The Obsidian Mirror began to whine, as faintly as crystal, at what it was forced to display. A Brightworlder would have called it glorious, beauty incarnate. The two Endarkened did not. Virulan hissed, spreading his wings. Uralesse shuddered. In that instant, he knew his king had seen what he himself had seen: the Unicorn was not merely a creature of the Light. It was Light Incarnate.
With every fiber of his being, Uralesse yearned to debase it.
The Unicorn seemed to realize it was being watched. It threw up its head, and for an instant, gazed directly into the Obsidian Mirror.
And in that moment, the Obsidian Mirror exploded.
CHAPTER NINE.
FIRST BLOOD.
The Starry Hunt and the Starry Huntsman do not favor one cause, one army, over another. Make sacrifices and petitions for victory in their season, as is right, but know that the Hunt care only for honor and skill. The Hunt reward the valor of the Lords Komen with immortality and endless battle-but They do not choose the victor.
-Arilcarion War-Maker, Of the Sword Road Rain became Flower. In a few sennights Sword Moon would mark the beginning of War Season, when the formal battles arranged among the War Princes moonturns and even decades before would be fought. Border raids began as soon as the weather could be trusted: trials of strength, sport for younger knights, the settling of old grudges and the foundation for new ones.
The army of Ivrithir rode Oronviel's borders, if not tirelessly, than at least dutifully and without complaint. By now the whispers Vieliessar had loosed by Nadalforo and her mercenary comrades had reached every intended ear: Come to Oronviel and swear to fight for her War Prince, and receive amnesty and sanctuary.
The first who came sought fresh prey and easy victims, thinking they could slip across the border unnoticed and say to any who asked that they were Oronviel's sworn knights. They did not reckon with troops of komen who rode the borders as diligently as foresters might walk their lords' estates, nor did they expect to be greeted with sword and spear and bow at every farmstead.
For that was another new thing Vieliessar had done in Oronviel. Nowhere in the Fortunate Lands were Farmholders or their tenants permitted possession of the sword and spear and bow. The sword was for a knight to carry to war. The spear and horseman's bow were for knights and lords and princes to hunt with; the walking bow was for their foresters to clear their lands of beasts that would spoil their hunts. Farmholders might use the sling to take hares or birds and to frighten wolves, and use the cudgel and the stave for defense. To own or to wield a spear or a bow had brought harsh penalties. To possess a sword had meant death. And so those farmsteads which could not call upon a nearby manor and its knights for protection had been easy prey for raiders.
No longer.
She had set forth her proclamation in Woods Moon, knowing a knife could become a spear easily enough. Skill in bow and sword could not be granted by decree; it would be enough, she thought, that the weapons would no longer be forbidden. Gunedwaen had laughed, hearing her speak her thoughts, and told her she was wrong. Foresters, he said, who could slay a boar with one arrow loosed from the formidable walking bow, did not come from thin air, but from Farmhold families. Not only skill, but bows, were sown wider than she imagined, and as for swords ... well, it was well known that any battlefield on which the fallen lay for more than a night or two would be found mysteriously bare of blades when the dead were gathered up.
And so all who entered Oronviel seeking to prey upon its folk were slain or captured, and the prisoners were brought to the Great Keep, and those who could not swear truly under a Spell of Heart-Seeing that they meant to pledge fealty to Oronviel were slain, for Vieliessar would loose no more wolfsheads to plague her people.
Those who swore truly swelled the numbers of those who inhabited her Battle City. Some had been komen in other domains and would fight for their new liege as they had fought for the old. Those who had not been, Vieliessar sought to train in a new way: as foot knights.
As infantry.
Their weapons would be the walking bow and a heavy pike-spear such as castel guardsmen carried. They would wear chain instead of plate, for foot knights could not be asked to bear the weight of a mounted knight's armor through a long day of fighting. Such swords as they carried would be shorter than a mounted knight's sword, to be used when pike and bow failed.
Some called the presence of such lowborn warrior-candidates in Oronviel a burden and a curse. Vieliessar called it a blessing. She could not have taught her knights to become infantry. They would have needed to unlearn too much, and they would have thought fighting on foot to be a foolish and menial task. But she had offered arms to any who asked them-Farmholder, craftworker, or Landbond-and many of the mercenaries who flocked to Oronviel's standard had learned their battle skills not as children, but as men and women grown. Her ex-mercenaries saw the advantage of a dismounted force, and her Commonfolk had nothing to unlearn.
