DargonZine | Volume 3, Number 2 |
he moment the maid admitted Marcellon into the townhouse, he
called her: "Sable! Myrande!"
"She's in the other room, your lordship," the maid, a wench named
Yara, informed him. "I believe she was a wee bit sick, your lordship,
but--"
"I'm all right," said the young Countess of Connall, Myrande
Shipbrook Connall. She stood in the doorway, easy and dignified. Her
grey gown complemented her raven hair, ebony eyes, and dark skin.
Marcellon's mouth twitched with a smile; she was not unnaturally pale,
but he had seen her darker. "Yara, you may go." Myrande crossed the room
and gestured to a chair. "What may I do for you, Lord Marcellon?"
"I've just received a message from the King," the mage revealed,
displaying a bit of parchment with the royal seal on it. "A ship from
Beinison has just arrived in the city."
"Luthias--?" Myrande began, hardly daring to hope.
"No, he's still the Empire, but the King has received a pouch from
him, and apparently the Emperor has sent the King a gift, to be
presented this afternoon to the King by the Imperial Ambassador, Count
Tyago."
Myrande sighed. Marcellon knew the separation from her new husband
was difficult for her. Myrande had known Luthias all her life; her
father was castellan in his father's keep since before Myrande was born.
Life without Luthias and his late brother Roisart was alien to her. She
asked, "A gift?"
"A peace offering, I should think."
"Then...perhaps...the King might allow me to go to him."
"Join Luthias in the Beinison Empire? I think not," Marcellon, mage
and physician, said. "You look pallid, Sable," he continued, affection
in his voice. Myrande, who was staying in her new house in Magnus while
at the War Council, had become like another daughter to him. His own
daughter's husband, Clifton, Duke of Dargon, was staying at the mage's
home during the Council. But Myrande, though unrelated, bore a striking
resemblance in carriage and character to Marcellon's late wife. Though
Myrande knew of Marcellon's power, she, like his wife, was not afraid of
him; once, in the summer, she had stood up to Marcellon in defence of
the mage's daughter. Marcellon took a deep breath. His daughter, too,
had been pale.
"Besides," he continued, "your maid said you were ill. Nausea
again, Myrande?" She nodded. "And your sleepiness...still?" Again, the
Countess nodded. "The King is concerned about you, and so am I. Have you
any idea what is wrong?"
Suddenly, Myrande smiled. "I know what is...wrong, Marcellon, and I
suspect you know as well as I--"
"I do have my suspicions," the High Mage smiled, "as I have told
Sir Edward and the King." Marcellon patted a black leather pouch, in
which he kept his medical supplies. "I can tell you for certain."
She looked at him, mildly amused. "I thought you were a wizard, not
a doctor."
Marcellon smiled. "One can hardly be one without the other, young
lady. The training, especially in the potions, is remarkably similar.
And I have the herbs which can tell for certain whether or not you are
indeed bearing a child."
"Thank you, but I don't need the herbs," Myrande refused politely.
"I've been a midwife for six years, and I already know for certain."
"When shall the child be born?"
"At the beginning of Yule, I should think," Myrande calculated. She
smiled. "I can't tell you exactly, like Lauren can, but it should be
close to Luthias' birthday."
"With all luck, he should be home by then," Marcellon agreed. He
smiled. "You seem to have all well in hand. Perhaps you should become my
apprentice." The High Mage rose. "Come, Myrande, we must attend the
King."
"Now?"
"Yes, the King has called immediate court for the presentation of
the gift."
"Despite the storm?" Myrande asked, doubtfully casting a glance at
the falling snow.
"Yes. This is important; besides, most of the nobles are staying at
the palace or near it. My house here isn't that far; nor is yours."
"I know, but I'm unused to anything happening in Deber-- especially
when there's snow falling."
"Snow comes early and fiercely to Dargon," Marcellon agreed. "It
isn't like that here in the south. Come along, Countess. The King
awaits."
The Duke of Dargon met Marcellon, his father-in-law, and Myrande,
his cousin's wife, at the King's palace in the city of Magnus. The great
hall was tall, cold, and impersonal; yet the hundred or so nobles
gathered from all the land of Baranur warmed it a little, as did their
cheerful looks. Clifton Dargon smiled at Myrande and bowed slightly to
her, as did her cousin, Warin, Lord of Shipbrook, who was also in Magnus
for the War Council.
