Recluce 07 - Chaos Balance (54 page)

BOOK: Recluce 07 - Chaos Balance
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   “Advantaged . . . that I'll accept. Given the way they treat women-”

 
  “Wouldn't it have been worse if they'd lapsed into low-tech?”

   “That's too theoretical, worse than engineering speculations.” Ayrlyn cleared her throat. “You're going to use that force?”

   “If I can.”

   “If we can,” corrected Ayrlyn.

   The smith laughed, less harshly. “I stand corrected ... as always. If we can ... and we can. I just don't know how yet.”

   “Harnessing that power won't be as hard as surviving it,” predicted Ayrlyn. “Especially in one piece.”

   Nylan feared her assessments were all too correct.

   Ayrlyn reined up beside the shed and glanced toward the rear door of the house. As she looked, Sylenia appeared.

   “You were not gone that long.”

   “You didn't want us to go at all,” Nylan said.

   “If one must do something . ..”

   The smith glanced helplessly at Ayrlyn. While a glimmer of a smile flitted around her lips, she remained silent.

   “We probably need to get moving tomorrow,” Nylan said as he dismounted and turned to Weryl.

   Ayrlyn pursed her lips.

   “Will we learn any more by staying?”

   “Probably.” The redhead slipped lightly from the saddle.

   “Will we learn it fast enough?”

   The redhead frowned. “Probably not. . . but. . .”

   “I know. It's risky .. . everything's risky.” But do we have a choice? And we did give our word, and. . .

   Ayrlyn nodded sadly. . . . and there's a tie between keeping a promise and order. . .

   “Unfortunately.”

   Sylenia cleared her throat, loudly. Both angels turned to her.

   “I have made all the bread we can dairy, and dried beans, and even some wasol roots. They were in the garden.” Sylenia beamed. “Much better than cheese and biscuits.”

   Nylan would have been surer about their travel fare before she mentioned wasol roots, whatever they were.

 

 

Chaos Balance
CXXIV

 

IN THE DARKNESS, Nylan slipped out past the bushes and downhill, stopping only after he crossed the first dry irrigation ditch.

   What did he have in mind?

   Did he really know, except that he somehow needed to raise and channel the power of or in or from the forest? Ayrlyn's comments about not knowing enough had worried at him, and worried. Yet he knew that the Cyadoran hordes were about to descend on Lornth-if they hadn't already, and there was a time to act whether they had enough knowledge or not. Somehow, someway, they had to raise the power of the forest, or a power like that of the forest, in Lornth, against the Cyadoran hordes. And he didn't have any ideas, except in a general sense. Too general.

   He took a deep breath, drawing the mixed fragrances that held the hint of reisera and others he could not have named.

   Slowly, slowly, he opened himself to the pulse of the forest, of the order and chaos, of the flows, so similar to those between the poles of a fusactor, except the flows were a construct of the power differentials . ..

   No.' Get back to the basics.

   Power . . . order to hold chaos.

   Not to hold. . . to guide . . . always in balance . . .

   The sweat popped out on his forehead, despite the cool breeze out of the east.

   Guide . . . balance ...

   Rather than reach, he tried to open himself to that power, visualizing himself as a conduit, a circuit, insulated by order.

   He staggered under the impact of the twin flows-darkness and the crushing might of chaos welling from the hot magma far beneath Candar, chaos hot enough to melt even ship alloys, with enough free electrons, unstable quarks, leptons ... the terms swirled through his thoughts, but the energy was real.

   Around him light grew-from a glow to a glare, so much of a glare that he closed his eyes, and yet the not-quite-cold light turned the area around the house into nearly day.

   . . . heat. . . but not too much . . .

   Despite his efforts to hold off the heat, he could feel it building, feeling the surges of power.

   . . . careful...

   The ground beneath him trembled, ever so slightly, but insistently, as though the chaos beneath wished to obliterate that thin barrier laid between the surface and the depths so many generations earlier by the Old Rats.

   . . . not now . . . later. . . when we get to Lornth .. .

   Slowly, he eased the flows away, letting them subside.

   His breath was ragged, and his heart pounded so hard that he felt the sleepers inside the house could have heard it.

   For a time he stood, gasping, just trying to get his body back under control.

   Then he turned toward the house.

   “Very impressive.” Ayrlyn sat on the patch of grass remaining in front of the bushes. “I'm glad I understand you. Someone else might not have taken it well. They might have thought you were out to get the power for yourself.”

   “I never-”

   “I know. You were afraid it wouldn't work. Or that I'd get hurt. Like all good engineers, you wanted to test your idea with no one around in case it went wrong, and, as usual, you didn't want to worry me. So ... all I knew is that you were worried, and I couldn't sleep anyway.”

   “I'm sorry.”

   “You are so dense ... sometimes. Don't you understand?” Nylan . . . don't shut me out. . . please . . .

