"Then how can the box be closed to keep the worlds separated!"
"The same way the gateway is opened. With both Additive and Subtractive Magic."
"And what about the Stone of Tears?"
"I don't know. I would have to study."
"Then you better study fast."
"Please," Warren whined, "you don't mean that you know where the boxes are. You haven't found them, have you?"
"Found them? The last time I saw the boxes, one was opened, about to suck my bastard father into the underworld."
Warren fainted.
57
Under the impotent rays of the late day sun, an old woman was spreading wood ash on the ice covering the vast expanse of stairs. Kahlan walked past, relieved that the old woman didn't look up to see that the person in the heavy clothes, white fur mantle, and carrying a pack and bow, was the Mother Confessor returned to Aydindril.
She was in no mood for starting a celebration tonight. She was exhausted. Already, before coming home to the Palace, she had climbed up to the Wizard's Keep on the mountainside, but the Keep was stone cold and dark as death. The shields were in place, though a Confessor could enter, but no one was inside.
Zedd was not there.
The Keep sat now, as the last time she had seen it so many months ago, when she had left to find the missing great wizard. She had found him, and helped stop the threat from Darken Rahl, but now she needed the great wizard again.
Since leaving the Galean army nearly a month before, she had been struggling to reach Aydindril, and Zedd. Storms had raged for days at a time. Passes had been rendered impassable by the weather and snow, forcing them to backtrack and find alternate routes. It had been a frustrating and tiring journey, but the despair at reaching her goal and not finding Zedd was withering.
Kahlan had made her way through the side streets, avoiding Kings Row. The palaces on Kings Row housed dignitaries, staffs, and guards of the lands that were represented in Aydindril. The Kings and Queens and rulers of those lands stayed in their palaces when they came to address the Council. The palaces were a matter of pride for each land, and each was magnificent, although none could begin to compare to the Confessors' Palace.
Kahlan had avoided Kings Row because she would be recognized there, and she didn't want to be recognized right now; she wanted only to find Zedd and, failing that, speak to the Council, so she headed toward the service area to the side, near the kitchens.
Chandalen was out in the forest. He didn't want to come into Aydindril; the size of the city and the multitudes of people made him uneasy, though he denied it, and claimed only to be more comfortable sleeping outside. Kahlan couldn't blame him; after being alone in the mountains for so long, she, too, was uneasy going into the city, even though she had grown up in this place and knew its streets and majestic buildings as well as Chandalen knew the plains around the Mud People village. The people everywhere made her feel closed in as never before.
Chandalen wanted to go home to his people, now that she was delivered safely to Aydindril. She could understand his desire to be off, but asked him to rest the night, and say goodbye to her in the morning.
She had told Orsk to spend the night with Chandalen. His presence was wearing; his one eye following her everywhere, his jumping to help her with everything, his constantly standing ready to do her bidding at the slightest indication. It was like having a dog continually at heel. She needed a night away from that. Chandalen seemed to understand. She didn't know what she was going to do about Orsk.
A stifling blast of warm air hit her as she went in through the kitchen entrance. At the sound of the door, a thin woman in a sparkling white apron spun to her.
"What are you doing in here! Get out, you beggar!"
As the woman lifted her wooden spoon in a threatening manner, Kahlan pushed back the hood of her mantle. The woman gasped. Kahlan smiled.
"Mistress Sanderholt. I'm so pleased to see you again."
"Mother Confessor!" The woman fell to her knees, clasping her hands together. "Oh, Mother Confessor, forgive me! I didn't recognize you. Oh, good spirits be praised, is it really you?"
Kahlan pulled the wiry woman to her feet. "I've missed you so, Mistress Sanderholt." Kahlan held out her arms. "Give me a hug?"
Mistress Sanderholt fell into Kahlan's arms. "Oh, child, It's so good to see you!" She pushed away, tears running down her face. "We didn't know what had become of you. We were so worried. I thought I might never see you again."
"It has been a long and difficult time. I can't tell you how good it is to see your face again."
Mistress Sanderholt started pulling Kahlan toward a side table. "Come. You need a bowl of soup. I have some on now, if these featherbrains who do what scarcely passes for cooking haven't ruined it with too much pepper."
The welter of cooks and help caught the words and kept their heads down, applying their attention to their tasks. The sounds of whisks and spoons on bowls stepped up. Men picked up sacks and hurried away. Brushes worked at pots with greater zeal. Butter hissed in hot pans, and bread in ovens and meat on spits suddenly needed checking.
"I don't have time, right now, Mistress Sanderholt."
"But I have things I must tell you. Important things."
"I know. I have things to tell you, too. But right now I must see the Council. It's urgent. I've been traveling a long time, and I'm exhausted, but I must see the Council before I rest. We will talk tomorrow."
Mistress Sanderholt couldn't resist another hug. "Of course, child. Rest well. We will talk tomorrow."
Kahlan took the shortest route, through the immense hall used for important ceremonies and celebrations. Fires in the large, magnificent fireplaces set around the room between fluted columns, sent shadows of herself spiraling around her as she crossed the green slate floor. The room was empty, now, allowing her footsteps to echo overhead from the intricate lierne vaulting with the wave-like, sweeping ribs. Her father used to set thousands of walnuts and acorns, representing troops, all over the floor of this room, to teach her battle tactics.
She turned down the hall at the far end, toward the corridor to the Council chambers. In the Confessors private the gallery, groups of four glossy black marble columns to each side supported a progression of polychrome vaults. At the end, before the Council chambers, was a round, two story high pantheon dedicated to the memory of heroines: the founding Mother Confessors. Their portraits, in frescos between the seven massive pillars ranging to the skylight, were twice life size.
Kahlan always felt like an pretender to the post in the presence of those seven stern faces that overlooked the room. She felt they were saying, "And who are you, Kahlan Amnell, to think you could be the Mother Confessor?" Knowing the histories of those heroines only made her feel all the more inadequate.
Grabbing both brass levers, she threw the tall, mahogany doors open and marched into the Council chambers.
A huge dome capped the enormous room. At the far end, the main vault was decorated with an ornate fresco celebrating the glory of Magda Searus, the first Mother Confessor. Her fingers were touching the back of the hand of her wizard, Merritt, who had laid down his life to protect her. Together, now, for all time in the colorful fresco, the two oversaw the Mother Confessors who followed and sat in the First Chair, and their wizards.
Between the colossal gold capitals of the columns thrusting up around the room were sinuous, polished mahogany railings at the edge of balconies that overlooked the elegant chamber. The arched openings, set at intervals around the room and leading up to the balconies, were decorated with sculpted stuccoes of heroic scenes. Beyond were windows looking out over the courtyards. Round windows around the lower edge of the dome also let light into the glistening chamber. At the far end was the semicircular dais where the Councilors sat, behind an elaborate, curved desk. The opulent First Chair in the center was the tallest.
A clump of men were gathered around the First Chair. By the numbers, Kahlan judged about half the Co
uncil to be present. As she strode across long swaths of sunlight on the patterned marble floor, the heads began to follow her progress.
Someone was sitting in the First Chair. Although not enforced in recent times, it was a capital offense for a Councilor to take the First Chair, as it was considered tantamount to a declaration of revolution. The conversation hushed as she approached.
It was High Prince Fyren, of Kelton, sitting in the chair. His feet were up on the desk, and he didn't take them down as he watched her draw near. His eyes were on her, but he was listening to a man with smoothed down, dark hair and beard, streaked with a touch of gray, leaning over whispering to him. The man's hands were in the opposite sleeves of his plain robes. Strange, she thought, for an advisor to be dressed so, like a wizard.