Iron Road be closed; the World of Iron barred to them? It was madness. He had to believe what Gislaine and all the others had told him, and it was still idiocy. You could not close the way to the World of Iron. It lay at the bottom of the Nine Worlds; it was the place where all the roads of all the Morning Lands led to. A trap for the unwary, a snare for the careless, a dark eidolon that drew all light and life and magic into it, ever greedy. Sorcerers and morthworkers had been trying to seal the doors into it, for safety's sake, for years. Lifetimes. And now that someone actually wished to go there, the way to the World of Iron was sealed. Ruth would have seen the humor in that. Ruth, who more than his love, his heartsease, was the puzzle piece he could show to the TWilight Court that would prove the Treasures had been tampered with. As always, his thoughts circled back around to that central problemof proving what was now mere belief: that Eirdois Baligant, their High King-Elect, meant to compass the destruction of all the Seven Houses of the Twilight. The lady Ruth was his proof, trapped in the World of Iron, out of reach. Or-Melior steeled himself to admit the worst-dead. He put his head in his hands. I cannot prove Lord Baligant's fell intentions without her. I can write to the others and tell them my fears, not that it will matter. They know the date of the Kingmaking as well as I; no doubt they huny even now to find-Ar retrieve-their Treasures. We have all grown untrusting through the years. . . . Untrusting or not, he must try to tell his truth. But there was no point in asking the others to come to hear him unless he could produce
his lady Ruth in proof of his accusations. Ruth, lost beyond the power of elphen magic to retrieve-but not beyond the power of magic. He needed a wizard. A very powerful wizard. Melior roused himself. There was one last hope. It was nearly as dangerous as Baligant himself, but it was the only thing left for Melior to try. He pulled inkstand and vellum toward himself and began to write. Cold Steel and Loaded Pistols THE BROOK WAS right out of a storybook, or one of those slices of English countryside now found only in dreams. It was about three feet wide and not more than a foot deep where they were, and mossy grassy verges overhung it. Its course was starred with large round boulders green with algae, but the water was clean and fast-running over a bed of colored stones. The sight of the clear purling water made Ruth suddenly aware of how thirsty she was. She helped Nic sit down against the hole of a large tree on the clover and knelt beside him, then looked around for something to serve as a cup. There wasn't anything, unless she used her shoe. And questions of delicacy aside, it wouldn't be any good to walk in afterward. She knelt beside the stream and scooped up several handfuls of the water, drinking and washing her face. The water tasted wonderful, and even the specter of cholera, typhus, and dysentery didn't slow her down much. If they even had them here. Oh, God, she knew nothing at all about this mystic fun house that she and the mysterious Nic Brightlaw were trapped in. Was she really any closer to Melior? And did it actually matter? Maybe he'd written her off and settled down with a nice elf Valley Girl. "Help me get my jacket off," Nic said, breaking into her thoughts. "It's ruined anyway. You're going to have to make a bandage out of my shirt, or I'll be leaving a blood trail a blind man could follow." "If he was you," Ruth muttered, moving forward to help. "Or someone who-ow! Let that be a lesson to you, Miss Marlowe, never ask strangers to share their toys; they won't play nicely." Ruth eased the jacket off Nic's brawlly shoulders. It was heavy, but appeared to contain only the normal mundane male impedimenta of wallet, checkbook, notepad, pens. . . . His glasses were there, thin glass lenses cracked across. All useless here, as Melior's possessions had been in the World of Iron. Their positions were reversed now-at least Ruth hoped so. Melior was safe and in his own place, and she was somewhere outlandish, hoping for the kindness of a passing stranger.
Only the last strangers they'd seen hadn't been very nice. Nic dragged the useless tie from around his neck and dropped it on Ruth's knee. "Here," he said.
"You might want to tie somebody up with it."
"Wrong movie." Ruth carefully rolled the tie into a ball and set it aside. Nic leaned back against the tree with his eyes closed, unbuttoning his shirt. Blood had dripped down his neck and face and soaked the collar and neck of the shirt. He looked like a bad special effect in a splattermovie. "It comes and goes," he said without opening his eyes. "I only hope the next outtakes from Lord of the Rings we meet are more inclined to be reasonable." "It was my fault," Ruth said miserably. "If I hadn't-" "To hell with 'if." 'If will kill you," Nic enunciated, very distinctly. Ruth shut up. "Now, if you can just help me get this off, you can soak it in the stream and see what we can do to make me less a sight to frighten children with." Ruth plunged the shirt into the river as if she were drowning delinquent borrowers. Blood made theatrical swirls in the rippling current, leaving behind only pale pink stains in the oxford-cloth button-down shirt from Earth. She came back to Nic holding the sopping mass in two hands. The undershirt he wore did little to conceal the long bruises from the attacker's weapons that barred his shoulders, angry red welts darkening slowly to purple. She knelt carefully beside him and began dabbing blood off his face and neck with her makeshift sponge. "Arrgh," Nic said on a rueful sigh. "I should know better than to do things like this at my age." He took the shirt away from her and pressed it gently against the back of his head, closing his eyes. Ruth glanced away. The summer sun filtered in long gold bars through the leaf canopy. The brook's song was a rhythmic noise in the background, and hesitant birdsong began again around them. As her eyes sharpened, Ruth could see flowers everywhere; tiny ones in the moss-covered bank; bolder ones peering out in hot summer hues from the gorse. As she stared, a butterfly in violent purple bumbled through the air and vanished in the leaf canopy. All of it might be as mundane as a National Geographic special or as strange as The Twilight Zone. Ruth didn't have enough experience with even normal Earth-type flora and fauna to know. Except, of course, for the odd unicorn or so. And what if this was as far into the Morning Lands as she was ever going to get-stuck playing Girl Medievalist in some place that both wasn't home and didn't have Melior?
And not only her.
There was Nic to consider.
"Do you think you're going to be all right?" voice to steadiness.
Ruth asked, forcing her
"Urn, well, no, actually," Nic said apologetically. His eyes were closed, and his voice was slightly muffled by the mass of wet cloth. "I'm going to have one hell of a headache. again?"
Could you soak this
Ruth went back to the stream-only a step and a half, really, Nic's feet were almost in it-and soaked the shirt again, as requested. So this was Elfland. And here she was, Ruth Marlowe, stuck here, like a mirror, for reflection. Reflecting on how she, no matter where she was, was caught betwixt and between. Not alive, not really, and no chance of a life until she gave up hope of Melior. Unless-until-she did, there was not only a glass ceiling between her and the rest of the world, but glass walls and a glass floor as well. Glass coffin, in which this new improved Snow White slept on, with her awakening only a dream. What am I going to do? What am I going to do? The idiot plaint circled round and round in her mind. Here in this strange place, cut off from everything familiar, she had no idea what she ought to think or feel, and one course of action began to seem just as reasonable as another. God, you're morbid, Ruth chided herself. The bleak thoughts lifted themselves to flight, and, like vultures, circled only to return. Later, Ruth told them firmly. She turned, wet shirt in her hands. knife.
And froze when she saw the
It was only a little knife. About as long as her thumb, all in all, with a cheerful red plastic case with a white cross on it. A penknife. Nic brandished it. "Unless, of course, you'd like to tear my shirt into strips with your teeth?" he said politely. It was with a certain effort that Ruth refrained from simply tipping the sopping shirt into his lap. She took the knife, and discovered that a wet, well made cotton shirt resists retailoring with an inch-and-a-half blade. Eventually she whacked enough of it apart to make a pad for the back of his head, and used the despised silk red tie to bind it on with. The finished result was rather festive and piratical. "Better," Nic said when she was finished. Moving carefully, he maneuvered himself to the edge of the stream, washed his face, and drank. Then he sat up again and held out his hand. "The gun."
Wordlessly Ruth dug it out of her skirt pocket and handed it to him. He inspected it closely and slid it back into its concealed holster, then leaned back against the tree. "Conventional wisdom says that, lost in enemy country, we should make tracks for our extraction point or at least find shelter for the night. But before we do that, I'd kind of like to hear your life story, Miss Marlowe," Nic said with elaborate casualness. "Me?"
said Ruth, staring at him with wide blue eyes.
"Let me put it this way: I'd just gotten the alarm reset when it started going crazy all over again, so I cut the power and went looking for what caused it. When I got to the Second File, I found you staring down the throat of a genuine Spielberg special effect and not looking very upset about it. The next thing I know, we're here in an MGM remake of Robin Hood, and you don't seem too surprised by that either. "So I think I'm entitled to an explanation-at least before you start defending any more unicorns." Ruth winced. But if he were as right as common sense indicated, why was it so annoying? She took a deep breath and tried to feel cooperative. "Okay. In twenty words or less the story goes like this: about two years ago in New York, I rescued an elf who'd gotten lost on Earth. They call it the World of Iron," she added, reluctant to come to the point. "He was looking for a lost sword. My friends and I helped him find it." This was the stupidest story she'd ever heard, Ruth realized, and she'd been there. "And?"
Nic prompted.
Ruth closed her lips on the rest. He'd laugh, and then she'd have to kill him, and she didn't have the energy for it just now. "So then he found the Sword and went home. Or at least went away. End of story." "Except that there seems to be a mouse hole to Elfland in the basement of the Ryerson Memorial Library," Nic pointed out. And Penny and Katy must still be there looking for them, Ruth realized. What a dreadful Christmas present. She ought to be horrified or something, but thinking about them only made Ruth tired. Two more people whose lives she'd ruined, just by being alive. She closed her eyes. Her eyes flew open again a moment later as Nic flicked water at her.
"Don't spend so much of your time on vain regrets, Miss Marlowe; nobody ever appreciates it. You haven't told me half the story, but it'll do for now," Nic said. "But you don't think this is the world your traveling elf-errant came from?" "I don't know," Ruth said, conscious only of a vast, dragging weariness. "He said there were a lot of, urn, lands on the High Road to Chandrakar." And you're remarkably unsurprised to be here, too, Nicodemus Brightlaw, to coin an observation. Id say you aren't what you appear to be either, but I'm not quite certain what you do appear to be. A twig cracked, sharply, somewhere nearby. Nic sprang to his feet, reeled, swore, and grabbed at the tree. When Ruth started to get up, he waved a minatory hand at her. "Stay there," he said through gritted teeth. "I'm going to use you for bait." Still holding one-handed to the tree for support, he slipped around it, hidden. Ruth sank back into a sitting position. moving through the brush.
There was a sound of something
I could really, really, get to dislike that man, Ruth thought, holding very still. Was it the hunters coming back? Nic had killed the two footmen and she'd run the horses off. Maybe Pied-eyes wanted revenge. There was a glint of sunlight on metal as Nic drew the little gun. Now Ruth could hear the direction of the sounds clearly. She swore she would not look as they came closer, but at the last moment nerve and resolve both broke, and she turned. The unicorn stepped through the stream and laid its head in her lap. Fancies and Goodnights FLOIRE JAUSSERANDE OF the House of the Silver Silences, Cupbearer and once Captain of Jausserande's Ravens, sat in the small elegant tower room that custom and courtesy appointed to the lady-cousin of the Master of Dawnheart whenever she should choose to visit there. She wore a loose short tunic over wide ankle-gathered trousers tucked into soft short velvet boots, every item shades of the same violet as her eyes. The tunic and trews were hand-painted in eye-teasing variations-light to dark and light again-as if all the world were purple and she a Scout who needed to hide in it. She wished. Though she could see the sun was setting through the room's wide windows, and fire and candles alike stood waiting, she did not call for light. Before her on the table were a battered tin cup and a squat bottle of violet glass with Vuissane's seal pressed into the wax at the stopper. The bottle held the draught that Jausserande had asked the Lady Vuissane for; the draught that sharpened the kenning of the world-leys. Equitan had brought it just a few moments before.
Jausserande fidgeted in her chair, sick of her own company but unwilling to seek the company of others. Once again, unwillingly, like telling over an old scar, she picked up the cup on the table before her. It was a footed cup, of rough workmanship, such as was turned out in marketplace by the dozen for the use of serfs and soldiers. Crudely ed of disks and triangles of rough-soldered tin, it was already pewter with tarnish and age. Jausserande turned it in her hands. The mock he tainaiste-Cup, worthless except for the simple spell laid on it: to show the presence of the true Cup and, being thrust into shadow, bringing the true Cup visible. But it couldn't do it from here. It could only do it in the Vale of Stars, the place where the Cup of Morning Shadows was hidden, and only on the second day of the full moon, at moonrise. Conditions finicking enough to satisfy any Adept, set around the Cup like wards to assure that it was not taken lightly from its resting place in the Vale of Stars. A place less than a day's ride from here, that Jausserande had not reached in three moons full of days. Almost as if someone prevented her. Jausserande shook her head angrily, banishing fancy. Oh, for her lance and bow-for a good warhorse beneath her and her Ravens around her! They had never been beaten, never left one of their own in enemy hands, and the tales of their prowess had made fine songs for the fireside at the day's end. But no one wanted to sing those songs now. And the Ravens were gone; dispersed to home and fireside, to marriage. Miralh even had a child, and another on the way, and no time for retelling old glories with her former captain. And in the end, they hadn't even won the war.
They'd just .
. .
stopped. And now she was supposed to bend the knee to Baligant NoHouse when he set his clerkly arse in the High Seat, with that white ferret Hermonicet beside him, gloating over the way she'd been dangled like a gobbet of meat over a kennel of starving dogs and then flung to the noisiest. It was beyond Jausserande's understanding. She tilted the tainaisteCup in her hands, so that the last rays of sunset ran round its rim like wine. All she had to do was reach the Vale of Stars with it by tomorrow's sunset, and it would call the other Cup forth. And Line Floire, Cupbearers, would have that which it must bring to the Kingmaking-or be banished, down to the smallest babe, beyond the borders of Chandrakar. Jausserande returned the cup to the table with a snort. Melior swore that Baligant No-House was trying to gather all the Treasures to himself and then declare their erstwhile guardians attainted. She'd like to think he was. Seven, eight, ten Lines-half the Houses of Twilight-try to strip them of everything they held and drive them out of the land and there'd be a fight. There'd be war.
Whereas, as seemed more likely, if Baligant Baneful's plot existed only in her cousin's mind, the others would present their Treasures on the day of the lungmaking, and only Line Floire would come empty-handed. And only Line Floire would be driven away. Everything depended on her. In the war Jausserande had been a warrior, not a planner of high strategy. And though she might-by right of birth and of what she heldclaim a seat at the councils of her House, Jausserande had no interest in endless weary talk of marriages and dowries, taxes and teines, of who to send as Advocate to the High Court and who to send as Speaker to the Twilight Court. And while her sister, who had been Cupbearer before her and was now head of Line Floire, would willingly advise her, even in wartime Glorete had been too prudent for Jausserande's taste. It was Jausserande's task alone. She would get the Cup of Morning Shadows tomorrow moonrise. She must. She would not fail Line Floire. There was a knock on the door. "Go away!"
Jausserande exclaimed.
The door opened. Guiraut appeared, bearing a tray large enough to hold a whole roast deer without crowding. Steam and savory odors rose from it. "Your dinner, my lady." "I'm not hungry," Jausserande said sullenly. Guiraut, conveniently deaf, set the tray on the table before her. He looked around and noticed the darkened condition of the room. He snapped his fingers. Nothing happened. He muttered an oath copied from the chief groom, and violet blood rose to the tips of his pointed ears. Jausserande stared out the window, keeping her face expressionless with an effort. Guiraut wanted to impress her, and she would not mock him. After three more tries, Guiraut snapped hearth and candles ablaze. "You've been practicing," Jausserande said, making sure the approval was plain in her tone. Guiraut had more aptitude for the Art Magical than she did, but aptitude was nothing without practice. He blushed again, this time with pleasure. "I have laid out your armor for the morrow, my lady. You must eat, and then away to bed," he said with as much severity as his youth would allow. Jausserande looked at the food with faint repulsion. The sense of doom she had felt all day was back now, stronger but still as nebulous. Would Vuissane's potion buy her any clarity? Or would it simply befuddle her mind with a garden of bright images? "I will eat if you will join me," she said finally, gesturing at the
stool that stood beside the leaping fire. As Guiraut turned away to pull it forward, Jausserande picked up the violet flask and broke the seal. The liquid inside bore the cloying scent of too many flowers. She poured it into the tainaiste-Cup, and added wine to fill the cup to the brim. "To success," Jausserande said, when Guiraut had filled his own cup with watered wine. And though he echoed the toast, he could not begin to know how passionately she meant it. The predawn air was breathtakingly chill. She could almost imagine she was setting out on a daybreak scouting raid; the lightest armor, the fastest horse, and the barest sky glow differentiating the castle roofs from the sky. Almost, Jausserande could forget the Cup, the Line, and the wretched unheroic Peace. "Art ready, Guiraut?" she cried, joy at their freedom ringing through her voice. The mouse-gray mare Sparrow danced with muffled hooves on the dew-wet courtyard cobbles. " Ready," Guiraut answered. But it was not Guiraut at all, but her cousin Melior-to be named, by later generations, Melior the Mad-who swung into the saddle of his big gray cob, his deep-hooded traveling cloak making him hard to see in the morning twilight. The Sword of Maiden's Tears, slung over Melior's shoulder in a traveling baldric, gathered all the light in the courtyard to itself. That was when Jausserande knew that this was a dream. She glanced around, searching for signs and portents, and saw that instead of Dawnheart's silver stone, the living red granite of Citadel surrounded them. Citadel, where the High King was made and the Twilight Court met. Was this her future? The mare danced; hot-blooded and impatient to run. Jausserande set that question aside. She spurred Sparrow on; the mare leaped forward like a doe before the hunters, and in moments she had left Citadel and Melior behind. The countryside was familiar, though nothing that belonged near Citadel. Ahead the white clay road ran twisting through the valley, until the valley became a canyon and the pass too narrow for even a single armored warhorse. Beyond that pass was the Vale of Stars, and in the Vale was the Cup of Morning Shadows. So intent was she, even in the dream, on what ought to be that it was not until Sparrow slipped and barely recovered herself that Jausserande took a good look at her dreamscape. The road beneath her mare's hooves was not white, but red.
Mudred.
Blood-red. "Hold it right there, Miss." The voice came just as Jausserande was reining in.
Sparrow stopped.
Ahead, Jausserande could see the pass into the Vale of Stars, and just
outside it, barring her way, was a man on a horse. The horse was the dazzling frost-on-snow color that shouted magic a legendary, wizard-conjured beast. The rider was not like anything Jausserande had ever seen before. He was dressed in outlandish dull-colored armor pied black and green. After a long moment she realized with a shock that he was human. "Out of my way, earthling," Jausserande snapped. "I don't think so," the human observed politely. His hair was the yellow of the gold that humans prized so highly and his eyes were a bright jeweled blue. "Insolence! We'll see what taste you have for insolence after being run at my horse's stirrup for a mile or two!" Jausserande loosened her sword in its sheath and reached for her mace. "With all due respect, Miss," the human said, with just enough emphasis on the "due" to make Jausserande grit her teeth, "aren't you orgetting that you've come for the Cup?" At this new insolence Jausserande ground her heels into Sparrow's flanks and the mare bounded forward. Jausserande crouched low on her neck, the battle cry of the Ravens on her lips. But as hard as Sparrow strained, and Jausserande with her, they came no closer to the false knight or the pass into the Vale of Stars. "You're what's standing in the way of your getting the Cup, not me. And if you can't get past me, you'll never get it," the human said in tones of scholarly reproof. The words echoed, reverberated, took on form and solidity, and caged her with bars of burning fire. Then her horse was gone, the road was one, her dream was gone and the knight with it, and Jausserande was alone in her bed, staring out at false dawn and listening to the sentry cry the hours. As Vuissane had promised, her head hurt abominably. And she was no closer to seeing a true future than she had been the night before. Into the Woods HE UNICORN REFUSED to leave. It didn't like Nic though it tolerated him, but it positively doted upon Ruth. Its improbable coat was as thick and soft as a cat's fur and its long-lashed eyes were bright lapis blue. It was the size of a small deer, or a very large dog-its shoulder came as high as her ribs-and it would not go away for any money. "Tears, threats, pleas, entreaties, vain, all vain," muttered Ruth. The unicorn nudged at her elbow hopefully. Ruth wailed, ruffling the downy neck. that people hunted them. "A maiden?"
Nic suggested.
"Oh, what do you want?"
All she knew about unicorns was
An hour's rest on the stream bank had done him a lot of good; his color was better, and the gash on his scalp had finally stopped bleeding. It was cool enough under the shade of the trees that he'd put his suit jacket back on. Worn over the wet, bloodstained T-shirt, with his head garlanded in a necktie and the remains of his shirt, it gave him a particularly raffish look. Miami Vice for the Hyborean Age. "Very funny," said Ruth crossly. She was hot, tired, hungry, and lost in the woods without a yellow brick road in sight. She looked at her watch. 7:30-at least it was back home in Ippisiqua. My, what an interesting Christmas this is turning out to be. "Well, what do unicorns usually want?"
Nic went on patiently.
"You're the one with all the Twilight Zone experience." The unicorn nudged her again. "My experience does not include unicorns," Ruth said brusquely. Her eyes prickled and her mouth went wry. She took a breath and held it, fighting back tears. She'd come here of her own free will; sniveling about it now was stupid. But at this precise moment she couldn't really remember why she'd wanted to come here so badly. And badly was certainly the way she'd come. Ruth took a deep breath. "Unicorns. Their horns are supposed to be proof against poison, they represent purity, they symbolize Scotland in the royal arms of Britain. . . ." She stopped. None of that seemed to be of any particular use at the moment. "Go on," Nic said encouragingly. He's humoring me, Ruth realized in sudden indignation. Well, I suppose he dislikes screaming hysterics as much as the next man. She tried a smile, carefully. "I'm afraid that's your lot. Nothing I ever read mentioned live unicorns." "Well," said Nic, leaning back against the tree trunk. "It looks like we're stuck with Fluffy here for a while. The next question is: Where are we going to go?" :,Go?"
Ruth echoed blankly.
'llnless you want to stay here and learn to fish," Nic pointed out. "And so far we've seen unicorns and unicorn hunters, which doesn't rule out lions and tigers and bears, oh my-or a dragon." Ruth contemplated the thought of a dragon and wished she could feel more hopeful anticipation at the prospect. She wished, in fact, that she could feel anything, instead of assembling her emotions by guess and by gosh and by deduction. Maybe if she got her soul back. "You're right," Ruth said. you think we should do?"
Yeah, right.
"But I'm afraid I'm not much help.
What do
What Nic thought they should do was nothing Ruth had any stomach for, though it made perfect sense. When the three of them (Nic leaning on Ruth, the unicorn following) made it back to the clearing, their approach startled a cloud of rooks that flew up from the bodies, cawing derision. Ruth saw what the birds had left behind and turned away, gagging. "Wait here," Nic said firmly.
"And don't look."
She would have argued, but she hadn't the stomach for it; the animal depredations of the helpless dead were etched upon her mind's eye with remorseless clarity. Nic relinquished her support and shuffled off. Ruth knelt in the grass, one arm around the unicorn. Is this all I'm good for-to be the hapless, helpless, fainting heroine? To let Nicprotect me-antiget hurt because of me? That isn'tfair. didn't ask to come here. He didn't know what he was getting into (well, neither did I, but I thought I did). And this isn't even dangerous. It's just icky.
He
She opened her eyes. Nic was on his knees beside the nearest body, pulling at the clothes. Ruth got to her feet and walked over to him. "I guess you could use some help with that, right?" steady voice.
she said in a
Above the trees, the false-lying sun of Elfland was sliding toward the West. Ruth, no expert, placed the local time at anywhere between two and four. She knelt beside the stream, sluicing armloads of rough woolen cloth through the icy water, frightening the fish and hoping the wool wouldn't shrink too much. The dead footmen's clothing was a far cry from the expensive and exquisite traveling garb that Melior had worn when Ruth had first seen him. Baggy undyed homespun trousers were meant to be tucked into coarse knitted socks, while a wrapped breechclout and a sleeveless slit-necked singlet protected the cloth of trousers and the green-dyed T-tunic of heavy fulled cloth from the sweat and dirt of the skin. Heavy leather belts with horn or wooden buckles and sheepskin spats cross-gartered over stiff boiled-leather shoes completed these less than haute-couture outfits. Ruth wasn't looking forward to wearing this stuff, but Nic felt if the two of them wore the local clothes they'd be safer. Just who is this guy, anyway? Ruth shoved her nagging worries about her traveling companion to one side and tried to think of something useful. The unicorn (still with her) had thrown her mental balance off badly. Who'd written the rules for this place, anyway: J. R. R. Tolkien or the Brothers Grimm? Ruth breathed a brief bibliophile's prayer that it wasn't Angela Carter, but there were no guarantees. That was the difference between Elfland and Real Life. There were no guarantees either way, but in Real Life you pretended there were.
Elfland stripped away that pleasant fiction. Ruth added yet another length of cloth to the sopping pile.
Done.
She emerged into the bright late-afternoon summer sunlight, blinking owlishly. While she'd been gone, Nic had dragged the dead bodies off into the woods. Now he sat, back braced against a rock that had been padded with Ruth's discarded Inverness cloak, sorting through the contents of the dead men's belts. Ruth chose a patch of sunlight and began to spread the clothes out to dry. The trews and undertunics might make it, but the heavy green kneelength tunics definitely wouldn't dry in the few hours of sunlight left. And that raised the interesting question of where-and how-she and Nic were going to spend the night. She'd done some camping, true, but previous experiences had involved such comforts as a tent and a battery-powered microwave. She walked over to Nic and sat down beside him. "So," Ruth said, by way of a conversational opening. "So," Nic said. him.
His plunder was spread out in little patterns beside
Two crude general purpose daggers, bone-hilted and slightly rusty, were laid carefully upon their sheaths. At first Ruth thought the blades were copper, but the metal had a brassier sheen. Bronze. No cold iron in Elfland. She turned to the rest of the loot. Two belt-pouches, of differing sizes and design. One drinking horn, rimmed and tipped in leather, with a loop and a bronze ring to hang it from a belt. An empty waterskin. And, laid out carefully on Ruth's muffler, the contents of the beltpouches. A pair of dice, crudely hand-carved. A tin spoon. A box the size of Ruth's palm, purpose unknown. A handful of copper or bronze coins, small change in any universe. And among all these items, flagrantly, the one that did not fit. Fine silver is as different from sterling as gold is from brass. Soft, perishable, white as moonlight, too soft for use in jewelry without the adulteration of baser metal that turns it from fine silver to sterling, few moderns have ever seen it. The ring was fine silver, thick and wide-banded, set with a gemstone the size of an apricot pit glittering transparent and opaline in all the hot plangent spectrum of the dragon's eye. "Don't touch that!" Ruth cried, her voice raw with fear, as Nic, following the direction of her gaze, reached to pick it up. He stopped. "Don't touch it," Ruth said hoarsely. "That's . . . I think it's magic." Sunlight and fire; its gemstone the chatoyant witch-fire rainbow of the jewels in the Sword of Maiden's Tears. The sword that had killed Naomi.
"Magic."
Nic's voice was neutral, neither accepting nor denying.
"It's a valuable ring.
What was our friend doing with it?"
Magic . . . Ruth reached for the ring indecisively. horror, was this stone designed to release? "Ruth?
What spell, what
Have you seen something like it before?"
Ruth withdrew her hand. "In a sword," she managed to say. sword. It . . . killed somebody."
"Melior's
Nic picked up one of the daggers and slipped its point through the ring. He lifted the ring off the muffler. The band was open behind the stone, allowing the light to pass through. The sun shining through it made a small hot point of whiteness on the muffler beneath and threw the curious carvings on the band into sharp black-and-white relief. Ruth Marlowe was a realist, a rationalist, born into a clockwork universe that kept all its magic safely between the covers of YA fiction. Her adventures with Melior had been strange, but not enough to shake her faith in cause and effect, a world defined by objectivism. The ring seemed to shimmer against the knife blade, saying it was a mere artifact, saying its artifactury was a lie. Malignant because unnatural, supernatural, magic. "And you think this is more of the same?" Nic asked, as even-voiced as if inquiring about the possibility of rain. "I don't know." Before she could censor herself, Ruth plucked the ring from the knife blade and held it in her hand. A cold uncanniness seemed to radiate from it into her bones, but it appeared that the message-or the spell-that it held was not strong enough to affect her. "Magic," Ruth repeated uncertainly.
She closed her fingers over it.
Hard and chunky in her palm, it burned as cold against her flesh as it ought to have been hot. After a moment she dropped it to the scarf again. "Yeuch."
She rubbed her palm against her skirt.
Nic picked up the ring and stared at it suspiciously, but it didn't seem to trouble him even as much as it had Ruth. His mouth set in a dogged line. "Not a piece of junk," he pronounced. "And nothing like anything else that bozo had. Why did he have it? Loot? Payment?" "A plot device?" Ruth suggested. She'd long since discarded the bloodstained cardigan portion of her twin set, but even the short-sleeved cashmere shell was too hot for the weather. And blood-spotted as well, dammit; blood was hell to get out of woolens. "I don't know, Nic, maybe they come in gumball machines here." "Somehow I think we'll find out," Nic prophesied. Amber. Or to Oz," he added.
"All roads lead to
High Noon in Elphame THE VALE OF Stars and its surrounding woods were supposed to be among the most beautiful places in all Chandrakar, but all its new denizens knew or cared about was that the area was easily defensible. There was only one path a horse could follow; the narrow riverine track that led between the steep hills covered in birch and pine. The road ran straight and smooth, and the trees on either side grew dark and thick. A perfect site for an ambush. As it had been. The other rider had turned and fled at the first sign of trouble. The riderless horse of their victim had bolted ahead; they would find it later. Scholars in a hard school, they held their places until the birds had resumed their untroubled calling before moving out to claim their prey. Fox reached the body first. His knife flashed, bright and quick, cutting the arrow loose from the throat and letting the dead elf s blood ooze onto the track. The edges of the wound blackened and smoked; Fox's blade was iron. "Defiled for at least a month; let those cat-eyed weasels think about that," he said with satisfaction. Fox got to his feet and began cleaning his knife. The others, as frightened of cold iron as any elphenborn, closed in and began stripping the body of everything useful. Fox turned his knife so its blade flashed in the sun. Iron, cold iron, the master of them all.- a thing not easily come by in Chandrakar, where iron blistered the flesh of its privileged, silverblooded princes. And confounded their magic. "Fox, what if they come for us? a little thieving," Raven said.
An open killing-that's different than
And God knew, it had taken him long enough to give them the stomach for it. Fox turned toward the man who had spoken. And Raven was the best of them; wasn't that a joke? A handful of apologetic cowards to topple an empire. "Of course it's different, Raven," he explained with a reasonable amount of patience. "It's better. When that pointy-eared bimbo gets back and puts out the word that-quells horreur-elf blood has been spilled in the Vale of Stars, they might not even come back next month. If they don't come back, they don't get their Cup." Raven's brow bent with the effort of following Fox's train of thought.
Fox sighed inwardly. He'd thought it would be so easy, once. he'd seen what he had to work with-the outlaws of Chandrakar.
Before
There were disaffected men@utlaws-living in every forest of Chandrakar; yes, and starving there, too, since their elphen overlords had the magic to hunt them down with no more aid than a lock of hair or a drop of blood any time their depredations became seriously annoying. The elphenborn spent magic with the profligacy of those expending an infinitely renewable resource. Everywhere but here, in the Vale of Stars. Here, humans were safe to come and go and hunt and eat their fill as they pleased. All it had taken was the courage-and the brains-to come here. And that Fox had given them. "And if the highborn don't reclaim their Treasures, there won't be a Kingmaking. There'll be another war," Raven said dutifully, in the fashion of one telling back a hard-learned lesson. Raven towered over his companion by a good two hands'worth, and with flowing black hair and curling beard-and branded cheek-Raven looked far more likely to lead a band of human outlaws than Fox. But then, Raven had been a blacksmith, once upon a time. And Fox had not. "Another war. And this time, humans won't fight it for them, dying for some damned abstraction. Baligant will banish most of them and we'll take care of the rest. More humans than elves equals no elves. Simple." Fox smiled up at his companion. He would be short in any company; slender and pale and quite as dangerous as a type of blade that did not exist in this or any nearby world. Tempered steel.
Tempered in flame.
"All we have to do is hold this road a year and a day," another manyarrow-said. "That's right." Fox's smile was as sweet as it was infrequent. this road, keep them out of the Vale of Stars."
"Hold
And drag Line Rohannan down with Line Floire, lose Baligant two of the most powerful Treasures ... it would be Chaos come again. "Disorganized chaos is the worst kind, " echoed a sudden memory voice. Absent friends, dead loves. "C'mon," Fox said, a few moments later. He took a last look at the body, at the dull violet bloodstain in the white clay roadbed that would keep any "highborn" who saw it from setting foot on such unlucky ground, let alone using magic to find the killers. There were some things about magic that Fox liked just fine.
A New Way to Pay Old Debts MELIOR HEARD THE footsteps a scant instant before their cause entered the room. "I give you good greeting, Cousin-and bring you the Cup of Morning Shadows!" the Lady Jausserande cried. Her spurred and booted steps rang harshly on the inlaid stone floor of Melior's solar. And then she threw it. Melior did not duck; the missile was not meant for him. It landed with a dull unmusical thud on the carpets at the center of the room and rolled in a forlorn half-circle. Melior turned away from the standing desk beside the tall narrow window. The late afternoon sunlight struck through the high windows and scattered prismed reflections across the floor and tapestries as Melior walked across the carpet. He bent down and picked up what Jausserande had thrown. "This," Melior said neutrally, "is the Cup of Morning Shadows." It was not, of course; merely the shadow of a shadow which-if pushed into the Otherworld in the right time and place-would bring the Cup of Morning Shadows into the world of Chandrakar once more. As it should now have done. Jausserande shrugged her saddlepouches to the floor with a thump more eloquent than mere words and began to unbuckle her gorget. Melior watched as his cousin shrugged her gray-dappled travel cloak to the floor. In peacetime, in a land at peace, she wore no plate, only a sleek white doeskin tunic beneath a shirt of fine-linked silver mail. The mail gleamed silvery in the light as she worked the heavy armored collet free and dropped it, too, on the floor before she spoke. "No . . . just a little something I picked up in the Bazaar for the douce amusement it would give Baligant High Prince when I present it instead of the Cup." Her words were honeyed-sweet, and her tone the sweet singsong of murderous fury held barely in check. She picked up the decanter from the side table, saw the cups sitting innocently beside it, and lost what was left of her temper. This time Melior did duck. The wine-filled flagon barely cleared his head, and with marksmanlike accuracy sailed out through the open window. There was an instant's silence, then a distant sound of shattering. "If you misliked the vintage, Cousin, you had only to say," Melior observed mildly. A low growl was the only response. Melior turned away, bearing the tainaiste-Cup back to the high desk by the window. He looked out and down, to where the decanter was a glittering crimson smear on the courtyard flags. The servants clustering around it looked up, saw him looking, and scattered. Melior continued gazing idly about his demesne, giving Jausserande time to
recover herself. His eyes flickered to where the Sword of Maiden's Tears hung upon the wall. "Oh, yes. Very well for you." Jausserande crossed the room, stray bits of half-unbuckled armor jingling, and took the cup from him. She slid the battered tinny thing inside a fold of her surcoat. She could not meet Melior's gaze, and began to pluck at her gauntlets. "Well for you," she repeated. "Line Rohannan will appear at the Kingmaking, and all will be well-for Line Rohannan." "And how long do you think Line Rohannan will stand alone?" asked.
Melior
"If Bastard Baligant is what you say, challenge him and make an end to it." One heavy elbow-length gauntlet of gold-stamped scarlet leather fell to the floor, then the other. Hard work for her squire, Melior thought to himself, following Jausserande's back trail to collect and restore all her possessions. But Guiraut worshiped her; he'd think the duty no hardship. "Where is Guiraut?"
he asked without thinking.
"Feeding the rooks on the Vale Road," Jausserande said harshly. "He took an arrow through the throat. Meant for me, I think, but in the end it doesn't really matter, does it?" "How-?" "There are outlaws living in the Vale, Cousin. And I did not they could be so bold." Jausserande's proud head bowed. She to award Guiraut his knightly spurs at Midsummer. "We'll try Line Floire and I. Next moon, and the moon after that. Until Kingmaking."
imagine had hoped again, the
When Line Floire-without the Cup-would be attainted, and the Cup, present or absent, would fall to the High King's hand to bestow upon a more worthy Treasurekeeper. Somehow, Melior doubted that Baligant would be generous. "I share your sorrow, Cousin," Melior said formally. "And I have made up my mind that I can delay no longer in dealing with that matter of which we spoke. I shall be leaving on a journey tomorrow dawn. You are, of course, welcome to guest at Dawnheart for as long as it takes you to achieve the Cup." "I shall achieve the heads of those mud-mannikins first," Jausserande said in low tones. "Of your charity, Cousin, a detachment of the castle guard to sweep the forests and the roads. Your outlaws and beggars have become far too bold of late." "Granted," Melior said, "but only as far as lies between Dawnheart and the Vale. Little though you may credit it, Cousin, they are my outlaws and beggars, and I hold myself rather fond of them." Jausserande made a face of eloquent disgust.
"What of Harvest Home?
What of Twilight Court?" "I imagine my tenants can celebrate the Harvest without me. As for the Court, it hardly seems necessary in this time of peace to meet one's enemies beneath the branch of truce and plan the coming slaughter, does it? I have considered how I may best serve the Realm, and there is only one truth I see: I must bring the lady Ruth of the World of Iron to my side." The calm matter-of-factness of Melior's madness swept Jausserande's grief momentarily aside. To think that Melior set so much store by some mud-born leman that he would Do what? "And how, Cousin, will you bring Ruth from the World of Iron, when you have said that all that way is closed?" "I shall seek out a wizard." "A wizard?" If anything in Chandrakar could have the power to rouse Jausserande from the contemplation of her own problems, it was such a declaration. Adepts in the Art Magical were one thing: elphen scholars as loyal and trustworthy as any fighting man, masters of the High and Low Magics both Right and Left, who walked in sunlight, order, and law. Wizards were something else entirely: masters of the Wild Magic who bowed to no law save their own desires. A wizard might belong to any of the Five Races, though it was rare indeed for one of the Sons of the Morning to follow the Wild Magic's path. "You're going to seek out a wizard?"
Perhaps she had misheard him.
"Not merely any wizard, but one with whom I have had dealings of old. I know his price; it is high, but I think now that I have no choice but to meet it. I think he will accept my promise as sure coin." "Bargaining with a wizard!" Jausserande burst out, "For a- A-" "For the proof that Baligant has tampered with the Treasures," Melior said before Jausserande could say otherwise. But his cousin was as stubborn as he. "And would this :proof' be so desirable, my lord Rohannan, were it not the earthling that you have sworn to be your heartsease? A pretty package, Cousin, when duty is so neatly yoked with expediency." "And what course would you suggest, Cupbearer?" distantly formal.
Melior's tone was
Leave it alone. Baligant's scheme is the air-dream of one on fire for a mortal maid. Jausserande bit her lip, unwilling to speak so plainly. She already knew it would do no good. heart's-bride, even if it was idiocy.
