The Cygnet And The Firebird Part 17
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"That is a mage," Rad said tersely. She stared at him, then began to move again, dressing quickly in the light, silken garments they had given her. She bent over the guard, touched the paths on one wrist. "You can't remove the time-paths," Rad said. "Just hold one. I'll open a path for you. Any warrior is taught this-it takes no power. You must walk down the path to me. Draken won't sense anything until you reach me. The path will end inside his trap. Don't enter; I'll be able to walk your path out. When I'm free, he'll know it. But I'll open another path to the Luxour, then; we won't return here."
"What about the mage?" she asked.
"What about the mage?"
"He'll wake," she said, holding the silver tightly, as if mage and time might disappear together. "He'll tell Magior-"
"Meguet. He'll tell the entire house. It will take them just long enough to find breath to say 'Luxour' before they know where we have gone. They'll come looking for us, they'll come fast, and they will be the warrior-mages. But they'll have to search the Luxour for us, and a hundred mages on the Luxour will confuse even Draken. For a while."
He was shaping time as he spoke, weaving a pattern around them, silver smoke in the dark; she could not tell if the path lay before her, or behind her eyes, within her mind.
"Trust me," she heard Rad say. The guard stirred a little under her hand. She heard Rad say something else-in her mind or beyond it-and she rose. Come, the path said, the frozen s.h.i.+ning stream at her feet, and she followed it into Draken Saphier's tangled weave.
Fifteen.
Nyx sat outside a ruined palace, listening to the dry s.h.i.+ft and stir of dragon wings. Earlier, the palace had been a pile of stones; twilight had reshaped it, given it depth, subtle colors, ghosts. She had been reading Chrysom's book, searching for Brand's grandfather, since his father had either left the Luxour or been swallowed by it. The firebird had flown somewhere within the rocks, dropping darkly gleaming garnets like a trail of blood through the shadows. Nyx drew her mind out of dragon-paths long enough to make a mage-light so that Brand could find her when he changed. Then she wandered back with Chrysom underground, within still water, up cold barren peaks, into magical rings of mist and gold and fire. Some part of her, listening for Brand, was aware of the gently changing hues of blue above the mountains where the moon would rise. She refused to look, for that might slow the moon. She refused to let her thoughts stray, for then she would find Brand's cobalt eyes looking back at her through every page she turned. The moon took its time, leaving her adrift among the dragons until a footfall brought her out of dragons' time into her own, and she closed the book in her mind.
The moon had not yet risen, but the man who stepped into her mage-light was so like Brand that she almost said his name. And then she saw the white in his long dark hair, the lines beside his mouth. He looked at her silently, out of Brand's eyes. She rose slowly, making no ambiguous movements, for she sensed an enormous power in him, as if in his dragon blood he had inherited something of the Luxour. He stood motionlessly, taking in what she revealed to the inward and the outward eye, before he spoke.
"You are Nyx Ro."
"Yes."
"I know all the mages of great power in Saphier, and therefore you are not of Saphier. You know my face, therefore you know my son." He paused; she saw his eyes follow the glittering path of garnet into the stones. His lips moved soundlessly. He turned abruptly, disappeared for a few moments among the caves and crevices; Nyx waited. He returned without me firebird. "It's sleeping," he said. "On a high ledge, with its face toward the moon." She saw him swallow. "I think he can get down."
"He says he's grown used to finding himself in odd places when the bird changes."
"Where did you find him in Ro Holding?"
"He flew over the walls of Ro House, and started turning can horses into trees with diamond leaves. Cobblestones into gla.s.s. He changed my cousin into a rose-tree. He was very nearly shot. His cries were terrible."
"Yes," he said huskily. "I heard him-it-cry before he vanished from Saphier. And then what? You calmed him. You call the bird him."
She nodded a little wearily. "Brand and I have argued over this. He insists the bird is sorcery, that it has nothing to do with him. But I think he is the man and he is the firebird, and the bird cries of all the things the man can't remember, in the only language he will permit himself to use."
She heard his breath. He moved closer to her, leaning against the stones between her and the firebird's trail of jewels. He studied her silently again. Magelight catching in his eyes revealed fine rays, like dragon's gold, across the cobalt. "You are perceptive," he commented, "for so young a mage."
"I've seen his face," she answered grimly, "when as a man he hides from memory. It's like a man flinching from fire." His own face changed, as if he had felt the sear of memory; for an instant he wore Brand's expression. "What is it?" she whispered, shaken. "What is it he will not remember? Do you know?"
