09/28/2003:
Proof-read without the real book to check against. Correct several
OCR/formatting errors. Still there are several words I couldn’t guess so I mark
them in bold and put bookmarks before them.
–
BW-SciFi
Copyright 1996
Prelude
The demon
dactyl came awake. It didn't seem such a momentous thing, just a gradual
stirring in a deep cave in a far, empty mountain. An unnoticed event, seen by
none save the cave worms and those few insomniacs among the bevy of weary bats
hanging from the high ceiling.
But the
demon spirit had awakened, had come back from its long dormancy into the
statuelike form it had left behind after its last visit to the world called
Corona. The tangible, corporeal body felt good to the wandering spirit. The
dactyl could feel its blood, hot blood, coursing through its wings and mighty
legs, could feel the twitching of its mighty muscles. Its eyes flickered open
but saw only blackness, for the form, left standing in magical stasis in the
deep cave, head bowed and wings wrapped tightly about its torso, had been
covered by magma. Most of the fiery stuff of that time long past had bubbled
and flowed away from the cavern, but enough had remained to harden about the
dactyl's corporeal form. The spirit had come back to Corona encased in
obsidian!
The demon
spirit fell deep within itself, summoned its powers, both physical and magical.
By sheer will and brute strength, the dactyl flexed its wings. A thin crack ran
down the center of the obsidian sarcophagus. The dactyl flexed again and the
crack widened, and then, with a sudden powerful burst, the beast blew apart the
obsidian, stretched its great wings out to the side, clawed tips grasping and
rending the air. The dactyl threw back its head and opened wide its mouth,
screeching for the sheer joy of the return, for the thoughts of the chaos it
would bring again to the quiet human kingdoms of Corona.
Its torso
resembled that of a tall, slender man, shaped and lined by corded strands of
taut muscle and sporting a pair of tremendous batlike wings, twenty feet across
when fully extended and with strength enough to lift a full-grown bull in swift
flight. Its head, too, was somewhat human, except more angular, with a narrow
jaw and pointed chin. The dactyl's ears were pointed as well, poking up about
the demon creature's thin tuft of black hair. Neither did that hair hide the
creature's horns, thumb sized and curling in toward each other at the top of
the demon's brow.
The texture
of its skin was rough and thick, an armored hide, reddish in hue and shiny, as
if lit by its own inner glow. Shining, too, were the demon's eyes, pools of
liquid black at most times, but shifting to fiery red orbs, living flames, when
the demon was agitated, a glow of absolute hatred.
The creature
flexed and stretched, extended its wings to their full glory, reached and
clawed at the air with its humanlike arms. The demon extended its fingernails,
transformed them into hooked claws, and grew its teeth–two pointed canines
extending down over its bottom lip. Every part of the demon was a weapon,
devastating and deadly. And undeniably powerful though this monster appeared,
this demon's real strength lay in its mind and its purpose, the tempter of
souls, the twister of hearts, the maker of lies. Theologians of Corona argued
over whether the demon dactyl was the source or the result of evil. Did the
dactyl bring the weakness, the immorality, to humanity? Was the dactyl the
source of the deadly sins, or did it manifest itself and walk the world when
those sins had festered to the point of eruption?
For the
demonic creature in the cave, such questions hardly mattered. How long had it
been? the dactyl wondered. How many decades, even centuries, had passed since
its last visit to Corona?
The creature
remembered that long-ago time now, savored the thoughts of the streaming blood
as army after army had joined in delicious, desperate battle. It cursed aloud
the name of Terranen Dinoniel, who had rallied the humans and the elves,
chasing the dactyl's armies back to the base of this mountain, Aida. Dinoniel
himself had come into this cave after the beast, had skewered the dactyl...
The
black-winged demon looked down at a darker red tear marring its otherwise
smooth hide. With a sickening crackle of bone, the creature's head rotated
completely around and bowed, examining the second imperfection of its form, a
scarred lump under its lower left shoulder blade. Those two scars were
perfectly aligned with the dactyl's heart, and thus, with that one desperate
thrust, Dinoniel had defeated the demon's corporeal body.
Yet even in
its death throes, the dactyl had won the day, using its willpower to bring up
the magma from the bowels of Aida. Dinoniel and much of his army had been
consumed and destroyed, but the dactyl...
The dactyl
was eternal. Dinoniel was gone, a distant memory, but the demon spirit had
returned and the physical wounds had healed. "What man, what elf, will
take Dinoniel's place?" the demon asked aloud in its hollow, resonating
voice, always seeming on the edge of a thunderous roar. A cloud of bats
shuddered to life at the unexpected noise and flew off down one of the tunnels
formed when the lava had flowed from this spot. The dactyl cackled, thinking
itself grand to be able to send such creatures—any creatures!—scurrying with a mere sound. And what resolve might the humans and
the elves—if the elves
were still about, for even in Dinoniel's day they had been on the wane—muster this time?
Its thoughts
turned from its enemies to those it would summon as minions. What creatures
could the dactyl gather this time to wage its war? The wicked goblins
certainly, so full of anger and greed, so delighting in murder and war. The
fomorian giants of the mountains, few in number but each with the strength of a
dozen men and a hide too thick and tough for a dagger to puncture. And the
powries, yes, the powries, the cunning, warlike dwarves of the Julianthes, the
Weathered Isles, who hated the humans above all others. Centuries before,
powries had dominated the seas in their solid, squat barrelboats, whose hulls
were made of tougher stuff than the larger ships of the humans, as the
diminutive powries were made of tougher stuff than the larger humans.
A line of
drool hung low from the dactyl's mouth as it considered its former and future
allies, its army of woe. It would bring them into its fold, tribe by tribe,
race by race, growing as the night grows when the sun touches the western
horizon. The twilight of Corona was at hand.
The dactyl
came awake.
Part One
FATE
What song is
this, drift through the trees
To lift men
broken from their knees?
To untwist
hearts from grasping sorrow,
To offer the
promise of the morrow?
Hark, what
song,
What music
sweet?
Warm
whispers of the dawn.
Hot blood
waft steam in night air cold.
What hopes
of treasure, what hunger of gold
Hath brought
foul beast from caverns deep
To face the
Nightbird, to know endless sleep?
They come
for greed.
They come to
bleed.
At gentle
hands of elven breed.
The shining
sword, the horse's run,
The bane of
monsters all and one.
To their
midst the rider, Nightbird the Ranger,
Flashing
Tempest's anger, denying the danger
Cutting and
slashing!
Tearing and
gashing!
Chasing the
nightmares away.
Fast run,
you goblins, the Ranger sets his bow,
To let ;your
blood, to stain white snow
Arrow and
arrow, the river of red
Fast fall
the Evil, to the one is dead.
Hawkwing's
fury,
Goblins to
bury
In worm's
cold domain.
Scatter,
goblins, fly and flee!
You'll not
outrun Symphony.
Hooves of
music rend the gloom
Bearing Nightbird,
know your doom!
At Tempest's
fall,
So shall you
all To blackness evermore.
A way drifts
music, Symphony sweet.
A way goes
Nightbird, the forest to greet
In
springtime sunshine, of Evil no traces,
Through
flowers and lovers, step measured paces
Hark, listen
you all
The
Nightbird's call
And sleep
peaceful lovers, secure.
-"THE SONG OF THE NIGHTBIRD"
CHAPTER 1
The Unexpected Kill
Elbryan
Wyndon was up before the dawn. He dressed quickly, fumbling with his clothes in
the red light of the hearth's glowing embers. He ran a hand through his tousled
straight hair—a light
brown shock that bleached pale on its top layers under the summer sun. He
retrieved his belt and dagger, which he had reverently placed right near his
bed, and Elbryan felt powerful as he ceremoniously strapped the weapon about
his waist.
He grabbed
the heaviest wrap he could find and rushed out into the dark and chill air, so
anxious that he hardly remembered to close the cabin door behind him. The small
frontier village of Dundalis was quiet and eerily still about him, sleeping off
the well-earned weariness that followed every day's hard labor. Elbryan, too,
had worked hard the previous day—harder than normal, for several of the village men and women were
out in the deep forest, and the boys and girls, like Elbryan who was nearing
his teens, had been asked to keep things aright. That meant gathering wood and
tending the fires, repairing the cabins—which always seemed to need repair!—and walking the perimeter of the sheltered
vale that held the village, watching for sign of bear, great cat, or the packs
of hunting wolves.
Elbryan was
the oldest of those children, the leader of the pack, as it were, and he felt
important, truly he felt a man. This would be the last time he remained behind
when the hunters went off on the season's last and most important expedition.
Next spring would bring his thirteenth birthday, the passage from childhood in
the hardy land that was the northern wilderness. Next spring, Elbryan would
hunt with the adults, the games of his youth left behind.
Indeed he
was tired from the previous day's labors, but so full of excitement that sleep
had not come to him. The weather had turned toward winter. The men were
expected back any day, and Elbryan meant to meet them and lead their procession
into the village. Let the younger boys and girls see him then, and afford him
the respect he deserved, and let the older men see that the village, under his
watchful eye, had fared well in their absence.
He started
out of Dundalis, stepping lightly despite his weariness, passing through the
darker shadows of the small, one-story cabins.
"Jilly!"
The call was not loud but seemed so in the quiet morning air. Elbryan moved up
to the corner of the next house, smiling for his cleverness, and peered around.
"It
could be today!" protested a young girl, Jilseponie, Elbryan's closest
friend.
"You do
not know that, Jilly," argued her mother, standing in the open doorway of
their cabin. Elbryan tried to muffle his snicker; the girl hated that nickname,
Jilly, though nearly everyone in town called her that. She preferred the simple
""Jill." But between her and Elbryan, the title was Pony, their
secret name, the one Jilseponie liked most of all.
The snicker
was soon gone, but the smile remained, all the wider for the sight. Elbryan
didn't know why, but he was always happy when he saw Pony, though only a couple
of years before, he would have taunted her and the rest of the village girls,
chasing them endlessly. One time Elbryan had made the mistake of catching
Jilseponie without his male companions nearby, and of tugging too hard on her
yellow mane to prove the point of his capture. He never saw the punch coming,
never saw anything except how wide the blue sky had suddenly seemed as he lay
on his back.
He could
laugh at that embarrassment now, privately or even with Pony. He felt as though
he could say anything to her, and she wouldn't judge him or make merry of his
feelings.
Candlelight
spilled out onto the road, softly illuminating the girl. Elbryan liked the
image; every day that passed, he found that he enjoyed looking at Pony more and
more. She was younger than Elbryan by five months but taller than he, standing
about three inches above five feet, while the young man, to his ultimate
horror, had not yet reached the coveted five foot mark. Elbryan's father had
assured him that Wyndon boys were normally late in sprouting. All jealousy
aside, Elbryan found the taller Pony quite a pleasing sight. She stood straight
but not stiff, and could outrun and outfight any of the boys in Dundalis,
Elbryan included. Still, there was a delicate aura about her, a softness that a
younger Elbryan had viewed as weakness, but the older Elbryan viewed as oddly
distracting. Her hair, which Jilseponie seemed to he constantly brushing, was
golden, silken, and thick enough to lose a hand in; it bounced about, her
shoulders and back with an alluring wildness. Her eyes, huge eyes, were the
richest and clearest blue Elbryan had ever seen, like great sponges soaking in
the sights of the wide world and reflecting Jilseponie's every mood. When
Pony's eyes showed sadness, Elbryan felt it in his heart; when they soared with
sparkling joy, Elbryan's feet moved involuntarily in dance.
Her lips,
too, were large and thick. The boys had often taunted Pony about those lips,
saying that if she ever stuck them to a window, they would surely hold her fast
for all eternity! Elbryan felt no desire to tease when looking at Pony's lips
now. He sensed their softness, so very inviting ...
"I will
be back in time for the morning meal," Pony assured
"The
night woods are dangerous," her exasperated mother
"I will
be careful!" Pony responded dismissively, before the older woman had even
finished the sentence.
Elbryan held
his breath, thinking that Pony's mother, often stern, would scold the girl
severely. She only sighed, though, and resignedly closed the cabin door.
Pony sighed,
too, and shook her head as if to show her ultimate frustration with adults.
Then she turned and skipped off, and was startled a moment later when Elbryan
jumped out in front of her.
She
reflexively cocked a fist, and Elbryan wisely jumped back.
"You
are late," he said.
"I am
early;" Pony insisted, "too early. And I am tired."
Elbryan
shrugged and nodded down the road to the north, then led the girl off at a
swift pace. Despite her complaints concerning the time, Pony not only paced him
but skipped right by him, obviously as excited as he. That excitement turned to
sheer joy when they passed out of the town and began their ascent of the ridge.
Pony chanced to look back to the south, and she stopped, stunned and smiling,
and pointing to the night sky. "The Halo," she said breathlessly.
Elbryan
turned to follow her gaze, and he, too, could not suppress a grin.
For
stretched across the southern sky, more than halfway to the horizon, was
Corona's Halo, the heavenly belt—a subtle tease of colors, red and green and blue and deep purple,
a flowing softness, like a living rainbow. The Halo was sometimes visible in
the summer sky, but only during the deepest parts of the shorter nights, when
children, and even adults, were fast asleep. Elbryan and Jilseponie had seen it
on a few occasions, but never so clearly as this, never so vibrant.
Then they
heard a distant piping, soft music, perfect melody. It floated through the
chill air, barely perceptible.
"The
Forest Ghost," Pony whispered; but Elbryan didn't seem to hear. Pony spoke
the words again, under her breath. The Forest Ghost was a common legend in the
Timberlands. Half horse and half man, he was the keeper of the trees and the
friend of the animals, particularly of the wild horses that ran in the dells to
the north. For a moment, the thought of such a creature not so far away
frightened Pony, but then her fears were washed away by the sheer beauty of the
Halo and the fitting melody of the enchanting music. How could anyone, or
anything, that could pipe so beautifully pose a danger?
The pair
stood on the side of the ridge for a long while, not speaking, not looking at
each other; not even realizing that the other was there. Elbryan felt totally
alone, yet one with the universe, a small part of majesty, a small but endless
flicker in eternity. His mind drifted up from the ridge, from the solid ground,
from the sensible experiences of his existence into the unknown, exhilarating
joy of spirituality. The name of "Mather" came to him briefly, though
he didn't know why. He didn't know anything at that time, it seemed, and yet he
knew everything—the secrets of the world, of peace, of eternity—it was all
there before him, so simple and true. He felt a song in his heart, though it
had no words, felt a warmth in all his body, though he was not at that moment a
part of that corporeal form.
The
sensation passed too quickly. Elbryan sighed deeply and turned to Pony. He was
about to say something but held the words, seeing that she, too, was immersed
in something beyond language. Elbryan felt suddenly closer to the girl, as if
they two had shared something very special and very private. How many others
could look upon the Halo and understand the beauty of the thing? wondered. None
of the adults of Dundalis, certainly, with their grumbling and grouching, and
none of the other children, he decided, who were too caught up in silliness to
ponder such thoughts.
No, it was
his experience and Pony's—theirs alone. He watched her slowly drift
back to the reality about them—the ridge, the night, and her companion.
He could almost see her spirit flowing back into that five foot three inch body—a body that
was growing more shapely by the day.
Elbryan
resisted the sudden and inexplicable urge to run over and kiss Pony.
"What?"
she asked, seeing turmoil, even horror, come over his face, despite the
darkness.
The boy
looked away, angry at himself for allowing such feelings. Pony was a girl,
after all, and though Elbryan would openly admit that she was a friend, such
deeper feelings were truly horrifying.
"Elbryan?"
she asked. "Was it the song, the Forest Ghost?"
"Never
heard it," Elbryan retorted, though when he thought about it, he had
indeed heard the distant piping melody.
"Then
what?" Pony pressed.
"Nothing,"
he replied gruffly. "Come along. The dawn is not long away." He
started up the ridge at a feverish pace then, even scrambling on all fours at
times, crunching through the thick carpet of fallen leaves. Pony paused and
watched him, confused at first. Gradually a smile found its way back onto her
face, her dimples showing the slightest blush of red. She suspected she knew
the feelings that Elbryan was fighting, the same feelings she had battled
earlier that same year.
Pony had won
that battle by accepting, even relishing, those private feelings, the warmth
that washed over her whenever she looked upon Elbryan. She hoped Elbryan would
wage a gallant war now, with an outcome similar to her own.
She caught
up to her friend at the top of the ridge. Behind them, Dundalis sat quiet and
dark. All the world seemed still, not a bird calling, not a whisper of wind.
They sat together, yet apart, separated by a couple of feet and by the wall of
Elbryan's confusion. The boy didn't move, hardly seemed to blink, just sat
staring straight ahead at the wide vale before him, though it was too dark for
him to even recognize the place.
Pony,
though, was more animated. She let her gaze linger on Elbryan until the boy
became obviously flustered, then she politely looked away, back to the village—a single
candle was burning in one of the houses—and back to the Halo, which was now fast
fading in the southern sky. She could still make out the brighter colors, but
that special moment of beauty, of innermost reflection, had passed. Now she was
again Jilseponie, just Jilseponie, sitting on a ridge with her friend, awaiting
the return of her father and the other hunters. And the dawn was approaching.
Pony realized that she could make out more of the village, could discern the
individual houses, even the individual posts of Bunker Crawyer's corral.
"Today,"
Elbryan said, unexpectedly, his voice turning her about to study him. He was at
ease again, the uncomfortable feelings tossed out with the mystery of the
night. "They will return this day," he announced with a nod.
Pony grinned
warmly, hoping he was right.
They sat in
silence as the day grew about them. In the wide vale, the wall of blackness
gave way to the individual dark spots that were the evergreens—rows and
rows of ancient trees, Corona's oldest soldiers, standing proud, though most
were not twice Elbryan's height. The starkness of the scene from this vantage
point, in this mounting light, amazed the companions. The ground about the
trees caught the morning light and held it fast, for the undergrowth was not
dark but was white and thick, a padding of caribou moss. Elbryan loved the
stuff—all the children did. Every time he gazed upon the white carpet,
he wanted to take off his shoes and pants and run through it barefoot and bare
legged, to feel its softness between his toes and brushing against his shins.
In many places, the caribou moss was even deeper than his knees!
He wanted to
do it, as he had so many times in his earlier years, wanted to cast off his
shoes and all his clothes . . .
He
remembered his companion, his earlier feelings, and turned away from Pony,
blushing fiercely.
"If
they come in before the sun gets too high, we'll see them a mile away," Pony
remarked. The girl was not looking ahead, though, but at the ridge to the south
behind them. Autumn was well advanced, and all the leaves of the deciduous
trees, particularly the sugar maples, were bright with colors, shining red and
orange and yellow, painting the ridge.
Elbryan was
glad that the distracted girl had not noticed his own shade of red.
"Coming down that side of the vale," he agreed sharply, catching
Pony's attention, and pointing to the wide gentle slope of the vale's
northeastern face added, "a mile away!"
Their
assessment proved overoptimistic, for the starkness of the scene had confused
their sense of distance. They did indeed spot the returning hunters, to their
complete joy, but not until the group was moving along the bottom of the bowl-shaped
vale, a line of tiny forms far below them.
They
watched, chattering wildly, trying to count and to guess who was leading but
getting confused as parts of the line wove in and out of the tree shadows.
"A
shoulder pole!" Elbryan cried out suddenly, spotting the line that seemed
to join two of the men.
"Another!"
Pony added happily, and she clapped her hands with glee as more came into view.
The hunters would return with carcasses—elk, caribou, or white-tailed deer—slung on
shoulder poles, and it seemed to the watching pair as if this hunt had been
successful indeed! Their patience fast disintegrated; they leaped out together,
running fast down the steeper slope, picking their angle to intercept the
returning troop.
From the
ridge top, the vale seemed stark and open, but descending into it, Elbryan and
Pony quickly remembered just how confusing and intimidating a place it could
be. Down among the squat but wide-spreading pines and spruce, vision in all
directions was blocked after just a few feet; the companions became separated
quickly and spent many minutes just talking themselves back together and then
arguing over which direction would lead them to their fathers.
"The
sun is in the southeast," Elbryan reminded Pony, squaring his shoulders as
he took command of the situation. The sun had not yet come up high enough to
peer over the rim of the vale, but they could make out its position easily
enough. "The hunters approach from the northeast, so all we have to do is
keep the sun just behind our right shoulders."
It seemed
logical enough to Pony, so she shrugged and let Elbryan lead and didn't mention
to him that if they simply called out loudly, their fathers would likely hear
them and guide them in.
Elbryan
picked his way determinedly, weaving about the bushy evergreens, not even
looking back to make sure Pony was keeping up with him. He moved faster still
when he heard the voices of the hunters. His heart pounded when he recognized
his father's deep tones, though he couldn't make out what the man was saying.
Pony caught
up to him, even passed him over that last expanse, leading the way through the
tangle of two wide pines, pushing aside the prickly branches and bursting into
a clearing right beside the returning party.
The
startled, almost feral, reaction of the hunters froze Elbryan in his tracks and
sent Pony ducking for cover. Elbryan hardly heard the sharp scolding his father
offered, the boy's eyes basking in the sight, moving from the carcass of a
caribou buck, to a deer, to a line of coneys, to . . .
Elbryan and
Jilseponie stood perfectly still, stricken. Their fathers, who had come forward
to meet the impetuous children, to scold them again for being so far away from
Dundalis, let the opportunity pass. The object on the fourth shoulder pole,
each man realized, would be enough to get the lesson across.
The sun was
up, the day bright, and the village wide awake by the time Elbryan and Pony led
the hunting party back into Dundalis. Expressions ran from excitement to
awkward fear to blank amazement as the villagers took stock of the kills,
especially the last carcass on the shoulder poles, a smallish humanoid form.
"A
goblin?" asked one woman, bending low to regard the creature's hideous
features: the sloping forehead and the long thin nose, the tiny but perfectly
round eyes, now glazed over, sickly yellow. The creature's ears, pointed at the
top and with a loose flapping, fat lobe at the bottom, stuck out several inches
from its head. The woman shuddered when she considered the mouth, a tangle of
greenish-yellow fangs, all crooked but each angled inward. The chin was narrow,
but the jowls wide with muscle. It wasn't difficult to imagine the power of the
creature's bite or the pain of getting free from those nasty teeth.
"Are
they really that color?" asked another woman, and she dared to touch the
creature's skin. "Or did it just turn that way after it died?"
"Yellow
and green," an old man answered firmly, though he had not been out on the
hunt. Elbryan watched the wrinkled and bent elder, Brody Gentle, by name,
though the children usually called him "Body Grabber" in mock horror,
teasing him and then running away. Old Brody was a snarling type, angry at the
world and at his own infirmities, and an easy mark for children, always ready
to give chase and never quick enough to make a catch. Elbryan considered the
man's true name now, for the first time, and nearly laughed aloud at the
contradiction of the surname with Brody's grouchy demeanor.
"Surely
is a goblin," Brody continued, obviously enjoying the attention, "big
one, too, and they're yellow and green," he answered the second
questioning woman, "living and dead, though this one's fast turning
gray." He snickered as he finished, a sound of utter contempt that seemed
to lend, credence to his greater knowledge of the goblin race. Goblins were
little seen creatures; many considered them more myth than truth. Even in
Dundalis, and in other frontier villages nestled in the Timberlands on the
borders of the deep Wilderlands, there had been no confirmed sightings of any
goblins for longer than the villagers could remember—with the
apparent exception of Brody Gentle.
"You
have seen goblins before?" asked Olwan Wyndon, Elbryan's father, and his
tone and the fact that he crossed his large arms over his chest as he spoke
showed he held many doubts.
Brody Gentle
scoffed at him. "Oft have I told the tales!" the old man fumed.
Olwan Wyndon
nodded, not wanting to get Brody into one of his legendary fits of outrage.
Sitting by the hearth in the village's common house, Brody had recounted
endless tales of his youth, of battling goblins, even fomorian giants, in the
first days of Dundalis, staking out the ground for proper folk. Most listened
politely but turned up their eyes and shook their heads whenever Brody looked
away.
"We had
the word of a goblin sighting in Weedy Meadow," offered another man,
referring to another village some twenty miles to the west of Dundalis.
"A
child's word," Olwan Wyndon promptly reminded them all, quieting nervous
whispers before they could gain any momentum.
"Well,
we've much work to do, and you've a tale to tell," Pony's mother
intervened. "Better suited for the common house, after a supper of venison
stew."
Olwan nodded
and the crowd gradually dispersed, one person taking a last, long look at the
goblin, which was indeed fast turning gray. Elbryan and Pony lingered long by
the corpse, studying it intently. Pony didn't miss her companion's derisive
snort.
"Small
as an eight-year-old," the boy explained, waving a dismissive hand at the
goblin. That was something of an exaggeration, but, indeed, the goblin wasn't
much above four feet tall and couldn't have weighed more than Elbryan's ninety
pounds.
"Perhaps
it is a child," Pony offered.
"You
heard Body Grabber," Elbryan countered. He screwed up his face, the
ridiculous nickname sounding foolish in his ears. "He said it was a big
one." He ended with another snort.
"It
looks fierce," Pony insisted, bending low to study the creature more
closely. She didn't miss Elbryan's third snort. "Remember the badger?"
she asked quietly, stealing the boy's bluster. "Not a third the size of
the goblin."
Elbryan
blanched and looked away. Earlier that year, at the beginning of summer, some
of the younger children had snagged a badger in a noose. When they came into
the village with the news, Elbryan, the oldest of their group, had taken
command, leading the way back to the spot. He approached the snared creature
boldly, only to find that it had chewed right through the leather bindings.
When it came around at him, teeth bared, Elbryan had, so the legend—and among
the children, it was indeed a legend—said, "run away so fast that he
didn't even notice he was running straight up a tree, not even using his hands
to grab a branch."
The rest of
the children had fled, as well, but not so far that they could not witness
Elbryan's ultimate humiliation, as the badger, like some vindictive enemy, had
waited at the base of Elbryan's tree, keeping the boy up in the branches for
more than an hour.
Stupid
badger, Elbryan thought, and stupid Pony for opening that wound once again. He
walked away without another word.
Pony
couldn't sustain her smile as she watched him go, wondering if she had pushed
him a little too hard.
Every
villager was in the common house that night, though most had already heard the
tale of the goblin fight by then. The hunting party had come upon a band of six
creatures, or actually both groups had come upon each other, stepping out of
the thick brush onto an open, rocky riverbank simultaneously, barely twenty
paces apart. After a moment of shock, the goblins had thrown their spears,
injuring one man. The ensuing fight had been brief and brutal, with many nicks
and cuts to both sides and even a couple of bites to the humans, before the
goblins, outnumbered two to one, had fled, disappearing into the brush as
suddenly as they had appeared. The only serious wound to either side was the
hit to the slain goblin—a spear thrust that had punctured the
creature's lung. It had tried to flee with its companions but fell short of the
brush for lack of breath and died soon after.
Olwan Wyndon
told the tale again in full to the gathering, trying hard not to embellish it.
"We spent three days looking but found no more sign of the other
goblins," he finished.
Immediately
a pair of mugs came up into the air from the side of the room. "To Shane
McMichael!" the two mug holders bellowed together.
"Goblinslayer!"
The cheer
went up, and Shane McMichael, a quiet, slender young man just a few years older
than Elbryan, reluctantly came forward to stand beside Olwan in front of the
blazing hearth. With much prodding, the man was prompted to tell of the fight,
of the cunning twist and parry and the straightforward thrust that had come too
soon for the goblin to completely dodge.
Elbryan
savored every word, envisioning the battle clearly. How he envied Shane!
Afterward,
the conversation turned into an exchange of what other people had recently
seen, of the report of a goblin sighting in Weedy Meadow, and even a few wild
tales from Dundalis folk claiming that they had noticed some huge tracks but
just hadn't said anything about it. Elbryan at first listened intently to every
word but, gradually taking the cue from his father's posture, came to
understand that most of the talk was no more than individual efforts to grab a
bit of attention. It surprised Elbryan that adults would act that way,
especially considering the gravity of the situation.
Next came a
discussion, led by Brody Gentle, of goblinkind in general, from the numerous
small goblins to the rare and dangerous disfigured fomorian giants. Brody spoke
with an air of expertise, but few in the room hung on his every word. Even
young Elbryan soon came to realize that the old man knew little more than
anyone else concerning goblins, and Elbryan doubted that Brody had ever seen a
fomorian giant. Elbryan looked at Pony, who seemed to be growing quite bored by
it all, and motioned to the door.
She was out
into the night before he got out of his chair.
"Bluster,"
Elbryan insisted, joining her. The night was chill, and so the boy moved close
to Pony, sharing their warmth.
"But we
cannot deny the goblin," Pony replied, motioning to the shed where the
creature had been placed. "Your father's tale was real enough."
"I
meant Brody—"
"I know
what you meant," said Pony, "and I do not believe him either—not
completely."
Elbryan's
surprise at her qualification of the remark reflected clearly on his face.
"There
are goblins," Pony explained. "We know that well enough. So perhaps
those who first came to the edge of the Wilderlands to settle Dundalis did have
a few fights on their hands."
"Fomorians?"
Elbryan asked skeptically.
Pony
shrugged, not willing to discount the possibility of giants, not after viewing
a dead goblin.
Elbryan
conceded the point, though he still thought Brody Gentle more bluster than
truth. He couldn't hold that thought, though, or any other negative feelings,
when Jilseponie turned to look him directly in the eye, when she, her face only
a few inches from his own, locked his olive green eyes with her stare.
Elbryan
found his breath hard to come by. Pony was close—too close—and she wasn't backing away!
And she was
coming closer, Elbryan realized, her head slowly drifting toward his, her lips,
so soft, in line with his! Panic hit him, wrestling hard with a jumble of other
emotions that Elbryan did not understand. A part of him wanted to turn away,
but another part, a larger and surprising part, would not let him move.
The door to
the common house opened with a crash, and both Pony and Elbryan immediately
spun away from each other.
The younger
children came out in a mob, swarming around the older pair. "What are we
going to do?" one of them asked.
Elbryan and
Pony exchanged curious looks.
"We
must be ready for when the goblins come back," another boy remarked.
"The
goblins were never here," Pony interjected.
"But
they will be!" claimed the boy. "Kristeena says so."
All eyes
turned to Kristeena, a girl of ten who always seemed to be staring at Elbryan.
"Goblins always come back for their dead," she explained eagerly.
"How do
you know that?" Elbryan asked doubtfully, and his tone seemed to hurt the
girl.
She looked.
down and kicked the dirt with one foot. "My grandmother knows," she
answered, her voice suddenly sheepish, and Elbryan felt a fool for making her
so uncomfortable. All the gang was quiet, hanging on Elbryan's every word.
Pony nudged
him hard. Pony had told him many times that Kristeena was sweet for him, and
the older girl, not viewing a ten-year-old as competition, had been charmed by
the thought.
"She
probably does know," Elbryan said, and Kristeena looked up, suddenly
beaming. "And it sounds right." He turned to the shed, and all the
younger children flowed about him, following his gaze.
"And if
the goblins do come back, we must be ready," Elbryan decided. He looked at
Pony and winked, and was surprised when she returned the gesture with a serious
frown.
Perhaps this
was more than a game.
CHAPTER 2
True Believer
Twenty-five
stood in a line, cloaked in thick brown robes with voluminous sleeves and large
hoods that were pulled low to hide their faces. Quiet and humble, they kept
their heads bowed, their shoulders stooped, and their hands folded before them,
though not a digit showed from beneath the folds of cloth, not a flash of flesh
in the whole of the line.
"Piety,
dignity, poverty," the old father abbot, Dalebert Markwart, intoned in his
nasal voice. He stood alone on the balcony above the main entrance of
St.-Mere-Abelle, the most prominent monastery in all the kingdom of
Honce-the-Bear, in the northern temperate zone of Corona. Intertwined with the
rocky cliffs of the southeastern coast, St.-Mere-Abelle had stood solemn and
dark for nearly a millennium, with each generation of monks adding their toil
and craftsmanship to the already huge structure. Its gray rock walls seemed to
grow right from the solid stone, an extension of the earth's power. Squat
towers anchored every turn in the wall; narrow windows showed that the place
was built for somber reflection and defense. The visible parts of the monastery
were impressive; the sea wall alone rose and melted back into the cliff face
for more than a mile. But the bulk of the place could not be seen from beyond
the walls; it was buried under the ground, in tunnels strong and square, in
vast underground chambers—many smoky from the constant torchlight,
others brightened by ways magical. Seven hundred monks lived here and another
two hundred servants, many of them never leaving the place except to go on
short visits, usually to market in the village of St.-Mere-Abelle, some three
miles inland.
The new
class of twenty-five stood one behind the other. As they were positioned
according to height, Avelyn Desbris, tall and large-boned, was near the back,
with twenty-two before him and only two behind. He could barely hear the Abbot
above the constant groan of the wind, weaving always through the many rocks.
But Avelyn hardly cared. For the majority of his twenty years, the young man
had dreamed of this day, had set his sights on the Order of St.-Mere-Abelle as
surely as any general would focus on his next conquest. Eight years of formal
study, eight years of grueling testing, had brought Avelyn to this point, one
of twenty-five remaining of the two thousand twelve-year-olds who had begun the
process, each desperately vying to gain admittance in this class of God's Year
816.
Avelyn dared
to peek out from under his hood at the handful of spectators lining the road
before the monastery's front gates. His mother, Annalisa, and father, Jayson,
were among that small group, though his mother had taken ill and would not
likely make it back to their home in the village of Youmaneff, some three
hundred miles from the coast. Avelyn knew with near certainty that this would
be the last time he saw her, and likely the last time he'd see his father, as
well. Avelyn was the youngest of ten, and his parents had been well into their
forties when he was born. His next youngest sibling was seven years his senior,
and so he wasn't really close to any of them. By the time Avelyn was old enough
to understand the concept of family, half the children had already moved out of
the family house.
His life had
been good, though, and he had been close to his parents, more so than any of
his brothers or sisters had been. The bond had been particularly strong with
Annalisa, a humble and spiritual woman, who had encouraged her youngest child
to follow the path of God from his earliest recollections.
Avelyn
dropped his gaze once more, fearful of discipline should he be caught peeking
out from under his hood. Rumors hinted that students of St.-Mere-Abelle had
been dismissed for less. He pictured his mother on that day many years before
when he had announced that he would enter St.-Mere-Abelle: the tears that had
come to her; the smile, gentle, even divine. That image, that confirmation, was
burned into Avelyn's thoughts as clearly as if it had been painted and
magically illuminated on the inside of his eyelids. How much younger and more
vibrant Annalisa had seemed! The last few years had been hard on her, one
illness after another. She was determined to see this day, though, and Avelyn
understood that with its passing, with his entering St.-Mere-Abelle, the woman
would no longer fight against mortality.
It was all
right, to Avelyn and to Annalisa. Her goals had been met, her life lived in the
spirit of generosity. Avelyn knew he would cry when word reached him of her
passing, but he knew, too, that his tears would be selfish—tears for
himself and his loss, and not for Annalisa, whom he knew would be in a better
place.
A grinding
sound, the great gates sliding open, brought the young man from his
contemplations.
"Do you
willingly enter the service of God?" Father Abbot Dalebert Markwart asked.
The
twenty-five responded with a unified "Yes, say I!"
"Show then
your desire," the Father Abbot demanded. "Pass ye the Gauntlet of
Willing Suffering!"
The line
shuffled forward. "My God, our God, one God," they chanted, and they
lifted their voices even higher when the first of their ranks entered the
gauntlet, stepping between two lines of monks, those who remained of the
classes of the previous two years, all armed with heavy wooden paddles.
Avelyn heard
the slaps of wood, the unintentional groans, even an occasional cry from the
younger students near the front. He fell deeper within himself, chanted with
all his strength, and listened to his own words, grabbing at his faith and
building with it a wall of denial. So strong was he in meditation that he did
not even feel the first few blows, and those that slapped against him afterward
seemed a minor thing, a momentary pain, lost in the ultimate sweetness that
awaited him. All his life, he had wanted to live in service to God; all his
life he had dreamed of this day.
Now was his
time, his day. He came through the gauntlet without uttering a single sound
beyond the range of his controlled, even-toned chant.
That fact
was not lost on Father Abbot Markwart, nor on any of the other monks watching
the initiation of God's Year 816. None of the others in Avelyn's line could make
such a claim; not one in several years had walked the Gauntlet of Willing
Suffering with so minimal complaint.
The huge
stone gates of St.-Mere-Abelle slammed shut with a resounding crash that jolted
Annalisa Desbris violently. Her husband held her tight then, understanding her
pain, both physical and emotional.
Annalisa
knew, as Avelyn had known, that she would never see her son in this world
again. She had given him over to the service of God, to her ultimate joy, but
still, the very real human pain of final parting tugged at her weak heart,
stole the strength from her tiny arms and legs.
Jayson
supported her, always. He, too, had tears in his eyes, but unlike Annalisa's,
which were of joy, Jayson's tears came from a mix of emotions, ranging from
simple sadness to anger. He had never spoken openly against Avelyn's decision,
but privately the pragmatic man had wondered if his son wasn't merely throwing
his life away.
He couldn't
say that to frail Annalisa, he knew. A simple word could break her. Jayson only
hoped that he could somehow get her home, into her own bed, before she died.
Thoughts of
his parents could not hold Avelyn's attention as the group crossed the
windblown courtyard and entered the grand entrance hall of St.-Mere-Abelle.
Now, the young man did utter an unintended sound, a gasp of disbelief and
delight.
The place
was not bright, having only a handful of tiny windows set high up on the tall
walls. Torches burned at regular intervals, and the massive beams that
supported the hall's ceiling seemed to dance in their light. Avelyn had never
seen a place so huge, could not comprehend the effort that had been expended to
put this hall together. His own village of Youmaneff would fit inside this one
hall, with room left over to stable the horses!
The
tapestries that lined the place were no less magnificent and intriguing, woven
into scenes that held a million details in every square foot—sights
within sights, subtle lines and smaller images—that caught Avelyn's eyes and his
curiosity and would not let them go. The tapestries covered the walls almost
completely, allowing for windows and for racked displays of shining weapons:
swords and spears, great axes, long daggers, and a myriad of pole arms with
hooked blades and prodding tips that Avelyn did not know. Suits of armor of
various designs stood as silent sentinels, every type from the overlapping
wooden plates of the ancient Behrenese to the strong metal-plate mail designed
for Honce-the-Bear's Allheart Brigade, the personal guards of the King—whoever that
might be at the moment. Along one wall stood a gigantic statue, fifteen feet or
more, dressed in a heavy leather jacket, trimmed in fur and set with spiked
metal plates and heavy iron rings. A fomorian, Avelyn realized with a very
visible shudder, in the typical battle dress of its warlike race. Beside it,
dramatically, were two tiny figures, one just over half Avelyn's height, the
other a bit taller, but slender and lithe. The shorter of the pair wore a light
leather tunic and arm shields, metal sleeves hooked over the figure's thumbs
and running from wrists to elbow. The red beret gave the figure's identity
away. It was a powrie mannikin, Avelyn realized. The cruel dwarflike powries
were also called "bloody caps" for their gruesome habit of dipping
their berets, enchanted pieces made of specially prepared human skin, in their
victims' blood until the cap took on—and kept—a shining red hue.
The statue
beside the powrie, sporting a pair of nearly translucent wings, had to be a
representation of an elf, the mysterious Touel'alfar. Its limbs were slender
and long and its armor a silver shining coat of fine interlocking links. Avelyn
wanted to go closer to it to study the stern facial features and the incredible
craftsmanship of the armor. That thought, and the potential punishment it might
bring, reminded the young man of where he was and that many seconds, minutes
perhaps, had slipped past him unnoticed. He blushed deeply and lowered his
head, taking a quick glance all around. He calmed quickly, though, seeing that
all of his classmates were similarly entranced and that the Father Abbot and
the other ranking monks seemed not to care.
The
initiates were supposed to be overwhelmed, Avelyn suddenly realized, and he
looked again around the room, this time more openly, nodding as he began to
understand the true nature of the place. The Order of St.-Mere-Abelle was noted
not just for its pious and humble priests but also for their long reputation as
fierce warriors. The eight years of Avelyn's' pretraining had included only
minor instruction in the martial arts, but he had suspected that the physical
qualifications of the brotherhood, the ability to fight, would become more
prominent once inside the monastery.
To Avelyn,
it was more of a distraction than anything else. All that the gentle and
idealistic young man wanted was to serve God, to foster peace, to heal, and to
comfort. To Avelyn Desbris, nothing in all the world, not the treasures of a
dragon's hoard, nor the powers of a king, could outweigh that accomplishment.
Now he was
on the other side of the great stone gates of St.-Mere-Abelle. Now he had his
chance.
So he
believed.
CHAPTER 3
The Lingering Kiss
Things
quieted quickly in Dundalis. As the days after the patrol's return stretched
out into an uneventful week, and then a second, thoughts of the slain goblin
took second place to the very real threat of winter's onset. There was much to
be done: the last harvesting, preparing the meat, patching holes in the
cottages, and cleaning the chimneys. Every passing day, danger from the goblins
seemed more and more remote; every passing day, fewer and fewer men and women
went out of the town to walk a patrol.
Elbryan and
his friends, some as young as six or seven, saw their chance unfolding. For the
adults, the specter of the goblins brought a sobering wariness and then a
troublesome distraction. For the younger villagers, whose imaginations were far
livelier and whose sense of adventure hadn't yet been tempered by any real
loss, thoughts of goblin raids brought excitement, a call to arms, a time for
heroes. Elbryan and his friends had offered to walk patrols since the first day
of the hunting party's return. Each morning, they approached the village
leaders, and each morning, they were politely refused and quickly put to some
more mundane task. Even Elbryan, who would be entering the realm of adults that
coming spring, had spent almost all the previous week with his head up a dirty
chimney.
But the
young man held faith and passed his hopes down the line. The adults were tiring
of their patrols, he knew, and were growing more and more confident that the
goblin incident was a chance thing—a single, unfortunate meeting—and that
those creatures which had been chased away would not return to the site of the
battle, let alone try to track the humans back to their village, some thirty
miles away.
Now, with
two calm weeks behind them and no further sightings except for a few wild
rumors that were discounted by even the most cautious of Dundalis' folk,
Elbryan recognized the lessening of resistance in his father's voice. He was
not surprised that morning when Olwan, instead of shaking his head, bent low
and sketched out in the dirt a rough map of the area, explaining to his son
where he and his friends should be positioned.
Elbryan was
surprised, though, and pleasantly so, when Olwan then presented him with the
family sword, a short, thick blade of two-foot length. It wasn't an impressive
weapon—its blade showed many nicks and more than a little rust—but it was
one of the few real swords in the village. "Make certain that every one of
your group is well armed," Olwan said seriously. "And make sure that
each knows the value, and the danger, of his or her weapon."
Olwan knew
what this meant to his son, and if he had smiled or let on in any way that the
patrols were no longer really necessary, he would have stolen something from
Elbryan, a measure of importance that the young man desperately needed to feel.
"Do you
think it is wise to let the children go out with weapons?" Shane McMichael
asked Olwan, coming up to the large man soon after Elbryan had run off.
"Or to let them go out at all?"
Olwan
snorted and shrugged his muscular shoulders. "We cannot spare the men and
women," he replied, "and there is the other patrol in the vale, the
most likely route for our enemies to take, should they come." Olwan gave
another snort, a helpless sound that surprised McMichael, who had always known
Olwan as the coolest and most confident head in all the village.
"Besides,"
Olwan went on, "if the goblins or fomorians get close enough to Dundalis
for my son and his friends to see, they will be as well off out in the woods as
in the village."
Shane
McMichael did not argue the point, though the weight of it grew steadily on his
shoulders. Since Honce-the-Bear had been at peace for many years—and goblins
and evil giants receding from the thoughts of most people to become little more
than fireside tales—Dundalis had not been built for defense. The village was not even
walled, as earlier settlements near the Wilderlands had been, and the folk were
not well armed. The hunting party of twelve had carried with them more than
half the total real weapons of the hundred folk of Dundalis. Olwan was right,
Shane McMichael knew, and he shuddered with the thought; if the goblins got
close enough for Elbryan and the others to spot them, then all the village
would be in danger.
Olwan
started away, and McMichael calmed and moved to follow. He really didn't think
any goblins would come; none in the village except for pessimistic old Brody
Gentle spoke of such darkness.
The patrols
began that day, with a score and five youngsters walking the rim of the
bowl-shaped vale that held Dundalis. There was one other patrol, a handful of
older teenagers, venturing further out, down among the pines and fluffy caribou
moss to the northeast. Each of this group nodded respectfully at his younger
counterparts as he passed them on the rim; some mentioned that Elbryan's
patrols would serve as their vital liaison with the village proper. After that
exchange of compliments, even the passing of endless uneventful hours could not
dampen the thrill for the youngsters. Elbryan and his friends were not being
left out this time, were not being treated as mere children.
As each day
slipped past—the weather growing a bit colder, the wind shifting more to the
north—the twenty-five in Elbryan's group perfected their patrol routes.
Elbryan split them into four teams of five and one of three, which would move
from group to group gathering information, while he and Pony served as anchor
to them all, holding a position along the highest ridge directly north of
Dundalis, overlooking the valley of evergreens and caribou moss. There were
several complaints about this arrangement at first, mostly from the older boys
who thought that they should serve as Elbryan's second. Some even resorted to
teasing Elbryan about his growing relationship with Pony, prompting him to
"ride the Pony," and other such crudities.
Elbryan took
it all in stride, with the exception of any insults to Pony, which he promptly
informed the teasers would bring them serious and painful retaliation. He
didn't care about their teasing him though, having at last admitted, to himself
and openly, that Pony was his best and most-trusted friend.
"Let the
children have their fun," Elbryan, coming into manhood, whispered to Pony
as the groups split up.
When he
wasn't looking her way, when he had moved off to set up a windbreak of dead
wood, Pony regarded him knowingly, a warm smile spreading over her face.
* * *
Something
else watched the young man from a perch in one of the thicker pines on the
ridge. It moved nimbly from branch to branch, crossing over to nearby trees
with barely a whisper. It shadowed Elbryan's every move, studying the young
leader intently.
To Pony and
Elbryan, alert as they were, the creature was invisible and unnoticed. Even if
they had looked intently the creature's way, its movements were so fluid and
graceful—and always under the cover of pine boughs—that they
would have considered the sway of the branches no more than the movement of the
wind or a gray squirrel, perhaps.
Another week
passed by uneventfully. Work in the village was at full pace, readying for
winter. On the ridge and in the vale beyond, the primary enemy became boredom.
Elbryan lost half a dozen of his patrol at the beginning of that second week,
the youths explaining that their parents needed them about the house and would
not let them go out. Elbryan did not miss that every one of those
"soldiers" seemed grateful to be relieved of the dull patrols.
Elbryan
continued his diligent work, though, reorganizing the routes to cover more
ground since he was down to three teams of five, with a couple of messengers.
"We'll
lose Shamus tomorrow," Pony said as they sat side by side in a hollow on
the high ridge, sheltered from the chill wind by a pair of large pines. The day
was late, and gray clouds were rolling in to hide the afternoon sun. "His
mother told me this morning this would be his last day out."
Elbryan
prodded the ground with the tip of his sword. "His patrol group goes to
four, then," he said matter-of-factly.
Pony
recognized the frustration in his voice, though he did well to hide it. Elbryan
was watching his first command crumbling about him, his soldiers being taken
away so that they could help patch roofs or shore up barns. Pony sympathized
with the young man, but logically, this was the best scenario they could have
hoped for.
"They
are being called back home because no enemy has come," she gently reminded
him. "Better this than for your patrol to have been truly necessary."
Elbryan
looked at her, little luster showing in his normally bright green eyes.
"Or
maybe we were necessary," Pony quickly added, trying to salvage some
measure of the young man's pride. "How do we know that goblins have not
ventured near Dundalis?"
Elbryan
cocked his head and ran a hand through his thick layers of straight, light
brown hair.
"Perhaps
their scouts did come near us," Pony went on. "Perhaps they saw our
patrols and realized they would not have an easy time of it against the
village."
"We are
just children," Elbryan said disgustedly.
Pony shook
her head. "And all but the smallest of our group is larger than a
goblin," she replied without hesitation, and that truth seemed to lend some
credence to her reasoning. "Is not the best army the one so strong that
enemies will not dare attack?"
Elbryan
didn't answer, but that familiar sparkle fit up his eyes. He turned back to regard the ground in front
of him, and the wild design he was cutting with the sword tip.
Pony smiled
warmly, feeling that she had done well. It pleased her greatly to help out
Elbryan, to guard his emotions. She didn't really believe goblins had come near
enough to see the patrols, and neither did Elbryan, but at least this way he
could hold out some reason to believe his first real effort at something
important by adult standards had not been in vain. The simple fact that they
could not be absolutely certain offered Elbryan all the encouragement he
needed.
Pony dared to
reach out then; the connection was too strong to let the moment pass. She
cupped Elbryan's chin in one hand and gently turned him back to face her.
"You
have done a wonderful job out here," she said softly.
"Not
alone," he started to reply, but she stopped him by putting a finger of
her free hand across his lips. Only then did Elbryan realize how close they
were, their faces barely two
inches
apart. He felt warm suddenly, a bit dizzy, a bit frightened.
Pony drifted
closer. She kissed him! Full on the lips! Elbryan was terrified and thrilled
all at once. He thought he should pull away, spit on the ground, and yell
"girl poison!" as was the expected response, as had been his response
all the other times Pony, or any of the other girls, had tried to kiss him.
He didn't
want to do that; the last notion in his mind was to pull away. He realized then
that it had been a long, long time since Pony had tried to kiss him—at least a
year. Had she feared his reaction? Had she known he would have spit and yelled
out "girl poison," a chant that would have been taken up by every boy
in the village?
Or had she
known he wasn't ready, until now, to be kissed? That was it, the young man
decided as the gentle kiss, their closed mouths barely touching, lingered on
and on. Pony knew him so very well, better than he knew himself. Their last few
days together, alone for four of every five hours, had brought them even
closer.
And now
this. Elbryan didn't want it to end. He shifted in his seat, first lifted the
short sword, then, realizing that it would be awkward, perhaps even dangerous,
dropped it to the ground. He dared to put his arms around Pony's back, dared to
pull her closer, feeling the strangely interesting curves and bumps of her body
against his own as they came together. He fought a fit of panic—not knowing
what he should do, where he should move his hands, or if he should move his
hands at all.
All Elbryan
knew was that he didn't want the kiss to end, that he wanted something more,
though he wasn't really sure what that might be. He wanted to be closer to
Pony, physically and emotionally. This was his Pony, his dearest friend, the
girl—no, the young woman—whom he had grown to love. He would pass
into manhood that spring, Pony into womanhood the following autumn, and soon after,
he would ask for Pony's hand . . .
That notion
brought fear and Elbryan tried to pull away—and did break the hold long enough to
catch his breath. Again, the fears passed, lost in a swirl of warmth as he
looked at Pony's shining blue eyes, at her smile, as genuine and joyful as
anything Elbryan had ever seen. She hardly had to nudge him to get him to kiss
her again, and they settled even more comfortably together.
The kiss
shifted, from curiosity to urgency, then back to gentleness. Their clothes
ruffled and seemed more of an obstacle than a necessity. Though the air was
chill, Elbryan had the feeling he would be warmer without them. His hands did
move now, as he lost his fear of touching Pony. He caressed her neck, ran his
hand down her side and along the outside of her strong leg. He was shocked as
her mouth opened a little bit, as he felt her tongue against his lips, so soft
and inviting.
The moment,
this most precious moment in all of Elbryan's young life . . .
And then
suddenly, it was gone, destroyed by a horrified, and horrifying, scream. The
couple jumped apart and to their feet, staring wide-eyed down the long slope to
the village, at the swarming forms, at the large plume of smoke—too large to
come from any chimney! —rising from one of the houses.
The goblins
had come.
Hundreds of
miles away, in a windswept, foreboding land called the Barbacan, in a deep cave
in a mountain called Aida, the dactyl basked in the sensation of fear. The
demon creature could feel the screams of those dying in Dundalis, though it had
no idea where the battle was being waged. This was an action of a rogue goblin
chieftain, perhaps, or one of the many powrie raiding parties, acting on their
own initiative, bringing misery to the wretched humans.
The dactyl
could not take direct credit, but that mattered little. It had awakened,
darkness rising, and already its influence was spreading throughout Corona.
Already the goblins, the powries, or one of the other races the demon would
claim as minions had felt that awakening and had been given the courage to act.
The creature
flexed its great wings and settled back in the throne it had shaped from the
obsidian that had formerly served as its tomb. Yes, the dark vibrations were
running strong through the stone. The sensation of war, of human agony.
It was good
to be awake.
CHAPTER 4
The Death of Dundalis
Elbryan and
Pony were stunned and terrified for many seconds. It was too unreal, too beyond
their experience and expectations. Images assaulted them, mingling with
imagined scenes even more horrifying, and amid all of it welled utter denial,
the hope against obvious reality that this simply could not be happening.
Jilseponie
moved first, a single, tiny step, her arm reaching out helplessly. That almost
involuntary motion seemed to break her trance and she let out a shriek for her
mother and ran full out for home.
Elbryan
thought to call out for her, but indecision held his voice and kept him from
immediately following. What should he do? What were his responsibilities?
A warrior
would know these things!
With great
effort, Elbryan tore his gaze from the dreadful spectacle below and glanced all
around. He should organize his friends—yes, that was the course, he decided. He
would gather together his scouts, perhaps even call in the older scouts from
the vale, and charge down into Dundalis in tight formation, anchoring the
defense.
But time was
against him. He glanced about again, turned to the evergreen and caribou moss
valley, and started to call out, thinking to bring in the patrol of older men.
Elbryan fell
back behind the twin pines, catching the shout in his throat, gasping for
breath. Just over the ridge, facing away from him, he saw the nearly bald head,
the pointed ears, the chalky yellow skin of an enemy. With trembling fingers, Elbryan
retrieved his short sword, and then he sank even deeper into the hollow,
paralyzed with terror.
* * *
Pony wasn't
armed, having left her club back at the ridge. She didn't care, for she wasn't
really running into battle.
The girl was
running to find her mother and father, to feel their comforting hugs, to hear
her mother telling her that everything would be all right. She wanted to be a
little girl again, wrapped tight in her bedsheets, and tighter in mother's
embrace, waking from a nightmare.
This time,
though, she was awake. This time, the screams were real.
Pony ran on
desperately, blinded by tears. She stumbled to the base of what she thought was
a tree, then nearly fainted as it shifted suddenly, as the fomorian giant, huge
club in hand, took a long step away from her.
If she had
had any breath in her lungs, she would have screamed, and if she had screamed,
the giant would have noticed her and squashed her where she stood.
But its
focus was the village and not some insignificant little girl, and in a few
loping strides it left Pony far behind. She scrambled back to her feet, picked
up a couple of rocks of a good size for throwing, and ran on, taking a course
that would parallel, but not too closely, the giant: Now, as she entered the
area of battle, as she saw the confusion, the fierce fighting, the dead bodies
on the road, she was no more a little girl. Now she remembered her training,
forced herself to think clearly and concisely. Goblins swarmed everywhere, and
Pony spotted at least two other giants, fifteen feet tall and perhaps a
thousand pounds of chiseled muscle. Her friends and family could not win! That
logical, adult part of Pony—the part that knew that the time of
fending off nightmares with bedsheets was long past—told her
without doubt that Dundalis could not survive.
"Plan
B," she whispered aloud, using the words to steady her thinking. The rules
of survival, taught to every child in Wilderlands settlements, declared that
the first priority in any catastrophe was to save the village. If that failed,
the next task was to save as many individuals as possible. Plan B.
Pony picked
her way around the back of the nearest houses, moving in and out of the
shadows. She peeked around the corner and stood transfixed.
On the main
road of Dundalis, just on the other side of this house, a fierce battle raged.
Pony saw Olwan Wyndon first, standing tall in the middle of the human line,
calling out commands, forming the group of twenty men and women into a tight
circle as enemies came at them from nearly every direction. Pony's first
instincts were to try and join that battle group, but she quickly surmised that
she would never get in. She clenched her fist hopefully as Olwan Wyndon smashed
a goblin's head, dropping the wretch to the dirt.
Then she
held her breath as she noticed the man behind Olwan, parrying wildly as two
goblins prodded at him with sharp spears.
Her father.
Elbryan held
his breath, gasped once, then held it again. He didn't know what to do, then
cursed himself silently for what he had already done!
In the
hollow of the twin pines, he had lost sight of his enemy—the first,
and often fatal, mistake.
Now he had
to work hard to deny his terror, had to climb above the emotion and the
physical barrier and remember the many lessons his father had given him. A
warrior knows his enemy, locates his enemy, and watches its every move.
Silently mouthing that litany, Elbryan inched his face toward the edge of the
pine. He hesitated momentarily at the very last instant, certain the goblin was
just on the other side, weapon poised to smash him as soon as he peeked around.
A warrior
knows his enemy . . .
A sudden
shift brought the field beyond the pines back into view, and Elbryan nearly
collapsed with relief when he saw the goblin had not moved and was still facing
away from him, staring into the northern valley. That relief fast transformed
into a sinking feeling as Elbryan realized the meaning of this creature's
positioning. The patrol in the valley had been spotted perhaps had even been
already engaged, and this goblin had been set as sentry, watching for any other
potential human reinforcements while its companions sacked the village.
That thought
sparked anger in the young man, enough to overcome his fear. He clenched more
tightly his short sword and slowly brought one leg up under him.
Without
hesitation, for if he paused, he knew his courage surely would falter, Elbryan
slipped out from behind the protection of the tree: Half walking, half
crawling, he moved closer to the goblin, quickly covering a third of the
distance.
Then he
wanted to turn back, to run into the hollow and cover his face. The sounds
behind him, from his home, bolstered him, as did the smell of burning wood
carried by the wind up to the ridge. With a grimace of determination, Elbryan halved
the distance to his foe. No turning back now. He scanned the area, and, as soon
as he was confident that this creature was alone, he stood up and rushed out.
Five running
strides brought him to the goblin, who didn't hear his approach until the last
second. Even as the goblin began to turn, Elbryan's sword came down hard on its
head.
The sword
bounced out wide. Elbryan was surprised by the force of the impact and that his
sword had not cut into the goblin's skull. He thought for one terrible moment he
hadn't hit the thing hard enough, that it would turn and skewer him with its
crude spear. Desperately, the young man scrambled to the side, trying to ready
a defense.
The goblin
staggered weirdly, dropped its weapon, and fell to its knees. Its head lolled
from side to side. Elbryan saw the bright red gash, the white of split bone,
the grayish brain. The goblin stopped moving. Its chin came to rest on its
chest, and it held the kneeling pose, quite dead.
Dead.
Elbryan felt
his guts churning and labored for his breath. The weight of his first kill
descended upon him, bowing his shoulders, nearly driving him to his knees.
Again it was the smell of his burning village that cleared his head. He had no
time now to ponder, and any sympathetic notions that he might have captured the
goblin instead of killing it seemed perfectly ridiculous.
He looked
ahead at the evergreen vale and noted to his dismay that a fight was going on
down there. Then he looked back at the larger battle for Dundalis.
To where his
parents were fighting, to where Pony had run.
"Pony,"
the desperate young man whispered aloud, and before Elbryan even consciously
knew what he was doing, he saw the trees going past him in a blur as he
sprinted down the slope toward Dundalis.
Pony made
her way around the house, inching toward the battle, wondering how she might
get past the ring of goblins to stand beside her father. A cry of agony within
the house froze her in place, and she leaned heavily on the frame for support.
She took a moment to consider where she was, whose house this was, and she
stifled a sob.
"No
time for that," she scolded herself, and she focused on the battle raging
on the road. Again her shoulders sagged, for though many goblins lay dead or
dying on the bloodied ground about the ring of desperate fighters, several
humans were down as well. And the goblin ranks, for all the carnage, remained
deep, and seemed undiminished.
Above it all
stood Olwan, proud and strong and unshakable. He clobbered yet another goblin,
bashing in its ugly skull, then raised his arm and called out, trying to rally
the others. Pony blinked curiously, for Olwan's arm did not come down, seemed
to be going up, up, up. She saw the look of horror and pain that came over the,
man, then looked higher, past his stretched shoulder, his elbow . . .
The giant's
hand covered the tall man's entire forearm. Blocked by the wall of the house,
Pony couldn't follow the man's ascent. She wanted to yell out for someone to
help doomed Olwan, wanted to scream simply for the sake of screaming.
And then
Olwan came flying back into sight, falling in a broken heap on the road right
in the midst of the valiant fighters. Their ranks broke apart. They ran every
which way, most getting no more than a couple of strides before being buried
under a wave of swarming goblins. Pony lost sight of her father immediately,
mercifully. She tried to sort out the mob, saw another person—the woman
who had taught her to read and write—get pulled down to the ground, saw the
goblin spear fast following. And then Pony turned away, stumbling to the back
of the house, holding her churning stomach.
There were
no lines of defense anymore, no organized pockets of resistance. Everything was
confusion, screams and cries of pain. Pony didn't know where to turn, where to run.
She saw the image of dead Olwan again, and the last glimpse of her father.
She turned
back toward the road, hoping that her dad would come for her, would somehow
rush out of the jumble and scoop her away from the danger, would make
everything better, as he'd always done.
As if in a
grotesque mockery of that hope, a goblin marched around that corner, bearing
down on the girl. Pony let out a cry, hurled one of her stones at the creature,
and ran off.
Anger held
her in place just around the back of the house. She stopped and braced herself,
measuring the goblin's footsteps. As it rounded the corner, the girl snapped
back her elbow with all her strength, catching the charging creature right
under the chin.
Pony spun
and jumped on it, flailing wildly with both fists, kicking and kneeing
viciously. Stronger than its little body would indicate, the goblin finally
pushed her aside and turned its spear.
"Elbryan!"
The call
brought the sprinting lad to a skidding halt. He caught the trunk of a young
maple and swung about it, turning in the direction of the voice.
Carley dan
Aubrey, one of the younger scouts, staggered toward him, his face ashen, both
hands clenched firmly to his right side at his waist. Elbryan saw the dark
stain near those hands.
"Elbryan!"
the nine-year-old boy called again, stumbling forward. Elbryan ran out to meet
him, caught him as he fell.
The older
boy moved quickly to inspect the wound, forcing Carley's hands away. Elbryan
grimaced, and Carley whimpered and nearly vomited, when Elbryan's hand brushed
against the broken tip of a spear jutting from Carley's side.
Elbryan
pulled back his trembling hand, staring wide-eyed at the bright blood that now
covered it. Carley clutched desperately at the wound again, but he could not
hope to stem the blood.
Elbryan
forced himself to remain steady, to think clearly. He had to get his own shirt
off and use it to somehow wrap the wound. And quickly! He tore off his overcoat
and pulled open his leather vest, quickly unbuttoning the sleeves of his white
shirt. Then he saw the goblin, coming fast, half a spear in its hands. It
raised the shaft like a club, bearing down on him.
Elbryan
grabbed for his short sword, tried to bring it up in front of him, and fell
back as the goblin dove upon him. They came together hard, Elbryan going flat
out on his back.
Down they
rolled together. Elbryan's sword was up against the creature's side, had cut in
a bit, but the angle was wrong, and the goblin's grip surprisingly strong,
preventing the boy from driving the weapon home.
Over and
over they rolled, tumbling down the slope, punching and thrashing. The ugly
goblin face, all twisted teeth and long pointy nose, was barely inches from
Elbryan's face, and closer still when the creature began to butt the boy.
Elbryan felt his nose crack, felt the warmth of his blood running. He struggled
harder, but the goblin would not let him drive his sword home.
Elbryan
tugged more fiercely with his other hand instead, increasing the pace of the
roll. He caught his ankles on a tree trunk but kicked off, not daring to stop,
and the goblin came right over him. Still the creature held on stubbornly,
pulling Elbryan over, and they began to roll sidelong again, heads to feet. On
the first roll, Elbryan saw his new advantage, and on the second the young man
poked the elbow of his sword arm out so it hit the ground and was braced.
When the
goblin came over, its own weight forced it down on Elbryan's sword.
The creature
went berserk, kicking and thrashing, flopping like a landed fish. Elbryan at
first tried to defend himself but when that seemed futile, went on the
offensive instead, brutally turning and twisting his blade.
The pair
rolled hard into the trunk of another tree, and the goblin abruptly stopped its
thrashing. Elbryan, dazed, his breath blasted away, nearly fainted. His
thoughts came back in a terrifying rush and he tore free his sword and began
hacking wildly, cutting the goblin again and again. He crawled out from under
the thing, but kept on attacking it, savagely, primally, his blows wrought of
sheer terror. Finally he stopped, realizing it was dead, that it could no
longer hurt him. He knelt over it, trying to catch his breath, which would not
seem to come to him.
Carley dan
Aubrey's whimper brought him back to his senses. He dashed back up the slope,
finally getting to the boy.
"Cold,"
Carley mouthed quietly. Elbryan fell to his knees, reaching for the wound,
gingerly touching the spear and wondering if he should pull it free. He looked
at the boy, and he held his breath.
But Carley
was dead.
Pony ran
off, stumbled and fell, then scrambled on all fours—anything to
get away. The goblin was behind her; she could imagine it readying its spear,
lining up her vulnerable back. She cried out and fell around a corner, flat on
her face. Realizing she hadn't been hit by anything, she put her feet back
under her and ran on.
Around the
back of the house, Thomas Ault, Pony's father, tore his dagger free and let the
dead goblin fall to the ground. He looked plaintively at the corner around
which his daughter had run, hoping, praying she would somehow escape.
Thomas had
done all he could. He felt the sting of the light spears, six of them, in his
back, his side, deep in one thigh. He heard the footsteps as the band of
pursuing goblins closed the distance to him.
He prayed
Pony would get away.
Before
Elbryan could start back toward the town, he saw the shadows moving among the
trees in the area from which Carley had come. He knew these were not his other
friends, knew instinctively the others had fallen. He moved slowly, quietly,
away from Carley's body, taking cover behind a larger tree.
Seven
goblins came into sight, trotting easily down the slope. They hooted and
laughed when they spotted the dead boy, then hooted even louder when they saw
their fallen companion, not even pausing as they passed.
Elbryan
wanted to jump out at them, to slash them all. Wisdom overruled his rage,
though, and he stayed hidden and let them pass. Then he stalked after them, his
bloody sword in his bloody hand, hoping one of the creatures would stray from
its friends.
The smoke
was growing thicker down in the village now. The screams had diminished, but
when he crossed an area that offered him a clear view of Dundalis, Elbryan saw
the scrambling forms were still thick about the place.
The young
man knew it was hopeless, knew that his village was lost, knew all of his
friends, his parents, his Pony, were gone.
Elbryan knew
it, yet he did not slow his pace and did not alter his course. He was beyond
grief, beyond logic, with no tears to cry. He would go down to Dundalis; he
would kill every goblin he could catch.
She saw the
dead, saw the dying. She didn't know why she hadn't yet been caught, but as she
darted from shadow to shadow, from the side of one burning building to the next,
she knew that her luck would not hold out for long. All thought of rescuing
anyone was gone. All that she wanted now was to get away, far away.
But how? The
roads were thick with goblins. Groups of the ugly creatures ran into each
house, ransacked the place, and then, set it ablaze. They showed no mercy; Pony
saw one woman beg for her life, offer herself to the goblins circling about
her.
They hacked
her down.
The noose
was getting tighter, Pony knew. As villagers died, more and more goblins were
free to run about. She looked in every direction, trying to find some course
out of the town to the trees. But there was no escape, no way to get beyond
Dundalis without being seen. And there were other goblins in the woods, coming
in a few at a time.
No escape.
Pony
squeezed in tight between two buildings and put her head against a wall. She
wondered if it would be better to run out into the road and get it over with.
"Better that than to wait," she mumbled determinedly, but she found
she could not do it, that her most basic instinct for survival would not let
her.
Pony took a
deep breath. She felt the heat against her hands as this house, too, started to
burn. Now where could she run?
The girl
cocked her head, suddenly realizing exactly where she was. This was Shane
McMichael's house in front of her, Olwan Wyndon's right behind her. Olwan's
house; Elbryan's house.
Elbryan's
new house!
Pony
remembered the building of the place, only two years previously. The whole
village had buzzed about the house because Olwan Wyndon was laying a stone
foundation.
Pony fell to
her knees and began to scrape the ground at the base of Olwan's house. Her
fingers bled, she felt the heat growing behind her, but she dug on desperately.
Then her
hand broke through into an open area. She reached deeper, perhaps a foot and a
half down, and her hand met cold, wet ground. Olwan had used large slabs for
the base, and, as Pony suspected, the house hadn't completely settled.
The smoke
grew thick about Pony; Olwan's house, too, went up in flames. Still she dug,
widening the hole, trying desperately to squeeze under the slab.
The angry
young man didn't have long to wait. The goblin band, sentries apparently and
not part of the attacking force, did not continue down toward Dundalis but
split ranks and filtered left and right into the trees.
Elbryan went
left, shadowing a group of three. He heard the continuing screams in Dundalis,
more of a pitiful weeping now than any cries of resistance. He saw the houses
burning, was close enough to realize that his own house was among them.
That only
fueled the young man's outrage. He stalked quietly from tree to tree, and when
one of the goblins paused and fell behind the others, he was quickly to the
spot.
The kill was
swift, a single thrust through the creature's ribs, but not quiet, for the
goblin managed to let out a dying cry.
Elbryan tore
free his sword and started to run, but too late. He swiped left and right,
picking off a pair of thrusting spears as the two other goblins bore down on
him, howling and shouting. Their eyes—so full of glee, so uncaring for their
fallen comrade—unnerved Elbryan, and he tried hard not to look at them, tried to
concentrate on their stabbing spears.
All the
while he was backtracking, realizing he had to flee before the other group
answered the howling call. The goblin on his left came in hard and straight.
Elbryan snapped his sword over and around the spear, angling it past on his
right, and he skittered out to the left, up the slope, gaining the higher
ground.
All
advantage was lost as the young man stumbled, the loose earth slipping out from
under his foot. The other goblin ran around the back of its companion and moved
higher, coming in at Elbryan from above.
Desperately,
he threw himself backward, put a foot under him, and kicked off, flying past
the turning spear of the first goblin and rushing to get out of range of the
second. He slashed out with his sword as he careened past, gaining hope as he
felt it connect with something solid.
Then the
world was spinning as Elbryan bounced and rolled. He finally controlled his
slide and tried to angle himself so he could stop his roll and come up in a
defensive posture. He expected the goblin—perhaps both of the creatures—to be right
behind him.
They
weren't. The one Elbryan had slashed lay very still on the ground—apparently
he had hit it harder than he'd believed. The other was also on the ground,
squirming and groaning.
The only
explanation Elbryan could think of was that it had charged at him as he had
leaped away and had slammed hard against the ground or against a tree trunk.
Not one to argue with good fortune, Elbryan scrambled to his feet.
Something
tapped him on the shoulder, not hard at first, but then he was flying once
more, sidelong this time. He hit the ground in a roll but slammed hard against
a tree trunk as he came around. Confused and dazed, Elbryan staggered to his
feet.
And all hope
flew from him as a fomorian giant, holding a club as large as Elbryan's entire
body, casually walked toward him. And Elbryan heard hoots from behind him and
knew the other four goblins were on the way.
The young
man glanced all around. Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. He braced himself,
used the solid tree as support. When the giant was within one huge stride,
Elbryan leaped out, trying to confuse it with sheer savagery. He stabbed and
slashed, came in close to the monster's knees and stabbed again, then rolled
right between the giant's legs.
But the
giant had seen the move dozens of times in its battles with little folk.
Elbryan got halfway through before the giant clamped his knees together,
holding the youth so securely he could barely draw breath. Elbryan tried to
stab the monster again, but the giant squeezed even tighter, and all the young
man could do was groan. He managed to turn sideways, and from that perspective
could see the giant's club rise up over its head.
A sickening
feeling washed over Elbryan. Stubborn to the end, he stabbed again as hard as
he could, then closed his eyes.
The air came
alive with a strange humming sound. The giant released its grip and Elbryan
fell to the ground. He scrambled out, running on for several steps. He heard
the continuing whistles and thought for a moment that a swarm of bees had flown
up around him. Instinctively he whipped out his hand, and then he cried out for
the sudden sting and pulled it back in close.
He turned
about, regarding the giant, which was dancing and slapping at the air. Beyond
it he could see a pair of the four goblins that were coming in, both of them
jerking weirdly and then falling to the ground.
"What?"
Elbryan asked in utter confusion. Dots of red, like grotesque chicken pox,
covered the giant's face and arms. Looking closer, and then at his own injured
hand; Elbryan realized that these were not caused by bees, but were bolts, small
arrows, the likes of which he had never seen.
Scores and
scores of small arrows, filling the air all about him!
But they
hardly seemed to stop the behemoth. The fomorian charged ahead with a
tremendous, hideous howl, its cudgel going high. Elbryan, puny and helpless
beneath it, held aloft his short sword, though he could not possibly deflect
such a mighty blow.
The next
volley was concentrated, sixty arrows flying fast for the giant's face and
throat, sixty bolts that looked indeed like a swarm of bees. The fomorian
staggered once, twice, and then again, as the bolts burrowed in, one on top of
the other, a dozen on top of the previous dozen. Finally, the stinging ended,
and the fomorian tried to move forward, back toward its prey. But before it
could get anywhere near to the young man, the giant went down, choking in its
own blood.
Elbryan
never saw it; he had fainted dead away.
CHAPTER 5
God's Chosen
Brother
Avelyn turned hard on the crank, both wood and man groaning with each rotation.
When would that bucket finally appear? the young novice wondered.
"Faster,"
insisted Quintall, Aveyln's work partner and classmate. The class had been
divided by birth dates; Avelyn and Quintall had been put, together solely
because they had been born in the same week, and not for compatibility, either
physical or emotional. Indeed, the two seemed obviously mismatched. Quintall
was the shortest man in the class of twenty-five, while Avelyn was among the
tallest. Both were large boned, but Avelyn was gawky and awkward, whereas
Quintall was muscular, a fine athlete.
They were
opposites in temperament, as well: Avelyn calm and reverent, always in control,
and Quintall a "firework," as Master Siherton, the class overseer,
often appropriately referred to him.
"Is it
near?" Avelyn asked after a few more unrewarded turns.
"Halfway,"
Quintall answered coldly, "if that."
Avelyn
sighed deeply and put his aching arms into motion.
Quintall
offered a disgusted snort; he would have had the bucket up by this time and the
pair could have gone off and gotten their midday meal. But it was Avelyn's turn
to crank, and the taskmasters were particular about such things. If Quintall
tried to sneak in and push that crank, it would likely cost them both their
meal.
"He is
an impatient one," noted Master Jojonah, a portly man of about fifty, with
soft brown eyes and rich brown hair that showed not a speck of gray. Jojonah's
skin was tanned and smooth, except for a fan of lines spreading out from each
of his eyes—"credibility wrinkles," he called them.
"Firework,"
explained Master Siherton, tall and angular and thin, though his shoulders were
wide, protruding many inches from either side of his skinny neck. Siherton's
features befit his rank of class overseer, the disciplinarian of the newest
brothers. His face was sharp and hawkish, his eyes small and dark—and smaller
still on those many occasions that he squinted ominously at his young students.
"Quintall is full of passion," he added with obvious admiration.
Jojonah
regarded the man curiously. They were inside the abbey's highest chamber, a
long, narrow room with windows overlooking the rough ocean breakers on one side
and the abbey courtyard on the other. All twenty-four—one novice
had been forced to leave because of illness—brothers of the newest class were out in
the courtyard, tending their chores, but the focus of the two masters was
Avelyn and Quintall, considered the exceptional novices.
"Avelyn
is the best of the class," Jojonah remarked, mostly to gauge Siherton's
reaction.
The taller
man shrugged noncommittally.
"Some
say that he is the best in many years," Jojonah pressed. It was true
enough; Avelyn's incredible dedication was fast becoming the talk of
St.-Mere-Abelle.
Again, the
shrug. "He is without passion," Siherton replied.
"Without
human passion because he is closer to God?" Jojonah replied, thinking that
he had finally caught Siherton.
"Perhaps
because he is already dead," the tall man said dryly, and he turned to
glare at his counterpart.
Master
Jojonah settled back on his heels but met the penetrating stare firmly. It was
no secret that Siherton favored Quintall among this most important class, but
the man's overt insult of Avelyn, the choice of every other master—and
reportedly of Father Abbot Markwart as well—surprised him.
"We received
news this day that his mother died," Siherton said evenly.
Jojonah
looked back at the courtyard, to Avelyn at work as always as though nothing was
amiss. "You have told him?"
"I did
not bother."
"What
macabre game do you play?"
Again came
that annoying shrug. "Would he care?" Siherton replied. "He
would say that she is with God now, and so she is happy; and then he would go
on."
"Do you
mock his faith?" Jojonah asked rather sharply.
"I
despise his inhumanity," replied Siherton. "His mother has died, yet
will he care? I think not. Brother Avelyn is so smug within the cocoon of his
beliefs that nothing can unbalance him."
"That
is the glory of faith," Jojonah said evenly.
"That
is a waste of life," Siherton retorted as he leaned out the window.
"You, Brother Quintall!" he called.
Both the
novices stopped their work and looked up at the window. "Go to your
meal," Master Siherton instructed. "And you, Brother Avelyn, do come
and join with me at my—at Master Jojonah's chambers." Siherton pulled back into the
hall and eyed Jojonah.
"Let us
see if our young hero has any heart at all." Siherton remarked coldly, and
he stalked off toward the stairwell that would lead him down to the master's
quarters.
Jojonah
watched him for a long moment, wondering which of them it was, Siherton or
Avelyn, who was truly lacking in heart.
"You
are using this loss for a most unworthy point," Jojonah insisted when he
caught up to Siherton three levels below.
"He
must be told," Siherton replied. "Let us not miss the opportunity to
measure this man in whom we may soon put so much trust."
Jojonah
caught Siherton by the shoulder, stopping him in mid-stride. "Avelyn has
spent eight years proving himself worthy," he reminded the taller man.
"Unbeknownst to him, he has been under constant scrutiny these last four
years." What more would Siherton demand?
"He
must prove that he is a man," the hawkish master growled. "He must
prove that he can feel. There is more to spirituality than piety, my friend.
There is emotion, anger, passion."
"Eight
years," Jojonah repeated.
"Perhaps
the next class—"
"Too
late," Master Jojonah said quietly. "The Preparers must be selected
from this class, or from one of the three previous, and not a man among the
seventy-five admitted in the last three years has shown the promise of Avelyn
Desbris." Jojonah paused and spent a long while studying the other man.
Siherton knew the truth of Jojonah's words, and seemed now caught within that
truth, helpless in the face of reality. His arguments against Avelyn would be
duly noted, but they rang hollow in light of the choices before the abbey. And
even with any credible arguments, Siherton's posture, bordering on anger, on
outrage, seemed so out of place.
"Why,
my dear Siherton," Jojonah said a moment later, figuring it out, "you
are jealous!"
Master
Siherton growled and turned away, heading for the door to Jojonah's private
room.
"Our
misfortune to be born between the showers," Jojonah said, sincerely
sympathetic to Siherton's frustration. "But we have our duty. Brother
Avelyn is the best of the lot."
The words
stung Siherton profoundly. He stopped at the door, bowed his head; and closed
his eyes, conjuring images of the young Avelyn. Always working or praying;
there were no other recollections of Avelyn to be found. Strength, or weakness?
Siherton wondered, and he wondered, too, about the potential danger of having
one so devout getting involved with the precious stones. There were pragmatic
matters concerning the magic which might not sit well in a man so deep in
faith, in a man so obviously convinced that he understood the desires of God.
"Father
Abbot Markwart is quite pleased with the young man," Jojonah remarked.
True enough,
Siherton had to admit, and he understood that he would not win any debate he
might wage against the selection of Avelyn as one of the Preparers. The
position of the second Preparer remained wide open, though, and so the tall
master decided then and there that he would use his energy to put forth a
student better to his liking. Someone like Quintall, a young man full of fire
and full of life. And, because of that passion, because of worldly lusts, a man
who could be controlled.
He was not
surprised; his lip didn't quiver.
"Pray
tell me, Master Siherton, was it peaceful?" he heard himself ask.
Master Jojonah
was glad to hear the sympathetic question. Avelyn's lack of initial response to
the news that his mother had died had lent credence to Siherton's complaints.
"The messenger said that she died in her sleep," Jojonah interrupted.
Master
Siherton eyed his peer sternly, considering the lie, for the messenger, a young
boy, had only delivered news of the death and had offered no details
surrounding it. Master Jojonah hadn't even conversed with the messenger. In a
rare display of sympathy, with Jojonah glaring at him out of the corner of his
brown eye, Siherton let it go.
Avelyn
nodded, accepting the news.
"You
will want to leave at once," Siherton offered, "to join your father
at your mother's gravesite."
Avelyn
stared at him incredulously.
"Or you
may choose to stay," Jojonah put in immediately, seeing the lure. If
Avelyn left St.-Mere-Abelle for any reason, he would have to wait until the
following year to enter. His reentry would be guaranteed, but his position as a
Preparer—though he had no idea that he would be offered such a position or
even that there was such a thing—would be lost.
"My
mother is already buried, I assume," Avelyn responded to Siherton,
"and my father has surely left her grave to return home. Given the short
time since their departure from St.-Mere-Abelle, he has yet a long road before
him."
Master
Siherton squinted ominously and leaned close over Avelyn, glaring openly.
"Your mother has died, boy," he said slowly, accentuating each
syllable. "Do you care?"
The words
hit young Avelyn hard. Did he care? He wanted to punch out at the tall master
for even insinuating otherwise. He wanted to fly into a rage, tear the room—and anyone
who tried to stop him—apart!
But that
would be a disservice to Annalisa, Avelyn knew, an insult to the memory of the
gentle woman. Avelyn's mother had lived in the light of God. Avelyn had to
believe that, or else all of her life—and all of his own life—would be no
more than a lie. The reward for such a life, for such a good heart, was a
better existence in a better place. Annalisa was with God now.
That thought
bolstered the young man. He straightened his shoulders and looked squarely at
the imposing Master Siherton.
"My
mother knew that she would not make it home," he said quietly, aiming his
words at Jojonah. "We all knew it. She lived on, in sickness, only to see
me enter the Order of St.-Mere-Abelle. It was her glory that I join the
Abellican Church, and I would be stealing that glory if I left now." He
sucked in his breath, bolstering his declaration.
"The
Order of St.-Mere-Abelle, God's Year 816," Brother Avelyn said without the
slightest quiver in his voice. "That is my place. That is the vision that
allowed Annalisa Desbris to pass on peacefully from this world."
Master
Jojonah nodded, seeing the calm and logical reasoning, and at once impressed
with, and frightened of, the depth of this young man's faith. It was obvious
that Avelyn had loved his mother dearly, and yet, there was a sincerity in his
demeanor. In that, Jojonah could clearly see Siherton's point. Either Avelyn
had a direct line to God or the young man simply had no idea of what it was to
be human.
"May I
go?" Avelyn asked.
The question
caught Jojonah off guard, and as he considered it, he came to realize that
Avelyn's stoicism was, perhaps, not so deeply rooted. "You will be excused
from your duties this day," the master stated.
"No,"
Avelyn replied without hesitation. He bowed his head as soon as he realized
that he had just spoken against a master's command, an offense that could lead
to exile from the abbey. "Please allow me to continue my duties."
Jojonah
looked to Siherton, who was shaking his head disgustedly. Without a word, the
tall master stalked from the room.
Jojonah
suspected that young Brother Avelyn should be careful in the coming weeks. Master
Siherton would see to his dismissal if given any real cause. The gentle master
hesitated for a long while, making sure that Siherton would be far away by the
time that Avelyn left the room.
"As you
wish, Brother Avelyn," Jojonah subsequently agreed. "Be away, then.
You have a few minutes left for your midday meal."
Avelyn bowed
deeply and exited the room.
Jojonah
folded his hands on his desk and spent a long while staring at the closed door.
What was it about Avelyn that really bothered Siherton? he wondered. Was it, as
Siherton insisted, the young man's apparent inhumanity? Or was it something
more profound? Was Avelyn, perhaps, a higher standard, a shadowy mirror, held
up before all the monks of St.-Mere-Abelle, a testament of true faith that
seemed so rare in these times, even in the holy abbey?
That thought
shook Jojonah as he looked around at his decorated chamber, at the beautiful
tapestry he had commissioned from the gallery of Porvon dan Guardinio, among
the most respected artists in all the world. He considered the gold leaf
highlighting the carved hardwood of the room's support beams, the rich rug from
some exotic land, the cushiony chairs, the many baubles and trinkets on his
vast bookshelf, every one of them worth more gold than a common laborer would
make in a year.
Piety,
dignity, poverty, that was the pledge offered upon entering the Order of
St.-Mere-Abelle. That was the standard. Jojonah glanced around the room again,
reminding himself that most of the other masters, even some of the tenth-year
immaculates, had chambers more richly adorned.
Piety,
dignity, poverty.
But
pragmatism, too, should be part of that pledge, so said Father Abbot Markwart,
and so had declared the abbey's previous leaders, dating back more than two
centuries. In Honce-the-Bear, wealth equalled power, and without power, how
could the Order hope to influence the lives of the common folk? Wasn't God
better served by strength than by weakness?
So went the
widely accepted argument that allowed for relaxing some aspects of the holy
pledge.
Still,
Master Jojonah could see why a student such as Avelyn Desbris would so unnerve
Master Siherton.
That night,
Avelyn retired to his room, thoroughly exhausted, both emotionally and
physically. He had spent all his waking hours at demanding work, volunteering
for the most difficult parts of each task. He had lost count of the buckets he
had cranked up from the well—somewhere near fifty—and had gone
right from that heavy work to removing loose stones near to the northern end of
the abbey's top wall, pulling them free and piling them neatly for the masons
who would follow the next day.
Only the
call to vespers, the ceremony heralding eventide, had interrupted Avelyn's
frantic pace. He went quietly to the service, then skipped his evening meal
altogether and went right to his chamber, a five-foot-square cubicle with a
single stool, which doubled as a table for Avelyn's candle, and a cot—little more
than a flat board and a blanket—that folded down from one wall.
The work was
ended now, and the ache settled in. Despite his weariness, Avelyn Desbris could
hardly sleep. Images of his mother flooded his thoughts; he wondered if he
might see a vision of her now, a visitation of her spirit before it went to its
place in heaven. Would Annalisa come to say goodbye to her youngest child, or
had she already said her farewells to Avelyn in the courtyard outside of
St.-Mere-Abelle?
Avelyn
rolled off the cot and fumbled with his flint and steel, finally getting the
candle lit. He glanced around in the shadowy light, as if expecting Annalisa to
be standing in a comer waiting for him.
She wasn't,
to Avelyn's ultimate disappointment.
The young
man settled on the edge of his cot, head bowed, hands resting on his sore
thighs. He felt the first tears leaking from his eyes and tried to deny them.
To cry would be a weakness, Avelyn reasoned, a lack of faith. If what he
believed, what he truly held in his heart, could not sustain him in a time of
death, then of what value was it? The Abellican Church, the ancient scriptures,
promised heaven to those deserving, and who could be more deserving than gentle
and generous Annalisa Desbris?
A tear
rolled down Avelyn's cheek, then another. He dropped his head lower, brought
his hands up. to cover his eyes, his wet eyes.
A sob lifted
Avelyn's bowed shoulders. He tried to deny it, tried to fight back. He recited
the Prayer of the Dead, the Prayer of the Faithful, the Prayer of Eternal
Promise, all in a row, forcing his voice to hold steady.
Still the
tears came; every so often his even tone was broken by a sniffle or a sob.
He went
through the recitals again, and again. He prayed with all his heart, wrapping
the words around images of his mother, often intoning her name between lines of
verse. He was on the floor then, but did not know how he had gotten there. On
the floor and curled up like a baby, wanting his mother, praying for his
mother.
Finally,
after more than an hour, Avelyn composed himself and sat back on the cot,
taking several deep breaths to fight away the last of the sobs. He thought long
and hard then, considering his grief, searching his soul for the weakness that
had come into his faith.
Soon enough,
he had his answer, and Avelyn was glad. He was not crying, he realized, for
Annalisa, for he did indeed hold faith that she had passed on to a deserved
better existence. He was crying for himself, for his brothers and sisters, for
his father, for all who knew Annalisa Desbris and would not be graced by her
presence in this life again.
Avelyn could
accept that. His faith was intact and solid, and so he was not desecrating the
memory of his mother. He moved to blow out the candle, then changed his mind
and settled back on the cot. Still his eyes searched the corners of the shadowy
room for his mother's spirit.
Perhaps he would
find her in his dreams.
Two men
walked quietly away from Brother Avelyn's closed door. "Are you
satisfied?" Master Jojonah asked Master Siherton when they were far away.
Indeed
Siherton had been pleased to hear Avelyn crying, to know that the too-dedicated
young man was possessed of human emotions, but the sound of Avelyn's sobs had
not changed the stern master's general attitude toward Avelyn. He gave a slight
nod to Jojonah and started away.
"I have
been given the blessings of Father Abbot Markwart to show young Brother Avelyn
the stones," Jojonah called after him.
Siherton
stopped dead in his tracks, fought down the angry protest that rose in his
throat, and then nodded again, only slightly, and continued on his way.
It was
settled then. Brother Avelyn Desbris would be one of the Preparers.
Avelyn tried
to keep his head bowed, his eyes to the floor, as befitted his lowly station,
but he couldn't help notice some of the splendors that surrounded him as he
followed Master Jojonah through the winding corridors of the Abbot's Maze, the
most private and revered place in all of St.-Mere-Abelle, and one that a
first-year novice would certainly not expect to visit.
Jojonah's
explanation for the tour had been weak, some remark about an area that needed
cleaning. After only a few weeks in the abbey, Avelyn knew enough about the
routine to understand that students much older and more experienced than he
were the normal choice for any tasks, however menial, in the Abbot's Maze. He
also knew that nothing special was going on, that many of the older students
would have been available to Master Jojonah.
His
questions were kept private though, for it was not his place to ask anything of
the masters. Only to obey, and so he was, walking as quietly as he could beside
the plump man, keeping his head bowed but still stealing an occasional glance
at the splendor: the gold leaf bordering every side door, the wondrous and
intricate carvings on every beam of wood, the mosaic tile patterns on the
floors, the tapestries, so rich in detail that Avelyn figured he could spend
hours and hours lingering over but one of them. Master Jojonah talked
constantly, though he said nothing of interest—slight remarks about the weather, a storm
that had hit twenty years before, the passing of his favorite baker in the town
of St.-Mere-Abelle, a surprisingly off-color remark about the man's
"lusty" wife. None of it diverted Avelyn's attention from the wonders
of the place, though he did listen somewhat, fearing to miss any questions directed
his way.
They stopped
before a heavy door—and what a door! Avelyn could not help but lift his eyes at the
sight of the thing, at the layers and layers of painted carvings, scenes of
battles, of Saint Abelle being burned at the stake, of the healing hands of Mother
Bastibule. Scenes of angels conquering demons, of the mighty demon dactyl
screaming in agony as its own lava poured over it, consuming it. Scenes of the
Halo, the heavenly gift, enwrapping all the others, an oval because of the
angle at which it was portrayed. It started, if such a complete thing could be
said to start, at the bottom left corner of the door, and led the observer's
eye upward across the portal to the top right. And on the way, as Avelyn's eyes
scanned, it seemed to him as if the history of the world, of the faith,
unfolded to him, the images packed so that one led to another easily, with
enough distinction so that each made an impact, however brief, like the flowing
of time.
He wanted to
kneel and pray; he wanted to ask who the artist—or artists; for certainly no one man could
have created all of this—might be, but realized before the words
left his mouth that any name would be inconsequential, for certainly the
carvers and illuminators who had done this had done so at the explicit intervention
of God. He alone, who called all the men and women of the world His children,
might have done this.
"You
know of the Ring Stones?" Master Jojonah asked abruptly, and the words
sounded sharp and out of place to Avelyn. He nearly jumped, and turned with a
start, surprised that a master would be so foolish as to speak in the presence
of such beauty.
Then the
impact of the question hit him fully.
"You
know?" Jojonah asked again.
Avelyn
swallowed hard, trying to discern his best response. Of course he knew of the
Ring Stones, the heavenly gifts to St.-Mere-Abelle, the source of all the magic
in the world. Avelyn didn't know much, though, just the common rumors about how
the stones would fall from the heavens into the hands of waiting monks, to be
blessed by the Father Abbot that their special powers be realized.
"We are
the Keepers of the Stones;" Master Jojonah said after a moment, Avelyn
still making no move to respond.
The young
monk nodded slightly.
"It is
our most holy duty," Jojonah said, moving to the door and lifting the
heavy latch that held it. Avelyn blinked; amid the wonders of the door, he
hadn't even noticed the huge latch!
"The
stones are the proof of our faith," Jojonah remarked, pushing wide the
door.
Avelyn stood
as if turned to stone. "The proof of our faith," he whispered under
his breath, hardly believing that a master of St-Mere-Abelle had uttered those
borderline blasphemous words. Faith heeded no proof—indeed the
very value of faith was loyalty to beliefs without proof!
Of course
Avelyn would not protest aloud, and even his silent musings were washed away as
the heavy door opened silently, on balanced and oiled hinges, to reveal the
greatest splendor of all.
The room
inside was well lit, though Avelyn saw no torches and didn't smell the usual
odor of burning wood. They were far below ground in one of the abbey's interior
chambers, so there could be no window. But there was indeed light inside that
room, such a light as to make Avelyn think of a cloudless midsummer day. It
filled every corner, every crack in every stone, and reflected brilliantly off
the glass covers of the many cases set about the room, and off their contents
as well, hundreds and hundreds of polished stones.
The Ring
Stones!
Jojonah
moved into the room, Avelyn practically stumbling behind him. The young monk
made no pretense of keeping his gaze low now, looking left and right as they
passed each case, marveling at the gems, the reds and blues, amber-colored
stones and violet crystals. One case of a dozen or so smooth stones, a dark
gray in hue but somehow seeming even blacker than night, caught Avelyn's
attention and made him shudder, though he did not know why. In another case he
saw clear stones—he recognized them as diamonds —and he paused again, and noted that
Jojonah, too, had paused, allowing him to linger.
Avelyn
studied the way the light worked off the many facets of the diamonds, how it
seemed to delve within the stone itself, swirling down to crystalline depths.
Then he realized the truth.
"The
diamonds are the source of the light," he said, and he bit his lip
immediately when he realized that he had spoken out of turn.
"Well
done," Master Jojonah congratulated, and Avelyn relaxed somewhat.
"What do you know of the Ring Stones?"
"They
are the source of all the magic in the world," Avelyn recited.
Jojonah
nodded but said, "Not exactly true."
Avelyn
stared at him hard.
"The
Ring Stones are the source of all goodly magic," Master Jojonah explained.
"God-given
magic," Avelyn dared to put in.
Jojonah
hesitated—a pause not consciously caught by Avelyn, but one that he would
recall in years to come—then nodded. "But there are, too, the
Earth Stones, the source of evil magic, the power of the dactyls," said
Jojonah. "They are not numerous, by God's grace, and can only be used by
those demons—who, by God's grace, are even less numerous!" He ended with a
chuckle, but Avelyn was hard-pressed to see any humor in a discussion of the
demon dactyls.
Jojonah
cleared his throat uncomfortably. "And there is magic in the Touel'alfar,
as well," he said. "In their melodious singing, so it is said, and in
the metal their gardens 'grow' from the soil."
"Grow?"
Avelyn asked.
Master
Jojonah shrugged; it was not important. "Tell me of the Ring Stones,"
he prompted. "Who gathers them?"
"The
brothers of St.-Mere-Abelle," Avelyn answered immediately.
"From
where?"
"They
fall from the sky, from the Halo, into the waiting hands of—"
Jojonah's
chuckle stopped him short. "They fall with a speed greater than that of an
arrow in flight," the master explained. "And they are hot, my novice
friend, so hot as to burn the flesh and the bone beneath it!" Jojonah
chuckled again as he described to Avelyn an image of a young monk standing in a
field, as holed as the cheese of Alpinador, an incredulous look on his face, a
group of glowing rocks on the ground behind him.
Avelyn bit
hard on his lip. He realized that Jojonah wasn't mocking him, but could not
understand why he was being told these things.
"Where
do we get them?" Jojonah asked suddenly.
Avelyn
started to say, "The Halo," but stopped short, realizing that that
ground had already been covered. His expression blank, he merely shrugged.
"Pimaninicuit,"
Jojonah said.
Avelyn's
expression did not change.
"An
island," the master explained. "Pimaninicuit. That is the only place
where the sacred stones may be collected."
Avelyn had
never heard such a thing.
"If you
ever utter that name to any who do not know it, without the express permission—no, the
express instruction—of the presiding father abbot of St.-Mere-Abelle, all of the
powers of the abbey will be put into focus to bring about your execution."
Avelyn knew
why he had never heard the name before.