Melior wanted the mortal for his
Many a mud-daughter? "I would not presume to advise Line Rohannan, my lord," Jausserande said, equally formally. "I wish you a safe and pleasant journey."
Now, if only the wizard would do as he asked, and open the Iron Road so that Ruth could come here. Melior's sturdy dappled gelding, a mount chosen for its steadiness and endurance, stood quietly in the chill of the early morning courtyard as its master made his last minute preparations. Melior dwelt for a pleasant instant upon the thought of his lady Ruth here in his own world. But more than that, Ruth's arrival would undo the trap that bound the Sword of Maiden's Tears, and reunite Ruth with her pilgrim soul. And in that unbinding and reunion allow Melior to prove how that binding had first been done, proving Baligant's treachery to all who were willing to see. Melior frowned. For the first time since he had hit upon this certain proof, he was close enough to gaining it to think about what having it might mean. Eirdois Baligant of the House of Vermilion Shadows, High Prince and High King to be, had been the only claimant of the High Seat all the Morning Lords could agree upon; the only one all could bear to gift with, not only the Kingship, but the white body of Hermonicet the Fair. Remove him, and war began again. Fail to remove him, and see the Seven Houses of Twilight destroyed. It was not a decision that Melior had a right to make alone, and so he had held his peace even after he knew the truth. But now there was proof to present to the TWilight Court, to set the yoke of this vendetta squarely upon the shoulders of them all. It was not a vendetta, Melior assured himself. Not yet, at least. He gave one last tug to the girth, not wanting to leave that homely task to his groom. Melior set his foot in the stirrup and vaulted into his saddle. The groom at the gelding's head released its bridle, and another waiting servant unbolted the postern gate. Melior shrugged the folds of his travel cloak more warmly about himself First Ruth, he promised himself, then all the rest. Melior headed his gelding up into the hills, away from the plowed fields and terraced vineyards of his demesne. He did not have far to going Chandrakar, at least. The wizard that he sought was not here, though the way to his tower was not hard to find-once you had the key. Reflexively Melior touched the object hung on the cord about his neck: a little knife barely a hand's width in length, with a hilt of clear amber and a blade of black glass. A key, if you knew how to use it. At midday Melior stopped to eat and to give the gelding a rest. He would not reach the place he sought before sunset, and there was no point in reaching it before sunset in any event: this Gate was a complicated one, opening to time, location, and proper tools. As was the Gate the Cup of Morning Shadows lay beyond. Would he, Melior wondered, have done any better than Jausserande, were the Cup his quest? She was young, and touchy about her autonomy; newly
come to her Wardenship. Floire Glorete had never sought the Cup through all the long years of war, knowing it to be safe in the Vale of Stars. Line Floire had held the Cup since time out of mind; it had been Floire Bertraine who put it there when Rainouart the Beautiful had died, and charged no Cupbearer to come near it until the war was over. Glorete had served her entire tenure without having held her Treasure in her hands. And now that Jausserande went to claim it, there were brigands in her way, brigands who had slain Guiraut-mostly likely by sheer accident-and now undoubtedly cowered half-mad with terror at their ill fortune. Assuming they were, in fact, honest villains, and not more of Baligant's mischief. Since the peace had been declared and the great armies of each side disbanded, such feral jostlings had become an all-toocommon problem for the Morning Lords. Landless, masterless menhuman men, whose sires and grandsires and great-grandsires had been raised to war-what was there for them, without place or occupation, but to roam the roads, taking what they could? Melior shook his head sadly. No matter the reason, he could not permit it. And if the ambush on the road to the Vale of Stars was something more than honest brigandage, he could not permit that either. Baligant would not play his games in Melior's demesne. Why? It was the question Melior always returned to in the end, the question that eternally baffled him. Baligant already had everything, and still he fought on. "why? Melior was not of the generation that had striven so bloodily for those twin prizes: the High I-Lingship and the white body of Hermonicet the Fair. The earls and barons who had battled for such riches were his uncles and cousins: even Rohannan Lanval had possessed ambitions in that direction, although it was more accurate to say that Melior's father had had firm notions of who should not be High King. Yet he had lived to see Baligant chosen, and said nothing. Melior frowned, staring unseeing at the half-eaten apple in his hand. Rohannan Lanval had said nothing, but perhaps his reasons had more to do with the reasons for Melior's silence now than with blind cowardice. Perhaps Melior's father had also held his suspicions yet had no way to prove them, and found himself forced to choose between an unjust peace and a just war. There was no way now to know. It was, as Melior had intended, just sunset when he arrived at the place of the Gate. The long day's ride had brought him to a place where the grass and trees were replaced by dust and rock-too companionable to be called desolation-and the eye was drawn to the horizon by the first promise of the great mountains to the north.
There was nothing on this side of the wizard's Gate to make the location particularly memorable; only four boulders of a mottled dark granite arranged in an irregular circle in a place where the trail widened to obscurity. Melior dismounted, keeping a firm hold on the gelding's reins. This Gate was one through which a mounted man might pass, and he had no intention of doing any more walking than he had to. He looped the reins about his arm and took the glass and amber knife in his right hand. The gelding nudged at his shoulder curiously as he pulled off his left gauntlet and pushed up the sleeve of his tunic. Melior glanced around, taking his bearings. The long sunset shadows of the boulders reached out to him, straggling and elongated with the same tricky sunset light that turned the knife's golden amber hilt red. At the last moment before darkness Melior used the little knife to make a long cut in his left arm. The wine-violet elphen blood welled up and began to run. Melior caught the first drops on the knife blade, and at once time seemed to stop, and Melior was wrapped in the chill uncanniness of the High Magic. He made certain the blade was well coated before shrugging his sleeve back into place. Then he sketched a door in the unchanging twilight: high enough for a rider, broad enough for a horse. Within the area he had marked, Reality fell away as if he had cut a hole in a painted canvas backdrop. The space beyond was jarringly unlike the world he stood in-the sky the wrong blue, the soil the wrong brown. Melior unlooped the reins from his arm and remounted, pressing the cut on his forearm closed before tucking the little knife away against future need. And the gelding stepped, with only a little hesitancy, through the Gate. At once everything changed. A thin chill wind plucked at his hair, and Melior pulled the deep hood of his cloak forward to shield himself. It was brighter here than in the day he had just left, but the sky was a deep indigo, crossed by impossible auroras, and Melior had never seen either sun or moon here. Melior glanced over his shoulder as his mount-steady, dependable, not given to nerves-picked its way along the downward-sloping trail. Behind him was a cyclopean jumble of white granite cast down from the cliffs above, among which two slabs had been raised as Brobdingnagian gateposts. Beyond them the wide road seemed to roll onward forever, though Melior knew that he had but to ride on for a few leagues to find himself upon it, approaching the Gate again from the direction he had come. The land around him was mountainous and barren, a place where nothing grew. It ought to have reminded him of the World of Iron, but if it did it was only because of the differences. For the World of Iron was . . . iron, while this was a world whose very bones were made of magic; the small kingdom of an Adept of the Wild Magic, to be entered at one's peril.
Was Ruth worth it? Or Baligant's defeat? be worth coming here?
Could anyone, could anything
"Yes," said Melior aloud. The tension lifted: a soap bubble vanishing. There was the scent of laughter upon the wind. Melior rounded a bend in the trail and saw his goal. Ahead the road stopped abruptly at the base of a sheer cliff. White as everything was in this world; bone-white and all the colors of shadows. But the cliff was not in shadow. Whatever source this world's light had, the light itself shone full-face upon the cliff. About halfway up the cliff face there was an opening in the stone; a smooth and regular arch filled with sooty and indigo shadows. "I am waiting," Melior observed into the emptiness. "Don't get your bones in an uproar, Child of Air," a voice answered from the air around him. "I'm coming." But no entity appeared. Instead, the blowing wind stopped and the light shifted, and in that still silence Melior saw the ghostly outline of a phantom staircase, curving upward to the stone doorway. Melior shrugged within himself, and dismounted. He flung the loop of the horse's reins over the finial of an ornate and barely perceptible newel post and began to ascend the stairs. Only a soap bubble iridescence betrayed the existence of those stairs; that, and the solidity of the treads beneath Melior's feet. The jagged boulders at the base of the cliff were starkly visible between his boot toes; the balustrade, hard and slick beneath his hand, held all the insubstantial character of water to his eye. Ophidias had always had a sense of humor, Melior reminded himself Of a sort. As he reached the top of the staircase, the wind returned full force. His cloak unfurled with a snap that nearly strangled him, dragging him backward, into the empty air. He pulled it around him, and that, too, was a mistake; the wind found every entrance, filling the fabric as if it were a ship's sail and hauling at him with invisible hands. Clutching the balustrade with one hand, Melior clawed at the throat latch of the cloak until he had worried it loose. The wind took the cloak with almost sentient glee, snatching it from his shoulders and bearing it off with a long whistling howl. "You owe me a new cloak," Melior said, taking advantage of the respite to struggle inside. It was warmer out of the wind, though not by much. The chamber he had entered was long and straight, the walls curving upward and inward until their meeting, if any, was lost in shadow. There was no light.
The only illumination came from the tatterdemalion sky behind and the firelike glow ahead. Melior walked toward the light and entered a chamber of gold. The walls, floor, and ceiling were made of gold; gold polished mirrorbright, gold wrought in a thousand styles of ornament. The floor of the room was heaped with treasure; treasure spilling carelessly from casks as valuable as their contents; the plundered excellence of a thousand worlds. But the light did not come from the walls, nor from the treasure. The light came from the room's occupant. "It took you long enough to think of me," the wizard said. The wizard Ophidias was not Morning Lands which had the belonged to the oldest: the namesake element the native transformed.
elphen. There were Five Races in the Art of Magic, and of these, Ophidias People of Fire, who shared with their power to change . . . and to be
"I thought of your price longer," Melior responded. The firedrake half-spread his vast wings. His throat and stomach were the pure hot gold of embers; his sides and back the same color but slightly silvered, as if with a fine coating of ash. A pleasant warmth-at least at this distance-radiated off his skin in waves. "You wrong me, Child of Air," Ophidias commented. "Then, of course, you'll do what I ask without cost?" responded.
Melior
"No," Ophidias said simply. "But you've had a long cold journeyand without a cloak, too. You might as well have some wine and tell me what you want." One opal-webbed wing spread and gestured to a jade table balanced precariously upon the golden hoard. Atop it was a blue glass beaker webbed in jeweled silver, and a carven pearl cup that could ransom a hundred queens. Melior unstopped the one and poured its contents into the other. drank, suspiciously at first, then with real pleasure.
He
"Did you know," said Melior with as much artlessness as he could muster at short notice, "that the Iron Road is sealed on the Borders?" "Ridiculous," said the firedrake. He changed position on his treasure and stretched luxuriously. Gold coins shifted and spilled beneath his weight; a cup rolled free with a clinking sound. "Nearly as ridiculous as this mummer's play of yours. I have seen more convincing deceits on television, " Melior said, drawing on a term from his recent excursion to the World of Iron. "Ah, well, if you don't like it . . ." Ophidias waved one polydactyl foreclaw and everything-save the wine table and its
contents-vanished. Including the light. Considered as a dragon, Ophidias was not especially large; perhaps as large, if you compressed the serpentine neck and the barbed whiplike tail and the vast veined wings, as one of the drafthorses that tilled Melior's acres in Chandrakar. But a dragon Ophidias was not, any more than Rohannan Melior was human. And considered as a wizard, Ophidias was formidable. "I thought she'd like it, you see. out of the darkness.
The expected thing," Ophidias said
Light reappeared, and now the room was such as might grace any of Melior's own castles. The walls were hung with dark claret velvet. The wizard lay curled on a couch constructed to his special requirements, and regarded Melior from a glowing eye set in a long narrow head of flanged and sculpted chitin. "Better?"
the wizard purred.
"Your skill is, as always, most impressive, Ophidias, but I have not come for entertainment." "No. You've come to ask a boon. It is a great pity you're going to ask for the wrong thing, since as high as you say my price is, you'll only be able to meet it once." Melior stood very still. Nothing that a wizard said was idle chatter, and the aid of an Adept of the Wild Magic, bound to no law, was never free. They delighted in tricking any of the Five Races who dealt with them by speaking nothing but the truth, only in a fashion so obscure that their victims never recognized the warning until far too late. But Ophidias was his friend, and was speaking plainer than most. What Melior had come to ask for-Ruth's summoning into the Lands Beyond the Morning-was the wrong thing to ask for. Ophidias had just said so. Thus, there must be a right thing to ask for, if Melior could only figure out what it was. "Then perhaps we should settle on your price first, before we come to the small matter of my request," Melior said with forced ease. He wondered how long he could stall for time. Ophidias flicked his tail. "Now, how are we to do that, Child of Air, when you haven't told me what you've come for?" "Surely so great a wizard-" Melior began, and stopped. Surely so great a wizard could indeed peer into Melior's mind and see what he thought he had come for-and sell it to him, too, even though what he had come for was the wrong thing.
And asking the wizard what he ought to want would be just as expensive, Melior suspected, as getting the thing itself. -will give a great vintage the respect it deserves?" smoothly, sipping the wine.
Melior finished
"Of course," the firedrake agreed, a draconian rumble of mirth in his voice. Melior reflected with well-concealed irritation that riddling with wizards was nearly as low on his list of fun things to do-as his human friends might have said-as was visiting the World of Iron. But was that, perhaps, the boon he ought to ask? To go to the World of Iron, and this time bring Ruth away with him? Melior considered that for only a moment. He had failed once and had no greater expectation of success this time, even with his own Adepts to lend him the power to walk out of that most treacherous of all worlds. And the way was now sealed besides, beyond the power of any, Adept or wizard, to unseal it. Which must mean "I trust that Ruth will reach Dawnheart in time to enjoy the Harvest Fair?" Melior observed politely. Ophidias opened his jaws wide, and light poured from his throat. The velvet he lay upon emitted a faint curl of smoke. "Oh, very good, Child of Air. Of all your line, you are the least stupid. Now ask your boon." The whiplike tail lashed again and the opal-webbed wings mantled. Melior was to be given no more time for delay. So. Ruth was already in the Lands Beyond the Morning and, all things being equal, could be found with the arts available to Melior's own Adepts, now that he knew where to look. So what must he ask of Ophidias?
Proof of Baligant's treachery?
Once he had Ruth, he would have that; with an Adept to unbind her soul from the Sword Melior took a deep breath and wished he did not know how plainly Ophidias could see his fear. Ask the boon and he was pledged to pay for it, whether it was something he truly needed or not. The price might be agonizingly high, and he was bargaining with Ruth's life. "Come once into my land, at a place and time appointed by me, and there unbind Lady Ruth's soul from the Sword of Maiden's Tears, restore her soul to her entire, and make plain to all who watch the Adept who performed the binding." And let me hang Baligant No-House from Dawnheart's highest tower. Better death in war than this ravening treachery. "A clever little elf," Ophidias said. He spread his wings and cupped the air, rising from his couch as the room around him vanished like sands through an hourglass. Now the room was dark again, the wine cup, the treasure, the world-all-vanished into this formless potential creation. This was the true state of Ophidias' world: magic shaped by will.
"Now hear me, elphenborn." The wizard's voice was everywhere: the world was made of words whose power was greater than swords, and Melior saw Ophidias at their heart like a bright flame of logos. "What you ask I shall accomplish, but at the price of a life. For what I do, you will bring a human bride who comes freely and of her own will to wed with me." Melior nearly protested aloud. Humans had no magic and thus were fearful of it; and to become the bride of a wizard, an Adept of the Wild Magic and a Child of Fire besides, was a geas so daunting that even many an elphen heart would quail. Freely. Willingly. Human. Where in all the Lands Beyond the Morning would Melior find Ophidias' price? Never mind. "This I promise to bring you before the day that my firstborn son weds," Melior said, tempering his promise as much as he dared. Slowly light returned, until Melior stood once more in the chamber of golden mirrors that he had first entered. Ophidias stared at him, reptilian muzzle inches away from Melior's face. Melior felt his skin tighten with the heat that radiated from the firedrake's body. "And so you shall, elf-child-because if you don't, your son's bride will become mine, and everything you hold mine as well," Ophidias told him. "In this I have no choice, Rohannan Melior, so mark me well." "How shall I summon you?" Melior said, ignoring the wizard's closeness-and as far as he might, the doom he had bought for Line Rohannan. The fire-glowing head on the sinuous neck was withdrawn. Ophidias blinked once, causing a momentary flicker in the room's light. "A ring is traditional. spread, pointed.
Cast it into fire, and I will come."
A wing
A ring lay upon what appeared to be a cloth of finest scale mail. It was a domed band of red gold, and set into it was a smooth-surfaced gem that was the bright clear flame color of the firedrake's eyes. Melior picked it up. It was almost painfully warm, but he slipped it on his finger anyway. It slid on loosely, then seemed to strop itself against his skin like a contented kitten, settling to a perfect fit. "Since you seem to have lost your cloak, take this as well. my bride, when you find her."
Give it to
Ophidias was enjoying himself hugely, but Melior could not bring himself to object. He turned his back and picked up the armored cloth the ring had rested on. Ophidias' skin was smooth, but this was not. Melior could not imagme what animal the skin had been taken from, that the perfect pearlfire golden scales should all be the same size, delicate as gilded fingernails.
The cloak was not hooded, though heavy enough and more for outdoors. It had a high stiff collar ornamented with more gems of the sort in the firedrake's ring. Melior shrugged it over his shoulders and found that, like mail, the weight was not as great worn as when carried. It was lined and edged with fur softer than vair and as red as human blood, and it brushed the backs of his boot heels. Whoever Ophidias' future bride might be, she had better be both tall and strong. "And now, 0 great wizard, have I your leave to go?"
Melior said.
Dealing with wizards was a tricky business, and although he seemed to have survived it, his temper had not. "Oh, go by all means, Child of Air. Do come again, it is always delightful to see you." Ophidias lay back, fanning himself with lazy wings. Melior swept the cloak around himself and left the chamber.
Adventures in the Greenwood AS RUTH HAD predicted, the heavy green tunics were nowhere near dry when lengthening shadows forced her to admit that they were certainly as dry as they were going to get. "They'll have to do," Nic pronounced, shrugging into the larger of the two. The trews and clogs that were the rest of their gruesome salvage were hopelessly too small; he settled for the green tunic and the sheepskin leggings gartered over his suit trousers. The unicorn regarded the transformation from library director to rogue with skepticism. It shook its head and creeled, an odd, unruminant sound. "I think I agree," Ruth said. She looked at her intended wardrobe of damp scratchy homespun with distaste. Still, her kilt and cashmere shell were almost an invitation to assault from uncouth passersby. For Nic's sake as much as her own she didn't want to get into any more fights. Traveling with the unicorn would draw attention enough. "All right, all right-I'm going." Fifteen minutes later Ruth stumped back out of the woods to which she had retreated for privacy. A damp baggy pair of brown homespun trousers were cross-gartered over sheepskins that nearly concealed her brown-and-bone saddle oxfords. A thick leather belt with a carved bone buckle cinched in the soggy wool tunic enough to help the drawstring waist hold the trousers up. She only hoped the things would finish drying quickly-she felt like the Second Murderer; a spear-carrier from any play you cared to name; unkempt and ludicrous. She hated it. "Now what?"
Ruth said, more than a little crossly.
"Now we follow the stream and see where it takes us. water, at any rate."
We'll be sure of
"Travel at night?" Ruth was dubious. Beside her, the unicorn's coat shimmered like a silver flame in the dusk. It nuzzled her hand and Ruth patted it absently. "There's at least an hour of useful light," Nic said ruthlessly. "Enough to find a place to bivouac." But the unicorn, it turned out, had other ideas. Nic had made himself a staff from one of the spears and used it to lean on. If the blow to his head still bothered him, he didn't show it. He started into the woods in the direction of the stream. Ruth took one last longing glance behind her at the brighter open spaces and followed. The unicorn stood its ground, looking after them beseechingly. And then it Well, Ruth wasn't sure how to describe it, but it was loud.
It
yodeled like a cat in the throes of a hairball, like a beagle with its people away for the weekend, like a lovesick peacock and an entire cote of pigeons. It shut up as soon as Ruth came back. "I wonder what unicorn steak would taste like?" admirable restraint but perfect seriousness. "Come on, Daisy," Ruth said to the unicorn.
said Nic, with
"We're going this way."
She put her hand on its neck and tried to lead it. After a few steps it broke away and skittered to the opposite side of the clearing, gazing at them reproachfully. And then it began yodeling again. Ruth tried making her muffler into a noose and dragging the unicorn on a leash. Same result. "Leave it, then," Nic said. unicorn anyway."
"I don't recall asking to travel with a
Ruth hesitated. "It'll probably give up and follow if it's going to, Ruth." Reluctantly, Ruth allowed herself to be persuaded. She followed Nic into the forest. The birds were twittering their birdish evensong high above, where the topmost tree branches still caught the last rays of evening light. Under the forest canopy it was nearly dark. Progress was slow, and Ruth began to doubt Nic's assertion that they would get any distance at all. Behind her the unicorn's cries grew louder and more frantic, and finally stopped. Ruth felt like the sort of monster usually found tying orphans to railroad tracks for her desertion. There was a sudden crashing in the brush ahead. Ruth heard abrupt sibilants as Nic said something rude and heartfelt. The unicorn stalked out of the thicket before them. Like any wild thing, its eyes flashed in the half-light: not the silverygreen of the headlight-dazzled deer, but a deep, burning, predatory red. Its silky fur was fluffed out like an angry cat's; its neck stretched long and snakelike as it menaced them in weaving darting motions with its spiraled, dagger-sharp horn. It was growling. The unicorn advanced, growling and twisting its neck. back up, very slowly. Ruth backed up a bit faster.
Nic began to
It took them very little time to reach the clearing once more, and there the unicorn, like a cat, pretended it had never been the spiky fiend of moments before. It stropped itself against Ruth, crooning its pleasure, and tugged coaxingly at her tunic with teeth sharper than any herbivore should reasonably possess.
Ruth took a couple of steps in the direction of the pull. The unicorn released the cloth and danced away cajolingly, looking back over its shoulder. "I think it wants us to follow it," Ruth said needlessly. "Do tell," Nic said. "I don't see a lot of choice-but if this thing is leading us into a trap, I am going to have that steak." Ruth made a strangled sort of half-laughing noise. Shaking her head, she followed the white beacon of the unicorn's body into the woods on the other side of the clearing. And they'd been trying to save it from hunters! Nic intended for them only to put a half mile or so between themselves and the unicorn hunters before stopping for the night. The unicorn had other ideas, and wasn't shy about enforcing them. This left Nic and Ruth with a choice between following the unicorn blindly through the pitch-dark forest, or camping next to something that was howling like a defective smoke alarm and incidentally pointing them out to every emissary of the ungodly within earshot. They followed. Until, some fifteen hours after seven o'clock Christmas Eve night, the unicorn vanished. "I'm immoderately delighted," Nic Brightlaw said in an acid undertone. "What?" Ruth said. Her hunger had subsided to a slow resentful rumble long since, but lack of food and lack of sleep and the clammy awfulness of her clothes combined with good old-fashioned shock to lend everything a giddy unreality. "Your damned pet fire siren's gone," Nic said shortly. forward, and then another. "And so's the forest."
He took a step
Ruth, leaning wearily against a tree that seemed to be revolving slowly about the Pole Star, decided she couldn't possibly have heard him clearly. "What?" she said again. "We have reached the end of the forest. Stumps and second-growth ahead, then road, I think. And Fluffy the Wonder Caprid is nowhere in sight." This seemed to call for more than another monosyllable. now?" Ruth asked after a long pause.
"What do we do
"What I wanted to do in the first place," Nic said crossly. morning."
"Wait for
When the Deal Calls for a Sacrifice THE CASTLE WAS a pale tower of shimmering stone. Once it had belonged to the husband of Hermonicet the Fair. Its name was Mourning. From a distance the castle bore the appearance of a child's toy discarded thoughtlessly in the marshes that marked the eastern border of Chandrakar. It was the single vertical line in the flat marsh landscape, and what it guarded would be safe forever.
Eirdois Baligant sat within Mourning's walls upon a most comfortable chair of state in a private chamber to which he had brought the most expensive, if not the most tasteful, of his newly-won treasures. The High King-Elect was a little below average height, and his hair was a color that an inhabitant of the World of Iron would not have hesitated to call gunmetal. Before he had been acclaimed High King by the TWilight Court, he had not been accounted handsome, the elvish beauty that was his birthright marred by the decades of dissipation, greed, and anger that had carved his face into the permanent frozen snarl of a cheated bird of prey. He no longer wore the armor of the soldier's life that had occupied all but his earliest youth. Eirdois Baligant was High King-Elect, and wore silk trousers and jeweled slippers, a velvet robe and furred mantle and rings for every finger. Delicacies from all the world-and worlds beyond-graced his table, and nobles who had once dismissed him as inconsequential now bent reluctant knee at his demand. Eirdois Baligant was High King-Elect, with the lady Hermonicet the Fair to his wife. He had everything it was possible to want within Chandrakar's borders. The Kingship, Hermonicet-and soon enough his enemies would be gone, on the very day of the Kingmaking that would set the seal on his triumph. If only there weren't something he felt he might be forgetting. It was not that he was not content-or rather, it was not that his discontent was disturbing to him, for Baligant knew himself better than some, and knew his appetites could only be deadened for a time, never slaked. That the High Yingship itself would not content him he knew; but he knew also that the High Yang has endless opportunities for fresh, inventive revenges, and Baligant was by nature vindictive. He knew these things about himself and many more, having lived quite long enough to become well acquainted with his own measure of what other men called faults. To avarice he would also admit, and held that such admission rendered him superior to those who lusted and coveted and swore that they did not. In his own narrow fashion, Baligant was a shrewd and honest prince, and if Fate had fitted him admirably for a pawnbroker and then turned him loose upon the stage of greater events, this was not his fault. Baligant rose from his chair and began to pace about the room, marking his path by the treasures which lay along it. Each of them had once belonged to someone else, and not one of their former owners would have had an approving word to say of Eirdois Baligant were he not the High King. Elect. But at the moment Baligant felt very much like the laborer who, having worked long and hard, discovers that the coin he has been paid in is false. Baligant was honest enough to assign that fault to no one-he was to be High King, and it would be foolish to complain that the High King was ruler of a land spoiled by three generations of war. And besides, he would tax it as if it flourished. Baligant smiled. war.
Let them complain-the alternative to obedience was
And Baligant had seen the war, every year of it-from the beginning, when every lord called up his meinie to wage what would surely be only the briefest of battles, to the end, when even the slights and cruelties and betrayals of a century of war could not keep the earls from negotiating their secret treaties of peace. Even the loss of the white body of Hermonicet the Fair could not incline them to battle once more. And if they would not fight for her, they would not fight. He could do as he liked, until the grandchildren of this generation were grown. And by then it would be too late for the Seven Houses of the Twilight. Far too late. Baligant smiled. "Lord Baligant?" be.
The voice was hesitant, but that was as it should
He was in his private chamber, and no one would disturb him there without overriding necessity. That was power. He turned, prepared to show a terrifying arrogance. "My lord?" It was his wizard.
His pet wizard.
Her name was not Amadis, but it was what he had been given to call her. Her hair was long and silken, and her form was slender and lithe, and these, too, were not necessarily truth. What was true was that Baligant didn't care. For someone who trusted all his plans to his captive wizard, Baligant truly knew very little about her. But he knew the two things that mattered. He knew she was an Adept of the Wild Magic. And he knew about the flowers. He let her wait for his pleasure, studying her while he wonderednot for the first time-how it would be to be more to her than her master. But he was smart enough not to attempt it. That small thing might be the one thing that would tip the balance of binding and obligation and free her. And he meant never to free her. Amadis swayed in the doorway, and Baligant noted with pleasure the green shadows beneath her skin; the hollowed, fever-bright eyes. She had been too long away from the flowers. "Yes?"
he said at last.
"I hope this is important."
Fury gave her strength; Baligant saw it flare in her eyes as it brought her body rigidly upright. Her eyes were a brilliant copper a few shades darker than her hair; Baligant wondered (again, not for the first time) if the elphen form she wore were her own. So few Daughters of the Twilight had any talent for the Wild Magic. But if Amadis were truly talented, mere elphenborn would not have been able to trap her. "You may find it so," Amadis said briefly. "The soul-anchor I set upon the Sword of Maiden's Tears has broken loose from the World of Iron. The Sword has been carried out of this world through a Gate that is not charted in my ephemeris. If both the Sword and the soul-anchor are in motion through the Lands, they will meet. That is the Law." "What do I care if one vermin-infested mud-daughter finds her way out of the World of Iron?" Baligant blustered, beginning to fear. His wizard didn't answer-didn't need to answer, because Baligant already knew. In tampering with the Sword, perhaps the greatest of the Treasures, Amadis had left evidence that tampering had been done. And the heart and triumph of Baligant's plan lay in that his wizard's meddling should never be discovered by the elphen Houses that it doomed. "Kill her," Baligant said simply. The wizard did not answer. The hot bright anger that had animated her had ebbed. She put out a long pale hand to steady herself, the gesture echoing the unfolding of a dragonwing. "But perhaps you'll want a stirrup cup to speed you on your journey?" Baligant smiled, unease dissolved in cruelty. chamber. The flowers were here.
This was his private
He went to his desk and opened a jar. The moment he did, sunlight and high summer seemed to radiate from it, warming the chill autumn day. He plunged his hand into the jar, pulling out a fistful of dried flower heads. "Is this what you want?" He held them out. The wizard drifted closer, an unwilling serpent drawn to his piping. She stared at the crushed flowers with hungry despair. "Not to your taste?" He held his hand over the jar, preparing to drop the flowers back in, and was rewarded by the sound of a whimpering gasp from the wizard. "If you'd control your temper better, Amadis, you'd get more of what you want." He smiled, feeling the heat of the wizard's hatred wash over him like the wave of a summer sea. She wanted his death. But she didn't want it quite badly enough. "On the other hand, you did tell me about the Sword," he said,
relenting. Baligant picked up a small dagger from the table. He cut the hand that held the flowers once, very carefully, and watched as his blood welled up and began to soak the crumpled petals. Let no man say I have not shed blood for Chandrakar. "Is this what you want?" He held his hand out to her. The dried flowers were saturated and sticky with his blood, their pale ivory petals stained a swollen blood-red. The wizard Amadis snatched the flowers from his hand and crammed them into her mouth, gulping and choking on them. A thin trail of bloody saliva flowed down her chin and dripped onto her long white gown. She held both hands over her mouth, hiding behind them, licking them clean. She turned away. "Amadis? Kill the Ironworlder before she reaches the Sword," Baligant said genially. He wiped his bloody hand upon his tunic, staining the costly delicate fabric. Traveling in an Antique Land THE WORLD WAS called Counterpane. Ruth sat on the bench outside the country inn, quaint as a Brothers Grimm woodcut, and let the pale morning sun bake the midnight chill out of her bones. Counterpane. Her store of local information was increased by one hundred ludicrous percent. It was-she sought through a jumbled trove of J-book memories-straight out of A Child's Garden of Verses. Something that started "I used to go to bed by day .
. ."
Which did not, at the moment, seem like a bad idea. She and Nic had slept the few hours until dawn huddled against each other for warmth like the proverbial Babes in the Wood. They were awakened by the sound of cart wheels rumbling along the road, and in the early daylight the two of them crouched in the underbrush at the side of a road and watched as a barrel-filled, wooden-wheeled cart drawn by four oxen rolled magisterially past. A drover dressed much as Ruth and Nic were walked at their heads. Almost as soon as it had rolled out of sight, another party came down the road, this time on horseback. The two in the lead were riding gray horses the improbable color of polished steel. In contrast to the earth-toned world Ruth had seen so far, the knights-somehow they looked to Ruth like knights-were in technicolor: their horses' reins were tasseled with bright multicolored flags that matched the colors in their long fringed saddleclothes, and their riders were bright and brave in sweeping feathered hats, long colored boots, striped hose, and brilliant silken tabards over white shirts trimmed in lace. Behind them, on a horse of a different gray and far less fine, rode a bareheaded young man with a plain dark vest over his laceless shirt, leading a white mule piled high with wrapped
bundles, including two long canvas-wrapped ones that Ruth thought looked like skis but considering everything were probably lances. "They look like what the SCA would do if it had money," she muttered half aloud. Nic nudged her warningly. One of the knights reined in and stared in their direction. His companion, finding himself riding on alone, looked back and said something that Ruth was too far away to hear. After a moment more, both knights rode on. But the squire, too, paused to stare. And without a floppy hat and trailing feathers to get in the way, Ruth could see that his ears rose to delicate points and his slit-pupiled eyes were cat-green. Nic gently but firmly put a hand over Ruth's mouth. The party of elphen knights rode on. When it was entirely quiet once more, he let her go. "Vulcans," Nic said. "Elves," said Ruth. "Whatever." After that they had cautiously taken to the road themselves-once Nic had unwound the bandage around his head and scrubbed away as much blood as he could with the heavy morning dew. Half his blond hair was stained a rusty brown, but he looked much more conventional without the bandage than with it. Once they began, Ruth discovered how many aches and pains you could have after walking all night and sleeping in a ditch. Her only consolation was that since she never wore makeup, leftover mascara was not now making dark rings under her eyes. "Ah-ah," Nic said, after about an hour's walking. Ruth looked up. pointed, and Ruth's gaze followed the direction of the pointing finger.
He
If there were buildings in Elphame at all, Ruth imagined they must be tall, airy Gothic cathedral structures entirely constructed from gleaming white marble with tasteful accents of granite and maybe rock crystal, with silk pennons flapping in the breeze and every single copper-sheathed turret roof foiled in gold. Of course, it that were true, this wasn't Elphame. "The Last Homely House," Nic said. "Get real," Ruth said weakly. But the building did bear a weird and irritating resemblance to a Professor Tolkien set piece. The building was set back a few hundred yards from the edge of the road on the right side, with a wide beaten-dirt courtyard before it. The building itself was made of wood planks weathered to gray, with a flat turf-covered roof that angled sharply backward, giving it an outline not inconsistent with that of certain Dairy Queens in Thlsa,
Oklahoma. There were no windows at all in the front wall, just a white-washed door beneath a carven lintel. There was a bench on either side of the door, each rough-hewn from a single plank. Both were empty. "Give me all your money," Nic said. Ruth obediently dug into the belt-pouch that had come with her new outfit, rummaging until she retrieved the handful of chump change bequeathed her by its previous owner. She held it out to Nic. He turned over a couple of the coins as dubiously as if he'd never seen them before, and slid the whole into his belt-pouch. He looked at Ruth and shrugged. "Let's go buy some information." They crossed the road and the inn yard, and stopped a few paces away from the door. "You stay here," Nic said, pointing to the bench. Ruth-much against her inclinations-began to protest. Nic put a hand on her shoulder, shoving until she sat. "Look," he said. "I can't watch you and them at the same time, Miss Marlowe. If this turns out to be more unicorn hunters, you're the one with the allies and connections here in Wonderland. So if I don't come out . . ." "What?"
Ruth asked, because he'd stopped.
"Run like hell," Nic said, and grinned. Ruth sat down, and within a few minutes found herself fighting not to fall asleep. A few minutes later Nic came out again. His hair was wet and slicked back, all traces of blood removed, and he carried a battered leather mug and a slab of coarse dark bread that had a slab of soft white cheese balanced on top of it. He handed them to Ruth. "Welcome to the canton of Counterpane," Nic said, "which is one of the Borderlands-I hope I have the emphasis right-that the Iron Road runs through. This is the Merry Grigot, and its main business is serving traders. Business has been bad this spring-no caravans-and the innkeeper isn't sure why. What he does know is that some lord from one of 'the inward lands' has been crossing borders in a rather highhanded fashion, throwing his weight around." "My, haven't you been busy," Ruth said peevishly. She took a hesitant drink from the quart-sized leather mug. It smelled like apples and had a vinegary, bubbly taste with a burning afterkick. Hard cider. She followed it with a bite of bread and cheese. "Basic recon. Apparently they're used to all kinds of strangers through there, so neither of us should attract much attention. The name Counterpane mean anything to you?" "A counterpane is a bedspread, if that's what you mean," Ruth
offered. "Melior said he came from Chandrakar. He didn't exactly run through Baedeker's Guide to the Perplexed " "Cheer up, Miss Marlowe. Apparently you can get there from here," Nic said, before going back inside. Ruth sat and drank her cider, wishing for a number of things that started with a shower and clean clothes and ended with her toothbrush. And now, because it had suddenly become possible, and because it didn't look as if she and Nic were going to get thoroughly killed any time in the near future, she thought about what she was going to say to Melior the next time they met. She loved him, and she was pretty sure her feelings hadn't changed. But while feelings didn't change, situations did. He hadn't come back for her, though it had taken her a long time to give up hope. Had Rohannan Melior accepted that he would never see her again, settled down with a nice second-best elf-princess, and gotten a steady day job, whatever his sort of day job might be? Or had he not come back for her because he was dead? He'd said he had enemies. One of the traps they'd set for him had dumped him onto 116th Street in little old New York. The next might have been fatal. These thoughts were not new, but always before Ruth had been able to bury them deep beneath the impossibility of ever finding out the end of the story. But now she was here in the Morning Lands, and it seemed very likely that she'd find out. And which of the three possibilities-married, dead, or ready to take up where they left off-distressed her most, Ruth was not prepared, at this time, to say. She wondered if a real person-with a whole soul-could have made an easier choice. She finished her bread and cheese and cider, and set the leather mug beside her on the sun-warmed bench. After a while a boy appeared from around the back of the inn, collected it, and skittered off again. He returned a short while later leading a saddled horse, and a traveler in a dark cloak came out the front door, mounted, and rode away. No one gave Ruth any more notice than if she had been a part of the wall. Eventually she did fall asleep. A hand on her shoulder woke her. Ruth started awake with a gasp to find Nic Brightlaw gazing mildly down at her. The sun was higher in the sky; nearly noon. He placed a cloth-wrapped bundle on her lap. "Your lunch, Miss Marlowe. Ruth opened the bundle.
C'mon, let's move."
More bread, more cheese, a couple of apples
and a slab of over-roasted meat. It looked delicious. She extracted the meat and shoved the rest into a vest pocket for later. "Yeah, right.
Where?"
She stood up, biting into the meat.
Nic started for the road. answered. "Oh .
He gave her time to catch up before he
. . you might call it the Unfair Faire Affair."
The Fox and the Hounds POETS MIGHT HAVE called it the greenwood, and maybe a hundred years after the event a highly-colored romanticized version of events would make its way into the popular songs. And then again, maybe not. Fox was bored. He lay at full length among the birches that covered the ridge and looked down on the pass into the Vale of Stars. The noonday silence was broken only by the chirr of cicadas, and the deep blue unpolluted sky was occupied only by a pair of soaring hawks. Several hundred yards behind him and down the ridge was their village; half a dozen rude structures made of green birch saplings bent into semicircles and then covered over with peeled bark and animal hides. Warm enough, even in winter, with half a dozen fellow sleepers, but Fox was fastidious by nature and craved more solitude than this rusticity was likely to give him. Nominally he was on watch. And should anything in fact appear on the road that led to the Vale of Stars, the willow whistle he wore on a cord around his neck would gather his men around him soon enough. Absently Fox summer sweat fine to pick shirt. Even
scratched himself inside the leather jerkin where the made a tingling itch along his ribs. Leather might be up girls in, but it wasn't as comfortable as a cotton homespun would be better.
