
The pig-woman dropped her pipe. She rose in a swift, blurred movement that
startled Raederle. The vagueness dropped from her face like a mask, revealing
a strength and sorrow worn into it by a knowledge of far more than Raith's
pigs. She drew a breath and shouted, "What?"
The shout cracked like lightning out of the placid sky. Raederle, flinging her
arms futilely over her ears, heard above her own cry the shrill, terrified
cries of rearing horses, and the breathless, gasping voices of men struggling
to control them. Then came a sound as unexpected and terrible as the
pig-woman's shout: the agonized, outraged protest of the entire pig herd of
Hel.
Raederle opened her eyes. The pig-woman had vanished, as though she had been
blown away by her shout. The unwieldy, enormous pig herd, squealing with pain
and astonishment, was heaving to its feet, turning blindly, massing like a
great wave, panic rippling to the far edges of the herd in the distance. She
saw the great boars wheeling, their eyes closed, the young pigs half-buried in
the heave of bristled backs, the sows, huge with their unborn, swaying to
their feet. The horses, appalled by the strange clamor and the pigs jostling
against them, were wrenching out of control. One of them stepped back onto a
small pig, and the double screech of terror from both animals sounded across
the clearing like a battle horn. Hooves pounding, voices shrilling and
snorting, the pride of Hel for nine centuries surged forward, dragging men and
horses helplessly with them. Raederle, taking prompt, undignified shelter up
the oak tree, saw Raith trying desperately to turn his horse and reach her.
But he was swept away with his retinue, Elieu, whooping with laughter,
bringing up the rear. The herd ebbed away and vanished into the distant trees.
Raederle, straddling a bough, her head beginning to ache with the aftermath of
the shout, thought of the pigs running along with the Lord of Hel all the way
into the King's council hall in Anuin, and she laughed until she cried.
She found, riding wearily back into her father's courtyard at twilight three
days later, that some of the pigs had gotten there before her. The inner walls
were blazoned with the banners of the lords who had arrived; beneath the
banner of Hel, limp in the evening air, were penned seven exhausted boars. She
had to stop and laugh again, but the laughter was more subdued as she realized
that she had to face Mathom. She wondered, as a groom ran to take her horse,
why, with all the people in the house, it was so quiet. She went up the steps,
into the open doors of the hall; amid the long lines of empty tables and the
sprawl of chairs, there were only three people: Elieu, Duac and the King.
She said a little hesitantly as they turned at her step, "Where is everyone?"
"Out," Mathom said succinctly. "Looking for you."
"Your whole council?"
"My whole council. They left five days ago; they are probably scattered, like
Raith's pigs, all over the Three Portions of An. Raith himself was last seen
trying to herd his pigs together in Aum." His voice was testy, but there was
no anger in his eyes, only a hiddenness, as if he were contemplating an
entirely different train of thought. "Did it occur to you that anyone might be
worried?"
"If you ask me," Duac murmured into his wine cup, "it seemed more like a
hunting party than a search party, to see who would bring home the prize."
Something in his face told Raederle that he and Mathom had been arguing again.
He lifted his head. "You let them go like a cageful of freed birds. You can
control your own lords better than that. I've never seen such shambles made of
a council in my life, and you wanted it so. Why?"
Raederle sat down next to Elieu, who gave her a cup of wine and a smile.
Mathom was standing; he made a rare, impatient gesture at Duac's words. "Does
it occur to you that I might have been worried?"
"You weren't surprised when you heard she was gone. You didn't tell me to go
after her, did you? No. You're more interested in sending me to Caithnard.
While you do what?"
"Duac!" Mathom snapped, exasperated, and Duac shifted in his chair. The King
turned a dour eye to Raederle. "And I told you to stay out of Hel. You had a