"When
do we get them?" Jojonah asked, changing the subject so abruptly that he
had Avelyn thoroughly flustered. Again the young monk could only shrug
helplessly, wanting to know but afraid to know. There was something most
sacred, yet particularly unmysterious, and thus unholy, in all of this, a
tingling of ecstasy combined with a slightly foul taste that Avelyn Desbris
could not ignore.
"The
stones do not come to ground often," Jojonah explained, sounding more like
a scholar than a priest. "They do not fall frequently, but they do fall
regularly." He led the way to the left-hand wall of the large chamber, and
as they neared, Avelyn could see that the murals carved there were, in fact,
charts, astronomical charts. Avelyn, who had often spent hours at a time gazing
at the wondrous night sky, recognized some of the points. He noted the
four-starred girdle of Progos-Behemoth the Warrior, the most prominent
constellation in the northern sky, and the arcing stars that marked the handle
of the Farmer's Bucket, the one he had to walk away from his parent's back door
in order to see, for it always lingered right above their roof. Corona, with
its Halo, was certainly evident, and prominent, being the center of it all, as
Corona was the center of the universe.
Looking
closer, Avelyn noted grooves in the wall. At first he thought them the borders
of the known spheres, for he had heard theories of the universe as a series of
overlapping, interlocking heavenly spheres, the invisible bubbles that held the
layers of stars in place. When he realized that most of the grooves were near
Corona, connecting the sun and the moon, and the five planets, he came to
understand the truth. Those grooves were of a practical and not aesthetic
nature, serving the mechanics of the chart so that the heavenly bodies could be
kept in motion. Avelyn carefully noted the position of Sheila, the moon, and
stared at it long enough to realize that it was indeed moving, ever so
slightly, along its path about Corona.
"Six
generations," Master Jojonah explained, after he had given Avelyn several
quiet minutes' in which to study the fabulous chart. "Or nearly," he
added when Avelyn turned to him. "A hundred and seventy-three years will
pass between each of the offerings."
"Offerings?"
"The
stone showers," Jojonah explained. "Consider yourself blessed, my
novice friend, for you live in a time of the showers."
Avelyn breathed
hard and stared again at the chart, as if expecting little lines of falling
stones to appear between the Halo and Corona.
"Have
you ever witnessed one of the stones at work?" Jojonah asked suddenly,
drawing Avelyn from his contemplations. The young man stared at him wide-eyed
with hope and eagerness, his hands clenching and opening at his sides.
Jojonah
pointed to a case near to the middle of the room, and motioned for Avelyn to
approach it. As soon as his back was turned to the master, Avelyn heard a click
from the wall and suspected that Jojonah had thrown some sort of lever,
probably hidden within the tapestry of the star charts, to unlock the case. The
master soon joined him at the case and slowly slid back the glass top.
There were
several various stones within, all smooth and polished. Jojonah's hand reached
for one of two of the shiny gray stones. "The soul stones," he
explained. "Hematite, by name." He held the stone tightly in his
right hand, then reached back in with his left and took out a different gem,
mostly clear, but with a slight shading of yellow-green.
"Chrysoberyl," he said. "A stone of protection, in this clear
form. Always a wise choice when dealing with the dark hematite!"
Avelyn
didn't really understand, but he was too overwhelmed by all of this to think of
interrupting with a question.
Jojonah
dropped the chrysoberyl into the pocket of his thick robe and moved far from
Avelyn, facing the younger man directly. "Count to ten," he
instructed, "that I might have time to cast the enchantment. Then place
your hands behind your back and raise your fingers, however many you choose, in
a slow and clear sequence of seven distinct numbers. Take care, to remember
your sequence!"
The master
closed his eyes and began to softly chant. Avelyn hesitated for a moment,
trying to digest the newest information. He collected himself quickly and did
as instructed, alternating the number of raised fingers behind his back.
Through it all, Master Jojonah continued his soft chant, his eyes never
fluttering, all of his body seeming locked in place.
A moment
later, the master opened his eyes. "Seven, three, six, five, five, two,
and eight," Jojonah said, seeming quite pleased with himself.
"You
heard what was within my mind!" Avelyn gasped.
"No,"
Jojonah quickly corrected. "I left my physical body and ventured behind
you. I merely watched as you raised your fingers."
Avelyn
started to respond but held the thought private, though his labored breath and
incredulous expression revealed volumes.
"Not so
hard a task!" Master Jojonah said suddenly, exploding with delight.
"The hematite is a powerful tool, among the most powerful stones of all.
Using it to walk out of body barely touches at the edge of its true magic.
Anyone trained in the stones could do it. Why even you . . ." Jojonah's
voice trailed off, a tease that anxious Avelyn could not ignore.
"Brother
Avelyn," the master said in all seriousness a moment later, "would
you care to try?"
Before he
could even begin to consider the offer, Avelyn nodded so forcefully that he was
sure he must have looked incredibly simple. His feet, too, were moving before
his conscious thought could stop them, as if he were being drawn to the stone.
Jojonah
nearly laughed aloud at the spectacle, and held forth the hematite. Avelyn
reached for it, but the master pulled it back.
"It is
a powerful stone," the master said somberly, "one that could put you
somewhere you do not belong. Take care in your travels, my young friend, for
you may soon be lost!"
Avelyn
retracted his hand a few inches, wondering if he was being a bit foolish here.
The temptation was too strong, though, and he reached out again, and this time,
Jojonah let him take the hematite.
Its feel was
impossibly smooth, almost liquid. It was heavier than Avelyn had expected,
quite solid and dense. He ran his fingers over it repeatedly, felt something
deeper within it, a place of mystery, of magic. He looked to Jojonah and saw
that the master was clutching the chrysoberyl close to his heart.
"It
will prevent our spirits from crossing," Jojonah explained. "That
would not be a wise choice."
Avelyn
nodded and backed off a few steps. Jojonah put his free hand behind his back.
"All in your due time," he said softly. "I will know when you
are in the hold of the magic, and then I will begin."
Avelyn
hardly heard him. Already the young monk was falling into the depths of the
stone. To his rubbing fingers, the hematite felt truly liquid then, and
inviting. Avelyn stared at it for a long while, then closed his eyes, but saw
it still. It was expanding before him, engulfing his hands, then his arms. Then
he was falling, falling.
He resisted,
and the hematite receded dramatically, almost forcing him from the trance. But
Avelyn caught his fears in time and started the journey once more.
His hands
were gone, then his arms. Then all was gray, then black.
Avelyn
stepped out of his body. He looked back and saw himself standing there, holding
the stone. He turned back to Jojonah, saw most distinctly the chrysoberyl,
fiercely glowing and encasing all of the master in a thin white bubble, a ward
that Avelyn knew his spirit could not pass.
He started
toward Jojonah, giving the man a wide berth. He felt incredibly light, felt as
if by will alone he could rise from the ground and fly.
Behind the
master, Avelyn watched the sequence of fingers: one, three, two, one, five.
"Go
higher," he heard Master Jojonah prompt.
Avelyn was
surprised that he could even hear the voice in this state. He understood the
command and willed himself off the ground, drifting effortlessly toward the
ceiling.
"There
is no physical barrier that can stop you," Jojonah remarked. "No
barriers at all. Have you seen the roof? There is something on the roof that
you should know."
Despite the
thrill, Avelyn flinched as he drifted through the room's ceiling. He marveled
at the loose structure of the wood, at the density of the higher room's tile
floor.
There were
several monks, men a few years Avelyn's senior, in the chamber above. Avelyn
felt himself grinning, felt his physical form in the lower room grinning, as he
passed, the men totally oblivious of him.
Then the
grin was gone. Something tugged hard at the young monk, some dark temptation
that he should enter one of these men, that he could push out the host spirit
and possess the body!
He was beyond
them before that dangerous notion fully registered, drifting higher, through
the next ceiling into an empty room, then through that ceiling and the next and
the next and the next, this last one much thicker. Then he was outside, though
he felt none of the physical sensations, the warmth of the sun or the chill of
the ocean breeze. He saw that he was rising above one of the highest spots of
St.-Mere-Abelle, coming right out of the roof. Still he went higher, and Avelyn
feared that he would never stop the ascent, that he would drift through the
clouds, out to the Halo, the stars. Perhaps he would shine in the heavens
above, a fifth light on the girdle of Progos-Behemoth!
He dismissed
that ridiculous notion and turned his spirit about, looking at the roof of the
abbey. From up here: St.-Mere-Abelle appeared as a thick and stretched snake,
winding its way along the top of the sea cliff. Avelyn saw a commotion in the
courtyard, far to the side, as a group of young monks labored at the well and
with the abbey's horses and mules.
"Come
back," bade a distant voice, Master Jojonah's voice, reaching Avelyn
through his physical form. The disconnection was not complete, the young monk
realized, and he shuddered to think of what a complete break from his own
physical form might mean.
Shocked back
to his senses, Avelyn turned his attention to the high roof directly below him.
He had seen this roof before, from one of the higher points of the abbey, but
looking on it from this vantage point revealed a most clever design, an image
that could not be seen from a lower angle. Carved into the roof were four arms,
two sets, hands lifted high, palms open and holding stones.
The journey
back was quicker, until Avelyn got into the room directly above the Ring Stone
chamber. This time the temptation of the other bodies pulled at him even
harder. He felt himself being drawn in. He pictured the hematite as another
living being, commanding him, whispering promises of power into his spiritual
ear.
Avelyn felt
something touch his hand—not his spiritual hand, but the physical
one, the one clutching the stone. He sensed the chrysoberyl again, that magical
barrier, and then his spirit was pulled to the floor, through the floor,
careening back to his waiting body.
Avelyn
nearly jumped when he opened his physical eyes again, seeing Master Jojonah so
very close.
"One,
three, two, one, five," the young monk said abruptly, trying to satisfy
whatever curiosity held the older man.
Jojonah
waved his hand and shook his head, uninterested. "What did you see?"
he asked.
Avelyn noted
that Jojonah held both stones again, though he didn't remember giving the
hematite back to the man.
"What
did you see?" Jojonah pressed, moving even closer.
"Arms,"
Avelyn blurted. ""Two sets, palms open . . ." Before he could
finish, Jojonah fell away, gasping, laughing, crying all at once. Avelyn had
never seen such a display, couldn't begin to decipher it.
"How?"
Avelyn asked with enough force to bring Jojonah back to his senses. "The
stones," Avelyn clarified when he had the man's attention. "How could
this be?"
Jojonah
launched into a rushed explanation, more the regurgitation of a prepared speech
than anything spontaneous. He talked of the humours of the body joining
together with the alien humours of the stones to create the seemingly magical
reaction. He even compared what had happened to Avelyn with the tablets given
to a monk with a stomachache to induce a belch or a fart.
As he
listened, Avelyn felt the mystery melting around him. For the first time since
they had entered the room, there was no reverence in Master Jojonah's voice,
just the dry lecturing tone of an instructor. Avelyn didn't buy into it, any of
it. He could not explain what had just happened to him, but he knew
instinctively that this talk of "alien humours" belittled the
experience. There was indeed a mystery here that no tumble of fancy words could
lay bare; there was something here of a higher order. Master Jojonah had called
the stone showers "offerings," and to Avelyn, that description seemed
exactly wrong. "Graces" was a more appropriate term, the young monk
decided there and then. He glanced around the room again, from stone to stone,
his reverence of these gifts from God tenfold what it had been when first he
had entered the chamber.
"You
should be among those select few who make the journey," Master Jojonah
declared, and the weight of the statement drew Avelyn back to him.
"To
Pimaninicuit," Jojonah explained, his grin widening as Avelyn's brown eyes
widened. "You are young and strong and full of God's voice."
Tears
collected in Avelyn's eyes and began to stream-down his face at the mere
thought that he might be among the chosen few to get so very close to the
greatest gift of God.
Jojonah
dismissed him then and he left the room as if in a trance, overwhelmed indeed.
When he was
gone, Master Jojonah replaced the stones, closed the case, then went to the
wall and moved the hidden switch to lock it fast. All the while, the master
considered the weight of what he had witnessed. A first-year novice should not
have been able to activate the magic of the stone, despite what he had told
Avelyn about hematite. Even if a novice had managed to fall into the magic, the
control should have been above him, a quick and random out of body experience,
culminating with a gasping, disbelieving, thoroughly overwhelmed young man.
For Avelyn
to control the magic enough to get behind Jojonah's back and see the finger
sequence was incredible. For the young man to use the stones and drift out of
the room, out of the abbey, and see the design on the roof was truly amazing.
Jojonah would not have believed it possible. The master paused and lamented his
own weakness. He had been in St.-Mere-Abelle for more than three decades, and
had only been able to use the hematite that way for the last three years!
Jojonah
pushed his own self-pity away and smiled about Avelyn. The young monk was a
good choice, a God-given choice indeed, to go to Pimaninicuit.
CHAPTER 6
Carrion Birds
She came
back to consciousness never expecting to see the wide sky again. She opened her
blue eyes even as she moved her hands in frantic waves, trying to rid the small
hole of the thick odor of charred wood.
A slanting
ray cut in through the smoke, a single shaft of light that beckoned the girl
back to the land of the living. She followed it as if in a dream, gingerly
reaching up to touch the piece of lumber that had fallen to partially block the
hole.
The wood was
warm. Jilseponie understood then that she had been unconscious for a long time.
She found she could put her arm against the beam firmly as long as she kept her
sleeve between tender flesh and the wood.
The girl
pushed hard, but the beam would not give. Stubborn as ever, summoning her rage
to bolster her muscles, Pony set her legs under her as firmly as she could and
pushed again, with all her might, groaning with the strain.
The sound of
her own voice stopped her cold. What if the goblins were still out there? She
settled back and sat very still, listening intently, not even daring to
breathe.
She heard the
cawing of the birds—carrion birds, she knew. But nothing else came to her—not the
whimper of a survivor, not the whining, grating voice of a goblin, not the
guttural grunts of the fomorian giants.
Just the
birds, feeding on the bodies of her fallen friends.
That horrid
thought set Pony into violent motion. She set her legs again and pushed with
every ounce of strength she had, groaning but too angry to consider the
implications of her noise should the goblins still be around.
The beam
lifted an inch and shifted to the side, but Pony could not maintain its weight
and it came down heavily, with a decidedly final thud. Pony knew that she could
not move it again from this new angle, and so she didn't even try. Now she
squirmed and squeezed. She got her arm through, then her head and one shoulder,
and held there for a moment, trying to catch her breath, so relieved to have
her face, at least, out in the open sunlight once again.
That relief
lasted only until the girl glanced around. This was Dundalis—she knew that
logically—but it was no place Pony had ever seen before. All that remained
of Elbryan's house was a few beams and the stone foundation; all that remained
of Dundalis was a few beams and a few stones.
And bodies.
Pony only saw a couple from this angle, a goblin and an older woman, but the
stench of death hung as thickly in the air as the smoke from the fires. A
substantial voice within Pony's head told her to crawl back into the hole, to
curl up and cry, perhaps even to die, for death—be it heaven, be it empty blackness—had to be
preferable to this.
She spent a
long while halfway in and halfway out, teetering on the edge of hysteria, of
hopelessness. She made up her mind simply to crawl back in, but something, some
inner resolve the young woman did not yet understand, would not let her.
Again came
the wriggling, the tearing of clothes and scraping of skin, the frantic pull
and twist that, at last, freed her from the hole. And then came the next long
pause, lying on the ground on her back, her thoughts swirling down a multitude
of paths, every one of which seemed to lead to no place but despair.
With great
effort, Pony pulled herself up from the ground and walked from between the
piles of rubble that had been the houses of Olwan Wyndon and Shane McMichael. The
main road remained, crushed stones and packed dirt carefully edged for
drainage, and that alone confirmed to Pony that she was indeed in Dundalis, in
the remains of what had been her home. Not a single structure stood. Not a
single person or even a horse remained alive. Nor were there any living goblins
or giants, Pony, realized, with small relief. Only the vultures, dozens and
dozens, some circling overhead, most on the ground feasting, tearing at skin
that had been warm to Pony's touch just the day before, pecking at eyes that
had locked with her own, shared gaze and shared thought.
Pony turned
with a start, visualizing the fight on the road, the last she had seen of her
father. There were the bodies; she saw Olwan, crumpled and broken in the same
spot where she had seen him fall. And then she could look no more, fearing that
she would find Thomas Ault, her father dear, among the dead. Of course he was
dead, Pony told herself, and so was her mother, and so was Elbryan, and so was
everyone.
The girl,
feeling so helpless and so little, nearly fell to the ground, but again that
stubborn instinct kept her upright. She noted the great numbers of dead
goblins, even a couple of giants. One group in particular, a pile of many
monstrous corpses together in the road, posed a curious riddle. They had fallen
as if they had formed a defensive ring, yet there were no human bodies near
them. Just the goblins and a lone giant, slumped together, soaked in blood from
the many small wounds on each corpse. Pony thought she should go closer to
investigate, but she hadn't the stomach.
She stood
and stared, and a numbness came over her, stealing her emotions. The riddle was
lost, for Pony was too exhausted to pause and ponder it, to pause and think of
anything—too defeated and bedraggled to do anything except stagger out of
the village, moving south along the road, then turning west at the first fork,
moving toward the dying sun.
Subconscious
instinct alone guided her. Weedy Meadow was the closest village, but Pony
really didn't think that the place would be any different. Surely all the world
had fallen to ruin; surely all the people were dead, were being pecked and torn
by vultures.
Sometime
later, as dusk descended, Pony's senses warned her that she was not alone. To
the right, she saw a slight shiver of one small bush. It could have been a
ground squirrel, the girl reasoned, but she knew in her heart that it was not.
To the left
came a titter, a tiny voice whispering softly.
Pony kept
moving straight ahead. She cursed herself for not having had the wisdom to
collect a weapon before leaving Dundalis. It wouldn't matter, she quickly
reminded herself, and perhaps this way, defenseless, the end would come more
quickly.
So she went
on, stubbornly, looking straight ahead, ignoring any signals that she might not
be alone, that goblins might be behind every tree, watching her, laughing at
her, taking good measure of her, perhaps even arguing among themselves over
which one would be given the pleasure of the kill—and the pleasures that might come before
the kill.
That thought
nearly dropped Pony to the ground, reminded her of Elbryan, of the moments
before the disaster, of the kiss . . .
Then she
cried. She walked straight ahead, kept her shoulders squared.
But she
could not deny the tears, and the guilt and the pain.
She slept
fitfully at the base of a tree, in open view right beside the road, shivering
from the cold, from the nightmares that she feared would haunt her forever.
Those dreams
were mercifully gone when she awoke, and no images could she conjure of the
village, of her family and her friends. All that the girl knew was that she was
out on the road somehow, somewhere.
She knew
that she was in pain, physical and emotional, but the reason for the latter
escaped her conscious memory.
She didn't
even know her own name.
The giant
was there, facedown in the blood and dirt, in the same place Elbryan had last
seen it, just a few feet from where he had fainted. At that horrible moment,
the monster had been lifting its club to squash Elbryan; now it was dead.
And so were
a dozen other goblins, scattered all about the area.
Elbryan sat
up and rubbed his face, noting the cut and dried blood on one of his hands. His
thoughts careened suddenly back to Pony and the kiss at the twin pines atop the
ridge. Then they came full force back to the present, through those minutes of
horror—the goblins in the woods; poor Carley; the smoke from Dundalis;
Jilseponie running, running for the town, screaming every step. It had all been
so unreal, had all happened much too quickly. In the span of a few unbelievable
minutes, Elbryan's entire world had been thrown down.
The young
man knew all that, as he sat in the dirt, staring curiously at the somehow dead
giant. He knew nothing would ever be as it had been.
He struggled
to his feet and approached the fomorian tentatively, though he realized from
the amount of blood and from the absolute stillness of the creature that it was
certainly dead. He moved to the head and knelt, studying the many wounds.
Puncture
wounds, as from arrows, only much smaller. Elbryan recalled the humming sound;
he conjured an image of buzzing bees. He found the nerve to inspect more
closely, even to put his thumb on the edge of one prominent wound and push the
skin back.
"No
bolt," he remarked aloud, trying to make sense of it all. Again he thought
of bees—giant bees, perhaps, that stung and stung and flew away. He sat
back again and began a quick count, then shook his head helplessly when he
realized the giant had at least twenty such wounds on its exposed face alone
and no doubt countless others all over its fifteen-foot frame.
The young
man simply had no answers now. He had thought himself dead, and yet he was not.
He had thought Dundalis doomed . . .
Elbryan
scrambled to his feet, did a quick check of the dead goblins in the area. He
was somewhat surprised, and a bit humbled, to find that even the two he had
struggled against, even the one he had thought slain by his own sword, also
showed many mysterious puncture wounds.
"Bees,
bees, bees," Elbryan chanted, a litany of hope, as he dashed from the
area, down the slope toward Dundalis. The words, the hopes, fell away in a
stifled gasp as soon as the village, the charred rubble that had been the
village, came into view.
He knew that
they were dead, all dead. Even from this distance, fifty yards from the
northernmost point of the village, Elbryan felt in his heart that no one could
have survived such a disaster. His face ashen, his heart pounding—but offering
no energy to arms that hung slack at his side or to legs that seemed suddenly
as if they each weighed a hundred pounds—the young man, feeling very much a little
lost boy, walked home.
He
recognized every body that had not been caught by flames—the parents
of his friends; the younger men, just a few years older than he; and the
younger boys and girls who had been taken from patrol by their parents. On the
charred threshold of one ruin, he saw a tiny corpse, a blackened ball. Carralee
Ault, Pony's cousin, Elbryan realized, for she was the only baby in town.
Carralee's mother lay facedown in the road, just a few feet from the threshold
where lay the baby. She had been trying to get back to Carralee, Elbryan
understood, and they had cut her down as she had watched the house, her house,
burn down about her baby.
Elbryan
forced himself to stay away from such vivid empathy, realizing that he could
easily lose himself in utter despair. The task became all the harder as he
approached one large group of slain goblins and giants on the road, as he
walked past the area of heaviest fighting, as he walked past the body of Olwan,
his father.
Elbryan
could see his father had died bravely, and understanding his father's stern and
forceful way, he was not surprised. Olwan had died fighting.
But that
mattered not at all to Elbryan.
The boy staggered on toward the ruin of his
own house. He snorted, a crying chuckle, as he saw that the foundation, of
which his father was so proud, was intact, though the walls and ceiling had
collapsed. Elbryan picked his way into the still-smoldering ruin. One of the
back corners had somehow escaped the flames, and when the roof had fallen in,
it had angled down, leaving a clear space.
He pushed
aside a timber gingerly, when he heard the remaining roof groan in protest and
went down to his knees, peering in. He could make out two forms, lying against
the very
back corner.
"Please,
please," Elbryan whispered, picking a careful path to that spot.
The goblin,
the closest form, was dead, its head bashed. Unreasonable hope pushing him on,
Elbryan scrambled over the thing to the next body, sitting in the very corner.
It was his
mother, dead as well—of smoke, Elbryan soon realized, for she had not a wound on her.
In her hand she clutched her heavy wooden spoon. Often had she waved that thing
at the children, Elbryan and his friends, when they were bothering her,
threatening to warm their bottoms.
She had
never used it, Elbryan only then remembered. Not until this day, he silently
added, looking at the slain goblin.
All the
images of her in life waving that spoon, shaking her head at her impetuous son,
teasing Olwan, and sharing a wink with Jilseponie as if they knew a secret
about Elbryan came flooding back to the boy in an overwhelming jumble. He moved
in further and sat beside his mother, shifting her stiffening form that he
might hug her one final time.
And he
cried. He cried for his mother and father, for his friends and their parents,
for all of Dundalis. He cried for Pony, not knowing that if he had rushed into
town as soon as he had awakened, he would have spotted the battered girl
stumbling down the south road.
And Elbryan
cried for himself, his future bleak and uncertain.
He was in
that corner of his house, that tiny link to what had been, cradling his mother,
when the sun went down, and there he remained all through the cold night.
CHAPTER 7
The Blood of Mather
"The
blood of Mather!" scoffed Tuntun, an elf maiden so slight of build that
she could easily hide behind a third-year sapling. Tuntun's normally melodic
voice turned squeaky whenever she got excited, and several of the others
cringed and some even put their hands over their sensitive, pointed ears.
Tuntun pretended not to notice. She batted her huge blue eyes and her
translucent wings, and crossed her slender arms imperiously over her tiny,
pointy breasts.
"Mather's
nephew," replied Belli'mar Juraviel, never taking his gaze from Elbryan as
the boy moved about the ruins of his house. Juraviel didn't have to look
Tuntun's way to know her pose, for the obstinate elf struck it often.
"His
father fought well," remarked a third of the gathering. "Were it not
for the fomorian—"
"Mather
would have slain the fomorian," Tuntun interrupted.
"Mather
wielded Tempest," Juraviel said grimly. "The boy's father had nothing
more than a simple club."
"Mather
would have choked the fomorian with his bare—"
"Enough,
Tuntun!" demanded Juraviel; even in a shout, the elf's voice rang like the
clear chime of a bell: It didn't bother Juraviel, or any of the others, how
loud their conversation had become, for though Elbryan was barely fifteen yards
away from them, they had erected a sound shield, and no human ear could have
discerned anything more than a few chirps, squeaks, and whistles, sounds easily
enough explained away by the natural creatures in the area. "Lady
Dasslerond has declared this one a fitting choice," Juraviel finished,
calming himself. "It is not your place to argue."
Tuntun knew
she could not win this debate, so she held fast her defiant nose and began
tapping her foot on the ground, all the while staring at young Elbryan and not
liking what she saw. Tuntun had little fondness for the big, bumbling humans.
Even Mather, a man she had trained and had known for more than four decades,
had more often than not driven her away with his pretentious purpose and
stoicism. Now, looking at Elbryan, this sniveling youngster, Tuntun could
barely stand the thought of seven years of training!
Why did the
world need rangers, anyway?
Belli'mar
Juraviel suppressed a chuckle, for he liked seeing Tuntun flustered. He knew
the maiden would make his life miserable if he embarrassed her now, though, so
he leaped up high, his little wings beating hard, lifting him a dozen feet from
the ground; he came to rest on a low branch, a better vantage point for
watching the movements of this boy who would replace Mather.
Mercifully,
Elbryan's grief had brought with it exhaustion, and the boy had found some
sleep. He remained in the house, cradling his mother, gently stroking her hair
even after the first waves of slumber had come over him. He awoke with the dawn—and with
resolve.
He came out
of the house, eyes still moist with tears, his mother's body in his arms. Now
Elbryan steeled himself against the scene of devastation. He found strength in
duty, and that duty lay in burying the dead. He put his sword in his belt,
found a spade; and began to dig. He buried his parents first, side by side,
though the task of filling the grave, of putting cold dirt on the bodies of
those whom he had most loved, nearly destroyed him.
He found Thomas
Ault and several other men next, and only then did the already weary youngster
realize the scope of his task. Dundalis had been home to more than a hundred
folk; how long would it take to bury them all? And what of those youngsters who
had been slaughtered on the hill? And of the other patrol, who had battled in
the wide pine valley among the caribou moss?
"One
day," Elbryan decided, and even his own voice sounded strange to him in
this surreal situation. He would spend just this one day gathering the bodies,
collecting them for a mass grave. That would have to suffice.
But then
what? Elbryan wondered. What might he do after the task was completed? Where
might he go? He thought of Weedy Meadow, a day of hard marching. He thought of
pursuing the goblins, if he could find any tracks. Elbryan shook that away
immediately, knowing the rage within him, the hunger for revenge, could cloud
his judgment, could consume him. His next task was clear to him, for the moment
at least, and though it pained him immeasurably to think of success, he knew he
had to find the body of Jilseponie Ault, his dear Pony.
And so he
searched, pulling corpses from the ruins of houses, collecting the fallen and
laying the bodies side by side on the field that had been Bunker Crawyer's corral.
Half the day slipped by, but Elbryan had no thoughts of food. His search for
Jilseponie grew more agitated as the hours slipped by. Soon he was bypassing
the closest bodies, leaving them where they lay, focusing his search, though he
realized that in his desperation, he was, perhaps, being inefficient and he had
little time to waste. Such a scene of carnage would no doubt bring other
scavengers—great cats and bears, perhaps—and Elbryan couldn't be sure that the
goblins wouldn't return. So he ran on, hauling bodies, peeking under rubble,
kicking aside piles of dead goblins to see who might be underneath. He tried to
keep a mental note of his macabre collection, tried to match it against the
people of Dundalis by sorting their names house by house.
The task
overwhelmed him; he couldn't be sure, couldn't even be certain of the identity
of so many of the charred bodies. One of them must have been Pony.
By
mid-afternoon, Elbryan knew he was defeated, knew he could not hope to properly
bury all the corpses. He had two score lined up in the field, and so he decided
to bury them alone. The rest...
Elbryan
sighed helplessly. He took the spade, went to the field, and began to dig. He
transferred the grief, rising again within him, into rage, and went at the
earth as if it, and not the goblins, had assaulted Dundalis, had stolen from
him everything in the world that was familiar and comforting. Everything,
everyone that he loved.
His muscles
complained, but he didn't know it; his stomach groaned from lack of food, but
he didn't hear it.
Even Tuntun
was impressed by his stamina.
Elbryan lay
down to sleep at the base of the ridge that night, outside Dundalis.
"Pony," he said aloud, needing to hear a voice, any voice, even his
own.
The elves
quietly encircling him paused and cocked curious ears. Tuntun thought the boy
might be calling to his mount, but Juraviel, who had been more attentive to the
boy and his relationships, knew the truth.
"Please
don't be dead," Elbryan said to the quiet wind. He closed his eyes, wet again
with tears for his mother and father, for all his friends and all his
community. "I can survive this," Elbryan said determinedly, "but
only with you." He lay back on the ground and crossed his forearms over
his face. "I need you, Pony. I need you."
"A very
needy young boy," Tuntun remarked.
"Some
sympathy," Juraviel scolded.
A short
distance away, Elbryan sat bolt upright, confused.
Juraviel
glared at Tuntun, for the female's sour attitude had forced the words out
before any sound screen could be cast up.
Elbryan drew
out his short sword, glancing warily into the shadows. "Come out and face
me!" he commanded, and there was no fear in his voice.
Tuntun
nodded. "Oo, so brave," she said sarcastically.
Juraviel
responded with a nod of his own, but his admiration was sincere. The young man,
so suddenly no more a boy, had passed through grief and through fear. He was
indeed brave—it was no act—and would willingly face whatever enemy he
found without fear of his own death.
After a few
moments, Elbryan's nerves began to wear thin. He moved to the nearest tree,
stalked about it, then darted to the next. The elves, of course, had little
trouble keeping ahead of him, silent and out of sight. After a few minutes, the
young man began to relax, but, exhausted though he was, he realized he should
not remain so vulnerable here out in the open. He couldn't think of any
defensible spots nearby, but perhaps he could strengthen this one. He went to
work quietly, methodically, using the lace of his shirt, his belt, anything he could
find to secure saplings into snares.
The elves
watched every move, some with respect, some with a hugely superior attitude.
Elbryan's traps couldn't catch a squirrel; certainly any elf could run into
one, untie it before it ever went off, then reset it as he scampered out the
other side!
"Blood
of Mather!" Tuntun remarked more than once.
Juraviel,
Elbryan's chief sponsor with Lady Dasslerond, took it lightly. He remembered
Mather at the start of the legendary ranger's career, a bumbling boy no more adept
and probably not even as resourceful as this Elbryan.
Within the
hour, Elbryan had done all he could—and that was not much. He found a tall
pine with low-hanging branches and slipped underneath them into the natural
tent. Only the keenest of eyes could have picked him out within that blocking
canopy, but of course, his field of vision likewise was severely limited. He
put his back to the tree trunk, put his sword across his lap. Nagged by a
distinct feeling that he was not alone and believing that he would be safe if
he could just make it to the dawn, he tried hard to stay awake. But weariness
overtook him, caught him where he sat, and brought his eyelids low.
The elves
gradually closed in.
Something
brought Elbryan awake. Music? A soft singing he could not quite discern? He had
no idea how long he had slept. Was morning close? Or had he slumbered right
through the next day?
He forced
himself to his knees and crawled to the edge of the overhanging canopy,
carefully pushing aside one of the branches.
The moon,
Sheila, was up, but not yet directly overhead. Elbryan tried to calculate the
duration of his rest, knew it had been no more than a couple of hours. He
paused and listened hard, certain there was something out there beyond his
vision.
A soft
melody vibrated in his ear, somewhere just below his consciousness. Quiet and
sweet were the notes, but that did little to comfort Elbryan.
It went on
and on, sometimes seeming to rise, as if his enemies were about to rush out at
him from the shadows but then it diminished to near nothingness once again.
Elbryan clutched the sword hilt so hard his knuckles whitened. It wasn't Pony
out there, he knew; it wasn't anything human. And to the young man who had
somehow survived a goblin raid, such a conclusion meant it could only be one
thing.
He should
have stayed hidden. Rationally, Elbryan knew his best defense lay in
concealment, the best he could hope for against returning goblins was to keep
as far away from them as possible. But thoughts of his slain family and friends,
of Pony, spurred him on. Despite very real fears, Elbryan wanted revenge.
"I told
you he was brave," Juraviel whispered to Tuntun as Elbryan slipped out
from under the pine boughs.
"Stupid,"
Tuntun corrected without hesitation.
Again
Juraviel let the insult to Elbryan pass. Tuntun had thought Mather stupid, as
well—at first. Juraviel motioned to his companions and started away.
The teasing
fairy song, remaining at the very edge of his consciousness, led Elbryan on for
many minutes. Then abruptly it was no more, and for Elbryan, the sudden silence
was like waking up from a dream. He found he was standing in the middle of a
nearly circular clearing, a small meadow ringed by tall trees. The moon was
above the easternmost boughs, casting slanted rays upon him, and he realized
how foolish he had been and how vulnerable he now was. Ducking low, he started
for the edge of the clearing but stopped almost immediately and stood up
straight, eyes wide, mouth hanging open.
He spun in a
complete circle, watching as they stepped into the clearing's perimeter, dozens
of creatures of a type he did not know. They were no taller than he and
couldn't have weighed close to his ninety pounds. They were slight of build,
delicate, and beautiful, with angled features, pointed ears, and skin that
seemed almost translucent in the soft light.
"Elves?"
Elbryan whispered, the thought coming from somewhere far back in his memories,
the stuff of legends so remote the flustered young man had no idea what to make
of these creatures.
The elves
joined hands and began to walk in a circle about him, and only then did Elbryan
realize they were indeed singing. The syllables came clear to him, though they
joined into words he could not understand, distant melodic sounds he somehow
recognized as part of the earth itself. Soothing sounds, and that made defiant
Elbryan panic even more. He glanced all around, tried to focus on individual
creatures that he might discern their leader.
Their tempo
increased. Sometimes they held hands, and other times they let go long enough
for every other elf to turn a graceful pirouette. Elbryan couldn't focus; every
time he sorted out an individual, some movement at the edge of his vision, or
some higher note in the chorus, distracted him. And by the time he looked back
to the original spot, the individual elf had blended away, for surely they all
looked alike.
The dance
intensified, the pace, the spins. Now whenever the elves broke apart for their
pirouettes, those not spinning lifted off the ground as if by magic—for Elbryan
could not see their delicate wings in the moonlight—floating and
fluttering to land back in place.
Too many
images assailed poor Elbryan. He tried to push them away, closed his eyes, and
several times took up his sword and started a charge, meaning to break through
the ring and run off into the forest. Every attempt proved futile, for though
he started straight, the young man inevitably turned with the flow of the
dancers, going around in a circle until the multitude of images and the sweet
melody distracted him and defeated him.
He realized
then he had dropped his sword and thought it might be a good idea to pick it
up. But the song . . .
The song!
There was something about it that would not let him go. He felt it, a tender
vibration all along his frame, more than he heard it. It caressed him and
beckoned him. It brought images of a younger world, a cleaner and more vibrant
world. It told him these creatures were not of the evil goblin race; these were
friends to be trusted.
Elbryan, so
full of grief and rage, fought that last notion fiercely and so remained
standing much longer than usual for a mere human. Gradually, though, his
resolve drained away and so did his strength. He accepted the invitation of the
soft earth.
He was lying
down; that was the last thought that came to him.
"Blood
of Mather," muttered Tuntun as the elvish caravan started off, Elbryan
moving with their line on a floating bed woven of silken strands, feathers, and
music.
"You
keep saying that," replied Juraviel. As he spoke, the elf fingered a green
stone, serpentine, feeling its subtle vibrations. Normally such trivial magic
would prove useless against one as wise as Tuntun, who had seen the birth and
death of several centuries, but the female was clearly distracted by her distaste
for this night's work.
"I
shall keep saying it!" Tuntun insisted, but her bluster was lost in the
whoosh of a sapling. The agile elf managed to slip her foot out of Elbryan's
belt snare and come dropping back to the ground, though even with her wings fluttering
hard, she hit rather unceremoniously.
Her glare at
Juraviel was almost threatening as laughter erupted about her. She knew, as did
all the gathering, that there was no possible way she could have stumbled into
such a coarse trap had not a bit of magic been worked.
It wasn't
hard for Tuntun to guess who had worked it.
CHAPTER 8
The Preparer
The schedule
was grueling, designed to find weakness and break those who were not fit for
the daily rigors of the Order of St.-Mere-Abelle. For the four chosen Preparers
candidates, Avelyn and Quintall, Thagraine and Pellimar—two students
from the class of God's Year 815—life was even more difficult. In addition
to their daily duties as first—and second—year students at the abbey, they were
given the extra chores of preparation for their journey to Pimaninicuit.
After
vespers, their classmates knelt to pray for one hour, spent an hour with their
letters, then retired early to meditate and sleep, to reinvigorate their bodies
for the tasks of the next day.
But after
vespers, the four Preparers began a four-hour regimen, each with an appointed
master. They studied the Halo, the charts that determined the astronomical data
which would indicate the time of the showers. They learned of seamanship, of
how to navigate by the stars of the night sky—and of how those stars would change when
the ship carrying the monks crossed certain latitudes. They learned how to tie
ropes in a variety of ways, knots necessary for the many uses aboard a sailing
vessel. They learned sea etiquette, the rules of the wide waters, and they
learned, most of all, the properties of the various stones and of how they must
prepare the stones immediately after the shower.
For Avelyn,
the night lessons were the promise of his greatest aspirations. He was with
Master Jojonah most nights, and Avelyn lived up to his reputation as the finest
student to enter St.-Mere-Abelle in many decades. After only two weeks, his
predictions of astronomical shifts were perfect, and within the first month, he
could recite all the known magical stones, from adamite to turquoise, their
reputed properties, and the greatest known magical effects which had been
brought about by each.
Master
Jojonah watched the young brother with mounting pride, and Avelyn recognized
that the older man considered him a protégé. There was security in that, Avelyn
came to realize, but also responsibility. Some of the other masters, Siherton
in particular, watched him closely, very closely, seeking an excuse to berate
him. It seemed to Avelyn as if he had fallen into the middle of a running
rivalry between the two older men.
That
bothered the young monk profoundly. To see such human frailty in the masters of
St.-Mere-Abelle touched the very core of Avelyn's faith. These were men of God,
the men closest to God, and such petty actions on their part diminished the
very meaning of the Abellican Church. All that should have mattered was the
retrieval of the stones. Toward his fellow Preparers, young men he would
compete against for the coveted two positions of those who would actually step
onto the island of Pimaninicuit, Avelyn felt no rivalry. He exalted in their
successes as much as in his own. If they proved the better, he believed, then
that was obviously God's will. The proven better two must go to the island; all
that mattered was the success of the journey, the retrieval of God's highest
gift to humanity.
It quickly
became apparent to the watching masters that Avelyn Desbris would be one of the
two. During the long hours put in at night, not one of the other three came
close to him; they were still mired in charting the stars when Avelyn had moved
on to the specific humours that caused the "magical" reaction, having
already passed through the recognition of the stones by touch as well as sight
and the recognition of their potential intensity by their brightness, shape,
and hue. After only five weeks of a four-year training program, the first
position of Preparer was nearly secured. If Avelyn did not take ill, the
competition to go onto the island of Pimaninicuit had been narrowed to three
monks fighting for one slot.
The daytime
training was not as easy or as inspiring for Avelyn. He found the many prayer
rituals boring, even trite, in light of the revelations he was finding every
night. The candle ceremonies, the water bucket lines, the stone carriers
bringing material to the newest sections of the abbey, the gift of the class of
God's Year 816, simply did not measure up against the mysteries of the
God-given stones. Worst of all, and most intense of all, was the physical
training. From sunrise to noon each day; with only an hour break—half for a
meal and half for a prayer the students assembled in a courtyard for a lesson
in the martial arts or ran barefoot along the rough walls of the abbey or swam
in the frigid waters of All Saints Bay. For months they learned to fall and
roll; they hardened their bodies by slapping, slapping, slapping one another
until their skin grew less sensitive. They walked through attack and defense
routines, slowly, endlessly, building in their sore muscles memories of the
moves. For the first year, they would study barehanded techniques, punching and
grappling. After that, the monks would move on to weapon mastery. And through
it all, bare-handed and with weapons, they would square off against each other,
pounding on each other relentlessly. Physical perfection was the goal; it was
said that a monk of St.-Mere-Abelle could outfight any man alive, and the
masters seemed determined to keep that reputation intact.
Avelyn was
not the worst of his class, but he was certainly not near the best: Quintall.
The short, stocky man went at the martial training as eagerly as Avelyn went at
the nighttime studies. As the year progressed, as Avelyn further separated
himself from the other three candidate Preparers, he came to dread his daytime
matches against any of them, particularly Quintall. There was supposed to be no
anger toward an opponent, only respect and mutual learning, but Quintall
growled whenever the masters paired him against Avelyn.
Avelyn
understood the man's motives. Quintall was carrying over the nighttime rivalry.
He could not beat Avelyn at the Ring Stone studies, but he gained a measure of
superiority during the day. In most of the maneuvers, the monks were supposed
to pull their punches, but Quintall often blasted the breath from Avelyn; there
was no striking above the shoulders allowed, but more than once, Quintall
knifed a "serpent hand" across Avelyn's throat, dropping him to his
knees, gasping for breath.
"Is
this how you plan, to get to the island?" Avelyn quietly asked after one
such mishap. The slips had become too common; Avelyn honestly believed Quintall
meant to eliminate the competition.
The look the
stocky man gave him in reply did little to allay the monk's mounting suspicions.
Quintall's grin was certainly as far from Godlike as anything Avelyn had ever
seen, and the fact that their training with weapons, where wounds could easily
become more severe, was not far away, brought goose bumps to the scholarly
young man.
What
bothered Avelyn even more was that if he could recognize what was going on
here, then so could the masters, who watched every move of every student so
closely. The Order of St.-Mere-Abelle took its physical training seriously;
perhaps Avelyn was expected to defend himself against such tactics. Perhaps
this training was not so far removed from the nighttime training, which Avelyn
considered more important. If he couldn't survive in the courtyard of the
abbey, after all, what chance did he have on the high and wild seas?
He watched
Quintall walk away from him, his stride so confident, even cocky. Avelyn folded
his hands and bowed his head, closed his eyes and began to plot his defense for
the next time he and Quintall were paired.
All the
troubles of the day were lost each night when Avelyn went to his true work,
usually under the tutelage of Master Jojonah. Sometimes that work entailed
exhaustive study, reading text after text and reciting procedures so many times
in rapid succession that Avelyn would often continue reciting them after he had
gone to sleep. Other nights Avelyn and Master Jojonah would simply spend on the
roof, huddled against a chill ocean breeze with no fire between them. They
would sit and stare at the stars. An occasional question might pass between
them, but otherwise their vigil would be as silent as it was dark. Master
Jojonah's instructions were vague at best, but Avelyn came to understand them
in his heart. He was to watch the night sky, to learn every twinkle of light,
to become so familiar with the visible stars that he would not only know their
given names but also might create pet names of his own for them.
Avelyn loved
those nights. He felt so close to God, to his dead mother, to all humanity,
living and dead. He felt a part of the larger and higher truths, a oneness with
the universe.
But the
quiet awe of stargazing placed a distant second on Avelyn's preferred list of
duties. His real zest and heart came shining through on those nights he and
Master Jojonah worked with the stones. There were nearly fifty different types
at the abbey, each with its own particular properties, and each individual
stone with its own particular intensity. Some stones had multiple uses—hematite,
for example, could be used for simple out-of-body experiences, for possession
of another's body, for domination of another's spirit, and also to heal
another's physical wounds.
Avelyn knew
all the uses of all the stones, and gradually he was coming to sensitize his
fingers to the magical humours within any stone he touched. Handed two similar
stones, Avelyn could quickly discern which was the stronger.
Jojonah
nodded on each occasion as if expecting that of any student, but in truth the
master was again amazed by the young man's prowess. There were in the abbey no
more than four other monks, three of them masters and one Father Abbot Markwart
himself, who could so distinguish magical intensity, and that fact had been the
determining factor in Dalebert Markwart's ascension to the highest rank, for
his chief rival could not determine magical intensity in individual stones.
And here
before Jojonah's astonished eyes was a young novice, a man of only twenty
winters, performing feats that would tax the Father Abbot of St.-Mere-Abelle to
the very limits of his powers!
"The
night is cloudy," Avelyn dared to note, one dreary and cold November
evening as he followed Master Jojonah up the winding staircase of a tower,
toward the perch where they would normally sit and study the stars.
Master
Jojonah kept quiet and continued on his way, and Avelyn knew better than to
press the point.
Avelyn was
even more surprised, when he came to the tower top, to find Master Siherton and
the Father Abbot waiting for them. Siherton held a small diamond, and from it
came enough light for Avelyn to discern the man's features clearly. The young
man bowed low and kept his gaze on the floor stones even when he straightened,
focusing his attention on the joints among the rocks, each black line seeming
so distinct in the harsh diamond light. He had been in St.-Mere-Abelle for
several months and had only gazed upon Father Abbot Markwart a handful of
times, usually at vespers, when the older leader would sometimes come forth and
oversee the celebration.
The three
older men moved to the edge of the tower and talked among themselves. Avelyn
tried hard not to eavesdrop, but he did catch snatches of the conversation,
mostly Siherton complaining vigorously that this was against strict procedure.
"This is neither a requirement nor a sensible test for any first-year
student," the tall and hawkish master argued.
"Not a
test, but a show," Jojonah argued, unintentionally lifting his voice.
"A
show-off, more likely," sneered Siherton. "The place has already been
secured," he went on. "Why must you press on with it?"
Jojonah
stamped his foot and pointed an accusing finger at Siherton; Avelyn was quick
to look away from that uncomfortable sight. How it bothered him to see masters
bickering! Particularly when he realized that they were arguing over him!
Now Avelyn
began to recite his evening prayers so that he might hear no more. He did catch
one reference by Master Jojonah to the morning routine, something about its
being too dangerous.
Finally,
Father Abbot Markwart halted the conversation with an upraised hand. He led the
two masters back to Avelyn and bade the young man to look up at him. "It
is unusual," he said calmly. "And know you, Masters Siherton and
Jojonah, that it is neither a test nor a show and irrelevant to the decisions
to be made concerning Pimaninicuit. Suffice it to say that it is for my
pleasure, for my curiosity."
He focused
on Avelyn then, his face serene, comforting. "I have heard much about you,
my son," he said quietly. "Your progress has been monumental in
Master Jojonah's estimation."
Avelyn was too
awestruck to beam.
"You
have used the stones?"
It took a
long moment for Avelyn even to register the question. He nodded dumbly.
"You
have walked high with hematite, so says Master Jojonah," Abbot Markwart
went on. "And you have lit the hearths of many rooms with the small
celestite crystals."
Avelyn
nodded again. "The greatest was the hematite," he managed to say.
The Father
Abbot smiled gently. "Satisfy my curiosity," he bade Avelyn. He held
out his left hand and opened it to show Avelyn three stones: malachite, ringed
with various shades of green; shining, polished amber; and a silvery piece of
chrysotile, the largest of the three resembling a sheet of straight bars, long
and narrow lying side by side.
"Do you
know them?" Markwart asked.
Avelyn
sorted them out in his mind. He did indeed know the magical properties of these
three, though those properties seemed oddly disparate for Father Abbot Markwart
to be presenting them together. He nodded.
Markwart
handed him the stones. "Do you feel their intensity?" he asked,
looking hard into Avelyn's eyes. He needed to know the truth, Avelyn realized.
Markwart needed to be absolutely certain.
Avelyn fell
into the stones, closed his eyes, and passed the items one at a time into his
free hand that he might weigh their magical strength. He opened his eyes a
moment later, staring hard at the Father Abbot, and nodded again.
"Why
must we use such a combination?" Master Jojonah dared to interrupt.
Father Abbot
Markwart, his eyes glowing fiercely in the diamond light, waved a hand to
silence the master. Nonetheless, Jojonah began to protest again, but Markwart
cut him short.
"I
warned you of the conditions!" the old Father Abbot growled.
Avelyn
swallowed hard; he had never imagined such ferocity coming from the gentle man,
the most Godly man in all the world.
"I'll
not allow the ruby to be used anywhere near St.-Mere-Abelle." Father Abbot
Markwart went on. "I'll not take such a chance for the sake of your
student's pride." He turned back to Avelyn and smiled again, but there was
little gentle or comforting in that hungry grin. "If Brother Avelyn cannot
utilize the simple stones I have given to him, then he has no right even to
hold this one." He ended by bringing forth his other hand, turning it
over, and opening it to reveal the most beautiful, perfect jewel that Avelyn
had ever seen.
"Corundum,"
the Father Abbot explained. "A ruby. Before I give this to you, understand
that what I ask of you is dangerous indeed."
Avelyn
nodded and reached out for the jewel, too stunned to fully appreciate the
gravity in the old man's voice. Markwart handed it over.
"The
puzzle is before you," the Father Abbot explained. "There are no
ships in. Sort it out." With that, he walked to the far edge of the tower
and motioned for the two masters to join him.
Avelyn
studied them intently. Father Abbot Markwart appeared wickedly intense, the
gleam in his eyes seeming almost maniacal, and certainly frightening. Master
Siherton wouldn't even look his way, and Avelyn could sense that the man
desired his failure. Master Jojonah was the most intense, but in a kinder way.
Avelyn could smell the man's fear—fear for Avelyn's safety—and only
then did the young monk appreciate the weight of this performance and the
danger.
"Sort
it out," the Father Abbot said again urgently.
Avelyn bowed
his head and considered the stones. The ruby was thrumming in his hand, its
magic intense and straining for release. Avelyn knew what he could do with that
jewel, and when he stopped to consider the implications for the other monks if
he used the ruby first, the puzzle seemed not so difficult. Father Abbot
Markwart had pointedly mentioned that there were no ships in; Avelyn knew where
he was supposed to go. Malachite, amber, serpentine, ruby, in that order.
Avelyn
paused and considered the sequence and the implications. He would have to have
not one but two other stones already in use when he called forth the powers of
the ruby. He had once used two stones together—a hematite and a chrysoberyl, that he
might walk out of body with no urge to take possession of any form he passed.
But three?
Avelyn took
a deep breath, consciously keeping his eyes from the eager gazes of the
onlookers.
Malachite
first, he told himself; and he walked to the outer edge of the tower,
overlooking the sea, black and thunderous a hundred yards below. Avelyn
clutched the malachite firmly, felt its magic tingling and coursing through his
hand, then his arm, and into all his body. And then he felt lighter, strangely
so, almost as light as he did when spirit-walking with hematite. He went over
the tower's edge with hardly a hesitation, his body beginning a gentle,
controlled fall.
Avelyn tried
not to think of the reality of his position as the tower walls slipped past his
descending form. The cliff wall below the tower was less smooth and far from
sheer, and the young monk had to constantly push himself away, angling down and
out from the abbey.
As he neared
the pounding surf, Avelyn shifted the amber into the hand holding the malachite
and brought forth its powers as well.
He touched
down easily atop the surf, berating himself for not simply walking his body
horizontally across the cliff to land atop the wharf instead. No sense in
worrying about that now, he decided; so he kept the malachite functioning until
he caught his balance, then, with a deep breath, let it go.
Only the
amber was functioning now, and it kept him above the water. With another deep
and steadying breath, his confidence in the stone growing, Avelyn walked out
across the dark waters, his feet barely making the slightest depression on the
rolling surface.
He looked
back over his shoulder several times as he moved out from the abbey. He had to
get far enough away so that using the ruby would not pose any risk to the
structure, and even farther than that, considering the angle of the tall tower,
if he wanted the two masters and the Father Abbot truly to witness the
demonstration.
Now Avelyn
called upon the serpentine, a stone he had never before put to any real test.
He knew its reputed properties, of course, but he had never attempted to use
them. Master Jojonah had done so once in Avelyn's presence, when he had
retrieved a jewel from a hot hearth, and the young monk had to focus on that
now to take faith that the serpentine would protect him.
All too soon,
the moment was upon him. He was far out from shore, standing firm on the
rolling waves, the serpentine shield strong about him. Avelyn put the ruby in
his hand.
"He
might have slipped under the waters," Siherton said dryly. "A great
and difficult task we will have in retrieving the stones."
Father Abbot
Markwart chuckled, but Master Jojonah didn't appreciate the levity.
"Brother Avelyn is worth more to us than all the stones in St.-Mere-Abelle
combined," he asserted, drawing incredulous looks from both his
companions.
"I
think, perhaps, that you have become too close to this novice," the Father
Abbot warned.
Before the
old man could go on, though, his breath was stolen away as a tremendous
fireball erupted out at sea, rings of searing flames spreading out wide from a
central point that the three knew to be Avelyn.
"Pray
that the serpentine shield was in full!" Markwart gasped, thoroughly
stunned by the intensity and size of the blast. The ruby was strong, but this
was ridiculous!
"I told
you!" Master Jojonah said over and over. "I told you!"
Even
Siherton had little in the way of rebuttal. He watched, as impressed as his
companions, as the fireball widened and churned, as the ocean hissed in protest
so loudly that the three could hear it clearly, as the top waters turned to
steam and rose in a thick fog. Brother Avelyn was strong indeed!
And probably
dead, Siherton realized, though he was too shaken to make the point at that
moment. If Avelyn had concentrated so much of his energy into the ruby, then
likely he had let the serpentine shield slip. Then likely he was now a charred
thing, drifting to the bottom of the harbor.
The three
waited a long time, Jojonah growing ever more concerned, but Markwart
resignedly saying, "A pity," many times, and Siherton seeming on the
verge of a chuckle.
Then came a
sound not so far below them, a deep breath as one might take after great
exertion. They rushed to the edge and peered over, Siherton holding the diamond
low, focusing its light downward to reveal a haggard-looking but very much
alive Brother Avelyn, the malachite clenched tightly in one hand, his other
hand working at the wall, pulling his nearly weightless body upward. Avelyn's
brown robes were tattered and dripping; he had the stench of burned hair about
him.
He got near
the tower's lip and Jojonah pulled him over.
"Some
of the flames got through," a shivering Avelyn explained, bowing his head
in shame, holding his arms wide to display the damage to his robe. "I had
to let go of the amber's power briefly and dunk myself."
Only then
did Jojonah realize how blue Avelyn's lips appeared. He looked sharply at
Siherton, and when the master didn't respond; Jojonah snatched the diamond from
him. The light went out for just a moment, then returned, brighter than ever.
And warmer. Jojonah held the diamond close to Avelyn, and the young monk felt
its warmth flowing into his aching, frozen form.
"I am
sorry," Avelyn said to Father Abbot Markwart through chattering teeth.
"I have failed." He held his hand out limply, returning the four
stones.
Father Abbot
Markwart burst out into the most heartfelt laughter Avelyn had ever heard. The
cackling old man pocketed the four stories, then clenched his empty fist, and
from a ring on his finger, set with a tiny diamond, he brought forth a light of
his own. He motioned for Siherton to follow and started for the stairs.
Master
Jojonah waited until the pair had gone, then lifted Avelyn's head so the young
brother could look directly into his soft brown eyes. "You will be one of
the chosen pair who go onto the island of Pimaninicuit," he said with all
confidence.
He led
Avelyn down from the tower then, to the warmth of the lower levels. Avelyn
undressed and wrapped a blanket about himself, then sat alone with his thoughts
in front of a blazing fire. Though the trial of the four stones, the high wall,
and the cold sea had exhausted him, he did not sleep that night.
CHAPTER 9
Touel'alfar
It was warm;
Elbryan felt that first, felt a soft, moist sensation gently touching all his
skin. Gradually his consciousness came floating back to him, as if from a far
distant place. He spent a long while lying very still, bathing in the
comforting sensation, the warmth, holding that clear consciousness away. For
the boy who had just witnessed such carnage and loss, the semiconscious state
was preferable.
It wasn't
until a memory of Dundalis, of his dead parents, slipped through his defenses,
shocking away the quiet and the calm, that he opened his olive green eyes.
He was on a
mossy bank, a gentle slope that put his head comfortably above his feet. A warm
fog hung thick about him, caressing his body and dulling his senses. Visibility
was but a few feet and Elbryan, shuffling up to his elbows, soon realized that
sound traveled little farther than that, caught up and deadened in the tangible
mist. He was in a forest, he understood—he was ankle deep in fallen leaves.
Elbryan's instincts—something about the air, perhaps, the aroma told him this was not
the slope leading out of Dundalis up to the ridgeline, the slope where he had
met the . . .
The what?
Elbryan wondered, having no explanation of who or what those delicate winged
creatures might be.
Despite the
bruises from his fights with the goblins, the minor wounds, and the discomfort
of the night spent in the corner of his ruined house, the young man felt no
pain, no soreness in his limbs. He sat up straight, then rolled to put his legs
under him. Gradually he came up in a crouch, studying the area intently, trying
to get some bearings on where he might be.
The forest
was an old one, judging from the gnarled and twisted trunks of those nearby
trees he could discern through the mist. The sun seemed a gray blur above him,
a lighter spot in the sky. "West," Elbryan decided after studying it
for a moment, his instincts, his internal directional sense, sorting things
out. The boy believed the sun to be in the west, halfway from noon to sunset.
He didn't
have much time before the night settled around him. He stood up, but stayed
low, feeling vulnerable despite the thick mist. His reasoning told him to get
out of that fog so that he might survey the area, but his physical senses did
not want him to leave the soothing mist.
He overruled
the physical and started up the slope, thinking to get above the gray blanket.
He moved quickly, stumbling often and cursing himself silently for every stick
snapping sound. He climbed within the fog for only a few minutes and came out
of it so suddenly he nearly stumbled again from the shock. At the same moment
that the air grew clear about him, strong winds buffeted him—not gusts
but a continual blow. Elbryan looked down the slope curiously, just the few
feet to the unmoving mist. It appeared to him as if the mist were somehow
blocking, or at least escaping, the winds, but how could that be?
Elbryan's
eyes widened with yet another unexplainable mystery as, he continued to survey
the ascent before him, going up, up, up from his position, dwarfing him, making
him feel totally insignificant and tiny. He knew that he was nowhere near
Dundalis; this mountain was nothing like the gentle, tree-covered hills of his
homeland. He was on the western face of but one mountain in a great, towering
range, looking down at a mist-shrouded vale, oval-shaped and nestled between
the many overlooking peaks. Not so far above him, Elbryan could see the snow on
this mountain and on all the others, a whitecapping that the young man
suspected might be perpetual.
He shook his
head helplessly. Where in Corona was he? And how had he come to this place?
The young
man's eyes opened even wider then, and he glanced all around frantically.
"Am I dead?" he asked the wind.
No answer,
no hint, just the murmur, an endless string of mysterious whispers.
"Father?"
Elbryan cried, and he scrambled three steps to the right, as though that might
make some difference. "Pony?"
No answer.
His heart
was racing, blood pumping furiously. Soon he was gasping for breath in utter
panic. He started to run, first left, then up, then, when that course proved
too difficult, back to the right, all the while calling out for his father or
mother or for anyone.
"You
are not dead," came a sweet, melodic voice from behind.
Elbryan
paused for a long while, catching his breath, composing himself. Somehow he
knew the speaker was not human, that no human voice could chime so sweetly, so
perfectly.
Slowly,
concentrating on his breathing more than anything else, Elbryan turned.
There stood
one of the creatures he had seen in the glade, a bit shorter than he and
probably no more than three-quarters his weight. Its limbs were incredibly
slender, but they weren't bumpy and bony like Jilseponie's had been when she
was much younger. This creature's limbs didn't look skinny, any more than did
the supple branches of a bending willow. Nor did this creature, so tiny, seem
weak. Far from it; there was a sureness, a fluid solidity to the creature that
warned Elbryan this tiny foe would be more difficult than any of the goblins he
had battled, perhaps more difficult even than the giant.
"Come
back down where it is warmer," the creature bade Elbryan, "into the
mists where the wind does not blow."
Elbryan
looked back at the vale and realized for the first time that no treetops were
poking through the gray canopy, as if all the trees had stopped at exactly that
level. Elbryan had the distinct feeling the mist and the treetops were somehow
connected.
"Come,"
said the creature. "You are not dead and are not in danger. The danger has
passed."
Elbryan
winced at the reference to the tragedy of Dundalis. The way the words were
spoken, however plainly and without any apparent deception allowed Elbryan to
relax somewhat. Instead of sizing up the diminutive creature as a potential
enemy now, he regarded it in a different light. He noticed for the first time
how delicate and beautiful this one seemed, with angular features perfectly
sculpted and hair so golden that even Pony's thick, lustrous mane could sparkle
no brighter. It was as if the being shone of its own accord, an inner light
making the flowing hair glow and shimmer. The creature's eyes were no less
spectacular, two golden stars, they seemed, bright with childish innocence, yet
deep with wisdom.
The creature
started down the slope but stopped at the very edge of the fog, realizing the
young man was making no move to follow.
"Who
are you?" came the obvious question.
The creature
smiled disarmingly. "I am Belli'mar Juraviel," it answered honestly
and motioned again toward the mist, even took another step down, so that its
shins disappeared into the grayness.
"What
are you?" Elbryan said with more confidence. He suspected the creature
would confirm it was an elf, but he realized even such an honest and expected
answer would give him little information, for he really didn't know, what an
elf was.
The creature
stopped again and turned back to regard him. "Do you know so little?"
Elbryan
glared at Juraviel, in no mood for cryptic talk.
"The
world is a lost place, I fear," Juraviel went on. "To think we have
been forgotten in a mere century."
Elbryan's
scowl melted away in curiosity.
"You
really do not know?"
"Know
what?" Elbryan snapped back defiantly.
"Of
anything beyond your own race," Juraviel clarified.
"I know
of goblins and of fomorian giants!" Elbryan insisted, his voice and his
ire rising.
Juraviel had
a response for that, a remark concerning the relative unpreparedness of
Dundalis in the face of such knowledge. If this boy knew of the evil races,
then why was his village so utterly ill-equipped to deal with a simple raiding
party? The elf politely kept the question to himself, though, understanding the
wounds were too raw in this young one. "And do I fit into your knowledge
of such creatures? Am I goblin or fomorian?" Juraviel asked calmly, that
melodic voice alone destroying any possible comparisons to the croaking and
growling monsters.
Elbryan
chewed on his lip for a moment, trying to find an appropriate response.
Finally, he shook his head.
"Come,"
Juraviel bade him, the diminutive fellow turning again toward the mist.
"You
haven't answered my question."
When
Juraviel turned back this time, his expression was more stern. "There is
no answer that can be conveyed with simple words," he explained. "I
could tell you a name, and you might have heard the name before, but that will
give you little of the truth and more of the myth."
Elbryan cocked
his head, obviously lost.
"Your
prejudices twined with the name will conflict with your perceptions,"
Juraviel went on. "You asked me my own name, and that I willingly gave,
for the words 'Belli'mar Juraviel' bring no preconceptions with them. You asked
what I am, and that I cannot tell you. That is something Elbryan Wyndon of
Dundalis must learn for himself."
Before the
startled young man could even ask how Belli'mar Juraviel might have come by his
name, the creature turned and strode into the mist, disappearing from sight.
Elbryan rocked back on his heels, fumbling with his thoughts. Then he realized
that he was alone again, and utterly lost. His choices were simple, and there
seemed none better than following this creature, whatever it might be.
Elbryan
sprinted down the slope, back into the grayness, and found a smiling Juraviel
waiting for him just a few feet beyond the mist's edge. At first, Elbryan
wondered why he hadn't seen the figure from outside the mist, then he realized
that he could not see the trees from out there, either, though they were tall
and thick about him now, just five steps in.
Too many
questions, the young man decided, and he didn't even want to know the answers
at that moment, his curiosity overwhelmed.
Juraviel
walked down the slope at an easy pace, Elbryan right behind him. Not so far
down, they moved beneath the misty canopy, and the forested valley came clear
to Elbryan. Again he was amazed. He felt warm and serene, despite all that had
happened, despite his very real fears. He didn't feel lost anymore and if he
was dead—and he was again beginning to believe that to be the case then
death was not so bad!
For the
forest, this place, was more beautiful than anything young Elbryan had ever
seen. The undergrowth was lush and thick. but seemed to part before them as
they made their way along smooth trails that always seemed as if they would end
just a few feet in front of the pair but went on, apparently in any direction
that Belli'mar Juraviel chose. The creature wasn't following a trail, Elbryan
believed, but was making one, walking as easily and openly through the
underbrush as a man might wade through a shallow pond. As soon as he recovered
from that spectacle, Elbryan was overwhelmed again, this time by the myriad
vivid colors and delicate aromas, by the chirping of countless birds, the
winsome song of an unseen brook, the bleating of some distant creature. The
whole place was a song; Elbryan's every sense was on its edge, and he felt more
alive than he had ever felt before.
His mind
fought against that perception. He forced himself to remember Dundalis, to
replay the horror, that he might find a fighting edge. He thought of escape,
though he knew not where he might run, or even why he would wish to. He looked
at the low branches of a nearby tree and visualized a weapon he could fashion
from one of them, though a weapon, any weapon, would surely seem out of place
here. His stubbornness held for many minutes, a testament to the young man's
strong willpower. But even the memories of the recent tragedy could not hold
firmly to Elbryan as he walked for the first time through the forest that was
home to the elves, to Belli'mar Juraviel's folk. Dark thoughts could not be
sustained in the place where Juraviel's people danced and played.
"Can
you at least tell me where I am?" a flustered Elbryan asked some minutes
later, Juraviel going along as if in a trance, ignoring the young man
completely.
After a
dozen more skipping steps, the creature paused and turned. "On your maps,
if it is on your maps, this place is named simply the Valley of Mists."
Elbryan
shrugged; the name meant nothing to him, though he was glad to learn that it
might be on some map, at least. If that was true, then he probably was not
dead.
"Truly,
it is Andur'Blough Inninness, the Forest of Cloud, though few of your people
would recognize that name, and those who did would not likely admit it."
"Do you
always talk in riddles?"
"Do you
always ask foolish questions?"
"What
is foolish about wanting to know where I am?" Elbryan asked angrily.
"And so
I have told you," a calm Juraviel replied. "Does that change
anything? Do you feel comforted now, to know that you are in a place that you
do not know?"
Elbryan
growled softly and brought both his hands up to ruffle his light brown hair.
"But
then," the elf went on in condescending tones, "humans must name
everything, must map it and place it in some tidy little package and category,
that they believe they have found some measure of control over what cannot be
controlled. A false sense of godliness, I suppose."
"Godliness?"
"Arrogance,"
Juraviel clarified. "My young human!" he said suddenly, excitedly,
clapping his delicate hands together in mock glee. "You are in
Andur'Blough Inninness!"
Elbryan
screwed up his face and shrugged.
"Exactly
my point," Juraviel said dryly, and started on his way.
Elbryan
sighed and followed.
Half an hour
passed uneventfully, Elbryan walking and looking about, constantly awed by the
beauty and the richness of Andur'Blough Inninness. Mostly, though, the boy's
gaze drifted back to the. curious creature leading him.
"Do
those work?" he asked on impulse, blurting out his thoughts before he even
realized he was speaking.
Juraviel
stopped short and turned to regard the obviously embarrassed Elbryan, standing
perfectly still on the trail and pointing forward at Juraviel.
Juraviel's
smile calmed Elbryan considerably. "A logical question," the creature
remarked, understanding Elbryan's curiosity, and then he added, with
exaggerated relief, "at last."
Elbryan's
expression soured.
"But
why would you wish to know?" the ever-elusive Juraviel answered. "To
gain advantage in a battle, perhaps?" He quickly added, "Not that you
and I shall ever battle, of course," as soon as he noticed Elbryan's
muscles go tense.
That
declaration relaxed the young man, and so, of course, Juraviel put in,
"Except during . . ." and then paused and let the teasing thought
hang empty in the air.
Thoroughly
flustered, feeling very out of place both physically and emotionally, Elbryan
took a deep breath and removed himself from his anxiety—as simply as
that. He merely let his fears and dark thoughts fall somewhere behind him,
concentrating only on the present. It might have been resignation, a simple
conclusion that he could do nothing about anything anyway, but to Juraviel, the
obvious change that came over the boy was promising. Certainly an emotional
detachment would prove healthier for this young human who had been through so
much and who had so many more trying experiences ahead of him.
With a widening
smile, Juraviel started his wings fluttering, bent his knees, and leaped into
the air, a half jump, half flight to the lowest branch of a nearby maple.
"They
work," Juraviel announced, "for short hops and to break a fall. But,
no, we cannot fly as do the birds." He came back to the ground, his face
suddenly serious as he contemplated his own words. "A pity."
Elbryan
nodded, in full agreement. How wonderful it would be to fly! He imagined the
wind, the green treetop canopy speeding below him . . .
"Your
time here will not be unpleasant unless you make it so," Juraviel
announced immediately and grimly before the grin could even begin to spread
across young Elbryan's face.
Elbryan
stared at the creature curiously, caught off guard by the sudden change of demeanor.
"Know
that there are those among my people who do not believe you belong,"
Juraviel went on, his voice stern. "There are those who do not see in you
the likeness of Mather."
"I know
of no person by the name of Mather," Elbryan replied with all the courage
he could muster. Again came that feeling of detachment, summoned consciously,
an attitude that he had nothing to lose, had already lost all there was.
Juraviel
shrugged, a flitting little movement of his slender shoulders. "You
shall," he promised. "Hear me now clearly, young one. You are not a
prisoner, yet you are not free. As long as you remain in Andur'Blough
Inninness, your conduct must be controlled, as your training shall be
guided."
"Training?"
Elbryan started to ask, but Juraviel didn't pause long enough to hear him.
"Stray
from the rules at your own peril. Ask not for a second chance when the harsh
justice of the Touel'alfar falls upon you."
The threat
was open and clear. Elbryan, with that typical Wyndon pride, squared his
shoulders and tightened his jaw, a movement that Juraviel seemed to take no
note of whatsoever. The name Juraviel had given his people, Touel'alfar, had a
distinctly familiar ring, and Elbryan was certain he had heard it in
conjunction with tales of the elves.
"You
may rest now," Juraviel finished. "I will show to you your duties
with the rising of the sun.
"And
rest well," he finished, his voice grim and somber, "for your duties
are many and will weary you indeed!"
Elbryan
wanted to shout out that he would do as he pleased, when he pleased. He wanted
to proclaim his independence loudly and openly, but before he got the first
stuttered word out of his mouth, Juraviel hopped into a short flight once more.
The delicate creature stepped lightly onto a branch and jumped again
immediately, disappearing into the thick brush so completely arid easily that
Elbryan blinked and rubbed his eyes.
He stood
there, in the valley of Andur'Blough Inninness, doubting what he had seen,
doubting all that had happened. He wanted his mother and his father. He wanted
Pony, that they might have another chance to warn the village before the goblin
darkness descended. He wanted ...
He wanted
too much, all at once. He sat down right in the dirt at his feet and fought
hard against his emotions, for he did not want to cry.
From
Juraviel's perspective, the first meeting had gone quite well. He knew there
would be many doubts raised about Elbryan, particularly by Tuntun, and he knew
how difficult Tuntun could be! But after speaking with the boy, Juraviel was
even more convinced that this was indeed the true bloodline of Mather, and an
appropriate ranger-in-training. Elbryan had that same impish quality about him
as Mather, a love and luster of life, lurking just below the surface. The boy
could control it, could find that necessary place of detachment . . . and yet,
Elbryan could not resist the question about the wings. He had to know, and
then, when he did know, he couldn't help but imagine the wonder of soaring
through the air. Just by the expression on Elbryan's face, Juraviel had read
the boy's every wonder-filled thought and had relished each of them as much as
had Elbryan.
It was good
that the boy could think such things at this darkest time in his life, was good
that he could press on logically, stoically. Tuntun was wrong, Juraviel knew
without any doubt at all; this one had character.
Elbryan
wanted to eat, or fall asleep, even looked for a place, a moss bed, perhaps,
where he might lie down. That notion was lost along with so many others,
fleeting thoughts banging into a wall of images. Andur'Blough Inninness, with
all its sounds and colors, all its vivid images, called to him, teased him.
Juraviel had said nothing about his remaining where he was, so Elbryan got up,
brushed himself off, and started walking again among the trees.
He spent the
remainder of the afternoon caught up in the sights and smells. He found a
stream filled with yellow fish that he did not know, and watched them for more
than an hour. He spotted a deer, its long white tall bobbing, but as soon as,
he tried to get closer, it caught wind of him and leaped away, disappearing as
completely as Belli'mar Juraviel had into the shadows.
For all the
sights of that wondrous afternoon, for all the relief of existing simply in the
present and not in the most terrible past or the uncertain future, Elbryan was
even more greatly overwhelmed as dusk descended.
The hole
opened in the middle of the fog that covered the elven valley, showing the deep
blue sky. Slowly that hole widened, all sides drawing away evenly, perfectly,
and Elbryan, watching in sheer amazement, knew that something supernatural,
some magic, guided the mist. Soon the sky was clear above him, the first stars
twinkling into view.
Elbryan ran
about in search of an open meadow, wanting to see this spectacle more clearly.
He found a hillock, bare of trees, and scrambled up its side, stumbling more
than once, for his eyes remained fixed on the sky.
The fog had
receded now to the edges of the vale, and there it hung, blurring the dark shadows
of the towering mountains, blurring the boundary between earth and sky. Elbryan
had stopped at the top of the hillock, but he felt as if he were still going
up, still ascending to those brilliant, twinkling dots. There was a music that
swelled about him, he suddenly realized, a beautiful harmony, and it, too,
seemed to draw him higher to walk among the stars, to dwell in their light and
mystery. Questions too profound flitted about his consciousness.
He knew not
how many minutes, perhaps even hours, had passed when he at last came from that
trance. The night was dark about him; his neck ached from holding the position
for so long.
Though he
was back on earth, spiritually, the music remained, soft and wonderful,
emanating from every shadow, from every tree, from the ground itself.
No horrible
memories could come to him while he was listening to that elvish song, no fears
could gain hold. Slowly, determinedly, Elbryan moved down the hillock, looking
back often to the sky. Then he forced himself to stare at the darkest spot he
could find, that his eyes could adjust more completely.
He paused
and very carefully turned a circuit, listening intently, trying to focus on the
sound. His direction chosen, he started off, determined to find the singer.
Many times
that night, Elbryan believed that he was close. Many times, he rushed around a
bend in the trail or jumped out from behind a tree, expecting to catch an elf
at song, and once he thought he glimpsed the light of a distant torch.
The song was
strong, though not loud, with many voices joining in, but Elbryan never caught
a glimpse of any of the singers, saw no elf nor any other creature the rest of
that night.
Juraviel
found him at dawn, curled in a hollow at the base of a wide oak.
It was time
to begin.
Part Two
PASSAGE
Often I sit and stare at the stars, wondering, wandering. They are
to me the shining symbol of all the unanswered questions of human existence, of
our place in this vast sky, of our purpose, of death itself. They are sparkles
of unanswerable wonder, and, too, the beacons of hope.
The night sky is what I liked most about my years in Andur'Blough
Inninness. At dusk, when the fog rolled back to the forest edge, it shrouded
the known world, blocked the stark mountain shadows in soft and subtle mystery,
and the stars came out shining clearer than anywhere else in all the world.
That magical mist drew me up—my spirit and even my physical body, it
seemed—into the heavens, above the tangible world, that I might walk
among the stars and bathe in the lights of mystery, in the secrets of the
universe unveiled.
In that elven forest, under that elven sky, I knew freedom. I knew
the purest contemplation, the release of physical boundaries, the brotherhood
with all the universe. Under that sky that posed to me so many questions, I
dismissed mortality, for I had become one with something that was eternal. I
had ascended from this temporary existence, from a place of constant change to
a place of eternity.
An elf may live for a handful of centuries, a human for a handful
of decades, but for both that is but the start of an eternal journey—or perhaps a
continuation of a journey that had begun long before this present conscious
incarnation. For the spirit continues, as the stars continue. Under that sky, I
learned this to be true.
Under that sky, I talked to God.
-ELBRYAN WYNDON
CHAPTER 10
Made of Tougher Stuff
Elbryan
rolled his breeches up over his knees—not that the worn and ragged pants would
stay that way for long!—and touched the dark water with his toe.
Cold. It was
always cold; the boy didn't know why he even bothered testing it each morning
before plunging in.
From
somewhere in the thick brush behind him, he heard a call, "Be quick about
it!" The words were not spoken in the common tongue of Honce-the-Bear but
in the singsong, melodious language of the elves, a language Elbryan was
already beginning to comprehend.
Elbryan
glared over his shoulder in the general direction of the voice, though he knew
he would not see one of the Touel'alfar. He had been in Andur'Blough Inninness
for three months, had watched winter settle over the land just outside the
elven valley and in a few places within the enchanted vale. Elbryan didn't know
exactly where Andur'Blough Inninness was located, but he suspected they were somewhere
in the northern latitudes of Corona, beyond the Wilderlands border of
Honce-the-Bear. By his reckoning, the winter solstice had passed, and he knew
Dundalis, or what was left of the village, was likely under several feel of
snow. He remembered well the hardships, and the excitement, of Dundalis in the
winter, the gusting wind throwing icy particles against the side of the cabin,
the piles of blowing snow, sometimes so deep that he and his father had to
break through a drift just to get outside!
It wasn't
like that in Andur'Blough Inninness. Some magic, probably the same enchantment
that brought the daily blanket of fog, kept the winter season much warmer and
more gentle. The northern end of the valley was carpeted by snow, but only a
few inches, and the small pond up there was frozen solid—Elbryan had
once seen a handful of elves dancing and playing on the ice. But many of the
hardier plants had kept their summer hue, many flowers still bloomed, and this
reedy bog, the one place in all the valley that Elbryan had truly come to hate,
had not frozen. The water was chilly, but not more so than it had been on the
first day Elbryan had been told to go in, back when the season was still
autumn.
The boy took
a deep breath and plunged one foot in, held the pose for a moment until the
numbness took away the sting, then dipped in his second foot. He picked up his
basket, cursed when one pant leg slipped down into the water, then waded out
through the reeds. The cold mud squishing through his toes felt good, at least.
"Be
quick about it!" came the predictable call again from the brush, and it
was repeated several times, sometimes in elven and sometimes in the common
human tongue, by different voices in different places. The elves were taunting
him, the boy knew. They were always taunting, always complaining, always
pointing out his all too numerous shortcomings.
To his
credit, Elbryan had pretty much learned to ignore them.
Parting one
patch of reeds, the boy found his first stone of the day, bobbing low in the
water. He scooped it out and dropped it into his basket, then moved along to a
group of nearly a dozen bobbing stones. He recognized which ones were too high
in the water, and plunged them under, trying to saturate the spongelike rocks a
bit more before taking them out. When he squeezed them, extracting the
now-flavored liquid, the elves would inevitably complain about how little he
had collected.
It was yet
another part of this unchanging daily ritual.
Soon the
basket was full, so Elbryan hauled it back to the bank and collected another
one. Thus it went for the bulk of the morning, for the bulk of every morning:
the boy moving carefully about the chilly bog, collecting ten baskets of
milk-stones.
That was the
easy part of Elbryan's day, for then he had to haul the heavy baskets, one at a
rime, nearly half a mile to the collecting trough. He had to be fast, for he
could lose precious time at this point and then would have to suffer almost
continual insult from the unseen elves. "Five miles laden, five miles empty,"
was the way Belli'mar Juraviel had described this part of his work. Ironically,
the laden section of each trip seemed the easiest to Elbryan, for the elves
often set traps for him on the journey back to the bog. These weren't
particularly nasty traps, designed more to embarrass than to injure. A trip
line here, a disguised patch of slick mud on a corner there. The worst part of
falling victim to one of the snares was hearing the laughter as he tried to
extract himself from whatever had hold of him, be it a thorny bush or some of
those silken elven strands, which, Elbryan found out soon enough, could be made
as sticky and clingy as a spiderweb.
He got his
reward for his morning's toils when he returned to the bog to collect the tenth
loaded basket. There, every day, he would eat his midday meal—though at
first, it was usually halfway through the afternoon before Elbryan got a chance
to taste it. The elves would set out a grand table, steaming stew and venison,
sometimes roasted game fowl, and piping hot tea that warmed the boy from his
head to his cold toes. Always it was a hot meal they set, and Elbryan soon
understood why. The elves would put the food out at exactly the same time every
day, but if he was not fast enough, "tolque ne 'pesil siq'el palouviel,"
or, "the steam would be off the stew," as one particularly nasty elf,
a deceivingly delicate maiden named Tuntun, had often chided him.
So Elbryan
ran, stumbling with his ninth basket, knowing that any stone he dropped into
the dirt would be useless for that day. Carefully placing the basket at last at
the trough, the boy then sprinted full out the half mile back to the bog. He
ate a cold lunch every day at first, but gradually, as the terrain became more
familiar and his legs became stronger, as he grew to recognize and thus avoid
many of the devilish elven traps, he graduated to warm food.
This day,
Elbryan resolved, that tea would burn his tongue!
He put the
ninth basket down by the trough right on schedule, took one deep breath,
clearing his thoughts and remembering the last layout of the elvish obstacle
course. For only the third time in all these weeks, the lunch had not yet been
set out when Elbryan had collected the ninth basket. On those first two
occasions, the hopeful lad had fallen victim to ever more cunning elvish traps.
"Not this time," he said quietly, determinedly; and he started his
sprint.
He spotted
mud at one sharp bend; without slowing, Elbryan leaped atop a stone at the
elbow of the trail and skipped off it, landing beyond the slick area. With the
aid of a slanting sunbeam poking down through a break in the leafy boughs, he
then spotted a series of nearly translucent trip lines, of height ranging from
ankle to knee, blocking one long straight section of the trail. Elbryan
considered veering off the trail, crashing through the brush, then slowed,
thinking he should just walk past this obvious trap.
"Not
today," Elbryan growled, and he put his head down and ran on, full speed.
He found his visual focus quickly, locking his eyes upon a point just one step
ahead, and high-stepped his way through the region, getting his feet up over
every single trip line.
Laughter
trailed him as he sped away, and Elbryan sensed that there was some measure of
admiration in it.
Within a
couple of minutes, his goal—the bog, the basket, the meal—was in
sight; down the last stretch of path. Here, high stones lined both sides of the
trail, making passage off the path nearly impossible unless Elbryan took a
circuitous route quite deep into the underbrush.
He slowed to
a near walk, opting for caution and understanding that an extra few seconds
would make no difference in the quality of his meal.
They had dug
a pit—how could they have done that so quickly?—and had
cleverly covered it with a layer of dirt and fallen leaves, supported by a
trellis of woven sticks. Despite the addition of the pit, the path appeared
almost exactly the same as it had on all of his previous returns.
Almost
exactly.
Elbryan
crouched and tamped down his feet, thinking to take a few running strides and
then leap the trap. He stopped before he had really begun, though, catching the
sound of a soft titter on the breeze.
A smile
widened on the boy's face. He wagged his finger at the underbrush. "Well
done," he congratulated, then he moved to the edge of the apparent pit and
pulled aside the phony trellis.
The real
pit, he discovered was several feet beyond the apparent pit. He would have
leaped clear of the phony, only to drop heavily into the real one.
Now it was
Elbryan's turn to laugh, as he discerned the dimensions of the true trap, then
easily leaped it, leaving the last few feet of the path, the last expanse to
the food, open to him.
"Not
this time!" he yelled loudly, and there was no return laughter from the
brush, no sound at all. "Ne leque towithel!" he repeated in elvish.
Elbryan
slowly passed the last tree, home free, so he thought.
Something
zipped by him, just under his chin. He heard a thud at the side and turned to
see one of those tiny elvish arrows half buried in a tree. A second bolt whistled
behind him, turning him with a start, and only when Elbryan noticed the silvery
filament trailing this arrow did he understand what was happening.
There came a
third and a fourth, all dangerously close.
"Not
fair!" the boy yelled, trying to move—and discovering that the sticky strands
were already grabbing at him. He looked at the brush helplessly, at the
steaming stew, just a few strides away.
More arrows
whistled past, each trailing a strand, each tightening the web about Elbryan,
holding him from his meal.
"Not
fair!" he yelled repeatedly, tearing at the strands. He managed to pull a
few down—a couple of arrows came out of the tree, other strands pulled free
of the arrow fletchings—but that helped only a little, as the now
loose strands clung to the boy's clothing, entangling him even more.
Another
arrow came by and slashed across Elbryan's forearm as he struggled. His protest
came out as a snarl, words stolen by the stinging pain, and he stopped his
thrashing and clutched at his arm.
"Cowards!"
he yelled in total frustration. "Goblinkin! Only a coward would shoot from
the boughs. Only a coward of goblin heritage would attack someone who has no
weapons with which to strike back!"
The next
arrow razored painfully across the back of his neck, drawing a line of bright
blood.
"Enough!"
came a stern voice from the brush, a voice that Elbryan recognized—and was
certainly glad to hear.
Protests,
laughter, taunts all came back in reply from many different places.
"Enough,
Tuntun!" Belli'mar Juraviel demanded again; and the elf came forth from
the brush, moving to young Elbryan. Tuntun, bow in hand, came out from across
the way and moved quickly to follow on Juraviel's heels.
"Calm,
my friend," Juraviel prompted poor Elbryan, the boy thrashing about and
only entangling himself even more. "The strands will not let go until
Tuntun commands them." Juraviel turned and glared at the female then, and
she sighed resignedly and muttered something under her breath.
Almost
immediately, the strands began to fall from Elbryan, except for those still
tight in the line from the tree to the brush where Tuntun had tied them off,
and those which the young man had inadvertently twisted and turned about his
limbs. Finally, with Juraviel's help, Elbryan got free, and he immediately
stormed up to Tuntun, his green eyes flaring dangerously.
The elf
looked up at him calmly, smiling, perfectly relaxed.
"I
earned that meal!" the boy stormed.
"So go
and eat it," Tuntun replied, and snickers came at Elbryan from every bush.
"You needn't worry that it will burn your tongue."
"Elbryan,"
Juraviel warned when he saw the boy ball his fist at his side. Tuntun held up a
hand to her elvish companion, silently bidding Juraviel to let her take care of
this situation. Juraviel knew what was coming, and though he did not like it,
for he thought it too soon in the boy's training, he did on some levels agree
that the lesson might be necessary.
"You
want so badly to strike me." Tuntun tittered.
Elbryan
fumed but couldn't, in good conscience, punch this diminutive creature, half
his weight, if that, and a girl besides!
Tuntun's bow
came up, faster than Elbryan could follow, and the elf let fly an arrow, down
the path. It struck the bowl of stew, overturning it and making a mess of the
meal. "You'll get nothing more this day," Tuntun said sternly.
The knuckles
on both of Elbryan's hands were white by this point, and the muscles along his
jaw strained taut. He started to turn away, thinking that he had to hold his
control, had to let all the insults pass, but before he got halfway around,
Tuntun slapped her bow across the back of his head.
Elbryan let
fly a wide-arcing left hook as he spun back toward the elf. He missed
miserably, Tuntun ducking low under the predictable blow, and kicking him twice
in rapid succession, once on the inside of each knee.
Elbryan
stumbled and squared himself; Tuntun tossed her bow aside, held up both her
empty hands, and motioned for Elbryan to come on.
The boy
paused. The forest was silent, totally silent, about him, and Juraviel made not
a move nor any indication of how Elbryan should proceed.
It was his
choice to make, he realized, and so he crouched low; hands out wide, feeling
his balance on the balls of his feet. He waited, and waited some more, until
Tuntun relaxed, and then he sprang like a hunting cat.
He caught
the air, nothing more, and didn't even realize that the elf was not in front of
him until he heard wings fluttering behind him and felt a series of sharp
punches on the back of his head.
He wheeled,
but Tuntun turned with him, staying behind him and punching out a veritable
drum roll on his upper back. Furious, Elbryan finally launched himself
sideways, putting some ground between him and his elusive opponent.
"Blood
of Mather!" Tuntun said sarcastically. "He fights as any lumbering
human might!"
Juraviel
wanted to respond that Mather had fought the exact same way in the first years
of his training, but he let it pass. Let Tuntun have her fun this day, the elf
decided; that would make his victory all the sweeter when Elbryan finally
proved himself.
On cue,
Elbryan came back in, measuring his steps this time, not taking his eyes off
the dancing elf. Tuntun was on the ground again, swaying slowly, hands waving
before her.
Elbryan saw
an opening and let fly a combination left jab, step, and right cross. He meant
to retract the left, which missed, that he could roll his shoulders and put
some weight behind the right. He meant to do a lot of things, to follow the
combination with a shoulder tackle or another quick one-two if the opportunity
presented itself. He found, however, that as soon as his left arm extended, his
fist flying so tantalizing near Tuntun's swaying head, that his moment of
control had passed.
Tuntun
turned in accord with the punch, her head fading back across to Elbryan's
right, her right hand catching the boy's wrist and pushing outward, her left
hand coming back in and catching the outside of his elbow, driving in.
As Elbryan's
arm locked, and before he could even step in and begin the cross, Tuntun turned
her right wrist over and down.
Elbryan had
no choice but to follow, scampering out to the left a step before tumbling hard
to the ground, crashing into one nearby bush. To his credit, he didn't fight
the roll or even try to break his fall. He went right over and came back out
low, scrambling for Tuntun's legs.
The elf
straightened and stiffened, and leaned forward over the lunging boy's head and
shoulders.
Tuntun's
strength surprised Elbryan, for he could not break the elf's position, and then
he was surprised even more as Tuntun locked her hands together and brought them
down hard onto the tender area just below Elbryan's right shoulder blade.
The boy felt
the strength leave that side of his body. He staggered down again, was barely
even conscious that his hold on the elf was broken. He noted the elf's spring,
heard the wings fluttering. He went up fast to his knees, realizing that he was
vulnerable. He heard a snicker, then felt the explosion as Tuntun, half turning
and landing easily on one foot right between the boy's ankles, let fly a kick
with the other, up between Elbryan's thighs to catch him right in the groin.
The boy went
down hard, clutching and groaning, feeling suddenly weak and nauseous.
"Tuntun!"
he heard Juraviel protest, and it seemed to him as if the elf's voice had come
from far away.
"He
fights like a human," Tuntun answered indignantly.
"He is
a human!" Juraviel reminded.
"All
the more reason to kick him hard." The laughter from the forest was
painful to Elbryan, at least as much as his wounded groin. He remained on the
ground for a very long time, eyes closed, curled in a fetal position.
Finally, he
opened his eyes and rolled to find Juraviel alone standing near him. The elf
offered a hand, but Elbryan stubbornly refused, struggling shakily to his feet.
"Suffer
the barbs, my young friend," Juraviel offered. "They are not without
merit."
"Lick a
bloody cap," Elbryan cursed, a common insult among humans, but one
referring to powries. Elbryan hardly knew what a "bloody cap" was,
and so the meaning of his own curse was lost on him.
It wasn't
lost on Juraviel, though, for the elf had battled the fierce, evil powries many
times over the centuries. Recognizing the boy's ultimate distress and
embarrassment, Juraviel generously let the insult pass.
Elbryan
walked a crooked path to the food and stubbornly salvaged what he could. That
done, he hoisted the last basket and started back the half mile to the trough.
Juraviel
followed silently, some distance behind. He wanted to make the most of Tuntun's
painful lesson, but he wasn't sure that Elbryan was in any frame of mind to
learn.
Titters came
at Elbryan from the shadows several times as he walked. He ignored them, didn't
even hear them, lost in his self pity, consumed by frustrated rage. He felt so
alone and isolated, felt as if he would have been better off had these vile
elves not come and rescued him from the fomorian.
Back at the
trough, Elbryan began his more difficult work. He took up one of the saturated
stones and squeezed it with all his strength over the trough. When the porous
thing was light once more, the flavored bog water extracted, Elbryan tossed it
near the basket and took up the next. All too soon, before he had even finished
with the first basket, his forearms ached from the effort.
Juraviel
walked past Elbryan to the trough and dipped his cupped hands in. He stared at
the water for a moment, eyeing its hue, then sniffed its delicate bouquet. The
combination of bog water and milk-stones, as the elves called them, produced
some of the sweetest juices in all of Corona. From this raw product, the elves
would make their intoxicating wine, Questel ni'touel to the elves, but known to
the wide world simply as "boggle." The swamplike connotation of the
name was usually completely lost on the humans, who thought the term a mere
reference to their state of mind after but a few sips of the potent liquid. Not
that many humans had ever tasted the elixir, for the elves did not deal openly
in the juice. Their contacts in the wide human world were discrete and few, but
the elves did enough trading so that they could bring desired items, curiosity
pieces mostly, and a sampling of songs of the few human bards who could bring
them pleasure, into their valley.
"A good
take today," Juraviel commented, hoping to draw the boy from his sour
mood.
Elbryan
grunted and did not reply. He took up another stone, held it high over the
trough and squeezed with all his might, hoping to splash the juices enough to
wet Juraviel.
The elf was
too quick and wary for that.
Juraviel
nodded at the surprising effect, though, taking note of the boy's gain in
strength after just a few short weeks. He thought to leave Elbryan then, but
decided to try one last time to calm the boy, to put a positive meaning on the
embarrassing and painful lesson. "It is good that you have such
spirit," Juraviel said, "and better still that you keep it under such
control."
"Not so
tight a rein," Elbryan replied, growling with each word. To accentuate his
point, Elbryan lifted the next stone, and, instead. of holding it over the
trough, hurled it into the brush nearby, an act of defiance and of finality.
Even if he went and retrieved it, the liquid within the stone had been tainted
and was no good.
Juraviel
stared solemnly at the spot where the stone had bounced for a long moment. He
tried to view things through Elbryan's eyes, tried to sympathize with the
frustration, tried to remember the terrible tragedy the youngster had suffered
just this past season.
It was no
good. For whatever had happened, today and in the days and weeks before, this
stubborn behavior could only lead to disaster. Juraviel turned on Elbryan
swiftly and suddenly, wings lifting the elf into a short hop. One hand grabbed
the back of Elbryan's hair, the other cupped under the boy's chin, and though
Elbryan, at least as strong as the elf, got his arms up to defend, when
Juraviel turned his arms, turned Elbryan's head, the boy had no chance to
resist. Juraviel took full advantage, put Elbryan off balance and kept on
twisting, angling the boy over the trough. Quite a bit of juice might be
ruined, but Juraviel figured the loss was worth it.
He put
Elbryan's head under the liquid, brought him up, sputtering, then dunked him
again. The third time, he held the boy under for what seemed like minutes, and
when he brought Elbryan up and subsequently let him go, the stunned boy fell to
the ground, gasping desperately.
"I am
your friend," Belli'mar Juraviel said sternly. "But let us both
understand the situation from the proper perspective. You are n'Touel'alfar,
not of the People. You have been brought into Andur'Blough Inninness to be
trained in the way of the rangers. This is fact, it has begun and there can be
no turning back. If you fail in this, if you do not prove yourself worthy of
elven friendship, you cannot be let out into the world with the knowledge you
have attained of our home and of our ways."
Even as
Elbryan started to protest, horrified at the thought of becoming a prisoner,
Juraviel finished grimly, "Nor can you stay."
Elbryan's
thoughts shifted to the illogic of it all. He couldn't leave, and he couldn't
stay. How could that be?
The boy's
jaw drooped as he realized the only remaining possibility, as he considered
that Tuntun would carry out his execution, if Juraviel would not, without hesitation.
Humbled, he
said not a word, but went right back to his work, as Juraviel left him.
That night,
Elbryan sat upon the bare hillock that he claimed as his own, under the starry
canopy, alone with his thoughts. Images, memories of the time of his past life,
a few weeks that sometimes seemed as a few minutes and other times a few
centuries, careened about the edges of his consciousness. He tried to
concentrate on the present, on the simple beauty of the starry sky, or on the
future, the questions of infinity, of eternity. Inevitably, though, that led
Elbryan to thoughts of mortality and thus to the recent fate of his family and
friends.