"Did the King tell you?" Clifton asked his father-in-law. "After
the meeting with you, Sir Edward, and the rest of the War Council last
night, the King has made the decision not to attack the Beinison
Empire."
"Good thing, too," Myrande acknowledged. "The last thing we need is
a war."
Yes, a good thing, Countess, Marcellon thought, for your husband
would be the first casualty in that conflict. But the mage said, "Your
young hot-headed friends will be disappointed, Baron Shipbrook."
Warin shook his head. "No doubt, your excellency. They think of war
as a toy and they wish to play with it. All they think about is the
glory of the wars we've read about at the University, about being
heroes, about battling for the King."
Perhaps those books should be writ in blood, not ink, Marcellon
thought. "I must attend the King," Marcellon excused himself. "Clifton,
see to the Countess." Clifton smiled at the tone of the command. He and
Myrande had been friends since Myrande was a child playing with
Clifton's cousins, Roisart and Luthias, the latter now her husband and
the Count of Connall. "I shall see you shortly, Myrande," he said his
farewell. "Baron Shipbrook."
Marcellon weaved his way to the vestry behind the throne. The King,
Haralan, was not yet there, and neither was his other chief advisor,
Edward Sothos, Knight Commander of the Armies. Marcellon sat down softly
on a cushioned chair and stared out at the snow.
It fell peacefully, gently, the first snow of the season. As
Marcellon watched, it turned gold, then blood red.
Quickly, Marcellon blinked the vision away. Gold, and red, in the
snow. A chill took him, and he frowned. Another vision. The third within
a week, all three of gold and blood. Odd, very odd. Something powerful--
"Ah, Marcellon," the King greeted him from behind. The mage rose
smoothly and nodded to the King, then to Edward Sothos, the scarred man
who stood with him. "Help me into this cloak, will you, Edward?" The
King smiled at his chief advisor, the mage, the most powerful wizard in
Baranur. "What think you, Marcellon? Will this gift bring peace?"
"I think, your majesty," Marcellon began slowly, then stopped.
"What do you think?"
"I think, your majesty, that there will be war."
"Ah, so I should refuse this gift."
"That would be extremely bad form, Haralan," Edward softly reminded
him. "And it would indeed start the war you wish to avoid."
"There will be no war so long as the Empire does not attack us,"
the King said firmly. "I feel no great need to fight."
"They did try to trick us into warring with Bichu by killing the
late Baron of Connall and his son, and accusing the Duke of Dargon of
treason," Edward mused. "I am not sure we can avoid dealing with that
issue."
"We have only Coranabo's word and the Count Connall's speculation
for the truth of that, Edward," the King admonished the Knight Commander
gently. "We will not fight a war for that." The KIng of Baranur smiled.
"I wonder what this gift shall be."
"Bloody gold," Marcellon muttered.
"What is that?"
"Nothing, your majesty," the High Mage lied. "Let us go."
The King gave a nod to a nearby servant, who in turn gave a signal
to the heralds. The royal trumpets swiftly announced the King's
presence. Haralan stood regally, and started for the door which would
open to the side of the dais. Marcellon followed, a pace behind, to the
King's right. Edward, parallell to the High Mage, was on his left.
When the King stood before the throne, the assembly of nobles
bowed, and the King returned the respect with a nod. "Be seated, my
lords and ladies," the King commanded royally. "A message of peace has
come from the Beinison Empire."
Around the long tables, the nobles sat, muttering amongst
themselves. Marcellon had known the news; Countess Myrande knew, as did
the Duke of Dargon, but this was new information to the rest of
Baranur's noblility. The herald cried out, "His majesty calls forth the
Count of Tyago, Ambassador of his Imperial Majesty, the Emperor of
Beinison."
And the boy came forward. Marcellon couldn't think of Count Tyago
as anything else. He was a thin young man, blond, with blue eyes as
innocent as the sky. His face was decked in happiness as he came forward
with two servants, one who carried a roll of sealed parchment, another
who bore a gold coffer inlaid with jewels.
"You have a message for us, do you not, Count Tyago?" asked the
King, his voice respectful, yet superior, as befitted his station.
"I do, your royal majesty," the boy said. How old could he be?
