<h2 id="c8"><span class="h2line1">7</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">SEDAD VIX: A NEW LIFE</span></h2>
<p>The doorman did not glance from his cachet—a lazy doorman—and
the provost on guard at the street entrance was equally indifferent
as Rodvard went past, feeling a trifle unreal after so long
close indoors. Remigorius was compounding a philter with mortar
and pestle; he hailed Rodvard almost boisterously, laughing over
the figure he made in his false facial hair. “What! Will you have a
career as a ladies’ lap-cat, now that you’ve turned seducer by profession?
Well, I have summoned you here because things mount to
a crisis. The court’s finance is utterly broke, and the High Center
holds that we must move fast, for though there are stirrings in the
west, it seems they move in the direction of Pavinius.”</p>
<p>Said Rodvard; “We are likely to be broke ourselves. Mme.
Kaja’s a traitor.”</p>
<p>Pestle stopped in mortar; the doctor’s face seemed to narrow
over the midnight thicket of his beard and a soft pink tongue came
out to run a circlet round his lips. “I’ll mix that bitch a draft will
burn her guts out. Give me the tale.”</p>
<p>Rodvard told it all plainly, with the hiding on the rooftop and
the household of the Amorosian woman, over which last Remigorius’
eye held some anxiety. “The one who came here? You did
not tell her of our fellowship? These people of the Prophet’s rule
lie as close together as so many snowflakes, and though they’re
as deep against the court as we, I would not trust them. But touching
your affair of the old singer—” he placed one finger to his cheek
and held his eyes averted, so that Rodvard could not see where his
true thought lay “—you’re too censorious. I see no real treason
there; she’s deep in double intrigues and must keep up an appearance,
beside which, no doubt, there is something of an old woman’s
green-sickness for a younger man. It may all have been by order
of the High Center, indeed; you’d certainly have been saved yourself
by some tale, for you are now too valuable. Now for our affair;
you are to take the stage at dawning for Sedad Vix, where you are
to be writer for Count Cleudi at the conference of court.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</div>
<p>Rodvard’s eyes sprang open wide. “The court? Will I not be
known?”</p>
<p>“Ah, nya, you’re not involved now in this pursuit of the provosts.
The only one that could establish your communion with the
witch is cared for.”</p>
<p>“What—who would that be?”</p>
<p>“Your pensionnario doorman. An accident happened to him last
night but one; was found in the river this morning, thoroughly
dead and green as a smelt.” Remigorius waved a hand goodbye to
Udo the Crab and whipped to his main theme, the conference of
court. Florestan the Chancellor, the army restive for want of pay,
the revenues hypothecated, the question of a great assembly, Cleudi
intriguing, the time come for all terrible measures.</p>
<p>“But Mathurin can discover all this as clearly as I,” said Rodvard
(a little quickfire of suspicion running through him).</p>
<p>“Better in the open, but we’d know the secret purposes, and
whom to trust. Mathurin takes Cleudi to be a spy for the regent
of Tritulacca, despite his ejection from the councils there. Is it
true? You’ll find the hiding place of his mind. Then there’s Baron
Brunivar, the peoples’ friend, as they call him. A reputation too
exalted for credit. He’s from the West—is he not by chance in
Prince Pavinius’ service, seeking to place that worm-bitten saint
on the throne, as prince and Prophet, both together? A thousand
such questions; you’ll play in high politics, young man, and earn
yourself a name.”</p>
<p>Rodvard (heart beating) said; “Well—”</p>
<p>“Well, what do you ask more?”</p>
<p>(His mind made up with a snap, and as though the words
came from someone else;) “Two things. To write a letter to
Demoiselle Asterhax, who will be expecting my return, and to
know how I am to reach Sedad Vix without a spada.”</p>
<p>Remigorius shot him a glance, hit and past (in which there
was annoyance and something like a drop of ink about Lalette).
“What, you grasshopper? Always without money. To Sedad Vix
is a spada and two coppers.” He drew from his pouch this exact
amount. “As for the letter, write. Here’s paper, I’ll charge myself
with the delivery.”</p>
<p>Rodvard wrote his letter; discussed through a falling light what
persons might be watched at the villa by the sea, and how to give
the news to Mathurin; dined miserably with the doctor on a stew
that had the sharp taste of meat kept beyond its time, and lay down
exhausted on the floor, with a couple of cushions and his cloak.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</div>
<p>Sleep withheld its hand; his mind kept running in a circle round
the thought of being a controller of destinies, until he made up a
land of play-show in his head, of being accuser before a court of
the people, with some man who bore a great name as the accused,
and himself making a speech—“But you, your lordship, are a liar
and a traitor. What of your secret adhesion to the Prophet? . . .”