   “I'm sorry. I didn't know, and I wasn't sure how it would work.” He put his arms around her. Didn't want you hurt. . . if it didn't. .

   “It will work. You could have asked me.”

   “It's such a change. I forget, still.” He shivered, feeling weak. He released Ayrlyn and sat on the grass.

   “Try not to.” Or I'll do . . . something dreadful! Long before we ever get back to Lornth! She sat beside him.

   The engineer blushed at her unspoken comment.

   “In fact...” I'm going to do something dreadful right now. Her lips were upon his before he could speak again, and she pushed him back on the grass. While you're too weak to resist ... Her hands were at his waistband. And if anyone hears . . . you get to explain. . . .

 

 

Chaos Balance
CXXV

 

GETHEN DID NOT unroll the scroll he held as he sat in the green upholstered armchair across the ancient carpet from his daughter and coregent. “The traders-the ones who ported in Rulyarth. They bring disturbing news, daughter and regent.”

   “That the white demons ready an attack? We knew that. Do they say when?”

   “They bring no news of what we face from the south.” Gethen cleared his throat. “The lord of Cyador builds a fire-ship like one of the ancients that swept clean the Great Western Ocean. It nears completion.”

   “We need not worry of that.” With a quick look at Nesslek, who banged two blocks at each other, not exactly in a coordinated fashion, Zeldyan raised her goblet of greenjuice, taking a small sip. “Not soon, in any instance.”

   “Perchance not. Has there been word from Fornal?”

   “Except for another plea for coins and levies ... no. We sent him all that the sale of the copper raised. It was not enough, he claims. Yet he did not seize the copper, not according to Diwer. The angels did, and Fornal called them highwaymen.”

 
 “Would we had more such highwaymen.” Gethen snorted.

   “They may yet suffice.”

   “You have faith in the angels, yet we have heard naught.” Gethen stood and walked to the serving table where he filled a goblet, not with the greenjuice, but with a dark wine. “The demons must be nearing, and we hear little. I must leave for Rohrn before long.”

   “How soon, my sire?”

   “No more than a few days.”

   “So soon?”

   “So late.”

   “So late, yet I must have faith.” She set the goblet on the side table, leaned over, and disengaged Nesslek's busy fingers from where he picked at the ancient green silk border of the chair's upholstery. “What else is there? We have no coins left. No way to raise more levies beyond that poor handful you take. Our holders are openly grumbling, and the harvest has been poor.”

   “Not so poor as for the mutters we hear,”

   “The Lady Ellindyja?”

   “Some still visit her,” admitted Gethen. “We cannot remove her.”

   Zeldyan lifted Nesslek into her lap. “A poor patrimony for you, my son, and much because your grand-dame was overly concerned about that of your father.”

   “That is cruel, especially to tell your son,” offered Gethen. “It is true. Would you have me lie to him? Even as his grand-dame destroys his own patrimony out of spite and pettiness? Truth may yet be his only weapon.”

   “Truth be never enough. Cold iron-that be the only weapon that a lord can depend on. Wizards and mages and trade-they come and they go. Cold iron remains. To the cold iron we do not have.” The gray-haired regent took a deep swallow.

   Zeldyan hugged Nesslek until he squirmed, then set her son back on the carpet beside his wooden blocks. She looked at the goblet, but did not drink.

 

 

Chaos Balance
CXXVI

 

SYLENIA CARRIED OUT the provisions bag and set it on the rear stoop. She glanced at the mid-afternoon sun that seemed to duck in and out of the puffy gray and white clouds scudding from the northeast. “To begin travel so late in the day .. . ?”

   “This time we'll travel more by night, until we get out of Cyador, anyway.” Nylan checked the girths for Sylenia's saddle, then readjusted Weryl's seat, stopping to wipe his forehead. While the area in and around the forest was cooler than the Grass Hills, even with the cooling of the trees the harvest season was far hotter than mid-summer on the Roof of the World-or anywhere else in two universes that he could remember offhand, at least outside of Candar. “I'm still not up to any battles.”

   “You could handle them better.” Ayrlyn did not look up from where she loaded the pack mare.

   “Maybe.” Of that, Nylan wasn't exactly certain. Theoretically, he supposed he could figure out some way to balance things, but the gap between theory and practice was awfully wide, wider in many ways than advanced power system operations and engineering theory had been.

   “I don't want to leave.” Ayrlyn held the saddlebag in her hands, almost as if she had been halted by an outside force. Nylan understood. For the first time in years, if not ever, they weren't surrounded by all of the unseen imbalances that had rocked their lives from one side to the other. Already, they had begun to adjust themselves to the forest's requirement for balance, and when Nylan extended his senses to look at Ayrlyn, he could see the changes, almost, it seemed, on the cellular level. While some changes appeared in Sylenia, Ayrlyn and he-and Weryl-appeared vastly different. Was that because he had been a power engineer? Or Ayrlyn a comm officer? Because the forest had reached out to them? Or they to it? “It's not paradise.”

