The Knight: A Tale from the High Kingdom (5 page)

BOOK: The Knight: A Tale from the High Kingdom
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6

 

Lorn awoke in the morning, when a servant brought him his meal.

It was old Odric, Alan’s trusted valet. Thin, dry and wrinkled, he had been in the service of the prince since his birth. So Lorn, too, had always known him.

‘Good morning, Odric,’ said Lorn, noticing that the servant was avoiding his gaze.

‘Good morning, my lord.’

In fact, Odric was uneasy and couldn’t hide it. Lorn watched him set out the contents of his tray on the table.

‘I’m happy to see you again, Odric.’

‘Thank you, my lord.’

Then, his eyes still averted, the old servant enquired:

‘Is there anything else you desire, my lord? The supplies on board are limited, but …’

‘This will be fine.’

‘At your service, my lord.

The valet withdrew, but before closing the door, he turned round.

‘My lord?’

‘Yes?’

He looked ashamed.

‘I … I beg your forgiveness, my lord …’

His face expressionless, Lorn felt the anger that had faded during the night returning.

‘Leave me, Odric.’

Once he was alone, Lorn rose and went to the window.

The galleon had not yet left the Sea of Shadows, but it was sailing on calmer waters, propelled by steady winds. Lorn watched the waves for a long moment, and then turned towards the meal awaiting him.

He ate without appetite.

Lorn was finishing his breakfast when Alan came to join him and, without ceremony, sat down to pick at his friend’s plate. They exchanged a glance but said nothing.

Because they were true friends, silence had never embarrassed them. Yet the silence that installed itself between them now had a different quality about it. It was not the expression of a complicity that needed no words, but the manifestation of awkwardness, each of them hesitating to speak first. Lorn did not feel able to express anything at all, not even gratitude. While the prince did not know what approach to adopt, torn between the urge to take care of his friend, the fear of being tactless and an idiotic sense of decorum that inhibited him.

Moreover, he could not help but feel guilty.

‘Your eyes have changed,’ he finally said in a casual manner.

With the tip of his knife he was spreading a pat of butter on a piece of bread.

Lorn frowned.

‘What?’

‘Your eyes. They’ve changed colour. The right one, especially. At least, I think so.’

Lorn took down the little tin mirror hanging above the washbasin. Then he approached the window in order to see more clearly in the light passing through the small diamond-shaped panes.

Alan was right.

Lorn had been born with blue eyes. Now, the right one was a very faded grey. The previous evening, in the cabin’s dim light, he had not noticed this. Besides, he’d avoided examining himself too closely. It had been years since he had seen his own face, and the one he’d glimpsed in the reflection frightened him.

‘How did that happen?’ asked the prince.

‘I have no idea.’

But Lorn knew the cause of this change as well as Alan. He tossed the mirror on the crumpled sheets of the bunk and sat back down.

‘That’s not so serious,’ Alan commented. ‘I’d even wager that it will please the ladies. It gives you a … umm … mysterious air.’

Lorn shrugged.

The truth was, he didn’t care if one of his eyes had changed colour. He knew that Dalroth had done far worse to him, by stealing part of his soul for ever.

‘Father Domnis spoke to you, didn’t he?’ he asked.

Alan’s face grew grim.

‘Yes.’

‘And?’

The prince weighed his words carefully.

‘He’s afraid you’ve been corrupted by the Dark.’

‘Do I seem to have lost my reason?’

‘No,’ admitted Alan.

That did not prove anything, however.

Both men knew that the Dark’s contagion might not be apparent. It was furtive and patient. It could wreak havoc before it fully revealed itself. It might even go completely undetected.

Lorn sighed.

‘And what do you believe?’

‘I believe you are my friend and I will do everything in my power to help you.’

They exchanged a long glance that spoke volumes, before Lorn finally said:

‘Thank you. Thank you for taking me out of that hellhole.’

He almost had to force himself to say it.

He knew that Alan had braved the storms of the Sea of Shadows in order to fetch him home from Dalroth. He was equally convinced that the prince had done everything he could to hasten Lorn’s release. And yet he couldn’t feel any gratitude towards Alan. The torments he had endured under the influence of the Dark were like raw wounds; still too painful for him to feel anything but his suffering.

‘Don’t thank me, Lorn. I owe you my life, don’t forget that.’

Lorn said nothing.

‘Furthermore,’ continued Alan, ‘there’s no reason to thank me. Or anyone else. You should not have been sent to Dalroth in the first place. You were innocent and—’

Lorn stopped him.

