Dorrel nodded. 'Garth and I have talked to many of them. There is a lot of sympathy for you, particularly among the younger flyers. The older delegates, most of them, tend to side with Corm and tradition, but even they do not have their minds completely made up.'
Maris shook her head. 'The older flyers outnumber the younger ones, Dorr.'
Barrion put a fatherly hand on her shoulder. 'Then you will have to win them to your side also. After the things I've seen you do already, it should be easy enough.' He smiled.
The delegates had all filed inside, and now, from the door behind her, Maris heard the Landsman of Greater Amberly sound the ceremonial drumbeats that signaled the beginning of the Council. 'We must go,' Maris said. Barrion nodded. As a non-flyer, he was barred from the assembly. He squeezed her shoulder once, for luck, then took his guitar and walked slowly down the steps. Maris, Coll, and Dorrel hurried inside.
The hall was an immense stone pit, ringed by torches. In the center of the sunken floor, a long table had been set up. The flyers sat around it in a semicircle, on rough stone seats that ascended, tier after tier after tier, to the place where wall met ceiling. Jamis the Senior, his thin face lined by age, sat in the center of the long table. Though a land-bound for several years now, his experience and character were still widely esteemed, and he had come by boat to preside. On either side of him sat the only two non-flyers admitted: the swarthy Landsman of Greater Amberly and the portly ruler of Lesser. Corm had the fourth seat, at the right-hand end of the table. A fifth chair was empty on the left.
Maris went to it, while Dorrel and Coll climbed the stairs to their places. The drumbeats sounded again, a call for silence. Maris sat and looked around as the room began to quieten. Coll had found a seat, high up among the unwinged youths. Many of them had come by boat from nearby islands, to see history be made; but like Coll, they were expected to play no part in the decision. Now they ignored Coll, as might be expected; children eager for the sky could scarcely understand a boy who had willingly given up his wings. He looked dreadfully out of place and lonely, much as Maris felt.
The drums stopped. Jamis the Senior stood, and his deep voice rang over the hall. 'This is the first flyers'
Council in the memory of any here,' he said. 'Most of you already know the circumstances under which it has been called. My rules will be simple. Corm shall speak first, since he invoked this meeting. Then Maris, whom he accuses, shall have her chance to answer him. Then any flyer or former flyer here may have his or her say. I ask only that you speak loudly, and name yourself before you talk. Many of us here are strangers to each other.' He sat down.
And now Corm stood and spoke into the silence. 'I invoked this Council by flyer's right,' he said, his voice assured and resonant. 'A crime has been committed, and its nature and implications are such that it must be answered by us all, by all flyers acting as one. Our decision shall determine our future, as have the decisions of Councils past. Imagine what our world should be now if our fathers and mothers before us had decided to bring warfare into the air. The kinship of all flyers would not be — we would be torn apart by petty regional rivalries instead of being properly airborne above the quarrels of the land.'
He went on, painting a picture
'The problem today is equally grave,' Corm continued, 'and your decision will not simply affect one person, for whom you may feel sympathy, but rather all our children for generations to come. Mind you remember that as you listen to the arguments tonight.' He looked around, and although his burning eyes did not fall on her, Maris nevertheless felt intimidated.
'Maris of Lesser Amberly has stolen a pair of wings,' he said. 'The story, I think, is known to all of you—' But Corm told it, nonetheless, from the facts of her birth to the scene on the beach. '… and a new bearer was found. But before Devin of Gavora, who is among us now, could arrive to claim his wings, Maris stole them, and fled.
'But this is not the whole of it. Stealing is shameful, but even the theft of wings might not be grounds for a flyers' Council. Maris knew she could not hope to keep the wings. She took them not to flee, but rather with the thought of revolting against our most vital traditions. She questions the very foundations of our society. She would open the ownership of the wings to dispute, threaten us with anarchy. Unless we make our disapproval plain, pass judgment on her in Council that will go down in history, the facts could easily become distorted. Maris could be remembered as a brave rebel, and not the thief she is.'
A twinge went through Maris at that word. Thief. Was that truly what she was?
'She has friends among the singers who would delight in mocking us,' Corm was saying, 'in singing songs in praise of her daring.' And Maris heard in memory Barrion's voice: I'd
Her eyes sought out Coll and she saw that he was sitting straighter, with a slight smile on his lips. Singers did indeed have power, if they were good.
'So we must speak out plainly, for all of history, in denouncing what she has done,' Corm said. He faced Maris and looked down at her. 'Maris, I accuse you of the theft of wings. And I call upon the flyers of Windhaven, met in Council, to name you outlaw, and pledge that none will land on any island you call home.'
He sat, and in the awful silence that followed Maris knew just how much she had offended him. She had never dreamed he would ask so much. Not content merely to take her wings, he would deny her life itself, force her into friendless exile on some distant empty rock.
'Maris,' Jamis said gently. She had not risen. 'It is your turn. Will you answer Corm?'
Slowly she got to her feet, wishing for the power of a singer, wishing that even once she could speak with the assurance Corm had in his voice. 'I cannot deny the theft,' she said, looking up at the rows of blank faces, the sea of strangers. Her voice was steadier than she had thought it would be. 'I stole the wings out of desperation, because they were my only chance. A boat would have been far too slow, and no one on Lesser Amberly was willing to help. I needed to reach a flyer who would call Council for me.
Once I did that, I surrendered my wings. I can prove this, if—' She looked over at Jamis; he nodded.
Dorrel picked up his cue. Halfway up in the tiered hall, he rose. 'Dorrel of Laus,' he said loudly. 'I vouch for Maris. As soon as she reached me, she gave her wings into my safekeeping, and would not wear them again. I do not call this theft.' From around him, there was a chorus of approving murmurs; his family was known and esteemed, his word good.
Maris had scored a point, and now she continued, feeling more confident with every word. 'I wanted a Council for something I consider very important to us all, and to our future. But Corm beat me to it.' She grimaced slightly, unconsciously. And out in the audience she noticed a few smiles on the faces of flyers who were strangers to her.
Skepticism? Contempt? Or support, agreement? She had to will her hands to part and lie still by her sides. It would not do to be wringing her hands before them all.
'Corm says I am fighting tradition,' Maris continued, 'and that's true. He has told you this is a terrible thing, but he hasn't said why. He hasn't explained why tradition needs to be defended against me. Just because something has always been done in one way doesn't mean that change is impossible, or undesirable. Did people fly on the home worlds of the star sailors? If not, does that mean it was better not to fly? Well, after all, we aren't dauberbirds, that if our beaks get pushed to the ground we keep on walking that way until we fall over and die — we don't have to walk the same path every day — it wasn't bred into
She heard a laugh from her listeners, and felt elated. She could paint pictures with words even as Corm could! Those silly waddling cave birds had gone from her mind to someone else's and drawn a laugh; she had mentioned breaking tradition, and still they listened. Inspired, she went on.
'We are people, and if we have an instinct for anything, it is the instinct — the will — toward change.
Things have always been changing and if we're smart we'll make the changes for ourselves, and for the better, before we're forced into them.
'The tradition of passing the wings on from parent to child has worked fairly well for a long time — certainly, it is better than anarchy, or the older tradition of trial by combat that sprang up in Eastern during the Days of Sorrow. But it is not the only way, nor is it the perfect way.'
'Enough talk!' someone growled. Maris looked around for the source and was startled to see Helmer rise from his seat in the second tier front. The flyer's face was bitter, and he stood with folded arms.