   “I still don't want to leave.” This feels . . . closer to home. . .

   They turned to each other and embraced.

   “Stupid . . .” murmured Ayrlyn in his ear. “How ... a forest... feels like home ...”

   “Does, doesn't it?” He squeezed her more tightly for a moment, then slowly released her.

   “In some ways I feel as you, lady,” added Sylenia. “But there is Tonsar-”

   “And there's still the problem of the Cyadorans. Remember all those burned patches? Sooner or later they'll be back to deal with the forest.” Especially if we don't deal with them-if we can . . .

   “I know,” sighed Ayrlyn, “and we made a promise.” A promise. . .

   It wasn't just the words, Nylan understood, all too well, but the chaos created within themselves by failing to keep their commitments. Anyone who had to deal with order fields, he was coming to understand-possibly too late and too slowly-had to live a life somehow in balance. And unkept promises were not good for balance.

   At least, that was how it seemed to him.

   “Me, too,” said Ayrlyn. “We're in this together.”

   He smiled at her, taking in the warmth that radiated from her, the warmth he'd been blind to for too long on the Roof of the World. Then he walked over and lifted the provisions bag from the stoop.

   Sylenia turned and reentered the Cyadoran dwelling, presumably to reclaim Weryl.

   Nylan stood and surveyed the dwelling, the smooth pale walls, thinking about the ceramic stove, the tile floors, the apparent cleanliness-and the chaos behind its creation.

 

 

Chaos Balance
CXXVII

 

THE STARS WINKED on and off as the clouds slipped across the night sky, covering one unfamiliar point of light and uncovering another, all the time that Nylan and Ayrlyn made their way north along the empty highway. Only the muffled sound of the horses' hoofs echoed through the night as the four rode closer to the river and the brick bridge.

   The smell of the fields, and the faintly acrid odor of something that had been cut drifted across the road on the light breeze.

   “The beans, they have harvested,” confirmed Sylenia.

   “Wadah . . . cans?”

   “You just had some.” Sylenia turned in the saddle and, twisting her body, offered Weryl the water bottle. He pushed it away, and the nursemaid recorked it and replaced it in the holder without a word.

   Nylan doubted he would have been that temperate, son or no son.

   When they passed the crossroads where they had confronted the Cyadoran patrol, not even a lingering sign of chaos remained. The engineer glanced around, his ears alert for any noise, but the only sounds were insects, ?. soft bird call, and the breathing and hoofs of the horses.

   As they neared the river, neither Nylan's eyes nor senses .could distinguish any movements or or beyond the bridge, a dark outline above the darker water and against the starry sky. “Quiet,” murmured the redhead.

   The mounts' hoofs clacked, if not loudly, not softly on the brick pavement of the arched three-piered structure that spanned the deep and smooth-flowing water that appeared black under the cold stars, a blackness darker than the unlit and silent town on the north side.

   Infrequently scattered points of reflected starlight dotted the smooth dark surface of the river-wider than Nylan recalled. Even centuries after the Old Rationalist planoforming, the chaotic white-red hints of violence seethed beneath the ground and beneath deep and slow-flowing river waters, the unseen line between what had been and what now was as clear and implacable as ever.

   And I. . . we're ... going to harness that?

   “Yes,” answered Ayrlyn.

   “I'd better start working out the practical details.” Especially since I haven't the faintest idea how.

   “I have every confidence in you.”

   “Thanks.”

   Riding two by two between the stone walls, they reached the top of the span, where the echo of hoofs seemed to reverberate into the night. Yet no lights appeared in any buildings on the north side of the bridge.

   Downstream, the fractionally darker shadows that were piers loomed above the north side of the water, and a solitary dog barked . . . and barked. Nylan tried not to stiffen, wondering who would come to investigate, but no lights appeared near the piers and the dog and the clack of hoofs began to echo oft the brick buildings once they entered the town proper.

   “It's spooky.” Ayrlyn's voice was low. “Like the world outside their walls doesn't exist at night.”

   “They have to shut it out,” whispered Nylan, “but that makes it easier for us.”

   The open-columned marketplace was empty-yet unbarred and unguarded, and across the street, the water splashed quietly down the sculpted tree fountain, water holding the faintest glow. Some sort of chaos?

   “The town still doesn't smell,” Nylan said.

   “You want it to?”

   “No. The only thing I've been able to smell is harvested beans, and a dampness around the river. No flowers ... no garbage ... no ... nothing . . .”

   “It does seem odd.”

   “Better no smell than the smell of Lornth by the old wharfs,” suggested Sylenia dryly.

   Nylan wondered. Cyador was clean and ordered, but how high was the price for such cleanliness-and how much force had been required, and still was?

   Too much . . .

   But how many people preferred order at any cost?

 

 

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