He looked away from her, down at a single jewel. "I heard Brand cry out," he said tautly. "And then I saw the firebird, and the mage who had ensorcelled him. I heard the firebird's cry before it disappeared. No one else had been with them, to witness what had happened between them. No one in my court could give me the shadow of an explanation why the most gifted mage I have ever trained had cast a spell over my son. No one. I questioned everyone, often, and in every way I could, with and without language." He paused; the lines along his mouth deepened. He met her eyes again. "They had been close. That's all anyone could tell me."
"Yes." Her voice caught. "So he said."
His expression did not change, but she felt the sudden shock within his thoughts, as if it had disturbed the air between them. "He remembered?"
"A few things. The mage's name. That once he loved him and now he wants to kill him. Even the firebird recognizes the mage."
"And what more does he remember?"
"Saphier. You. That's why we came here: to search for you. He is convinced you can remove the spell because you are the most powerful mage in Saphier."
"The mage who made the spell will unmake it," he said harshly- "I have him."
She made an abrupt, uncalculated movement; her body peeled itself away from the stones, stiffening. "You have Rad Ilex?"
"I trapped him on the Luxour two nights ago."
She reached out to touch him, did not. "Please." She felt herself tremble, windblown. "Was there a woman with him? He pulled my cousin out of Ro Holding; I came to Saphier to search for her-"
"You followed Rad Ilex out of Ro Holding?"
"No, I came later. She is tall, with long pale hair-"
He was nodding. "Meguet Vervaine." he said, and for an instant she saw gold rays of dragon-light burn in his eyes. "I found her half-dead, alone in the Luxour." Nyx tried to speak, put her hand over her mouth. "I was suspicious of her at first. She tried to protect Rad Ilex, she lied about herself and him. But I persuaded her to help me trap him. She did, and so I took her with me to my court, where she is safe, cared for by my mages. She knows that you are here in Saphier, and that I am searching for you."
"Thank you." She closed her eyes, felt a burning like hot, dry winds, the merciless sun, behind them. She said again, numbly, "Thank you. I would have blamed myself forever if she had died here, alone and lost in a strange land."
"Blaming Rad Ilex seems more to the point. He brought her here. Under duress, you say. Then why would she have tried to protect him from me?"
"I don't know." She eased back against the stones, considered the question blankly. "Falling headlong into another world, perhaps she trusted no one. One mage had already terrified her; perhaps you frightened her even more. She isn't used to mages."
"I fed her, spoke gently to her. She recognized me as Brand's father and as Saphier's ruler. Still she tried-" He lifted a hand, let it fall. "It isn't important. I have you all now: Brand and Rad Ilex, your cousin and you. As you said, I must have frightened her, and it is sometimes difficult to think clearly in the Luxour."
"But where was Rad Ilex?" she wondered, puzzled. "Why was she alone? If she ran into the desert to escape him, why would she try to protect him?"
"People do strange things when they are confused by circ.u.mstance. She said, when she finally told me her name, that she was walking to my court."
"Across the desert? On foot?"
"So she said."
"But if she was running away from Rad Ilex to your court, then why was she afraid of you, and trying to protect Rad at the same time?"
"I thought," he said patiently, "you might explain that."
She brooded, her brows knit. "It makes no sense. Meguet usually makes more sense than that."
"Is she a mage?" he asked abruptly. She transferred her brooding from the ground to him.
"No," she said, surprised. "Why ask me? You recognized what I am the moment you saw me. You were with Meguet; if you were curious, you would have answered that question, one way or another."
"At first I thought not. And then I saw -,." He hesitated. "A shadow. Perhaps it was only the Luxour."
She was silent, gazing at him, trying to put pieces together: Meguet protecting Rad Hex from Brand's father, Meguet trying to walk alone and powerless across a desert to get to Draken Saphier's court, Meguet casting a shadow of power when she no longer had the strength to move. "It makes no sense," she said again, baffled. "If Rad Ilex left her in the desert to die, then why would she-and if he didn't, then what was she doing there? She has more intelligence than to try to cross a wasteland like this on foot."
"One or two other things I found puzzling also. Why did Rad Ilex go to Ro Holding? And how did you get from Ro Holding to my court, and then from my court to the Luxour? Rad Ilex wears the timepaths I forged for him, and so does my son. But Brand's were destroyed. So. You must have walked paths of your own making."