Piled in the
emotional jumble were Elbryan's mixed feelings concerning the elves. He did not
understand these creatures, so gay and full of almost childish spirit at one
moment, so deadly and stern at the next. Even Juraviel! Elbryan had thought the
elf his friend, and perhaps Juraviel was, in his own inhuman way, but the
ferocity and ease with which Juraviel had put the boy under the trough water
was amazing and frightening. Elbryan had always thought himself a bit of a
warrior. He had killed goblins, after all, though his body was far from
maturity. Yet measured against the speed and agility of the elves, the fluidity
of their movements, substituting perfect balance for lack of weight and
strength, Elbryan truly felt a novice. Juraviel, lighter and smaller, had put
him down with astounding ease, a simple movement for which Elbryan had no
counter.
So now here
he was, in a land enchanting and terrifying, sharing the forest with these
creatures that he could not understand and could not defeat. Sitting on that
hillock that night, Elbryan felt as if he were alone in the universe, as if
everything around him—the world and the elves, the goblins that had attacked Dundalis
and the folk he had known in the village were but a dream, his dream. Elbryan
realized the arrogance of that notion, an almost sinful pride, but he was so
much out of control, so insignificant, so vulnerable, that he suffered the
barbs of his conscience for the sake of his sensibilities.
On that
hillock, under that sky, Elbryan dared to play God, and that emotional game
allowed him to sleep finally in peace and to wake with the determination to go
on, with the gritty confidence that today, this day, he would eat hot stew for
lunch. He collected his baskets and ran for the bog.
And when he
slipped back beside the tenth and last basket, he saw steam still rising from
his tea.
It was
difficult, exhausting work, repeated every day, endlessly. But it was not
without its benefits. As the weeks became months, and they became a year, and
then two, Elbryan was hardly recognizable as the short gangly boy that
Jilseponie had once beat up. His legs grew strong and agile from carrying loads
and dodging traps. His chest and shoulders grew broad and thick, and his arms,
particularly his forearms, bulged with iron-hard muscles.
By the
tender age of sixteen, Elbryan Wyndon was stronger than Olwan had been.
And Olwan
had been the strongest man in Dundalis.
CHAPTER 11
Cat-the-Stray
"Corner
table, Cat," called Graevis Chilichunk, the barkeep and proprietor of
Fellowship Way, reputedly the finest inn in all the great city of Palmaris.
Fellowship Way, or the Way, as it was commonly called, was not a large
establishment, boasting only a dozen small, private rooms and a single common
bedroom in the upstairs guest quarters, and a tavern that could hold no more
than a hundred, and that with most folks standing. But Graevis, a fat, balding
man, perpetually smiling, full of laughter and cheer and with the warmest of
hearts, had made the place the best of the cheapest, so to speak. The noble
visitors to Palmaris mostly stayed at the more haughty establishments, those
near or within the duke's castle, but for those who knew, for the lesser
merchants and the frequent wanderers, there was no better place in the world
than Fellowship Way. In the Way, a single piece of silver would get you a hot
meal, and a mere smile, whether you were a paying customer or not, would coax
from Graevis or from most of the other usual patrons or workers a marvelous
tale. In the Way the hearth was always blazing, the beds were always soft, and
the song was always loud.
The young
woman sighed deeply, paused a moment, then consciously worked hard to erase the
perpetual frown from her face as she made her way to the three men calling her
from the corner table. She was aware of their eyes upon her as she approached;
always the men looked at her that way. She was in her mid-teens, but had the
shapely body of a woman five years older. She was not tall, just four inches
above five feet, but that only made her golden hair appear even thicker and
longer. She brushed at it and shook it as she crossed the room, for with her
sweat and the grease from the meal she had just helped prepare, it clung
uncomfortably to her neck.
"Ah,
the pretty lady!" one of the men cooed. "Be a good girl for me,"
he added, winking lewdly.
The young
woman—Cat-the-Stray, she was called by the folk of the Way—tried
unsuccessfully to hide her scowl. She caught herself quickly, though, and
covered it with a smirk she thought must have appeared, at least a little, as a
smile. Not that the seated drunk was even looking at her face; his eyes never
seemed to angle quite that high.
Another deep
breath steadied her. She thought of Graevis, dear Graevis, the man who had
rescued her from a past she could not remember, the man who had taken in a
broken little girl and, with his warm smile and warm heart, helped her to heal,
at least enough so that she had become functional once again. Out of the corner
of her eye, she noticed the movements, a dance they seemed, of Pettibwa
Chilichunk, Graevis' boisterous wife. When she had first come to know the
woman, Cat had thought her simple. Pettibwa was forever laughing, dancing with
her tray from one table to the next. She got pinched at every stop, hugged by
every patron who left at night, but she never seemed to care. Indeed, Pettibwa
loved every moment of it. If she had a free hand when a man pinched her on her
ample buttocks, she would pinch him right back; often she would grab a man
along the path of her table-to-table dance and sweep him with her across the
room. And it was all done in such good fun that neither Graevis nor any suitor
of her unsuspecting dance partner ever seemed to care.
It took grim
Cat a long while to learn the truth of Pettibwa. The woman was not simple, far
from it. Pettibwa just had an unrivaled love of life and of other people.
Cat loved
her—as much as she had loved her own mother, she believed, for though
she could not remember her own mother, she couldn't imagine loving anyone more.
Sometimes that thought only made the young woman even sadder than usual.
She took the
order from the three—no surprise here, just three more mugs of the cheapest ale—then turned
to the bar. She stopped short when the winker gave her rump a solid slap, and
she stood there, suffering their laughter. She wanted to turn and lay him out
flat on the floor, and anyone who had witnessed Cat's temper knew that she
could have done it easily enough, but her eyes met the gaze of Graevis, soaking
in his smile. By all his motions—bobbing head, sparkling brown eyes—he was
silently telling her to let it pass.
Not that
Graevis wouldn't protect her. He had taken her in, heart and soul, and loved
her at least as much as he loved his own son, the surly Grady. No man would
ever take advantage of Cat while Graevis drew breath—and
Pettibwa, too, for that matter—but in the Way, a slap on the rump was not
to be made into a big deal, especially not considering the everyday actions of
the boisterous proprietress.
The young
woman didn't look back as she made her way across the crowded floor to get the
drinks.
"Take
it as a compliment, me deary," Pettibwa remarked in her "commoner
accent," as she strolled to the bar beside her adopted daughter.
"I
shall have to wash my dress in the morning," Cat-the-Stray replied, her
speech not as stilted as the older woman's, though it hinted at her four years
with the Chilichunks.
"Bah,
ye're always so serious!" Pettibwa replied, pinching the young woman's
cheek. "Sure'n ye've come to know the feelings ye stir in menfolk."
The young
woman blushed and looked away.
"No,
ye're not a pretty one, now are ye?" Pettibwa cooed with smiling sarcasm,
stroking Cat's hair. "If only ye'd smile, me girl, then all the world'd be
smiling back at ye."
The young
woman closed her eyes and felt the gentle, unthreatening stroke on her hair.
Had her mother done it that way? She sensed that her hair had been much shorter
then, back when she was young and all the world seemed a great adventure, back
when the devils were just fireside stories to make your skin tingle or imagined
demons upon whom children could wage war.
The moment
ended all too soon, Cat-the-Stray tuning back to the bustle of the lively room
about her. She offered a meek smile and a nod to Pettibwa, who returned them
with a wink. The older woman collected her tray and rushed away, blending into
the continuing party just a step from the bar.
"If
he's to bother ye, ye just be letting me know about it," Graevis said to
her as he put the three ales in front of her. "Ye're not to play with him
if ye're not wanting to."
Cat-the-Stray
nodded and smiled weakly again. She knew that Graevis spoke truthfully; she,
and not the patrons, was in control in here. But she knew, too, the atmosphere
of the Way, and the last thing in the world the young woman wanted was to make
things difficult for Graevis and Pettibwa, her saviors.
She took up
her tray and weaved across the room, getting back to the corner table with
hardly a drop spilled. Master Wink-and-Slap twisted his face at her again and
gave a breathless burst of laughter, his throat no doubt numb from the drink.
"Might that we be getting together when the hearth's burning low," he
stated more than asked. "I've a gold piece to be rid of."
Again that
hoarse laughter, this time accompanied by the other two.
Cat ignored
it and methodically placed the mugs on the table.
"Two
gold, then, and ye best be worth it," the dirty man offered, and when Cat
continued to ignore him, he roughly grabbed her by the arm.
Her other
hand came across, hooked his thumb, and bent it back over his wrist so quickly
that the man, senses blurred by drink, hardly understood what was happening.
Suddenly he was off balance, and then he was sitting on the floor, the pretty
barmaid gliding out of reach. His friends howled with glee.
Cat suffered
his insults, but couldn't dismiss the realization that Pettibwa would have
handled it differently, better. Pettibwa would have proclaimed that two gold
was an insult to a woman of her talents, and might have gone on to insist that
she would never bed a man, no matter the money, who did not understand the
meaning of the word "bath."
Pettibwa
would have extracted herself delicately, subtly, turning the joke back on the
rude man, making him the fool but with such cunning that he probably wouldn't
even realize it until she was across the room.
Now, the man
continued sputtering. Cat caught the word "whore," and then she was
not surprised to see Graevis, several of the other regulars in tow, crossing
the room, their faces suddenly grim.
Cat suffered
the inevitable apology, the insincere man only offering it at the end of his
twisted arm. The young woman pointedly turned away then, not wanting to watch
as Graevis none too gently threw the drunk out into the street, and then.
pushed his two wretched friends out behind him.
Perhaps
worst of all for the young woman were the host of other eager young men ready
to defend her honor, offering everything from a thrashing of the man to his
very life. One in particular, handsomely dressed and well groomed, with light
brown eyes that sparkled with intelligence and a calm demeanor that hinted at
good breeding, nodded the young woman's way and smiled slightly, an invitation
for Cat to name him as her champion. She eyed the young man for a long moment—the way he
sat, the way he moved—and she had no doubt that he was well trained in the use of the
slender sword that hung comfortably at his hip. On a single word from her, he
would thrash all three of the drunks to within an inch of their lives.
Cat knew it,
and knew that many others would have defended her as well. That should have
come as a compliment, but Cat-the-Stray hated being the center of attention,
hated the patronizing, the would-be heroes, who, with the sole exception of
Graevis, wanted exactly the same thing as the bounced drunk. Their course was
more gentlemanly, less straightforward, but their goal through honor, Cat knew;
was precisely the same as the drunk had attempted through offered gold.
She worked
for another hour, and when her smile did not return, Graevis graciously bade
her to take an early night. Cat resisted, fearing that her leaving would only
put more work on Pettibwa's shoulders, but the older woman pooh-poohed that
notion and almost forced Cat through the side door, into the family's private
chambers. Cat looked back appreciatively, and over Pettibwa's large round
shoulder, she saw again the handsome well-dressed young man, watching her go,
lifting his glass of wine in apparent toast to her.
She scurried
away, suddenly uncomfortable.
All the
bustle of the common room disappeared as soon as the heavy door was closed,
leaving the young woman in happy solitude—almost, for a moment later, she noticed
that Grady Chilichunk was in the house, moving about his little room.
Cat sighed
again; the last thing she wanted now was to spend any time near Grady. He was a
handsome man of thirty years, nearly twice Cat's age, with sharp brown eyes.
Physically, by all accounts, he was the image of his father in Graevis' younger
days, but by Cat's estimation, Grady could not have been more different than
Graevis in temperament. Since her first days in the house, Grady had made the
young woman uncomfortable. Not in a lewd way, like the drunk in the bar, or
even in a teasing way, like the handsome young man. In four years, Grady had
never once looked at the flowering young woman lustfully. To Cat-the-Stray, his
adopted sister, he was always polite, too polite. Stiff even, and as the young
woman had grown wiser to the ways of the world, she came to understand that
Grady saw her as a threat to what he considered his rightful inheritance.
It wasn't
that Grady honestly cared for Fellowship Way. He was hardly ever in the place.
He liked the money the establishment brought in, though, and the young woman
already understood that if Graevis and Pettibwa left Fellowship Way to her,
even partially, Grady would not be pleased.
"What
are you doing in here?" he asked, coming from his room. His proper speech
rang in sharp contrast to the street dialect of his parents. Grady saw himself
as above that lowly station, Cat understood. He fancied himself an important
man, and frequented the more expensive establishments near the duke's castle,
and had even been in the castle on many occasions. It struck Cat that he must
know the well-dressed gentleman in the bar; perhaps the man had even come to
the Way on Grady's invitation.
"Have
you no work?" he snapped at her.
Cat-the-Stray
bit her lip, not liking his condescending tone. "I've done more this one
night than you have in the last two seasons," she replied.
Grady glared
at her. "Some were made to work in life," he began evenly,
"others to live and enjoy."
Cat decided
that it wasn't worth arguing. She shook her head, tossed her apron to the back
of a nearby chair, gathered up her cloak, and headed out into the Palmaris
night.
A chill
breeze was blowing off the gulf, moaning as it wound its way past the many two-
and three-story houses of the great city. Palmaris was second in size in all
the Kingdom of Honce-the-Bear only to Ursal, the throne seat, further upriver,
though neither were reputedly as populous as the great, crowded cities of the
southern kingdom of Behren. To Cat-the-Stray, who had grown up on the edge of
the Wilderlands, in a village where ten people together was considered a crowd,
the place had, at first, been overwhelming. Even now, after nearly four years
in Palmaris, when she knew every street, where to go, where to avoid, and when
the dark image of the great Masur Delaval and the smell of brine and the wind
filled with crisp wetness had become very familiar to her, she could not
consider the place her home. Even now, surrounded by the love of the
Chilichunks, the place was not home; could never replace the fleeting image of
a cabin that she held so dear. She loved Graevis and Pettibwa, even Grady, but
they were not, could not be, her parents, and Grady would never take the place
of a true friend she sensed that she had once known.
Cat-the-Stray
winced as the thoughts careened back in time. She had blocked away so much,
could only remember, fleeting images, a certain look, a kiss that she wasn't
even sure had really happened. And the name, all the names, were gone from her
mind—that was the worst thing of all! She could not remember her
friend's name, could not remember her own name!
"Cat-the-Stray,"
she whispered distastefully into the cold night air, watching the mist of her
breath float away, and wishing the title would go with it. It had been given to
her affectionately, she knew, and with all sympathy for her pitiful
predicament, and so she had not argued.
The young
woman made her way around the back of the inn, down a dark alley that inspired
no fear, and up a gutter, to the one section of Fellowship Way's roof that was
not slanted. The lights of Palmaris spread wide before her, the lights of the
night sky wide above her. This was her secret place, her place of
contemplation. She came up here as often as her duties allowed to be alone with
her memories, to try to piece together who she was and where she had come from.
She
remembered wandering into a village, dirty and wounded, covered in soot and
blood. She remembered the tender manner in which she had been brought in,
followed by relentless questions that she could not answer. Then came the long
journey, tagging along with a merchant caravan that had swapped crafted items
to the people of the small frontier village in exchange for pelts and great
trees that would be used as masts for the sailing ships built in Palmaris.
Graevis Chilichunk had been on that caravan, coming north to the Wilderlands to
pick up some very special wine, boggle by name. He had taken to the poor lost
girl—he was the one who had given the girl the name of Cat-the-Stray—and the
villagers had been more than willing to part with the orphan and with many of
their own weaker folk, since they were in fear of a raid similar to the one
that had sacked the neighboring settlement, Cat's settlement.
Cat rested
back against a sooty chimney, the warm bricks taking a bit of the bite from the
night chill.
Why couldn't
she remember the name of her village or of the one where Graevis had found her?
On several occasions, she had started to ask Pettibwa and Graevis about it, but
every time she had stopped short, some part of her fearing to remember. Neither
of her adopted parents pressed her to remember; Cat had overheard them talking
one night, making a pact that they would let the girl heal in her own time.
"Perhaps she will never remember," Pettibwa had said. "Perhaps
that would be better."
"And
she's got her new name now," Graevis agreed. "Though if I'd've
thinked it would stick, I'd've chosen differently!"
And they
laughed, and it was not in any way an insult to the girl, just their joy at
being able to help one so in need.
Cat loved
them with all her heart. Now, though, she was beginning to think it was time
for her to figure out who she was and where she, had come from. She looked up
at the sky. Some streaks of clouds had moved in, giving a different perspective
to those stars still visible. It was often possible to look at familiar things
in a different way, Cat realized. She let the night canopy absorb her, used it
to filter back through the painful barriers. She had seen this sky all her life
and used that commonality to recall another place.
She
remembered running up a forested slope, looking back to her village, nestled in
a sheltered vale, and then turning her gaze above it, to the southern sky, to
the faint colors of the Halo.
"The
Halo," Cat-the-Stray muttered, and she realized that she had not seen the
phenomenon since she had come to Palmaris. Her face screwed up with concern.
Did such a thing as the Halo even exist, or was her memory a mere fantasy?
If it did
exist, then her memory was correct, then she had found yet another image of her
lost life.
She
considered going back into the Way and inquiring about this Halo right then,
but her concentration was broken by a sharp, metallic sound.
Somebody was
climbing up the gutter.
Cat did not
get overalarmed—until she saw a familiar dirty face come over the edge of the
roof.
"Ah, me
lovely," said the drunk from the bar. "So ye come up here to meet
with me."
"Be on
your way," Cat warned, but the man rolled up over the edge of the roof and
started to rise.
"Oh,
I'll be having me way," he said, and then Cat heard yet another man coming
up the gutter, and realized she was in trouble. They had followed her, all
three, and she knew well enough what they meant to do to her.
Quick as her
namesake, the young woman leaped across and put her knee heavily into the
drunk's chest, knocking him flat to the roof. She slapped away his grabbing
hands, then slugged him twice in the face.
Then she was
up, meeting the second intruder with a foot in his face as his head came above
the roof edge. His head snapped back; he started to say something in protest,
and Cat kicked him again, right in the jaw.
With a
groan, he fell away into the blackness, dropping heavily atop the last of the
three, then both of them going down hard to the cobblestones. Two kicks and two
down, but it had taken too long. Even as Cat started to turn back for the
first, the drunk's arms came about her and locked about her chest, squeezing
her tight.
She felt his
hot breath on her neck, smelled the stench of the cheap ale. "There,
there, me pretty one," he whispered. "If ye're not to fight me, ye’ll
like it all the more."
He nibbled
her earlobe, or tried to, but she snapped her head back hard into his face,
stunning him.
The one
memory that Cat-the-Stray held completely from her past was not an image or a
name, but a feeling, a deep frustrated rage. She let that memory out now, on
the roof of Fellowship Way in Palmaris. She let all the tears and all the
unanswered screams come out, channeled them into a level of violence that the
drunk could not have foreseen.
Her hands
raked at his arms; she stuck one arm between her torso and the drunk's arm, and
let her legs fall out from under her, twisting and squirming.
"Might
be more the fun if ye fight!" the drunk squealed, but he wasn't paying
attention and had let the young woman get her face close to his clenched hands.
Cat-the-Stray
clamped her teeth over one of his knuckles and bit him hard.
"Ah, ye
whore!" he yelled, and lifted his other hand to pound her.
But he had
broken his grip, and Cat turned and ducked, accepting the blow across the back
of her shoulders, not even feeling it through the turmoil of her emotions. She
came around and up and right back in, clawing at his face, raking for his eyes.
He pulled her hands out wide, and she used the opening to head-butt him again.
She tore her
hands free and grabbed him by the hair. He punched her hard on the side of the
head, but she only loosed a feral scream, and tugged down hard with both her
hands, while she jumped and curled one leg. She heard the crack of bone as her
knee connected with his face. He shot back up straight, then fell over
backward, but Cat was not done with him.
She came in
hard, screaming all the while, driving her knee into his throat.
"Enough!"
he whined, gagged. "I'll let ye be."
That wasn't
the point; Cat would not let him be. She hit him a score of heavy blows; she
kicked him, she bit him, she clawed him. Finally, battered and bleeding from a
dozen wounds, he managed to get to his feet and he ran headlong to the ledge
and dove right over it.
Following
across the roof, Cat noticed that there was a light below in the alley. She
came to the edge, expecting one of the man's companions to be coming up the
gutter, and hoping that to be the case.
She stopped,
taken fully by surprise. The drunk lay very still, groaning softly, blood
running from his many wounds and from the side of his broken head. The man she
had kicked from the gutter was down as well, sitting against the building wall
across the alley, one hand supporting him, the other clutching his shin. The
leg had splintered in the fall; Cat could see the jagged edge of a bone poking
through the skin.
The third
drunk was up, hands high above his head and facing the wall directly below Cat,
a sword's pointed tip tight against the middle of his back.
"I
heard a scream," said the handsome man from the Way, the one with the
sparkling light brown eyes, the one with the purest white smile. "I took
my leave soon after you departed," he explained, "figuring there was
nothing left in the place worth watching."
Cat felt the
blood rushing to her face.
"Some
hero I prove to be," the man said, bringing his sword back in a salute to
the young woman. "By my eyes, it seems as if I saved these three!"
Cat-the-Stray
had no idea what to respond to the gallant man. Her rage bubbled away, and she
turned from the alley, walking back into the solitude of the darkened rooftop.
After a few
uncomfortable minutes, the man called up to her, but before she could answer,
she heard a commotion as several others, Graevis among them, came rushing into
the alley.
Cat-the-Stray
didn't want to face them. She was embarrassed, she was ashamed, and she just
wanted to be left alone. That was not possible, she realized, nor could she
slip down the other side of the building without having half of Palmaris
searching frantically for her. She took a deep breath and moved to the gutter,
then down, meeting the eyes of no one, falling into the bosom of Pettibwa as
soon as she spotted the woman, and whispering for Pettibwa to please take her
to her room.
CHAPTER 12
The Windrunner
The hours
were endless, up before the dawn and not to bed again until the midnight hour
had passed. Brothers Avelyn, Quintall, Pellimar, and Thagraine learned to
survive, even thrive, on no more than four hours of sleep. They were taught the
deepest forms of meditation, where a twenty-minute break afforded them all the
recuperation they needed to press on with their training for several more
hours. They studied with their respective classmates throughout the day,
learning their religious duties and expectations, the day-to-day functions of
the abbey, and the fighting techniques. After vespers, the training shifted to
lessons concerning the sacred stones—the collection process, the preparation
ceremony immediately after collection, and the various magical properties of
each type of stone. In addition, all four were taught the ways of the sea,
spending many hours on a small boat rocking in the waves on the rough, frigid
waters of All Saints Bay.
Avelyn could
not keep up with his three companions in the matters of fighting or seamanship;
and in the religious training, the young brother grew more and more frustrated.
It seemed that as every ceremony became ingrained within him, it lost a bit of
its mystery, and thus, its holiness. Were the fifteen Holy Orders of God, the
rules of righteousness, truly God inspired, or were they merely rules of
keeping order within a civilized society? Such questions would have broken
Avelyn were it not for the training after the sun had set. For in the Ring
Stones, the young man found his ideals satisfied. The mysteries of stone magic
could not be explained away by human desires of control and order. To Avelyn,
these stones were truly the gift of God, the magic of the heavens, the promise
of eternal life and glory.
So he
suffered the brutal hours of the day, the fighting in which Quintall almost
always bested him. By the beginning of the third year, the level of jealousy
among the four began to rise noticeably. Avelyn and Thagraine had been formally
named as the Preparers, the two monks who would leave the chartered ship and go
onto the island of Pimaninicuit to collect and prepare the stones, while
Quintall and Pellimar would remain aboard, going onto the island only should
one of the chosen pair falter. Sea journeys were not considered safe in God's
Year 821, the year of the stone showers, and replacements might become necessary.
Quintall was
easily the best of the four in matters of martial arts. The man was impossibly
strong, his stocky frame and low center of gravity giving him the leverage he
needed to punish Avelyn endlessly. On more than one occasion, the lanky Avelyn
was convinced that Quintall meant to kill him. What better way to get to
Pimaninicuit?
The thought
was more than a little unsettling to gentle Avelyn Desbris, and he thought it
ironic that Quintall's anger was no more than proof that he, and not the
stocky, ferocious man, was the better choice for Pimaninicuit. Avelyn knew in
his heart that if the situation were reversed, if Quintall and not he had been
chosen to go to the island, he would support the man with all his heart, taking
his comfort in the fact that he was allowed to go on the journey and holding
faith that the masters, and not he, were better judges of the students.
Besides, at night, and especially on those occasions when the chosen students
actually handled the stones, Brother Avelyn easily proved that he was the
proper choice. By the fourth year, none, not even the masters, could bring
forth the stone magic more completely, more effortlessly, than Avelyn. Even
skeptical Master Siherton, whatever reservations he continued to hold about
Avelyn as a fellow human being, had to admit that the man was the obvious
choice, the God-given choice, for Pimaninicuit. Siherton maintained his tight
bond with Quintall and lobbied for the younger man to be included—as
Thagraine's replacement and not Avelyn's. By the third year, Master Siherton
also became invaluable as a mediator between the two rivals from the class of
God's Year 816, coaxing Quintall into easing up on his jealousy of Avelyn.
The first
three months of God's Year 821 were dull of excitement and anticipation
throughout St.-Mere-Abelle. Nearly every day—when the weather was calm enough for the
younger monks to go out into the courtyard—the students would glance repeatedly, at
the dark waters of All Saints Bay, shaking their heads whenever an iceberg
floated by but always remarking that it would not be long. As Bafway, the third
month, whose end marked the spring equinox, neared, the whispers became a
contest to see who might first spot the square sails of the chartered ship.
Bafway
proved to be a long, uneventful month. The spring equinox passed, and every
time the weather seemed to be improving, another cold front would sweep down
from Alpinador, chopping the waters of All Saints Bay into frothing,
threatening whitecaps.
As the
fourth month, Toumanay, slipped past, the quiet whispers became open
discussions, with even the older brothers—even some of the masters—joining in,
the older and more experienced holy men admitting that this was indeed a
blessed time and a ship was indeed on its way to St.-Mere-Abelle. The only
secret remained the subsequent destination of that ship, for only the masters
and the four chosen monks knew the magical name Pimaninicuit.
Brother
Avelyn's thoughts were full of that island and of the long voyage ahead of him.
He hardly considered the dangers, though he knew from his studies that on
several occasions, the monks who had set out for Pimaninicuit had never
returned, taken by storms or powries or by the great serpents of the Mirianic
Ocean. Even on successful voyages to Pimaninicuit, more often than not, one or
more of the four monks did not return, for disease was a very real fact of life
aboard ship. What Avelyn focused on, therefore, was the destination, the isle
itself. From the texts he had studied, he conjured images of lush gardens and
exotic flowers, pictured himself standing in a garden with multicolored stones
raining down around him, divine music playing in the air. He would run barefoot
through the stones, would roll in them, would bask in his God.
Avelyn knew
the absurdity of his fantasy, of course. When the showers arrived, he and his
fellow Preparer would be hidden underground, sheltered from the pelting
meteors. Even after the showers ceased, the pair would have to wait some time
before handling the heated stones, and then the work would be too furious and
desperate to pause and contemplate God.
But for all
the harsh reality, for all the possibilities that he would not survive, Avelyn
watched the watery horizon for hint of those square sails most intently of all.
To his thinking, this was the pinnacle of his existence, the greatest joy that
a monk of St.-Mere-Abelle might know, the closest, before death, that he could
ever get to his God.
Toumanay was
less than half finished when the two-masted caravel appeared, gliding swiftly
through the choppy waters to the sheltered harbor before St.-Mere-Abelle.
Avelyn spent the entirety of the morning in silent prayer, as instructed, and
was shaking so badly when he was at last summoned to Father Abbot Markwart's
chambers that Master Jojonah had to lend him a supporting arm. The other three
chosen were already in the spacious office when Avelyn and Jojonah arrived. All
of the masters of St.-Mere-Abelle were there, along with the Father Abbot and
two men Avelyn did not know, one tall and slender, the other shorter, much
older, and so skinny that Avelyn wondered if he had eaten in a month. Avelyn
quickly discerned that the taller man was obviously the captain of the
chartered vessel. He stood with an air of superiority, posture perfect, hand on
gilded rapier. He had a garish scar running from ear to chin that seemed to
Avelyn somehow gallant, and, unlike his scruffy companion, he was clean shaven
except for a neatly trimmed mustache, rolling out from the sides of his mouth
and curling up. His eyes were dark brown, so dark that the pupil was hardly
distinguishable from the iris; his hair was long and black and curly, and under
one arm he had tucked a great hat, with an upturned brim and a feather on one
side. The rest of his dress, though weathered, was rich, particularly a golden
brocade and jewel-studded baldric. That garment held Avelyn's attention
acutely, for he sensed that at least one of those jewels, a small ruby, was
more than ornamental.
Avelyn tried
not to stare, confused as to why this man, who was not of the Order of
St.-Mere-Abelle, was in possession of a sacred stone—and right in
front of Father Abbot Markwart! Surely the Father Abbot and the masters
recognized the jewel for what it was.
Avelyn
calmed quickly; surely they did recognize the jewel, and apparently, it did not
bother them. Perhaps, the younger brother reasoned, the stone had been given as
payment for the ship, or perhaps it had only been loaned, a helpful tool for
the perilous voyage. Avelyn shook it all away.
The older
man caught Avelyn's attention only because of his constant squinting, his
bulbous eyes darting about nervously from man to man, head bobbing and
trembling on his turkey neck. His clothing seemed nearly as old as he, worn out
so badly in many places that Avelyn could see the darkly tanned skin beneath.
He was dirty and gray, his hair cropped short and badly trimmed, and his beard
untended. Avelyn had once heard the term "salty dog", in reference to
seamen, and he thought that appropriate indeed for this one.
"Brother
Quintall, Brother Pellimar, Brother Thagraine, and Brother Avelyn," the
Father Abbot said, indicating each monk, and each, in turn, bowing to their
guests. "I give you Captain Adjonas of the good ship Windrunner, and his
first hand, Bunkus Smealy." The proud captain made no motion, but Bunkus
bowed to each in turn so violently that he nearly toppled, and would have, had
it not been for his proximity to Father Abbot Markwart's huge desk.
"Captain
Adjonas knows your course," Markwart finished, "and you may trust
that his is the finest ship on the Mirianic."
"The
tide will be favorable an hour after the dawn," Adjonas said in a clear
and strong voice—a voice befitting a man of his station, Avelyn thought. "If
we miss the tide, we will lose an entire day." The stern man steeled his
gaze upon each of the four monks, letting them know right up front that the
ship was his domain. "That would not be a wise thing to do. We shall be
running against the weather at least until we have turned south of All Saints
Bay. Each day we spend this far north brings the very real chance of complete
ruin."
The four
young monks exchanged glances; Avelyn was sympathetic to the captain's wishes
and actually took some comfort in the man's commanding, if cold, demeanor. He
saw that his three companions apparently didn't share his feelings, for
Quintall openly scowled as if he were offended by a mere ship's captain
speaking so forcefully to him.
Father Abbot
Markwart, also sensing the sudden tension, cleared his throat loudly. "You
are dismissed," he said to the four, "to an early meal and to your
rooms. You are excused from all your duties this day, and all the ceremonies.
Make your peace with God and prepare yourselves for the task before you,"
They left
the office then, unescorted, and Quintall began openly complaining even as the
door shut behind them.
"Captain
Adjonas will be in for a long journey indeed if he thinks that he
commands," the stocky man said, to the nodding replies of both Thagraine
and Pellimar.
"It is
his ship," Avelyn said simply.
"A ship
bought," Quintall replied immediately and brusquely. "Adjonas
commands his crew to execute the task they were paid to do, but he does not
command us. Understand that now. On the Windrunner, you and Thagraine answer
only to Pellimar, and Pellimar answers only to me."
Avelyn had
no response to that. The pecking order for the voyage had indeed been
determined in just that manner. While Thagraine and Avelyn, as Preparers, were
paramount to the mission, Quintall and Pellimar had been given higher positions
on the voyage to and from Pimaninicuit. Avelyn could accept that. If things got
rough out on the seas, as expected, Quintall, the most physically impressive of
the four, would be best prepared to handle any situation.
Avelyn left
the group then, heading for his room as the Father Abbot had ordered. He was
some distance down the corridor and still he heard complaining near the Abbot's
door. He suspected that Quintall and the others kept up their complaining for
some time, long after he was kneeling beside his simple cot, falling deep into
important prayer.
The morning
ceremony was the grandest event that Avelyn had seen in his four and a half
years at St.-Mere-Abelle. More than eight hundred monks, every member of the
Order, including four score who were not living at the abbey any longer but
were serving as missionaries all along All Saints Bay, lined the docks, lifting
their voices in common song. The bells of the abbey pealed repeatedly, drawing
curious onlookers from the nearby village of St.-Mere-Abelle. The ceremony
began before dawn, intensified as the sun glistened on the horizon across the
waters, then went on and on, one prayer after another, each song louder than
the previous.
The four
crewmen of the Windrunner's boat, which was bouncing noisily against the wooden
dock, sat through it all with smirking faces, thoroughly amused and certainly
not impressed. As the day brightened, Avelyn could see the rest of the
thirty-man crew lining the deck of the caravel, the ship resting at anchor some
fifty yards out in the harbor.
The sailors
cared nothing for this all-important mission, Avelyn realized, beyond their
payment of gold—and whatever other trinkets Father Abbot Markwart had included in
the bargain. Avelyn considered again the sacred stone woven into Captain
Adjonas' baldric, and the thought disturbed him more than a little. If the man,
like his crew, was so obviously nonreligious, then he should not possess such a
gem, not for any reason.
This was
just the first hint, Avelyn understood, and he began to suspect that the long
voyage—they were expected to be away for near to eight months—would be
trying in more ways than physical.
First hand
Bunkus Smealy interrupted the ceremony an hour or so after the dawn, calling
out in a crusty voice, "Time for going!"
Father Abbot
Markwart, closest to the craft, looked at the man, then turned back to the
suddenly quiet gathering. He motioned to Siherton, and the hawkish master led
the four chosen brothers to the edge of the dock. "Go with God's
graces," he said to each as he stepped into the rolling craft. Avelyn
nearly fell over the side, and banged his leg hard against the edge of the
dock. He caught the look that crossed between Quintall and Siherton. Quintall
seemed disgusted, but Siherton was unbending, silently imparting to the
aggravated Quintall that his duties were paramount to his personal feelings.
Avelyn
watched that stare, and the return look Quintall offered to the master, and he
understood that, while Quintall hated him and was jealous of him, the man would
indeed protect him at all costs on the journey to and from the island.
Or at least,
to the island.
Songs
followed them out across the harbor, and Quintall led them up the netting to
the deck of the Windrunner, where Captain Adjonas, face as stern as ever,
waited.
"With
your permission, sir," Quintall said evenly, as he had been instructed.
Adjonas gave a curt nod, and Quintall paced by him, the other three monks in
tow.
Avelyn
remained at the taffrail—an ornate railing about waist high that
encircled the stern deck—for some time, watching the walls of
St.-Mere-Abelle diminish, as the drifting voices raised in joyous song faded.
Soon the rugged hills of the coast were but a gray blur and the Windrunner,
whose mainmast had appeared so tall and impressive in the sheltered harbor,
seemed a tiny thing indeed, dwarfed by the overwhelming power of the vast
Mirianic.
CHAPTER 13
Running Fast Down a Long, Long Road
Elbryan
froze as he heard the crusty snow crunch under his feet. His breath came slow
and steady, and he let that sensation spread throughout his tense body, easing
muscles, finding a solid harmony, a more perfect balance. He could see the
deer's shoulder over the next rise. Its head had not come up; it had not heard
the slight noise.
That slight
noise had sounded so clearly to Elbryan!
The young
man paused then to consider the extent of his progress. Only the previous
autumn, his fourth in Andur'Blough Inninness, he had not been able to get
within fifty feet of such a wary creature. Only the previous autumn, he would
not even have noticed his last slight misstep. The elves had worked him hard,
very hard. He continued his daily gathering of the milk-stones, though now he
ate a hot meal every time, easily avoiding even the most cunning of the elvish
traps. No longer was the rest of the day his own, though, for the elves had
filled his afternoons and early evenings with lessons on the ways of beast and
plant. He had learned to identify the various plants and their properties, often
medicinal. Elbryan had learned to walk nearly silently—though he
still thought himself clumsy when measured against the graceful elves! He had
learned truly to understand and recognize the perspective of those animals
watching him, that he might better blend into the forest background. He had
learned to observe the world through the senses of each animal, understood now
each creature's fears and needs. To a squirrel and a rabbit, he could become
perfectly unthreatening, coaxing the beast to feed right from his hand. And to
a deer, perhaps the most skittish creature of all ...
He was
barely a half dozen steps away, unnoticed, on open ground.
His focus
went back to the task at hand, to the six most difficult steps of all. He
considered the air around him, the slight breeze in his face. Winter was still
present in this part of Andur'Blough Inninness, but its grip was fast
loosening. The deer was having little trouble finding grass through the spotty
layer of snow, and its treasurelike find had it, perhaps, a little less alert
than usual.
Elbryan
couldn't suppress his widening smile. Eagerness welled within him, the very
real hope that this time he would touch that animal. He took another step, then
another.
Too quickly,
with too little time to find his center of balance.
The deer's
head came up, ears twitching, scanning; Elbryan's smile vanished. He went
forward with all speed, scrambling over the low ridge. He dove and reached,
desperate to slap the creature, though he knew perfectly well that this kind of
closing rush was not what Juraviel and Tuntun wanted from him.
Would his
victory prove tainted?
The point
was moot, anyway, for Elbryan never got close to touching the elusive deer. A
single great leap sent the beast flying away, disappearing so quickly into the
twigs and branches of the forest lining the small meadow that it was lost to
Elbryan's sight before he ever recovered from his lunging roll.
The young
man shifted to a sitting position and sagged on the wet ground. Juraviel came
to him at once, the elf grinning and nodding. "Elu touise!" Juraviel
exclaimed and patted the young man on the back. "So very close!"
"I lost
control," Elbryan said despondently. "At the last, and most crucial
moment, my eagerness overcame my movement."
'Ah, but you
miss the point," the elf replied. "You kept control for all this
time, closing perfectly."
"I did
not touch the deer!"
"But
you have approached the goal," Juraviel cried. "You have just begun,
my young friend. Think not of the failure but of the triumph. Never have you
gotten this close; but you shall again, and when you do, you will know better
and will temper your eagerness."
Elbryan
looked at the elf long and hard, glad for the words. Put in that manner, this
was indeed a day of celebration. He hadn't touched the deer, that was true, but
his progress beyond his last few fumbling attempts was marked.
Just as the
young man's smile began to widen, Tuntun came out of the brush, walking back
from the spot where the deer had disappeared She moved right in front of
Elbryan and put her tiny hand up to his face.
He smelled
the scent of deer on her fingers.
"Blood
of Mather." Tuntun snorted sarcastically as she moved away, the all too
familiar phrase that Elbryan had grown tired of years before. He looked back at
Juraviel for support and found that the elf was working hard to hide his grin.
Elbryan
sighed deeply. He tried to keep a perspective on his gains. Could any of the
men of Dundalis, could his own father, have ever gotten that close to a deer?
Still, Elbryan wasn't among those folk anymore, and in measuring his progress
in all areas but physical strength against the elves of Andur'Blough Inninness,
he felt a novice indeed. It was hard for the young man to appreciate all he had
learned when he considered all he had left to learn.
Juraviel
offered him a hand, and Elbryan took it, though in truth the elf could do
little to help the large man rise. There was very little boyishness left in
Elbryan's frame. He stood three inches over six feet, tall and muscular, and
his two hundred and twenty lean, strong pounds put him at more than three times
the weight of the average elf. Not that Juraviel and the others weren't strong;
it constantly amazed Elbryan how much power an elf packed into its tiny frame,
power he felt all too often in the sting of a practice sword's strike during
his sparring sessions!
Together,
with Tuntun nearby but comfortably—for herself and for Elbryan—out of
sight, the pair enjoyed the fine day as they made their way to the southern end
of the enchanted valley, the area of Andur'Blough Inninness where winter had
never found a hold. They chatted easily, Juraviel doing most of the talking,
explaining this plant and that, talking of ways to bind a wound, then shifting
the subject back to where Elbryan had performed well and where he had failed in
his quest to slap the deer. Such were Juraviel's methods, his enchanting and
engrossing conversation techniques, that Elbryan hardly realized this to be
perhaps the most important part of his training, these daily chats, anecdotal
and enjoyable.
They walked
down confusing trails, often branching, seeming to go in circles, seeming as if
they merely ended until that apparent end was reached. Elbryan still could not
navigate this area, but he was gaining some understanding. Juraviel let him
lead often and corrected him whenever he went wrong—which was
not often any longer—and soon the pair came into the low dell called Caer'alfar:
Elvenhome. It was a place of thick grass and lines of trees, with houses built
in the boughs above' the ground. It was a place of flowers and song, where the
forest was not so thick and the sky could be seen from many vantage points.
This was the very center of the mist that blanketed Andur'Blough Inninness
during the light of day, and yet Caer'alfar was rarely covered, a small hole
remaining in the gray canopy, unnoticeable from anywhere but this low meadow,
that the elves might enjoy the sun as well as the stars.
Dozens of
elves were about this day, some sparring with practice weapons, others dancing.
Some rested back against the trees or lay comfortably in the soft grass,
drinking their sweet Questel ni'touel wine. Here and there debates sprang up
concerning the value of the spirits and what they should bring in trade, for
the spring caravan. would soon depart, a group of elves going to their secret
contacts in the frontier villages.
All in all,
the peaceful scene struck a chord in Elbryan about how out of place he was, and
yet, he somehow felt as if he belonged. He had been coming into Caer'alfar
regularly since the turn of the year, and now the elves hardly gave him a
thought as he walked in. No longer was he an outcast—he even
joined in their nightly party of song and dance—and yet, he was so obviously different.
For Elbryan, his entire existence seemed as it had been on those occasions many
years back in Dundalis when his father and mother invited friends to the house.
Sometimes Elbryan would be allowed to stay up late, sometimes he would even be
allowed to join in their dice games for a bit before retiring. How grown up he
had felt! And yet, he was not really a part of that game, of that group. His
parents and their adult friends had accepted him with smiles that he now
realized were somewhat condescending.
So it was
with the elves. He could never truly be one of them.
He and
Juraviel continued their conversation until Tuntun walked by, eyeing Elbryan
derisively and tapping her smooth cheek and chin. Elbryan understood—so did
Juraviel—and the elf motioned for the young man to go to his place. Above
all else, the elves were meticulous about grooming. Elbryan was expected to
bathe daily, to keep his clothing clean, and since his beard was splotchy and
uneven, not yet that of a man, to keep his face clean shaven. That was the one
task which always seemed to elude the young man —until Tuntun inevitably pointed it out—although,
with the impossibly fine-edged elven knife, shaving was neither painful nor
troublesome.
Elbryan
moved grudgingly to his lodging, a low, wide house on the bottom boughs of a
thick-limbed elm. He collected his bowl, towel, and knife, but before he began,
remembered that he had not yet asked Juraviel when they would again stalk a
deer, something the eager young man greatly wanted to know.
He slipped
down from the tree house and moved about Caer'alfar, spotting Juraviel talking
with another elf across the way. Elbryan smiled sneakily and went into a
crouch. Perhaps the only creature more difficult to surprise than the wary deer
was the forest elf! Using all his skills, the young man picked his way through
the trees, scampering across the opening, finding cover wherever he could. The
other elves took little notice, hardly caring for his games, and Juraviel and
his companion remained apparently oblivious.
Elbryan put
his back to a tree barely a dozen feet from the pair and considered his next
move.
"Within
six strides," Juraviel was saying in the elven tongue. "Perhaps five.
And the deer did not notice."
"Well
done!" the other congratulated.
Elbryan
nearly fainted away. He recognized the voice, melodic and higher pitched than
Juraviel's, as that of Lady Dasslerond, the High Lady of Caer'alfar and of all
Andur'Blough Inninness.
And she was
speaking of him! Elbryan held steady his breath, paying close attention, for
though he could understand the melodic language, many individual words might
elude him if he was not careful. With Lady Dasslerond speaking of him, the
young man didn't want to miss a thing.
"In the
fighting, too," she went on, "he is losing much of the clumsiness
that comes with his human heritage, and what a combination of power and grace
he shall be when one of his stature learns to wield the sword as an elf!"
Elbryan
peeked around the tree to see Juraviel nodding his agreement. He forgot all
about his game of surprising the pair then, and used his stealth ability to
extract himself from the area, return to his tree house—which was
closer to the ground than the sky—to shave and to prepare himself for his
next sparring session, one he suddenly intended to win.
Early that
evening, Elbryan walked onto the low meadow, ringed by tall, thick pines and
capped by the starry canopy. He carried only a long smooth pole, his weapon.
The elf was already there, and Elbryan breathed a sigh of relief when he noted
that it was not Tuntun waiting for him.
He could
never catch Tuntun off her guard; she relished the sparring matches, acting as
if they were her personal forum for punishing the young man. After his first
few encounters with the surly elf, Elbryan had wondered what it was that so
prompted her desire to punish. Soon enough the young man had realized that it
was for no particular act but merely because he was not elvish.
His opponent
this night was Tallareyish Issinshine, an older and calmer member of the elvish
band. He was a quiet sort and rarely talked with Elbryan, though, according to
Juraviel, Tallareyish had the finest singing voice in all of Andur'Blough
Inninness. Elbryan had sparred with him only once, very early in his training,
and had been put down rather easily.
"Not
this time," the young man muttered under his breath as he walked
determinedly to the center of the meadow. He moved to a spot five feet from the
sprite and bowed low, as did Tallareyish, in respect.
Elbryan
presented his long pole horizontally in front of him; the elf responded by
crossing his two smaller poles, replicas of slender elvish swords, in the air
before him.
"Fight
well," Tallareyish said, the proper beginning.
"And
you," Elbryan answered, and on he came, full of fury and determination.
His skills had improved, so he had heard Juraviel say, and now he meant to show
how much.
He started
with a cunning feint, boring in, mock spear leading, as if he meant to overrun
the diminutive elf, and then pulling to an abrupt stop and swishing his weapon
hard to the side. He had to guess, of course, which way agile Tallareyish would
spin, and even though he guessed correctly that the elf would go to his right,
his swipe was batted aside, not once but three times, before it ever got close
to hitting the mark.
Tallareyish
came right back in, wooden swords dancing and weaving, cutting figure eights
and then darting straight ahead suddenly, viciously. Elbryan could not watch
them and try to react. He had to anticipate, and so he did, flipping his spear
over one hand counterclockwise and then back again, then again clockwise, then
back the other way. He hardly saw the elf's attacks, but he took comfort in the
clicking sounds as the twirling pole picked off each one.
"Well
done!" Tallareyish commented, pressing the attack with every word.
Elbryan's
green eyes sparkled with pride. He kept his focus, though, and knew that he had
to get off the defensive posture. He had spent many hours with Juraviel playing
the game the elves called pellell, resembling something close to a three-tiered
chess match, and he had learned well the value of taking the initiative. At
this point, Tallareyish was playing white, pressing the attack, but Elbryan
meant to reverse that.
Over went
his spinning pole, clockwise to his right, then it went over again, and then a
third time, Elbryan sliding his foot further to the right with each spin.
Tallareyish turned in pursuit and came forward, one step, left foot. Elbryan
tensed.
Another
step, right foot.
Elbryan
caught his long pole in both hands to stop its spin. He threw it out diagonally
to his left, then let go with his left hand, planted the pole against his right
hip with his elbow, and swept it back across in front of him, forcing
Tallareyish to fall a step to the side, forcing the elf's wooden weapon away.
The eager
young man rushed through the opening, shuffling a few steps past Tallareyish's
right flank, then cut a swift pivot, grabbing his pole down low with both hands
and sweeping it back.
It swished
through the air, hitting nothing, and Elbryan's eyes widened in shock as he
came to realize that Tallareyish had followed his move perfectly, had run out
right behind him. Elbryan was not surprised, therefore, when the elf's poles
smacked him, but not so hard, on the rump and the back of the knee. His leg
nearly buckled, but he managed to swing about, his pole still flying in a
desperate, wide arc.
Tallareyish
ducked low under it and double-poked his weapons, stabbing at the young man's
belly twice, though neither connected. The elf came forward suddenly,
furiously, as Elbryan halted the flow of his pole and snapped it back to the
ready, a beautiful recover.
And one that
might have worked against a human or a goblin. Tallareyish, though, was diving
low before the pole ever got back in front of Elbryan. The elf went into a
headlong roll, right between the young man's widespread legs, came up to his
feet behind the yelling and turning Elbryan, and reversed his momentum,
stabbing both his poles back. over his shoulders.
Elbryan was
already into his responding turn but not far enough; and the elf's blades poked
him hard in the kidneys. Waves of pain buckled the young man's legs. He
continued to swing, but he was down on one knee then, and his blurred vision
didn't even register that Tallareyish had moved again.
The next hit,
a heavy slash, caught the young man across the shoulder blades and laid him out
facedown on the wet grass.
Elbryan lay
still for a long, long while, his eyes closed, his thoughts whirling. He had
come in so full of hope, and had gone down so very hard.
"Well
done," he heard above him—Juraviel's voice. The young man rolled
over and opened his eyes; he was surprised to find that Tallareyish was no
longer there, that Juraviel was apparently speaking to him, was, for some
reason that Elbryan could not understand, congratulating him.
"Do you
often salute corpses?" Elbryan asked sarcastically, each word strained
from the pain.
Juraviel
only laughed.
"I
heard you," Elbryan said accusingly.
The elf
stopped his grinning and painted a serious expression, understanding the sudden
gravity and frustration in the young man's tone.
"You
and Lady Dasslerond," Elbryan clarified. "You said that I had come
far in fighting as well."
Juraviel's
expression hardly changed, as if he didn't understand the point Elbryan was
trying to make.
"You
said that!" the frustrated young man accused.
"Indeed,"
replied Juraviel.
"But
here I am." Elbryan spat, pulling himself to his knees and tossing aside
his pole—a useless piece of wood, by his current estimation. He flinched as
he straightened and grabbed at his kidney.
"Here
you are," Juraviel agreed, "fighting better than any, Tuntun
included, would have believed possible."
"Here I
am," Elbryan corrected grimly, "spitting grass."
Juraviel
laughed aloud, something the young man obviously did not appreciate. "Two
in three," the elf remarked.
Elbryan
shook his head, not understanding.
"Tallareyish's
maneuver," Juraviel explained. "The roll through your legs. Two in
three attempts, it will work; the third equals complete disaster."
Elbryan
quieted and considered the thought. He didn't like his odds in that prospect—only one in
three—but the mere fact that he had forced Tallareyish into so desperate
a routine—and any routine that held a reasonable chance of utter failure was
indeed desperate—surprised him.
"And of
the two that work, only half will gain a solid strike," Juraviel went on.
"Even worse, you have now seen the 'shadow dive,' as we call it, and you
will never, ever be taken by it again."
"Tallareyish
was worried," Elbryan said quietly.
"Tallareyish
was nearly beaten," Juraviel agreed. "You executed the plant of your
staff on hip perfectly, and your step timing was without error. Even in running
behind you was Tallareyish forced off his balance; that is why his passing
strikes were of little consequence. Your turn, and subsequent blows, would have
forced a close-quarters parry, at the very least, and no elf desires that with
one of your size and strength."
"So he
dove ahead," Elbryan concluded.
"He was
stumbling anyway," Juraviel explained. "And only that stumble allowed
your mighty swipe to go over his, head." The elf gave a chuckle. "Had
it connected, I fear that Tallareyish would still be lying facedown on the
field!"
Elbryan
managed a smile. To think that he had almost won! To think that he had put one
of the agile elves off his balance!
"When
first we began the sparring, any elf in Caer'alfar could defeat you easily,
with hardly any effort, " Juraviel said. "We drew lots each night to
find your opponent, for none, other than Tuntun, wanted to waste time in
battling you."
Elbryan
chuckled, not surprised that predictable Tuntun enjoyed issuing the beatings.
"Now
your opponents are selected carefully, as we bring to you different fighting
styles, ones that we believe will offer you the greatest challenge. You have
come far."
"I have
far to go."
Juraviel
would not argue the point. "You heard my conversation," he replied.
"Our Lady was not exaggerating when she spoke of your potential, my young
friend. With your great strength, and the elven sword dancing style, you will
be the match of any man, of any elf, of any goblin, of any fomorian. You have
been with us only four years and a season. You have time."
That last
sentence brought a strange feeling over Elbryan. He was indeed grateful for the
kind and optimistic words, and felt better, much better, about his loss to
Tallareyish. But now something else tugged at him and put him on edge. What
might come next for him? Elbryan had come to think of his life with the elves
as a permanent arrangement, had figured that he would live in Andur'Blough
Inninness for the rest of his mortal days. The notion of going out from the
enchanted valley, perhaps of walking with his own kind again, scared him.
But also
intrigued him.
Suddenly the
world seemed much wider.
CHAPTER 14
Jilly
Cat-the-Stray
was more than a little surprised, and embarrassed, when her would-be rescuer
ventured into the Way the following week. To his credit, the gentleman did not
approach her directly, nor did he leer at her or make any remarks whatsoever
that made the young woman feel uncomfortable.
For her
part, Cat kept her distance, offering a shy smile once or twice but mostly
looking the other way. A part of her was very glad that the handsome man had
returned, but another part of her, a very large part, was more than a little
uncomfortable with the whole situation. She was closer to seventeen than
sixteen now, by all appearances no more a girl, and surely the thought of the
handsome man imparted intriguing, warm thoughts.
The man left
early, tipping his floppy beret to Cat as he exited, his light brown eyes
sparkling gaily, and the young woman was both relieved and upset that this
second meeting had ended so abruptly. She shrugged it away, though, and went
about her work, giving the stranger not another thought.
He came into
the Way again the following week.
Again, he
was more than polite, the perfect gentleman, not pressuring Cat to even so much
as offer a greeting to him. He watched her more closely this time, though, and
whenever she looked back, his eyes widened with intensity.
His
intentions were becoming quite clear.
That night,
alone in her room, Cat-the-Stray found it more difficult to dismiss her
thoughts of the man. She wondered what life might be like for her in the years
to come, away from Pettibwa and Graevis perhaps. She dared to fantasize about a
life without work in Fellowship Way, about a life in a home of her own, with
children of her own. That notion inevitably led her back to images of her own
childhood, of her mother . . .
Cat-the-Stray
shook her head violently, as if trying to launch the disturbing half memories
right out of her ear. Suddenly the fantasy became a horrid thing that had no
relevance to her present life. Her place was in the Way, with Graevis and
Pettibwa. This was her home and, though she did not yet realize it, this place
was also her shield against memories too terrible for her to face.
But the
handsome gentleman came back again the night after the next, and then again the
next week, and, predictably, the whispers started that his heart had been
stolen by a certain barmaid. Cat-the-Stray tried to ignore the whispers and the
sidelong glances, but even Pettibwa, cheery cheeked and grinning slyly, caught
Cat's gaze and nodded her head in the man's direction more than once.
"Will
ye wait the man at the table near to the window for me?" the conniving
woman asked often, always with some excuse close at hand.
Cat-the-Stray
could hardly refuse, but she went to the man with a cold demeanor indeed,
asking what he fancied and pointedly clarifying that she was referring to food
or drink only. Again to his credit, the gentleman did not press the young
woman, but ordered some wine only.
He was in
the tavern the next week, as well, and this time, Pettibwa, seeming a bit frustrated
with the young woman, was more straightforward about insisting that the man was
Cat's to serve. Even more disheartening to the frightened young woman, Pettibwa
left the Way a short while later, only to return with Grady.
"Gone
on about long enough by me own thinking," Cat heard the woman say to her
son, to which Grady laughed and eyed Cat directly. He moved from his mother
immediately and took Cat by the hand, pulling her along toward the man who had
become such a regular in the tavern.
Cat
resisted, tugging back, until she noted that half the patrons were watching and
smiling, obviously understanding what was going on.
Cat pulled
her hand from Grady's grasp. "Lead on, then," she muttered grimly, as
if he were some powrie captain walking her to the plank of his barrelboat.
The
gentleman smiled in recognition of Grady when he noticed the approach.
"My
greetings to you; Master Bildeborough," Grady said, sweeping a low bow.
"And
mine to you, Master Chilichunk," Bildeborough replied, though he didn't
bother to get up from his seat and likewise bow.
"I
believe that you are acquainted with my . . ." Grady fished for the right
word, and Cat; blushing fiercely, wanted to smack him on the back of the head.
"My
sister," Grady finished. "By adoption, of course."
"Of
course," Bildeborough agreed. "She is much too beautiful to be a
blood sister of yours!"
Grady's lips
seemed to disappear, but in truth, there was indeed little family resemblance
between him and Cat-the-Stray. The young woman was undeniably beautiful, even
in her plain barmaid's dress. Her hair was long and golden, her eyes a
startlingly clear and rich shade of blue, and her skin silken smooth and
slightly tanned. Everything about her seemed to fit perfectly—her nose,
eyes, and mouth in perfect proportion, her legs and arms long and slender but
certainly not skinny. Her gait enhanced that perception as well, for she walked
with ease and fluidity, always balanced.
"Cat-the-Stray
is her name," Grady said, eyeing the young woman somewhat contemptuously.
"Or at least, that is the name Graevis, my father, gave to her when she
was taken in."
"Orphaned?"
Bildeborough asked, seeming genuinely sympathetic.
Cat nodded,
and her expression told the gentleman to let it go, which, of course, he did.
"And
Cat," continued Grady; "I give to you Master Connor Bildeborough of
Chasewind Manor. Master Bildeborough's father is the brother of Baron
Bildeborough, who presides over the outlands of County Palmaris, third only to
the duke, and of course, they both to the King himself."
Cat realized
that she should have appeared more impressed, but in truth, little about
society had ever meant anything to her. She smiled at the man, at least—and from
Cat-the-Stray, that was something! —and he returned the grin.
"I do
thank you for the introduction," Connor said to Grady, his tone begging
the man to take his leave. Grady was more than willing to comply, practically
shoving Cat right onto the man's lap. as he moved behind her. Grady then gave a
curt bow and rushed away, back to a wide-smiling Pettibwa.
Cat backed
away, glanced over her shoulder, and straightened her dress. She knew that her
face was bright red, and felt the perfect fool, but Connor Bildeborough was no
novice to the ways of courting.
"For
all these weeks, I have come back to the Way hoping that you would once again
find yourself in danger," he said, taking Cat completely off her guard.
"Such a
wonderful wish," the young woman replied sarcastically.
"Well,
I merely wanted to prove to you that I would be willing to rescue you;"
said Connor.
Cat did well
to keep the grimace from her face. Her pride didn't appreciate that
condescending notion—she was never one to think she needed anyone's protection—but again
she managed to check the defensive reflex, consciously reminding herself that
this man truly meant no harm.
"Is not
that the way it is supposed to happen?" Connor asked lightly, pouring half
his wine into an empty glass on the table, then handing Cat the original glass,
from which he had not yet sipped. "The young damsel, caught by fiends,
rescued by the gallant hero?"
Cat couldn't
quite decipher his tone, but she was quite certain that he was not mocking her.
"Rubbish,"
Connor went on. "Perhaps I came here hoping that I would get into a bit of
a stew, so to speak, that you might rescue me."
"And
why would I want to be doing that?"
Cat could
hardly believe she had spoken the words, but her horror vanished when Connor
laughed heartily. "Why, indeed?" he said. "After all, I was a
bit late in getting to the three who came after you, and as I said on that
night, I believe that I did more to help their cause than your own!"
"Are
you mocking me?"
"I am
admiring you, young lady," Connor replied without hesitation.
"Am I
to swoon, then?" Cat asked, growing bolder and more sarcastic. "Should
I run from the Way and hunt up some willing rogues, that your pride be
assuaged?"
Again came
the heartfelt laugh, and this time, despite herself, Cat found herself laughing
with Connor.
"You
are the spirited one," Connor remarked. "A bit of the wild pony in
you, not to doubt!"
Cat's laugh
was buried in confusion as soon as she registered the analogy. Something about
the comparison, something she could not grasp, tugged hard at her, begging for
release.
"My
apologies," Connor said a few moment's later. "I meant no
disrespect."
That wasn't
it at all, Cat silently replied, but to Connor, she said nothing.
"By my
heart, my remark referred not at all to your virtue, which I would not
question," Connor went on sincerely.
Cat nodded
to him and managed a smile. "I have my work..." she started to say.
"Might
we walk when you are done?" Connor asked boldly. "I have waited these
weeks—more than a month it has been just to be told your name. Might we
walk?"
Cat didn't
know what to reply. "I must ask Pettibwa," she explained, only to buy
herself some time.
"I will
assure her of my honor," Connor asserted and started to rise.
Cat caught
him by the shoulder—her strength seemed to surprise him—and held him back. "No need,"
she assured him. "No need."
She smiled
at him again, pushed the wineglass, from which she had not sipped, back in
front of him, and took her leave.
"Oh, by
me eyes, he's a handsome one!" Pettibwa beamed when she caught up to Cat
in the small kitchen behind the bar area a short while later. The older woman
clapped her pudgy hands before her, her toothy smile nearly taking in her ears.
She clapped her hands again, then wrapped Cat in a bone-crushing hug.
"I had
not noticed," Cat replied coolly, not returning the hug and trying hard to
keep her expression blank as Pettibwa jumped back to arm's length.
"Hadn't
ye, now?"
"You
embarrassed me."
"Meself?"
Pettibwa said innocently. "Ah, but, me girl, ye'd never find one sweet for
ye if I left ye to yer own doings. Why, ye act like no man's a good man!"
The woman gave a bawdy wink. "So tell me now that ye're not feeling a bit
warm in yer belly, and a bit o' the tingling, when ye look upon Master
Bildeborough."
Cat blushed
fiercely, all the confirmation Pettibwa needed.
"No
reason for embarrassment," the woman said. "It's all so
natural." She hooked one finger in the cleavage of Cat's dress, pulled the
dress lower, and shook her hand about, so that the young woman's breasts
jiggled. "And what are ye thinkin' these are for?" Pettibwa asked.
Cat's look
was one of pure horror.
"For
catchin' men and feeding babies," the woman said with a wink. "And ye
can't get the latter without the former!"
"Pettibwa!"
"Oh, go
on then!" Pettibwa shot back. "I know ye think he's handsome, and who
wouldn't? And well mannered and up to his waist in the gold, too. Nephew of the
Baron himself! Why, even me Grady's speaking highly o' the man, and ye be
knowing, by Grady's words, that the man's speaking highly o' Cat-the-Stray.
Sure there's a sparkle in his eye when he's looking on ye, and his pants are
gettin' a bit too ti—"
"Pettibwa!"
The older
woman laughed riotously, and Cat took the welcomed break in the conversation to
consider her words. Grady was all for this, so said Pettibwa, but Cat knew that
had little to do with the demeanor of her would-be suitor. If she was set up
with a nobleman, the gain fox Grady would be twofold. First, he'd have the
prestige of being related to the nobility, a sure invitation to any important
social event, and most of all, with Cat's needs attended to by outside money,
she could have no claim on the lucrative Fellowship Way.
So Grady's
enthusiasm for this alliance held little weight with Cat, but Pettibwa's
exuberance was a bit harder to dismiss. Through all the bawdy talk, Cat could
see that her adopted mother was indeed thrilled at the prospect of Cat being
courted, especially by one as influential and handsome as Master Connor
Bildeborough of Chasewind Manor.
So what did
Cat think? That was the real question, the only one that truly mattered, but
the young woman couldn't look at things that way, not now, not with Pettibwa
beaming more brightly than ever.
"He
asked me to walk with him when I am done with my work," Cat admitted.
"Oh,
do!" Pettibwa said. "And if he means to kiss ye, then let him,"
she said, tapping Cat on the cheek.
"But
these," Pettibwa went on, hooking her finger again and giving Cat's
breasts another jiggle, "these'll wait a bit."
Cat blushed
again and looked away, pointedly did not look down. Her breasts had developed
late, just past her sixteenth birthday, and, though by any standards they only
added to her beautiful, feminine form, she had never been comfortable with
them. They represented another side of the girl, a womanly side, sensual,
sexual—a part that Cat's free and girlish spirit was not yet ready to
admit. Graevis used to wrestle with her; had helped her to mature her fighting
skills, but once those breasts had swelled, the man stayed away. It was as if
they were a boundary between Cat and her beloved adopted father, a signal that
she was not his little girl any longer.
In truth,
Cat had never been his "little girl." That had been reserved for
another man, in some place far away, a place that Cat could not remember.
She wasn't
ready to grow up yet, not all the way.
And yet she
couldn't ignore the advances of handsome Connor Bildeborough, not at the price
of breaking Pettibwa's heart.
She went for
the walk, and truly had a lovely time, for she found that Connor was as easy to
talk to as he was to look at. He let her lead the conversation, down any avenue
of her choosing, and was careful not to question her too personally on any
points. She told him, only that she was not really the daughter of the
Chilichunks, but had been adopted in a faraway village called, according to
Graevis, Weedy Meadow. "Have you ever heard a name so foolish?" she
said, embarrassed. She went on to explain that she didn't know where she had
been before that, didn't know of her family or her real name.
Connor left
her at the door of the private quarters behind Fellowship Way. He didn't even
try to kiss her, not on the face anyway, only took her hand in his own and put
it gently to his lips.
"I will
come back," he promised, "but only if you so desire."
Before she
could even consider the question or the implications, Cat found herself
mesmerized by the way his lashes closed upon those beautiful brown eyes. He was
tall—he had to be close to six feet—and slender, but his body was hard with
well-honed muscles. Strange emotions swirled in Cat as he lightly touched her
arm, vaguely familiar feelings but ones she had not felt in several years.
"May I,
Cat?" he asked.
"No,"
she replied, and his expression became crestfallen. "Not Cat," she
explained quickly, and then, with a most curious expression, she said,
"Jilly."
"Jilly?"
"Or
Jill," the young woman replied, seeming sincerely confused. "Jill.
Jill, not Cat. They used to call me Jilly."
Her
excitement mounted with each word, and so did Connor's. "Your name!"
he exclaimed. "You've remembered it!"
"Not
Cat, never Cat," Jill said firmly. "It is Jilly, Jill. I am sure of
it!"
He kissed
her, right on the lips, but he backed off at once as if in apology, as if to
let her know that it was unintentional, a consequence of his sudden joy.
Jill let it
go without a word.
"You
must go and tell Pettibwa," Connor bade her, "though surely I hate to
part with you now." He tipped his chin toward the door behind the young
woman.
Jill nodded
and moved to leave, but Connor caught her by the shoulder and turned her about
to face him.
"May I
return to Fellowship Way?" he asked in all seriousness.
Jill thought
of some smart remark about the tavern being a public place, but she held her
tongue and merely nodded, offering a warm smile. There followed a tense moment—Jill, and
probably Connor, not sure if he would try to kiss her again.
He didn't;
he just grabbed her hand in both of his, squeezed it warmly, then turned and
walked away.
Jill wasn't
sure if she was glad of that or not.
Pettibwa
accepted the news with the purest joy Jill was afraid that the woman would be
hurt when she cast off the name Graevis had given to her. Far from it, though,
the woman bubbled with joyful tears. "Not fittin' to be calling ye Cat
when ye're no more a girl," she said, wrapping Jill in a hug, falling over
her so heavily that the strong young woman could hardly hold them both upright.
Jill went to
bed that night full of warm feelings, some pleasant, others too intense, too
uncomfortable for her to understand. Her thoughts careened back and forth
between the realization of her true name and her experience with Connor. So
much had happened in a single night! So many emotions and memories had come
rushing to the surface. Now she knew her name: Jill—though she
knew that she was more often called Jilly.
And that
feeling when Connor was close to her! How could she sweat so much on such a
cool night?
That
feeling, too, seemed something out of her past, something wonderful and
terrifying all at once.
She couldn't
place it, and didn't try. She knew her name now; and suspected that alone would
begin to bring other memories back to her. And so it was with a true jumble of
emotions, a purely teenage churning of confusion, fear and warmth, happiness
and the verge of terror, that the young woman, no longer Cat-the-Stray, drifted
off to a sleep of the sweetest dreams and the starkest nightmares.
CHAPTER 15
Miss Pippin
They were
out beyond sight of land all too quickly, rolling on great swells and an aroma
so thick that Avelyn felt as if he could float atop it. They were busy every
minute, checking and rechecking lines, adjusting the rigging, for the
Windrunner hadn't been out to deep sea in several years and Captain Adjonas was
clearly nervous. Old Bunkus Smealy seemed to take extra pleasure in ordering
the monks on any particularly dangerous task.
But the old
sea dog couldn't fathom the level of physical training these four men had
endured. He ordered Thagraine and Quintall up the yard of the mainmast, and so
up they went, faster than any crewman on the Windrunner. Smealy sent them far
out on the yard, and they went easily, hanging under, hand over hand, adjusting
the rigging and then sliding down the ropes to stand on the deck right beside
the first hand.
"Well,
next for ye—" Smealy began, but Quintall cut him short.
"Take
care, Master Smealy," the monk said calmly. "We are as part of the
crew, and as such, will work—" He paused, his stare boring into
the man. They were about the same height, but Quintall carried an extra fifty
pounds, every one of them hardened muscle.. "—as the crew
works," Quintall finished ominously. "If you entertain thoughts of
working the brothers of St.-Mere-Abelle beyond what you demand of the regular
crew, then accompany those thoughts with visions of swimming."
Smealy
squinted perhaps a dozen times in the next few seconds and lifted a hand to
scratch hard at his gray hair—to kill a few lice, Avelyn figured. The
twitchy little man looked across the open deck, past the staring eyes of the
crewmen, to the tall, regal figure of Captain Adjonas.
Quintall
suspected that he and his fellow brothers might be fighting very soon, but so
be it. He had to set the ground rules right away or this would be a long and
perilous journey indeed. This was Adjonas' ship, that Quintall did not dispute,
but the abbey had paid well for this transport and the brothers had not been
put aboard as slaves.
To the
relief of the monks—though Quintall felt a bit of disappointment Adjonas tipped his
great feathered hat to the monk and nodded slightly, a clear sign of respect.
Quintall
glowered at Smealy, the old sea dog trembling with frustration. Smealy glanced
at each of the four monks, spat something unintelligible, then stormed away,
taking out his rage on the nearest crewmen.
"You
took a chance," Pellimar remarked.
Quintall
nodded. "Would you have us treated as cattle?" he asked. "We
would all be dead before we ever reached Pimaninicuit." He grunted and
started away.
"Not
all, perhaps," Thagraine remarked, stopping Quintall short.
Avelyn and
Pellimar held their breath at the bold words. The monks still carried some
jealousy, Avelyn—and obviously Thagraine—realized, concerning which pair would go
onto Pimaninicuit.
Quintall
turned slowly. Two long strides brought him right up to Thagraine. "You
might have fallen from the mast," he said bluntly, his tone making the
statement sound like a threat. "And then I would journey to the
island."
"But I
did not fall."
"And I
did not push you," Quintall stated. "You have been given your duty,
and I mine. I will get you to Pimaninicuit." He glanced Avelyn's way.
"Both of you, and if Captain Adjonas or Bunker Smealy—or any
others aboard the Windrunner—conspire differently, they will answer to
Quintall."
"And to
Pellimar," the fourth monk added.
"And to
Thagraine," the man said, smiling.
"And to
Avelyn," Avelyn was compelled to add. The bond was immediate and secure,
the four monks putting aside their personal squabbles in light of potentially
more dangerous enemies. Avelyn, who had worked so closely with Quintall for
more than four years, found that he believed the man wholly. He looked at
Thagraine, who by fate had become his most trusted ally, and he smiled when he
noted that the man and Pellimar, who had been together a year longer than had
Avelyn and Quintall, had clasped wrists firmly, staring eye to eye.
It was indeed
a good start.
No land came
in sight for three days, the Windrunner making a direct run to the southeastern
point of the Gulf of Corona, the northern tip of the region known as the Mantis
Arm. They saw a light after dusk on that third day, far to the south but
obviously high above the waterline.
"Pireth
Tulme," Captain Adjonas explained to his guests. "The Coastpoint
Guards."
"Whatever
it may be," Pellimar put in, "it is good to see a sign of land
again."
"You
will be seeing it often over the next two weeks," Adjonas replied.
"We will run the length of the Mantis Arm near to the shore, then to
deeper water in a straight run to Freeport and Entel."
"And
then?" Pellimar's voice was full of anticipation.
"And
then we have just begun," Quintall put in firmly. The stocky man knew
their course better than his three companions, as part of his private training
with Master Siherton. The dangers of such a voyage were many, but perhaps most
prominent among them was the danger to the mind. Pellimar seemed too eager, as
if he expected Pimaninicuit to be quite close to Entel, but in truth, the
Windrunner would likely spend the better part of four months getting to the
island, and that was assuming favorable winds. Even if they arrived at
Pimaninicuit early, they would only spend their days encircling the island,
awaiting the day of the stone showers.
"Then
we turn more directly south," Captain Adjonas added.
"In
sight of land?" Pellimar asked.
Adjonas
scoffed at the absurd notion. "The only land to be seen would be the coast
of Behren."
"We are
not at war with Behren," Pellimar promptly put in.
"But
the southern kingdom has little control over its raiders," Adjonas
explained. "To be in sight of land would mean to be in sight of
pirates." He snorted and walked away, but paused, looked back, and
motioned to them.
The four
began to follow.
"Only
you," Adjonas said, pointing to Quintall.
The stocky
man followed the captain into his private quarters, leaving his three curious
companions out on the deck with the cold, wet wind and the distant light of
Pireth Tulme.
Quintall
returned to them much later that evening, belowdecks in the closet-sized
compartment they now called their home. There was something weird about his
smile, Avelyn noted, something misplaced.
Quintall
took Thagraine's arm and led him out of the cubby, then the stocky man returned
alone.
"Where?"
Pellimar asked.
"You
will learn soon enough'," Quintall replied "I think two is enough for
one night." He moved to his bunk as Pellimar and Avelyn exchanged
unknowing shrugs. Their curiosity only heightened as Quintall chuckled
repeatedly, until he fell away into a sound slumber.
Thagraine
was likewise chuckling the next day on the deck. Avelyn wasn't sure the man had
ever rejoined them the previous night, and indeed he looked haggard but
certainly not displeased. The stoic Avelyn dismissed it, all of it. Apparently
Quintall and Thagraine's secret posed no threat, so whatever it might be really
didn't matter. For now Avelyn, had his duties, and his goal was growing closer with
each gliding league.
Pellimar,
though, was not so patient. He prodded Quintall repeatedly, and when he got
nowhere with the stocky man, he went to his older friend. Finally, after the
bright sun had nearly reached its zenith, Quintall and Thagraine exchanged
nods.
"The
ceremony of necessity," Quintall explained with a grin—a rather
lewd grin, Avelyn thought.
"A fine
one," Thagraine put in. "Not so long in the trade, I'd guess."
Avelyn
narrowed his eyes, trying vainly to decipher the cryptic talk.
"Not here,"
Pellimar breathed hopefully, having apparently figured it all out. Avelyn
looked at him for some clue.
"Only
for Captain Adjonas," Quintall explained, "and for the four of us,
who have earned the captain's respect."
"Not so
long a trip then!" Pellimar cried. "Direct me!"
"Ah,
but, you have rigging to tie," Thagraine teased.
"And
I'll work all the better after the—"
"Ceremony
of necessity," Thagraine and Quintall said together, laughing. Quintall
nodded his approval and Thagraine led the eager Pellimar away.
"What
are you talking about?" Avelyn demanded.
"Poor
dear Avelyn," chided Quintall. "Sheltered in your mother's arms, you
have never learned of such treasures."
Quintall
would say no more about it, leaving Avelyn chewing his lip in frustration for the
rest of the afternoon. Avelyn stubbornly decided that he would ask no more,
that he would overcome his curiosity, treating it as a weakness.
That
discipline lasted only until the four took their supper, a bowl of lumpy,
lukewarm porridge in the tight quarters of their small room, when Quintall
talked of taking "first watch."
"We set
no watch," Avelyn protested. "That is the job for the common
crew." The monk certainly wanted no part of a night watch on the decks,
for a soaking rain had started, and even the smelly, damp cabin was better than
walking the slick decks, or even worse, climbing the masts.
"I am
second," Thagraine said quickly, to Pellimar's dismay.
"Fear
not," Quintall said to Pellimar, "for I am sure that Thagraine's
watch will not last long." That brought a laugh from both men, obviously
at Thagraine's expense.
Avelyn
shoved his plate forward forcefully, angered now at being left out of their
little secret. It wasn't until Quintall had left, though, that he finally got
the clue he needed.
"She's
a fine one," Pellimar remarked, quite offhandedly. Thagraine's face as he
glanced Avelyn's way showed that he was disappointed; that alone clued Avelyn
in to the fact that Pellimar had slipped.
"She?"
Avelyn asked.
"The
ship's whore," Thagraine admitted, scowling at Pellimar. "I am
thinking that your watch, Brother Pellimar, just became the fourth."
"Third,"
Pellimar insisted. "If Avelyn desires a ride this night, he can wait until
I've finished!"
Brother
Avelyn sat back, thoroughly overwhelmed. The ship's whore? The ceremony of
necessity? His hands grew clammy—more out of sheer fear than anticipation.
He had never expected such a thing, could not comprehend that his companions,
on the most important journey of their lives should they live a century, would
surrender to such base urges.
"Surely
you are not offended," Thagraine scoffed at him. "Ah, but it is
simple embarrassment, then. Why, my dear Pellimar, I do believe that our
companion here has never ridden a woman."
Ridden a
woman? The coarse image burned in Avelyn's mind. To hear his fellow monks
speaking of something as sacred as love in such crude terms did surprise and
offend him.
He said
nothing, though, fearful of making a fool of himself. Avelyn understood that he
could lose more than a little respect from the other three, and that any
mistakes could cost him dearly as the weeks aboard the Windrunner dragged on.
"You go
after Thagraine," he said to Pellimar, trying to keep his voice as steady
as possible. "I will wait for another time." He turned to lie on his
cot then, noting the judging look Thagraine was sending his way. There would be
a measure in this of his manhood, Avelyn realized, a test he could not fail. To
completely lose the respect of Thagraine, or any of the others, could jeopardize
it all. There were replacements for Pimaninicuit, after all, and Quintall, so
strong and virile, Quintall, no doubt practiced in the arts of lovemaking,
Quintall, who would likely visit this woman daily at the very least, was next
in line for the island.
But the
thought of actually going to see the woman terrified Avelyn. Thagraine's
perception of his sexual past was indeed accurate. All his adult life had been
devoted to his studies; there had been no time for such diversions. He tried to
push it all from his mind and find solace in sleep, but he got another shock
when Thagraine and Pellimar began speaking in quite familiar terms of a certain
maidservant and two of the cook's helpers back at the abbey.
"More
practiced than any of them," Thagraine assured Pellimar, speaking of the
ship's woman.
"Yes,
but the young one," Pellimar argued, his voice almost wistful. "Bien
deLouisa was her name, was it not?"
Avelyn's
stomach churned; he knew the woman, hardly more than a girl. She worked in the
kitchen at St.-Mere-Abelle, a beautiful young lady with long black hair and
dark, mysterious eyes.
And now
these two fellow brothers were comparing her lovemaking techniques!
Avelyn found
he could hardly breathe. Had he been so blind as that? He had never even
suspected that anything so sordid could go on at St.-Mere-Abelle.
He didn't
sleep well at all that night.
* * *
The weather
was rough over the next few days—mercifully so, in Avelyn's estimation,
because he and his companions were kept very busy, attending rigging, a dangerous
yet thrilling exercise in the gusting winds, and crawling in the dark
belowdecks, checking for leaks in the hull. At one point, they even took up
buckets as part of a balling line.
The grueling
schedule, though, allowed Avelyn the opportunity to put off his more personal
problems. He knew what would be expected of him—the other three viewed sexuality as a test
of manhood—and, on one level, at least, he was indeed intrigued. More than
that, however, Avelyn was simply terrified. He had never known a woman in that
way, and didn't know how he would react. Every time he passed that cabin door,
a small stateroom just behind the quarters of Captain Adjonas, he trembled.
His sleep
every night was fitful, tossing and turning even more than did the Windrunner
on the rough swells. All his dreams melded into that singular, mounting fear.
He began to envision monsters behind that door, a horrid caricature of a woman,
of his mother even, leering at him as he entered, eager to destroy his finer
feelings, to steal his very soul. But even those nightmares were not quite that
simple, for Avelyn's other instincts, more base than any he had ever allowed
himself to feel, often made him attack that female demon as fiercely as she
attacked him, wrestling and kicking, biting in furious, uncontrollable passion.
He awoke always in a cold sweat, and one time found himself in an even more
uncomfortable position.
It had to
happen: the weather cleared. The Windrunner glided easily over calmer seas, the
southern reaches of the Mantis Arm's coast a gray blur to the west. The four
monks were on deck when Bunkus Smealy informed them that they would have no
formal duties that day, that they might go about their business. "I know
ye've a bit of prayin' to catch up on," the old sea dog said, mostly to
Quintall, with a lewd wink. "Say a prayer for me, if ye'd be so
kind."
"One
for every man on the ship," Thagraine piped in, bringing on a cackling fit
of laughter in Smealy. The old man ambled away on bowed legs.
"I
could indeed use a round of morning exercise," Thagraine added jubilantly
when they were alone once more. He rubbed his hands together and started aft.
Quintall
caught him by the shoulder. "Avelyn," the stocky man said. Thagraine
turned to regard him. "We have all tasted the sweetness of Miss
Pippin," Quintall explained, "except for our brother Avelyn."
Three sets
of eyes bore down on the young monk, who felt small indeed. "Go," the
nervous young monk bade Thagraine, before he hardly considered his options.
"I am weary from the days of storm."
"Hold!"
Quintall said forcefully, stopping Thagraine before he had taken a single step.
To Avelyn, he asked, "Are you to join with the barrelbumpers then?"
Avelyn's
eyebrows rose with curiosity. He had heard the term before, and he knew
Quintall and the others used it for the common seamen, but he had no idea what
it meant. Now, putting it so obviously in sexual terms only confused poor
Avelyn even more.
"Yes,"
Quintall remarked quietly, "that might be more to your liking."
Thagraine and Pellimar chuckled; Avelyn noted that they tried to stifle the
laughs and were thus somewhat sympathetic to him, at least.
"I know
not of what you speak, Brother Quintall," he replied bluntly, firming his
jaw. "Perhaps you would tell me what a `barrelbumper' might be."
That brought
a loud snort from Pellimar. Thagraine nudged him hard.
Avelyn
scrunched his face with distaste and disbelief. To see other members of his
order acting so . . . juvenile was the only word he could think of to describe
it, pained him greatly.
"Do you
see that barrel," Quintall happily explained, pointing across the open
deck to a single keg set far forward.
Avelyn
nodded gravely, not liking where this was going.
"It has
a small hole in one side," Quintall went on, "for those who cannot
use the woman."
Avelyn took
a deep breath, trying to calm his mounting anger.
"Of
course, you'll have to pay on your appointed night," Quintall finished.
"The
night you are in the barrel!" Thagraine howled, and all three broke into
laughter.
Avelyn saw
nothing at all humorous in the ridiculous joke, nor did the few crewmen close
enough at hand to hear the insults. For Avelyn, this was a most sacred mission,
the most important duty of the Abellican Church, and to profane it so by
indulging in a shipboard orgy, was surely blasphemous.
"The
woman was sanctioned by Father Abbot Markwart," Quintall said suddenly,
sternly, as if he had read Avelyn's thoughts—not so difficult a feat, given the man's
sour expression. "In his wisdom, he knows the trying times of a shipboard
voyage and would have us reach Pimaninicuit healthy of mind and body."
"And
what of soul?" Avelyn asked, but Quintall snorted at the notion.
"The
choice is yours," Quintall finished.
Avelyn
didn't think so, not at all. He had been called onto the table, so to speak.
His actions now carried serious consequences concerning his future dealings
with his three companions. If he didn't have their respect, he couldn't expect
their loyalty, and given the level of jealousy that had been creeping about the
four since they had become the chosen Preparers . . .
Avelyn took
a bold step, cutting between Quintall and Thagraine. The stocky man willingly
fell back, a smirk on his dark face—darker now for the week of beard—but
Thagraine put his arm out to hold Avelyn back.
"After
me," the monk said firmly.
Too angry
for debate, Avelyn hooked his arm under, then up and over Thagraine's and gave
a sharp tug to put the monk off balance. Avelyn then let go and dropped into a
leg sweep that left Thagraine lying flat on the deck. Not wanting to continue
the struggle, Avelyn was up and walking fast before the felled monk could
respond.
Quintall's
laughter followed him.
Captain
Adjonas came out of his room as Avelyn neared. He looked at the flustered young
monk, then across the deck at the other three. His grin was telling when he
looked back at Avelyn, and he merely tipped his great feathered hat and
continued on his way.
Avelyn
didn't look back. He stalked up to the stateroom and lifted his hand to knock,
then thought that perfectly ridiculous and simply walked in.
He caught
her by surprise, wearing only a dirty nightshirt. She jumped when he briskly
entered, pulling the covers from her bed up before her.
She wasn't
what he expected—and was certainly not the monster of his dreams. She was younger
than he, probably just a year or so past twenty, with long black hair and blue
eyes that had long ago lost their sparkle. Her face seemed tiny, framed by the
voluminous hair, but cute, if not beautiful, and her frame, too, was small and
thin. Avelyn suspected that to be from lack of food not from any desire to be
fashionable.
She looked
at Avelyn curiously, her fear fast-fading. "One o' the monks, then?"
she asked in a throaty voice. "He said there'd be four, but I thought I'd
seen all. . ." She paused and shook her head, apparently confused.
Avelyn
swallowed hard; she was so oblivious of her partners that she didn't even know
how many of them had visited her.
"Are
ye?"
"What?"
"A
monk?"
Avelyn
nodded.
"Well,
good enough then," she said, and she tossed the blanket onto the bed, then
reached for the hem of her short shirt, pulling it up.
"No!"
Avelyn said, near panic. He noted bruises on her legs, his eyes drawn down
despite his good intentions. And the dirtiness of the woman assaulted him. Not that
he was any cleaner; it amazed Avelyn how difficult it was to stay washed in the
middle of so much water.
"Not
yet," Avelyn quickly clarified, seeing the woman's stunned expression.
"I mean . . . what is your name?"
"Me
name?" she replied, and then she thought about it and chuckled and
shrugged. "Yer friend calls me Miss Pippin."
"Your
real name," Avelyn insisted.
The woman
looked at him long and hard, obviously confused and surprised but also seeming
a bit intrigued. "All right then," she said at length. "Call me
Dansally. Dansally Comerwick."
"I am
Avelyn Desbris," the monk responded.
"Well,
are ye ready then, Avelyn Desbris?" Dansally asked, pulling up the hem a
bit more and striking a teasing pose.
Avelyn
considered the sight from two widely disparate viewpoints. Part of him wanted
to take her up on the offer, to rush right over and crush her under him; but
another part, the part that had spent more than half of Avelyn's life in
fervent effort to elevate him and all of mankind somehow above this level—above
following base, animalistic urges without thought, without reason—could not
accept it.
"No,"
he said again, walking near her and gently moving her hand away so that the
nightshirt slipped back down over her legs.
"What
would ye have me do?" the confused woman asked.
"Talk,"
Avelyn answered calmly, under control.
"Talk?
And what would ye have me say?" she asked, a mischievous, lewd sparkle
coming to her blue eyes.
"Tell
me where you are from," Avelyn bade her. "Tell me of your life before
this."
If he had
slapped her, she would not have looked more wounded. "How dare ye?"
she asked.
Avelyn
couldn't hide a smile. She seemed insulted, as if he had gotten too personal
with her, and yet she was offering willingly what should have been the most
personal thing of all! He held up his hands and backed off a step.
"Please
sit, Dansally Comerwick," he bade, motioning at the bed. "I mean you
no harm."
"I am
here for a reason," she said dryly, but she did sit on the edge of the
bed.
"To
give us comfort," Avelyn said, nodding. "And my comfort will come in
the form of conversation. I would like to know you."
"To
save me, then?" Dansally asked sarcastically. "To tell me where I
wandered from the righteous path and guide me back to it?"
"I
would never presume to judge you," Avelyn said sincerely. "But indeed
I would like to understand this, which I apparently cannot comprehend."
"Have
ye never felt a bit funny then?" she asked, again with that teasing
sparkle. "A bit itchy?"
"I am a
man," Avelyn assured her in all confidence. "But I am not certain
that my definition of the term and that of my companions is nearly the
same."
Dansally,
not a stupid woman, settled back and digested the words. She had spent the four
days of the storm alone—except for the regular visits of Quintall,
who never seemed to get enough of her. In truth, though, Dansally had felt
alone for so very long—for all the voyage to and from St.-Mere-Abelle and for years
before that.
It took more
than a bit of coaxing, but at last Avelyn got the woman to answer his
questions, to speak with him as she might a friend. He spent the better part of
two hours with her, sitting and
talking.
"I
should go back to my duties now," Avelyn said at last. He patted her hand
and rose, heading for the door.
"Are ye
sure ye'll not stay just a bit longer?" Dansally asked. Avelyn looked back
to see her stretched languidly on the bed, blue eyes sparkling.
"No,"
he answered quietly, with respect. He paused a moment, considering the wider
picture. "But I would ask a favor."
"Don't
ye worry," Dansally replied with a wink before he could begin to ask.
"Yer friends'll look on ye with respect, don't ye doubt!"
Avelyn
returned her smile warmly. He found that he believed her, and he walked back
out into the sunlight truly relieved, but not in the way that the others,
particularly Quintall, could ever have guessed.
Avelyn
visited Dansally at least as often as all the others, sitting and talking,
laughing, and one night even with Dansally crying on his shoulder. She had lost
a baby, so she told him, stillborn, and her outraged husband had thrown her out
into the street.
As soon as
the story came pouring out, Dansally pulled away from Avelyn and sat staring
hard at the man. She couldn't believe she had so opened up to him. It made her
more than a bit uncomfortable, for Avelyn, with his clothes on, had reached her
in ways that the others never could, had touched a very private part of her
indeed.
"He was
a dog," Avelyn said, "and no better. And a fool, Dansally Comerwick,
for no man could ask for a better companion."
"There
goes Brother Avelyn Desbris," Dansally said with a huge sigh. "Savin'
me again."
"I
would guess that you need less saving than most," Avelyn replied. His
words, the sincerity of his tone, struck her dumb. She dropped her gaze to the
floor and the tears came again.
Avelyn went
to her and hugged her.
The
Windrunner made great time, cutting southwest from the southern reaches of the
Mantis Arm in a direct run to Freeport. Adjonas swung her out wide at first,
explaining that it would not do to be too close to treacherous Falidean Bay,
where the water could rise forty feet in twenty minutes and the undertow of the
tremendous flood tide could pull a sailing ship against gale winds and smash it
to bits on the rocks.
They put
into Freeport only briefly, with but a handful of sailors going ashore in the
boat. The Windrunner caught the next tide away from the unlawful and dangerous
place, and they were soon into Entel harbor.
Entel was
the third largest city in Corona, behind Ursal, the throne seat, and Palmaris.
The wharves were long enough in water deep enough for the Windrunner to dock,
and Adjonas gave leave for all hands to go ashore, in two shifts.
On
Quintall's orders, the four monks ventured out together to see the city.
Pellimar suggested that they pay a visit to the local abbey. Thagraine and
Avelyn nodded, but pragmatic Quintall overruled that choice, fearing that any
discussion of what might have brought four brothers of St.-Mere-Abelle so far
south could lead to some uncomfortable questions. The secrets of Pimaninicuit
were the domain of St.-Mere-Abelle only; according to Master Siherton, even the
other abbeys of the Abellican Church knew little concerning the source of the
magic stones.
Avelyn
remembered the speech Master Jojonah had given him when first they had talked
about the island, the stern warning that to utter even its name to any without
sanction of Father Abbot Markwart was punishable by death, and he agreed with
Quintall's logic.
So they
spent the day walking and marveling at the sights of the great city, at the
thick rows of exotic flowers in the tree-lined green that centered the place,
at the shining white buildings, at the frantic bazaar, the largest open market
that any of them had seen, reputably the largest open market in all
Honce-the-Bear. Even the vivid, bright colors of the clothing of Entel's
inhabitants struck the four as unusual. The city, it was said, was more akin to
those of exotic Behren than to any in Honce-the-Bear, and Avelyn, after half a
day of one astounding sight after another, decided that he would indeed enjoy a
visit to Behren.
"Another
time, perhaps," he whispered, looking over his shoulder as he made his way
back aboard the Windrunner, the sun dipping over the city.
Resupplied,
the Windrunner put out the next day, sails full of wind with a favorable tide,
sailing fast to the south.
Avelyn got
his wish sooner than expected, for, without explanation, Captain Adjonas put
his ship into the next harbor in line, Jacintha, just a score of miles to the
south, but across the mountain range that divided the kingdoms.
The three
nervous monks looked to Quintall for answers, but he had none, caught as
completely off his guard as the others. He went at once to the captain,
demanding an explanation.
"None
know the southern waters better than the sailors of Behren," Adjonas
explained. "What winds we should catch, what troubles we might face. I
have friends here, valuable friends."
"Take
care that your questions do not lead your contacts to the way to Pimaninicuit,"
Quintall whispered ominously.
Adjonas
straightened, the blood rushing to his face, making that garish scar seem all
the more imposing. But Quintall did not back down an inch. "I will
accompany you to your . . . friends."
"Then
change out of your telling robes, Brother Quintall," Adjonas replied.
"I'll not guarantee your safety."
"Nor I
yours."
The pair,
along with Bunkus Smealy, went out late that afternoon, leaving the nervous
gazes of three monks and thirty crewmen at the rail. Pellimar relieved his tensions
with a visit to the woman—to Avelyn's satisfaction, his companions
still didn't know her real name—but Avelyn and Thagraine remained at the
rail, watching the sunset and then the lights of the structures that lined the
harbor.
Finally came
the welcome sound of oars and the boat, all three safely aboard. "We are
out in the morning, at first light," Adjonas said sharply to Smealy and to
the nearby crew when the three gained the deck.
Thagraine
and Avelyn exchanged grave looks, given the man's uncharacteristic tone and the
severe look on Quintall's face.
"The
waters are not clear, by any reports," Quintall explained to his brothers.
"Pirates?"
asked Thagraine.
"Yes,
that and powries."
Avelynsighed
and moved back to gaze at the unfamiliar landscape, layers of lights lifting up
to the darkness of the great range known as the Belt-and-Buckle. He felt so far
from home, and now, with the vast open Mirianic looming before him and the talk
of fierce powries, he began to understand that he had much further yet to go.
He, too,
visited Dansally that night. Brother Avelyn needed a friend.
CHAPTER 16
Endwar
Elbryan's
fifth summer in Andur'Blough Inninness was among the very best times in all his
young life. He was no more a boy but a young and strong man, with all traces of
his youth gone except for a mischievous streak Tuntun feared he would never be
rid of. He continued his ritual with the milk-stones, running out eagerly each
morning, attacking the task with pride, for he could see the difference the
continual exercise had made on his tall, graceful form. His legs were long and
covered with muscle, and his arms had grown huge, each muscle clearly defined.
When Elbryan bent his fist forward and flexed, he couldn't put his other hand—and his
hands were not small by human standards!—halfway around the bulging forearm.
But even
with all that mass, there was nothing awkward about the young man. He danced
with the elves, he fought with the elves, he skipped along the winding trails
of Andur'Blough Inninness. His light brown hair had grown long, to his
shoulders, but he kept it clean and neatly trimmed, pushed back from his face,
which he still kept clean shaven.
He was
welcomed in every elven ritual now—in every dance, in every celebration, in
every hunt—but still, perhaps more than ever, Elbryan felt alone. It wasn't
that he craved human companionship; he continued to fear that thought greatly.
It was simply Elbryan's realization of how different he was from these
creatures, and not just in stature. They had taught him to view the world as an
elf might, with utter freedom and often more veiled in imagination than
reality. Elbryan found that he could not possibly maintain such a stance. His
sense of order was simply too strong, his sense of right and wrong too keenly
developed. He expressed that sentiment to Juraviel one quiet afternoon, he and
the elf out on a long walk, talking of the plants and animals.
Juraviel
stopped in his tracks and stared at the young man. "Could you expect
differently?" he asked simply.
It wasn't the
wording but the way Juraviel spoke that offered Elbryan comfort. For the first
time, he realized that perhaps the elves were not expecting him to be as one of
them.
"We are
showing you a different way to view the world about you," Juraviel
explained, "one that will aid you in your journeys and trials. We are
giving you tools that will put you above your kin."
"Why?"
Elbryan asked simply. "Why was I chosen for these gig?"
"Blood
of Mather," Juraviel replied, a phrase the young man had heard all too
often, usually derisively, from Tuntun. "Mather was your uncle, your
father's oldest brother."
As he spoke,
Elbryan found his mind drifting back to a specific place and moment, a time
nearly five years previous, when he had stood on the ridge outside of Dundalis,
Pony beside him, looking up at the glowing Halo. Though his mind conjured that
image, that feeling, and placed him squarely within that space and time, he
remained alert to Juraviel's every word.
