Skir interrupted; he'd heard enough about the Rising. âWhat about the â that thing inside the pile?'
âPunishment.' Tansy's face was pale. â “The Witch-Woman will send you to the shore fires,” that's what they say. This is Wanion's work.'
âWhoever that was,' said Perrin, âthey've been dead a long time.'
Tansy twined her hands into Penthesi's mane to stop them shaking. The two horses trotted away swiftly, as if they too were glad to leave the gruesome sight behind. For a long time after, the three young people sensed the high, brooding presence of the bonfire on the clifftop behind them, and they all breathed easier when the shoreline curved and it dropped from view.
âSedge has a loose shoe,' said Tansy when they stopped that night in a hollow in the dunes. âWe need a smithy.'
âI don't think we'll find one,' said Perrin. âEven if we could risk going into a village.'
Tansy looked at him hopefully. âCan't you fix it?'
âDon't have the right tools.' Perrin helped himself to a slice of hard-cake.
âI mean, can you sing something?'
âSing what? You need an ironcrafter for this sort of job.'
Skir asked abruptly, âCan we still ride her?'
âYes. But it ain't good for her hoof. You better ride her alone, Skir, you're the lightest, and don't carry nothing.'
Skir picked at his toes without looking up. âI can't,' he muttered.
Tansy and Perrin exchanged an exasperated glance. Tansy said, in a bright, encouraging voice, âCourse you can manage her! You're nearly as good as me now. Old Ingle wouldn't know you. Just let her favour that right foreleg. You'll be all right.'
Skir's face set in a sullen frown. âJust don't blame me if something goes wrong.'
âNothing'll go wrong,' said Perrin. âBy the bones! I know you're not happy, but do you have to make us
all
suffer?'
âSorry,' said Skir stiffly, and he rolled himself in his coat and pretended to go to sleep while Tansy and Perrin hissed and whispered together about him.
It was long after midnight when Tansy woke and saw a glow on the horizon. She whispered, âPerrin?'
âYes.' His voice came quietly out of the dark. âI can see it too. They've lit the shore fire.'
For a few moments they were silent, watching the eerie flicker of the flames against the sky.
Tansy whispered, âWhy?'
âThe fires are meant to keep chantment at bay. Maybe the soldiers we fought at Rarr heard me sing and told your Lady Wanion one of us was a chanter.'
âAnd Skir.'
âYes,' said Perrin after a pause. âAnd Skir.'
âSo she knows â she knows where we are?'
âI only said maybe.'
âBut you let our fire go out . . .'
âBetter cautious than a corpse, as the commander likes to say. Don't worry, Tansy. Go back to sleep.'
âNo. I'll keep watch now.' Tansy sat up, shivering, and wrapped her blanket round her shoulders. She thought Perrin had fallen asleep, but after a long time he spoke again.
âDon't tell Skir.'
âNo,' said Tansy. She kept her eyes fixed on the distant orange glow until, just before dawn, it died away. Only then would she let herself sleep again.
The next day Skir rode Sedge alone. After midday they came to a patch of shingle that led down onto a long stretch of hard sand. Tansy and Perrin slipped from Penthesi's back, and pebbles skittered underfoot as they led him down. Skir hesitated at the top. He squeezed his legs gently. âGo on, Sedge.'
Sedge flicked her chestnut ear questioningly, then set one hoof on the shingle. The stones shifted. Sedge put another hoof down, then another. Too late to turn back now. It was all right, thought Skir with relief, and then the world swung sideways. Sedge screamed in pain and fright as the shingle rushed up to slam against Skir's face. He rolled over, winded, and stared up at the wide blue sky.
âAre you hurt?' cried Tansy.
âI â I don't think so.' With infinite care, Skir raised himself on his elbows.
âShe was talking to the mare,' said Perrin.
Dazed, Skir looked around. Sedge was down. Tansy was at her side and feeling up and down her legs as she soothed her. The chestnut tried to struggle to her feet, but kept collapsing, and at last Tansy gathered her head into her lap.
âHer leg's broken.'
Skir closed his eyes. âStupid, stupid, stupid! I told you I couldn't do it, I
knew
I'd mess it up.'
Tansy spoke past him to Perrin. âCan you heal her? Can you
make
her heal?'
âNo.'
âThere must be something, some magic to help her!'
