Traitor’s Knot: Fourth Book of The Alliance of Light. Janny Wurts
glanced down, marked hands laid uncertain before him.
Where Sidir’s grave tact preferred space, Eriegal flared to impatience. ‘Ath, you’re too quiet. You know where his Grace is! Is that why you’re shorn of your clan braid, for shame? Braggen, where did you fall short?’
The accused Companion snapped up his chin, bitter. Against precedent, his anger turned inward. ‘I did not fail in my charge! As a man with no other skill but the sword, I stood ground at my prince’s shoulder. I could, and I did, defend him with weapons. But I am not made as his chosen caithdein. I was not fit to stand in the breach and challenge his adamant spirit.’
‘What happened?’ pushed Eriegal. ‘Where did Arithon go to seek refuge?’
Braggen stood in a rush, with Feithan beside him, her small hands caging his fist. ‘Peace! All of you! This was Jieret’s lodge, and he would not have your contention.’
And trembling, Braggen was first to back down. He turned from Eriegal’s leashed accusation, and with a dignity no man had seen, eased the earl’s widow back to her seat. Then finesse deserted him. ‘My lady, on my word of honour, the truth: I cut off my clan braid at need, in order to pass through the lines as a townsman. Now it’s my right to know. What happened to your husband in Daon Ramon Barrens?’
While Sidir pressed long fingers over closed lids, and Eriegal watched, white, Feithan looked up at the man who overshadowed her, savage and raw with resentment. She told him. ‘Jieret was captured by Lysaer’s Lord Commander of the Alliance armed forces. He was wounded, Luhaine said, and not handled kindly. Yet he was kept alive. His enemies thought to use him as a hostage to bring the Teir’s’Ffalenn back to heel.’
‘Ath’s mercy!’ gasped Braggen. ‘For Jieret’s life? Defend us! For that, the s’Ilessid pretender would have flushed Arithon from cover.’
Sidir bared his face, and found grace at last to lift the burden from the brave woman now sorely bereft. ‘Jieret knew that, as well. He found resources no other caithdein has tapped. The Sorcerer told us he achieved true greatness, and opened a gateway into the mysteries through his sworn tie to the land. Signs and wonders were shown to men on that night. Lysaer’s war host was paralysed, unable to fight. They could not be made to regroup until Earl Jieret received a sorcerer’s twofold death, first by a sword through the heart, then by immolation with fire.’
‘The hand on the blade was Lysaer s’Ilessid’s,’ Eriegal added with wretched clarity. ‘Our High Earl met a dog’s end, without succor. Now, tell us the fate of Prince Arithon.’
Pale to the lips, Braggen backed up until his huge frame bumped against the center pole of the lodge tent. There, he braced, at a loss for retort. His fellow Companions held their wary ground, well aware he was wont to strike out when cornered.
Yet Braggen gave them no whisper of argument. His volatile fists stayed locked at his sides. ‘Grant me the presence of my acting clan chief. Also Rathain’s appointed caithdein since, in this life, I can scarcely bear to repeat what will have to be said.’
Feithan arose. Silent and quick, she fetched wooden cups and a bottle of cherry brandy. Eriegal woke out of his bristling distress. He took Sidir’s urgent hint and left to bring Jeynsa, who had yet to make timely appearance.
Nothing remained except to wait, with Braggen’s raw nerves wrapped in the lodge tent’s familiar, close shadows. Though he had a wife and a daughter, kept safe, in the northern wilds of Fallowmere, this place was as much a home to him. Head bent, he breathed in the pitch scent of resin, underlaid by the fragrance of leather and goose-grease and the wax used for weatherproofing the camp gear. The summer furnishings seemed as they always had, except for the absence of Jieret’s sword and the dearth of scouts coming and going. The encampment had been three-quarters stripped of its fighting men, blood-bought cost of a crown prince’s freedom.
None too soon, the pent silence shattered, cut across by a male voice, declaiming, overlaid by a woman’s vituperative anger. The lodge door flap cracked open, careless of the light, and Jeynsa strode in, still raging.
Brows pinched into an iron scowl, eyes like chipped flint, she encountered the motionless presence of Braggen, and stopped. Her vivid regard raked him over. From cropped head to scraped boots, she missed only the foxtail melted at one with the shadow.
Her opening was hostile. ‘Did you cut your hair out of protest as well?’ Against the stunned stillness, she raked back the hacked bangs that remained of her shining brown hair.
Eriegal moved, shut the door flap, then caught her arm. ‘You have no shame!’ Despite his dumpy stature, he man-handled her subsequent, wild cat wrench. Curbed, she stood glaring, hard-breathing and heedless of the deep bruise her clamped wrist was going to show later.
His voice level, Sidir explained from behind. ‘She cut off her hair rather than suffer the formal ritual of her investiture.’
Braggen stared, horrified. ‘Girl, you did this to avoid receiving the pattern of the caithdein’s traditional clan braid?’
‘We’re a perfect, matched pair, as you see,’ Jeynsa sheared back. ‘Why’d you cut yours?’
‘That’s enough!’ Feithan ploughed Eriegal aside to confront her daughter. ‘No get of mine is brought into this world to insult clan heritage under this roof! Apologize, Jeynsa! Right now.’
Strapping at seventeen, with her sire’s tough strength clad in scout’s knives and leathers, the girl towered over her mother. Nonetheless, her eyes dropped. Smoking with banked defiance, she spoke the rote phrases, then perched against the board trestle. To Braggen, she said, ‘You have news of my father? Don’t trouble to report. I know how he died. By Sight, I stood witness. No reason, and no blooded prince under sky could justify how he suffered!’
Struck breathless, Braggen appealed to Sidir. ‘What’s she saying? Ath’s own mercy. The High Earl was tortured?’
‘Worse.’ Jeynsa spat on the packed earth floor, while the brand dipped her drawn features in carmine. ‘He was mutilated, degraded, cut dumb, and drugged. Did you know, when they finished, they threw his charred skull to be mauled in the teeth of the tracking dogs?’
‘He was gone by then, and you know it!’ Feithan’s composure withstood the cruel pressure. ‘Luhaine swore you his oath that your father was raised beyond pain when his spirit crossed over Fate’s Wheel.’ Upright, arms folded, she drew a fierce breath. ‘But that’s not why you won’t forgive him. Be honest! You hate what happened because Jieret held true to his oath as caithdein. He died, and died well, for this land and his prince. You reject the willed choice of his crossing because of his triumph, that dared come before his own family’
‘What’s to forgive?’ whispered Jeynsa, while the tears welled and spilled. ‘Not Father! It’s the crown prince who left him that I would cry down for Dharkaron’s redress.’
Braggen shoved off the center post. ‘Prince Arithon’s will had nothing to do with this! Jeynsa! I was there.’ Helpless anguish broke through, as, after all, he spoke out before Barach arrived to share witness. ‘Your father broke orders. As caithdein, by right claim of precedence to the realm, he rejected Prince Arithon’s instructions. I was to have been the one sacrificed to Lysaer. Jieret was your liege’s choice to return, safe and sound, to this hearthstone.’
‘I don’t believe you,’ Jeynsa gasped, unappeased. Her glimpsed sight of the fox-brush roused more galling venom. ‘I still see the sword fall. Every night, I smell the stench of the pyre. My father’s heart’s-blood runs red through my dreams. He had no tongue, and no voice, beyond the wretched sound Ath gave an animal.’
‘That’s quite enough, Jeynsa!’ Sidir thrust forward; yet Braggen, like rock, only shuttered his face with blunt fingers.
‘I will tell you this much,’ he said, muffled, then lowered his arms, unutterably altered.