“Either would have gotten you out; the one you wanted was the shorter, though. Ready for the second test?”
“I think so. Rolan seems to be.”
“All right thenâoff with you, despoiler of gardens!” Keren slapped Rolan lightly on the rump; he snorted at her, and trotted off. Skif followed beside him.
Keren had a single die, which she threw for a set of twenty passes, as Talia carefully noted down the number of pips. Skif, with Rolan, had a set of six cards, one for each face of the die. Rolan was to indicate which face was up for each pass Keren madeâfor this time,
he
would be using Talia's eyes. This didn't take long; both of them were soon back, and Skif's and Talia's lists compared.
âIncredibleânot even
one
wrong! We're going to have to tell Kyril about this; I don't doubt he'll want to give you even more tests together,” Keren said with amazement.
“He's welcome if he wants to,” Talia replied. “I just wanted to be sure that I was right about the bond. Now that we're done, I'll tell you what else I was testing. I was shielded the entire time for both tests.”
“You're joking, surely!” Skif's mouth fell open.
“I was never more serious. You realize what this means, don't you? Not only is our bond one of the strongest I know of, but if
I
can't shield him out, nobody can block him away from me, either.”
“That could be mighty useful, someday,” Keren put in. “It means that even if you were unconscious, you could be reached through Rolan. We'll definitely have to tell Kyril about this now.”
“Go right ahead. It's hardly something that needs to be kept secret.”
“Talia, do you think I'll have a friend like Rolan someday?” Elspeth asked wistfully.
Talia gathered the child to her and hugged her shoulders. “Catling,” she whispered, “Never doubt it for a minute. In fact, your Companion-friend may very well be even
better
than Rolan, and that's a promise.”
Rolan did not respond to this with his usual snort of human-like derision. Instead, he nuzzled the child gently, almost as if to confirm Talia's promise.
Â
A few evenings later Talia decided to determine exactly what the physical limit of the range of her Gift was.
She did not bother to light a candle in her room, but simply relaxed on her bed in the growing dusk, isolating and calming any disturbing influences in herself until she was no longer aware of her body except as a kind of anchor from which to move outward. She extended her sense of empathy slowly, reaching first beyond her room, then beyond the Collegium, then beyond the Palace and grounds. There were vague pockets in the Palace of ambition and unease, but nothing and no one strong enough to hold her there.
She brushed lightly past them, venturing beyond, out into the city itself. Emotions appeared as vivid colors to her; they were like mists to move through for the most part, with none of the negative sort being strong enough to stay her passage. Once or twice she stopped long enough to intervene; in a tavern brawl, and in the nightmares of a young soldier. Then she passed on.
She ranged out farther now, following the Northern road, moving from contact to contact with those dwelling or camped beside it as if she were following beacons along the wayside. They were like little lanterns along the darkened road, providing mostly guidepoints for herâor perhaps like stepping-stones across a brook since she needed them to move onward. The contacts here were fewer than in any other direction as the Northern road led through some of the most sparsely populated districts in the Kingdom. As Talia's consciousness flowed along this route, she remembered that this was the route Ylsa had been sent out on earlier in the week.
Suddenly, as if merely being reminded of Ylsa's existence were impetus enough, she found herself being pulled Northward, caught by a force too strong and too urgent to resist.
There was growing unease and apprehension as she was pulled alongâand growing fear as well. She found herself unable to break the contact or to slow herself and became even more alarmed because of this. She was in a near panic when she was suddenly pulled into what had drawn her.
She found herself
there
. Looking out of another's eyes. Ylsa's eyes.
Â
Ambushed!
Too manyâthere were too many of them to fight off. Felara lashed out with wicked hooves and laid about her with her teeth, trying to make a path for escape, but their attackers were canny and managed to keep them surrounded. She clamped her legs tightly around Felara's chest to stay with her, knowing she was as good as dead if she was thrown.
