It was the treasure room door the soldier opened. His light shone in on barrels and crates and a scattering of gold goblets and bowls. Teb hit him on the head with the stone. He dropped at their feet. Teb pocketed his keys and dragged him inside, then stood surveying the chamber.
There was no sense of bright power here, as there had once been outside the door. The barrels and crates would take all night to open and the effort turn out useless. Teb locked the door and they went on, winding through black passages by Gram’s sense of the palace until at last she had to stop and strike flint to light her lantern. A quarter hour later, they descended a narrow stair, going steeply down. The air felt damp and smelled of mold. They went along a cleft in the mountain where no pretense had been made to smooth the walls.
When they came to a metal-clad door, Teb tried the five keys but none would turn. Gram removed a clasp from her hair and, as he held the lantern, she poked it into the lock, twisting delicately. He had to laugh. A dragon would have melted the lock with one breath, but now he had only Gram, trying to pick it with a trinket of tin.
Chapter 18
The setting sun stained the sky with blood, mirroring the blood in Dacia’s streets, and still the royal armies wheeled after rebels that struck from behind, then vanished to strike again. The king’s frustrated troops took as prisoners the confused townsfolk they found cowering in corners and abandoned shops, unwilling to fight for either side. These were herded into makeshift cells, and the doors and windows were nailed shut.
In some quarters the rebel army tried to force the uncertain townsfolk to stand ground against the king, but found only a useless, cowering lot on their hands. On a corner near the quays, Garit’s forty raiders fled from a green-clad battalion and vanished, then silently attacked from behind. They confiscated the dead soldiers’ uniforms and pulled them on, and took the uninjured horses and the weapons. So a new king’s band rode through Dacia, joining other king’s soldiers, then turning on them with the king’s own swords. It was the only attack they could master now, for in many quarters of the city the dark forces were winning.
But the dark leaders got no new reinforcements from the sea as they had expected. No boat stirred the waters, and still the sky was patrolled by the three dragons.
Atop the stone watchtower, Kiri and Camery killed five horsemen, and saw them relieved of their yellow tunics and their weapons and wandering mounts. The false army grew slowly against the larger forces of the dark. But the dark lusted for battle and took strength from seeing men die.
In the back of the barrelwright’s storeroom behind stacks of oak timbers and lathes, children kept the stew pot boiling, dished up meals and tended wounds. There were too many wounded and not enough blankets or bandages. In the chandler’s, weapons were passed out the back door. In the sleeping loft of a tavern, four young girls picked off the king’s soldiers with heavy slingshots and sharp stones. Along the coast the great cats massed, charging into side streets to cripple and stampede the king’s horses and kill the fallen riders with quick, bone-crushing skill.
Teb and Gram could hear the lock’s insides move, but they couldn’t get it open with her hair clasp. At last he took the stone to it, pounding until it gave way with a loud snap, scattering its parts across the stone floor. He pulled the door open; Gram held the lamp high.
The cave had a tall ceiling and was so deep the light melted away before it reached the back. The floor could not be seen for the piles of silver and gold that reflected the guttering light. There were shields and caskets, pitchers and plateware and urns and saddlery, gold bedposts and chamber pots and tall, gold-crusted chairs with laddered backs. Casks and chests stood open, with jewels spilling to the floor.
But Teb surveyed the treasure room with disappointment. There was no sense of the lyre here, no hint of the magic he had felt in the palace above. Then Gram caught her breath sharply and he spun, sword drawn.
Accacia stood in the doorway flanked by four green-clad soldiers, their blades catching the light. Teb flung the lamp at them and spilled fire over one, struck another with a blow that sent him rolling among the treasure, moaning. He faced the other two crouching, and caught a glimpse of Gram snatching up something bright from the treasure heap. He countered the two blades, trying not to be backed into the tangle of treasure and tripped, fighting close and hard with short jabs. Soon one soldier was down, but the other had drawn a knife and ducked under Teb’s blows—then he went down suddenly, his head lolling against his shoulder. Gram stood over him, the hilt of a gold ax tight in her two thin hands. Accacia snatched up his fallen blade and swung. Teb tripped her, forced the blade from her, and forced her down with his knee. She glowered up at him as he pulled off the heavy cord that bound her hair.