The scene he could fix clearly, with the accused’s face, and the
members of the court looking grim as the accusation was driven
home, but somehow the people of his drama would not move
around or change expression beyond this one point, and each time
he reached it, the whole thing ended in a white flash, and he
drifted for a while between sleeping and waking, wondering
whether his Blue Star might not be driving him foolish, until the
imagined play began again, without any will of his own. Toward
day, he must have slept a little, for Remigorius was laying a cold
hand on his face, and it was time to look toward the new day
and new life.</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>From the city to Sedad Vix by the shore is a fair twelve leagues,
through the most fertile fields in all Dossola, now jumping with new
green, orchards blooming in a row and pale yellow jonquils. Another
time Rodvard had found the trip after they crossed the high bridge
pure pleasure; but now he felt having missed his sleep, and the
travel-mate in the opposite seat was a good-looking pregnant woman,
who said she was going to join her husband, and babbled on
about his position in the royal orchestra till one could not even
doze. The Blue Star said coldly that she was a liar and talking to
hide the true fact, namely that she hated her husband and pregnancy
and the love of any man, and as soon as she was free of her
condition, hoped to catch the eye of some wealthy lady and to be
maintained for pleasures impermissible—so vile a thought that Rodvard
closed his eyes. The man next to him was a merchant of some
kind by the badge in his cap; he kept addressing heavy-handed
compliments to the dame, saying that he would dance with her at
the spring festival and the like. Rodvard, turning, could see he
thought her licentious, and was determined to profit by it at some
future time. At Masjon, where they stopped for lunch, the merchant-man
bought a whole roasted chicken and a bottle of that fine white
Tritulaccan wine which is called The Honey of the Hills.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</div>
<p>Rodvard himself was a little faint from lack of food when he
reached the royal villa after a solid half-league of trudging beyond
the stage-post, nor did the under-butler who received him offer food,
but took him at once to a cabinet looking out over a terraced flower-garden,
at the back of the rambling building. This guide said to
wait for the arrival of Ser Tuolén, the butler-in-chief. The name
had a Kjermanash sound; and sure enough, the tall man who came
after perhaps half an hour’s retard, had the high-bridged nose and
curling hair of that northern land. Rodvard stood to greet him with
extended hand, and as he looked into the eyes, received a shock
that ran through him like poison-fire, with its indubitable message
that he was facing another wearer of the Blue Star.</p>
<p>“You are Ser Bergelin?” The eyes looked at him fixedly though
the lips did not cease smiling. “What is your function to be?”</p>
<p>“Writer to the Count Cleudi for the conference,” Rodvard managed
to say. (One almost seemed to drown in those eyes, liquid and
northern blue, but he could not read a single thought behind them.)</p>
<p>The smile expanded. “You will find it easier to meet others who
<i>know</i> when you have borne that stone for a time. I perceive it is a
novelty to you. There are not many of us. Hmmm—I suppose it is
little use asking you why Count Cleudi wishes a Blue Star with him.
No matter; I have watched him before, and it is no secret that he
wishes to be Chancellor; even Lord Florestan knows that. I trust
you are not an Amorosian or one of that band of assassins who
call themselves Sons of the New Day?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Rodvard (and thought with the back of his mind
that this was why all plans to deal directly with the court had
broken, and others of the brotherhood been laid in the toils of the
provosts, this Star-bearer here.) With the front of his thought he
concentrated on looking at the detail in the painting of a milkmaid
just beyond Tuolén’s ear.</p>
<p>The butler-in-chief turned. “It is by Raubasco. He was not satisfied
with the highlights in the middle distance, as I discovered by
a means you will understand, so it was easy to persuade the painting
away from him. Do you intend to bring your wife?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Rodvard, (thinking quickly on Lalette and as quickly
away).</p>
<p>“Oh, there is something wrong with the personal relation. Perhaps
it is just as well if you do not; Her Majesty is not prudish,
but she does not approve of witches at the court. Your room will
be at the depth of the west wing, beyond the hall of conference. I
will have one of the under-butlers show you.” He stood up, then
paused with one hand holding the bell-rope.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</div>
<p>“One last word. A Bearer finds himself in a strange position here
without his witch. I suppose your wife has given you the usual warning
about infidelity, but you are clearly new to the jewel and
young, and there are not a few ladies who might make the loss
seem worth the gain—since you can read their desires. In particular
I warn you to stand clear of the Countess Aiella of Arjen, in whom
I have noted something of the kind. She is involved with the Duke
of Aggermans, a man who’ll protect his own dangerously. . . .