But outlaws couldn't get cloth at all, even the coarse homespun that the cottage weavers made. And as for cotton and linen, silk and velvet, they were woven on giant water-driven looms in the market towns of the north for the sole consumption of the elf-lords and their favorites. Fox sighed for what he couldn't have, and returned his mind to his current problem. He'd been slow enough learning the lesson that all good generals knew-that the bone and sinew of an army is people. Fox hadn't had much use for people-before. To be perfectly frank, he'd always thought most of them were extremely stupid, and in this belief he had not been disappointed by later experience. His merrie outlaw band, Fox estimated, was about as thick as two short planks. And that was on a good day. But never mind. He needed them. And he had a much better idea now than he'd once had of how to make people do what he wanted them to.
Up to a point. A waiting game was the strongest tactical position, and all very well for fellows like Wellington and Alexander who commanded a paid army that actually wanted to be there. Fox had a collection of followers who were with him only because they couldn't be somewhere else. They'd been taxed out of existence, driven from their homes, and generally disenfranchised-and far from having instilled in them by these vicissitudes a steely spine and a martial nature, all they really wanted was to be left alone. But even if he were willing to let them sit in the shrubbery and rot, he didn't have that luxury. Without a goal, his semblance of leadership evaporated, and without leadership, the Merries would just wander off and get caught@r be sitting ducks when their numbers became too large for their former masters to ignore. And that time-despite all Fox had done to delay it-was coming soon. His fame was spreading. Every month brought a scattering of new recruits. If his outlaws could not manage to fight when they were attacked, he had called them together only to see them slaughtered. And though that thought would not have bothered him before, it bothered him now. They had to be able to fight-and more than that, they had to be willing. He needed some cheap and easy victories to weld them into a unit. And it wouldn't hurt, not at all, if this cloud-castle victory allowed them a change of fare from venison, rabbit, and dandelion greens. Besides, he thought the point-ears were getting it a bit too much their own way. He was keeping the blonde elf-bimbo away from the Cup, true, but what if he could do better than that? What if he could get the Cup? "Okay, is everybody clear on what's going on here?" Fox squatted on his haunches over the improvised sand table and pointed at the diagram with a peeled twig. "Dawnheart's here. The village is over here. The market sets up in this flat place between the village and the castle, but the Harvest Fair won't be there-it's too big. It's going to set up over here, on the water meadow just beyond the castle." He'd made up his mind to raid the Harvest Fair because his skittish band of rebels needed a cheap and easy victory, and what could be easier than pillaging a bunch of unwarlike merchants? Besides, Fox had found out that there was something called the Harvest Truce, which meant that nobody on the Fair's grounds would be armed. Except Fox.
And his band of merrie men, of course.
"What if they open the dyke?"
Raven asked.
"The river's too low to flood the meadow this time of year. Even if we're close to the castle, we're out of bowshot-and even if they could get siege engines up onto the catwalks, they won't be able to fire into
the middle of the Fair without fragging a couple hundred civilians. Which I don't think they'll do." "What about magic?" another man asked. cheeks-poaching, a first offense.
He was branded on both
This was something Fox had worried about himself, being largely ignorant of the workings of magic. But most of his outlaws had seen service on a battlefield where magic was in use, and he had listened carefully to their talk. "They aren't expecting trouble. Magic takes time. As long as we're fast, we're safe-and once we're back to the Vale of Stars they can't even track us." The others laughed at this, and Fox felt their tension ease, to be replaced by confidence. And once they saw that a strike at their former overlords brought no reprisals, they'd be bolder. And so would every other human in Chandrakar. Yippee, thought Fox dourly.
We're finally going to do something.
"Okay, guys. We'll move out as soon as the moon is up. We hit the Fair tomorrow at dawn. And remember-the goal is a horse for every man." The gathering around the sand table broke up. Fox took a last look at his careful map, running one more time over escape routes and pitfalls, before scrubbing the sand smooth again. By this time tomorrow he'd either have proof that he was as good as he thought he was, or he'd be dead. Of course, maybe he'd be both.
There was always that possibility.
Fox sighed. None of this was going quite the way he'd planned, back when he'd begun. He'd wanted some basic surgical first-strike revenge against elvenkind in general and Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences in particular. So you build the tools to build the tools to build the weapon to wage the war. And if it takes long enough, you can even forget what you're fightingfor. Isn't that fun? The Road Goes Ever Onward HE WAS LOST. Ridiculous. Nonetheless. Rohannan Melior-Marchlord, Swordwarden, Treasurekeeper, Baron Rohannan of the House of the Silver Silences-reined his gelding to a halt yet again. Lost.
Lost, and the Sword of Maiden's Tears with him.
Lost
somewhere. Lost Somewhen. To pass through any of the Gates was to play with time. At its simplest, Time ran faster the closer one came to the World of Iron, and slower the farther away one got, until one reached the Timeless Lands where Time did not exist at all. Pass through a Gate and gain-or lose-a day, a week, a month@r more. And when dealing with the Wild Magic, be grateful it wasn't still more. But he had thought to lose those days to threshold-teind, and not to a wizard's prank that seemed neatly designed to make him take the long way home. And he had been so sure that Ophidias stood his friend. Melior had left the wizard's lair wrapped warmly in his borrowed troth-cloak, the bargain-ring on his finger. He had ridden through the icepale world with its lying sky and back through the hills to the bleached bone Gate. He had seen the Gate, and clucked encouragingly to his mount, and ridden through the arch at a jog-trot. And come here. Wherever it was. It was not Chandrakar in autumn, nor any of her neighboring Lands. Nor yet did it seem to be any of the Borderlands-Cockaigne, Broceliande, Amalur, Counterpane-that lay along the Iron Road to Earth. Gislaine had said that road was closed anyway; there was nothing for him there. Yet if Ophidias had not lied-and no wizard, whose magical Self was created entirely through the Word, could lie-then Ruth had crossed that border before it closed, and wandered now in the Morning Lands. Perhaps she was here? Melior gazed about the wholly unfamiliar countryside, nameless and unknown despite his magical attempts to find one of the leys; the powerlines that would lead him to a Gate or to the Iron Road itself. fair land, a pleasant land-but not the one he wanted, unless it held his lady.
A
Melior frowned. Ruth was no longer in the World of Iron. Ruth was here. Here, lost, alone, and-if he knew his Ruth-highly indignant about it all. And so easy to kill, did anyone know who and what she was. And if she died, far more than Melior's heart would die with her. The chance to publish Baligant Baneful's treachery would die as well, and that must not be. A man who made slow decisions would not have lived to grow older in wartime. Almost as the thought came to him, Melior had drawn the Sword of Maiden's Tears and held it before him. The bare blade shone blue in the daylight as Melior balanced it cautiously upon his gloved palms. Perhaps he was foolish in thinking that the Sword could help him now. He was no magician, nor, it seemed, was he adept in dealing with wizards.
But for good or ill, the Sword was linked to Ruth Marlowe through her stolen soul. And Ruth was freed from the World of Iron, and walked a world as filled with magic as the Ironworld was filled with electricity. The pommel-piece of the Sword glinted, a giant drop of frozen fire. Melior breathed a Word across it, his breath misting the polished steel on its blade. He felt the dweomer gather power as it left his lips, and slowly the Sword swung its ponderous weight gracefully upon his hands, until the pommel-stone pointed distinctly in a direction it had not pointed before. Melior marked it, then flung the Sword up and caught it by the hilt in a theatrical gesture that would have much surprised his lady-cousin, who thought him dull and peacebound. And then he clapped his heels to the sides of his surprised mount, and took off across the meadow, once more upon a quest. The Unfair Faire Affair "IF YOU DON'T mind a little vulgar curiosity," Ruth said, "just what is the Goblin Market? Other than a poem by Christina Rossetti, of course." It was late afternoon on the High Road. Ruth's feet hurt, but not to the exclusion of rational thought. Their superfluous garments were bundled in Ruth's cloak and Nic had lashed it across his shoulders like a pack. Life was good. In fact, nothing had tried to kill either of them since, oh, this time yesterday. After leaving the inn, they had walked in what seemed to Ruth to be a more-orless easterly direction. They'd left the road three more times to make way for parties of travelers, but no one had stopped them or tried to question them. "The Goblin Market, according to mine host," Nic replied, "is something supposed to be so well known in these parts that you'll appreciate that I couldn't ask too many questions about it. The caravans travel with special scouts whose specific job is to guide them away from it. From what I gathered, it's some sort of navigational hazard that dumps you off course and slides you across Borders." "Which would make it pretty ideal," Ruth said slowly. Nic smiled without humor. "If crossing Borders is what you're after, the Goblin Market sounds like the place to go. The only question I have is how to find it. By the way, we're being followed." Nic spoke so casually that by the time the words sank in Ruth didn't react at all-which had probably been his intention, damn him anyway. Just let them get somewhere safe and she was going to have a number of tough questions for Nicodemus Brightlaw, Boy Library Director. Of course, she had no idea how she could make him answer them. "Followed," Ruth said, in admirably even tones. "In the woods, off to the left."
His voice was pitched lower now, so that only Ruth could hear. This time she did look, as casually as she knew how, and saw nothing but what she had seen all along: the beige, slightly-rutted dirt of the road, the grassy verge with its sharp drop-off into the reed-filled ditch, the expanse of grass on the other side, now mixed with bushes and skinny trees that became bigger trees with no bushes until the forest proper began. All the trees were in the full leaf of summer; you could hide two armies and a three-ring circus in that woods in perfect concealment. I don't see anything, Ruth thought of saying, and rejected the remark as idiotic. "What are you going to do about it?" she said instead. "That looks like a nice place to have lunch," Nic said irrelevantly. He gestured at the road ahead, where the grassy verge widened into a semicircle bordered by the forest. Wagon ruts and burned circles on the grass showed where other travelers had taken advantage of this Otherworld rest stop. "Yeah, sure," Ruth said under her breath. Nic off to the side of the road.
But dutifully she followed
He untied the improvised pack from around his shoulders and spread it out on the ground for a blanket. "Miss Marlowe," he said, and Ruth bobbed him a mock-curtsy and sat down. She dug out the remains of the lunch Nic had bought her at the inn and bit into an apple. The taste was sweet and tart, mouthwateringly strong, and Ruth suddenly remembered something else about the poem "The Goblin Market": the warning it contained against eating Otherworldly fruits. But it doesn't matter. I'm not going back to Ippisiqua no matter what happens. She took another bite of the apple and bent to unlace her shoes. "If you take those off, you'll never get them back on," Nic observed. He squatted on his haunches, watching her. direction. "Your feet will swell."
Ready to move in any
"I don't care," Ruth said, trying not to sound sulky about it. only annoying because he was right, of course.
He was
She unlaced the furry cross-gaiters and pulled off her bone-andbrown saddle oxfords, and then, for good measure, the blue cashmere argyle kneesocks that went with them. Her skin was winter-white, unseasonable. She took another bite of her apple. "Have it your way.
I'm going for a walk."
Nic's voice was bland. As always, Ruth watched him amble away toward the edge of the wood, the picture of unconcern, and wondered what it would be like to hear real emotion in his voice. She wriggled her toes defiantly in the grass, savoring the coolness, and finished her apple.
She flung the core in his general direction, careful not to come remotely close. Emotion scared Ruth. It always had. Not always. As if it had only been waiting for this break in her concentration, her mind directed Ruth's attention back to that eternal sore spot: the years Ruth had spent . . . asleep. The nothingness after the accident that had stolen eight years of her life. She did not remember how it had happened. That had been left for others to tell her, and none of them could tell her how she had felt, what she had thought. 1981. Ruth had been seventeen. She-and Jimmy, and Allen, and Kathleen-had been going to the Senior Prom. Jimmy had his father's convertible. There was dinner before, at an expensive restaurant, then the Prom itself, and afterward about twenty of them had been going back to Kathleen's house to party till dawn. Or so Ruth had been told afterward. She didn't remember the month before the Prom; her graduation; or even why she'd bought the dress she had. She had a picture of it; a Polaroid her folks had taken when Jimmy came to pick her up. Yards of pink tulle, in every shade from baby's breath to flamingo. Fourteen years later she still wore her hair the same way; long, parted in the middle. The need to know the truth ground against the unshakable reality that she would never know the truth. Those memories were gone, destroyed by the same thing that had pushed her into the coma. Because somehow, somewhere, between the Prom and the party, there was a car accident, and nobody ever knew why for sure. There was no other car, no sign of anything except that Jimmy Ramirez had put the pedal to the metal and rammed a tree at something over sixty miles per hour. Everyone else was killed. Ruth had been thrown clear, to dream the next eight years of her life-all her young adulthood-away. The newspapers Ruth read ten years later said Jimmy must have been drinking. When she'd come out of her coma, her father had said the same thing. At the time, confused about so many things, she accepted what she was told. Ruth's memories of Jimmy were vague, like old photographs seen through carnival glass, but one thing she eventually remembered with certainty was that he couldn't have been drinking. Jimmy Ramirez' older brother had been an alcoholic. Jimmy didn't smoke, didn't pop, didn't drink anything stronger than Coca Cola. And this was a hell of a time to dredge up ancient history. Except that it wasn't ancient history, according to Melior. According to Melior, Ruth's soul had been stolen while she lay in that hospital bed, stolen and used to tie the Sword of Maiden's Tears to the World of Iron, so that it would fall into that last of all possible worlds, unrecoverable. Only Melior had recovered it, and without enough magic to repair the damage, had taken the Sword-and, Ruth supposed, her soul-away with him again.
What could she say to him when-if-she saw him again? say?
What could she
Ruth lay back, staring up at the wispy cloud trails in the sky. It was just for a moment. She should keep a lookout for Nic, and for whatever was following them. If anything. Ruth slept. "C'mon, Jimmy-we're going to be late!" "Parly can't start tillyou get there, Kath!" Jimmy shot back, laughing. He made a great show of searching for the car keys through all his pockets-the cummerbund and bow tie of his rented tux in his other hand-and then when he found them, tossed them up in the air and made a production out of scrambling to catch them. Ruth snickered Ruth Marlowe was sure that Jimmy Ramirez was the handsomest man she'd ever seen, and even though they knew perfectly well they didn't love each other, they both enjoyed the looks they drew as a couple. After tonight their paths would diverge: Ruth to college, Jimmy to work in his father's gas station. But tonight that didn't matter. Jimmy finally opened the car-it didn't matter, really, since it was his dad's almost-a-classic-car convertible and the top was down, but Kathleen's dress fit like one of her mom's old panty-girdles from her armpits to her knees and she couldn't exactly climb over the side of the car. Allen handed Kath in and she slid across the seat and then Jimmy walked around the car and opened the door for Ruth. She tossed her head, flirting with him, both of them knowing it was all for show. He'd brought her a corsage of white roses to go with her dress and Mom had pinned it into her center-parted hair. Her ombrid-tulle dress swirled around her calves, and her satin pumps were dyed to match the darkest shade of pink in it. They had glittering rhinestone buckles on them that matched her earrings, and Ruth could not imagine a future occasion on which she would be so perfectly dressed She got into the car. Jimmy closed the door. There was a shortcut to Kath's place-a back road, not very well lit, not exactly two lanes wide, although everyone pretended it was. It was one in the morning, and real unlikely that anyone else would be on it. Ruth held her hair in place with her lace shawl and shivered deliciously in the whipping midnight slipstream. There was a flash of light in the road ahead "Shit, " Jimmy muttered, thinking of cops, of tickets, of his dad's refusal to ever let him borrow the car again. But the lights weren't flashing red-andblue. It was a coppery fiery light, and Ruth, straining her eyes, suddenly saw "Nuh-oh!" Ruth struggled awake, pulled by terror and a feathery, whiskery touch on her cheek. She opened her eyes, and the meaning of the dream dissolved into spangled fragments, leaving only the fear behind. Her unicorn was looking down at her, blue eyes wide and pink nostrils flaring. Around its neck it wore a garland of flowers, each bloom the bright intense improbable color of one of the Crayolas in the Deluxe 64
Color assortment. The scent pouring off them suggested that someone had machine-gunned the perfume counter at Bloomingdale's. It nuzzled her again. "Yag," said Ruth, and forgot her dream entirely. She struggled to a sitting position. The unicorn backed up politely and sat down, looking rather like a large friendly dog that happened to have hooves and a single horn growing out of its forehead. "Where have you been?" Ruth asked it. She stood up, wincing as she put weight on her bare feet. Nic had been right, of course; her feet were swollen. If she'd known she was coming to Elfland, she would have worn hiking boots. The unicorn got to its feet and shook itself all over. It trotted a little ways away and looked back over its shoulder hopefully. "Oh, no.
Not this time."
Ruth looked around.
"Hello?"
she said tentatively.
Where was Nic?
The unicorn trotted back to her and nudged her arm. Oh, the hell with it.
"Nic!"
Urgently.
Ruth shouted at the top of her lungs.
The unicorn added its trilling bugle to her shout and then looked at her expectantly. Ruth shook a minatory finger in its face. "We are not going anywhere without Nic. We started out with Nic, and we are finishing up with Nic, whether you like him or not. And, really, you ought to be a little grateful." The unicorn was unimpressed. "And where did you get those flowers anyway? Ruth reached out to touch the flowers. out of reach.
A secret admirer?"
The unicorn skittered back just
Ruth looked around, turning her whole body to do so.
Where was Nic?
If what had been following them was the unicorn, then he wouldn't have been able to catch it, but he would have come back. And if it hadn't been the unicorn that was following them, had Nic met up with what was? And what happened then? "Damn," Ruth said inadequately. just five minutes ago.
And everything had been going so well
With quick angry motions she bundled the cloak and its contents back together as she'd seen Nic do and yanked on her socks. Getting her shoes back on took more determination, but Ruth was mad enough now not to care how much it hurt. Or, to be honest, scared enough. angry than scared, any day.
But mad was better.
She'd rather be
"Nic!" She looked around hopefully, but he didn't appear. It was, to coin a clichd, later than she'd thought. The sun would be setting in a few hours, heraking the start of another wonderful night spent sleeping on the ground in her clothes with no blankets. "Nic! Nicodemus!" She'd give him one last chance to show up before she really lost her temper. But he didn't, and secretly she'd known he wouldn't. Nic Brightlaw thought she had survival skills one notch above those of free-range linoleum. He would not leave her alone for this long if he'd had a choice. Unless, of course, he's simply abandoned you. "Cute, Ruth.
Real cute.
C'mon, Fluffy.
Let's go hunting."
Midnight Is a Place THE TOWER WAS in no place, at no time. And that was precisely the way its lady liked things. To age meant to change, even for the Sons of the Morning and the Daughters of the Twilight. And the lady liked herself just the way she was. Here in her tower, time passed just as she wished it to. Quickly, slowly, backward . . . or not at all. Here she dreamed and made her plans, and wielded the small subtle weapons that bent the great and powerful to her will. A small thing, in the midst of war, to single out Baligant No-House and put into his mind the thought to hide the Treasures. Easier still, to direct him to the Adept who could aid him in this-the Adept whose weakness she had discovered. And no trouble at all to conceal from Baligant the fatal idiotic flaw in his ambitious plan-that even though their absence would allow him to attaint and destroy the seven unruly Houses of Twilight, without the Treasures, Baligant could not be made High King of the land, much less hold its borders. No trouble, because Baligant was . . . dazzled. The lady regarded her image in a mirror and allowed it to reflect a faint expression of contempt. A fool, a greedy and jealous mediocrity who might never have been noticed all the days of his elvish immortality, save for the war that had cast him upon his betters' regard just as if he were some deep-sea refuse tossed ashore by a storm. Weak and flawed, but those very qualities were what made Baligant No-House such an able tool of destruction. Her tool. And when this working was done, nothing would be left not High King, not Morning Lords, not the very boundaries of Chan drakar itself. Hermonicet-called the Fair-regarded her image in the mirror. And smiled. The Broken Swordsman
NIC MOVED INTO the forest, letting it close around him like the sea, touching him all over. And, like the sea, a disturbance in any part of it would be transmitted to him here. He did not think about Ruth. He did not worry about the impossibility of their arrival here by way of a haunted bookshelf in a library basement, or about her half-told tale of sorcery and power politics. Nic Brightlaw had learned in a very hard school to focus his mind in a deep and narrow track, avoiding speculation about things he could not affect. Just now, his mind was focused on achieving the Objective: ID-ing the stalker who followed them. He wished, momentarily, for the toys that belonged to another world and another life: grenades, rifle, LAW. Then he put them from his mind. He had a knife. At first he headed away from the direction of the presence. He intended to circle around, and if he drew the Unfriendly away from Ruth and toward him, so much the better. He stopped, sheltered by a stand of trees. He stood until the birdsong resumed, and knew by its resumption that his quarry was either equally motionless or absent entirely. He continued his sweep. Neutralization would be second best. Live capture and interrogation would be better. Who were they, who did they report to, why were they following him and Ruth, what did they want Ahead the forest thinned. Second-growth vegetation, legacy of a recent fire. A clearing. The sort of place he'd wanted to look for so that he and Ruth could camp for the night. He saw a flicker of color and movement in the clearing ahead. closer, and stopped. A horse.
He moved
A roan mare.
In the afternoon sunlight her coat blazed like polished copper. She swung her beautiful sculpted head toward him and flicked her ears back and forth. The sun turned her eyes as red as her coat, and her mane and tail fell in a long silky curve, fine as a woman's hair. Nic's lips curved in a sardonic smile. He had a certain amount of experience with horses. Enough to tell him that the presence of this one was suspicious. "The phooka, " he announced in loud, conversational tones, "is an Irish fairy able to take three forms: dog, human, and horse." And to tell him that there was no more point in playing hide and seek. He couldn't break a horse's neck. Scratch Objectives One and Two.
And a horse couldn't talk.
On the other hand, the knife in his hand was iron. "Iron, Cold Iron, the Master of them All."
I hope.
"I'm not aphooka, " the woman said. She was red-gold and ivory, and she was absolutely naked. Her ivory body shone like every dream of goodness and honor he'd ever had. "All hail, 0 mighty Queen of Heaven-isn't that how it goes?" said.
Nic
If she'd expected her magic to unnerve him, she was doomed to disappointment. Du ma nhieu, Charlie. Goodness and honor were dreams. And dreams were lies. She shook out her hair and it fell over her shoulders, highlighting her nakedness instead of concealing it. She was alone. If she weren't, she and her partner would have tried a flanking maneuver against him and Ruth on the Road long since. The only question was, were they after him or after Ruth? The smart money was on Ruth. politicos.
She had a history with the local
"And then I am to tell you that name does not belong to me." She smiled. The effect was heartbreakingly beautiful, meant to keep his eyes riveted to her face. Nic looked past her, moving his gaze without moving his head. Beyond her, at the edge of the clearing, he saw the unicorn. Its head was down, neck extended, the very picture of a dog trying to pull its head out of a too-tight collar. There was a black strap digging into the flesh just behind its head. The other end of the strap was looped around a tree. The creature struggled in desperate silence. Nic looked back at the Queen of Air and Darkness. He focused all his attention on her, banishing the unicorn from his mind. He took a step sideways, as if trying to get a better view of her. "What do you want with me?" stupid civilian question.
he asked, because it was the next obvious
There was an infinitesimal pause, a ball-lightning crackle of electrical potential on his skin. She's checking something. He took the opportunity to shift position slightly. "You are a great warrior, Nicodemus, unjustly betrayed by your leaders. There are those among the worlds who have noted that betrayal, and would give you the means to set it right." "You can't know what you're talking about," Nic said pleasantly. "But I do," the Lady said. "Time is mine to command. I can give you a sword to shatter worlds, and return you to your own place at any time you wish."
She waved her hand, and hanging in the air was the image of a sword. A Prince Valiant, ICing Arthur, Conan the Barbarian wet dream of a sword, with a blade as long as his thigh and an edge sharper than a razor. "Yeah, I can just see me walking into Firebase Delta carrying that." "It is invincible," the Lady purred, and whether she was lying or not, he believed her. It would chop through the barrel of an AK-47 like it was balsa, and go through a man like he was made out of Jell-0. She waved her hand again, and a doorway appeared beside the sword. Rank, fleshy, yellow-green vegetation filled the opening, and the light was the shadowy bluish light that was all that filtered through the jungle canopy. It was the place that had become home, because it had burned away the memory of any other place. He smelled cinnamon and burnt rubber, the rank brackishness of canal water and the glass-house humidity of the jungle. "Take it," the Lady said. Offering him life.
"Go."
She gestured toward the doorway.
Offering him the real world.
One step forward, one to the side.
"I like it here," Nic lied.
She snapped her fingers, and sword-image and doorway both vanished. She turned toward him, just as he wanted. If you moved slowly enough, most people would turn to face you without really noticing. "Then stay. I'll sponsor you." She held out her hand. "I can promise you adventure beyond imagining, and-" she dropped her eyes demurely, "Other things." Her hand was white and soft, the nails gleaming seashell pink. glamourie she was exuding would have melted the tires on an eighteen-wheel semi tractor trailer.
And the
But not Nic Brightlaw, who believed in neither Beauty or Truth in any possible combination. "The trip down Memory Lane was really special, but if there wasn't something you wanted, we wouldn't be talking." He took another step. The unicorn's tree was almost within reach. The woman stretched, raising her arms and pushing the copper-gold mass of her hair off her neck. Nic felt power and intention reach out for him-and miss, as if he had almost intercepted a message meant for another. Interesting. "You didn't come here willingly. It was an accident, in fact. with me, and I will make it right."
Come
Almost there. "And Ruth?"
Time to set off the fireworks.
Nic said.
"Ruth has her own destiny to follow," the Lady said glibly. She smiled, and her teeth were long and white and sharp. "Come to me, Nicodemus Brightlaw. I have waited for you for so long." She held her arms out to him, welcoming him. He knew who she was now. She was Death, and he'd strung her about as far as he was going to be able to. He threw himself sideways, toward the tree. The penknife in his hand sliced down at the strap circling the trunk. He'd expected a struggle, but when the blade touched it there was a recoil sharp as an explosion, and the little knife flew out of his hand. The strap parted with a teeth-setting scream, and the unicorn plunged free. He rolled to his back just in time to meet the leopard's rush. She hit him like a football player going for the winning tackle and her open jaws stank of blood and roses. He kicked her off him and knew he couldn't do it twice. He scrabbled to his feet, back against the tree. She crouched, sleek and beautiful, her copper coat spotted with improbable vermilion florets. Her ears were flat and her jaws were open, and her beautiful eyes flared as red as dashboard warning lights. The jaws could grind his bones to powder. The foreclaws could lay him open like a fistful of razors. But the hind claws would kill him fastest, disembowling him with unstoppable force. But whatever she was, she had wanted the unicorn trapped, and he'd freed it. Maybe that gave Ruth a chance. "Nice kitty," said Nic. He bared his teeth in an expression that had very little to do with a smile. He knew someone who'd killed a leopard bare-handed. He'd died, but then so had the leopard. And she deserved something for waking up the memories he'd buried so carefully. The leopardess sprang again. Nic flung himself away from the tree, and she slammed against the trunk with bruising force. He saw what he wanted, half-buried in the mulch of the forest floor, and dove for it. The cat came up in a blinding flurry of fur and fangs, and a small dispassionate timekeeper in the back of Nic's brain told him he had only a few more seconds before she tried something more effective. But now he had a rock in each hand. And when she launched herself at him again, he brought both hands up, trying to make them meet in the middle of the big cat's skull. His fists struck with a hollow wooden sound, and bounced away again. She flung herself away from him in mid-leap, defying all the laws of physics. Nic scrabbled backward, adrenaline obliterating weakness.
His feet skidded and slipped on the leaf mold of the forest floor and he saw, for only a moment, the image of the copper-fire witch-queen, her face bloody and bruised. You will die a thousand deaths!
screamed the voice inside his skull.
She flung her arms skyward as if summoning heavenly vengeance, but instead her body rippled, pulled like taffy. A wave of furnace heat tightened his skin. The dragon-thing spread her wings, blotting out the sun. Maleficent.
Jesus, I always hated that movie.
She reared back to strike, all beauty and inevitable grace. himbecause he'd made her mad. Then Ruth.
First
Only he didn't give a damn whether she turned into a dragon or a two-car garage. She wasn't getting Ruth. The gun was small. A pocket pistol. The noise it made would scare horses, not dragons. But the load was steel-jacketed hollowpoints. Steel.
Iron.
She swung a head the size of a Japanese sedan at him, mouth wide with rows and rows of teeth. The scent of blood and roses was enough to make him gag. He thrust his arm down her throat and pulled the trigger. The jaws closed. collision.
Oblivion for Nic Brightlaw came with the speed of a
Shop Till You Drop THE GOBLIN MARKET was one of the most dangerous places in all the lands, and in the end, it was inevitable that every Gatewalker should find himself there at least once. If dealing with a wizard took all one's skill, surviving the Goblin Market without loss took all one's skill-plus luck. The rules of commerce there were simple: you could only sell what you wanted to keep, and purchase what you already owned. Melior, on horseback, sat on the crest of a hill and looked down into the Market. Painted tents and ribbon-decorated stalls spread out across the floor of the valley. Gypsy wagons occupied the edges of the pitch, and also on the perimeter were the horse-copers' lines, filled with horses worth-well, what you paid for them. Literally. Every road out of this valley led to a different Land. No road led to the same destination twice. Even experienced travelers, when caught in the Goblin Market's turbulence, let its power fling them where it would, and made their way home from that more stable Land with gratitude for the ability to do so. Power and opportunity. Market.
Or, in other words, danger.
The Goblin
The Goblin Market never closed, but its character changed sharply with
nightfall. day.
It was safer, by far, to chance the Market during the
Melior looked at the sun, balanced a bare hour's worth of daylight above the mountains. Go down the path to the Market an hour from now, and there was every chance he'd lose the Sword again. And Ruth was not worth that, no matter what his heart told him. That cold equation had been solved before, and nothing yet had changed. He would die to save Ruth. But he would not give up the Sword. But it was only a chance he would lose the Sword, not a certainty. And Ruth was there. If he waited for her to pass through the Market and enter a less hazardous Land, he might lose her forever. There were no certainties. Melior clucked to his tired gelding and urged him down the path to the Market. In its sheath upon his back, the Sword of Maiden's Tears flamed palely. "What-to coin a phrase-fresh hell is this?" Ruth demanded of the unicorn. It had been willing enough to follow her into the forest in search of Nic, but inevitably she'd gotten lost. The unicorn had brought her to a trail, and the trail had brought her here. If the inn this morning had been vintage Hildebrandt, the scene before her now was pure Howard Pyle. There were wooden stalls, some with bright-colored cloth awnings. The counters were piled high with all sorts of things-hats, it looked like over there, and those were gloves. . . . "Whoa," Ruth said.
"It's the Hollow Hills brand of Nieman Marcus."
And it was filled with people, more people than Ruth had seen in one place since she'd fallen through the bookcase. Some behind counters, more-far more-strolling the lanes between the stalls in garb from every possible historical period and fantasy kingdom. Here was a lady wearing a gown that Ruth could reasonably assign to fourteenth century France-save for the fact that the gown was made from layer on layer of sea-green gauze, and the lady's headdress was a cone-shaped hennin of spectacular height, swathed in more sea-green veiling. There she saw a man whose silky black hair hung nearly to his waist. He did not look toward her, but shouldered his way through the crowd, wearing full plate armor of breathtaking rococo splendor that looked as if it had been emitted from a cake decorator, chrome-plated, and then Turtle-Waxed. A tiny woman with hair the bright improbable blue of Egyptian faience darted up to him from between two stalls. He bent his head toward her, listening, and they went off together. Ruth hesitated, then stumbled forward as the unicorn nudged herhard-in the back of her knees. Ruth swung toward it and it bounced sideways, out of reach, shaking its head at her in silent laughter. It tossed its head, and the wreath it had worn lay in the road at her feet.
Then it turned and trotted off, back the way they'd come. moments the white flash of its body was lost to sight.
In a few
"Abandoned," Ruth said out loud. She took a step in the direction it had gone, and stopped. It obviously didn't mean to be followed, this time. The bushes closed behind it, and the path she'd followed to come here looked narrow and unappealing. Ruth blinked hard against tears. She'd miss the silly thing. She supposed it was gone for good this time. She stooped and picked up the flowers it had dropped. Something to remember it by, at least. She'd expected it to be rigid, like a horse collar or a wreath, but instead the flower garland was as flexible as a lei. She draped it around her neck. The perfume radiated from it like a more benignant form of a particularly virulent Air-Wick. Ruth turned back to the fair. .
Was this Nic's Goblin Market?
Probably
And because it was as likely that Nic was there as anywhere, she walked toward it. Ruth Marlowe had faced hordes of sixth-graders with an assignment due tomorrow and five minutes until the library closed. A Goblin Market full of elves, fairies, and little men shouldn't faze her in the least. The race is not to the swift, nor the contest to the strong, but that's the way to bet. James Thumber. There was no formal entrance to the Market, only two posts about eighteen feet tall and slender and straight as teenaged telephone poles, striped black and white in a cognitively-dissonant symbolic blend with railway-crossing barriers. Ruth passed between them and into the colorful, noisy, busy babble of the Goblin Market. The setting sun gave the place the fluorescent jewel-brightness of a medieval Book of Hours. And, as in a Book of Hours, there were small cylindrical tents of bright-colored felt flying pennants of gorgeous, rippling, many-colored silk, banners on poles, and liveried lackeys of every stripe. There were piemen in motley hawking their wares, pushcarts draped with brightly-colored banners, strolling minnesingers; the New York City bustle that Elfland had so far lacked. It took all Ruth's attention just to navigate through the press of crosstime patrons without trampling or being trampled. Fortunately she didn't have to worry about getting her pocket picked. She didn't have anything worth stealing. "What d'ye lack?" Ruth swung around again, menacing oblivious fairgoers with the bundle she carried over one shoulder. While she'd been staring, one of the wandering handelsmenchen had waylaid her. He was wearing red and gold striped hose and purple velvet boots with tiny golden bells sewn around the dagged cuffs. His shirt had billowing white sleeves, and over it he wore a quilted vest of deep
green leather. Ruth regarded this vision with fascination. His hair was red and his wide eyes were a green-hazel, and when he saw that he had Ruth's attention, he smiled more broadly. His wares were piled on a tray he carried hung from a strap that went around the back of his neck. "What d'ye lack?" "Everything," Ruth sighed with weary comprehensiveness. "Have you seen-" "Old loves, lost causes, true dreams, new hope-tell me what you lack; for I've the key to every lock and the word to every riddle." "I'm looking for my friend," Ruth persisted. "He's tall-" but there were any number of tall men in the Goblin Market "-and he was hit on the head. Have you seen him?" "Friends, ah, lost loves are the sweetest. The Market has what you lack if I do not-but before you go on, won't you buy a faireing from me?" "I haven't got any money," Ruth said apologetically. "Barter me, then-the knife at your belt, useless thing, for any piece on my tray. No, better yet-any two." He smiled coaxingly. Ruth considered, staring after all-and though she value of the dagger, she closer look at the items
at the tray. There was no reason not to, was probably going to be cheated of the real didn't have any use for it anyway. She took a on the peddler's tray.
There was a red glass heart on a chain of pearls, a gossamer scarf in grays and blues, a mirror the size of a half-dollar with a silver frame shaped like a snake swallowing its tail. There was a set of what first looked like bondage gear for hamsters but which Ruth eventually identified as a hood and jesses for a hawk. Glass bracelets, gilded nutmegs, embroidered ribbons . . . an entire jumble of possibilities. "Choose what you lack," the peddler urged. Ruth pulled the dagger from her belt and handed it-still in its scabbard-to the peddler. He inspected it briefly and slipped it into his vest. Around them large competent-looking men in more sober dress carried baskets of torches, stopping at intervals to set one in a socket on pole or stallside and light it. The warm scent of burning resins tickled Ruth's nostrils. "Any thing-any two things-that you see," the peddler urged. She plunged her hand into his tray almost at random. Beneath the jumbled surface of ribbons and silks, her fingers hit something hard. She pulled it out. Scissors. throat.
Well, that's useful Maybe I can cut my hair.
Or my
The scissors looked as perfectly ordinary as any Ruth had in her sewing basket back in lost New York: about four inches long. The eyes were gilded, and textured with some sort of design that Ruth couldn't make out in the twilight. The blades gleamed needle-sharp; embroidery scissors. Tangled through the scissors' eyes as if it belonged there was a long red ribbon with a tiny gold bell at each end. Gold embroidery on the ribbon glittered in the torchlight. "I'll take these," Ruth said. "And if you see my friend-" But the man with the tray was already bowing his way out of her presence, searching for new customers. Ruth found an unoccupied pouch in which to stow her purchases, and walked on into the Market. She had not had time to see much of it in daylight, but it seemed to Ruth that the character of the Market changed perceptibly in torchlight. All the middle ground in shapes and colors vanished, and all that was left were the brightest brights and the darkest darks. And it was no longer possible to fool herself that Nic was here. She was the one who was here, in the place that people paid good money to stay away from, so Nic had said. She'd lost him-and the unicorn-and herself-and she felt not so much threatened as maddeningly ineffectual. "Ruth!"
A voice called her name.
They would say, when it was time to compose his epitaph, that Rohannan Melior was a fool. So be it. He was a fool. The sun's light had fled the Goblin Market and he was still here. A wise man would not try to ride his horse through the twisting maze of alleys and fairways that made up the Market, and so Melior had left his in the place provided, bribing the attendant suitably to assure that he came back not only to a horse, but to the same horse he'd left. He carried the Sword of Maiden's Tears upon his hip; an awkward position for a sword of that length, but it enabled him to use it as his compass in his search for Ruth. And either its magic had failed entirely, or Ruth was dead, or she was here. What a comforting selection of possibilities to choose from. But the flame that was Ruth's soul burned clear and bright in the pommel of the Sword, and while there was a chance of finding her, Melior knew he would not leave, fool though that marked him. He paced through the Market, oblivious to its temptations. Scraps of music and conversation swept past him like clouds scattered by a storm wind, and Melior ignored them all. Natives and visitors alike spared him a respectful distance, for the sword that Melior carried held one-twelfth the magic of an entire Land, and such power commanded respect even here. He was so focused on finding Ruth before the Market did her harm that
the sound had been in the air for several seconds before he noticed it. The sound of wings.
Large wings.
He looked up. The bowl of night was filling slowly, pale stars visible only at midheaven in a sky only just darker than an October day's. The flying thing could be seen against that background quite clearly, the last rays of day striking greenish-copper light from its hide. Its wings were a dark insectile blur about its torso. Warwasp. Not a natural creature. A form assumed by wizards and Adepts Major for the damage it could do. Created for war. Faster than a dragon, more poisonous than a manticore, able to burn with the lethality of a salamander. Melior had seen a warwasp destroy an entire unit of cavalry once. Around him others who had seen it too were spreading the news; in moments this collection of unrelated people would be a mob. Or a riot. He looked down, choosing his retreat.
