one on Irrylath's breast when he had been a darkangel. Oriencor's bloodless lips pursed fretfully.
"It's true," she mused. "I can't love. I don't have a heart of flesh anymore. I took it out, after the Ancients deserted me, and replaced it with one of winterock."
She glanced over one shoulder. Aeriel followed her gaze. A crystal box rested in a niche across the room.
"I put the original away for safekeeping."
Warily, Aeriel eyed the box. Something dark lay inside, dimly visible through the colorless stone.
Oriencor shrugged.
"You may look at it, if you wish."
The pearl burned bright upon her brow. Aeriel felt an irresistible attraction drawing her to the box.
Slowly, she crossed the room and touched the lid. The crystal was bone chill: cold as the keep.
"Don't think you can harm it," the lorelei warned, still at the windowsill. "I'd never let you near it, if you could do it any harm."
Aeriel felt a stirring within the pearl, like something just beginning to wake—but it subsided at once.
She lifted the box's lid and halted, frowning. Nothing lay within the box but a layer of fine, dark grit.
Immediately, the pearl brightened.
"There's nothing in here," she said. "Nothing but dust."
Scowling, Ravenna's daughter bit her lip with one pointed tooth. "Won't you lie to flatter me, little sorceress?" she inquired. "Aren't you afraid of me yet?"
Aeriel turned to face her. "I'm very much afraid of you," she answered. No use to pretend otherwise.
The Ancient's daughter could read her with such ease. Still biting her lip, the White Witch smiled.
"So was Irrylath. And he said the same."
Despite the other's eyes upon her, Aeriel felt her own gaze, very gently, being directed once more to the fine sooty stuff in the bottom of the box, like ashes of the dead. Widün the pearl, something shifted again. She reached to touch the ash. It was cool and clung together like barely damp meal. Ravenna's pearl glowed. A strange, soft murmuring came into the back of Aeriel's mind. She tried to listen, but Oriencor's muttered words drowned it out.
"All the others told me what a fine heart it was, how beautifully preserved. They thought to please me.
Irrylath told me it was only wormwood. It's why he was my favorite. Of all the boys I ever made into darkangels, only Irrylath never lied."
The Witch's knifelike nails drummed the crystal of the windowsill, chipping and scoring it. They sounded like death beetles clicking in the walls. Taste it, the pearl was telling her, that I may know my daughter's heart. Almost without a thought, Aeriel touched a few grains of the Witch's dust to her tongue, and a sharp sensation went through her like a pinprick. It was the bitterest thing she had ever known. It tasted like despair. The pearl dimmed then, and its voice subsided. Aeriel forgot about it instantly as a sleeper, waking, forgets a dream. Across the room from her, Oriencor sighed.
"My heart fell away into dust long ago. I hadn't realized it would do that when I cut it out. The crystal was supposed to preserve it. Well, I was very young at sorcery then. But no matter. A heart would be too great a burden to bear with me across the Void."
Aeriel frowned, having lost the other's train of thought. Across the Void? But Oriencor only laughed and turned back to the window.
"Ah," she said softly. "So it starts."
Aeriel caught in her breath. Hastily she replaced the Witch's box in its niche and went to join Oriencor at the casement.
"Your lady's army comes forward," the lorelei murmured.
Gazing down, Aeriel saw the great crescent advancing now, comprising allies of every hue: blue Berneans, pale green Zambulans, Pirseans with coppery skin, pale Terraineans and gold-complected refugees from Avaric, the rose-skinned people of Rani and the teal-colored folk of Elver, dark Mariners, Isterners with plum-colored skin, and the cinnamon-colored wanderers of the desert lands. All at once, Aeriel understood what their yellow banner was. Above them all, her wedding sari floated, blazing in the light of Solstar.
Beside her at the window, Oriencor lifted her gaze. Winged figures—half a dozen of them— poised in the air about the keep. Smiling, she commanded them: "Begin."
12
Seventh Son
With a start, Aeriel took note for the first time of those to whom the Witch had spoken. High above the palace hovered six darkangels: manlike but deathly pallid of skin. Their eyes had no color; their flesh was all fallen in. They were bloodless, heartless, soulless things. The dozen black wings upon the back of