Read The Secret Country Online

Authors: PAMELA DEAN

The Secret Country

Table of Contents
 
GAME—OR REALITY?
“Well, look,” said Ted. “Lord Randolph is going to poison the King, right?”
“I suppose. If this is our game, yes, he is.”
“And then I have to kill Randolph, right? Because the King was my father? And I’m the new King?”
“Yes, what about it?”
“Ruth, I don’t want Randolph to poison the King.”
“Of course you don’t,” said Laura, relieved to hear someone say something she could understand. “The King is a good, kind man, but he’s been corrupted, and he’s old, and—”
“You don’t know that,” said Ted. “I met him, and he
is
a good, kind man. And I met Randolph, and I don’t want to kill him, either.”
“Well, of course not, that’s the point,” said Ellen, “he’s your best friend, but you kill him for his honor and yours because—”
“Ellen!” Ted shrieked, and startled them all. He stood up and threw his stick into the fire. “You don’t know anything, none of you do.”
“I made up as much as you did!” said Ellen.
“That’s not what he means,” said Ruth. “Sit down, Ted.”
“I have a good mind to quit right now,” said Ted, not moving. “What
do
I mean, if you’re so smart?”
“It’s real, that’s what you mean.”
“But I tell you, it isn’t,” broke in Patrick. “It can’t be. There’s no such thing as magic.”
FIREBIRD WHERE FANTASY TAKES FLIGHT™
FIREBIRD
Published by Penguin Group
Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R ORL, England
Penguin Books Australia Ltd, 250 Camberwell Road,
Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia
Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2
Penguin Books (N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road, Auckland 10, New Zealand
First published in the United States of America by Ace Fantasy Books,
The Berkley Publishing Group, 1985
Published by Firebird, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 2003
Copyright © Pamela Dyer-Bennet, 1985
All rights reserved
eISBN : 978-1-440-68444-9