And then he saw her.
"Ruth!" He recognized her even through the motley rags Fate had dressed her in. For some impossible reason she was wearing a Gate-garland-the ornament that assured you exited through the same Gate you had entered by-around her shoulders. She swung toward the sound of her name and stared straight at him. Above him, he heard the thin song of the monster's flight change pitch as the warwasp prepared to dive. She wasn't ready, was Ruth's first thought. She'd turned at the sound of her name, thinking Nic had somehow found her after all, and seen him. Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences. was nearly as afraid of him as in love with him.
And she found she
He was wearing a cloak the metallic orange-gold color of enameled monarch butterfly wings. It glittered in the torchlight, and in his hand he held the Sword. The Sword of Maiden's Tears. The Sword that had killed Naomi. As she stood, indecisive, the press of people that had seemed pliable and permeable suddenly took on solidity and direction; a solid mass of people, pushing her away from Melior. She struggled against them, trying to go the other way, and then at last she heard the sound that everyone else had heard before her Ironworlder ears had. A dive bomber?
Don't be Ruth looked up.
A nightmare, vexed to madness by a thousand Japanese monster movies: a wasp the size of a subway car, glowing dull red as if stoked by hell's own furnace. Its giant bubble-eyes gleamed wetly with unclean phosphorescence, and when Ruth looked up she knew with a sick certainty transcending logic that it was looking at her. Melior drew his sword; a white-hot neon blur that bleached his surroundings to a ghost of daylight brightness. And the determined selfinterested exodus around Ruth became a full-scale rout. She struggled to keep her feet, knowing that if she fell she would be trampled. Reaching Melior, finding him, was abruptly less urgent than surviving to find him again. Melior took a step toward Ruth, knowing that he could never reach her through this mob; that by the time he might search for her again she could be half a hundred Lands away. Then he drew the Sword of Maiden's Tears and pushed Ruth from his mind. The Goblin Market was sacrosanct: to use sorcery near it-or in it was a violation of custom and treaty so vast that Melior could not begin to imagine the retribution that would be exacted. And the warwasp was a creature of Chandrakar and those Lands near it. Paranoid intuition indicated that the creature was here for him. Or for Ruth. To save Ruth; to deflect the Heartlands' retribution from Chandrakar, Melior had to kill the warwasp. Here. Now. Quickly. The Sword flared nova-bright in his hands, heterodyning magic from the creature above him. He saw the nightmare yanked from its intended path by the compelling magnet of the Sword's power, and took the last moment before it reached him to feel fear that for the first time the Sword's hidden weapon was his to wield. Each of the Twelve Treasures was more than it seemed. The Sword of Maiden's Tears was unstoppable, unshatterable-but more than that: the Sword of Maiden's Tears gave its wielder the opportunity to know the mind of his opponent. As Melior would know the mind of the warwasp. He unclasped the hindering cloak and flung it away. Then the warwasp was within reach. Against beasts, spears and bow. Against men, the sword. Against a true dragon, the only defense was prayer. And the warwasp was none of these. It hovered above him, as large as three cart horses and their wagon. He slashed upward, and it dodged out of reach, nimble in an element Melior couldn't enter. Heat radiated off it like a furnace. The body was scaled; six grasping legs ended in claws, and mandibles glistened like black glass. It descended on him and this time Melior retreated, hampered by close quarters and the inability to bring the Sword to bear. The mandibles clicked, inches from his face.
But he had seen something. Behind the head, high in the chest between the two forelimbs, was a tiny fleck of blue-white light, as if there were something inside the warwasp, burning. That was its vulnerable part. Melior backed between two market stalls, hoping the warwasp would follow. The intuition granted him by the Sword assured him that it wouldn't. The monster snatched itself into the sky again on its black gauze blur of wings. It wanted Ruth, not him, and now Melior knew it. But the wizard whose creation this warwasp was couldn't search for Ruth, not while the Sword of Maiden's Tears flared magic like a balefire, eclipsing all lesser lights. The warwasp would attack the Sword until the Sword was destroyed, or until it gave up and left without its prey. So he was risking the Sword after all. He looked around, trying to find his enemy. The space he was in was a narrow alley between two rows of stalls. The top was covered with canvas. He saw a clear space ahead, and started to move toward it. The canvas above him bulged inward. The stall timbers edging it began to groan and splinter. The canvas smoked, catching fire, and black mandibles sliced through it, seeking him. Melior cut upward, and the canvas split with a high buzzing shriek, dropping the hindquarters of the warwasp into the alleyway with him. The barb in its tail dripped greenish vitriol that smoked and stank. The Sword bit into the creature's thorax. Only a glancing blow, but enough to make the warwasp disengage. Only this time, when the monster tried to rise into the air, it was tangled in the burning canvas. It thrashed like a dying horse, spraying poison from its trapped hindquarters. Melior ran.
Behind him the walls of the market stalls began to burn.
He heard the crashing as the warwasp floundered free, and a distant, bookish part of his mind wondered what indemnities the Heartlands would ask against Chadrakar for the bringing of its war into the Goblin Market. He wondered what coin his pillaged kingdom could find to pay in, after a century of war. But what he wondered most was if he could find a clear area ahead so that he could seduce the warwasp into another attack. Buying time, so that Ruth and the other innocents here could flee. And Ruth would be lost to him again. Ahead, the alley opened out into another thoroughfare. There were still people here, cowering or merely watching. He saw a blue-eyed lion the size of a pony regarding him unblinkingly. Melior turned back the way he'd come, and saw the warwasp rise into the air again. Bright gold blood dripped thickly from its torso, setting
fires wherever it dropped, and the werewizard itself glowed like a stoked kiln. The night was full dark now, illuminated only by torches, random fires, and the light that flamed from both combatants. The monster sighted the radiant Sword and flew toward it. Its heat sucked the breath from his lungs and pulled his skin taut. Melior raised the Sword for the downward cut-through the shoulder, into the spine-that experience and training swore was the surest kill. The bright blade flung itself forward. And the lower part of the warwasp whipped forward like a second attacker, and a chitinous barb the size of a boarspear slashed at Melior. Its venom had been expended in the first encounter; the droplets remaining were only enough to burn, not kill. The barb struck his thigh and stuck, then tore free to drag a smoking furrow up his body before Melior flung himself out of reach. The Sword passed cleanly through untenanted air as the warwasp reared back. A miss. And the swift instants in which Melior might have won the fight through surprise and misdirection were gone, and all that was left was a war of attrition. A war that Melior Treasurekeeper, elphenborn or not, would inevitably lose. And though the roads through all Lands crossed here, by the time another warrior came to his aid it would be too late. He would be dead. And Baligant would have the Sword. The wound in his side burned, poisoned and seeping. Melior's vision blurred. His body shook with waves of hot and cold, and not even the incandescent insectile proximity of his foe could warm him. It seemed there had been poison enough remaining, after all. The warwasp hung in the air before him, just out of reach, savoring the moment. It was a tactical advantage Melior had been taught to look for-that those creatures who loved slaughter often stopped to admire their work. It would not be enough to save him, but if he could cripple it, another might finish the task. This, too, Melior had been taught. He slashed down. The Sword hit the barb in the warwasp's tail with the sound of an ax hitting wood. And the barb broke and the Sword did not. But the Sword was so heavy.... Up again, with the weapon that now felt as awkward as a bar of tarrier's bronze clutched clumsily in his hands. Stroke to the midline; open the belly. He missed.
And while his clouded senses were still registering the fact, the warwasp closed on him. He brought the Sword up barely in time to save himself, all the while knowing it was only a temporary respite. Through a hot poisoned fog Melior felt himself falling backward, felt the dulled impact as he struck the street. He saw his hand clasped around the hilt of the Sword, and the warwasp's maw upon it. His fingers lay just outside the flexing mandibles; safe. But the blade was being pushed back toward Melior's own throat, and his other arm was trapped beneath him. And through the Sword he felt his opponent's intentions. No ambiguity there, only madness, blood, and flowers. And the furnace heat, beginning to scar. "Father!" The shout cut through Melior's concentration, forcing him to look. A brown-haired girl, her face a subtle blending of Ruth's features and his own, stood in the street behind the warwasp. His daughter. And in her hands she held a sword that was twin to his own-that was his own, duplicated by Time refolded like a silk ribbon to touch itself. It was not the warwasp's poison alone that had sickened him; the air was glutted with the magic that had let this be; a stifling rarefied atmosphere that choked the breath in Melior's lungs and made his vision dim. Not what will be, but what may be. The Sword in his hands vibrated like some mad Ironworld machine, threatening to tear itself apart through proximity to . . . itself. The warwasp turned, sensing, impossibly, the magic that bespelled it, redoubled. It lifted off him to confront this new threat, and Melior freed his trapped arm and snatched the Sword from its jaws; felt his hands, burned and cut to the bone, slide upon the sharp dimpled substance of the hilt. Then the warwasp jerked and reared up, screaming silently as it was attacked from behind. Melior felt the blow that had struck it vibrate through its body and into his, and at last he had the clear target he had been trying for. With the last of his endurance, Melior thrust the Sword of Maiden's Tears, point first, into the glowing patch in the warwasp's throat. He felt the Sword turn icy and sullen in his hand as it transfixed the node of molten iron burning in the warwasp's breast. Reflexively he jerked it sideways, clearing the blade with a snap-wristed jerk, and fell to the street, sick and dizzy. The warwasp flung itself into the night sky, body rippling as it threw off the form that had served it so ill. Melior didn't need his Sword to tell that it was abandoning the attack.
And it hadn't killed him. But the riptide of Wild Magic might. He scrambled to his knees and looked through the veils of shifting smoke to his daughter. The daughter who had not yet been born, who might never be born, despite her appearance here today. Who had saved his life, at the cost of a greater magic than Melior thought there was to buy. She smiled at him, pushing her hair up off her forehead in an achingly familiar gesture. He could see the street beyond through her body. ". . . Father . . . " her voice was faint, as the Time River that had never been meant to merge here separated itself again before the worlds tore themselves apart. "Your name! Child, your name!" Melior shouted, willing her to hear him. Suddenly it was important to know, to properly honor this spiritdaughter. He saw her lips move in answer as she faded. he didn't need to hear to know.
No sound reached him, but
"Naomi. For the Love and for the Glory A PLAN.
I need a plan.
Ruth Marlowe was no ordinary interdimensional traveler. Possibly unique among the visitants of the Goblin Market, she had survived rush hour in the New York Subway. In the crowd that swept her away from Melior she kept both her feet and her head, looking for an alley to dodge down. She worked herself to the edge of the press of bodies and pulled free, the force of the maneuver sending her sprawling into a display of baskets. As she fell, the scissors jabbed her sharply; Ruth swore and tucked them somewhere safer, rolling into concealment. No one saw her here, no one was idiotish enough to stop and "rescue" her. Ruth tried to catch her breath and think sensibly. Melior was back there. And it would be vaporbrained to the ultimate max to do anything but get back to him as soon as possible. There was a blinding flash of light and Ruth cringed instinctively deeper into the baskets. She thought about that thing that Melior was currently fighting and shuddered, a mutinous panic building in her. It belonged in a monster movie, not in Elfland. She didn't like adventures. She didn't like surprises. And most particularly she didn't like monsters, whether they flew, shambled, or swam. She closed her eyes tightly, stricken paralytically by the certainty that twelve-foot wasp knew who she was, knew she was here, and was coming for her. And someone showed up to rescue her after all.
" -shut up. Your pardon, demoiselle, can we be of assistance?" man's voice, light and amiable. "We.
I like that."
A
A woman.
Ruth opened her eyes and looked up. Two of the people she'd seen before-the man in the wedding-cake armor and the woman with the blue hair-were standing in front of the stall. The man was looking at her. His companion was looking at him. He looked like a sword and sorcery pinup designed by a particularly vindictive armorer. His hair was black, his eyes were blue, and his strong sculpted face had a faintly Oriental cast to it. His hair was longer than Ruth's own and straight, caught back in a jeweled ring and falling free over his shoulder. His armor was intricately jointed and elaborately chromed. He had an earring, equally bright, in his left ear, and the open, friendly expression of an All-American Hero from a thirties pulp magazine. His companion barely came up to his elbow. Her hair was shoulderlength, a bright false cerulean blue that clashed weirdly with her old-ivory skin and slanting amber eyes. She was wearing a fussy, elaborate costume that incorporated every form of dagging, slashing, trapunto, bead, button, and ribbon ornamentation of Western Europe from the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries, inclusive, but far from making her look ridiculous, it simply increased her resemblance to some fabulously expensive jeweled clockwork doll. Her boots had curled toes and her cape resembled a fuschia suede artichoke that someone had edged heavily with gold bullion fringe. Her gloves had lace trim. Ruth took a deep breath and tried not to surrender to an hysterical urge to laugh. "Might you perhaps have a particularly large can of Raid?" carefully.
she asked
The man smiled, an especially dazzling smile on an entirely human face. "No," he said, "but I'll happily stand you a cup of wine. obligation."
No
His companion made a noise like an enraged cat sneezing. There was another flash of light. sobered slightly, then lightened.
Ruth flinched.
The man's expression
"Oh, don't worry about that-just some local elf-lord bringing his war to Market. One of there'll kill the other, and everything'll be fine. I'm Perigord, by the way, and this is Azure Bowl." hand and Ruth took it. He helped her to her feet.
He held out his
"You don't understand. That's my elf-lord, and-" "I knew it!" Azure Bowl shrieked. "Peri, you inbred son of a peripatetic sphim, I knew she was trouble!"
"And I suppose I should have just stepped over her and gone on?" Perigord shot back. He looked over his shoulder, and Ruth followed the direction of his gaze. Fires. He turned back to her. "If the elf-lord's your friend, then I hope he wins. have to win without me." Perigord shrugged.
But he's going to
"No money in it-and too much trouble," Azure Bowl snapped, but unease radiated from her. With an effort alien to her nature Ruth shut her mouth on her next remark, which was that if the giant bug killed Melior, it would be coming after her next. Why should she tell these people that? She didn't know them. And they might decide that it wasn't too much trouble to simply hand her over to the wasp-thing in the name of peace and quiet. "The offer of a drink still stands," the man-Perigord-said, and Azure Bowl threw up her hands in the universal gesture of one who has nothing to do with events. She regarded Ruth with a measuring eye. "Maybe you should buy her some clothes instead, Peril" she purred. Pure irritation wiped every other thought from Ruth's mind for an instant, and she took a quick self-inventory: borrowed clothes, the wrong size to begin with, that she'd worn for two days; her hair full of brambles; her possessions much the worse for wear. And her cloak-Naomi's cloak-was gone. "It's been a long day," Ruth said tightly, and didn't add: "Just who's calling who a fashion victim? I've seen better dressed Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade floats." "Don't mind my charming companion," Perigord said, with a haste suggesting this was a speech he had to make frequently. "She used to be a librarian and she's never gotten over it." "Better a librarian than a prince," Azure Bowl rejoined. Perigord took Ruth's arm and led her in the direction in which the crowd had been running. Librarian?
Ruth wondered.
It was perhaps fortunate that visitors to the Goblin Market were a uniquely sophisticated clientele. Most of them were only interested in getting out of the way of the immediate danger. Though half the Market seemed to be burning, the customers grouped around the wine seller's stall were completely nonchalant. Perigord handed Ruth a battered tin goblet full of wine. She started to raise it to her lips, trying to phrase some graceful way of thanking him for such disinterested kindness, when suddenly the ground . . . shimmered. Magic!" shrilled Azure Bowl. Perigord clutched her in his arms, which would have surprised Ruth if she'd had any inquisitiveness to spare.
The world had taken on a form only seen in nightmare, where there was vision without light, sensation without perception. Everything seemed both distorted and horribly clear; vertiginous, hot, cold, greasy, and dryly gritty. Ruth felt as if the air had turned to rubber cement, gelid and chill. In her sight the objects around her pulled like taffy and flickered like a riffle of playing cards. The Market was there.
It wasn't.
It was a forest. A city inhabited by huge insects. A featureless plain. The Market. And Ruth felt the shock wave strike her, as personal and intended as if someone had found the loose trailing ends of her nerves and yanked on them. It was terrifying enough to numb her entirely, and without a backward look for her new friends she ran toward where she had last seen Melior, though the ground beneath her rippled and bucked like a fun house attraction. I have to get out of here, was Melior's first clear thought, and then: The cloak. Not mine. Ophidias'gift to his bride. I cannot leave it. But where was it?
And was it, for that matter, still there?
He got unsteadily to his feet and looked around. The Market was burning. The smoke hung in a low pall, reflecting back the light of the fires. Several of the stalls were smashed, their inventories strewn about the street. In a few moments their owners would return, and Melior hoped to be gone by then. Or, at least, to blend into the crowd. Small chance of that, battered as he was, and with the Sword he carried. Melior grinned mockingly at that, and winced, and staggered as the world did another slow revolve. Now distinct from the disorientation of High Magic, the warwasp's poison burned in Melior's veins. He looked down at tunic and trousers shredded and soaked with blood. He could still die here. With flayed and shaking hands he sheathed the Sword of Maiden's Tears. He drew breath to voice the Word that would show him Ruth's location, and realized that to expend even so little magic would use all his remaining strength. The cloak. Now.
Then his horse.
If either was still there.
He had come out of that alleyway.
. . .
The alley was smoldering and venom-fouled, but Melior didn't dare choose an alternate path, lest he lose his way entirely. He was rewarded by the sight of Ophidias' cloak just where he'd left it, and
risked losing his balance completely to bend and retrieve it. New strength seemed to seep into his bones as its scaled golden folds settled about his body. There was a wine seller's stall across the way, and Melior stopped to retrieve an unbroken flask from the wreckage, carefully putting a silver penny in its place. Another wave of dizziness roiled through him and he clutched at a wooden pole for support. Still gripping the pole, he broke the wax seal on the bottle and drank. Brandywine, spiced and potent. False strength surged through him with the liquor's heat-enough, perhaps, to get him to his horse, but far from enough to allow him to pass through a Gate of his own choosing, or to find Ruth. That much, at least, the warwasp had succeeded in accomplishing. He had hated Eirdois Baligant before. But now Melior swore that he would kill him, no matter what else happened, no matter what the consequence to Line Rohannan. For forcing Melior to abandon Ruth here, Eirdois Baligant would die. Childish runesinger nonsense, Melior scolded himself. a campaign. And Ruth was not lost, nor was he.
A battle was not
He hoped. But Baligant would still die. Grimly, Melior set himself to reach the horse lines. "No!" Ruth screamed it in pure terrified fury. She skidded to a stop, the leaf-and-pine-needle-strewn track treacherous beneath her saddle oxfords. She spun around, glaring behind her, already knowing what she'd see. Or wouldn't see. The Goblin Market was gone. And here, where simple physics and the logic of Ruth Marlowe's top speed, even terrified, both assured her should be approximately where Melior was fighting the Return of the Creature From Beneath the Id, wasn't. It was as if she'd run through the Market, unheeding, but even so she should see it behind her. I Hate magic! Ruth stamped her foot, and rejected every swearword she'd learned in a lifetime of obscure reading as simply . . . inadequate. The Market-and Melior-were gone. It was night, and Ruth stood just inside a forest, on a long straight track that, looking back, she could see led out into a gently-sloping meadow lit a bright unreal blue-silver by the full moon. In the distance were more trees, and beyond that a different darkness that could be mountains or clouds or both. No Goblin Market. Ruth walked out into the middle of the meadow, finding that moonlight
was everything its detractors had ever said it was: tricky and lying and full of illusion. Though the light seemed nearly bright enough to read by, objects seen by moonlight seemed to possess a sort of insubstantial vagueness that made it difficult to navigate, even if she did stay on the path. And she couldn't see the Goblin Market from here either. By the time she reached the middle of the meadow Ruth realized she was still clutching the wine cup. It had long since been emptied by her headlong flight, and whether it had been Prince Perigord's or belonged to the Market wineshop, Ruth saw precious little hope of returning it. She thought of throwing it away, but a lifetime of reading Andrew Lang's fairy-tale collections stopped her. Whatever else it was, the cup wasn't hers. And besides, that would be littering. She stuffed the cup into her tunic and hoped she wouldn't lose it, too. She'd lost Nic, she'd lost the unicorn-Oh, I've lost Britain and I've lost Gaul and I've lost Rome, but most of all-she'd even lost Melior, although she hadn't really had him, and although she now knew that he'd gotten home to Chandrakar alive, she didn't know if he was alive now and had a number of reasons to think he wasn't, so she really didn't think she was ahead on points. . . . And she was lost, with no idea of which way to go, a pretty good idea that there were people and things around that didn't like Ruth Marlowe very much at all, and no basis for choosing a direction. That, at least, was solved for her with the first cold drops of rain, falling miraculously out of a sky still moonlit and star spangled, but even as Ruth stared upward indignantly the question of whether the dark shapes on the horizon had been clouds or mountains was answered as the clouds slid across the sky like scenery being changed between acts, blotting out the moon and bringing rain in earnest-wet, soaking, cold, pneumonia-producing rain. Ruth ran for the nearest possible shelter: the forest she'd just left. The rain became a full-fledged downpour, complete, suddenly, with thunder and lightning and noisy whipping wind. And while the forest canopy was a roof of sorts, it was a very leaky one, and the gusting air was damp and chill. The thought of holing up in a hollow tree with a woodland assortment of spiders, woodlice, and rabid squirrels actually began to take on a certain charm as Ruth stood, shivering, in the dark. After standing there long enough to realize exactly how miserably uncomfortable and out of alternatives she was-about two and a half minutes-Ruth began groping along the path that led deeper into the forest, guided by intermittent spasms of lightning, seeking some place drier and out of the wind. Navigating by lightning was exhausting enough that Ruth stopped at the first halfway suitable spot. She sat down among the gnarly sheltering roots of the enormous tree and set her back firmly against its trunk, and vowed to sit there forever, or at least until a kindly old fairy
godfather came along with a pair of red shoes. And what would I wish for and where would I go?
Ruth wondered.
Then she thought about Melior, and put her head on her knees, and wept. She thought she'd probably dozed, because when she roused the storm had spent itself, and the only sound was a faint but constant dripping as the rainwater spilled from leaf to leaf in search of the forest floor. She was so cold that everything hurt; her fingers felt as if they'd been boiled, and if she wasn't as wet as she would have been out in the meadow, she was at least much wetter than she liked. And there was a light. Ruth stared at it for a while, numb-brained and fuzzy, and tried not to think that it was what it so very much looked like: a porch light, or one of those retro coach lanterns people hung on their gates or over their garages. But it didn't move, and it didn't vanish, and eventually Ruth got wincingly to her feet and tottered off in the direction of the friendly yellow light. He was, Melior realized, in what his cousin Jausserande would have called real trouble (to distinguish it, Melior had always supposed, from the numberless samples of unreal trouble she was constantly exposed to). The Goblin Market was deserted. And that could not be the case, nor ought it be that the Market's rulers would hesitate to make their feelings known to him, and that at once. Yet he saw no one and heard nothing, only the crackle of the fires that burned in half a hundred locations. Even the gypsy wagons were dark and silent when he reached them. Melior shook his head, wishing he could be more regretful of the unpleasantness his future undoubtedly held. He clutched at the side of one of the gypsy carts, using it to hold him upright as he made his way past it and to the horse lines. Ah. So that explains it, Melior thought with light-headed clarity. At least it would save him the sorry task of informing Line Rohannan of this latest disaster. He tried to remember who was next in the succession at the moment, and failed. Was it Rollant? Acevelt? All the horses were gone-the horses for sale and trade, the pack animals with their watchful trader masters, the light, long-legged couriers and the savage, heavy-boned warhorses. Even the donkeys, mules, and oxen. All of the animals were gone. Save one. It advanced upon him with a slow, measured gait-but this horse was not one which had to run-or that any in the Morning Lands wished to hurry.
It was pale gray, this horse, its mane and tail a darker gray than its coat. Its long hooves were unshod, yet Melior could hear each step that fell upon the soft turf clearly. Around its eyes, and at its muzzle, its coat was soot-dark, and out of that darkness, its long-lashed eyes flared red. Melior knew this horse.
He had seen it on innumerable battlefields.
Some called it beautiful, and some hideous, but it had never been his to ride. Until now. It walked toward him without hurry, and when it reached him, it stopped. "Now?" Melior said. "But I have suffered deeper wounds than this-" And why, he thought with regret and indignation, should he still suffer all the hurts of the body, when the presence of this new mount showed that Rohannan Melior was beyond them? The horse nudged him with its nose, soft and implacable. stretched his hand out toward its mane.
Melior
No! If he must choose to mount this horse, then it followed that he could still choose otherwise. He recoiled from the pale horse and stumbled away, toward the forest. Behind him, he heard the footsteps of Death follow patiently after. Ruth stumbled creakingly toward the light at the aching pace of an arthritic snail. If the storm had not passed, she could not have managed, but the blue bars of moonlight filtering down through the leaves gave just enough light to move by. As she got closer, the one light became two, and once she was closer still, Ruth saw that the light came from two lanterns hung one at each side of a set of wooden gates. The forest path branched there; one path leading on into the forest, one leading toward the gate. TWo carved posts, each with an iron hook to hold a lantern. Between them the gates-about five feet high; low enough to peer over without too much difficulty. Gates of what must be a purely ornamental nature, because anyone who chose to leave the path and step into the bramble of the forest for a step or two could simply walk around the gates: there was no fence. Ruth did not leave the path. She tottered up to the gates and looked over them. As she pressed close, she felt the soggy wreath she still wore around her neck squish against the wood, pressing water into her clothes. She pulled back and hung it over one of the gateposts, then gripped the top of the gate with blue and aching fingers and peered over. On the other side of the gates the path was graveled, wide and silver in the moonlight. The forest receded from the sides of the path until it was gone altogether; the path itself ambled on for a little distance until it reached the house.
In the pale moonlight what Ruth saw was a house that could very well have come out of her own world. It was a Thjdor manor house, with a halftimbered, lime-washed second story, and high narrow windows set with diamond-shaped panes of glass. The flagstone path spread out to a courtyard that ran the length of the front of the house. Beyond the house Ruth could see a low stone wall and the regular planting of trees that meant an orchard. There was a lantern burning over the front door, but all the windows were dark. Ruth hesitated, wanting to run to the safety and normalcy the house proclaimed, but knowing that here, in Melior's world, things were . . . different. The householders might welcome her with open arms. Or chain her in the basement. Or serve her for dinner. And there were no cops to call, and she didn't think the American Library Association would take much of an interest either. She might be much better off just staying with the forest, and starvation, pneumonia, lions, tigers, and bears. In the end it was the homely ordinariness of what she saw that persuaded her to risk it. Surely people who lived in a house that looked like that would at least be . . . civilized. Jennet Jourdemayne Memorial Society, here we come. Ruth ran her hand down the front of the gate, looking for a latch, and one wing of it slid inward under her hand. Ruth was extended latch it how come
cold and wet and hungry and tired and not in the mood for debate. She stepped through the gate, stopped to close and carefully-but if the latch is on this side, and it was closed, it came open?-and hurried on down the path.
It was, if anything, colder out in the open than in the forest, and the air had the crystal-bright stillness of long after midnight. Ruth walked as quietly as she could, but her progress was marked by the sharp crunching of saddle oxfords on gravel. Then she stood at the house's front door and tried to gather up enough nerve to knock. At least, if you were meeting someone under normal circumstances, you had a hint of what you should say, and some idea, however unfounded, of what sort of person they were. Not here. And it was late, and she was a stranger knocking on a country house door. And bringing trouble with her. Ruth had to admit that here even if she hadn't admitted it to her new acquaintances at the Goblin Market. 'Rouble was following her. She stood in front of the door for a long moment in silent frustration, then finally grabbed the dangling chain of the bell that hung beside the door, and pulled.
There was no sound. open.
Instead, the door slowly swung
It was warm inside, and light. walking in.
Ruth hesitated only a moment before
"Hello?" Profoundly disinterested silence answered her. Ruth stood in a front hall facing a staircase. The hall was dimly lit by candles in glass bowls in sconces on the wall. The floor beneath her muddy shoes was polished wood, and Ruth conscientiously backtracked to wipe her feet clean on the rag rug just outside the door. "Hello?" she said again, a little louder this time. There was no sound from deeper in the house. She glanced around the hallway nervously, wondering what she was looking for and how she'd know if she saw it, anyway. No one and nothing.
An empty house.
The wall on her right was half-timbered; golden wood below, whitewashed plaster above. The staircase took up the left wall, its newel post fancifully carved with leaves and acorns. There were sliding parlor doors-closed now-in the wall to her right, and straight ahead a halfopen door led to a parlor with a fireplace. Ruth could see the shadows the firelight cast upon the wall, and went toward that source of light and warmth as if drawn by a magnet. This room was empty, too, but Ruth didn't care. She huddled in the arch of the fireplace, hands nearly in the flames, and winced in silent discomfort as the blazing fire baked the bone-deep damp from her body. A few minutes later, the worst of the chill gone, Ruth gave the room a careful inspection. Not a modern house after all. Something more in the Colonial Williamsburg line, from the high-backed settles on each side of the fire to the high, narrow windows swathed in velvet curtains worthy of Scarlett O'Hara's dressmaking abilities. There was a narrow, brocade-covered couch, two deep padded chairs, and, to one side of the room, a table swathed in white linen upon which two candelabra burned. Ruth left the fireside and advanced upon the table, an unsettled feeling of triumphant dread in her throat. She knew what she was going to find. On the table was a glass goblet, a pewter bowl, a silver spoon, and a folded square of white linen. There was also a green glass carafe filled with red wine, a loaf of bread on a wooden dish, a wedge of cheese on a patterned china plate with a silver knife beside it, a wooden bowl of apples, and a blue and white china tureen with a silver ladle beside it. Ruth lifted the lid of the tureen. It was warm under her fingers, and the tureen contained steaming hot stew.
I know where this is. Abruptly Ruth wondered if she would have seen a rose garden if she'd walked all the way around the house. Was there a garden here, in which the roses bloomed even in winter, and was one of them a blue rose, fairest of the fair? I know where this is. The Beast's castle, to which the weary traveler came in the dead of night and found food and drink, clothes and shelter-and no master. The house was familiar in the way dreams and childhood are familiar. No wonder she had recognized it. Ruth considered her options. Suppose this was the Beast's castle-or house-just as advertised? If it was, she should be perfectly safe, providing she stayed out of the garden and didn't steal the spoons. But what if it wasn't? What if Oh, God, she was so tired. And there was one thing left to do. To make the proof that she needed, because Ruth had no faith left in her to give to anything. She picked up one of the candlesticks from the table and left the room. She slid open the doors to the parlor-cold fireplace, more Jacobean furniture-then climbed the stairs. On the second floor she found two bedrooms, a dressing room, and a study with shelves of books and a writing desk. She did not stop to look further, because all of them were empty of inhabitants. The last room she entered-a back bedroom-was not dark like the others. She opened the door into light. Burning candles on the table, wellmade fire in the grate. The room contained a large four-poster bed with carved walnut posts and garnet velvet bed curtains fringed with bullion, a dressing table, and a clothespress. There was a patterned carpet on the floor, and a fireplace with a roaring fire built up in it, and in front of the fire, sheltered by canvas-covered crewelwork screens from the draft, there was a copper hip bath full of steaming water. Beside the hip bath stood a narrow can shaped like a cone with the point sliced off, also filled with water. There was a stack of fawn-colored towels with a square cake of orange soap and a wide-toothed comb lying upon it. There was a puffy yellow bath sponge, and, best of all, on a bench near the fire was a long soft heavy gown very nearly the color of the firelight with a pair of fur-lined soft boots beside it. That does it. Ruth surrendered to her fate with a sigh. She could pass up any number of roses, and she could even, with an effort, pass up dinner, but she could not bear another moment of being filthy and unwashed and grubbing around wearing a dead man's clothes. She kicked off her oxfords and began to undress. Some minutes later, a pink, wet, and naked Ruth sat in the bath and
gouged the last of the burrs and elflocks out of her hair with the sandalwood comb. She was warm-really warm-for the first time since she'd fallen through the bookcase in the Ryerson basement, and clean besides. And now she was going to wash her hair. If she hadn't been stupefied with exhaustion, stress, and unaccustomed exercise she might have thought twice about participating in this setup for a Masterpiece Theater remake of Psycho. But Ruth was numb past hysteria, and so she bent her head between her knees to wet her hair, and then lathered it thoroughly with the soft orange soap. Afterward there remained the problem of getting it really rinsed, but with the aid of the second can of water Ruth managed to get her long brown hair "clean enough for government work," as she thought of it. Then she rubbed off another layer of unwanted skin with the hot rough towels and picked up the robe. It was a simple T-tunic, generic to the point of parody; the garment all moderns thought everyone in "The Middle Ages" wore and none of them actually did. The tunic had a close round neck with a short slit in front to let the head through, fell to just below the calf, had slightly-flared three-quarter-length sleeves and otherwise fit like a unisex sack of potatoes. The fabric had a close smooth hand and was the color of pale apricot flame; a color that Ruth was quite certain could not be achieved in Nature before the introduction of coal-tar (aniline) dyes in 1857. It was thick and rather stiff, the way wool blankets or drapery fabric are stiff, and reminded Ruth vaguely of one of those one-piece acrylic fleece sleepers for infants. It was also clean and soft and she hadn't had to peel it off a corpse. Ruth put it on. The slippers were soft suede fur-lined ankle boots, obviously meant to be worn indoors, and Ruth put those on, too. Then, compulsively and apologetically tidy, she shook out and folded the clothes she had come in, and spread the towels she had used over the fire screens to dry. Then she sat in front of the fire and combed her hair until it fell in a soft, loose light brown curtain. Clean. Ruth braided her hair in a fat tail over one shoulder, and was standing there, holding it, and wishing in frustration for her long-lost purse or even one good rubber band, when she remembered the hair ribbon she'd bought at the Market. That sent her on a (one-handed) search through her possessions until she unearthed it. She found more than that, though. Ruth stood, absentmindedly tying off her braid with the red silk ribbon with the tiny golden bells and looking at the object now lying on top of her discarded clothes. She'd forgotten all about the ring. Ruth's worldly goods as of this moment, exclusive of clothes, consisted of a battered tin cup stolen (probably) from a Goblin Market wineshop, a pair of golden embroidery scissors, Nic's wristwatch (how had she gotten that?), and a ring, a silver ring with a golden stone that glittered uncleanly of magic. The ring the dead man had been carrying, back in the meadow where she met the unicorn.
Nic had agree. tempted against
said it was out of place where She also knew that it made her to throw it into the fire, but her unseen host's graciousness
it was, and Ruth could only profoundly uneasy. She was the firm resolve not to trespass stopped her.
With some reluctance, she unearthed the one remaining belt-pouch in her possession and shoved ring, scissors, and goblet into it. She hesitated for a moment more, looking about for something to hold it on with, then went over to the bed and unhooked one of the golden ropes that held back the curtains. It had a heavy fringed tassel at each end, and easily went round her waist with a good deal to spare. She slipped the strings of the pouch over one of the fringed tasseled ends and tied the makeshift belt tight over the housegown. She didn't want any of the pouch's contents, but she didn't think it was fair to leave them lying around loose for someone else to trip over. She snuffed all of the candles in the bedroom except the one she'd brought with her from downstairs, and went back down. Her soft booted feet made no sound on the oak-planked floors of the empty house. In the parlor the stew was still steaming hot, just as it had been an hour before. The candles were no lower, nor were the logs on the fire any more consumed. It was as if, in this room, time had stopped while Ruth was elsewhere. The thought made her uneasy, but not profoundly so. long it had been since Christmas Eve.
Not after however
She tried to remember exactly how long it had been, how many days she had been here, but the only thing that came to mind were scraps of misplaced poetry about a sleep and a forgetting. She wished she could forget.
Or remember.
Or something.
The stew was very good, and the wine had spices in it. Ruth finished both. Sometime tomorrow she'd have to try to find the kitchen. But somehow it didn't seem like a very good idea just now, so Ruth finished her stew and her wine and then, like a good actor patiently following his assigned if rather bewildering role, Ruth took her candle and went back upstairs to bed. Here, however, things were not just as she had left them. The hip bath and towels were gone, the screens were folded and stacked against the wall, and there was an enormous marmalade cat sitting on the pile of Ruth's neatly-folded clothes. He must weigh twenty pounds! was Ruth's first marveling thought. if it had heard her, the cat turned its head and regarded her, unwinking butter-yellow eyes fixed on her with a feline look of disdain.
As
"Hello, moggie," Ruth said. "I'm Ruth Marlowe, the traditional benighted traveler who comes to the house in the woods and doesn't ask awkward questions about where the owners are." The cat closed its eyes and began to purr, kneading the fabric beneath it with its paws. "I'm going to bed," Ruth added, feeling only a little silly to be
having this one-sided conversation. "You're perfectly welcome to join me. In the morning, all things being equal, I expect to be on my way. Even if I don't know where I'm going. yawned, hugely.
Or how to get there.
On" Ruth
"G'night, moggie." The bed was already turned back, revealing an expanse of white linen sheet trimmed in French point lace. Ruth sat down on the side of the bed and kicked off the house boots, curling her toes at the cold before sliding them beneath the covers. There was a hot brick wrapped in flannel at the foot of the bed; Ruth wrapped her toes around it and sighed. All the comforts of civilization. Civilization. And in the word the edges of some larger concept than could be embodied in flush toilets and tax collectors; something about expectation and reason and the rule of law. She unknotted the curtain tieback from her waist and pulled the leather pouch off of it. She put the tieback on the table beside the bed and the pouch (with reluctance) on the pillow next to her. She snuffed the candle, but the room remained rosily lit by the fire on the hearth. She lay down and pulled the covers up to her neck. There was a thump on the bed as the marmalade cat joined her. It walked the length of the bed, toward the pillows, and stopped as it encountered the pouch. It regarded it for a moment, sniffed at it, and sneezed. Then it began pawing at it, making the universal "cat covering up something" motions on the pillowcase. "Oh, for heaven's sake," muttered Ruth. She snatched at the pouch and moved it to the night table. The cat settled into the pillow with a deep-voiced purr. Time slipped from his ordering like a willful serpent, and if anyone knew when and where he was, it was not Rohannan Melior of the House of the Silver Silences. Head of Line Rohannan. be?
Was that event far in his past, or still yet to
At least the Sword was with him. It had been Melior's task and obsession for a human lifetime, and its absence would have left him more than restless. He stood in his father's solar in Castle Dawnheart. A wild witch-storm battered the walls,- cover for Ameis' and Gratien's move of troops along the border of the Vale of Stars, so Rohannan's scouts had said As soon as the storm died, Rohannan Lanval and his son would be after them with two troops of horse and Jausserande's Ravens-if she got back here in time-and hope to pin them at the edge of the Vale until Rohannan infantry and Adepts could come to support them. At any cost, Ameis and Gratien must not be allowed to come to Medraut's aid with fresh troops. "Melior." His father's voice recalled him to himself. He turned from the window. Rohannan Lanval was staling at him intently.