She opened her mouth to answer, and hesitated, unwilling, without knowing why, to open the marvels of Chrysom's book to Draken Saphier. As the answer hung in the air between them, she saw his eyes change, and she realized that he had known the answers to those questions even before he had found her on the Luxour. His eyes caught mage-light, turned gold. Dragon's eyes, she thought, frozen under the strange, inhuman gaze, and then: Meguet was born knowing what to fear, She remembered the figures standing in the doorway of Chrysom's library, as the time-paths slowly misted the world with silver: the young man with Meguet's hair, and her heritage, with the warning to the Cygnet in his eyes....
The stones and shadows were misting around her now, washed with gold; the pale mage-light burned gold. The key floated in a dark, secret place in her mind. But the dragon-eyes permitted no secrets; the key might as well have been in her open hand. It turned slowly in her mind, as if touched by invisible hands, that could not, for the moment, break through its mystery to open it.
Then the dragon closed his eyes; the gold melted into shadow and stone and light. Nyx blinked, saw Draken frowning deeply, concentrating, but not on her. She took a step away from him, another. He did not notice, lost in some private, harrowing moment. At her third step, his eyes opened. The taut lines of his face loosened; he sagged against the stones, spent and amazed.
"I've lost him," he breathed. "How could he escape a time-path looped back into itself?" He was silent, working out an answer; so did Nyx, in case the knowledge came in handy. But it only mystified her. "He had help," Draken said flatly, and Nyx felt herself grow cold with fear.
"No," she said quickly. "Not-"
"No one in my house would have helped him. No one else."
"She wouldn't have. She couldn't have. She has no power."
He shook his head impatiently. "She wouldn't need power for that. She'll be with him now."
"No."
He pondered, his eyes human again. "The Luxour," he said at last. "They'll come here. It's the only place in all Saphier where he can breathe a moment or two longer, though he is dead now, as he runs." Then a ghost of memory haunted his face; he whispered. "Brand." He turned away from Nyx, slumped against the wall, his face hidden in one upraised arm.
She heard a sound: stones s.h.i.+fting, dragon-claws sc.r.a.ping over them. It was Brand, she realized, climbing down from the firebird's roost. The garnets had vanished. Standing within the dragon's golden eyes, she had not seen the milky rising of the moon. Draken lifted his head, listening as Brand followed the path of the mage-light through the stones to Nyx.
He stopped when he reached me light; she saw him rock on his feet, as if a wind had pushed him. Then he made a sound, a broken word, and slid to his knees at his father's feet. Draken bent to pull him up, then knelt himself, as if even he could not bear the weight of all the bird's enchantments, and drew Brand into his arms.
Brand, lifting his face from Draken's shoulder, found Nyx, and stretched one hand out to her. Draken's shadow lay between them; she could not bring herself to move. Draken said, bringing Brand to his feet, "Nyx Ro said she found you in Ro Holding."
"The firebird found her." His eyes clung to her a moment longer, and then returned to his father- His hold on Draken's arms tightened a little. "She gave me the only hope in the world of finding you again."
"Yes. I did not know how or when or where I would see you again, since your time-paths were destroyed."
"Nyx has a book. The ancient mage Chrysom of Ro Holding fas.h.i.+oned time-paths all through the Luxour. I made her bring me here to search for you. When we could not find you, I made her search for dragons. For my grandfather."
Draken looked at her, his expression unfathomable. "And did you," he asked, "find dragons?"
"No."
"Nyx decided that, even for a desperate man in the shape of a firebird, the dragons were too dangerous."
"That was wise of her." He touched his son's hair lightly, let his hand drop to Brand's shoulder. "What a strange thing to find in Ro Holding: the paths to the dragons of the Luxour."
"And equally strange," Nyx said tightly, "to find on a warrior's wrist the path from Saphier to Ro Holding."
They both looked at her as she stood alone, the mage-light casting her shadow wide and dark across the stones behind her. Draken seemed only thoughtful, but Brand, troubled, left his father abruptly.
"Nyx." He put his hands on her shoulders, frowning, then kissed her, as if to change the expression on her face. He succeeded only in changing his father's expression. "How can you believe that my father will be anything but grateful to you, to your house, to Ro Holding, for caring for me?"
"How could I?" she wondered.
He held her a moment longer, searching her eyes, tuned to the undercurrents in her voice, but not understanding them. He turned to his father again, said tautly, "Help me. Please. Nyx tried to remove the spell, Magior has tried-I can barely remember day, and I am beginning to hate the night. It's like drowning, every midnight, night after night after night. Only Nyx has made it bearable."
