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The Singer of All Songs
by Kate Constable
Excerpt:
The orchard was white with apple blossoms, as through the ancient
trees held heaped armfuls of snow in their gnarled, low branches
the bees hummed their contentment, and the novices who where taking
their turn to help Calwyn with the hives trotted about as sunny
as strawflowers in their yellow tunics. One of them pulled off her
big veiled hat to fan her forehead, squinting in the sunshine. "Calwyn,
look!"
Calwyn looked up and was surprised to see the slight, blue-robed
figure of Marna making her way slowly across the grass. "Lady
Mother!" She hurried to offer her arm, but the High Priestess
waved her away. "They told me you were unwell."
"Well enough for a stroll in the orchard, as you can see."
With a slight grimace of discomfort, Marna settled herself on
a low bough; a shower of petals fluttered to the grass. "It
is too long since I came to see the hives. All is well here, I trust?"
"Yes, Lady Mother. But Amara hive is preparing for a swarm
though it's so early in the season."
"Is that why you came to see me this morning, Calwyn?"
"No." Calwyn hesitated and looked about at the little
group of novices clustered nearby, each with a basket or a scraping
knife in her hands, each staring wide-eyed at this unaccustomed
visitor. She lowered her voice. "I have a message from the
Outlander. Likely it's only the ravings of his fever, but
"
"Very well." Marna's voice held the trace of a smile.
"Send the little girls away."
Calwyn shooed them to the hives at the end of the orchard and warned
them not to return until she came to fetch them. Once they were safely
out of hearing, she settled herself cross-legged at Marna's fee
and recited what the stranger had told her.
"The Singer of All Songs?" repeated Marna. "You are
certain that's what he said? Those were his exact words?"
"Yes, Lady Mother. And he said to tell you that he has the
power of seeming something, but he never finished what he was saying."
"The Power of Seeming," said the High Priestess under
her breath. "No wonder he jumps at every shadow." For
a moment she stared out across the river, toward the gleaming mountain
peaks, lost in thought, then turned her pale blue eyes back to Calwyn.
"What does it mean, Lady Mother?"
"The Outlander's enemy has the Power of Seeming. That means
he can wear any face he chooses and conjure up illusions that appear
as real as this vough under my hand. Imagine wandering alone through
the mountains, never certain if what you see before you is real
or a dream. It's no wonder the poor man's wits are strained."
Calwyn had taken off her broad-brimmed hat; now she pleated its
protective veil between her fingers. "And the Singer of All
Songs?"
Marna was silent while the bees in the next hive, readying themselves
to swarm, buzzed with their high-pitched furious humming. She was
silent so long that Calwyn feared she was never going to answer,
but at last she spoke.
"Once you have become a full priestess, my daughter, you will
learn more of these matters. Its is not fitting that I should tell
you too much while you are still a novice. But you already know
that there are other Powers of chantment besides our own. You have
heard, you have seen this sorcerer yourself, and you know that the
magic he practices is not the same as ours."
"Yes, Lady Mother." Calwyn felt suddenly very solemn and
serious. Usually during lessons and lectures she felt only a fierce
desire to be elsewhere or an irresistible urge to fidget, but now
she sat as still as a statue, sensing that what Marna was about
to tell her was more important, and certainly more interesting,
than herb lore or weaving patterns.

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