http://us.penguingroup.com

For my mother,
Mary Ann Dean,
who let me read
when I should have been
outside playing softball
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book took a long time to write. I am grateful to the following people, without whose aid it would not be written yet:
Brian Davies, Kathy Etter, Betsy Mitchell, Ellen Trumbull, and David Weiner, who gave me my earliest encouragement;
Nick O’Donohoe, who gave me notebooks that the story might not languish in my head;
Gerri Balter, Judy Cilcain, Joyce Odum, Laramie Sasseville, Joyce Scrivner, and Mike Smith, who prevented its languishing in the notebooks;
Nate Bucklin, Steven Brust, Emma Bull, Kara Dalkey, Will Shetterly, and Pat Wrede, whose stern advice and kindly nagging transformed what had come out of the notebooks;
David Dyer-Bennet and Scott Robinson, who rescued the transformed book from the wrong computers;
and David Dyer-Bennet, who cheerfully married the book along with its author.
PROLOGUE
EDWARD Fairchild, Prince of the Enchanted Forest, Lord of the Desert’s Edge, Friend to the Unicorns, and King of the Secret Country, wished he were somewhere else. Pretending his foot was asleep, he slid closer to the door.
“My lord,” said Randolph, his chief counselor, “I beg you—”
“I do more than beg!” said Fence the Wizard. “Edward, keep thy place.”
Edward looked at him. “I will not hear these things,” he said.
“Thou wilt if I say thou wilt.”
“I am king here.”
“And I am above kings. I am not thy servant.”
“Hey!” said a page.
“Be still!” said Fence. The page scowled.
“Very well, then,” said Randolph, “as I was saying. Could vintners or merchants distill this poison? Could butlers, cooks, pages”—the page looked up, pleased—“know its secret? Thou,” he said to Fence, “taught me the use of my wits. Now where are thine?”
Fence stood up, and as the folds of his robe fell into place he seemed suddenly to dwarf the room. “If mine are addled,” he said, “I must needs make do with thine. Make thine work for me.” He fixed Randolph with piercing blue eyes, and the counselor looked suddenly blank.
“I know the truth,” whispered the page.
“Silence, varlet!” said Edward, and was pleased to see the page’s eyes widen.
“I know the truth,” said Randolph. “I do not need my wits to discover it. And knowing it already, how can I tell thee in what way thou shouldst work thy wits to discover it thyself?”
“Tell me this truth, then,” said Fence.
The page tugged at the King’s sleeve and whispered, “Your crown’s slipping.” Edward pushed the crown farther back on his sweaty head. Was it so hot in the room?
“No, indeed I shall not,” said Randolph. “I would not betray thy teaching thus. How many times, knowing the truth thyself, hast thou made me dig it out for myself? Can I do less for thee?”
“Do you know,” said Fence to Randolph, “why I did thus?”
“I do,” said Randolph. “It was that I might believe the truth when I saw it. For truth hath shapes strange and terrible.”
“And this truth,” said Fence, “a most terrible one.”
“Say it,” said Randolph.
“Randolph,” said Fence, “you have betrayed all I ever taught you; you have betrayed your liege lord and your solemn word; you have done this besides with the lowest and cruelest of all weapons, a weapon of cowards. You poisoned King William.”
“I have said I will not listen to this!” shouted Edward.
“Well done,” said Randolph to Fence.
“What?” said Edward.
“Will you set a trial, my lord,” said Randolph, “or—”
“A trial is a coward’s weapon also,” said Edward, loosening his sword in its sheath.
“My lord, have a mind for your cloak,” said the page. Edward unfastened it, and the page took it from his shoulders and folded it.
Randolph took off his own and dropped it onto the floor. He and Fence looked at each other. “You can do no good here,” said Randolph.
The wizard nodded and turned to go.
“What about his ring?” demanded the page.
“Be quiet!” said Edward.
“But he forgot—”
In the distance a bell rang.
“Hell!” said Randolph. “That’s lunch.”
“You forgot to take his ring of sorcery and kick him out of the guild of wizards!” said the page fiercely.
“Ellen,” said Randolph, “no matter what anybody forgets, you shut up. You’re only a page and we can hang you for mouthing off, okay?”
“You try it!” said Ellen. She pulled off her velvet cap and shook out her cloud of black hair. In the hat she had looked very like a page. Without it, thought Edward, she looked like someone who would grow up to be a witch.
“I’d love to,” said Fence, struggling out of his robe. “But we’d be late for lunch.”
“This is it, then, isn’t it?” said Edward. “The plane leaves at two-thirty.” He pulled at his crown, which came damply apart in his hands.
“And you still didn’t get it right,” said Ellen. “You ought to let Ted do Fence, Patrick, and you be Prince Edward.”
“I
am
Prince Edward, and I want to be him in this part,” said Ted. “Especially in this part.”
“Oh, all right.”
“So this is it,” said Patrick, cramming Fence’s robe under his arm.
“And you still didn’t get it right,” said Ellen. “And neither did Ruth. Randolph is supposed to be resigned, Ruthie, and you just sounded bored. And Ted, Edward is much more shocked than that; you just sounded like somebody’s put a frog in your bed, not like—”
“Ellie, stop that, please,” said Ruth, picking up Randolph’s cloak again. Being fifteen to Ellen’s twelve, and having the same wild hair and green eyes, she looked like a witch already, no matter how inspired a Randolph she could do. “When you’re grown up and directing plays,” she told Ellen, like a sorcerer lecturing her apprentice, “you can fuss at people like that. Until then, cut it out.”
The bell rang again.
“Next summer,” said Patrick, “we should—”
Laura stuck her head into the doorway of the barn. Ted looked at his sister in despair. Her braids were coming undone. She would never look like a witch.
“Will you guys come on?” she said. She looked at what Patrick had under his arm and added, “Your mother just started wondering what happened to that sheet.”
“Took her long enough,” said Ellen.
“Next summer,” said Patrick to Laura, “
you
can be a page. She talks too much.”
“Hey!” said Ellen.
“Well,” said Laura, “it might be better than being a dead king. Lying there waiting for the worms to come.”
“Laurie, for goodness’ sake, you don’t have to wait for the worms to come,” said Ruth. “Dead people don’t, you know.”
“How do you know?” demanded Ellen. “You ever been dead?”
“We could embalm you,” said Patrick to Laura. “They’d leave you alone then.”
“Embalming’s barbaric,” said Ruth. “The Secret Country is more civilized than that.”
“Civilized!” said Patrick. “They don’t even have machines!”
“I don’t want to be embalmed,” said Laura hastily. “I’d rather wait for the worms.”
“I don’t think you’d make a good page,” said Ellen. “I like to be impudent, so I make a good page, but you only like to be a mouse, which is better for a dead king, really.”
“On the other hand,” said Patrick, “it’d be good for her to be impudent once in a while. Next summer—”
Laura seemed to feel that she was on Ellen’s side and that she did not want to hear any more about this. She asked Ellen, “How’d it go?”
“They messed it up,” said Ellen. “They forgot that we decided that Fence
is
Edward’s servant, and they forgot to take Randolph’s ring away, and—”
“Next summer,” said Ruth.
“Let’s eat,” said Laura.
“Shut up, brat,” said Ted, throwing the remains of Edward’s crown at her.

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