Nightingale's hands stopped moving for a moment. Her eyes took on the expression of someone who is looking deep into her own spirit, and T'fyrr wondered what she was thinking.
Then, with an abrupt motion, as if she had suddenly made up her mind about something, she put the last twist into her hair and folded her hands on her lap. 'T'fyrr, who told you that some of the Free Bards have_magic?' she asked.
'Harperus,' he replied promptly. 'Harperus told me that
She bit her lower lip and looked away from him for the first time. 'I am not really supposed to admit to this,' she said finally. 'Especially not to someone connected with the Deliambrens.' She looked back at him with a wan smile. 'Harperus and his kind are driven mad by things they cannot measure, and if they knew we really
T'fyrr nodded but said nothing, only waited quietly for her to continue.
'There is_there is a power in music properly performed,' she said after another long moment of silence, broken only by the sound of the air in the ventilators and the distant murmur of all the sounds of Freehold below them. 'You might call it 'magic.' Certainly the Gypsies and the Elves do, and so does the Church, although the Churchmen have no idea how great or little that power really is. I'll put it to you briefly: some Bards are mages, and_among other things_we can influence the thoughts of others through our music. Some of us can do the other things you described as well, but it is that one particular power that pertains to our situation now.
'But you can do more,' T'fyrr stated. He had no doubt that she, personally, could do much more.
She nodded reluctantly. 'This might be a case where doing more is justified. Would you care to add me, and my magic, to your performances for the King? All you need do is bring me in as your accompanist, and I can do the rest. Between the two of us, we may be able to reawaken his sleeping conscience and rouse his slumbering sense of duty. But I won't lie to you; this is interference in someone's mind, his thoughts. Before you take me up on this, you need to think about that_and if you would appreciate having something like this done to you, if your situation and his were reversed.'
Now that she had put it baldly and
'It is a great power,' Nightingale said softly. 'This is why we so seldom use it. It is far too tempting to misuse it.'
He took a deep breath. 'It is also too great an issue to decide on impulse,' he told her firmly. 'I need to think about this at length.'
He was afraid that Nightingale would be annoyed with him for prevaricating after she had taken the great step of not only admitting she had this power, but offering to help him with it. But she only nodded, as if she had expected him to say something like that.
'You should see what you can do on your own,' she told him. 'You haven't been doing this for very long; you may be able to stir the King's conscience without any outside influence. That would be better_for him, and for you, I think.'
She
'There is that,' she agreed. 'But I am not the one in the position to make the decision; you are. And I will not make your decisions for you.'
'But what would you do if you were in my place?' he asked_no, begged.