Read Oath and the Measure Online
Authors: Michael Williams
“Are all the Brightblades this nimble-witted?” Mara asked ironically. “Get hold of your mare, Master Sturm, before she takes us all the way to Neraka!”
The dark came suddenly and swiftly, as it often does near the end of winter. Sturm had roamed through high grass
and farmland, searching fruitlessly for the path to Dun Ringhill. Western Lemish, it seemed, was as featureless as the face of a moon, and just about as hospitable.
As far as Sturm could see, there was no lantern or lamp, no smell of woodsmoke in the air, no sound of herd or watchdog. It was an uninhabited country and a place without landmark.
Sturm dismounted from the mare. The countryside rolled ahead of him, and the clouds blocked the stars so thoroughly that he couldn’t tell north from west, much less tell direction by the heavens.
“So much for Lemish,” he said disgustedly. “Nothing but a pasture, this is.”
Mara stayed in the saddle, squinting as her sharp elf eyes scanned all possible horizons.
“Dun Ringhill is somewhere around here,” she said. “Of that much I’m certain.”
The grass stirred behind them, and Cyren scrambled into the open, trailing a single white strand of webbing.
“I thought you had been in these parts before,” Sturm said, looking up at the girl.
“True enough,” Mara said quietly, “I met Jack Derry once—not far from here.”
“What? How did you come to meet him? And who really is Jack Derry?” Sturm asked, stretching Solamnic politeness out of curiosity. For after all, there might be something the elf could tell him, something to lead them to the village, to Weyland the Smith and to eventual safety.
“My money has it he’s awaiting us in Dun Ringhill. The first step in finding this village is to know west from east. Sunrise will tell us that quick enough.”
She peered at him through the furs, her dark eyes intent and questioning.
“You know well that it will not,” Sturm grumbled. “Not quick enough, that is. The countryside is filled with bandits, and we’d best not camp in the midst of them.”
“Then we steer by starlight,” Mara proclaimed and lifted
the flute to her lips again.
“Starlight?” Sturm asked skeptically. “M’lady, look at the clouds.…”
But the elf had closed her eyes, an eerie music rising from her instrument. It was a Qualinesti plainsong, sacred to Gilean the Book. Crisp and staccato, the notes filled the moist air around them, and Sturm looked about uneasily, sure that the music would give them away to the bandits.
Mara played, and a silver light shone in her hair. For a moment, Sturm thought she was glowing, then gradually he noticed the same light spreading over his arms and shoulders, over Acorn’s neck and the chestnut flanks of Luin behind them. White Solinari had broken through the thick mask of clouds, and the road behind him and before him was as clear and dazzling as midday.
“As I feared,” Mara said, the song over and the clouds returning. “We’ve listed a bit to the south. We’ll strike the river again if we keep on as we’re going.”
“How … how did you do that?” Sturm asked, turning Acorn forcefully from the trail that the stubborn little mare insisted on following.
“Gilean mode,” Mara said quietly, “with the High Mode of Paladine placed in its silences. When you combine them, it’s a song … of revealing. It dispels clouds and night, stills waters so you can look to the bottom of pond and river. In the hands of the great bards, it unmasks the dissembling heart.”
She smiled at Sturm, who caught his breath at the depths of her hazel eyes.
“But I am no great bard,” the elf concluded quietly. “With my music, we are lucky to see a momentary change in the weather.”
Sturm blushed and nodded, yanking once more at Acorn’s reins.
“Well, the clouds parted long enough,” Mara said, pointing due east. “There’s our direction. That way lies the Darkwoods.”
“But where on the woods’ edge can we find Dun Ringhill?” Sturm asked. “The stars don’t tell us that. If only we had Jack Derry here!”
“Ah, but Jack is lost or upriver or … elsewhere,” Mara said. “Leaving us alive if no wiser.”
“He believed I could find the way,” Sturm muttered disconsolately. “He trusted that I was my father’s son, that I am more resourceful than I feel.”
“My dear boy,” Mara said with a crooked smile, “what in the name of the Seven makes you think
that?
”
“He told me,” Sturm said, “that the acorn doesn’t fall far from the tree. What else could that be but talk of fathers and sons?”
“Perhaps something a bit more … arboreal?” Mara asked. “Or a simple riddle that your thoughts of fathers have kept covered? After all, Jack couldn’t give you directions to Dun Ringhill. Bandits have ears, after all, and would follow us like hounds.”
Sturm nodded. It made sense. Jack was, after all, a man of concealments and riddles. Seated on the increasingly unruly mare, Sturm mined his knowledge of tree lore, of gardening, of the mythical ancient calendar of the dryads that supposedly followed a symbolism of trees. None of it helped. He felt as though he were back in the maze of Castle di Caela or in the thickest reaches of the Green Man’s fog.
The mare wrenched once more, and he tugged furiously at her reins. “By the gods, Acorn!” he snapped. “If you don’t—”
He paused at the sound of Mara’s laughter.
“
Now
what?” he exclaimed, but the elf laughed even more.
“Let go of the reins, Sturm Brightblade,” she said, recovering her breath.
“I beg your pardon?”
“Think about it, Sturm. Who among us knows the way to the village of Dun Ringhill?”
