“Sister Anne claimed that the Aoi would bring in their wake a great cataclysm.”
“Sister Anne claimed many things, but she also would have let Blessing starve to death. She spent years hunting down her own husband, and in the end she killed him because she wanted to get her daughter back. No one has ever explained to my satisfaction why a man like Bernard would run away with Liath in the first place, or hide her so desperately. What if he knew something we do not? Nay, Sister Anne may say many things, and twist the truth to serve her own purposes, and in the end we cannot know what is truth and what is falsehood, only that she is heartless when it comes to those she would use to advance her own objectives.”
“You’ll hear no argument from me on that score,” murmured Heribert. “I built her a fine hall, yet I do not doubt that she would have disposed of me without a second thought once I was of no further use to her.” He sighed suddenly and sheathed his knife. Running his fingers over the finely carved tower which now crowned his oak staff, a crenellation, arrow slits, a suggestion of stonework etched into the wood, and the Circle of Unity rising from the center, he spoke softly, his voice shifting in tone. “All ruined, so you said.”
“Everything. The hall burned like kindling.” He lowered his stick and set a companionable hand on Heribert’s shoulder. “You can’t imagine their power.”
“The power of Anne and her sorcerers?”
“Nay, although truly Sister Anne commands powers greater than anything I can understand or have ever seen before. I spoke of the fire daimones who stole Liath away. Everything their gaze touched burst into flame. Even the mountains burned.” Just as his anger burned, deep in his heart, fueled by helplessness and frustration. The words came unbidden. “I could do nothing to stop them.” Grief made his voice hoarse, but then, after the wound to the throat he’d taken in battle five years ago, his voice always sounded like that.
A breeze had come up in the trees. He listened but could not make words out of their rustling: they were not spirits of air, such as Anne had commanded, but only the wind. Yet that sound of wind through autumn leaves reminded him that he still had hope. In the palace at Angenheim, he had seen a gateway opening onto a place veiled by power and distance and the mysteries hidden in the architecture of the universe as Liath would have said. He had heard Liath’s voice. “She’s still alive,” he whispered.