But even if she had wished to, Vieliessar could not spend all her time teaching her army new ways to fight. If her war for the High Kingship was to be won, it would not be won on the battlefield. It would be won because the people of Jer-a-kalaliel joined her freely. She had never planned to win by defeating or allying with the Ninety-and-Nine. She meant to win by drawing everyone else to her standard.
When Vieliessar is High King there will be a Code of Peace. One justice for all, be they highborn or low, and all voices heard.
When Vieliessar is High King, domain will not war with domain, for all domains will be one.
When Vieliessar is High King, the Lightborn will not be taken from their families and hoarded as a glutton hoards grain. They will go where they will and do as they wish. Nor will any children be forced to the Sanctuary against their will.
When Vieliessar is High King, lords will not steal from vassals, from craftworkers, from Landbonds- When Vieliessar is High King, any with skill may become a knight, or a weaver, or a smith- When Vieliessar is High King, any may own a horse, or a hound, or a sword- When Vieliessar is High King ...
The folk of Oronviel believed her-believed in her-because what she did as War Prince of Oronviel was exactly what she promised she would do as High King of the land entire. Her Lightborn were her greatest weapon in that secret war, for at least half of them came from Farmhold or Landbond families: And if her knights and lords were disappointed by the fact that they could no longer hang poachers as they wished-or beat their tenants for their amusement-they were reconciled by the knowledge that Oronviel would soon be going to war.
I wonder when my good cousins and fellow princes will notice I have stolen half their lands? Vieliessar mused. It was a whimsical thought, but a serious one as well. She'd cleared her domain and much of the domains it bordered of bandits. Half by patrols, half by recruiting those bandits to serve in her army. She'd sent her Lightborn to tend the people of the border steadings on both sides of her borders. And in truth, even if Harvest were to see the paying out of tithes, many of the folk of the border steadings would not be there to pay: a vast army needed wagons and animals to pull them, servants to cook food and pitch tents and saddle and unsaddle horses. Landbonds had many of the skills her army needed, so she encouraged them to leave their holdings and come to her.
But if her strength and her victory lay in the commons, it did not mean she could neglect either her lords or her knights, for if she won through to peace when she sat upon the Unicorn Throne, she would fulfill the last of Amrethion's promises to his future: the end of High House and Low. Equal justice for all meant not merely that there would no longer be great lords and lesser lords. It meant that none could be set above another: she changed little if she simply set those who were now low above those who were now high.
Vieliessar thought idly of how different Oronviel now was from the other domains of the West. In the springtide the War Princes usually went on a progress, traveling with an escort large enough to protect them from treachery or attack. Bolecthindial Caerthalien had taken no less than five hundred of his Household knights when he rode out, but Vieliessar could ride from corner to corner of her own land alone, certain not she would not be attacked. She thought of the story she had so often been told in her childhood: And the knights of the High King's meisne were all great kings, and each was as sweet-tempered as a sleeping babe, as loyal as a hunting hound, as beautiful as the Vilya in fruit and flower, as strong as the storms of winter, and pledged to care for all they met as ardently as the Silver Eagle tends her hatchling.
In Oronviel, that nursery tale had come true.
Today, in the company of a mixed troop of Oronviel and Ivrithir knights-her own guard, plus a meisne of Ivrithir komen commanded by Lord Farathon of Ivrithir-she rode toward the place where Araphant's borders touched hers. Aramenthiali and Caerthalien used it as a way to enter one another's domains unnoticed. Through the winter, Vieliessar and her knights had used it as a hunting park, clearing it of outlaws.
Oronviel did not share much border with Araphant-a score of leagues, no more-and Vieliessar's border lords had little to do, for Araphant's manors and farms lay in that domain's southern quadrant. Its northern reaches had been left to the stag and the wolf, for Araphant had long been a limp rag chewed by Caerthalien and Aramenthiali, helplessly ceding territory to each. When War Prince Luthilion died, his House might simply vanish, for Luthilion had lived far beyond his allotted years; fate and chance had taken brothers, sisters, children, and greatchildren all before him.
"My lord, someone comes," Komen Bethaerian said.
"They ride one of our horses, whether they are ours or not," Vieliessar said, peering at the mounted figure in the distance. "Peace, Betharian," she added, "we are nearly two score."
"If this is no scout for one of your enemies," Farathon of Ivrithir said.
"If an enemy comes in force from Araphant, I will hold myself surprised," Vieliessar said dryly. "But even if Luthilion rides at Bolecthindial's order, he would head west and come at us over Caerthalien's border rather than try to bring an army through this forest." On their own side of the border the trees had been kept thinned by landbond families driven from their homes and forced to labor. On Araphant's side, they had grown unchecked for centuries.