He had no desire to hear his friend speak of his innocence and he knew perfectly well where he stood in this matter. His pain and his anger were on the verge of becoming outrage.

‘Don’t hold what I’m about to say against me, Alan. You … You are my friend. I know you couldn’t help me these past three years. But others could, and they did nothing. Nothing at all. So forgive me if I hold a grudge against all of you. Even against you personally. I still have too much … too much anger in me.’

The prince nodded, with a profound sadness in his eyes.

‘I understand.’

Lorn then regretted having caused his friend sorrow and tried to explain himself more clearly.

‘No one deserves to endure what I did at Dalroth. The suffering, the nightmares, the madness, the Dark … No one deserves that and I can’t …’

His voice choked. He could not finish his sentence.

The prince hesitated, and all he found to say was:

‘Free, Lorn. Free and declared innocent. I wish I could have done more but I didn’t know about the accusations made against you. I would have defended you, otherwise. And three years would not have passed before—’

Lorn’s gaze hardened.

‘I’m sure of that. But as I said: don’t ask me to forgive you now.’

‘Without you,’ Alan continued nonetheless, ‘I would no longer be of this world. And where was I when you needed me?’

‘Stop it, Alan. Just stop.’

Lorn’s tone had become icy and menacing.

The prince pulled himself together at last and, ashamed of his self-pity, fell silent with his head hung. He knew that he was sometimes selfish and he was angry at himself for giving in to his tendency to ease his own conscience.

There was another silence which, as it stretched, became embarrassing.

Alan noticed Lorn’s left hand was bandaged and thought he had hit upon a safe topic of conversation.

‘Are you wounded?’

Lorn gave him a cynical smile.

‘In a manner of speaking.’

After a moment’s hesitation, he removed the bandage and, fist raised, placed his elbow upon the table so Alan could see the seal on the back of his friend’s hand. It was an ancient rune, that of the Dark, engraved upon a red stone medallion embedded in the flesh.

The galleon soon left the black and dangerous waters of the Sea of Shadows behind. The continent was still far away, but an island loomed on the horizon. The captain set a course for this island first, and then made for two rocky needles that stood behind it. A gigantic stone arch linked these twin peaks.

Alan and Lorn came out on deck to witness the spectacle. Standing on the poop deck, a mage from the Navigators’ Guild had already started his incantations. The ship was loaded with arcanium. Even its sails were woven with threads of this metal. Reacting to the magic, the arcanium started to glow and to hum, while an uncanny breeze lifted.

Still weak, Lorn was overcome by dizziness. He had insisted on leaving his cabin in order to watch the ship depart from the Sea of Shadows. But he had overtaxed his strength and had not foreseen the effect the immensity of the horizon would have on him after three years in a gaol cell. He felt crushed and lost, tiny and vulnerable. The blue sky seemed infinite and the sun hurt his pale eyes. The air of the open sea was intoxicating. He had to take in several deep breaths, gripping Alan’s shoulder as his friend discreetly held him upright.

‘Are you all right?’

‘I’m … I’m fine …’

‘Sure?’

Lorn did not have to reply.

At the galleon’s approach, the runes engraved in the stone arch lit up. Shimmering coils spun in the air. They wrapped themselves around the ship, curled around the masts, slipped over the sails and crackled when they came into contact with the arcanium supports. A passage opened beneath the immense arch.

The ship entered it and disappeared in a blinding flash.

7

 

‘The High King Erklant II was wed to Queen Celyane in a second marriage, after the death of his first wife. No doubt he never loved her, although she bore him two sons.’

Chronicles (The Book of the Three Princes’ War)

 

The ladies-in-waiting busied themselves, finishing sewing on a button, measuring a sleeve, taking in a hem, adjusting a pleat. In their midst, Queen Celyane let them get on with it, holding herself straight and lifting an arm when necessary. Tall and slender, still beautiful, with dark eyes and a severe mouth, she was impassive but watchful, regularly ordering her entourage to step aside so she could see herself in the large mirror placed in front of her. This outfit was the one she would wear at an event that would mark the triumph of her policy and would establish her in the eyes of all the world as the reigning queen of the High Kingdom.

An event fit to be related in the
Chronicles
.

‘Ma’am?’

The queen turned her head towards a young lady-in-waiting who presented her with different sets of jewellery on a satin cushion. She was pointing to one when it was announced that Lord Esteveris wished to be received. The queen sighed and permitted her minister to enter. Behind her, one of her dressers climbed onto a small stool to place the gold-and-ruby necklace she had chosen about her neck.