"Father?" "You know that our Covenant forbids us to use that which we guard against one another-" Melior frowned. Of course he knew it. They all knew it. With every herotale and elementary lesson in simple magic came the lore and warnings surrounding the Twelve Treasures. They must be kept. They must be presented at the Ungmaking. They must not be set against the other Treasures, for the Twelve Treasures were only vulnerable to themselves, and the destruction of any of them was the death of all the Seven Houses of Twilight. 'C-yet I would have used it tomorrow." Melior stared at his father in shock and felt disjointed time slide around him like chill oiL "The Sword of Maiden's Tears is gone, my son. Find it. Find it. Find-" Where was he? In the middle of some retreat, but the Sword of Maiden's Tears was with him, and Melior had never carried it in war. The rain fell in distinct echoingpock! noises through the canopy of trees, and Melior was soaked; his silver hair sleeked dripping to his skull by the rain that slid down his skin and beneath the collar of the ornate cloak he wore to soak the clothes beneath. His boots, too narrow and high-heeled for this activity, squished soddenly with each step. There was nearly enough water to wash away the blood, until he felt life flow out of him with the trickling rain. It seemed, however, important to go on. Chills and fever racked him alternately, and Melior knew his senses could no longer be trusted. He was giddy with blood loss; unbearably thirsty. He had stopped once, to inspect the wound and bandage it as best he might, with strips dagger-cut from his undertunic, and then he had seen that the edges of the long slashing wound were iridescent and slimy, glowing with the residue of poisoned magic that would finish him, with time. He paused, leaning against a tree, and a chilling douche of water from above caused the time-ocean to recede momentarily and beach him in the Now. He was Melior Rohannan. His father was dead and he was alive, and lost somewhere in the Heartlands with the Sword of Maiden's Tears. He looked over his shoulder and saw the gray mare. Her mane and tail fluttered in the breeze as if no rain reached her, and she walked in a shaft of moonlight reserved for her alone. He would not ride. Melior turned and stumbled on. And once more the world slid away, until he was only a soldier in an endless war, slogging through the rain without knowing why. "C'mon, Jimmy-we're going to be late!" Ruth tossed restlessly in the strange bed. Sleep had hit her like an auctioneer's hammer coming down on a quick sale, but it hadn't brought oblivion. Lost in the Lands Beyond the Morning, Ruth dreamed. There was a shortcut to Kath's place-a back road, not very well lit.
It was one in the morning. Ruth sat beside Jimmy Ramirez as he slewed the Oldsmobile around the curve. There was a flash of light in the road ahead; a coppery fiery light, and Ruth, straining her eyes, suddenly saw It was in the middle of the road, and she saw She saw It was gold, copper and gold, and she saw "Oh, please, no," Ruth said in a tiny voice. She was awake, sitting bolt upright, staring into the embers of the fire. The marmalade cat was curled in her lap. And this time she remembered her dream. For some unreasonable reason, here in Elfland the memories the doctors had told her were gone forever, destroyed by accident and trauma, were hers again, at least in dreams. She would remember the moment of the accident soon.
She knew it.
And she couldn't bear it. Ruth took several deep breaths and tried to stop her hands from shaking. Horrible as the nightmare was, it wasn't what had awakened her. Something else had. What? There was no point in trying to go back to sleep, and for Ruth the question of whether she would like to sit in the dark and brood or do it by candlelight was easily answered. She gently set the cat aside and groped around the edge of the bed until she found her boots. Then she put them on, slid out of the bed, and took her bedside candle to light at the hearth. Naomi always said the SCAD come in useful some day. For the first time in a long while, thoughts of her dead friend didn't bring pain. Ruth held the lit candle aloft, feeling absurdly like a remake of the Statue of Liberty, and watched it chase shadows back to their hiding places in the corners of the room. Then she went back downstairs. The marmalade cat followed her, complaining volubly: it was too hot, it was too cold, what was she doing up at this time of night? Ruth didn't know. She was still tired from the long walk that day and all that had followed it; exhaustion thrilled in her bones like a stubborn vibration. But the hope of sleep was gone. The parlor that was her first entry to the house was dark; there were banked coals on the hearth, but everything else was tidied away, waiting for morning. Even the remains of Ruth's dinner were gone, and the white linen cloth of the table as chaste and unsullied as ever. Simple tricks and nonsense, Ruth thought wearily, pleased through it all at her lack of reaction. Why, magic was becoming just as ordinary as ordinary to her. There was a coruscating flash.
Multicolored light forced itself
through the chinks in the curtain in a neon Armageddon, as if someone had just detonated Times Square outside her window. Ruth yelped and flinched backward, to tangle herself inevitably with gown and cat and go sprawling. The candle and its silver candlestick sailed in a wide are toward the hearth, where the candle struck, broke, went out, and began slowly to melt in the greater heat of the fire. The fall hurt, even though she was not hurt. The cat was all solicitude, stropping and purring and favoring Ruth's chin with a few random licks. ,'moron," Ruth muttered, pushing it away. There were no further explosions, and after a moment to collect the shreds of her courage, Ruth limped over to the window, and pulled back the drape. The moon was a ghostly galleon that illuminated the scene in mono chrome clarity. Beyond the windows, a terrace; beyond the terrace, a garden. Nothing to frighten. Nothing to call her up out of bad dreams. No source for the Filmore East Revisited light show, come to that. The cat jumped up on the sill and thrust its furry face against her shoulder. Ruth stroked it absently. Poor thing. It must be lonely. I wonder if She jerked as if someone had shouted her name, and stood baffled the next moment, the cat in her arms. Nothing. No sound. Something is going on, Ruth thought with grim certainty.
But what?
If she were one of the peculiar natives of this place, Ruth had no doubt, she could simply whip out some highly enchanted mathom from her strait-waistcoat and thole the whole situation to the ultimate max. Hefting her handy crystal ball or notebook computer, she She was in a terrible mess because she didn't know the local rules, and it was about to get worse. "Help me get out of this, Jonesey; there's a good moggie," Ruth whispered to her furry companion. There it was again. The sensation that someone was shouting for her-someone in terrible danger. Only she didn't hear anything. Any number of Ruth's acquaintances back in college would have been happy to suddenly manifest psychic powers at a juncture like this and be perfectly certain they knew what was going on, but Ruth was not so made. She liked her facts manifest and incontrovertible. Or at least visible. She didn't hear anything, and she couldn't force herself to pretend that she did. And that stubbornness, Ruth realized with a sinking feeling, might very well be the death of her. Or of someone else.
He was lucid enough, in his periods of lucidity, to know that they were infrequent and becoming rarer. He might as well have mounted the nightmare back at the Goblin Market and saved himself all of this. It wasn't as if there was anywhere for him to go, or anyone who could help him. Chandrakar was worlds away, and Melior had no allies here. He didn't even know where he was. Some forest. Broceliande. Avingnon. The Forest of the Night.
The Wherewood.
Somewhere.
His feet slipped on the muddy forest path, and Melior staggered, working desperately to keep his feet. Fall and he would never get up again. He shook his head to clear it, and the pain washed his senses clear for a moment. And he realized that here, in this rain-damp autumn forest, he smelled flowers. Flowers. A moment later, looking for them, he saw them; a garland of many-colored blossoms hanging on a post. A Gate-garland. Ruth had been wearing a Gate-garland in the Market. A small eternity later he reached it; hewn gatepost a garland Melior lost his balance crushing his wounds against the planks and blood. He groaned, sliding to his knees. kept him from falling on his face.
wood, a gate, and on one and fell against the wood, smearing the wood with his Only his grasp on the Sword
The horse was closer now. And he had no more flight left in him. He reached behind himself, and pounded weakly upon the gates. No matter whose dominion lay beyond them, entrance to it was better than death. The gates didn't open. Reason, sweet or otherwise, was a poor substitute for faith or intuition. Either of those could have told her what to do, but Ruth lacked them utterly, and all that Reason could do was grant her answers that were some sum total of information she already had. GiGo. Garbage In, Garbage Out. frustration.
Ruth paced the parlor in
In here she was warm, safe, fed, and protected. Out there it was the middle of the night. It was cold. It could rain. The house might vanish the moment she was over the doorsill. There was nothing out there, no reason to go out there, nothing out there that she wanted, come to that. But at last Ruth realized that the choice boiled down to this: be stupid or go mad. And with this paradigm defined, she picked up a fresh candle and headed for the front door. Instantly the cat was underfoot, explaining loquaciously to Ruth that there were needs, urgent needs, feline needs that must be addressed upon the instant. Needs in favor of which Ruth's petty priorities must be set aside. Surely she could not abandon a cat, a small and lonely cat, in a large empty house in the woods, could she? Yes. "I'm sorry, moggie, I really am-and it's undoubtedly the wrong thing to
do, and I can tell my own self I told me so, but I haven't got any choice, you know," Ruth told it. With gentle firmness she scooped it out of the way and opened the front door. The night was still out there, black and chill. And it came to Ruth, with the blatant irresistibility of the Improving Homily at the end of some nineteenth-century Moral Thle, that she was turning her back upon Safety and Normalcy to forge off into Chaos and Uncertainty. "Crap," muttered Ruth under her breath. She pulled the door carefully shut. She was going up to the gate, and then she was coming backif she could. And then she was going to find the wine cellar and get royally drunk. She was heartily kicking herself for even this much of an indulgence in hysteria by the time she got to the gate. The candle had blown out before she'd gotten two steps, she was just as cold as she'd expected, and the soft slippers had introduced her to every sharp flint pebble in the path. But she ran the last few yards to the gate-almost, Ruth thought selfmockingly, as if she knew what she was going to find. She peered over the top of the gates and then wrestled them open, dragging one wing inward. It grated on the flagstones, creaking in protest. She hadn't recalled it making so much noise the last time. Melior lay upon the threshold, looking like a high Victorian knight back from a seven-year party at Elf Hill. His skin was pale and rainsoaked, and his lips were blue. He didn't seem to be breathing. "Melior? Mel?" Ruth's voice was an overwrought croak. There was the sound of a hoof striking against stone.
Oh, Jesus
Ruth looked up and saw the pale horse, and abandoned Reason and Logic in a rush. The horse was Death, and if it reached Melior, he would die. It stepped forward slowly, neck stretched toward Ruth questioningly. 'Get away from him." Even at the time Ruth had difficulty believing it was her own voice. Fury and adrenaline banished cold, pain, and common sense. "Get away from him, you bitch." Its head snapped up-almost as if she'd insulted it, Ruth thought, stifling a suicidal impulse to laugh. She paid no more attention to the nightmare; there was nothing she could really do to stop it, except, perhaps, get Melior through the gates. She grappled awkwardly with the dead weight of him, trying first for a grip under his arms and flinching back when her hands came away wet with blood. The horse took another step. Ruth gritted her teeth and plunged her hands into the blood-soaked cloth, grabbing and dragging and pulling Melior's body in through the gate and down the gentle incline of the flagstoned path that led back to the house. The moment she was through them the gates shut with a snap, as if
spring-loaded. Ruth heard the clatter of the mare galloping off and drew a breath that sobbed with the force of her relief. Then she looked at Melior. "Oh, God," said Ruth.
"What a mess."
The Fall Is All That Matters AND SO, IN the end, the Lady Floire Jausserande of the Silver Silences was back once more where she had begun: upon the walls of Castle Dawnheart without the pleasant serenities of grace that had lapped her as little as a week before. Guiraut was dead, and the castle's lord, Rohannan Melior, was gone, and that he had not returned home again argued persuasively that he had found his wizard-the one who would bring him his human concubine at whatever price Melior was willing to pay. Human. The upwash of fury was as perilous and irresistible as the flames of a spring balefire. Jausserande yielded to it even as she recognized the danger. Coolness, unemotionalism, were the hallmarks of a good commander. Detachment was what saved your life in battle. But there had been no battle, and still Guiraut was dead. Struck to stillness between one breath and the next, all his might-have-beens forever unriddled. Dead. There would be no knighthood, no Adepthood for Guiraut now. He had ridden out with his lady on a bright fall morning and human brigands had squandered his blood in the dust of the Vale of Stars. And she, his lady, had stayed not to defend or avenge him, but, burdened with the tainaiste-Cup that could not be lost lest the Cup of Morning Shadows be lost with it, had run. If she had possessed the true Cup, she could have saved Guiraut.
The
Cup could cure. A formless murder coiled itself around Jausserande's heart, dark and subtle. The Cup could also kill. The thought horrified her even while the fury whipped fire to ice and settled around her in seductively numbing armor. The outlaws who had killed Guiraut would die. Her Rohannan cousin was not here to stop her. She would hang their bodies in chains from the castle walls. "First catch your coney," Jausserande whispered. It could be done. She was Cupbearer and Treasurekeeper, even without the Treasure in her hands. When she gave orders, there were few in the land that would say her nay. What she willed would come to pass. And was it so wrong, to sweep the land free of human wolves that preyed upon their betters and upon Melior's contented human sheep? Yes, a last scrap of sanity protested. But Guiraut had trusted her, and they had killed him-now, in the New Peace, when through all the long years of war Jausserande had not lost
anyone she loved.
But now she had, and the pain was unbearable.
The only refuge left to her was in revenge. The outlaws in the Vale would die. She would take them by whatever means she must, and see every one of them dead. Jausserande took a deep breath, and felt cool clarity settle over her like a cloak once the decision was made. A pretty problem, this. How to proceed? The villains were within the Vale of Stars. Magic did not work in that sacred precinct; violence was forbidden there. It did not matter that humankind broke that law. Elphenkind, bound by magic, could not. Very well.
She must drive them out of the Vale.
What drove out vermin? "Fire," Jausserande said softly, and began to sing, quietly, under her breath. His brain was on fire. Nic Brightlaw groped painfully back to consciousness, afraid of what he would find if he allowed himself to reach it. But against all expectation, the fire behind his eyes was not a foretaste of crisped and suppurating limbs, shards of candied white bone spangling the earth, silvery loops of intestine uncased and garlanding the jungle trail He opened his eyes, horror within banishing horror without. And found himself alive, intact-not whole, but not the ruined meat-puppet of unimaginative memory. He lay on his back in a woods. His clothes were shredded. Blood made a sticky mask of his face, and the scalp wound had opened again. He rolled over; every muscle protested and the crusted gouges in his arm began to bleed again. He'd fought a dragon and lived.
Nic gritted his teeth and sat up.
Unfortunately, so had the dragon-since, looking around himself, Nic could see nothing, anywhere, that even slightly resembled a dead dragon. And that meant that it was alive and after Ruth. He tried to tell himself that it wasn't his problem. He tried to tell himself that Ruth didn't look for him to protect her. He tried to tell himself that it was far too late; that Ruth was already dead anyway; that once upon a long time ago there had been people who'd looked to him for rescue, for loyalty, and that all of them were dead. Swearing, he dragged himself to his feet. Bone bruises were a dull ache, mixed with the bright heat of torn muscles and the sick damaged sense of open wounds. The head injury, gotten a day or maybe three before, throbbed chillily with this fresh mistreatment. He tried to close the hand the dragon had savaged, and watched the fingers clamp painfully into a half-numb unresponsive claw as the blood dripped brightly down. Torn muscles, damaged nerves. Impairment.
There was no point to this. It didn't matter how long he'd been unconscious. Five minutes or an hour, the dragon already had Ruth. There was no point.
This wasn't his problem.
This wasn't his fight.
His war was over more than fifteen years before. Ruth hadn't even wanted him here. Nic drew a breath and found the strength to laugh. Don Quixote of the poisoned lance; he knew what he was going to do. There was no point in trying to bargain his way out of it. He was going to find Ruth if he could, save her if he could. And if he couldn't, he was going to kill her killer. Or die trying. Starting now. "Courage, Miss Marlowe," Nic murmured. knight, on his way."
"One rather shopworn white
The wood bordering the Vale of Stars was a ghostly monochrome in the dawn light. Fox's outlaws moved silently through their camp, gathering up their weapons: bows, staves, here and there a salvaged lance or sword. This morning of all mornings there were no fires to warm them. Better cold comfort than the risk of attracting unwanted attention here while they were most vulnerable. And later? Fox looked around at his men, wondering which of them would be dead by noon. He saw them watching his expression for some sign and smiled, as approvingly as if he thought they'd all live forever. Their tension relaxed, and Fox continued moving among them, making the last minute plans that would take them all to the Harvest Home by routes that would let them merge with the travelers, unremarked-upon. One last time he coached Raven and Yarrow, his lieutenants, on what they must do and where they must go. "Once you've got the horses, don't wait for me. You got that? Don't wait for anybody outside your group. Keep them together, keep track of them-and get out when you've got what you came for." Yarrow was a tall sandy man missing both ears; a bit quicker than Raven to see the ways of the world, but too easily discouraged. "And what if you don't come back?"
Yarrow said.
Fox sighed inwardly. In the old days, he'd never needed to look at people and measure their capacities as if they held a list of ingredients for his recipe. Now things were different. "If I don't come back, Yarrow, you and Raven will have to make up your minds what to do." Hopeless, when centuries of slavery had buried the
human capacity for self-determination beyond Fox's ability to retrieve it. "But I'll be back. You can bet on that." And if he didn't come back, he'd be dead, and would hardly be in any position to concern himself with broken promises. Raven smiled brilliantly. you." Two chances of that.
"And if you don't come back, we'll rescue
Slim and none.
"Sure," Fox said.
He didn't like the way he felt; this treacherous sense of obligation and responsibility. But he didn't like most things in his life since the moment he'd first set eyes on Rohannan Melior, and for this thing, too, Melior was responsible. "Come on, guys. Let's move out. the Outlaw said.
Nobody wants to live forever," Fox
Jausserande had hoped, superstitiously, that Melior would return for the Harvest Home. She'd sat awake all night in his solar, watching the road that led up to the castle as intently as if it held her last hope of salvation. Watching, and not seeing him. Beyond the walls, in the Water Meadow, the circling sparks of torches told of midnight arrivals and late construction on the booths and dancing floors of the Harvest Home. Tomorrow, outhers from every corner of Melior's fee-lands would come to the Home, bearing samples of the harvest, the teind they paid to Line Rohannan. And Melior would not be here to receive it. Nor, Jausserande realized with tardy dread, was Melior here to go to the Twilight Court to be confirmed by the Seven Houses as The Rohannan of Line Rohannan. It was custom that named him head of his Line as his father's inheritance, not law. And the Peace had only ended the war, it had not healed the divisions among the Seven Houses of the Twilight. There would be those who would argue against Melior's accession for spite or advantage. Melior must be at the Twilight Court to speak for himself, else he would lose the guardianship of Line Rohannan to another. He had known all that, and still he had gone to seek the wizard and be taken out of Time. For what? Not for the mud-born, daughter of Earth. He had come back once without Heruthane-Ruth-and had not gone after her again. No, he had sent messengers, and mere common sense argued that now, when the stakes were so much higher and the penalty for absence so much more great, Melior would send messengers again, with gifts if needful, to the wizard whose assistance he desired to court. Jausserande swung herself to her feet. Seven paces to the window, where the High Road gleamed white in the moonlight. Nine paces from that to the wall where Melior's Treasure, the Sword of Maiden's Tears, hung when its master was in residence. The empty pegs were black punctuation to the pale stone. Jausserande slapped the wall in pure frustration; the sound was muffled and flat.
He had gone for something more important to him than Ruth. Jausserande stood in the middle of Melior's solar, the pale dawn light crowding around her like the enemy host. She must see Lady Vuissane at once. Perhaps she "So there you are." Jausserande whirled to face this new threat. It was the human knight out of her dream, still dressed in his bizarre black-and-green armor, but even as she registered that, she understood that he was not here at all. An aftereffect of Vuissane's potion, or some baffling weight of futurity pressing its shadows into the real world. "Who are you?"
Jausserande said tightly.
"I'm nobody: who are you?" He smiled; teeth dazzling white against skin burned brown by the sun in human fashion. His eyes were cold as winter glass. "Why are you here?"
Jausserande persisted.
"You're supposed to be the ones so familiar with the unseen world, lady. I'm here because you keep calling me. You need me. Without me, you can't get the Cup." Lies and illusion, Jausserande told herself firmly. do you need?" "A windmill," the phantom answered maddeningly. practice. A windmill will do."
"I need?
And what
"I need some tilting
Jausserande felt the anger take her, making her voice and movements abrupt and precise. So the inconnu wanted windmills, did he? When she found him in the flesh, she would chain him in a mill until he was sick of it. Sick to death. She took a step toward him, saw his smile widen with maddening mockery And then it was full day, the light of two hours past sunrise streaming in through the windows, and Dawnheart's steward stood where the apparition had been, holding a tray laden with morning bread and beer. "A good day for fairing, Lady Jausserande," Arnaut suggested. Jausserande blinked, the thoughts and visions of the night sliding and jumbling around each other until they were battered to fragments. She forced a smile, though she felt more like screaming. "A good day, indeed," she answered, and every instinct told her that she lied. She spoke with Amaut a few moments more; small politenesses, forgotten as they were spoken. He was barely gone when she, too, left the chamber. In her tower room, Jausserande dressed to go a-fairing. Perhaps her answers were there. At any rate, going to the fair would take her away from Dawnheart, with all its reminders of unkept promises. But the clothes she selected from her clothespress were not the garments of a young lady of fortune bent upon dalliance. The doeskin trousers were soft and gray, molding to her skin like
supple armor. She selected, and rejected, several pairs of boots before settling upon a high-cuffed pair in dark shagreen leather, broad-toed and low heeled and hobnailed for far journeying. The undertunic she chose was soft cream linen; nothing white to draw the eye; and over it a tunic of wool sheared black from the ram, a darker gray than her trousers. She pulled the laces at the neck tight and then let the ends dangle upon her chest. The belt was the only touch of luxury to her outfit, buttery black leather studded with chased and enameled silver plates depicting ancient victories, its silver rings ready to hold a purse and dagger. Jausserande took neither: Lady Jausserande of Line Floire, Cupbearer and Tteasurekeeper, would need neither to show coin nor defend herself at the Harvest Home. She picked up her cap from the windowsill and set it on her head. Soft dark leather, low and flat, and at one corner broached with a red-eyed silver raven. The badge of Rohannan's Ravens. Who had never left one of their own to the enemy-dead or alive. Who had never been defeated in battle. She had kept this one piece after all the rest of her battle livery was gone. As she turned to go, she caught sight of herself in the mirror. "ere am I going and what do I seek?
Jausserande asked her mirror.
The image seemed almost about to speak, but Jausserande did not know what to say. And if she could step through that mirror into the time before the New Peace, would she? Jausserande turned and hurried from the room. The Harvest Home was all that anyone could ask of it. Memories of childhood walked with Jausserande here, and she bought that imagined child fried cakes spangled in sugar and hair ribbons stamped with silver foil stars. But even the horse lines could not hold her attention for long; the animals were sleek and powerful, but Jausserande had no cavalry troop to buy for. It was then that she saw him. There were humans everywhere at the Fair. That was understandable; the Home was one of the few places where the Sons of the Morning and their human vassals mingled freely. Humans came to sell. Elphenkind came to buy. Jausserande's life.
This was as it had been all the autumns of
This year was different. This human was different. He was tall and gaunt, dressed in worn clothes and a hooded tunic. When he glanced in her direction, Jausserande saw pale sandy hair and pale eyes; an expression that made her think of a yellow dog kicked
once too often. And when he turned away, a madcap flirt of autumn wind blew his cowl back and revealed the pale hair lying smooth and unimpeded along the sides of his head. He scrambled to pull the hood forward again, concealing his shame. Both ears docked, Jausserande noted automatically.
Thieving.
And as she began to wonder what fool had let such a man leave his master's lands to travel to the Fair, she saw the others. They were not together, not taking overmuch notice of one another, but each one had the same air of subtle wrongness as Crop-Ears did. Petty prigs, Jausserande thought, but even as she tried to convince herself, Jausserande's steps were taking her back toward Dawnheart and the guard barracks. Despite all law, custom, and the Harvest Truce, one of the outlaw bands that plagued Chandrakar in such numbers since the war had come to Rohannan's Harvest Home. Dawnheart's main gate was closed, its master being absent and its steward a prudent man. Jausserande went in by the narrow postern gate. Outer court. Inner court. The doors to the Great Hall were barred, and rather than summon someone to open them, she took a shortcut; up the outside stair to the second-floor gallery open to the air. The wall had a wooden walk behind it for archers to shoot from. Jausserande ran along the top. Dawnheart had five towers set into its eighteen-foot-thick outer wall. In this time of peace, several of them were connected to the buildings of the inner castle by high-slung suspension bridges of ropes and planks, swaying and delicate. Jausserande found the one she sought and plunged down it without hesitation, her hobnailed boots catching and chattering on the smooth planks. The door at the far end was open to the warmth of early autumn. Jausserande lunged inside. Nothing and no one. Nearly everyone was at the Fair, another reason to keep Dawnheart shut up so tight, that it could be guarded lightly, releasing its soldiers to their pleasures. But Richart, Captain of the Guard, should be here. She scanned the room, saw the down-flung quill spattering its ink across a curling sheet of vellum. Richart had left in a hurry. She could not waste the time to find him. In the middle of the suspension bridge she looked out toward the Fair, and through the lazy curling of blue smoke she saw the flash and flicker of pikes and helmets. Richart did not need to be warned.
Richart was at the Fair already.
The Harvest Truce was broken. Melior was tight! was her first outraged thought. But right about what, she could not say; all that Melior feared was Baligant No-House, and if the High Prince was bent on murder, he was hardly fool enough to tip his hand at a simple Harvest Home on Rohannan lands.
Across the bridge and down the wall. Back along the gallery, and this time her path took her along the hall and through the solar, the quickest shortcut to her tower room and weapons. In the middle of the room she stopped, as abruptly as if the air before her had become stone. Someone had been here. She turned in a circle, looking around. The books on her cousin's desk had been moved. There were papers strewn around that she did not remember seeing. The bread and ale left for her this morning by Arnaut and left, by her, untouched, were half-eaten. "Looking for me?"
a voice said lazily.
Jausserande turned, scrabbling at her belt for the dagger she was not wearing. The speaker stepped from behind a pillar. It was a man, blond as in her vision, but not that man at all. That one was an immovable barrier. This man was a stiletto, to break all locks. "Or just looking around?" he went on. His hair was as long as any elf s, caught back with a leather theng to fall in a silky whip down his back, and he was dressed in the same shabby leathers as the outlaws she'd seen at the Fair. In his left hand he held a stout staff several inches taller than he was. On his right hand was Melior's ring. It flared with magic in the dim light of the room. This was how this outlaw had bypassed all the castle defenses; the magical traps and wards that should have alerted the guards and kept him out. Melior's signet. The signet of Baron Rohannan. Was this why Melior had not returned? "You are a dead man," Jausserande told him. seem afraid.
But incredibly, he did not
"Watch me shake. You're Jausserande, right?" He took a step toward her, and Jausserande's sight was drawn toward the flicker in his right hand. A knife with a gray blade, darker than silver and somehow harder. Iron.
Iron.
"Lord Arnaut!" Jausserande raised her voice in imperious summons, and the intruder smiled. "He's a little busy right now. the granary."
Somebody seems to have set a fire in
"A fitting place for rats-and mice.
Run along, little mouse, and
perhaps you can still escape," Jausserande said scornfully, but it was a bluff, and he seemed to know it. "Maybe you can answer something that's been keeping me up nights. How come you didn't go back after your buddy on the Vale Road?" took another step.
He
Jausserande had retreated from the iron that would burn her before the sense of his words penetrated. The Vale Road. He was the one who had killed Guiraut. Red murder filled Jausserande's vision, driving out tactical thought and making it hard to breathe. Her eyes flicked left and right, searching the room for a weapon. "And while you're answering questions, Tinkerbelle, where's Mel and his patented glow-in-the-dark Magic Sword? I'm taking up a collection." Jausserande turned and ran, for as many steps as it took her to reach the hearth and the display of hunting weapons mounted above it. She yanked down the first that came to her hand. A boar-spear. "Oh, very good, Tinkerbelle," the intruder sneered. She grounded the butt of the spear and menaced him with the firehardened point. "Tell me your name, before you die." "Call me Fox. But I'm not going to die." The smile on Fox's face widened, and became a burning, predatory thing. "And neither are you. Which is too bad-at least you're going to think so." And then he lunged forward, knocking the point of the spear aside with his staff and lashing at her with the deadly iron blade. Jausserande leaped backward, barely far enough. The blade touched the sleeve of her tunic and the fabric began to spark and flare as the small magics in the weave guttered and died. She shifted her grip backward on her chosen weapon, trying to find the balance point that would let her lift and swing it. She back pedaled, lifting the spear barely in time to ward off a blow from Fox's staff. "Historically," Fox remarked, "oppressed groups have not been allowed access to state-of-the-art military technology-in your case, Tink, swords and spears. Big deal." The staff struck the heavier spear and bounced off, spinning in Fox's hands to strike again. Jausserande was barely fast enough to convert a blow meant to cripple to one that was only glancing. But even that glancing blow was enough to send bolts of tingling numbness down her arm. "And also historically," Fox went on genially, his predator's smile wider now. "The oppressed people have managed to develop a pretty effective martial technology out of leftovers. Prepare to lose big time, elf bitch." He struck, but Jausserande was not there.
The spear clattered to the
floor as she dropped it, and she sprang backward, gaining the refuge of a tabletop. "I have not lost yet," Jausserande said, hefting a candlestick. you talk too much, Fox." "Yeah, probably," Fox said.
"And
And threw the knife.
He aimed for none of the possible targets where a throw meant to disable could miss, and kill. The point of the iron hunting knife he carried sank into the meat of Jausserande's leg a little above the knee, sliding home as if it entered water, not flesh. It felt to Jausserande as if every nerve in her body had been dipped in acid. She smelled the stink of her burning flesh in the moment before the pain hit, and as she drew breath to speak, the shock of raw agony slammed an iron vise around her lungs and throat, staggering her heart in its rhythm and blotting out every sensation except the pain. She did not feel herself fall from the table to the floor, nor hear the hard wooden sound of her solid impact. And when Fox turned her over and yanked the knife out of her leg, the blessed cessation of pain brought dreamless oblivion, and she did not hear the bitter sound of Fox's cursing. The Manor of Roses IT WAS WET, it was raining, she was kneeling in the mud over the bloody, dying body of a man who was not only her hopeful lover but a dead weight she could not possibly drag to true safety. Ruth Marlowe had had better days. "Melior," Ruth whispered under her breath. hell." Rohannan Melior wearing a gaudy butterfly wings walking stick. he slept.
"Oh, God damn it to
did not respond. He lay on his back in the road, fantastic scaled cloak the hot urgent color of monarch and holding the Sword of Maiden's Tears as if it were a His face was pale as a beeswax casting; as still as if
And this would be a moment of high Victorian tragedy, except for the fact that Ruth's knees hurt from the gravel and her fingers ached with cold. The rain plastered her hair to her scalp and made it hang down her cheeks and back like dripping snake-locks, and there were urgent things to be done and no form of aid forthcoming anywhere. But she could not simply let her lover die due to lack of imagination. The house held warmth and safety and a promise of life. reach it.
If they could
If it would let them in. Ruth rose stiffly to her feet and looked back the way she had come. The house was dark, and after a moment she realized she could not see the expected lights through the windows: the lights that had been burning when she left. Ruth set her jaw stubbornly. She would make
the house let her in. She turned back to Melior. The icy soaking rain still pocked noisily on the cobbled path around them. The edge of the forest still loomed just beyond the gate. The lantern at the gate still burned; light enough to show Ruth her lover. One hand was still clutched tightly around the hilt of the Sword of Maiden's Tears. The other flexed feebly against the ground. "Melior?"
Ruth said quaveringly.
His eyes opened when she spoke. He saw her and smiled, an effortful redrawing of the lines of pain in his face. "Don't try to talk," Ruth said hurriedly. "There's a house, I-" He was already trying to get up, eyes closed against the pain. Ruth saw what he was doing and put her hands under his arms and pulled back and up, trying to get him on his feet. He was taller than she was and heavy; the strain sent needles of warning pain down the long muscles in her back. But if she dropped him now, she would hurt him worse; Ruth clung to that thought just as Melior clung to her, grimly dragging them both upright. The point of the Sword grated along the cobbles as he dragged it, point first, to serve as a prop for his weight. His clothes were soaked with blood and rain; the sodden front of his tunic was pressed against her, soaking the robe she wore and beginning to drip. She felt no warmth from his body; cold, sodden, and chill, he was a faery knight dragged from a watery grave, a burning brand bare in his hand. The strain of holding him upright was a tight fiery ache in her neck and shoulders, and ran quicksilver wires of strain down her back and leg muscles. You're babbling, Marlowe.
Get the lead out.
"Melior." She spoke his name loudly, willing him to attend. Sword away. Put it away, okay?"
"Put the
She didn't know if he heard, but she knew that the touch of the Sword of Maiden's Tears would do worse than kill a human. She didn't need lamplight to see it; it glowed with a faint rotten phosphorescencewitch-fire and marsh gas; poison. But he wouldn't leave it behind, and she didn't dare drag him toward the house while he clutched it naked in his hand. "Melior! " He heard her at last; with awkward, laborious grace he lifted the blade and slid it into its sheath. Deprived of its support he leaned even more heavily on Ruth; she felt her knees begin to buckle as he clutched at her again. She felt her muscles begin to tremble as she forced her legs straight. She had to get him to shelter or he'd die. do was walk there. With him.
To do that, all she had to
She took one hand from beneath his arm and tried to unlock his hand enough to turn him. Finally he released his bruising death grip on her
shoulder, only to transfer it to her hand, so that for one moment they stood poised like demented dancers in the rain. Slowly Ruth turned, moving with agonizing care, so that they stood side by side. Melior seemed to understand what she was doing; he let go of her and slid his arm across her shoulders, transferring his weight to that new support. With his other hand he clutched her arm. The fingers dug in cruelly, bringing first pain, then numbness, then, finally, a chill, bone-deep ache. I can't move. The realization almost made Ruth laugh out loud, and only the fact that she would fall if she did stopped her. It was all she could do to stand supporting Melior's weight. Walking was impossible. "Walking isn't impossible, Ruth. learn.
It's just going to be hard to
A woman in white. The first of many days of mindbending frustration and pain. But she'd learned. Ruth Marlowe had learned to walk once before. She could walk now. First one step. She unbalanced them so that she could move. Heard Melior groan as his weight shifted. Slid her foot forward quickly. Caught her weight on that hip-knee-leg, and felt the muscles quiver and burn with strain. A step. Then another step. Legs heavy and aching and unresponsive, it was just like learning to walk again, wasn't it? If she tore a muscle, if she hurt herself too badly, if she fell, it would be all over and Melior would be here, helpless, with no one to see if he lived or died. A step. Then another step. Her feet pressed against the ground with more than twice her normal weight, and every sharp stone in her path was a possible assassin. But now the door was only a few yards away. Locked and dark. Unheeded tears ran down her face, mixing with rain and sweat. And Ruth, beginning to plea bargain with Fate in a rote litany of empty extravagant promises, stopped short with the chill certainty that here, in this place, words had meaning. What promises she made, she would be held to. "Oh, please let us in," Ruth said very softly to the dark and shuttered house. Her words came in breathy staccato gasps of air drawn into lungs aching and strained with effort. "I don't have a kingdom and I won't marry some stranger and I won't work for a wizard for seven years." I'm losing my mind "But there must be something you want. I promise to help-as much as I can and if it doesn't hurt anybody else. That's enough, isn't it? Please, please, oh, please-" She was almost to the doorstep, and knew, with a soul-dead certainty, that she could not take the step that would lift Melior over the threshold.
The door swung inward. Faint and low on the wall inside Ruth could see the shifting glow of a chamberstick. In the open doorway the marmalade cat stood, looking up at Ruth accusingly. Ruth opened her mouth to say something more, but all she could do was gasp for air with a ratcheting bellows sound. She had carried Melior perhaps a hundred yards, if that. The door opened wider, and Ruth, determined to the point of madness, found the strength to drag herself up the one low step, and Melior after, and then pivot, swinging him around her and into the sure support of the door frame. He slammed into it harder than she'd meant, and cried out as if the impact hurt him terribly. And then his knees buckled and he began to sink to the rain-wet threshold, and Ruth, all passion spent, slid down with him, unwilling to let go. Together they lay in the doorway, spent and shaking. She must shut the door. The thought occurred to Ruth in a vague detached fashion. Melior's head was pressed firmly into the hollow between her neck and shoulder, and she was rain-chilled on one side and only slightly less cold on the other. The stiff immense sodden weight of Melior's cloak hung about them like a tent; Ruth smelled wet fur and leather and cinnamon, and even the trembling quivering aches of her shaking body were remote and forgettable. How pleasant to simply stay here until someone else solved all her problems for her. There was a pat-pat-pat of a velvet paw against her face, and an utraged misowing, as of a cat forced to stand in a cold and drafty hall when a warm fire was available. Reluctantly Ruth opened her eyes and stared into the yellow eyes of the marmalade cat. "I'm coming, I'm coming," she muttered hoarsely. She crawled out from under Melior. Freed of her support, he slid the rest of the way down the doorjamb to sprawl on the stoop like an unstrung puppet. Ruth surveyed him for a moment and then grabbed him by the tunic and dragged him forward until his entire body was inside the house. The latch was a carved wooden peg; she latched the door and slid the bolt home. Now that Ruth was indoors again and safe, all the nagging annoyance of being cold and wet and dirty returned with full insistent force. Angrily she pushed the thoughts away and turned back to Melior. In the shadows of the hall it was difficult to see how badly Melior was hurt, but she could smell his blood. She took the chamberstick and lit the hall lamps; in the pale candlelight, Ruth saw the outline of bones stark beneath his skin, the pale eyelashes wet and spiky and gilded with flame. The cat wove back and forth around Ruth's feet, looking up at her with feline opacity and singing a constant chantpleure of its needs and
injuries. "Oh, do be quiet, there's a good moggie," Ruth pleaded, and knelt beside Melior. His eyes had opened, and his gaze was fixed, not on her, but upon the marmalade cat. "I cry your pardon, Lord," Melior said, his voice thin and effortful. "I would not have come here had I known. added, almost apologetically.
But Ruth is my lady," he
"Melior," Ruth said. He reached up and took her hand with fingers that were cold and trembling, then he closed his eyes again as if he had exhausted all his strength. Ruth bit back a yelp of tearful laughter. His hand went slack in hers, and she laid it down gently. Her chest ached, and there was a lump in her throat that made it difficult to breathe. If this was love, she'd take a good book instead, thank you very much. Because if Melior died, she couldn't bear it. And she didn't think there was anything she could do to prevent it. The realization made her hands shake even harder, and the tightness in her throat expanded in a burning, strangling ache. "Mir-RAO!" The cat of the house was tired of being ignored. It sat on the newel post and wailed. Ruth jumped, and stared up at it guiltily before seeing what lay beyond it. The parlor door was open. Not the Parlor where Ruth had eaten her dinner, but the small one in the front hall that she had examined and dismissed; an odd unlikely room, useful mostly for spying upon the dooryard. Ruth got up and peered inside. There was a roaring fire in the small fireplace. The heat tightened Ruth's skin and made her numb hands ache with returning life. There was a pallet of canvas-covered straw laid out beside the fire, and a pile of blankets beside, and on a nearby stool draped with a white cloth there were bandage rolls, lint, and cord, knives and probes and forceps. There was a squat green bottle of brandy and a wide copper basin of water. "Thank you," Ruth whispered, tears prickling her eyes. She turned back to Melior. Warmth, and life, and everything else he lacked, only a few steps away. "What dye lack?" echoed the ghostly remembered voice of the redheaded vendor at the Goblin Market. If Melior died, Ruth would lack everything. Forever. But she could help him live. All she had to do was get him into the room. I 'Only a little more," Ruth promised. She undid the beautiful jeweled clasps that held the golden cloak close about his throat and dragged him free of it, toward the safety and haven of the small front room.
