“Be there,” said the Sidlesaghe.
“I—”
“You still have the power. You must be there.”
James sighed, and rubbed at his eyes. God. Would he never escape this?
“No,” said the Sidlesaghe, softly. “Not until the Troy Game is played to a conclusion.”
Highly reluctant, James reached out a hand and took the parchment. “How do I find my way to this…‘Naked’?” Despite himself, and despite his reluctance, James felt the smallest twinge of curiosity.
More of Anne’s face emerged from the coverlet. “May I come?” she said. All fear had vanished from her face, and now she looked more curious than anything else.
“No!” James cried.
“You’re a faerie creature,” Anne said to the Sidlesaghe.
He smiled, and inclined his head slightly.
“And Charles’ court is going to convene at this…Naked?” she said.
“Anne…” James began.
“England’s Faerie Court, aye,” said the Sidlesaghe.
“That’s enough!” James yelled.
“You may come, madam, if you wish,” said the Sidlesaghe. “The invitation shall include you as well.”
Anne sat up, forgetting in her excitement that her breasts were totally exposed.
“For God’s sake!” James muttered, hauling the coverlet up to her shoulders.
“But,” the Sidlesaghe continued, his voice now rigid with warning, “you shall tell no one of this invitation. No one.”
She nodded. “I will tell no one.”
James groaned.
“She shall make you a fine wife,” said the Sidlesaghe.
“I—” James said, then stopped, knowing that any denial spoken now would devastate Anne. He’d only wanted to bed her, not wed her…and most definitely not get her caught up in the machinations of the Troy Game.
“I am so tired,” James finally said, meaning that he was not physically tired, but that he was tired of everything he had been battling for three thousand years.
“Then I shall share your weariness,” said Anne, one of her hands on his upper arm, and she very gently kissed his cheek. Anne may have understood very little of the hidden meanings and depths behind this strange conversation, but she felt as if she suddenly knew James a great deal better.
“Be there,” said the Sidlesaghe. “Do it for all that once you were, and can yet be.”
Then he was gone, and James was left sitting in bed, Anne Hyde at his side, staring at the enchanted invitation in his hand.
“What can you tell me?” Noah said very softly, lying on the pallet beside Jane.
Jane, who was obviously awake, did not immediately reply.
“Jane…”
“Charles was not quite all I had expected.”
“Ah.”
“‘Ah’? You knew?”
“Yes.”
“Why did you not tell—”
“Would you have told, if our positions had been reversed?”
To that, Jane said nothing for some time. She lay there, seething that she’d been left to think that Brutus-reborn was Charles, when all the time he’d been Louis. Oh, intellectually she knew the reasons why she hadn’t been told. But, emotionally, Jane could not help the hurt at discovering she had been deliberately left unknowing.
“And you?” Jane finally said. “How did you spend your day, Mistress Noah? It seemed quite the domestic scene I came home to this evening.”
“We talked.”
“Oh, aye. But of what?”
Noah hesitated. “Of what he wants.”
“Aye? And that is?”
“Me,” said Noah softly.
At the softness in Noah’s voice, Jane rolled over and looked at Noah. “And this surprises you?”
“No. You were right. He wants me to become the Mistress of the Labyrinth so that he and I can together control the Troy Game.”
“Well,” said Jane. “As for learning the craft of Mistress of the Labyrinth, then I shall see about that. I—”
At that moment both women jumped nervously. A tall figure had appeared from nowhere at the foot of their pallets.
“I come bearing an invitation,” said the Sidlesaghe.
The Naked, in the Realm of the Faerie
Two nights later, at the stroke of midnight, as instructed in his invitation, Louis de Silva rose from the chair where he’d been waiting, and opened the door of his bedchamber. By rights, there should have stretched a long, nondescript corridor beyond that door. But now Louis saw a wide and long meadow that stretched towards The Naked.
Louis stared into the Faerie. He would have stood there indefinitely, save that a Sidlesaghe materialised at his side, and extended his hand into the faerie meadow in obvious invitation.
“Come forward, Louis de Silva, for you are wanted.”
Louis slid a cynical sideways glance at the Sidlesaghe, then walked forward into the faerie meadow. Louis was surprised at how fast they approached The Naked. One moment it seemed as if they were miles from it, the next they were leaning into its gentle slope.
“Will Noah be here?” Louis asked.
“Aye,” said the Sidlesaghe, “unless by misfortune the Bull stops her. But we think not. We think that the Bull will sleep well through this night. He knows nothing of faerie things.”
As do I know nothing, thought Louis, and yet still I am here. His nerves twitched. Noah—Eaving— would be here tonight. How could he bear it, seeing her go to Charles?
“You should have loved her earlier,” said the Sidlesaghe, “and then you would not now feel so dejected.”
Irritated at the Sidlesaghe’s too-easy reading of his most intimate thoughts, Louis merely grunted. He could see many other creatures approaching or already climbing The Naked, some escorted by Sidlesaghes, others singly or in small groups. When Louis and his Sidlesaghe attained the summit, it was to discover almost the entire faerie folk already there.
The Sidlesaghe touched his elbow gently. “Now, Louis de Silva, follow me and greet your host.”
They walked forward through the throng. The summit of The Naked was peopled here and there with individuals and groups of the strangest folk Louis had ever encountered: Sidlesaghes in great numbers; water sprites; women who looked of human origin, but who exuded such power Louis could hardly dare allow his eyes to rest for too long on any one of them; various creatures of forest and moor and mountain—foxes, badgers, bears, wolves, moles, elk, hares, aurochs, creatures of both this world and of lost worlds; the giants, Gog and Magog, standing and laughing with a group of ethereal creatures the Sidlesaghe murmured to him were snow ghosts; and strange lumpen grey men called movles that the Sidlesaghe told Louis were the souls of the very mountains themselves.
“And these exist beside us in the ordinary world?” asked Louis, feeling completely out of place. Gods, he had so much to learn about this land!
“Aye,” said the Sidlesaghe. “But who has eyes to see, these days?”
Louis caught sight of Eaving’s Sisters then, standing a few paces away, and they smiled at him, and curtsied as one, which he hadn’t expected. Marguerite came over, and kissed him softly on the mouth. “I am glad you came, Louis,” she said. “The night would have been lost without you.”
Then, before Louis could reply, she returned to Catharine and Kate’s side.
The Sidlesaghe smiled at them, and motioned Louis to keep walking forward.
“Who are the women?” said Louis, nodding to one of the women who exuded strange power. She was a small, dark, fey creature, watching Louis and his companion Sidlesaghe with much curiosity.
The Sidlesaghe bowed slightly in the woman’s direction, and she inclined her head and smiled. “She is Mag, of whom you must have some passing acquaintance.”
Louis jerked to a halt, staring at her. “Mag? But—”
“All the great mother goddesses depart from their ordinary life, if goddess life can ever be so called, and come here, to dream and laugh,” said the Sidlesaghe.
Louis shook his head slightly. Again he thought, How could all this have been, and continue to be, and I not ever realise?
He was still shaking his head when he saw James standing to one side, Anne Hyde standing with him. Anne? Louis thought bemusedly. James looked as stunned as Louis felt; Anne merely looked fascinated. She was also so excited that she had her hands clasped tightly before her like a small girl; when she saw Louis she grinned and actually jiggled up and down on her feet for a moment.
Dear gods, thought Louis, his sense of unreality deepening. Who else shall I see here?
“The Lord of the Faerie,” murmured the Sidlesaghe at his side, and Louis tore his eyes away from James and Anne and looked forward.
At the eastern end of the summit stood a throne, in front of which had been scattered a great circle of leaves. In the centre of this circle of leaves stood a man, dressed simply in leather breeches but wearing a crown of twisted twigs and red berries.
“Go,” whispered the Sidlesaghe, and Louis stepped forward, his eyes locked on the Lord of the Faerie’s face.
Coel. Louis could hardly believe the power and dignity—as well as a deep sense of peace and tranquillity—that radiated out from the Lord of the Faerie. Louis walked forward, hardly daring to breathe, and bowed as he stopped before the Lord of the Faerie.