A man in his fifties appeared, plump and bald, luxuriously dressed, his fingers adorned with several rings. A former prelate, Esteveris was a cautious man and an able politician who always maintained a calm, unctuous manner. He was reputed to be aware of all the intrigues and plots brewing in the High Kingdom. Despite the countless spies in his employ and the accommodating souls who spontaneously came to him with information in the hope of winning favour, this was no doubt not the case. But Esteveris did nothing to contradict the rumour and even endeavoured to lend it credence.

He bowed.

‘Your Majesty.’

‘To what do I owe this visit, my lord minister?’

‘News has just arrived, ma’am. News from the Citadel.’

‘I’m listening.’

Esteveris said nothing.

When he persisted in remaining silent, Queen Celyane understood and dismissed her entourage. The room emptied in a few seconds and as soon as the door to her antechamber was closed, the queen demanded:

‘Well?’

Looking concerned, the minister announced:

‘The High King has received another emissary from the Assembly of Ir’kans.’

As the queen did not react, he added:

‘It’s the second time in only a few months, ma’am.’

But the queen remained expressionless. So he continued:

‘After the first interview, the High King ordered the trial that absolved Lorn Askarian. And now I’ve learned that a troop has left the Citadel bound for Samarande. To Samarande, where Prince Alderan will soon be landing, ma’am. That cannot be a coincidence …’

Esteveris fell silent, convinced that the queen would finally react.

He was not mistaken.

With an impatient snap of her fingers, she pointed to a gold-and-vermilion service on a table. Bowing, the minister went to pour a cup of wine while the queen sat in a low-backed armchair. She took the cup that Esteveris brought her, but barely wet her lips.

‘I suppose that you have no better idea of what was said during this second audience than at the first …?’

‘No, ma’am,’ admitted the minister in a prim tone.

‘Don’t you have spies within the Citadel?’

‘Only a few, ma’am.’

‘But very able ones, fortunately …’

Esteveris was sufficiently acquainted with Queen Celyane to know it was never a good sign when she resorted to irony.

‘The High King receives the Assembly’s emissary alone,’ he explained. ‘Even Norfold, the captain of the guard, remains outside the door. My spies cannot risk—’

Queen Celyane bade him to be silent with a gesture, and then, containing her frustration, tapped nervously on her armrest.

‘What mission was this troop assigned?’ she finally asked.

‘I do not know.’

‘How many men?’

‘Twenty horsemen from the Grey Guard.’

‘But there’s no doubt that they are heading for Samarande.’

‘None, ma’am.’

‘At the order of my husband.’

‘Yes, ma’am.’

The queen of the High Kingdom pinched her lips.

Samarande was the most influential of the seven Free Cities – their capital, in a sense. Long ago, the province of the Free Cities had belonged to the High Kingdom, before being invaded by the kingdom of Yrgaard. As soon as he was crowned, the current High King had reconquered it at the end of a military campaign that had driven the armies of the Black Dragon back across the Sea of Mists. Erklant had since granted a degree of independence to each of the Free Cities in order to win their gratitude and loyalty. They governed themselves as they saw fit, as long as they paid their taxes and never acted against the interests of the High Kingdom. After suffering under the Yrgaardian yoke, this newfound liberty allowed the Free Cities to prosper. Yet one of them was about to throw off the tutelage of the High Kingdom and return to the bosom of Yrgaard …

‘Do you think the High King may try to oppose Angborn’s cession?’ asked Esteveris.

Rather than a question it was a warning, all the more prudent on the part of the minister as he had already posed it several times before. He was the principal architect of this political and diplomatic masterstroke that would make Angborn a full-fledged Yrgaardian city. Nevertheless, he was aware what this cession represented in the eyes of the High King and his last remaining supporters.

The queen shrugged her shoulders.

‘That senile old man?’

‘The province of the Free Cities was the most handsome conquest of your husband’s reign,’ Esteveris said. ‘And throwing the armies of Yrgaard back into the sea was one of his most glorious feats. It’s easy for our adversaries to claim that ceding Angborn to the Black Dragon means amputating part of our territories and bringing Yrgaard to our doorstep. No doubt the High King, however isolated, is not—’

‘Leave my husband where he is, will you? Leave him in that fortress he has chosen to make his tomb. After all, isn’t that what he wants? To die in peace?’

The minister bowed respectfully.

