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Sylvi, even in her desolation, saw Fthoom, who had come so far forward that he was leaning over the edge of the dais with the l.u.s.tre of triumph rising off him like a stench, step back and fall silent.
Quiet fell quickly, and Lrrianay dropped back to four legs and drew his wings together again, though they would not settle, and his feather-hands were spread like fans. He might have knocked half the people off the dais, had he been even a little careless, but he had reared immediately behind his bondmate, and so briefly Corone had been haloed as if he too had wings. There was a little fox-fire glint on many pegasus wings, but it was very strong now on Lrrianay, and tiny kinked rainbows ran dizzyingly from his shoulders.
Fleetingly he put his nose to Corone's temple as if returning a mandate briefly borrowed-and Sylvi registered that Lrrianay actually touched him, as she felt Ebon's velvet nose briefly touching her own cheek. Corone's face was cold and angry, and Sylvi was so confused and unhappy that she wondered if perhaps he was angry at her and Ebon. If it were not for them, none of this would be happening . . . and perhaps . . . No, no, Fthoom was lying!
The room was now as unnaturally silent as it had been unnaturally noisy a moment before; the young bearer seemed to have stopped breathing. Corone spoke quietly, but everyone present heard every word. "This is a great matter that has been set before us, and the king must respond to it at once. The king's daughter and Lrrianay's son shall be kept apart from this moment, until those who may understand such affairs have looked into this one with the care and caution vital in a situation which may bear upon the future of the entire country. If what Fthoom has revealed to us today is as simple as it appears, he has done us a very great service."
The king paused. Fthoom smiled, and again it seemed to Sylvi that his eyes glittered queerly. But to her now there was nothing human about him-he was a taralian, a norindour, a roc; how strange it was that he should stand upright and wear a human magician's robe. She s.h.i.+vered as if her father had struck her, but if Glarfin's hands had not still held her arms, she might have thrown herself at Fthoom and tried to draw his blood till his magic turned her into a pebble or a worm. Ebon stood with his feet slightly splayed, as if he too were holding himself back, and Sylvi half noticed that there was another, smaller pegasus standing half in front of him, her shoulder against his, although she was not big enough to hold him if he could not hold himself: Hirishy.
"However," the king continued, and he spoke very slowly and clearly, "Fthoom brings himself no honour in the means by which he chose to announce this discovery. He has produced disarray and disrespect in the king's Court, and this in itself is an offense against his monarch and his country. But I hold you responsible for a more grievous crime"-and there was a sharp general intake of breath at these words, for the king never spoke directly to a miscreant; this was very nearly declaring a personal vendetta-"that of causing unnecessary pain to my daughter, the king's child, and to the pegasus she is bound to, who is the son of the pegasi king who is himself bound to me. This news would be terrible to our two beloved children under any circ.u.mstances, and they need not have suffered it on public display."
Fthoom had stopped smiling.
"You will turn over your findings-all your findings-to such magicians as I shall appoint. your findings-to such magicians as I shall appoint.
"And then I wish never to see your face again.
"This meeting is ended."
The well-trained housefolk leaped to open the doors, their muscles taking over while their confounded minds stood still, and the equally confounded audience began to pull itself together and file out. Little jerky bits of conversation began and broke off, and no one looked up at the faces of those on the dais; at most a few glanced sideways, at knees and feet and hoofs. Fthoom left with the rest, but Sylvi did not notice, for as soon as her father had stopped speaking, she pulled herself free of Glarfin's hands and ran to him, throwing her arms around his waist and burying her face in his chest, weeping and weeping and weeping as if she might die of it; and rather than setting her on her own feet kindly and firmly and reminding her that she was a princess, he wrapped his own arms around her and rocked her gently back and forth as if she had been a much younger child, saying,"Oh, my darling, I am so sorry. I am so sorry."
By the time Sylvi had cried herself out, she and her father were alone in the Little Hall, but for the footmen at the doors. Lrrianay and Ebon had gone.
ALSO BY ROBIN McKINLEY
Chalice
Dragonhaven
Suns.h.i.+ne
Spindle's End
Rose Daughter
Deerskin
The Outlaws of Sherwood
The Hero and the Crown
The Blue Sword
Beauty
Short story collections:
Fire: Tales of Elemental Spirits (with Peter d.i.c.kinson) (with Peter d.i.c.kinson) Water: Tales of Elemental Spirits Water: Tales of Elemental Spirits (with Peter d.i.c.kinson) (with Peter d.i.c.kinson)
A Knot in the Grain and Other Stories
The Door in the Hedge