“Tie her hands, Gram.”
Gram tied her hands roughly, the two scowling at each other. There was no love between these two. Accacia’s eyes were hard, her mouth set in a scowl.
Teb looked her over coldly. “Why did you come here? Why did you follow us?”
She stared at him, mute and furious.
“You came because you knew I would search for the lyre,” he said more gently. “But why didn’t you just tell the king, let him deal with me?”
Her look remained defiant, but he saw a flash of some deeper anger, too.
“You are angry with the king,” he said softly, testing her. “The king has kindled such fury in you—” He saw her look grow uncertain and felt a rising strength in himself. “You came here to spite the king,” he said, and saw his guess was the truth. “You followed me, Accacia, hoping . . . to discover me with the lyre.” Yes, he saw the truth in her eyes.
‘To find you with it,” she said, “take you captive and present you to the king. Show the king . . . show him “
“He was cruel to you.”
“He was furious. He thought I told the queen that you were captive in the stadium. I told him it was Roderica, but then Roderica, the little traitor—” She paused, scowling.
“Go on, tell me all of it.” There seemed no need to charm her now; her anger made her speak, spilling hatred.
“I told him it was Roderica. I know her—everything for the queen. Sardira grabbed Roderica’s arm to keep her from running out of the stadium when . . . when the dragons—” She swallowed, pale with fear at that memory. “Roderica denied telling the queen you were captive. But who else could have?” Her eyes blazed with hatred. “But Roderica told Sardira something else. She told him you made me speak about the Ivory Lyre. She said she heard it all. I don’t remember,” Accacia said, staring at him with fury.
“Who told the queen I was captive?”
“I don’t know! If not Roderica, who would? It would take a terrible power on the queen’s part to make the king’s servants obey her. To make them carry her to the stadium. His orders were that she never leave the palace.” She swallowed again and her eyes showed pain. “It would take a terrifying power to do . . . what she did.”
Teb smiled. It was interesting to see something really touch her, frighten and confuse that smug little ego.
“It was the queen who saved you,” she said in a small, lost voice. But her look at him was of hatred.
“The queen didn’t know about the lyre?” he asked, knowing she could not have, not until the spell was broken.
“She didn’t know. That was partly why he kept her locked up . . . away from the places that hid the lyre, away from the tablet that told about it.”
“And where is the tablet?”
“In his chambers, behind a panel in the wall.” Her eyes blazed. “What difference does it make now if I tell? What difference? He has already called me a traitor and told me to leave the palace.”
“So you came to find me with the lyre, to take me captive and deliver me to him, to soothe his fury.”
“Yes. But it doesn’t matter. If I don’t take you to him, he will find you. He will kill you anyway.”
“Where is the lyre now? Where has he hidden it?�
�
“I don’t know.”
He forced the spell again. “Where is the lyre? You know you will have to tell me.”
She glared back at him, then slowly her face grew docile, her eyes dulled. “The lyre is in the queen’s chambers, where her dead body lies.”
“Why would he take it there?”
“A joke, his cruel joke . . . that he take it to her, now that she could no longer use it. He kept it secret for so many years, but now . . . now he has given it to her.”
He took her hands, twisting her tied wrists so she had to follow him. “You are coming with us to search for it. If you cause a problem I will kill you.”
He pushed her toward the passage. As she passed Gram, her look at the old woman was cruel and puzzling. They went quickly up the passage, then up a narrow stair rising steeply into the heart of the mountain, then a low-roofed passage—not the one he had used to visit the queen. They joined that passage, but there was no sense of the lyre near the queen’s door. Teb approached cautiously with drawn sword, forcing Accacia ahead.
