Medair, who had suffered many shocks in the last day, swayed invisibly in the watch-tower. She had looked upon the land around Athere countless times, and this was somewhere else. Five hundred years had changed certain features of Palladium, but it had still been the same place. This sculptured landscape of quiet hills and soft curves was… She shook her head.
In the far distance, the mountains which formed the eastern reaches of Farak’s Girdle rose as they always had, yet they seemed higher and darker than before. The glitter of the Tarental River curved to the east, but surely that bend shouldn’t be there? And that bridge, an elegant arch which led to the beginnings of a dark forest where farmland should be? Everything was different and oddly familiar.
"I finally have run mad," she whispered.
The verdant world did not go away. The shield remained, locking out the scene like an image behind glass. It was better, surely, than the ashen char everyone had been expecting, but Medair still stared in blank dismay. She could hear cheers from the wall below, but they were muted, nervous. Frightened.
There was something strange about the rider still racing toward them. No, not the rider, the steed. It took only a moment to isolate why: not only was the animal travelling faster than any horse Medair had ever encountered, it was doing so at about a foot above the ground.
It
The Kier’s armed escort, their own horses missing, were holding the crowd back from the open gates. Medair was quick to slip invisibly past and hurry out to the shield. The Kier, with the Keridahl Alar and a cluster of attendants, was standing before the shield, lost in casting. Even as Medair came up, the blue wall dissipated, and a cool, scented breeze swept over the city.
It was all real. Medair stopped where she was, only a short distance from the Kier. Beneath her feet, the grass was withered and brown, a testament to the heat which had beat upon the shield. A few feet away, beyond where the shield had stood, the grass grew lush and moist. She took a few steps forward and then knelt to touch it. Grass, cool beneath her fingers. It smelt real. There was magic everywhere, the lingering remnants of the Conflagration, but the grass was not an illusion. The fire had destroyed Farakkan, then remade it.
The rider on her floating horse was drawing close. Why its hooves should make any noise when they didn’t touch the ground, Medair couldn’t guess. And didn’t try, as she had her first good look at the rider. She had Mersian features, almost exaggeratedly so. Her hair was a mass of thin braids wound with glittering threads. And she wore the uniform of a Herald.
Medair put her hands slowly down on the grass and simply stared.
It wasn’t until the woman dismounted that she was sure it wasn’t the same uniform. In outline it was almost identical to an Imperial Herald’s, but there was no silver badge, no satchel, and there was a device of a tree stitched on the breast. And it was green.
Long before Medair been born, Heralds had worn a thousand combinations of colour to complement every kind of message. That was why the colour-change enchantment had been created. The system had been deemed overly complex during the reign of a former Emperor, and the Heralds had been restricted to three colours. White, red and black. Dark green would have been…marriage tidings? Medair shook her head, numbly. This wasn’t an Imperial Herald. It wasn’t.
"It was a marvel to look upon,
"Tell me more of Queen Valera," the Kier responded.
The Mersian looked frankly bewildered, but then, so did most of the Ibisians. "
The horse, a black mare, swung its head in a strangely alert fashion as Medair climbed unsteadily to her feet. The animal seemed to be looking directly at her, and Medair shifted uneasily, not certain whether to be concerned. At least the black’s hooves were for the moment planted firmly on the ground.
The Kier’s voice was as thin and cool as it had been when she’d interviewed Medair. But she looked tired. "This day has brought many strange things to Athere, Heleise of Tir’arlea. The memories you have I do not share. Nor, it seems, does the fire we watched overtake our land remain in your mind."