A Midsummer Tempest Read online

Page 18


  A reluctant smile twitched Rupert’s lips. “’Tis late indeed.”

  “Past midnight. Should’a heard tha butler when I kicked him out o’ bed! Not that I followed his speech, but ’a opened tha spigot for sure. I ’splained what I wanted in zign language, includin’ tha flat o’ my blaede ’cross his hindquarters, an’ … here it be, measter. For everybody’s zake, eat,” Will pleaded.

  Rupert rubbed his eyes. “A sound idea, no doubt. Lord knows thou makest abundant sound about it.”

  “An’ afterward go to sleep.”

  “Nay. Although my search is proving so barren I might almost as well.”

  “What dost thou zeek?” Will filled a goblet with wine and water and thrust it into Rupert’s grasp.

  The prince drank, scarcely noticing. “Our goal: since in my folly I cast away the compass given by a hand which trusted me.” His voice was rough and stiff.

  Will nodded at the ring and its ordinary-looking jewel. “I thought as much. Last night—tha duchess, ha?—aye, tha zigns war plain on her today. An’ what’s wrong in thic, pray tell?”

  Rupert stared into darkness. “I told myself at the time,” rattled from him, “insofar’s I thought in any wise through that sudden torrent of lust … I told myself my pledge of faith to Jennifer Alayne was meaningless, no proper betrothal, no Christian oath; rather, the whole thing could be a snare of hell, and I skirting damnation. But when at last, near dawn, Belinda slunk from me, back to my befriender I’d cuckolded—” He covered his face. “I saw this darkness in the stone, and my soul had become a stone as dead.”

  “Oh, General! Talk zense, I beg thee!” Will leaned over the table to clasp a bowed shoulder. “Maybe thou didst maeke a mistaeke. Well, art thou zo unchristianly proud as to think human stumbles o’ thine be few an’ terrible enough that heaven quaekes? Bezides, ’twould not surprise me if tha duchess used a love potion to o’ercome thee in the end; I’ve heard o’ zuch things in theezam parts. Though as for parts … why, thou’rt young an’ full-blooded. Thou’d’st been a monk for I know not how long ere we zet north, whereafter thou wert zoon an’ always kept aware o’ mine own artillery at work, click o’ tha cockin’, snap o’ tha hammerfall, thump an’ bang o’ tha flyin’ balls. No moare magic than this miaght’ve been needful, an’ small wonder if at last thou didst fall; though’t might be better I bespeak a girt wonder which did ariase. Liake I heard a learned man zay once, abstinence maekes tha font grow harder.”

  “Spare me,” Rupert said. “Leave me alone to do what little I can toward repairing the disaster.”

  “If thou’lt stoake thyzelf.”

  Rupert nodded, rolled bread around a slab of meat, and chewed. “Thic’s better,” Will said. “Uh, if we’ve lost use of our guide, can we carry on?”

  Rupert winced. “I can try … to seek my goal—Prospero’s isle—by mortal means. The odds are less than poor for finding it and, should I find it, gaining aught thereby. Yet what else can I do?”

  “We, my loard.”

  “Thanks for fidelity too deep to need thanks.”

  Whether because of nourishment or encouragement, the prince’s manner regained some of its iron: “My reasoning goes thus. Six decades ago, Duke Prospero of Milan and his infant daughter were made captive by his usurping brother. He had them taken secretly to sea—‘some leagues,’ says the Historian—and there put into a derelict, ‘a rotten carcass of a butt, not rigged, nor tackle, sail, nor mast; the very rats instinctively have quit it.’ Now this must have been a ship, not large, but not a boat either. We have the description, as well’s the fact there was stowage for the arcane books and other goods which kindly Gonzalo managed to give the duke along. Nonetheless, it must have drifted at mercy of wind and wave, slowly sinking. What minor magics Prospero could wield at that time no doubt aided him to strand safely. However, considering the starting point and the condition of the vessel, the island he found must lie somewhere between Italy and Spain.”

  “H’m.” Will rubbed his bristles, which made a scratchy noise across the snores of the old librarian. “Thou’st skimped talk o’ this to me. But than, we’d thin time for talk till we boarded for our own v’yage; an’ thic—Ne’ miand. What happened laeter?”