There was a rasping sound as the scabbarded Sword was pulled across the floor, but she did not stop until Melior lay upon the blankets in front of the fire. In the bright hot light she could clearly see Melior's injuries at last; the slashes that crossed his leg and torso; the torn leathers and the ruined flesh beneath. Bile rose in her throat and she swallowed hard. But the bleeding seemed to have stopped, or slowed down at least, and if she could only get him warm and dry First she had to get the Sword away from him. In a world not this, Ruth, whose hobby was costuming, had once had the opportunity of a long and detailed acquaintance with Melior's clothes. The straps and buckles were not unfamiliar to her now, and soon she had uncased him of belt and baldric. She unbuckled the high horseman's boots with their tassels and gilded spurs and pulled them off, and then eased the leather straps of the sword harness from beneath him until he no longer lay upon them. To move them any further she would have to touch the Sword. "No, no, no Ruth whimpered. anything else.
It wasn't fair; she was willing to do
Anything but that. Once there had been five friends: Ruth and Michael and Philip and Naomi and Jane. And they'd rescued an elf named Rohannan Melior, who told them his magic sword-the Sword of Maiden's Tears-would do worse than kill any human who touched it. The Sword would turn that human into a grendel, a mindless cannibal who lived only to kill, who could only be killed by the Sword. And Naomi had taken up the Sword. . . . She stood in a tunnel far below the city, bleeding and gore-spattered, resting the tip of the Sword of Maiden's Tears upon the platform floor, the body of the slain grendel liquefying at her feet. The last grendel. Ruth ran toward her. "Get back!" Naomi whirled around to face her, holding the sword en garde as if it were weightless. Drops of liquid flew from the spinning blade. Her voice was high, her eyes wide and mad "You can't have it!" shrieked.
Naomi
Ruth stopped dead "Naomi!" Ruth said. "Don't do-" "What you know damn well is the only thing I can do, now?" Naomi's voice was ragged; her breathing faster now than even exeilion had made it. "God dammit, Ruth."
Thze words were evenly spaced, inflectionless.
"Melior was right. The sword wants-" She broke off. Ruth could see sweat tackling down Naomi's face, her teeth bared in a g?imace of effort. "Get out of here.
Go on."
Naomi had taken up the Sword.
And died for it.
There was a poker by the fireplace. Ruth shoved at the Sword with it until it was safely on the other side of the room. She threw Melior's boots after the Sword and then crouched beside him, clutching the poker. But she didn't have time for this now. She turned back to Melior. His eyes were open again; she smoothed his hair back from his forehead with a hand that trembled only a little. "Everything's going to be fine," Ruth said. "And so it is," said Melior, his voice a bare whisper, "I have rescued you, my lady Ruth. There is nothing to fear." The corner of his mouth quirked upward in a wry smile. "It is cold here," he added, in a tone of faint apology. Cold? In front of a fire that baked Ruth's skin like custard and filled the room with the wet scent of stewed wool? Ruth lunged for the pile of blankets that lay beside the pallet and flung several of them over him. She remembered the brandy and uncorked it. There was no cup, but then she remembered the cup in the bag on her belt and pulled it out, filling it and holding Melior up to it to drink. He drained it as if it were water. "Again," he said, and Ruth refilled it. "Better," he said, when it was empty again. She laid him down and sighed deeply, still holding her hand. "There is so much to tell you," Melior said. he was unconscious again.
Then his eyes closed, and
Ruth studied him with desperate attention. His skin was pale, but it had always been pale. His hair was drying now in the furnace heat of the fire; Ruth smoothed his hair back; his skin was chill and clammy. Was he healing?
Dying?
And if he was dying, what could she do?
Ruth remembered the pale nightmare in the forest outside and shuddered. The nightmare would not have Melior. If she could help it. The only thing she could think of to do was to get his wet clothes off and bandage his bleeding wounds. And then What? Blood transfusion? Amputation?
Antibiotics she didn't have?
She couldn't imagine the extent of his injuries and had less idea of how to treat them. But she had to do something. "You're going to be all right," Ruth said, wishing it were true. she set to work.
Then
There didn't seem to be any place here for false modesty, but even so it was difficult in a purely practical sense, working with her hands
beneath the sheltering blankets to remove tunic, mail shirt, jerkin, and undertunic-all sodden-without hurting him further. Melior stirred and muttered as she shifted him, and Ruth recognized at last that this was not healthy sleep, but feverish delirium. Why? He was wounded, not sick. And it was only a few hours since she'd seen him at the Market-there hadn't been time for infection to spread. She worked the soaked woolen tunic up under his arms at last and tossed it into a corner. The mail shirt beneath was a fine-woven silvery thing, but crumbling and discolored in places, as though Ruth dropped the blankets back over Melior and grabbed the tunic. It dripped as she shook it out and held it up. The gapes she'd thought were cuts were burns-something had eaten through it. A horrible realization spread through Ruth's mind. She turned back to Melior. Where the silvery mail had been splashed, it was flaking and black, and she brushed metal ashes aside to expose rotting leather beneath. She dithered for a moment before she used the knife to cut the leather thengs that bound the mail shirt closed and worked it off Melior's body. He stirred and muttered, but whatever he said wasn't in English. A ring with an orange-red stone gleamed on his left hand, brilliant and out of place. Magic. She left it alone. The leather jerkin beneath the mail had been white once; now it was soaked, rotting away where the monster's poison had spilled on it. It was a tighter fit than the tunic and harder to remove; Ruth worked carefully to keep the rotted places in it from touching either Melior's skin or her own. Beneath it, the linen undertunic was yellowed and burnt, and even the skin underneath was faintly reddened. Ruth pulled the blankets down to Melior's waist to sponge him clean of the last possible traces of poison before swaddling him in blankets again. He shivered beneath them as though neither the blankets nor the fire were there. "Oh, God," Ruth muttered under her breath. "Oh, God, oh, God-" But the worst injuries were below the waist, where the armor did not cover him. The doeskin of his breeches was glued to his skin by the blood of reopened wounds, and she had to sponge, and cut, and sponge again, before she could peel them off. But once she had, she could see the injuries Melior was dying of. Whatever had wounded him had struck up from below. It had dug a deep gouge above his left knee before ripping free to slice a shallower trench across the front of the thigh and then, at last, to score a dark welt across the top of his right hipbone where the mail did not protect him. The splashes that corroded his mail followed the same trajectory, as if Rohannan Melior had been attacked by some mad mix of bayonet and acid-gun.
No. It was no use pretending she did not know what had made these wounds. Memory of the monster she had glimpsed at the Goblin Market made her shudder. It had looked like a giant wasp. And a wasp's stings were poison. Panicked hopelessness sluiced through her veins like ice water. was poisoned, he was going to die.
If he
No. There was a chance. People survived wasp stings and even snakebites without medical intervention. If she could just keep him warm and safe . . . The water in the basin was too bloody now to be of any use and her neck and back were a screaming knot of tension, demanding release. Ruth covered the exposed gashes with a square of bandage, then stood up. She could not think of anything else to do; it should be safe to leave him for a while. She stretched her cramped muscles gratefully. She looked down at the basin. She needed somewhere to dump and refill it. She stood, and picked up the basin of bloody water and went out into the hallway again. The cat was still sitting on the banister. "Any suggestions?" Ruth asked it. Melior had spoken to it as if to an equal, but Ruth was too tired to manage more than simple politeness. That must have been sufficient, because the cat trotted off down the hall in a purposeful way, tail up and glancing back at her. Ruth followed, carrying the basin gingerly. So this is the kitchen, Ruth said to herself a few moments later. It looked like most English kitchens before 1750; a low room with small windows high in the walls; a hearth big enough to hold a whole roast ox and encumbered with a number of hooks and swivels that Ruth realized were bronze, not iron; a table or two in the middle of the floor and a whole catalog of hulking, unidentifiable furniture along the walls. She located the back door and emptied the contents of the basin out it in a great watery crimson are. The bloody water spattered on the stones of the walkway, and it was a shock to see, in addition to a well-tended kitchen garden, that the rain had stopped and the sky was lightening. Dawn. The cat strolled in and out of the open doorway, looking up at her as if anxious she should approve the place. Ruth looked over her shoulder into the kitchen, worrying her lip in indecision. She didn't want to take anything from the house that wasn't freely given, but she needed water, water in quantity, and preferably hot. Finally she shut the bottom half of the door and went in search. One of the cupboards Ruth opened held food. A half-cut wheel of yellow cheese, a bowl of white butter, a loaf and a cut loaf of bread, and a crock of milk.
Habit alone made her think of eating. Common sense and a lifetime of reading fairy tales was stronger. But the cat was winding around her ankles, purring and miouwrling just as if it were any kitchen cat, any cat that had never been fed in this or any other lifetime, and so she went and got a dish from one of the other cupboards and filled it from the crock. She set it down on the floor and the cat immediately deserted her, lapping at the milk and purring loudly. Ruth continued her search. If she could just find one of those jerricans that had appeared at her bath, it would be practically perfect for what she wanted. She located one eventually, and ten minutes of excruciating exercise with the pump enabled her to fill it. Every single one of her strained, abused, and exhausted muscles objected to their treatment, and once she'd filled the can, it was nearly too heavy for her to carry. But she managed to bring both it and the empty basin back to the room where Melior lay. He'd thrown off the blankets. Ruth set down the can and basin hastily and hurried over to him. He thrashed back and forth, defending himself against some absent enemy, his eyes wide and unseeing. Blood soaked the cotton pad and spilled down his leg, soaking the pallet beneath him, a richer red than human blood. Ruth put her hands on his shoulders, trying to push him back down to the bed. She hissed in pain as his fingers clamped on her arm, finding old bruises with unerring accuracy. She'd forgotten how strong Melior was. He struggled against her, and even leaning all her weight against him, she could not get him to lie still. "Stop it!" Ruth cried in frustration. She would gladly have shaken him, if she could only get free to do it. At last she simply lay across his chest, trapping his body with her own. He struggled against her for a few moments more, then subsided. Ruth rose awkwardly off him and replaced the blankets, sopping up the oozing blood as best she could. It didn't seem possible that one person could contain that much blood, but on the other hand, look how much tea a teacup could be found to have contained once you spilled it. . . . The sun was rising now, and the little room was filling with daylight. Ruth looked down at what she was wearing; the robe that had been so pretty when she put it on the night before; it was draggled with mud and blood, and still damp from the rain. She exhaled and closed her eyes, a weariness great enough to bring tears to her eyes dragging at her very bones. She felt like a swimmer, pushed beyond her strength, in that last moment before the ocean closed over her head forever. A small traitorous part of her mind assured her that no blame could come to her if Melior died, and then she could stay here forever, free. .
. . No. She turned back to the doorway and picked up the can and basin. She found the hook in the fireplace that instinct had told her must be there, and hung the can on it to warm the water. While she waited, she retrieved the brandy bottle and the tin cup from the Market. She poured it half-full of brandy and raised it toward her lips, glancing down into it as she did. The cup was filled with cool blue streamers of glowing light, coiling into the depths of the brandy, swirling down and down, as if she stared into a tiny holographic maelstrom. Ruth was tired and her reactions were slow, or else she would simply have dropped the cup. But as it was, she only quivered slightly, staring into the liquid. The fire seemed to drift out of the walls of the cup. It spiraled into the dark red brandy, turning it a rich, luscious, impossible purple. It might be a trick of the light, but now, dazed, half dizzy with the need for sleep, Ruth thought she recognized the faint unnaturalness of magic. The cup was magic. Whatever this was, it did not bring the instant lightning revulsion that the magic ring she had taken from the outlaw did. Good magic, then, if there was such a thing. But what did it do? Other than make brandy change colors and glow in the dark? Hesitantly she dipped a finger into the brandy and licked it dry. She felt no different, tasted no strangeness. Recklessly, Ruth belted back a healthy mouthful of the brandy. she blinked once, very slowly, in astonishment.
Then
It was like drinking sleep. Sleep, rest, health . . . she felt like she'd had two Excedrin and a nice cup of hot cocoa. Ruth looked at the cup and looked at Melior. There was no possible way she could get him to drink now. She took a tag-end of clean bandage and moistened it in the brandy, and wiped at the burned and poisoned skin on Melior's thigh. Was it her imagination, or was the redness less red, the puffiness decreased? Alcohol was a good antiseptic, anyway. She filled the cup from the bottle again, and witch-fire drifted out into the brandy. When magical as it was going to get, she went back brandy from the cup to the cloth and swabbing wiped all around the gashes in his leg. But the wound itself still had to be cleaned.
watched as cerulean it seemed to be about as to her task, drizzling Melior's skin until she'd
And if she poured alcohol into an open wound, it'd hurt like hell, magic or not. But would water have the same effect? The water in the jerrican was pleasantly hot now. Ruth drank the last mouthful of brandy and dipped the cup into the water. The blue streamers of light were fainter now, or possibly only harder to see against clear water in full daylight. But after a few moments the liquid was perceptibly bluer. Maybe the cup was running out of charge, or something. be careful. Not waste it.
She'd have to
Carefully she poured the water over Melior's leg. He jerked once as the water touched him, but almost as if he'd started in his sleep. Ruth's stomach clenched as she realized the water was literally filling the wound, the way rainwater would fill a rut in the road. An iridescent scum rose to the top of the water and Ruth swallowed hard, trying not to gag. She poured another cup of water into the wounds on Melior's leg. It spilled over, carrying the scum-residue with it. Ruth mopped and swabbed, noting with resigned despair the growing pile of soggy, bloody, messy cloth. She blotted the gashes dry and then poured water over them a third time. This time the water ran nearly clear. The bleeding had stopped. She did not question her good fortune, but used the last of the dry pads and the bandage rolls, brisk efficient wrappings and tyings learned in what seemed another lifetime. She lifted Melior's leg carefully, propping it up against her knee so she could wrap the bandage all around his thigh, crisp and clean and sane and white. Then she covered him in blankets until he lay like a little hill before the embering fire. There was nothing more to do. And Ruth, unable to push her mind past the moment, lay down beside him on the bare wood floor. And slept. "C'mon, Jimmy-we're going to be late!" Ruth tossed and turned, realizing too late that sleep had been a bad idea. The dream that had followed her into the Morning Lands had seized her again and not let go. And now they were on the back road to Kathleen's place, on their way to the accident that had stolen eight years of Ruth's life, and she could not wake. Jimmy Ramirez was driving, and Kathleen and Allen sat in the back, and in a few moments all three of them would be dead. Desperately Ruth attempted to wrench her inner vision away from the sight of what must be. There were flashing lights around the corner of the road ahead, and at the moment Jimmy thought they were cop-car flashers, but the lights weren't red-and-blue. It was a coppery fiery light, glowing as balefully as the stone in the brigand's ring, and Jimmy, slowing, slewed the Oldsmobile around the corner and Ruth sawAnd
Jimmy screamed The car jumped forward as he floored the accelerator "No!" Ruth jerked herself free at last. She lay on the floor, staring unseeingly at the legs of unfamiliar furniture, while her heart battered the inside of her chest like a demonic washing machine on eternal spin cycle. A hand touched her shoulder. Ruth screamed and flung herself away, scrabbling at the floorboards like a maddened armadillo. She looked back. Melior was staring at her with an expression of bewildered concern. "Oh.
It's you," Ruth said lamely.
"Yes," Melior said. He was, if not completely recovered, at least going to recover. He was propped up on one elbow among the blankets in front of the ashes of the fire, one hand was still raised in the gesture of touching her. He did not ask who it was she thought might have been in the room with her. Ruth scrabbled to her feet and sat down on the settle. Heroines of fiction might have seized the moment to throw themselves into their lovers' arms, but she just didn't feel like it right now, she told herself crossly. "You came back to me," Melior said marvelingly. And it was true, she knew it was true; she remembered, vividly, Christmas Eve in Ippisiqua, and wanting him, and knowing there would never be any peace or happiness in the world again. And finding the door that had led her here. Ruth began to cry. All that, and now that she had him, she couldn't think of a single thing to say. She was so absorbed in blotting out the world that she did not hear him move. Only the faint unstartling susurrus of wool as he sat down beside her on the wooden bench and gathered her into his arms. He smelled of brandy and wood smoke and damp linen, and Ruth clung to him both as if she would keep him safe forever and punish him for unspecified wrongs. "Your leg," she said, a long damp time later. "Does not pain me so much as some wounds might. And as the dead feel no pain, I should begrateful for the discomfort," he responded. Ruth looked at him with suspicious embarrassment. He had one of the blankets draped around himself One fold of it covered her bandaging job. She scrubbed at her eyes with the back of one hand. He was well enough to have gotten over here, at any rate. "How long has it been in the World of Iron?"
Melior asked.
41 About two years," Ruth said. "Well, a year and seven months. was Christmas, when-" She stopped.
It
When she had fallen through a hole in the world with Nic Brightlaw right behind her. "Nic!
Ohmigod, I- How could I just have forgotten about him?
We've got to find him. He's my boss, the library director at Ryerson; he fell through the bookcase with me and then the unicorn got me lost, and he's out there-" Melior shook her gently. "The round tale, from the beginning. Andnot following my example-omitting no details whose omission could prove inconvenient or fatal later." Ruth stared around the room. Late afternoon sunlight streamed through the narrow windows, and the place looked as messy, rumpled, and disorganized as Ruth felt. There were piles of bloody rags everywhere, the scraps of Melior's clothes, and, abandoned in one corner, his riding boots and the Sword of Maiden's Tears. "But perhaps not at once," Melior amended. "Lend me your aid, and we will see if my strength extends to leaving this room, and what generosity this house's master may be moved to. The magic that runs here is not to be accomplished in the sight of eyes," Melior added, as if annotating some guidebook for her benefit. "There's a cheese in the kitchen," Ruth offered. Melior shook his head, saying nothing, and after a moment Ruth got to her feet and helped him stand. Then Melior pulled her toward where the Sword of Maiden's Tears lay on the floor. Ruth dug in her heels, pulling them both to a stop. "I must bring it with me," Melior said quietly. you."
"It will not hurt
"It-kills people," Ruth said, from a throat drawn suddenly tight. Naomi .
. .
"That is the nature of swords," Melior answered implacably. "But it lacks the particular power you fear while it is in my possession." "You mean you can turn it off," Ruth said flatly.
Melior sighed.
"While I am its guardian-while it is mine-it will not trap humankind into grendelform, nor will humans covet it. The sword is harmless now, Ruth, and I must keep it with me. It is my duty." Plainly this was not a subject for discussion. And Ruth knew that Melior would not lie to her, nor lead her danger. But it was still hard to help him over to where the to pick it up by a loop of swordbelt and hand it to him. He strap over one shoulder. The silver-chased scabbard dragged floor.
into any Sword lay, looped the on the
Ruth turned to go, Melior's arm around her shoulders. Then she remembered the other thing that it would not do to abandon. "My cup!" she said. "Oh, well, it isn't really mine, but-" She stopped babbling with an effort, and guided Melior to the door frame where he could stand supported while she scurried back over to the hearth.
Ruth found the cup without difficulty and stuffed it into the pouch with her other (wanted and unwanted) possessions, and returned to Melior. Together they went out into the hall. The back parlor where Ruth had eaten her dinner the night before was sun-drenched and welcoming. Through the long leaded windows she could see a flagstoned walk and a low wall, and beyond the wall an entire orchard of apple trees, bare-limbed in the fashion of early spring. Beyond the orchard was another low wall, and then a long meadow, punctuated with stands of blue and yellow flowers. Hyacinth. Daffodil. At the foot of the meadow, Ruth was certain, there was a stream, and beyond the farther bank of the stream a forest There was bread and wine laid out on the sideboard, and Ruth consoled herself with the knowledge that a skimpy breakfast was better than none. Melior sat on the sofa with the Sword propped up beside him while Ruth cut bread and poured wine. "Tell me how you came to this place, Ruth," Melior said. back to him, forgetting about the forest.
Ruth turned
"It was raining-" Ruth began, and with the help of Melior's patient questioning was able to tell him most of what had happened since she fell through the enchanted bookcase. Nic, the unicorn, the inn they'd foundand what had happened after. "He said there was someone following us. He went off into the woods to look. I thought it might be the unicorn, and it did show up again, but Nic didn't. And it wanted me to go with it, and, well, I already knew what happened if you didn't. So I did, and I didn't find Nic, but I got to the Goblin Market-" "And were lucky to escape unscathed," Melior said sternly. He didn't ask how she'd managed to bring him back from the dead-perhaps he didn't know how badly he'd been hurt. Or maybe she was the one who was wrong about the extent of his injuries. "Unscathed," Ruth echoed unsteadily. "That thing-" "The warwasp sought to kill you," Melior said bluntly, "and was dazzled by the bolder magic of the Sword. It is a creature of Chandrakar; I think Baligant wishes your death before you can be used against him." "Me?" said Ruth. his books?"
"Used against him?
What am I going to domiscatalog
Melior looked into her eyes, and Ruth realized with a small thrill of unease that he was deciding how much he should tell her. " I want the truth," Ruth said flatly.
"All of it."
"There is a court," Melior said after a pause, "which settles matters among the Houses of the TWilight-matters that are not the concern of the High King. I believe that Eirdois Baligant, the High Prince, works to harm us, and it is at the Twilight Court that I must tell the tale to the Earls and their vassal lords. But what is a tale without proof, in a time where I stand to be confirmed in my father's holdings, or have my rights set aside for another?" "I don't know," Ruth said, feeling like a straight man.
"What is a
tale without proof.?" "Useless. But I have proof. You are my proof, Ruth Marlowe." He looked into her eyes and smiled, with the faint hint of self-mockery that told her he knew she wasn't going to like this, whatever it was. "I think you'd better explain that," Ruth said, with sinking heart. So Melior did. It was in the World of Iron that Melior had discovered that Ruth Marlowe's soul was tangled somehow into the magics that had wrought the Sword of Maiden's Tears. Now Melior went on to explain that some wizard Ruth had never met was going to make a public spectacle of putting her soul back together and getting it out of the Sword while everyone at the TWilight Court watched. It would, he hoped, prove that Baligant was behind the plot to destroy the 'fteasures. It sounded if not actively painful, at least luridly public and humiliating. "And what if I don't choose to cooperate in this?" tightly.
Ruth said
There was a very long pause. "Do not ask me that, Ruth," Melior said tonelessly. Before she was quite knew it herself, Ruth was on her feet and out of the room, running down the hall just as if she had someplace to go. Running away before she said something she'd regret to the man who, last night, she was sure she'd die without. And who now intended to use her as a pawn in some elphen chess game, no matter how she felt about it. "Per-RRING?"
said the cat, from halfway up the stairs.
Ruth picked it up. The marmalade cat was a warm ecstatic weight in her arms, indicating by every means known to catkind that Ruth was surely the wisest of mortals to be devoting her time to him. She walked the rest of the way up the stairs, cat in her arms, then down the hall to "her" room. Once again there was a tub before the fire and clothes laid out, and this time there was the mouthwatering smell of hot venison pie and a bowl of candied chestnuts laid. out on the table before the bow window. The cat leaped down from her arms and began making sure the accommodations were up to standard. Ruth stood and inhaled. This time hunger overcame cleanliness. The cat jumped up onto the bed and settled itself to watch her eat, and Ruth, standing so as not to get guck on any of the furniture, wolfed the pie in large inelegant swallows, washing it down with mugsful of the hard cider provided. It was better fare than that laid out below, she reflected.
"Don't like Melior much, eh?" pie. The cat purred.
she said to the cat around a mouthful of
"Don't blame you," Ruth said generously. "Don't like him myself at the moment." She filled her cup with the last of the cider, drained it, and sighed. "But I love him, I think. And he's responsible-to the Court of Twilight, whatever that is. To prove the truth to them about that other guy. Baligant." The cat stopped purring, and regarded Ruth with gold oracular eyes. Ruth pulled off the robe, folded it fastidiously, and climbed into the bath. "You see," she said to the cat, picking up the soap, "if he doesn't get back with the Sword, or if Baligant manages to get all the Treasures and screw everything up, that means Naomi died for nothing, doesn't it?" The cat watched her. "Or maybe I'm just crazy, talking to a cat. But I don't think so. wish-" Ruth thought of the garden and the orchard and the meadow beyond. About the clean clothes and hot dinners; comfort, order, and civilization. About calm comfort, untroubled by love or politics. wish I could stay here.
I
I
"But I can't," Ruth said aloud, and bent to wash her muddy, bloody hair. As if it had already known her intention, the clothes laid out for her to put on were traveling clothes, even though the shadows stretched toward evening. Ruth tried to remember whether any of the rash and hasty half-promises she'd made yesterday included a promise to only spend one night here. But whether or not she'd promised, whatever she'd promised, the house seemed disinclined to welcome Melior. And that seemed to mean they would have to leave tonight. It did not occur to her to stay without him. She had no idea if she could really be happy with him, but the idea of not finding out was unthinkable. And so, Ruth thought primly, she'd better get dressed. There were knitted woolen stockings that gartered above the swell of the calf with bright braided ribbons, brown boots lined in sheepskin with stout formidable soles, an airy linen smock made opulent with tucks and pleating and delicate white embroidery over which Ruth, professional costumer, tied with ease one wool and two cotton petticoats followed by a sleeveless chemise of silk, which was in its turn surmounted by a soft, thick, serviceable and dependable double full circle skirted T-tunic in dark green wool.
The neck of her dress laced closed with a scarlet ribbon, and at the wrists and above the neckline the immaculate white embroidery of her smock could be seen. The neck, placket, and wrists of the dress, and a band eight inches above the hem, were brave with bright multicolored silk embroidery in designs that were vaguely Celtic, in the way the clothes she wore were vaguely historical. But the twelfth century T-tunic did not go with the fourteenth century petticoats, and the sleeveless silk chemise was from no historical period. Still, it was warm. There were gloves, too, long gauntlets of supple green leather whose cuff-embroidery matched that of her dress. And a snood, of green velvet ribbons and lined in darker silk, that Ruth gratefully seized upon as an answer to the eternal question of what she should do with her hair. There was a belt of green-dyed braided leather that she fitted about her waist, threading it through the drawstrings of the pouch she carried and returning the tasseled cord to the bed curtains. The free end of the long belt wove back and forth through D rings; Ruth folded the excess over and through, making it dangle properly. The last item there was Naomi's Kinsale cloak. Ruth was sure she'd lost it at the Goblin Market. She thought the matter over carefully and became positive. She'd been carrying it at the Market. She'd dropped it sometime there, as she certainly hadn't had it in the forest. And now it was back. Welcome to Elfland The Lost and Found Department .
. .
She picked it up and slung it over one arm. The cloak was heavy and it dragged, but she clung to it like a last lifeline to home. How many times did she have to leave safety and comfort and at least the semblance of normalcy, just to follow Melior? There ought to be a limit to what she was asked to give up, somehow, somewhere. . . . You've buttered your bread, Ruth Marlowe, now lie on it. She turned to the cat and held her hand out toward it tentatively. allowed its ears to be ruffled and its jaw to be rubbed. "Do take care of yourself, moggie.
It
And I remember my promise."
But this time, talking to the cat, she felt silly instead of wise. She shrugged the cloak into a more comfortable position over her arm and went out the door. It was no particular surprise to see Melior standing at the foot of the stair waiting for her, fully dressed. The Sword was slung over his back again, and he leaned upon a black walking stick as long as he was. His clothes were a match for hers, down to color, cut, material, and embroidery, save that he wore his own boots and the orange scaled
cape. And it was too soon for him to be up and around; he'd been dying the night before. She could tell he was hurt; his mouth was set firmly and his gloved hand clenched tightly on the stave. "Looks like we're both ready to go," Ruth said, trying for the bright neutral tone that had served her many an hour at the Reference Desk. "Yes. The Border should be easy enough to cross from here; we might even find the Road again. But I confess my plans take me no farther than the nearest inn." "Why-" Ruth began, but a gesture from Melior stopped her. She came the rest of the way down the stairs and followed him down the hall. The front door stood open. And standing on the threshold, knowing she would never see this place again, Ruth felt a wild clutch of homesickness drag at her heart. This place was not home, she had been here barely a night, but somehow it was the distillation of all of Ruth's best times and places, and leaving it would be like abandoning all her happy memories. "Come, Ruth." Melior's voice was abrupt with tension. Out of sheer inertia, she crossed the threshold and set foot on the path outside. Mellior's measured pace was easy to match, even in her bulky unfamiliar skirts. She would not look back. She held firmly to that resolve. She would not look back for a last sight of a place she could never go home to again. The sun was setting, and despite the fact that it had been autumn here last night the sky was the pale crystal-white of clear spring sunsets. Dusk and the season made everything sharp and rainwashed and vivid, and tiny details leaped out at her, from the green of the moss overgrowing a rock to the even distinctness of the cobbles edging the walk. Bare bushes and early grass became trees within yards of the walk, and here and there Ruth could see clusters of spring flowers closed against the oncoming night. Melior's footsteps were loud beside her. They came to the outer gate, the one that divided the house's grounds from the forest, a double recurve of weather-grayed wood. There were clusters of flowers at the foot of each post, and the garland she had hung the night before was still draped over the gate. The lamps were already lit, their candles feeble against the bright twilight. She could still go back. Even now, the house would take her back, and there would be long walks in the twilight, through the orchard and the meadow to the river beyond. Melior put his hand on the gate, and it swung away from him as if it did not like to be touched. Four steps would take her onto the forest path.
And the gate would
close forever. It did not matter what she might have with Melior. What she was giving up here was real, and good, and precious, and she would miss it all the days of her life. Ruth wavered. And Melior yanked her arm so that she stumbled forward, through the gate. She gasped as she heard it swing shut behind her with gunshot finality. Melior looked down at her. "Some day I will explain, if you still wish to hear. You have been done great honor, Ruth Marlowe, in that place." Ruth shook her head, blinking back tears, and wiped her eyes on the sleeve of her tunic. Melior held out his free arm and she put herself inside it, resting her hand on his hip and leaning her face against his tunic. This was what she'd chosen. For better, for worse, with malice aforethought. This. Melior. Then he shifted his weight, hissing a little to himself as he leaned his weight upon the stave, and the two of them began to walk down the forest path through the darkening wood. Between the Knife Edge and the Skin THERE WAS A long time of pain and sickness, of wandering alone crying out for any of her own to find her, to answer her. She was hot and cold by turns, and fought the hands that held her back when all she wanted was to run. At last, exhausted, Jausserande fell into dreamless sleep. Some uncounted time later she drifted toward consciousness, only to be lulled back into dreams by the familiar sounds of an armed encampment. "-don't know why you brought her." From somewhere outside the place where she lay, Jausserande heard voices, but it was too much trouble to wake to them. "Everybody else got to bring home a souvenir. shop." Jausserande heard the words without caring.
I didn't get time to
She felt weak; lazy.
Every muscle in her body ached with past strain. "The men won't like it." "Then the men can go find somebody else to play with, Yarrow. I'm the Daddy; either they do what I tell them, or I'm taking my toys and going home." How strange. She must have taken a head-hit in the last raid. would explain everything. How Miralh would laugh. Jausserande drifted back into sleep. "Wake up, Tinkerbelle," a voice said, very close.
That
Jausserande jolted awake, fully conscious this time. itself into separate aches. Her head. Her leg. The Harvest Home.
Fatigue resolved
Fox.
Fox was standing over her, holding a bowl. Jausserande lunged for him, reaching for his throat And was yanked back by the collar around her neck. Its leash was tethered securely to something that would not yield; her hands were prisoned behind her, in a carven yoke such as she had seen prisoners wear in wartime, half her life ago. She fought her bonds, gritting her teeth at the nausea and weakness that rode over her in waves. "Quit thrashing. can't.
If Raven couldn't break that-and he tried-you
I thought you aristocrats were supposed to have a few brains," Fox sneered. Jausserande stared up at him, violet eyes wide with shock as the full horror of her situation sank in. She was in the hands of the enemy. She looked around. Jausserande lay on a crude pallet in a primitive hut. Her boots and her belt were gone; she lay on the pile of skins in her linen undertunic and drawers, with a large bandage wrapped high on one thigh. Through the squares could see chinks of had mocked her with yes-but the camp of
of bark that formed the hut's outer covering, she daylight shining, and could hear the sounds that their familiarity. The sounds of an armed camp, the outlaws.
Fox stood over her-wearing, she noted with almost ludicrous indignation, her gray wool tunic over the same crude leathers she had seen him wearing at Dawnheart. His skin had darkened with exposure to the sun, as humans' skin was wont to do, and the hairs on his forearms were almost elf-silver by contrast. And Melior's signet ring was on his finger. Fox gazed passionlessly down at her, as if she were a litter of pigs he was deciding best how to cull. Then he squatted, setting the tray down on the floor of the hut within easy reach. "Going to behave, Tink? silly."
You try to kick me, and I'll knock you
Jausserande swallowed, through a throat gone suddenly dry. This was not clean war, where prisoners were ransomed. Fox and his losels had nothing to lose. He might do anything. And there was nothing she could do to stop him. It was a new sensation, and a year ago she would have fought no matter the odds, as blindly as an unbroken colt. But she was Cupbearer now, and the honor Jausserande had taken up so lightly held her more brutally than Fox's shackles could. She had responsibilities that
stretched far beyond her own desires. She was Cupbearer; and while the Cup of Morning Shadows was safe still . . . The key to the Cup was not. "Lie back," Fox said, and reached for her leg. Despite her best intentions, Jausserande flung herself away from him. Her arms were twisted awkwardly behind her by the shackle, and the leather collar at her throat chafed. The bad leg buckled agonizingly under her when she tried to use it and Jausserande bared her teeth at Fox in hopeless defiance. Fox sat back on his heels. "What? Afraid of me, a-what was the quaint native term again?,mud-born'? Afraid of something at least, Tink? Finally? you know, is the beginning of wisdom. Mao Tse-tung said that, I think.
Fear,
You won't ever have heard of him." Jausserande watched him, spellbound as the lark before the cobra. "But maybe you've heard of gangrene? Stupid bitch," Fox added in an afterthought. "All of you damn elves think you're so irresistible. You just come walizing in and expect everybody to be struck stupid by your ineffable beauty-and then you start putting the boot in. Well, the boot stops here, Tink. No more elves. No more magic. No more Twelve goddamned Treasures." She had thought the situation was as bad as it could be, and had been wrong. It had just gotten worse. The human was mad. "What are you going to do?" Jausserande demanded, her voice harsh and low. "And what have you done with The Rohannan?" "Who?"
Fox's surprise was genuine enough.
Now it was Jausserande's turn to be nonplussed. Had he killed Melior and looted the body without even knowing his victim's name? She stared at Fox's hand. He saw the direction of her stare and smiled, the sweet smile of a saint seeing Paradise. It transformed his face to something neither human nor elphen, and Jausserande did not care for it. "Oh, the ring. He gave it to me, Tink, and that was his first mistake, and too bad for him not his last. But you asked what I was going to do, so in good villain style I might as well tell you. I'm going into the Vale and getting the Cup of Morning Shadows. Then I'm holding you and the Cup for ransom until I see if Melior is going to come and get you back. If he does, I'm going to shoot him in the back and see what a hammer and anvil'Il do to his Sword." The Sword of Maiden's Tears.
Line Rohannan's 'Reasure-destrayed?
"You can't do that!"
Jausserande gasped.
"Wanna bet?" Fox reached into a pouch dangling from his belt and pulled something out. Jausserande desperately tried to shut her eyes, but couldn't bear not to see. Her cup. The tainaiste-Cup, that would find the true one. In Fox's hands. The attack on the Fair had been a feint all along. The outlaw did not seek plunder, but to strike at the heart of Chandrakar itself At the Twelve Treasures. But who could be so crazed? No one. Unless her cousin, whom she had thought mad, was not. human, though mad, was not crazed.
And the
"Tell your master the High Prince he will never succeed in his depravity-not while any of the Treasurekeepers retains his charge!" Jausserande raged. The surge of fury left her weak. Jausserande closed her eyes, and through the tide of weakness felt Fox's fingers at the bandage on her leg, unknotting and unwinding. Almost, she did not care. " You'll live," he said, when the wound was bared to his inspection. "Jesus, a five-year-old with a slingshot and a box of paper clips could take over this place in twenty minutes. Assuming he could get anybody to get off their ass and rebel. How do you ever expect to develop any decent technology without iron?" His words meant nothing to her, and his scornful manner whipsawed Jausserande between fury and a hard, hopeless fear. There would be no rescue for her here, and even the small magic she could command was beyond her in this weakened state. She tried to shut out the day, the place, the sight of the tainaiste-Cup in human hands, Baligant's madness, to put all the Treasures so at peril. The feel of a wet cloth on her skin shocked her to alertness again. Fox was bathing her wound. She stared; it was a short ugly violet gash, swollen and raised but obviously healing cleanly. Such a small injury, to cause such agony. Jausserande's eyes teared unwillingly at the memory. She had ridden all day once with a bone-deep sword cut to the leg, but the sword had been bronze, and nothing, nothing to the pain of iron. "I'm going to leave the bandage off so it can get some air. you aren't going anywhere, are you?" Fox said. Jausserande didn't answer.
After all,
She turned her head away, dismissing him.
"And now, Tink, it's dinnertime. There's just one thing I'd like to share with you before I read you the list of tonight's specials. Look at me, elf bitch." His voice had lost its light note of self-mockery.
Unwillingly Jausserande met his eyes. They were blue; pale blue and opaque, like expensive glass. His face was expressionless, his tone emotionless as he spoke. "If you give me trouble, I won't feed you. If I don't feed you, nobody will. They're afraid of you. That probably sounds like a good deal to you, but it means my men won't come anywhere near you-unless, of course, Yarrow cuts your throat. He's that kind, you know; inclined to panic. And he gives up too easily-but on the other hand, you're tied up. Not much of a challenge. "But since I know Yarrow's that kind of guy, I've got Raven keeping an eye on him. Raven wouldn't touch you with a ten-foot pole. He's kind of an idealist, you might say. "So if I don't feed you, I don't think the rest of them are going to give it a real high priority. Think about that. You'll die of thirst in about four days, assuming you're anything like a human, and you know, somewhere along about your third day without water you'll be willing to do practically anything to get a drink." The smile that followed that bland recitation of horror was all the more terrifying for its easy brilliance. "So why don't you be a good Tinkerbelle, and cooperate, and we can all keep our illusions a while longer. Okay?" He knelt beside her, watching and waiting, and all Jausserande could think of was that if she died here, the Cup of Morning Shadows would be lost to Line Floire forever. And Line Floire would in turn be lost. And Baligant would win. If fury could have cut her bonds, Jausserande would have been free. If desperation were a weapon, Fox would be dead.