Slowly, reluctantly, Sturm opened his hand. The reins
dropped limply over Acorn’s withers, and sensing the new freedom, the little mare turned about and walked steadily east, then south, then east again. Mara resumed the music, this time singing the old song from Qualinost, adding to it equally ancient words.
“The sun
,
the splendid eye
of all our heavens
,
dives from the day
“and leaves
the dozing sky
spangled with fireflies
,
deepening in gray
.
“The leaves
give off cold fire
,
they blaze into ash
at the end of the year
,
“and birds
coast on the winds
and wheel to the north
when autumn ends
.
“The day grows dark
,
the seasons bare
,
but we
await the sun’s
green fire upon
the trees.”
Ahead of them, green footprints sprouted and grew among the dingy ground cover. Acorn leaned forward, grazed softly on one of them, and began her slow progress on the new trail. Luin followed, browsing at the footprints,
too, eating the trail behind them. At a farther distance, the high bushes tilted and switched, a sign that the spider Cyren followed, as always obscurely and furtively.
They hadn’t traveled twenty yards before the music arose in front of them, too. A fluid, beautiful descant joined with Mara’s singing, and Sturm closed his eyes and saw liquid silver passing like a magical stream before his inner vision.
So Vertumnus had joined in the music again. Sturm sat back in the saddle, resigning himself to Acorn’s direction and the melody all around him. Though the Green Man’s song invariably led to … challenges, it also led toward the Southern Darkwoods. And despite the challenge and the peril, that was the goal of his journey.
On they traveled, and even though the night was thick about them, Sturm’s heart was much lighter. Jack Derry’s riddle had been a little thing, not much compared to the mysteries that lay ahead. But solving one thing gave hope to solving another. The road ahead of him looked less daunting now, and as the lights of Dun Ringhill shone dimly before him, Sturm imagined the smithy, the sword reforged, Vertumnus faced down and beaten on the first day of spring.
It all seemed possible, even likely. He felt the crisp exhilaration of adventure, of swords and riding and mystery and beautiful females. He sat back in the saddle, brushing against the sleeping Mara, who mumbled and tightened her grip about his waist. For a moment, the journey seemed something he was born to do.
He didn’t notice the men until they rose like fog from the high grass, sudden and quick and quietly efficient. The man in the forefront, a brown, wizened little character, smiled and raised his hand.
“Good even, Sturm Brightblade!” he called out, his common speech fluent but thick with the accents of Lemish.
Good old Jack Derry, Sturm thought admiringly. As quick in travel as he is with the sword. “Ho, there!” he called out, dismounting from the horse. And then, more
formally and Solamnically: “Whom have I the honor of addressing?”
“Captain Duir of the Dun Ringhill Militia, sir!” the weathered little man announced, standing at comical attention. “Assigned to protect the western approaches.”
Sturm looked back in amusement at Mara, who was rubbing her eyes and straightening herself in the saddle.
Sturm stepped forward, removed his glove, and offered his hand in the traditional Solamnic gesture. Shyly, awkwardly, Captain Duir extended his own hand, and the two men exchanged greetings as equals.
Sturm nodded and smiled at the peasant soldier, who slowly smiled back, his blue eyes narrowed now with a new and strange amusement.
“Master Sturm Brightblade of Solamnia,” the captain announced, his grip tightening on the young man’s hand, “I arrest you as an invader, in the name of the Druidess Ragnell!”
He could return to the Tower now.
Boniface watched Sturm’s arrest from the topmost branches of a distant vallenwood. The spyglass he carried with him was cloudy but good. He saw the boy offer his hand, saw the captain take it, saw the gestures of friendship stiffen and sour, and saw the militia take them all—the horses, the elven mistress, and Brightblade—off toward the town of Dun Ringhill, where the old druidess sat at the head of an angry tribunal.
The finest swordsman in Solamnia wrapped his dark cloak about him tightly and shivered with pleasure. From a distance, framed in the menacing red moonlight, he looked like a huge raven or some unspeakable bat-winged creature, huddled in the height of the enormous tree. The spring wind
died at the foot of the vallenwood, and in the upper branches, it was ultimate winter, dead and still, the steam of Boniface’s breath rising like a specter into the midnight air.
Let the old witch have the boy, he thought. He shinnied down the tree like a spider.
Let them hang him, or boil him, or do whatever they do in the barbaric villages of Lemish. In its own way, it would be perfectly legal.
Why, it might even jog the council from their notorious sleep back in the Tower, where the Oath and Measure rust in the closets. The death of his ward might be enough to stir Gunthar Uth Wistan southward to invasions long overdue. Then the people of Dun Ringhill, of the Darkwoods, of all of Lemish and later Throt and Neraka, would know what it meant to transgress the Order and Measure.
But even if Lord Gunthar did not budge from the Tower, if the boy went unavenged and Lemish untouched, if this night marked the end of the matter, Boniface was still satisfied. For the long wars of a decade would be over at last.
Lord Boniface of Foghaven leapt into the saddle of his black stallion. Swiftly, with the grace born of fighting from horseback at close quarters, he wheeled the beast about and rode toward the Vingaard River at full gallop, his mind rehearsing the oldest of his pains.