Authors: The Summer Tree
"All right. But what about Loren and Matt? How did they . . . ?"
"That, too, is strange," Ailell said. "At the end of his training, Loren sought leave of the Council and of me to travel for a time. He was gone three years. When he returned he had his cloak, and he was bonded to the King of the Dwarves, a thing that had never happened before. No Dwarf-"
The King broke off sharply. And in the abrupt silence they both heard it again: a barely audible tapping on the wall of the room across from the open window. As Paul looked at the King in wonder, it came again.
Ailell's face had gone queerly soft. "Oh, Mörnir," he breathed. "They have sent." He looked at Paul, hesitating, then seemed to make a decision. "Stay with me, young Paul, Pwyll, stay and be silent, for you are about to see a thing few men have been allowed."
And walking over to the wall, the King pressed his palm carefully against it in a place where the stone had darkened slightly. "Levar shanna," he murmured, and stood back, as the thin outline of a door began to take shape in the seamless structure of the wall. A moment later the demarcation was clear, and then the door slid soundlessly open and a slight figure moved lightly into the room. It was cloaked and hooded, and remained so a moment, registering Paul's presence and Ailell's nod of endorsement, then it discarded the concealing garment in one smooth motion and bowed low before the King.
"Greetings I bear, High King, and a gift to remember your crowning day. And I have tidings needful for you to hear from Daniloth. I am Brendel of the Kestrel Mark."
And in this fashion did Paul Schafer first see one of the lios alfar. And before the ethereal, flame-like quality of the silver-haired figure that stood before him, he felt himself to have grown heavy and awkward, as a different dimension of grace was made manifest.
"Be welcome, Na-Brendel of the Kestrel," Ailell murmured. "This is Paul Schafer, whom I think we would name Pwyll in Fionavar. He is one of the four who came with Silvercloak from another of the worlds to join the fabric of our celebration."
"This I know," said Brendel. "I have been in Paras Derval two days now, waiting to find you alone.
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This one I have seen, and the others, including the golden one. She alone made the waiting tolerable, High King. Else I might have been long hence from your walls, with the gift I bear undelivered." A flame of laughter danced in his eyes, which were green-gold in the candlelight.
"I thank you then for waiting," said Ailell. "And tell me now, how does Ra-Lathen?"
Brendel's face went suddenly still, the laughter extinguished. "Ah!" he exclaimed softly. "You bring me quickly to my tidings, High King. Lathen Mist-weaver heard his song in the fall of the year. He has gone oversea and away, and with him also went Laien Spearchild, last of those who survived the Bael Ran-gat. None now are left, though few enough were ever left." The eyes of the lios alfar had darkened: they were violet now in the shadows. He stopped a moment, then continued.
"Tenniel reigns in Daniloth. It is his greeting I bring you."
"Lathen gone now, too?" the King said, very low. "And Laien? Heavy tidings you bear, Na-Brendel."
"And there are heavier yet to tell," the lios replied. "In the winter, rumor came to Daniloth of svart alfar moving in the north. Ra-Tenniel posted watch, and last month we learned that the word was not false. A party of them moved south past us, to the edgings of Pendaran, and there were wolves with them. We fought them there, High King. For the first time since the Bael Rangat, the lios alfar went to war. We drove them back, and most of them were slain-for we are still something of what
we were-but six of my brothers and sisters fell. Six we loved will never now hear their song.
Death has come again to us."
Ailell had collapsed into his chair as the lios alfar spoke. "Svarts outside Pendaran," he moaned now, almost to himself. "Oh, Mörnir, what wrong of mine was so great that this need come upon me in my age?" And aged he did seem then, shaking his head quiveringly back and forth.
His hands on the carved arms of the chair trembled. Paul exchanged a glance with the bright figure of the lios.
But though his own heart was twisted with pity for the old King, he saw no trace of the same in the eyes, now grey, of their visitor.
"I have a gifting for you, High King," Brendel said at length. "Ra-Tenniel would have you know that he is other than was the Mistweaver. My tidings of battle should tell you that. He will not hide in Daniloth, and henceforth you will see us more often than at the sevenyear. In token of which, and as earnest of alliance and our interwoven threads of destiny, the Lord of the lios alfar sends you this."