"He
died very young, so it was believed by your father and the others of the Wyndon
family."
"I
remember—" Elbryan stopped short. He didn't know what he remembered.
He had a feeling that his father had mentioned a lost older brother, Mather
perhaps, and it must have been so, because Elbryan now knew he had heard that
name before he had ever met with the Touel'alfar.
"The
boy Mather was nearly killed," Juraviel went on. "We found him in the
woods, mauled by a bear, and brought him to Caer'alfar. It took him some time
to heal, but he was strong, as is the way of your heritage. Afterward, we could
have let him return to his family, but many months had passed and the Wyndons,
by all the reports of our scouts, had moved along."
The elf
paused, as if wondering how he should proceed. "In centuries past,"
he began solemnly, "our peoples were not so secluded. Elves and humans
lived near each other, often trading stories and goods and sometimes living
together in a single community. There were even marriages, two that I know
written of, between elf and human, though few offspring ever came from such
unions."
"What
drove our peoples apart?" Elbryan asked, for he thought that the world,
particularly concerning his race, was a more tragic place for the change.
Juraviel
chuckled. "You have been in Andur'Blough Inninness for five years,"
he replied. "Have you noticed the absence of anything?"
Elbryan
crinkled his brow. What could possibly be missing from so enchanted a place as
this?
"Children,"
Juraviel prompted at length. "Children," he repeated, his voice low.
"We are not like humans. I might live a millennium—I am nearly
halfway to that point already—and sire no more than one, or perhaps two,
children."
Juraviel
paused again, and it seemed to Elbryan as if a cloud passed over the elf's
angular features. "Three centuries ago, the dactyl awakened," he said
"Dactyl?"
Elbryan asked.
"Demon,"
Juraviel clarified. He turned away from Elbryan, walked to the edge of a small
clearing, and lifted his head to the heavens and his voice in song.
"When the eyes of sentries turn inward,
When the hearts of men covet,
When love is lost to lust.
When the ways of merchants turn cheating,
When the legs of women bow,
When gain is ill not just.
Then look ye men to darkness.
Then see the smoke-filled sky.
Then feel the rumble 'neath your feet
And know 'tis time to die.
So turn your swords away from kin
Your hatred far from kind,
And see the charge of goblin and dwarf
To which lust has left you blind.
Thus find your hearts and enemies true
And all ill ways forsake
And know the time for righteousness!
The dactyl has come awake!"
Many images
flitted through Elbryan's imagination as Juraviel sang: scenes of war and
terror, scenes so very much like Dundalis on that awful day when the goblins
came. By the time Juraviel finished, the young man's cheeks were wet with
tears, and Juraviel's were as well, Elbryan noted when the elf turned back to
him.
"Dactyl
is the name we give to it," Juraviel said softly, "though truthfully
the awakening of the demon is more an event of the whole world than of a
specific being. It is our own folly—that of human and in times long past, of
elf—that allows the dark creature to walk the earth."
"And
when the demon awakens, then there is war," Elbryan reasoned from the
song. "Like the battle that claimed my family."
Juraviel
shrugged and shook his head. "Often there are such battles when humans and
goblins live near each other," he explained. "On the wide seas,
sailing ships often meet the low boats of powries, with predictable
results."
Elbryan
nodded; he had heard of the fierce powries and their reputation for destroying
human ships.
"It was
three centuries ago when the dactyl last awakened," Juraviel said.
"At that time, I and my people traded openly with humans. We were many
more. Many more, though not as many as the humans. Co'awille, 'Endwar,' we call
that horrible time, for four of every five elves were killed." He sighed
resignedly. "And since we do not procreate prolifically . . . "
"You
had to run away," Elbryan reasoned. "For the very survival of your
race, you had to seclude yourself from the other races."
Juraviel
nodded and seemed pleased by the perceptive reasoning. "And so we came to
Andur'Blough Inninness," he said, "and to other such places of
mystery. Aided by the holy humans and their precious gifts, the magical stones,
we made these places our own, secluded and veiled from the eyes of the wider
world. Know that the dactyl was defeated in that time long past after great
cost, but gone, too, was our time in this world. And so we live on, here and
there, under blankets of cloud, under cover of darkness. Our numbers are small;
we cannot afford to be known, even to the humans whom we consider our
friends."
"Some
of you do," Elbryan remarked, thinking of Tuntun.
"Even
Tuntun," Juraviel replied with a laugh. But his smile did not last.
"She is jealous of what you have."
"I?".
"Freedom,"
Juraviel went on. "The world is open to you, but not to Tuntun. She does
not hate you."
"I will
believe that right up until the next time we spar," Elbryan replied,
drawing a laugh from his elven friend.
"She
fights hard," Juraviel admitted. "And on you, she is particularly
strict. Is that not proof that she is your friend?"
Elbryan
stuck a blade of grass between his teeth and considered the viewpoint.
"Tuntun
knows that your life may be difficult," Juraviel finished. "She
desires you to be properly prepared."
"For
what?"
"Ah,
that is the question," Juraviel answered, his finger pointing into the
air, his eyebrows arched. "Though we have forsaken the ways and places of
the humans, we have not forsaken your race. It is we, the elves of Caer'alfar,
who train those known as rangers, the protectors, usually of people who have no
idea they need protecting."
Elbryan
shook his head; he had never heard of rangers, except for occasional references
by the elves.
"Mather
was a ranger," said Juraviel, "one of the finest. For near to forty
years he kept a line a hundred miles long secure from goblins and fomorian
giants alike. His list of victories is far too long to be recited here, if we
had a week to spare."
Elbryan felt
a strange sense of family pride. He remembered again that morning on the ridge,
viewing the Halo, hearing the name of Mather distinctly within his mind.
"And so
you shall be," Juraviel finished. "Elbryan the Ranger."
The elf
nodded, then walked away. Elbryan understood that his lesson was at its end and
understood, too, that this lesson might have been the most important of all
during his time in Andur'Blough Inninness.
"There,
do you feel it?"
Belli'mar
Juraviel held his hand up, begging silence, then shifted his sensitive bare
feet about on the stone face. A moment later, feeling the subtle vibrations
running clearly into him through his toes, he gave a grim nod.
"Many
miles north and west," Tallareyish remarked, looking that way as if he
expected some vast horde of darkness to be charging down toward Andur'Blough
Inninness.
"Lady
Dasslerond has been told?" Juraviel asked.
"Of
course," an elf by the name of Viellain, one of the oldest in Caer'alfar,
answered. "And scouts have gone out. There are reports of a trench, a
great upheaval, not twenty miles beyond our valley."
Juraviel
looked to the north, to the wild lands beyond his elven home and far beyond the
settlements of any humans. "Do you know this place?" he asked of
Viellain.
"It
should not be so hard to find," Tallareyish answered quickly, as eager as
Juraviel to glimpse the evidence. The pair looked at Viellain, their
expressions revealing much.
"The
scouts will pass by the trench, if there is indeed such a marker, then continue
far to the north," the old elf explained. "Thus they shall not return
to Caer'alfar for many days."
"But
Lady Dasslerond should be informed," Tallareyish reasoned, guessing that
Viellain, usually a stickler for rules, was coming around to their way of
thinking.
"We can
reach this place and return before the sun has set tomorrow," Juraviel
said, "if we can find it."
"The
birds will know," Viellain assured him. "Always, the birds
know."
The glade
was strangely quiet this night, with no elves in the area—or at least
none showing themselves, for Elbryan had been around the Touel'alfar long
enough to realize that a host of sprites could be within a dozen paces and even
he, now so attuned to the forest, would not suspect it unless they chose to
make their presence known.
Still, he
was fairly certain that he was alone this night, except for his opponent,
standing in the shadows across the way.
The young
man held his breath when the elf came out into the moonlight.
Tuntun.
Elbryan
clutched his staff and set his heels. He had not battled Tuntun in many weeks;
he was determined now to give the upstart elf a bit of a surprise.
"I
shall not stop beating you until you cry out my name," Tuntun taunted,
moving to the center and twirling her longer pole, the size of an elven sword,
in a circle, while her second weapon, a stick fashioned as a dirk, worked in
tighter circles over her fingers. Around and around the weapons went, reminding
Elbryan of her uncanny dexterity. Tuntun could roll four coins at a time on
each of her hands; she could juggle a dozen daggers, or even flaming brands,
effortlessly.
But that
quickness and precision would not be enough, Elbryan told himself. Not this
time.
He stalked
in, his staff horizontal before him, right hand palm up, left palm down.
Normally, the combatants would speak the rules before a match, but with these
two there was little need for such ceremony: After all these years, Tuntun and
Elbryan understood each other perfectly; between these two, there were no
rules.
Elbryan went
into a crouch, and Tuntun wasted no time in going on the attack, sending her
sword straight ahead. Elbryan let go of his staff with his left hand, turned
his right hand over, then back. The overhand parry deflected the stabbing
blade, but the second attempt, the undersweeping slap designed to send the
elf's sword flying up high, was far too slow to catch up to Tuntun's retracting
movement.
Elbryan
caught the staff again with his left hand, holding steady, his defenses set.
But then he
surprised Tuntun. Fighting logic said that he, with the heavier weapon and more
lumbering moves, should have allowed Tuntun the initial attacks, playing black
on the chessboard. Any offensive mistake would leave Elbryan dangerously
vulnerable to the elf's darting blades,
But on the
young man came anyway, pressing furiously. He started with an overhand,
underhand parry sweep again, but instead of catching the staff with his left
hand as it came swishing back to horizontal, he turned his right hand over once
more. Halfway through the next sweep, Elbryan's powerful forearm flexed tight,
catching the pole in mid-swing, and he brought its low end snapping in against
his side, catching it under his right arm, then lowering and thrusting its tip
like a spear.
Tuntun,
almost expecting the attack from this man who so hated her, was not caught by
surprise. She backed through the first swishes, then ducked under the thrust,
crossing sword and dagger in an X above her head to keep the pole harmlessly
high. She expected then to find an opening for a counter but had to stay
defensive as she realized the young man wasn't yet through with his
surprisingly adept routine.
Elbryan
brought the pole right back in, before Tuntun's crossed blades could shift it
to either side. Then he sent it straight out a second time, cutting short the
thrust as the elf predictably ducked. He brought the leading end of the pole up
and back over his head, launching the pole into an immediate spin, catching it
again in his left hand after it went once around, then stepping forward
forcefully. Now firmly held in both hands, his staff made a second twirl, then
came arching diagonally toward the ground, toward Tuntun.
The elf
squealed and threw her sword out to the side, blade vertical, its tip nearly
touching the ground. The staff smacked it with all the young man's considerable
weight and strength behind it, and Tuntun went flying backward; skipping and
hopping, even flapping her gossamer wings, to absorb the tremendous shock.
Elbryan
smiled grimly and came on, twirling and swinging, poking, stabbing, thrusting—anything to
keep the elf moving backward and off her balance.
His success
was partly gained by surprise. Soon the cunning elf had a new and more
respectful measure of him, and her parries—and the distance she kept between herself
and her opponent—became more appropriate.
And so they
fought, evenly matched, for a long while, poles sometimes slapping together so
rapidly that it occurred to Elbryan that, if they had some kindling, they might
light a fire from friction alone! Each scored minor hits, each felt minor
stings, but neither seemed to gain the advantage as the minutes continued to
slip by.
Inevitably
the hits, particularly on Elbryan, became more substantial as weariness caused
some sloppy defensive posturing. Tuntun was tiring, too, Elbryan knew, and if
he could land but one solid blow, the fight might be at its end.
Elbryan
slashed across in front of him and felt his staff smacked once, twice, perhaps
a half dozen times before he even completed the pass. One solid blow, indeed,
he thought, but landing that hit would prove no easy task!
That point
came clearer a split second later, as the last of Tuntun's sword parries hit
hard enough to force his staff out just wide enough for the elf to dart
straight ahead and sting the fingers of Elbryan's trailing hand with her dirk.
He needed
something new, something Tuntun had not seen from him and could not expect.
Something daring, even desperate, like the shadow dive Tallareyish had used to
defeat him.
Tuntun was
growing more confident, he realized. She felt she had his measure.
She was ripe
for the plucking.
A series of
swipes, stabs, and forward strides put Elbryan in the desired position. He
shifted back on his heels, reading the elf's next attack perfectly and easily
sliding too far away for the small sword to reach.
Then he came
ahead in a rush, hands apart and holding firm, swiping the staff across left to
right in front of him, up high so that Tuntun could not stop it and had to duck
it.
She did,
perfectly, but Elbryan kept his staff moving, letting go with his left hand and
using his right merely to keep the staff's turn intact and balanced. He caught
the weapon mid-pole, again in his left hand, an overhand grasp as it came
around his back and swiped it across in the same direction, this time with only
the one hand and using his hip, the back half of the staff still behind it, for
leverage.
Again Tuntun—though
surprised the second swing had come the same way and not on the predictable
backhand—managed to dodge, this time rolling around the tip of the pole,
turning a complete spin back to her right.
But Elbryan
wasn't more than half done. As his staff came sweeping around to horizontal in
front of him, he caught it in his right hand, quickly flipped his left hand
under the weapon, then stepped ahead and to the left in swift pursuit and
launched the third swipe, again left to right, by pulling his right hand in
while thrusting his left out.
Tuntun's
only avenue of escape was straight down to the ground, and so she took it
unceremoniously.
Elbryan did
not check the flying momentum, continuing his own spin and letting the staff
fly out to its full extension, catching it down low in both hands, as he might
have held a club in his younger days when at play smacking rocks far into the
air.
Around he went,
all the way around, though he knew that it was dangerous to turn his back for
even a split second on one as swift as Tuntun. He yelled out as he came back to
face her, dropping to one knee, swiping low with all his strength.
The staff
swished harmlessly through the air. Tuntun was gone!
The man's
mind whirled through the possibilities, all jumbled with the horror that he had
erred, that he was about to get clobbered. He realized immediately that Tuntun
could not have stepped left or right without his noticing and certainly
couldn't have gone low under the cut with him dropping to one knee.
That left
only one possibility, an escape borne on translucent wings.
As his swing
crossed before him, Elbryan turned his left shoulder down and fell into a roll
that left him on his back in the grass. He pulled with all his great strength,
tearing out the staff's momentum, halting its flow and turning it perpendicular
to the ground.
Down came
Tuntun, her wing-fluttering hop exhausted, her sword pointed below her, leading.
She had meant to pounce right upon stupid Elbryan's back, driving her wooden
practice sword into the back of his neck. How her blue eyes widened when she
saw the pole's tip come up to meet her descent!
She batted
futilely with her sword, then, that failing, tried to stab down at Elbryan. Her
breath came out in a rush as she plopped down hard, the staff's butt end secure
against the ground, its tip stabbing hard into her chest between her lowest
ribs.
She held
there for a long moment, up high on the eight-foot pole, her sword nowhere near
supine Elbryan. She dropped the sword—unintentionally, Elbryan knew, for it fell
harmlessly to the side—so the young man graciously pulled the pole out straight so Tuntun
wouldn't fall off balance to either side. She landed on her feet, skittered
back away from the weapon, but soon fell, gasping desperately for breath.
Elbryan, his
weapon dropped, was at her side in a moment. He thought himself foolish as he
neared the unpredictable Tuntun, expecting that she would find the strength to
drive her dirk into his face, thus claiming a draw.
But Tuntun
had no such strength. She couldn't even talk, and her dirk, like her sword
before it, slipped uselessly from her weakened hand. Elbryan knelt beside her,
his arm about her shoulders, comforting her.
"Tuntun,"
he repeated over and over, for he feared she was hurt, that she might die out
here in the practice glade with no one near her except this man she so
despised.
But finally
she was breathing somewhat steadily again. She looked up at Elbryan, sincere
admiration in her eyes. "Fairly won," she congratulated. "I
thought . . . you had over . . . stepped . . . your ability, but your recovery
. . . was truly remarkable."
Tuntun
nodded and rose unsteadily, then walked from the glade, leaving Elbryan
kneeling in the grass.
He hardly
knew how to react. After so many long months, he had scored his first win.
The row of
trees, short and wide apples, ran almost perfectly straight, then jumped back a
dozen feet, up a ridge twice an elf's height, and continued on straight again
from there. The upheaval was recent, that much was perfectly clear, for the
soil on the torn side of the ridge was loose and deep brown, pocked here and
there by a root, but with no fresh, aboveground growth. Something had reached
into the middle of this line of apple trees and simply pulled back a third of
the row.
"This
is one of Brother Allarbarnet's groves," remarked Tallareyish. The other
two nodded their agreement, for Allarbarnet, a wandering monk of St. Precious
Abbey of Palmaris, was not unknown to them or to any reasoning creature of
Corona. He had wandered the lands—the Wilderlands and not the civilized
regions of his birth—more than a century before, planting lines of apple seeds in hope
that his fruit would encourage the people of the kingdom of Honce-the-Bear to
explore the wider world. Brother Allarbarnet—the canonization process for the man had
already begun, and the abbots expected that he would be sainted within the
decade—had not lived to see his dream realized; indeed, it had not yet
been realized, but many of his groves had grown and flourished. Unknown to the
humans, Brother Allarbarnet had been named an elf-friend, and had often been
aided by the elves or by the rangers the elves had trained. So these three knew
of the man and his work, knew of his groves, and knew that they were always
planted in straight lines.
What, then,
had so altered this one?
There could
be only one answer, for no living creature, not even one of the great dragons
of the north, could so tear this amount of ground in such an even, tidy manner.
"Earthquake,"
Juraviel muttered, but even given his grim demeanor, his melodic voice could
sound only a bit ominous.
"From
that direction," Tallareyish agreed, pointing to the north in the
direction, they all knew, of the wastelands of old, a torn and battered
mountainous region known as the Barbacan.
"Not so
unusual an event," Viellain reminded the pair. "Quakes happen in all
times."
Juraviel
understood his fellow's reasoning and knew the elf was speaking those words for
his sake mostly. For Juraviel's anxiety was clearly etched on his fine features—how could it
have been otherwise when he had been speaking to his protégé Elbryan about this
very subject not a week's time past?
Viellain was
right, Juraviel knew logically. Earthquakes and thunderstorms, swirling
tornadoes, even exploding volcanoes, were more often than not natural events.
Perhaps it was coincidence.
Perhaps, but
Juraviel knew, too, that such events might accompany a larger and darker
phenomenon, that earthquakes that could tear the earth as here, that goblin
raids upon villages, like the one that had orphaned Elbryan not five years
before, might signal something evil indeed.
He looked to
the north again, peering hard just above the horizon. If the day had been
clearer, his keen eyes might have spotted something, some flicker, some
confirmation. For now, the elf could only worry.
Had the
dactyl awakened?
CHAPTER 17
Black Wings
They took.
it slowly, very slowly, with eager Connor coming to understand Jilly's needs
and hesitation. He sensed the way she tensed every time he moved near her,
every time his face was within a few inches of hers, his lips and hers seeming
to pull together as if magnetic.
But Jill
inevitably turned away, her face flushed with frustration as deep as that which
Connor felt. On those first few occasions, Connor took the rejection
personally, as a slight, despite Jill's proclamations otherwise. He couldn't
help but feel that she did not find him attractive, that he somehow revolted
her. No novice in the ways of love, the nephew of Palmaris' baron was surprised
and pained but also intrigued. Jilly was a challenge he had not before faced
and one he was determined to overcome.
Gradually,
as he came to see the light in Jill's eyes every time he entered the Way—a more and
more common occurrence—the proud young man began to understand and accept that her
problem was within the mysteries of her past and not with him. That realization
didn't lessen the challenge, though, and Connor found he wanted Jill more
desperately than he had ever wanted any woman. To Connor Bildeborough, Jill
became perhaps the ultimate challenge of his young life. So he would be
patient, would spend his nights walking with Jill and talking. His other needs
could be taken care of in the many brothels that openly offered their wares in
the city, but of course he didn't need to tell Jill, his Jilly, about that.
For Jill's
part, her night always got better when Connor entered the Way. She found herself
thinking about him constantly, even dreaming about him. She took him to her
private place, the roof down the alley, and together they sat for hours
watching the stars, talking comfortably. It was up there that she finally
allowed Connor to kiss her—actually kissing him back—though she
kept it brief and pulled away as soon as those dark wings of some past event
she did not understand began to flap up around her. In kissing him—in kissing
anyone, she supposed—Jill was sent back to a moment of pain, an event in her past too
painful for her to remember.
But she
suffered that pain, and let Connor kiss her, every once in a while.
It was up on
that rooftop, under a sky that was streaked by clouds and stars, that Connor
first mentioned the prospect of marriage.
Jill found
it hard to breathe. She couldn't look at the man but kept her eyes locked on
the stars, as if seeking refuge high above. Did she love Connor? Did she know
what love was?
She knew it
made her happy to be with Connor but also that it terrified her. She couldn't
deny the longings, how parts of her body seemed to grow very warm, how she felt
as if she were on the verge of trembling whenever she looked upon him. But
neither could Jill deny the fear of getting too close—to Connor or
to any man. The sweetness was there, but somehow just out of Jill's reach.
Her first
instinct told her to refuse the proposal. How good a wife might she be, after
all, when she wasn't even sure who she really was? And how long would Connor
remain with her when even a kiss was a strained thing, something she had to
force past this great black block that she did not understand?
But what of
Pettibwa and Graevis? Jill had to consider. What of her duty to the couple who
had taken her in and given her a home? How much better their lives would be to
know that she was well wed! Perhaps her ascension into local nobility would
even raise their own station in life, and Jill would treasure that above all
else.
Jill finally
found the nerve to look back at Connor, to stare into those marvelous brown
eyes, sparkling more now in this starry light than she had ever seen.
"You
know that I love you," he said to her, "only you. All these weeks,
nay months, I've sat beside you, wanting to make love to you, wanting to wake
beside you. Ah, my Jilly, do say you love me. If you do not, then I shall walk
into the Masur Delaval and let the cold waters take me, for never again will
this body know warmth."
The words
sounded so beautiful to the young woman, except for his reference to her as
"Jilly," which she really didn't like much, which made her feel like
a little girl. She believed him with all her heart, and she had come to love
him, so she thought: What else could it be called, after all, considering that
her smile came so easily whenever he was in sight?
"Will
you wed with me?" he asked softly, so softly that Jill really didn't hear
the words but felt them as if they were transferred to her by his gentle touch
as he ran the tip of his finger from the side of her nose and down her cheek.
She nodded
and he kissed her, and she let him hold her close, their lips together for a
long while, and all that time, while Connor was making soft, satisfied noises,
Jill was beating back black wings, was furiously fighting to divorce her mind
from the current situation, was remembering beer orders from her work in the
Way, was thinking of the man she had seen get run down by a rushing cart the
week before—anything so that the moment would not send her careening back
across the lost years to something, some horrible event, that she could not
face.
The reaction
of Pettibwa and Graevis to the news of the marriage was not hard to predict.
The bartender nodded, smiling, and gave his precious Cat—he still
called her that—a generous and warm hug. Pettibwa was distinctly more animated,
hopping up and down, breasts and belly bouncing wildly, and clapping her hands
together, her cheeks fast streaking with an outburst of tears. All that Graevis
and Pettibwa had ever wanted for the girl was for her to be happy: as unselfish
a love as anyone could ever know. And now that seemed so certain. To wed
nobility! Jill would never want for anything, so they believed. She would dress
in the finest gowns and attend the highest social events in Palmaris, even in
Ursal!
Their
reaction confirmed to Jill that she had made the right choice. Whatever her
personal problems, the sight of Graevis and Pettibwa so animated and so
sincerely happy warmed her heart. With all that they had done for her, how
could she have ever chosen otherwise?
The wedding
was planned by Connor's family, of course, since they had the wealth to do it
right for late summer, and with all of the preparations ahead of them, Connor
and Jill actually saw less of each other over the next few months than before
the proposal.
* * *
"Finished
already?" Grady called as he descended the wide, sweeping staircase of
House Battlebrow, the most renowned brothel in all of Palmaris.
Connor,
sitting back on one of the plush chairs in the lobby, turned an absent gaze his
companion's way.
"What,
only one this night?" Grady chided. "To be sure then, there are at
least two disappointed ladies in the house!"
"Enough,
Grady," Connor replied, his commanding tone leaving little doubt as to
which was the dominant one in this relationship. Grady's standing was nowhere
near Connor's, and the only reason the baron's nephew suffered the almost
constant companionship of the upstart commoner was for the sake of his adopted
sister.
Grady knew
too much about Connor's nighttime pursuits for the nobleman to discard him, and
though Grady had never even hinted at blackmail, Connor understood him well
enough to fear him.
"What
is wrong, my friend?" Grady asked, tying his belt and sliding into the
chair beside Connor. "Your cheer has been left behind, I fear. Might the
bonds of approaching matrimony be tightening?"
"Hardly,"
Connor replied. "Would that the day were the morrow! How long I have
waited!"
Grady spent
a long moment digesting those words, trying to find any hidden meanings.
"And do
not doubt my love for your sister," Connor went on. "She is surely
the most beautiful, the most tantalizing and teasing . . ." He let it go
with a profound sigh.
Grady put
his hands in front of his mouth to hide his grin. "So it seems that she is
driving you mad," he offered. "Her charms have put you into the arms
of three women a night for, lo, these five months!"
Connor
glared at him, hardly appreciating the sarcasm. "And if you tell her a
single word of it, I shall stick my sword into your belly and wriggle it
about," he warned, and there was little doubt he meant every grim word.
But Grady
understood he had the upper hand and he would not back away. "You do so
like sticking and wriggling," he teased.
"As any
true man must!" Connor insisted. "Am I to let Jilly drive me to
madness? But that does not mean I love her any less. Understand that. So fine a
wife."
"Have
you bedded her?"
Connor's
expression forced Grady to lean the other way, fearing the man would slap him.
"An honest question," Grady protested, "and not one aimed in
protection of my sister's honor. Know that I would bed her myself, except for
the consequences I would face from my parents."
"And
from me." Connor's words sounded as a low growl.
"No
longer do I desire such a thing, of course," Grady wisely conceded. Even
hinting that he still had amorous desires for Jill to Connor would be akin to
reaching under a crowning eagle to pull away its meal. "She is for you,
and only you. A swooning girl, if ever I saw one. No man but Connor
Bildeborough could bed her now, but by force.
"And what
of Connor Bildeborough?" Grady bravely pressed. "Has Jill
surrendered?"
"No,"
the frustrated nobleman admitted. "But the time is near."
"End of
midsummer, I should say," Grady agreed, "or will you wait that
long?"
"I give
her until the wedding night," Connor replied. "She is fearful—virgins
always are—but of course, my rights on that night are absolute. She will
offer it, or I shall take it!"
Grady wisely
bit back a remark questioning the virginity of his adopted sister. It really
didn't matter; all that mattered was what Connor believed.
And indeed
Connor believed! Grady could see that in his every fidget, in his almost
animal-like intensity. Why, even the practiced whores of House Battlebrow were
losing their charms for him!
"Dear
Jilly," Grady mumbled under his breath as Connor rose furiously from the
chair and stormed across to the exit. "You teasing little wench. Putting
your maidenhead on a barbed hook and jiggling it before the baron's
nephew." Grady silently applauded his conniving little sister, though his
perception of her actions almost scared him; he had never thought her capable
of such a beautifully treacherous play. "Ah, good enough for both of them,
I say," Grady remarked more loudly, addressing a pair of ladies sitting on
the bottom step of the wide stairway as he walked past in pursuit of Connor.
The women cocked their heads curiously. "I'll be rid of you, dear
sister," he went on; speaking to himself once more, "and let Connor
Bildeborough learn in his own time that you were not worth the waiting!"
Another
prostitute entered from the street just before Grady went out. He cupped her
chin in his hand, drawing a smile from her. "The little teasing
wench," he said, moving near the woman, who was one of his favorites.
"Poor Connor will learn soon enough that she hasn't your charms nor your
talents."
He kissed
her, then rushed out behind Connor. The night was young but getting on, and
Connor would soon enough have to get to the Way to meet Jill. But perhaps he'd
have time for a few drinks and a dice game before.
It was a
ceremony that had all of Palmaris talking; the women swooning, the men standing
tall, feigning importance, wishing they were in the carriage in Connor
Bildeborough's place as it made its winding way, through the streets. Any reservations
that the nobleman's family had held toward the peasant orphan girl had been
washed away when they met Jill, truly beautiful both inside and out. Now,
seeing her adorned in a white gown of satin and lace, her long, thick blond
mane pinned up on one side and hanging loose on the other, she seemed made for
royalty. There were even whispers that the young woman was indeed of royal
blood, and a host of rumors as to her past made their way through the crowds.
It was all
nonsense, all pretension, but in Honce-the-Bear in God's Year 821, that was the
way things were done.
For Jill,
her face was a mask of paint and false smiles. She looked a princess but felt
like a little lost girl. On the one hand, she couldn't deny the pleasure of
dressing so beautifully, of knowing she was the center of attention. On the
other hand, being the center of attention truly terrified her. It was bad
enough that the carriage would roll through every part of the large city, bad
enough that more than five hundred people would be in attendance at the church
when she and Connor were wed, but the thought of what would come later, after
the grand ball . . .
"I have
waited long enough," Connor had said to her that morning, following the
words with a kiss on the cheek. "Tonight."
And then he
had left Jill with the thought. She hadn't even been able to kiss him yet
without those black wings of that awful past flapping up around her, but she
knew what he expected—one of his house servants had described it to her in great detail.
She had smiled
at Connor before he left, trying to be comforting. She dreaded the night to
come.
The ceremony
went off perfectly solemn yet joyous, ladies crying, men standing tall and
handsome. After the carriage ride, the newlyweds came to a hall filled with
music and drink, with ladies and gentlemen spinning about, twirling and
laughing. It was loud and rushing, exhilarating. Jill rarely drank more than a
single glass of wine, but this night, Connor kept foisting glasses upon her,
and she kept taking them. He was trying to loosen up her inhibitions, and she
was, too.
Or maybe she
was just trying to blur the terror.
She found
herself in the arms of dozens of men whom she did not know, gentlemen all, by
blood if not by deed. More than one whispered something lewd in her ear, more
than one tried to get a hand somewhere it should not be. Even a bit drunk, Jill
was agile, and she got through the dancing with her purity intact.
The ball
ended far too soon, at Connor's insistence, which brought more than a few randy
comments.
Jill
suffered them as she had suffered everything else, quietly and privately,
looking at Graevis and Pettibwa as they stood beside the Bildeboroughs. This
was for them, Jill constantly reminded herself, and in truth, she had never
seen them, particularly Pettibwa, looking so happy.
When the
guests were excused, Connor took Jill across the town to the mansion of his
uncle, the Baron Bildeborough. They entered quietly through a side door of the
west wing, proceeding to the guest quarters, which were empty; save a pair of
handmaidens Baron Bildeborough had put at Connor's bidding. The two young women—younger than
Jill even, though she had just passed eighteen—took Jill to the private chamber, a room
that made her feel tiny indeed! The ceiling was high, the walls covered in
grand tapestries, and both the bed and the hearth were of heroic proportions.
For Jill, who had spent her life so simply, it seemed somehow obscene; a dozen
people could sleep comfortably on that bed, and she needed a stepping stool to even
get onto it!
She said
nothing as the handmaidens helped her to get out of her great gown, making
suggestions all the while as to how she should proceed, of this trick or that
trick they had heard about. "A lady must be well practiced in the ways of
lovemaking for royalty," one of them remarked.
"Is
there a girl in Palmaris that Connor Bildeborough could not bed?" the
other added.
Jill thought
she would throw up.
When the
tittering pair finally left, Jill was sitting on the edge of the great cushiony
bed, wearing only a simple silk nightgown that was too low cut, both front and
back, and didn't go nearly far enough down her legs. The night was chill for
late August and the room drafty, but the handmaidens had lit a small fire in
the hearth. Jill was just moving for it when the door swung open and Connor,
dressed in the black pants and white shirt he had worn for the wedding and ball
but without his boots, without his jacket, and without his belt, entered.
She started
for the hearth; he cut her off and wrapped his arms about her.
"My
Jilly," he whispered, the word lost as his lips brushed against her neck.
Connor
backed off almost immediately, his face crinkled in confusion. He could feel
her tension, she knew, and that notion alone allowed her to relax a bit. Connor
knew her so very well; he could sense her fear. He would be gentle With her,
she believed, would give her all the time she needed. He loved her, after all!
Even as that
thought cascaded down through Jill's body, easing the muscles, Connor grabbed
her and pulled her to him roughly, crushing his lips against hers. She hadn't
even time to consider the rush of passion, so surprised was she. She didn't
fight back, not at first, just stood there perfectly still.
She tasted
his lips, felt his tongue brushing through.
In her mind,
she heard a scream, agonized. The scream of a dying child, of her mother, of
her village.
"No!"
Jill growled, pushing him back.
She stood
before him, panting.
"No?"
Jill could
not find the breath to answer, to explain. She just stood there, shaking her
head.
"No?"
Connor yelled again, and he slapped her across the face.
Jill felt
her knees buckle and she would have gone down, except Connor was on her again,
squeezing her tight, kissing her all about the face and neck. "You cannot deny
me," he said.
Jill
squirmed and twisted, not wanting to hurt him, even sympathetic to him, but
simply unable to comply with his needs. Finally she worked her arm up under his
and broke the hold enough so that she could move back a step.
"I am
your husband," Connor said evenly. "By law. I will do as I please
with you."
"I beg
of you," Jill said, her voice barely a whisper.
Connor threw
up his arms and spun away from her. "You have kept me waiting all these
months!" he roared. "I have dreamed about you, about this night.
Nothing else in all the world matters but this night!" He spun back to
face her, now several steps away.
Jill felt as
if she must be the most horrible person in the world. She wanted to give in to
Connor, to give him what he deserved for his patience. But those wings, those
black wings, that distant scream!
Connor's
demeanor changed again, suddenly. "No more," he declared, his voice
low, even threatening. Jill watched helplessly as he tore open his shirt,
leaving it back on his shoulders, then squirmed out of his pants.
She had
never seen a nude man before, and certainly not like this! But whatever
feelings the sight of Connor's body—and he was indeed a beautiful man—might have
inspired were washed away by the fear, by the black wings, by feelings that
Jill could not understand.
Even worse,
there was no love, no tenderness in his face as he stalked back to her, just
heated desire, an almost angry passion. "Look at me!" he demanded,
grabbing Jill by the shoulders and turning her roughly, forcing her to face him
directly. "I am your husband. I will do as I please, when I please!"
As if to accentuate his point, he reached over with one hand and tore down the
side of Jill's nightgown, pulling it low enough to reveal one of her breasts.
The sight of it, round and firm and creamy white, seemed to calm him for a
moment.
"You
approve of my appearance," he concluded.
Jill looked
down. Her nipple stood hard, but it was not for love, not for excitement, just
fear and a cold sensation that coursed through her entire body. Connor brought
his hand to it and pinched it hard.
Jill winced
and pulled away. "I beg of you," she whispered again.
Her
hesitance incited his rage once more. Connor grabbed her and pulled her down,
and before she could move to protest, he was on top of her, his knee between
her legs, forcing them apart.
"No!"
she begged, and she could feel him prodding at her, tearing at her nightgown to
get the material out of his way.
His passion
seemed to mount, driving him on, forcing him closer, rougher.
Jill gasped
for air that would not come. She heard the flapping wings, the screams, the
dying. She pulled and turned, looking away as his hungry mouth descended, but
he only pursued, pinning one of her arms, putting all of his weight atop her.
The screams,
distant, agonized. Her mother dying!
Jill scraped
her forearm on the sharp edge of the stone hearth. She looked up to see she was
trapped by the raised hearth, no room to squirm, her head close to the stone.
And Connor would not relent, prodding and pushing.
Her mind was
lost to the swirl of the past to the screams, to the sights, the smells of torn
bodies swelling, growing thick with decay. She was there again, in that most
horrible place, with no escape, with the death and the fire.
The fire.
She saw the
ember fall from a log, orange glowing like the eye of some hideous night
creature. She closed her hand on it and felt no pain, was beyond pain.
And then she
turned and stuck it into the face of her attacker, into the face of this thing
that was atop her, this thing that had killed her mother, had murdered all of
her village. It howled and fell away, and Jill rolled out from under it and
scrambled to the bed.
Her
surroundings confused her. She saw the man—it was a man, it was Connor! —rise to his
feet, clutch at his face, and run screaming out of the room.
Waves of
pain assaulted her suddenly; she threw the ember back into the fireplace.
What had she
done?
She fell
upon the bed, crying, clutching her burned hand in the other and pressing both
of them under her, against her breasts. Her sobs did not relent for many
minutes, for half an hour perhaps, for all of an hour. She did not stop, did
not look up when she heard the door open, when she heard the sound of footsteps—more than
one set—approaching.
She did not
stop crying when she was grabbed roughly and turned about, her arms pinned out
wide to the sides, her legs hooked under the knees and similarly pulled out
wide.
The
handmaidens had her securely, and Connor, the burns on his face mercifully not
so bad, approached, wearing only his shirt, and with that garment open wide.
"You
are my wife," he said grimly.
Jill had no
more fight left in her. She looked up pleadingly at the two women that held
her, but both seemed impassive, even somehow pleased by it all, by the sight of
her, and of Connor—seemed pleased by her helplessness and their part in it.
She looked
back as Connor climbed up onto the bed, moving right atop her.
She shook
her head. "I beg," she whispered.
Connor
thrust against her, but she felt no stabbing point.
Connor
lifted his head up from her, and he seemed to her truly hurt and saddened. He
spun away in frustration, shifting off the bed right back to his feet.
"I
cannot," he admitted, looking back sharply, his eyes reflecting a
simmering rage. "Take her out of here and lock her in a room," he
demanded of the handmaidens, who immediately and none too gently moved to
comply. "We shall let the magistrate, Abbot Dobrinion, determine her fate
in the morning. Take her!
"And
then return to me," Connor added, speaking to the handmaidens, but aiming
the words at Jill's heart. "Both of you."
CHAPTER 18
The Test of Faith
Hour after
endless hour, day after endless day, the Windrunner glided lazily across the
sparkling glassy surface of the South Mirianic. The sun became the enemy; the
air grew uncomfortably hot. All the time.
Avelyn
thought his very skin would slip off his body, a great rag, and fall rumpled to
the deck. He burned and blistered, then browned, darker and darker, taking on
the leathery appearance of those seasoned sailors around him. He tried to keep
clean shaven, as did his monk companions, but there was no blade fine enough,
and soon all three had scraggly beards.
The worst of
it was the boredom. All they could see in any direction was the flat
bluish-gray line of the horizon. Moments of excitement—a whale
spout, the flight of a dolphin beside the prow, a run of bluefish churning
white the water—came all too rarely and lasted barely seconds, to be inevitably
replaced by the emptiness of the open sea. All romantic notions Avelyn had held
concerning sea voyages were long gone, washed away by the slow, creaking,
rolling reality.
He visited
Dansally often, and for hours at a time. She was forbidden to come out of her
cabin and preferred it that way, both she and the captain fearing what might
happen if the common sailors, men who had been away from women for great
lengths of time, caught her sweet scent. Thus she kept her cabin door securely
locked.
Avelyn also
noted that his three monk companions, apparently tiring of Dansally, visited
her far less often. He was glad of that, though he wasn't certain why. Dansally
didn't seem to mind at all the duties of her profession, and Avelyn had come to
accept her work as a part of who she was. As he had said to her on his initial
visit, it was not his place to judge her.
He believed
that with all his heart, and yet he couldn't deny he was glad to see that the
others, including Captain Adjonas, were spending less time with her. He came to
know aspects of Dansally that his companions would never think to look: former
witty sense of humor, tenderness, and her regrettable resignation for her
station in life. Avelyn came to hear her dreams and ambitions, uttered rarely
and never to anyone else, and he, alone among all the men the woman had known,
tried to encourage those dreams, to give the woman some respect for herself.
The issue of physical intimacy did not come up between them during those weeks,
for both of them had found a more special intimacy, far more satisfying.
And so the
days went, the sun, the stars, the endless swells and sparkles. The one relief
for the monks and crewmen alike came on cloudless nights, for the colors of the
Halo were much clearer here than in the northern zones. Soft blues and purples,
vivid oranges and sometimes a deep crimson lined the night sky, lifting hearts
and spirits.
Even prosaic
and gruff Quintall appreciated the beauty, saw the Halo as a sign of God, and
took faith whenever those colors appeared.
"Starboard
ho!" came the cry one bright morning the second week out of Jacintha.
Quintall
peered at the horizon, hopeful, though he knew from his discussions with
Adjonas that they were not near to halfway to Pimaninicuit, and any other land
they might sight would only tell them that they were far off course.
"Whale
to starboard!" the lookout cried a moment later. "Must be a dead one,
'cause he's not moving."
Farther back
along the deck, Avelyn was close enough to hear Captain Adjonas mutter,
"Damnation."
"Is it
bad fortune to spot a dead whale?" the innocent monk asked.
"No
whale," Adjonas answered grimly. "No whale." He headed forward,
Avelyn in his wake, and Bunkus Smealy, Pellimar, and Thagraine falling in line.
Quintall was already at the rail, pointing far out and down.
Adjonas took
up his spyglass and peered in the direction. He shook his head almost
immediately and handed the instrument to Quintall—a move that Bunkus Smealy apparently did
not like.
"No
whale," Adjonas said again. "Powrie."
"Powrie?"
Avelyn said, confused. Powries were skinny dwarfs, barely four feet in height.
"Powrie
vessel," Adjonas explained. "Barrelboats, they're called."
"That
is a boat out there?" Pellimar asked in amazement.
Quintall
nodded, bringing down the glass. "And keeping fair time with us," he
added.
"They've
no sail," argued Pellimar, as if logic alone should dismiss the
possibility that this was a powrie craft.
"Powries
need no sail," Adjonas answered. "They pedal, turning a shaft to a
great fan aft of the ship."
"Pedal?"
Pellimar scoffed, thinking the notion ridiculous in so vast a sea, where
distance was measured in hundreds of miles.
Adjonas'
voice was grim and unrelenting. "Powries do not tire."
Avelyn had
heard as much. Powries were not often seen, except in times of war when they
were dealt with all too often. Their battle prowess was the stuff of legend, of
terrifying fireside tales. Though diminutive in stature, they were said to be
stronger than an average man and with incredible stamina. They could suffer
brutal hits with club or sword and keep on fighting, and they could wage battle
for hours at a stretch, even after a forced march of many miles.
"So far
out," Quintall remarked. "Surely there's no land within ten days
sail."
"Who
can know the minds of powries," Adjonas replied. "They have been
quite active of late, so my friends in Jacintha informed me. They slip into the
shipping routes and take their fill, then move back to deep water, following
the blues or the cod or other favored fish. A hardy and stoic type, do not
doubt; powries have been said to be out on the open water for a year and a half
at a stretch."
"But
what would they do with their booty?" Avelyn reasoned innocently, drawing
looks from the other five. "If they waylay ships, what goods do they
extract and where, then, do they drop off their newfound cargo?"
Adjonas and
Bunkus Smealy exchanged grim glances, telling the four monks that they simply
did not understand this enemy.
"They
take lives," Adjonas answered calmly. "They waylay ships simply to
kill. They attack only to pillage enough stores to get them to the next ship
and for the simple thrill of the hunt and torture."
Avelyn
blanched, so did Thagraine and Pellimar, but Quintall only let out a low growl
and tarried his gaze back in the direction of the distant powrie ship.
"But
for us to pass so close to one of them," Pellimar offered nervously.
"What dumb luck is that? We'd not even have seen the craft if we were but
a hundred more yards to port."
"But
they would have seen us," Adjonas replied. "Our sails break the horizon
for miles, and powries have magic of their own, do not doubt. It is said that
they have friends that swim under the sea, returning to them with whispers of
passing ships. This is not dumb luck, my good brother Pellimar."
"What
could they know of us?" Quintall demanded, not turning back to face the
others.
"Only
that we are a lone ship far from home," Adjonas was quick to answer.
"Of our
mission?" Quintall pressed.
"Nothing,"
Adjonas assured him. "It is doubtful that any aboard the powrie craft
would even recognize your abbey robes."
Quintall
nodded. "Then run away from them," he instructed.
Avelyn and
the others held their breath as they watched Captain Adjonas' face tighten.
Avelyn feared that Quintall, in issuing such a clear order, might have
overstepped his bounds this time.
"Hard
to port!" Adjonas screamed out, then he calmed and turned to his first
hand. "Fill our sails, Mister Smealy," he instructed. "I've no
desire to do battle with powries."
Smealy ran
off. Adjonas let his dagger-throwing gaze linger on Quintall's back for a long
while, then calmly turned and, with a quick nod to the other three monks,
walked away.
Avelyn moved
to the rail and shaded his eyes with his hand, peering hard into the vast
gray-blue expanse. He thought he caught sight of the barrelboat but couldn't be
sure―it might have been no more than the shadow of a wave.
The
Windrunner veered hard to port, sails filling and pushing the square-rigged
caravel on with tremendous speed. But the powries tailed her; the lookout
called down repeatedly, his tone growing thick with frustration and fear, that
the barrelboat was keeping pace, was even beginning to close a bit.
Now at the
taffrail the four monks and Captain Adjonas watched the powries' progress.
Avelyn could see the craft clearly now; no longer did he confuse the strange
barrelboat with any wave shadows.
Adjonas
looked up at his sails, then at his crew, tacking frantically to keep them as
full of wind as possible.
"An
amazing design," Quintall remarked of the closing craft. "Why is it
that we humans have not copied it?"
"There
is a human barrelboat in Freeport," Adjonas replied, "and several
were constructed in Ursal for use on the river. But men are not powries. The
quarters within such a boat are tight―far tighter than even your small
cabin on the Windrunner. And men have not the powrie endurance. The dwarves can
pedal all day, while most men tire within the hour―or after a couple of
hours, at most."
Quintall
nodded, his respect for the stoic, tireless enemy redoubled. "If the powries
will not tire, then we cannot simply keep up the run," he remarked.
"I will
set bowmen firing flaming arrows upon the vessel when it closes a bit
more," Adjonas answered, his tone far from hopeful. "But most of the
craft is underwater, with little above to aim at, and none of that critical.
Hopefully we will be able to keep our pace swift enough so that the powries'
initial ram causes little damage. Then we will fight them―what choice do
we have?―as they try to board us."
Quintall was
shaking his head before Adjonas even finished. "We cannot allow them to
ram," he argued. "Any damage would slow us, at the least, and that we
cannot afford. We have less than a week of extra time―and that if our
calculations to our destination are correct and the winds hold."
"I see
few options," Adjonas remarked.
The other
three monks were looking grimly at the distant barrelboat or at each other,
shaking their heads, but Quintall had turned his thoughts in a different
direction, digesting all the information that Adjonas had given him of the
enemy.
"Tell
me," he said at length, "how swift will a barrelboat run if its great
fan becomes entangled?"
Adjonas
looked at him curiously.
"We
have extra netting," Quintall added.
"The
fan is not so exposed," Adjonas said. "Even if we placed the netting
perfectly in the barrelboat's path, it would not likely snag on anything except
the catch hooks protecting the fan."
"Suppose
that we did not simply place the net but rather took it to its
destination?" Quintall asked slyly, drawing a confused look from all but
Thagraine, who had caught on and was more than eager.
"That
would be foolhardy," Adjonas began, but he stopped as the hatch of the
barrelboat flipped open and a red-capped head popped into sight. Up came a
skinny arm, holding a funnel-shaped tube.
"Humans!"
the powrie shouted through the funnel. "Yach, trader, give her up! You
cannot outrun us, yach you cannot, nor can you hope to give a fight. Give her
up, I say, and some of you might be spared."
Adjonas
looked all around at his now-stationary crew. He saw the expressions there, the
sudden faint hope in the powrie's promise.
Bunkus
Smealy spoke for many of them by Adjonas' estimation. "Might that we
should harken to his words, Captain," the first hand said. "If we
offer them no fight―"
Adjonas
pushed him aside and walked in from the rail so that all on deck could see him.
"They shall kill us, every one!" he shouted. "These are powries,
bloody caps, looking to wet their berets in human blood. They'll not let a ship
sail from them, nor do they have room for prisoners! If we stop, or even slow,
they'll only ram us all the harder."
Even as
Adjonas spoke, a flaming quarrel arched over the taffrail of the Windrunner,
slashing into the rear sail. Three crewmen ran to the small fire immediately,
minimizing the damage.
"Yach,
how long can you keep up the run, trader?" the powrie howled, and then he
disappeared, closing the hatch behind him.
"Who
are your best swimmers?" Quintall asked, moving up to the captain. Adjonas
looked at him curiously.
"The
Windrunner is a ship of cold northern waters," he replied. "As a
habit, we do not swim."
Quintall
nodded grimly and turned to his three brothers. He hated risking them all but
realized the success of the mission hinged on their actions right now. Before
he ever finished his motion, Avelyn, Pellimar, and Thagraine dropped their
robes to the deck and began stretching their muscles and swinging their arms.
"We are
swimmers," Quintall explained. "Even in the cold northern waters.
Fetch me a net."
Adjonas motioned
to Bunkus Smealy; this was Quintall's operation now, and the Windrunner
captain, with no other apparent options, was more than willing to give the
sturdy monk his chance.
The four
were at the port rail out of sight of the barrelboat soon after. Quintall
tossed the net into the water, and Thagraine went in right behind it, taking
hold.
Adjonas
grabbed Quintall by the shoulder. He pulled a stone from his baldric, a small
red ruby, and handed it over. "Only if you see a need," he explained.
"That stone is more valuable than all my ship."
Quintall
looked it over curiously. He could feel the magic within it, a faint pulsing of
energy. He nodded to Adjonas, then unexpectedly handed the stone to Avelyn.
"Not a man alive knows the power of the stones better," he said to
his companion. "Use it well if we find the need."
Avelyn took
it and fingered it for a few moments, feeling the energy clearly, understanding
the purpose of the stone as surely as if it had spoken to him. He moved to put
it in his loincloth but didn't feel secure with that, so he popped it into his
mouth instead, rolling it behind his teeth.
Then they
went in, swimming fast to join Thagraine, who was still bobbing with the net,
many yards behind the swift-running Windrunner.
They split
into two groups, with Thagraine and Quintall holding the net between them while
swimming out to the side, trying to find an angle to the closing barrelboat,
and Pellimar and Avelyn putting themselves right in line with the craft,
keeping low in the water in case that hatch should open again or in case the
powries had some other method of looking out.
Adjonas
watched nervously from the taffrail. He knew things about powries and about the
sea that the four monks apparently did not. If the barrelboat got by the net holders,
for example, they would never catch up and Adjonas couldn't turn about for
them. They would be stranded in open water, and thus, surely doomed. Even more
dangerous, powries were said to have waterborne friends, often ones with a
distinctive dorsal fin.
The captain
nodded, confident that even if brave Quintall knew all of this, he still would
have gone into the South Mirianic with the net.
* * *
"Swim
hard!" Quintall gurgled to his companion, moving fast to close the
remaining distance. The barrelboat was moving much more swiftly than it
appeared, for it cut no prow wake, as did the Windrunner. Thagraine worked as
furiously as he could, flailing arms and legs, but he would not have gotten to
the mark had not Quintall, the other end of the netting hooked about his broad
shoulders, tugged him along.
Exhausted,
the two men dove under for the last expanse, swimming so the craft would pass
right over them. Fortunately, the water was crystal clear.
Up ahead,
Avelyn and Pellimar waited anxiously. They would have to get aboard the
barrelboat, whatever the outcome of Quintall's attempt. If the net failed, then
these two would have to find some way to stop the powries. Avelyn rolled his
tongue over the ruby. The stone wouldn't be nearly strong enough, he realized,
to take out the wet barrelboat's sturdy hull.
The
barrelboat closed―fifty yards, forty, twenty―cutting the water
smoothly.
Then it
jerked suddenly and its straight run shifted to the diagonal. Avelyn and
Pellimar swam with all speed. Pellimar reached the drifting boat first, pulling
himself cautiously up its slick, rounded side. He shuffled for the hatch and
got there just after it opened.
The first
powrie out was truly stunned. The fan had snagged on some seaweed or on
something the caravel had dropped, so the dwarves thought, and it was not so
uncommon an occurrence. But to see a human standing on the deck!
The sight
was no less amazing to Pellimar, who had never seen a powrie up close. The
dwarf stood just over four feet, with gangly arms and legs that seemed too
skinny to support its barrel-like torso.
The dwarf's
expression did not change, its pale, wrinkled face staring openmouthed as
Pellimar hit it with a solid right cross.
The monk
stared at his wounded hand, and at his opponent, so much more solid than it
appeared! The hard-headed powrie shook its head vigorously, lips flapping.
Pellimar hit
it again, a series of three quick left jabs, then brought his right leg up
hard, snapping out his foot to connect right under the powrie's jaw. The
dwarf's head snapped back, and it fell to the deck and rolled over the side of
the barrelboat.
But another
was in its place, this one not surprised. Pellimar, quick as a cat, hit it,
too, with three solid punches―a left, right, left combination―but
the monk's impetus was lost when his right hand, still pained from the first
hit, connected that second time.
Avelyn,
rushing in behind his brother, saw Pellimar jerk suddenly and then fall to the
side, a bright red line across his chest. There before Avelyn stood the powrie,
its short sword dripping Pellimar's blood. The dwarf squealed in rage, seeing
its victim falling off the side, seeing a chance to heighten the color of its
already bright crimson beret tumbling into the Mirianic. That moment of
distraction gave Avelyn his chance.
He could
have bent low and barreled into the dwarf, but he sensed its solidity and saw
another powrie coming through the hatch behind it. Putting his personal safety
aside, Avelyn had to consider the greater good.
He ran
forward and slid down to the deck, scrambling fast and taking the ruby from his
mouth. He rubbed it in his hand, calling forth its magic, finding its center of
energy and bringing that to a volatile level.
The powrie
came across with a backhand slash, but Avelyn managed to duck beneath it. He
reached between the powrie's legs and tossed the stone upward, toward the
hatch. Then, guided purely by his survival instinct, Avelyn curled his legs
under him and came up fast.
The ruby,
shining with power, arced lazily over the open hatch. The next powrie coming
out saw its sparkle and, mesmerized, reached for it. The dwarf caught the gem
securely, but surrendered his hold on the ladder. Thus, when Avelyn and the
other powrie came up suddenly, rising over the stone holder, the surprised dwarf
fell back down into the barrelboat, glowing ruby in hand.
Avelyn clung
to the powrie's sword arm, for all his life. He had one hand below him and
managed to push the hatch back as they descended, Avelyn rolling right over the
hatchway, the deceivingly agile powrie hopping to its feet atop the now-closed
portal. The dwarf lifted its sword, grinning evilly, and let out a wail that
shook Avelyn to the marrow of his bones as he lay prone not far away.
But then the
dwarf was flying, the hatch spinning through the air behind it, and a stream of
thick black smoke poured from the open hole.
The jolt
sent Avelyn tumbling, and he didn't fight the motion. The blast had not likely
killed half the powries―the barrelboat was nearly as large as the
Windrunner!―and they would be up on deck soon enough.
And Avelyn
had no desire to face another.
Quintall and
Thagraine came up breathless after setting the net in place. By the time
Quintall got near the barrelboat a powrie was in the water, and Brother
Pellimar was tumbling close behind.
With their
heavy bodies and spindly limbs, powries were not strong swimmers, and Quintall
easily overtook the dazed creature, pushing it under the water and gaining a
seat atop its shoulders. The powrie struggled desperately, but the powerful man
locked his legs tight and fought to keep his balance.
The dwarf
would not find the surface ever again.
Once in the
water, Avelyn found Quintall treading high not so far away, half his body clear
of the sea. The sight surprised Avelyn at first until he noted the
"seat" his companion had found. Thagraine, some distance to the side,
had Pellimar under one arm, swimming as hard as he could for the turning
caravel.
As soon as
his grim business was finished, Quintall, easily the strongest swimmer,
relieved Thagraine of his burden and nearly kept up with his two companions,
despite the added weight of an unconscious Pellimar.
Adjonas
watched it all anxiously, moving along the rail as his ship executed a turn.
The barrelboat was disabled temporarily, but the fight was hardly over. The
captain ordered archers into place and told them to take whatever shots presented
themselves if the powries came out through that smoke, which was already
diminishing.
Then he
watched, because there was nothing else he could do. The Windrunner came right
about, bearing down on the four monks, and on the barrelboat. There were indeed
powries on her deck now, some with heavy crossbows; taking potshots at the
swimming monks.
Even worse
for the monks, Adjonas knew, was the trail of blood the wounded Pellimar was
leaving in the water.
Thagraine
was first to the Windrunner, grabbing frantically at a line thrown from the
deck. He had barely taken hold, Avelyn twenty yards away, and Quintall and
Pellimar that distance again, when the lookout gave a not unexpected cry.
"Dorsal
fin!" he shouted. "Shark, white shark!"
"Get
them up quickly!" Adjonas howled, moving to the rope to lend a hand.
"More ropes into the water!"
One thrown
rope splashed right near Avelyn, but understanding the frantic lookout and the
newest danger, he refused it, turning about for Quintall and Pellimar.
"Brother
Avelyn!" Thagraine shouted from his perch on the Windrunner's rail.
"You and I are the Preparers! They are expendable!"
The words
assaulted Avelyn with the force of a cold slap. Expendable? These were monks of
St.-Mere-Abelle! These were human beings!
With a growl,
Avelyn pushed on, finally reaching the tiring Quintall. To Avelyn's surprise,
Pellimar bobbed in the water behind the stocky man.
Avelyn asked
no questions, nor did Quintall, who was swimming hard for the rope. Avelyn
finally reached Pellimar and hooked his arm around the bobbing man's shoulder.
A crossbow
quarrel skipped across the water right beside Avelyn's face as he turned. He
saw it, then ―a dorsal fin sticking fully two feet out of the
water―and though he had never seen or heard of sharks before, he could
well imagine the horrors that lay beneath the telltale fin.
The shark
closed, as did the Windrunner. A dozen men―Quintall, Thagraine, and
Adjonas among them―had the rope in hand and were pulling it taut even as
Avelyn desperately grabbed its other end.
He couldn't
lift himself even a bit, had all that he could handle and more in simply
keeping his grasp on the rope and on limp Pellimar.
But they got
him up to the rail, Quintall grabbing Pellimar and hauling the man onto the
deck, Avelyn dangling dangerously low. He heard the screams of the crewmen and
looked down, one foot still in the water, as the great dark shape, fully
twenty-five feet in length, glided under the Windrunner, under Avelyn.
A split
second later, the terrified monk was standing on the deck.
"Big
one," Adjonas remarked, noting the shark.
Bunkus
Smealy turned his greasy grin on Avelyn, holding one hand up, his thumb and
index finger about five inches apart. "With teeth this long," he said
cruelly.
There were a
dozen powries on the deck of the barrelboat, Adjonas noted, but none would go
into the water with the great shark so close and so obviously agitated. Powries
and sharks worked in concert, so it was said, but apparently there were limits
to such friendship.
A wicked
grin widened on the captain's face; he decided to test that unlikely truce.
"Give
them a bump," he told Bunkus Smealy, and the first hand shrieked with glee
and ran to the wheel.
It wasn't a
full ram―no sensible captain would pit his ship against the strong hull
of a powrie barrelboat―but enough of a nudge certainly to send all but
one of the powries on deck rolling into the water. The Windrunner's archers
opened up hard as the ship crossed beside the powrie craft, leaving three more
dwarves dead in the water.
A second,
smaller dorsal fin joined the first in its tightening ring.
How the
dwarves scrambled!
"Get us
away," Adjonas called to his crew. The sharks would feed on the dead, and
the frantic actions of those still alive combined with the widening blood spill
would likely bring more in, he knew. No powrie would dare go into the water to
try and untangle the netted fan with frenzied sharks so close.
Even worse
for the powries, though neither Adjonas nor any other aboard the Windrunner
could have foreseen it, the drifting barrelboat appeared remarkably like a wounded
whale to the crazed sharks.
The
barrelboat, rolling from the contact with the Windrunner, with water rushing in
the open hatchway, soon disappeared under the waves.
The
excitement on the Windrunner did not dissipate until the powries were left far
behind. The monks had been the heroes of the fight, but Avelyn heard crewmen
muttering "foolhardy" as often as "brave." The sailors were
a tough bunch, proud and cynical, and if he or Quintall or any of the others
expected a congratulatory pat on the back, they were disappointed.
Avelyn and
Thagraine took the severely wounded Pellimar into Dansally's quarters, and
found the woman was versed in more skills than the sensual. Soon after, the man
was resting as comfortably as possible, and Avelyn left the room.
He found
Quintall standing with Adjonas, the captain, looking weary, leaning against the
mainmast.
"Powries,"
he was muttering when Avelyn walked up. "More bloody caps than ever on the
Mirianic, north and south. They have multiplied on their isles, the Julianthes,
it would seem, bursting from their shores. Their attacks will only increase in
number and in purpose."
Quintall
shrugged away the grim words. "How fares Pellimar?" he asked Avelyn.
Avelyn
sighed helplessly. "He may live," he replied, "or he may not."
Quintall
nodded, then suddenly exploded into action, his roundhouse punch catching
Avelyn square on the jaw, dropping the man in a heap to the deck. "How
dare you?" Quintall yelled.
Sailors
looked up from every corner of the deck; Adjonas eyed the stocky man with
disbelief.
Avelyn
pulled himself up, wary of another blow, thoroughly confused by Quintall's
actions.
"You
are the chosen Preparer," Quintall scolded. "Yet you risked your life
to save Pellimar."
"We all
risked our lives by going out," Avelyn argued.
"We had
no choice in the matter," Quintall retorted, so angry that his spittle
sprayed forth with every word. "But when the danger to the Windrunner was
ended, when the powries were stopped and the way was clear, you went back into
the dangerous waters."
"Pellimar
would have been eaten!"
"A
pity, but not important!"
Avelyn
swallowed his next retort, knowing that it would be a useless argument. He had
never imagined such a level of fanaticism, even from stern Quintall. "I
could not leave him, and you."
Quintall
spat on the deck at Avelyn's feet. "I asked you not for help, and would
have refused it if offered. The way to our destination was cleared, the threat
to the Windrunner ended. You should have gone aboard and stayed aboard. What a
waste Pellimar's life, and my own, would have been had Avelyn, too, died in the
water!"
Avelyn had
no response. The argument was indisputable. He pulled himself up, nodding in
agreement, though in his heart he knew if the situation arose again he would
again go back to the pair.
"We do
not know that the way to Pimaninicuit is now clear," Adjonas whispered,
protecting the sacred name.
"Pellimar
is no good to us in any case," Quintall was fast to respond. "Even if
he lives, he'll not likely crawl out of bed for many days."
Avelyn
studied the stocky man intently. The mission was all important―Avelyn
agreed and he would sacrifice his own life for the good of the voyage. But to
ask him to let another die?
Avelyn shook
his head, though fortunately Quintall and Adjonas missed the movement. No, the
young monk decided, that he could not, would not, do.
"Remember,"
Quintall said to him gravely.
"I will
go to Pellimar," Avelyn replied, taking comfort in the subtle vow the
words implied, one that Quintall could not comprehend. "Dansally tends his
wounds."
"Who?"
Quintall asked as Avelyn walked away.
Avelyn
smiled, not surprised.
Pellimar's
condition did not much improve as the days slipped past. The weather remained
hot and clear, and no more barrelboats came into view.
Perhaps it
was the boredom, the heat, or the tasteless provisions, but the crew grew
increasingly uneasy, even hostile. More than once, Avelyn heard Bunkus Smealy
and Adjonas in a shouting match, and every time the monk walked the open deck
now, he felt burning gazes of hatred on his back. The crew were blaming the
monks for their discomfort, for this whole journey. Quintall had warned Avelyn
and Thagraine of this, as Adjonas had warned Quintall. The Windrunner was
usually a coast hugger. Journeys into the wide, vast ocean were extremely rare,
and rumors told of a madness that often grabbed at a crew. Ships had been
found, so the stories went, intact and seaworthy, but with not a crewman
aboard. Some said it was the work of ghosts, or evil monsters of the deeper
waters, but most rational, experienced sailors attributed it to fear and
suspicion, to the long days of emptiness and the undeniable feeling that the
sea would never end, that the ship would sail and sail until there was no more
to eat and no more to drink.
It got so bad
by the sixth week out of Jacintha that Adjonas, to Avelyn's utter dismay,
opened privileges of Dansally to other members of the crew. It had to be done
in a calm fashion, so the captain ordered, and every time Avelyn saw another of
the filthy sailors going to Dansally's door, his heart sank a bit lower, and he
chewed a bit more of his skin from his lip.
Dansally
took it in stride, accepting her lot in life, but her expanded duties left her
little time for her talks with Avelyn, something the monk, and now the woman,
dearly needed.
Even the
extra privileges did little to improve the mood of the increasingly surly crew.
The situation came to a frightening head one especially hot humid morning.
Quintall spent the better part of an hour in a sometimes heated discussion with
Captain Adjonas. Finally, Adjonas seemed to nod his assent, and then he called
Bunkus Smealy to his side.
More yelling
ensued, mostly by Quintall, and when Smealy at last tried to counter, the
stocky monk snapped his hand under Smealy's chin and lifted the man from the
deck by the throat.
Avelyn and
Thagraine rushed to Quintall's side, Thagraine pointing out that all the crew
was watching with more than passing interest.
"It
proves my point, Captain Adjonas," Quintall remarked, giving Smealy a
little shake. "He is the leader of the unrest, a man to be thrown over as
food for the sharks."
Adjonas
calmly put his hand over Quintall's arm, easing it and his first hand down.
Smealy pulled away, coughing and, predictably, turned to the crew for help.
"Utter
one word of encouragement to them," Quintall threatened, "and all my
attacks, and those of my companions, will be directed at you. Both your arms
and both your legs will be broken and useless when you hit the water, Bunkus
Smealy. How long could you stay afloat, waiting for the Windrunner to turn
about and find you?"
The greasy
man blanched. "We're too far out," he said to his captain, his plea
sounding as a whine. "Too far!"
"The
island―" Adjonas started to say.
Smealy
stopped him with a snarl. "There ain't no island!" he yelled, and the
murmurs of the crewmen, seeming closer now than a moment before, were in
agreement.
Adjonas
turned a worried glance at Quintall. They had another month of sailing, at the
least, and the captain honestly wondered if his crew would show that much
patience. They had been carefully picked, most had sailed with Adjonas for
nearly a decade, but weeks on end out of sight of land were unnerving.
"Three
months!" the captain yelled suddenly. "Before ever we started from
Jacintha, I told you that we would find three months of travel before our
destination was reached. Yet, we've not yet marked the end of our second month
out of St.-Mere-Abelle. Are you cowards, then? Are you not men of your
honor?"
That backed
them off, though they continued grumbling.
"Know
by my word," Quintall said to Smealy as the first hand, too, retreated,
"that I hold you personally responsible for the actions of the crew."
Smealy never
blinked and didn't dare look away from the dangerous monk until he was halfway
across the deck.
"It
will only worsen if Pimaninicuit is not easily found," Adjonas quietly
warned the three.
Quintall
fixed him with an icy stare.
"We are
on course, and on time," Adjonas assured him, feeling the need to calm the
man, "according to the maps I was given."
"They
are accurate to the league," Quintall growled in response.
Indeed they
were, for four and a half uneasy weeks later, the lookout cried out, "Land
to forward!"
All the crew
rushed to the forward rails, and soon enough the gray haze became more
substantial, became the undeniable outline of an island, conical in shape. Gray
became green as they closed, lush vegetation thick on the slopes.
"By my
estimation we have nearly a week to spare," Adjonas remarked to the four
monks―for Pellimar, though still very weak, was up on the deck again.
"Should we go ashore and scout―"
"No!"
Quintall snapped to everyone's amazement. The captain's recommendation seemed
perfectly logical.
"None
but the Preparers may go ashore," Quintall explained. "Any others who
touch the shores of Pimaninicuit will find their lives forfeit."
It was a
strange decree, one that caught Avelyn so much by surprise that he hardly
noticed Quintall had openly proclaimed the name of the island.
The words
caught Captain Adjonas off his guard as well, an unexpected proclamation and
one that was hardly welcomed by Adjonas. His crew had been aboard ship for so
long, with only the short break in Entel. To keep them out now, with land so
close and inviting―land likely covered with fruit trees and other
luxuries they had not known on the open sea―was foolhardy indeed.
But Quintall
would not relent. "Circle the island close once that we might discern
where best to put the Preparers ashore, then sail out to deeper water out of
sight of the island," he instructed the captain. "Then sail back in
five days."
Adjonas knew
he was at a critical point here. He didn't agree with Quintall, not at all, but
now with Pimaninicuit in sight, he had, by agreement with the Father Abbot, to
let the monk take command. This was the purpose of the voyage, after all, and
Father Abbot Markwart had made no secret of Adjonas' place in all this. On the
open seas, he was the captain; at Pimaninicuit, he would do as told, or all
payment, and the sum was considerable, would be forfeit.
And worse.
So they
circled, spotting one promising lagoon, and then sailed out to deeper waters
for the longest five days of the trip, particularly for Avelyn and Thagraine.
Avelyn spent
all the last day in prayer and meditation, mentally preparing himself for the
task ahead. He wanted to go to Dansally and tell her of his fears, of his
inadequacy for such a task, but he resisted the urge. This was his battle alone.
Finally, he
and Thagraine, carrying their supplies, slipped down the rope off the side of
the Windrunner into the boat, Pimaninicuit looming large before them.
"We
need be far out when the showers begin," Quintall explained to them,
"for the stones have been known to cause great damage. When it is ended,
we will sail back here."
A cry from
the stern stole the conversation, and the monks and Adjonas turned as one to
see one of the crew, a boy of no more than seventeen who had been especially
sea-crazed, dive off the ship into the water, then begin swimming hard for the
shore.
"Mister
Smealy!" Adjonas roared; turning a stern eye on all the crew.
"Archers to the rail!"
"Let
him go," Quintall said, surprising Adjonas. Quintall realized that
shooting the desperate man in front of the crew would likely cause a mutiny.
"Let him go!" Quintall yelled louder. "But since he has chosen
the island, he will find his work doubled." He bent low and whispered
something to Thagraine then, and Avelyn doubted that it had anything to do with
putting the fleeing man to work.
Avelyn and
Thagraine rowed away from the Windrunner moments later and the ship raised sail
immediately, fleeing for the safety of the deeper waters far from Pimaninicuit.
On board Quintall launched right away into lies about the dangers to the
foolish seaman, about how the monks, and the monks alone, were trained to
withstand the fury of the showers. "He will not likely live to return to
the Windrunner," Quintall explained, trying to prepare the volatile crew
for the blow that would surely come.
Thagraine
was out and running as soon as the small boat brushed its bottom on the black
sands of the island beach. They had passed the mutineer on the water, far to
the side, and Thagraine had made a mental note of his direction and speed.
Avelyn
called out to his companion, but Thagraine only ordered him to secure the boat,
and did not look back.
Avelyn felt
a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach. He hauled the boat to a sheltered
point in the lagoon and tipped it low, filling it with water and securing it on
the shallow bottom.
Thagraine
returned to him soon after.
Avelyn
winced, seeing the man alone. He knew what instructions Quintall had offered.
"There
is much to eat," Thagraine said happily, trembling with excitement.
"And we must seek out a cave."
Avelyn said
nothing, just followed quietly, praying for the young sailor's soul.
The next two
days, mostly spent huddled in a small cave on the side of the single mountain,
overlooking the beach and the wide water, were perfectly unbearable. Thagraine
was most ill at ease, pacing, stalking, and muttering to himself.
Avelyn
understood the man's distress and knew that Thagraine's agitation could cost
them both much when the showers came. "You killed him," the younger monk
remarked quietly, taking care so that his statement did not sound as an
accusation.
Thagraine
stopped his pacing. "Any who step on Pimaninicuit forfeit their
lives," he replied, straining hard to keep his tone even.
Avelyn
didn't believe a word of it; in his mind, Thagraine had acted as a tool for the
murderous Quintall.
"How
will they know when we are finished?" Thagraine asked suddenly, wildly.
"How will they even know when the showers occur if they sail so far from
the island?"
Avelyn eyed
him carefully. He had hoped to draw the man into a discussion of his action
against the sailor, to ease the man's mind, at least for now, that they might
concentrate on their most important mission. But his words hardly seemed to
calm Thagraine; quite the opposite, the man, obviously racked with guilt paced
all the more furiously, slapping his hands together repeatedly.
The showers,
by their calculations, were now overdue. Still the pair huddled near the edge
of the cave, looking for some sign.
"Is it
even true?" Thagraine protested every few minutes. "Is there a man
alive who can bear witness to such a thing?"
"The
old tomes do not lie," Avelyn said faithfully.
"How do
you know?" Thagraine exploded. "Where are the stones, then? Where is
the precious day?" He stopped, gasping for breath. "Seven
generations," he shouted, "and we are to get here within the week of
the showers? What folly is this? Why, if the abbey's calculations are off by
only a month, or a year perhaps . . . are we to stay huddled in a hole all that
time?"
"Calm,
Thagraine," Avelyn murmured. "Hold fast your faith in Father Abbot
Markwart and in God."
"To the
pit of Hell with Father Abbot Markwart!" the other monk howled.
"God?". He spat contemptuously. "What does God know when he
calls for the death of a frightened boy?"
So that was
it, Avelyn realized: guilt, pure and simple. Avelyn moved to take Thagraine's
hand, to try and offer comfort, but the older monk shoved him away and
scrambled out the narrow mouth of the cave, running off into the brush.
"Do
not!" Avelyn cried, and he paused only a moment before following. He lost
sight of Thagraine immediately, the monk disappearing into the thick underbrush
but headed, predictably, for the open beach. Avelyn moved to follow, but as
soon as he got out of sight of the cave, something, some inner voice, called to
him to stop. He looked back in the direction of the cave, then out over the
hillside to the water. He noted that the sky had turned a funny color, a
purplish, rosy hue the likes of which Avelyn had only seen at sunrise or
sunset, and then only on the appropriate horizon. Yet the sun, in this region
of long days, was still hours from the western rim and should have been shining
bright and yellow in the cloudless sky.
"Damnation,"
Avelyn sputtered, and he scrambled with all speed back to the shelter of the
cave. Inside, from that higher perch, he spotted Thagraine, running wildly
along the beach, and he saw, too, a gentle rustling on the water far out from
the shore.
Avelyn
closed his eyes and prayed.
* * *
"Where
are you, damned God?" Thagraine cried, stumbling along the black sands of
Pimaninicuit. "What cost do you exact from your faithful? What lies do you
tell?"
He stopped
then, suddenly, hearing the splashing.
He grabbed
at his arm a moment later, felt a line of blood there, and noticed a small
stone, a smoky crystal, lying on the black sand before him.
Thagraine's
eyes widened as surely as if God himself had answered his questions. He looked
back and turned and ran with all speed for the cave, crying for Avelyn every
step.
Avelyn
couldn't bear to watch, nor could he bear to look away. Fiery rocks streaked
down before the cave entrance, slicing holes in the wide leaves of trees and
bushes. The rocky hail was light for some time, gradually increasing to the
point where it punished the very ground of Pimaninicuit.
And through
the deluge, Avelyn heard his name. He peered out, stunned, as a torn and
battered Thagraine came into view beyond the thinned foliage, the man bleeding
in so many places that he seemed one great wound. He stumbled forward
pitifully, holding out his arms toward the cave.
Avelyn set
his feet under him. He knew that it was foolhardy for him to go out, but how
could he not? He could make it, he told himself grimly. He could get to Thagraine
and shelter the man back to the cave. He tried not to think of the choice that
would then befall him, of tending to either Thagraine or to the sacred stones,
for his period of opportunity for sealing the enchantment of the stones was
narrow indeed.
But Avelyn
would have to worry about that when the time came. Thagraine was barely twenty
strides away, stumbling forward, when Avelyn started out.
He saw it at
once, a dark blot high above, and he knew, somehow he knew, its deadly path.
Thagraine
spotted him then, a hopeful, pitiful, smile widening on his bloody face.
The stone
streaked down like an aimed arrow, smashing into the back of Thagraine's head,
laying him out flat on the ground.
Avelyn fell
back into the cave, into his prayers.
The storm
intensified over the next hour, wind and rocky rain pounding the island,
battering the ground above Avelyn's hole so forcefully that the monk feared it
would collapse upon him.
But then, as
abruptly as it began, it ended, and the skies cleared quickly to deep blue.
Avelyn came
out, frightened but determined. He went right to Thagraine, a torn and bloody
pulp. Avelyn meant to turn him over, but he could not find his breath when he
looked at the fatal wound, a gaping hole smashed right through Thagraine's
skull, brain matter splattered all about.
The object
of Thagraine's death, a huge purple amethyst, held Avelyn's attention. Gently,
reverently, Avelyn reached into the back of his dead companion's head and
pulled forth the stone. He could feel the power thrumming within it, the likes
of which he had never before imagined. Surely this was greater than any stone
at St.-Mere-Abelle! And the size of it! Avelyn's hands were large indeed, yet
even with his fingers fully extended he could not touch all edges of the stone.
He went to
work, put all thoughts of Thagraine and of the boy Thagraine had killed far out
of his mind, and went with furor to the task he had trained to do for all these
years. He prepared the amethyst first, coating it with special oils, giving it
some of his own energy through intense prayer and handling.
Then he went
on, letting his instincts guide him to which stones were the most full of
heavenly energy. Many showed no magical power at all, and Avelyn soon realized
that these were the remnants of previous showers, brought up to the surface by
the battering of the storm. He selected an egg-sized hematite next, and then a
ruby, small but flawless to his trained eye.
On and on he
went. Only those stones he selected and treated would hold their power; the
others would become the waste of Pimaninicuit, buried by the black sands and
the resurgent foliage over the next seven generations.
Late that
night, the monk fell; thoroughly exhausted, upon the beach bordering the
lagoon. He did not wake up until long after the dawn, his precious cargo intact
in his pack. Only then did Avelyn take the time to note that dramatic change
that had come over Pimaninicuit. No longer did the island seem so plush and
inviting. Where trees and thick brush had grown was now only battered pulp and
blasted stone.
It took
great effort for the monk to get the sunken boat raised and floating, but he
somehow managed. He thought that he should fill it with fruits or some other
delicacy, but in looking around at the near total devastation, Avelyn realized
that opportunity was lost. On another note, Avelyn could not help but laugh at
the absurd, useless treasure that lay strewn all about him. In an hour's time,
he could collect enough precious―though non-magical―gemstones to
finance the building of a palace finer than that in Ursal. In a day, he could
have more wealth than any man in all Honce-the-Bear, in all the world, perhaps,
including the fabulously rich tribal chieftains of Behren. But his orders
concerning Pimaninicuit had been explicit and unyielding: only those stones
treated to retain their magic could be brought from the island. Any other gems
taken would be considered an insult to God himself. The gift of the showers was
given to two monks only, and whatever they might prepare, they might take. Not
a ruby, not a smoky quartz, more.
Thus, Avelyn
simply sat staring outward, too overwhelmed even to eat, and waited for the
Windrunner.
The sails
came into sight late the next day. Like a robot, beyond feeling, Brother Avelyn
got into the boat and pushed away. Only then did he think that perhaps he
should retrieve the body of Thagraine, but he decided against that course.
What better
fate and final resting place for an Abellican monk?
CHAPTER 19
Truth Be Told
He hardly
noted the passing of the days, the weeks, so enthralled was he with the horde
of God-given treasures. While Adjonas tended to the crew and their course, the
three remaining monks―even Pellimar, whose condition had steadily
improved―worked with the stones. The powrie slash had not been without
consequence to Pellimar, though, tearing the muscles about the monk's left
shoulder. His arm hung practically useless, with no sign that it would ever
improve.
They
encountered no powries on the voyage back from Pimaninicuit, and Avelyn wasn't
concerned in any case. He above all others sensed the throbbing powers of some
of the gemstones. If a barrelboat showed itself, Avelyn was confident he could
use any one of a dozen different stones to destroy it utterly.
Most
intriguing of all was the giant purple amethyst, with so many different crystal
shafts. Its bottom was nearly flat, and placed on the floor it resembled some
strange purple bush, with stems of various heights rising at many angles.
Avelyn could not discern the purpose of the magic, except to note that there
was a tremendous amount of energy stored within those crystals.
Some of the
stones, such as the hematite, were placed in a small tumbler and rolled for
hours on end, smoothing them to a perfect finish. Others had to be treated with
oils for many days, that their magic be locked permanently within them. All
three monks knew the process, and knew each stone, except for that amethyst.
They
couldn't tumble it―it was too large for the container―and they
hardly knew where to begin with their oils. Avelyn made it his personal work,
and he treated the giant crystal with prayers, not physical salves. He felt as
if he was giving a bit of himself to the stone each time, but that was
acceptable, as if it were soiree communion with his God.
The talk
among the monks did not turn often to poor Thagraine―they prayed for him
and, in their minds and hearts, put him to rest―but among the grumbling
crew, little was whispered that did not concern Taddy Sway, the youth who had
tried for the island and who had not returned. Avelyn felt burning, accusing
eyes on his back every time he walked the deck.
Whispers
bred open talk in the heat and boredom of the passing days, and open talk bred
accusing shouts. Avelyn, Pellimar, and most of all, Quintall, were not
surprised then, one early morning, when Captain Adjonas came to them, warning
of a mounting call for mutiny.
"They
want the stones," Adjonas explained. "Or at least, some of the stones,
in exchange for the life of Taddy Sway."
"They
cannot even begin to understand the power of these gems," Quintall
protested.
"But
they understand the value of a ruby or an emerald," Adjonas pointed out,
"even without the magic."
Avelyn bit
his lip, remembering the hours on the beach, surrounded by so vast a wealth of
useless gems.
"Your
crew is being well paid for the voyage," Quintall reminded the captain.
"Extra
compensation for the lost man," Adjonas remarked.
"They
knew the risks.
"Did
they?" the captain asked sincerely. "Did they suspect that the four
men they carried might turn against them?"
Quintall
stood up and walked to stand right before the captain, the monk seeming even
more imposing because Adjonas had to stoop belowdecks, whereas Quintall could
stand at his full height.
"I am
only echoing their sentiments," Adjonas explained, not backing off an
inch. Words that Quintall should hear. "We are three months yet from
St.-Mere-Abelle."
Quintall
glanced around the tiny cabin, eyes narrowed as he planned his next move.
"We must end it this day," he decided, and he moved to Avelyn's cot
and took one of the gemstones, an orange-brown stone marked by three black
lines―a tiger's paw, it was called―from the tumbling box.
The stocky
monk led the way to the deck, the other three close behind. Quintall's physical
attitude as he came out alerted the crew that something important was about to
happen, and they quickly gathered around the group, Bunkus Smealy at their
lead.
"There
will be no compensation for Taddy Sway," Quintall said bluntly. "The
foolish youth forfeited his life when he swam to the island."
"Ye
killed him!" one man cried.
"I was
on the Windrunner," Quintall reminded.
"Yer
monks, I mean!" the man insisted.
Quintall
neither denied nor confirmed the execution. "The island was for two men
alone, and even one of them, trained for years to survive Pim―the island,
did not return."
Bunkus
Smealy turned about and waved his hand forcefully, quieting the rising murmurs.
"We're thinking that ye owe us," he said, turning back to Quintall.
He tucked his hands into his rope belt, taking on an important attitude.
Quintall
measured him carefully. He understood then that Smealy was the linchpin, the
organizer, the would-be captain.
"Captain
Adjonas does not agree," Quintall said evenly, coaxing the mutiny to the
surface.
Smealy
turned a wicked grin on the captain. "Might not be Captain Adjonas'
decision," he said.
"The
penalties for mutiny―" Adjonas began, but Smealy stopped him short.
"We're
knowing the rules," Smealy assured him loudly. "And we're knowing,
too, that a man has got to be caught to be hung. Behren's closer than
Honce-the-Bear, and they're not for asking many questions in Behren."
There―he
had played his hand, and now it was time for Quintall to take that hand and
crush it. Smealy's eyes widened when he looked back at the stocky monk, when he
heard the low growl coming from Quintall's throat, when he looked at the man's
arm and saw not a human appendage but the paw and claws of a great tiger!
"What?"
the old sea dog started to ask as Quintall, faster then Smealy could possibly
react, raked the man chin to belly.
The
horrified crew fell back.
"He
killed me," Smealy whispered, and then, true to his words, with three
great lines of bright blood erupting across his neck and chest, he fell limp to
the deck.
Quintall's
roar, truly the roar of a tiger, sent the crew scrambling.
"Know
this!" the transformed monk bellowed from a face that looked human but
with a voice that sounded much greater. "Look upon dead Bunkus Smealy and
see the fate of any other who speaks against Captain Adjonas or the brothers of
St.-Mere-Abelle!"
Given the
expressions on the crewmen, Avelyn thought it unlikely that any of them would
utter another mutinous whisper all the way back to the coast and to
St.-Mere-Abelle.
The three
monks exchanged not a word as they went back to their cabin, nor for the rest
of that day. Avelyn took care to keep his accusing gaze away from Quintall. His
mind swirled in a hundred different directions. He had come to know Bunkus
Smealy well over the last few months and, though he was not overfond of the
weasely man, he could not help but feel some sense of loss.
And
agitation. The cool and callous way Quintall had dispatched the man, had
murdered a human being, shook gentle Avelyn to his very bones. This was not the
way of the Abellican Church, at least not in Avelyn's mind, and yet the
efficiency of the executions of Taddy Sway and now of Bunkus Smealy made Avelyn
suspect that Quintall was acting as he had been instructed by the masters
before they had left port. The mission was vital, true enough, the greatest
moment in seven generations. Avelyn and the other monks would give their lives
willingly to see the mission successful. But to kill without remorse?
He chanced a
look at Quintall early the next day as the man went about his business. He
remembered the emotional torture the execution had exacted on Thagraine, the
restlessness. None of that was evident in the dark, stocky man. Quintall had
killed Bunkus Smealy as he had drowned the powrie, without distinction of the
fact that the victim this time was not an evil dwarf but a human being.
A shudder
coursed down Avelyn's spine. Without remorse. And Avelyn knew when they
returned to the abbey, when their tale was told in full, the masters, even
Father Abbot Markwart, would only nod their agreement with Quintall's brutal
actions.
Avelyn could
appreciate their notion of the "greater good," for that would surely
be the excuse given, but somehow all of this was out of line with justice, and
justice was supposedly among the major tenets of the Abellican Church.
For Brother
Avelyn, who had just been through the most sacred event, who had just realized
the most religious experience by far of all his young life, something here
seemed terribly out of place.
The month
had turned to Parvespers, the last month of the autumn, when the Windrunner
swept around the northeastern reach of the Mantis Arm, past Pireth Tulme and
into the Gulf of Corona. Cold winds and stinging spray buffeted the crew. At
night, they huddled together around oil lamps and candles, trying to ward off
the chill. But their spirits were high, every man. All thoughts of Taddy Sway
and Bunkus Smealy were behind them now, for their destination and their reward
were at hand.
"Will
ye stay in the abbey, then?" Dansally asked Avelyn one crisp morning. Land
was out of sight again as the Windrunner cut a direct course across the gulf to
All Saints Bay.
Avelyn
considered the question with a most curious expression. "Of course,"
he finally answered.
Dansally's
shrug was telling to the perceptive monk. He realized suddenly that she was
asking him for companionship! "Do you mean to leave the ship?" he
asked.
"Might,"
Dansally replied. "We'll be puttin' in three times between St.-Mere-Abelle
and Palmaris, where Adjonas means to dock for winter."
"I have
to . . . " Avelyn began. "I mean, there is no choice before me.
Father Abbot Markwart will need a full accounting, and I will be at work for
months with the stones I collected―"
She silenced
him by putting a finger gently across his lips, her eyes soft and moist.
"Would
that I could come and visit ye then," she said quietly. "Might that
be allowed?"
Avelyn
nodded, fairly stricken mute.
"Would
ye be bothered?"
Avelyn shook
his head rather vigorously. "Master Jojonah is a friend," he
explained. "Perhaps he could find you work."
"On me
back in an abbey?" the woman asked incredulously.
"Different
work," Avelyn answered with a chuckle, hiding his discomfort at the
notion. Those wicked stories of Bien deLouisa flitted through his memory.
"But would Captain Adjonas let you off the ship?" he asked, to change
the uncomfortable course down which his mind was flying.
"Me
contract was for the isle and back," she replied. "We'll soon be
back. Adjonas got nothing on me after Palmaris. I'll get me pay―and more
for the favors I did for the rest of the crew―and be gone."
"Then
will you come to the abbey?" Avelyn asked, showing more emotion, more
hopefulness, than he had intended.
Dansally's
smile was wide. "Might that I will," she answered. "But first,
ye got to do something for me." As she finished talking, she leaned
closer, putting her lips to his. Avelyn recoiled instinctively, out of shyness.
When he thought about his hesitation, it only strengthened his resolve. His
relationship with Dansally was special, was something different from the
physical connection she had with other men. Surely his body wanted what she
offered, but if he gave in now, then would he be lessening that special bond,
reducing his relationship with Dansally to the level of all the others?
"Don't
ye pull away," she pleaded, "not this time."
"I
could bring Quintall to you," Avelyn said, a bitter edge to his voice.
Dansally
fell back and slapped him across the face. He meant to respond with an insult,
but by the time he recovered, he noted that she was kneeling on the bed, head
down, shoulders moving with sobs.
"I―I
did not mean ..." Avelyn stuttered, feeling horrible about wounding his
precious Dansally.
"So ye
think I'm a whore," she said. "And so I am."
"No,"
Avelyn replied, putting a hand on her shoulder.
"But
I'm more a virgin than ye know!" the woman snapped, head coming up so that
her gaze, her proud gaze, could lock with Avelyn's. "Me body does its
work, 'tis true, but me heart's never been there. Not once! Not even with me
worthless husband―might that be why he threw me out!"
The thought
that Dansally had never loved caught Avelyn off his guard and settled him back
for a bit. Though he was completely inexperienced in physical lovemaking, he
understood what she was saying.
And he
believed her!
He didn't
answer, except to lean forward and offer a kiss.
Brother
Avelyn learned much about love that day, learned the completeness of body and
spirit in a way more profound than his morning exercise could ever approach.
So did
Dansally.
The
Windrunner was welcomed at St.-Mere-Abelle with understated efficiency, just a
handful of monks, Masters Jojonah and Siherton among them, coming down to the
docks to greet the returning brothers and their precious cargo, and to direct
the lesser monks in carrying aboard ship a pair of heavy chests. A new wharf
had been constructed, reaching far enough out into the bay so that the
Windrunner could dock.
To mollify
his crew, Adjonas had the chests opened as soon as they were brought on deck,
and how the men gasped!
Avelyn did,
too, noting the piles of coins and gems and jewelry, such a treasure as he had
never before seen. Something beyond the rich materials caught his eyes, though;
as the lids were being secured in place once more. He didn't quite understand
it, nor could he make out the aura of magic surrounding Master Siherton. The
man had one of his hands behind his back, and Avelyn noted that he was
fingering a pair of stones, a diamond and a smoky quartz.
Suspicious,
but wise enough to keep his mouth shut, Avelyn bid farewell to Adjonas and the
others―though not a man aboard the Windrunner regretted the departure of
the three monks―and went ashore. His thoughts were on Dansally, hoping
she would indeed leave the Windrunner at next port and make her way to
St.-Mere-Abelle. Logically, Avelyn knew that she would indeed, knew that they
had shared something precious. But still his doubts lingered. Had their
encounter really been special to Dansally? How had he measured. up against all
the men she had known? Perhaps he hadn't really done it right, or perhaps Adjonas
had ordered her to bed Avelyn, or even had made a wager with her that she could
not bed the man.
Avelyn
fought hard to dismiss all those ridiculous notions and doubts. Whatever logic
assured him, Avelyn knew that he would not relax until he saw the dark-haired
woman's blue eyes again, eyes to which Avelyn had brought back a good measure
of sparkle, at the gates of St.-Mere-Abelle.
The
reception awaiting the three returned monks inside the abbey was more in tune
with what they had been expecting. The chapel hall was lined with the finest
baked goods from all the region―muffins and sweet rolls, cinnamon and
raisin breads―all to be washed down with mead and even some of the rare
and precious wine known as boggle. The choir was there, singing joyously. The
Father Abbot watched from his high perch on the balcony, and all the monks of
the order and all the servants of the abbey danced and sang, and laughed the
whole night through.
How Avelyn
wished that Dansally were there! That thought led him to wonder why she and the
others of the Windrunner had not been invited. With the tides, the ship could
not put out until after midnight, so why hadn't the thirty, or at least the
captain, been included in the much deserved festivities?
The last
bite of a cinnamon roll turned over in Avelyn's stomach, a sinking feeling. A
group of monks were walking toward him―he recognized Brother Pellimar
among them―no doubt to pester him about the events on the island. Avelyn
knew that he could say nothing about that time until he had reviewed his words
with the Father Abbot.
And at that
moment, the young monk had other things on his mind. He considered the stones
Master Siherton had carried to the ship: a diamond and a smoky quartz. He knew
the properties of diamonds, the creation of light, but had never used quartz.
Avelyn closed his eyes, ignoring the call of his name by Pellimar, and reviewed
his training.
Then it came
to him in a sudden, horrifying rush. Diamonds not for light but sparkles!
Quartz to create an image that was not real! The crew and captain of the
Windrunner had been cheated! Now Avelyn knew why Adjonas was not at the
gathering, and as he considered the implications, his gut churned violently.
Avelyn
rushed past the approaching group, muttering something about speaking with them
soon, then ran about the room, taking a mental count of those in attendance. He
noted with mounting trepidation that not all of the monks were in attendance,
that one group in particular, the older students, tenth-year immaculates, those
men on the verge of becoming masters, were absent.
Neither
could he find Master Siherton.
Avelyn ran
from the chapel, skittering down the empty halls, his footsteps echoing
noisily. He didn't know the hour but suspected that midnight was near or that
it had come and gone.
He ran for
the south side of the abbey, the seaward side, and turned into one long
corridor, its left-hand wall dotted with small windows that overlooked the bay.
Avelyn rushed to one and peered out desperately into the night.
Under the
light of a half moon, he saw the outline of the Windrunner gliding out into the
bay. "No," he breathed, noting the bustle on the deck, tiny
silhouettes rushing past a small fire near the stern. He saw a second fire on
the water.
"No!"
Avelyn screamed.
Another ball
of flaming pitch soared out from the monastery, skipping in along the starboard
rail of the vessel, igniting the mainsail into one tremendous flame.
The barrage
intensified, more pitch, great heavy stones, and giant ballista bolts battering
the ill-fated craft. Soon the Windrunner was adrift, the strong currents of All
Saints Bay taking her toward a dangerous reef. Avelyn winced, seeing men
leaping from the deck, their doom at hand.
The screams
of the crew drifted across the dark water; Avelyn knew that the other monks, at
their celebration, would not hear. He watched helplessly; hopelessly, as the
ship that had been his home for nearly eight months jolted and listed, then
broke apart on the reef as still more missiles soared in. Tears ran freely down
his cheeks; he mumbled the name "Dansally," over and over.
The
bombardment went on for many minutes. Avelyn heard the people in the cold
water, and hoped against hope that some of them, that his dear Dansally, might
make it to shore.
But then
came the worst thing of all―a hissing, sizzling noise. A bluish film
covered the dark water, snapping and crackling off the stones and the sailors,
off the remnants of the proud ship. A sheet of conjured lightning silenced the
screams forever.
Except in
Avelyn's mind.
More
missiles went out, though their task was certainly finished. The strong ebb
tide of All Saints Bay would collect the flotsam and jetsam and carry it out to
the open sea. All the world, save Avelyn and the perpetrators, would think this
a tragic accident.
"Dansally,"
Avelyn breathed. His shoulders slumped, the young man needing the stone wall
for support. He rolled away from the window, putting his back to the wall,
facing the corridor.
"You
should not have come," Master Siherton said to him, the tall, hawkish man
standing quietly.
Avelyn noted
the considerable bag of stones at his belt and the grayish graphite he held in
his hand. Graphite was the stone of lightning.
Avelyn
slumped back against the wall even more, thinking Siherton would use the stone
to destroy him then and there and, in many ways, hoping Siherton would do just
that. The master only reached out and grabbed Avelyn by the arm and led him to
a small, dark room in one far corner of the massive abbey.
The next
morning, a crestfallen Brother Avelyn was in Father Abbot Markwart's private
quarters, Masters Siherton and Jojonah flanking him. It stung Avelyn even more
to realize that the actions taken against the Windrunner had not been a rogue
decision by brutal Siherton but had been sanctioned by the Father Abbot,
apparently with Master Jojonah's knowledge.
"There
can be no witnesses to the location of Pimaninicuit," Father Abbot
Markwart said evenly.
As there
will be no witnesses to my death, Avelyn thought, for the corridors of
St.-Mere-Abelle had been deserted that morning, the monks and servants sleeping
off their evening of revelry..
"Do you
realize the implications to the world?" Markwart said suddenly, excitedly.
