act! For, my lords,
when the Prince of Enlad tells us that he spoke the words of the Making in a spell and
yet did not know their meaning as he spoke them; when the Master Patterner says that
there is fear at the roots and will say no more: is this so little a foundation for
anxiety? When a storm begins, it is only a little cloud on the horizon.”
“You have a sense for the black things, Sparrowhawk,” said the
Doorkeeper. “You ever did. Say what you think is wrong.”
“I do not know. There is a weakening of power. There is a want of
resolution. There is a dimming of the sun. I feel, my lords—I feel as if we who
sit here talking were all wounded mortally, and while we talk and talk our blood runs
softly from our veins. . . .”
“And you would be up and doing.”
“I would,” said the Archmage.
“Well,” said the Doorkeeper, “can the owls keep the hawk
from flying?”
“But where would you go?” the Changer asked, and the Chanter
answered him: “To seek our king and bring him to his throne!”
The Archmage looked keenly at the Chanter, but
answered only, “I would go where the trouble is.”
“South or west,” said the Master Windkey.
“And north and east if need be,” said the Doorkeeper.
“But you are needed here, my lord,” said the Changer.
“Rather than to go seeking blindly among unfriendly peoples on strange seas, would
it not be wiser to stay here, where all magic is strong, and find out by your arts what
this evil or disorder is?”
“My arts do not avail me,” the Archmage said. There was that
in his voice which made them all look at him, sober and with uneasy eyes. “I am
the Warder of Roke. I do not leave Roke lightly. I wish that your counsel and my own
were the same; but that is not to be hoped for now. The judgment must be mine: and I
must go.”
“To that judgment we yield,” said the Summoner.
“And I go alone. You are the Council of Roke, and the Council must
not be broken. Yet one I will take with me, if he will come.” He looked at Arren.
“You offered me your service, yesterday. Last night the Master Patterner said,
‘Not by chance does any man come to the shores of Roke. Not by chance is a son of
Morred the bearer of this news.’ And no other word had he for us all the night.
Therefore I ask you, Arren, will you come with me?”
“Yes, my lord,” said Arren, with a dry throat.
“The Prince, your father, surely would not let you go into this
peril,” said the Changer somewhat sharply, and to the Archmage, “The lad is
young and not trained in wizardry.”
“I have years and spells enough for both of
us,” Sparrowhawk said in a dry voice. “Arren, what of your
father?”
“He would let me go.”
“How can you know?” asked the Summoner.
Arren did not know where he was being required to go, nor when, nor why.
He was bewildered and abashed by these grave, honest, terrible men. If he had had time
to think he could not have said anything at all. But he had no time to think; and the
Archmage had asked him, “Will you come with me?”
“When my father sent me here he said to me, ‘I fear a dark
time is coming on the world, a time of danger. So I send you rather than any other
messenger, for you can judge whether we should ask the help of the Isle of the Wise in
this matter, or offer the help of Enlad to them.’ So if I am needed, therefore I
am here.”
At that he saw the Archmage smile. There was great sweetness in the smile,
though it was brief. “Do you see?” he said to the seven mages. “Could
age or wizardry add anything to this?”
Arren felt that they looked on him approvingly then, but with a kind of
pondering or wondering look, still. The Summoner spoke, his arched brows straightened to
a frown: “I do not understand it, my lord. That you are bent on going, yes. You
have been caged here five years. But always before you were alone; you have always
Elizabeth Amelia Barrington