Never in his life had Paul seen a thing so beautiful as the object Brendel handed to Ailell. In the thin scepter of crystal that passed from the lios to the man, every nuance of light in the room seemed to be caught and then transmuted. The orange of the wall torches, the red flickers of the candles, even the blue-white diamonds of starlight seen through the window, all seemed to be weaving in ceaseless, intricate motion as if shuttling on a loom with the scepter.
"A summonglass," the King murmured as he looked down upon the gift. "This is a treasure indeed.
It has been four hundred years since one of these lay within our halls."
"And whose fault was that?" Brendel said coldly.
"Unfair, my friend," Ailell replied, a little sharply, in his turn. The words of the lios seemed to kindle a spark of pride in him. "Vailerth, High King, broke the summonglass as a small part of a great madness-and Brennin paid a blood price for that madness in civil war." The King's voice was firm again. "Tell Ra-Tenniel that I accept his gift. Should he use it to summon us, the summons shall be answered. Say that to your Lord. Tomorrow I will speak with my Council as to the other tidings you have brought. Pendaran will be watched, I promise you."
"It is in my heart that more than watching may be needed, High King," Brendel replied, softly
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now.
"There is a power stirring in Fionavar."
Ailell nodded slowly. "So Loren said to me some time ago." He hesitated, then went on, almost reluctantly. "Tell me, Na-Brendel, how does the Daniloth wardstone?"
"The same as it has been since the day Ginserat made it!" Brendel said fiercely. "The lios alfar do not forget. Look to your own, High King!"
"No offence was meant, my friend," said Ailell, "but you know that all the guardians must burn the naal fire. And know you this as well: the people of Conary and Colan, and of Ginserat himself, do not forget the Bael Rangat, either. Our stone is blue as it ever was, and as, if the gods are kind, it ever will be." There was a silence; Brendel's eyes burned now with a luminous intensity. "Come!"
said Ailell suddenly, rising to stand tall above them. "Come, and I will show you!"
Turning on his heel he stalked to his bedroom, opened the door, and passed through. Following quickly behind, Paul caught a glimpse of the great four-postered, canopied bed of the King, and he saw the figure of Tarn, the page, asleep on his cot in a corner of the room. Ailell did not break stride, though, and Paul and the lios alfar hastened to keep up as the King opened another door on the opposite wall of the bedchamber and passed through that as well into a short corridor, at the end of which was another heavy door. There he stopped, breathing hard.
"We are above the Room of the Stone," Ailell said, speaking with some difficulty. He pressed a catch in the middle of the door and slid back a small rectangle of wood, which allowed them to see down into the room on the other side.
"Colan himself had this made," the King said to them, "when he returned with the stone from Rangat. It is told that for the rest of his days, he would often rise in the night and walk this corridor to gaze upon Ginserat's stone and ease his heart with the knowledge that it was as it had been. Of late I have found myself doing the same. Look you, Na-Brendel of the Kestrel; look upon the wardstone of the High Kingdom."
Wordlessly the lios stepped forward and placed his eye to the opening in the door. He stayed there for a long time, and was still silent when at length he drew back.
"And you, young Pwyll, look you as well and mark whether the blue of the binding still shines in the stone." Ailell gestured and Paul moved past Brendel to put his eye to the aperture.
It was a small chamber, with no decorations on the walls or floor and no furnishings of any kind.
In the precise center of the room there stood a plinth or pillar, rising past the height of a man, and before it was set a low altar, upon which burned a pure white fire. Upon the sides of the pillar were carven images of kingly men, and resting in a hollowed-out space at the top of the column lay a stone, about the size of a crystal ball; and Paul saw that that stone shone with its own light, and the light with which it shone was blue.
Back in the room they had left, Paul found a third goblet on a table by the window and poured wine for the three of them. Brendel accepted his cup, but immediately began a restless pacing of the room. Ailell had seated himself again in his chair by the game-board. Watching from the window, Paul saw the lios alfar stop his coiled movement and stand before the King.
"We believe the wardstones, High King, because we must," he began softly, almost gently. "But you know there are other powers that serve the Dark, and some of them are great. Their Lord may yet be bound beneath Rangat, but moving over the land now is an evil we cannot ignore.
Have you not seen it in your drought, High King? How can you not see? It rains in Cathal and on the Plain.
Only in Brennin will the harvest fail. Only-"
"Silence!" Ailell's voice cracked high and sharp. "You know not of what you speak. Seek not to meddle in our affairs!" The King leaned forward in his chair, glaring at the slim figure of the lios alfar. Two bright spots of red flushed his face above the wispy beard.
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Na-Brendel stopped. He was not tall, but in that moment he seemed to grow in stature as he gazed at the High King.
When he finally spoke, it was without pride or bitterness. "I did not mean to anger you," he said.
"On this day, least of all. It is in my heart, though, that little in the days to come can be the affair of one people alone. Such is the meaning of Ra-Tenniel's gift. I am glad you have accepted it. I will give your message to my Lord." He bowed very low, turned, and walked back through the doorway in the wall, donning his cloak and hood as he moved. The door slid silently closed behind him, and then there was nothing in the room to mark his ever having been there, save the shimmering scepter of glass Ailell was twisting around and around in the trembling hands of an old man.
From where he stood by the window, Paul could hear a different bird now lifting its voice in song.
He supposed it must be getting close to dawn, but they were on the west side of the palace and the sky was still dark. He wondered if the King had completely forgotten his presence. At length, however, Ailell drew a tired breath and, laying the scepter down by the gameboard, moved slowly to stand by Paul, gazing out the window. From where they stood, Paul could see the land fall away westward, and far in the distance rose the trees of a forest, a greater darkness against the dark of the night.
"Leave me, friend Pwyll," Ailell said at length, not unkindly. "I am weary now, and will be best by myself. Weary," he repeated, "and old. If there truly is some power of Darkness walking the land I
can do nothing about it tonight unless I die. And truly, I do not want to die, on the Tree or otherwise. If this is my failing, then so it must be." His eyes were distant and sad as he gazed out the window towards the woods far off.
Paul cleared his throat awkwardly. "I don't think that wanting to live can be a failing." The words rasped from too long a silence; a difficult emotion was waiting within him.
Ailell smiled at that, but with his mouth only, and he continued to look out at the darkness. "For a king it may be, Pwyll. The price, remember?" He went on in a different voice, "Some blessings I
have had. You heard Ysanne in the hall this morning. She said she had loved me. I never knew that.
I don't think," the King mused softly, turning at last to look at Paul, "that I will tell that part to Marrien, the Queen."
Paul let himself out of the room, after bowing with all the respect he had. There was a queer constriction in his throat. Marrien, the Queen. He shook his head, and took an uncertain step along the corridor. A long shadow detached itself from the wall nearby.
"Do you know the way?" Coll asked.
"Not really, no," Paul said. "I guess I don't."
They passed through the hallways of the palace, their footsteps echoing. Beyond the walls, dawn was just breaking in the east over Gwen Ystrat. It was dark still in the palace, though.
Outside his doorway Paul turned to Diarmuid's man. "Coll," he asked, "what's the Tree?"
The burly soldier froze. After a moment a hand went up to rub the broad hook of his broken nose.
They had stopped walking; Paras Derval lay wrapped in silence. For a moment Paul thought his question would not be answered, but then Coll did speak, his voice pitched low.
"The Summer Tree?" he said. "It's in the wood west of the town. Sacred it is, to Mörnir of the Thunder."
"Why is it important?"
"Because," said Coll, lower yet, "that's where the God would summon the High King in the old
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days, when the land had need."
"Summon him for what?"
"To hang on the Summer Tree and die," said Coll succinctly. "I've said too much already. Your friend is with the Lady Rheva tonight, I believe. I'll be back to wake you in a little while; we've got a long ride today." And he spun on his heel to walk off.
"Coll!"
The big man turned, slowly.
"Is it always the King who hangs?"
Coll's broad, sunburnt face was etched with apprehension. The answer, when it came, seemed almost to be against his will. "Princes of the blood have been known to do it instead."