Maze of Moonlight by Gael Baudino (read with me TXT) ๐
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- Author: Gael Baudino
Read book online ยซMaze of Moonlight by Gael Baudino (read with me TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Gael Baudino
If Lake's words had stung, Varden gave no sign. โWhat do you intend to do for her?โ he said.
Lake stood up, folded his arms, hung his head. โGod know. I dan. I'll think of sa'thing, though. What wi' the schism and all, the Church is turning bad. Gregory set the Inquisition loose on sorcery some years back, and so I'm ha'way expecting . . .โ He shrugged. He did not want to say it. Someday. Any day.
But Varden was shaking his head. โThe Inquisition has attempted before to make inroads into Adria. It was last directed at the Free Towns, at the instigation of Baron Roger of Aurverelle. It failed.โ
โThat was before I was born,โ said Lake, โan' people still talk about it as though it were some kind o' miracle. I suppose it was, too: Roger just turned around and let the Towns go. Just like tha'. But times have changed. E'en the Free Towns ha' changed. It could happen again. And in any case, it wan't take a crusade to claim Vanessa, only one frightened priest and a few woman-hating Dominicans.โ
โAnd what about you?โ
Lake snorted. โI'm nearly fifty. I've lived. I've seen enough, and I'm tired of it. I can leave it.โ He felt Varden's starlit eyes. Fifty years? Compared to a lifetime measured in eons? Varden had watched the making of the world, and here was Lake insisting that his own tastes had become jaded after only fifty years.
But Varden said nothing. He did not have to. The transparency about him was eloquent enough.
โBut Vanessa is young,โ Lake forced himself to say. โShe dan deserve that.โ He shook his head, covered his face with his hands. โMy God, she's fourteen. She should be married by now, or at least we should be planning it. But no one i' the village . . . I mean, wha' man in his right mindโโ
โWould you . . .โ Varden spoke slowly, hesitantly. โWould you let me see her? Perhapsโโ
โStay awa' from her,โ Lake snapped. Varden was silent, and Lake looked up at the loft uneasily. โYou've got to understand,โ he said, his voice a taut whisper, โyou are as you are. That's all. But Vanessa and I . . . We're struggling just to be human. It's na simple in this world. We ha' to fight for it, and it hurts us.โ The starlight gleamed in Varden's eyes, and Lake's voice shook. โMaybe it will kill us. I dan know. God knows.โ
โOr the Lady.โ
Lake nodded, torn between beliefs, between races, between worlds. โWhate'er, Varden.โ
Silence again. Finally, Varden nodded and rose. โForgive me for troubling you. Do what you think is best. Roxanne is gone, and I begin to understand now that my work is done. Indeed . . .โ He shook his head sadly. โ. . . I wonder whether I have not marred as much as I have made.โ
โYou dan know?โ
โEverything is fading. We do not see as we used to. The world is for men now.โ
Varden went to the door, cast his cloak about his shoulders; and Lake wondered whether he was now seeing the wall behind him as through a thin veil, whether the shadow Varden cast had lightened from black to gray. Fading, like all his kind, leaving a shadowy legacy behind that, with time, would itself fade into the mortal blood of the world.
But a thought seemed to strike Varden, and he returned to the hearth as he unfastened a chain from his neck. A pendant in the form of a moon and a rayed star swung flashing in the dull glow of the fire.
โGive this to Vanessa,โ he said. โTell her its origins or not as you think best. Butโpleaseโgive it to her.โ
Lake took it as though it were a serpent. โAnd wha' can this do for her?โ
Varden shrugged. โA sign,โ he said. โPerhaps a token if she ever needs one. Or, if not, a bauble to catch the eye of a husband.โ He smiled thinly. โThe hand of the Lady be upon you, Lake.โ
And then he opened the door and was gone. And though Lake looked after him, it seemed that Varden's form and the gleam of starlight that veiled him faded long before he had gone far into the falling snow. The road was suddenly empty and dark. All that was left was the cold, and the night, and the snow.
Fading.
Lake closed the door, barred it, and banked the fire carefully; and then he climbed the narrow stairs to the loft, undressed, and crawled under the thick comforter next to his wife. Miriam smiled in her sleep and snuggled closer to him, shifting her head from the feather pillow to his strong shoulder; and he wrapped an arm about her as though to shield her from Varden and all that he represented, as though to gather in his embrace all the mortality and humanity to which he could make some small claim and hold it up as a bulwark against the comforting, frightening, dangerous, immortal light of the stars.
Miriam, at least, was safe: peasant born, stout, smiling, and happy. Vanessa, though, sleeping uneasily a few feet away, tossing amid visions of patterns and futures, was another matter. Well, at least she could sleep. At least she had that much.
The pendant burned in his hand like a latent stigmata. He resolved not to give it to her. Not tomorrow, at least. Perhaps someday, but not tomorrow.
Roxanne was dead. His mother. And now Varden was gone to whatever fate folded soft wings of oblivion about those in whom the immortal blood of the Elves ran pure.
The tears finally came. Truly, he was alone now. โThe hand o' the Lady be upon you too, Da,โ he whispered, and then he forced sleep to accept him.
Chapter Three
โHe had
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