“Do not worry,” said Senneck. “You can trust us to do as we have promised.”
Laela grinned at her. “I'd be a fool not to trust my own brother. C'mon, Kullervo, let's go eat.”
The siblings left together, but Senneck didn't follow. Oeka hadn't moved a muscle.
I sense great ambition in your mind,
her voice accused.
“I have always been ambitious,” said Senneck. “It is natural to our kind. I thought that you would know that, little griffin.”
Your new human is not welcome in my Eyrie, Senneck. If you have sense, you will not return from Amoran.
“Kill us, then, if you cannot trust us.” Senneck flicked her tail and stared defiantly.
You know I could have done this already if I had wanted.
Oeka finally lifted her blind head.
I have allowed you to live because you are useful to me.
“I am surprised,” Senneck mocked. “I thought that you would have killed Kullervo out of mere frustration by now.”
Oeka said nothing.
“After all,” said Senneck, “you must be enraged that, of all the minds in Tara, his is the only one you cannot violate. And though you must want him dead, you cannot kill him. Have you seen that by now, you twisted fool? You cannot kill him, no matter how much you want to. Your magic cannot do it, and you have sacrificed so much of your own self that your talons cannot do it either.”
Oeka's fury made Senneck's mind flash red with pain.
“You cannot!” she rasped again. “You are a cripple who cannot even hunt her own food!”
I do not need that nonsense any more!
Oeka snarled.
I am the master of this land. I am the greatest and you are the lowest, you whimpering chick who could not protect her own human! Do you believe that you have the strength to challenge me, when you could not even do that?
Senneck didn't rise to the bait. “Am I so low?” she asked. “I killed three of your greatest enemies while you lay here and did nothing. And now I have a new human, who is only one step away from owning all your own human's power. A human who is stronger than you.”
The force of Oeka's mental attack drove Senneck to her knees. She convulsed, beak open in a silent scream. Her eyes rolled back in her head.
Blood began to well up over her eyelids.
Somehow, she found the strength to cry out. “Kill me!” she screamed. “Kill me, and my human shall avenge me! He will kill you, and you will be defenceless against him!”
For a moment it looked as if her threat hadn't worked. But then Oeka let her go, and she found herself on the floor, looking up at her through blurry eyes.
The small griffin stood over her, her own eyes white and decaying.
You will regret what you have said to me, old one,
her voice said.
You will regret it very much. You have only seen a fraction of the powers that will be mine. Soon, you will see.
She left the chamber, her gait clumsy and hobbling.
Senneck watched her from her position on the floor. Her entire body throbbed in time with her head, and when she blinked, she felt blood try to glue her eyes shut. Trembling slightly with shock, she hissed contempt and triumph.
“Go then,” she gasped to the empty room. “And see what becomes of a griffin that abuses magic. I will screech victory over your corpse.”
O
eka returned to the audience chamber, moving with difficulty on her weak legs. She was vibrating with anger.
Laela wasn't in her room, and the small griffin's rage increased. Her human was with that vile monster that called itself her brother. The heir to the throne!
She rested a moment and went back down the tower, to the dining hall. Sure enough, there was Laela, sitting with Kullervo and eating lunch. Neither of them did more than glance up when Oeka came in.
She stood in the doorway, sensing their presence and motions in ways that went beyond mere sight and sound. No fear from them. No reverence either.
That was when she made up her mind.
Laela.
She sensed that Laela had asked what was wrong.
I am going downward,
she told her.
To the dark place where the stone humans lie. It is time for me to work my magic again, in privacy this time. I will claim the last of my powers.
No,
Laela's mind said.
This must be done,
Oeka said, and left.
To her astonishment, Laela tried to stop her. She felt the human's arms around her neck, pulling her back, while the mind driving them said, No, no, again.
Don't do it. Too dangerous. You could die.
Oeka struggled, but her body felt stiff and awkward. All of a sudden, terrible, crushing despair came to her. She, who had once been so strong, was now unable to overpower a mere human! And all her senses, her sight, her hearing . . .
Confused and angry, she bit Laela's arm. It released her at once.
I must do this,
she said.
I must be strong.
This time, nobody tried to stop her when she left.
She walked down and down, following the ramps she knew so well, down and down to the lowest level of the tower, below the earth itself, where a door waited. It was closed, but she used her mind to summon a servant, who opened it for her.
