And finally all three spoke of Idra -- what Jadrek knew, and what the partners had heard before she'd vanished.
That changed the anger to doubt, and to apprehension. 'If she headed here, she didn't arrive,' Stefansen said, unhappily, the firelight flaring up in time to catch his expression of profound disturbance. 'Damn it! Dree and I had our differences, not the least of which was that she voted for Char, but she's the one person in this world that I would never wish any harm on. Where in hell could she have gotten to if she didn't come here?'
Tarma wished at that moment that she could have Warrl's thought-reading abilities. The Prince seemed sincere, but it would have been so very easy for Idra to have met with an accident once she'd crossed into Valdemar, particularly if Stefansen hadn't known about her change of heart. He could be using his surprise and dismay at learning that to cover his guilt.
At the same time all her instincts were saying he was speaking only truth --
She turned her attention to Roald. He seemed to be both holding himself apart rrom the rest, and yet at the same time vitally concerned about all of them.
After a long silence, Jadrek said: 'This is not something I ever expected to hear myself saying, but whatever has happened to Idra, I fear her fate is going to have to take second place to what is happening to the Kingdom.' Jadrek turned to the Prince, slowly, and with evident pain. 'Stefan, Raschar is a leech on the body of Rethwellan.' Tarma could see his eyes now, and the open challenge in them. 'You never retracted your oath to your people as Crown Champion. You still have the responsibility of the safety of the Kingdom. So what are you going to do about the situation?'
'Jadrek, you never were one to pull a blow, were you?' The Prince smiled thinly. 'And you're still as blunt as ever you were. Well, let me put it out for us all to stare at. Do you think I should try to overthrow Char?'
'You know that's what I think,' Jadrek replied, eyes glinting in the firelight. He looked alert and alive -- and a candlemark ago Tarma would never have reckoned on his reviving so fast. 'You'd be a thousand times better as a king than your brother, and I know that was the conclusion your sister came to after seeing him rule for six months.'
'Roald?'
'You've matured. You've truly matured a great deal in the time you've been here,' the Herald said thoughtfully. 'I don't know if it was fatherhood, or my dubious example, but -- you're not the witling rakehell you were, Stefan. The careless fool you were would have been a worse king than your brother, ultimately -- but the man you are now could be a very good ruler.'
Stefansen turned to Mertis, and stopped dead at a strange, hair-raising humming. Tarma felt the tingling of a power akin to the Warrior's along her spine; she glanced sharply at Kethry in startlement, only to see that the mage wore an equally surprised expression. The humming seemed to be coming from the heap of saddlepacks and weaponry they'd dumped just inside the door, after Mertis had extracted their soiled, soaked clothing for cleaning.
Stefansen rose as if in a dream, as the rest of them remained frozen in their seats. He walked slowly to the shadowed pile, reached down, and took something in his hands.
A long, narrow something.
Bits of enshrouding darkness began peeling from it, and light gleamed where the pieces had fallen away. The thing he held was a sword -- not hers, not Kethry's -- a sword in a half-decayed sheath --
As the last of the rotten sheath flaked off of it, Tarma could see from the shape of it that it was the dead man's sword that they'd found -- and no longer the lifeless, dull gray thing it had been. In Stefansen's hands it was keening a wild song and glowing white-hot, lighting up the entire room.
Stefansen stood with it in both hands, as frozen for a moment as the rest of them were. Then he dropped it -- and as it hit the wooden floor with a dull thud, the light died, and the song with it.
'Mother ofthegodsf' he exclaimed, staring at the blade at his feet. 'What in hell is that?'
Jadrek shook his head. 'This is just not to be believed -- Idra pretends to go haring off after the Sword That Sings -- then we just happen to stumble on it on a remote trail, and just happen to bring it with us -- '
'Archivist, I hate to disagree,' Tarma interrupted, 'but it's not so much of a coincidence as you might think.