The tight cordon parted and the prince mounted the platform. Standing alone, heturned all the way around, raising his hands to the crowd.
'My friends,' he cried, 'I know you have claims upon me. The least wrong to oneof my people is important to me.'
Wess snorted.
'But tonight we are all privileged to witness a wonder never seen in the Empire.Forget your troubles tonight, my friends, and enjoy the spectacle with me.' Heheld out his hand, and brought a member of his party up beside him on the stage.
Bauchle Meyne.
'In a few days, Bauchle Meyne and his troupe will journey to Ranke, there toentertain the Emperor my brother.'
Wess and Quartz glanced at each other, startled. Chan muttered a curse. Aerietensed, and Wess held her arm. They all drew up their hoods.
'Bauchle goes with my friendship, and my seal.' The prince held up a rolledparchment secured with scarlet ribbons and ebony wax.
The prince sat down, with Bauchle Meyne in the place of honour by his side. Therest of the royal party arrayed themselves around, and the parade began.
Wess and her friends moved closer together, in silence.
They would have no help from the prince.
The Processional gates swung open to the sound of flutes and drums. The musiccontinued for some while before anything else happened. Bauchle Meyne began tolook uncomfortable. Then abruptly a figure staggered out on to the path, as ifhe had been shoved. The skeletally thin, red-haired man regained his balance,straightened up, and gazed from side to side. The jeers confounded him. Hepushed his long cape off his shoulders to reveal his star-patterned black robe,and took a few hesitant steps.
At the rope barrier's first wooden supporting post, he stopped again. Hegestured towards it tentatively and spoke a guttural word.
The post sputtered into flame.
The people nearby drew back shouting, and the wizard lurched along the path,first to one side, then the other, waving his hands at each wooden post in turn.
The foggy white circles melded together to light the way. Wess saw that theposts were not, after all, burning. When the one in front of her began to shine,she brought her hand towards it, palm forward and fingers outspread. When shefelt no heat she touched the post gingerly, then gripped it. It held no warmth,and it retained its ordinary texture, splintery rough-hewn wood.
She remembered what Lythande said, about her having a
strong talent. She wondered if she could do the same thing. It would be a usefultrick, though not very important. She had no piece of wood to try it on, nor anyidea how to start to try in the first place. She shrugged and let go of thepost. Her handprint -she blinked. No, it was her imagination, not a brighterspot that she had touched.
At the prince's platform, the wizard stood staring vacantly around. BauchleMeyne leaned forward intently, glaring, his worry clear and his anger barelyheld in check. The wizard gazed at him. Wess could see Bauchle Meyne's fingerstense around a circle of ruby chain. He twisted it. Wess gasped. The wizardshrieked and flung up his hands. Bauchle Meyne slowly relaxed his hold on thetalisman. The wizard spread his arms. He was trembling. Wess, too, was shaking.She felt as if the chain had whipped around her body like a lash.
The wizard's trembling hands moved: the prince's platform, the wooden parts ofthe chairs, the poles supporting the fringed awning, all burst suddenly into afierce white fire. The guards leaped forward in fury and confusion, but stoppedat a word from their prince. He sat calm and smiling, his hands resting easilyon the bright arms of his throne. Shadowy flames played across his fingers, andthe light spun up between his feet. Bauchle Meyne leaned back in satisfaction,and nodded to the wizard. The other nobles on the platform stood disconcerted,awash in the light from the boards between the patterned rugs. Nervously, butfollowing the example of their ruler, they sat down again.
The wizard stumbled onward, lighting up the rest of the posts. He disappearedinto the darkness of the tent. Its supports began to shine with the eerieluminescence. Gradually, the barrier-ropes and the carpets on the platform andthe awning over the prince and the canvas of the tent became covered with a softgentle glow.
The prince applauded, nodding and smiling towards Bauchle Meyne, and his peoplefollowed his lead.
With a sharp cry, a jester tumbled through the Processional gates andsomersaulted along the path. After him came the flutists and drummers, and thenthree ponies with bedraggled feathers attached to their bridles. Three childrenin spangled shorts and halters rode them. The one in front jumped up and stoodbalanced on her pony's rump, while the two following did shoulder-stands, bracedagainst the ponies' withers. Wess, who had never been on a horse in her life andfound the idea quite terrifying, applauded. Others in the audience applaudedtoo, here and there, and the prince himself idly clapped his hands. But nearby alarge grizzled man laughed sarcastically and yelled, 'Show us more!' That wasthe way most of the audience reacted, with hoots of derision and laughter. Thechild standing up stared straight ahead. Wess clenched her teeth, angry for thechild but impressed by her dignity. Quartz's oldest child was about the sameage. Wess took her hand, and Quartz squeezed her fingers gratefully.
A cage, pulled by a yoke of oxen, passed through the dark gate. Wess caught herbreath. The oxen pulled the cage into the light. It carried an elderly troll,hunched in the corner on dirty straw. A boy poked the troll with a stick as theoxen drew abreast of the prince. The troll leaped up and cursed in a highpitched angry voice.
'You uncivilized barbarians! You, prince - prince of worms, I say, of maggots!May your penis grow till no one will have you! May your best friend's vaginaknot itself with you inside! May you contract water on the brain and sand in thebladder!'
Wess felt herself blushing: she had never heard a troll speak so. Ordinarilythey were the most cultured of forest people, and the only danger in them wasthat one might find oneself listening for a whole afternoon to a discourse onthe shapes of clouds or the effects of certain shelf-fungi. Wess looked around,frightened that someone would take offence at what the troll was saying to theirruler. Then she remembered that he was speaking the Language, the real tongue ofintelligent creatures, and in this place no one but she and her friendsunderstood.
'Frejojan!' she cried on impulse. 'Tonight - be ready - if I can -!'
He hesitated in the midst of a caper, stumbled, but caught himself and gambolledaround, making nonsense noises till he faced her. She pulled her hood back so hecould recognize her later. She let it fall again as the cart passed, so BauchleMeyne would not see her from the other side of the path.
The grey-gold furry little being gripped the bars of his cage and looked out,making horrible faces at the crowd, horrible noises in reaction to their jeers.But between the shrieks and the gibberish, he said, 'I wait -'
After he passed them, he began to wail..
'Wess -' Chan said.
'How could I let him go by without speaking to him?'
'He isn't a friend, after all,' Aerie said.
'He's enslaved, just like Satan!' Wess looked from Aerie's face to Chan's, andsaw that neither understood. 'Quartz -?'
Quartz nodded. 'Yes. You're right. A civilized person has no business being inthis place.'
'How are you going to find him? How are you going to free him? We don't evenknow how we're going to free Satan! Suppose he needs help?' Aerie's voice rosein anger.