It was utterly dark beyond, but that didn't make any difference to her now. She could sense everything around her, in the dark or the light.
She went down the steps and into the dirt-lined chamber where the dead humans lay in their stone boxes. How ridiculous, she thought, to keep a dead thing this way. When a thing was dead, it was nothing. It became an object, one with no use. Why keep the bones of a kill after they had been stripped bare?
Oeka found a place in the middle of the floor and spent some time churning up the soil to make a comfortable spot to lieâmore from habit than anything else. That done, she settled down on her belly and allowed herself to relax. She could still feel the heart of the Spirit Cave lying in her stomach. There had been no food to move it out.
Fear twinged in her again. She dismissed it. She had made herself weak in the body, yes, but it had been a necessary sacrifice. Soon, she would make herself so powerful that not even her physical form would hold her back. Soon, she would have more magic than any other griffin that had ever lived.
Oeka put forth the captured spirits, and began again.
“W
ar.”
Caedmon Taranisäii felt his fists clench, the fingers pressing inward until the knuckles turned white. Tears burned behind his eyes, but he wouldn't let them show.
“War,” he said again, gritting it out from between his teeth. “This is war.”
Beside him, his partner, Shar, extended her talons. “Yes. We shall make it war. There is no other way.”
“Sweet Night God,” Caedmon muttered to himself. “How did it come to this?”
“We live in a land built by fighting,” said Shar. “And we ourselves were made for it. Accept that.”
Caedmon couldn't take it any more. He moved away and began to pace around the room, shoulders hunched. “I can't believe it, I just . . . can't. It's all so much, so fast . . .”
Shar turned her head to watch him. “Yes,” she admitted. “It has been a strange time, and so many bad things have happened in only a few days. But we must accept that. Our path is clear; that is what we must look toward now.”
Caedmon stopped pacing. His hands opened and closed compulsively. “My father, dead. My sister. My mother. All of them goneâI just can't . . .” His voice cracked. “I can't believe they're gone.”
Shar came closer, opening a wing to cover him like a shield. “But they
are
gone, Caedmon, and my own father with them. You and I are alive, and we are strong. We must ensure that we do not go to the soil as they have done, and we must fight to destroy the ones who have done this.”
“Going to the soil” was a griffish term for dying. Caedmon struggled, fighting against the tears that wanted to escape. In the end, he twisted them into rage. He pressed himself against Shar, taking strength from her own lithe, red-feathered bulk. “You're right. I know we can do this. The North will know what the half-breed did. We'll unite them and see justice done.”
“Revenge will be ours,” said Shar. “And so will the throne of Tara.”
“Yes,” Caedmon said grimly. He stood taller, willing himself to be strong. “I am the last true Taranisäii, and it's my duty to protect Tara from Southerners and half-breed traitors. I'll purify this land just like my cousin Arenadd did. I swear it on my family's graves.”
Shar purred, the sound vibrating softly in her flanks. “And I shall fight for our lives and our honour. You are my human, my precious human, and I shall protect you always and tear your enemies apart with my talons. That is my own duty, and my own . . . vow.”
“Then it's settled,” said Caedmon, keeping his voice steady. “We'll go and talk to Garnoc. Time to make plans.”
Shar yawned. “Yes. Plans are human things; I trust you to make them well.”
“I will.” Caedmon picked up his sickle from the table by his bed, and the two of them left.
It had been only a few days since the worst had happenedâa few days before the last survivor had arrived at Fruitsheart with the awful news of what had happened at Warwick.
All done, all of it, on the Queen's orders. Queen Laela, the false Taranisäii. Laela, the half-breed. Laela, who claimed to be the daughter of King Arenadd, after she had murdered him and stolen his throne. Laela, the traitor with the impure and treacherous blue eyes of a Southerner.
The mere thought of her filled Caedmon with hatred.
He walked down the stairs of Fruitsheart's Eyrie, taking them two at a time. At nineteen years old, he was tall and long-legged and had just grown his first beardâa small thing that ringed his mouth, which he was careful to keep neat at all times, like the curly hair that people said made him look like his great cousin. He had always taken pride in that fact, even after he had lost the awe he had once had for the former King. When other people pointed out the resemblance, it was always as a compliment.