  “Oh, Prospero and Miranda dwelt there till he had by his studies become a mighty wizard and she was a young lady. At last his false brother chanced nigh. He’d been with the party which married Claribel, the daughter of his overlord the King of Naples, to the King of Tunis—she who’s dowager queen here. By his arts and the aid of a servant spirit, Prospero caused the ship to be driven to his shore, and played such tricks as taught repentance. Finally, when all could be forgiven, he returned to rule again in Milan, while his daughter married the crown prince of Naples—aye, they’re the same King Ferdinand and Queen Miranda who reign there still. Prospero practiced no more sorceries for the rest of his life, being mainly concerned with preparing himself for the next one. In fact, he’d abandoned his magical articles on the island.” Rupert paused before finishing: “Oberon’s thought was that we might recover and use them.”

  Will shivered despite the heat. “An uncanny quest forzooth. Well, I’ve aye found All Hallows Eve good for rangin’, sine gaemekeepers stay indoors throughout thic night. Know’st thou where this plaece may be?”

  “Hardly closer than I’ve said. Islands are not plentiful in the western Mediterranean Sea. However, Oberon’s people failed to find it. Therefore I think it has a magic of its own, including a girdle of invisibility. Mariners espy naught save empty waves, unless by sheer chance they come within a certain close distance. That may well have happened from time to time, men may actually have made landings, though they could never quite find it again, given their primitive navigation in earlier ages. I wonder if it may once have been Calypso’s isle, or Circe’s—” Rupert’s words trailed off.

  “An’ thou’rt ranzackin’ tha records for mentions what might pw’int tow’rd it?” Will asked. (Rupert nodded.) “Winnin’ scant booty, zeems liake. How much longer’ll thou taeke?”

  “A week should exhaust this library.”

  “An’ thee, ’speci’lly if thou’lt not eat. Chomp, measter! What’s thy scheame afterward?”

  “I’ll buy a boat.” Rupert’s fingernails whitened where he clutched the table edge. “Belinda’s money; my penance.” Decisive again: “A small craft, which two can man. We’ll need no more, in this sea and season. Why add risk of betrayal, when word of my coming here must soon reach agents of our enemies? We’ll crisscross the area of possibility, starting at the likeliest parts, until—” He bit savagely into the food.

  “Till tha year grows too oald; or King Charles be beaten; or zomething drags us under,” Will said. “An’ liake thou toald, our odds be none I caere to waeger a clipped farthin’ on. Well, Oberon an’ Titania loaded tha dice in our faevor, last time. Maybe now tha’ can hit on a way for shufflin’ that spots around. If not—” He shrugged. “There be no other gaeme, hey?”

  THE JOLLYBOAT.

  It rocked to a slow swell beneath a cloudless sky. Apart from that motion, the water might have been green and blue glass. Westward heaven stood gray-violet around a sinking moon, eastward whitened by a sun not yet risen. The air was cool, but barely gave steerage way; the sail hung more slack than taut, often flapping as the yard slatted about.

  Jennifer half sat, half sprawled in the sternsheets. Her hands were raw on tiller and cordage, the lips in her burnt face had cracked open to the dry blood, eyes smoldered emptily beneath swollen lids.

  A night at sea, a day, another night, she thought, and here’s another dawn. Will I see dusk? How long till thirst will free me from itself? Her neck let go. As chin struck chest she gasped back to consciousness. I must not sleep! Impossible at best to tack along that course the ring once pointed … through shifty winds or none, and unknown currents, by sun, moon, stars unlike the stars of home, observed through haze of weariness and scorch … impossible surely if I fall asleep.

  S
he cleated the line she held and scratched in salt-stiffened hair. My skull’s quite hollow—Nay, there is much sand within the shriveled kernel of my brain. Have I gone mad? Am I indeed possessed? This scow’s not even very good at tacking. I know no longer where I am, or why. I ought to make for shore, where’er ’tis nearest—whichever way that is, unless too late—not plod eternally to seek a Dutchman whose own witch-pilot somehow must have died.

  She raised her head, though it went slowly. Why, there’s my reason! How could I forget for e’en a minute? If the spell has failed, he too may be bewildered and beset. With God all things are possible, they say, although, of course, the most of them unlikely; thus it may be I’ll find him—help him—find him—If not, I died in trying, like a soldier.

