“The Prince jestingly mentioned the possibility,” Mistirea sighed. “Or was it in jest? Yet how could one demand the life of the king’s son? Further, King Kerenei is very ill… it will not be long before Prince Askon succeeds him. Then we shall have a strange circumstance—the safety of the realm will depend on the king’s bitterest enemy.”
“Askon Octrago swore himself a vassal of my monarch King Krassos. Let the keeping of his oath be the price of my help.”
“In what manner is he to keep it? It can only be a form of words—Peldain remains cut off from the rest of the world, and there is no way your king can rule here.”
“I am aware of this.” Vorduthe’s tone softened slightly. “I have already pondered these matters. You will be relieved to hear that I intend to try my strength against the spirit, if I can. My reasons, however, are my own.”
Mistirea appeared satisfied with this response. His judgment of people was intuitive, Vorduthe knew. He depended on feeling to tell him whether a man’s word could be taken on trust.
And so it was that later in the day Vorduthe filled his lungs for the second time while floating in the center of the lake. Mistirea placed a hand on the small of his back, urging him down.
Vorduthe dived.
His descent slowed as the liquid thickened, and this time the entity was waiting for him. He entered trance state, and suddenly the darkness was filled with green-gold light.
The voice spoke soothingly.
Vorduthe knew that a trap was being opened under him.
“You are wrong,” the voice told him calmly.
“True, when you descend into the lake you descend into your own subconscious mind, the arena where dreams take place. But what you do not know is that this, the undermind, is collective, universal. Everyone shares it. Through it you can contact others, if you know how, and I know how. It is in the undermind that you meet me. There also you met your beloved wife Kirekenawe, the closest to your own soul—
“It is not possible. She is half a world away.”
“There is no distance in the undermind, just as there is no time. How could a morning pass in the space of one breath? Yet you remember that morning… Yes, you dream and she dreams—the same dream. And since it is a dream, why should she be paralyzed? Why should you be unhappy? I will create a world for you both where you can find what you lost.…”
“It is still only hallucination.”
“No, it is as real as anything you have known. Do you think that you dream apart from one another? No, you dream together, your souls meet and you know one another. If you do not believe me, ask her for news of home… come, see for yourself…”
Vorduthe’s resolve to contend with the spirit wavered. That was all the assent the lake needed.
There was a feeling of being drawn through something. A brief period of sleep. Then.…
The outrigger boat scudded along on the swelling, shining sea, its triangular sail taut and straining on the slanted spar. Vorduthe leaned on the steering oar, turning the prow of the canoe-like craft while his wife hauled on the sheet, pivoting the sail so as still to catch the wind.
The narrow vessel shot through outcroppings of coral, breasted foamy breaking waves, then beached finally on the sandy shore of the island. Swiftly the Lady Vorduthe reefed the sail and tied the sail-line. They jumped out, splashing through the warm salty water and pulling the outrigger onto the beach together.
The sun sparkled on their sea-bronzed bodies. Vorduthe followed his wife up the beach into the shade of the long-leaved trees whose fruit contained a cool, refreshing drink. He cut down two with his knife, chopping off the stems. They drank their fill, and lay together chewing the sweet yellow pulp.
This little group of tiny islands, completely uninhabited and with an associated atoll, had been a favorite spot of theirs early in their marriage. Many a curved, empty beach had been the scene of their pleasure in one another, while breeze-driven waves crashed softly nearby. But now, after an interlude, Vorduthe recalled the Peldainian lake’s advice. He asked his wife how things went in the kingdom.
For the first time a frown crossed her features. “In truth, not well,” she said sadly. “Your departure signaled a time of trouble, husband. Must you really hear of it?”
Vorduthe’s fist clenched. “Yes!”
“Very well.”