But they were not.
He was waiting for her to answer, Jausserande realized. And when he was tired of waiting, he would leave. He would not come back. And she would begin to die. The need of her Treasure broke her own need before it. "I accept your terms," Jausserande whispered. If her capitulation pleased him, Fox didn't show it. There was none of the gloating or bragging Jausserande expected from a human who had captured one of the Morning Lords. Instead, he simply moved forward and helped her back into a sitting position. Her leg gave twinges of pain as she shifted, but she thought it would soon be strong enough to bear her weight. And then she could get free.
Get the tainaiste-Cup.
Kill Fox.
Jausserande leaned against the post she was shackled to; a tree trunk, lopped and left rooted in the earth. Fox brought a waterskin and held the nozzle to her mouth; Floire Jausserande, Cupbearer and Treasurekeeper, gulped thin warm flat beer until the waterskin was withdrawn.
"For what it's worth," Fox said, turning back to her with a bowl containing boiled grain, "my plans don't include killing you. But you can kiss your Cup good-bye." Never, Jausserande thought fiercely, but there was puzzlement in the thought. Didn't Fox know that the loss of the Cup meant death for every man, woman, and child of Line Floire? How could Fox think to promise her life and withhold the Cup? "Whatever you have been offered to do this, Line Floire will match it, for my freedom and the return of the Cup. And more-Gate passage for you and all you choose to a land where humans rule," Jausserande said. Surely Baligant could be offering nothing more. "Think, before you cleave to your bargain with the High Prince. A lord who has betrayed one will betray all." Fox stopped with the spoon halfway to her mouth. "Very pretty, and very noble. And you'd probably even keep your word, which is a nice gesture considering what we mean to each other. Too bad you got me wrong, Tink. I don't give a damn about the home rule situation in Elfland. I'm a freelancer." Jausserande opened her mouth to protest. porridge.
Fox filled it with a spoon of
Days passed. Jausserande brooded as her injury slowly healed, wondering how she could kill the outlaws' leader. In her captivity she saw no one other than Fox, though she heard his men on every side. He slept in the hut beside her, and in the darkness Jausserande would lie awake, listening to his breathing and watching the progress of the waxing moon through a chink in the roof of the hut. He had the tainaiste-Cup. She could not kill him until she knew where it was. During daylight hours Jausserande had the hut to herself, Fox usually being absent on his mysterious business of rabble-rousing and thievery. She listened carefully to the careless talk that went on outside, and after a few days had collected a good idea of the extent of his following. The knowledge made her no happier. Fox was the touchstone for every spark of foolish human disaffection in all her cousin's wide lands, it seemed, and had gathered about himself not only the brutal losels that one might expect to find accompanying a forest outlaw, but also men of a dangerously high quality. Jausserande suspected that there might be women in Fox's band as well, and that was the gravest news yet. It meant that this band of Fox's was no summer rebellion, with disaffected serfs returning to their hearths and masters as soon as the first snow fell. If the women supported Fox, then he might find welcome and support in any village in Chandrakar. Ungrateful, stupid creatures, to turn so on their overlords just as peace had come to Chandrakar at last. It was their great-grandsires
who had first gone to war; surely they themselves should be grateful to put an end to it. As she had been? Jausserande was honest enough to ask herself that question. If she could imagine no life beyond war, how much less imaginative might these short-lived humans be? It mattered not. Their duty was to obey their overlords. There was no excuse for their rebellion. When Melior returned, he would not be allowed to be as soft with them as formerly. Line Floire would sue for Jausserande's blood-price, and Melior must pay it. Fox and all his band would die: gelded, hanged, and then beheaded to deck the Traitors' Gate of Dawnheart. If Melior returned. And even if Floire took its vengeance, what would happen to the Cup? In the late afternoon after the night she had watched the full moon pace the sky Fox came to her. It was early for the evening meal Jausserande had come to expect from him, though he carried a wooden tray with food on it. But instead of feeding her, today he untied her hands. Freed, it was absurdly easy to untie the braided leather leash from the tree; Jausserande stood, holding to the post for support. Her muscles trembled with the unaccustomed exercise. "Why?" Jausserande said, stretching to ease the stiffness of long stillness. She could kill him even bare-handed, she was nearly certain, but if she knew that, Fox must know it as well. She rubbed her wrists and eased her shoulders, not looking at him. "Eat your dinner, Tink; we're going walkies. And although it's hardly necessary to mention it, I will: the Cup is hidden somewhere that only I know about." Jausserande sat again and reached for the tray. There was bread and ale, proof, though she hardly needed it, that Fox had sympathizers in the local villages. She did her best to ignore him as she fed herself. His trick was only what she had expected. It was only what she herself would have done, had one of the other 'Heasurekeepers fallen into her hands during the war. But today Fox was edgy, keyed up and minded to talk. "The way I figure it, if you kill me, no Cup. If you escape, you can't dally to search every rock, rabbit hole, and tree. The only way you can think of to maybe get it back is to string me along. In other words, cooperate." "What makes you think it means so much to me?" crossly.
Jausserande said
Fox laughed, a short sharp bark such as his namesake might have uttered. "If it means as much to you as the Sword does to Melior, you'll do whatever it takes for a chance to get it back."
Jausserande nodded, slowly, acknowledging what was no more than the simple truth-and wondering, not for the first time, why the outlaw Fox seemed to claim such intimacy with her cousin. She reached for the wooden mug on the tray and then stopped, speaking almost without thinking. "Fox, what do you truly want? Destroy the Treasures and you destroy us all, elf and human alike-you cannot want that." "I want," said Fox, with the soft passion of a man at the edge of endurance, "to be able to sleep again at night. So I'll destroy Chandrakar? Fine by me. It's a damn shame Chandrakar didn't think a little harder about what it destroyed. But it didn't-so Chandrakar-and its 'measures-and its elves-have me." Another of Fox's brilliant smiles, which Jausserande was coming to distrust as the indicator of Fox's truly nasty temper. "Like the man says. I'm not your judge, I'm your judgment. dressed, Tink; we're going for a ride."
Get
He'd brought her most of her own clothes, with a heavy sheepskin vest to take the place of her lost tunic. He even brought her cap with the Ravens' badge, and Jausserande could not say whether such consideration pleased or discomfited her. Since knowledge was the only weapon she had, she considered the matter carefully. Fox did not treat her with the respect a worthy enemy deserved. He was not cruel out of fear of her strength. He treated her with the distant kindness she used toward her human servants, as if he were so high above her that there was no way she could drag him down. Realizing this, her eyes kindled, and she glared at Fox, settling the cap on her head. He regarded her with mocking acknowledgment. "It's show time, Tink.
C'mon."
"My name-" "Is really, really unimportant to me, Tink. C'mon." turned his back and ducked out through the hut's low doorway.
He
After a moment, Jausserande followed. Her first view of the camp showed it much as she had imagined it would be. Shelters made of bent but still-rooted saplings roofed over with hides and squares of bark, small fire pits were scattered here and there, carcasses and food bundles hung from tree branches-all the signs of a long-kept base camp, yet so portable and ephemeral that an hour's hard work could erase it almost as if it had never been. She counted perhaps thirty men, and knew there must be at least half again as many that she did not see. Fox led her to the edge of the camp, where, within a concealing lattice of branches, six horses stood, saddled and ready-fruits of Fox's raid on the Harvest Home. Fox looked at her, a slanted sidewise knowing glance. "See anything you like?"
Fox asked her, still in that blithe
untrustworthy mood. Wait for your chance, Jausserande told herself. She spared a sweeping glance for Fox, the stolen horses, the outlaws standing around. "Nothing." Foxlaughed. He rode well, an uncommon skill in the mud-born. The horse Jausserande rode was the worst of them, easily caught by any of the others should she incite it to bolt, and haltered to Fox's saddle besides. Four of his men rode with them, and Jausserande had seen the flash of sword and dagger as they mounted. Fox led them with easy certainty onto the road that led into the Vale itself. Jausserande watched Fox's back and the long tail of pale hair, and wondered who he was and what she should believe about him. Even if Melior's theory was true, she did not think that this one looked to Baligant Baneful. But if he did not, why did Fox want the Treasures? They were of no use to the mud-born. Humans had no magic-they could not wield the powers of the Twelve Treasures. And, though the Cup of Morning Shadows was not so guarded, no human could even touch Rohannan's Treasure, the Sword of Maiden's Tears. Yet if she could believe him, the Sword was more Fox's goal than the Cup, though he wanted the Cup as well. Why? For the first time Jausserande wished she had paid more attention to her lessons in the Art Magical-or, even better, had an Adept Major to consult. Because Fox said that his intention was to destroy both Cup and Sword, and Jausserande had no idea what would happen if he succeeded. Chandrakar would be doomed, that was common knowledge, but doomed how? As her horse's hooves struck the white clay road, Jausserande felt a familiar warning tingle of sensation. This was the road into the Vale of Stars, where elphen magic could not be used, lest it twist itself and turn upon the wielder. Even the enchantment upon the Cup was a simple thing, a mere mechanism, related to the works of the Art Magical as a child's hobbyhorse was to a war destrier and thus safe from the power of the Vale. Did that very simplicity mean that Fox would be able to use its magic as well? The terrain rose around the mounted party in the gathering dusk, until they rode down a gleaming bone-white road between the steep dark walls of a great defile, and at last passed through into the Vale of Stars. Beyond the walls of the pass the road dipped sharply, arrowing down into a tiny perfect valley. Though the sky was already dark, and the crowding hills shut out the sunset light, the Vale shone with its own illumination. There was a faint glow to the mist that hung over the
vivid green meadow, and even in this season the trees were filled with pale flowers that gave off their own light. All was perfect; Jausserande could hear the purl of a quick-running stream, see the flicker of grass stems bent beneath an evening breeze. To this place, unique in Chandrakar, the war had not come. Until now. Fox chevied his mount down the narrow track. Jausserande was pulled unwillingly with him, wondering if it was best to vault from her saddle and run before Fox could attempt to compel her help. She didn't get the chance. "Tie her," Fox snapped over his shoulder, and before the horses had stopped, Raven yanked Jausserande from her saddle. She fought him, but his strength was as great as Fox had foretold, and he was able to hold her as another of Fox's men jerked her hands back and bound them behind her. Not enough to restrain her, save for the noose that went about her neck. Run and she would hang herself. "There. All comfy now?" Fox asked, dismounting. The man behind her tossed Fox the free end of the halter. He caught it and looped it about his wrist. "I will see you hanged from Dawnheart's walls with your own entrails," Jausserande grated. "Why is it that people complain when others do things as well as they would themselves? Your problem, Tink, is that you get really bent out of shape when you start to suspect you aren't going to win." Around them Fox's men were dismounting and picketing the horses, but Fox and Jausserande might have been alone. Her fury was a palpable weight, pressing against her skin until only gritted teeth kept her from panting for relief from it. For a moment she forgot even the Cup. Fox turned away and strode off, pulling the rawhide leash taut between them. A sharp shove between the shoulder blades sent Jausserande stumbling after him, muscles trembling at her narrow escape-though from what, she wasn't sure. He does not know where he must stand The realization broke through to her consciousness like a rock that she could cling to. How could he know, when even she had only Floire Glorete's handed-down directions to a place Glorete had never seen? What had Glorete said? Jausserande frowned, summoning memory under unpromising conditions. On the second day of the full moon-that was now-at moonse, the presence of the shadow-Cup within the Vale of Stars would show the presence of the true Cup and, being thrust into shadow, bring the true Cup visible. Moonrise would be very soon.
And when it came, the tainaiste-Cup would
cause an image of the true one to appear for a few moments somewhere within the Vale of Stars. Glorete had told her to hold the shadow Cup within the image of the other one, but even Glorete hadn't been able to tell her what would happen then. Could Fox do that much? Would he even see it? aid-and kill her when she did not give it?
Would he ask her
For the first time Jausserande forced herself to think about what would happen if the Cup of Morning Shadows were lost here-not as a vague possibility, but as a real likelihood. Chandrakar would still be safe, since the Cup would still be within the land. And perhaps Line Floire would send someone to the Vale to search when Jausserande was known to be dead. And perhaps that one would find it. And if they did not? On the day of the Kingmaking, with Eirdois Baligant in the High Seat, Floire would be called upon three times to present its Treasure. And when it had been called for the third time, and failed . . . Line Floire would be no more. Before the sun had set, every man, woman, and child of the Line would have been driven beyond the bounds of Chandrakar, banished and attainted with no more possession than the clothes they wore. Landless wanderers, thrown upon the mercy of Lands that had none. It could happen. Fox stopped near the middle of the tiny valley. If not for the luminescence filling this place, he would not have been able to see; overhead, the sky was dark indigo velvet powdered with bright autumn stars. From the corner of her eye she could see two of Fox's men in the distance, standing with lighted lanterns beside the horses. The lanterns' warm light clashed oddly with the cool illumination that emanated from the grass and trees. She glanced behind her. There was Raven, the black-haired giant who-so Fox said-feared her. When he saw her look toward him, he looked away, obviously ill at ease, and it occurred to Jausserande that if she could manage to be alone for any length of time with Raven, she could probably bend him to her will. Beside him was the man who had bound her hands. Remarkable among Fox's band, he was not marked or branded for thievery or trespass, but his eyes would mark him in any company: one blue and one brown, they gave his face an oddly unfinished look. He regarded her with a knowing disrespect that irritated Jausserande even as it worried her. Such irreverence toward their overlords was not natural to the mud-born. "Well, Tink, here we are.
Just you, and me-and this."
Fox reached to his belt and pulled out the shadow-Cup. ring flashed on Fox's hand as he raised it. "You had it all along!"
Melior's signet
Tly as she might, Jausserande could not keep
the note of betrayal out of her voice. Fox smiled and spoke-for him-with compassion. "But you couldn't know that. risk it."
And with stakes so high, you couldn't
"How can you know that-and still do what you do!" "I'm just one surprise after another, Tinkerbelle," Fox said, turning away. Raven came forward, making a wide detour around Jausserande. Fox handed him the end of her leash, and Raven looped it around his wrist. "Don't drop that." "Fox, shouldn't we-" Raven began. "Once we've got the Treasure, Raven, things'll be different," Fox said. "They'll be worse!" Jausserande cut in swiftly. "Let me go now and-" "If I have to shut you up, Tink, you won't like it," Fox said mildly, and the man still standing behind Jausserande chuckled. Jausserande shut up. Fox gestured, and Raven moved aside until the rope about Jausserande's throat was pulled uncomfortably taut. Now Fox lifted the simple pewter cup higher. The light from the meadow played along his jaw and the underside of his raised arm, but the darkness of his hand nearly blended into the dull pewter surface of the cup. "Such a large area to search. Moonrise, isn't it?" predatory.
And such a short time to do it in.
Fox turned back to her, and his bared teeth were
Jausserande raised her chin and stood silent. "And somewhere-some particular where-here in the beautiful Vale of Stars we swap this one-" Fox tossed the Cup into the air and caught it, "-for that one. I wonder where?" But he didn't wonder, Jausserande suspected in growing horror. If he did not know -or think he knew-how to retrieve the Cup of Morning Shadows, Fox could not be so gaily confident. Surreptitiously she tested her bonds. Her hands had the numb tingle of having been tied too tight for too long, but as she pulled, she felt the leather cords creak and stretch. She could get free. She worked at the bindings on her wrists as Fox wandered, seemingly in random circles but actually covering a good amount of territory, as full night fell and moonrise drew nearer.
The pied-eyed man moved far enough away that Jausserande could watch as he unslung a crossbow from his back and held it ready, but she was still close enough to see that some of the bolts were tipped with a bright grayish metal. Iron. Raven's hold on her leash never slackened, but Jausserande had taken care to turn away from him and make no abrupt struggling movements. The leather bonds on her wrists continued to stretch. It began to seem that she had deluded herself during the days she had spent in the outlaws' camp. The most important thing was not to get the Cup of Morning Shadows. It was to keep the Cup away from Fox. "Ah-hah." Fox spoke softly, but Jausserande was so keyed up that the sound made her jump. The movement made the cords slide loosely on her wrists. The moon hovered on the edge of the ridge, dispelling the luminescence from the Vale by its greater light. In the distance there was a spark of gold. "Bring her along." The source of the stream she had heard was a spring, round and perfect as the Cup itself, that bubbled up out of the earth at the crown of a small rise. Above it hung the faint balefire flicker of the Cup of Morning Shadows. The true Cup. Jausserande stared, her heart hammering in anticipatory terror. moment he "Hold on tight," Fox said, but not to her.
In a
Raven's hands settled on her shoulders in a crushing grip. Fox grabbed her arm and yanked. Her hand slid easily out of the loosened cords. "Naughty," Fox said, but not as if he cared. around the tainaiste-Cup.
And wrapped her fingers
She knew what he meant to do in the instant before he did it, but there was nothing she could do to stop him. She felt the hot callused roughness of Fox's hand over hers as he held her hand closed on the Cup, and Raven's grip on her shoulders was bruisingly tight. And Fox used all his strength to force her hand, filled with the shadow-Cup, into the gleaming ghost-image of the real one. It would be her touch that retrieved it, not his. Jausserande struggled until every muscle burned and her heartbeat was a hammering concussion in her temples. Her breath was a rasping repetition and there was the taste of blood in her mouth. Nothing had any effect. And, at last, the Cup in her hands and Fox's passed through its golden mirror image. The icy suction that Jausserande associated with High Magic pulled at the marrow of her bones, and through the Cup's gleaming illusion she
could see the tainaiste-Cup catch fire, dull metal gilding. And vanishing. She felt it melt away in her hand, and for a moment she was as stunned as Fox. Raven released her and backed away, and she heard the words of a mud-born prayer against magic. Magic. Shadow and image both gone-and no Cup. But then she realized that RaVen and her need to protect the Cup no longer held her, and the only hands on her were Fox's. He was powerful for a human, but no match for elphen strength. Jausserande tore free and whirled away, only to slam into Raven's massive bulk. She knew he was stronger than she, but his fear of hurting her placed him at a disadvantage. In a moment she would be free of him, too. " No, Hathorne-you'll hit Raven!" Meaningless words that she did not bother to listen to. Now Raven's grasp was loose on her wrists, and then she was running, a jagging path to baffle the crossbowman. The evening grass was cool on her legs as she ran for the trees and safety. She did not hear the whistling are of the slingstone that struck her unconscious. Queen's Play IN THE SPACE of one short night she had been maid and mare, leopardess and dragon, warwasp. . . . And, defeated. Amadis could still not believe-could not understand-the moment when her carefully made plans had dissolved like sugar in hot wine. Though the mortal man she had left for dead had wounded her, the Wild Magic had rippled through her like pure power incarnate, obedient to her command, and even the death-metal embedded in her throat was only a minor handicap. It had been simple to follow the soul-anchor to the Goblin Market; one snap of her mandibles and the soul she had spun out like flax would be free to inhabit the Sword of Maiden's Tears for the rest of its eternal existence, and the proof that Baligant's rebellious nobles might bring against him would be lost, lost, lost Only that was not what had happened. The Swordwarden had been there, the magic of the Treasure that he bore blinding to her supernatural senses. She had lost her prey, but the Swordwarden's death would serve almost as well, and so she Had been defeated by him. By Rohannan Melior, and the Sword of Maiden's Tears, and a magic greater than her own. If she had not fled, she would have died there. Which might, Amadis considered, have been better than what faced her now-to go and tell Baligant High Prince, her master, that she had failed. That Ruth Marlowe, who had been the trap to bring the Sword of Maiden's Tears into the World of Iron, was still alive, and must inevitably encounter-and be used by-the Sword and its bearer.
No. Amadis considered the matter carefully. To die was worse than having to make such a confession, it was true. But it was far better to be able to report success than to confess to failure. She had possessed the strength and wit to return secretly; Baligant would not know to demand her presence yet. But the little time before the need that measured the seasons of her life was once more acute was short, and when that time was gone, she must go to Baligant High Prince in hope of slaking it again. Without success to offer him, Baligant would deny her. And though he would not deny her unto death, the long agonizing humiliation that stretched before her as the payment for failure was something it was worth any exertion to avoid. So when Baligant asked of the outcome of her hunt, she must have a better answer for him then than failure. In the chamber set aside for the wizard's use in the tower by the sea, Amadis made her preparations. In this chamber the floor was inlaid with lines of silver; the gross geometries of the true world and its Gates. All lines led to the center of the room, where a low black cube of glass supported an enormous alabaster bowl, also webbed with silver. These were the trappings of the High Magic, which any Adept Major might presume to master. In Amadis' hands, these objects became something more. She set the wards, which would confine the powers she raised within the cube of space defined by the walls of this chamber. She set another such binding on the white bowl, that it would retain its shape regardless of the energies poured into it. Then Amadis gestured, and cold green fire gushed from her hands into the bowl. Her form and the form of all the room's contents became mutable, the shapes they displayed merely a consensus shaped by her will and by the Word. The bowl flared sun-bright all along its silver inlays, and the fire that filled it, refined by its own weight, became darker and quieter until at last the bowl was glutted with an emerald liquid dark as blood. In this speculum, Amadis began to search. She did not see the forest house where Ruth had sheltered, for sight of that was barred to such as she. And from the Market, paths multiplied in such bewildering profusion that it could take a very long time to search all the Lands they led to. Amadis took the time, though she could not draw upon the Word for as much energy as she spent. That was her peculiar misfortune. But her need was great enough to spend herself so. She had not only space to search, but Time, which shifted its rate at every border, spinning faster and faster until one reached the World of Iron and Time became a blur, snuffing out the brief lives of that world's mortal inhabitants in an instant. And at last, because she must, she found the moment and the Gate wherewhen the Swordwarden and his heart twin, Child of Earth, crossed
the border into Chandrakar. There.
She marked it: there.
The viridian phlogiston sank away into the walls of the bowl and vanished. The light left her hands, her body, the walls of the chamber, returning them all to this world: creatures of matter, with fixed and immutable shapes. The riptide of Wild Magic ebbed and ebbed and ebbed, until for a moment Amadis wondered if she had cast the spell that every wizard fears-the unrepaid outwelling of power that takes all with it, even the life force of the wizard and his Covenant with the Word. But it wasn't. Not this time. Still in flesh, Amadis slid to the chill stone floor and lay there with her cheek pressed against the icy glass of the altar cube. And the hunger for the drug that was weakness, that was power, burned demandingly within her. An hour passed, then two, before she recovered the strength to stand. She swayed slightly as she got to her feet, still graceful as a willow in the wind. Now to finish the task that Baligant had set her, and kill Ruth Marlowe. She raised her arms, willing the transformation, but even as she did the impulse flickered and died. Not enough. She put her hand to her throat and touched the faint white scar where the lump of iron had lain. Gone now, but death-metal destroyed magic as rain quenched fire. She must have time. But a hammering upon her door told Amadis that time was something she did not have. "I trust you come to tell me that the Ironworld daughter is dead?" Baligant said. "I came to tell you nothing," Amadis reminded him. In contrast to Baligant High Prince's elaborate jeweled and embroidered robes, the gown Amadis wore was of unornamented silk with a surface so bright it seemed almost to be made of the copper its color mimicked. Her hair gleamed in coils against it, its surface only slightly less hard. "Don't toy with me, wizard. unjust."
I can be spiteful and exceptionally
Baligant sat at his ease in his favorite room, the one that was crowded with treasure extorted from those whom Baligant suspected of being better than he. Amadis stood, as she had stood since Baligant's lackey had summoned her to him. "I merely remark that you demanded a report. you news."
I did not come to bring
"Did you or did you not slay the Ironworlder bound to the Sword of Maiden's Tears?" Baligant snarled. "Slain or not, Line Rohannan would retain the Sword," Amadis remarked, as innocently as if it were an observation on the weather. Baligant, like all clever men, could sometimes be dazzled by his own cleverness. There might be something in that which she could use, as Baligant used her. Amadis waited, dispassionately hoping, and dreamed of revenge. "Line Rohannan would retain the Sword," came Baligant's inflectionless acknowledgment. His scrutiny came to rest on her, a slow weight. "Am I to understand, my . . . wizard, that you have refrained from slaving the earthling in order to bring me a greater triumph instead?" "It is known that The Rohannan has obtained the Sword but has not yet brought it to the TWilight Court. Nor is he confirmed as the Lineholder. Now he is out of the world. No man knows where. His own cousin will swear that he went in search of the Ironworlder, and every servant in his castle knows that he has thought of nothing else." "And should he disappear, and the Sword with him .
. ."
"Then his name would be remembered as that of a fool. And another from Rohannan would go to seek the Treasure Rohannan Melior had lost." Baligant smiled. death."
"Fail me twice, creature, and I will make you beg for
He would, and she would. make use of her.
But she would not die, nor would he cease to
Baligant held out a filled and bloody hand. And for a moment there was bliss; freedom from pain. Power. Dress in Black and Lose Your Heart Beyond Recall ONCE HE'D RECOVERED a little from the thrashing the dragon had given him, Nic circled the glade he'd awakened in until he found the unicorn's tiny split-hoofed prints. He'd followed the tracks hopefully, but they led, not to Ruth, but to a stream he didn't remember crossing. He stopped, and drank, and salved his injuries as much as he could with the icy river water. His head hurt. Also his arm, his back, and the rest of his recent injuries. The Hyborean Age was no place for a forty-year-old library director, no matter what he might have been once. And if that much were true, then by extension this was no place for a thirty something librarian, no matter what she was now. At least, not alone.
An hour later, unhappily satisfied of the unattainability of Ruth Marlowe or the main road, Nic sat down on a fallen stump to think. About unicorns.
Unicorns wearing handmade, man-made garlands.
Unicorns right out of a medieval tapestry, unicorns that Miss Marlowe, who at least had some small familiarity with this place, had not recognized as familiar when she had seen them. Unicorns that appeared and vanished with suspect facility, and had a vested interest in herding him and Miss Marlowe straight down the middle of the High Road that led to Fair Elphame-to coin a ballad. In the cold clear light of hindsight, it looked very much like Fluffy the Wonder Caprid had been a player, and, presented as he had been with such painfully real evidence of the existence of at least two sides, Nic wondered which side it had been on. The opposite side-or an opposite side-from the Dragon Lady, almost certainly. But that didn't mean it was on Miss Marlowe's side, whatever being on Miss Marlowe's side might constitute at any given moment. Nic smiled ruefully. You could take the boy out of the country, as the saying went, but the boy would never stop expecting smoke and mirrors. He'd gotten too attuned to hidden meanings in his youth to stop looking for them now. The only thing he could be even sha-five percent certain of was that the possession or destruction of Miss Ruth Marlowe was important to at least some of the sides. Nic took a deep breath and held it, and blew it out, looking down at the split and ruined remains of his expensive leather wing tips. Suitable shoes for a life it didn't seem he was ever going back to. It would be nice to know what was going on, not that not knowing what was going on had ever been much of a handicap in the past. You just kept going on until you made enough trouble that the other guy took his toys and went home, a tactic Nicodemus Brightlaw had found particularly useful at meetings of the Ryerson Library Board of Directors. On the other hand, it didn't seem to be of much utility when he was looking for somewhere to spend the night. And Ruth Marlowe, come to that. Nic got to his feet, took his bearings from the sun, chose a direction at random, and began to walk. Melior had been perfectly serious about advancing no farther than the nearest inn, Ruth discovered. It had been a matter of only a halfhour's walk along the forest road until they saw the lights in the distance. Why did it seem that she had come so far? If not for the dense forest surrounding it, Ruth would have taken this place for the inn she and Nic had found their first day here. The same sloping roof, the same Brothers Grimm wood carving. Maybe it was a chain, like Howard Johnson's. Come to the Otherwhere Hilton, where you can check out any time you like, but . . . Oh, quit
whining, Ruth Marlowe. here.
You've got what you said you wanted.
You're
And somebody's trying to kill you. "Come, Ruth," Melior said. Melior entered the inn's common room as if he'd just bought the place on a long lease. The landlord scurried toward him as if he'd been included in the price. "Dinner," Melior said succinctly. "A room. require two horses, one for my lady." "Yes, my lord.
In the morning I will
At once, my lord."
And how are you going to pay for all this? Ruth wondered. Two locals-if there could be locals in a place like this-took their dice and tankards and vacated a table near the fire. Melior led Ruth toward it. The inn was one room, so large that the black-beamed ceiling seemed very low. In one corner, enormous kegs were racked on their sides, bunged and ready for tapping. So that's what a hogshead looks like.
I've always wondered.
A board on trestles provided a bar of sorts, as well as a place to stack empty clay jugs, pewter goblets, and leather quart-jacks. The fireplace was large enough to store grand pianos in, and in addition to a roaring fire contained a covered clay pot as well as a whole roast sheep hanging on a spit swung out of the way of the flames. The opposite wall of the room was filled with an enormous oven, cold now. The table was round, its thick oak planks polished satiny by years of handling. The chairs were three-legged stools with a cricket bat-shaped backrest. It was all very odd. Melior lifted Ruth's cloak off her shoulders and threw it across one of the chairs, then piled his own dragon-mail mantle atop it. He leaned the ebony walking stave against the wall. Then he sat down, and Ruth saw that one reason for the odd chairs was that their arrangement allowed a man with a sword slung across his back to sit down without removing it. They must get a lot of wandering paladins here. Melior arranged himself with his back to the fire, wincing as he eased his weight off the wounded leg. He pulled off his long gauntlets as the landlord hurried anxiously over with two pewter cups and a clay jug. Ruth ducked out of his way, pulling at her own gloves, sitting down next to Melior as the landlord set down the cups and began to pour. "Have you no better vintage?"
Melior demanded ungraciously.
The landlord stopped in his tracks and retreated, rattling out a string of unintelligible promises. Melior rubbed his forehead wearily, face
drawn. "Rohannan is-was-known for its vintage," Melior said, as if that were an explanation. "You didn't have to snap at him," Ruth said. "His kind understands nothing else." Ruth bit her lip to keep from snapping something unforgivable back at Melior. She was seeing a new side of his personality now that he was in his own world, one that she didn't think she liked. Not even arrogance: a matter-of-fact assumption of privilege that grated badly upon Ruth's republican ideals. This was her own true love? This . . . monarchist? "If you say so," Ruth said tightly. Melior glanced quickly toward her, his eyes flashing golden-green in the firelight. "Yes. I say so." The landlord returned, this time with a large, dusty, dark green bottle with a protruding cork covered in red wax. He cut through the wax and drew the cork, and a scent like summer flowers in honey filled the room. Melior smiled.
The landlord looked relieved.
"And there is game pie, my lord, and new bread, and apples in honey for the lady. And a bath, should either of you desire-at your word I will have the tub brought up-" Melior raised his hand and the man stopped speaking. "Bring what I have asked of you, and that will be sufficient," Melior said briefly. The landlord retreated once more. Melior inspected the cups critically, and then filled them both, pushing one toward Ruth. He drank, and leaned back carefully. "I hope you know some way of paying for all this," Ruth said sourly, not touching her own cup. The conversation seemed to be sliding irrevocably into one of those nasty snippy little fights she hated-and could see, here and now, no way to keep from having. Melior glanced at her through lowered lashes and smiled faintly, and in that moment Ruth saw the man she'd fallen in love with such a very long time ago. Her mouth quirked upward in answer. "Ah, Ruth, did you think I bought and could not pay? It is true that we do not spin plastic in the Morning Lands as you do in the World of Iron, but be sure that the innkeeper will receive his@ertain to be outrageous-due." Melior refilled his cup and drank again. "Magic is the coin between the realms, and he shall have what sorcery he asks on the morrow."
"You didn't have to be so rude to him," Ruth said, retreating to her original complaint. "And is the friendship of Rohannan Melior such a desirable commodity, that you would offer it to every passing stranger?" Melior looked even more amused. "We are hunted-it is not hard to imagine by whom." "B-Baligant," Ruth got out, remembering the name at last. She took deep swig of the contents of her cup and choked, her nose and mouth led with sugar and heat and the scent of summer fields. Melior hissed slightly, a warning to Ruth to hold her tongue. The landlord reappeared, this time leading a girl dressed as if there were a Bavarian comic opera rehearsing next door. "Buxom wench" was about the only way to describe her, politically incorrect though it might be, with the tight red leather of the woman's gold-laced bodice thrusting her chest up and out in that uncomfortable-looking Playboy Bunny fashion. The serving girl set a tray stacked with food down in front of Melior, and smiled in a fashion Ruth tried very hard to mistake for something else, and lingered in front of him to place the dishes on the table. In the firelight, Ruth saw that what she had first thought was glitter and then bad skin was actually scales. She blinked, and tried not to stare.
A tavern wench with scales?
I don't think we're in Kansas any more, Toto. "If there is anything else," the landlord said hopefully. Well, thought Ruth, yes. For dessert we can always manage to get this place leveled by something out of a science fiction double feature. "The horses in the morning," Melior reminded him. The landlord bowed and smiled and rubbed his hands together in a way that made Ruth wonder how expensive-mr overpriced-those horses were going to be. Then Melior turned his attention to the food and so did she. There were, as promised, game pie and new bread and apples in honey. Ruth, who had eaten well not that long ago, picked at a portion of apples. They tasted as if they had been boiled in honey, impossibly sweet. She pushed them away and concentrated on the wine, while Melior finished both servings of the pie, a heel of the loaf, and the rest of the apples. "Ah," he said at last, leaning carefully back in his seat. The gem on the pommel of the Sword of Maiden's Tears glowed with opal rainbows in the firelight. Ruth regarded it mistrustfully. "And now to bed, Lady Ruth. Melior amended truthfully.
And tomorrow, home-or at least the Road,"
Another of the inn servants followed them, to bring the cloaks and the
half-finished wine, and to carry the candle and light them up the stair. Melior mounted the steps with apparent ease, and only Ruth knew how his hand tightened on hers. His injuries were far from healed; God knew what he was going to do with a horse tomorrow. God knew what she would do, come to that-Ruth had never ridden a horse in her life. The room could be nothing but the inn's best, but despite the small, with a tilting ceiling and closed wooden shutters where windows ought to be. But there was a fire burning in the corner, and at least the place smelled clean. And it contained a very large bed. There was a thump as Melior dropped the bar into position across the door, and another as the head of his walking stick struck the white plaster wall beside it. Then the creak and pull of leather, as he unbuckled the harness that held the Sword in place. Ruth sat down on the bed. And down, and down, and down, through featherbeds piled one on the other, because here at the Elphame Hilton the mysteries of the innerspring mattress had not been revealed unto them. Melior regarded his lady, who was staring resolutely off into space, and wondered if he would have to manage his boots by himself. It was true that he could have gotten one of the lackeys to do it-if he had wanted to publish the fact of his injuries to all the wide world. It had seemed more desirable to have a barred door between him and them instead, but now he wasn't so sure. Melior told over his memories of Ruth's world, and decided he would have to get his own clothes off. And then Return to Chandrakar as fast as they could, and hope and pray that the Twilight Court still sat. Summon Ophidias, unbind Ruth from the Sword, lay the evidence of Baligant's tampering before the convened Lords Temporal And, oh, yes, arrange to be confirmed in his lands and honors at the same time. Find some way to meet Ophidias' price. Discover what doom the Heartlands would call down on Chandrakar for the attack at the Goblin Market. Collect the taxes. Collect the harvest. Discover whether Jausserande had yet been successful in retrieving her Treasure. Sweep the forests for outlaws, and decide what to do with them when he caught them. Perhaps Richart would have some idea-many of them would be ex-soldiers, after all. Perhaps they could go to the guard, where a roof and a meal and a warm cloak would do much to discourage thievery. Keep the sword. Keep his life. And, somehow, in all of this, incline his lady's heart once more to him. She had been willing to leave her own world for him once. But that had been long ago, as mortals reckoned time. And if it were true that she no longer loved him, each day would be less bright than it might have been. "Ruth?"
Melior said.
She turned at the sound of his voice, and felt the corners of her mouth
twist downward. But underneath the automatic pain was the unnerving certainty that her responses weren't real; that somehow she was only faking what a real person would feel. Because she wasn't real. In the truest sense of the phrase, Ruth Marlowe was not "all there." Against her will she looked toward the Sword of Maiden's Tears. That was where her soul was-the thing that would let her be real. Melior said he would return it to her. was pretend.
Until then, all she could do
She got to her feet and went over to him. "Need help?"
Ruth said.
Melior smiled up at her and reached for her hand. His fingers were warm over hers, and she wished "I need to find Nic," Ruth blurted out suddenly. Melior frowned and tightened his grip on her, as if he were afraid she would suddenly pull away. "If he is here, it is wizard work, or do you think that the Iron Road is open to any who choose to stroll it for a day's pleasaunce?" "I think I don't know where he is. I think he's in trouble and needs help. I hope you'll help me find him," Ruth finished in a strangled tone. Melior lifted her hand and lightly brushed it with his lips. Ruth wanted to hug him to her; wanted to push him away. She stood perfectly still. "I shall do all that I may to find your friend, once we are home," Melior said. "But-', "My lady, do you think we ourselves are safe?" gently.
Melior said
"We are in danger as great as the power of the wizard who hunts us. In my own place-" The last word was a drawn-out sigh, and Melior's head drooped a little. "We'll be safer," Ruth finished for him. Poor Melior; no wonder he's been so bitchy. If I knew what was going on, Id be scared to death, too. As it is, I'm merely terrified. "Yes," Melior said. He released Ruth's hand and looked down at his boots, and Ruth's imagination painted vivid holographs of the ragged tears and gouges that the warwasp had left in his flesh. "Let me do that for you, okay?"
Ruth said.
Though in the course of her association with the Society for Creative Anachronism Ruth Marlowe had been given occasion to assist both fops
and fighters with that one item of garb which, when properly worn, it is almost impossible to remove unaided, it did not mean she was particularly expert at it. The first boot came off easily enough. The second, for all her determination, resisted until Ruth was tugging with all her might, whereupon it slipped free and sent her sprawling. Still, it was probably easier on Melior than trying to remove them himself. She looked up at him from her inelegant seat on the floor and grinned hopefully. And Melior, who had been trying hard not to laugh at her, gave up. "So elegant a chatelaine," he teased, holding out his hand and smiling at her. "I never claimed-" began Ruth. "To be anything but my lady.
My-dearest-lady.
My heartsease."
He pulled her forward until Ruth knelt between his knees, her face turned up to regard him. And then he brought his lips down on hers; so slowly, so carefully, that she was mad with impatience by the time contact was made. It was as if the touch completed some circuit of power, filling meek Ruth Marlowe with a borrowed wildness. She reached up to put her arms around his neck, but instead of pulling him downward, the gesture raised both of them to their feet. And finally, for a while, everything was all right. She awoke near dawn, lying nestled in featherbeds with Melior's arm across her. At one point during the night he had opened the shutters, and from where she lay Ruth could see the faint proto-lightness of the sky. Mist overlay everything, so that only the sharp black-green tops of the pines protruded. Dawn had always had the power to lift Ruth's spirits. To see dawn was to have survived the night, and there had been times when surviving was the only triumph Ruth had been able to claim. Not any more. Now there was Melior. And if she was too old to believe that love could solve all her problems, at least she could believe that now she had an ally against them. That no matter what tricks of temper and imagination might intervene, there was no longer an invisible wall dividing the two of them. They were together, and all their future problems could come from that. Ruth smiled to herself and nestled deeper into the bed. All the mist had burned away and true morning had come when Melior escorted Ruth from the inn. The stave had been left behind; this morning Melior walked without it, and the effort it cost him was visible for no one to see. An ostler led two horses into the yard for their inspection. Both were saddled and bridled. The dark gray one had saddlebags behind the saddle.