Marcellon wondered. Seventeen, eighteen perhaps? Younger than Luthias,
certainly. They were both too young to be ambassadors, Marcellon
thought. "His Imperial Majesty has sent me a missive to read to you, and
a gift." The boy held out his hand for the parchement. He broke the seal
ceremoniously and began to read in a loud voice:
"From his Imperial Majesty, Emperor Untar the Second, greetings
unto his Majesty, the King of Baranur, who seeks peace with Us." Count
Tyago paused, took a breath. "Your Count of Connall has presented your
case before us, and We have considered it carefully with Our wisest
counsellors. We have listened to the Count Connall, and how your Kingdom
wishes to avoid war with Our Empire."
Marcellon grimaced. Luthias would never present Baranur's case from
a point of vunerability. Luthias knew too much about war to do that.
Yet, the Empire chose to see it so.
"To end all further uncertainty between Our fair Countries, we have
sent to you this gift, which shall clarify Beinison's intention toward
Baranur forever."
Count Tyago bowed, rolled the parchment, and sent the servant
forward to present it to the King. Sir Edward took it, unrolled it, then
nodded to Haralan. The Count's words were accurate. Marcellon looked
over at the paper. Still uneasy, still uneasy, a message of peace, and
he was still uneasy.
"It seem that your sensible Emperor is friendly to us, your grace,"
King Haralan said, his voice laced with magnaminity, to the Count.
"Pray, what is the gift you bear us?"
"In truth, your royal majesty, I do not know," the boy confessed.
"But from his Imperial Majesty's letters to me, I suspect that the Count
of Connall deeply impressed him, and he sends this gift partly in esteem
of the Count."
"The young Count Connall has done well," Haralan pronounced. How a
man as young as Haralan could be as pompous as Haralan was sometimes,
Marcellon could not fathom. "Bring us the gift." The servant started
forward. "No..." the King changed his mind, "bring it to the Countess
Connall, as it was her lord and husband who inspired this gift." He
gestured to Myrande, who sat next to the Duke of Dargon, a mere two
seats from Marcellon.
Myrande stood gracefully as the servant approached. She thanked the
servant.
Something was wrong. Marcellon gazed at the coffer between her two
small, dark hands.
Uneasy, uneasy, what was it that made him so uneasy? "It must be
magical, your majesty," Countess Myrande said to the King. "It is so
light."
"It is a possibility, my lady," Count Tyago informed her.
"Mon-Taerleor, the Emperor's wizard, is said to have made for his
Imperial Majesty this gift for your Kingdom."
Marcellon stared at the golden coffer, a cube somewhat bigger than
a man's head, in sharper apprehension. Mon-Taerleor: Marcellon knew the
name and the man, and raised an eyebrow. Alexander Mon-Taerleor, his old
friend: the thought should have comforted him, but it didn't. Still,
despite his ill ease, Marcellon was curious. What would Mon-Taerleor
have done to impress a King, to honor young Luthias, the Count of
Connall?
Mon-Taerleor. Marcellon almost smiled at the memories of his fellow
apprentice, but still, the fear gripped him. Chills of terror coursed
through his suddenly and with force. Something was wrong--so wrong!
He reached out and touched the King's arm--a bold gesture to be
performed in Court, even by the High Mage. The King, annoyed, scowled at
his advisor. Marcellon shook his head. "Haralan," he hissed, and the
King lost some of his anger to puzzlement; Marcellon almost never called
him by name. "Take it from her. Do not make her open it." Marcellon
gazed over at Myrande with uneasy urgency; she was loosening the latch.
For a moment, Marcellon saw Haralan wrestling mentally, wondering
if he should reprimand the High Mage. Finally, the King said, "Be easy,
Lord Marcellon. It is a gift of peace."
"Haralan--"
The Countess' scream cleaved the exepectant silence of the Court
and sliced the rest of Marcellon's protest from his tongue. The High
Mage whirled and saw the white-faced Duke of Dargon swat the golden box
from her in a shocked attempt to close the coffer. It flew from
Myrande's hands towards the King.
The box landed on the table before Haralan and his two chief
advisors. The gift bounced onto the table and thudded to a halt in front
of the King. Stunned, then quickly sad, Marcellon stared into the
death-frozen eyes of the Count of Connall.
Pale, Clifton instantly whirled Myrande to him, held her head
against his chest. "Don't look," Marcellon heard his son-in-law rasp.
"He wouldn't want you to see this."
Next to the High Mage, the King rose, fury in his movement. "What
means this?" the monarch demanded, gesturing to the severed head of his
ambassador. "You will pay--"
"Your majesty, he's only a boy," Edward Sothos counseled softly. "A
pawn...as was Luthias."