"If Pimaninicuit became common knowledge, the security of the Ring Stones
would be lost and petty merchants and kings would hold the secret to wealth and
power beyond their comprehension!"
It made
sense to Avelyn that, for the security of the world, the location of
Pimaninicuit should remain secret, but that thought did little to erase his
revulsion at the destruction of the hired ship and the murder of her crew.
And the
murder of Dansally.
"There
could be no other outcome," Markwart said flatly.
Avelyn
glanced around nervously. "May I speak, Father Abbot?"
"Of
course," Markwart replied, resting back in his chair. "Speak freely,
Brother Avelyn. You are among friends."
Avelyn tried
hard to keep his expression calm at that absurd notion. "All aboard the
ship would have been long dead before the next occurrence of the stone
showers," he argued.
"Sailors
make maps," Master Siherton said dryly.
"But
why would they?" Avelyn protested. "The map would be of no use to
them, since seven generations―"
"You
are forgetting the wealth strewn about Pimaninicuit," Father Abbot
Markwart interrupted, "a treasure trove of jewels beyond
imagination."
Avelyn
hadn't thought of that. Still he shook his head. The journey was too
treacherous, and if the crew had been well paid, as promised, they would have
had no reason to dare the perils of the South Mirianic again.
"It was
God's will," Markwart said with finality. "All of it. You are to
speak nothing of what you have witnessed. Return now to the room that Master
Siherton assigned to you. Your punishment will be determined and revealed later
this same day."
Avelyn's
thoughts whirled, too confusing a jumble for him to utter even a sound of
protest. He staggered away as if he had been struck. Markwart verbally hit him
again when he got to the door.
"Brother
Pellimar succumbed this morning to his grievous wounds," the Father Abbot
informed Avelyn.
Avelyn
turned, stunned. Pellimar would carry scars forever, but surely he had mended.
Then Avelyn understood. The previous night, at the party, Pellimar had been
loose with his tongue. Too loose. Even to utter the name of the island without
Father Abbot's permission was forbidden.
"A
pity," Markwart went on. "That leaves only you and Quintall of the
four who went to Pimaninicuit. You will have much work before you."
Avelyn
stepped out of the room, into the stone corridor, and vomited all over the
floor. He staggered away, half blind, half insane.
"He is
being watched?" Markwart asked Siherton.
"Every
step," the tall master replied. "All along, I feared this response
from him."
Master
Jojonah snorted. "Avelyn worked alone on Pimaninicuit, yet the hoard he
retrieved is inarguably the finest ever brought back from the island. How can
you doubt his value?"
"I do
not," Siherton replied. "I only wonder when those qualities that give
Avelyn such value will become dangerous."
Jojonah looked
at Markwart, who was nodding grimly. "He has much work to do," the
Father Abbot told them both. "Committing his adventures to the page,
cataloguing the stones, even seeking out their true strength and deepest
secrets. The crystal amethyst most of all. Never have I seen such a magnificent
stone, and Avelyn, as its Preparer, has the finest chance to discern its true
measure."
"Perhaps
I can persuade him to our way of thinking before he has finished his
work," Jojonah offered.
"That
would be most fine," replied Markwart.
Siherton
gave his fellow master a dubious glance. He did not believe that Avelyn, so
full of idealism and ridiculous faith, could be corralled.
Jojonah
noted the look and could not disagree. He would try, though, for he was fond of
young Brother Avelyn and he knew the alternative.
"The
summer solstice," Father Abbot Markwart remarked. "At that time, we
will discuss the future of Brother Avelyn Desbris."
"Or
lack thereof," Master Siherton added, and from his tone, it wasn't hard
for Jojonah to figure out which event would most please the hawkish, brutal
man.
Avelyn found
himself secluded from the rest of the monks over the next few weeks. His only
contacts were with Siherton, Jojonah, and a couple of other masters, as well as
the pair of
guards―more tenth-year immaculates, who remained with him
wherever he went and Quintall, who was often at work beside him in the room of
the Ring Stones.
Disturbing
questions haunted the young monk every day. Why did they have to kill the men
of the Windrunner? Couldn't Father Abbot Markwart have simply imprisoned them?
Or, if this procedure was always the case, then why didn't the monastery simply
man its own ship and send only trusted monks to Pimaninicuit?
Every
logical argument ran smack into a wall, though, for Avelyn knew that he would
not impress any change over his superiors and the way of the Abellican Order.
And so he worked, as he was instructed, penning the tale of his adventures in
great detail, studying and cataloguing the newest stones, their type, their
magic, their strength. Whenever he was allowed to handle a magical stone,
Master Siherton was at his side, a potent and lethal gem in hand.
Avelyn
realized his place now, and truly he felt like one of the Windrunner's crew.
His only solace came in his many discussions with Master Jojonah, to whom he
still felt a bond. But while Jojonah continually tried to explain the necessity
for the actions taken upon the monks' return, Avelyn simply would not accept
it.
There had to
be a better way, he believed, and despite the potential for disaster, there
could be no justification for murder.
The spring
of 822 was late when his work neared completion, and Avelyn noted with some
concern that Master Jojonah spoke with him less and less, noted with some
concern the tender master's sympathetic expression whenever he looked upon
Avelyn.
Avelyn grew
uneasy, and then desperate. So much so that he chanced to pocket a gemstone, a
hematite, one day. Fortune was with him, for a mistake by Quintall caused a
minor explosion that afternoon, and though no one was hurt and nothing too
badly damaged, it proved enough of a distraction for the theft to go unnoticed,
at least for the moment.
Back in his
cell, Avelyn fell into the powers of the stone. He didn't really know what he would
do, other than spy on the masters and confirm his fears of his approaching
fate.
His spirit
walked free of his body, passed through the porous wood of the door and past
the pair of oblivious guards. Avelyn felt that tug of the stone, wanting
possession, but his will was strong and he resisted, floating invisibly down
the corridor and finally to Father Abbot Markwart's door.
Inside,
Avelyn glimpsed Siherton and Jojonah with the Father Abbot, the old man livid
about the mishap in the stone room.
"Brother
Quintall is a bumbler," Jojonah pointed out.
"But a
loyal one," Siherton snapped back, an obvious comparison to Avelyn.
"Enough
of this," demanded Markwart. "How goes the work?"
"The
cataloguing is nearly complete," answered Siherton. "We are ready for
the merchants."
"What
of the giant crystal?"
"We
have found no practical use for it," Siherton replied.
"Avelyn―Brother Avelyn" he corrected with a derisive snort,
"is convinced that it is thick with magic, but how to extract that magic
and what purpose it might serve, we do not know."
"It
would be folly to auction it," Jojonah put in.
"It
would not bring a good price unless we could determine its powers," Father
Abbot Markwart agreed.
"There
are merchants who would purchase it simply for the mystery," Siherton
argued.
Avelyn could
hardly believe what he was hearing. They were talking about a private auction
of the sacred stones! How much that notion diminished the sacrifice of
Thagraine and Pellimar, of the Windrunner's crew and of Dansally! The thought
of unbelieving merchants plying the gift of the stones, to amuse guests,
perhaps, or even for sinister purposes, wounded Avelyn deeply. His spirit
drifted out of the room, unable to bear any more of the sacrilegious talk.
He was
heading back for his physical form when he
realized that time was against him. His spirit hovered there in the hall. The
missing hematite would surely be discovered, and even disregarding that stone,
Avelyn's future was far from secure.
What was he
to do? And how could he tolerate any of this madness, this insult to God?
Master
Siherton came out of Markwart's room alone, his boots clicking on the floor as
he made his way in the direction of the stone room. To check on the damage from
Quintall's misstep, no doubt, the spying Avelyn realized; to check on the lists
of reorganized stones.
Tugged by a
sense of urgency, Avelyn gave in to the hematite, his spirit floating fast for
Siherton's back.
The pain as
he entered the man's body was excruciating, beyond anything Avelyn had ever
felt. His thoughts mingled with Siherton's; their spirits clashed and battled,
shoving and pushing for possession. Avelyn had struck the man off guard, but
even so, the straggle was nothing short of titanic. Avelyn realized then that
an attempt at possession was akin to fighting an enemy on his home ground.
If any had
been about to bear witness, they would have seen Siherton's body lurching back
and forth across the corridor, slamming into walls, clawing at its own face.
Then Avelyn
felt the weight of a corporeal form again. He knew instinctively that
Siherton's spirit was nearby, locked in some dimensional pocket that Avelyn did
not understand. And he had control of the body; it moved to the commands of his
spirit!
Avelyn went
off with all speed to the stone room, entering forcefully and snapping his
glare over the two guards and Quintall before they could utter a word of
protest.
"You
remain," Avelyn commanded one of the guards. "You," he said to
Quintall, "your punishment has not yet been determined."
"Punishment?"
Quintall echoed breathlessly. He had been told that there would be no
consequences from his mishap, and indeed, such minor problems had not been
uncommon in the month in which he and Avelyn had been at work with the new
stones. Just a week before, Avelyn had melted a leg of one table while
examining a ruby sprinkled with carnallite!
"Brother
Avelyn was not―" Quintall began to protest.
"To
your room and prayers!" the voice of Siherton commanded.
"Yes,
my master," said a cowed Quintall, and he moved off out of the room.
"Be
gone!" Avelyn commanded the other guard, and the man ran out of the room,
swiftly passing Quintall in the hall.
Then Avelyn
and the remaining guard began selecting and collecting stones: the giant
crystal amethyst, a rod of graphite, a small but potent ruby, and several
others, including turquoise and amber, celestine and a tiger's paw, a
chrysoberyl, or cat's eye, some gypsum and malachite, a sheet of chrysotile,
and a piece of heavy magnetite. Avelyn placed them in a bag, and in it he
placed, as well, a small pouch of tiny carnallites, the one stone whose magic
could be brought forth only a single time. Avelyn then went to the other end of
the room and pocketed a valuable emerald, not an enchanted one, but one used as
an example of a particular cut, and then he, bade the guard to follow
him―and quickly, since the use of the hematite was draining the monk and
Siherton's spirit was nearby, trying, Avelyn knew, to find some route back to
its body.
They made
their way to the secluded cell that held Avelyn's body, the master's voice
quickly and forcefully dismissing the two men who stood guard in the hall.
The one
remaining guard, the man from the stone room, opened the door on Siherton's
order. There stood Avelyn's corporeal form, as he had left it, clutching the
hematite. Avelyn in Siherton's body stepped past the guard and deftly took the
hematite, then instructed the guard to shoulder the inanimate body and follow
him.
"Brother
Avelyn is to be punished for treason against the Order" was all the
explanation he offered, and the guard, who had heard rumors to that effect for
weeks now, did not question the news.
It was
vespers, so few were about to observe the master and the guard, bearing his
extraordinary burden, as they made their way to the abbey roof overlooking All
Saints Bay. The guard, as instructed, placed the body at the base of the low
wall and stepped back.
Avelyn
waited for many moments, gathering his strength. He bent over the body,
slipping the hematite and one other stone, into its hand, tying the gemstone
sack to the body's rope belt.
"The
stones will allow us to find the body," he explained to the guard, noting
that the man was growing increasingly suspicious. "They will take from
Brother Avelyn the last of his physical strength as he dies."
The guard's
face screwed up with curiosity, but he did not dare to question the dangerous
master.
Avelyn knew
that he had to be quick―that he had to be perfect.
With great
effort, Avelyn tore his spirit free of Siherton's corporeal form and reentered
his own, coming to his physical senses even as Siherton's body shivered with
the return of his own spirit.
Avelyn was
up, quick as a cat, clutching the stones in one hand and grabbing Siherton by
the front of his robe with the other. Before the guard could come to the
master's aid, Avelyn hauled the stunned Siherton and himself over the rail.
They
plummeted past the abbey walls, down the cliff face, into the gloom, Siherton
screaming his protests.
Avelyn
kicked and pushed the man away, then called upon the second stone he held, the
malachite.
Then he was
floating, Siherton continuing to plummet.
Avelyn
continued to push out as he descended gently past the angled cliff. Near the
bottom, he pulled the amber from his pouch. He touched down lightly on the
water, as he had done in an exercise that seemed to him a million years ago. He
was glad that Siherton's body was not in sight; he could not have borne that
spectacle.
Using the
amber, he walked across the cold water to a point where he could get ashore,
then he moved off down the road.
He knew that
he would never look upon St.-Mere-Abelle again.
He used the
stones. With the malachite, he floated gently over cliffs that any pursuing
monks would spend hours climbing down. With the amber, he crossed wide lakes
that his pursuers would have to circumvent. Using a chrysoberyl, a cat's-eye,
he could see clearly in the dark and move along at daylight pace without the
telltale glow of a light. At the first town he entered, he happened upon a
caravan of several merchant wagons, and there he sold the common emerald,
giving him all the funds he would need for a long, long time.
He put miles
and miles behind him, between him and that terrible place called
St.-Mere-Abelle. But the young monk could not pull his mind far from the
horrors he had witnessed, the encroaching evil that nibbled at the very heart
of all that young Avelyn Desbris had held dear.
He learned
the truth of it one cold night as he lay curled beneath a tree, under the
stars, under the heavens. As if his thoughts were magically transported, or his
prayers for guidance divinely answered, his eyes looked across the scores of
miles to a land of great jagged mountains, to a smoking cone in its midst, and
the black devastation behind a slowly creeping line of red lava.
Avelyn
understood then―all of it―for it was not without precedent. This
gloom that had come to Honce-the-Bear had come before in a definite shape and
manner that was oft-told in the historical volumes at St.-Mere-Abelle. All of
it: the cancer that had grown in his world, the unpreparedness, the ungodliness
of St.-Mere-Abelle. The monks were the sentinels of God and yet even they had
given in to complacency, to the cancer. And because of that lapse, the darkness
had returned.
Half-crazed,
his entire world shattered, Avelyn understood. The dactyl was awake. The
brooding demon that forever haunted the race of man had come back to the world.
He knew it to be true. In all his heart, young Avelyn Desbris recognized the
darkness that had murdered Taddy Sway and Bunkus Smealy, the evil that had
destroyed the Windrunner and left his dear Dansally cold in cold water, the wickedness
that had forced Brother Pellimar to "succumb" to his wounds.
He awoke,
from his fitful sleep before the dawn.
The dactyl
was awake!
The world
did not understand the coming darkness.
The dactyl
was awake!
The Order
had failed; their weakness had facilitated this tragedy!
The dactyl
was awake!
Avelyn ran
off―one direction seemed as good as any other. He had to tell the world
of the evil. He had to prepare the men and women of Honce-the-Bear, and all of
Corona. He had to warn them of the demon, warn them of the Order! He had to
somehow show them their own unpreparedness, their own weakness. The dactyl was
awake!
CHAPTER 20
The Oracle
"How
many lights do you see?" The words were spoken in the elvish tongue, one
that Juraviel was using more and more with Elbryan. The young man knew all the
word's, all the common phrases, now, after five years in Andur'Blough
Inninness, and only his inflections still needed perfecting.
Juraviel
held a candle, as did Elbryan; and a couple of stars had appeared in the sky, the
sun just gone behind the mountainous western horizon.
The young
man spent a long moment studying Juraviel. Elbryan's lessons had turned more
toward philosophy during the fall and winter of God's Year 821 to 822, and he
had learned that even the simplest questions carried many layers of subtle
meanings. Finally, convinced that this was but a prelude to his lesson, and
nothing dramatic, the young man looked up and did a quick count of the stars,
noting four.
"Six,"
he announced cautiously, adding the two candles.
"They
are separate, then," Juraviel stated. "Your light and mine, and those
of the stars."
Elbryan's
brow furrowed. Slowly, hesitantly, as if he expected to be rebuked, he nodded
his head.
"So if
you pinched the light from your candle, you would stand in darkness,"
Juraviel reasoned.
"More
than now," Elbryan was quick to reply. "But still I would have some
of your light."
"Then
my light is not contained within the flame," Juraviel went on, "but
rather, it spreads far and wide. And what of the light of the stars?"
"If the
light in the stars was contained within the stars, then we would not see the
stars!" Elbryan growled in mounting frustration. There were times, such as
this, when he hated simple elven logic. "And if the light in your candle
was contained within the candle, them I would not see it."
"Exactly,"
replied the elf. "You may go now."
Elbryan
stamped his foot as Juraviel turned away. The elf was always doing this to him,
leaving him with questions that he could not answer. "What are you talking
about?" the young man demanded.
Juraviel
looked at him calmly, but made no move to respond.
Elbryan took
the cue―it was his lesson, after all. "You are saying that the
light, since it is not contained, is a shared thing?"
Juraviel
didn't blink.
Elbryan
paused for a long while, backtracking the conversation; considering the
options. "One light," he said finally.
Juraviel
smiled.
"That
was the answer," said Elbryan, gaining confidence. "One light."
"I
count a dozen stars, at least, now," replied the elf. Elbryan looked up.
It was true enough; the night was fast deepening, the stars coming out in
force.
"A
dozen sources of the same light," Elbryan reasoned, "or of different
lights that all join together. Because I see them, they blend. The lights
become one."
"One
and the same," agreed Juraviel.
"But
must I see them for this to be true?" Elbryan asked eagerly, but his
anticipation dissipated as he saw the frown immediately come over the elf.
Elbryan
paused and closed his eyes, remembering his earliest lessons, the axioms the
elves had put to him so that he might view the world in a completely different
manner. In elven philosophy, the first truth, the basis of reality was that the
entire material, physical world was no more than the collection of perceptions by
the observer. Nothing existed except in the consciousness of the individual. It
was a difficult concept for Elbryan, because he had been brought up with the
idea of community, and within that concept, such elevation of self was
considered the worst of sins: pride. The elves didn't see things that way;
Juraviel had once asserted to Elbryan that everything in the world was no more
than a play put on for Juraviel's benefit. "My consciousness creates the
world around me," the elf had proclaimed.
"Then I
could never defeat you in battle unless you willed it so," Elbryan had
then reasoned.
"Except
that your consciousness creates the world around you," the elf had
replied, and then, typically, he had walked away.
That seeming
contradiction had left Elbryan in a quandary. What he came to understand from
that viewpoint was a sense of self he had never before felt free to explore.
"The
stars and my candle are one because I can see both," the young man said
conclusively. "I make the world around me."
Juraviel
nodded. "You interpret the world around you," he corrected. "And
as you heighten your senses to become aware of the slightest details, your
interpretations will grow, your awareness will grow."
Juraviel
then left him, sitting in a field, holding his candle and watching the birth of
so many stars, heavenly fires to join with his own. That simple shift in
perception, that all the lights were truly one, gave Elbryan a sense of oneness
with the universe that he had never truly experienced before. Suddenly the
heavens seemed closer to him, seemed within reach. Suddenly he felt a part of
that vast velvet canopy.
All through
the rest of that year, and through the months of God's Year 822, Elbryan
learned to view the world as an elf, to find a paradox of individuality and
community, an elevation of the self, yet a oneness with all about him. The tiny
shifts in perception brought on so many new experiences, allowed him to see
flowers where he never before would have looked, allowed him to feel the
presence of an animal―even identify its approximate size―by subtle
scents and vibrations in the living world about him. He felt like a great empty
sponge being dunked into the waters of knowledge, and he absorbed so much,
taking incredible pleasure in each lesson, in each word. His entire concepts of
space and time altered. Sequence became segment, memory became time travel.
Even
Elbryan's sleeping habits changed, shifting to a more controlled, meditative
process than a lumped time of uncontrollable unconsciousness. "Fanciful
musing," the elves called it, or "reverie." In this semidream
state, Elbryan could tune out his sense of sight, yet keep his ears and nose keen
for external stimuli. And he replaced much of his dreaming with time travel,
moved his mind back. to another place in his life that he could replay the
events about him and view them from a different perspective, and thus, learn
from them.
Olwan was
alive to him on those nights, as was Jilseponie, dear Pony, and all the others
of Dundalis. Somehow the perfect recollections gave Elbryan a sense of
immortality, as if all those people really were alive, just locked away in a
different place to which his memory was the key.
He took
comfort in that. He found that much of elven philosophy gave him solace, except
that he could not really change what had happened, could not alter the past.
The pain
remained, the horrible screams, the desperate fights, the mounds of bodies. On
Juraviel's instruction, Elbryan did not avoid the anguish, but went to that
terrible place often, using the harsh reality of the death of Dundalis to
strengthen his nerve, to harden him emotionally.
"Trials
past prepare us for trials future," the elf often said.
Elbryan
didn't argue, but he wondered, and almost feared, what future trials could
possibly match the pain of that awful day.
He stood
atop the treeless hillock and he waited, his eyes glued to the eastern horizon,
to the tiny sliver of light heralding the approach of dawn.
He was
naked, every hair, every nerve feeling the tickle of the chill breeze. He was
naked and he was free, and as the horizon brightened a bit more, he lifted his
sword, a large but well-balanced weapon, into the air before him, both hands
clasping its long hilt, the muscles of his arms bulging.
Elbryan
brought the sword across in a gentle sweep, his weight lifting gradually with
the movement of the outstretched blade to keep his balance perfect. Up went the
blade over his left shoulder. He stepped right foot forward, then brought the
sword back, again slowly, perfectly balanced. His left foot came forward, then
went out to the side, blade and right foot following, turning the young man as
if he were now facing a second opponent. Strike, parry, strike, all in harmonic
and slow motion, and then he dropped his right foot back, coming around in a
fluid movement to stalk back to the left. Strike, parry, strike―the same
routine.
Then he
dropped his right foot back again and half pivoted, so that he was facing
exactly opposite from where he had started. He came ahead in three strong
strides―strike, strike, strike with the blade as he moved, then repeated
the same motions he had used, left and right, from this new position.
"Bi'nelle
dasada," it was called, the sword-dance. The young man continued for
nearly an hour, his arms and weapon weaving ever more intricate patterns in the
empty air. This was the bulk of his physical training now, not sparring but
gaining a memory of the movements within his muscles. Every attack and parry
angle became ingrained in him; what had been conscious battle strategy melded
into a reactive response or an anticipatory strike.
From the
trees at the base of the hillock, Juraviel and some others watched the
sword-dance in sincere admiration. Truly the muscled young human was a thing of
beauty and grace, a combination of pure strength and uncanny agility. His sword
swished with ease, as did his long and wavy, wheat-colored hair. Never losing
the slightest edge of balance, Elbryan's muscles worked in perfect harmony,
perfect fluidity, none battling, flexing and complementing each move.
And his
eyes! Even from this distance, the elves could see the olive-green orbs
sparkling with intensity, truly seeing the imagined foes.
The young
Elbryan's movements improved with every day, and so Juraviel gave him more of
the sword-dance, the most intricate battle movements known to the elves, who
collectively were the finest swordsmen in all the world. Elbryan mastered the
intricate movements, every one, soaked them into the sponge he had become and
held them fast in his heart, mind, and muscles. No longer did any, even Tuntun,
question his prowess or his bloodline. Never again in Andur'Blough Inninness
were the words "blood of Mather" spoken derisively where young
Elbryan was concerned. For he had passed through the "wall of
nonperception," as Juraviel called it, had shrugged off the human societal
inhibitions of consciousness, had become one with the greater powers, the
natural powers, about him.
On those
occasions when he did spar, he not only understood how to defeat any attack,
deflect, dodge, or block, but also knew which tactic would offer appropriate
counterattacks or would keep his defensive posture strong against subsequent
attacks from that foe, or even from others. Elbryan now won far more often than
he lost, even held his own when battling two against one.
His routines
became more varied, more deadly, resembling in many instances the motions of an
animal predator. He could put a dagger in his hand and curl his arm in such a
way that he might strike as the viper. Or he didn't even need the dagger but
could stiffen his fingers that he might drive them right through any obstacle.
And every
morning, before the mist veil blanketed Andur'Blough Inninness, Elbryan came to
this spot and watched the dawn, weaving his sword-dance, building the memory.
The blood of
Mather.
The
gifts―a heavy blanket, a small chair shaped of bent sticks, and a
wood-framed mirror―surprised and confused Elbryan. The mirror alone was
very expensive, he knew, and the craftsmanship and incredibly light wood of the
chair allowed it to be folded and easily carried, but the only one of the three
presents that made any sense to him was the blanket, a most practical item.
Tuntun and
Juraviel let the young man look the gifts over for a long while, let him test
the chair and even study his own image in the silvery mirror.
"My
deepest gratitude," Elbryan said sincerely, though his measure of
confusion was clear in his voice.
"You do
not even understand the significance," Tuntun replied distastefully.
"You believe that you have been given three gifts, yet it is the fourth
that is most precious by far!"
Elbryan
looked at the elf maiden, studied her blue eyes for some hint.
"The
mirror, the chair, and the blanket," Juraviel said solemnly. "The
Oracle."
Elbryan had
never heard the word before; again his confusion showed clearly on his face.
"Do you
think that the dead are gone?" Tuntun asked cryptically, apparently
enjoying this spectacle. "Do you think that all there is is all you
see?"
"There
are other levels of consciousness," Juraviel tried to clarify, casting a
stern glance at his teasing partner.
"Dreaming,"
Elbryan offered hopefully.
"And
the memories of fanciful musing," Juraviel added. "In Oracle, the
musing combines with the consciousness to bring the memory to the
present."
Elbryan's
brow furrowed as he considered the words, as their implications began to unfold
before him. "To speak with the dead?" he asked breathlessly.
"What
is dead?" Tuntun laughed.
Even
Juraviel couldn't suppress a chuckle at his elven companion's unending games.
"Come," he bade Elbryan. "It would be better to show than to
tell."
The three
left Caer'alfar, moving purposefully into the deep woods. The day was not
bright above them, even darker than usual with the misty blanket, and a light
rain tickled the forest canopy. They walked for nearly an hour, no one talking
except Tuntun, who offered an occasional verbal jab at Elbryan.
Finally
Juraviel stopped at the base of a huge oak, its trunk so wide that Elbryan
couldn't put his arms halfway around it. The two elves exchanged solemn looks.
"He'll
not do it," Tuntun promised, her melodic voice rising singsong.
"Nor
could he ever defeat you in battle," Juraviel was quick to respond,
drawing an angry stamp of Tuntun's delicate foot.
Elbryan took
a deep breath and straightened his shoulders. So, this was but another test, he
thought. One of his will and mental prowess, no doubt, considering the three
gifts he carried. He was determined not to disappoint Juraviel and not to let
Tuntun be right about anything.
Around the
back of the tree, Elbryan saw there was a narrow opening between the roots, a
tunnel that seemed to widen as it descended at a steep angle.
"There
is a pedestal of stone inside on which you must place the mirror,"
Juraviel explained, "and a place before it where you might set up your
chair. Use the blanket to cover the entry, so that it becomes very dark
within."
Elbryan
waited, expecting more instructions. After a long moment, Tuntun nudged him
roughly. "Are you afraid even to try?" she chided.
"Try
what?" Elbryan demanded, but when he looked to Juraviel for support, he
found the elf was pointing to the narrow opening, indicating that the young man
should enter.
Elbryan had
no idea what they expected, what he should do, beyond the simple instructions
Juraviel had offered. With a shrug, he took up his items and moved to the
opening. Getting in would be test enough, for the cave was far more suited to
one of elven stature. He slipped the chair in first, easing it down as far as
he could reach, then closing his eyes and letting go. From the sound of its
descent, the floor of the cave was not more than eight feet below the opening,
he figured. Next he lay the blanket along the bottom of the shaft, using it to
cover uneven jags of roots, that he wouldn't hook his clothing, get stuck, and
look completely stupid in Tuntun's always judging eyes. With a final glance at
Juraviel, hoping futilely that some further information would come his way,
Elbryan closed his eyes and started in, going headfirst and protecting the
mirror with his body. As soon as he crossed under the tree, he opened his eyes,
now more sensitive to the darkness, and scouted. A bear or a porcupine or even
a smelly skunk might have slipped in here, and it was with great relief that
Elbryan found the cave apparently empty, and not so large. It was fairly
circular, perhaps eight feet in diameter. As promised, a stone pedestal rested
near the wall just to Elbryan's side, and hooking his arm around a root in the
ceiling, he turned right side up and swung his feet to the pedestal, then
stepped down easily to the cave floor. A bit of water had accumulated in one
low spot, but nothing threatening or even inconvenient.
Elbryan
quickly set the mirror on the pedestal, leaning it against the back wall of the
cave, and opened his chair; placing it before the mirror, as instructed. Then
he went about draping the blanket over the cave entrance, darkening the room so
that he could barely make out his hand if he held it in front of his face. That
done, the young man felt about, found his chair, and slipped into it.
Then he
waited, wondering. His eyes gradually adjusted so that he could just barely
make out the larger shapes in the room.
The minutes
continued to pass him by; all was quiet and dark. Elbryan grew frustrated,
wondering what test this might be, wondering what purpose could be found in
sitting in the dark, facing a mirror he could hardly see. Was Tuntun right in
asserting that this trip was a waste of time?
Finally
Juraviel's melodic voice broke the tension. "This is the Cave of Souls,
Elbryan Wyndon," the elf half spoke and half sang. "The Oracle, where
an elf, or a human, might speak with the spirits of those who have passed
before them. Seek your answers in the depths of the mirror."
Elbryan
steadied himself with the breathing routine of bi'nelle dasada and focused his
eyes on the mirror―or at least on the area where he knew the mirror to
be, for it was hardly discernible.
He brought
out a mental picture of. the pedestal and mirror, recalled the image from the
few moments before he had draped the blanket. Gradually, the square shape was
visible, at least in his mental image, and so he sent his gaze within the frame
of that square.
And he sat,
as the minutes became an hour, as the sun behind the elven mist and the clouds
made its way toward the western horizon. Boredom crept into his concentration,
along with the frustration of realizing that Tuntun might be right. Still, no
further calls came from beyond the cave, so the two elves, at least, were
apparently being patient.
Elbryan
dismissed all thought of the elves, and each time one of those distracting
notions―or any other thoughts from outside this one room―came back
to him, he fought it off.
He lost all
sense of the passing of time; soon nothing invaded his focus. The room darkened
even more as the sun moved westward, but Elbryan, his eyes long past the gloom,
didn't notice.
There was
something in the mirror, just beyond his vision!
He slipped
deeper into his meditative state, let go of all the conscious images that
cluttered his mind. Something was there, a reflection of a man, perhaps.
Was it his
own reflection?
That notion
stole away the image, but only for a moment.
Then Elbryan
saw it more clearly: a man, older than he, with a face creased by the sun and
wind, a light beard trimmed low to follow the line of his jaw. He looked like
Elbryan, or at least as Elbryan might look in a score of years. He looked like
Olwan, and yet it was not, the young man somehow knew. It was . . .
"Uncle
Mather?"
The image
nodded; Elbryan fought for a gulp of air.
"You
are the ranger," Elbryan said quietly, barely finding his voice. "You
are the ranger who went before me, who was trained by these very same
elves."
The image
made no move to reply.
"You
are the standard to which I am held," Elbryan said. "I fear that you
stand too tall!"
Something
seemed to soften in the visage of the spirit, and Elbryan got the distinct
feeling that, in Mather's eyes at least, his fear was misplaced.
"They
speak of responsibility," the young man went on, "of duty, and the
road that lies before me. Yet I fear I am not all that Belli'mar Juraviel
believes me to be. I wonder why I was chosen in this―why was Elbryan
saved that day in Dundalis? Why not Olwan, my father, your brother, so solid
and strong, so knowing in the ways of battle and the world?"
Elbryan
tried to pause and collect his thoughts, but he found the words kept coming out
as if compelled by the spirit, by this place, and by his own state of mind.
Even if this was his uncle Mather, he realized he was speaking to the spirit of
a man he had never known! But that fear couldn't hold against the river of his
own soul, pouring forth in great release.
"What
height must I attain to satisfy the judgment of Tuntun and the many other elves
of like mind? I fear that they ask of me the strength of a fomorian giant, the
speed of a frightened deer, the wariness of a ground squirrel, and the calm and
wisdom of a centuries-old elf. What man could measure such?
"Ah,
but you did, Uncle Mather. By all that they say of you, even by the look in
Tuntun's eyes―one of sincere admiration―I know that you were no
disappointment to the fairy folk of Caer'alfar. How will they judge me twenty
years hence, a mere day by an elf's measure?. And what of this world I will
soon know?"
Terrifying
images, mostly of other humans, flitted across Elbryan's vision, as if they
were flying across the face of the mirror.
"I am
afraid, Uncle Mather," he admitted. "I do not know what it is that I
fear, whether it is the judgment of the elves, the dangers of the wilderness,
or the company of other people! More than a quarter of my life has passed since
I have seen another who stands as a human, who sees the world as a human.
"But
then," he continued, his voice dropping low, "I fear most that I no
longer see the world as a human, nor can I truly view it as an elf might, but
as something in between. I love Caer'alfar, and all of this valley, but here I
do not belong. This I know in my heart, and I fear that out there, among my own
kind, I will not be among my own kind.
"Kin
and kind," Elbryan decided, "do not always go together. What is left
of me, then? What creature am I that is neither elf nor human?"
Still the
image did not answer, did not move at all. But Elbryan felt that soft
feeling―that sympathy, that empathy―and he knew then that he was
not alone. He knew then his answer.
"I am
Elbryan the Ranger," he asserted, and all the implications of that title
seemed to fall over him, their weight not bowing but bolstering his broad
shoulders.
Elbryan
realized that he was bathed in a cold sweat. Only then did he notice the room
had darkened almost to the point of absolute blackness. "Uncle
Mather?" he called in the direction of the mirror, but the image of the
specter and even of the mirror itself was no more.
Juraviel was
waiting for the young man when he crawled out of the hole. The elf looked as if
he meant to ask some question, but he stared instead at Elbryan's face and
apparently found his answer. They said nothing all the way back to Caer'alfar.
CHAPTER 21
Ever Vigilant, Ever Watchful
Jill looked
out past the towering rocks to the dark waters of the wide Mirianic, great
swells rolling lazily, then breaking fast against the rocks two hundred feet
below her. The rhythm continued, through the minutes, through the hours,
through the days, the weeks, the years. Through all eternity, Jill supposed. If
she were to return to this place in a thousand years, the waves would remain,
rolling gently and then crashing against the base of this same rocky rise.
The young
woman looked back over her shoulder at the small fortress that she called home,
Pireth Tulme. In a thousand years, the scene would be the same, she decided,
except that this structure, with its single low tower, would not remain, would
be taken by time, by the wind and the storms that swept into Horseshoe Bay with
disturbing regularity.
She had only
been here for four months and she had witnessed a dozen such storms, including
three in one week, that had left her and her forty companions, all members of
the elite corps known as the Coastpoint Guards, soggy and sullen.
Yes, those
were the words, Jill decided. "Soggy and sullen," she said aloud, and
nodded, thinking that a fitting description of all her life.
She had been
given her chance, the one opportunity that most people, particularly women in
the patriarchal kingdom of Honce-the-Bear, never had. Jill closed her eyes and
let the ocean sounds take her. back to another shore, a gentler shore on the
banks of the Masur Delaval, to the city of Palmaris, the only home she
remembered. How fared Graevis and Pettibwa? she wondered. And what of Grady?
Had her disaster with Connor Bildeborough destroyed the man's attempts at entry
into the high society?
Jill laughed
and hoped that it had. That would be the one good thing to come of the tragedy.
Nearly two years had passed since her "wedding night," but the pain
remained vivid indeed.
She looked
around again, then up at the sky and noticed that many of the stars had
disappeared. A moment later, a light rain began to fall. "Soggy," she
said again, shaking her head. No matter how many times she witnessed it, Jill
could hardly believe how quickly the rain came on in Pireth Tulme.
Like the
rain that came into her life, first in that frontier village, when the goblins
came, then in Palmaris. She could hardly remember that first incident, but she
knew that her life had gradually grown wonderful. And then, in the snap of
fingers, in the space of a single kiss, it was all gone, all taken away.
How much
more could she have hoped for above the wedding in Palmaris? She had been
married in St. Precious, considered by many to be the most beautiful chapel in
all of Corona. And Dobrinion Calislas, Abbot of St. Precious and thus the third
ranking priest in the entire Abellican Church, had performed the ceremony
himself! What young woman would not swoon at the mere thought of such a day?
And then the night, spent in the mansion of Baron Bildeborough!
A shiver
traced Jill's spine as she remembered the grand room, the change that had come
over Connor, and then the look on his face, first feral and then, with the side
of his nose and one cheek burned and blistering, even worse. His expression had
softened only a bit the next morning when he and Jill had gone again before
Abbot Dobrinion. Of course, since it had not been consummated, the marriage had
been annulled immediately.
A snap of
old Dobrinion's fingers.
There was
still the matter of Jill's crime, though. Her assault on a nobleman, one that
might well have left the handsome young man permanently scarred, was no minor
matter in Palmaris. By right, Connor could have demanded her execution. Short
of that, there was the very real possibility that Abbot Dobrinion would bind
Jill into indenture to Connor, perhaps for the remainder of her life.
But Connor
had been merciful, and ever was Abbot Dobrinion long on forgiveness. "I
have heard of the incident with three rogues on the back roof of Fellowship
Way," the old priest had explained, a warm smile coming to his face.
"One with your skills should not be wasted serving at tables: There is a
place for a woman of your talent and ferocity, a place where such wild anger is
assuaged, even applauded."
Thus the old
abbot had bound her over into the service of the King of Honce-the-Bear, as a
foot soldier in the Kingsmen, the army. That moment remained very clear to
Jill: Dobrinion's words spoken sympathetically, while she looked back over her
shoulder at Pettibwa and Graevis. There was no anger showing on the faces of
her adopted parents, no hint that Jill and her irrational actions of the
previous night had cost them, too, so much just a most profound sadness.
Pettibwa had neatly burst apart at Abbot Dobrinion's decree, at the notion that
her Jilly would be taken from her. There was little joy that night at the Way;
where Jill said her good-byes.
Soon after,
with Palmaris behind her, Jill had come to see the wisdom of the abbot's
decision. Indeed she had thrived; initially, at least, in the military. She
started as a common foot soldier, "fodder walkers" they were called,
but soon enough worked her way into the more elite cavalry group. There were no
real enemies to battle: Honce-the-Bear had been at peace for longer than anyone
could remember. But in the weekly sparring contests, Jill released enough
enemies from her memories to carry her through with a ferocity that had astonished
her superiors. One by one, her sparring partners had been dispatched, usually
painfully, until not a man or woman in the unit desired to go against her. Her
notoriety had made her more than a few real enemies, though, and so she had
been moved about, from one fortress to another, serving a variety of functions,
from castle guard to cavalry patrol.
All in all,
it had been a boring year; castle guards were no more than showpieces, and the
worst incident Jill had seen in four months with the cavalry patrol was a fight
between two peasant brothers, when one had bitten the other's ear off. And so
it was with great expectations and hopes that Jill had received the news of her
appointment into the second most elite unit, behind only the Allheart Brigade,
in all of Honce-the-Bear: the famed Coastpoint Guards. These were the legendary
fighters who had in ages past turned away a powrie invasion, the fearsome
warriors who had tamed the region known as the Broken Coast, thus widening the
domain of Honce-the-Bear's King.
She didn't
get what she expected when she arrived at the small fortress of Pireth Tulme,
overlooking Horseshoe Bay and the wide Mirianic. Pireth Tulme was but one in a
series of keeps dotting Honce-the-Bear's coastline. Like all of its sister
fortresses, Pireth Tulme was secluded, far from any large settlements, but
strategically located to watch the waters for invasion. Pireth Tulme guarded
the southern passes of the Gulf of Corona, while Pireth Dancard held post on
the five small islands centering the gulf, and Pireth Vanguard watched the
northern way.
To Jill,
their mission seemed paramount, a stoic existence protecting the welfare of all
the kingdom. It didn't take her long to realize that she was alone in her
convictions.
Pireth
Tulme, and apparently all the other Coastpoint fortresses, were far from the
stoic bastions of their reputation. The partying had hardly slowed in all the
four months Jill had been there. Even now, later into the night as she walked
her watch along the low walls, she could hear the revelry―the clink of
glasses lifted high in one toast after another, the bawdy laughter, the squeals
of women pursued or pursuing.
The guards
were forty in number, with only seven of them female. Jill, whose only
experience with a man had been so very disastrous, did not like the odds. She
shook her head distastefully as she walked her watch this night, as she did
every night.
A short
while later one haggard-looking soldier―a man of forty years by the name
of Gofflaw, who had spent more than half his wretched life in the Kingsmen,
including a dozen years in the Coastpoint Guards shuffling from one lonely
outpost to another came staggering out to the wall, making his way toward Jill.
She gave a
sigh, resigned to the reality about her. She wasn't particularly afraid; she
didn't think the drunken slob would even get to her before he fell off the
narrow walkway, dropping the eight feet to the fortress's small courtyard.
Somehow, bouncing against the blocks of the outer wall with each step, he got
near the woman.
"Ah, me
Jilly," Gofflaw slurred. "Walkin' again in the rain."
Jill shook
her head and looked away.
"Why
don't ye go inside and warm yer bones then, girl?" the man asked.
"Quite a row this night. Go on with ye. I'll take yer watch."
Jill knew
better. If she accepted his outwardly gracious offer and went inside, Gofflaw
would soon follow, leaving the walls empty. Even worse, for him to be out here
fetching her, there was likely a conspiracy inside. The long, low main house of
Pireth Tulme was not large, only three medium-sized common rooms, each
surrounded by a dozen anterooms, each barely large enough for the pair of cots
and two footlockers it held. Most of the structure was underground, the main
house being three identical levels but appearing as only one story from the
courtyard. If Jill ventured into that tight place, if this man was out here to
lure her in, she would likely find herself in grabby quarters indeed.
"I will
keep my own watch, thank you," she replied politely and started away.
"And
just what're ye watching for?" the soldier demanded, his tone suddenly
sharp.
Jill spun on
him, her blue eyes narrow and glaring. She knew the routine and even agreed
that it seemed very unlikely that any enemies, or anyone at all, would approach
the fortress or sail past it on their way into the Gulf of Corona. But that
wasn't the point, not in Jill's estimation. If one invasion came every five
hundred years the Coastpoint Guards, the elite of the elite, must be prepared
for it!
"You go
to your party," she said evenly, her jaw clenched. "I choose to walk
to honor the uniform I wear."
Gofflaw
snorted and wiped a greasy hand down the front of his own red jacket. "The
better of it, ye'll learn," he said. "Just ye wait until the days
become a year, and then two and three and four and―"
"I
believe that she understands your reasoning, Gofflaw," came a solid,
unwavering voice. Jill looked past the drunk, who turned as well, to see Warder
Constantine Presso, the commander of Pireth Tulme, approaching along the wall.
By all appearances, the man was impressive―tall and straight, mustache
and goatee neatly trimmed, his red-trimmed blue overcoat tailored straight and
proper, black leather baldric crossing right shoulder to left hip and sporting
an impressive sword, a family heirloom. He was in his late twenties and had
earned his position by defeating three bandits who had slipped into the house
of a nobleman one evening. When she had first arrived at Pireth Tulme and had
met the warder, Jill's hopes had soared with a sense of greater responsibility.
She had soon
learned, though, that the ready appearance of the fortress, on that day when
the Kingsmen's regional commander had taken her out to the isolated outpost,
had been no more than a temporary show, and that Warder Presso, for all of his
regal appearance, had long ago fallen into the same trap as the rest of her
companions.
Presso eyed
Jill directly―he was often doing that. "And I believe that she
declines," the warder said.
"I
do," Jill agreed.
Gofflaw
muttered something under his breath and started past Presso, but the man stuck
out his arm, blocking the way.
"But it
grows late," Presso said to Jill, "or should I say early? Your watch
surely is ended."
"I take
the night."
"What
part of the night?"
"The
night," Jill snapped. "No one else will come up here. They view the
setting of the sun as the end of their duties, what little duties they do
bother to perform during the day."
"Calm,
lass," Presso said, patting his hand in the air. Perhaps he was trying to
be the levelheaded commander, but to Jill, it came off as condescending.
"I am
well read in our rules of conduct and operation," Jill continued.
"Our watch does not end with the setting sun. 'Ever vigilant, ever
watchful,' " she finished, the motto of the once proud Coastpoint Guards.
"And
for what are you watching?" Presso asked calmly.
Jill's face
screwed up incredulously.
"Would
you see a powrie ship, or even a raft full of goblins, if it glided past us
into the gulf, barely a hundred yards from our shore?"
"I
would hear them," Jill insisted.
Presso's
snort fast became a full-blown chuckle. "Dawn is not so far away," he
said. "Pray you go inside now and get the rain out of your bones."
Jill started
to protest, but the warder cut her short. He set Gofflaw up as sentry, then
took Jill by the arm and pulled her in front of him, pushing her gently toward
the tower door.
They went in
together, and in truth; Jill was glad to be out of the rain. At the bottom of
the tower stairs, through the small hallway that led into the main house, the
pair passed a partly opened door. From the sounds emanating from within, it was
quite obvious what was going on in there.
Jill hurried
down the hallway and entered the common room of the upper level. A dozen men
were in there, along with two women, all nearly falling-down drunk. One man was
up on the tables, dancing, or trying to; and removing his clothing to the jeers
of his male friends and the hoots of the women.
Jill looked
straight ahead as she made for the door to the stairwell that would get her
down to her room. Warder Presso caught her just as she reached that door,
grabbing her by the shoulder.
"Stay
with us and enjoy the rest of the night," he said.
"Are
you commanding me to do so?"
"Of
course not," replied Presso, who was really a decent sort. "I am
merely asking you to stay. Your watch is ended."
"Ever
watchful," Jill replied through gritted teeth.
Presso, gave
a great sigh. "How many months of boredom can you tolerate?" he
asked. "We are out here alone, all alone, with nothing but time ahead of
us. This is our life, and each of us must choose whether it will be pleasant or
wretched."
"Perhaps
we have different views of what is pleasant," Jill said, subconsciously
glancing back across the room to the hallway and the partly open door.
"I give
you that," Presso replied.
"May I
go?"
"I
could not order you to stay, though I truly wish that you would so
choose."
Jill's
shoulders sagged. Presso's conciliation somehow seemed to take the strength
from her more than any order he might have issued. "I was put in service
to the Kingsmen by a magistrate, the abbot of Palmaris," she explained.
Presso
nodded; he had heard as much.
"I did
not choose to enter, but once in the ranks, I came to believe," she said.
"I do not know what it was―a sense of purpose, a reason for
continuing."
"Continuing?"
"To
live," she answered sharply. "My duty is my litany―against
what, I do not know. But this―" She held her hand out to the
revelry, to the half-naked dancer who, as if on cue, tumbled from the table.
"This is no part of my duty nor my desire."
Presso
touched her arm gently, but still she recoiled as if she had been slapped. The
warder immediately raised both his hands unthreateningly.
Jill
understood his concern to be both defensive and compassionate. On the very first
night after her arrival, one of the men had tried to get too familiar with the
fiery woman. He had limped for a week, one foot swollen, one ankle and both his
knees bruised, one eye closed and a lip too fat for him to drink anything
without it dribbling down the front of his shirt. Even without the very
prominent evidence that she could defend herself, Jill believed that Presso
would not try anything. Despite his acceptance of the behavior within Pireth
Tulme, Jill recognized that he was a man of some honor. He had his way with the
other women, probably all six of them, but he would not infringe where he was
not invited.
"I fear
that Gofflaw's reasoning was sound," the warder warned. "The months
will wear on you, day after boring, lonely day."
"Indeed,"
remarked Jill, gesturing with her chin across the way. Presso turned to see
Gofflaw entering the room. The warder sighed audibly, then turned back to Jill
and merely shrugged. He really didn't care that the walls were unmanned.
Jill swung
about and left the room, but as soon as the door was closed behind her, she
veered down a side corridor and back out into the rain. She moved to a ladder
and climbed to the seacoast wall, then sat on its outer edge, dangling her legs
over the long drop.
There she
stayed for the rest of the night, watching the stars return as the storm cloud
raced away into the gulf. As the day brightened, the pillar-like rocks in the
wide bay came clearer, standing tall and straight like sentinels, ever
vigilant, ever watchful.
CHAPTER 22
The Nightbird
"The
snows will be soon in coming this year," Lady Dasslerond remarked, staring
out of her high tree house at the gray clouds that loomed on the horizon just
north of the enchanted valley.
"A
difficult winter would be consistent," Tuntun replied, her expression even
more grave than usual.
Lady
Dasslerond turned back to the pair and considered the words. The raid on
Dundalis, the sightings of goblins and even giants, the evidence of many
earthquakes to the north of Andur'Blough Inninness―all pointed to the
resurgence of the dactyl. There were even reports of a smoke cloud rising
lazily over the Barbacan, streaming from a solitary mountain known as Aida.
It made
sense; the dactyl could―and indeed, likely would awaken a long-dormant
volcano, using the magma to strengthen its underworld magic.
"How
long is he?" Lady Dasslerond asked as her gaze returned to the west and
north.
"He has
just passed his sixth year with us," Juraviel answered without hesitation.
"He was rescued from the goblins in the harvest season of the year the
humans call 816. Their reckoning shows the turn of 823 approaching."
Lady
Dasslerond turned to Juraviel, her expression showing that his answer was not
acceptable. "But how long is he?" she asked again.
Juraviel
sighed and rested back against the wide trunk of the maple. Measuring such
things was never easy for the elf, especially since he feared he viewed Elbryan
with favorable eyes.
"He is
ready," Tuntun unexpectedly put in. "The blood of Mather runs thick
in his veins. In a half century, we will be telling our next would-be ranger
that he is of the blood of Elbryan."
Juraviel
couldn't suppress a small laugh, even given the gravity of this meeting. To
hear Tuntun speaking so well of Elbryan seemed to him the ultimate irony. "Tuntun
speaks the truth," he confirmed as soon as the shock wore off.
"Elbryan has trained hard and well. He fights with grace and power, runs
silent and wary, and has visited the Oracle many times, almost always with
success."
"He
found a kindred spirit?" asked Lady Dasslerond.
"Only
that of Mather," Juraviel replied, beaming as the smile widened across his
lady's fair face.
"But he
is not yet ready," Juraviel added quickly. "There is more for him to
learn of himself and of the woodland arts. He has a year remaining, and then,
he will indeed walk as a ranger."
Lady
Dasslerond was shaking her head before the elf even finished his proclamation.
"The winter will be difficult," she said firmly. "And the humans
have settled several communities along the edge of the Wilderlands, have even
resettled that place which was, and is again, known as Dundalis. If what we
fear is true, then Elbryan will be needed, before the next season of
harvest."
"Even
if our fears of the dactyl prove false," Tuntun added, "many of the
humans are unprepared for the Wilderlands. The presence of a ranger would do
them well."
"The
turn of spring?" Juraviel asked.
"You
will have the boy prepared for his walk," Lady Dasslerond agreed.
"And
what of Joycenevial?" Juraviel asked.
"The
bowyer is ready for him," Lady Dasslerond replied. "And the darkfern
is tall this season."
Juraviel
nodded. He knew that Joycenevial, the finest bowyer in all of Caer'alfar, in
all of the world, had been cultivating a special darkfern all these six years
since Elbryan had been brought to Andur'Blough Inninness. This would be
Joycenevial's first human task since Mather, and, since the bowyer was aged
even by elven standards, most likely his last.
This one
would be special.
Elbryan
thought that he knew every trail and grove in the enchanted valley, and so he
was indeed confused on that day when Juraviel led him down, a particularly
twisting path, often branching and crisscrossing a stream more than a dozen
times. Their destination must be important indeed, Elbryan realized, for this
trail was even more difficult to follow than the winding ways that hid
Caer'alfar itself!
Finally,
after hours of backtracking, the pair came to a short descent down a steep,
sandy bank. At the bottom of the ravine, past a blocking wall of low evergreen
bushes, they came to a bed of ferns, bluish green in color. Most were about
waist high to Elbryan, shoulder high to Juraviel. Elbryan understood
immediately that this was their destination, that there was something unusual
about these plants; they were growing in neat rows, evenly spaced, and the
ground around them was bare. He wouldn't have expected much undergrowth, for
the ferns cast shade, but this area was too clean, as if caring hands regularly
weeded it.
"These
are the darkfern," Juraviel said, his tone full of reverence. He led
Elbryan to the nearest plant and bent low, bidding the young man to inspect the
fern's stem.
The plant
was thick and smooth, and the stem didn't seem to narrow at all as it came up
high and spread, three-pronged, to the leafy fronds. Elbryan peered closer, and
his green eyes widened in surprise, then narrowed again quickly as he moved
even closer to inspect the stem.
Silvery
lines wove gracefully about the dark green stem; they seemed to Elbryan
consistent with the fishing lines and the bowstrings the elves used.
"The
darkfern is one with the metal," Juraviel explained as soon as he realized
that Elbryan had found the key. "This ravine was chosen for the planting
because we learned that it is rich in minerals, particularly silverel, which
the plant prefers above all."
"The
plant brings the metal lines up with it?" Elbryan asked. Many implications
came to him then, as if the fog veiling one of the mysteries of elven life had
suddenly lifted. The elves used many metal implements―shields and swords
mostly―and Elbryan had sometimes wondered where they got the material,
since, to his knowledge, there were no working mines in Andur'Blough Inninness.
He had assumed that they traded for the metal, but then he had come to realize
that elven metal was unlike anything he had seen outside the enchanted valley.
He remembered his father's sword, bulky and dark, but that hardly compared to
the fine elvish blades, shining bright and holding so keen an edge.
"They
are as one," Juraviel confirmed. "The darkfern is the lone source of
silverel."
Elbryan
stared hard at the lines of gleaming metal. He felt as if he had seen this same
pattern before, though where that might have been, he could not remember.
"Treated
and cured properly, the stems are incredibly strong and resilient,"
Juraviel explained; "and pliable."
"Even
after you take the metal from them?"
"We do
not always take the silverel from the harvested stem," the elf replied.
Elbryan
thought on that for a moment, particularly on Juraviel's last claim that the
plants were pliable. Then it came to him where he had seen this same design.
"Elvish bows," he breathed as the fog flew from yet another mystery.
Now he knew how the elvish bows, so small and frail, could launch an arrow a
hundred yards on a straight line.
He looked up
from the plant to see Juraviel nodding.
"There
is no composite, not bone and wood, even when blended with sinew, that is
stronger," the elf said. He motioned to the man. "Come with me,"
he bade.
They walked
carefully past the cultivated rows to the tallest fern of all, one whose broad
fronds were above Elbryan's head. Unexpectedly, Juraviel handed Elbryan his
sword, then motioned the young man back a few paces.
Elbryan
watched, mesmerized, as the elf closed his eyes and began to chant in the
elvish tongue, using many words so arcane that Elbryan didn't recognize them.
The song came louder, faster, and Juraviel began to dance delicate, spinning
circles wrapped in a larger circle that encompassed the plants. Elbryan concentrated,
looking for the root sounds that made up the elf's song, but still he could not
decipher many of the ancient words. He did understand that Juraviel was
praising the plant and thanking it for the gift it would soon give. This did
not surprise Elbryan; the elves always showed respect for other living
creatures, always prayed and danced over the bodies of animals they had hunted,
and sang countless songs to the fruits and berries of Andur'Blough Inninness.
The twirling
elf tossed several puffs of powder upon the plant, then bent low and with some
reddish gel painted a stripe around the base of the stem just an inch or two
from the ground. He finished with a leaping flourish and landed pointing to the
stripe. "One clean strike!" he commanded.
Elbryan
rolled to one knee quickly and brought the sword flashing across, severing the
plant at exactly the stripe. The darkfern landed upright and held for a moment,
then slowly tumbled to the side into Juraviel's waiting hands.
"Follow
quickly," the elf bade, and ran off.
Elbryan had
to work hard to keep up. Juraviel ran all the way back to Caer'alfar, to the
side of the glen, to a tall tree that housed only a single elf.
"Joycenevial
is as old as the oldest tree in Andur'Blough Inninness," Juraviel
explained as the aged elf came out of his home and slowly descended. Without
saying a word, he dropped between the pair, took the cut fern from Juraviel,
and held it up near Elbryan. He turned it over and nodded, apparently pleased
by the fine and clean cut, then started back up his tree, fern in hand.
"No
markings?" Juraviel asked.
Joycenevial
only shook his head, not even bothering to look back at the pair.
Juraviel
praised him once, then started away, Elbryan in tow. The young man had a
million questions stirring around in his head. "The red gel?" he
dared to ask, trying to start a conversation, trying to unravel this most
extraordinary day.
"Without
it, you would never have cut through the darkfern," Juraviel replied.
Elbryan
noted the curtness of the answer, the elf's crisp, almost sharp tone, and he
understood that further questioning would be unwelcome, that he would learn
what he must when the elves decided to tell him.
Juraviel
sent Elbryan off to his duties then, but interrupted the young man again that
afternoon, two bows, including one that was fairly large by elvish standards,
in hand.
"We
haven't much time," Juraviel explained, handing the large bow to his
student.
Elbryan took
it and, ignoring the multitude of questions that again swirled in his thoughts,
silently followed. He studied the bow as he walked, and concluded at once that
this was not formed of the darkfern such as he had cut, but from a smaller
plant.
The old elf
took up a curious-looking knife, bent upward on both sides and with its cutting
edge on one side of a slit running down its middle. He grasped it firmly in his
left hand and cradled the fern stem―now stripped of its fronds―in
his right. He tucked the long shaft of the plant under his right shoulder, then
gently, very gently, scraped the blade along the stem.
A tiny strip
peeled away, so thin as to be nearly translucent. Joycenevial nodded solemnly;
he had treated the fern stem perfectly for the carving.
The old elf
closed his eyes and began a chant. He pictured Elbryan at the moment when the
young human held the stem, envisioned the size of his hand, the length of his
arms. Other bowyers would have marked the stem appropriately, but Joycenevial
was far beyond such crude necessities. His was an act of the purest creation
and not a mere crafting; his art was bound by magic and by the sheer skill that
seven hundred years had honed. And so it was with eyes closed that the old elf
went to work on the stem, singing softly, using the music of his voice to pace
his cuts in depth and intensity. He would spend the better part of half a year
on this one, he knew, scraping and treating, notching and weaving spells of
strength. Twice a week during the carving, he would coat the stem with special
oils to add to its resilience. And when at last the bow had taken shape, he
would hang it over an ever-smoking pit, a secret, enchanted place where the
magic was strong indeed, so strong that it continually filtered up from the
ground.
Half a
year―not so long a time as measured by the elves of Caer'alfar, a mere
moment in the long history of Belli'mar Joycenevial, father of Juraviel. He
closed his eyes and considered the final ceremony, for the bow and the boy: the
naming. He had no idea what title he would give the bow; that would come to him
as the weapon took on its own personality, its own nuances.
The name
would have to be correct, for this bow would be the epitome of his crafting,
Joycenevial determined, the highest achievement in a career so often marked by
perfection. Every elf in the valley carried a bow crafted by Joycenevial, as
did every ranger that had gone out from Andur'Blough Inninness in the last half
millennium. Not one of them would hold their weapon up against this bow,
however, for Belli'mar Joycenevial, as old as the oldest tree in Andur'Blough
Inninness, knew that it would be his last.
This one was
special.
* * *
At least
this time he had hit the tree that held the target! Elbryan looked at Juraviel
hopefully, but the elf just stood, shaking his head. In one swift movement,
Juraviel put up his bow and let fly an arrow, then another, then a third in
rapid succession.
It had come
so fluidly, so fast, that Elbryan was still staring at the elf when he heard
the third arrow hit. He was almost afraid to look up at the mark and wasn't
surprised to find all three embedded squarely in the target, one in the
bull'seye, the other two right beside it.
"I will
never shoot as well as you," Elbryan lamented, in as close to a whine as Juraviel
had heard from the young man in years. "Or as well as any elf in the
valley."
"True
enough," retorted the elf, and he smiled as Elbryan's green eyes widened.
That apparently was not the response the young man wanted to hear.
With a
growl, proud Elbryan put up his bow and let fly, missing everything this time.
"You
are aiming at the target," Juraviel remarked.
Elbryan
looked at him curiously; of course he was aiming at the target!
"At the
whole target," the elf explained. "Yet the tip of your arrow is not
nearly large enough to cover the whole."
Elbryan
relaxed and tried to decipher the words. He considered them in relationship to
the entire elven philosophy of life, the oneness. Suddenly it seemed possible
to him that his arrow and the target were one and that his bow was merely a
tool he used that he might join the arrow and target.
"Aim at
a specific, very precise point on the target," Juraviel explained.
"You must tighten your focus."
Elbryan
understood. He had to find the exact spot where the arrow belonged, the
specific point where the two, target and arrow, were to be joined. He lifted
the bow―which was too small for him―again, drew back to the length
of the bend, though his long arms would have allowed him to pull much farther,
and let fly.
He missed,
but the arrow notched into the tree barely two inches above the target by far
the closest the young man had come.
"Well
done," Juraviel congratulated. "Now you understand." And the elf
began to walk away.
"Where
are you going?" Elbryan called to him. "We have only been out for
minutes. My quiver holds ten arrows yet."
"Your
lesson for this day is completed," Juraviel replied. "Contemplate it
and spend as long as you desire perfecting it." The elf walked off,
disappearing into the thick brush of the forest.
Elbryan
nodded grimly, determined that by the time Juraviel brought him out here the
next day, he would be able to hit that target with ease. He would stay out here
all the rest of the day, and would return as soon as his duties with the
milk-stones were completed the next morning, so he thought.
Every time
his concentration wavered even a bit, his arrow flew wide of the mark,
disappearing into the forest scrub. Elbryan had come out to this place with a
full quiver, a score of arrows, but within half an hour, his quiver was empty
and not a one could be found. Just as well, the young man thought, for the
fingers of his right hand ached, as did the muscle in the middle of his chest,
and the inside of his left forearm was badly chafed.
The next
day, Juraviel gave Elbryan a black leather guard to put on that left arm and a
new bow, this one not of darkfern but the largest the elf could find in all the
valley―though it was also too small for the towering man. Juraviel also
brought with him a light green triangular huntsmen's cap, which Elbryan
accepted with a confused shrug. This time they went out with two full quivers,
and Elbryan, improving minute by minute, spent nearly three hours at the range.
At the end of the day, Juraviel revealed a new tool for him, the very cap he
wore upon his head. The elf showed him how to bring the front tip of the
triangular hat low above his eyes and to use that point as a reference in
lining up his shots.
The very
next day, Elbryan hit the target two out of every three shots.
All through
the fall and winter, Juraviel trained Elbryan with the bow. The young man
learned the practical aspects of the weapon, learned how to fashion arrows,
heavy for greater damage and light for longer flight, and how to replace
bowstrings―though the elven silverel string rarely broke. Most important
of all, Elbryan came to know that archery was more a test of the mind than the
body, a concentration and focus. All of the physical aspects―the draw,
the aiming, the loosing of the arrow―soon became automatic repetition,
but each individual shot remained a mental measure of distance and wind, of the
length of the draw and the weight of the arrow. The fingers of the young man's
right hand were soon laced with calluses, and the leather on the inside of his
black arm guard had been worn down to half its original thickness. For Elbryan
went at this training with all the hunger he had shown in his other endeavors,
with a pride and determination that had many of the often scatterbrained elves
shrugging their shoulders in disbelief. Every day, whatever the weather,
Elbryan was at the target, working, training, drawing shot after shot, and
inevitably sinking his arrows into the target, near if not in the bull's-eye.
He learned to shoot fast―and from different angles: to roll on the ground
and come around with an arrow flying; to hang upside down from the branch of a
tree, arcing his shot skyward so it held the appropriate range; to let fly two
arrows at once and put them near each other, usually both on the target.
Every
morning he performed bi'nelle dasada and then his physical conditioning with
the milk-stones. He spent his lunches talking philosophy with Juraviel, then
went with the elf to the archery range for more practice.
His
evenings, to his surprise, were most often spent with Tuntun, for the female
had been the primary instructor, and friend, of Mather, a man about whom
Elbryan desperately wanted to learn more. Tuntun recounted many stories of
Mather, from his training days in Andur'Blough Inninness―he had made so
many of the same mistakes as Elbryan!―to his exploits in the Wilderlands.
How many thousands of goblins and giants had fallen to Mother's deadly blade!
That sword, too; became a topic of many discussions, for Tempest, as the blade
was named, was one of but six ranger swords ever crafted, the most powerful
swords to ever go out from Andur'Blough Inninness. Of the six, only one was
still accounted for, a huge broadsword named Icebreaker, wielded by a rarely
seen ranger, Andacanavar, in the far northland of Alpinador.
"You
are of a rare breed indeed," Tuntun remarked one starry evening. "It
might be that you are the only ranger alive, though we have not felt the sorrow
of Andacanavar's demise."
The
reverence with which she spoke touched Elbryan and at the same time laid a
great weight upon his strong shoulders. He had come to feel special, in many
ways superior. Because of the elves, he had been given a rare and precious
gift: another language―physical and verbal―another way of looking
at the world about him, another way of perceiving the movements of his own
body. He had come so far from that frightened waif stumbling out of burned
Dundalis. He was the blood of Mather, Elbryan the Ranger.
Why, then,
was he so terrified?
To find his
answer, Elbryan often visited the Oracle. Each time, it became easier for him
to conjure the spirit of Mather, and though the specter never offered any words
in response, Elbryan's own soliloquies allowed the young man to keep things
fairly sorted out, to keep his perspective and his nerve.
The winter,
a difficult one even in the enchanted valley―as Lady Dasslerond had
predicted―passed slowly, the snows coming early and deep and holding on
stubbornly as the season shifted to spring.
For Elbryan,
life went along at its usual frantic pace, learning and growing. He was truly
an archer now, not as proficient as some of the elves, but certainly an expert
by the measure of humans. His understanding of the natural world about him
would never be complete―there was simply too much for any individual to
know―but it continued to deepen with each passing day and each new
experience. The entire way in which Elbryan now viewed the world around him was
conducive to such learning; truly he was the sponge and all the world a liquid.
The shift
came dramatically, unexpectedly, when Elbryan was roused from his bed one
blustery Toumanay night by Juraviel and Tuntun. The elves prodded and pushed
him, finally getting him out of his low tree house wearing only a cloak and a
loincloth. They escorted him to a wide tree-lined field, where all two hundred
elves of Caer'alfar had gathered.
Juraviel
pulled away Elbryan's cloak, while Tuntun pushed him, shivering, to the middle
of the field.
"Remove
it," she said sternly, indicating the loincloth.
Modesty
caused Elbryan to hesitate, but Tuntun wasn't in the mood for a debate. With a
flick of her daggers, one in each hand, she cut away the meager covering,
caught it before it dropped two inches, then skittered away, leaving the
confused, naked man standing alone, with all the eyes of Andur'Blough Inninness
upon him.
Holding
hands, the elves formed a wide circle about him. Then they began to dance, the
circle rotating to the left. They broke their line often, individual elves
leaping into pirouettes or simply following steps of their own choosing, but in
general the rotation continued about Elbryan.
The elven
song filled his ears and all his body, gradually taking him from his place of
modesty, relaxing him, intoxicating him. All the forest seemed to join
in―the gusty breezes, the birdsong, the croaking of frogs.
Elbryan
tilted back his head, considering the stars, the few rushing clouds. He found
he was turning as the circle turned, as if compelled, as if the elven movement
had summoned a whirlpool about him, spinning him with its currents. All seemed
a dream, vague and somehow removed.
"What
do you hear?" came a question near him. "At this, your moment of
birth, what do you see?"
Elbryan
didn't even consider the source―Lady Dasslerond standing right before him. "I hear the
birds," he answered absently. "The night birds."
All the
world around him went silent, the dream state shattered by the sudden change.
Elbryan blinked a few times as he came to a halt, though, to his dizzy
perspective, the stars above him continued on their merry rotating way.
"Tai'marawee!"
Lady Dasslerond cried out, and Elbryan, hardly conscious that she was out in
the middle of the field with him; jumped at the sound of her voice. He looked
down at her as the two hundred elves echoed the cry of "Tai'marawee!"
Elbryan
considered the words: tai for "bird" and marawee for
"night."
"The
Nightbird," Lady Dasslerond explained. "You have been named Nightbird
on this, the evening of your birth."
Elbryan
swallowed hard, not comprehending what this was all about. Juraviel and Tuntun
certainly had not prepared him for such a ceremony.
Without
explanation, Lady Dasslerond then threw a handful of glittering powder in
Elbryan's face.
All the
world seemed to stop, then to start again but more slowly. The elvish singing
and all the harmony of the forest had renewed, and he was alone again in the
middle of the field, turning as the circle turned. So gradually that Elbryan
never noticed it, the elven voices faded away one by one. He realized he was
alone long after all the elves had gone, and before he could decipher any
meaning to it all, sleep overtook him, right there, naked in the middle of the
field.
The night of
his birth.
* * *
Belli'mar
Joycenevial nodded his head as he considered the product of his love. They had
named the ranger Nightbird, and so the elf's dream had not deceived him. This
bow, Hawkwing by name, certainly fit all that Elbryan had become.
Joycenevial
held the beautiful weapon up before him. It was taller than he, rubbed and
stained to glassy smoothness―even in the dim light of the single candle,
Hawkwing's dark green, silverlined hue shone clearly―with a sculpted
handgrip and delicate, tapered ends. The removable high tip was set with three
feathers, so perfectly aligned that they appeared as one when the bow was at
rest.
Hawkwing and
Nightbird―the old elf liked the connection. This would be the last bow he
ever crafted, for he knew beyond doubt that if he made a thousand more, he
would never near the perfection of this weapon.
Elbryan
awoke as he had fallen asleep, alone and naked on the field, except that he
found a red strip of cloth tied about his left arm, a green strip tied about
his right, both crossing the middle of his huge biceps. He considered them for
a moment, but didn't even think of removing them. Then he turned his attention
to the awakening world about him. The dawn had long passed; Elbryan knew that
he had missed his sword-dance, for the first time since it had been taught to
him. Somehow, that morning, it didn't matter. The young man spotted his cloak
and wrapped it about him, but then, instead of returning to his tree house, he
went to the Oracle, where he had left his mirror, blanket, and chair.
"Uncle
Mather?"
The spirit
was waiting for him, serene in the depths of the mirror. A thousand questions
came to Elbryan, but before he could utter even the first, his mind was
clouded, by images of a road, of a moor and a forest, of a valley of evergreen
trees that seemed vaguely familiar.
Elbryan
fought to steady his breathing; he was beginning to understand. Dark terror
crept up all around him, threatening to swallow him where he sat, and he
desperately wanted to ask Uncle Mather about it all, to relieve himself one
more time of those doubts.
But this
time, Elbryan was a receptacle and not the speaker. This time, he rested back,
even closed his eyes, and let that unknown path find its place in his mind.
He came out
of the cave even less relaxed than he had been when he had gone in, his face
reflecting his fear and uncertainty, more questions raised than answered.
When he got
back to Caer'alfar, he was surprised to see the place deserted. He moved
quickly to his tree house and found it empty of all his possessions―his
clothing, his baskets for collecting the milk-stones.
A new set of
clothes, finely made, was laid out on the floor before him. They had to be for
him, for they would obviously fit none other in Caer'alfar. Unless, Elbryan
pondered, another would-be ranger had been brought in.
He shook
that thought away, shrugged off his cloak, and began donning the clothing:
deerskin boots, high arid soft; supple breeches with a narrow belt made of rope
lined with silverel for strength; a soft sleeveless shirt with a leather vest
lined in silverel; and finally, a thick forest-green traveling cloak and a
lighter-green triangular huntsmen's cap.
Elbryan
looked around, wondering what he was expected to do next. He thought of the
field again and made his way there, to find all the elves of Caer'alfar waiting
for him, this time standing quietly in neatly ordered rows. In front of the
gathering stood Lady Dasslerond and Belli'mar Juraviel. They motioned
immediately for Elbryan to join them.
When he got
there, Juraviel handed him a full pack, a fine knife strapped on one side, a
balanced hand axe on the other.
A long
moment passed before Elbryan realized that the elves were waiting for him to
properly inspect the gift. He fumbled with the ties and opened the pack, then
bent low and gingerly dumped it out onto the ground. Flint and steel, a slender
cord of the same silverel-lined rope as his belt, a packet of the same red gel
he had seen Juraviel use on the darkfern, the blanket and mirror needed for
Oracle―which must have been retrieved soon after he had left the
place―and most telling of all, a, waterskin and a supply of food,
carefully salted and packed.
Elbryan
looked up to his elven friend, but found no answer there. Carefully, his hands
trembling, he repacked the satchel, then stood tall before Juraviel and the
Lady of Andur'Blough Inninness.
"The
red band is soaked in permanent salves," Juraviel explained. "Both
bandage and tourniquet. The green will filter air when placed over nose and
mouth, will even allow you to pass under water for a short time."
"These
are our gifts to you, Nightbird," Lady Dasslerond added. "These and
this!" She snapped her fingers and Belli'mar Joycenevial stepped forth
from the ranks of elves, cradling the beautiful bow.
"Hawkwing,"
the old elf explained, handing it over. "It will serve as a staff, as
well." With a simple movement, he removed the feathered tip, taking the
bowstring with it, then just as easily replaced it, bending the bow to restring
it with hardly an effort. "Fear not, for though it seems delicate, you'll
not break it. Not by striking, not by a bolt of lightning, not by the breath of
a great dragon!"
His
proclamation was met by a sudden burst of well-deserved cheering for the old
elf.
"Draw
it," Juraviel prompted.
Elbryan put
down the pack and raised the bow. He was amazed by its balance, by the
smoothness of its long and comfortable draw. As the bow bent, the three
feathers on its top tip separated from one another, looking like the
"fingers" on the end of the wing of a gliding hawk.
"Hawkwing,"
the old bowyer said again to Elbryan. "It will serve you as bow for all
your days, and as staff until you have earned your sword, if ever you do."
Tears in his
eyes, the old elf handed over a quiver full of long arrows, then slowly turned
and moved back to his place in line.
"Our
gifts to you," Lady Dasslerond said again. "Which do you consider the
most precious?"
Elbryan
paused for a long while, understanding that this was a critical moment for him,
a subtle test that he could not fail. "All the supplies and clothes,"
he began, "are worthy of a king, even a king of elves. And this bow,"
he said with all reverence, looking at Joycenevial. "I am sure that it has
no equal and know that I am truly blessed in carrying it.
"But
the Oracle," Elbryan continued, turning back to Lady Dasslerond, his voice
firm, "that is the gift I hold most precious."
The Lady
didn't blink, but suddenly Elbryan knew that he spoke mistakenly. Perhaps it
was the slightly crestfallen look of his friend Juraviel that tipped him to the
truth of his own thoughts.
"No,"
he said quietly, "that is not the greatest of your gifts."
"What
is?" the Lady prompted anxiously.
"Nightbird,"
Elbryan replied without hesitation. "All that I am; all that I have become.
I am a ranger now, and no gift in all the world―not all the gold, not all
the silverel, not all the kingdoms―could be greater. The greatest gift is
the name you have given me, the name I have earned through your patience and
your time, the name that marks me as elf-friend. There could be no higher
honor, no higher responsibility."
"You
are ready to face that responsibility," Juraviel dared to interject.
"It is
time for you to go," Lady Dasslerond stated.
Elbryan's
first instinct was to ask where, but he held the thought private, trusting that
the elves would tell him if he needed to know. When they did not, when they did
nothing but bow to him once, then filter out of the field, leaving him, once
again completely alone, he had his answer.
The Oracle
had shown him the way.
The land was
relatively flat and brown, with sparse low shrubs poking here and there. But
the gentle slopes were deceiving and the ranger, running smooth, could not
usually see very far in any direction. There were the Moorlands―the Soupy
Bogs, they had been affectionately called by the settlers on the edge of the
Wilderlands. To the child Elbryan, this had been the place of wildly
exaggerated fireside tales.
Except that
now, he ran through the Moorlands, and recalling those tales of howling beasts
and horrid guardians wasn't very comforting.
The mist was
light this day, not closing in on the man as it had the previous day, when
Elbryan felt as if watching eyes were with him every step. He came over a rise
and saw a silvery stream winding below him, meandering this way and that across
the brown clay. Instinctively, the ranger's hand went to his waterskin, and he
found it less than half full. He trotted down to the stream, which was just a
few feet across and less than a foot deep, and dipped his hand, nodding when he
found that the water was quite clear. The ground here was simply too compacted
to be swept up in the light flow. Rivulets of runoff had been crystalline all
through the Moorlands, except in those low basins where the water collected and
remained, where the ground and water seemed to blend, to melt together into a
thick muddy stew.
Elbryan
continued his inspection of the stream to make sure that nothing ominous was
swimming along its course, then hooked his pack on the stiff branch of a
prickly shrub and gingerly removed his boots. He had been running for five
days, the last two in the Moorlands. The cool water and the soft bed beneath it
felt good indeed on his sore feet; he briefly considered pulling off all his
clothes and lying down in the flow.
But then he
felt something, or heard something. One of his senses subtly called out a
warning to him. The ranger froze where he stood, tuned his senses outward to
his environment. The muscles in his feet relaxed, nerves on end, feeling for
vibrations beneath him. He turned his head side to side slowly, eyes sharp.
He noted a
splash, not so far in the distance upstream.
Elbryan
considered his position. The stream flowed around one of the deceivingly high
rises, turning out of sight just a couple dozen yards from where he stood.
He heard
another splash, closer, and then a voice, though he could not make out the
words. He looked around again, this time searching for a vantage point, a perch
from which he might ambush any enemies. The terrain wasn't very promising; the
best he could do would be backtrack up the rise and crouch just beyond the
ridgeline. He would have to time his move perfectly, though, for various areas
of that high ground would be visible from around the upstream bend.
Elbryan
dismissed the notion altogether; he was on the eastern edge of the Moorlands by
now, not so far from human settlements. Whoever or whatever was coming
certainly wasn't kicking up a storm―it could not be giants. There was no
reason for him to think that these would be enemies.
Even if they
were, Nightbird had Hawkwing in hand.
He pulled
his forest-green cloak tighter about his shoulders, lifted the hood up over his
head and cap, then went about his business, crouching low to dip his waterskin
in the stream.
The noise
increased―by the volume and consistency of the splashing, Elbryan figured
there must be about a half dozen bipedal creatures approaching. More important
to him, though, was the continuing conversation, not the words, of which he
could understand only a few, but the high, grating tone of the voices. Elbryan
had heard such voices before.
The
splashing and talking stopped suddenly; the creatures had rounded the bend.
Elbryan remained crouching. He peeked out around the side of his hood to make
sure that they carried no bows.
Goblins, six
of them, stood and gawked from barely thirty feet away, one with a spear up on
its shoulder, but not yet ready to throw. The others held clubs and crude
swords, but thankfully, no bows.
Elbryan
stayed low. With his posture and his cloak the creatures couldn't be sure of
his race.
"Eeyan
kos?" one of them called.
Elbryan
smiled under his hood and did not look the goblins' way.
"Eeyan
kos?" the same one asked again. "Dokdok crus?"
"Duck,
duck, goose," Elbryan said under his breath, the name of a game he had
played perhaps a decade before. He smiled again as he thought of that innocent
time, but it was not a longlasting sentiment, swept away in the wave of darker
emotions as he considered what creatures such as these had done to his world.
The goblin
called out again. It was time to answer, he knew, and since he had no idea what
the goblin was saying, he merely stood up tall, too tall to be any goblin, and
slowly dropped back the hood of his cloak.
Half of the
goblin party shrieked; the spear wielder accompanied its yell by rushing three
strides forward and hurling its weapon.
Elbryan
waited until the last possible moment, then flashed Hawkwing across in front of
him, deflecting the spear. He moved the bow around and out as it connected,
diverting then defeating the spear's momentum, turning it harmlessly in midair
and then catching it mid-shaft in his right hand as his left brought Hawkwing
back to his side.
Suddenly he
held the spear, aimed right back at its original wielder. That stopped the
goblins cold before they could even begin to charge.
Emotions
churned confusingly in the young man. He remembered the teachings of the elves,
mostly of tolerance, though they held no love for goblinkind or for any of the
fomorian races. However, Elbryan was not in any human settlement, not in any
land claimed by his kind, and quite possibly was within the boundaries of
goblin territory. If that was the case, would he be justified in waging battle
with these six?
Yet, one had
just attacked him, though it might have come more from fear than aggression.
And Elbryan, whatever logical reasoning he summoned, could not possibly dismiss
those memories of Dundalis.
He
hesitated; were these goblins responsible for what their kin had done to
Elbryan's home? The one the elves had named Nightbird had to give himself an
honest answer; he owed that much, at least, to Belli'mar Juraviel.
A flick of
his powerful wrist sent the spear flying back the way it had come, to land with
a splash and stick up from the stream just a foot or so in front of the creature
who had thrown it. Elbryan cast a warning glance the goblins' way, then turned
sideways to them, focusing on the water, and bent down to finish filling his
waterskin.
He had given
them one chance; a large part of him, that boy who remembered Dundalis, hoped
they would not take it.
He heard and
felt the water stirring as the creatures came on slowly. He sensed that at
least two had broken away, moving out of the stream to flank him front and
back.
Elbryan
measured their approach, kept wary for any hint that the spear was coming his
way once more.
Everything
seemed to stop, all movement, all splashing. The creatures were not more than
ten feet away, he knew. Slowly he turned square with the main group of four,
rising to stand straight, a foot and more higher than his tallest foe.
"Eenegash!"
the closest and ugliest of the group demanded, holding forth its sword, a
two-foot blade not unlike the one Olwan had given Elbryan for his patrols.
"I do
not understand," he replied evenly.
The goblins
muttered something among themselves; Elbryan realized that they could not
understand his language either. Then the ugly one turned back to him.
"Eenegash!
" it said again, more forcefully, and it pointed its sword at the staff,
then at the riverbank.
"I
hardly think so," Elbryan replied, smiling widely and shaking his head. In
a barely noticeable movement, the ranger pulled the feathered tip from the bow,
tucking it and the bowstring into his belt.
The goblin
gave a threatening growl. Elbryan shook his head again.
The creature
rushed to close half the distance and prodded with its sword, a movement more
of intimidation than an actual attack. But it was the creature who was
surprised.
Elbryan
grabbed the staff, right hand over left; reversed his grip with his left as the
pole started moving, and snapped it across so quickly in front of him that the
goblin never had a chance to move. The staff connected simultaneously on the
sword and the goblin's hand, knocking the weapon from the creature's grasp and
launching it a dozen feet away. A subtle shift, still too quick for the
creature to dodge, and Elbryan stabbed the tapered end out straight, striking
the goblin on its sloping forehead right above and between the eyes, laying it
out straight in the stream.
With a whoop
of delight, the other goblins, predictably, came on.
Elbryan
brought his staff back in, letting go with his left hand, flipping with his
right to send the forward tip under. Never breaking the momentum, he extended
his right arm out, catching the closing goblin, the one that had run out of the
stream to flank the man, completely by surprise, Hawkwing's tip stabbing right
under its chin.
Back in came
the weapon, a full and defensive spin between the ranger and the three goblins
coming along in the stream. Elbryan caught the staff firmly in his left hand
and extended that arm out in similar fashion so that the other flanking goblin
was poked away. Back in came the staff, half spun and caught again in the right
hand, half spun, angled outward diagonally, and caught again in the left, and
then the right hand catching it, too, as the trailing end came around and over,
Elbryan shifting the weapon's angle and striding boldly ahead. The downward
chop connected squarely on the head of the center goblin, the spearwielder,
Hawkwing's incredible hardness splitting wide the creature's skull with a
resounding crack!
Elbryan
swept his staff out to the left, knocking aside a club strike, then back to the
right, parrying a sword. Back left, back right, each time the angle shifting to
defeat the intended attack. Then back left, then left again, knocking wide the
creature's club arm. Elbryan stepped left as well and spun, avoiding an awkward
cut of its sword. He came around hard and low, Hawkwing flying before him. The
goblin, to its credit, recognized the circuitous attack and managed to get its
club down, but Elbryan merely lifted Hawkwing's flying tip, cracking across the
creature's skinny forearm, shattering bone. The club fell into the stream; the
goblin shrieked and clutched at its arm.
Elbryan
stepped forward, facing the creature squarely, staff coming horizontal in front
of him, and punched out with his left, right, left, Hawkwing swishing about to
smack the goblin hard on alternate sides of its head. The ranger dropped his
right foot back after the last strike, retracting the staff, then turned
sidelong to his current foe, expecting an attack from the sword wielder. Seeing
that creature in full flight, Elbryan stabbed the staff back out hard to his
left, hitting the dazed and battered goblin right in the face.
He didn't
see but heard the movement as the goblin that had come in at his left struggled
to its feet. Hawkwing went swinging again, turning a vertical circle under and
then over Elbryan's right shoulder as he turned and leaped out to the left.
Down raced the staff above the angle of the terrified goblin's pitiful attempt
to parry, crashing hard against the base of the creature's neck. The goblin
jolted perfectly still and then, as if the wave of energy had rolled right down
to its feet and then come rushing back up, the creature went into a weird
backward leap, landing on its feet for a long moment, then slowly falling over.
Elbryan
turned and dropped into a defensive crouch, but no enemies presented
themselves. The first one he had hit, the leader, was on its hands and knees in
the middle of the stream, facing away, too dazed to even get back to its feet.
The one he had hit to the right of the stream was still on the ground,
squirming and gasping for air that would hardly come. This last one he had hit
was surely dead, as was the spear wielder, and the one who had taken four blows
to the head lay unmoving at the stream's edge, its face in the water. The last
of the group, the one with the sword, faced Elbryan from twenty paces, hopping
up and down, hurling curses that the ranger did not understand.
Casually, in
no hurry, Elbryan replaced the feathered tip of his bow and in one fluid
motion, bent the shaft around his leg and hooked the bowstring over the bottom
edge.
The goblin
caught on, howled, and fled.
Up came
Hawkwing; three feathers separated. Clear and straight for thirty-five feet.
The arrow
slammed the goblin square in the back, lifting it clear of the stream and
sending it another five feet. Arms and legs flailing, it flopped heavily,
facedown in the water.
Grim Elbryan
retrieved the axe from the side of his pack and finished the task at hand.
Then he was
on his way, running across the Moorlands.
Part Three
CONFLICT
Did you go home, Uncle Mather? When you walked away from Andur'Blough
Inninness, from your elven home, did you return to the place you had known in
your childhood?
I had thought it a vision that led me across the Moorlands then
north to a sweeping vale of knee-deep caribou moss and stark pines. Now I
wonder if it wasn't merely a memory returned, a backtracking of the same course
the elves had taken on that day when they pulled rite
from Dundalis. Perhaps they then placed a veil over my memory, that I had no
desire to escape Caer'alfar and run back to the place of my kinfolk. Perhaps
that last Oracle in Andur'Blough Inninness was no more than a lifting of the
veil.
I had not even considered this until my northern trek led me back
to these lands familiar. I feared that I had erred in my course, that I had
returned home by memory, not by vision.
Now I understand. This land is my land, my ranger haunt. It is
under my protection, though the proud and hardy folk here would hardly believe
they need it, and certainly would refuse it should I ask.
They are more numerous than when I lived here last. Weedy Meadow
remains a village of four score―the goblins never attacked after the
sacking of Dundalis―and a new village, nearly twice that in number, has
been built some thirty miles to the west, even further into the Wilderlands.
End-o'-the-World, they call it, and a fitting name it seems.
And, Uncle Mather, they have rebuilt Dundalis and have kept its
name. I do not yet understand how I feel about this. Is the new Dundalis a
tribute to the last or a mockery? It pained me when, walking along the wide
cart path, l happened upon a signpost, new signpost, for we never had such
things―proclaiming the village limits, the edge of Dundalis. For a
moment, I admit, I even held fast a fantasy that my memory of the destruction,
of the carnage, was in error. Perhaps, I dared to think, the elves had tricked
me into believing that Dundalis and all its folk had died, to keep me from
fleeing their custody, or from wanting to flee.
Under the name on the signpost, someone had scrawled
"Dundalis dan Dundalis, " and under that, another prankster had added
"McDundalis," both indications that this place was "the son of
Dundalis. I should have understood the implication.
It was with great anticipation that l walked that last mile to the
village proper―to see a place that I knew not.
There is a tavern now, larger than the old common house and built
on the foundation of my old home.
Built by strangers.
It was such an awkward moment, Uncle Mather, a feeling of absolute
displacement. l had come home, and yet, this was not my home. The people were
much the same―strong and firm, tough as the deepest winter
night―and yet, they were not the same. No Brody Gentle, no Bunker
Crawyer, no Shane McMichael no Thomas Ault, no Mother and Father, no Pony.
No Dundalis.
I refused the invitation. of the tavern's proprietor, a
jolly-looking man, and without a word―I suppose that was the moment the
folk of the village began to suspect that l was a bit unusual―headed back
the way I had come. I took my frustrations out on the signpost, I admit,
tearing off the lowest board, the scribbled references to the original village.
Never had I felt so alone, not even that morning after the
disaster. The world had moved on without me. I meant to come and speak with you
then, Uncle Mather, and so I crossed by the town, up the slope on the northern
edge. There are several small caves on the backside of that slope, overlooking
the wide vale. In one of those, so I believed, I would find Oracle. I would
find Uncle Mather. I would find peace.
I never made it over that ridge. It is a funny thing, memory. To
the elves, it is a way to walk backward in time, to rediscover old scenes from
the perspective of new enlightenments.
So it was that morning on the ridge north of Dundalis. I saw her.
Uncle Mather, my Pony, as alive to me as ever she was, as
wonderful and beautiful. I remembered her so very vividly that she was indeed
beside me once again for a few fleeting moments.
I have no new friends among the current residents of Dundalis, and
in truth, I expect none. But I have found peace, Uncle Mather. I have come
home.
-ELBRYAN WYNDON
CHAPTER 23
The Black Bear
"It
came roaring down that hill," the man was saying, waving his arm
frantically in the direction of the forested slope north of Dundalis. "I
got my family into the root cellar―damned glad I dug the thing!"
The speaker
was about his own age, the ranger noticed as he approached the group of
ten―eight men and two women―who were gathered outside the nearly
destroyed cabin on the outskirts of Dundalis.
"Damn
big bear," one of the other men said.
"Twelve
footer," the first man, the victim of the attack, remarked, holding his
arms as far apart as he could possibly stretch.
"Brown?"
Elbryan asked, though the question was merely a formality, for a twelve-foot-tall
bear would have to be brown.
The group
turned as one to regard the stranger. They had seen Elbryan about town on
several occasions over the last few months, mostly sitting quietly in the
tavern, the Howling Sheila, but none, save Belster O'Comely, the innkeeper, had
spoken a word to the suspicious man. Their reluctance was clearly etched on
their faces as they regarded the outsider and his unusual dress: the forest
green cloak and the triangular cap.
"Black,"
the victim corrected evenly, his eyes narrowed.
Elbryan
nodded, accepting that as more likely the truth than the man's previous
statement. He knew two things from the color: first, that the man was surely
exaggerating the bear's size and second, that this attack was far from normal.
A brown bear might come roaring down the hill, hurling itself upon the cabin as
if the shelter were some elk, but black bears were shy creatures by nature, far
from aggressive unless cornered, or defending their cubs.
"What
business is it of yours?" another man asked, his tone making it seem to
Elbryan as if he were being accused of the attack.
Ignoring the
comment, the ranger walked past the group and knelt low, inspecting a set of
tracks. As he suspected, the bear was nowhere near the size the excited farmer
was claiming, probably closer to five or six feet in height, perhaps two to
three hundred pounds. Elbryan didn't really begrudge the man his excitement,
though. A six-foot bear could indeed appear twice that height when angered. And
the amount of damage to the house was remarkable.
"We
cannot tolerate a rogue," a large man, Tol Yuganick, insisted. Elbryan
looked up to regard him. He was broad shouldered and strong, forceful in manner
as he was in speech. His face was clean shaven, seeming almost babyish, but
anyone looking at powerful Tol knew that to be a deceptive façade. Elbryan
noticed the man's hands―for hands were often the most telling of
all―were rough and thick with calluses. He was a worker, a true
frontiersman.
"We'll
get together a group and go out and kill the damned thing," he said, and
he spat upon the ground.
Elbryan was
surprised that the burly man hadn't decided to go out alone and hunt the bear.
"And
what of you?" the man bellowed, looking at the ranger. "You were
asked what business this might be of yours, but of yet I've heard no
answer." Tol moved closer to the stooping ranger as he spoke.
Elbryan came
up to his full height. He was as tall as the man and, while not as heavy,
certainly more muscular.
"Do you
think that you belong in Dundalis?" the man asked bluntly, again the words
sounding like an accusation, or a threat.
Elbryan
didn't blink. He wanted to scream out that he belonged in this place more than
any of them, that he had been here when the foundation of their beloved tavern
was that of his own home!
He held the
words, though, and easily. His years with the elves had given him that control,
that discipline. He was here, in Dundalis, in Weedy Meadow, in
End-o'-the-World, to give the folk some measure of protection that they had
never known. If an elven-trained ranger had been about those seven years
before, then Dundalis would not have been sacked, Elbryan believed, and in the
face of that responsibility, the surly man's demeanor seemed a minor thing.
"The
bear will not return," was all the ranger said to them, and he calmly
walked away.
He heard the
grumbling behind him, heard the word "strange" several
times―and not spoken with any affection. They were still planning to go
out and hunt the bear, Elbryan realized, but he was determined to get there
first. A black bear had attacked a farmhouse and that alone was enough of a
mystery to force the ranger to investigate.
Elbryan was
amazed at how easy it was for him to track the bear. The beast had run off from
the farmhouse, creating a swath of devastation through the brush, even knocking
over small trees, venting a rage that the ranger had never before witnessed in
an animal. The tracks were surely those of a medium-sized bear, but Elbryan
felt as if he were tracking a fomorian giant or some other evil, reasoning
creature, some creature purposefully bent on destruction. He feared that the
bear was in the grip of some disease, perhaps, or was wounded. Whatever the
source, with every passed scene of utter destruction, the ranger's fear mounted
that he would not be able to spare the creature. He had hoped simply to drive
the bear faraway into the deeper woodlands.
He moved up
the side of one steep hill, peering intently into every shadow. Bears were not
stupid creatures; they had been known to backtrack hunters, taking the men from
behind. Elbryan crouched by the side of one small tree. He placed his hand on
the ground, feeling for subtle vibrations, anything that might offer a hint.
He caught a
slight movement of a bush out of the corner of his eye, The ranger didn't move
except to shift his head to better view the shadow. He noted the wind, noted
that he was upwind of the spot.
Out came the
bear in full charge, roaring.
Elbryan
shifted to one knee, fitted a heavy arrow, and, with a sigh of complete
resignation, let fly. He scored a hit, the arrow skipping off the bear's face
and burrowing into its chest, but the bear kept coming. The ranger was amazed
at the sheer speed of the thing. He had seen bears in Andur'Blough Inninness,
had even seen one run off when Juraviel had banged two stones together, but
this creature's speed was outrageous, as fast as any horse might run.
A second
arrow followed the first, diving deep into the bear's shoulder. It bellowed
again and hardly slowed.
Elbryan knew
that he would not get the third shot away. If it had been a brown bear, he
would have taken to the trees, but a black could climb any tree faster than he
could.
He waited,
crouched, as the bear bore down on him, then, at the last instant, the ranger
went into a sidelong roll, down the hill.
The bear
skidded to a stop and turned to follow. When Elbryan rolled to his knees,
facing up the hill to the bear, the creature went up onto its hind legs,
standing tall and imposing.
But leaving
some vital areas exposed.
Elbryan
pulled the bowstring back with all his strength; Hawkwing's three feathers were
as wide apart as they could go. The ranger hated this business as he sighted
the hollow on the bear's breast.
And then it
was over, suddenly, the creature rolling, dead. Elbryan went to the corpse. He
waited a while to make sure that it would not stir, then moved to its muzzle,
lifting its upper lip. He feared that he would find foamy saliva there, an
indication of the most wicked disease. If that was the case, then Elbryan would
have his work cut out from him indeed, hunting almost day and night for other
infected animals, everything from raccoons and weasels to bats.
No foam; the
ranger breathed a sigh of relief. It was short-lived, though, as Elbryan tried
to figure what, then, had caused this normally docile animal to go so bad. He
continued his inspection of the mouth and face, noted that the eyes were clear
and not runny, then moved along the bear's torso.
He found his
answer in the form of four barbed darts, stuck deep into the bear's rump. He
worked one out―not an easy task―and inspected its tip. Elbryan
recognized the black, sappy poison, a pain-inducing product of a rare black
birch tree.
With a
growl, the ranger threw the dart to the ground. This was no accident but a
purposeful attack on the bear. The poor beast had been driven mad by pain, and
someone―some human, most likely, given the type of the darts―had
done it.
Elbryan
gathered his wits and began his dance of praise to the spirit of the bear,
thanking it for its gift of food and warmth. Then he methodically went about
skinning and cleaning it. To waste the creature's useful body, to leave the
bear to rot or even to bury it whole in the ground would, by elven
standards―and by Elbryan's―be a complete insult to the bear, and
thus to Nature.