Just now, he wished he could be as strong as Arenadd had been, as decisive . . .
he
had always made it look easy. But, then, nobody could ever imagine Arenadd Taranisäii's ever being uncertain, not even Caedmon, who had grown up so close to him.
Shar reached the tower's middle level ahead of him and waited, tail twitching. “Garnoc is close by; I smell him.”
Caedmon managed to smile as he joined her. “You and your amazing beak. I wish I could do that.”
“You do not need to,” said Shar. “You have me. Come now, let us catch him.”
Garnoc must have been expecting them because he emerged from the room he was in just as they arrived. Big and powerful despite his advancing years, his dark grey hair cropped close to his head, Garnoc inclined his head briefly by way of greeting. “Sirâ”
“We have to talk,” said Caedmon. “Now. Where's Hafwen?”
“In the healers' quarters,” said Garnoc. “Sir, there's somethin'â”
“Go and fetch her, then,” said Caedmon. “We shouldâ” He finally realised that Garnoc was trying to say something, and broke off irritably. “What?”
“Sir, it's yer mother.”
“I know she's dead, Garnoc,” said Caedmon. “And I'm going to avenge her. That's what we're going to talk about with Hafwen, so come on! We have to make plans, and fast, beforeâ”
“Sirâ”
“There's no time to waste,” Caedmon snapped.
“Sir, yer mother,” said Garnoc. “She'sâ”
Caedmon couldn't bear to hear her mentioned. “I told you, Garnoc, I know she's dead. I don't need to know anything more than that they killed her.”
“But she's not dead!” Garnoc shouted at last. “That's what I'm tryin' to tell yer!”
Caedmon froze. “What?”
Shar's tail ceased its endless twitch. “What?”
“She ain't dead,” Garnoc said again. “They found her, collapsed outside the city gate. She's in with the healers right now. I just found out an' came to let yer know, sir.”
Caedmon couldn't move. “That's impossible,” he whispered.
“It's her,” Garnoc said flatly. “I saw her.”
“Is . . . is she hurt?”
“Don't think so. Just exhausted. I reckonâ”
Caedmon heard no more. He ran. Away from Garnoc, away from Shar, away toward the healers' quarters as fast as he could go. Someone got in his way; he didn't even slow down or try to dodge him, or hear his complaint when a blow from his shoulder sent him sprawling. The door that lay between him and his mother reared up in front of him; he threw himself against it so hard it hurt, grabbing the handle with sweat-slicked fingers. The door opened inward, and he stumbled on and into the room, mouth opening to call. “Mother!”
“Caedmon!” Hafwen was there, turning to look. Not his mother, only old Hafwen. He looked blankly at her and went straight to the bed, and there . . . there . . .
Saeddryn Taranisäii lay among the pillows, apparently asleep. She looked tiny and fragile, her face pale. The eyepatch she had once worn was gone, and he could see the ugly, gnarled hole where her eye had been. She could have been dead, but her chest moved up and down very gently under the covers.
Caedmon's mad rush finally came to a halt when he saw her. “Mum . . . Mother . . .”
“Aye,” Hafwen said softly. “The great an' holy Saeddryn Taranisäii, come back to us when we thought she was lost forever.”
Caedmon reached down to touch his mother's face. It was cold, terribly. “How? How could she be here?”
“Don't know,” said Hafwen, in her dry old voice. “All I know is the guards over the gate saw her walk up through the snow an' collapse. They don't know how she got so close without bein' spotted sooner.”
“She wasn't with Aenae?”
“No, no sign of any griffin about.”
Caedmon hadn't taken his eyes off his mother's face. “She can't have walked here . . .”
“Don't worry about it,” Hafwen advised. “She'll tell ye about it when she wakes. For now, just be glad ye got her back, boy.”
Caedmon never even considered taking offence at her tone; you didn't bother with ceremony around Hafwen. Instead, he forgot he was a grown man, forgot he was a griffiner, forgot he was a leader, and lifted his mother into his arms. He held her tightly, frightened by how thin she felt, and murmured, “You're safe now, Mother. You're safe. I'll protect you now, I swear.”
F
ar away, deep in one of the five towers that made Malvern's great Eyrie, someone else stirred. Senneck opened her eyes and lifted her head from her talons. Beside her in the darkness she could feel the warm shape of Kullervo.