Perrin squatted beside Sedge. âThere's only one thing I can do.'
âWhat?' Tansy looked up eagerly, but Perrin kept his gaze fixed on Sedge as he rubbed the mare's nose.
âI can sing her to sleep, Tansy. That's all.'
âTo sleep? You mean â you mean she won't wake up?'
âYes.'
Penthesi whinnied, and Sedge lifted her head to answer, a soft, bewildered nickering.
âShe knows, Tansy. She knows there's nothing else to do.'
Tansy bent her head over Sedge's neck, and said nothing.
Skir said, âBut it's only her leg! Can't we bandage it?'
âThat wouldn't do no good.' Tansy spoke without bitterness or blame, just a terrible sadness. âPerrin's right.'
âPoor old girl,' murmured Perrin, stroking Sedge's velvet nose. âPoor old girl. Stay there, Tansy.' And he began to sing a chantment, a crooning song like a lullaby, and Skir felt the hairs rise on the back of his neck as they always did when Perrin sang.
Penthesi lowered his head, as if he knew exactly what was happening. Skir patted his neck, and the big horse snorted into his hand, then turned back to watch Sedge.
The chestnut lifted her head; she heaved a great breath, then laid her head calmly in Tansy's lap while Perrin's chantment drifted over her. Tansy whispered something that Skir couldn't hear; she was crying.
Skir walked away to the water's edge where foam hissed and died on the sand, and each wavelet smoothed the beach like the caress of a gentle hand.
When he returned, Sedge was dead. Perrin sat beside the big, motionless body. Already flies had collected around the soft dark nose and the sealed eyes. Skir sat on the sand.
âWhere's Tansy?'
Perrin gestured down the beach to where two tiny figures, girl and horse, walked slowly side by side.
âIt was my fault,' said Skir leadenly. âI killed her. I wrecked two dolls and now I've killed two living beings. First the soldier, now Sedge. It's Wanion's magic coming after me.'
Perrin hesitated, tempted to agree, then he shook his head. âNo, Skir. Not everything in the world revolves around you. You didn't kill Sedge. I did. With my chantment.'
Skir was silent for a moment.
âHave you sung that chantment before?'
âYes.'
âWhen?'
âWhen I had to.' Perrin brushed the sand from his hands and stared hard at Skir. âAnd what about you? What kind of chantment do you sing?'
Skir stiffened. âI'm not supposed to talk about it.'
âReally? Not even one chanter to another? It's just that, in all this time, I haven't heard you sing one chantment.'
Skir frowned at the sand. âThe Priest-King's power is sacred. It's only to be used for the defence of Cragonlands.'
âBut I thought you couldn't be Priest-King any more. You've defiled your office. So now you're just an ordinary chanter. Like me.'
âI'm Priest-King until the Temple releases me.' Skir's frown deepened.
âYou haven't been very successful at defending Cragonlands, have you? The Balts invaded, what, twenty years ago? And you haven't exactly shaken them off yet.'
âThe insurgents â'
âYour precious insurgents wouldn't have got far without the Rengani Army behind them, my friend.'
âWe don't need any of you.' Skir's face was scarlet. âWhy can't you leave us alone?'
âWhy don't you make us, if you're such a mighty chanter?'
âBecause I'm not!' cried Skir. âI'm not a mighty chanter. I'm not any sort of chanter. I can't do it. All right? Are you satisfied now?'
âAh,' said Perrin softly.
There was a silence while they both stared away at Tansy and Penthesi walking along the beach. Skir kicked the sand. As they watched, the girl and the horse turned, and began to walk back toward them.
Skir said wretchedly, âI'm supposed to be an ironcrafter. The Priest-King is always an ironcrafter. When you said that, about fixing Sedge's shoe â I thought you knew, I thought you were making fun of me.'
âNo.'
âIroncrafters can move the earth, shake the ground, make the mountains quake. But I can't. I never could.'
âSo why did the priests choose you?'
âI don't know! They made a mistake. I suppose they couldn't find anyone. There has to be a Priest-King . . . Beeman said I might grow into my gift, he said it sometimes happens that way.' Skir glanced at Perrin. âIs that true?'
Perrin shrugged. âI've never heard of a gift that didn't show itself in childhood.'
âI knew it,' said Skir savagely. âI know the songs, they taught me all the chantments, but it never â the magic never â'
âIf it doesn't come, it doesn't come,' said Perrin. âYou can't force it.'