His work was
done late that afternoon, but the ranger did not rest, nor did he return to
Dundalis to inform the townsfolk of the kill. Something, someone, had brought
on this tragedy.
Nightbird
went hunting again.
They were
not much more difficult to find than the bear. Their hut, a mere shack of logs
and old boards―Elbryan got the distinct impression that many of these had
come from the ruins of Dundalis―was at the top of a hill. Branches had
been tossed all about for camouflage, but many of these had already withered,
their dry and brown leaves a telltale sign.
The ranger
heard them long before he caught sight of them, laughing and singing terribly
off-key, though the voices were surely human, as he had suspected.
Elbryan
glided stealthily up the hill, tree to tree, shadow to shadow, though he
doubted the men inside would have heard him had he been accompanied by a
hundred villagers and a score of fomorian giants! He recognized the implements
of the trapping trade hanging all about the shack, along with dozens of drying
pelts. These men knew animals, Elbryan understood. In a vat not far from the
back wall of the shack, the ranger found a thick concoction of black liquid,
and quickly surmised it to be the same irritant poison that had been used on
the bear.
The walls of
the shack were in bad disrepair, with cracks between every board. Elbryan
peeked in.
Three men
lay about on piled skins, black bear mostly, drinking foamy beer from old mugs.
Every so often, one would shift to the side and dip his mug into a barrel,
first brushing away the many flies and bees drawn to the liquid.
Elbryan
shook his head in disgust, but he reminded himself to keep a measure of
respect. These were men of the Wilderlands, strong and heavily armed. One had
many daggers within easy grasp, hanging on a bandolier that crisscrossed his
chest. Another sported a heavy axe, while the last earned a slender sword. From
his vantage point, the ranger noted, too, that a bar was in place across the
one door.
He moved
around to the front of the house and took the dagger from his pack. The door
did not fit the opening well, leaving a wide crack on one side, wide enough to
admit the dagger's blade. A flick of the wrist dislodged the bar and Elbryan
kicked open the door, striding a single step into the shack.
The men
scrambled, spilling beer, one shouting aloud as he rolled across his sword, the
hilt catching hard on his hip. They were up soon enough, Elbryan standing
impassively by the door, Hawkwing, its feathered tip and string removed, in his
hand like some unthreatening walking stick.
"Whad'ye
want?" asked one of the men, a barrel-chested brute whose face was more
scar than beard. Except for that hardened face with its wild, untended beard,
this man could have passed as a brother of Tol Yuganick, Elbryan noted
distastefully. Surely their bodies were cut from the same, rather large, mold.
The fellow had his huge axe out in front of him, and if Elbryan couldn't offer
a reasonable answer, there was little doubt what he meant to do with it. The
swordsman, tall and lean with not a hair anywhere on his head, shadowed the
burly man, gaping at Elbryan from over his companion's shoulder; while the
third, a skinny, nervous wretch, moved to the far corner, rubbing his
fingers―which weren't so far from his many daggers.
"I have
come to speak with you about a particular bear," Elbryan answered coolly.
"What
bear?" the burly man replied. "We got skins."
"The
bear you maddened with poisoned darts," Elbryan answered bluntly.
"The bear that destroyed a farm in Dundalis and nearly killed a
family."
"Go on
now." The man spat.
"The
same poison you have brewing out back," Elbryan went an, "a rare
concoction, known to few."
"That
don't prove nothing," the man retorted, snapping his dirty fingers in the
air. "Now get on out of here, else ye'll soon feel the edge of me
axe!"
"I
think not," the ranger answered. "There is the matter of
compensation―to the farmers and to me for my efforts in hunting the
bear."
"C-compen―?"
the tall, bald man stuttered.
"Payment,"
said Elbryan. He saw the movement even as he spoke, the man from the corner
drawing and throwing a dagger with practiced ease.
Elbryan
planted the ball of his left foot and spun clockwise, the dagger flying
harmlessly past to stick deep in the wall. The ranger came round as if he would
launch a horizontal swipe, but he recognized the move was anticipated: the
burly man's axe was up to block. As soon as he started around, then, Elbryan
turned his right foot out and went around counterclockwise, pulling in his hip
to avoid a swipe of that axe.
Now he
launched his attack, dropping down to one knee, slapping his staff across to
catch the inside of the overbalanced man's leg. A shift of the angle sent his
staff poking straight up, smacking the man's groin. Faster than a cat, Elbryan
retracted the staff a foot, shifted its angle, and poked ahead three times in
rapid succession, prodding the burly man in the hollow of his chest.
He fell away
and Elbryan came up hard, bringing Hawkwing horizontal above his head in both
hands to catch the downward chop of the second man's sword. Up came the
ranger's knee, slamming the man's belly, and as he started to double over,
Elbryan turned his staff, deflecting the sword to the side. He twisted his
staff around the man's arm, hooking him under the armpit, stepped with his left
foot across his body behind the man's entangled side, then heaved with all his
strength, launching the wretch into the air to land heavily on his back and the
back of his head.
Elbryan
immediately swung about, realizing he was vulnerable. Predictably, another
dagger was on its way, and the ranger just got Hawkwing up in time to block its
flight. He loosened his grip on his staff as the dagger connected so that it
wouldn't bounce far away. As fortune would have it, the dagger went straight
up, and Elbryan seized it, catching it by the tip.
In the blink
of an eye, the ranger stood, staff in one hand out before him, his other hand
holding a dagger cocked behind his ear, ready to throw.
The skinny
man, two daggers in hand, blanched and let his blades drop to the floor.
Elbryan fought
hard to restrain the rage that called for him to put that dagger right into the
foul man's chest, a rage that only intensified when the ranger thought of what
these three had done to the bear and of the potentially devastating
consequences of their foolhardy actions.
With a
growl, he let fly, the dagger slamming hard into the wall right beside the
man's head. Never taking his eyes from Elbryan, whimpering all the way, the
skinny man slumped to a sitting position in the corner.
Elbryan
looked about; the other two were staggering to their feet, neither holding a
weapon.
"What
are your names?" the ranger demanded.
The men
looked curiously at one another.
"Your
names!"
"Paulson,"
the burly man answered, "Cric, and Chipmunk," he finished, indicating
first the tall man, then the dagger thrower.
"Chipmunk?"
Elbryan inquired.
"Skittery
type," Paulson explained.
The ranger
shook his head. "Know this, Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk: you share the
forest with me, and I will be watching your every move. Another prank, another
cruelty, as with the bear, will bring you more harm than this, I promise. And I
will be watching your trap lines―no longer shall you use the jaw
traps―"
Paulson
started to complain, but Elbryan glared so fiercely at him that he seemed to
melt.
"Nor
any other traps that inflict suffering on your prey."
"We've
to earn our money," Chipmunk remarked in a shaky voice.
"There
are better ways," Elbryan answered evenly. "And in the hopes that you
will find those ways, I'll demand no coins from you for compensation . . . this
time." He looked at each of them, meeting their stares, his own showing
clearly that he was not speaking empty threats.
"And
who might ye be?" Paulson dared to ask.
Elbryan
shifted back on his heels, considering the question. "I am Nightbird,"
he answered.
Cric
snickered, but Paulson, locked with that intense gaze, held a hand up in his
companion's face.
"A name
you would do well to remember," Elbryan finished, and he headed for the
door, boldly turning his back on the dangerous threesome.
They didn't
begin to entertain any thoughts of attacking.
The ranger
went around to the back and dumped out the cauldron of poison. As he left, he
took a few of the jaw traps, nasty pieces of toothy iron hinged and set with
heavy springs so that they would clamp hard on the leg of any passing animal.
His next
stop was the tavern, the Howling Sheila, in Dundalis. A dozen men and women
were in the common room, boisterous until the stranger entered. Elbryan went to
the bar first, nodding to Belster O'Comely, the closest thing he had to a
friend in the area.
"Just
water," the ranger said, and Belster mouthed the predictable words right
along with him, then pushed a glass out to him.
"Word
of the bear?" the jolly innkeeper asked.
"The
bear is dead," Elbryan replied grimly, and he walked to the far side of
the room, taking a seat at the corner table, his back to the wall.
He noted
that several other patrons shifted their seats, one woman even bluntly turning
her back on him.
Elbryan
brought the tip of his triangular cap down low and smiled. He understood that
it would be like this. He was not much like these folk; no longer was he much
like any human, except for those rare few who had ventured to the valley of the
elves, who had spent years beside the likes of Belli'mar Juraviel and Tuntun.
Elbryan missed those friends now―even Tuntun. It was true that he had
been out of place in Caer'alfar, but in many ways the ranger felt even more out
of place here among folk who looked so much like him but who saw the world through
very different eyes.
Still,
despite the prominent reminders of his position, Elbryan's smile was genuine.
He had done well this day, though he regretted having to slay the bear. His
solace came in duty, in his vow that this Dundalis and the two neighboring
villages would not share the fate that had befallen his own village.
He remained
in the Howling Sheila for nearly an hour, but not a person, save Belster on
Elbryan's way out, offered him so much as a glance.
CHAPTER 24
The Mad Friar
"Tinson,"
Warder Miklos Barmine said to Jill as she walked her watch along the sea wall
of Pireth Tulme.
Jill
regarded the short, stout man curiously. She recognized the name Tinson as that
of the small hamlet some dozen miles inland from the fortress. The place was no
more than a score of houses and a tavern, a place of rogues and whores
servicing the soldiers of Pireth Tulme.
"The
Waylaid Traveler," Barmine added in his typically curt manner.
"Another
fight?" Jill asked.
"And
something more," replied the warder, walking away. "Gather ten and
go."
Jill watched
the man depart. She didn't like Miklos Barmine, not at all. He had replaced
Constantine Presso only three months before, the previous warder sent north to
command Pireth Danard. At first, Jill thought the new warder more her style, a
stickler for detail and duty. But he was a letch, a drooling, grabby slob, who
took it personally when Jill refused his advances. Even his strict rules for
duty had relaxed within the week, Pireth Tulme reverting to its typical partying
ways. Also, it had surprised Jill how much she missed Constantine Presso, a
decent man―by Pireth Tulme's standards, at least. She had served under
Presso for more than a year, and he had always been a gentleman to her, always
respected her decision not to partake in the unending festivities. Now, with
Presso gone and the brooding Miklos Barmine in command, Jill feared that the
pressure on her would only increase.
She shook
that dark thought away, turning her attention to the task at hand. Bannine's
punishment for her refusal to bed with him was always work―little did the
fool understand that his punishment was more like a reward to Jill! There had
been another fight, the fourth in less than two weeks, at the Waylaid Traveler,
the apparently appropriately named tavern in Tinson. What this "something
more," that Barmine had hinted at might be, Jill could not guess, though
she suspected it to be nothing extraordinary. The woman shrugged; at least
there was something to do now besides walking the wall.
She collected
ten of Pireth Tulme's Coastpoint Guards, using their hangovers as a tool for
rejecting more of the others, then set out, double-timing the march down the
dirt path. They arrived in dirty Tinson late that afternoon. The town square
was empty and quiet it was always quiet, Jill noted, for on the three previous
occasions she had visited the place, she hadn't seen a single child. The
majority of Tinson's residents slept the day through, preferring the revelry of
the night.
A shout from
the Waylaid Traveler caught Jill's attention.
"We
must prepare!" came a bellow, a tremendous voice, clear even out here at a
distance and with a wall between the speaker and Jill. "Oh, evil, what a
foothold you have found! What fools are we to sleep as darkness rises!"
The group of
soldiers entered the tavern openly through the front door, doubling the number
of patrons. The first thing Jill noticed was a huge, fat man standing atop a
table, waving an empty mug, sometimes in a threatening manner to keep at bay
the closer patrons, all obviously intent on knocking him from his perch. Jill
ordered her troop to filter about, then went to see the man behind the serving
bar.
"The
mad friar," the barkeep explained. "He was in all the night, then
came back just a short while ago. Has no shortage of money, I can assure you!
They say he bartered jewels with merchants on the road, and though he didn't
get a fair price―not even close―he left with pouches full of
gold."
Jill
regarded the fat friar curiously. He wore the thick brown robes of the
Abellican Church, though they were old and threadbare in many places and
weathered, as if he had been out on the open road for a long, long time. His
black beard was thick and bushy, and he was tall, half a foot above six feet,
and had to weigh near to three hundred pounds. His shoulders were wide, his
bones thick and solid, but Jill got the feeling that the extra weight, most of
which was centered about his belly, was something fairly recent.
What struck
Jill most about him was his almost feverish intensity, his brown eyes showing a
luster, a life, beyond anything she had seen in many years.
"Piety,
dignity, poverty!" he yelled, and then he snorted derisively. "Ho,
ho, what!"
Jill
recognized the litany―piety, dignity, poverty―the same one Abbot
Dobrinion Calislas had uttered on the fateful day of her wedding.
"Hah!"
the huge man bellowed. "What piety is there in whoring? What dignity in
foolhardiness? And what poverty? Gold leaf and jewels―ah, the
jewels!"
"His
song is not for changing," the barkeep said dryly. Then he yelled out to
the guards, "Will you get him down?"
Jill wasn't
sure that they should move in so straightforward a manner against the friar.
The man's remark about whoring, in particular, had seemed to stir more than a
few angry grumbles, and she feared that any overt action, a physical assault
rather than trying to calm the man, would bring about a general row. She could
do little to stop her soldiers, though, given the lax chain of command and the
barkeep's permission.
She started
across the room to try and keep things calm, stopping, though, when she heard
the barkeep add, too low for any others to hear, "And take care, for he
has a bit of magic about him."
"Damn,"
Jill muttered, turning back to see two of her soldiers, one of them Gofflaw,
reach up to grab the monk.
"Hah,
preparedness training!" the fat man howled joyfully, and he grabbed
Gofflaw by the wrist and hoisted the surprised man into the air: Before the
soldier could begin to react, the powerful friar lifted him above his head, spun
him twice, then tossed him across the room.
A third
soldier drew sword and swiped out one of the table legs, bringing the friar
tumbling down atop the poor second man who had been reaching for him. The monk
hit the ground in a roll, showing surprising agility for one his size, and came
right back to his feet, shouting at the top of his lungs and barreling over the
next two closest people, one a soldier, one a townsman.
The fight
was on in full.
The sheer
power of the friar astounded Jill. The man ran every which way, bowling over
all who would stand before him, laughing maniacally all the while, even when
one of those dodging his charge landed a solid punch about his face or neck.
"Prepare!" he roared over and over, and he cried something about a
dactyl and then about a demon.
Jill watched
him for a few moments, honestly intrigued. The man was obviously out of his
mind, or at least he appeared so, but to Jill, who had spent a year and a half
in the Coastpoint Guards, a cry for preparedness and virtue did not seem like
such a bad thing.
A group of
soldiers encircled the friar, one man quickly putting his sword in link and calling for the monk to yield. There came
a sudden, sharp flash of blue, and all the soldiers were flying, their hair
standing on-end. The friar laughed wildly.
And he
charged on. He rushed to one terrified woman and picked her up by the
shoulders. "Do not lay down for them!" he cried earnestly, and Jill
had the feeling that the man had some personal stake in his plea. "I beg
of you, do not, for you are part of the encroachment, do you not see? You are
part of the dactyl's gain!"
A soldier
jumped on the friar from behind, and he was forced to let go of the woman. He
merely howled, though, and shrugged the man away, then charged on.
Jill cut in
front of him; he recognized her as a woman and again slowed and softened his
approach.
Jill dove at
his legs, rolling and sweeping with her own legs, sending the burly friar
tumbling headlong. Five men were atop him in an instant, grabbing and twisting.
Somehow, the huge friar managed to get back up to his feet, but more soldiers
and several of the townsfolk rushed in, finally subduing him: They ushered the
man to the door and unceremoniously threw him out.
Jill noted
that Gofflaw drew out his sword and moved to follow.
"Let
him be!" she commanded.
Gofflaw
growled at her, but under Jill's unyielding glare, he replaced his sword in its
sheath.
"And if
ye show yerself again," another of the soldiers yelled, "then know
ye'll feel the bite of a sword!"
"Hear you
the words of truth!" the mad friar yelled back at him. "Know me for
what I am, and not for the insulting names you give to me. I am the hound of
ill omen, the messenger of disaster!"
"Ye're
a drunk," roared the soldier.
The fat man
sputtered something unintelligible and turned away, waving his hand
dismissively. "You will learn," he promised grimly. "You will
learn."
Jill turned
to the barkeep, the man merely shaking his head. "He's a dangerous
one," the man said.
Jill nodded,
but she wasn't sure she agreed. The fat friar had made no move to finish any of
his attacks. He had tackled and punched, had thrown Gofflaw halfway across the
room, but no one, not even the friar, had been badly injured. To frustrated
Jill's thinking, Gofflaw could use a throw or two across a room. She moved to
the door to see the friar shuffling down the muddy lane, weeping and crying out
for the "sins of men" and the woeful state of preparation.
He swung
about, some score of yards from the tavern entrance, and launched into a diatribe
on the coming dark days, about a world unprepared to face the forces of evil,
about a darkness being fed by the internal rot of the land.
"The
man's crazy," one of the soldiers remarked.
"The
mad friar," the barkeep replied.
Jill wasn't
so sure of that. Not at all.
CHAPTER 25
Brother Justice
Master
Jojonah looked down from an inconspicuous balcony at the large chamber, bare of
any furnishing but for a few practice riggings sitting against the far wall. In
the center of the room stood the stocky young man, his face haggard from lack
of sleep. He wore only a loincloth and stood defensively, shoulders hunched,
arms crossed to cover his belly and loins. Even his head was bare, for his
superiors had shaved it. He uttered a chant repeatedly, using it to bolster his
failing strength, and De'Unnero, the new master who had taken Siherton's place,
stalked about him, occasionally stinging him with a riding crop. Behind
Quintall stood a tenth-year immaculate.
"You
are weak and useless!" De'Unnero screamed, smacking Quintall across the
shoulder blades. "And you were part of the conspiracy!"
Quintall's
mouth moved to form the word "no," but no sound came forth, managing
only a pitiful shake of his head.
"You
were!" De'Unnero roared, and he whipped Quintall again.
Master
Jojonah could hardly bear to watch. Quintall's "training" had been
going on for more than a month now, ever since Father Abbot Markwart, looking
old and tired indeed, had seen a vision of Avelyn alive.
Avelyn! The
very thought of the young brother sent shivers along Jojonah's spine. Avelyn
had killed Siherton―the body, or what remained of it, had been found only
late that spring, almost a year to the day since the tragedy. And worse, if
Markwart's vision was true, Avelyn had survived and had run off with a
substantial supply of the sacred stones.
Jojonah
closed his eyes and remembered all the times Siherton had warned him about
Avelyn's almost inhuman dedication. Avelyn would be trouble, Siherton had
promised, and the master's words had proven true. But why? Jojonah had to
wonder. What had precipitated the trouble, a fault of Avelyn's or the man's
lack of fault in an order grown perverse? Indeed, Brother Avelyn Desbris was
trouble, a dark mirror that the masters of St.-Mere-Abelle could not bear to
gaze into. Avelyn, by any measure that Jojonah could discern, was what a monk
was supposed to be, the truest of the true, and yet his manner could not agree
with the increasingly secular ways of the monastery. That the Order should be
threatened by the piety of a young monk was something Master Jojonah could not
come to terms with.
And yet, the
master was too tired, too wrapped up in a sense of loss, both for Siherton and
Avelyn―and for himself―to try to make some peace within the
monastery. Markwart had become almost feverish in his desire to see Avelyn and,
more particularly, the sacred stones, brought back, and the Father Abbot's word
was sacrosanct.
The crack of
the crop brought Jojonah's attention back to the scene at hand. He had never
held any love for brutish Quintall, but still he pitied the man. The
conditioning ranged from sleep deprivation to long periods of hunger.
Quintall's strength, both physical and mental, would be torn away piece by
piece and then brought back under the guidance and control of the training
masters. The man would be reduced to an instrument of destruction, Avelyn's
destruction. Quintall's every thought would be focused on that singular
purpose; Avelyn Desbris would become the source of all his ills, the most-hated
threat to St.-Mere-Abelle.
Jojonah
shuddered and walked away, trying hard not to picture the scene when Quintall
finally caught up to Avelyn.
The cave
seemed a gigantic caricature of a king's throne room. A huge dais, three steps
up; centered the back wall, sporting a single obsidian throne that two large
men could sit in together without touching each other. Twin rows of massive
columns, each carved into the likeness of a giant warrior, lined the room. Like
the throne, they were formed of obsidian, with graceful but somehow discordant
lines swirling about them like the fibers of interlocking muscles. The floor
and walls were clear of the black rock, showing the normal dullish gray of Aida's
stone, and the single set of doors was made of bronze.
No torches
burned within, the room's light coming from either side of the great dais where
a continual flow of lava issued from the back corner of the wall and descended
through holes in the floor, diving down into the tunnels of Aida, then reaching
out along the mountain's black arms, engulfing more and, more of the Barbacan.
Small indeed
did Ubba Banrock and Ulg Tik'narn, powrie chieftains from the distant
Julianthes, and Gothra, the goblin king, seem in that tremendous room. Even
Maiyer Dek of the fomorian giants felt small and insignificant, eyeing the
statue-columns as if they would come alive and surround him, dwarfing his
sixteen-foot height. And Maiyer Dek, among the largest of his giant kind, was
not accustomed to being dwarfed.
Still, even
if all twenty of the columns, and a dozen more besides, surrounded the giant,
it would not have been more imposing than the single creature reclining on the
throne. All four of the dactyl's guests felt that imposing weight keenly. They
were each among the most powerful of their respective races, leaders of armies
that numbered in the hundreds for the giant, in the thousands for each of the
powries, and in the tens of thousands for the goblin. They were the darkness of
Corona, the bringers of misery, and yet, they seemed pitiful, groveling things
before the great dactyl, mere shadows of this infinitely darker being.
Goblins and
giants often aligned, but both races traditionally hated the powries almost as
much as they hated the humans.
Except on
those occasions when the dactyl was awake. Except at those times when the
darker forces bound them together in singular purpose. There could be no
struggles for power among the mortal leaders of the various races when the
dactyl sat on its obsidian throne.
"We are
not four armies," the dactyl roared at them suddenly, and Gothra nearly
fell over from the sheer weight of the resonating voice. "Nor three, if
the powries consider their respective forces to be allied. We are one army, one
force, one purpose!" The demon leaped from its throne and tossed a small
item, a fabric patch, gray in color and with the black image of the dactyl sewn
in. "Go out and begin the work on these," the demon ordered.
Maiyer Dek
was first to inspect the patch. "My warriors are not stitch women,"
the fomorian leader began, but as soon as the words left Maiyer Dek's mouth,
the dactyl leaped down to stand before the giant, and seemed to grow. A feral
growl escaped the demon's lips as its hand shot out, slapping the behemoth
across the face with enough force to knock Maiyer Dek to the floor. Then the
dactyl began a more insidious attack, a mental barrage of images of torture and
agony, and Maiyer Dek, the proud and strong leader, the strongest mortal creature
in all the Barbacan, whimpered pitifully and squirmed about on the floor,
begging for mercy.
"Every
soldier in my army shall wear such an emblem," the dactyl decreed.
"In my army! And you," the beast said to Maiyer Dek, reaching down
and easily lifting the massive giant to its feet. "Bring to me a score and
four of your finest warriors to serve as my house guard."
And so the
meetings went, through the days. The demon dactyl had been awake for several
years, watching, feeling every slaughter of humans in the Wilderlands, tasting
the blood of every corpse into which a powrie dipped its infamous cap, hearing
the screams of sailors and passengers as each scuttled ship went under the
swells of the merciless Mirianic. The darkness had grown; the humans had become
ever weaker. Now the creature saw the time to organize its forces fully; to
begin its unified attacks.
Terranen
Dinoniel was dust in the earth; the dactyl meant to win this time.
To the
twenty-four giants Maiyer Dek brought in, the dactyl presented suits of armor,
demon-forged in the twin lava flows of the throne room, full plated, thick and
strong. And the dactyl made even finer protection for its four chieftains,
great magical bracers, studded with spikes, that would protect the wearer from
the blows of any weapon. Among the three evil races, none had earned any
reputation of loyalty or honor, but now, with the bracers, the dactyl could
hold faith that its four chosen generals would survive the not unexpected
treachery of their underlings.
And those
ranks were considerable indeed. Outside the cave, on the tree-covered slopes of
Aida, thousands of goblins, powries, and giants milled about their respective
camps, glancing up the southern face to the gaping hole that marked the main
entrance to the demon's lair. All three camps were between the mountain's
newest "arms," two black streaks of cooling lava, red-tipped as the
stuff continued its slow roll from the bowels of the mountain, reaching out,
southeast and southwest, as if they were extensions of the demon's own reach.
There was no sign of tree or brush within those black lines; all life had been
snuffed out beneath the darkness, burned away by the fires, and covered by the
cooling lava. Even those creatures closest to the center of the area between
the arms felt the residual heat, and on that shimmering air was brought the
tingles of promised power, the itchy anxiety to go out and kill.
All for the
dactyl.
"What
is your name?"
"Quintall."
The man
groaned as the whip struck him again, tearing a red line across his back.
"Your
name?"
"Quintall!"
The whip
cracked.
"You
are not Quintall!" De'Unnero screamed in his face. "What is your
name?"
"Quin―"
He hadn't even gotten the word out before the whip, handled expertly by the
tenth-year immaculate, ripped all sounds from his body.
Up on the
balcony, unseen by the victim and his pair of torturers, Master Jojonah sighed
and shook his head. This man was tough, admirably so, and Jojonah feared he
would die from the beatings before he would relinquish his identity.
"Fear
not," came a voice behind him, that of Father Abbot Markwart, "The
treatises do not lie. The technique is proven."
Jojonah
didn't really doubt that―he just wondered why in the name of God such a
technique had ever been developed!
"Desperation
breeds dark work," the Father Abbot remarked, coming to Jojonah's side
just as the whip cracked again. "I find this as distasteful as do you, but
what are we to do? Master Siherton's body confirms our fears. We know the
tricks Avelyn used to escape, and his cache of magic stones is considerable.
Are we to allow him to run free to the detriment, perhaps even the downfall, of
our Order?"
"Of
course not, Father Abbot," Master Jojonah replied.
"No
living monk in St.-Mere-Abelle knows Avelyn Desbris better than Quintall,"
Father Abbot Markwart continued. "He is the perfect choice."
As
executioner, Jojonah thought.
"As the
retriever of what is rightfully ours," the Father Abbot said, reading
Jojonah's thoughts so clearly that the master turned to regard him closely,
Jojonah honestly wondering if Markwart was using some magic to peek into his
mind.
"Quintall
will serve as an extension of the church, an instrument of our justice,"
Father Abbot Markwart said grimly, more determination in his normally quivering
old voice than Jojonah had ever heard before. The master understood the man's
desperation, despite the fact that Avelyn's crimes and subsequent desertion
were not without precedent. Nor did the stolen stones present any real danger
to the Abellican Order; Jojonah knew that twice the number Avelyn had taken
were sold at fairly regular auctions, that the powers of those stones possessed
by merchants and noblemen far outweighed the cache Avelyn held. The only
concern any in St.-Mere-Abelle's hierarchy held about the stolen stones was for
the giant amethyst crystal, and that only because it was a stone whose magic
they had not yet deciphered. So foolish Avelyn wasn't really any serious threat
to the abbey or to the Order. But that wasn't the point, wasn't the source of
the Father Abbot's desperation. Markwart would be dead soon, taken by that
greatest enemy: time. And he did not desire to leave behind any legacy of failure―including
the existence of the renegade Avelyn.
"We
will put him on Avelyn's trail very soon," the Father Abbot remarked.
"Unless
he continues to resist," Master Jojonah dared to say.
Markwart
issued a coughing laugh. "The techniques are proven: the lack of sleep, of
food, the rewards and punishments exerted by the eager young masters.
Quintall's concepts of right and wrong, of duty and punishment, have been
systematically replaced by the tenets given him at times of reward. He is a
creature of singular purpose. Pity him, but pity Avelyn Desbris even
more." With that, Markwart walked away.
Jojonah
watched him go, shuddering at the sheer coldness of the man's aura. His
attention was caught by yet another crack of the whip.
"What
is your name?" De'Unnero demanded.
"Quin .
. . "
The man
hesitated; even from the balcony, Master Jojonah sensed they were near a
breakthrough.
De'Unnero
started to prompt the tortured man again, but he stopped, and Jojonah
recognized that the young master had seen a change in Quintall's demeanor, a
strange light in the man's eyes, perhaps. Jojonah leaned over the rail,
listening to every inflection, every whisper.
"Brother
Justice," the battered man replied.
Master
Jojonah settled back on his heels. He still wasn't wholly convinced that he
agreed with the technique―or the purpose―of Quintall's training,
but he had to admit that it seemed effective.
CHAPTER 26
Bradwarden
"Is it
fear that inspires them? Is it jealousy? Or is it something more sublime, some
inner voice telling them that they and I are not of similar ilk? They do not
know, of course, of my days with the Touel'alfar, but certainly it is evident
to them, as it is to me, that they and I do not share the same
perspective."
Elbryan
slumped back in the chair, musing over his own words. He put the tips of his
fingers together and shifted his hands in front of his face, allowing his gaze
to drift from the mirror.
When he
looked back, the specter of Uncle Mather remained, passively and patiently
standing in the mirror's depths.
"Belli'mar
Juraviel warned me that it would be like this," Elbryan went on.
"And, in truth, it seems perfectly logical. The folk of the Wilderlands
frontier necessarily huddle together. Their fear isolates them, and they often
cannot distinguish friend from foe.
"So it
is concerning me whenever I venture into the Howling Sheila. They do not
understand me―my ways and my knowledge, and most of all, my
duty―and thus they fear me. Yes, Uncle Mather, it must be fear, for what
have I that the folk of Dundalis should envy? By their measures, I am poorer by
far."
The young
man chuckled and ran his hand through his light brown hair. "Their
measures," he muttered again, and he couldn't help but feel sorry for the
folk of Dundalis, of Weedy Meadow and End-o'-the-World, huddled ever in their
cabins. It was true enough that they enjoyed some amenities Elbryan did not:
soft bedding, solid water basins, stored food. But the ranger had two things
far more valuable, by his way of thinking, two things that he would not trade
for all the treasures of all the kingdoms of Corona.
"Freedom
and duty, Uncle Mather," he said firmly. "I draw no lines of
property, because those lines serve as barriers both ways. And, in the end, it
is a sense of accomplishment, of purpose, and not the wealth attained by such
accomplishment, that equates to fulfillment and happiness.
"And so
I walk my watch. And so I accept the barbs and open chiding. I take faith in
what I am doing, in my sense of purpose, for I, above all others, understand
the consequence of failure."
But I am
alone, the young man thought privately, not yet ready to admit the truth aloud.
He sat back again for a long moment, then braced his hands on the arms of his
chair, preparing to leave.
He felt a
soft and subtle vibration. Music?
He knew it
was music, though it seemed too soft, too much in the background for him to
actually hear it. Rather, Elbryan felt it in his bones, a gentle, delicate
sound, sweet as an elvish harp, melodic as Lady Dasslerond's voice.
He looked at
the mirror, at the distant image, and sensed a calm there.
Elbryan went
outside his cave immediately; expecting the music to be louder. It wasn't; it
hovered on the edge of his perceptions, whatever way he turned. But it was
there. Something was there.
And Uncle
Mather wanted him to find it.
He had
planned to go to Weedy Meadow that day, then move on with the setting sun to
the west, a circuit of End-o'-the-World. Now he could not go, for this subtle
music, though Elbryan sensed it was not threatening, was surely intriguing. Had
the elves come to visit? Then another thought nagged at the young man, a notion
that he had heard this song before, though he could not place it..
The ranger
spent the better part of the morning searching out the direction of the quiet
notes. He used all his training, all his tools, focusing his senses one at a
time in each direction, on every plant and every animal, seeking some hint of
the source. Finally, he came upon a set of tracks.
A single
large horse, he decided, unshod and walking at an easy pace. There were indeed
wild horses in the area, some perhaps that had escaped the tragedy at Dundalis,
others that had run off from caravans, and still others whose roots in the
region were older than those of the human settlers. They were not numerous, and
surely skittish, though Elbryan had entertained the notion of breaking one.
He soon came
to believe that this would not be his chance, though, for as he followed the
clear trail, he came to the conclusion that he was following, too, the source
of the music. Thus, Elbryan believed, the horse was obviously ridden.
That thought
didn't slow the ranger; it only intrigued him even more. Someone had come into
his domain, someone not of the villages, for if it was one of the villagers,
then this horse would likely have been shod.
Elbryan
skipped down one tree-covered hillside, into a narrow vale and to the edge of a
rushing river. He crossed with some difficulty, but had no trouble regaining
the trail on the other side, for the rider was making no effort to conceal his
tracks. Elbryan closed steadily. Soon he could make out the actual notes of a
wind instrument, he noted, and he searched his memory once again, for he was
certain that he had heard that peculiar, haunting sound before. He remembered,
then, the instrument, piped by a merchant on the occasion of Elbryan's tenth
birthday, a curious thing, a leather bag and a series of pipes―a bagpipe,
it was appropriately named.
The ranger
moved swiftly and silently over a series of rolling hills. Then he stopped,
suddenly, as the music stopped. Elbryan peered out around a tree. There,
standing higher on the hill amidst a tangled grove of birch and low brush,
stood a tall man, much taller than Elbryan, even considering the ranger's
deceivingly low perspective. He had black, bushy hair and a tight beard. He was
naked, at least from the belly up, with a powerful upper body, muscles clearly
defined, and an arched back. He held the pipes under one arm, down low, his
song finished.
"Well,
ranger, are ye liking the way I fill me chanter and drones?" he asked, a
wide, white smile across his face.
Elbryan
crouched lower, though he was obviously seen. He could hardly believe that this
man had noted his approach or that this man knew his title!
"And it
took ye long enough to find me," the man bellowed. "Not that ye would
have had I not piped for yer tracking!"
"And
who are you?" the ranger called.
"Bradwarden
the Piper," the man answered proudly. "Bradwarden the Woodsman.
Bradwarden the Pine Father. Bradwarden the Horse Tender. Bradwarden the
..."
He stopped
as Elbryan came out from behind the tree, the ranger rightly sensing that this
introduction could go on for some time. "I am called Nightbird," he
said, though he figured that this man somehow already knew that.
The tall man
nodded, smiling still. "Elbryan Wyndon," he added, and Elbryan
nodded, then stared dumbfoundedly when he considered the implications of that
long-lost name. To everyone in Dundalis with the exception of Belster O'Comely,
Elbryan was known only by the name the elves had given to him.
"Might
be that the animals telled me," Bradwarden remarked. "I'm smarter
than I look, not to doubt, and older than ye'd guess. Might be the animals,
might be the plants." Bradwarden stopped and offered an exaggerated wink
that Elbryan, still a fair distance down the hill, saw clearly. "Might be
yer uncle."
The ranger
rocked back on his heels, unable to find even the words to ask the obvious
questions. He was wary, though not afraid, and he continued up the hill,
testing every step before he shifted his weight, as if he expected the place to
be trapped.
"Ye
should've killed the three," the piper went on.
Elbryan
shrugged, not understanding.
"Paulson
and his cronies," the tall man went on. "Nothing but trouble. I'd
been thinking o' killing them meself, when I seen an animal chewing off its leg
in one o' their wicked catchers."
Elbryan
started to respond that he had eliminated the cruel traps, but the words were
stuck in his throat. As he came around the low brush, he noted the hind
quarters of a horse, noted that the man was mounted: As he came around another
step, he saw that that was not the case, that the man, and no mount, had been
the source of the tracks.
For Elbryan,
Nightbird, who had battled fomorian giants and goblins, who had lived with the
elves, the sight of a centaur was not completely unsettling. It brought many
questions, though, too many for poor Elbryan to begin to sort out. And it
brought, too, a memory of a piping song while he and Pony had stood quiet on
the slope outside of Dundalis, and he recalled, too, the stories of the Forest
Ghost, half man and half horse, that he had enjoyed as a child.
"They
be nothing but trouble," Bradwarden remarked distastefully. "And I'll
kill them if one more scream of me animal friends reaches me ears!"
Elbryan
didn't doubt the claim for a minute. There was something too matter-of-fact
about the centaur's tone, something. dispassionate, removed from humanity. A
shudder coursed the ranger's spine as he imagined what this powerful beast,
easily eight hundred pounds and cunning enough to completely avoid the ranger
for all these weeks, might do to Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk.
"Well,
Elbryan the Nightbird, have ye an instrument to join with me pipes?"
"How do
you know of me?" the ranger demanded.
"Now if
we're both for asking questions, then we're neither to be getting any
answers," Bradwarden scolded.
"Then
you answer mine," the ranger demanded.
"But I
already did," Bradwarden insisted. "Might be―"
"Might
be that you are avoiding an answer," Elbryan interrupted.
"Ah, me
little human laddie," Bradwarden said with that disarming smile, though it
surely seemed condescending coming from so far on high, "Ye'd not be
wanting me to give up me secrets, now would ye? What fun would ye have
then?"
Elbryan
relaxed and let down his guard. One of his friends had told Bradwarden of him,
he figured, one of the elves, most likely Juraviel. Either that, Elbryan decided,
or the centaur had eavesdropped when the young man was at Oracle, for
Bradwarden knew of Uncle Mather, and of the "little cave." In any
case, Elbryan felt in his heart that this was no enemy standing before him, and
he thought it more than mere coincidence that this very day, for the first time
since he had come to the region, he had hinted openly of his feelings of
loneliness.
"I
trampled me a deer this morning," the centaur said suddenly. "Come
along for a meal then; I'll even let ye cook yer part!" With that, the
centaur took up his pipes and started a rousing military march,. thundering
away on powerful legs. Elbryan ran full out, constantly seeking out shortcuts
in the thick underbrush, just to keep pace.
They were
not alike, very different in so many ways. True to his words, Bradwarden
allowed Elbryan to start a fire and cook his venison, while the centaur ate his
portion, nearly a quarter of the deer, raw.
"I do
hate killing the damn things," the centaur said, ending his sentence with
a resounding belch. "So cute they be, and appealing to one of me body in
more ways than ye'd know. But fruits and berries are naught but ticklings. I'm
needing meat to fill me belly." He rubbed a hand across his stomach, at
the point where his human torso connected with the equine bottom half.
"And I've considerable belly to fill!"
Elbryan
shook his head and smiled―all the wider when Bradwarden belched again, a
great, thunderous burp.
"You
have been in the region all the while?" Elbryan asked. "And I never
spotted you nor found any sign."
"Don't
ye be too hard on yerself," the centaur replied. "I been in the
region longer than yer father's father was alive. And what might ye spot? A
hoofprint or me droppings? Ye'd think them both that of a horse, though if ye
inspected the droppings a bit more, ye'd find that me diet's not quite the same
as me horsie friends."
"And
why would I look closer?" Elbryan asked, a sour expression on his face.
"Dirty
business, that," Bradwarden agreed.
The ranger
nodded, forgiving himself for missing the signs.
"Besides,"
Bradwarden went on, "I knew ye were coming, and ye didn't know I was here.
Unfair advantage, I'd call it, so don't ye go chastising yerself."
"How
did ye―you know?"
"A
little birdie telled me," the centaur replied. "Sweet little thing
that says her name twice in a row."
Elbryan's
face crinkled at the cryptic statement, but he just shook his head, thinking
that it really wasn't that important. Even as he started to ask a question in a
completely different direction, he remembered a certain friend who fit the
description. "Tuntun," he stated more than asked.
"Aye,
that's the one." Bradwarden laughed. "She warned me not to expect too
much from ye."
"Indeed,"
the ranger said dryly.
"So I
telled her that I'd be watching over ye," the centaur went on.
"Though I've come to know that ye don't need much watching."
"Then
you are elf-friend," Elbryan said, hoping to find some common ground.
"Elf-acquaintance,
I'd be calling it," the centaur replied. "They're a good sort for the
wine, and they respect the animals and the trees, but they're too much for
giggling and too long on manners!" To accentuate his point, he let fly the
loudest belch Elbryan had ever heard. "Never heared an elf's
belly-thunder!"
Bradwarden
laughed riotously, then hoisted a huge skin and poured an amber-colored
liquid―Elbryan recognized it as boggle―into his mouth, a
considerable amount splashing over his bearded face.
"Ye
should've killed them," the centaur said suddenly, spraying more than a
little wine with each word.
Elbryan,
thinking Bradwarden to be referring to the elves, crinkled his brow
incredulously.
"The
three men, I mean," the centaur clarified. "Paulson, Cric, and . . .
what's the third, then? Weasel?"
"Chipmunk."
The centaur
snorted. "Idiot," he muttered. "Ye should've killed them, all
three. No respect, I say, and nothing but trouble."
"Then
why has Bradwarden tolerated them?" Elbryan asked. "They have been in
the area for some time, I would guess, considering their lodgings, and
obviously you knew of them."
The centaur
nodded at the simple logic. "I been thinking of it," he admitted.
"But they didn't give me an excuse. And," he paused and offered a sly
wink, "don't ye fear, for I'm not overly fond o' human flesh."
"You
have tasted it then?" Elbryan reasoned, not taking the bait.
Bradwarden
belched again, and then he launched into a long speech about the ills of
humankind. Elbryan merely smiled and let the centaur ramble on and on,
considering the creature's words carefully so that he could discover many hints
about Bradwarden. Elbryan suspected, and would come to confirm over the next
few weeks, that he and the centaur were not so different in purpose.
He was a
ranger, a guardian of the frontier humans and also of the forest and its
creatures. Bradwarden's mission, it seemed, was not so different, except that
the centaur was more concerned with the animals, particularly the wild horses;
he even hinted that he had given many of the wild horses their freedom, since
their human masters treated them badly. He hardly cared for the humans. He had
seen the raid on Dundalis years before, he confirmed for Elbryan, though the
worst he would admit of the tragedy was that it was "a pity."
Theirs
became a tentative friendship, an offered smile and exchange of news whenever the
pair happened to be in the same area. For Elbryan, knowing Bradwarden was a
wonderful thing indeed. He found that when he next ventured to Oracle, his
previous feelings of loneliness did not follow him into the cave.
CHAPTER 27
The Fat Prophet's Warning
News that
she would soon be transferred to Pireth Vanguard far to the north, did little
to change Jill's sullen mood. By all reports, the weather was better on the
northern side of the Gulf of Corona, more alive, with brisk winds and a greater
change of the season. In Pireth Tulme, even the winter was one long gray sheet
of clouds and cold rain, differing from the summer only in terms of
temperature.
But Jill had
settled into a routine here, akin to the continually gloomy season. Each day
seemed as the last, an existence of perpetual watch and work. Seconds, minutes,
and hours seemed to drag on endlessly, and yet, at the same time, once the
weeks had passed, it seemed as if they had flown away.
The incident
at the Waylaid Traveler had brought some measure of excitement, some break in
the routine. Jill had taken the image of the mad friar back with her, could
hear his words still, and found in them a kinship to that which lay in her own
heart. There was no sense of duty or honor in Pireth Tulme, none in the
Kingsmen or the Coastpoint Guards, none in all of Honce-the-Bear, she feared,
or in all of wide Corona. And now this man, for speaking the truth with a level
of enthusiasm that exceeded even the orgies in Pireth Tulme, this man, who
would not be surprised by the tragedy that had touched young Jill's life, who
would have expected it and called for preparation against it, this man, this
holy prophet, was tagged "mad."
Jill sighed
deeply every time she considered the man who had called himself the hound of ill
omen. His words rang so true in her ears, echoing in the quiet lulls between
the groans and shrieks that endlessly emanated from the rooms behind her. The
mad friar foresaw disaster; Jill only wished that he had sung out his tune in a
small frontier village several years ago.
Would the
people of that village have heeded his warnings? Probably no more so than the
soldiers of Pireth Tulme, their party resuming from the moment they returned
from Tinson.
But despite
her feelings, Jill kept her vigilant watch, day after day, often long into the
night. And she kept her honor and virtue, refusing to give in to the
temptations of the celebration, refusing to surrender to the
hopelessness―and that precisely was the way Jill viewed the hedonism
around her. The soldiers of Pireth Tulme engaged in the revelry, the pleasures
of the flesh, to avoid noticing their empty souls. They had sacrificed their
hearts, so to speak, for their loins.
So be it.
Jill stoically suffered the barbs of her comrades, particularly from Warder
Miklos Barmine, who seemed to covet her all the more since she would not give
in.
Perhaps
Pireth Vanguard would be better, she sometimes dared to hope; but inevitably,
her wishes fell back on the dark reality that was life in Honce-the-Bear in
God's Year 824.
It was a
gray morning―no surprise there―with Jill on the wall, seated
between crenelations, her legs dangling over the two hundred-foot drop, her
gaze on the dreamy mist that hung over Horseshoe Bay. Pireth Tulme was
especially quiet after a night of tremendous drinking, a night which Jill had
spent on the tower roof, quietly tucked under the beam of the fortress' lone
catapult, her blanket tight about her.
She kept her
senses tuned totally to the present, thinking of nothing but the rocky pillars
standing like quiet sentinels in the foggy bay, the continual lap of the ebb
tide waves against the rocks so far below, the occasional bleat of a sheep in
the sloping field on the other side of the fortress.
And of the
square sail that was drifting her way through the gray mist.
She
scrambled to her feet and leaned out over the battlement, peering hard out to
sea. It was indeed a sail, moving toward Pireth Tulme and neither in nor out of
the Gulf of Corona. Jill's first instinct was to find some way to warn the obviously
wayward craft. The fortress did have a signal barrel, a cask of volatile
ingredients―though it hadn't been used in so many years that Jill feared
it wouldn't even burn brightly―that was designed for signaling the larger
fortress of Kingsmen some dozen miles inland, close beside the catapult. Jill
realized that she wouldn't likely rouse enough help to get the barrel up in the
air in time, and so she began waving her arms and calling out loudly, warning
the ship's crew of the rocks and the impending disaster.
How Jill's
mouth dropped open in shock when the vessel responded with the swish of its own
catapult, a huge rock smashing against the cliff face some thirty feet or so
below her!
It was
exactly the situation for which the young soldier had trained all these years,
just as Jill had imagined it might happen. And yet, for some reason, it seemed
all too unreal for Jill. She stood there another long moment, perfectly
stunned.
She noted
then that the vessel was not alone, but was moving in accord with other craft,
low to the water. One―at least one―had already gone by Pireth
Tulme, making for the beach of Horseshoe Bay, and two flanked the sailing ship
on the right, a third on its left.
A second
ball soared in, this one soaring high over the fortress wall, and over the back
wall as well, bouncing down the green field.
Jill cried
out at the top of her lungs, then again a moment later, the ships moving ever
closer, when she heard no response. She could see the activity on the deck of
the sailing ship now, small forms darting this way and that, tacking hard to
put the large caravel in between the bay's many sentry stones. She noted their
red berets.
"Powries,"
she muttered under her breath. She had no time to wonder where they could have
stolen or captured the ship; she cried out again, then turned to view the tower
door.
There should
have been a second sentry there, the relaying voice to the soldiers within.
Jill shook her head, her short shock of blond hair bouncing about. Frustration
boiled in the young woman, mingling with desperation. Another shot came
thundering in, this one scoring a hit on Pireth Tulme's front wall, taking down
some stones.
Jill ran
along the wall, angling for the door. She noted the bay as she went, saw that
the low craft was nearing the beach and that another was already there, its
hatch open and dozens of redcapped dwarves pouring onto the shell-strewn sand!
Yet another
shot came in as Jill grabbed the heavy door's latch and pulled it wide, this
missile not of stone, nor pitch, but a jumble of dozens of wide-flying
grapnels.
"Oh,
damn," she sputtered; seeing many of the hooks gaining a firm hold on the
walls. She screamed into the tower then, calling for all hands to the walls,
warning of powries in the bay.
Then she
ran, drawing her sword, cursing at every step. They had been caught unaware;
she noted no allies had yet exited the tower even as she got back to the front
wall. Likely, half the soldiers either didn't believe that call or were simply
too drunk to heed it, and the other half probably couldn't even find their
damned weapons!
The ropes
were tight from the ship to the wall, with lines of dwarves on each, moving
steadily with surprising strength, hanging under, hands and ankles locked about
the cord. Jill first tried to dislodge the grapnel, but found that it was too
tightly secured, with too much weight on the heavy line. Then she went at the
line ferociously, hacking and chopping, chipping her sword from one ill-aimed
blow, the blade ringing off the stone wall. The ropes were thick and strong,
and Jill knew then that she could not cut them all down, could not cut more
than one or two down before the evil powries began gaining the wall.
"Hurry!"
she cried, glancing back to the open tower door.
Finally,
Miklos Barmine wandered out, rubbing his eyes, blinking repeatedly as if the
light, though the day was dim, stung him profoundly. He started to call out to
Jill, to ask her what all the shouting was about, but he stopped, as he noted
the woman at work on the heavy rope.
Another man
came up behind the warder. "To the walls! To the walls!" Barmine
cried desperately, and the man disappeared again into the blackness of the
tower, crying out for his comrades.
A final hack
from Jill sent the rope flying free, half a dozen powries splashing down hard
into the cold waters. Jill ran to the next line but moved right past it, seeing
that a dwarf was nearly to the wall some distance down. She got to the spot
first, slashing the powrie hard as it tried to scramble to the stone. The
creature grabbed on stubbornly, but Jill hit it again, right across the face,
and it fell away, shrieking, to its doom.
Jill went to
work on the rope. Soldiers were coming from the tower by this point, but
powries were coming over the front wall. Jill wasn't halfway through the heavy
cord when she had to stop and run to fight another of the dwarves as it pulled
itself onto the parapet. The creature drew a small sword but too late to parry
the woman's first savage attack, Jill's sword slashing across the dwarf's eyes,
blinding it. The dwarf countered viciously, but Jill had already stepped beside
it, then behind it, and when the powrie finished its wild swinging, coming back
to full defensive posture, Jill locked one arm over its shoulder, her other
under its crotch, and lifted and twisted, sending it plummeting from the wall.
She didn't even have time to slice once at that particular rope, though, for
another dwarf was already running her way, hooting and howling, whipping a
cudgel about in the air before it.
Charging
soldiers met the red-capped dwarves all along the wall, battling fiercely. Jill
saw a pair of dwarves go flying over, saw a man slump to his knees, hands
clutching a mortal chest wound.
Then she was
fighting again, hopping back from the swing of that nasty cudgel―she saw
more than a few spikes protruding from its wide end. On she came with a snarl,
stabbing straight ahead with her sword, then, when that attack was neatly
deflected, kicking her foot out beneath the sweep of the cudgel, connecting
solidly with the dwarf's belly.
The powrie
didn't even flinch, came right back to the offensive with one, two, and then a
third swiping attack.
Jill was
backing steadily, but realized that she would soon run out of room, for she
sensed that another powrie was fast coming in at her back. She started ahead a
step, then turned about abruptly, dropping to one knee and lunging ahead, her
free hand catching the second dwarf's swinging sword arm, her own sword driving
deep into its chest.
Jill came up
in a short run, bowling the wounded powrie away, then she pivoted again and
came in hard, moving too close for the cudgel to score a solid hit and
accepting the weakened blow in exchange for her own attack, a stab into the
dwarf's throat.
Breathing
hard, the woman surveyed the scene.
They could
not win. The Coastpoint Guards of Pireth Tulme were fighting well, but they
were badly outnumbered and they had lost their one advantage: the walls. If
they had been prepared, if they had been alert, then most of the powrie lines
would have been cut before the dwarves ever gained the wall. If the soldiers
had drilled for such an attack, then their defenses would have been
coordinated, then the signal barrel would already be in the air, spinning high
and far for reinforcements. Jill did see that a detachment of six soldiers was
at the catapult, three working the levers, three desperately trying to hold a
handful of powries at bay. She should get to them, she realized, but she
understood, too, that there was no chance of that. Fighting was general all
along the wall, more and more powries pouring in, and another group, those from
the two barrelboats that had gone into Horseshoe Bay, screaming wildly and
charging up the sloping field behind the fortress.
Pireth Tulme
was lost.
Jill saw
Warder Miklos Barmine shouting commands from the wall near the tower, powries
swarming all about him. He took a vicious hit, then another, but responded with
a slash of his own, knocking one powrie from the wall. One of Jill's female
comrades came to the tower door then, but she was swept away by a host of
bloody caps as they charged in.
Barmine
continued to scream, though his words soon became but grunts and howls of
agony. He was bloodied in a dozen place and took hit after hit, though he
stubbornly continued to swing that sword.
Then Jill
lost sight of him, finding herself facing another dwarf. This one came in hard
and, thinking that it had the woman by surprise, launched a wild sidelong
swing. Jill dodged easily, then kicked out behind the flying weapon, just
nicking the powrie on the back but solidly enough so the overbalanced dwarf
fell from the parapet eight feet to the ground below.
Another was
quick to take its place, snapping off a series of thrusts with its short sword.
Jill managed to glance back toward the tower, saw the host of powries flooding
in, saw Barmine kneeling, his face, his arms, all his body covered in blood.
Spurred by
the gruesome sight, she attacked fiercely. Up went her sword, cutting across
left to right, then back again, then another strong backhand, each swing
sounding with the ring of metal on metal. She shifted her right foot forward
with the last stroke, then turned her blade and came straight ahead, driving
the powrie back. But another dwarf was behind it to bolster the defense, and
another behind that. Jill heard the dying scream of a soldier to her rear and
fully expected that she would soon be overwhelmed.
She started
forward, then leaped atop the wall, hopping from high point to high point, once
over the surprised powrie's stabbing sword. She outdistanced all three with a
few long strides, moving to the far corner of the front wall. There was yet
another rope secured at that point, the last dwarf on it barely five feet from
the wall.
Jill glanced
back at the carnage. Many powries were down, but more remained, and each of the
still-standing soldiers was surrounded, battling desperately. Barmine was
kneeling but offering no resistance, a powrie wiping its beret across his face.
Jill winced
as the dwarf lifted its cap, up high and in the same motion, slammed its spiked
cudgel into the dying warder's face.
She had seen
enough.
She could
have taken out the dwarf on the rope, but doing so would have allowed the three
pursuing her to catch her. Jill sheathed her sword instead, pulled her belt
off, and leaped out from the wall, beyond the climbing dwarf. She caught the
rope with one hand, barely, and hung on with all her strength, two hundred feet
of empty air below her.
The powrie
immediately reversed direction, deftly turning about on the rope with sure,
strong grips. Its three companions, with typical powrie loyalty, went to work
at once on the grapnel and rope, caring not at all if they dropped a comrade
along with the dangerous woman.
Jill had no
time for a fight. She kicked out to the side, trying to keep the dwarf at bay,
but her main focus was on getting her belt, held fast in her other hand, up
over the rope. She looped it up on one try, but lost her grip on the rope and
started to tumble.
Her free
hand somehow caught hold of the other end of the belt. She was holding both
ends now, hanging lower, and then she was sliding away from her enemy, sliding
fast into the mist, toward the ship, which was holding steady more than a
hundred feet from shore.
The other
end of the rope was fixed to the yard of the mainmast. There were many powries
on that deck, though none had, as yet, spotted her. She figured she'd let go as
she came over the prow, in the hope that she would land on deck clear enough
for her to roll a few times to absorb the impact. If she could get across the
deck to the stern catapult or more particularly, to the cauldrons of pitch and
the firepit near the catapult, then she might be able to cause more than a little
havoc.
Her plan was
moot, as it turned out, for as Jill approached the front of the craft, the rope
gave way, and suddenly her descent was much sharper than her forward momentum.
She let out a scream, thinking that she would slam headlong into the ship's
prow.
Luck was
with her and she hit the cold sea short of the ship. She came up sputtering,
her mouth full of water, her ears still filled with the sound of dying men
ringing down from the fortress walls. Anger welled within her, directed at both
the powries and her own comrades. Had they been prepared, this disaster would
not have befallen them. Had they heeded their own code of conduct, the powries
would have been repulsed.
She had lost
her sword in the fall, but Jill didn't care. Feral growls escaped her lips as
she started to swim around the vessel, moving all the faster for fear that her
limbs would soon be too numb to propel her. She got around to the stern and
found the anchor line, a heavy rope down from the port side. Her arms aching
from cold and weariness, she grabbed hold and pulled herself up the ten fit to
the rail. She peeked over even as the catapult fired again, a ball of flaming
pitch soaring up over Pireth Tulme's wall. Jill noted that the missile was far
more likely to burn a host of powries than any human, but the dwarves hardly
seemed to care, howling with glee as they loaded the next ball.
Three of
them had the ball, cradled in a heavy blanket, up above their heads near the
basket when Jill hit them with a flying body block. They fell away toward the
taffrail, but could not let go of their load. Over the rail the pitch ball
went, taking the three powries with it.
A fourth was
on Jill in a moment, grabbing for her throat. She couldn't believe the weight
of the diminutive thing! Nor the strength! In an instant, the powrie had her on
her back and was choking her hard.
She tried
desperately to break its grip, locked her fingers about its thumbs and turned
them outward.
She might as
well have been pulling against iron shackles.
Jill changed
tactics and began slugging the dwarf in the face instead, then poking for its
eyes. It held on tight and even tried to bite her fingers.
Soon Jill's
hands were flapping inconsequentially at the powrie's barrel-like torso, her
strength fast deserting her. She would die as Pireth Tulme died, she realized,
again silently cursing the unpreparedness, the slovenly men and women to whom
she had been forced to entrust her life. She would die, not of any fault of her
own, but because the Coastpoint Guards had grown weak.
Her hands
flailed wildly; darkness crept into the edges of her vision. One hand banged
against the powrie's solid waists against a metal ball above the dwarf's belt.
The hilt of
a dagger.
Jill had
struck the dwarf four times before it realized that it was being stabbed. With
a howl, it finally let go, scrambling about to evade the jabbing dagger.
Jill wounded
it again, between its flailing arms and right in its chest, and then again,
higher, in its throat. The dwarf rolled away, but Jill could hardly move to
follow. She lay there for what seemed like minutes, then finally found the
strength to come up. to her elbows.
The powrie
was near the rail, facedown.
Jill took in
another blessed gulp of air and staggered to her feet. She turned to the
catapult, its arm low and ready to fire, then looked at the vats of burning
pitch, wondering what mischief she might cause.
The powrie
slammed her hard from behind, driving her into the bent beam. Jill came about,
dagger slashing, cutting a line across the dwarf's face, just inches above the
garish cut she had put in its throat. The dwarf fell back a couple of steps,
but came on again. . .
Jill dropped
to her knees and lowered her shoulder, accepting the impact. She curled her
legs under her and lifted the dwarf high, stepping fast and shoving with all
her strength, putting the creature into the catapult basket. Jill rolled away
immediately, falling to the side, grabbing at the release pin and pulling hard.
The powrie
was almost out of the basket when the catapult fired, launching the dwarf in a
wild, spinning flight straight up, arms and legs out wide.
Many other
dwarves heard the scream, took note of the curious missile, and turned to the
stern deck; Jill was out of time. She kicked over the pitch barrels, spilling
one onto the capstan that held the anchor line and knocking another down the
stairs to the lower main deck. Then she turned to the taffrail, thinking her
only escape to be the cold water.
Again sheer
luck saved her, for she found a boat hanging from the stern. She had it falling
free in an instant, then, with powries scrambling up to the stern deck, with
fires growing all about her on the capstan and on the catapult, she leaped out
as far as she could, taking care to avoid the burning pitch that was floating in
the water and the three dwarves, bobbing low, barely keeping their heads above
the waves. They made for the boat as did Jill, the woman overtaking one and
easily dispatching it with her borrowed dagger.
Powries
weren't so tough in the water, she noted as she closed on the second. She swam
right by that one, realizing if she delayed, the third would get to the boat
before her. She caught that last floundering dwarf, stabbing it hard on the
shoulder, then swimming right by it, grabbed desperately for the small craft.
A crossbow
quarrel skimmed the water right beside her head.
Jill worked
to get behind the boat, to use it as a barrier against the powrie archers on
the deck. She knew that the angle was all wrong, though, that they were too
high above her, the boat too close, and that they would get fairly clear shots
no matter where she moved.
And she knew
from the profound numbness that was creeping into her limbs that she had to get
out of the water, and quickly.
The groan of
wood alerted her to the powries' newest problem: She dared to peer over the
small boat's rail, and saw that the ship's anchor line had burned through, and
the ship, caught on a swell, had swung hard about. Suddenly, the archers had
more on their minds than the woman in the water.
Jill started
to climb into the boat, but had to stop and turn to strike again at the
struggling powrie. Finally she was in the boat, setting the oars, then pulling
away with all her strength, the third powrie frantically trying to catch up.
It got near
enough for Jill to slam it on the head with one of the oars.
CHAPTER 28
Siblings
She dragged
herself onto the beach, battered, cold, and angry. She looked back at the small
boat, even then being dashed against the rocks, tossed about by the powerful
surf. She had drifted all through the rest of that fateful day, all through the
night and the better part of the next morning as well. She had meant to go
right from the battle to the nearest spot she could find to land the boat, to
then run off and find some help, and lead the charge back to Pireth Tulme. The
powrie ship was barely out of sight when her wounds overtook her, pains and
aches she didn't even realize she had suffered. The heat of battle had left her
body and unconsciousness had descended over her like some great hunting bird,
wings out wide to block the light of day.
She had
awakened that night, drifting somewhere in the gulf, praying that the currents
had not pushed her out into the open Mirianic. Luck was with her, though, for
the coastline remained in sight, towering black mountains marking the southern
horizon. It had taken Jill hours to manage to row the craft near shore and then
to find some place where she could put in. She had settled for a narrow inlet,
but as soon as she entered, she found that many sharp rocks were in the water,
lurking right below the surface. Jill worked the small boat hard, but
understood the futility. So she shed her red Coastpoint jacket and her heavy
boots and went over the side, fighting the undertow every inch of the way through
the icy water.
The rocks
took her boat.
She didn't
recognize any landmarks but figured she must be somewhere west of Pireth Tulme
on the north coast of the Mantis Arm. Her suspicions were confirmed when she
moved inland, found a road, and then, an hour of walking later, a signpost
pointing the way, three miles hence, to Macomber.
Jill found
herself circumventing the town and approaching it from the west, not from the
east the way any stragglers fleeing Pireth Tulme would. She tried to straighten
her still-damp clothes, but realized that she would be conspicuous indeed to
any, walking as she was without boots, and without the dirtied, calloused feet
of a peasant woman. And though she was not wearing the telltale red jacket, a
woman dressed in a simple white shirt, tan pants, and bare feet was not a
common sight. Jill wished that she had a cloak, at least, to gather closely
about her.
She got more
than a few curious looks from the townsfolk as she passed the fairly sizable
settlement of more than three score buildings, some two stories high. Some folk
pointed, all whispered, more than a few turned their shoulders and scurried
away, and it seemed to the young woman that they were on edge. Perhaps word of
the disaster had preceded her.
These
suspicions were bolstered by the snatches of conversation Jill caught, words of
a contingent of Kingsmen riding hard to the east. She nodded to herself; she
should go out and join the force, should go to Pireth Tulme to avenge―
The thought
hit Jill like a cold slap. To avenge what? Her comrades? The letch Miklos
Barmine? Gofflaw, whom she'd imagined killing several times herself?
She found a
tavern, its sign too worn for her even to make out the name, though the image
of a foaming mug was clear enough. Before she entered, a familiar voice, raised
in dire warning, assaulted her.
"What
demons do we invite into our midst?" the man inside cried, and Jill knew
before she saw him that he was surely standing atop a table, one finger pointed
high into the air.
She went in
expecting a brewing row, but found instead that the mad friar, this time, had a
fairly attentive audience.
And a large
one; there had to be forty people inside, filling the tavern from wall to wall.
Jill sifted through the crowd to get to the bar, started to order a mug of ale,
but then realized she had no money. She turned instead, put her elbows on the
bar, and watched the monk and, more particularly, the reactions, of his
audience.
She heard
whispers of a fight, of goblins, some said, though others more accurately named
the enemy powries. Estimates of the enemy force ranged from a thousand warriors
to a thousand ships full of warriors.
Jill wanted
to tell them that it was but one captured sailing vessel and no more than five
barrelboats, but she kept quiet, fearing to reveal too much of herself and also
thinking it would do these folk good to be afraid.
The mad
friar apparently shared her feelings, for his speech became more dire, more
frantic, as if he envisioned an army of monsters marching down the road, right
to the border of Macomber.
The fever
reached a critical point, and then, all of a sudden, it broke. The barkeep came
around the bar with a heavy club, moving pointedly for the fat monk.
"Enough from you," he warned, waving his weapon. "Whatever
happened is the business of the Kingsmen, and not for the folk of
Macomber!"
"All
the world must prepare!" the fat man retorted, throwing his arms out wide,
inviting the people to join.
But it was
too late; he had pushed past the fear and into the realm of anger, and when the
barkeep called for assistance, the man found no shortage of volunteers.
The mad
friar put up a terrific fight, tossing men about, howling about his
"preparedness training!" In the end, though, predictably, the monk
was sailing out the door to land unceremoniously in the street.
Jill was
beside him at once, on one knee as he sorted himself out. He reached into a
pocket of his robe and produced a small flask, popping the top and sucking a
huge swig. He did well to stifle his belch and looked at Jill as if
embarrassed.
"Potion
of courage," he explained dryly. "Ho, ho, what!"
Jill
regarded him sourly, then rose and offered an arm. "You are
consistent," she chided.
The friar
looked at her more closely. He knew he had seen her before, but he could not
place her. "Have we met?" he asked finally.
"Once,"
Jill said, "in a place not so far away."
"I
would not forget so pretty a face," the friar insisted.
Jill was too
bedraggled to blush or even to care. "Perhaps if I were still wearing my
red jacket," she said, though she could hardly believe she had just
admitted her position to this man.
He paused
for a long moment, then his face brightened in recognition―and then it
darkened immediately as he realized the implications. "Y-your home,"
he stuttered, as if not knowing which direction to go. "Pireth
Tulme."
"Never
would I call Pireth Tulme my home," Jill retorted. The mad friar started
to speak again, but she stopped him with an upraised hand. "I was
there," she said grimly. "I saw."
"The
rumors?"
"Powries,"
she confirmed. "Pireth Tulme is no more."
The friar
held out his flask, but Jill refused. He nodded and put it back under the folds
of his weathered robes, his expression more serious. "Come with me,"
he bade her. "I have an ear for what you might need to say."
Jill
considered the offer for a long moment, then moved away with the man to a room
he had rented in a small inn on the outskirts of Macomber. He expected her to
speak of desertion, but of course, her tale, spoken simply and truthfully, was
far different. She saw respect mounting in the man's brown eyes and knew that
he was a friend, knew that he would not turn her in to the military
authorities, that he held as little respect for them as did she.
When she
finished, when she explained that she was glad again to hear his voice and
could now appreciate his dire warnings, the friar smiled comfortingly and put
his hand over hers.
"I am
Brother Avelyn Desbris, formerly of St.-Mere-Abelle," he confided, and
Jill understood she was probably the first person he had told his true name in
a long, long time. "It would seem that we are both dispossessed."
"Disappointed
would be a better word," Jill replied.
A dark cloud
passed over Avelyn's face. He nodded. "Disappointed indeed," he said
softly.
"I have
told you my tale," Jill prompted.
It came out
in a burst of emotion Avelyn had not known since that night he had cried for
his dead mother. He told Jill much―more than he would have ever believed
he could confide―holding back only the specifics of the Ring Stones, the
secret island, the method and fatal result of his escape, and the fact that he
carried with him a stolen cache of powerful magic. Those things did not seem
paramount to Avelyn, anyway, not when weighed against the tragedy of the
Windrunner, the loss of his dear Dansally Comerwick.
"She
told you her name," Jill put in quietly, and Avelyn's brown eyes misted at
the realization that this woman could understand the significance of that.
"But
you have not," Avelyn said to her.
"Jill,"
she answered after a short hesitation.
"Just
Jill," she assured him.
"Well,
Just Jill," Brother Avelyn said with a widening smile, "it would seem
we are two lost lambs."
"Yes,
mad brother Avelyn Desbris," she replied in the same singsong voice,
"two lost lambs in a forest of wolves."
"Pity
the wolves, then!" Avelyn cried, "Ho, ho, what!"
They shared
laughter, a relief of tension both of them so desperately needed Jill for her
recent trials and Avelyn because he had spoken openly at last of his dark past,
had relit the candles about those desperate
images and feelings that had driven him out on the road.
"Piety,
dignity, poverty," the monk said distastefully when he had caught his
breath.
"The
credo of the Abellican Church," Jill replied.
"The
lie," Avelyn retorted. "I saw little piety beyond simple rituals,
found little dignity in murder, and poverty is not a thing the masters of
St.-Mere-Abelle tolerate." He gave a snort, but Jill knew she had him
beaten on this point.
"Ever
vigilant, ever watchful," she recited dryly, and Avelyn recognized her
words as the motto of the Coastpoint Guards. "Tell that to the
powries!"
They laughed
again, all the louder, using the very sound of mirth as a shield against tears.
Jill spent
the night in Avelyn's room; the monk, of course, acting the part of a perfect
gentlemen. He considered the tale he had told her, his life's story, and then
looked to regard himself, the extra hundred pounds, the battered appearance.
"Ah,
Jill," he lamented. "You should have seen me in my idealistic youth.
What a different man I was then, before I saw the terrible truth of the
world."
His thoughts
hung on those words for a long, long while, and then it struck him that if he
were to truly call this woman his friend, he would have to search hard for a
part of himself that he had thought long lost. To be a friend to Jill, to be a
proper companion to anyone, would mean recovering some of that idealism, some
of that belief that the world was not so dark and terrible and that, with
effort, it might get even better.
"Yes,"
the monk whispered over the sleeping woman, "we'll find our way
together."
The next
morning, they purchased some supplies, including a short sword, boots, and a
warm cloak for Jill, and then they walked out of Macomber together, down the
road to the west, ignoring the stares and whispers, feeling somehow as if they
shared a secret and a wisdom the rest of the world, fools all, could never
comprehend.
That bond
alone held Jill together with Brother Avelyn over the first weeks of their
journey; they were siblings, Avelyn insisted, two alone against the encroaching
darkness. Jill accepted a large part of that argument, but hardly considered
herself brother to the mad friar. The man drank almost constantly, and whatever
town they entered, Avelyn found some way to get into a fight, often brutal. So
it was in the town of Dusberry along the Masur Delaval halfway between Amvoy
and Ursal. Avelyn was in the tavern, as usual, standing atop a table, spouting
warnings and curses. Jill came in just as the fight broke out, two dozen men swinging
at the closest body, not bothering to ask if it was enemy or ally. In these
general rows, as opposed to the occasions when all in the bar teamed up against
the monk, Avelyn more than held his ground. The huge bear of a man tossed his
attackers with ease, punched and twisted deftly, hollering "Ho, ho,
what!" every time he felled another.
Jill came in
hard and fast, simply to defend herself as she made her way to her comrade.
She, too, could handle the drunken townsfolk without much effort, turning easily
as one man lunged for her, walking right past his lumbering reach, then kicking
back hard on his instep, sending him down to the floor.
"Must
you always?" she asked when she at last reached Avelyn's side.
The monk
replied with a wide grin. Then he quickly brushed Jill aside with his right
hand, straightening the man who was charging in at her back with a stiff left
jab, then knocking him flying with a heavy right cross.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn boomed. "The town will be the better for it!"
He started
away, but Jill kicked him hard in the rump. He turned to her, wounded
emotionally at least, but she would not back down, pointing resolutely at the
door.
It wasn't
until they had exited the tavern, the fight raging still, that Avelyn suddenly
stopped and looked at his beautiful companion a most curious expression on his
face. Not even blinking, he reached under his robes, then quickly retracted his
hand.
It was
covered in blood.
"My
dear Jill," Avelyn said, "I do believe I have been stabbed." His
legs started to buckle under him, but Jill caught him and guided him off the
main road to a porch in a nearby alley. She thought to leave him there, to run
off and find Dusberry's healer―every small town had one―but Avelyn
caught her by the arm and would not let her go.
Then she saw
it. Brother Avelyn produced a grayish-black stone, its polish so deep that it
seemed almost liquid, so smooth that Jill felt as if she could slip right into
it. Her gaze lingered on the stone for a long while, the young woman sensing
there was something extraordinary, something magical about it.
"I need
to borrow some of your strength, my friend," Avelyn said, "else I
shall soon perish."
Jill, on her
knees before him, nodded, eager to help in any way.
Avelyn
wasn't satisfied with that response, though, fearing that Jill did not
understand the true measure of what he needed from her. "We shall become
one," he said, his voice growing ever more breathless, "more intimate
than anything you have ever known. Are you prepared for such a joining?"
"I
hardly think you are in condition―"
"Not
physically, oh no, not that!" Avelyn quickly corrected, wheezing out a
laugh despite his obvious agony. "Spiritually."
Jill rocked
back on her heels, regarding Avelyn curiously. A physical union she could not
abide―not with this man, not with Connor! But this cryptic talk of a
spiritual joining did not seem so imposing. "Do what you must," she
begged.
Avelyn
regarded her a while longer, then finally nodded. He closed his eyes and began
chanting softly, falling into the magic of the powerful hematite. Jill likewise
closed her eyes, listening to the inflections of the chant.
Soon she no
longer heard them, but rather felt them as if they were emanating from within
her own body. And then she felt the intrusion, the spirit of Avelyn making its
way into her.
Just his
body was there, she realized, as again his spirit sought entry. Jill tried to
break down her defenses, knew logically that if she did not let Avelyn have his
way, he would surely die. She knew, too, that she had come to trust this man.
He was a friend, of like mind and, on most points, morals.
She focused
all her strength, trying vainly to invite the man in, trying vainly to
facilitate the joining.
Then she was
screaming, not aloud―or perhaps aloud, she was too consumed to know.
Avelyn came closer, so much closer. Too close. They seemed to be as one; Jill
caught images of the brown and gray walls of a monastery, of an island covered
with lush vegetation and trees with wide-fingered branches. Then she felt as if
she was falling, looked into the face of a hawkish man who was falling beside
her.
And then she
felt the pain, of a stab wound, sharp and hot. It was not on her; she knew
that. But it was right there beside her, pulling at her life force, sucking her
into its depths. She resisted, tried to push Avelyn away, but it was too late
now. They were joined and the monk fed as a vampire would feed.
Jill's eyes
popped wide in horror and she jumped, startled, to find that the monk was still
reclining in front of her.
The pain
became another sensation, hot and private. Too private and yet shared. Jill
instinctively recoiled, but she had nowhere to hide. She had let Avelyn in, and
now she must suffer the experience.
For Avelyn,
the union of spirits proved something wondrous. Even as he explored this
unfamiliar use of hematite, he gave to Jill his understanding of the
stories―and it was so easy! He felt her response immediately, Jill
passing her energy through the hematite into Avelyn's wounded body as smoothly
as any fifth-year student of St.-Mere-Abelle. It struck Avelyn profoundly then
that the monks might be teaching the usage of the stones in a terribly wrong
manner, that if the instruction came in the spiritual mode, through the use of
hematite, the students might progress much faster. Jill, he knew, would come
away from this with more than a casual understanding of how to use the magic
stones, and she was strong! Avelyn felt that. With practice, and more joinings,
she could quickly rival all but the most powerful stone users of
St.-Mere-Abelle―and all because of this simple technique.
But dark
images began to wash over Avelyn, scenes of men running amok with stone power.
He dismissed the notion of training stone use through this method as quickly as
he had entertained it, for he realized that the discipline involved in handling
such power could not be taught in any easy way. Suddenly he felt guilty for
what he had just given this woman he hardly knew, felt as if he had somehow
betrayed God, giving a blessing without first asking for any guidance or
sacrifice.
It was over
in a few moments, with Avelyn back in his nearly healed body. Jill turned away,
could not look upon the man.
"I am
sorry," Avelyn said to her, his voice weary but all trace of physical pain
gone. "You have saved my life."
Jill fought
away the black wings of her past, the barrier that had for so long protected
her against intimacy, the barrier that Avelyn had not crashed through but had
somehow circumvented. With great effort, she managed to turn back and face him.
He was
sitting upright now, smiling sheepishly, the cloud of pain and death gone from
his plump features. "I am―" he started to apologize again, but
Jill put a finger over his lips to silence him. She stood up and offered her
hand, helping the portly monk to his feet.
Then Jill
started down the road, like all the other roads that led them out of all the
other towns. She offered not a word as they walked long into the night,
replaying those terrible moments of their joining over and over in her mind,
constantly telling herself that it had been necessary, and trying to fathom the
images that Avelyn had given her, images, no doubt, from the monk's past. There
was something else, though, some gift that Avelyn had left behind. Jill had
never even heard of the magic stones before, let alone used one, but now she felt
as if she could handle them fairly well, as if their secrets had been unlocked
to her in the blink of an eye. On this point, as well, she kept quiet, not
knowing yet whether Avelyn had given her a gift or a curse.
Avelyn, too,
did nothing to break the silence. He, too, had much to contemplate: the
feelings he had viewed within the tortured woman and the scenes that the
joining had shown him images of a slaughter in a small town, probably somewhere
in or near the Wilderlands. And Avelyn had a name for the place, a name the
woman could not remember. He inquired privately about it in the next town the
pair ventured through, and then, as the monk gained more and more knowledge, he
began to steer Jill generally north.
It was with
mixed feelings that Jill followed Brother Avelyn into Palmaris. The woman
desperately wanted to seek out Graevis and Pettibwa, to tell them she was all
right, to hug them and fall comfortably onto Pettibwa's soft bosom. All of that
was, of course, tempered by her realization that she was, in effect, a
deserter. A meeting with Connor could prove disastrous, and if Grady happened
to spot her or learn of her visit, the greedy man would likely set the Kingsmen
on her trail, if for no other reason than to ensure his inheritance.
Jill did go out
one night, while Avelyn went down into the common room of the inn they had
chosen, spouting his diatribes. She made her way silently across town, taking
up a spot in the alleyway across from Fellowship Way. She sat there as the
minutes became an hour, taking some comfort in the fact that many patrons came
and went; apparently her little disaster hadn't ruined the Chilichunk name.
Sometime later, Pettibwa came out of the inn, rubbing her hands on her apron,
wiping the sweat from her brow, smiling, always smiling, as she went about the
business of her life.
Jill's heart
tugged at her to go out and embrace the woman, to run to Pettibwa as she would
have run to her natural mother.
Something
within, fear for Pettibwa, perhaps, stopped her though.
And then, quickly,
the plump woman was gone, back into the bustle of the Way.
Jill left
the alley hurriedly, thinking to go back to her room across town. Somehow she
wound up on the back roof of the Way, in her private spot, basking one final
time in those familiar feelings. Up here, she was, in effect, in Pettibwa's
arms. Up here, Jill was Cat-the-Stray again, a younger girl in a world less
complicated, with feelings less confusing.
She spent
all night watching the stars, the gentle drift of Sheila, the occasional lazy
cloud.
She returned
to her room as dawn was breaking over Palmaris, to find Avelyn snoring loudly,
his breath smelling of ale and more potent drinks, one eye blackened.
They
remained in Palmaris, a city large enough to suffer the likes of the mad friar,
for several more days, but Jill never ventured near Fellowship Way again.
CHAPTER 29
Of Singular Purpose
They gave
him but two stones: a smooth yellow-hued sunstone and a cabochon garnet, a
carbuncle, the deepest shade of red. The former, among the most valued stones
at St.-Mere-Abelle, could protect the man from almost any stone magic, could
kill all magic in an entire area and render all spells useless within it, and
the latter, the seeking stone, could show him the way to magic. Thus was
Brother Justice equipped to find and destroy Avelyn.
He set out
from the abbey one dark and dreary morning, riding an ash-gray mare, not swift
of hoof but long in heart. The horse could go for many hours, and Brother
Justice, so focused on the completion of his vital task, pushed her to her
limits.
He traveled
first to Youmaneff, the village where Avelyn Desbris had been born, some three
hundred miles from St.-Mere-Abelle. He went to the small cemetery on the hill
outside the place first, found the stone raised in memory of Annalisa Desbris,
and noted with some satisfaction that the name of Jayson Desbris had not been
added.
"You
have come to tell me of my son Avelyn?" the old man asked as soon as
Brother Justice, his brown robes marking him as an Abellican monk, knocked at
his door.
The simple
question, asked so very sincerely, put the monk on edge.
"Is he
dead?" Jayson asked fearfully.
"Should
he be?" Brother Justice retorted.
The old man
blinked many times, then shook his head. "Forgive my lack of
manners," he bade the visitor, moving to the side of the door and sweeping
his hand, an invitation for the monk to enter. Brother Justice did so, his head
bowed to hide his cruel smile.
"I had
only assumed that a visit from a man of St.-Mere-Abelle would be to give
tidings of Avelyn," Jayson explained. "And since the visit was not
from Avelyn―"
"Where
is Avelyn?" The monk's tone was flat and cold, a snapping question that
sent Jayson back on his heels and had the hair on his neck standing on end.
"You
would know better than I," the old man replied quietly. "Is he not at
the monastery?"
"You
know of his long journey?" the monk asked sharply.
Jayson shook
his head, and Brother Justice sensed that he was truly confused.
"I last
saw my son in the fall of God's Year 816," Jayson explained, "when I
handed him into the care of St.-Mere-Abelle, into the arms of God."
Brother
Justice found he believed every word, and that fact only made him all the more
angry. He had hoped for information from Jayson Desbris, a direction to take
that he might end this foul business quickly and efficiently. But Avelyn had
apparently not come home, or at least, had not made contact with his father.
Now the monk was torn, not knowing whether he should kill the old man, erasing
any trace of his pursuit of Avelyn should he come home, or simply brush away
any sense of misgivings Jayson might hold, putting the visit in a more
congenial light.
That would
not work, Brother Justice realized, for if Avelyn did come home and learn of a
visit from a monk, then he would know that this had been no social call. Still,
to slay the old man might make things even more complicated, for then he would
be marked by the local officials and perhaps even hunted.
There was
one other way.
"I fear
to tell you that your son is dead," he said with as much conviction as he
could muster―and that was not considerable.
Jayson
leaned heavily on a table, and seemed suddenly very much older indeed.
"He
fell from the abbey walls," Brother Justice went on, "into All Saints
Bay. We have not recovered his body."
"Then
why did you come here with questions as to his whereabouts?" came a sharp
question from the side of the room. A large man, perhaps ten years older than
Brother Justice, stormed into the room, his dark brown eyes filled with
outrage.
Brother
Justice hardly paid the man any heed―at least outwardly. He kept his
focus on Jayson and tried to cover his previous questions. "Avelyn has
taken his long journey," the monk said quietly, and that reference, put in
terms of a spiritual flight, slowed the mounting anger in Avelyn's brother
Tenegrid.
"He is
with God now," Brother Justice finished.
Tenegrid
came right up to the monk, glaring down at the shorter man. "But you never
found his body," he reasoned.
"The
fall is too great," Brother Justice said quietly. He had his hands in
front of him, buried within his voluminous sleeves. They were not clasped,
rather, his right hand was cupped, fingers set tight, forearm muscles twitching
from the strain.
"Be
gone from this house!" Tenegrid commanded. "Foul messenger who comes
and taunts with questions before speaking the truth!" It was an obviously
misplaced anger, an expression of pain and with no real resentment aimed at
Brother Justice. Tenegrid was wounded as much by the sight of his
grief-stricken father as by the news of his brother's death. Brother Justice
understood this, though he hardly sympathized.
Still, the
vicious monk would have let it go, but then Tenegrid made a dangerous mistake.
"Be
gone!" he repeated, and he put his hand on the stocky man's strong
shoulder and started to push him toward the door. Faster than his eyes could
follow, Brother Justice's cupped hand snapped up and out to the right, striking
Tenegrid squarely across the throat. The man fell away a couple of staggering
steps, grabbed the back of a chair for support, and then fell over anyway, the
chair tumbling down about him.
It took
considerable willpower for Brother Justice, his blood so hot for the kill, to
turn away for the door. He wanted to vent his rage on this brother of foul Avelyn,
wanted to rip the man's head right off before his father's eyes and then slowly
murder the father as well. But that would not be prudent, would likely make his
course to Avelyn, the grandest prize of all, much more difficult.
"We of
St.-Mere-Abelle are sorry for your loss," he said to Jayson Desbris.
The old man
incredulously looked up from his son, who was still lying on the floor holding
his wounded throat and gasping for breath, to see the monk depart.
The one
obvious lead fruitless, Brother Justice had to turn to his magic, to the
carbuncle, a stone also called Dragon Sight for its ability to detect things
magical. He rode out of Youmaneff shortly thereafter, finding no magical
emanations in or about the pitiful village. This was worse than a cold trail,
Brother Justice realized, for this was no trail at all.
The world
seemed wide indeed.
His first
contact with magic came a few days later on the open road when he happened by a
merchant caravan. One of the merchants had a stone―and admitted as much
when Brother Justice cornered him alone inside his covered carriage. It was
merely a diamond chip, useful for saving the candles and oil on long journeys.
The monk was
soon again back on the road, riding steadily and making a general course to the
north. The largest city in Honce-the-Bear was Ursal, so that, he figured, might
be a good place to start. Brother Justice knew the pitfalls, though. Many
merchants in Ursal likely possessed stones; the monastery was not averse to
selling them. His garnet would lead him down a hundred different avenues, to
one dead end after another. But still, considering the limited range of the
Dragon Sight stone―it could not locate magic more than a few hundred feet
away―Brother Justice would have more of a chance in a confined city than
in the vast open spaces of central and northern Honce-the-Bear.
He wasn't a
third of the way to Ursal, though, when his course took a different direction,
when the trail suddenly heated up.
It happened
purely by chance in a hamlet too small even to have a name, a place a certain
"mad friar" had passed through only a few weeks before on his way to
Dusberry on the Masur Delaval. The reaction of the inhabitants to Brother
Justice's brown robes tipped the monk off to the fact that he was not the first
Abellican monk to come through this place recently. People sighed when he
walked in, seemed fearful at first, and then, as if recognizing that he was a
different man than they had originally feared, they sighed again, this time in
obvious relief.
When
questioned, they were all too ready to give an account of the "mad
friar" who had visited their village, offering portents of doom and
starting a wild fight in the tavern. One man showed Brother Justice a broken
arm, still far from healed.
"Not
good business for the church, I'm thinking," the man offered, "to
have one o' yer own wandering about hurting folks!"
"More
than a few folk have turned away from St. Gwendolyn of the Sea since the
fight," the bartender of the tavern added.
"This
monk was of St. Gwendolyn?" Brother Justice asked, recognizing the name of
the monastery, a secluded fortress nestled high on a rocky bluff, perhaps two
days' ride to the east.
The man with
the broken arm shrugged noncommittally, then turned to the bartender, who
likewise had no answers.
"He
wore robes akin to yer own," the bartender remarked.
Brother
Justice wanted desperately to inquire if the man carried any magical stones, if
there was any magic about him at all, but he realized that these two would not
likely have held back such information if they had it, and he didn't want to
tip his hand too much to anyone, fearing that Avelyn would be all the more
difficult to find if he realized he was being hunted.
So the monk
got a description, and though it was not an exact image of the Avelyn Desbris
he had known, it was enough to hold his curiosity. So, suddenly, he had a
description, a title―"the mad friar"―and a direction, the
folk of the hamlet uniformly insisting the monk had gone down the western road
with his companion, a beautiful young woman of about twenty years, close beside
him.
The trail
was warm, and it led Brother Justice from town to town, across the countryside
to Dusberry on the Masur Delaval. He picked up even more clues as he went, for
in one skirmish in a bar this mad friar had apparently sent a pair of men
flying with a blue shock.
Graphite.
Less than a
month after he had set out from the tiny hamlet, confident that he was steadily
gaining on this rogue monk, Brother Justice walked through the fortified gates
of Palmaris.
Only two
short days later, Brother Justice used his Dragon Sight stone to detect the use
of strong magic, coming from the northeastern quarter of the city, the high
ground of rich houses overlooking the Masur Delaval. Convinced that his prey
was in reach, a lion staring down the face of an old and weary zebra, the monk
rushed through the streets, through the crowded marketplace, knocking over more
than one surprised person. He was a bit apprehensive when he got to the gates
of the indicated house, a huge structure of imported materials: smooth white
marble from the south, dark wooden beams from the Timberlands, and an
assortment of garden artwork that could only have come from the galleries of
the finest sculptors in Ursal. Brother Justice's first thought was that Avelyn
had hired on with this obviously wealthy merchant, perhaps to perform some
necessary feat with the stones, perhaps merely as a court jester. The fierce
monk tried to hold hard to that hope, for, logically, he could not dismiss his
doubts. Would Avelyn, who held the stones as most sacred, rent out their
powers? Only in emergency, Brother Justice realized, and since Avelyn could not
have been in Palmaris for more than a couple of weeks, this was not likely a
familiar house to him.
That left
another possibility, one the monk did not wish to entertain. He went over the
gate easily, lighting down in the front yard without a whisper of sound. There
were many hedges and high bushes; he could get to the door without drawing
notice from within or from the wide street behind him.
He
understood his error before he had gone a dozen paces when he heard the growl
of a sentry dog.
Brother
Justice spat a curse and saw the animal, a massive, muscled beast, black and
brown with a huge bony skull and wide jaw full of gleaming white teeth. The dog
hesitated only a moment, taking full measure of the man, then came on in a dead
run, lips curled back to show Brother Justice those awful teeth with every
stride.
The monk
crouched low, bent his legs, and tightened his muscles, measuring the dog's
swift approach. The beast came in fast and hard, but just as it was about to
leap for the man's throat, Brother Justice confused it by jumping high into the
air, curling his legs under him.
The dog
skidded to a stop, its momentum too great for it to effectively change its
angle of attack, and then Brother Justice came down hard on its back, kicking
both his legs straight down as he descended.
The dog's
legs splayed wide; it gave one yelp, then lay still, its back broken, its lungs
collapsing.
The monk,
convinced that the animal could not cry out any further warnings, walked on
toward the house. He decided to take a straightforward approach and went right
to the front door, knocking hard with the large brass knocker, another imported
and sculpted item, he knew, this one in the shape of a leering, stretched face.
As soon as
he saw the handle begin to turn, the monk lifted one foot and went into a spin,
timing it perfectly so that his foot connected with the door just as it began
to open. The man on the other side, a servant, flew to the floor as the door
swung wide and Brother Justice entered.
"Your
master?" the monk asked flatly.
The stunned
man stammered, taking too long for the impatient monk's comfort.
"Your
master?" Brother Justice demanded again, grabbing the man by the collar
and lifting him to his feet.
"He is
indisposed," the man replied, at which Brother Justice slapped him hard
across the face, then clutched him on the neck, a grip that left no doubt in
the man's mind that this intruder could rip out his throat with hardly an
effort. The man pointed toward a door across the foyer.
Brother
Justice dragged him along. He let go before he reached the door, though,
tossing the poor servant to the floor as he felt the first waves of intrusion,
magical intrusion, an attack aimed his way and coming from within the room.
The monk
quickly took out his yellow sunstone, falling immediately into its defensive
magic. The attack was fairly strong though he would have expected more from
powerful Brother Avelyn―but the sunstone was among the most potent of all
the stones of St.-Mere-Abelle, its defenses even more complete than the
chrysoberyl more commonly used, and its power was more tightly focused than any
other, a simple shield against magic. In an instant, a yellowish glow
surrounded the monk, and the waves of intrusion were halted.
The monk
snarled in defiance and kicked at the heavy door. It jolted but did not open.
He kicked again and again, repeatedly slamming the lock, until finally, the
wood of the jamb gave way, the door flying wide to reveal a portly man, richly
dressed, standing behind a large oaken desk, a loaded crossbow in hand.
"You
have one shot," Brother Justice said evenly, striding directly into the
room, his eyes locked on those of the merchant. "One shot, and if it does
not kill me, I will torture you to a slow death."
The man's
hands trembled; Brother Justice knew that without even looking at them. He saw the
merchant flinch as a line of sweat rolled from his brow into one eye, saw the
man chewing his lip.
"Not
another step!" the merchant said with all the courage he could muster.
Brother
Justice stopped and smiled wickedly. "Can you kill me?" he asked.
"Is this the end you desire?"
"I
desire only to defend what is mine," the merchant replied.
"I am
no enemy."
The merchant
stared at him incredulously.
"I had
thought you to be another," Brother Justice said calmly, turning his back
on the merchant to close the door as tightly as the shattered jamb would allow.
He sneered at the curious servants gathering in the hall to keep them at bay.
"I am hunting a dangerous fugitive, one who employs the magic of the
stones," he explained, turning back to the merchant, a disarming look on
his face. "I had not thought that any but he would be so powerful with the
magic." Brother Justice did well to hide his wicked grin as the crossbow
slipped down.
"I am
always ready to lend aid to those of St. Precious," the merchant declared.
Brother
Justice shook his head. "St.-Mere-Abelle," he corrected. "I have
traveled the breadth of Honce-the-Bear in my most vital quest. I had thought it
to be at its end. Forgive my entrance; my Father Abbot will reimburse you for
all the cost."
The merchant
waved his hand, his face brightening at the mention of the man. "How fares
old Markwart?" he asked, his tone one of familiarity.
Again the
monk restrained his feeling of outrage that this man―this simple,
pitiful, wretched merchant could speak of Father Abbot Markwart as if he were
the man's equal. Obviously he had dealt with Markwart―where else would he
have garnered so powerful a stone?―but Brother Justice understood the
relationship between the merchants and the abbey far more clearly than did the
merchants. Father Abbot Markwart was always willing to take their money, but
never in exchange for honest respect.
"Perhaps,
then, I can help you with your quest," the merchant offered. "Ah, but
where are my manners? I am Folo Dosindien, Dosey to my friends, to your Father
Abbot! You must be hungry or perhaps in need of a drink." He lifted his
hand and started to call out, but Brother Justice cut him short.
"I
require nothing," he assured the merchant.
"Nothing
but help in your search, perhaps," the man said teasingly.
The monk
tilted his head, somewhat intrigued. The man had at least one powerful
stone―he knew that and suspected it to be hematite. Many things could be
accomplished with such a stone.
"I seek
a fellow monk," Brother Justice explained. "He is known as the mad
friar."
The merchant
shrugged; the name obviously meant nothing to him. "He is in
Palmaris?"
"He
came through, at least," the monk explained, "not more than two weeks
previous."
The merchant
sat down behind his desk, his features tightening with concentration. "If
he travels, if he is an outlaw, then likely he would have sought out the
lowlier regions of the southern docks," he reasoned. He looked up at the
monk, his expression resigned. "Palmaris is a large place."
Brother
Justice did not blink.
"I have
offered my name," the man prompted.
"I have
no name to offer," replied Brother Justice, and the tension grew once
more, instantly emanating from the monk's cold stare.
Dosey
cleared his throat. "Yes," he said. "I wish that I had more
answers to give to one of Markwart's underlings."
Brother
Justice narrowed his eyes, not appreciating the sentiment, the way the foolish
merchant tried to dominate him by referring to his superior in such familiar
terms.
"But
there is a place,", the merchant whispered, coming forward suddenly in his
chair, "where one might get answers. Answers to any question. in all the
world."
Brother
Justice had no idea where this conversation was going, had no idea what to make
of the man's sudden, almost maniacal expression.
"But
not until we have dined," Dosey said, falling back in his chair.
"Come, then, I will set for you a table unrivaled in Palmaris, that you
might return to St.-Mere-Abelle with kind words for Markwart's dear old
merchant friend."
Brother
Justice played along, and, indeed, the merchant Dosey was not exaggerating. His
servants―the man Brother Justice had dropped to the foyer floor and three
women, one undeniably beautiful ―brought in course after course of the
finest cuts of meat and the sweetest fruits. Juicy lamb and thick cuts of
venison buried in brown sauces and mushrooms, oranges that exploded in a shower
of juice as soon as the integrity of their peels was breached, and large,
round, yellow melons that the monk had never before seen but that were sweeter
than anything he had ever tasted.
He ate and
he drank, neither to excess, and when the meal was over, some two hours later,
he again sat quietly and let the merchant guide the conversation.
The man
rambled on and on, telling mostly stories of his dealings with the various
monasteries of Honce-the-Bear, even with St. Brugalnard in faraway Alpinador.
Brother Justice knew that he was supposed to be impressed, and he worked hard
to pretend that he was as the minutes dragged on into yet another hour. Dosey interrupted
his tales only for an occasional belch; so lost was he in his own sense of
importance that he hardly bothered to gauge the monk's reaction. Brother
Justice figured that the man was accustomed to dealing with people in need of
or with great desire for his wealth, and, thus, he could ramble on and on to an
attentive though captive, audience. Such were the trappings of power that Dosey
did not realize what an ultimate bore and ridiculous buffoon he truly was.
But Brother
Justice needed the merchant, as well, or at least it seemed plausible that the
man might aid the monk in his all-important quest. That alone held the monk at
the table long after the sun had set.