"That is so, Lord Vieliessar," Farathon said with a smile, for his meisne had been riding this stretch of border for the past fortnight and had spent much of that time in Araphant's forest. "Yet no good word ever came swiftly."
The horseman had closed the distance to them as they spoke. Neither horse nor rider was encumbered by a single ounce they did not need to bear: the animal's saddle was a thin pad of leather, the stirrups mere flattened rings. And the rider, who was little more than a child, wore no armor. He barely checked the horse's mad gallop before he flung himself from its saddle and ran forward. His mount, freed of direction, cantered in a wide circle around Vieliessar and her knights, so filled with the excitement of the run that it hardly noticed its exhaustion.
"The War Prince-komentai'a, I must speak with her-my lord of Greenstone Tower said I would find her near-it is urgent-" the boy gasped.
"I am here," Vieliessar said, nudging Sorodiarn forward. "Let him pass," she said, for when she spoke, the boy had started toward her and Farathon had moved automatically to block him.
"Lord Vieliessar-" the boy began. He was as winded as his mount, but determined to deliver his message at once. "A meisne-from Araphant-my lord Peramarth did not know their intent until today-through the wood-"
"How many?" Bethaerian demanded, but the boy only shook his head.
"Why did your lord not use the sun-signal to warn us?" Farathon demanded, for each of the border towers were equipped with sheets of silvered glass that could be used to flash simple messages to watchers many miles distant. At least during bright, clear days.
"Said-not to warn them," the boy gasped.
"You have done well," Vieliessar said, putting warmth into her voice. "Come. You will ride with me. Sorodiarn is a gentle beast and your own steed deserves a rest. We will go to Greenstone Tower and see what there is to see. But first, someone must catch your horse. We are lucky he is tired."
"My lord, you cannot mean to ride toward this peril, after Lord Peramarth has sent to warn you against it?" Bethaerian said. "We must retreat to a place of safety."
"Better to ride to than from," Vieliessar answered. "If knights come through the woods of Araphant, I do not think their number can be a force much larger than our own. Peramarth will be glad of extra swords if it is an attack."
And I shall be glad to be there if it is not, Vieliessar thought. A party of knights crossing from Araphant to Oronviel was so unusual she did not wish to gain information of it second hand, and asking her people to discover whether something unusual was a threat before attacking it was a thing most of them thought was sheer moonstruck madness. Attack and be safe, Vieliessar thought. They do as their greatsires did, and so grudge is heaped upon injury until they breed war. She knew that asking her people to stop, to talk, to think would someday generate a tragedy. And I can only say that if I meant to rule as all the War Princes have ruled before me, it would be better if I had never ruled at all.
"Now come," she said to the messenger. "Give me your name and your hand."
The distance young Randir had covered in less than a candlemark took the troop of heavy warhorses three to retrace, and when they were near to Greenstone Tower, they were met by a troop of its defenders led by Lord Peramarth himself.
"My lord prince," Peramarth said. When he pushed back the visor of his helm, his entire face was exposed, for the Border Lords might have to fight in any weather. "I did not expect you."
Here so soon or here at all? Vieliessar wondered, for Peramarth's thoughts were a flurry that could not be quickly untangled by True Speech.
"I had thought-" Peramarth began, then broke off. "No matter. Greenstone has stood since the days Araphant was a power in the land, and her walls have never been forced. Permit me to offer you my hospitality until we have repulsed our invaders."
"It seems a strange way to invade anything," Vieliessar commented a few minutes later, from atop Greenstone Tower. It was no taller than the watchtowers in her own keep, but it seemed as if it were, as there was nothing else for miles around and even the tops of the great trees were below them. Standing in this place, she could imagine she stood among the clouds themselves, and by spreading her arms, could join the hawks in the sky.
"I still cannot make the count," Angeleb said, sounding unhappy. He was one of Peramarth's sentries, chosen for his keen vision.
"We saw movement in the forest two days since," Peramarth said, pointing out and down. The area near the border was thick with greenneedle trees; Vieliessar had been watching since they'd climbed out onto the roof of the watchtower and had yet to see more than an occasional bright flash. "At first I thought Old Luthilion might have come hunting, though he has not been since before the Long Peace. But see-there?" Peramarth pointed to a gap in the forest cover. "Blight and storm has killed the old trees, and the new ones are not yet grown. They rode across that place just this morning. Two tailles of knights, a Green Robe-and someone with the right to ride beneath the princely standard of Araphant."