"Remove the Count Tyago," Haralan ordered angrily. "I will call for
him later." Palid and frightened, the boy-count bowed and left with his
attendants and a smattering of royal guards. The King turned to his High
Mage. "I should have listened to you, Marcellon." He sighed, looked at
the Count of Connall's wife. "Remove the Countess."
Shrilly, Myrande's voice rose from the depths of Clifton's arms,
"The Countess does not wish to be removed!"
The Court was buzzing, men were moving, and some came forward
boldly to see the gift. "There will be war!" the Duke of Northfield
cried. "Your royal majesty, you cannot ignore this!"
"No," agreed the King firmly, "we shall not ignore this. The man
who dares treat my ambassador so shall be punished--and promptly."
"War now!" suggested a Baron, and the cry rose up insanely, "War!
War now!"
Again, Myrande's scream split the air of the great hall: "No!"
Startled, the nobles fell into silence. With the strength of shock and
pain and anger, she broke Clifton's strong, frantic grasp and turned to
face the court. She had not been unnaturally pale before, but her face
was a ghastly grey now, and Marcellon feared for her and the child she
carrried. "Do you want that Luthias will have died for nothing? Do you
want your sons, your brothers, your grandsons, to die for lack of food
or from the cold? Do you damned idiots think that you can fight a war in
the winter? The supplies will be blocked, and men will starve and die of
disease and frostbite."
"We can invade Beinison, Countess," the Duke of Northfield told her
in a superior tone. "It is warmer there--"
"Oh, yes, invade the strongest Empire on the continent!" Clifton
spat. "Your majesty," Clifton appealed, turning to the King, "this is
what the Emperor wants, that we will enter into this at a foolish time,
do foolish things--"
"Do you want your kinsman's death to go unavenged?" sneered a
Baron.
"I have more cause than any of you to wish the bastards who ordered
Luthias' death tortured dead!" Myrande screamed at him. "Yet I do not
want a hundred thousand men to die for him because of your stupidity and
impatience!"
"Lady, you offend me!" the Baron cried.
"Accept my pity that the truth offends you," Myrande snapped. "But
if we fight Beinison now, we will have two enemies, the Empire and the
winter."
"I demand satisfaction," the Baron insisted.
"I must agree with the Countess' view." The Knight Commander spoke
calmly and simply, but he glared at the Baron menacingly. "If you wish
satisfaction, you may have it from me at your leisure."
"I too agree with the Countess and with the Duke of Dargon," added
Marcellon. "We may yet triumph over Beinison, mighty as they are, but
over nature, we are powerless."
The King nodded. "There will now be a true war council, and there
will be war," he announced. "But I will not fight the winter and
Beinison both. We shall wait until the spring--and then, death to them
all!" A cheer rose. Marcellon frowned at the bloody thirst; he saw
Clifton scowl. Myrande looked ill. The King waved at a herald. "Bring
before us the Count Tyago."
Swiftly, the boy was ushered into the court. With nervous
quickness, the Count bowed. "You will remain here until spring, in your
embassy, under guard" the King announced. "We will not treat the
Emperor's ambassador as shamefully as he treated ours, yet we will allow
no communication with your Emperor until you are returned after the
thaw."
"Perhaps, one?" asked a small voice, and the King turned to see
Myrande.
The King looked at her, his gaze sorrowful and kind. "What do you
wish, Countess?"
Myrande took a deep breath, and stepped forward. "I would wish that
the Count Tyago request of his Emperor that Lu--Count Connall's body be
returned to me, that he may be buried beside his father and brother."
"I do not know if that would be possible in any case, your grace,"
the boy-Count said sadly. "I am suprised they bothered to send the head.
Usually, the Emperor hangs offenders, slitting their throats, and
leaving their bodies to the birds and dogs."
Myrande groaned, put a hand over her mouth and the other over her
belly, and closed her eyes. Marcellon, fearing the worst, moved toward
her, but she held up a staying hand and dry-heaved.
"Count Tyago," said the King omnimously, "you are dismissed." The
boy bowed and left.
Pale and beaten, Myrande came forward. "With your permission,
sire," she whispered, and she reached out for Luthias' head.
"You shouldn't do that, Myrande," Marcellon admonished sternly. The
High Mage gestured his son-in-law and the Countess' cousin Warin
forward, then reached out himself to take the head into his hands. For a
moment, he stared full into that face, which he had seen animated with
life; then, Marcellon placed it gently in the box, closed the eyes, and
shut the coffer.