Finally, so
suddenly that the surprise shook the monk from his almost dreamlike state of
boredom, Dosey announced that it was time to get some answers and that these
things were better done in the dark.
The
mysterious tone of his voice set the monk on his guard, though, in truth,
Brother Justice really didn't expect much from the merchant. Perhaps the fool
Dosey would use his hematite to invade the bodies of several innkeepers from
the lowlier sections of the city, using their forms to inquire about the mad
friar.
The pair
went back to Dosey's study, to the great oaken desk. Dosey had his manservant
retrieve a second chair, placing it at the desk's side, and then he bade the
monk to sit and relax.
"I
could go," the merchant offered, and then he shook his head, as if not
liking that notion, almost as if he were afraid of that thought.
Brother Justice
made no move at all to reply, no verbal or body language to let the man know
that he was even the least bit intrigued.
"But
perhaps you should see for yourself," the merchant went on, a wry smile on
his face as he spoke. "Would you like to go?" he asked.
"Go?"
"For
your answers."
"I know
not of this place of which you speak," Brother Justice admitted. "You
have a stone, that much I know."
"Oh,
much more than a simple stone," Dosey teased. He reached under the lapel
of his fine gray jacket and produced a pin, a large broach, and held it out for
Brother Justice to see. Now the monk could not fully hide his interest. The
central stone of the broach was a hematite, as he had suspected, an oval of
liquid gray, deep and smooth. Encircling it, set in the yellow gold, were a
series of small, clear, round crystals. Brother Justice did not immediately
recognize them, for they might have been several different types, but he sensed
that they were indeed magical, in some way tied to the powers of the hematite.
"My own
design," Dosey bragged. "The fun of the stones is in combining their
powers, is it not?"
The fun,
Brother Justice silently echoed, hating this man and the irreverence with which
he spoke of something so sacred. "This broach presents a combination not known
to me," the monk admitted.
"Simple
clear-crystal quartz," Dosey explained, running his finger about the large
broach's edge. "For distant sight."
A stone of
divining, Brother Justice then realized, and he was beginning to catch on. With
the clear quartz, a man could send his vision across the miles; perhaps
combining that with the spiritwalking of the hematite . . .
"With
this, you can go to a place to find your answers," Dosey promised, "a
place that only I know of. The home of a friend, a powerful friend indeed, one
that would impress your Markwart, to be sure!"
Brother
Justice hardly noted the familiar reference to the Father Abbot this time, so
caught up was he in the implications. His intrigue was fast shifting to
trepidation now, as he got the distinct feeling that he had stumbled on to
something potentially dangerous. He recalled Dosey's fearful expression when he
hinted that he would make the journey, a mixture, it seemed, of the sheerest
horror and the highest titillation. What manner of being could so inspire such
a reaction? What, then, lay at the end of this spirit journey?
A shudder
coursed up the monk's spine. Perhaps the monastery should reconsider its
practice of selling stones to fools like Dosey.
The thought
flew away in an instant, for this monk, this Brother Justice, had been trained
to be unable to hold long to any ill feelings, any questions at all, concerning
the decisions of his superiors.
"Go,"
Dosey bade him, handing over the broach. "Let the stone guide you. It
knows the way."
"Am I
to possess the body of another?"
"The
stone knows the way." It was spoken simply, calmly, and, somehow wickedly.
That part of Brother Justice, that small flicker of memory that recalled his
life as Quintall, recognized Dosey's expression as that of an older boy
pressing a youngster to mischief.
He took the
broach, felt its power in his hand, eyeing Dosey cautiously all the while. His
physical body would be vulnerable while spirit-walking, he knew, but he doubted
that Dosey would strike against one of Markwart's emissaries. Even if he did
attack, Brother Justice, already using the hematite, figured that he would have
little trouble possessing the merchant's body. And Dosey likely knew the same
thing, and that understanding, the monk decided, would give him the insurance
he needed.
So Brother
Justice sat back in the chair, closed his eyes, and let the magic of the broach
engulf him. He visualized the hematite as a dark liquid pool and he waded in
slowly, letting the physical world dissipate into gray nothingness. Then his
body and spirit were apart, two separate entities. The monk looked about the
room from this new perspective, but his eyes could not remain fixed on anything
but the clear stones surrounding that hematite. They pulled at him as
forcefully as anything he had ever felt, a compulsion too great to ignore.
Doubts about the wisdom of his choice, about the wisdom of selling such
powerful stones to fools, flapped up about him, flashes of dark wings that beat
at the will of the powerful monk.
He was sinking,
ever sinking, into that crystal glare, away from the room, away from his
corporeal body and the fool Dosey.
And then he
was flying, faster than thought, across the miles. Time and distance warped. It
seemed as if an hour went by, but then as if only a second had passed; what
appeared as an infinite plain was crossed by a single step. On and on Brother
Justice flew, north to the Timberlands, to the Wilderlands, across great lakes
and deep forests, and then to mountains, towering peaks.
So many
times he thought he would collide with jags of stone only to watch them rush
under him at the last possible second. He had never imagined such an attunement
of stone magic, that these crystals could be so focused in their divination. It
was something dangerous and beyond his understanding―and he knew as much
about the stones as any man alive, with, as far as he knew, the exceptions of
only Father Abbot Markwart and Avelyn Desbris!
He crossed
the range into a huge, high valley, a great plateau ringed by the towering
mountains. Below him, massed like ants, were the campsites of armies. He wanted
to go lower, to distinguish the individual forms, to see what force had
gathered in such unbelievable numbers, but the compelling crystals would not
let him out of their grasp. He flew on above the plateau to a singular, smoking
mountain, its southern face tree covered, but with two black arms reaching
down, reaching out to encompass the gathered armies.
Brother
Justice nearly swooned, his senses overwhelmed by the sheer speed at which his
spirit entered a series of connecting narrow tunnels. Every breakneck turn
jolted him, though his physical form was hundreds of miles away. Every dip and
sudden rise blurred his vision, scrambled his thoughts.
He came up
fast on a pair of great bronze doors, inlaid with a myriad of designs and
symbols. They opened but a crack, and through that tiny space flew his
disembodied spirit into a huge chamber lined by stone columns that resembled
gigantic sculpted warriors. He soared through their twin lines, his attention
stolen as he approached the far end of the chamber, a raised dais, and a
creature whose strength was beyond anything Brother Justice had ever known,
whose emanations of power and of evil mocked life itself.
The flight
stopped, leaving Brother Justice standing right before the dais. He considered
his own form, for normally spiritwalkers were invisible. Not in here, though.
The monk could see himself, as he appeared within his corporeal trappings,
except that he was a singular shade of gray and translucent, so that he could
look right through his form to see the gray stone beneath his feet.
But that
spectacle couldn't hold Brother Justice's attention for any length of time, not
with this huge monstrosity leering at him from on high. What monster was this?
the monk wondered as he studied the reddish skin and black eyes, the bat wigs,
horns, and claws. What manifestation of hell had come to walk the material
world? What demon?
The
questions spiraled into a singular line of thought, a singular fear that
threatened to break the monk's very mind. He knew! From his lessons, years of
religious training, years of his masters imparting the fears of that which
opposed their God.
He knew!
You have
destroyed the fool Dosey, then, the creature telepathically imparted to the
monk, and have stolen his treasure. The instant that last thought ended,
Brother Justice felt an intrusion that he could not deny, a sudden scouring of
his brain, of his identity, his intentions. Sheer revulsion saved him, catapulted
his spirit out of that terrible place like a slingshot snapping back through
the tunnels, across the plateau, above the swarming soldiers that he knew then
were an army of evil, across the mountains and then the forests, the lakes,
careening all the way back to Palmaris, to the merchant's study, and back into
his body so suddenly that the physical form nearly toppled over.
"Do you
know now?" Dosey asked him even as his eyes blinked open.
Brother
Justice looked into that maniacal expression and saw the result of contact with
such a creature clearly etched on Dosey's face. He wanted to shake the man and
ask him what he had done, what he had awakened―but it was far beyond
that, Brother Justice realized before he ever uttered a word. The man had
passed the point of redemption and had perhaps awakened a dangerous curiosity
in the demon.
Up came the
monk's hands, locking fast on Dosey's throat. Dosey grabbed at the monk's
wrists, tugging futilely, trying to cry for help, scream, anything. The muscles
on Brother Justice's arms stood taut and too strong to fight. The monk drove
the feeble merchant to his knees and held fast long after the struggling
stopped, long after the merchant's arms fell slack at his sides.
His mind
whirling with outrage and fear, Brother Justice stalked about the house,
finding the servants and the merchant's family.
He left long
after midnight, battling his confusion with a wall of sheer anger. The broach
was in his pocket, the house of Folo Dosindien was dead.
CHAPTER 30
Symphony
"I am
at peace, a greater sense of belonging than I have ever known," the ranger
said at length after more than half an hour sitting in his wooden chair in the
darkness, staring at the barely perceptible mirror. He gave a chuckle at the
irony of his own words. "And yet, Uncle Mather, I count my current friends
as but two, and one of them is no more than a shadowy image, a specter that
cannot speak!"
Elbryan
laughed again as he considered the preposterous illogic of it all. "I
belong here," he declared. "This area, these towns―Dundalis,
Weedy Meadow, and End-o'-the-World―are my towns, these folk, my folk,
though they hardly tolerate the sight of me. What is it then that gives me
acceptance in this place, a greater sense of peace and belonging than I knew
among the Touel'alfar, who became my friends, who cared for me much more deeply
than any of the folk of the three villages, than any but you and
Bradwarden?"
He stared
hard at the image at the edge of the dark mirror for a long while, considering
his words, seeking his answers.
"It is
duty," Elbryan said finally. "It is the belief that here I am doing
something to better the world―or at least my corner of the wide world.
With the elves, I felt a sense of personal growth, learning and training,
perfecting my skills, always moving toward something better. Here, I use those
skills to better the world, to protect those who need protection whether or not
they believe they need protection.
"So
here I belong. Here I fit into a necessary niche and know that my daily toils,
my watchful eye, my rapport with the forest―creatures and plants―is
surely valuable, if not appreciated."
Elbryan
closed his eyes and kept them shut for a long moment, his mind filling with the
thoughts of the many duties left to him this day. He soon realized that Uncle
Mather would not be in the mirror when he again opened his eyes, for the trance
was broken. That was the way it always happened, the needs of the day
dispatching the spirit soon before the dawn, turning Elbryan's thoughts from
philosophical to pragmatic. He used the Oracle regularly now, sometimes two or
even three times in a week, and he never failed to bring up the image of his
relative, the ranger who had gone before him. He wondered often if he might
also find the image of Olwan in that mirror or of his mother or Pony, perhaps.
Yes, Elbryan
would like to converse with Pony, to see her again, to remember that innocent
time when patrolling was play and nightmares were not real.
He left the
small cave, crawling out past the large tree roots, with a sincere smile on his
face, rejuvenated and ready for the day's work, as always. He was hoping to
find Bradwarden, for the centaur, after weeks of Elbryan's teasing, had at last
promised him an archery contest. Perhaps Elbryan would make his prize, should
he win―and he had no reason to believe that he would not―an
indenture of the centaur, forcing Bradwarden to accompany him on his coming
visit to the forest about the western village of End-o'-the-World.
First things
first, the ranger told himself. He took up Hawkwing, removed its feathered tip
and its string, and went to a place he had claimed as his own, a nearly
treeless hillock much like the one he had frequented in Andur'Blough Inninness,
one that lifted him up into the heavens on starry nights and brought him the
first rays of dawn and the last rays of the sunset.
The ranger
quickly removed his clothes, the grass feeling scratchy but not unpleasant to
his feet. He greeted the dawn with his dance, weaving the staff about as he
would wield a sword, stepping slowly, perfectly balanced, the moves coming with
hardly a thought, since the movement memories were ingrained deep within his
muscles. The sword-dance was perfected now, and there were no steps to be
added, no more difficult maneuvers, no increase in speed. These movements alone
would continue to heighten Elbryan's balance, his sense of control over his
body. In the half hour that it now took Elbryan to perform the dance, he would
put his body through every movement needed in battle, he would reinforce in his
muscles the memory of which action properly followed which.
Truly the
ranger was a thing of beauty, moving with animal-like grace but with human
control. A combination of strength and agility, a balanced, thinking warrior.
The greatest gift of the Touel'alfar was his name, Nightbird, and all the
training that had come with it. The greatest gift of the elves was this harmony
the man had achieved, this joining of two philosophies, of two ways of looking
at the world, of two ways to do battle.
Sweat
glistened in the morning light, beading and rolling about the man's hard,
sculpted form. For though he was not moving quickly, the energy required to
maintain the balance of the sword-dance was tremendous, often a working of
muscle against muscle or an isolation of a muscle group so completely that it
was worked to its limits.
When he was
done, Elbryan gathered up his clothing and ran to a nearby pond, diving into
the chilly water without hesitation. A quick swim refreshed him, and he dressed
and went at once to his morning meal, then set off to find the centaur.
To Elbryan's
relief, Bradwarden was in the appointed area, though not exactly in the spot where
he had told Elbryan their contest would be held. To make things even easier for
the tracking ranger, the centaur was playing his pipes this morning, a haunting
melody that seemed akin to the dawn, gentle and rising, rising, until the notes
burst forth as the rays of the sun, cresting the long hill and spreading wide.
Following that music, compelled by its notes, Elbryan soon came upon the
half-equine beast, standing amid a tumble of boulders.
The centaur
stopped his playing when he spotted his friend, his white smile growing wide
within his bushy black beard. "I feared ye would not have the courage to
show yer face!" Bradwarden roared.
"My
face and my bow," the ranger replied, holding Hawkwing up before him.
"Aye,
that elven stick," the centaur remarked. Bradwarden held aloft his own bow
then, the first time Elbryan had seen it, and he was truly astonished. Mounted
sidelong on a platform, the thing would have passed for a fair-sized ballista!
"You
throw arrows with a tree?" the ranger scoffed.
Bradwarden's
smile didn't lessen a bit "Call 'em arrows," he said evenly, placing
his pipes on the ground and hoisting a quiver that would have passed for a sleeping bag for Elbryan, with arrows each
as long as the man was tall. "Call 'em spears. But if ye get hit by one,
know that ye'll call 'em death!"
Elbryan
didn't doubt that for a minute.
Bradwarden
led the way out of the area to an open meadow upon which he had placed a series
of six targets; each a different distance from the appointed line.
"We'll
be starting close and working our way to the back," the centaur explained.
"First one to miss a target is the loser."
Elbryan
considered the rules, so befitting the centaur's blunt style. Normally in a
test of archery, each contestant would be granted a specified number of shots,
with the best total score serving as the measure. With Bradwarden, though, it
was a simple challenge of hit or miss.
Elbryan
stepped up and let fly first, confident that the first target, no more than
thirty paces would pose no difficulty. His arrow slapped into the target near
the bull's-eye, a straight, level shot.
Without a
word of congratulations, Bradwarden lifted his monstrous bow and drew back.
"Ye only stung the giant," the centaur remarked, them let fly. His
great bolt thudded into the target near Elbryan's arrow and overturned the
whole three-legged thing. "Now," the centaur declared, "the
beast is properly killed."
"Perhaps
I should shoot first at each target," Elbryan said dryly.
The mighty
centaur laughed heartily. "If ye don't," he agreed, "then ye' ll
be aiming high for the clouds and hoping yer bolt drops straight down on the
mark, don't ye doubt!"
Before the
centaur had even finished, Elbryan's second arrow thudded dead center into the
next target, ten paces farther away than the first.
Bradwarden
hit it as well, and again the target fell over:
They were up
to the fifth target in no time, the first three having been knocked flat, and
the fourth still standing, for Bradwarden's great arrow, though true in aim,
had not pushed it all the way over. This fifth target, some hundred yards away,
was the first for which Elbryan had to elevate his shot. Not much, though; so
strong was Hawkwing that the arrow's flight was barely arched, cutting a sure
line through the gentle wind to strike perfectly.
The centaur,
for the very first time, seemed honestly impressed. "Good bow," he
muttered, and then he took aim and let fly.
Elbryan
clenched a fist, thinking himself victorious as he marked the flight.
Bradwarden's arrow did hit the target, though, barely catching hold in its
outer edge, as far to the left of center as it could go.
Elbryan
turned a wry gaze on the centaur. "A bit of luck," he remarked.
Bradwarden
pawed hard at the ground. "Not so," he insisted in all seriousness.
"I aimed for the beast's weapon hand."
"Ah,
but if it was left-handed . . ." the ranger replied without hesitation.
Bradwarden's
smile was gone. "Last shot," he said evenly. "Then we'll be
picking out farther trees to substitute for targets."
"Or
leaves," Elbryan replied, and lifted his bow.
"A bit
too much," the centaur said suddenly, and the ranger eased the tension on
his bowstring, having almost lost his concentration and the shot.
"Too
much?"
"Too
much faith in yerself," the centaur clarified. "Next, ye'll be
wanting to wager."
Elbryan
paused and thought hard on that line, then looked back to consider the
centaur's last shot, so near a miss. Or had it been planned that way? he had to
wonder. Was Bradwarden setting him up? Certainly the centaur was a fine archer,
but was he even better than Elbryan had recognized?
"Me
pipes'll be needing a new bag," Bradwarden mused. "Not a difficult
chore, but a dirty one taking a hide."
"And if
I win?" Elbryan asked. His eyes betrayed his idea, roaming to the
centaur's strong back.
Bradwarden
started to laugh, as if the notion that Elbryan might win was absurd. The
centaur stopped abruptly, though, and glared hard at his human companion.
"I know ye're thinking ye might be riding me, but if ever ye try, I'll be
giving human flesh another taste."
"Just
to End-o'-the-World," Elbryan clarified. "I wish to be there and back
in a hurry."
"Never!"
the centaur declared. "Only a maiden I'd let ride, and then she'd be
letting me," he finished with a lewd wink.
Elbryan
didn't even want to conjure the image.
"What,
then?" he asked. "I'll wager against you, but the prize must be
named."
"I
could make ye a real bow," the centaur chided.
"And I
could put an arrow up your arse from a hundred paces," Elbryan retorted.
"Big
target," the huge centaur admitted. "But what might ye be needing, me
friend, not that ye've a chance at winning."
"I
already told you," Elbryan replied. "I enjoy my walks, but I fear
that I need a faster method to cover the ground about the three towns."
"Ye'll
never climb on me back."
"Do you
lead the wild horses?" Elbryan asked, surprising the centaur.
"Not
I," Bradwarden replied. "That's the work of another." A strange
smile came over the centaur, a strange expression as if he had found the
solution to some puzzle. "Aye," he said at length, "that'll be
yer prize. If lightning hits me arrow―for that's the only way ye'll beat
me―I'll take ye to the one who leads the wild herd. I'll take ye, mind
ye, but then ye'll make yer own deals."
Elbryan
realized that he was being duped, that this prize, in Bradwarden's estimation,
was more a punishment. The ranger felt the hairs on the back of his neck
standing up, felt a tingling of trepidation. Who might this leader of the herd
be to inspire such uncharacteristic respect from cocky Bradwarden? Along with
the realization came an undeniable sense of intrigue, however, and so the
ranger agreed.
Up came
Hawkwing and off flew the arrow, striking hard on the far distant target.
Bradwarden
gave a grunt of respect, then let fly, his arrow, too, hitting the mark.
"Three,"
said Elbryan, and he put up his bow three times in rapid succession, each bolt
flying unerringly.
Bradwarden
followed and scored three hits.
"Fourth,
fifth, sixth!" Elbryan cried, letting three more shots fly, the first
hitting the fourth target squarely, the second striking the
fifth―splitting Elbryan's previous shot on that target―and the last
zipping into the final target, dead center.
The centaur
sighed, beginning to understand that he had, for the first time, possibly met
his match in a human. He got the fourth target easily enough, and then the
fifth, but his shot at the last in line skipped off the top of the target and
flew away into the brush beyond the far edge of the meadow.
Elbryan
smiled widely and clenched a fist. He looked up at Bradwarden and found the
centaur eyeing him with an expression he had not really seen from the creature
before: respect.
"Ye've
got yerself one dragon-killer of a bow, me friend," Bradwarden offered.
"And be sure that I've not seen a steadier hand."
"I had
the best bowyer," Elbryan replied, "and the best tutors. None in all
the world can match the archery of the Touel'alfar."
Bradwarden
snorted. "That's because the skinny little folks don't dare to get close
to an enemy!" he replied. "Come on then, let us go and get our
arrows, and then I'll show ye something fine."
They
gathered together their arrows and their belongings and set off at once, the
centaur leading Elbryan deep into the forest, past the pine and the caribou
moss, down a deep valley, then up its other side. They walked for several
hours, speaking little, but with the centaur often lifting his pipes to play.
At last, the sun moving low in the western sky, they came to a secluded grove
of pines, neatly tended into roughly a diamond shape. It sat on the gentle
slope of a wide hill, surrounded on all sides by a meadow of tall grass and
wildflowers. Elbryan could hardly believe that he hadn't found this grove
before, that his ranger instincts hadn't guided him to a place so naturally
perfect, so in tune with the harmony of the forest. This grove―every
flower, every bush, every tree and stone, and the trickling brook that crossed
it―was something more than the ordinary forests of the region. It was
something sacred, something befitting Andur'Blough Inninness, and not of the
tainted world of men.
There was
some magic here; Elbryan felt that as clearly as he had felt the magic of the
elven valley. Reverently, almost as if in a trance, the ranger approached,
Bradwarden at his side. They crossed the outer line of thick evergreens into
the heart of the grove and found bare paths weaving through the dense
undergrowth. Elbryan walked along without speaking a word, as if fearing to
disturb the stillness, for not a hint of a breeze came in through that wall of
pines.
The path
meandered, joining another, then forking three ways. The grove was not large,
perhaps two hundred yards across and half again that measure in length, but
Elbryan was certain that the paths, if straightened and laid end to end, would
cover several miles. He looked back often to Bradwarden for guidance, but the
centaur paid him no heed, just followed silently.
They came to
a dark, shady spot where the path forked left and right around a great jut of
rock covered with a thick patch of short, yellow flowers. Elbryan glanced both
ways, then, figuring that the paths converged just the other side of the
boulder, went right. He soon came to the expected joining, and, looking ahead,
he almost continued on.
"Not so
perceptive for one trained by elves," the centaur remarked, Bradwarden's
deep voice shattering the stillness. Elbryan spun around, meaning to hush him,
but all thoughts of that, all thoughts of Bradwarden at all, left him as he
glanced past the centaur, to the back side of the boulder that had split the
path. Elbryan glided back, moving beside the centaur, staring hard at the pile
of rocks, eight feet by six and roughly diamond shaped. The ranger glanced all
about. They were in the very center of the grove, he realized, and he realized,
too, that this cairn was the source of the magic, that the tree-lined borders
of the grove seemed to be a reflection of this place.
He went down
to one knee, studying the stones, marveling at the care with which they had
been placed. He touched one and felt a gentle tingling there, the emanation of
magic.
"Who is
buried here?" the ranger whispered.
Bradwarden
snorted and smiled. "Not for me to tell," he replied, and Elbryan
couldn't discern if the centaur meant that he did not know, or that it was not
his place to reveal the person's identity.
"Put in
the ground by the elves," the centaur said, "when I was no bigger
than yerself."
Elbryan
looked at him curiously. "And how long ago might that be," he asked
Bradwarden, "in the measure of human years?"
The centaur
shrugged and pawed the ground uneasily. "Half a man's life," he
replied, as exact an answer as Elbryan was going to get.
The ranger
let it go. He didn't need to know who was buried here. Obviously the man, or
elf or whatever it might be, was important to the Touel'alfar; obviously they
had graced this place, this cairn and the grove that had grown about it, with
more than a small measure of their magic. He could be satisfied with that;
Bradwarden had promised to show him something fine, and indeed the centaur had
fulfilled that pledge.
There
remained, however, the matter of Elbryan's prize for winning the archery
contest. He looked up at the centaur.
"Ye
just keep coming here," Bradwarden remarked, as if reading Elbryan's
thoughts, "and ye'll find the one who leads the horses."
The notion
filled the ranger with both excitement and fear. They left the grove soon
after, to find an evening meal. Elbryan returned later that night, and then
again the next day, but it wasn't until his fourth journey, some two weeks later,
after he had returned from his rounds to End-o'-the-World, that he found
Bradwarden's payment.
It was a
brisk autumn day, the wind whipping though inside the grove, the air remained
still―leaves and clouds alike, the puffy white mountains drifting swiftly
overhead across the rich blue sky. Elbryan went right to the heart of the
grove, paying homage to whoever was buried there, then came back to the edge,
wanting to feel the breeze in his face.
Then he
heard the music.
At first he
thought it was Bradwarden at work with his pipes, but then he realized that it
was too sweet, a subtle vibration in the ground and air, a natural song. It
didn't increase in volume or intensity, just played on, and Elbryan soon
realized it to be a heralding call, the run of hooves and the wind. He turned
and ran along to the southern tip of the grove, though he had no idea of what
might be guiding him.
Across the
wide meadow, past the flowers and the grass, he saw perfection of form, a huge
stallion, milling about the shadows of the distant trees.
Elbryan held
his breath as the great horse, shining black except for white on the bottoms of
its forelegs and a white diamond above its eyes, came out onto the open field.
It was taking his measure, Elbryan knew, though he was not downwind and too far
for most horses even to notice him.
The stallion
pawed the ground, then reared and whinnied. It came forward in a short burst, a
show of strength, then turned and thundered away into the forest.
Elbryan
breathed again. He knew the magnificent steed would not return that day, and so
he walked away, not in the direction in which the horse had run but back toward
Dundalis. He found Bradwarden, at work crafting some devilish arrows, and the
centaur's face immediately brightened.
"Welcome
back," Bradwarden offered with a chuckle. "I see ye've already been
to the grove."
Elbryan
blushed to think that his emotions were so clearly displayed on his face.
"I
telled ye," the centaur gloated. "So fine a creature is―"
He stopped and laughed again.
"The
stallion has a name?"
"Different
to all," Bradwarden remarked. "But ye must be knowing it if ye want
to get close to him."
"And
how might I learn it?"
"Silly
boy," said Bradwarden. "Ye do not learn it, ye just know it."
The centaur
walked off then, leaving Elbryan with, his thoughts.
The ranger
was back at the grove the next day, and the next after that, and every day,
until finally, more than a week later, he heard, or rather, felt the music once
more, this time from the west.
"Smart,"
he quietly congratulated when the horse came into view on the edge of the
shadows, for the stallion's approach was downwind this time, that it might get
a scent of this intruder to the grove without offering its own scent in return.
After a few
minutes, the horse came out onto the open field, and again Elbryan's breath was
stolen away by the sheer beauty of the thing, by its muscled flanks and wide
chest, by the intelligence of its features, those knowing black eyes.
A word came
to the ranger then, but he shook his head, not understanding. He took a step
forward and the horse ran off, breaking the spell and ending the encounter.
Their third
meeting came only a day later, the same way as the previous, the stallion
approaching tentatively from the west, eyeing Elbryan and pawing the ground.
That word
was in his head again, a word that perfectly described the appearance of the
great horse.
"Symphony!"
the ranger called out, stepping boldly from the grove: To Elbryan's surprise,
to his delight and his horror, the horse reared and neighed loudly, then fell
back to all fours and pawed hard at the ground.
"Symphony,"
Elbryan repeated over and over as he cautiously approached. What other name could
so fit such a horse? What other word could describe the beauty and harmony, the
working of muscle with muscle, the songlike vibrations, as if all of nature
heralded the run of the great stallion.
Before the
ranger even realized it, he was within five strides of the great horse.
"Symphony,"
he said quietly.
The horse
nickered and threw back his head.
Elbryan
moved closer, his hands out wide to show that he was not a threat:
Respectfully, he put his hand on the stallion's neck, stroking firmly and evenly.
Slowly; slowly, the horse's ears came up.
Then the
great stallion leaped away, thundering back into the shadows, into the brush.
The pair met
day after day, each time growing more comfortable. Elbryan soon realized that
this horse was meant for him, as surely as if the elves had put him here as
companion for the ranger―and that thought, too, did not seem so
ridiculous.
"Did
they?" he asked his uncle Mather at Oracle one night. "Is Symphony,
for I know that to be the stallion's proper title, a gift to me from the elves,
from Juraviel, perhaps?"
There came
no reply, of course, but hearing his own words, Elbryan discovered one distinct
flaw in his reasoning.
"Not a
gift, then," he said, "for no such animal could ever be given. But
surely the elves have played some role, for this was no chance meeting and the
response from the horse was not as would be expected from a creature running
fully wild all its life.
"The
cairn," Elbryan whispered a moment later, discovering his answer. It
seemed so perfectly clear to him then; the magic of the cairn had somehow
brought Symphony to him―no, it had brought the two of them together,
ranger and stallion. Now more than ever, Elbryan wanted to know who was buried
there, what great man―or elf or centaur, perhaps―had been placed so
reverently in the ground by the Touel'alfar, with magic strong enough to tend
that perfect grove, strong enough to call Symphony and to give the horse such
intelligence. For surely it was the magic of the cairn that had done all of
this; Elbryan knew that without doubt.
The next
day, he rode Symphony for the first time, bareback, clutching tight to the
horse's thick mane. The wind rushed past his ears, the landscape flying along
beneath, such a thrill of the run, such a smoothness of stride, that Elbryan
would have sworn he was flying across a cushion of air.
As soon as
he dismounted, back in the meadow by the grove, Symphony turned and ran off,
and Elbryan made no move to stop the stallion, for he knew that this was not
the normal rider-horse relationship, not a relationship of master to beast but
a friendship of mutual respect and trust.
Symphony
would come back to him, he knew, would let him ride again, but. on the
stallion's own terms.
Elbryan gave
a salute to that place on the forest's edge where the stallion had disappeared,
a motion of respect and understanding that he and Symphony had their own
separate lives but were joined now.
CHAPTER 31
Home Again, Home Again
Over the
next couple of weeks, as they marched along the trails, Avelyn showed Jill just
how much he had come to trust her, for he began formally tutoring her in the
ways of the stones. At first, the monk used the conventional methods, the same
lessons that had been given to him in St.-Mere-Abelle. He saw at once, though,
that Jill was far beyond an average beginning student, was nearly as strong as
he had been when Master Jojonah had played the out-of-body game with him that
first time. Avelyn understood the source. Jill was naturally strong, but surely
not as strong as he had been. But she was no beginner. That joining by means of
the hematite when he had been sorely wounded had given her an understanding of
accessing the powers on a level that other monks spent months, even years,
trying to attain. As their friendship deepened, their trust becoming so strong,
Avelyn again dared to use the hematite to instruct Jill. Not only was her gain
exponential, but so was the monk's understanding of this secretive
woman―and of her dark past.
"Dundalis."
The word fell from Jill's lips like the peal of a church bell, a chime that
could be of celebration, of hope and the future promise of eternal life, or one
that could signify death. The young woman ran a hand through her hair, which
had grown thick to her shoulders again, and looked at Avelyn suspiciously.
"You knew," she accused.
Avelyn
shrugged, having no practical response.
"Somehow
you discovered my history," the woman went on, using excitement, a sense
of betrayal, to block away the more urgent feelings that were welling up inside
her as she considered that long-lost name, the name of the village that had
been her home and apparently the name of a new village, built on the same spot.
"In Palmaris," Jill reasoned, "you spoke with Graevis!"
"Pettibwa,
actually," Avelyn admitted dryly.
"You
dared?"
"I had
no choice," Avelyn retorted. "I am your friend."
Jill
stuttered incoherently for a moment, trying to sort it all out. Avelyn had led
her north of the city, along the Masur Delaval to its delta, then turning
inland, heading for the wilderness. It had happened in a roundabout manner;
Jill feared that she might be wandering into once-familiar territory, but
really nothing had sparked recognition within her, not until the pair had
ventured into a town called End-o'-the-World and had heard that name "Dundalis"
spoken aloud. She wanted to lash out at Avelyn at that moment, but she could
not deny his last words. Indeed the monk was her friend, among the best of
friends Jill had ever known. She need only look at the gift he was giving to
her with the stones to confirm that he loved her.
"You
run from ghosts, my friend, my dearest Jill," Avelyn explained. "I
see your pain and feel it as though it were my own. It is evident in every
stride you take, in every smile you feign―yea, feign, I say, for have you
really smiled, Jill? In all of your life?"
Tears welled
in the young woman's shining blue eyes and she looked away.
"You
have, I say!" Avelyn insisted. "Of course you have! But, that was
before the disaster, before the ghosts began to walk in your footsteps."
"Why
did you bring me here?"
"Because
here those ghosts have nothing to hide behind," Avelyn remarked firmly.
"Here, in this new village that was once your home, you will confront
those ghosts and banish them to the peace they deserve, and the peace you deserve."
It was
spoken with such resolve, such strength, that Jill could no longer be angry
with him. Brother Avelyn was indeed her friend, she knew, and he wanted only
what was best for her, would fight and die for her sake. But still she feared
that his decision was folly, based on his underestimating the pain within her.
Avelyn could not truly appreciate that grief; nor could Jill, but she feared it
lurked right below the surface and, if loosed, would surely consume her.
She nodded
mutely, having no answers, having only fears. She walked in the back door of
the tavern, then to the private room she and Avelyn had rented. She didn't know
what memories the familiar name might conjure, but she wanted to be alone when
she faced them.
He had been
angered beyond words, had spat and kicked down the door of his room, had even
broken the jaw of one woman of the night who had offered her wares. For
Palmaris had deceived him as much as his encounter with the merchant Dosey had
unnerved him. Brother Justice had not gained on his intended prey―had, in
fact, lost ground, wandering aimlessly about the large city. Only chance had
brought him in contact with a man named Bildeborough and a rake named Grady
Chilichunk, drunkards both.
Brother
Justice found their stories, sputtered for the price of a few cheap ales, quite
interesting. Especially Grady's, when the man mentioned that he had seen yet
another Abellican monk only a month before, talking with his mother, Pettibwa,
in Fellowship Way. "How uncommon that two of you should come out
together," Grady remarked, not politely. "Normally your kind are so
reclusive; and what do you do to entertain yourselves within those abbey
walls?"
The
implications were clear, considering the man's lewd manner, and Grady and
Connor shared a laugh.
Brother
Justice used a fantasy of twisting the fool's head off to force a smile. The
monk remained polite long enough to learn that this other Abellican monk, whom
he suspected to be Brother Avelyn, had gone out to the north to the Wilderlands
and the Timberlands, to a place called Weedy Meadow.
There were
no merchant caravans going north from Palmaris at that time, with autumn
settling thick over the land and the promise of a deep winter, but that hardly
deterred the resourceful Brother Justice. He set out alone, moving swiftly,
running more than walking, determined to make up the ground and be done with
this business.
She
remembered that long-ago morning on the tree-covered slope, looking at the sky,
at the shining Halo, with its rainbow of colors, its heavenly allure. She
remembered the music filling all the air. She had not been alone that morning,
Jill now realized, for she had called out her discovery.
"A
boy," she whispered to the empty corners of her small room. The name
"Elbryan" nipped at the edges of her mind, but with it came an
overwhelming sense of grief and loss: that black wall of pain that caused her
to shrink away, that had made her put the glowing ember in Connor
Bildeborough's face.
Jill took a
deep breath and forced all the memories away. She did not sleep at all that
night, but still, she was packed for the road early the next morning, leading a
groggy―and hungover―Avelyn by the hand out of the inn, tugging him
down the eastern road, toward the village known as Dundalis.
They arrived
late that afternoon, the sun settling on the western horizon, the long, slanted
shadows rolling out from the buildings of the new village. Jill didn't
recognize the place, not at all, and she was surprised by this fact. She had
held her breath along the last expanse of road before Dundalis came into sight,
expecting to be overwhelmed by sudden memories. It simply didn't happen like
that. This was Dundalis, built on the remains of the former Dundalis, but it
resembled Weedy Meadow, End-o'-the-World, or any other frontier village as much
as it resembled its namesake―at least at first glance.
Avelyn let
Jill lead him through the village, down the one main road, heading north. There
was an old, broken-down fence on the northern edge of town, formerly a corral,
Jill realized, and beyond it was the slope.
The slope.
"I saw
the Halo from there," she remarked.
Avelyn
smiled, but only briefly, remembering his most vivid encounters with the Halo,
so far, far away on board a swift sailing ship on his most important and sacred
mission.
"It was
real," Jill whispered, more to herself than to Avelyn. She took some
satisfaction in that, in knowing that the small fragment of her past life that
was clear to her was indeed something real and not imagined. Looking up from
the northern edge of Dundalis to the slope that separated the town from the
valley of evergreens and caribou moss, to the slope that had been so important
to her in her youth, Jill knew beyond any doubt that her memory of sighting the
majestic Halo was indeed real. She felt it again, that tingling sensation, that
removal of mortal bonds to soar into the infinite universe.
"The
boy," she remarked.
"You
were with someone?" Avelyn asked, trying to coax her on.
Jill nodded.
"Someone dear," she replied.
The moment
passed; Jill turned back toward the town. She paused before she got all the way
around, though, staring hard at the old corral fence. "I used to play on
that fence," she announced. "We would climb up to the top rail and
bet on how long we could walk it."
"We?"
"My
friends," Jill said, without really thinking about her answer.
Avelyn had
hoped that his latest prompt would get her to name some of those lost friends,
but he wasn't too disappointed with its failure. The trip north had been a wise
thing, the monk believed, for now, only a few minutes after entering Dundalis,
Jill had recaptured more of her past than she had known in many years.
"Bunker
Crawyer," she said suddenly, her expression turning curious.
"A
friend?"
"No,"
Jill replied, pointing to the old fence. "It was his corral. Bunker
Crawyer's corral."
Avelyn
smiled widely, but hid it when Jill turned to regard him, her frustration
evident. It was coming back, but painfully slowly, for now she was growing
quite impatient.
"Let us
go and get lodging for the night," the monk offered. "We passed an
inn on our way to this place."
Avelyn knew
that another memory had come over Jill, this one more powerful, as they
approached the front door of the place called the Howling Sheila, a large
tavern near the center of Dundalis. The woman looked not at the building, but
at the ground beneath it, her expression shifting from curiosity to fear to
outright horror.
She turned
away, trembling, and Avelyn caught her even as she started to run. If he let
her go, the monk suspected that she would run all the way back to Weedy Meadow,
all the way back to End-o'-the-World, all the way back to Palmaris!
"You
know this place," Avelyn said, holding her fast.
Jill's
breath came in gasps; she smelled smoke, thick and black. Though she was
outside, she felt as if she were suffocating, closed within a space that was
too tight.
"You know!"
Avelyn declared forcefully, giving her a shake.
Jill's deep
breath resonated like a growl and she turned, pulling free of the monk, staring
hard at the tavern, at its stone foundation. "I hid in there," she
said, working hard so that her voice would not break apart. "While all the
town burned down around me. While all the screams..."
Her words
faded to a choking sniffle, her straightened shoulders slumped suddenly, and
she would have fallen to the ground had not Avelyn held her tight.
There was no
other inn in Dundalis, and besides, Avelyn had not come all this way simply to
allow Jill to run again from her terrible past. He paid for a single room, for
there was but one vacancy, pointedly explaining to the jolly Belster O'Comely
that there was nothing romantic or lewd between him and the girl, that they
were merely good friends and traveling companions. That was the first time he
had ever bothered to offer such an explanation, Avelyn mused as he led Jill up
the stairs from the common room to their sleeping quarters. The monk believed
that they might remain in this town for some time, and since the community was
so small and so closed, he felt the need to protect Jill's reputation. She
would face enough trials in Dundalis, Avelyn knew, without hearing the nasty
whispers of gossiping townsfolk.
Jill went
right to sleep, overcome by the sheer power of the memory. Avelyn remained with
her for a long while, fearing that disturbing dreams would visit her.
She slept
soundly, perhaps too drained for dreams. Finally Avelyn could not ignore the
commotion from the common room below any longer. Most of the village was
gathered there, the monk knew, and for all of his love for Jill―and he
did indeed love the girl, as a father might love a daughter―the battered
monk had needs of his own.
He was
downstairs soon enough, drinking and talking amid a huge crowd, for many of the
area trappers had come in to lay in provisions in preparation of the coming
winter. They were a tough bunch indeed, reclusive and opinionated, men and a
few women who lived by their weapons and their cunning, and Avelyn was soon
enough arguing with one rake that a town whose history was as dark as that of
Dundalis should be better prepared to face the danger.
When the
trapper scoffed that the most dangerous thing in the area was the occasional
hungry raccoon, Brother Avelyn promptly put his fist in the man's face.
The monk was
alone with Belster O'Comely in the common room when he woke up, a slab of steak
positioned over one eye.
"Ho,
ho, what?" he asked the innkeeper. "Best training the folk around
here have seen in years!"
Belster gave
a laugh. The folk of Dundalis were, a hardy bunch, not shying from the
occasional fight. In a weird way, Avelyn―who had fought well, though he
hardly remembered it had earned a bit of respect that night, though most of the
men and women who had been in the common room thought him mad.
Belster
presented him with a piece of paper, a bill. "They decided that you would
pay for the last round of drinks," the innkeeper remarked.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn howled, and he was smiling wide as he turned over the
pieces of silver.
That jolly
smile turned to one of warmth as the monk entered his rented room to find Jill
curled up about her pillow, seeming like such a little lost girl. Avelyn knelt
by her bed and stroked her thick golden hair, then kissed her on the cheek.
CHAPTER 32
Darkness Rising
Elkenbrook
was a village not unlike Dundalis or Weedy Meadow, except that, being on the
western border of Alpinador, it was a colder place, with more hardy evergreens
and fewer deciduous trees. Winter in Elkenbrook began in the eighth month of
the year, Octenbrough, usually within a few weeks of the autumnal equinox, and
lingered on until the month of Toumanay had passed, giving way to a short spring
and shorter summer. The folk of Elkenbrook were light skinned and light of eye
and hair, as was true of most of their Alpinadoran brethren. And, again as
befitted the race, they were undeniably hardy, tall and square shouldered,
accustomed to hardship. Even the children of the Alpinadoran frontier―and
most of the still-wild kingdom was considered frontier!―could wield a
weapon, for goblins and fomorian giants were much more common up north than in
the more civilized southern kingdoms. The settlement, in attitude and posture,
reflected this, for Elkenbrook, unlike the villages of northern Honce-the-Bear,
was walled by an eight-foot fence of spiked logs.
Thus, when
the scouts of Elkenbrook reported goblin sign, the hardy folk were not too
concerned. Even when giant footsteps were noted mingled in with those of the
wretched smaller humanoids, the village leaders only shrugged stoically and
began sharpening their long broadswords and heavy axes.
It wasn't
until the very moment before the attack, eight hours after the dawn, the pale
sun already touching the western horizon, that Elkenbrook truly appreciated its
enemy and understood its doom. Normally the goblins would have come in as a
mob, a rushing horde, barreling past the trees and scrub, throwing themselves
wildly against the pickets and barricades. This time, though, the wretches
ringed the village, completely encircling it with ranks ten deep! And the
goblin line was bolstered every twenty paces by a fomorian giant wrapped in
layers and layers of thick furs.
The folk of
Elkenbrook had never known such a huge gathering of goblins, could not conceive
of the notion that the hateful, selfish creatures could ever band together in
such numbers. Yet here they were, countless spearheads glistening in the last
slanted rays of day, countless shields, emblazoned with the standards of many
different tribes, standing side by side.
As one, the
village folk held their breath, too overwhelmed to speak, to offer any new
directives or strategies. Often marauding goblins would send in a messenger
before the attack to ask for surrender, to barter for a bribe, warning that
battle would otherwise be joined. The usual answer to such a request came in
the form of the messenger's head staked before the village wall.
This time,
though, more than a few of the village folk were considering their options
should an emissary approach.
The goblins
held their line for several minutes, then, on command, their ranks parted,
doubled in depth as each warrior stepped left or right, a single, brisk
movement.
Out from the
gaps in the line came the next surprise, a goblin cavalry, the diminutive
creatures astride shaggy ponies. Goblin riders were not unknown but were
considered a rarity―never had any of the folk of Elkenbrook imagined that
so many could be together.
"Four
hundred," one man estimated, and that guess put the goblin cavalry alone
at twice the number of Elkenbrook's entire population.
Just as
stunning to the hardy folk was the manner in which the goblin lines had parted.
"Trained army," another man muttered.
"Disciplined,"
yet another agreed, his expression incredulous―and desperate, for it was
no secret among the Alpinadorans that the only thing that had kept the fierce
and prolific goblins from overrunning the entire northland was their inability
to band together. Goblins fought goblins more often than they fought
humans―or any other race, for that matter.
Directly
before Elkenbrook's main gate, four creatures emerged from the ranks: a huge
fomorian, nearly three times a tall man's height, wrapped in furs and the skin
of a white bear and carrying the largest club any of the villagers had ever
seen, an incredibly ugly goblin, its face scarred and disfigured, one arm
chopped away just below the elbow; and two curious creatures, goblin sized but
not goblin shaped, with barrel-like stout bodies and spindly arms and legs that
seemed too skinny to support them. Most striking of all about these last two
creatures were their berets, shining bright red in the fast-dimming light.
"Bloody
Caps," one man offered, and there were nods of agreement, though none of
Elkenbrook's folk had ever before actually seen one of the infamous powries.
Again, the
enemy line held its formidable posture as the seconds slipped by. Then one of
the powries motioned to the giant, and the fomorian, grinning wickedly, lifted
the dwarf high into the air. His eyes locked firmly on Elkenbrook, the dwarf
removed his beret and waved it about in the air, high above his head.
The folk
recognized the dramatic movement as a signal and braced for the charge,
determined to take their toll, whatever the final outcome. What they heard,
though, was not the thunder of hooves or the howls of charging goblins but the
creaking swish of powrie war engines. Great stones, twelve-foot spears, and balls
of burning pitch soared through the air, turning the tensed, frozen town into a
frenzy of screams and cries, splintering logs, and hissing flames.
Few folk
remained on the wall when the second volley roared in, for they were engaged in
tending wounded, in battling flames, and shoring up defensive barricades. Most
did not see the charge then, a splendid thing indeed; but they heard it, the
very ground shaking under their feet.
The third
volley, more than two hundred spears hurled by the rushing infantry, flew in
just before the cavalry arrived, and thus as the riders poured through the many
openings in the walls, they found more dead villagers than remaining defenders.
Those folk who had survived the bombardment soon envied their dead companions.
Elkenbrook
was flattened before the sun dipped below the horizon. Maiyer Dek of the
fomorians, Gothra of the goblins, and Ubba Banrock and Ulg Tik'narn of the
powries stood at the center of the massacre, hands and eyes uplifted, crying
out to their leader, their god-figure.
Far away, on
its obsidian throne in Aida, the dactyl heard them and savored the kill, the
first organized attack by its trained minions. The demon could smell the blood
and taste the fury as surely as if it had been on the scene with its chieftains.
And this was
but the first, the appetizer, the dactyl knew, for its army continued to grow,
black masses swarming into the embrace of Aida's dark arms, and Alpinador's
lonely villages were merely a testing ground. The real challenge lay in the
south, in the most prosperous and populous kingdom, in Honce-the-Bear.
They would
be ready as winter began to relinquish its grip on the land, when the snows
receded enough to free up the higher passes.
They would
be ready.
Jill
meandered this way and that on the forested slope north of Dundalis. The first
snows had fallen, a light and gentle blanket, and the air was chill, the sky
above showing the richest blue hue. That air alone brought to the young woman
familiarity, a crispness that she had not known in the city of Palmaris nor in
Pireth Tulme, where the dull and damp fog seemed eternal. Jill had known this
air, so crisp and so clean, in her youth, in this place; and images of that
past life flitted past the edges of her consciousness now, brief glimpses of what
had once been.
She knew
that her life had been happy, her youth full of freedom and wild games. She
knew that she had had many friends, co-conspirators in one grand and
mischievous scheme after another. Life had been somehow simpler and cleaner,
hard work and hard play, good food fairly earned, and laughter that came from
the belly, not from any sense of good manners.
Still, the
details of that past existence escaped her, as did the actual names, though
many of the faces returned. Such was her frustration that bright morning as she
walked about the forested slope to the tip of the ridge, to a pair of twin
pines overlooking the wide vale of ever-white mossy ground and squat trees,
their dark branches dusted by the recent snow.
More images
came rushing to her as soon as she sat in the nook of those pines. She pictured
a line of hunters weaving in and out of the trees in the mossy vale. She
envisioned shoulder poles, and recalled her excitement that the hunt had
apparently been successful.
Then the
images began to crowd back, of herself running to the group, losing sight of
them as she entered the low vale, weaving in and out of the barrier pines and
spruce, running with a friend. She remembered rushing through that last
obstacle, the feel of the prickly pine branches on her arms, and coming
face-to-face with the returning hunters―yes, she could see their faces,
and among them was her father!
She
remembered! And their poles were laden with the deer they would need, and with
. . . something else.
Jill's eyes
opened wide, the memory suddenly too vivid, the recollection of that ugly,
misshapen dead thing assaulting her, telling her mind to run away.
She held the
image fast, though her breath would hardly come to her. She remembered that
morning, that bright morning, so much like this one. She had seen the Halo, and
then the hunters, including her father, had returned with the winter
provisions―and with the goblin.
"The
goblin," Jill whispered aloud, the very name assuring her that this past
event had been the foretelling of doom for Dundalis, for her home, her family,
and her friends.
She fought
hard to steady her breathing, to keep her hands from trembling.
"Are
you well, my lady?"
She nearly
jumped out of her boots, spinning fast to face the questioner: a monk of the
Abellican Church, wearing the same style brown robe as Brother Avelyn, its hood
pulled back to reveal a shaven head. He was much shorter than Avelyn, but with
wide shoulders, obviously strong.
"Are
you well?"
He asked the
question softly, gently, but Jill sensed a hard edge to his voice and that his
concern was merely for show. He studied her intently, she noted, staring long
at her hair, at her eyes and lips, as if he were taking a measure of her.
Indeed he
was. Brother Justice had heard many descriptions of the woman traveling beside
the mad friar, and as he looked upon this woman now, upon her lips, so thick
and full, her stunning blue eyes, and that thick mane of golden hair, he knew.
"You
should not be up here all alone," he mentioned.
Jill scoffed
and brushed her fingers across the hilt of her short sword, not to threaten but
merely to display that she was not unarmed. "I served in the army of the
King," she assured the monk, "in the Coastpoint Guards." The way
the man's eyes narrowed in recognition suddenly caught Jill off guard and made
her think that perhaps she had not been wise in mentioning that fact.
"What
is your name?" he asked.
"What
is your own?" Jill snapped back, growing ever more defensive. It struck
her as curious that a brother of the Abellican Church should be this far to the
north and should be out alone away from the village. She considered Avelyn's
story then, his abandonment of the order. Might there be consequences for such
an action? Might the mad friar's increasing reputation have brought unwanted
recognition from the strict order?
"My
name has never been important," the monk replied evenly, "except to
one. To a man once of my order but who deserted the way and who stole from my
abbey. Yes," he said, viewing clearly Jill's growing look of apprehension,
"to Brother Avelyn Desbris, I am Brother Justice. To your companion, my
girl, I am doom incarnate, sent from the church to retrieve what he
stole."
Jill was up
on her feet, backing steadily, sword drawn.
"You
would attack a lawful emissary of the church?" the monk demanded.
"One whose title as Brother Justice is fair and true, and who carries the
punishment rightfully earned by the outlaw monk you name as your
companion?"
"I will
defend Avelyn," Jill assured the man. "He is no outlaw."
The monk
scoffed, standing easily. Then suddenly, brutally, he leaped ahead, fell low in
a spinning crouch, and kicked up hard at Jill's extended sword.
A deft twist
by the woman turned the sword out of harm's way, allowing Brother Justice
merely a glancing hit that forced Jill back a step.
Brother
Justice squared himself, ready to spring again, his respect for the woman
growing. She was no novice to battle, this one, with finely honed reflexes.
"It is
rumored that you, too, are an outlaw," he teased, edging closer, "a
deserter from Pireth Tulme."
Jill didn't
flinch, didn't blink.
"Perhaps
the Coastpoint Guards will offer a bounty," the monk said, and he came on
fiercely, spinning another kick, then turning straight and kicking out three
time in rapid succession, his foot snapping hard at Jill from various heights.
She dodged each, sidestepping, then came in hard with a thrust of her own.
Her
conscience held her, forced her to realize that she was about to kill a human
being.
She needn't
have worried, for her sword would never have gotten close to striking the
deadly monk. Brother Justice let it come in at him, turning subtly at the very
last moment, his left arm rolling under, then up and out, against the flat of
the blade. He stepped ahead as he parried, launching a heavy right cross.
Jill
retreated immediately, but got stung on the ribs, her breath blasted away. She
staggered backward, setting her feet as she went, ready to fend off the
expected attack.
As her
thoughts cleared, she saw that the monk was not pursuing, was not capitalizing
on the advantage he had earned. He stood calmly, a dozen feet away, one hand in
a pocket of his robe. To Jill's amazement, his eyes closed.
The woman's
questions were lost suddenly in a dizzying rush, for though the monk had not
physically moved, he came at her again, at her very spirit, and suddenly the
woman was fighting, through sheer willpower, to retain control of her body!
Intense pain
shot through Jill's body and soul, and through the monk's, as well, she
knew―though that thought gave her little comfort. She felt his obscene
intrusion as a shadowy wall, pushing into her, pushing her away from her own
body. At first, she felt overwhelmed, felt as if she could not possibly resist.
But soon she came to understand that in this body―in this, her home
battleground―she could indeed withstand the monk's wicked intrusion. The
shadowy wall edged back as Jill pushed hard with all her considerable
willpower. She envisioned herself as a light source, a blazing sun, rightful
owner of this mortal coil, and she fought back.
Then the
shadow was gone, and Jill staggered a step and opened her eyes.
He was right
in her face, leering at her. She understood then that his mental attack had
been but a ruse, a distraction from which he could recover much faster than
she.
She knew
that, in the split second of consciousness she had remaining. She knew all of
it and yet that knowledge brought only despair, for he was too close, too
ready, and she could not hope to defend.
Brother
Justice knifed his hand into her throat, dropping her back to the snow and
dirt. A single clean blow, but a punch pulled, for the monk did not want the
woman dead. Her knowledge would be valuable in locating treacherous Avelyn, he
presumed, and her presence as his prisoner would certainly aid in bringing the
outlaw monk to him:
He did not
want the woman dead, not yet, but the monk knew that when his business with
Avelyn was finished, this woman, Jill, too, would have to die.
Brother
Justice cared not at all.
CHAPTER 33
The Telling Blow
Elbryan sat
far in the back of the Howling Sheila, pushing his chair right into the corner
that he might have the security of walls on both his rear flanks. The ranger
wasn't expecting trouble―the people of Dundalis might not like him, but
they had never been openly hostile―it was simply his training at work,
always reminding him to place himself in the most defensible position.
The crowd
was loud this night, the tavern packed full, for a light snow was falling
outside and the people feared that it might intensify. A blizzard could
effectively shut the folk in their homes for a week straight.
The drinks
were flowing, the conversation rowdy and mostly about the weather, except in
one corner of the bar where a fat, brown-robed man and several townsfolk were
arguing about the potential of a goblin raid.
"Happened
before," Brother Avelyn declared dryly. "Whole town flattened and
only one―or perhaps none―survived." The monk snorted and hoped
his slip would not be noticed. Jill's secret was his to keep, and
hers―and hers alone―to reveal.
"But
only after Dundalis' hunters killed a goblin in the woods," protested a
man named Tol Yuganick, a bear of a man, though he did not seem so large next
to three-hundred-pound Avelyn. "And that was nearly a decade ago. The
goblins would not come back. No reason."
"And
not with Dusty on the prowl," another man laughed, turning to glance
across the room to the ranger, alone at his table in the back corner. The other
three townsfolk joined in the laughter, more than willing to do so at Elbryan's
expense.
"And
who is this man?" Avelyn wanted to know.
"An
attentive ear for your tales of doom," remarked Tol, quaffing his entire
mug of beer, so that his lips and chin were covered in foam.
"And
was it not Elbryan who took care of that marauding black bear?" asked
Belster O'Comely, moving down to that end of the bar, wiping it rather
enthusiastically to force two of the men away. "The same bear that sacked
your own home, Burgis Gown!"
The smaller
man, Burgis, shied away at the declaration.
"Bah!"
Tol snorted, a cloud of anger crossing his brutish features. The huge man had
never appreciated Belster's relationship with the strange Nightbird and had
said so often and loudly.
Belster held
his ground behind the bar. For a long time, the innkeeper had kept his
friendship with Elbryan quiet and low-key, knowing that his own reputation
might be at stake. Lately, though, Belster had begun changing that. He had
recently commissioned a specially designed saddle from the local leatherworker,
and had made no secret that it was for Nightbird, payment for some work the
ranger had done for him.
"The
bear was sick and dying anyway," Tol Yuganick blustered on. "Doubt
that Elbryan there, our lord protector, ever saw the damned thing."
Several
grunts and nods of agreement followed. Belster, understanding that he would get
nowhere with this surly crowd, just shook his head and moved along with his
work. He knew that any reminder of the bear incident bothered Tol, for the
hunter had sworn to get the bear himself―and would have been paid a
fairly substantial reward if he had!
Brother
Avelyn, too, ignored Tol Yuganick's cheering gallery. He studied the man in the
distant corner, the one Tol had referred to sarcastically as "our lord
protector," with new interest. Perhaps this one understood the truth of
the world, he mused.
"I
should think you would all be grateful," the monk remarked absently, more
thinking out loud than any directed comment.
A moment
later, Avelyn, still focused on the man across the room, felt a hard poke
against his chest.
"We
need no protecting!" Tol Yuganick declared, moving his contorted, though
still childish, face right before the monk's.
Avelyn
looked long and hard at the man, at the cherubic features so twisted by an
almost maniacal rage. Then the monk glanced back over his shoulder, to see
Belster shaking his head resignedly, the barkeep knew what was coming.
Avelyn
stepped back and produced a small flask from under his cloak. "Potion of
courage," he whispered to Burgis Gosen, giving a wink, and then he took a
deep draw. He finished with a satisfied "Aaah!" then rubbed his free
hand briskly over his face while replacing the flask in his thick robes.
Then Avelyn
eyed Tol squarely, matching the man's ominous expression with one of pure
excitement. Tol growled and came forward, but Avelyn was ready for him.
"Ho,
ho, what!" the monk bellowed as Tol moved to poke him in the chest again.
With a single sweeping left hook, Avelyn laid the big man low.
Two of Tol's
companions jumped the monk immediately, but they were shrugged away and the
fight was on.
Behind the
bar, Belster shook his head and sighed deeply, wondering how many would be left
standing to help him clean up the mess.
Brother
Justice smiled wickedly as he approached the Howling Sheila, as he heard the
commotion of a fight,. confirmation that Brother Avelyn was within. The monk
had shed his telltale brown robe in favor of the more normal dress of a
villager. He wondered if his old friend Avelyn would recognize him without the
Abellican trappings, and that thought prompted the man to pull low the hood of
his traveling cloak.
Better for
the surprise
Avelyn was
outnumbered five to one―and those odds were only due to the fact that
three other men were fighting on his side, or at least, against the mob that
was moving against the monk.
Elbryan, on
his feet and ready, watched it all curiously, not quite knowing what to make of
the wild monk, as Avelyn, fighting wonderfully, kept bellowing out for
"preparedness," and calling the brawl a "readiness
exercise." The ranger was not unhappy at seeing Tol Yuganick and his
friends getting a beating, as long as things didn't get too out of hand.
Elbryan
allowed himself a smile when brutish Tol pulled himself up from the floor and
charged the monk with a roar, only to have the huge man sidestep at the last
possible second, tripping Tol over a trailing leg, then helping him along with
a stiff forearm to the back of the flying man's head.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn howled in glee.
So Elbryan
stood back from it all, figuring it to be one of those dangers for the
villagers to work out on their own. He kept Hawkwing, unstrung, ready at his
side, though, already deciding that no deadly revenge would be taken once the
monk was put down.
If the monk
was put down, Elbryan soon corrected his thinking, for the fat man moved with
the grace and precision of a trained warrior. He dodged and punched, took a hit
and laughed it away, then buried his latest attacker with a heavy punch or a
well placed knee. He flipped two men at once over his huge shoulders, laughing
all the while. A chair shattered against his back, but while Belster O'Comely
groaned at the hit, the monk only laughed all the louder, giving his habitual
cry, "Ho, ho, what!"
Elbryan
leaned on his staff, thinking this quite a show. As soon as his posture eased,
he was challenged almost immediately as an enthusiastic villager used the
opportunity of a general fight to take a punch at the disliked ranger.
Elbryan
casually put Hawkwing out vertically in front of him, picking off the punch
with the hard wood. The attacker moaned and clutched his hand, and Elbryan
pulled hard down and toward himself with his upper hand so that the staff's
lower end shot up and out, right between the groaning man's legs.
Elbryan
retracted the weapon and poked it straight out, setting it firmly against the
man's chest and pushing him away to fail, clutching hand and groin, to the
floor. Then the ranger went back to watching, thinking that the mad monk would
soon tire. If the man made but a single mistake, the mob of villagers would
overwhelm him.
Then Elbryan
would step in.
The ranger
smiled once more as Tol Yuganick attacked again, only to be hammered away.
Elbryan's grin faded fast, though, his expression turning to one of curiosity,
as a newcomer slipped in the tavern doors, moving easily through the battling
crowd. When one man turned to punch at him, the newcomer leveled him with a
series of three sharp, perfectly placed blows, launched with such rapidity that
the man hadn't even moved to respond to the first when the third dropped him.
Even without
the fighting display, Elbryan knew that this was no ordinary villager. The man
walked with the balanced gait of a warrior and sifted through the crowd with
the focus of an assassin―and like an assassin, his face was half-covered,
a scarf pulled up high and tightly tied.
It wasn't
difficult for the ranger to discern the man's target.
What enemies
had this wild monk made? Elbryan wondered, as he, too, worked through the
tangled crowd, angling to intercept the newcomer.
The deadly
punch was headed for Avelyn's throat, though the fat monk, already engaged with
two others, never saw it coming. Elbryan's staff picked it off in midair,
deflecting the blow up high. The newcomer, his balance and timing perfect,
hardly noticed, but followed with his second strike, his other hand coming
across hard.
Elbryan
snapped his staff down low, quite hard, stinging the man on the forearm.
Now Brother
Justice did turn his sights on Elbryan, spinning to face him with the sudden
knowledge that this, too, was no ordinary villager who had come to Avelyn's
aid. A man tried to jump on the monk's back then, but Brother Justice elbowed
him hard in the chest, then the neck; then the face in rapid succession,
sending him tumbling away. None of those nearby who had seen the defense wanted
any part of the stranger, and none in the tavern―except perhaps for Tol,
who was still on the floor―wanted a fight with Elbryan. That left the
two, Elbryan and Brother Justice, standing face-to-face, an island of calm in a
raging sea, weirdly isolated from the rest of the thrashing mob.
The monk
leaped ahead, feigning a punch and kicking straight out for Elbryan's knee.
Elbryan put his staff up high to block the expected punch, but even though he
seemed to fall for the ruse, the ranger was not caught. He spun a reverse
circuit off his back foot even as Brother Justice kicked, moving his leg out of
range.
Brother
Justice came ahead hard, trying to beat the turn, to catch his foe on the back
before Elbryan could get all the way around.
Elbryan
halted in mid-spin, reversed his energy, and sent the staff straight out and
back. He turned right under the weapon and launched it again in a straight
poke, driving his opponent backward. Then the ranger went into a flurry:
poking, swishing the staff side to side, then pulling it straight across, and
alternating a series of heavy blows, left hand leading, right hand leading.
Brother
Justice picked every attack off, his arms waving in a blur, hardened forearms
smacking against the polished wood. He tried to find some hole in the ranger's
press, some opening through which he might go on the attack once more. But
Elbryan's form was perfect, each strike following the previous too closely for
any countering move.
Still, the
ranger did not get through the defenses of the skilled monk, and soon enough,
didn't even have Brother Justice backing any longer.
The attack
flurry played itself out, Elbryan coming to a crouched stance, Hawkwing
horizontal in front of him. Now the monk did come on fiercely, chopping at the
staff as if he meant to snap it in half.
Elbryan was
ready, had anticipated the move perfectly. He brought the staff in close to his
chest, Brother Justice's downward swipe falling short, then rolled Hawkwing
over the descending arm and snapped it down hard. In the same motion, Elbryan
came ahead a step and thrust both his hands, and thus the staff, straight out
horizontally, driving it under the monk's chin.
Brother
Justice fell away as the wicked strike came in. He rolled his free arm up,
taking some of the momentum from the blow, then knifed his hand out straight,
scoring a hit of his own.
The two
staggered apart, Elbryan gasping for breath, Brother Justice trying to shake
away the dizziness. Immediately the mob rolled in around them, for all the
Howling Sheila was flying fists and breaking chairs.
"Ho,
ho, what!" came the exuberant bellow above the din, and it was obvious to
Elbryan that the fat monk was enjoying this row.
Elbryan
heard the movement behind him, recognizing it as an attack. He spun, Hawkwing
extended, to pick off a lumbering hook, then brought the high tip of his staff
down hard diagonally, drawing blood on the face of Tol Yuganick. Seeing the
huge man dazed, Elbryan let go his weapon with one hand and snapped his palm
into Tol's chin, dropping him heavily to the floor. Then the ranger began his
scan again, seeking the newcomer, this skilled fighter, this assassin. The
ranger elbowed through the brawl, blocking punches whenever necessary, felling
with three shortened blows yet another villager who tried to pounce upon him.
Brother
Justice moved in a wide circuit of the dangerous ranger. He took a small pin
from the rope belt of his robe and held it in tight, against his sunstone.
Sunstones were used as wards, primarily against magic but also against various
poisons. The stone's magic could be twisted, though―could be inverted.
Soon the
monk spotted the ranger, predictably walking a guard near fighting Avelyn.
Slowly Brother Justice closed, using bodies as camouflage.
Elbryan
noted the man's approach and was ready when the deadly monk came in. He started
for Elbryan but shifted suddenly and darted fast for Avelyn, who was standing
with his arms high above his head, spinning Burgis Gosen in circles.
Elbryan had
to move fast, had to throw his weight to the side frantically to intercept. He
noted the tiny flicker of silver in the newcomer's hand, noted that the man
held some weapon.
He caught
the newcomer by the wrist, accepted a punch from the man's other hand in
exchange for his own strike with Hawkwing. Brother Justice had the better
balance at that time, though, and Elbryan took the worst of it. He staggered to
one knee, trying to find a defensive posture, expecting to be pummeled.
The attack
never came. Elbryan saw a shadow cross before him―Burgis Gosen in
Avelyn-launched flight―and when the tangle sorted out, the newcomer was
not to be seen.
Only then
did Elbryan realize that the wrist of the arm with which he had grabbed the
assassin was bleeding, a thin line of red. Not a serious wound, surely, but one
that seemed to burn with an anger of its own. The ranger shrugged it away and
hustled to the side of the fat monk.
Avelyn was
ready for the charge, his hands moving in swift defense. Elbryan had no time
for that, though. "I am no enemy!" he declared, but when Avelyn,
howling his usual "Ho, ho, what!" punched out anyway, Elbryan
skittered down to one knee, hooked his staff behind the fat man's legs, and
uprooted him. The monk fell hard to the floor.
Elbryan was
over him in an instant, more to protect him from the angry crowd than in any
fear of retaliation. "I am no enemy!" he yelled again, and he caught
the fat man by the wrist and yanked him to his feet, then rushed him out of the
tavern.
The fight
continued without them; Avelyn had merely given the villagers and the visiting
trappers an excuse for a wild party.
Brother
Avelyn was full of questions, full of protests, but the ranger would hear none
of them. He ushered the monk away, his own eyes darting from shadow to shadow,
expecting the deadly stranger to be about. Finally they got behind the back
wall of the northernmost house in the village, just beneath the forested slope.
"Preparedness
training," Avelyn explained, and the look on his face showed that he meant
to carry on the fight out here, with just this one "trainee."
One good
look at Elbryan changed Avelyn's mind, though. Lines of sweat streaked the
ranger's face and his breath came in short gasps. Elbryan held up his wrist,
staring at the wound, presenting it as explanation to the now-curious monk.
Avelyn caught
the arm and held it up in the moonlight. It was not a serious wound, a tiny
slice, too small to have been caused by a dagger, even. That alone told the
monk that this man was in serious trouble. For a wound so minuscule to cause
such pain could only mean . . .
Avelyn
fumbled to find his hematite. He suspected poison and understood that the
longer it took him to go after the insidious substance, the more deeply he
would have to join his spirit with his patient's and the more agony it would
cause both of them.
As soon as
he started, however, Brother Avelyn found a frightening twist. This man had
beenpoisoned, no doubt about it, but the poison was not based in any substance,
in any herb or plant or any animal venom. It was magically based; the monk
could feel that keenly. As such, it was quite easy for Avelyn to counter the
effects with his powerful hematite, and soon Elbryan was breathing steadily
again, soon the burning pain was no more.
"No
enemy?" Avelyn asked when he saw that Elbryan was fine and steady.
"No
enemy," the ranger replied. "But know that you will make enemies, my
friend, with such talk and such―"
"Preparedness
training," Avelyn finished with a wink.
"Indeed,"
the ranger said dryly. "And they will surely prepare the ground for your
interment if you continue to battle with some of the scoundrels about
Dundalis."
Avelyn
nodded and shrugged helplessly. "Your wound will heal," he assured
the ranger, and then he started away, into the dark night, heading back toward
the Howling Sheila, where the fighting was gradually diminishing.
Elbryan
watched him go, taking some comfort in the fact that the man swerved for the
inn's side door and was apparently going to his room, not back to the common
room. The fat monk was in real trouble, the ranger realized, for that man he
had fought, that man with the poisoned needle, was much more than an
overzealous ruffian. Elbryan didn't know exactly where he might fit in to such
a private affair, but he expected that he and the fat monk―and likely the
deadly stranger, as well―had not seen the last of one another.
CHAPTER 34
Justice
Brother
Avelyn was not overly concerned when he returned to his room to find that Jill
was not about. The woman had mentioned her plans to walk to the valley beyond
the north slope, and the monk was confident that Jill could take care of
herself. In their weeks together, it seemed to Avelyn that Jill looked after
him more than he protected her.
So the monk,
exhausted from fighting and then curing the stranger's magical poisoning, his
mind heavy with drink, plopped down on his bed and was soon snoring loudly. His
dreams were not content, though, not with the prospects of a magic-wielding
assassin nearby. Likely, the man was in no way connected to Avelyn, but still
the fugitive monk remained concerned.
He awoke
late the next morning, to find himself alone in the room. Again, he was not
concerned, figuring that Jill had come in after he had fallen asleep, and was
long up and about, probably down in the common room having her breakfast.
"Or
lunch," the monk remarked aloud with a self-deprecating chuckle. "Ho,
ho, what!"
When he got
downstairs, though, Avelyn saw no sign of Jill; indeed, Belster O'Comely
informed him that he had not seen the woman all night. "Perhaps she found
better company to keep," the innkeeper said snidely, leaning on the broom
he was using to sweep up the remnants of the previous night's activities.
"Indeed
would Jill be better off away from one as mad as I," Avelyn replied,
wincing with every word, for his head was pounding. The monk had long ago
noted, with complete frustration, that the hematite, powerful as it was, could
do little to relieve a hangover.
Avelyn ate a
light meal, then shuffled outside and promptly regurgitated it. He felt better
after. The day was cool and gray, the sky spitting light snow every so often.
"Oh, where are you, girl?" Avelyn asked loudly, more frustrated than
afraid. The question would have to wait, though, for the monk made his weary
way back to his room and went back to bed.
He didn't
wake up again until the next morning, to discover, once more, that Jill was
nowhere to be found. Now Avelyn was indeed growing fearful; it wasn't like Jill
to disappear for so long without forewarning him or without finding some way to
contact him. That, combined with the presence of this magic-wielding assassin,
surely concerned the monk. Perhaps the incident in the common room was no
accident. Perhaps the monastery was on his trail. Had they caught him at last,
up here in the most remote corner of Honce-the-Bear? And had Jill paid dearly
for Avelyn's crimes?
He went to
speak with Belster again, and, after hearing from the innkeeper that Jill still
had not been seen, Avelyn begged the innkeeper to tell him how he might locate
the stranger who had shuffled him out of the fight.
"The
ranger?" Belster asked incredulously, and from his tone, it was obvious to
Avelyn that few inquired as to this man's whereabouts.
"If
that is what he calls himself," Avelyn replied.
"He
calls himself Elbryan," Belster explained, "to me, at least, though
to others he carries another title. And he's one of the rangers, do not
doubt." He saw that the term held no meaning for Avelyn. "Some say
they're elf trained, others that they're merely misfits who find some comfort
in thinking themselves better than anyone else, walking their vigilant patrols,
protecting all the land―not that there's any need for protection, of
course."
"Of
course," Avelyn politely echoed. He found that he was beginning to like
this man called Elbryan more and more with every word. "Where might I find
this ranger, then?" the monk pressed.
Belster's
shrug was surely sincere. "Here and there," he replied. "Walks
the woods from here to End-o'-the-World, from what I'm told."
Avelyn's
expression soured and he looked down at the bar. "What of the other
stranger?" he asked. "The small mysterious man who fought so
well?"
Belster's
face screwed up. "There are many strangers in Dundalis this season,"
he answered. "And all of them fight well, else the forest would have taken
them by now!"
"The
small and agile man," Avelyn tried to clarify, "the one who battled
Elbryan so fiercely."
Belster
nodded his recognition. "He was in here again last night," the
innkeeper explained. "No fighting this time."
Avelyn took
a deep breath and cursed himself for sleeping the afternoon and all the night
through while a potential clue to Jill's whereabouts was right below him.
"Direct
me, then," the monk said at last. "Point me in the most likely
direction where I might find Elbryan."
Again
Belster shrugged, then he considered the fact that every time he had seen
Elbryan enter Dundalis, it was down the north road. He pointed to the north.
"That way," he declared, "up and over the slope, through the
vale, and turn west."
Avelyn
automatically looked that way, though of course, all he could see was the north
wall of the Howling Sheila. He nodded as he considered the words, glad for
them. Traveling north, he might find Elbryan, it would seem, and he would also
be able to search for signs of his dear Jill.
He set off
after a quick meal, huffing and puffing up the forested slope, then, after a
long pause spent staring down at the stark pines and white ground, he started
down the back side of the ridge, into the valley, angling northwest.
There were
no signs to be found―Brother Justice had made certain of that―and
oblivious Avelyn passed by within thirty feet of the concealed entrance to the
cave that now served as Jill's prison.
She had not
been treated badly . . . until Brother Justice had returned, the night before last,
in a foul mood and visibly bruised, to find that she had nearly escaped her
tight bonds. Then the monk had beaten her severely and had subsequently tied
her up so tightly that her hands and feet were now completely numb.
When she
wouldn't―couldn't―tell him anything about the staff-wielding
stranger who had intervened in the inn, the ferocious monk had beaten her
again, and now one of her eyes was swollen closed.
Brother
Justice had spent all that next day with her; talking mostly to himself about
how he might get word to the fat monk that he held her captive. Then the
assassin had gone out; Jill knew that his plan still was not fully clear and
that he was simply searching for more information. Now, with a gray morning
fast turning to midday outside, Brother Justice had not returned.
Jill hoped
that Avelyn had killed him; Jill, who could not possibly get out of the
bindings and gag that the monk had put on her this time, hoped that Avelyn had
first forced the man to disclose her whereabouts!
To Avelyn,
who had lived all of his life in the more populous and defined central region
of Honce-the-Bear, and who had lately traveled the breadth of the land along
well-defined roads, with clear landmarks and signposts, the prospects of
finding the ranger had not initially seemed dismal. It wasn't until Avelyn got
deep into the wide forest, where the view varied little from direction to
direction, where the landmarks were so much more subtle, that he understood the
true scope of his hunt. The distance from Youmaneff to St.-Mere-Abelle was over
two hundred miles, the distance from Dundalis to End-o'-the-World but two
score, yet, given the winding trails' and the areas where there were no trails
at all, Avelyn soon realized that he would have had a better chance of finding
the ranger had he been pursuing the man in the miles from his home to the
abbey.
He wandered
in circle, taking care to note the direction of the sun as it slipped behind
the gray canopy, looking for some sign. Of course Elbryan, trained by, the
elves, left, little or no trail at all, and Avelyn's frustration steadily
mounted. He wasn't even sure, after all, that Elbryan had left Dundalis in this
direction.
Thus, by
midday, the monk was ready to give up the hunt. He would return to
Dundalis―and perhaps Jill would be there waiting for him―and then
take the more conventional road through Weedy Meadow to End-o'-the-World. There
was simply no possibility, he now understood, that he would find the ranger in
this forest.
But Avelyn
was no ranger, and this was not his domain, and while he had no chance of
locating Elbryan, the ranger had little trouble finding him.
The monk was
huffing and puffing along a flat trail, arching around the base of a hillock,
when he first heard the hooves. He scrambled for some brush, thinking to hide,
and then, when that seemed futile, he fumbled about his magical stones, trying
to sort out some defensive measures.
A moment
later, Avelyn relaxed as a powerful black stallion thundered by.
"No
rider," the monk said aloud, mocking his own worries. "Ho, ho,
what!"
"But a
beautiful horse nonetheless," came a remark from right behind and above
him. "Would you not agree?"
Avelyn froze
in place, a lump rising in his throat. He turned slowly to see the ranger
crouched in the brush along the side of the hillock, just a few feet back.
"H-how did you―" the monk stammered. "I mean, you were
there all along?"
Elbryan
shook his head and smiled.
"But
how?"
"You
were busy listening to the horse," the ranger explained.
Avelyn
glanced back the other way to see the stallion standing tall and pawing the
ground, looking at him and Elbryan with eyes that seemed too intelligent for
such a creature.
"His
name is Symphony,"' Elbryan explained.
"I am
not well acquainted with horses," Avelyn admitted, "but he seems a
wonder."
Elbryan
uttered a soft clicking sound, and Symphony responded by lifting his ears and
nickering. The stallion pawed the ground once more, then thundered away back
along the trail.
"You
will have a hard time catching that one again!" Avelyn blurted, trying to
ease his own tension. He looked back at Elbryan. "Ho, ho, what!"
Elbryan
didn't blink and the ranger's lack of interest stole the bubbly grin from
Avelyn's face.
"Well,
yes," the monk began uncomfortably. "Why am I here, then, you would
like to know. Of course, of course."
Elbryan
squatted perfectly still, arms across his bent legs, fingers locked together,
his gaze fixed upon the man.
"Well .
. . to find you, yes, yes," Avelyn finally explained, finding his wits
against that uncompromising stare. "Of course, yes, I came into the forest
looking for the one they call the ranger."
Elbryan gave
a slight nod, prompting Avelyn to continue.
"Well,
it is about the fight, of course," he said. "About the man, actually,
the one who tried for me but poisoned you."
Elbryan
nodded; this visit wasn't totally unexpected, since the stealthy fighter from
the Howling Sheila was still in the region, as was. this monk whom Elbryan
believed the assassin's target. Elbryan suspected that the mad friar would need
help, and suspected, too, that he would find little among the folk of Dundalis.
"He
attacked you again?" the ranger asked.
"No―no,"
Avelyn stammered. "Well, yes, actually, or he might have. I cannot be
sure."
Elbryan
sighed wearily.
"It is
my companion, of course," the nervous monk went on. "Beautiful young
woman, and a fighter, too. But she is gone, nowhere to be found, and I am
afraid―"
"You
should be afraid," Elbryan replied. "That was no ordinary brawler in
the common room the other night."
"The
magical poison," Avelyn reasoned.
"The
way he moved," Elbryan corrected. "He was a warrior, a true warrior,
long trained in the art of battle."
Avelyn
nodded enthusiastically, but the ranger's words only heightened his fear that
this was indeed no coincidental attack, that the fighting monks of the
Abellican Church were after him.
"You
must tell me of this man," Elbryan said, "everything you know."
"I do
not know anything," Avelyn replied in exasperation.
"Then
tell me everything that you suspect," the ranger demanded. "If he has
your friend, then you need my help―help I willingly give, but only if you
remain forthright with me."
Avelyn
nodded again, glad for the words. Elbryan rose and moved down to the trail,
Avelyn following close behind.
"I do
not even know your name," the monk-remarked, though he remembered the name
that Belster had given to this man.
"I am
El―" the ranger began reflexively, but he caught himself and looked
hard at the monk, the first man who had actively sought out his help since he
had left Andur'Blough Inninness, the first man who would admit that he needed
the ranger's assistance. "I am Nightbird," Elbryan said evenly.
Avelyn
cocked an eyebrow at that curious title, not the response he had expected.
Whatever the man's reasons for offering a different title were not important,
Avelyn decided, and so he accepted the name without further question. The pair
walked back toward Dundalis then, Avelyn telling Elbryan his suspicions about
the pursuit from the church. Of course, the conversation grew uncomfortable for
Avelyn when the ranger asked why St.-Mere-Abelle might be after the monk, and
Avelyn had not the time nor the inclination to explain all the events that had
led to his fateful decision. How does one justify murder and theft, after all?
Elbryan didn't press the point, however; at that time, all that truly seemed
relevant was that Avelyn's companion was missing, possibly kidnapped by a man
the ranger knew to be dangerous.
And Avelyn's
description of his companion, added to the fact that the monk hinted that they
had come to Dundalis for her benefit, gave the ranger much to think about.
The hunt
began soon after, Elbryan searching hard to find some trail leading out of
Dundalis, while Avelyn inquired of Belster and some other patrons in the
Howling Sheila whether the stranger had returned to the inn today.
Their
answers came near dusk, when Avelyn returned to his room to find a note pinned
to his bedding. It was short and to the point, confirming the monk's worst
fears. If Avelyn wanted to save his companion, he was to travel to the slope
overlooking the pine valley, alone, and wait at an appointed spot.
He showed
the note to Elbryan down in the Howling Sheila's common room, the pair ignoring
the many derisive remarks aimed at them by the early customers there.
"Go,
then," the ranger bade the monk.
"And
you will be there?"
Elbryan
nodded.
"But it
says that I have to go alone," the monk protested.
"To our
enemy, you will seem alone," Elbryan assured him, and, after considering
this man beside him, after recalling the fact that this one called Nightbird
had moved to within five feet of him without his ever knowing it, Avelyn nodded
his agreement, took back the note, and started out of town.
All the way,
the monk fumbled with his pack of gemstones, then, on sudden intuition, he
stored all but three―graphite, hematite, and protective
malachite―in the nook of a tree. If his suspicions were correct, this man
had come for him, but even more for the stones. If Avelyn carried them with
him, and the dangerous warrior managed to wrest them away, then the monk would
have no bargaining power with which to save himself and even more important, to
save his dear Jill.
At the
appointed place, a bare spot on the side of an otherwise full-branched pine
tree some twenty feet below the ridge, Avelyn did not have to wait for long.
"I see
that you decided to follow my instructions, Brother Avelyn," came an
all-too-familiar voice. "Very good."
Quintall! It
was Quintall, Avelyn knew at once, and the monk felt as if the very ground were
about to. rush up and swallow him―and he almost hoped that it would. The
monastery, the Order, was after him, and there would be no corner of the world
far enough away, no shadows dark enough to hide him.
"I had
little faith that a thief and murderer would be so honorable as to come to the
aid of a friend," the voice went on.
Avelyn
glanced all about nervously, wondering where Nightbird might be, wondering if
the ranger was close enough to hear those words, and if he was, how he might
now feel about this man he had chosen to help.
"I have
her," the voice teased. "Come to me."
The reminder
of Jill's predicament bolstered the monk's failing courage. Perhaps his
Abellican brothers would get him, Avelyn decided, but they would not harm Jill.
Slipping the graphite all about the fingers of one anxious hand, the monk
followed the direction of the voice, soon discerning the dark rim of a cave
opening and the shadowy form of a man inside. He went in as the form retreated,
to find a fairly substantial cave, this one chamber―and it seemed
plausible to Avelyn that the place had more than one chamber larger than his
room at the Howling Sheila.
Quintall
stood at the back of the dimly lit cave, leaning easily against the wall,
flicking flint against steel until a light caught on the torch he had propped
there.
When the
light flickered to life, when it fully illuminated the face of the man Avelyn
had known all those years, the man who had traveled to Pimaninicuit beside
Avelyn and knew the truth of the stones, Avelyn was nearly overcome with grief.
All that he had lost his home, his companions, and most important, his faith
assaulted Avelyn; all the memories of the good times at St.-Mere-Abelle, his
instruction with Master Jojonah, the revelations about the sacred stones, the
studying of the charts, the revealed mysteries of the magic, came rushing back
to him.
And then
they were buried beneath the subsequent memories: the death of Thagraine, of
the boy who had foolishly gone onto Pimaninicuit, of all the crew of the Windrunner,
of Dansally, of Siherton.
"Quintall,"
Avelyn muttered.
"No
more," the other monk replied.
"Why
have you come?" Avelyn asked, hoping against reason that this man, too,
had deserted the Order and was as much a renegade as he.
Quintall's
cackle rocked him. "I am Brother Justice," the man replied harshly,
"sent to retrieve what was stolen." Quintall snorted. "I hardly
recognized you, fat Avelyn. You have lost all, so it seems, and have more than
doubled your size. Always you took your physical training lightly!"
Avelyn
steeled himself against the insults. It was true, he had taken on more than a
few bad habits, drinking too much and eating too much, and the only exercise or
martial training he now performed was in the fights he inspired.
"Did
you not believe that we would discover your treachery?" Brother Justice
went on. "Did you think that you could murder a master of St.-Mere-Abelle
and steal such a treasure, and then walk free for the rest of your days?"
"There
is more―"
"There
is no more!" Quintall shouted. "You fell my former brother. All that
remains for you is the pit of hell. I shall have the stones!"
"And my
life," Avelyn reasoned, making no move.
"And
your life," cold Brother Justice confirmed. "You forfeited that when
Master Siherton went over the wall."
"I
forfeited that when I refused to accept the perversion of the Order!"
Avelyn shot back, drawing some courage with words of conviction. "As
Brother Pellimar―"
"Silence!"
Brother Justice ordered. "Your life is forfeit, I assure you, and no
explanation is worth the time to utter. I will have the stones, as well, but if
you hand them to me without battle and accept the fate you deserve, then I will
let the woman go free. On my word."
Avelyn
snorted at that. "Is your word as solid a thing as the word of the masters
you serve?" he asked. "Is your gold but an illusion, meant to coax a
ship into waters where it might be destroyed?"
Quintall's
expression showed that he neither understood nor cared about what Avelyn was
saying, showed Avelyn beyond any doubts that the man was single-minded and
would not be swayed. That left the fat monk two choices: to surrender the
stones and his life and hope that Quintall was speaking truthfully, or to
fight.
He didn't
trust the man, not at all. Quintall would kill him after he got the stones,
without doubt; then he would kill Jill, that there would be no witnesses.
Avelyn believed that in his heart. He took his hand, and the graphite, out of
his pocket, pointing it in Quintall's direction.
"You
would forfeit the life of a friend?" Brother Justice asked and then he
laughed again.
"I
would spare your own life," Avelyn replied, "in exchange for the
woman."
The man's
laughter continued and it gave Avelyn pause. Quintall above all others
understood Avelyn's proficiency with the magic stones. Quintall should have
understood that Avelyn could loose a bolt of lightning with that piece of
graphite that would fry the man where he stood. And yet Quintall, this man who
called himself Brother Justice, this extension of St.-Mere-Abelle's vicious
order, was not afraid.
Avelyn
turned his thoughts away from the man, to the chamber Quintall had chosen for
this encounter. He felt the emanations, the subtle pulse of magic, and when he
looked then into the stone he held, when he realized that the powers of the
graphite seemed far, far away, he understood.
"Sunstone,"
Quintall confirmed, seeing the expression. "There will be little magic
used in this cave, foolish Brother Avelyn."
Avelyn
chewed his lip, looking for an out. Back in St.-Mere-Abelle, he had seen Master
Siherton create a magical dead zone while he and several others had tried to
discern the powers of the giant amethyst crystal. Only the most powerful magics
could function within such an area, and even then, their powers were greatly
diminished.
Avelyn might
be able to effect a lightning stroke within this chamber, but he doubted that
it would do much more than anger Quintall even more.
Quintall
held out his hand. "The stones," he said calmly, "for the
woman's life."
"The
woman is no part of this," Elbryan declared, slipping into the cave to
stand beside Avelyn. "I know not of Brother Avelyn's crimes, but you have
offered no charge against the woman."
Quintall's
expression grew suddenly grave at the sight of the imposing ranger.
"Treachery again!" he growled at Avelyn. "I should have expected
as much from the likes of Avelyn Desbris."
"No
treachery," Elbryan insisted, "but justice."
"What
do you know of it?" Brother Justice insisted. "What do you know of
this stranger, this mad friar, who has come into your midst, begging aid? Did
he tell you that he was a murderer?"
"And is
the woman a murderer?" Elbryan asked calmly.
"No,"
Avelyn answered when the other monk hesitated.
"A
thief ?" asked Elbryan.
"No!"
Avelyn said determinedly. "She has committed no crimes. As for my own, I
will speak of them, openly and honestly; and when all the account is told, let
someone other than a monk of St.-Mere-Abelle serve as judge."
Brother
Justice narrowed his eyes and glared at the monk. Of course, he had no
intention of allowing any court. He was judge, jury, and executioner, assigned
by the Father Abbot. "You were a fool to follow Avelyn to this
place," he said to Elbryan, "for now your life is forfeit, as is
Avelyn's, as is the woman's."
"More
justice?" Elbryan started to ask, but his question was lost as Brother
Justice spun about, pulling aside some hanging vines that blocked the entrance
to another chamber. A flick of the monk's wrist sent a silver item flying and
from within the deeper chamber came a gurgled groan.
"Go to
her!" Elbryan cried to Avelyn, and the ranger leaped forward to meet the
monk, Hawkwing spinning to a ready position.
"Not by
surprise this time," Brother Justice sneered, setting himself in a crouch.
He tried to keep near the door, to prevent Avelyn from getting to the woman,
but Elbryan's attack was too fierce, too straightforward. The ranger came
rushing in, accepting a punishing blow to the chest but managing to duck his
shoulder low against the monk and drive the man back a step. Brother Justice
dug in, locking himself in place until Avelyn came roaring in at Elbryan's
back, the monk's three-hundred-pound frame blasting the two combatants away.
Elbryan took
three quick punches―two to the chest and then one to the face that nearly
sent him down―before he managed to break the clench and get away from the
dangerous monk.
Facing the
man squarely, the ranger wasn't quite sure what to make of him. Brother Justice
turned sidelong and lifted his leading foot, drawing it slowly up his balanced
leg, arms lifting as well, as certain snakes might rise before the strike.
It was a
dagger, small but nasty, and thrown perfectly to hit the gagged and bound woman
right in the throat, just under her jawbone. Her main artery severed, blood was
pumping wildly from the wound, already forming a puddle around her slumped
form.
"Jill,
Jill! Oh, my Jill!" Avelyn wailed, rushing to her. He pulled the dagger
free, his hands going to the wound, trying futilely to stem the flow. She had
little time left, he knew. Her skin felt cold.
Avelyn
pulled out his hematite, then remembered the anti-magic shield that Quintall
had constructed. He thought to carry Jill from this place; but realized
immediately that she would be dead before he ever got her outside.
He clutched
his hematite in both hands, putting them to the wound, putting his lips against
his hands, praying with all his will, with all his heart. If there was a God
above, if these stones were indeed sacred, then the hematite must work!
The monk's
fighting prowess was indeed remarkable, his movements quick and fluid, his
frame always in perfect balance. He was too fast for most humans, dizzying them
with winding, sweeping feints before the lightning strike killed them.
But
Quintall, for all his training, was no faster than Tuntun or Belli'mar
Juraviel, or any of the elves that had trained Elbryan, and when he snapped a
strike from that snakelike pose, thinking to tear out Elbryan's throat and move
on to finish his business with Avelyn, the monk's expression showed he was
surprised to find his extended fingers hit only air, while Elbryan's staff gave
him a wicked smack on the elbow. With incredible flexibility, both physical and
mental, the monk adjusted, rolling his pained arm down across the staff to open
a hole in Elbryan's defenses, then snapping off a quick blow with his other
hand, followed by a kick that caught the ranger inside the knee and nearly
buckled his leg. Elbryan countered by letting go of his staff with his top
hand, rolling it under the blocking arm, then grabbing it and sweeping low for
the monk's supporting leg.
Brother
Justice hopped over the swing, but was forced back.
The monk circled,
a confident expression mounting.
Two running
steps launched Brother Justice into a double kick. Elbryan jammed one end of
Hawkwing into the dirt and swept the staff powerfully across in front of him,
left to right, deflecting the blow. He stepped ahead with his left foot then,
continuing to turn as Brother Justice landed on his feet and pivoted the other
way. Elbryan dragged Hawkwing up and around, slapping a backhand with the staff
that connected squarely on the monk's lower back at the same time Brother
Justice let fly an elbow to the back of Elbryan's head.
The ranger
reacted well, diving forward as the elbow connected, leaping and tumbling over
his staff as if it were a tree branch. He came back to his feet and turned as
Brother Justice spun around, the two men circling once more.
"I give
you one more chance to leave," the monk offered, drawing a smile from his
adversary. That smug look by the ranger spurred the proud Quintall into a
charge. He skidded to a stop right before Elbryan, throwing a vicious overhead
chop.
Up came
Hawkwing in a solid horizontal block. Anticipating the following moves, Elbryan
snapped his left hand down, taking the power from a right cross, then stepped
in closer, putting his right leg inside the monk's left, defeating an attempted
kick. Brother Justice wriggled his left arm about the staff, reaching for
Elbryan's face, but the ranger pulled the staff and the arm out wide, moving
even closer to the monk, then drove his forehead hard into the monk's face.
Brother
Justice grabbed hard onto the staff with both hands, as much to support himself
as to prevent any attacks. Elbryan let go with his left hand at that same
moment and snapped off a series of short, heavy jabs into Brother Justice's
face.
The monk was
dazed; Elbryan seized the moment. He grabbed the staff again, hard, and tugged
it in close, pushed it away to the end of his reach, then pulled it in again.
Brother Justice should have let go, but he was fighting to clear his thoughts.
Following the tug, he came rushing in close to Elbryan, and his face met the
ranger's forehead again.
Still dazed,
still hanging on, the monk felt the change in his adversary's angle as Elbryan
fell back to the floor, pulling hard, taking the monk right over him. Both his
feet planted squarely in Brother Justice's belly, the ranger heaved him right
over, sent him flying, to land heavily at the base of the chamber's hard wall.
Pure rage
drove the monk on, forced the pain away. He rolled and came up fast but not
fast enough. His defenses were not in place when Elbryan grabbed his staff down
low with both hands
and swept it
across mightily, smashing in the side of Brother Justice's face. The monk went
with the blow, turning to a dead run that launched him out the cave's outer
opening, into the daylight.
Elbryan was
quick to follow, but by the time he got out, the monk was many strides ahead,
in a full run. Hardly thinking of the motion, knowing only that he could not
lose this advantage against so deadly an adversary, Elbryan popped the
feathered tip onto his Weapon and bent it low, quickly setting the bowstring.
He ran ahead a dozen strides, seeking an angle to best view the top of the
ridge, where the monk was fleeing.
Brother
Justice came into view for only a split second, darting between two trees.
Elbryan's arrow caught him in the calf, right below the knee, and with a howl
of pain the monk tumbled sidelong, gaining momentum as he rolled along the
steep slope.
Elbryan
scrambled to get to the spot, saw the monk land heavily atop one rocky outcropping
and then tumble right over it, a fifteen-foot plummet to bard stone.
Elbryan
groaned sympathetically, running to get in view of the man once more. He
spotted the monk from a distance, lying among the boulders, one leg bent back
up under him, one arm across his chest, the other out straight, then turned
back under, obviously broken. The man, gasping for breath, reached inside the
fold's of his clothing and produced something that Elbryan could not discern
from this distance.
The ranger
halted as the monk suddenly glowed, limned in blackish flames. Elbryan's mouth
dropped open as the monk's features twisted, twisted, as his face blurred and
seemed to double, and as that second face stretched grotesquely and pulled free
of the man's corporeal form, his visible spirit ripping out of that flesh and
blood coil, down to the object he clutched in his hand.
There came a
bright flash and then the monk lay still, low flames licking his lifeless body.
"'Nightbird!"
came a cry from the cave, and Elbryan, thoroughly shaken, scampered back
within.
He was
careening, flying fast above the forest, across the lakes, over the lands where
the snow had already settled deep―too fast for his senses, too fast for
the man to understand. The pain was gone, that much he knew. Then he came upon
the mountains, whipping through passes, over peaks, to a plateau he had seen
before above a vast encampment between the black arms of a smoking mountain.