“You will see the queen,” she said, “lying there waiting to be buried.”
“I have seen dead people before.” Still there was no sense of the lyre, no sense of bright magic. He spun Accacia around to face him. “Is it a trick? You will die first if this is a trap.”
She looked at him steadily. “The lyre is there, in her chamber, secured in a locked safe beneath her bed.”
He forced her on, then saw the door was ajar and drew back. Too late. Soldiers surrounded them.
Teb flung Accacia aside, parrying blows, but there were too many, and the power of the un-men pressed at him, weakening him, striking him with sudden confusion. Perhaps they had confused him all along, led him here. It was a short battle and one-sided, two dozen blades and the power of the dark sending him sprawling, bleeding from a dozen wounds. Before him, beside the queen’s bed, watching coldly, stood King Sardira, Captain Leskrank, and General Vurbane. They stared with icy amusement as Teb was led in to them defeated, his woman’s skirts flapping around his ankles.
He looked back at them steadily, devoid of power, wishing mightily for Seastrider—as bear, as wolf— and realized how much he had grown to depend on her. Then, glancing at the bed, he was riven with shock.
There lay the little, thin body of the queen, brutally twisted across the satin as if the pain of her death still gripped her, the jeweled knife still protruding from her chest. The sight of her shocked Teb profoundly, that they had not arranged her in peace with her hands crossed, or even removed the knife or closed her eyes.
The soldiers bound him and Gram. They left Accacia’s hands tied.
She fought in a rage, swearing at the king. “You told me if I brought him here, you told me—”
King Sardira smiled coldly. “Never believe the word of an angry king, my dear Accacia. You will find no forgiveness for what you did.”
They were forced down passages and narrow stairs, beyond the passage to the treasure room, then at last through another door, into a long, rough fissure in the mountain that contained a line of empty cells, the soldiers’ lamplight catching at the heavy bars.
They were locked there, each to a cell, but not adjoining ones. The lamps showed the king’s lined face sharply. Teb stared at the uncertainty that showed for a moment in those dark eyes; then the king’s look went shuttered and cold.
The line of soldiers was filing out to where the un-men waited in the passage beyond. The king still paused, staring at Teb.
“You will not leave me here, King Sardira,” Teb said softly. “If our people win, and you have killed me, your own life will be forfeit. They will know—the dragons will know. If the dark should win, you will need me then. Only I can use the lyre to drive the dark back and save you. Don’t ever imagine, King Sardira, that the dark will leave you free. They know, now, what that power was that kept them from conquering you. Roderica confessed it all, in the stadium box.
“They will find the lyre now, King Sardira. You will have no protection, unless I am here to help, to use its power against them.”
The king stared at him openly for a moment, his eyes questioning. Then he moved on through the heavy door behind the last soldier. The door was pushed to so the light died and was locked with a dull clang. The darkness was so complete Teb could not see the bars to which he clung. He stood trying to memorize the exact distance between himself and Gram, between him and Accacia, between himself and the door. It was the kind of cell where one did not expect to be freed except by death.
Chapter 19
Smothered by the darkness, Teb tried to feel some hint of the lyre from somewhere. He was blinded by blackness, could not move beyond bars. Even Seastrider’s voice did not reach him. His very sense of time seemed warped, so he didn’t know if it was still night. The sun had been low when he had left Seastrider on the mountain, the shadow of the mountain itself stretched long across the city when he and Gram had made their way into the palace. He reached out for the lyre’s power and could feel nothing.
But it was there, somewhere in the labyrinth of the dark palace caves. Somewhere giant lizards guarded the Ivory Lyre of Bayzun, and he meant to know where.
Maybe Accacia knew, after all.
He began to question her, weaving his questions slowly, taking his time. She remained silent. He could not see or touch her to make the job easier.
At last she stirred in the darkness with a little rustling sound, and laughed. “Do you really think I would tell you anything, after you got me locked in this cell?”