  She turned the helm a trifle, seeking the most use out of what breeze she had.

  A swirl in the water drew her look. Why, ’tis a dolphin, she realized. Aloud, a croak forced from leathery mouth and tongue: “Greeting, Master Dolphin! Good morrow to thee. Come, I bid thee welcome. The antics of thy kind beside this hull, the liquid lightning beauty of their pace, have helped me keep my reason and my life. God loves the world; He gave it dolphins—Oh!”

  That was a parched scream. For the swimmer had drawn alongside, arced up in a cataract of spray, caught the first sunbeams on spear-bright flanks, and shimmered into something else.

  Jennifer shrank back. The one who perched on the middle thwart laughed. The sound was like bells, heard far away across summer meadows through dawn-dreams when she was a child; and he sang more than spoke:

  “I thank thee for thine invitation, lady, and do accept with pleasure. Pardon me if I surprised thee when I doffed my cloak. I have no few of them—as this—”

  Abruptly a dragonfly hovered, the absoluteness of blue. “Or this,” it said, and a dove preened an iridescent breast. “Or this”—a young man, brown, golden-curled, in a brief white tunic, strumming a lyre, wings on his cap and sandals—“or this”—a vortex of radiance, not unlike what had come from the ring before it faded, but whirling, whirling—“or this,” the being said, and returned to the first shape taken aboard, “or many more.”

  “What sending art thou,” Jennifer’s words dragged, “and from where, and why?”

  “Am I so terrifying in thy sight?” he teased. “I can become a gorgon if thou’d’st liefer.”

  Her breathing began to slow. Certainly his aspect could in itself only charm: a boy of seven or eight years, slenderness clad in breechclout and a lily garland across the fair locks, eyes big and cornflower-colored in a countenance dusted with freckles—but less than a foot tall, and winged like a butterfly which had been patterned on a tiger in a field of gillyvor.

  No matter his minuteness, she could easily hear him, and read the concern which crossed his features: “Wait. Thou hast sailed too near the edge, I see. No babe has drained thee, but a red-hot vampire, and thou art more a mummy than a mother. Abide a moment.”

  He was gone. She stared, opened and closed her mouth, could get forth no noise. Untended, the rudder waggled idle, the yard-arm rattled, and the sail spilled its wind.

  A footman appeared before her. “Milady, tea is served,” he intoned, set a tray on the after thwart, and became the boy-spirit, perched gleefuly in the bows.

  She gaped. A pot of China ware steamed upon the brass, next to an eggshell-thin cup; there were plates of cheese, raisins, cakes; beside a pitcher of milk stood one of water, both bedewed from their coldness, and an honest clay mug to pour full.

  “Quaff slowly, nibble, till thou’rt wont to life,” he warned.

  “I know,” she answered, “but know not how to thank thee.… Oh, thou’st naught against a prayer?”

  “Nay, I’ll join.”

  Reassured, she knelt for minute, as he did in the foresheets. Meanwhile the sun had come wholly in flight and the sea lay a-flash.

  With wondering care, Jennifer started to drink and eat. Her rescuer found a comfortable position against the gunwale, kicked his heels, and said:

  “No doubt thou’rt curious about this business. Well, I am Ariel, the airy spirit who once served Prospero upon that isle which thou’st been dogging, till he slipped me free.” Her stupefaction sent him into a gale of mirth. “I read thy mind. Fear not. ’Tis very pure.” He grew solemn. “And thus I learned how Faerie’s faring ill. I’ve kept myself too long in isolation—lost track of time, mine island is so pleasant. Now must I help thy cause and Oberon’s. Else might erelong the foe bestride my holm, his iron passionlessly ravish her, then flense the daisies from her dying flesh and on her bones erect a countinghouse.”

  “As has been happening in England,” she said between cautious, marveling sips. “Rupert—”

  “What’s in a name?” Ariel scoffed. “Well, names can be important. They should have made him Ernest. Ah, no matter. He clumps well-meaning, if on heavy hoofs. Myself, I like thee better, Jennifer.”

  “Speak never ill of him!” she flared.

  “That’s what I like,” nodded Ariel.

  “But … he’s alive and hale?”

  “Aye.”

  “God be praised.” Were she not desiccated, she would have wept.