She drew her longsword and cut at them, but for every one she laid low, two sprang up to replace him. The sword was not really meant for fighting a-horseback, and before she'd managed to strike more than half-a-dozen blows, it was carried out of her hands by a falling foe, and she was forced to draw her dagger instead. Then, in a well-coordinated move, they all drew back as a horn sounded.
Terrible pain lanced through her shoulder and momentarily filmed her eyes. She looked down stupidly to see a feathered shaft sprouting from her upper chest.
Felara screamed in agony as a second shaft pierced the Companion's flank. Damn the moon! They were illuminated clearly by itâclearly enough to make good targets for the archers that
must
be hidden underneath the trees. Their attackers fell back a little moreâand more shafts hummed out of the darknessâ
Felara cried once again, and collapsed, trapping her beneath her Companion's bulk. And she couldn't think or move, for the loss and the agony of Felara's death were all too much a part of her.
The archers' work done, the swordsmen closed anew. She saw
the
blade catch the moonlight, and arc down, and knew it for the one that would kill herâ
:Kyril! Tell the Queenâin the shaft!:
Dozens of images flashed and vanished. One stayed. Arrowsâringed with black. Five of them. Hollow black-ringed arrowsâ
Then unbearable pain, followed by a terrifying silence and darkness, more terrible than the painâshe was trapped in the darkness, unable to escape. There was nothing to hold to, nothing to anchor toâthen abruptly, there
was
something in the darkness with her.
It was Rolanâ
And she took hold of him in panic fear and
pulled
â
Â
Talia shrieked with a mortal pain not her ownâand found herself sitting bolt upright in her bed. For one moment she sat, blinking and confused, and not at all sure that it all hadn't been a far too realistic nightmare.
Then the Death Bell tolled.
âNoâoh no, no, noâ” She began to sob brokenly in reactionâwhen a thought stilled her own tears as surely as if they'd been shut off.
Keren.
Keren, who was bound to Ylsa as strongly as to her Companion or her brotherâwho depended on those bonds. Who, Talia knew, made a habit of communicating with her lover every night she was gone if Ylsa was within range. Who
must
have felt Ylsa's deathâif she hadn't been mentally searching for her at the time of the ambush, she would know it by the Herald's bond. And who, prostrated by grief and the shock of Ylsa's death, which she had experienced no less than Talia, might very well lose her hold on responsibility and duty long enough to succeed in death-willing herself.
Talia was still dressed except for boots. She ran for the Herald's quarters without stopping to put them on. She'd never been in Keren's rooms before, but there was no mistaking the fiery beacon of pain and loss that led her onward. She followed it unerringly.
The door was already open when she arrived; Keren's twin slumped next to her, his eyes dazed, his expression vacant. Keren was sitting frozen in her chair; she'd evidently been trying to reach Ylsa when Ylsa was struck down. She was totally locked away within herself. Her face was an expressionless mask, and only the wild eyes showed that she was alive. The look in those eyes was that of a creature wounded and near death, and not very human anymore.
Talia touched Keren's hand hesitantly; there was no response. With a tiny cry of dismay, she took both Keren's cold hands in her own, and strove to reach her with her mind.
She was dragged into a whirling maelstrom of pain. There was nothing to hold on to. There was only unbearable loneliness and loss. Caught within that whirlpool was Keren's twinâand now, Talia as well.
Again she reached blindly in panic for a mental anchorâand again, there was Rolan, a steady pillar to hold to. She reached for him; was caught and held firm. Now, no longer frightened, no longer at the mercy of the pain-storm, she could think of the others.
Keren could not be reached, but perhaps her brother could be freed. She reached for the “Teren-spark,” caught it, and held it long enough to try to pull both of them out.
With a convulsive lurch, Talia broke contact.
She found herself on the other side of the room, half-supported by Teren, half-supporting him herself.
“What happened?” she gasped.
“She cried outâI heard her, and found her like
that.
When I tried to get her to wake, when I touched her, she pulled me in with herâ” Teren shook his head, trying to clear it. “Talia, I can't reach her at all. We've got to do something! You can reach her, can't you?”