"Let him be entombed in the royal crypt," declared the King.
Impatiently, Haralan whirled and left the hall. Immediately, the herald
cried, "The Court of his royal majesty the King is dismissed."
An eerie stillness, more silent than winter, reigned over
Marcellon's house as the snow continued to fall that night. Clifton had
stayed with Myrande, whom they had brought to the High Mage's home;
Marcellon mixed a potion.
Luthias' head stared up at him from the bluish liquid...
Marcellon cleared his mind again, continued to mix the potion. It
boiled over an alcohol burner; the fire was bright.
Again, the Count of Connall's visage gazed at him, but something
was wrong with it.
The High Mage grimaced in an effort to concentrate. The vision
cleared. Vision? No, just an image from his memory; it was the head of
the Count of Connall, as he had held it between his hands today.
Something about it haunted him. The poor boy...poor Myrande.
Yes, Myrande--he had to finish this potion. Carefully, he took a
glass rod and stirred it.
Luthias' face was again in the beaker. Somehow, it seemed
incomplete.
This had to stop! Marcellon took the potion from the fire, poured
into a goblet half-full with mulled wine.
Within the wine, he saw again the face of Count Luthias Connall.
Determined, Marcellon took up the wine cup and left the room. No
matter what, he could not let this memory interfere. He had work to do,
magic to plan, a Countess to take care of...
With a soft knock, Marcellon entered Myrande's chambers. Clifton
sat at the table, writing something. She sat, dressed in only a white
flannel shift, gazing at the floor. Her face was not hard, or wreaked by
pain, nor aflame with fury, but dull, blank. The High Mage frowned. He
did not like this.
"Myrande," he said softly. Myrande looked at him immediately.
"Drink this."
"I don't want it," the Countess insisted, keeping her voice low in
an effort to disguise her pain. Marcellon sensed it in any case, and the
sorrow leaked into her whispered words despite her. "I'm..." She
swallowed and looked away.
"Drink, Myrande," Marcellon insisted. "For the sake of the child
you carry. I feared for you today."
Myrande looked at him, but did not take the goblet. "I'm all right.
I'm not dead yet...but they all are, Father and Mother and Uncle Fionn
and Roisart, and now Luthias...Luthias...God, it nearly killed me once,
when I thought he died at the same time as his brother...I feel like the
world is gone."
Marcellon ached for her, gazed at the cup, and saw Luthias' head
again, as it had stared up at him today when he had replaced it in the
jeweled box.
"My family is gone, all of them," Myrande continued, in a voice
stunned and painful. "I have no one..nothing...no where even to live."
"That is not true," Marcellon stated flatly. "You are always
welcome here in my home, Myrande."
"And in mine," Clifton added, rising from the table. "Warin
wouldn't turn you away, and neither would your mother's kin, the
Taladors. In any event," the Duke of Dargon continued, approaching the
Countess, "you have your own home--several." He handed her a piece of
parchment with his great seal upon it.
"What is this?" she asked.
"As Luthias' child isn't yet born, Connall, its holdings, the town
house in Dargon, and the house here in Magnus revert to me," Clifton
explained.
"I know," Myrande said dully. "Why else would I not have a home?"
"You have a home," Clifton assured her firmly. "My father granted
that land to Uncle Fionn for him and his children; I grant it to you,
Myrande, for you and yours."
Myrande took a shuddering breath. "My children? What children? How
am I ever going to have children? He's gone," she sobbed. Determined,
she choked it down, but her eyes still held tears.
"Drink this," Marcellon whispered, and this time, she obeyed
blindly. Clifton gestured for the maid, and both men left the room
uncomfortably.
When the door was shut, Marcellon saw that his son-in-law was more
disturbed than when his cousin's head had laid before him. The High Mage
put a hand on the Duke's arm. Clifton choked, "She- -it must be worse on
her than--I've not seen her this close to crying since she was a baby.
She has too much pride to weep in front of anyone; I doubt even Luthias
has ever seen her cry."
Marcellon placed a hand on his son-in-law's shoulder. "Are you all
right, Clifton?"
Luthias' face hid in Clifton's eyes. "I'm all right, Father. But he
was the last of my kinsmen--" The Duke of Dargon stopped, regained his
voice. "They were so young. Uncle Fionn was only forty-five, younger
than you are."