Peramarth-she knew-had delayed sending his warning until he was certain the party beneath the trees rode bowshot-straight, and not in the erratic circles of a hunting party. To the Border Lords, giving false warning was as shameful as giving no warning at all.
"Why does he come?" she wondered aloud. "He cannot expect to conquer Oronviel with twenty-four knights and one Lightborn." Gunedwaen had not wasted his efforts spying on Araphant-he had too few people and too many places they needed to be-so she knew nothing more of it than she had learned at the Sanctuary, and that was little indeed.
"Perhaps he comes to offer you a marriage alliance," Bethaerian said dryly. "It would be a brief marriage, at least. Old Luthilion has seen a dozen Astromancers tend the Shrine."
"There is some luck in surviving so long," Vieliessar said, still thinking aloud. "And perhaps wisdom, too. You say he will cross our border, Peramarth?"
"By midday, if they do not stop."
"Then we will greet him and see why he has come."
Peramarth disliked her plan-a mark of his loyalty, inconvenient though it was-and he liked it even less when Vieliessar said she meant to meet Araphant herself. In the end she prevailed, and sat her destrier before a taille of sixty knights: her own meisne and three tailles from Greenstone.
As the approaching party became visible, Vieliessar could see that tied to Araphant's pennion was a bough of the greenneedle tree, the traditional symbol that the party riding beneath it requested a parley-truce. Beside the knight carrying the princely standard-a leaping green stag upon a sable field-rode another in armor the iridescent green-black of a beetle's wing, and upon his left rode a Lightborn, his hair silvered with great age. When they reached the border stones, they stopped, and the standard-bearer and the Lightborn rode on alone.
The wind blew through Vieliessar's hair, blowing its strands ticklingly over her cheek. She did not wear her helmet; the envoy must be able to know he spoke with the War Prince of Oronviel, not some faceless messenger.
Lord Peramarth's knights were explicitly under her command, and she had given them unambiguous orders. Nonetheless, Vieliessar was proud of their discipline and that of the Ivrithir knights, for she had bidden them all stand still and silent, and not one armored figure moved, even when she rode forward, Bethaerian at her side, to meet the Araphant messengers.
"Oronviel gives you good greeting," she said when she and the two from Araphant had stopped facing one another. "I would know how it is you come to us beneath the branch of truce, for there is no war between us."
"Araphant greets Oronviel," the aged Lightborn answered. His voice was thin, but in it Vieliessar could still hear the echo of the resonance and power it must have held in his youth. "I am Celeharth Lightbrother, Chief Lightborn to War Prince Luthilion Araphant. We ride beneath the branch of truce out of desire to speak with you, Lord Vieliessar Oronviel, honestly and in peace."
"Your lord might have done so many moonturns since," Vieliessar said, nodding in the direction of the green-armored figure who still waited on the far side of the border. She could skim the surface of Celeharth's thoughts easily: he knew Luthilion had come to make an alliance with Oronviel, but what terms he would offer or accept, Celeharth did not know.
He smiled faintly at her mild gibe. "When one reaches my master's years, one does not hasten. Yet he would speak now."
"Events do not always wait upon the desire for reflection. Yet I am eager to hear Araphant's word to me. Say to your lord that I and all with me here accept Araphant's truce, and I offer my own body as surety for his life." She unbuckled her swordbelt and held it out to Bethaerian. Slowly, her thoughts a roil of worry for her liege's safety, Bethaerian took the weapon.
Celeharth inclined his head. "I bring him to your side." He turned and rode back to the Araphant knights. The lone knight-herald holding the pennion of truce sat as motionless as if he were carved from stone.
Vieliessar could feel the tension of the komen behind her as if it were a wind she must set herself against. It seemed an eternity before Celeharth Lightborn reached his master's side. His voice did not carry, but his thoughts did.
It is as we hoped, old friend. Oronviel's new War Prince, Vieliessar once-Lightborn, offers us the truce of the body.
Then come, Celeharth. Let us see what we may do to dismay the dogs that bark at our heels.
Slowly the knights of Araphant rode toward their standard-bearer. When they were still a little distance away, Luthilion raised his hand and the knights behind him stopped. Araphant's War Prince removed his helm and unbelted his swordbelt, handing both helm and sword to one of his knights before continuing forward, accompanied only by Celeharth.
If Luthilion's Chief Lightborn was full of years, the War Prince himself was truly ancient. His hair, though still proudly worn in the elaborate braids of a knight, was colorless with age. His face was printed with the lines of all the joys and sorrows he had known in the long centuries of his life, but if his body beneath the bright armor was frail with age, his will was as unyielding as star-forged adamantine.