  After a while, during which he conjured a sparkling ball into existence, bounced it on his fingertips, and dismissed it, Ariel went on: “Thou know’st our Faerie powers are but slight—illusions, apparitions, some few tricks, forecastings which the stream of time may drown, a whisper of ambiguous advice. Outside mine eyot, I’m a spy, no more. Not only would I not have known of thee, I could not aid thee as I’m doing now hadst thou not by thyself come near my home. Nor can I resurrect those mighty things whereby Duke Prospero first saved, then bound me. I can but show thee where he sank them down, and mortal muscles which may help thee—”

  “Rupert?”

  Ariel grimaced. “Nay, he sits deep inside a shell of books. I have no strength to winkle him from them, for that whole palace has an iron frame to fence off magic, which its builders feared.” Seeing her crestfallen: “However, by himself he’ll soon creep forth. Meanwhile, I know how it has fretted thee about the lad who cut thy chains in twain and thus did leave his sword unscabbarded. Well, he is in no danger. His companions agree thou didst bewitch his innocence, and anyway, have too much else to think of.” He grinned. “The owner of this boat demands its price of them—a sum left float to bloat, I’m sure—since watchmen state a Puritan did steal it, and furthermore insists on partial rental, although ’tis clear they’ll never use his ship. He threatens lawsuit; whilst they speak no French!” He beat the thwart and whooped.

  “How dost thou know these things?” Jennifer wondered.

  “The span of time I took to fetch you rations, was enough to follow up the clues within thy mind.” Ariel began to sing: “Where the eaves drop, there drop I—” but broke off in apology. “Ah, nay, I pray thy delicacy pardon each single second sere and useless here within this furnace hole of movelessness. I’ll bring an oil which heals all burns at once.” His words rose to a cry. “Now from the deeps for thee let whirl a wind, lass!”

  He flung an arm aloft. The air brawled to life, the waters beneath it. Sail suddenly filled, the boat sprang forward.

  xx

  THE ISLAND.

  HILLS lifted high from wide white beaches and intimate coves. They were bedecked with forest—here pine and juniper, there tall hardwoods—or meadows star-sky full of flowers. Springs gave rise to brooks which tumbled over moss-softened cobbles and rang down cliffsides. Odors of growth, blossom, sun-warmed resin drenched the air. It was always singing, for wings were overhead in the thousands: chirrup, trill, carol, and chant.

  Ariel’s medicines had already brought Jennifer close to full recovery. She followed an upward trail. Cathedral coolness dwelt beneath the branches which vaulted it Sunbeams dissolved into green and gold in those leaves, or reached the earth and minted coins among the shadows. The sprite flitted around and around her. Occasionally he zipped aside to startle a ladyb
ird, play tag with a robin, or drain the dew lingering in an orchid cup.

  “And have I died,” she asked at last in a sleepwalker’s voice, “to find this Paradise?”

  “Nay, it is earthly, though thou well hast earned it.” Ariel descended to perch on her shoulder. “Is not the whole wide world itself an Eden, and man himself its snake and fiery guardian? The first and foremost miracle thou’lt find, here too as elsewhere, is thy living flesh. That it may get its due, I’m guiding thee toward the cell that Prospero had carved from out a bluff, to house him and his girl. We’ll quickly sweep and garnish it for thee, and heap sweet boughs and grasses for thy bed.”

  He quivered his wings as he went eagerly on: “Thou’lt find the island fare we bring not simple. Each well we tap has its own icy tang, each honeycomb’s uniquely from one field, each grape’s most subtly blent of sun, earth, rain, while truffles taste of treasures buried deep and mushrumps have the smack of shade and damp, to emphasize the cunning of an herb or quench the acrid ardor of a leek as apple tartness is made soft by pears. That’s but to name a few of many plants. Our crabs and lobsters clack self-praise enough; the oysters rightly feel they need no boast. Soon hazelnuts and quinces will be ripe, and I could hymn what hymeneal things occur when they are introduced to trout. I think I shall—”

  “A moment, pray, kind sir,” Jennifer interrupted. She was coming out of her daze. “Thou speak’st of ‘we.’ Who else dwells hereabouts?”

  Ariel arched his brows. “Who dost thou think? … And here he comes to meet me.”

