a day you will have whatever you want - or you can struggle; it matters not one whit to me."
That phrase struck a chord of memory. "A year and a day," Tier said. "You'll make me beggar king for a year and a day." He hummed a bit of the old tune. "And I suppose, like the beggar king, you'll sacrifice me to the gods at the end?"
"That's right," said the wizard as if Tier were a prized pupil. "I see that an Owl will be different than a Raven - which is what we've had the last three times. The Hunter was interesting, though we finally had to cage him. I think you'll do. But first..."
He leaned forward and touched Tier lightly; as he did so, the silver and onyx ring on his index finger caught Tier's attention briefly.
He was distracted by the ring when the wizard's voice dropped a full octave and he said in the Traveler tongue, "By Lark and Raven, I bind you that you will harm neither me nor any wizard who wears a black cloak in these halls. By Cormorant and Owl, I bind you that you will not ask anyone to help you escape. By Falcon, I bind you that you will not speak of your death."
Magic surged through Tier, holding him still until the wizard was done.
"There," he said sitting back again.
There indeed, thought Tier, shaken. No one had ever laid a spell on him before. He felt... violated and frightened. It had been so fast and he hadn't been able to defend himself from it at all. Cold sweat slid down his neck and he shivered, fighting nausea.
"Sick?" Telleridge asked. "It takes some people like that, but I couldn't depend upon the word of a Traveler peasant - even if you'd give it. My young friends are easily influenced. I would hate to lose any of my Passerines too soon."
"Passerines?" asked Tier, breathing shallowly through his nose and hoping he didn't look as shaken as he felt. "You have song birds here?"
The wizard smiled. "As I said, a Bard will be interesting. Myrceria will tell you what you need to know about my Passerines. Ask her about the Secret Path if you wish. She is waiting for you outside the door."
The woman was indeed waiting for him, kneeling on the cold stone of the floor with her hands at rest. Prepared, Tier thought, to deal with a man in any mood he might emerge with. She sat unmoving until he closed the door gently behind him.
"If you like, I can take you into the Eyrie," she said, using her right arm to indicate the open double doors. "There are others to talk to if you wish and food and drink are available to you there. If you would prefer to ask me questions, we can go back to your room. You will find it much improved."
"Let's go talk," he said after a moment.
As Myrceria promised, the cell had been transformed in his absence. It had been scoured clean and furnished with a bed such as the nobles slept in rather than the rush-stuffed mattress over stretched rope he had at home. Rich fabrics and rare woods filled the room; it should have looked crowded, but it managed to appear cozy instead. In the center of the bed a worn lute rested, looking oddly out of place.
He took a step toward it, but stopped. He wasn't like Seraph: he didn't feel the need to do the opposite of whatever anyone tried to get him to do, but that didn't mean he enjoyed being manipulated either. So he left the lute for later examination and chose to investigate another oddity. The room was lit by glowing stones in copper braziers placed in strategic places around the room.
"They're quite safe," said Myrceria behind him. She moved against him, pressing close until her breasts rested against his back, then reached around him to pick the fist-sized rock out of the brazier he'd picked up.
He set the brazier down gently and stepped away from her. "You are quite lovely, lass," he said. "But if you knew my wife, you'd know that she'd take my liver and eat it in front of my quivering body if I ever betrayed her."
"She is not here," Myrceria murmured, replacing the rock and turning gracefully in a circle so that he could see what he was refusing. "She will never know."
"I don't underestimate my wife," he replied. "Nor should you."