"I give you good greeting, Oronviel," he said, when his destrier stopped beside his standard-bearer.
"And I you, Araphant," Vieliessar answered.
"I would speak with you regarding matters of interest to us both, yet I would do so in more comfort. It is not seemly for two princes to shout at each other from their destriers as if they were maiden knights hot to win their spurs."
"I listen," Vieliessar answered. Lord Luthilion's speech was slow and measured, couched in the courtly and careful phrasing of centuries past.
"Celeharth tells me you were a great scholar in your time at the Sanctuary. Granting this truth, you will know how many days' travel it is from Araphant's Great Keep to where you find me now. And I am far too old to delight in sleeping on the ground rolled in my cloak. I ask your leave to summon my servants to erect my pavilion, so we may be comfortable together."
"I shall be most grateful for your care," Vieliessar said, doing her best to match the mode in which the War Prince of Araphant spoke. "I ask only to send Komen Bethaerian with whom you will, so your meisne and mine know we may be easy together."
"This thought is both wise and cordial," Luthilion answered. He raised a hand and beckoned, and one of his knights urged his destrier forward. Vieliessar heard Farathon draw breath with a hiss, and saw Luthilion's eyes flicker with amusement-The child prays none of her hot-blooded young swords seeks to protect her, and that is a good sign. The knight reached for the pennion.
"I commend to you and your komen'tai'a Komen Diorthiel, who serves me far more faithfully than I deserve. Diorthiel, here is Komen Bethaerian, who will accompany you as you give your word to my servants to bring my pavilion here to me."
Diorthiel looked very much as if he wished to argue. Instead, he simply bowed to Lord Luthilion and rode away with Bethaerian at his side.
Where others might have filled the wait with inconsequential observations on the weather or the hunting, or even with some talk of horses, Luthilion simply sat, as silent and composed as a Lightborn in meditation. So Vieliessar sat quietly as well, wondering with faint curiosity how Luthilion had managed to bring baggage wagons through the dense northern forest. The waiting was broken once by a messenger riding out from Greenstone Tower to ask what was happening-for of course Lord Peramarth was watching all that went on-and being sent back with a curt reply: War Prince Luthilion and I discuss a treaty under truce-bough.
When the pavilion arrived, Vieliessar discovered Luthilion had not, after all, found some new way of getting large and unwieldy sumpter wagons through a dense forest. Instead, Luthilion's pavilion was bound to the back of mules. Each mule wore a sturdy saddle with wooden legs atop it-much as if someone had taken a common chair and turned it upside down-and this odd device held heavy packs easily and securely. Vieliessar filed away the information for later use: mules could go where heavy wagons could not, and they moved faster.
The servants worked with quick efficiency. They did not care whether they worked in Araphant, Oronviel, or the Vale of Celenthodiel: servants were invisible, and even in battle were rarely an enemy's target.
"All is ready, Lord Luthilion," Celeharth said at last. Diorthiel stepped to Luthilion's side, managing to give the impression he attended his lord out of courtesy, and not because Lord Luthilion required aid to dismount. Vieliessar allowed Bethaerian to do the same for her, then beckoned to Farathon to join them.
"Come," she said quietly. "If you attend, you may say to Lord Atholfol you know all that took place here today."
Farathon's face went blank with surprise at being so trusted-and perhaps also because she spoke so frankly of mistrust. "Ivrithir is loyal," he answered.
"I trust Lord Atholfol," Vieliessar answered simply. "And was there ever a War Prince who did not wish half his great lords would conveniently die in battle?"
Farathon gave a muffled cough of laughter, and Vieliessar turned away, following Lord Luthilion into the pavilion, seeing that it was much like her own: two rooms, the outer one dominated by a sizable table. There were scrolls in a wooden rack at one side of the table and a tea brazier on the other side; a shin'zuruf pot and cups waited beside the steaming kettle. There were two chairs, precisely equal in ornamentation, set so that neither of the lords would sit with their back to the door. Nearby was another seat: a padded stool without a back. Vieliessar could feel that the pavilion had been bespelled to keep sound from passing its walls.
"My Healer tells me wine is not good for me any longer," Lord Luthilion said, lowering himself heavily into a chair and gesturing toward the brazier. Now that he was afoot, the frailties of age seemed more pronounced.
"Three things the Light cannot Heal: age, death, and fate," Celeharth answered. It had the air of a well-loved and long-familiar argument.