"Early death is no uncommon thing," Marcellon disagreed. "Your
father couldn't have been--"
"That's different. The Red Plague takes everyone. But Roisart
survived it; he was going to be in the university now, learning how to
be Baron. Uncle Fionn and Sir Edward wanted to make Luthias a Knight."
"I know, my son, I know," Marcellon soothed. "You should rest."
"No, I think I'd better stay with Sable," Clifton suggested. "She
won't sleep tonight--"
"No, she will," Marcellon assured him. "The potion will make her
sleep. I'll not risk her health, nor the babe's. Trust me, Clifton."
The Duke of Dargon almost smiled. "I do trust you."
"Now go," the High Mage ordered. "You need the rest." Marcellon
jerked his head down the hall. "I had rooms prepared for you."
"I don't know if I can," Clifton confessed. "It's
rather...unnerving to see the man you called your brother...to see him
sent home, piecemeal, in a box."
"If you need it, I shall make you a potion, too," Marcellon joked
lightly. "Now, go to sleep."
"Yes, Father," Clifton almost laughed at the imperious tone of the
final command, and the Duke of Dargon slipped into his rooms.
The High Mage sighed, stared at the door--
Luthias' face lurked within the wood.
Damn it all! He could not banish that sight from his mind. And it
was not the shock, nor the horror, nor the anger which kept the vision
recurring. No, he had seen worse, much worse, in the time when he was in
Beinison, learning from the now-dead Styles. No, something nagged him;
something was wrong, more than the obvious injustice. Wrong--something
was wrong with that head!
Furious at the visions, Marcellon strode to his room. Wrong with
it--it was severed from its body, that is what was wrong with it. The
life, the animation, was gone from the eyes, the soul from the body--
Marcellon threw open the door to his bed chamber, slammed it shut--
The Count of Connall stared at him from a hanging mirror. "Why do
you haunt me?" demanded the High Mage in an enraged whisper. He gazed at
the head. Something was wrong, missing...
Stubbornly, Marcellon blinked the vision away. Then he turned, lit
a candle, and pulled a chair to a nearby table on which sat a bundle of
black cloth. Marcellon pulled the velvet away and dusted the crystal
ball. "Then show me," he challenged.
Marcellon gazed at the ball, cleared his mind, and let his eyes,
his soul, see only the crystal. Yes, the crystal...then the mist.
The mist cleared, and Marcellon saw a riverbank, in the summer,
some people...
Yes, they were closer now. A young man, of twenty perhaps, in
riding clothes, brandishing a sword and laughing. Suddenly, Marcellon
realized he gazed a younger version of his son-in-law.
There were others with him, two boys and a girl. The boys were tall
and slim in the manner of young men growing too quickly. They both
looked strong, though one looked slightly more athletic, and the other
squinted in the sun. They laughed loudly (though silently, to Marcellon)
on the riverbank, and the more athletic lad retrieved a sword from his
saddle.
The girl was dark of hair and eyes. She, too, wore riding
clothes--boy's riding clothes--and her figure was just beginning to
distort them. Her eyes laughed at the playful challenge that Marcellon
knew his son-in-law had issued. The more athletic twin brandished the
sword, smiled at the girl, and attacked his Clifton boldly.
Clifton parried well, but Marcellon could tell that only his
superior training saved him. The athletic boy was naturally skilled, and
somewhat trained beside. He attacked Clifton again. His twin and the
girl cheered.
Again, the boy attacked his cousin. Suddenly, his body betrayed
him; Marcellon, the physician, recognized the clumsiness of a young man
whose body had recently spurted in growth and whose mind had not
adjusted completely to the change. He attacked, but missed, and tripped;
Clifton swept a blow at him, laughing, and it contacted.
Blood dripped onto the grass. Marcellon could see the girl gasp;
she rushed forward, snatching a napkin from the picnic on her way.
Quickly, she pressed it to the cut. The boy brushed her away in an
effort to be manly about the wound, but kept the handkerchief, quickly
soaking the blood, to his head.
Marcellon blinked. The vision had disappeared.
Clifton on a picnic with twin boys: they were Roisart and Luthias,
obviously. Younger, perhaps fourteen. So the dark-haired girl of
thirteen was Myrande, a younger Myrande who knew no grief for father or
mother or uncle or brother or husband.
A picnic on the river...yes, Marcellon and Clifton and Lauren had
taken an excursion with Luthias and Myrande to the same place some time
that summer. Clifton had said it had been a favorite retreat when they
all were boys.