Drop in tomorrow night after Cleudi releases you; it will be a
pleasure to compare things seen with another Bearer. I have not
met one for long.”</p>
<p>In the room was a tray of food on the table, ample and well
selected, with a bottle of wine; three or four books also, but they
were all gesling-romances, and of a kind Rodvard found it difficult
to bear even when well written, as these hardly were. He
glanced at each in turn, then tossed them aside, and was only
rescued from boredom by Mathurin’s coming, who pressed his
hands, and said he would come the next evening again, but for the
now, he must hurry.</p>
<p>Rodvard replied that the high butler Tuolén was the bearer of
a Star, and Mathurin must either avoid his eye or keep his own
thought on innocuous subjects.</p>
<p>“And his witch? Wait, no, that explains much.”</p>
<p>“I do not see,” said Rodvard.</p>
<p>“Why, fool, the hold the court party has. No sooner a man turns
up that’s in opposition than your Tuolén knows his most secret
purpose, and I do not doubt that his wife witches the man. This
is something for the High Center of the New Day.”</p>
<h3>III</h3>
<p>A pretty maid brought him breakfast in bed. She gave him a
cheerful morning greeting but embarrassed him by hoping in her
thought that he would not make love to her. Her mind held some
memory of how the last man in this room had done so, but she
shied from the thought of the outcome so much that instead of
decently avoiding her look Rodvard was tempted to pry deeper,
but there was hardly time.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</div>
<p>She said it would be near to noon when Count Cleudi rose and
that his apartment was in one of the pavilions set among tree and
shrub and garden, west from the main villa. Rodvard dressed and
went to stroll in that direction through curved avenues among intricate
beds of spring flowers—tulip and narcissus, with pink azaleas
just in the bud beside them and magnolia showing its heavy white
wax. The pathways had been laid out so that each sweep brought
somewhere into view through trees the pale blue bay, with the white
houses of Sedad Vix climbing the slope beyond, their walls touched
to gold by genial sunshine; bright yellow birds were singing overhead,
or busily gathering morsels for their nests. Rodvard felt his
heart expanding with a joyous certainty that all would yet be well,
though in the same tick demanding of himself how men who dwelt
in such surroundings could be given to evil and oppression. Ah, if
all people could only walk in gardens daily! A question in philosophy
to put to the doctor—but before he could frame it into words,
a turn of the path brought him past a tall clump of rhododendrons
to the front of a red-doored pavilion, where a gardener was letting
into the ground plants of blooming hyacinth.</p>
<p>The air was rich with their fragrance. “Good morning to you,”
said Rodvard cheerfully, for joy of the world.</p>
<p>The man looked up with lips that turned down at the corners.