“If you will tell me where the lyre of Bayzun is hidden, maybe I can get us out of here.”
“What difference would it make to know where it is? If you don’t have it, how could you use it? What could it do anyway against iron bars?”
“Did you believe in dragons before you saw them? Did you believe in the power of bards? The power of the queen?”
She was silent.
“If the dark wins the last battle, Accacia—if the dark were to rule Dacia—do you still think you would become a part of their court? Did you see any special favors when they took us captive in the queen’s chambers?”
“They will come to get me. Once Sardira’s temper cools, he will. They will not let you out, Prince Tebmund. Nor will they release my grandmother, not until they shovel out your bones.”
Teb stared through the blackness. Her grandmother?
But of course, he should have known that. Hadn’t Accacia told him? She seemed to have told him all about her life. He had not been paying attention. Their two mothers, Accacia’s and Kiri’s—they had been sisters. But she was trying to lead him away from talk of the lyre. Did she fear the lyre so much?
“Are the lizards all dead, Accacia? Did they all die in the stadium? Or do some still guard the lyre? Where, Accacia? Where do the lizards now gather?” She sighed, and he heard the faint rustle of her skirt again. “Where, Accacia? Where are the lizards?”
“In the sea vault.”
“Where is the sea vault?”
“Beneath the mountain where it touches the sea on the far side. Sardira hardly ever opens the passage to the sunken cave. There is gold there, and he keeps lizards on the rocks around the cave and in the passages leading to it.”
“How many passages? Where do they begin?”
“One in the sea. One from near the treasure chamber you forced open. That is the one Sardira uses.”
“How close are we to the sea vault?”
She sighed and was silent for a few minutes, as if thinking over the lay of the passages. “Not far, I suppose. I imagine this cave isn’t far from the southern sea cliffs.”
He let the power ease away. All three of them were silent with their own thoughts. He lay down on the cool stone floor of his cell, tired suddenly but his mind alive with new hope. Beneath the mountain where it touched the sea, a passage to a sunken cave . . . He stretched his body long across the stone and felt his tension ease, then re
ached with his thoughts, toward Seastrider.
*
Within the warring city, within the broken tower, Kiri curled tighter against the stone parapet in fitful sleep, waking each time there was a sound from the street, or when Camery, standing guard, moved quickly to take aim. Kiri would jerk awake, then drop into sleep again, exhausted. Twice when Camery nudged her she was up at once, bow taut, her whole being keyed to sudden action. Then when the danger passed she dropped down to sleep hardly knowing she had stirred. Yet while her mind and body were tuned so tight to war, something within her dreamed of peace. She saw this war as a tiny, insane space in time. She saw all life suddenly and stupidly seeking to destroy itself, and woke angry that there was fighting at all.
But then she woke fully, her mind clearer. It was not all life that was seeking destruction. It was the un-life, the dark evil of the un-men, that sought to destroy the precious gift of life that all human blood and that of the many animals shared. The dark had made those dreams.
She thought of tired rebel soldiers sleeping hidden all over the city, nervous and edgy, waiting for dawn to begin again the terrible battle, and wondered if they had dreamed the same, and shivered. The dark knew it was not easy to fight at night, too easy to kill your own people. Night was a nervous truce breached often enough so guards stood at every shelter. Now the dark had breached that truce in a new and hideous way. She saw Camery yawning and rose to take the bow from her hands.
*
There should have been no new boats docking at the quays, for the three dragons had swamped and sunk every boatload of dark soldiers that moved anywhere in the northerly seas. But well to the south, unlighted boats clung to the black sea close beneath the cliffs of Edosta. They put in silently to Dacia, and the four heavy boats spewed forth horses and troops, the soldiers pulling dark capes over their yellow tunics. The horses had been silenced with wrapped bits and padded shoes. As dawn touched the seam of sky and sea far in the east, these warriors entered the city.
Ivory Lyre Page 16