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Empress of the Fall

Page 25

by David Hair


  Both women had looked away, embarrassed.

  I wonder why being forbidden something only makes the desire for it grow stronger? Because right now, the warm perfumed air had her feeling quite . . . amorous.

  ‘I need a cold drink,’ she decided, her skin tingling with want, and with shame for that want. She looked about guiltily, then took off her dressing gown. Clad in just the sweat-dampened nightdress, she followed the trickling sound of the fountain that fed the roots of her very own Winter Tree. She passed through the double row of old oaks to the pond where she’d planted the sapling from the shrine of Saint Eloy and knelt, careless of the dirt and leaf mould. She drank from her hands, feeling like a Fey Waif from the Fables: above her, the sapling spread its branches; it was several feet tall already, and covered in deep green thorny leaves and tart red berries, radiating an end-of-summer glow. Birds and insects trilled and thrummed about her.

  She liked that she wasn’t queen here, but she served one who was . . . She glanced around again, checking she really was alone, before holding out a hand and making a wish.

  Aradea, she whispered with her mind, show me Saint Balphus Abbey.

  A Blue Spindle butterfly fluttered about her and landed on her hand, then fluttered off as an eel rose from the bottom of the pool then wriggled away, leaving a vision forming in the swirling water: a tawny-skinned face with tresses of blackberry vines, teeth like a pike and moon-crater eyes. Lyra whispered a greeting and they stared at each other, then the face was gone, in its place a burnt-out, desolate building overgrown with vines.

  The place where she’d grown up had been abandoned by the Church after she was taken. The ruins saddened her, to see her old cell smashed open to the sky. You can never go back to the past, the wind whispered. Look ever forward.

  Then she saw a flash of something else: a black-haired man dancing with a red-clad woman. The image was too blurred to make out faces, but the sight made her feel horribly insecure. Irked by it, she splashed the vision away, the air resounding to the slap of her hand in the water.

  For four years, she’d been coming to the Winter Garden and opening herself to these little miracles. As the sapling grew, the place had become more and more like the chapel garden in Coraine or the shrine in the Celestium: a place of unexplained ‘magic’. She knew the right name from a long-ago conversation with Ostevan, but whether she called it pandaemancy or dwyma was irrelevant; the power was a heresy. She could be burned for using it.

  It frightened her – the Church would not lightly declare a power heretical – and she worried about what dabbling in it was doing to her soul, but she couldn’t leave it alone. Her gnosis had never come – Setallius and Domara said that could happen, that sometimes a mage-born child simply failed to gain the power that was their birthright – but it scared her to be helpless, so she’d begun to explore this other thing.

  In the early days of the gnosis, according to the histories, pandaemancers had been ‘a threat to all good men’, but Saint Eloy had persuaded most to renounce their powers. The rest were given ‘the judgement of Kore’ – she’d seen a woodcut print of a women burning at the stake, the flames filled with diabolos from Hel. The depiction of her agony looked horribly realistic.

  I’m not like her, she told herself fearfully. Corineus is my Saviour and Kore my Lord.

  But she could do . . . this . . . now. She asked Aradea for light, and the water droplets in her hand glowed. She asked for cold, and the droplets, still glowing, froze. She cast the little diamonds of light back into the pool and watched them melt away, sensing Aradea watching through the eyes of the owls in the oaks above and the eel in the corner of the pool. Heresy or not, she felt safe here, and nowhere else.

  Thank you, Father Kore, for creating such a place for me – and for the warning. She tried to recall which ladies favoured red this season. Just the thought of Ril with someone else made her stomach churn with jealousy, and anger at Domara’s restrictions. She wanted Ril to be here, now – to prove he still loved her, on her body. It wasn’t a frequent desire for her; the past few years had been an inner battle between her wish to please her husband – and her very real love of him and attraction to him – and the strictures she’d grown up with. The Book of Kore taught that pleasure was transitory, and obsession with the transitory imperilled the immortal soul. Marriage was for conception, the perpetuation of the line; the only love that mattered to true believers was the love of Kore. Ril didn’t believe that.

  Only Ostevan understood her struggle, and he was much more open-minded and forgiving than other confessors. She smiled, glad to have at least one person who understood her inner heart. And that reminded her that it must be time for her morning Unburdening. Smiling, she wandered back through the garden with her head full of earthly daydreams.

  *

  You cannot perceive all that I am, for I am a legion embodied in one man.

  The words from the Book of Kore were meant to express the feeling of power of a true believer when unifying himself with the will of his Creator, Kore. But to Ostevan, they’d come to mean completely the opposite.

  I have ten thousand eyes: the eyes of Abraxas.

  He felt the daemon avidly peering through his eyes as he slipped into the queen’s suite, greeting that naïve cowpat Geni with a smooth smile that made the maid’s heart palpably pound. Ugly lump. He sent an impulse into the girl’s brain, that she should be elsewhere, and glided into the queen’s boudoir.

  The bed was still unmade and he sniffed it, letting the fading aroma of Lyra’s body tease his suppressed lusts. He collected hairs from her sheets, long strands from her scalp and shorter curling ones from her nethers, and swallowed them, then he licked the rim of her cup, tasting her dried spittle, imprinting her unique taste and feel in his memories, so that he could more precisely target her soul when the time came.

  Then he joined Basia de Sirou on the balcony overlooking the Lyra’s private garden. The Queen’s Guardian was sitting on a stone seat, wincing in discomfort: she had unstrapped her artifice-legs and was massaging the stumps through her leggings. She sensed his presence and looked up, her narrow face going red. ‘Ring before you enter, Comfateri,’ she snapped, tugging at the harness until the stumps and artificial knee-joints were aligned. She tightened them and stood. ‘What do you want?’

  She’d be dead by now if I were an assassin. Which I will be one day. ‘It’s time for the Queen’s Unburdening,’ he reminded her. ‘Why don’t you go and relieve your bladder,’ he added, his voice so bland only a master could have detected the indiscernible gnostic impulse implanted in the words. It was far beyond Basia de Sirou to resist; she rose obediently and teetered away.

  He smiled, then peered down into the Winter Garden. The queen spent a lot of time down there, hidden from sight. Only with a personal invitation could anyone else enter, and despite the closeness he’d forged with her these past months, he’d not been invited – but no one had, he’d come to realise. This was her sanctuary, where she went to escape other people.

  I must investigate, he told himself. What’s so fascinating in there?

  Abraxas was curious and unusually cautious, as if the daemon sensed something here that threatened it. Intriguing. Then another presence joined him in silent aetheric communion and he greeted the Puppeteer, Ervyn Naxius.

  The Master inclined his masked face.

 

  Naxius radiated approval.

  Ostevan commented.

  Naxius replied. arks of Empire, will be shattered . . .>

  Ostevan wondered.

  Naxius gave him an approving glance.

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