The winter carnival was a tradition in Navarne, held in honor of the solstice and coinciding with holy days in both the Patriarchal religion of Sepulvarta and the order of the Filids, the nature priests of the Circle in Gwynwood. The duke of the province, Lord Stephen Navarne, was an adherent to the former but a well-loved friend of the latter, and so at his example the populace of the province, divided almost equally between the two faiths, put aside religious acrimony and differences to make merry at the coming of snow.
In earlier years the festival had sprawled as far as the eye could see over the wide rolling hills of Navarne. Haguefort, Lord Stephen’s keep and the site of the celebration, was located atop a gentle rise at the western forest’s edge with a panoramic vista of farms and meadowlands stretching to the horizon in all three other directions. Some of the other Orlandan provinces, notably Canderre, Bethany, Avonderre, and even faraway Bethe Corbair, had long since given up their own solstice celebrations in order to combine their festivities with Lord Stephen’s revels, largely because Stephen was unsurpassed as a merrymaker.
For two decades the young duke, whose Cymrian lineage was far removed but still granted him some of the exceptional vigor of youth enjoyed by the refugees of Serendair, had opened his lands at the first sign of winter, decreeing the contests and prizes for that year’s festival amid trumpet calls and flourish not often seen in Roland during this age. The Cymrian War had brought the pageantry of the First Age, the age of building and enlightenment, to a shattering end, leaving this, the Second Age, colorless and dreary, as most struggles for survival and rebuilding tend to be. Lord Stephen’s revels were the only regular exception to that dull tendency.
Like his father before him, Stephen understood the need for color and traditional secular celebration in the hardscrabble lives of the peasantry of his duchy. To that end he devoted his attention first to the safeguarding of his subjects’ lands and lives, then to that of their spirits, believing that a dearth of joy had been largely responsible for the troubles the land had suffered in the first place.
Each annual festival proffered a new contest: a treasure quest, a poetry competition, a footrace with a unique handicap, along with the traditional games of chance and sport, awards for the best singing—Lord Stephen was an enthusiastic patron of good singing—recitation and dance, sleigh races, snow sculpting, and performances by magicians capped by a great bonfire that warmed the wintry night and sent such sparks skyward as to challenge the stars.
It was small wonder that even travelers from the distant, warm lands of Yarim, Roland’s easternmost province, and Sorbold, the arid nation of mountains and deserts to the south, made their way to the inland province of | Navarne to enjoy the wintersport of Lord Stephen’s carnival, as did many of the Lirin of Tyrian, at least in better days. Recent acts of terror and violence j had begun to diminish the festival’s attendance as traveling overland grew j more hazardous. As times worsened, the festivities became more of a local celebration than one enjoyed by much of the continent.
The expected diminution of attendance this year would be both unfortunate and fortuitous in Lord Stephen’s eyes. He had recently completed the building of a vast wall, a protective rampart more than two men’s heights high and similarly thick, that encircled all of Haguefort’s royal lands and much of the nearby village and surrounding farmlands as well. This undertaking had almost consumed his every waking moment for the better part of two years, but it was a project he saw as critical to ensuring the safety of his subjects and his children.
Now, as he stood on the balcony beyond the windows of his vast library, Stephen observed the new masonry border he had erected with silent dismay. The once-unbroken landscape was now divided by the ugly structure with its severe guard towers and battlements, the formerly pristine meadows scarred by the construction of it. Instead of the wide, glittering horizon of snow there was a defined and muddy limit to the lands surrounding his keep. He had known when he began the undertaking that this would be the result. It was one thing to know with one’s mind, he mused sadly, another altogether to see with one’s eyes.
The winter festival would need to adapt to the new reality of Roland and its neighbors, the grim knowledge that violence, inexplicable and unpredictable, was escalating far and wide. The sheer madness of it had scarred more than Stephen’s fields; it had rent his life as well, taking his young wife and his best friend, Gwydion of Manosse, in its insanity, along with the lives of many of his subjects and his sense of well-being. It had been five years since Stephen had experienced a restful night’s sleep.
Daytime was easy enough; there was an endless stream of tasks awaiting his attention, as well as the time he devoted to his son and daughter. They provided in his life a genuine delight that was as vital to his happiness, his very existence, as sunlight or air. It was no longer the struggle to be happy it had been when Lydia died.
It was only at night now that he felt somber, downhearted, in the long hours after he had tucked his children beneath their quilts of warmest eiderdown, waiting by Melly’s bedside until she fell asleep, answering Gwydion’s questions about life and manhood in the comfortable darkness.
Each night the questions finally came to an end, replaced by the sound of soft, rhythmic breathing, and the scent of a boy’s sweet exhalations becoming the saltier breath of a young man on the threshold of adulthood. Stephen cherished that moment when sleep finally took his son to whatever adventures he was dreaming of; he would rise reluctantly and bend to kiss Gwydion’s smooth brow, knowing the time he would be able to do so was coming to an end.
A melancholy invariably washed over him as he made his way back to his own chambers, to the room where he and Lydia had slept, had made love and plans and their own unique happiness. Gerald Owen, his chamberlain, had gently offered to outfit another of Haguefort’s many bedchambers for him after the bloody Lirin ambush that had ripped her from his life, but Stephen had declined in the same graciousness with which he always comported himself. How could Owen know what he was asking? His faithful chamberlain could never understand how much of Lydia was there in that room still, in the damask curtains at the window, in the canopy of the bed, in the looking-glass beside her dressing table, the silver hairbrush atop it. It was all he had left of her now, all save memories and their children. He lay there, night after night, in that bed, beneath that canopy, hearing the voices of ghosts until restless sleep finally came.
The sound of childish voices swelled behind Lord Stephen as the library doors opened. Melisande, who had turned six on the first day of spring, ran to him as he turned and threw her arms around his leg, planting a kiss on his cheek as he lifted her high.
“Snow, Father, snow!” she squealed gleefully; the sound dragged a broad to the corners of Stephen’s face. “You must have been rolling in it,” he said with a mock wince, brushing the chilly clumps of frozen white powder from his doublet as he set her down, then slung an arm over Gwydion’s shoulders. Melly nodded excitedly. After a moment her smile faded to a look of disapproval.
“How ugly it is,” she said, pointing over her father’s lands to the endless wall that encircled them.
“And it will be uglier still, once the people start rebuilding their homes inside it,” Stephen said, pulling Gwydion closer for a moment. “Enjoy the tranquillity for what moments more you may, children; come next winter festival, it will be a town.”
“But why, Father? Why would people want to give up their lovely lands and move inside of an ugly wall?”
“For safety’s sake,” Gwydion said solemnly. He ran his forefinger and thumb along his hairless chin in the exact gesture his father used when pondering something. “They’ll be within the protection of the keep.”
“It won’t be all bad, Melly,” Stephen said, tousling the little girl’s golden curls, smiling at the sparkle that had returned to her black eyes. “There will be more children for you to play with.”
“Hurray!” she shouted, dancing in excitement through the thin snow on the balcony floor.
Stephen nodded to the children’s governess as she appeared at the balcony doors. “Just wait a few more days, Sunbeam. The winter carnival will be set up, with so many brightly colored banners and flags that you will think it is snowing rainbows. Now, run along. Rosella is waiting for you.” He gave Gwydion’s shoulder another squeeze and kissed his daughter as she ran by, then turned once more to contemplate the changing times.