Darkwitch Rising by Sara Douglass

“Noah…” he said, at a loss at what to call her, for “Noah” did not manage in any manner to encompass all that she now was.

As soon as he had spoken, and so abruptly it left him breathless, Noah pulled her hand from his, and stepped back four or five paces. She was distancing herself from him, and Weyland was certain now that it was because she was about to attack him.

Then she looked down at the ground.

He followed her eyes.

A small hand suddenly shot up out of the turf, grabbing Weyland’s left ankle.

He gave a yelp, and started back, knowing that she had brought him here to destroy him, that she was as much a betrayer as ever was Ariadne, and once more he called forth his darkcraft, meaning to use it in any manner he could to—

The tiny hand let go his ankle, hovered a moment in the air, then patted at his boot, as if in approval.

Noah laughed, the sound both merry and so vastly relieved Weyland would not have been surprised if she had wept with the force of it.

Weyland stared at Noah, then looked back down at the turf…where a small, white-bodied and copper-haired creature was pulling itself free of the soil.

“It is a water sprite,” said Noah. “One of my servants, and closer to the land than, oh, than almost any other creature save myself and one or two others.”

“What is going on?” said Weyland, totally confused but somehow incredibly relieved. There had been danger present, he was sure of it, but now it had somehow miraculously vanished.

“You have been welcomed…I think,” said a man’s voice, and Weyland spun about.

Behind him stood a man dressed simply in leather breeches, and wearing a crown of twigs and red berries. He radiated infinitely more power than did Noah.

“The Lord of the Faerie,” said Noah.

Weyland was not sure if he was supposed to speak or not, but this strange Lord of the Faerie forestalled any attempt he may have made.

“The soil does not reject him,” the Lord of the Faerie said to Noah. “You have your answer.” He relaxed, and smiled. “Thank the gods. We all have our answer, though how it may be, I do not know.”

Noah looked at Weyland, smiling with such loveliness that Weyland himself relaxed even further. This had not been a betrayal, but a test. But a test of what?

A cool hand slipped into one of his, and Weyland jumped. It was the water sprite, smiling up at him.

“He is among us, if from a great distance,” said the sprite and the Lord of the Faerie gasped.

“It cannot be!” he said.

“Ah,” said Noah, “but it can. It can.”

“What did the sprite say?” said Weyland. “What did he mean?”

Noah raised her eyes from the sprite to Weyland. “He said that you were among us.” She paused. “What he meant was that you are one among us. That you, too, are of the faerie folk, if from a very distant land and time. Weyland, was that truly a bull which mated with your mother? Or was it a god?”

Noah suddenly laughed, the sound rich and merry. “If poor Cornelia can find herself standing here, Weyland-Asterion, then there is no reason why you cannot, too.”

Twenty-two

The Gatehouse, Petersham

They walked down a straight gravelled path, an overgrown park to either side of them. They walked mostly in silence, sometimes exchanging a meaningless comment or two. By and large, both were lost in their own thoughts: Noah relieved and happy in that relief, Weyland somewhat confused and disconcerted.

“What just happened?” Weyland said, eventually.

“I took you to the edge of the faerie world,” said Noah. “There are, in essence, two lands: the mortal and largely unaware, and the Faerie. Each of these worlds exist side by side, but also exist interwoven.”

Weyland considered what she had said. Two lands, two worlds. He had only been aware of one. An icy finger of sheer fright stirred about in his bowels. What had been going on of which he had been unaware?

“A great deal,” said Noah softly, and Weyland came to a halt, catching at Noah’s elbow so that he could stare at her.

“The Troy Game…” Weyland said.

“The Troy Game is largely of the mortal world,” said Noah. “When Brutus and Genvissa constructed the Game they did not use any of the Faerie in the Game’s creation.”

“But now?”

“But now, as I grow as both goddess of the waters and as Mistress of the Labyrinth, the realms of the Faerie and the mortal world grow ever closer. The battle for the Troy Game, Weyland, shall be fought through both worlds.”

“Then why take me there? Surely I, the Great Enemy, should have been left in ignorance of the Faerie?”

“There was a straightforward reason for me to take you there,” she said, finally, turning to resume her walk along the path, and forcing Weyland to follow, “and there was a not-so-straightforward reason.”

“The straightforward reason was to ‘test’ me?”

“Yes.”

“And this ‘test’ was…”

“To see if you had caused the plague, or not. If you had, the Faerie would have rejected you.”

Weyland considered this. She had not believed him when he’d said he hadn’t created this pestilence which gripped London. For a moment he contemplated a minor sulk over the matter, then grinned a little to himself. Over their past three lives he’d given her every reason not to trust him.

“And thus I passed,” he said. “Does that make you happy?”

She glanced at him, half-smiling herself. “Oh yes, it does.”

“And the second reason you wanted to take me into the Realm of the Faerie?”

She paused, and Weyland understood that what she was about to say would be difficult for her.

“Because I needed to be sure that what I was doing was the right thing. That the path I had taken was a true one.”

“And that path, Noah?” he said softly.

Again she stopped, Weyland coming to a halt himself. “My goddess name is Eaving, Weyland. That is who stands before you now.”

He stared, and, as he remembered all the languages he’d learned during his various lives within England over the past three thousand years, then everything he’d intuited about asking her for shelter fell into place. “Gods,” he said, “your name means ‘shelter’!”

She smiled, dryly. “Aye. The unexpected shelter from the storm. The name dictates my nature. I must shelter any who ask me for it.”

He stared, his mouth hanging open.

“You did not know?” she said.

Weyland gave a small shake of his head. “I overheard you and Jane talking about shelter, and knew that it was important…but I was not sure why. All I knew was that whenever I mentioned ‘shelter’ to you, then a look of part-fear, part-resignation came into your eyes. I used it instinctively…Eaving.” He paused, thinking, then looked at her with sharp, calculating eyes. “What hold does that give me over you?”

“In its own way, a far greater hold than that of your imp.”

“Tell me what it means, precisely.”

She hesitated, the tip of her tongue touching briefly at her lower lip. “It means that I cannot betray you to Brutus-reborn. To do so would be to violate the trust of the shelter.”

“And has he ever asked you for shelter?”

Her eyes became brighter. “Yes.”

Weyland felt a jolt of sheer jealousy surge through him. “Have you slept with him, in this life?”

“Sheltering does not imply answering every question you might have, Weyland.”

He wanted to seize her, to shake the answer out of her, and was dismayed at how easy he found it to ignore the urge. “Eaving—”

She was walking again, and he had to take three or four quick steps to catch up with her.

“Weyland,” she said as he reappeared at her side, “you know none of this land’s magic, and recognise little of its beauty. And yet you could build your Idyll to the very borders of the Faerie. You are such an odd man.” She gave a strange little laugh. “You have passed your test, and I also, and to celebrate I thought I would bring you to this place, which is special to me.”

He realised she wanted to change the subject, and for the moment he was prepared to allow it. “Is this part of the Faerie?” he said.

“What do you think? What do you feel?”

“No. It is not part of the Faerie.”

“You are right. This is a beautiful spot, but it is not part of the Faerie. We are just beyond the village of Petersham, a place nestled in a curve of the Thames to the west of London. Do you feel it? The closeness of the river?”

She waited, and after a moment he gave a single nod.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *