Lord Of Snow And Shadows - Lord of Snow and Shadows Part 25
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Lord of Snow and Shadows Part 25

He wanted to turn away from the horrible sight but could not.

"What in God's name happened here?" he said in a whisper.

"Assassins that maul innocent women and children, that kill for pleasure but steal nothing . . ." Kostya's strident voice was muted. He was bending over the torn body of a little child, and Gavril saw with sudden anguish the pale hair spilling onto the bloodied snow as Kostya, with gentle hands, tried to straighten the twisted limbs. "What's the sense in that?"

"Kostya-" he began and then fell silent, remembering that Kostya had no idea that he knew what the Arkhels had done to his little son Kostyusha. Sickened by the carnage, he turned away, taking a swig from his flask of aquavit to try to steady his stomach.

"This looks like wolves' work, my lord." Lord Stoyan, grim-faced, came to stand at Gavril's side.

A shout came from one of the huts.

"Survivors, Bogatyr!" called Askold, one of Kostya's lieutenants.

They crowded into the little hut, stooping to enter by the low doorway. It was dark inside, the air pungent with the smell of dried fish. As Gavril's eyes became accustomed to the dingy light, he saw a wizened old woman cowering in the corner, clutching a young girl-child to her.

"She says it was wolves, Bogatyr," said Askold.

"What kind of wolves?" Gavril demanded. "How many?"

The old woman was muttering to herself in some kind of Azhkendi dialect; Gavril could hardly make out what she said.

"She says 'their eyes burned like marshfire,' Lord Drakhaon. They came by night over the ice. Too many to count."

"We need more details!" Kostya struck his fist against his palm.

The old woman stared imploringly at Gavril above the child's lolling head.

"Aquavit?" Gavril said, handing her his flask. She seized the flask and gulped down the fiery liquid as if it were water.

"Where are your menfolk?" Kostya asked.

The old woman shook her head and mumbled a half-coherent reply.

"Seems some went to market in Azhgorod. She thinks they were caught in the blizzard. They should have been back by nightfall. The women were out with torches looking for them when the wolves struck."

"And which way did they go, these wolves?" Kostya asked.

She shrugged and began to rock the limp child against her shriveled breast again, crooning a tuneless lullaby. Only now did Gavril realize with horror that the child was dead.

He beckoned Kostya outside. The druzhina druzhina were moving the bodies, covering them with sheets from the huts. He could not look. His eyes filled with useless tears. Blinking them away, he said, "These wolves are wanton, vicious killers. We must go after them. We must destroy them." were moving the bodies, covering them with sheets from the huts. He could not look. His eyes filled with useless tears. Blinking them away, he said, "These wolves are wanton, vicious killers. We must go after them. We must destroy them."

"We must be on our guard, my lord," Kostya said. "Snow wolves kill for food, not for sport. They rarely leave the mountains. Whatever these may be, they're not normal wolves. I smell Arkhel sorcery here."

"You told me all the Arkhels were dead."

"Kharsk is Nagarian. All the strongholds on the southern side of the moors are Nagarian. But to the north . . ."

Gavril fell silent, staring out across the frozen lake. He had not mentioned to Kostya anything of what Kiukiu had overheard. Now he began to wonder if Jaromir Arkhel had been raising a band of supporters to strike back at the Nagarians.

Was this the beginning of another clan war?

CHAPTER 15.

"This is the last food I can bring you, Snowcloud."

With a shudder of wings, the owl dropped down to perch on Kiukiu's arm and pecked the tidbits from her palm.

"It's too dangerous for you to stay here. You've got to go."

In the fading light she noticed little pellets on the floor of the summerhouse. Regurgitated, compressed remains of indigestible bone. Owl pellets.

"So you've learned to hunt for yourself! Clever boy!" She tickled the soft feathers around his ear tufts. "Now all you've got to do is fly."

He was a wild creature, for all that he had learned to come when she called, and he needed his freedom.

She set him down and took out Sosia's best vegetable knife, which she had smuggled out of the kitchen. "Now hold still, Snowcloud." The little splint Lord Gavril had made had worked loose; it took only two swift cuts to remove it. Snowcloud shook his feathers, ruffling them up into a snowy froth. Another cut and the tether was off.

"You're free," she said, straightening up. The owl made no move. "Come on, Snowcloud, fly away." She clapped her hands. The owl blinked but did not stir. She offered her arm and he hopped up, clinging on with wiry claws that pierced the thick cloth of her sleeve. She moved slowly to the door, the owl balancing on her wrist.

"It's dark now; owl time," she told him. "Time for you to go home."

She tried to lift her arm in one sweeping movement to encourage him to lift off, but he still held on, his claws gripping deeper into her flesh.

"Come on, you silly owl," she urged. "If you stay here, you'll be caught and killed. And I couldn't bear that."

Almost as if in reply, the owl turned his head right around and nibbled with his beak at her neck in a friendly, familiar way.

"One more night, then," she whispered reluctantly, ruffling the downy feathers with her finger. "But tomorrow you must go. No more tidbits. You've got to fend for yourself."

Kiukiu yawned as she huddled in front of the kitchen range, knuckling the sleep from her eyes.

"What's this? You're sitting here idle?" Sosia demanded as she bustled past.

"Lord Gavril's away so I . . ." mumbled Kiukiu.

"Then you'll have to do Lady Lilias' fires today."

"Lady Lilias? No. Oh, no." Alarmed, Kiukiu shook her head. "She hates me. She won't want me anywhere near her."

"We're short-staffed. Ninusha's in her bed with the stomach gripes again. I need Ilsi with me in the kitchens. It'll have to be you."

"Why can't Dysis do it?"

"Dysis is a lady's maid. Apparently lady's maids in Muscobar don't dirty their hands with fire making," Sosia said acidly.

A little while later, Kiukiu ventured along the corridor to Lilias' rooms and tapped tentatively at the door.

"Hello. Hello! Can you hear me? This is Dysis. Please respond!"

Kiukiu could hear Dysis' voice, but whom was she speaking to? She tapped again, louder this time. There was silence, and then Dysis snapped, "Come in."

Kiukiu went in, glancing nervously around; to her relief, Lilias was not in her sitting room. Dysis was standing by the mantelpiece, dusting one of Lilias' ornaments: a delicate crystal sculpture that was usually encased in a domed glass cover.

"Come to do the fires," Kiukiu mumbled.

"Well, you'd better get on with it, then," Dysis said crisply, replacing the glass cover. "Start in here. My lady is still in bed." She went over to the window seat and took up her embroidery.

Kiukiu had never looked out from Lilias' rooms onto the gardens before. But as she knelt down, she noticed that now that the leaves had fallen, the Elysia Summerhouse was just visible. Had she been seen, creeping out at twilight, to feed Snowcloud?

The thought was so alarming that she forgot what she was doing, losing her grip on the dustpan, dropping it with a clatter in the fireplace.

"Who's making all that racket, Dysis?" complained a woman's voice from the bedchamber. "I'm trying to rest in here."

"Sorry," Kiukiu whispered.

Dysis said nothing but narrowed her eyes at her above her embroidery.

"It's no good, Dysis, I can't sleep."

Kiukiu glanced up to see Lilias standing in the doorway of her bedchamber.

"What is she she doing in here?" The petulantly weary tones hardened as Lilias saw her. "Looking for intruders? Haven't you disturbed my sleep enough this week, Kiukirilya?" doing in here?" The petulantly weary tones hardened as Lilias saw her. "Looking for intruders? Haven't you disturbed my sleep enough this week, Kiukirilya?"

Does she know? Kiukiu cowered on her knees in the cinders. Kiukiu cowered on her knees in the cinders. Has she guessed? Has she guessed?

"Why is she she here and not Ninusha?" here and not Ninusha?"

"Ninusha's sick."

"More's the pity. Ah!" Lilias stopped, clutching at her belly. Kiukiu saw her face contort in an expression of disbelief. "My waters," she whispered. "My waters have broken."

"What?" Kiukiu said dumbly. Her brain refused to work; the sight of Lilias doubled up with pain terrified her. She didn't know what to do.

Dysis dropped her embroidery and hurried forward to help her mistress.

"Why are you still standing there?" she hissed, supporting Lilias. "Get help!"

Help? Kiukiu, flustered, began to back toward the door. Kiukiu, flustered, began to back toward the door. What kind of help did Lilias want? A mop to wipe up the waters? What kind of help did Lilias want? A mop to wipe up the waters?

"Hurry!" cried Lilias and then let out a cry of agony so piercing that Kiukiu fled into the corridor, leaving the door wide open behind her. cried Lilias and then let out a cry of agony so piercing that Kiukiu fled into the corridor, leaving the door wide open behind her.

"Help, help, Lilias is ill!" she cried.

"The baby!" Lilias' voice carried after, a banshee wail, echoing high into the stairwell. "The baby's coming!"

"Sosia! Sosia!"

As Kiukiu went running down the stairs, she saw that more snow had begun to fall in silent spirals, dusting the frost-blackened garden with white.

"What's the matter this time, girl?" Sosia appeared in the hallway, drying her hands on her apron.

"The b-baby," Kiukiu stammered, waving her hand toward Lilias' rooms. Another bloodcurdling shriek came from above.

"By all the saints," Sosia said, starting toward the stairs, "she's in labor!"

The cursing and shrieking went on from behind Lilias' apartment door well into the night. Ilsi had control of the kitchens and, in Sosia's absence, made Kiukiu's life miserable, ordering her to draw bucket after bucket of water from the well to heat on the range.

As Kiukiu was struggling back with the third bucketful, she caught sight of Ilsi gossiping with Michailo.

"Listen to her yell!" Ilsi said scornfully as another distant shriek penetrated the house. "You'd think no woman on earth had ever had a baby before."

"They say Nagarian babies are harder to deliver. They say they fight their way out."

"Who says this one's a Nagarian?" said Ilsi with a sly smile.

At about one in the morning, the shrieking stopped. A while later a weary Sosia came out onto the balcony, carrying a tightly swaddled bundle.

Kiukiu and the other servants gathered in the hall below with a few of the druzhina druzhina.

"Michailo," she called down, "send a messenger to Lord Gavril that Lilias has had a son, a fine son. She's calling him Artamon."

She raised the bundle high-and from inside came the unmistakably powerful yell of a newborn baby. Kiukiu craned her neck to see the baby, but he was too well wrapped to see. All around her she could hear muttered comments from the other servants as they strained to get a glimpse of little Artamon.

"Artamon," grunted old Guaram. "Does she think he's going to be emperor?"

"Is he dark?"

"Is he fair?"

"Is he a Nagarian?"

"How can you tell? Tell for sure?"

Four, five, today made six days Lord Gavril had been gone. Kiukiu counted under her breath as she hefted a heavy coal bucket up the stairs to Lilias' rooms. Kostya had sent word to the kastel that they were hunting a vicious pack of snow wolves.