"I see."
"You can remove the spell. You taught Rad Ilex everything."
"Rad." Draken's mouth tightened. "For a day or two I had him trapped."
"You found him?" Brand said sharply. "Where?"
"Here in the desert. But he managed to escape." He touched his eyes. "I am sorry."
"Free me." For a moment Nyx, used to all Brand's expressions, barely recognized him: He wore the cold, intent, merciless face of a warrior of Saphier. "We'll both find him."
Meguet, she thought, chilled, and a stranger's eyes nicked at her, as if responding to her fear, yet hardly seeing her.
"He must be here still," Brand added. "Where else could he go without leaving Saphier? Unless he went back to Ro Holding. But he wants Chrysom's key, and Nyx has it here. He must have known she would come here to find Meguet-"
Nyx closed her eyes, heard Draken say, "Chrysom's key."
"His book. The key is the book. Father-I am only human by moonlight, only until-"
"Listen to me." Nyx, wondering if she could fray into wind before either of them noticed, opened her eyes at the urgency in Draken's voice. He took Brand's face between his hands. "Listen to me," he said again. "I will try to help you. But I may fail."
"No."
"Listen. I know Rad's power. The Luxour shaped it. Before he could speak, he understood the language of these winds, the stones; he heard the dragons breathe before he knew the word for dragon. I don't know what of all this vast and unpredictable power around us went into the making of that spell-"
"Why?" Brand whispered. He was trembling; Nyx saw a streak of silver run down his face. "Why did he do this to me? I can't remember."
Draken shook his head. "I never knew," he said bitterly. "I only saw you after you had changed. When your human cry became the firebird's cry. You will remember. Look at me."
They were both silent. Nyx, sensing all Draken's attention on his son, was caught in the spell of the Luxour as its magic responded to Draken's making and unmaking. Their shadows, etched lean and black across the ground, changed shape: A great dragon spanned the circle of light, its black wings closed, its long neck bent toward me thing it held mesmerized beneath its gaze. The shadow of the firebird lay beyond Brand; winds s.h.i.+fted it, colored it yellow, red, peac.o.c.k-blue. Then the dragon's wings lifted, opened, folded around the gaudy shadow, swallowed it into blackness. Nyx, staring, raised her head abruptly, startled by a movement above her head. Something s.h.i.+fted in the night: A head as bright as blood rose clear against the moon. Fire streamed out of it, washed red across the stars. The great head disappeared. Nyx found Brand again; spells flowed over and away from him like tattered rags: an owl wing, a lizard claw, a lion's face, his father's face, a dragon's misty, glittering breath.
Then the magic flowed elsewhere, left their shadows intact, s.h.i.+fting, as Draken's hands fell from Brand's face, and Brand, white, tearless, took a step back from him.
"I'm sorry," Nyx heard Draken whisper. And then she opened Chrysom's book, chose a dragon at random, and ran.
Whether Draken tried to follow her or not, she was unsure: What leaped at her like a great wind, nearly tangling the strands of the path in her mind might easily have been the raw power sweeping across the Luxour, forming its own spells around anything magical. She found herself in the deep caves, among the roaring waterfalls where Brand had forgotten, so briefly, the memories that constantly reshaped him. Her own memories threatened to distract her; she felt the sudden loss of him like a hollow in the air beside her, a silence where his voice belonged, stone where her eyes expected his face. But she had no time for such unusual feelings; she had no idea whether Draken would pursue her or Rad Ilex first, and she had to reach Meguet before he did.
She turned another page, opened another path. This one ended among the stones and dream-palaces, too close to where Draken had found her. She opened another path instantly, and fell into a place so black she thought she had reached the ice-dragon's hole torn out of the night between the stars. But the air was warm, tranquil; she caught her breath a moment, reading a phrase or two about the dragon hidden within this shadow.
... a small and exquisite creature, with scales like gold leaf and s.h.i.+ning copper... its eyes are azure. By temperament elusive but not unfriendly ...
She opened its path back into the Luxour, and came face to face with a warrior-mage.
He carried ritual blades; they and the time-paths on his wrists glittered like frost in the moonlight. His black garments flowed on the wind; odd colors seemed to flame and break free from them, then fade into night. With mages' sight, they recognized one another.
The Cygnet And The Firebird Part 17
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The Cygnet And The Firebird Part 17 summary
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