“If you say it is a good morning, I suppose it must be one for
you,” he said, and turned back to his trowel.</p>
<p>“Why, I would call it the best of mornings. Does not the fine
air of it please you?”</p>
<p>“Enough.”</p>
<p>“Then what’s amiss? Have you troubles?”</p>
<p>“Who has not?” The gardener slapped his trowel against the
ground beside his latest plant. “Look at these flowers, now. Just
smell that white one there, it’s more fragrant than the blue. Aren’t
they beautiful things? Brought here at expense, and in this soil, see
how black it is, they would grow more perfect than ever, year by
year. But here’s the end of them; as soon as the blossoms fade ever
so little, poor things, they must be dug up and thrown away, because
she—” he swung his head and rolled an eye in the direction
of the red-doored pavilion “—can’t bear to have any but blooming
flowers at her door and will want new lilies.”</p>
<p>“Who is she?” asked Rodvard, lowering his tone for fear that
voices will sometimes carry through wood.</p>
<p>“The Countess Aiella. Her affair, you will be saying, whether
flowers die or live; she has all that income from the Arjen estates,
and doesn’t have to provide for her brothers, who married those
two heiresses up in Bregatz, but a man could still weep for the
waste of the flowers. Ser, give a thought to it, how in the world
we never have enough of beauty and those who destroy any part
of it take something from all other people. Is it not true, now?”</p>
<p>He paused on his knees and looked up at Rodvard (who was
growing interested indeed, but now felt the coldness of the Blue
Star telling him that this earthy philosopher was not thinking
of beauty at all, but only reciting a lesson and wondering whether
his pretty speech might not draw him a gift from this poetical-looking
young man.)</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</div>
<p>“I do not doubt it,” he said, “but I have no money to give
away,” and turned to go, but he had not travelled a dozen paces
when he met one who must be the Countess Aiella herself by the
little double coronet in her drag-edge hat. Rodvard doffed to the
coronet, noting in the fleeting second of his bow the passionate,
bewildering beauty of the face surrounded by curves of light-brown
hair.</p>
<p>She stopped. “Put it on,” she said, and he looked up at her. The
cloak did not conceal the fact that she was still dressed for evening;
a leg showed through the slit in her dress. “I have not seen
you before.”</p>
<p>“No, your grace. I only arrived last night.”</p>
<p>“Your badge says you are a clerk.”</p>
<p>“I am a writer to the Count Cleudi for this conference.” (He
dared to look into the eyes a finger-joint length below his own;
behind them there was boredom with a faint flicker of interest in
himself and the thought of having spent a bad night; a weary
thought.)</p>
<p>“Count Cleudi, oh. You might be him in disguise.” She laughed
a laugh that trilled up the scale, slipped past him with a motion
as lithe as a gazelle’s and up the path into the red-doored pavilion.
Rodvard looked after her until he heard the gardener cackle, then,
a little angry with himself, stamped on round the turn of the path,
trying to recover the glory of the morning. Some of it came back,
but not enough to prevent him thinking more on the comparison
between this countess and Lalette than the difference between this
day and any other day; and so he reached Cleudi’s door, with its
device of a fishing bird carved into the wood.</p>
<p>Mathurin greeted him properly in words to show he and Rodvard
barely had met each other. The pavilion was all on one floor,
the Count in a room at the side, with a man doing his hair while
he sipped hot spiced wine, from which a delicious odor floated.
Rodvard had heard of, but never seen this famous exile and intriguer;
he looked into a narrow face with a broad brow above a
sharp nose and lips that spoke of self-indulgence. Mathurin pronounced
the name of the new writer; a pair of dark eyes looked at
Rodvard broodingly (the thought behind them wondering what
his weakness was and how he would cheat). Said Cleudi:</p>
<p>“I do not ask your earlier employment, since it is of no moment
if you are faithful and intelligent. I cannot bear stupidity. Can you
read Tritulaccan?”</p>
<p>“Yes, your Grace.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</div>
<p>“You will gain nothing by attempting to flatter me with the
form of address. On the side table are pens and papers, also a
horoscope which has been cast in Tritulaccan and a poem in your
own musical language. Make fair copies of both in Dossolan. Have
you breakfasted?” (His accent had the slight overemphasis on S
which no Tritulaccan ever loses.)</p>
<p>“Yes, thank you.”</p>
<p>The symbols on the astrological chart were new to Rodvard; he
had to copy each by sheer drawing and then translate the terms as
best he might. The poem was a sonnet in praise of a brown-haired
lady; its meter limped at two points. Rodvard managed to correct
one of them by a transposition of words and presently laid both
papers before Cleudi, who knit his brows over them for a moment
and smiled:</p>
<p>“You are a very daring writer to improve on what I have set
down, but it is well done. Mathurin, give him a scuderius. Well
then, you are to wait on me in the conference at nine glasses of
the afternoon. Everything I say is to be set down, and also the remarks
of the Chancellor Florestan, but most especially those of the
Baron Brunivar, for these may be of future use. Of the others, whatever
you yourself, consider worth while. You are dismissed.”</p>
<p>Mathurin saw him to the door. “The scuderius?” asked Rodvard.</p>
<p>“Goes into the treasury of our Center,” said the servitor.</p>
<p>“But I have no money, no money at all,” protested Rodvard.</p>
<p>“Pish, you do not need it here. Would you starve our high purpose
to feed your personal pleasure in little things? I will come
to your room tonight.”</p>
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