"Ah," said Melior, in rueful tones. The large gray horse-as differentiated, in Ruth's nonequinephilic mind, from the small white horse-tugged at its lead rein when it saw Melior. He walked over to it, and it lowered its head to nuzzle him roughly, until he staggered. He grabbed at its headstall. "This," Melior announced, "is Cobant." Ruth looked blank. "The horse I began with," Melior elaborated. "They sold him back to you?"
"And lost."
Ruth said.
Melior shrugged, as though being sold one's own horse was no more than a wandering elf-lord could expect. "Assist my lady to mount," he said to the ostler. After last night Ruth knew that Melior's injured leg would not bear the strain of her added weight, but she still wished he were the one who would be helping her onto the beast's back. She regarded her destination with wariness. The white horse was really a pale gray, with dapples like rain spots across its shoulders and rump. It regarded her as if it had been expecting bad news and she was it. On its back was a carved wooden saddle with a high padded back and prowlike front, much as if someone had miniaturized an old-fashioned sleigh and then converted it to a saddle. The wooden stirrups were shielded by wide leather skirts, half flapping in the breeze like unhinged automobile cowling. A second groom came forward with a mounting block, and there was nothing for Ruth to do but step up to it as if she'd been doing this all her life. TWo steps up, then a foot through the stirrup, then a hop and wriggle and Ruth was in the saddle, smoothing her wide skirts carefully back into place while her pleasant seat sidled mistrustfully beneath her. The ground looked very far away. The painted leather reins lay on the horse's neck, and Ruth, for something to do, picked them up. As if that were a signal, both ostlers stepped away, and the horse took a step forward. Ruth clutched at the curled saddle-prow before her and dropped the reins. The horse stopped. Then Melior, without benefit of mounting block, swung himself aboard Cobant. He collected the reins and the horse moved as if it were merely an extension of Melior's will. He tossed a handful of something that sparkled to the ostlers and moved his horse next to Ruth's. "Ruth," said Melior in tones of sudden suspicion, "you have seen a horse before?"
"Sort of," Ruth said truthfully.
Why hadn't he asked earlier?
Melior shook his head and smiled. Reaching across, he took from her clutching fingers and unknotted them. He threaded a projection on the front of her saddle and wound the other gloved hand. He turned Cobant away. Ruth's horse followed lead.
the reins one through through his on the
"You ride like a basket of dead fish," Melior told her half an hour later. "Thank you," Ruth replied sweetly. you seen go riding?"
"How many baskets of dead fish have
It had to be admitted, though, that at the moment shefelt rather like a basket of dead fish: walk, trot, and canter alike were bone-jarring, and she always seemed to be going down just as the saddle was coming up. "Enough to know that you greatly resemble them. It might be easier," Melior said, "did I take you up in front of me." Ruth glanced sideways. Melior's saddle, though nothing out of a John Wayne Western (the sum total of Ruth's previous exposure to horses and riding), was still flat enough fore and aft that what he suggested looked possible. "I don't want to hurt you," Ruth said. "Cobant can carry us both this while. And I am anxious to strike the Iron Road and return home as soon as I may," Melior said. "By your leave, my lady." "And find Nic," Ruth said, just to remind both of them, though in truth it was rather difficult to stay worried about Nicodemus Brightlaw after the things she'd seen him do. By now he was probably king someplace, just like Conan the Barbarian. "And find your companion," Melior agreed. The transfer was more easily accomplished than Ruth would have thought, and soon she was seated sideways across Melior's thighs, one arm around his waist. Cobant broke into a trot, but this time, cushioned by Melior's body, the motion was fluid and peaceful. The road branched and branched again, and each time Melior took the wider of the branches. Her horse followed along behind. There were any number of things she should ask about-the unicorn, the warwasp-but Ruth kept silent on all of them, as if to name events would be to acknowledge that they had happened. And she didn't want them to have happened. It was as if the time in the forest house had drawn an eraser across all that came before it, and now the only thing Ruth wanted was Melior and peace and quiet. Then they came to a third crossroads, and Ruth, glancing up toward Melior, surprised him sketching a glyph in the air. The lines he had drawn sparkled for a moment and then faded: faery-fire.
"You said you didn't have any magic," Ruth said, as if he'd been deceiving her. "Small magic only-and less than that in the World of Iron," Melior corrected. "But enough to find our way. Now we will stop, and rest, and perhaps strike the Road by evening." They picnicked beneath a tree at the edge of the road-or, rather, Ruth picnicked, the horses grazed, and Melior ate and drank something beside the tree, the Sword of Maiden's Tears handy to his hand, and kept watch. It was a disturbing reminder of how far from home she was. It was true that there was street crime at home, but Ruth would never have gone into the worst neighborhoods of home, let alone stopped to have lunch in a place as dangerous as Melior seemed to think this one was. "We must give the horses ease, if we are to use them later," Melior said, catching the tone of her thought. "Where are we?"
Ruth asked.
"In the Morning Lands, near the Iron Road. Once we reach it, Chandrakar is not far, and Dawnheart a day's ride, if that, from the Gate." "Which tells me precisely nothing," Ruth informed him helpfully. Melior smiled. "Were you ephemeris, but as you are not the Last World, where place forever. These are
an Adept, my lady, I would refer you to your not, I know not how to lesson you. This is everything is fixed and in its appointed the Morning Lands. Things . . . change."
"Except you," Ruth said. "As to that, my lady Ruth, perhaps some day even such as I may learn wisdom, though not if wisdom means I must renounce you. Come, if you are sated, and we will try if we might make your ride a little smoother." When they finally reached the Road, it was late afternoon. The trail had been rising steadily since they'd stopped for lunch, and the air had taken on an alpine sharpness. Oak had given way to poplar and birch, then to pine, and Ruth was stiff and sore with the effort of keeping back straight, knees in, heels down, and wrists cocked. It was possible, she had discovered with pleasure, to not come down quite as hard-or as far-on the white horse's saddle as she had that morning, and the ground did not look quite so far away now that she was more certain of staying in the saddle. Despite-or because of-this, she was looking forward to tonight's inn with active interest. "There," Melior said, and pointed. Ahead the trail merged with a wider anticipation in the air, as if some air above the wider track shimmered the road changed and rippled in the white radiance, now opaline gravel. Magic.
track. There was a tightness, an enormous engine were running. The as if with heat, and the surface of wavering air-now claylike, now hot
"No!" Ruth cried. She hauled up and back on her horse's reins, and the beast obediently stopped. A cold chill of revulsion struck through her, and what had seemed so harmless when Melior used it to find their way, so reasonable when he proposed it in the morning light, was suddenly horrible. Go on that?
Ride along it, touch it, let it touch her?
"No," Ruth said, with what she hoped was more calmness. that."
"Not on
Melior had reined in also, and sat regarding her with blank puzzlement. "You can see it?"
he said after a moment.
Ruth nodded miserably. "A terrifying sight, is it not?"
Melior asked.
'Don't humor me!" "But it is a terrifying sight, Ruth-for any of the Five Races, let alone for a- " she saw him stop, and decide to go on, "-for a human, a Child of Earth, who has little experience of magic." "I've had enough," Ruth said tightly, glaring mistrustfully at the sword Melior carried. Enough to know that magic kills. He caught the direction of her glance. "But that explains it," Melior said. "You are bound to the Sword, and it lends you some of its magic." He looked back toward the Road. "I swear you will take no hurt from the Road, Ruth. Magic is not always baneful." Ruth shook her head. How could she explain that it didn't matter whether it was harmless or just as lethal as it looked? "But it is the Road, Ruth. helplessly.
There is no other way," Melior said
"There has to be," Ruth said, with the irrational desperation of the phobic. "I can't go on that." Even at this distance she could feel the presence of the Road; a heatless proximity pressing on her skin. It felt as Ruth imagined exposure to lethal radiation must feel-insidiously toxic, destructive beyond death. "None as certain, as simple, nor as fast," Melior answered honestly, "and we are in desperate haste." He sidled his horse over to hers and put out his hand. Ruth flinched away from his touch, but he only covered her gloved hands with his. "If I hooded you, or cast a darkening about the Sword so you did not see the Road, would that serve?" Ruth felt her eyes begin to tear from sheer stupid terror, and fury at her own helplessness made her voice hard. "But it would still be
there, wouldn't it?" "You see the Road as the Children of Air may see it-in all places, and none; the silver cord that binds the Morning Lands together." Which meant "yes," she guessed. And there was no other way. Butoh, God-to set foot on that road felt like betraying Naomi; making common cause with the magic that had killed her friend. And what would it do to her? To Ruth Marlowe-not fish, not flesh, not good red herring? Gazetted Sleeping Beauty, certified elphen pawnwould it fling her back into the World of Iron and lock the door behind her? Did she want to stay so much? She opened her mouth to try to force the words of acceptance out, but as she did, Melior turned violently in his saddle, listening intently to something she could not hear. Then he drew the Sword of Maiden's Tears. It flashed like an airplane wing against the sky, and hummed with the thin sweet croon of high-voltage power lines. Melior's face was grim enough that for an instant, watching him, Ruth forgot all her reasonable terror of being trapped between the Iron Road and the Sword in the fear of whatever made him look so frightening. "They've found us," Melior said. He patted Cobant's neck absently, as if judging what reserves of strength the horse had left to give him. "We must reach the Gate before they do-that is our only safety." Ruth strained her ears, her eyes, her mortal senses, but the link to the Sword that had given her elphensight enough to see the Road gave her nothing more. "Forgive me, Ruth," Melior said-and swung. The flat of the blade hit her horse square across the haunches, and the horse, already infected by Ruth's fear, squealed and lunged across the little distance that separated it from the Road. Ruth, flailing desperately to stay in the saddle, felt the pressure of the Road crescendo; felt a heatless, lightless sizzle envelop her-then she was on the Road, and Cobant was crowding her horse to turn it along it. The mare bounced and shied; Ruth clutched at the saddle, afraid of being pitched beneath those fatal hooves. The horse's plunging, kicking trot at last became first a canter, then a gallop, then a flat run. The hammer, hammer, hammer of the horses' hooves merged into a steady machinelike thunder, and now Ruth could hear sound behind them like the distant clamor of a mob-but loud enough to be heard over the jangle of bridle and thud of hoof. Ruth's new-learned horsemanship deserted her completely; she bounced helplessly in the saddle and focused all her will on not falling off. That was all she could do. Her safety was entirely at the mercy of the muscles and will of a frightened animal running out of control.
Just as the car had been out of control. The intrusion of the dream-memory into her waking fright was jarring. For a moment it blotted out the real world with its presenceA back road, not very well lit. One in the morning, Prom Night. There was a flash of light in the road ahead, a coppery fiery light, and Ruth, straining her eyes, suddenly saw The creature that blotted out the sun merged seamlessly with the terror-image of Ruth's nightmare. It was dark against the sun dazzle, and despite its wide leathery wings Ruth thought of spiders and blind squirming eyeless things churned up out of the earth. She barely had time to register its presence before it banked and dove for them. It passed low over her head, close enough for her to smell sulfur, blood, and the cloying scent of roses. Ruth crouched like a jockey, and the animal beneath her seemed to elongate, stretching its neck forward as if shrinking away from the monster above. Suddenly there was a sound, a flash; lightning, thunder, nuclear war. She saw Melior's horse Cobant pass her, riderless and running flat out. Where was Melior? She wound the reins around her hands and pulled back as hard as she could. Nothing happened. So You Want to Be a Hero IN THE END, as it turned out, the unicorn was of some use after all. In his circular sweep-looking for a road, looking for clues-Nic came upon the unicorn's track again, impossible to mistake. The print was slotted like a deer's hoof, but shorter and rounder, and in one place, where the tracks passed too close to a thornbush, there was a tuft of familiar white down caught among the twigs. "'*%ere are you come from, Baby DearlOut of the everywhere into the here?"' Nic quoted softly to himself. He followed the tracks, pushing the pain of his injuries as far into the background of his consciousness as he could. As it always had, a job to do settled Nic Brightlaw's mind wonderfully, letting him banish everything but the need to do it well. It was the light that gave him his first warning that things were worse than he thought. Ever since Christmas Eve, when he'd fallen through the enchanted bookshelf with Ruth Marlowe, the sun had behaved itsell It had risen, crossed the sky, and set in a reasonable fashion. Not any more. Nic stopped, and straigtened out of his half-instinctive crouch, winging as bruised muscles and torn flesh protested. He was in a spring forest with a heavy canopy, garden perfect: everything in new leaf and no sign anywhere of last autumn's leaves. The light was the rich mellow gold of late afternoon.
Just as it had been when he'd woken up-several hours ago. Nic looked up. The leaves gave the view the aspect of a green and starry heaven-an ever-shifting, nearly solid viridian canopy through which light penetrated in white glittering chinks. He turned around slowly, abruptly conscious of how unsteady he was on his feet; how dizzy, how likely to fall. There was no place where the sky, seen through the leaves, was brighter than any other. The light had not changed, or shifted, or dimmed, in hours. He braced himself one-handed against a tree trunk and continued looking for the source of the sunlight. There was none.
There was no sun.
Unreality washed over him in a slow wave of confused nausea. No matter what else had been strange, the physical world had always played by the rules. Now, it seemed, there weren't going to be any rules. Now, in the roots of his neglected soul, Nic Brightlaw believed he was in Faery. Where there was neither sun nor moon, only inhuman malice. Perhaps he ought to have been frightened. But he felt, instead, a vast stubborn rage pushing at the edges of his self-control. He was here to do a job and They-whoever They were-were withholding information. Changing the rules. It was an unexpected and not entirely pleasant thing to feel anger when the ability to feel anything at all had been dead for so long. To give it a focus-because anger, like lightning, needed a focus if it was not to destroy everything-Nic concentrated his anger on the unicorn. This was all Fluffy's fault. He was going to find it. snapped. Nic froze.
And once he got his hands on it A twig
He looked around carefully.
Only his eyes moved.
There was a flash of white. Fluffy the Wonder Caprid was back in town. If this isn't the oldest tuck in the book, it's certainly a main heading in the index, Nic thought with a flash of grim amusement. He knew how silently the unicorn could move. The noise it had made had been deliberate. Apparently he wasn't following fast enough. But apparently, too, he was supposed to follow without knowing he was being led, and that spelled "trap" to Mrs. Brightlaw's little boy. The nice thing about traps, Nic had always found, was that the people setting them were rarely paying much attention to anything else. Nic blundered-gracelessly and with as much dramatic effect as he could muster-in the direction of the silvery flash. He caught a brief glimpse of Fluffy-sans flowers, but otherwise much the same as the last time he'd seen it-for one brief shining second before the unicorn plunged away.
Nic stopped. He was supposed to follow, of course. Instead, he headed off at right angles to the direction of the unicorn's flight. If it was smarter than a man, this trick wouldn't work. It might not work anyway, of course, but at least it would give him something to do. When he was far enough away from where he'd seen the unicorn, he turned and walked parallel to its line, moving as silently as he could in his condition, looking for the right tree. After a few minutes he found it: a massive, dense-foliaged oak, with a thick overhanging branch suitable for Errol Flynn to stand on while making speeches. Nic had other plans for it. His first attempt to climb it made him abruptly aware that his right hand was entirely useless to him. He fell back, and found he'd reopened the deep gouges in his right arm. New blood seeped through the tight windings of Nic's makeshift bandage. The pain was exquisitely demanding, even overshadowing the pounding in his head. A fine countertrap he was setting here, lying on the ground waiting to be caught. Hissing through clenched teeth, Nic rolled to his feet and hooked the useless hand through his belt before trying again, one-handed this time. He made it onto the branch, but the pounding trembling weakness in every limb, the flashing light behind his eyes, told him how close to the edge of failure he really was. Catching the unicorn was his best and only shot. It should come back for him.
The unicorn was supposed to lead him .
. . somewhere. Once it realized he wasn't following, it ought to turn back and try to draw him out again. When it didn't spot him on its back trail, it should circle to find him. Eventually, it would show up here. Nic stretched himself full-length along the branch and waited, hidden from watchers below by the dense overhang of leaves. One of the advantages of being the aggressor was not having to wait until the other guy did something. Time was hard to judge without the sun to mark it by, and his watch had vanished long ago, probably in the fight with the dragon. In this woods there was only Now, and Now seemed to last forever. As he waited, Nic began more and more to think that this was not a place where human beings could safely remain. This was the dark side of Faery, deadly as poison, and Nic hoped, with the desire of one who dreams of a life free from complications, that he would not meet the rightful masters of these woods. The unicorn came back. Head up, pink nostrils flaring, tufted tail twitching like an inquisitive cat's, the creature minced into the clearing below Nic as if it were slumming royalty. Nic slid off the branch and dropped on it.
It was only when he was in midair, unable to change his mind, that he spared a fleeting thought for the unicorn's exceedingly sharp horn. But its mind was on flight rather than attack.
Fortunately.
Its legs buckled beneath his weight, and Nic twisted to grab it before it recovered. He was barely in time. The unicorn fought, all furious coiled muscles. It reminded Nic of wrestling alligators, the skills for which, once learned, were always with you, just like riding a bicycle. He clutched the unicorn to him, back to belly on the forest floor, his good hand clenched about the base of its horn, his other arm around its barrel just behind the furiously windmilling forelegs. It thrashed and squalled, but helplessly. So he thought. He was hoping it would run out of strength before he did, when suddenly the hairs on his forearm and the back of his neck prickled with some unsettling electrical charge. Incoming artillery! his idiot instinct yammered, and Nic threw himself sideways, still clutching Fluffy, to escape something that couldn't possibly be there. And fell into a pit that couldn't be there either. The fall was darkness and numbness-long enough for him to frame a coherent thought about failure and betrayal and dying alone. This time he landed on the bottom, and the pain that lanced through his skull made him close his eyes against the brightness. Then light returned, and he clutched tighter at the unicorn. "Let go of that, son.
I'm a thought fond of it, in my fashion."
Nic opened his eyes. He saw the biggest orange lizard he had ever seen. And it had wings. The fact that it could talk, too, was almost an anticlimax. Nic carefully let go of the unicorn. It didn't move, and for a moment he thought it was dead. Then it shook itself and rolled over, gaining its feet and staggering away from him-toward the dragon-shaking its head. The unicorn collapsed beneath the shadow of one enormous wing, looking rumpled and tired, and closed its eyes with a sigh. Nic was absurdly reminded of Christian iconography, the lion lying down with the lamb. But Fluffy was no lamb, and this was no lion. "That's a sight friendlier," the dragon said amiably. Its hide had the satiny-rough sheen of sharkskin and the bright ruddy color of California poppies, Monarch butterfly wings, and fancy goldfish. Its eyes were burning pupilless gold, set in a long triangular head belonging to no known taxonomy-bird and beast and insect all blended together into something out of heraldry set at the end of a serpentine length of plate-crested neck. It was lying on the grass, but even so, it could look Nic in the eyeand even so, it was much smaller than the last dragon he'd seen. Maybe
that was why he didn't feel immediately threatened. perhaps, but not threatened.
Endangered,
"I'm a friendly kind of a guy," Nic said mendaciously, glancing around unobtrusively. He was in open country, as manicured as a golf course, and the sun was a blessedly determinate point in the sky. It took him a couple of tries to stand up, during which he kept his gaze warily on the dragon. He wondered if it could actually fly, or merely glided once it had launched itself from a height. "Oh, I manage to get around," the dragon said. "I'm glad," Nic said. So it was telepathic, although it seemed to talk. On the other hand, it did not have the lips or tongue or palate to form those familiar English words he heard so clearly-just gleaming rows of teeth indicating a highly carnivorous lifestyle. Outclassed. Game, set, and match to magic. Every muscle hurt, he was bleeding steadily, and the next fight he was in he'd lose. Unless he could put it off long enough. right.
A year or so seemed about
"I'm looking for a friend of mine," Nic began. "I wonder if you might have seen her?" I wonder if you might have killed her, Puff, and if I can believe a damned thing you say, anyway. "Trust is a virtue," the dragon observed. "Virtue is found only in Heaven," Nic responded. "Does your friend have a name?" "Ruth Marlowe.
Do you?"
"Have a name?" the dragon asked, spreading its wings until the sun shone on Nic through a golden dragonsilk canopy. "Oh, many. But for the moment, you can call me Ophidias. It's a name much known in these parts," it added. What, not Gandalf the Grey? "Okay, Ophidias, have you seen Ruth Marlowe?" Nic asked patiently. Although why he should assume that every talking dragon he met was a wizard "Not a dragon. Please. Dragons are such obsessive creatures; you wouldn't enjoy meeting one, believe me. I'd prefer you thought of me as a firedrake-or salamander, if you have a classical education." Firedrake.
Salamander.
"Ruth Marlowe?"
Creatures of fire.
Creatures of Faery.
Nic asked yet again.
"My you are persistent. No, I haven't seen Ruth Marlowe yet. But I will." The dragon-firedrake-preened itself in the sun. The light struck golden rainbows from the chitin of its muzzle and crest and turned the unicorn's silvery coat saffron yellow.
So she was still alive.
Nic felt a pang of relief.
"The question now is, what shall I do with you?"
Ophidias pursued.
Here it comes. Nic tensed. He could see trees, behind him and to the right. Could he reach them before the creature reached him? "No. The question, firedrake, is why that-" he pointed toward the unicorn, "-has shown up every other minute since Miss Marlowe and I arrived. And where it was leading me just now-and why. And while we're on the subject, you owe me big time for rescuing it a while back before Cruella DeVille turned it into unicorn en brochette." "Ah." The firedrake mantled its wings. "Maybe," said Nic.
"You want to buy."
"But you still owe me."
Ophidias graciously inclined its head, agreeing. "Where was the unicorn taking me?"
Nic asked.
"To an inn where you would be fed, clothed, tended, and housed." Nic started to ask why, and stopped himself. "Why" was something he could worry about later. There were more important things to ask. "Where is Ruth Marlowe?" "In Chandrakar, in mortal peril," the firedrake answered promptly, and waited. Three questions were the traditional payment in fairy tales, and if Ophidias was a traditionalist, Nic had better not waste the third one. "Can you take me to Ruth Marlowe?"
he said carefully.
"Well," said Ophidias, after a long pause, "no. I can open the Gate for you, of course. But you're in no shape to go charging after her right now. Have some wine." The firedrake spread its wing, and the unicorn was gone. Where it had lain, Nic saw a small table with a decanter and a single glass on it. Nic looked from the cup to the firedrake. "Am I supposed to trust you?"
Nic asked mockingly.
"Do you actually have a choice, Child of Earth? I could spin you a tale about being a great wizard unable to interfere directly in the affairs of the Morning Lands. I could go on about chess games of the gods, and grand illusions, and young Adepts reaching for powers they don't understand, and the mistakes of ancient enemies giving me the chance to thwart their plans, but the brass-nailed bottom line is, you either trust me for the hell of it and drink the wine, or hit the road just the way you are, Jack-if you can-but don't forget to look over your shoulder."
Nic walked to the table, poured the cup full, and drank it off without stopping to breathe. The sweet, raisiny taste almost gagged him, and standing this close to Ophidias was like standing in front of a roaring fire. "That's no way to treat a fine vintage," Ophidias objected mildly, but Nic wasn't listening. The wine slid honey-hot down his throat and set up a comfortable burning in his empty stomach. And as the warmth spread, his headache cleared; the aches of used and abused muscles dulled into the background and then faded altogether. He flexed the hand that had been in the dragon's mouth. The fingers moved, feeling returning to them in a tingling rush. Already guessing at what he would find, Nic peeled back the bloody makeshift bandage to look beneath. The gouges were feverish, deep pink, and welted, but the fang marks were closed. There was no bleeding. As he stared at his arm, the color of the scars continued to fade. "I trust you consider yourself repaid?" I'Yes."
If it lasts.
Ophidias asked.
"Thank you."
"What a very suspicious young man you are. bargain for passage to Chandrakar?"
Now.
Did you wish to
Past overlay present with unwelcome suddenness. Sunlight. A crumbling sidewalk cafe in a city where the humidity molded your clothes to your skin even before you'd finished dressing. Across from him sat a smiling dark-skinned man, who smiled and smiled and offered his services in just such mild tones as Ophidias did. Black market is black market, no matter where. "Naturally I'm interested in listening to whatever proposal you care to make, but you'll appreciate that my resources are a bit limited at the moment," Nic said, falling into the old ways. He looked down at the cup in his hands, rolling it between his palms, then set it down on the table and took a step backward. Nothing hurt. "Well, son, I'm afraid your resources may turn out to be a bit of a problem. In fact, I don't think I'd be overstating the case to say that you really haven't got much to dicker with at all-except your life," Ophidias said in the bland tones of a Tennessee moonshiner. If Ophidias had wanted his life, the firedrake could already have taken it with one snap of those long fanged jaws. Don't listen to what they say.
Listen to what they mean.
"So you'll put me in Chandrakar in exchange for my life," Nic said. "That doesn't do me a lot of good-unless you'd consider leaving me part of my life to use myself after I get there?" Nic said, equally blandly.
"You're good, boy." The firedrake flicked its tail and settled itself more comfortably, for all the world like an old hound dog in front of the woodstove. "How much time do you think the rest of your time is worth-once we deduct the cost of the travel?" How the hell should I know, old man? Nic kept his face smooth. What was important here was the Mission Objective. Reality was for those who couldn't handle a good fantasy. And Logic was the greatest fantasy of all. "We haven't been talking about time until now. We've been talking about life. What will you give me for the part I've already lived?" Nic said logically. Now Ophidias reared up on its hind legs, spread wings blotting out the sun. Nic didn't flinch. "Apaladins " the firedrake said, and now there was respectful amusement in its voice. "What do you offer?" Nic considered carefully. What wouldn't he give, to lose the years and the knowledge he most needed to keep? But Mission Objective was paramount. What would he be, if those were gone? "Leaving me physically as I am now, and with all the abilities I presently retain," Nic began carefully, "I offer you my life from birth until June 17, 1971-eighteen years-and from January I, 1976 to December 24th of this year. That's a good length of time." "Give me the five years you're keeping, and you can have the transport, plus a horse and weapons," the wizard countered quickly. It was tempting.
But what is ability without memory?
Nic thought.
He'd phrased the offer so that-as far as he knew-if it was accepted he'd jump straight from the end of his last tour to Christmas Eve, at least as far as his memory was concerned. He didn't know what that would do to him. But if he didn't keep his tours, he was just another civilian. He needed what he'd learned. The horse and weapons would have been nice, though. "No," Nic said.
"The offer stands.
How much is it worth?"
Ophidias seemed to smile, though the shape of its face could not possibly change. "Not enough. But don't worry, boy, you've got more. What about the life you haven't used yet?" "What if I trip on a rock tomorrow and die?"
Nic jibed.
"What if you do?" returned the wizard equitably. "Don't worry about me, boy; I know the value of what I'm dickering for." And I don't.
Terrific.
Mission Objective. "For transport, horse, and weapons-my choice-the life I've offered, plus what I have left, minus one year-" "Seven days," the firedrake interrupted, with a flick of its tail. "Six months," Nic countered. "One month."
Lash-lash, went the long whip of tail.
There was a pause. "Okay. Minus one month of it," Nic agreed. "But including transport to hospitable terrain within, oh, five miles of Miss Marlowe and allowing me free access to her, that should be fair enough. And the time starts after I've reached Chandrakar and runs till it runs out. Without interruption." The firedrake half-closed his eyes, thinking. Nic tried not to wonder how badly he'd been rooked, bartering his past and future for one month's grace. Still, if he couldn't reunite Miss Marlowe with her boyfriend in thirty days, he just wasn't trying. Ophidias made up its mind. "Remind me not to play poker with you, boy. Okay. For transport, horse, and weapons. The horse is my choice, and no discussion. The weapons are your choice from a selection I supply. A fair selection, my promise for that; no good ever comes of cheating a paladin anyway, even if I was of a mind to. You have one month from the time you reach Chandrakar. Then I collect. Deal?" A choice from weapons the dragon supplies. probably the best I'll get.
Not a great offer, but
"Firedrake," Ophidias corrected. Nic took a deep breath. It's like dying! a part of his mind screamed, and another part answered: Don't be stupid. You died a long time ago. "Deal," said Nic Brightlaw, and held out his hand. Ophidias brought its wing forward so that the clawed tip-just-brushed Nic's palm. There was a lightless flash, a chilling sensation of no-space, no-time. Medic!
Get a medic!
I'm hit!
his mind screamed.
Then he was real again. His mind staggered and groped; the cognitive analog of a man with both legs blown off trying to stand; the attempt to rely on systems no longer there, that habit insisted hysterically must be there. Cautiously, with real fear, he tested what was left.
Was it enough?
He knew he'd sold the years of his life between twenty-four and forty
in order to survive in never-never land. needed to keep to survive?
Was there something there he
But he remembered that he'd survived them. be.
That was enough.
It had to
And his childhood, his parents, the town where he was born-gone. His first car, his first girl, the things that had brought him to the recruiting sergeant in 1971. Gone. He didn't need them. Nic took a deep breath-wondering suddenly, with new and frightening ignorance, why the parents he must have possessed had chosen to name their son "Nicodemus." Ruth Marlowe.
The Mission Objective.
A brown-haired, blue-eyed girl with the bitter depthless eyes of a survivor. How long had he known her? Had they been lovers? Had she told him what had made her the way she was? He'd have to ask her, wouldn't he, when he saw her again? Find Ruth Marlowe. Someone was trying to kill her, and Ophidias had said she was in deadly peril. Stop the killers. And never mind "why." "Why" would kill you.
"How" was what mattered.
Mission Objective. "A horse, weapons, and a Gate," Nic said. The wizard gestured, with one wide silk-sail wing, and Nic looked at what had not been there a moment before. There was a horse that gleamed as if someone had spray-painted and varnished it. Its coat was as white as the unicorn's had been, as the fur of a very white cat, so white that its pink skin shone like pearls along its muzzle and around its dark watchful eyes. Its hooves were as pink as Nic's own fingernails, and there was a narrow white gleam of metal between the hoof and the ground; silver horseshoes. It wore a halter of pale blue velvet and a narrow rope ran from the halter to a brass ring bolted to a whitewashed post. The post stood in front of a circular tent that looked like a miniature circus tent. It, too, was white and pale blue, and there was something faintly familiar about it. Not a real memory, or even a memory-of-amemory . . . Ivanhoe.
A movie.
He'd seen it on base one night.
Nic glanced once more at the firedrake, and walked toward the tent. The horse stretched its head out to him as he walked past, and Nic paused to stroke its muzzle and neck. The hide beneath his hand was glass-slick with grooming, hot with the sun, and its mane glittered with sunstruck iridescence; not like a horse's mane, but like a woman's hair.
He ran his fingers through it. Congratulations, Sergeant Brightlaw, you have just won a magic horse of your very own. He gave the horse a last friendly slap on the withers and walked into the tent. The thin fabric of the tent walls didn't keep the sun out. It was nearly as bright inside as out; a circle, perhaps twelve feet in diameter. There was no floor. grass.
The tent's contents were laid carefully on the
There was a saddle and bridle, he noted with relief. Either they counted as weapons, or the wizard was being generous. Then he looked further, and revised his opinions. No guns, no rifles. No grenades, bazookas, no C-4, and certainly none of the more elaborate black budget dirty tricks that Nic was used to. Seems like just yesterday, doesn't it? Nic told himself with gallows humor. He looked further. The wizard had promised him a selection to choose from, and so the contents of the pavilion were not simply what an Ivanhoe-knight would carry to tourney. Nic began to search, and to sort. There was a huge triangular shield, painted to look like the Ace of Spades. Black and white, and a pretty redhead in black silk stockings and not much else superimposed on the center pip. It weighed nearly twenty pounds. He set it aside. There was a sword in a scabbard of heavy, pale-blue leather, stamped in silver leaf with more spade Aces. Three and a half feet from point to pommel, with a blade three inches wide and sharp as his morning razor all the way up. But he didn't know how to use a sword.
He set it beside the shield.
There was a mace. Short. Light, after hefting the sword, but you still wouldn't want to stop it with your teeth. A possibility. He started a second pile. Knives. Everything from a belt-knife Bowie point-heavy enough to use as a machete to delicate throwing knives that were each barely three inches long. Eight of them studded an arm's-length bracer that concealed one more surprise: the four silver knobs at wrist and elbow of the bracer could be pulled free, leaving you with a narrow, rigid, six inch long steel pin with a wicked point. Eight knives, eight pins. A coil of rope, thin as climbing line and as strong. A slingshot. A wicked cage of blackened bronze, held in the hand and braced against the forearm. The cup was leather, but the strap was strong elastic. The bag of shot with it weighed easily a pound and a half, small round lethal lead bullets. Climbing hooks that could be used in the hands like claws, or attached
to a rope and swung. Caltrops. Spiky shapes that thrust at least two points skyward no matter how they fell. A horse that stepped on one was crippled. They'd survived past the days of cavalry, however: a car that drove over them was crippled as well. A quarterstaff. Four feet long and lead-weighted. over the smooth wood and smiled. A thinner coil of cord.
Nic slid his hand
It might support his weight.
It might not.
But what it would do, without uncertainty, was strangle a man. a mighty fine trip wire. A bow and its arrows joined the sword and shield.
Or make
So did a crossbow.
The crossbow had been the equivalent of the Saturday Night Special in its day: you needed very little training to become accurate, and it punched through armor as if it were swiss cheese. But Nic didn't know how to use one, it had a limited number of bolts, and anything he might kill with it he could probably kill with the sling. Spears and lance. Same objection as to the sword. throw. Looked easy enough to use. Might not be.
Ax.
Too big to
After some hesitation, Nic started a third pile. The full suit of plate armor, complete with bucket helmet topped with dyed ostrich plumes, went the way of the sword without a moment's hesitation. Good boots joined the mace, quarterstaff, and rope. He hesitated for a long moment over the mail shirt. Retro kevlar.
It would stop a knife, probably stop a spear or sword.
It felt like heavy velvet. Then he hefted it again and heard the faint rustling jingle as it slid over itself and the links shifted. He'd never sneak up on anyone wearing that. It joined the sword. He was drawn first by the leather shirt's false familiarity. It was not the "Come And Kill Me" blue of the sword's harness. The shirt was stippled in broad swatches of green, black, and darker browns. Breaking up the silhouette. It had a round neck, and rawhide lacing all along the shoulders and outer seam. The sleeves looked as if they'd reach the elbow or a little below-these were the magical gifts of a wizard, and Nic didn't even have to question whether everything was in his size-and had a small notch at the cuff about an inch wide, edged with eyelets and strung with a rawhide cord. Pull it on and lace it tight, and it would fit like Superman's costume.
Nic picked it up, puzzled. It was heavy, so heavy he dropped it once. Then he flipped it inside out and saw that the dappled doe-leather shirt was entirely lined in thin pale chamois. He saw the careful marks of stitching, where thin pieces of metal had been sandwiched between two layers of chamois, assembled piece by piece into a silent armored jigsaw, until to wear the shirt was to be invisibly sheathed in metal. Whoever thought this one up, I love you. You've got my kind of twisted mind He added the shirt to the pile of things he would keep. There was another wrist-brace, similar to the first except that it had no concealed pins or sheathed blades. It was heavy enough that Nic was willing to bet it concealed another shaped metal plate. He took it. There was a sack of coins, which any parfait gentill knyghte would have scorned. But money was also a weapon. Money was cooperation. Nic took the money. He took a firebox: flint and steel, and a space for tinder. He took a mirror, a polished square of metal the size of his hand. He took a three-foot length of leather braided with horsehair with a heavy ball weight on each end. Bolo. He took a small wooden box with a sliding top that was filled with black grease and green grease. He tried them first, suspiciously, on the back of his hand and then with his tongue. They tasted vile, but he knew what they were, then. Camouflage. He took the pants that went with the tunic. They were wool, not leather, and they didn't have metal plates sewn in, but they were lined with thick fleece, and there were shaped pieces of stiffer leather covering kidneys and groin. More protection than none. There was a cape with a hood, longer than he was tall. It was thin dark wool, shining with grease, and had wooden loop-and-toggle buttons halfway down the inside. Flap-covered slits let you poke your hands out when the cloak was buttoned. Rain poncho. He took a foolish-looking helmet that looked as if someone had mated a football helmet and the old Wehrmacht coal-scuttle helm. The cage on a pivot that gave it its resemblance to a football helmet could be hooked in place like a visor and protect eyes and nose, or swing down as far as the helmet would permit and protect the lower jaw. There was also a chin strap. What is this? Martians?
Wardrobe left overfrom Santa Claus Conquers the
And suddenly the voices from a time that ought to have been buried safely by almost two decades of living were painfully bright and close, and Nicodemus Brightlaw was gone. What was left was Sergeant Brightlaw of the United States Army Special Forces. "Saint" Nic.
Sniper, infiltrator, specialist in covert penetration and field intelligence. Field intelligence was walking through your lines and theirs, walking far enough that you'd have something to bring back. Papers.
Prisoners.
Intelligence.
The truth.
Find the truth and the truth will set you free.
Jesus on horseback.
Nic shuddered. Let it go, Saint. the
They're all dead, and you are, too, and what Puff
Magic Dragon out there is counting on is that you're going to come apall right here and he scoops it all for free. He added the helmet to the things he would take. He added a belt that incorporated a shoulder strap to distribute the weight that would hang from it, and pouches to hang from the belt because there wasn't a backpack and if you trusted the other man to carry what you needed the other man might just wind up raspberry roadkill and your stuff with him. Then everything in the tent seemed to be sorted into those three piles. By now the illumination in the tent was less, and the tent's contents were harder to see. He didn't worry. Time started when he went through the Gate. And he had a month. In a month, Ruth Marlowe would be either safe or dead. Nic took a last look at the ax and the mace and reluctantly added both to the pile with the armor and the sword. Too heavy. Everything he chose, he-and the horse-would have to carry. He stripped off the clothes he'd taken from the man he'd killed in the clearing when he and Ruth had first arrived, and the last of the clothes left over from a life he no longer remembered, on a Christmas Eve that now never was. He remembered that day from its beginning; getting out of bed, getting dressed. But the memories were slippery and senseless, hard to hold on to, because the day before that, his mind assured him, he'd been at incountry waiting for the Sikorsky that was going to medevac him back to the rear echelon country club, home, and Mother. Away from the nightmare. He looked at his body. There were scars where there had been fresh wounds day before yesterday. Old scars. Years old. And he was old. An old man of forty; impossible age to contemplate from twenty-two. If you'd thought this was going to be easy, Saint old son, you wouldn't have done it. He dressed in the firedrake's gifts, lacing and buckling everything carefully: heavy, calf-length boots that would protect the foot running or riding. Pants, gray-green wool lined intermittently with leather.
The shirt was hard to lace down by himself but he managed. It was much less heavy worn than carried, and hugged his outline like a tight T-shirt. He had a sudden d