rides on this mission, and you seek to conceal your fear for them.”
“
“Peace, Lord. I have no heart for jesting,” sighed
Shetra, and turned away to resume her study of Revelstone.
Lord Hyrim considered her in silence briefly, then said to Korik, “Well, she has less body to preserve than I have. It may be that fine spirit is reserved for neglected flesh. I must speak of this with the Giants if we reach them.”
“We are the Bloodguard,” answered Korik flatly. “We will gain Seareach.”
Hyrim glanced up at the night sky, and said in a soft, musing tone, “Summon or succour. Would that there were more of us. The Giants are vast, and if they are in need the need will be vast.”
“They are the Giants. Are they not equal to any need?”
The Lord flashed a look at Korik, but did not reply. Soon he moved to Shetra's side, and said quietly, “Come, sister. The journey calls. The way is long, and if we hope to end we must first begin.”
“Wait!” she cried softly, like the distant scream of a bird.
Hyrim studied her for another moment. Then he came back to Covenant. In a whisper so low that Covenant could hardly hear it, the Lord said, 'She desires to see Lord Verement her husband before we go. Theirs is a sad tale, ur-Lord. Their marriage is troubled. Both are proud-Together they made the journey to the Plains of Ra to offer themselves to the Ranyhyn. And the Ranyhyn-ah, the Ranyhyn chose her, but refused him.
“Well, they choose in their own way, and even the Ramen cannot explain them. But it has made a difference between these two. Brother Verement is a worthy man-yet now he has reason to believe himself unworthy. And sister Shetra can neither accept nor deny his self-judgment. And now this mission-Verement should rightly go — in my place, but the mission requires the speed and endurance of the Ranyhyn. For her sake alone, I would wish that you might go in her stead.”
“I don't ride Ranyhyn,” Covenant replied unsteadily.
“They would come to your call,” answered Hyrim. Again Covenant could not respond; he feared that this was true. The Ranyhyn had pledged themselves to him, and he had not released them. But he could not ride one of the great horses. They had reared to him out of fear and loathing. Again he had nothing to offer Hyrim but the look of his silent indecision.
Moments later, he heard movement in the throat of the Keep behind him. Turning, he saw two Lords striding out toward.the courtyard-High Lord Elena and a man he had not met.
Elena's arrival made him quail; at once, the air seemed to be full of wings, vulturine implications. But the man at her side also compelled his attention. He knew immediately that this was Lord Verement. The man resembled Shetra too much to be anyone else. He had the same short stiff hair, the same hawklike features, the same bitter taste in his mouth. He moved toward her as if he meant to throw himself at her.
But he stopped ten feet away. His eyes winced away from her sharp gaze; he could not bring himself to look at her directly. In a-low voice, he said, “Will you go?”
“You know that I must.”
They fell silent. Heedless of the fact that they were being observed, they stood apart from each other. Some test of will that needed no utterance hung between them. For a time, they remained still, as if refusing to make any gestures which might be interpreted as compromise or abdication.
“He did not wish to come,” Hyrim whispered to Covenant, “but the High Lord brought him. Hs is ashamed.”
Then Lord Verement moved. Abruptly, he tossed his staff upright toward Shetra. She caught it, and threw her own staff to him. He caught it in turn. “Stay well, wife,” he said bleakly.
“Stay well, husband,” she replied.
“Nothing will be well for me until you return.”
“And for me also, my husband,” she breathed intensely.
Without another word, he turned on his heel and hastened back into Revelstone.
For a moment, she watched him go. Then she turned also, moved stiffly out of the courtyard into the tunnel. Korik and the other Bloodguard followed her. Shortly, Covenant was left alone with Hyrim and Elena.
“Well, Hyrim,” the High Lord said gently, “your ordeal must begin. I regret that it will be so arduous for you.”
“High Lord-” Hyrim began.
“But you are capable of it,” she went on. “You have not begun to take the measure of your true strength.”
“High Lord,” Hyrim said, “I have asked ur-Lord Covenant to accompany us.”
She stiffened. Covenant felt a surge of tension radiate from her; she seemed suddenly to emanate a palpable tightness. “Lord Hyrim,” she said in a low voice, “you tread dangerous ground.” Her tone was hard, but Covenant could hear that she was not warning Hyrim, threatening him. She respected what he had done. And she was afraid.
Then she turned to Covenant. Carefully, as if she feared to express her own acute desire, she asked, “Will you go?”
The light from Revelstone was at her back, and he could not see her face. He was glad of this; he did not want to know whether or not her strange gaze was focused on him. He tried to answer her, but for a moment his throat was so dry that he could not make a sound.
“No,” he said at last. “No.” For Hyrim's sake, he made an effort to tell the truth. “There's nothing I can do for them.” But as he said it, he knew that that was not the whole truth. He refused to go because Elena daughter of Lena wanted him to stay.
Her relief was as tangible in the gloom as her tension had been. “Very well, ur-Lord.” For a long moment, she and Hyrim faced each other, and Covenant sensed the current of their silent communication, their mental melding. Then Hyrim stepped close to her and kissed her on the forehead. She hugged him, released him. He bowed to Covenant, and walked away into the tunnel.
In turn, she moved away from Covenant, entered the tower through one of the small doors beside the mouth of the tunnel. Covenant was left alone. He breathed deeply, trying to steady himself as if he had just come through an interrogation. Despite the coolness of the dawn, he was sweating. For a moment, he remained in the courtyard, uncertain of what to do. But then he heard whistling from outside the Keep — shrill piercing cries that echoed off the wall of Revelstone. Korik's mission was calling the Ranyhyn.
At once, Covenant hurried into the tunnel.
Outside the shadowed court, the sky was lighter. In the east, the first rim of the sun had broken the horizon. Morning streamed westward, and in it fifteen Bloodguard and two Lords raised their call again. And again. While the echoes of the third cry faded, the air filled with the thunder of mighty hooves.
For a long moment, the earth rumbled to the beat of the Ranyhyn, and the sir pulsed deeply. Then a shadow swept up through the foothills. Seventeen strong, clean-limbed horses came surging and proud to Revelstone. Their white forehead stars looked like froth on a wave as they galloped toward the riders they had chosen to serve. With keen whinnying and the flash of hooves, they slowed their pace.
In response, the Bloodguard and the two Lords bowed, and Korik shouted, “Hail, Ranyhyn! Land-riders and proud-bearers! Sun-flesh and sky-mane, we are glad that you have heard our call. Evil and war are upon the Land! Peril and fatigue await the foes of Fangthane. Will you bear us?”
The great horses nodded and nickered as they came forward the last few steps to nuzzle their riders, urging them to mount. Instantly, all the Bloodguard leaped onto the backs of their Ranyhyn. They used no saddles or reins; the Ranyhyn bore their riders willingly, and replied to the pressure of a knee or the touch of a hand-even to the command of a thought. The same strange power of hearing which made it possible for them to answer their riders at once, anywhere in the Land-allowed them to sense the call tens or scores of days before it was actually uttered, and to run from the Plains of Ra to answer as if mere moments, not three or four hundred leagues, separated the southeast corner of the Land from any other region-also enabled them to act as one with their riders, a perfect meeting of mind and bone.
The Lords Shetra and Hyrim mounted more slowly, and Covenant watched them with a thickness in his