She moved, shifting very carefully away from him. He stirred and mumbled in his sleep, and she waited until he stilled again before sliding away and standing up. Kullervo rolled over into the hollow left by her body, snuggling into the straw, and slept on.
Senneck crooned softly over him, like a mother over her chicks, and slipped away.
Once she was well out of sight and hearing, she sped up, hurrying off through the Eyrie as quickly and quietly as she could. She had to get back before she was missed, and Kullervo would fret if he woke up and found her gone. Besides, he would ask questions, and questions about this night were something she didn't want.
The Eyrie passages were only dimly litâmost of the lamps had been snuffed out, and only a few were left in case of an emergency. There was nobody about, and Senneck was gladâand even gladder that the carpets on the floor helped to muffle the sound of her paws.
She travelled through the tower, always heading downward, down and down toward the lowest levels, moving with the grace of the predator she was.
It never really occurred to her to think about the irony of where she was now. She had once been Arenadd's sworn enemy, but now she was fighting on behalf of the Kingdom he had built, and had made his son her human. An Eyrie was an Eyrie, and humans were humans, and griffins had no concept of betrayal. Not betrayal of ideas, anyway.
This time, she vowed yet again, this time it would be different. She had already struck the first blow against the real danger that stood in her way. Soon, it would be time to make the second.
Carried along by these thoughts, Senneck finally reached the tower's ground levelâa place she would normally never bother to visit and, in fact, had never seen before tonight. But a combination of scent, and a deeper sense, one only griffins could use, had led her to it. She halted here and began to scent around, searching for her goal. In the end she found it by following, not her nose, but the other senseâthe sense that felt for traces of magic. It was harder than she might have expected;
finding
magic here was easy. The trouble was that there was so much of it that the source was difficult to locate. She closed her eyes and let herself relax, turning slowly until the tingle in her neck and head increased, and she stopped. When she opened her eyes, she saw a wall with a tapestryâa tapestry that was stirring ever so slightly.
Senneck went straight to it and thrust it out of the way, and, sure enough, there was a tunnel behind it, sloping downward and into a smell of earth and stone. It was only just wide enough for her to fitâshe was thankful now that she had always been slim and that age and bad living had made her even slimmer. Holding her wings up over her head to keep them out of the way, trying even harder now not to make a sound, she descended into the darkness.
The further she went, the stronger the sense of magic became, until her entire body thrummed with it. In her throat, her own power stirred, wanting to break loose. She fought it down as if it were a chunk of food caught in her crop, and moved on.
Toward the end of the tunnel, she stumbled and lurched to one side when her forepaw bumped into an obstruction. She stopped to sniff at it. A human carcass, lying where it had fallen. She had a good idea of what had killed it: the very same thing that had stopped any other humans from coming to find their dead friend. The level of magic in the air right here was so huge that only a griffin could survive it. And maybe not even all of those.
Senneck could feel it beginning to affect her mind, confusing her senses with flashes of images and sounds that weren't there, scents of things that didn't exist, the touch of objects and creatures that had never been real. Shuddering, she pushed them away with all her strength and forced herself to see the wooden barrier that had finally blocked her way. She had no way of opening it, not without alerting what lurked on the other side. But she had never intended to.
With a great effort, trembling now with the strain of keeping her mind and body together in this sea of magical and mental energy, she crouched, with her head touching the door and opened her beak wide. Muscles flexed in her throat, the same ones used to expand it when she swallowed large prey. She retched a little with the effort, but, ignoring her instinctive urge to close her throat and leave this place, she pushed.
Her crop opened, exposing the strange little organ that stored her magic. It pulsated like a heart, flickering faintly green. It had never meant to be exposed this way, and it shrivelled a little, as if trying to protect itself. But Senneck held her position, allowing herself to gasp slightly as the magic in the air touched the gland and began to be absorbed by it.
She stayed there for a long time, unmoving, feeling it as she took in the raw magic that had been concentrated here in a way magic was never meant to be. The process held her rigid, just as when she wielded her own power, and it would take a great effort of will to break free.
All the same, she found room for a little glimmer of smug satisfaction. The griffin on the other side of this door had no idea of what she was doing. No idea that trying to weave this much magic into her own body would inevitably destroy her. No idea that her foolish quest for power had given her rival this opportunity. No idea that this was exactly what Senneck had wanted her to do and had deliberately provoked her toward.