“I tried; I can't come near. It'sâtoo strong, too closed in. I can't catch hold of her, and she's destroying herself with her own grief. Somehowâ” Talia tried to shake off the effects of her contact with that mindless chaos and loss. “Somehow I've got to find something to make her turn it outward instead of inâ”
Talia's chaotic thoughts steadied, found a focus, and held. With one of the intuitive leaps perhaps only she was capable of, she thought of Sherrillâ
Sherrill, daring to follow Keren into the river. Follow
Keren,
that was the key; and now Talia could remember how Sherrill had always seemed to hover at the edge of wherever it was that Keren or Ylsa or both were. And how there had always been a kind of smothered longing in her eyes. Remembered how Sherrill had always kept from intruding
too
closely on them, perhaps fearing that her own presence might spoil somethingâ
Sherrill, who came from the same people as Keren and Teren; from among folk who did not hold that love between those of the same sex was anathema as was so often the case elsewhere.
Sherrill, who had as many lovers as she wished, yet stayed with none.
“Teren, think hardâis Sherrill back from her internship yet?” Talia asked him urgently.
“I don'tâI think soâ” He was still a little dazed.
âGet her, then. Now! She'll know who the Bell is forâtell her Keren needs her!”
He did not pause to question her, impelled by the urgency in her voice. He scrambled to his feet and sprinted out the door; Talia returned to Keren's side and strove to touch her without being pulled in a second time.
Finally the sound she'd been hoping for reached her ears; the sound of two pairs of feet running up the corridor.
Sherrill led Teren by a good margin, and she plainly had only one goal in her mindâKeren.
Talia relinquished her place as Sherrill seized Keren's hands in her own and knelt by her side; sobbing heartbrokenly, calling Keren's name.
The sound of her weeping penetrated Keren's blankness as nothing Talia had tried had done. Her voice, or perhaps the unconcealed love in that voice, and the pain that equaled Keren's own, broke the hold Keren's grief had held over her.
Keren's face stirred, came to life againâher eyes went to the woman kneeling beside her.
“Sherrillâ?” Keren whispered hoarsely.
Something else came forward from the back of her mind, and Talia remembered one thing moreâYlsa, saying “sometimes persistent inability can mask ability”âand Sherrill's own disclaimer of any but the most rudimentary abilities at thought-reading.
Before the wave of their combined grief, and her need to find and give comfort, Sherrill's mental walls collapsed.
Teren and Talia removed themselves and shut the door, giving them privacy to vent their sorrows. But not alone anymore, and not facing their grief unsupported.
Talia leaned up against the corridor walls, wanting to dissolve helplessly into tears herself.
Talia? Teren touched her elbow lightly.
âCoddessâoh, Teren, I saw her die! I saw Ylsa die! It was horribleâ” Tears were coursing down her face, and yet this wasn't the kind of weeping that brought any relief. Other Heralds were beginning to gather around her; she hadn't had any time to reshield and their raw emotions melded painfully with her own. It felt as if she were being smothered or torn into dozens of little pieces and scattered on the wind.
Herald Kyril, a tall man considerably older than Teren, and accompanied by the Queen, pushed his way to Talia's side and caught hold of one of her hands. With that contact, he managed to shield her mind from the others. It gave her some respite, though the relief was only partial. He could not shield her from her own memories.
“Majesty!” he exclaimed. “
This
is the other presence I sensed!”
Selenay exercised her royal prerogatives and ordered the corridor cleared.
âKyrilâ” she said when only Talia remained. âIt is possible that she may have the answerâher Gift is empathy, to be as one with the person she touches.”
Talia nodded to confirm what Selenay said, her face wet, her throat too choked to speak.
“My ladyâ” the iron-haired Herald had something about him that commanded her instant attention, ââyou may be the key to a terrible dilemma. I hear the thoughts of others, it is true, but
only
as words. Ylsa cast a message to me with her last breath, but it means
nothing
to me,
nothing!
But if you can recall her thoughts, you who shared her mindâyou alone know the meaning behind those words on the wind. Can you tell us what she meant?”