But this vision was merely a dream of childhood. It signified
nothing.
Suddenly Marcellon understood. Nothing--that was the problem. There
had been *no scar on Luthias' head*.
Marcellon left the room hastily, intending to ride immediately to
the palace. Then a thought overtook him: was it Luthias who had been
scarred, or Roisart his twin? It would make sense that Luthias, the
warrior, who would have been Knighted, would be the more athletic twin
whom Clifton wounded, but still--
One person would know. The High Mage ran to his son-in-law's suite,
and knocked loudly. "Clifton!"
"Come."
Marcellon entered and asked quickly, "Which of the twins did you
cut in a fight?"
The question seemed to startle the Duke. "Both of them, at one time
or another. Nothing like what they did to me, though."
"You went on a picnic, and fought one of the twins. He lost."
"Oh, that," Clifton realized. "That was...seven years ago. He was
so angry; I'd spoiled his looks."
"He had a scar."
"Yes."
"It was Luthias who was scarred?" Clifton nodded. "Where?" demaned
the High Mage.
"Over his right eye. He was nervous about it when Sir Edward came
to Dargon--"
"Thank you, Clifton," Marcellon finished abruptly, and he fled the
room.
Due to the snow, it took Marcellon much longer than he would have
liked to reach the palace. He entered boldly and demanded to see the
King and Sir Edward Sothos.
"How is the Countess?" the King asked when he was admitted. Haralan
shook his head. "It is all my fault. I should have never sent that young
man...and now his lady..."
Marcellon, in his urgency, ignored him. "Where is the Count's head?
I must see it."
Startled out of his guilt, the King called a servant and sent for
it. "Marcellon, I don't understand."
"I don't either, your majesty--yet," Marcellon answered in way of
explanation.
"What is wrong?" Sir Edward inquired.
"We shall see," Marcellon promised, grabbing the jeweled coffer
from the swift servant. With all haste, the High Mage opened it, removed
the head.
The forehead was smooth and perfect...no scar.
"He has no scar," Marcellon announced. "Count Connall had a scar
over his right eye, and this head has no scar."
"A scar? I never noticed a scar," Sir Edward protested.
"It was seven years old, and therefore would have been very light.
Truth be told, I never noticed it either," Marcellon confessed. "But
Clifton assured me it was there. It was he himself who made the cut."
"Perhaps it is healed beyond visibility," the King suggested.
"I doubt it, your majesty," Marcellon argued. "The Duke of Dargon
told me that his cousin was *scarred.* He bore a scar. And light as it
must be by now, I am looking for it, and it is not there."
"Then this cannot be the Count's head," Sir Edward concluded.
"Exactly," Marcellon confirmed, turning it to examine it. After a
minute, the High Mage scowled furiously. "It is a facsimilie--a magical
duplicate. Styles taught me how to manufacture these. He taught
Mon-Taerleor as well." The scowl ripened.
"Forgive me," Sir Edward interrupted. "Marcellon, who is Mon-
Taerleor?"
"He and I learned together from Styles," Marcellon explained. "We
were much alike." We were much alike once, Marcellon corrected himself
mentally. The High Mage sighed. Apparently, his friend had changed. "I
believe he is now the High Mage for Beinison."
"I see," the King murmered. "It seems a wise thing, as he can do
things such as this--" he gestured to the man-made head, "--and you
cannot."
"No, your majesty," Marcellon corrected. "I *will* not, and I *do*
not. But I can. I can." The High Mage swallowed his disbelief. Alexander
had not been like this. "He chooses differently than I."
The three were silent for a moment. "This isn't the Count's head,"
the King began, "therefore, Count Connall is still alive."
"I doubt it highly, Haralan," Sothos countered him softly. "Recall
what Count Tyago said. In Beinison, they hang people and slit their
throats, and leave their bodies to animals. They've done something so
horrible to Luthias that there is no body left."
Marcellon replaced the head in the box and shut it with a disgusted
snap. "Yes, they've done away with him, and not prettily. The Count of
Connall was an expert in things military, and he knew this land. We
would be foolish to believe that he was not tortured for
information--and the Beinisons do not do such things neatly. The body
must be so mangled and scarred that--In any case, that head is not his."
"We must tell the Countess," Edward suggested.
"No!" Marcellon countermanded, shocked. "It is bad enough to her
that her husband is dead. At least let her believe he died quickly and
with some dignity."
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