  Jennifer cried aloud in shock.

  The being which shambled around a bend in the path seemed twice hideous against woods, birds, and elf. He was roughly manlike, somewhat beneath her in height. That was partly due to the shortness of his bowlegs, partly to his hunched stance, for the shoulders were broad. Arms dangled past knees; like the splay feet, they ended in black-rimmed unclipped nails. A matted white shock of hair disguised, at first, how small his head was. It had no brow or chin; the eyes crouched deep in great caverns of bone, the face was mostly muzzle, flat nose and gash of a mouth. His skin, sallow and brown-spotted, was covered by nothing save a filthy loincloth.

 

    Security Read onlineSecurityThe Valor of Cappen Varra Read onlineThe Valor of Cappen VarraThe Sensitive Man Read onlineThe Sensitive ManVirgin Planet Read onlineVirgin PlanetTo Build a World Read onlineTo Build a WorldSeven Conquests Read onlineSeven ConquestsMayday Orbit Read onlineMayday OrbitInnocent at Large Read onlineInnocent at LargeWinners! Read onlineWinners!Mother of Kings Read onlineMother of KingsUn-Man Read onlineUn-ManWar of the Gods Read onlineWar of the GodsGenesis Read onlineGenesisIndustrial Revolution Read onlineIndustrial RevolutionThe High Ones and Other Stories Read onlineThe High Ones and Other StoriesThe Chapter Ends Read onlineThe Chapter EndsFlandry of Terra Read onlineFlandry of TerraStarfarers Read onlineStarfarersA World Named Cleopatra Read onlineA World Named CleopatraOperation Chaos Read onlineOperation ChaosHarvest of Stars - [Harvest of Stars 01] Read onlineHarvest of Stars - [Harvest of Stars 01]The Rebel Worlds Read onlineThe Rebel WorldsPoul Anderson's Planet Stories Read onlinePoul Anderson's Planet StoriesNo World of Their Own Read onlineNo World of Their OwnThe Merman's Children Read onlineThe Merman's ChildrenThe High Crusade Read onlineThe High CrusadeThe Stars Are Also Fire Read onlineThe Stars Are Also FireThe Game of Empire df-9 Read onlineThe Game of Empire df-9The Sorrow of Odin the Goth tp-7 Read onlineThe Sorrow of Odin the Goth tp-7The Day After Doomsday Read onlineThe Day After DoomsdayGoat Song Read onlineGoat SongThe Wing Alak Stories Read onlineThe Wing Alak StoriesConan the Rebel Read onlineConan the RebelThree Worlds to Conquer Read onlineThree Worlds to ConquerIron mw-1 Read onlineIron mw-1The Fleet of Stars Read onlineThe Fleet of StarsCaptive of the Centaurianess Read onlineCaptive of the CentaurianessThe Sign of the Raven Read onlineThe Sign of the RavenThe Avatar Read onlineThe AvatarThe Boat of a Million Years Read onlineThe Boat of a Million YearsNew America Read onlineNew AmericaSatan's World Read onlineSatan's WorldGallicenae Read onlineGallicenaeA Midsummer Tempest Read onlineA Midsummer TempestA Stone in Heaven Read onlineA Stone in HeavenOrbit Unlimited Read onlineOrbit UnlimitedThe Corkscrew of Space Read onlineThe Corkscrew of SpaceTLV - 02 - The Road of the Sea Horse Read onlineTLV - 02 - The Road of the Sea HorseEnsign Flandry df-1 Read onlineEnsign Flandry df-1Young Flandry Read onlineYoung FlandryThe Broken Sword Read onlineThe Broken SwordSwordsman of Lost Terra Read onlineSwordsman of Lost TerraOrion Shall Rise Read onlineOrion Shall RiseA Knight of Ghosts and Shadows df-7 Read onlineA Knight of Ghosts and Shadows df-7The Queen of Air and Darkness Read onlineThe Queen of Air and DarknessTo Outlive Eternity Read onlineTo Outlive EternityThe Golden Slave Read onlineThe Golden SlaveDahut Read onlineDahutCaptain Flandry: Defender of the Terran Empire Read onlineCaptain