âIt doesn't matter anyway,' said Skir dully. âThey won't let me be Priest-King any more. All those years I spent learning the rituals, wasted. Bettenwey will have to find someone else . . . He's the High Priest. Or he was â I don't even know if he's still alive . . .' He pushed his fingers into the sand. âMaybe he'll give it to you.'
âNo, thanks,' said Perrin.
âBut you're a chanter.'
âNot a chanter of iron. Only a chanter of the beasts.' Perrin swept some sand into a pile and crumbled it with his fingers.
Tansy and Penthesi trudged toward them; Tansy leaned into the big horse's body.
Perrin looked up. âYou all right?'
Tansy nodded without speaking; her eyes were red and swollen. Perrin put his arms around her, and the two of them stood there for a long moment in silence.
Skir stood too and brushed sand from his hands. âPerrin?' he said.
Perrin looked over his shoulder. âWhat?'
Skir flung back his head. âI want you to sing to me like you did to Sedge. I want you to â to sing me to sleep.'
No one spoke. Tansy disengaged herself from Perrin's arms, and they stared at Skir. The silence crackled with tension, like the pause between a lightning flash and its roar of thunder. At last Tansy said softly, âYou ain't serious.'
âI'm perfectly serious.' Skir spoke louder. âYou heard me. I want to die. I've been training all my life to do one thing, and I can't do it. I'm supposed to be a chanter, but I'm not. No, Tansy, that's right, what do you think of your mighty Priest-King sorcerer now? I killed that soldier and now I've killed Sedge. Wanion's cursed me. I ruin everything . . .' He swept his arm around to encompass the beach, the sea, the body of the dead horse, Tansy and Perrin and Penthesi. The waves roared. âIt's too hard!' cried Skir. âI'd rather be dead!'
His words rang out in the empty sky.
At last Perrin said, âSongs of the Beasts don't work on people.' His voice was cold and distant.
âWhy not? We're animals too, aren't we?'
âWe're different. We speak, we have language, the Power of Tongue.'
âPenthesi speaks, in his own way. You understand him, so does Tansy. And some people don't speak â'
âSkir, the chantment won't work.'
âJust try it.'
âNo.'
âBut I'm
asking
you to. Maybe I won't mess up my next life. You tell him, Tansy.'
Tansy stared at him. âI ain't asking Perrin to kill you!'
âThere you are,' said Perrin crisply. âTansy doesn't want you to die. Happy now?'
âJust try!' shouted Skir.
âI won't do it, you lackwit,' said Perrin. âClear?'
Skir swung his fist, but Perrin dodged the blow easily. At the same instant, his fist flew out and crunched into Skir's face. Skir thumped backward onto the sand. After a moment he sat up, holding his nose. Blood seeped between his fingers.
âPerrin!' shouted Tansy. âWhat did you do that for?'
Perrin winced as he nursed his knuckles. âJust trying to knock some sense into him.'
Tansy stamped her foot. âA few days ago you were ready to die for each other and now you're punching each other in the head! And next to poor Sedge's body, too. Ain't you got no respect?'
A muffled moan came from Skir. âWhat am I going to do?'
âI'll tell you what to do. We're going to Cragonlands, taking you home, just like we planned. Ain't that right, Perrin?'
âRight,' said Perrin. âTaking you home to Cragonlands.'
âWe ain't come all this way for nothing. And here's you two squabbling like ducklings over a crust. You forgotten we got Madam chasing after us, and half the Army, too? You ain't dying, Skir, not after we went to so much trouble to keep you alive. Tip your head back, that'll stop the bleeding. Come here, you stupid boy, you're shaking.'
Tansy put her arm around Skir, and he didn't pull away. He leaned into her as earlier she had leaned into Penthesi and Perrin, and she felt the heat of his skin against her body. He was as hot as a child who's been a long time crying. He held his sleeve pressed hard to his nose. She kissed his hair roughly. âIt's all right. It's all right.'
Perrin spat onto the sand. âSave it, kids. We'd better move on. It'll be dark soon, and we can't camp anywhere near
that
.' He nodded to Sedge's body. âIt'll stink by morning.' He heaved the packs and bundles onto Penthesi's back, took the horse's bridle and stalked away down the beach.