‘As for our adversaries …’ the queen continued. ‘The cession of Angborn to Yrgaard shall take place, whether they like it or not. It will benefit the High Kingdom. It will re-establish diplomatic relations with Yrgaard and lay the foundations for an unprecedented alliance. The High Kingdom and Yrgaard! The two most powerful realms of Imelor allied at last!’

As her words grew heated, the queen had risen and took a few steps. She calmed down and added more thoughtfully:

‘It will be a done deed in a few weeks, Esteveris. We will be in Angborn and before delegations from the world over we will sign a treaty with Yrgaard that will force all our enemies, within and without our borders, to carefully reconsider their … positions.’

Celyane was smiling and her gaze shone, fixed on something far away. She stood proudly, satisfied with herself, in the dress she would wear for the occasion, which, like her triumph, only required a few finishing touches.

Seeing that she was savouring her forthcoming victory over all those who contested her authority or doubted her ability to rule on her own, the minister refrained from mentioning the tribute Yrgaard would be paying to acquire Angborn. Of course, the political and diplomatic advantages that the High Kingdom would reap from this operation were assured. But it still came down to selling Angborn – and the formidable fortress that defended it – in order to fill the royal coffers. The High Kingdom was on the verge of ruin and needed Yrgaardian gold.

‘The fact remains that the High King has just sent twenty horsemen from his guard on a mission to Samarande,’ said Esteveris after a moment. ‘If their mission does not concern the treaty, it probably has something to do with Prince Alderan’s arrival.’

The minister paused before getting to the crux of the matter:

‘Or with the return of Lorn Askarian …’

The queen gave him a steely glance.

‘Lorn! So Dalroth did not get the better of him?’

‘It’s possible he’s no longer alive, ma’am.’

‘How long was he at Dalroth, exactly?’

‘Almost three years.’

‘And can anyone survive that?’

‘Not with one’s reason intact, so it’s said.’

‘In that case, what could the High King want with this man?’

‘I don’t know ma’am.’

Celyane of the High Kingdom pondered for a moment, then gave a haughty smile and clapped her hands loudly, which prompted the return of her ladies-in-waiting.

‘It’s another of that old fool’s whims,’ she said dismissively. Once again she became the centre of feverish activity and, standing straight, she stretched out her arms horizontally. ‘Let him amuse himself as he pleases,’ she added. ‘We have other fish to fry.’

Esteveris returned to the luxurious apartment he occupied in the palace. He ordered a scented bath to be prepared and, dressed solely in a long ample shirt, he sank into the steaming water. The thin cloth clung, diaphanous, to the folds of his obese and completely hairless body. Fat beads of sweat ran down his ruddy face, wiped away at regular intervals by a servant.

The minister was worried.

Of course, the kingdom’s situation was cause for concern. The empty treasury. The legitimacy of the queen’s rule increasingly questioned. The peasantry threatening to revolt and the nobles plotting with the Duke of Feln. And the other Imelorian kingdoms massing their forces at the borders because they were hostile towards the rapprochement between Yrgaard and the High Kingdom.

But Esteveris was almost as tormented by the return of Lorn Askarian and the audience to which – he was convinced – the High King would summon him. Before ordering Lorn’s second trial the old king had received an envoy from the Assembly of Ir’kans. That couldn’t be a coincidence. The Assembly must have had a reason for wanting the man’s liberation despite everything he had endured at Dalroth. What message had it sent to the High King? What had it revealed to persuade him to take this step?

Esteveris had to assume that the High King, at present, knew. A perspective that was more than worrying, especially when one thought of what Lorn risked learning if he harboured even the slightest desire for revenge. And how could he not, after what he had endured? Anyone in his shoes would want to discover who had plotted his downfall, and why.

Curiously, it did not seem to trouble the queen.

Why not?

How could she not see the threat that Lorn’s return represented? How could she not be interested in whatever Erklant was up to in the Citadel? When the High King had shut himself away there, everyone had believed he was planning to end his days in peace, far from the scrutiny of others. But it had occurred to Esteveris that the king was actually seeking a refuge where he could act in secret. In hindsight, this hunch seemed to be correct …

You old fox
, the minister thought to himself, smiling faintly as he reclined in the perfumed vapours of his bath.

The fact remained that the queen’s lack of concern could be dangerous and, if she persisted in doing nothing about Lorn, Esteveris would have to take care of the matter.

For the good of the High Kingdom, for the good of his queen.

And also, perhaps, for his own good.

Closing his eyelids, he called for more hot water.

BOOK: The Knight: A Tale from the High Kingdom
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