Flandry: Defender of the Terran EmpireUn-Man and Other Novellas Read onlineUn-Man and Other NovellasDavid Falkayn: Star Trader (Technic Civlization) Read onlineDavid Falkayn: Star Trader (Technic Civlization)Sir Dominic Flandry: The Last Knight of Terra Read onlineSir Dominic Flandry: The Last Knight of TerraVault of the Ages Read onlineVault of the AgesThe Devil's Game Read onlineThe Devil's GameA Stone in Heaven df-12 Read onlineA Stone in Heaven df-12Flandry's Legacy: The Technic Civilization Saga Read onlineFlandry's Legacy: The Technic Civilization SagaHarvest the Fire Read onlineHarvest the FireThe Sharing of Flesh Read onlineThe Sharing of FleshHarvest of Stars Read onlineHarvest of StarsAgent of the Terran Empire Read onlineAgent of the Terran EmpireWorld without Stars Read onlineWorld without StarsThe Corridors of Time Read onlineThe Corridors of TimeFire Time gh-2 Read onlineFire Time gh-2The Stars are also Fire - [Harvest the Stars 02] Read onlineThe Stars are also Fire - [Harvest the Stars 02]We Have Fed Our Sea Read onlineWe Have Fed Our SeaDemon of Scattery Read onlineDemon of ScatteryRogue Sword Read onlineRogue SwordRise of the Terran Empire Read onlineRise of the Terran EmpireThe Only Game in Town tp-4 Read onlineThe Only Game in Town tp-4Agent of the Terran Empire df-5 Read onlineAgent of the Terran Empire df-5The Day Of Their Return Read onlineThe Day Of Their ReturnBrain Wave Read onlineBrain WaveThe Day of Their Return df-4 Read onlineThe Day of Their Return df-4The Golden Horn Read onlineThe Golden HornHrolf Kraki's Saga Read onlineHrolf Kraki's SagaTau Zero Read onlineTau ZeroThe People of the Wind Read onlineThe People of the WindTLV - 03 - The Sign of the Raven Read onlineTLV - 03 - The Sign of the RavenFlandry of Terra df-6 Read onlineFlandry of Terra df-6Gibraltar Falls tp-3 Read onlineGibraltar Falls tp-3The Game Of Empire Read onlineThe Game Of EmpireThe Road of the Sea Horse Read onlineThe Road of the Sea HorseDelenda Est tp-5 Read onlineDelenda Est tp-5Time Patrol Read onlineTime PatrolBrave To Be a King tp-2 Read onlineBrave To Be a King tp-2The Man Who Counts nvr-1 Read onlineThe Man Who Counts nvr-1A Circus of Hells df-2 Read onlineA Circus of Hells df-2The Rebel Worlds df-3 Read onlineThe Rebel Worlds df-3The Unicorn Trade Read onlineThe Unicorn TradeLord of a Thousand Suns Read onlineLord of a Thousand SunsThe Helping Hand Read onlineThe Helping HandThe Shield of Time Read onlineThe Shield of TimeThe Van Rijn Method Read onlineThe Van Rijn MethodA Circus of Hells Read onlineA Circus of HellsEarthman, Beware! and others Read onlineEarthman, Beware! and othersIvory, and Apes, and Peacocks tp-6 Read onlineIvory, and Apes, and Peacocks tp-6Life Cycle Read onlineLife CycleThe Last Viking Read onlineThe Last VikingRoma Mater Read onlineRoma MaterThe Man-Kzin Wars 09 mw-9 Read onlineThe Man-Kzin Wars 09 mw-9For Love and Glory Read onlineFor Love and GloryEutopia Read onlineEutopiaTLV - 01 - The Golden Horn Read onlineTLV - 01 - The Golden HornThe Old Phoenix Tavern Read onlineThe Old Phoenix TavernThe Long Night df-10 Read onlineThe Long Night df-10The Dog and the Wolf Read onlineThe Dog and the WolfTales of the Flying Mountains Read onlineTales of the Flying MountainsThere Will Be Time Read onlineThere Will Be TimeA Knight of Ghosts and Shadows Read onlineA Knight of Ghosts and ShadowsThree Hearts and Three Lions Read onlineThree Hearts and Three LionsThe Makeshift Rocket Read onlineThe Makeshift RocketThe Dancer from Atlantis Read onlineThe Dancer from AtlantisFire Time Read onlineFire Time