Then came the dizzying ride through tight tunnels, cutting left, right, down
and down again to a stone wall creased by a single crack, through that crack,
the stone rushing past him so close that his mind screamed out in terror.
Then he was
in the room between the columns before the obsidian throne.
Quintall
stood on semitransparent legs, caught halfway between the mortal and spirit
worlds. He stood on the legs of a wraith facing the dactyl demon.
It was the
end, the end of hope, of any pretense of godliness. It was the truth, the
dark-shining truth, the reality of what he had become, the only honest end of
the road upon which his Abellican masters had set him. It was the dactyl demon,
Bestesbulzibar―he knew its name!―in all its horrible beauty, in all
its magnificence.
Quintall,
Brother Justice, fell to his wraith knees before the dactyl, bowed his head,
and spoke.
"Master."
Elbryan took
the torch with him as he pushed aside the vines and entered the inner chamber.
Avelyn squatted on the floor, cradling the woman. Her wound was closed and she
was very much alive, though thoroughly exhausted, as was Avelyn, who had gone
into the hematite, who had, by sheer willpower and faith, fought past the
sunstone barrier, fought his way into the healing magic.
The monk
asked about Quintall, but Elbryan didn't hear him. Avelyn shifted on the floor
and tried to rise, nearly toppling for the effort, but Elbryan didn't notice.
All that the ranger saw was the woman, all that he heard was her breathing. His
eyes roamed over her―the thick mop of blond hair, the blue eyes, shining
in the dim light, despite her weary condition, and her lips, those thick and
wonderful lips, those so soft lips.
He could
hardly breathe, could hardly keep the strength to stand, all his thoughts, all
his energy, tied up in a single word, a name he had not spoken for so very
long. "Pony."
CHAPTER 35
Escape?
Pony.
The name hit
the young woman like a thunderbolt, spoken with such familiar inflection. She
watched, mesmerized, as the strong young man eased toward her, his green eyes
growing misty.
"Pony,"
Elbryan said again, and he was stating the name, not asking. "My Pony, I
thought..."
He slipped
down to his knees before her, closed his eyes, and tried hard to steady his
breathing. When, after a long while, he opened his eyes and looked again on
this image from his past, he found that her expression was more confusion than
anything else.
"Do you
not remember me?" Elbryan asked, and the question alone, the need to ask
it, seemed to pain him greatly.
The woman
didn't know how to respond. She did remember the man―he was there,
prodding somewhere in the back of her mind, screaming at her to let him out.
The way he said the name, her name―her nickname, she suddenly knew, for
her name was not Pony, nor Jill, but Jilseponie!―was so familiar; surely
she had heard this man call her Pony before in just that way.
"Give
her time, I beg, Elbryan," Brother Avelyn remarked.
That was it.
Elbryan. The name hit Pony as hard as Brother Justice ever could, jarred her,
sent her thoughts spinning back across the span of years.
"When
you ran from me on the slope, running into burning Dundalis, I thought you lost
to me forever," the ranger went on, spurred by the sudden sparkle of
recognition that came to the woman's blue eyes. "My Pony. How I searched!
I found your mother and father, my own, our friends. Carley dan Aubrey died in
my own arms. And I would have died, too, trapped by a fomorian giant and a band
of goblins, had it not been for―" He stopped, realizing that he was
going too fast for the poor young woman, realizing that he had overwhelmed her.
But it was
indeed his Pony; Elbryan knew that beyond any doubt. He moved closer to her
then, put his face barely inches from hers.
"Elbryan,"
she said softly, lifting a weary arm to stroke the ranger's face. All those
scattered images in her head spun and dropped together, like a vast puzzle, all
the pieces magically falling together. She remembered him as if she had never forgotten
him, remembered their talks and walks, remembered their friendship, and more
than that. In her mind, she saw him moving closer to her, to kiss her.
But then he
was Connor, poor Connor, and Pony was suffocating, reaching for the hearth,
grabbing a glowing ember.
When she
shook the image away, she found that Elbryan had backed away from her and was
looking to Brother Avelyn for answers.
"We
have much to discuss," the monk said.
Elbryan
nodded and, looked back at her, as beautiful now―more beautiful!―than
he remembered her.
"Brother
Quintall?" Avelyn asked.
Elbryan
looked at him curiously.
"Brother
Justice?" Avelyn clarified. "The hunter from my own Order, sent to
kill me and to kill my friends, do not doubt."
"He is
dead," Elbryan replied evenly.
"Take
me to him."
Elbryan
nodded to Avelyn. "Why did he come after you?" the ranger asked, the
question that Avelyn knew he would be forced to answer truthfully. He looked
from Elbryan to Pony, then back to the ranger.
"Not
all of his claims were untrue, I fear," the monk admitted. "I will
explain all when we are far from this place, and then I will accept your
judgment," Avelyn offered, squaring his shoulders. "Judgment from
both of you. You decide if Brother Quintall's mission was truly one that
deserved the name of Justice, if Brother Avelyn, the mad friar, is truly an
outlaw."
"I am
no judge," the ranger remarked.
"Then I
am a doomed thing," Avelyn replied. "For the only ones who presume to
judge me have made their decision, and it is based on greed and fear and in no
way on justice."
Elbryan
stared long and hard at Avelyn. Finally he nodded, and he helped both Avelyn
and Pony to their feet, then led them out of the cave and to the spot where
Brother Justice had fallen.
The monk's
body was hardly recognizable, a charred, smoldering thing.
"How
did this happen?" Elbryan asked, inspecting the corpse but finding no
indication of what had caused it to burst into flame.
"Here
is your answer," Avelyn explained, indicating the side of the corpse,
where one hand was nearly burned to ashes. On the ground beside the body lay
the ruined broach, its hematite core melted and misshapen, an elongated black
egg. Scattered around it were the small quartz crystals, blackened, some stuck
in the remains of the golden setting.
Avelyn
scrutinized the broach carefully. "Its power is no more," he
announced after a few moments. "Somehow the magic of the hematite and the
crystals erupted when Quintall fell." Avelyn paused and considered his own
words. Had there been some contingency placed on the magic? he wondered. Avelyn
could feel the magical reverberations in the area and knew that some strong
energy had been released. Perhaps the stones served as a warning device to the
masters back in St.-Mere-Abelle, a signal that Quintall was dead, that Quintall
had failed. Or was the magic even stronger than that? Given the powers of
hematite, might this have been some transport for Quintall's soul?
Avelyn, who
had spirit-walked, who had once possessed the body of another, shuddered at the
possibilities.
Elbryan
continued to prod at the corpse, searching for clues. What he found instead
were two stones intact: a sunstone―which did not surprise Avelyn in the
least―and a carbuncle.
"That
is how he trailed me across the country," Avelyn remarked, noting the carbuncle.
"It is a stone used to detect magic."
"And
you have magic about you," Elbryan reasoned.
"A
great cache," Avelyn admitted. "Perhaps the greatest individual cache
in all the world."
"Stolen
from St.-Mere-Abelle," said the ranger.
"Taken
from those who did not deserve it, who abused it and brought only misery from
the God-given stones," Avelyn said firmly. "Find us a camp, my
friend. I will tell you my tale, in all detail, in all truth. You decide which
of us, myself or Quintall, deserves the title he carried."
When they
arrived at Elbryan's camp, when the ranger and Pony settled beside a fire,
Avelyn did as promised. He told his tale, all of it, from the journey to
Pimaninicuit to the sinking of the Windrunner and the murder of Dansally, to
his escape from St.-Mere-Abelle and the death of Master Siherton. It was the
first time Avelyn had told his story, though he had hinted at many parts of it
to Jill over the course of their travels. It was the first time the monk was
able to purge his soul openly, to admit his crimes, if they were crimes. When
he finished, he seemed a miserable wretch indeed; his huge form had wilted upon
the hard ground, his eyes teary.
Pony went to
him, loving him all the more, feeling a true kinship with the man, feeling a
great deal of pity, as well. She was sorry that Avelyn had been forced to act
as thief and killer, sorry that this gentle man―and despite the barroom
brawls, Pony knew Avelyn to be a gentle man―had been put into such an
uncompromising position.
Both of them
looked at Elbryan after some time, fearing the ranger's judgment. They saw only
sympathy on his handsome face.
"I do
not envy that which you were forced to do," the ranger said firmly.
"Nor do I consider your actions criminal. You acted in self-defense,
always justifiable. You stole the stones because you rightly judged that they
were being abused."
Avelyn
nodded, so glad to hear those words. "Then I must be on my way," he
announced unexpectedly. "Jill―Pony, has found her way home, it would
seem." He put a hand to the woman's face, and his own brightened suddenly.
"Ho, ho, what!"
"She
needs me no more," Avelyn finished.
"But
does Brother Avelyn need her?" Elbryan asked.
The monk
shrugged. "St.-Mere-Abelle will not give up the search, thus I must keep
on the move. I would not bring danger to my friends, now that I know of
it."
Elbryan
looked hard into Pony's eyes, then the both of them burst into a fit of
laughter, as if the whole notion were perfectly ridiculous.
"You
stay," Elbryan remarked, demanded. "Pony is home, 'tis true, and her
home is Avelyn's, unless I miss my guess."
"Her
home is Avelyn's," she said firmly.
A light snow
had begun to fall all across the forest, but it seemed to shy from the ranger's
camp, from the heat of the ranger's fire, from the warmth of Brother Avelyn's
newfound home.
Part Four
THE RANGER
How I desire to go to her, to be with her, that we might know
again the peace that was in our lives before that terrible day. How I want to
hold Pony, to kiss her, to tell her all my feelings, all my secrets, my pain,
my hopes. To see Pony now is to see what was and to wonder what might have been
had the goblins not come to Dundalis. To see Pony now is to ponder what other
road might have been before me―might I have farmed the land and hunted,
as Olwan my father did? Would Pony and I be wed, perhaps with children?
How would the world look to Elbryan had he not spent those years
in Andur'Blough Inninness?
But that is the problem, Uncle Mather. I cannot know, can only
guess, and I fear that any guess I make will be tainted by the observations of
my current life. Perhaps my life would have been better if God had presented me
a different path, one more like Olwan's. I wish all those folk of
Dundalis―my mother and father, Pony's parents, and all the
others―had been spared their grim fate. I wish with all my heart that the
goblins had not come to Dundalis!
But where would that leave me? At peace, I suppose, and probably
with Pony, and that is a fate about which no man could complain.
Yet I refuse to dismiss or diminish my years with the Touel'alfar;
those elven friends helped to shape the man Elbryan. Those elven friends
created Nightbird, this ranger, hopefully for the betterment of the world and
surely for the betterment of me. Looking through the perspective of their
shining eyes, I have gained a newer and brighter appreciation of the world
about me; one I would never have known had the goblins not come to Dundalis,
had the elves not rescued me and taken me to their secret valley. Through that
tragedy, I, Elbryan, have come to know and love life all the more. Through that
tragedy, I have become the man I am, the man who can see the world through the
vision of an elf as well as the vision of a human.
That is my guilt, Uncle Mather, for why should I have been chosen,
and not another of Dundalis―not Olwan or Shane McMichael, not Pony or
Carley don Aubrey. That is my guilt, and seeing Pony alive, so beautiful, so
wonderful, only heightens my pain, reminds me of those who died, tempts me to
ask what might have been, and makes me wonder if I would indeed prefer that
lost course.
It is only worse for poor Pony. The sight of me, of Dundalis, has
brought back to her memories long buried. I have seen her little in the few
days since Brother Avelyn and I rescued her from Quintall. She is avoiding me,
I know, and I do not begrudge her that. She needs the time; she has seen again
so much of her lost past in so short a time.
Everyone in Dundalis died except the two of us. And we have
continued from that moment of tragedy, have grown strong and true, have found
lives pleasing, and, now that we are together again, the potential seems all
the greater. Yet, in our pleasures . . .
That is the guilt, Uncle Mather, our guilt. I cannot rescue Pony
from the pain of her memories, as she cannot rescue me from mine. I only hope
that she comes to accept our fate and that she desires to forge ahead in the
best manner that we may.
I knew it from the moment I saw her in that cave. I love her,
Uncle Mather, as I loved her that fateful day on the ridge above our home. I
love her, and all the world will be sweeter indeed if I may hold her in my arms
and feel her soft breath against my neck.
-ELBRYAN WYNDON
CHAPTER 36
Confrontation
"They
think me madder still!" Brother Avelyn roared happily.
"Ho,
ho, what!"
Elbryan
looked at Bradwarden, and the centaur only shrugged, not about to disagree with
the volatile friar's estimation of himself.
"Cavorting
with the likes of you, after all," Avelyn went on. "And, oh, would
they talk if they knew that I was dining with a centaur!"
"They
would talk respectfully if they knew Bradwarden as I know him," Elbryan
put in, "else, I fear the centaur would trample them."
Bradwarden
swallowed a huge chunk of mutton and gave a great belch.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn howled, charmed by it all. The monk was feeling better
now, feeling more at home than he had since his earliest days in
St.-Mere-Abelle, since that innocent time before he had learned the truth of
the Abellican Order. In Elbryan, Avelyn had found a man he could honestly
respect, a stoic individual, wary of the very real dangers of the world, ready
to fight against evil and injustice. He had told his tale in full to the
ranger, and the ranger had judged him not according to the penned laws but by
the true ideal of justice.
Now Avelyn
spent his nights in Dundalis or in Weedy Meadow or End-o'-the-World, and his
days in the forest with Elbryan and Pony―and sometimes with the ranger's
more unusual friends, such as Bradwarden and that magnificent horse Symphony.
There was something right about it all to Avelyn, some sense of godliness here
that he had not felt in many years. His only lament was that Pony seemed truly
shaken by her return to this area. She spent little time with any of them,
preferring to walk alone, mostly near Dundalis. She was confronting her past,
the monk knew, and he was glad of that, though he wished he could be of more help
to the young woman.
Bradwarden
took up his pipes then, following the meal with a mournful, soulful tune that
conjured in Avelyn images of the rolling hills, the wheatfields, and grapevines
of Youmaneff. He thought of his mother and father, hoped that his father was
still well. Of course, Jayson Desbris would not know it, but he could rest well
when thinking of his youngest son now.
On a hillock
not so far away, Pony, too, heard the centaur's haunting music. Her thoughts
rolled back to the carefree days of her childhood, of her times with
Elbryan―Elbryan! All those terrible images of that fateful day in
Dundalis remained with her, but somehow they were easier to deal with. She
could look at the tragedy rationally, and now, with Elbryan beside her, she was
beginning to come to terms with her fate.
Pony came to
know that it was not simple terror and grief that had forced her to bury those
awful images, but guilt. She had lived, but everyone else, so she thought, had
perished. Why her?
Seeing
another from her village, seeing dear Elbryan again, had allowed Pony to remove
some of that guilt. She knew the truth now, all of it, and she was strong
enough to accept that truth―and on those occasions when she found she was
not strong enough, she knew Elbryan would be there for her, as she would be
there for him. For the first time in many years, Pony was not alone.
"You
are not going into town this night?" Elbryan asked Avelyn, the monk
tarrying near to the fire.
"Jill―Pony
went into Dundalis," Avelyn clarified, "but I believe I will spend
this night in the forest."
"Cold
wind and a hard ground," Elbryan warned, and indeed, winter was fast
approaching.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn laughed. "You would not guess the hardships I have
endured, my friend. This round body does not tell of them."
Elbryan
smiled and considered the monk, understanding there was indeed a hardened frame
beneath the soft exterior.
"No, I
will stay this night," Avelyn went on. "I feel it is time for me to
begin repaying you the debt I owe."
"Debt?"
Elbryan asked incredulously.
"I owe
you my life, as does Pony."
"I
followed the only course open to me," Elbryan replied.
"And
glad I am that you did!" Avelyn snorted. "Ho, ho, what!"
Elbryan gave
a smile and shook his head, entertained, as usual by the complex man. "So
you shall repay me with your company," the ranger reasoned.
"Oh,
more than that," the monk replied. "And I fear that if I offer too
much of my company, then I shall owe you all the more!"
Again came
the laughter, but it died away quickly, Avelyn's face growing suddenly serious.
"Tell me of your horse," he bade the ranger.
"I have
no horse."
"Symphony?"
"Symphony
is not mine," Elbryan explained. "Symphony is free and belongs to no
man."
"All
the better then!" said Avelyn. He fumbled about his robes, then with his
pouch.
Elbryan
caught a glimpse within that pouch as Avelyn searched for a certain stone, the
ranger's jaw dropping low at the myriad sparkles, shimmering brightly,
magnificently, even in the light of the low fire. No wonder, then, that the
Abellican Church had come after Brother Avelyn!
Finally the
monk found the stone he was looking for and held it up before him: a turquoise.
"Is
Symphony about?" the monk asked.
Elbryan
nodded slowly, cautiously. "What magic do you intend for Symphony?" he
wanted to know.
Avelyn
snorted. "Nothing the horse will not desire," he assured the ranger.
They went
off together into the night, finding Symphony in a moonlit field, grazing
calmly. Avelyn bade Elbryan to wait at field's edge, then the monk walked slowly
toward the horse, holding forth the stone and chanting quietly.
Elbryan held
his breath, not certain what the powerful Symphony might do. The stallion had
accepted the ranger, but Elbryan knew that to be an unusual thing for proud and
wild Symphony. If the stallion now bolted forward suddenly, trampling the monk
into the earth, Elbryan would not be surprised.
But Symphony
did no such thing. The horse nickered quietly as Avelyn came right up to him.
The monk continued to chant―it seemed to Elbryan as if he were conversing
with the horse―and whatever he was saying, Symphony was listening! After
a long while, Avelyn motioned for the ranger to join him.
The monk was
still whispering softly when Elbryan moved up beside him. Symphony had gone
perfectly still, his head raised high, his magnificent, muscled chest presented
openly to the two men.
Avelyn
handed the turquoise to Elbryan. "Finish," he instructed.
Elbryan took
the stone, having no idea what he should do with it. Before he could begin to
question the monk, he felt an urge, a calling. The ranger looked up into
Symphony's dark eyes, understanding suddenly that it was the stallion calling
to him! Elbryan blinked in disbelief, then looked back at the turquoise and
realized that its glow was not reflected moonlight but its own inner light, a
radiating magic; only then did Elbryan realize how warm the stone had grown.
"Touch
it to the horse's breast," the monk instructed.
Elbryan
moved his hand slowly toward the stallion. Symphony closed his eyes, seeming as
if in a deep trance. The ranger put the stone right against the horse's breast,
right in the "V" where the muscles of the powerful shoulders came
together. He held it there for a long time, while Avelyn took up a louder, more
insistent chant that sounded as a song.
Elbryan was
hardly conscious of the stone's action, and Symphony seemed perfectly at ease,
as the turquoise burrowed into the horse's flesh, as the stone set itself
perfectly upon Symphony's breast.
The ranger
retracted his hand suddenly, his expression horrified as he regarded the stone,
which seemed now a natural part of the horse. Avelyn stopped his chanting and
put a comforting hand on Elbryan's shoulder; Symphony opened his dark eyes and
seemed perfectly calm, pained not at all.
"What
have I done?" Elbryan asked. "What have you done?"
Avelyn
shrugged. "Not exactly sure," he admitted. "But the stone's
magic was for animals, of that I am certain."
"To
heal?" Elbryan asked. "To strengthen?"
"Perhaps
both," the monk replied. Avelyn's face crinkled as he tried to sort out a
feasible explanation. "You see, I do not always know what magic the stones
will provide," he began. "They call to me; they tell me what to
do."
"Then
you have no way of knowing what we just did to Symphony," Elbryan
reasoned, his tone showing clearly that he was not pleased. Symphony was no toy
for experiments, after all! "Beneficial or baneful?"
"Beneficial,"
Avelyn said with all confidence and without hesitation. "Ho, ho, what! I
told you that I meant to repay a debt."
"But
you do not even know what you did!" Elbryan protested.
"But I
know the nature of what the stone did," Avelyn explained. "Turquoise
is the stone of animals, a true blessing of beasts. I suspect that your bond
with Symphony has been heightened, that you and the stallion are more deeply
and profoundly joined now."
"Master
and beast?" Elbryan demanded, clearly not happy with the prospect.
"Friend
and friend," Avelyn corrected. "Symphony cannot be owned, so you
said, and I would not presume to break this most wonderful stallion's spirit!
Ho, ho, what! Never that! Trust, my friend, hold faith in the stones, in the
gifts of God. You will soon learn the truth of this magic that Symphony now
holds, and you will be pleased, as will Symphony, do not doubt."
As if in
answer, Symphony reared suddenly and whinnied, then came back down and
thundered about the pair in a tight circle, hooves rending the turf. The
stallion showed no sign of pain or even agitation other than a sudden elation.
Elbryan felt
that emotion very clearly. It was as if he could read Symphony's mind, and not
just by the visible movements of the stallion's body.
He read the
stallion's thoughts!
Elbryan
looked at Avelyn, the monk smiling widely. "Do you 'hear' them?" the
ranger asked, for lack of a better word. "Do you know what the stallion is
feeling?"
"I was
but the mediator," Avelyn explained, "the facilitator, ho, ho, what!
I brought forth the stone's magic, but you are the one who used it, my friend.
You and Symphony, and now you two are joined more closely. But I do indeed know
the stallion's thoughts," the monk finished with a mischievous smile.
"I see them clearly on your face!"
Symphony
stopped abruptly and reared again, calling into the night. Then the horse
thundered away out of the field, out of sight.
But Elbryan
knew where the horse was; if he concentrated, the ranger could visualize the
very ground before Symphony's pounding hooves. He did so then, and saw and felt
the rush of the wind and the night as the horse raced through the darkened
forest. And it went deeper than that; the ranger came to perceive the world
about Symphony through the eyes of the magnificent horse. Only then did Elbryan
truly appreciate the intelligence of the animal, filtered through a different
perspective, perhaps, but no less intense than his own. The horse knew things
simply, without the interference of reason that was the domain of men, elves,
and the higher races. What was, in the horse's eyes, simply was with no
interpretation, an efficient and perfect way of perception that sorted through
emotion, that lived in the present without concern for the future or
interference from the past.
Perfect,
simple, beautiful.
After a long
while, Elbryan opened his eyes and looked at Avelyn. He nodded his
appreciation, for he understood already that this gift Avelyn had given to him
and to Symphony was as profound and precious as the bow Joycenevial had crafted
for him.
Elbryan put
his hand on Avelyn's shoulder and nodded again, for he could find no words to
properly thank the man.
Avelyn went
into Dundalis the next morning, passing Pony on the trail as she made her way
back to the ranger's camp. The monk started to ask the woman if she wanted him
to accompany her, but, in studying the expression on Pony's face, Avelyn
thought the better of it and continued on his way. Soon after, he was whistling
gaily, for upon some closer examination, Avelyn had indeed come to understand
the expression on the young woman's face.
Pony found
Elbryan burying the embers of his fire. She came into the camp quietly and
moved right across the way from him without a word.
Elbryan
stood tall, looking at her. They were alone, completely alone, for the first
time, and so many questions came to each of them that they remained silent,
just started circling each other, as combatants might, as a stalking panther
might when confronted with another of its own kind.
Pony's eyes
reflected an intensity Elbryan had never before encountered, a hunger, perhaps,
or a rage―some inner passion that kept her from blinking, that kept her
chewing on the corner of her bottom lip as she paced about him, her gaze locked
on his.
The ranger
soon fell into a similar trance, his focus becoming squarely, singularly, Pony.
There was only her and nothing else, only those burning blue eyes, those tender
lips.
Circling,
they moved slightly, but ever closer with each rotation.
A harsh
noise from somewhere in the forest startled the pair and stole the moment.
Neither recognized it, and neither wanted to search it out.
"Come,"
Elbryan bade Pony, taking her hand and leading her down a snow-covered path.
They moved out from under the canopy of the forest onto a clearing, and Elbryan
smiled wide, for there, across the field, stood Symphony. The ranger had known
that the stallion would be there, had even telepathically called out to
Symphony to wait for him.
Spotting
him, the great stallion reared and snorted, its breath coming out as a great
cone of steam.
"Come,"
Elbryan said again, leading Pony quickly across the field. Now that Symphony
was with them, the ranger knew his destination, knew the only place that would
suit this first private meeting with Pony. He became tentative when he neared
the magnificent horse. Would Symphony accept two riders?
"Easy,
friend," the ranger said softly, stroking the horse's muzzle and muscled
neck. He looked hard at the horse, sharing his thoughts, hearing the answer,
then looked at Pony and nodded.
"He is
beautiful," she said. She thought, her words lame, somehow hollow in the
face of such magnificence as Symphony, but she had no other words to offer to
the stallion. Elbryan took her hand and helped her up tentatively onto the
powerful animal's back.
Symphony
snorted again and jostled about, but gradually came to accept the woman. Then
came the real test as Elbryan went up on the stallion in front of Pony.
The horse
settled easily, ready to run.
And run
Symphony did! Fast as the wind, flying along the trails, weaving through the
trees in a dizzying blur that had Pony screaming with terror and delight, and
holding so tightly to Elbryan's waist that every time the horse came down hard
the ranger's breath was blasted from his body.
Soon they
came to the diamond-shaped grove, the spruce and pines blanketed by snow but
the ground about the grove blown bare by the wind. Symphony pulled to a stop
and the pair slid down.
Pony went
right up to the horse's face and stared hard into one dark eye. Her breathing
would not steady; there was something too primordial, too untamed and
uncontrollable, about this beast, something fearfully strong. And yet she had
come through the ride unscathed, breathless with joy and excitement.
She had come
through the ride!
She turned
to Elbryan, who was walking to the glade, and followed him. He disappeared through
the thick branches; Pony paused when she got to that spot, considering the
implications, considering her own feelings.
The young
woman shook her head defiantly, then looked back at the stallion, who reared
and whinnied, as if to prod her on. Untamed, uncontrollable, fearfully strong,
he embodied the feelings that bubbled at the edges of Pony's thoughts,
threatening to overwhelm her.
She pushed
through the thick branches into a small clearing, where Elbryan crouched, the
first flickers of a fire already starting before him. Pony watched him as he
worked, blowing softly, turning sticks.
Untamed,
uncontrollable, fearfully strong. The thoughts stayed with her, repeated in her
head like a warning, like a temptation. She clenched her fists at her sides,
chewed the corner of her bottom lip again, and stared hard at this man, no more
the boy she had known and yet so much that boy with whom she had shared her
youth.
She feared
those few memories she had not yet uncovered, and yet, looking at Elbryan, she
knew that she would soon face them.
She walked
over to him and he rose, the fire burning. Face-to-face they stood for many
seconds, for minutes, staring in silence at each other.
Then he
moved for her, his lips drawn to hers, and she gave a slight gasp, expecting black
wings to rise up all around her, expecting a scream to reverberate within her
mind. But then he was there, against her, his lips brushing gently over hers,
softly, softly, and all she felt was him, and all she heard was his soft
breathing and his slight moan.
The kiss
became more urgent, and gradually Pony's fears melted away, swept up in the
sudden torrent of passion that overcame her. He kissed her hard, and she kissed
him back, tongues entwined, lips pressing hard.
And then
they were apart, Elbryan staring at her, locking her deep in his gaze. His hand
came up and unlaced her cloak; and she let the garment drop without protest,
cool air on her skin. Then he reached for the buttons of her shirt, and on and
on until the last layer of her clothing fell away. And she was not ashamed, not
embarrassed, and no black wings of horrors past swept up about her.
Elbryan
pulled off his own cloak and shirt and stood bare to the waist before her. They
moved closer, the hairs of his chest just brushing her breasts, little tingles
shared. With his prompting, she lifted her arms high above her head and he
locked his fingers about hers.
Then he
broke the hold and began to run his hands down her arms, slowly and, oh, so
gently, the tips of his fingernails just grazing her soft skin. Down came his
hands, past her elbows, across her arms, and then around to the back, to her
shoulder blades and to the base of her neck, so softly and gently, fingertips
just lightly brushing.
She felt the
electric pull of those fingers, the tingle that made her want to pull them in
closer―and yet, she knew that if they were pulled in closer, their
teasing tingle would be no more. Her head went back, mouth opened as she basked
in his stroke, as his hands went down her back, so gently, to the top of her
buttocks and then brushing about, to her hips and past her hips. Again with his
prompting, Pony turned and melted back
into his strong embrace. He lifted one hand to push her hair aside, and gently
kissed the nape of her neck, the soft kiss turning slowly more urgent, a harder
kiss, a gentle bite, and when she cooed quietly, a harder bite still.
"Do you
feel me?" he whispered into her ear.
"Yes."
"Are
you alive?"
"So
alive."
"Do you
want me to make love to you?"
Pony paused,
searching for the threat of terrible memories. She recalled her wedding night,
glanced down at the glowing fire as if it were some enemy or some forewarning.
But this was different, the young woman knew, different from Connor. Stronger.
Untamed,
uncontrollable, fearfully strong, her mind recited. And right, she silently
added. So very right.
"Yes,"
she answered quietly.
They sank
down to the ground together, onto the still-warm cloak, and there they were,
caught in the present and encircled by their past. For Elbryan, it was the culmination
of his youth, where every waking thought had led him to this point with this
woman, his soulmate, his Pony. This moment, so many years in the waiting, was
the marker of the end of that relationship with the girl, the beginning of the
new and deeper relationship with the woman. Now he was a man, and Pony a woman,
and all the love that had brought them to this moment came crashing together
with their bodies. He was happy to the point of giddiness, and yet he was
vulnerable suddenly, so vulnerable, for if anything happened to Pony, if he
lost her now as he had thought he had lost her before, then a rift would be
torn in his heart that would never mend, then his life ever after would be
without meaning.
For Pony,
that moment in the grove was the denial of blackness, a dark barrier torn down
and thrown away, the harsh memories overwhelmed by the gentleness, the love,
and the warm memories of her youth with Elbryan: the time when he had pulled
her hair and she had laid him out flat; the times when his friends had teased
him, but he'd stood up to them, not denying his feelings for the girl; their
long talks and walks on the northern slope; that moment on the slope when they
shared in the vision of the Halo; that moment on the ridge when they first
kissed―yes, that moment of the kiss!―and this time, it did not end
in blackness and screams, but went on and on, kissing and touching, feeling
each other wholly. They had shared lives and were bonded by common memories, by
love lost and love found, and though they hadn't been together in years, they
each knew everything about the other, the truth of the moment.
They lay
together for a long time afterward, nestled in their cloaks, saying nothing,
staring at the fire. Elbryan got up once to add wood to the fire, and Pony
laughed at him as he hopped about, naked, his bare feet stumbling on the cold
ground. She pulled the blanket tight about her when he returned, not letting
him in.
But her
smile gave away her true feelings, the warmth of it egging Elbryan on until he tackled
her and fought with her, and then he was under the blanket again, their bodies
pressed together, and for Pony, all the world was spinning once more.
Untamed,
uncontrollable, fearfully strong.
Later, he
was above her, looking down at her in the light of the low fire.
"My
Pony," he whispered. "How empty was my life, so empty that I had not
the heart even to recognize the hole in it. Only now, when you have returned to
me, do I understand how empty it had been, how meaningless."
"Never
that."
He nodded,
denying her words. "My Pony," he said again. "The colors of the
world are returned to me."
Then he
closed his eyes and kissed her.
The night
deepened about them, the wind moaned through the trees and those few birds that
braved the northern winter whistled. Somewhere in the distance a wolf howled,
and another took up the song, and for Elbryan, the music was sweeter now than
ever before, than even in those years he had spent in the enchanted elven
forest.
He fell into
a most contented sleep, but Pony did not. She lay awake all the night, Elbryan
close to her, Elbryan one with her. She thought of Connor and her wedding
night, of the black memories that had swallowed her. Unconsciously, she rubbed
the palm of her hand, burned once so long ago by glowing embers.
Now, for the
first time, Pony saw those memories clearly, heard the screams of Dundalis, saw
the fires and the carnage, saw Olwan die in the grasp of a giant, and in her
mind, she crawled again under the burning house, into the darkness.
Only this
time, they were just memories and not threatening black demons. This time, with
Elbryan beside her, with Elbryan a part of her strength, she could face them
and accept them.
Teats
streamed down her cheeks, but they were honest tears for the loss of Dundalis;
when they were gone, when the moment of grief at long last was past, Pony
hugged sleeping Elbryan close and smiled, truly free for the first time since
that moment on the ridge, since the moment of her first kiss.
CHAPTER 37
Catch of the Day
"Damn
me," the skinny, nervous man whimpered, skittering away from the noose
trap and from the ugly humanoid creature hanging from it. "Damn me, oh,
damn me! Cric! Cric!"
He realized
soon enough that his screaming would only bring in more of these creatures, if
any were about, so he slapped a hand over his own mouth and tumbled down to the
field, his free hand moving to one of the many daggers on his broad shoulder
belts. He found little cover, however, for though the grass was tall, it was
sparse, with only a few blades sticking up through the blanket of light snow.
A few
moments later, Chipmunk breathed a little easier as a bald, lean man rushed
into view, his sword at the ready. "Chipmunk?" Cric called softly.
"Chipmunk, are ye here?"
Chipmunk
scrambled to his feet and ran for his friend, tripping and falling several
times on the slippery ground.
"What
do ye know?" Cric asked him repeatedly as he stumbled to approach.
Finally, Chipmunk caught up to his friend, but he was too excited to explain in
words. He hopped up and down, pointing back across the field to a small copse
of trees.
"Our
trap?" the bald man asked calmly.
Chipmunk
nodded so rapidly that he bit his tongue.
"What'd
we catch something?"
Again the
wild nod.
"Something
unusual?"
Chipmunk was
in no mood for any further questions. He grabbed Cric by the arm and shoved him
ahead in the direction of the copse. Cric straightened and, seeing that
Chipmunk would not be following, just shook his head and went alone to the
trap.
A minute
later, there came a howl from the trees and Cric ran from the spot nearly as
quickly as had Chipmunk.
"It's a
g-goblin!" the tall man sputtered. "A damned goblin!"
"We got
to get Paulson," reasoned Chipmunk, to which Cric only nodded and ran off,
the skinny man in close pursuit.
They found
barrel-chested Paulson, their leader, sitting, relaxing against the sunny side
of a wide elm, his ragged boots standing off to the side, his dirty toes
wriggling near a small fire. The pair slowed as they approached, knowing that
to disturb Paulson usually meant a slap on the head.
Cric
motioned for Chipmunk to approach the man, but Chipmunk only motioned back.
"State
yer business," Paulson demanded under half-closed eyelids. "And yer
business better be worth stating!"
"We
caught something," Cric remarked.
Paulson
opened his eyes and rubbed a hand across a face that was more scar than beard.
"Good pelt?" he asked.
"No
pelt," said Chipmunk.
"No
fur," added Cric. "Just skin."
"What?"
Paulson sat up straight and reached for his boots. "Don't ye tell me ye hanged
a man now!"
"Not a
man," said Chipmunk.
"It's a
damned goblin!" spouted Cric.
Paulson's
face went suddenly grave. "A goblin?" he echoed quietly.
Both men
nodded eagerly.
"Just
one?"
Again the
nods.
"Ye
damned fools," scolded Paulson. "Don't ye know there's no such thing
as 'just one' goblin?"
"We
should go home,`' said Chipmunk.
Paulson
looked all around, then shook his head. Cric and Chipmunk were fairly new to
the area, having come north a little more than three years before, but Paulson
had lived on the border of the Wilderlands for most of his life, had been
living just outside Weedy Meadow when the goblin raid had flattened Dundalis.
"We got to find out how many," he replied, "and find out where
they're heading."
"Aw,
who's to care for the folk o' Dundalis?" asked a frightened Cric.
"They never cared any for us."
"Yeah,"
added Chipmunk.
"It's
more than for them," said Paulson. "For ourselves. If goblins're
coming hard, then we'd be wise to go south for a bit."
"Can't
we just go south then, anyway?" asked Cric.
"Shut
yer mouth and keep yer sword ready," Paulson ordered. "Goblins ain't
so tough―it's their numbers ye got to fear. And their friends," he
added grimly, "for goblins and giants get on well."
The other
two were trembling.
"But
all we got to do is see them afore they see us," the burly man went on.
"Might be that there's a bounty on goblin ears."
That seemed
to catch the pair's attention.
The three
went back to the trap first, Paulson unceremoniously cutting the goblin down,
then slicing off its ears and putting them in a pouch, pausing only to note
that the creature was surprisingly well armed for one of its kind and that it
wore an insignia on its leather jerkin, a black emblem of a batlike creature on
a light gray background. Paulson didn't think too much of it, figuring that the
jerkin was stolen anyway.
"Not
been here more than a few hours," Paulson announced, after a quick
inspection, of the body. "If this one traveled with friends, then they're
likely still about." The creature's tracks through the copse were not hard
to follow, but any marks it had made on the open field beyond had been erased
by the wind. Still, just by the direction from which it had entered the copse,
the trackers could make a reasonable guess about where it had come from, and so
they set off quickly across the field and into the forest.
Chipmunk
found the first goblin sign―three sets of tracks with one branching back
the way the three men had come, the other two moving off down a different fork
in the trail.
"Well,
now we're outnumbering them," Paulson said wickedly, the big man never
fearful of a fight.
Less than a
mile on, they spotted the goblin pair, resting amid a tumble of rocks on a
forested hillside. Paulson drew out his large sword and motioned for Cric to go
in at his side, while Chipmunk was to go to the higher ground around to the
right, getting an angle for his dagger throws.
"Hard
and fast?" Cric whispered.
Paulson
considered the words, then shook his head. He held Cric back, hiding behind
some scrub, while agile Chipmunk worked his way into position. Then Paulson
started out, slowly, pacing evenly and calmly toward the goblin pair. He and
Cric were within a dozen strides before the goblins spotted them, and then how
the creatures howled!
They jumped
to their feet, one producing a long, iron-tipped spear, the other a
well-fashioned short sword. Paulson was surprised that these two, like their
dead comrade, were so well armed and also that their jerkins so closely
resembled the one on the dead goblin, even down to the emblem. The large man's
knowledge of goblins simply didn't reconcile with this sight before him.
Nor did the
goblins act in any manner that Paulson would have expected. He and Cric came on
fast, but only one goblin, the spear wielder, jumped out to meet them, blocking
the way, covering its companion's sudden retreat.
Both
swordsmen came in fast; the goblin swished the spear back and forth, the
weapon's sharp tip scratching Cric’s arm and holding him at bay. Paulson
stepped inside the range and caught the spear by the shaft and rushed up its
length, quickly and efficiently embedding his sword deep in the creature's
chest.
"Two
more ears!" Cric laughed, but Paulson wasn't thinking along those lines
just then.
"Get
him, Chipmunk!" he called.
The fleeing
goblin angled up the hill, and Chipmunk moved to intercept, sliding to his
knees and sending a pair of daggers spinning at the goblin. The creature
managed to dodge one, but the other caught it on the hip and hung there:
The goblin
squealed but hardly slowed, even when Chipmunk's next blade stuck deep into its
shoulder.
Then the
goblin was out of throwing range, and Chipmunk fell in with Paulson and Cric,
taking up the chase. Tall Cric was by far the fastest of the three and he
forged ahead, gaining steadily on the goblin as it scrambled down the back side
of the hill, then over the wooded floor of the next valley. The creature went
up over a rise, Cric in close pursuit, and Paulson howled out for his companion
to "take the damned thing down!"
Cric went up
to the top of the hill, eager, sword ready, and then, to the surprise of his
two friends, he skidded to a stop.
When Paulson
and Chipmunk caught up to him, they understood his hesitance, for there, in a
wide valley below the ridge, loomed the largest army that any of the three had
ever seen―and both Cric and Paulson had spent a few years in the
Kingsmen. All the valley was filled with tents and campfires; a thousand,
thousand forms milled about down below, most seeming about goblin-sized, some
even smaller, but with a fair number of fomorian giants among them. Even more
surprising to the three men were the war engines, a dozen at least, great
catapults and spear-throwing ballistae, and huge corkscrew devices, obviously
for burrowing through fortified walls.
"How
far south were you planning to move?" Cric asked Paulson.
To the
barrel-chested man at that moment, Behren seemed a distinct possibility.
"I'm
knowing that ye're up to something no good!" the centaur roared. "An
assumption I'm sure to make every time I glance upon yer ugly faces!"
Bradwarden had heard the stirring in the small ramshackle hut and, upon
investigation, had found the three trappers packing their gear, stripping
everything from the shack walls.
The three
men glanced nervously at one another. Even huge Paulson seemed a small thing
indeed when standing before the eight-hundred-pound centaur―and the
creature's demeanor at that moment made him even more imposing.
"Well?"
boomed Bradwarden. "Have ye an explanation?"
"We're
leaving, that's all," said Chipmunk.
"Leaving?"
"Going
south," Cric added, ready to concoct an appropriate lie, but when Paulson
glared at him, the tall, bald man went silent.
"What
did ye do, then?" demanded Bradwarden. "I know ye―ye'd not be
leaving if ye hadn't angered someone." The centaur backed off a bit, then
smiled, thinking he had it figured out. "Ye got Nightbird on yer
trail," he reasoned.
"We
ain't seen the ranger in weeks," Paulson protested.
"But
ye've seen his friends," said Bradwarden. "Might be that ye've killed
one o' his friends."
"No
such thing!" growled Paulson.
"Goblins
ain't no friend o' the Nightbird!" added Chipmunk before he could properly
think his words through. Cric pushed the skinny man hard, and Paulson's glare
promised Chipmunk that he meant to do him even more harm for his slip.
Bradwarden
backed off a step, eyeing the three curiously. "Goblins?"
"Did I
say goblins?" Chipmunk asked innocently, trying to backtrack.
"Ye
did!" Bradwarden roared, ending any forthcoming lies from the man and his
two companions. "Ye said goblins, and if there be goblins about, and ye
know o' them, then tell yer tale in full, or be sure that I'll trample ye down
to the dirt!"
"Goblins,"
Paulson said grimly. "Thousands of goblins. We seen them, and want no part
o' them." He went on to recount the tale in full, and ended by dropping
four goblin ears to the ground before Bradwarden.
Paulson then
asked the centaur to be gone so that he and his friends might finish their
packing and be on their way, but Bradwarden wouldn't let them get away that
easily. They would go with him, the centaur decided, to find Elbryan and Pony
and tell their tale once again. The three trappers weren't keen on the idea of
wasting a single moment, but neither were they ready to battle the fierce
centaur.
They found
the pair and Brother Avelyn at Elbryan's camp just north of Dundalis, nestled within
the shelter of a grove of closely growing spruce trees. Bradwarden called out
long before his group approached―Elbryan could set a trap as well as any
elf, and the ranger was always on his guard. The ranger invited the centaur in,
of course, but was surprised indeed to find his half-horse friend in the
company of such rogues.
"I
believe that Mr. Paulson there has a tale ye'll be wanting to hear,"
Bradwarden explained.
Paulson laid
it out simply and to the point, and his words hit especially hard on Pony and
on Elbryan. For Pony, the possibility of an approaching goblin army sent her
mind careening back to the day of the tragedy, threatening to overwhelm her
with feelings she had only recently reconciled.
For Elbryan,
though, the trapper's tale was more complicated. While he, too, carried those
terrible memories within him, he also had his sense of duty. How many times had
the ranger told himself that he would not allow such a tragedy to befall
Dundalis again? And here, before him, loomed the threat, the same threat. For
Pony, it took great strength to master her fears, to keep her wits about her;
for Elbryan, it was simply a matter of duty and pride.
The ranger
took a stick from the edge of the low fire and drew a rough map of the area on
the ground. "Show me the exact location," he ordered Paulson, and the
man readily complied, understanding that if Elbryan wasn't satisfied, the
ranger would probably force him to go along, the better to investigate.
Elbryan
paced about the campfire, looking down often at the map.
"They
must be told," Pony said.
Elbryan
nodded.
"On the
word of these three?" Bradwarden asked incredulously.
The ranger
looked from Paulson to the centaur, then nodded again. "It is never too
soon to issue a warning," he said.
Paulson
appeared vindicated, but Elbryan wasn't ready to concede that the man's words
were true. "I will go north," the ranger said, "to this place
described."
"I'll
not go with ye," Paulson protested.
Elbryan
shook his head, " I will fly fast, too fast for you." He looked at
Bradwarden, and the centaur nodded, understanding the plea and more than ready
to go along with his ranger friend.
"You,"
Elbryan said to Paulson, "and your friends will go to End-o'-the-World,
bearing word of warning."
Paulson held
out his hand to quiet Cric and Chipmunk, their protests and fears bubbling up
in the form of unintelligible whimpers. "And then?" Paulson wanted to
know.
"Where
your heart takes you," Elbryan replied. "You owe me nothing, I say,
beyond this one favor."
"We're
owing ye even that?" Paulson asked skeptically.
Elbryan's
grim nod was all the reply that the man was going to get, a poignant reminder
of that day in the trappers' shack when the ranger had shown mercy.
"End-o'-the-World,"
Paulson agreed angrily. "And we'll tell the fools, but I'm not thinking
that they'll be listening."
Elbryan
nodded and looked at Pony. "Weedy Meadow," he instructed. "You
and Avelyn."
"And
what of Dundalis?" the woman asked.
"Bradwarden
and I will return to Dundalis with word of the goblins," the ranger
explained. "But first, we will return here." The ranger pointed down
at the map with his stick, to a spot on the map northwest of Dundalis, a point
nearly equidistant from Dundalis and Weedy Meadow, and not much further from
End-o'-the-World.
"The
grove?" Pony asked.
Elbryan
nodded. "A diamond-shaped grove of fir trees," he explained to the
trappers.
"I'm
knowing the spot," said Paulson, "and not much caring for it."
Elbryan
wasn't surprised by that response―likely the same elven magic that drew
the ranger to the grove made a rogue like Paulson feel uncomfortable around it.
"One week, then," the ranger explained. He looked to Paulson.
"If you go straight to the south from End-o'-the-World, be certain that
the folk of the town know where I can be found."
Paulson
waved him away, the man seeming quite displeased by it all.
Elbryan
motioned to Bradwarden. "Symphony is about," the ranger said
confidently.
Before the
next dawn, the ranger and the centaur were racing to the north, Bradwarden
working hard to keep up with magnificent Symphony.
Avelyn and
Pony, walking side by side, set a more gradual pace, for they figured that they
could arrive in Weedy Meadow before the nightfall.
The road was
a bit longer for Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk, but though the latter two pressed
Paulson hard for desertion, telling him every step of the way that they should
abandon End-o'-the-World and go straight on to the south―all the way to
Palmaris, perhaps―the big man, duty-bound for the first time in years,
would hear nothing of it. He had given his word, to the ranger that he would go
and warn the folk of End-o'-the-World, and so he would.
Pony and
Avelyn had underestimated the distance and camped outside Weedy Meadow that
night, the monk reasoning that it would be better for them to go into town with
such grim warnings during the brightness of day. They rested easily in the
quiet forest, having learned much of camp building from Elbryan over the last
few days, and Pony was soon asleep.
She awakened
to the screams of Avelyn, the fat man in the throes of a nightmare, rolling
about on the ground. Finally Pony managed to stir him from his slumber, and the
look upon his face as he stared at her was one of madness, one that sent chills
up and down Pony's spine.
Avelyn
lifted his hand and opened it, revealing several small stones, the burned smoky
quartz that he had taken from the corpse of Brother Quintall.
"I felt
that they had magic left in them," the fat monk explained. "Distance
sight is their trademark."
"You
looked for the goblins," Pony reasoned.
"And I
saw them, my girl," said Avelyn, "a vast host. Paulson did not
exaggerate!"
Pony
breathed hard and nodded.
"But
that was not all!" Avelyn said to her, grabbing and shaking her. "I
was compelled beyond the army. Compelled I say, pulled by the magic of the
stones, by a distant power that long ago attuned itself to these special
stones."
Pony looked
at him curiously, not really understanding.
"Something
terrible is awake in Corona, my girl!" Avelyn spouted. "The dactyl
walks Corona!"
The words
were nothing new to Pony; Avelyn had been making such claims for a very long
time. Indeed, he had spouted similar words in the common room in Tinson on the
night Pony had first met him. This time, though, there was something more to
the claim, something personal. Always Avelyn had been firm in his belief, but
now his expression showed him to be far beyond simple belief. At that moment,
in the light of a dying fire, Pony had no doubt that Avelyn's knowledge of the
awakened dactyl was now something more than the suspicions aroused by ancient
texts. It was something entirely personal.
"So
there ye have it," Bradwarden said quietly, ominously, he and Elbryan
looking out over a vast field of dark tents. "Them three wasn't
lying."
"Or
even exaggerating," Elbryan added in subdued tones. When first he had
crested this ridge, looking down upon the massive army setting its camp, the
ranger's heart had dropped. How could the folk of Dundalis, Weedy Meadow, and
End-o'-the-World resist such an army, even if all of them stood together behind
fortified walls?
They could
not, of course.
And it was
quite obvious that this force was moving southward. The army was many miles
below the spot where Paulson, Cric, arid Chipmunk had indicated they had seen
it, and the swath the goblins and giants had cut in the forest on the northern
side of the encampment was visible even from this southern ridge.
"We'll
find us a hole to hide in," Bradwarden said calmly. "Goblins been
through afore, and'll be through again. I've waited them out afore, and I'll
wait them out again!'."
"We
need to know more of their intentions," Elbryan said suddenly, drawing a
curious stare from the centaur.
"Not so
hard to figure out what a goblin means to do," Bradwarden replied dryly.
Elbryan was
shaking his head before the centaur ever finished. "This is
different," he explained. "Goblins and giants should not be together
in so large a group. And working in concert," he added, sweeping his arm
across the panorama of the encampment, indicating the disciplined manner in
which the creatures were organizing their camp. "And what of those?"
he went on, pointing to a dozen huge war engines circled on the far end of the
camp.
"They're
a bit hungrier this time, is all," replied Bradwarden. "So they'll
kill a few more than usual, maybe sack two towns instead of one. It's an old
tale, me friend, repeated again and again, though always do ye human folk seem
surprised when it falls on yer heads."
Elbryan
didn't believe it, not this time, not in looking at that military camp. He
glanced to the left, taking note that the sun was touching the horizon. "I
have to go" he remarked.
"Do ye
now?" the centaur asked sarcastically.
Elbryan
slipped down from Symphony and handed his reins to Bradwarden. "Scout the
area," he said. "See if any branches of the army have moved past our
location. I will return at the setting of Sheila to this spot or to the back of
the next ridge if the goblins have claimed this area as their own."
Bradwarden
knew that it was futile to argue with the stubborn ranger.
Elbryan made
his way from tree to tree, to bush and to the back of hills, moving ever closer
to the great army. Soon, goblin scouts were about him, walking through the
trees, talking in their whining voices, complaining about this or that, about
the fit of their uniforms or some particularly nasty commander who talked more
with his whip than his voice. Elbryan couldn't make out every word; the goblins
were using the language spoken by the common folk of Corona, but the creatures'
accents were so thick, their slang so heavy, that the ranger could only get a
general impression of their conversation.
That
impression did little to calm Elbryan's fears. The goblins were speaking of
being a part of an army, that much was certain.
Elbryan got
his next surprise an hour later. The ranger was up in a tree, lying low across
a thick branch barely ten feet from the ground when a group of soldiers walked
into the clearing below the tree. Three were goblins, but the fourth, holding
the torch, was a creature the ranger had never before seen, a dwarf,
barrelchested but spindly limbed, wearing a red cap.
A cap red
with blood, Elbryan knew, for though he had never seen a powrie before, he
remembered well the childhood tales of the wicked dwarves.
The four
decided to rest right at the base of the wide-spreading tree. Fortunately for
Elbryan, none of the creatures bothered to look up into the tangle of branches.
The ranger
wasn't sure how to proceed. He felt that he should steal that bloody cap, as
further proof for the townsfolk that danger was sweeping their way. Reports of
goblins would do little more than stir up some interest and maybe incite a few
patrols, Elbryan knew, a response he remembered from his own days as a
villager. But a bloody cap tossed in their midst, proof that powries were in
the region, might scare more than a few folk from their homes, might send them
running down the road to the south.
How to get
the cap, though?
Stealthy
thievery seemed the order of the day. The four were down and resting; perhaps
they would drift off to sleep. One of the goblins brought out a bulging
waterskin, and as soon as the creature poured some of the foaming liquid into a
mug, Elbryan knew that it held some potent drink indeed.
Elbryan's
blood began to boil with rage as the goblins talked of flattening the towns and
killing all the men, as they described in detail the pleasures that might be
had before they killed the women.
The young
man found his breath hard to draw; the brutish talk brought him back to that
awful day in his youth, made him see again the carnage in Dundalis, made him
hear again the screams of his family and his friends.
All thoughts
of stealthy thievery flew from the fierce ranger's mind.
A few
minutes later, one of the goblins went off a short distance into the brush to
relieve itself. Elbryan could still see the creature, a darker spot in the
brush, its back to him, swaying back and forth as it watered a bush.
The ranger
shifted slowly to a sitting position. He lifted an arrow to Hawkwing's string
and gently pulled back. He glanced down at the other three, growing louder and
more boisterous as they drank deeply. The dwarf was telling some rowdy story,
the two goblins laughing riotously at every grotesque detail.
Elbryan
measured the words, waiting a moment longer, sensing that the dwarf was at some
high point.
Hawkwing's
bowstring hummed, the arrow flying true, diving into the back of the peeing
goblin's head. The creature gave a slight moan and tumbled headlong into the
brush.
The dwarf
stopped abruptly and hopped to its feet, staring out into the night.
The goblins
were still laughing, though, one of them making some crude remark that its
companion probably passed out on top of its own urine.
The dwarf
wasn't so sure and waved the pair to silence, then motioned for them to move
out a bit.
Up on the
branch, the ranger fitted two arrows to his bow, one above the other and drew
back the string. The two goblins paced out in front of the dwarf, side by side,
calling softly to their missing companion, though neither seemed
over-concerned.
Elbryan
shifted his bow to horizontal, took careful aim, and let fly. The arrows
whipped out, not quite parallel, their angle separating them as they flew. They
were two feet apart as each burrowed into its respective goblin, dropping the
creatures where they stood. One made not a sound, the other, hit below a lung,
let out an agonized howl.
Elbryan
leaped from the branch, letting fly another arrow in midair, this one silencing
the wounded goblin forever. The ranger hit the ground in a roll, flicked the
feathered tip and string from Hawkwing, and came to his feet, staff at the
ready.
The dwarf
was ready, too, a two-headed flail spinning in its hands. It came on in a wild
rush, showing no sign of fear.
Elbryan
leaped back, easily avoiding the short reach of the flail, then stepped ahead
and poked hard with the tip of his staff, smacking the dwarf right in the face.
The stout
creature hardly slowed, rushing ahead, whipping its flail back and forth.
Elbryan
dodged and darted out to the side and, when the dwarf turned to chase, swinging
its weapon with extended arms, Elbryan presented his staff vertically, both
balls of the flail wrapping about it.
The ranger
pulled hard, expecting to take the weapon from the dwarf's hand, but the powrie
was stronger than Elbryan believed, and only pulled back even harder. Always
ready to improvise, Elbryan eased his muscles and ran straight ahead into the
dwarf, turning his staff to smash its tip into the dwarf's face once more.
Elbryan
tugged again and the chained balls slipped off the staff's end, freeing both
weapons. The ranger had the advantage, though, and he batted Hawkwing back and
forth, clubbing the dwarf twice on either side of its hard head.
The powrie
retreated a step and shook its head fiercely, then, to Elbryan's disbelief,
came charging right back in. Its swing was awkward, the flail coming in from a
wide angle, and Elbryan thrust his staff out that way in one hand, enwrapping
the balls once more. The ranger stepped straight ahead, cupped his fingers,
flattened his palm, and slammed the powrie with a series of short heavy blows,
each one snapping the dwarf's head back.
His attacks
showing little effect, the ranger spun to the side, grabbed up his staff in
both hands, and tugged hard, pulling the flail free of the powrie's grasp and
launching it across the clearing. Sensing that the furious dwarf would be
charging again, Elbryan came all the way around and jabbed Hawkwing hard into
the creature's throat, stopping it in its tracks.
The ranger
spun again and smashed the staff down diagonally across the powrie's jaw,
cracking bone, but the dwarf only growled and pursued. Elbryan simply could not
believe the punishment this creature had accepted!
The powrie
dipped its broad shoulder, trying to tackle the ranger. Elbryan set his feet
and launched a vicious uppercut jab with the staff, using the powrie's momentum
against it.
But still
the dwarf came on, locking its thin arms about Elbryan's waist and squeezing
him tight, driving him back toward the trunk of the huge tree.
The ranger
dropped Hawkwing, reached behind him to his pack, and tore free his hatchet.
With a growl, he chopped it down hard on the back of the powrie's neck.
Still the
dwarf drove him backward.
Elbryan hit
the creature again and again, then nearly lost his weapon when he collided with
the tree, the powrie's legs driving on, as if the dwarf meant to push him right
through the bark.
And given
the unearthly strength of the dwarf, Elbryan wondered if the creature might
actually do so!
Now the
ranger's arm pumped frantically, and finally after perhaps the tenth blow, the
powrie's grasp at last loosened.
Elbryan
timed his maneuver, hit the dwarf once more, then spun out to the side, and the
overbalanced, semiconscious powrie ran headlong into the tree, hugging it now,
holding on to it dearly, for if the dwarf let go, it knew it would fall to the
ground.
Elbryan
walked up behind the creature and bashed his hatchet with all his strength into
the back of the dwarf's neck, splintering bone. The powrie whimpered, but held
on.
Elbryan,
horrified, hit it again, and the dwarf slumped to its knees, finally dead, but
still hugging the tree.
Elbryan
looked at his weapons, so ineffective against the sturdy powrie. "I need a
sword," the ranger lamented. He took the dwarf's cap and gathered up
Hawkwing, quickly replacing the feathered tip and stringing the weapon. As he
started out of the clearing, he heard a gasp, and turned and fitted an arrow so
fluidly and quickly that the newest goblin that had stumbled upon the scene
hardly moved before an arrow took it through the throat; ,sending it stumbling
backward into another tree.
Elbryan's
next shot pierced its heart and drove deep into the tree behind it, and the
goblin slumped, quite dead, but standing, pegged to the tree.
The ranger
ran off, arriving at the appointed spot as the moon settled behind the western
horizon. Bradwarden and Symphony were waiting for him, the centaur bearing ill
news. A section of the army had indeed broken off from this main group, so the
tracks had shown, heading south and west.
"End-o'-the-World,"
Elbryan reasoned.
"They're
near to the place already," said Bradwarden, "if not sleeping in the
village itself."
Elbryan
hopped up on Symphony. There would be no sleep for him this night, he knew, nor
the next.
CHAPTER 38
Mercy Repaid
"Remain
here," Elbryan bade Bradwarden when the pair reached the diamond-shaped
grove, "or in the region, at least. See what the news is from Weedy Meadow
and prepare the folk of Dundalis for the decision that will soon be before
them."
"The
humans aren't much for talking to the likes of a centaur," Bradwarden
reminded the ranger. "But I'll see what I can see and set me animal
friends about to the north and west, looking for goblin sign. Ye're for
End-o'-the-World, then?"
Elbryan
nodded. "I pray that I arrive in time, or that the three trappers got word
to the folk."
"Pray
for the second, for hoping for the first, I fear, will be a waste o' yer
time," Bradwarden replied. "And for the trappers, pray instead that the
folk're smart enough to heed their words."
Elbryan
nodded grimly and tugged his reins, swinging Symphony about. The stallion was
already lathered from the long run south, but Symphony had more heart than any
other horse and understood his rider's urgency. Off the stallion pounded
through the predawn forest, running on all through the next day. From one high
hillock, Elbryan noted hopefully that no smoke appeared in the west, that
End-o'-the-World apparently was not burning.
Elbryan
first noticed the ghostly figures moving through the mist as twilight
descended. The ranger still had a dozen miles before him to get to
End-o'-the-World, and so shapes moving through the forest, moving eastward, did
not bade well. He brought Symphony up behind a thick tangle of white birch and
strung Hawkwing, ready to fight all the way to the westernmost village if need
be.
Somewhere
not far ahead and to the side, a small shadow glided through the trees, a
slender form not much higher than Elbryan's waist. The ranger put up his bow
and drew back, finding the mark. He saw the form stumble out of some brush and
stagger along the trail. It was the right size for a goblin―a small
one―but the way it moved did not seem right to the perceptive ranger.
This was not a lead soldier in an army's march, but one exhausted, in desperate
flight. The ranger waited a few moments longer as the figure neared, as it came
out into a clearing under the moonlight.
A young boy,
no more than ten years.
Elbryan
prodded Symphony into a short gallop, too quickly for the frightened youngster
to scramble away. The ranger bent low to the side and caught the fleeing boy
under the arm, easily hoisting him up into the saddle, trying to quiet his
cries.
A movement
from the other side caught the ranger's attention. He pushed down hard to
secure the squirming youngster and swung about, Hawkwing in his free hand,
ready to fend off an attack.
The would be
attacker skidded to an abrupt stop, recognizing the man.
"Paulson,"
Elbryan breathed.
"And to
yerself, Nightbird," the large man replied. "Be easy on the boy. He's
been through the fighting."
Elbryan
looked down to his diminutive captive. "End-o'-the-World?" he asked.
Paulson
nodded grimly.
Other people
walked into the small clearing then, dirty, many with wounds, and all with that
hollow, shocked expression showing that they had just come through hell.
"Goblins
and giants hit the place two days after we arrived," Paulson explained.
"And
dwarves," added Cric, coming into the clearing beside Chipmunk.
"Nasty folk!"
"Powries,"
remarked Elbryan, holding up the cap he had procured.
"We got
some o' the folk on the road south before the fight," Paulson went on,
"some smart enough to hear our words o' doom. But most stayed.
Stubborn."
Elbryan
nodded, thinking of his own village. Few in Dundalis would have left even if
they knew a goblin force was coming to avenge the goblin that had been killed
by the hunting party. They would have stayed and fought and died, because
Dundalis was their home and, in truth, they had nowhere else to go.
"They
came in hard, Nightbird," Paulson went on, shaking his head, "and in
numbers I'd not've believed possible had I not seen the army in the north for
meself. We got out, me and Cric and Chipmunk, and we took about a score of folk
with us, running blind through the woods these few days, thinking that we've
got goblins on our heels all the way."
Elbryan
closed his eyes, sympathetic to the tale, understanding completely the plight
of these people, the horrible emptiness that some of them now felt, the
complete hopelessness.
"There
is a sheltered meadow two hundred yards from this spot," Elbryan told
Paulson, the ranger pointing back the way he had come. "Take your band
there and huddle together to fend off the cold. I will scout out the lands west
and return quickly, that we might make our choice."
Paulson gave
a quick nod. "We could be using some rest," he admitted.
Elbryan let
the boy down to Paulson's waiting grasp, and the ranger was touched by how
gently the bearish man handled the youngster. He sat for a while atop Symphony,
regarding the refugees, wondering what he might do for these people.
Then he set
off, riding hard through the moonlit woods. He was out an hour and more before
he decided that there were no goblins in the area, no dwarves, and certainly no
giants. Elbryan thought that a curious thing; why hadn't the wretched humanoids
pursued the fleeing humans? And why, he wondered, had the western sky been
clear of smoke? Surely the goblins would have burned End-o'-the-World, as they
had burned Dundalis years before.
Back at the
sheltered meadow, Elbryan gave his permission for the refugees to start a
couple of low fires. It was risky setting a light in the dark forest, but these
folk sorely needed the warmth.
Elbryan
slipped down from Symphony at the side of the meadow, bade the horse to stay in
the area and listen close for his call, then he went into. the small encampment
and found a place about the fire with the three trappers.
"I
would have thought that you three would take the south road with those who were
wise enough to flee," Elbryan remarked after a short, uncomfortable silence.
The ranger noted then the way Cric looked hard at Paulson, the way Paulson kept
his own gaze low to the fire.
"Wasn't
time," the big man replied unconvincingly.
Elbryan
paused for a long while, studying Paulson, trying to find some clue to this
uncharacteristically chivalrous action. Finally, Paulson looked up, locking
stares with the ranger.
"So
we're with ye, then," the big man growled. "But don't ye think for a
moment that we three give a beaver's damn for Honce-the-Bear or any town
between here and Ursal!"
"Then
why?" Elbryan asked simply.
Paulson
looked down at the fire. He stood up and kicked a stick that had fallen from
the flames, then walked off.
Elbryan
looked at the man's companions. Cric motioned across the way to the boy Elbryan
had captured.
"Paulson
had a boy once," Cric explained, "about the same years as that one.
Fell from a tree and breaked his neck."
"That
one there lost his folk, by me own guess," Chipmunk added.
"You
could have gotten away," said Elbryan, "to the south."
Cric started
to respond, eagerly and angrily, it seemed to Elbryan, but the tall man went
silent as Paulson stormed back over to the fire.
"And
I'm not liking smelly goblins!" the large man snarled. "I mean to get
me enough goblin ears so that a single gold piece bounty'll put me in a big
house with a dozen serving wenches on a hundred acres o' land!"
Elbryan
nodded and smiled, trying to calm the brute, but Paulson only kicked the dirt
again and stormed away. It was more than any bounty, the ranger knew. And,
given the fact that Cric and Chipmunk had remained, it was more than the tale
of a child lost. These three, for all their faults and all their vocal
protests, carried some degree of humanity within them. Whatever complaints Cric
and Chipmunk might offer, they had remained in the area because of the
refugees, out of simple compassion.
In the end,
Elbryan hardly cared what reason Paulson or the others gave for staying. Given
the increasingly desperate situation about him, Elbryan was only glad to have
these trappers, fierce fighters who knew the area as well as―or even
better than―he, on his side.
The next
day, Elbryan set the refugees on their way for Dundalis, if possible, though he
gave Paulson several alternate choices, caves and sheltered vales. Then the
ranger set off, riding hard for End-o'-the-World, looking for answers or hints
of what might yet come, and hoping to find more refugees.
The forest
was perfectly quiet as he neared the town. Still, he saw no smoke blackening
the sky. He left Symphony in the forest and moved tree to tree, crossing past
goblin sentries undetected, at last finding a good vantage point on the edge of
the village.
Goblins,
dwarves, and giants swarmed in the place, moving as if this were their home.
Elbryan saw the bodies, dozens of dead, human and humanoid, thrown in a ditch
on the western edge of town, but this was not as the sack of Dundalis had been.
,The buildings showed very little damage; none had been burned. Did the
humanoid army mean to settle here? Or, as the ranger thought much more likely,
did they mean to use End-o'-the-World as a base camp, a supply depot?
Elbryan
didn't like the prospects. From End-o'-the-World, this force could swing south
and then east, cutting off the roads for any people fleeing Weedy Meadow or
Dundalis, the next obvious targets. And if the humanoids didn't sack the town,
that indicated they meant to continue on.
Elbryan
recalled the image of the vast encampment. The humanoids could indeed advance,
and the ranger had to wonder if all the men of Honce-the-Bear could even slow
them.
He could do
nothing here, so he thought, and he turned to leave, picking the course that
would get him back through the forest to Symphony.
Then the
ranger heard the cry, a child's cry, from a house nearby.
Elbryan
squatted low and considered his options. He could hardly leave such a desperate
wail, but if he was caught here, then the information he possessed might never
reach Weedy Meadow or Dundalis. There was more at stake here than his own life.
But the cry
sounded again, seconded by another whimper, that of a woman.
Elbryan
dashed across the clearing between two houses, held still long enough to survey
the area, then ran on to the house in question.
"A meal
for a dog!" he heard inside, a harsh voice, like that of the powrie he had
killed. "You get me some proper food or I'll eat the arm from your ugly
son!"
The woman
cried out again, followed closely by the sound of a sharp slap, then of a body
falling hard to the floor. Elbryan moved along the side of the house, finally
spotting a small window.
The powrie
advanced on the sobbing woman, its hand raised to deliver another heavy blow.
It stopped, though, a couple of feet from its intended victim, looking down at
the woman curiously.
And she
looked at the dwarf, not understanding until the powrie toppled forward, an
arrow deep in its back. The woman looked past it, her eyes wide, to the window,
where stood the ranger, motioning to her and to her son to be quick.
The three
got from house to house, then across the short clearing to the woods. As they
entered the shelter of the trees, they heard a scream from the town.
Elbryan
looked back upon End-o'-the-World to see another powrie come running out of the
house, shouting that there was an archer about.
"Run!"
Elbryan whispered urgently to his companions. They scrambled through the woods
desperately, hearing horns from the town. Elbryan realized that the goblin
sentries would soon be all about them, swanning about the forest.
He saw the
shapes of two such goblins paralleling the movements of his group. Up came
Hawkwing, and two shots later, the immediate threat was ended.
But there
were more, many more, and the pursuit from the town was organized and
systematic, calls from sentries gradually narrowing the possible area.
The three
came upon Symphony, the big stallion pawing the ground and snorting warnings.
Elbryan hoisted the woman onto Symphony's back, into the saddle, then placed
the boy behind her.
"Tell
the centaur what you have seen in End-o'-the-World," he instructed the
woman, who only shook her head as if she didn't understand. "Tell
Bradwarden―remember that name―and all the others that the goblins
will likely move south and east to cut off their escape." The ranger's
tone was adamant, so forceful that the woman finally nodded her consent.
"I will join you as soon as I can."
"Run,"
the ranger instructed the horse, "all the way to the grove to
Bradwarden!"
"What
of you?" the woman asked, grabbing the ranger's hand. "How will you
get away from this place?" Elbryan had no time for answers. He pulled his
hand free, and Symphony leaped away, thundering down the trails, slamming down
two goblins that foolishly jumped in his path to intercept.
Elbryan
watched for a moment, confident that the woman and boy would be safe enough
with Symphony carrying them. Then the ranger turned his attention to his own
predicament, looked about at the many shapes moving among the shadows of the
trees, and listened to the many calls of goblins and dwarves and the fearsome
bellows of giants.
CHAPTER 39
The Difference
They were
readying to attack Weedy Meadow. Elbryan knew that, could hear
it in the shriek of every bird, in the movements of squirrels, agitated by the
presence of such numbers, by the thunder of a giant's step or the rolling war
machines, by the croaks of powrie generals, the eager whines of bloodthirsty
goblins.
They were
readying to attack Weedy Meadow, and Avelyn and Pony had not been able to
convince the townsfolk to leave―not many, anyway, though now with the
storm cloud that was the goblin army hovering about the village, many of the
folk began to recognize their folly.
From a high
vantage point some two miles south of the village, Elbryan saw the villagers
shoring up walls, scrambling about in preparation. None of it would make any
difference, the ranger knew. The only hope for Weedy Meadow's four score people
was to get out of the village and far away. And with the goblins moving in from
all sides, the only possibility of that was with the help of the ranger and his
friends.
But Elbryan
had so few to work with. Besides Pony and Avelyn, who were somewhere down amid
that scrambling group, Elbryan had only the three trappers and Bradwarden. The
refugees from End-o'-the-World Were nowhere near ready for another fight; half
of them hadn't even uttered a word yet. The one advantage on the ranger's side
was his knowledge of the region surrounding Weedy Meadow. The village was
nestled in a land of steep hillsides and narrow valleys, where a hundred
sneaking people might pass unnoticed only a few dozen yards away. This was a
place of natural noises: running streams, cackling birds, and chattering
animals. A living forest, with enough pine and spruce to offer cover even now,
with winter fast holding the land.
"What're
ye thinking?" Bradwarden asked, moving up quietly beside the ranger.
"We
have to get them out."
"Not so
easy a task, I'd be betting," replied the centaur, "else Avelyn and
Pony'd have them far away already." Bradwarden paused, watching Elbryan's
pained features as the man continued to stare to the north. The centaur
understood what the man was feeling, the sense of his own loss those years
before and the helplessness now in the face of a repeat of that disaster.
Bradwarden had watched Elbryan closely these last two days, since he had evaded
the monsters about End-o'-the-World and had crawled out of the forest. Always
had the ranger seemed stoic and often stern, but never as grim as now.
"We'll
get Pony and Avelyn, at least," the centaur offered, "and some
others, I'm not doubting. Most won't go. Ye know that. They'll be staying with
their homes until they see the enemy, then they'll know their doom. Then, it'll
be too late for them."
Elbryan
cocked an eyebrow. "Will it?" he asked simply.
Bradwarden
didn't quite understand. Even if Elbryan and the trappers, all the refugees
from End-o'-the-World, and all the folk of Dundalis went in to bolster the
defenses of Weedy Meadow, the village would be flattened within an hour.
Elbryan knew that as surely as did the centaur, and yet, the sudden gleam of determination
on Elbryan's face left the centaur believing that the man had some plan.
"There,"
Elbryan said, pointing to a position just east of the village, to a pair of
two-thousand-foot-tall mountains, their steep sides white with snow, crossed by
the dark lines of many leafless trees.
"The
valley between those hills is full of boulders and pine groves," the
ranger explained. "Cover enough, if we move the folk quickly."
Elbryan looked down and patted Symphony's muscled neck, knowing full well that
the horse not only understood the plan but would help facilitate it.
"Ye'd
choose the low ground for yer escape?" the centaur asked incredulously.
"Too
many trees," Elbryan answered without hesitation as the puzzle sorted out
before him. "They will get no clear shots or spear throws from
above."
"They'll
come down like a mass o' swooping hawks," Bradwarden protested.
Elbryan
smiled wickedly as he considered those steep hillsides, all of varied angles
and deep with virgin snow. He thought of Avelyn and the magic stones and some
of the properties the monk had explained to him. He thought of Paulson, Cric,
and Chipmunk, and their undeniable skills. "Will they?" he said
calmly, his tone so even and assured that the centaur sucked in his breath and
argued no more.
"How did
you get in here?" Pony asked breathlessly, grabbing Elbryan in a hug as
soon as she spotted him entering the common room at Weedy Meadow. "We know
the goblins are all about."
"Thicker
than you believe," Elbryan agreed, returning the hug tenfold. It felt so
good to him, so warm and fulfilling, that a very large part of the stoic ranger
wanted to whisk Pony away into the night, to run far away from this place and
its troubles and just live peacefully and lovingly.
He could not
do that, could not forsake his duty and the destiny that he had been shown by
the Touel'alfar. For every thought of running away with Pony, the ranger held
five memories of the tragedy that had befallen his own family and community.
Avelyn
bounded over to the pair a moment later, the boisterous monk seeming not so
animated now. "Ah, but they wouldn't go," he wailed at Elbryan.
"They would not listen to our words, and even now, with darkness looming
in the forest, many insist that they will stay and fight."
"Any
who choose to stay and fight will surely die," Elbryan said, loud enough
for several nearby townsfolk to hear. A pair of grizzly men at a table near the
common room entrance stood up, one kicking the table away as he rose. They
glared at Elbryan for a long moment, but finally walked away, moving to the
other side of the large hall.
Undaunted,
Elbryan moved to the long table that served as the bar, and hopped atop it.
"I tell you this only one time," the ranger proclaimed, and the score
of men and half that number of women in the room looked his way, most
disdainfully but some too fearful to show any outrage. "I have just
crawled through the ranks of our enemy, deep lines of goblins and giants and
powrie dwarves."
"Powries?"
one woman echoed.
"Bah, a
tale o' lies," someone answered from one corner.
"Your
only chance will be to get far from this place," Elbryan said bluntly,
tossing the bloodred beret to the floor. "And even now, escape will nor be
easy. I will take those that I can with me tonight, soon after the moon has
set." The ranger paused and glanced around, locking stares with each of
the patrons, letting them see the intensity of his green eyes, the
determination on his face. "As for the rest of you, your window through
the monstrous force will be small and any hesitation will cost you
dearly."
"Who
are you to come in here and give orders?" one man demanded. Agreeing
protests rang from every corner of the room.
True to his
word, the ranger did not repeat his message. He hopped down from the table,
gathered Pony and Avelyn in his wake, and bade them follow him outside, where
they might talk in private.
Elbryan
didn't flinch nor did he look back threateningly when a mug shattered against
the wall beside the exit, a missile obviously aimed at the back of his head.
Elbryan
conferred with Avelyn first, to confirm the potential of the magical stones.
Then he talked more to Pony, who better understood the terrain of this region,
with its hilly forests and many streams.
"They,
too, will come in through that valley," Pony reasoned as Elbryan laid out
the plan before her. "If they are as organized as your description of the
assault on End-o'-the-World indicates, they will not leave so open a route
behind them. They will come in through that valley, and will take the tops of
both hills."
"Not
many will make it through," the ranger promised. "The goblin line
will be thin, and speed and surprise will be our allies. As for those on the
hills, three friends are already preparing for them."
Pony nodded,
not doubting the ranger's words, but still, another part of the plan troubled
her deeply. "How can we place so much hope on animals?" she asked.
Elbryan
looked to Avelyn. "The turquoise," he explained. "It has given
me insight into Symphony's thoughts. I can talk to the horse with my mind, and
he understands. Of that I am sure."
Avelyn
nodded, not doubting the power of the turquoise. The stone, as if it were
something sentient, had called to the monk on that day when he had presented it
to Elbryan and Symphony, and Avelyn, who had floated down the face of a cliff,
who had walked on water and unleashed tremendous fireballs, who had held the
power of a thunderstorm in his puny, mortal hands, would not discount any
possibilities of its God-given power.
"We
have few options," Pony admitted.
"No
other," Elbryan replied.
Avelyn saw
the look that passed between them and he walked away, at first aimlessly but
then turning toward the cabin of the one family―a widow and her three
small children―that the three friends had agreed should leave with the
ranger this night.
Pony and
Elbryan spent a long and quiet moment together, ending it wordlessly with a
kiss that passed as a promise from Elbryan to the woman that she would not be
abandoned, and as a promise from Pony that she and those who would leave would
be ready when the moment of opportunity was upon them.
The ranger
left Weedy Meadow that night, moving through the winding valley east of the
village with the fleeing family. The forest was quiet, but, as Elbryan had
suspected, it was not empty.
"Goblins,"
he mouthed silently to the woman, and he held up his open hand to indicate
their number at five. The ranger had an arrow ready on Hawkwing, but he didn't
want to kill any monsters this night, not in this pass, where any bodies might
alert the army to a possible hole in its raiding fines.
So they sat
tight and waited, the woman working hard to keep her youngest child, a mere
infant, from crying.
The goblins
moved close, so close that the five could hear their whining voices, so close
that the crack of a stick underfoot sounded loud to the ranger and the family.
Elbryan kept
them down, tried to reassure them all by patting the other two children softly,
by showing them his weapons and that he was ready should they be discovered.
The ranger,
lying up front, said nothing when a goblin boot stepped firmly on the cold
ground barely three feet from his head. Elbryan held his breath and clutched
his hand axe, playing out in his mind the quickest and surest attack should the
goblin make any sudden move to indicate that it had spotted the group.
But then the
moment had passed, the goblins wandering on along their patrol route in the
valley, oblivious of the man and his refugees. The goblins' ignorance saved the
creatures' lives that night, for death was barely an arm's length away; more
important, the goblins' ignorance also saved Elbryan's plan.
* * *
The sky
brightened to a dull gray shortly before the dawn, another lazy snowstorm
dropping scattered flakes that floated to and fro during their descent. Elbryan
and Bradwarden, on that same hill far to the south of Weedy Meadow, watched for
the start of it all, for the first signs of the attack they knew would come
this day.
"Ye
left her there," the centaur said unexpectedly.
Elbryan
cocked a curious eyebrow.
"The
girl," the centaur explained. "Yer lover."
"More
than a lover," Elbryan replied.
"And ye
left her there," the centaur went on, "with ten thousand monsters
moving her way."
Elbryan
continued to stare curiously at his half-equine friend, not sure whether
Bradwarden was congratulating him or criticizing him.
"Ye
left the woman ye love in harm's way."
The words
hit Elbryan strangely, showed him a perspective that he had hardly considered.
"It was Pony's choice to stay, her duty―"
"She
could die this day."
"Do you
enjoy torturing me with your words?"
Bradwarden
looked the ranger squarely in the face and laughed heartily.
"Torturing?" he asked. "I'm admiring ye, boy! Ye love the girl,
but ye left her in a town that's about to be sacked!"
"I
trust her," Elbryan protested, too defensive to understand the centaur's
sincerity, "and trust in her."
"So I'm
seeing," said Bradwarden. He put a hand on Elbryan's shoulder and gave the
man a sincere, admiring look. "And that's yer strength. Too many of yer
folk would've forced the girl by their side, to protect her. Ye're smart enough
to see that Pony needs little protecting."
Elbryan
looked back to the north, to Weedy Meadow.
"She
could die this day," Bradwarden said evenly.
"So
could we," Elbryan countered.
"So
could ten thousand goblins." The centaur laughed.
Elbryan
joined in, but the mirth was ended when a streaking line of fire cut across the
sky, a ball of flaming pitch, soaring for Weedy Meadow.
"Powrie
catapult," Bradwarden said dryly.
"Time
to go," replied Elbryan. He gave one last look at the distant village, at
the small fire. that had come up. Pony was in there, in harm's way.
Elbryan
grimaced and let it go. He looked at the centaur, moving steadily ahead of him,
and at first he was angry with Bradwarden for bringing up the grim
possibilities. Until this time, Elbryan hadn't even considered the danger to
Pony on a personal level, so great was his trust in her. She would lead the
people out of Weedy Meadow, he had supposed, and though some of them might be
killed, Pony would not.
Bradwarden
had made him face the truth of this day, and gradually the ranger's anger
became gratitude. He didn't trust Pony any less; he could control his desires
to rush to her side and protect her. Bradwarden had shown him the truth of his
relationship, the true depth of his love and trust for this woman who had come
back into his life. Elbryan nodded and smiled as he regarded the centaur,
sincerely grateful.
"Ho,
ho, what!" the monk bellowed, running to the newest fire, clutching the
sheet of serpentine in his plump hand. Using the magical protection, Avelyn
walked right into the midst of the blaze, standing with flames licking to his
shoulders but smiling widely, to the amazement of those villagers witnessing
the sight.
The monk
fell deeper into the magic of the stone, calling forth its shielding powers,
expanding its area of influence until this particular fire was smothered.
Avelyn came
out of his trance, only to find that another blaze was burning, not so far
away. "Ho, ho, what!" he bellowed again, pushing aside the would-be
village firefighters so that he could use his much more effective method.
Despite the
efforts of the mad friar, the rain of powrie fireballs increased, coupled with
bouncing boulders that smashed more than one home to kindling. One fireball hit
against the village's east wall, splattering the two men standing nearby with
burning pitch. Pony was quick to one, wrapping him in a heavy blanket, and
Avelyn got to the other, using the serpentine effectively.
"The
gray stone!" Pony cried to the monk, indicating the hematite and the badly
burned man on the ground beside her. Avelyn went to him at once and eased his
pain, but the monk's expression turned more grim.
He was
beginning to admit that he could not keep up with the barrage, and he knew that
even this was but a prelude to worse.
Pony left
the man in Avelyn's caring hands and ran about the frantic villagers, berating
them for their folly in staying and reminding them that a way out might soon be
open.
She was not
surprised that now, with fireballs slighting structures by the minute and
boulders crashing down about them, she found more people willing to listen to
Elbryan's plan. Still, despite the flaming evidence, many of the proud and
stubborn folk refused to admit that this was more than a simple goblin raid.
"We'll
push them back," one man argued to her, "chase them into the woods so
far, they'll never find their stinking way out!"
Pony shook
her head, trying to argue, but the man had too much support from the five
fellows standing shoulder-to-shoulder with him along the wall.
"Goblins!"
the man insisted, and he spat at Pony's feet.
The others
started grumbling but went strangely silent an instant later, and Pony looked
up at them, then followed their gaze across the short field that stood between
the village and the edge of the trees.
A pair of
fomorian giants, fifteen feet tall and ten times the weight of a heavy man,
paced back and forth in the shadows, eager to rush the wall.
"Damn
big goblins," Pony replied sarcastically. She looked down at the weapons
the group earned―shovels and pitchforks mostly, with only a single, rusty
old sword among them. Pony had given her own sword to the mother who had left
with had and now she carried only a slender club
and a small axe, weapons that looked puny indeed against the sheer bulk of
those two giants.
She left the
stubborn group with one final reminder. "The east wall," she said
grimly.
She found
Avelyn near that wall, and paused as she approached, seeing a slight bluish
glow among the timbers of the one east gate. She looked at the monk curiously.
Avelyn
shrugged. "I did not know that the serpentine could enact a lasting
barrier," he said, "nor do I know how long I might maintain it. But
be assured that any fires brushing that gate will find no hold."
Pony put a
hand to the monk's broad shoulder, glad indeed to have Brother Avelyn on her
side.
The pair
turned abruptly a moment later when a shout from the north wall told them that
the attack was on.
* * *
Elbryan was
running hard to keep up with Bradwarden; Symphony had taken to the woods,
disappearing as a shadow might when the sun goes behind dark clouds.
"I
cannot slow!" the centaur called, and then he grunted as the ranger
grabbed fast to his tail, the man half running, half flying behind the swift
creature.
They came to
their base camp, where Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk waited.
"They're
filling the valley," Paulson explained, "a long line, goblins mostly,
and not so deep."
"Powries
on the hills," Cric piped in.
"But
the traps are set?" Elbryan asked.
All three
nodded eagerly.
Elbryan
closed his eyes and sent his thoughts out to Symphony, and heard the horse's
response clearly. Satisfied, he looked again at his immediate companions.
"We must pick our targets carefully," the ranger explained. "We
must thin their line wherever we may, and take out any giants or those monsters
that can get out of harm's way." The ranger looked back to the east.
"Let Symphony do the rest," he explained.
The group
started off quietly, Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk going along the base of the
north hill, Elbryan and Bradwarden making their way to the south.
Agile Pony
got to the roof quickly and fell flat to her belly, crawling low as spears
arched over her, as the monstrous horde came on toward the north gate. She
peeked over the edge of the roof, back into the village, and saw that only
three of the five at the wall remained alive, and they were fleeing fast.
The two
giants banged against the fortified wall for a moment, then simply stepped over
it.
Pony held
her breath at that dangerous moment, but fortunately the two giants were too
concerned with the townsfolk to notice her. They strode past into the village,
men and women fleeing before them, screaming, finally admitting their folly in
staying.
"Ho,
ho, what!" came a familiar cry, and Pony looked past the giants to see
Brother Avelyn standing steady before them.
A spear
nearly got the distracted woman. She spun about as a goblin's head appeared
above the edge of the roof. Pony's club sent the monster tumbling away, but she
noted that a hundred more were climbing all about the wall, eager for human
blood. With a growl, the woman threw her club into the face of the closest one,
and it, too, fell back. Then she gave a quick glance to the east, which was
still quiet.
"Damn,"
the woman muttered and she put her legs under her and ran for the southwestern
corner of the roof, leaping far into the air and grabbing the closest giant by
the hair. Her momentum brought her right in front of the monster, their faces
inches apart, and Pony wasted no time in planting her axe into that gruesome
visage.
The giant
howled, the woman fell away, landing in a roll, and the second giant turned to
her, ready to squash her flat.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn bellowed his signature cry, one he used now to release
the mounting energies of the graphite he held.
A forked
blast of blue-white lightning erupted from the monk's hand, one finger of the
bolt striking each giant. The one Pony had hit in the face, its hands up to
cover the wound, went flying backward, hitting the wall waist high and flipping
right over it, crushing a goblin in the process. The other giant, its foot high
to stamp Pony, jolted straight and stood trembling, too stunned to react as its
intended victim ran off.
Pony rushed
to Avelyn. She looked all about desperately. Goblins were crawling over the
walls like ants; hundreds and hundreds, their sheer numbers burying any
townsfolk who stood to challenge them.
"Fighting
in the east!" one man yelled, running to Pony and Avelyn. "Where is
your plan?" he added sarcastically, hopelessly.
Pony ran
with him back toward the eastern gate, while Avelyn held the rear guard,
loosing another lighting bolt that launched a dozen goblins from the rooftop
Pony had just abandoned.
A powrie
crawled atop the eastern wall directly in front of Pony and the villager, not
so far from the gate.
"Where
is your plan?" the man demanded again of Pony, his desperate question
echoing off the anxious faces of all the villagers gathered near the wall.
The powrie
stood tall on the eastern wall, but then kept moving forward, curiously,
falling headlong over the structure and landing in the dirt, very still.
A long arrow
protruded from its back, an arrow with fletchings familiar to the woman.
"There
is my plan," she replied confidently.
A moment later
came the thunder of hoofbeats to the east, many hoofbeats accompanied by the
screams of those unfortunate goblins caught in front of the wild horse
stampede.
"Avelyn!"
Pony yelled.
"Ho,
ho, what!" the monk replied, loosing yet another lightning bolt, this time
into the ground at the feet of a horde of goblins that were charging straight
for him. The jolt sent the entire group of monsters two feet off the ground.
Pony grabbed
a pitchfork from one of the men nearby and ran to the eastern gate, bravely throwing
it open.
There stood
a pair of goblins, stunned that the gate had opened before them. Pony took one
in the throat with the pitchfork. The other turned to flee, but was cut down
almost immediately, an arrow striking it right between the eyes. Pony looked
back and spotted Elbryan sitting on a low branch of a tree on the northern side
of the ravine. Below the ranger, Bradwarden ran back and forth, trampling
goblins and powries or bashing them down with his heavy cudgel. The centaur
tapped one powrie on the head, then scooped up the dazed dwarf and dropped it
into a sack.
Pony didn't
have time to consider the move, for the thunder approached, led by powerful
Symphony. Goblins and powries scattered or were crushed beneath the charge, a
hundred wild horses stampeding along the ravine.
"Avelyn!"
Pony cried, and the monk rushed past her; she noted that he was glowing
slightly, that same bluish hue as the eastern gate.
Pony held
the townsfolk back as Avelyn ran out among the goblins. Most were too confused
and frightened to attack, but some did charge.
Avelyn held
forth his hand―Pony caught sight of a red sparkle from within his grasp.
A huge ball
of fire encircled the monk and consumed all the nearby monsters. A hot wind
brushed Pony's face and blew into the stunned villagers standing beside her.
When the
flames dissipated an instant later, Avelyn stood alone and the way was open.
Almost open;
a powrie came rushing out from behind a stone, its hair burned away, its face
blackened, its club no more than a withered arid charred stick. But the dwarf
was very much alive, and very angry. It howled and whooped and charged Avelyn,
ready to throttle the monk with its bare hands.
In his other
hand, Avelyn clutched a third stone, brown and striped with black-tiger's paw, it
was called. Now the monk fell into this stone's magic, letting go the fire
shield of the serpentine. A moment later, Avelyn was screaming in agony, not
from the powrie―that enemy hadn't caught up to him yet―but from the
work of his own transforming magic that was bending and breaking the bones in
Avelyn's left arm. Fingers crunched and shortened, fingernails narrowed and
slipped back under the knuckles, and then came a great itching as orange and
black fur erupted all along the length of the arm.
The powrie
got to the monk, but Avelyn had recovered now. He was whole again―except
that his left arm was no longer the arm of Brother Avelyn but that of a
powerful tiger.
With a mere
thought, Avelyn extended his claws and raked them across, taking the face off of
the stunned powrie.
Now the way
was clear.
From further
down the valley, Symphony charged in, followed by his equine minions. The
stampede came to a skidding halt, the wild horses accepting riders, villagers.
Pony climbed atop Symphony, and Avelyn, standing with Elbryan as the ranger ran
in, waited behind to cover the retreat.
Both Pony
and Elbryan sucked in their breath at the sight of Avelyn's arm, but neither
spoke of it at that desperate moment.
Then away
thundered Symphony and the hundred horses, fifty of Weedy Meadow's eighty
inhabitants holding fast to manes, terrified, and scores of goblins and powries
scrambling to the hills, trying to get out of the way.
Down those
hills came the powries, outraged by the apparent escape, but Paulson, Cric, and
Chipmunk had done their work well. Deadfalls, pit traps, and jaw traps stopped
many; in one place a dropping pile of logs triggered a small avalanche of loose
snow and rock.
Those
monsters that did make it down found Bradwarden and his cudgel waiting for them,
the centaur kicking and smashing with abandon. Avelyn's graphite shot out
again, back toward Weedy Meadow's eastern gate, scattering those goblins coming
in close pursuit and opening the way for Elbryan, who insisted that he go back
for any stragglers.
The ranger
found a giant coming hard his way, stomping across the village, outraged and
already hurt by one of the monk's lightning blasts.
Hawkwing's
bowstring hummed repeatedly, an arrow thudding into the giant's chest, followed
by one to its belly, another to its chest, and then a third nicking off huge
ribs, and then a second in the belly.
Each hit
slowed the behemoth a bit more, allowed Elbryan yet another devastating shot.
Finally, the stubborn monster slumped down.
Several
frightened men ran right over its back as it tumbled, a horde of shrieking
goblins close on their heels.
Elbryan
knelt by the gate, taking careful aim and picking off the closest monsters one
by one.
"Avelyn,
I need you!" the ranger cried. The situation was even more desperate than Elbryan
initially believed, as he discovered when he looked up to see a goblin standing
atop the wall, some five feet to the side of the gate, ready to pounce upon
him.
But Avelyn
couldn't immediately help, the monk preoccupied with a group of powries coming
hard down the south hill, having dodged the trappers' pitfalls.
Elbryan
turned to meet the pounce, but even as the goblin came on, silver flickers
caught the ranger's eye. The monster landed right beside the ranger, but it was
dead before it hit the ground, three daggers sticking from the side of its neck
and chest. Elbryan glanced back to a smiling Chipmunk, the man running off to
engage another confused powrie.
"Avelyn!"
Elbryan called again, more insistently. The ranger put up his bow and cut down
one more goblin as the group of men ran out the gate and scrambled past him.
Elbryan fell
back in a roll; goblins filled the gate and poured out.
Avelyn's
lightning blast laid them low.
Then they
were off and running, all of them, Elbryan and the three trappers, Bradwarden
and Avelyn, and all the latest refugees of Weedy Meadow, following the
tentative trail opened to them by the horse stampede.
They ran all
the morning, fighting often, but only quick skirmishes. They followed the
obvious trail and were guided along even more cunning ways by Elbryan, the
ranger following Symphony's call.
One stubborn
group of thirty powries stayed with them all the way, hooting and hollering,
throwing daggers and axes whenever they got close enough, and only crying out
with more fervor whenever Elbryan or Bradwarden paused and let fly an arrow,
inevitably taking one of the dwarves down.
Avelyn,
huffing and puffing; and too weary to attempt another stone use, moaned and
complained that the others should leave his fat body behind. Elbryan would hear
none of that, of course, and neither would Bradwarden. The powerful centaur was
still carrying the sack with the kicking powrie, and somehow managing to put
his great bow to use every so often, but he still had enough strength to allow the
fat monk up on his back.
The horse
trail continued to the east, but Elbryan called for a turn to the south,
leading his group, more sliding than running, down a thickly wooded hillside
that ended in a half-frozen stream and a field covered with snow beyond that.
They splashed across and ran on, the powries coming in furious pursuit now that
their prey was in the open.
"Why'd
we go this way?" one villager cried out in desperation, seeing the
stubborn, untiring dwarves gaining steadily.
The man got
his answer as grim-faced Pony, sitting tall atop Symphony, came out of the
trees across the way, flanked on each side by a score of angry villagers and
their spirited mounts.
Elbryan's
group ran on; the powries skidded to an abrupt halt and tried to turn.
Pony led the
thunderous charge and not a dwarf got off that field alive―except for the
unfortunate one kicking futilely in Bradwarden's sack.
The
encampment that night, closer to Dundalis than to Weedy Meadow, was filled with
a bittersweet atmosphere. More than sixty of the village's eighty folk had
escaped, but that meant that nearly a score had died, and all their homes were
lost.
"You
sent him away?" Pony asked Elbryan as the ranger approached the campfire
she and Avelyn shared.
"I
could not tolerate that in the camp," Elbryan explained.
"How
could you tolerate it at all?" Avelyn asked.
"How
could I stop it?" Elbryan was quick to reply.
"Good
point," the monk conceded. "Ho, ho, what!"
Elbryan
looked at Pony, and each shuddered, thinking of brutal Bradwarden and his
planned meal. Elbryan had interrogated the captured powrie, getting no
information of any value, and then the centaur had claimed the dwarf as his
catch―and as his dinner.
He had
promised Elbryan that he would kill the wretched creature quickly, at least.
The ranger
had to be satisfied with that; he and the refugees were in no position to take
on a prisoner, especially one as fierce and stupidly bold as that powrie.
"We did
well," Avelyn remarked, handing a bowl to Elbryan and motioning to a
cauldron not so far away.
The ranger
held up his hand, having little appetite this night.
Avelyn only
shrugged and went back to his meal.
"You
did well," Elbryan remarked to the man. "Your fireball opened the way
for Symphony―and even the help of the horses would not have been possible
without the magic of the turquoise. And your lightning bolts saved many lives,
my own included."
"And
mine," Pony added, rubbing the fat monk's back.
Avelyn
looked at her, then at Elbryan, his expression truly content. He even forgot
his food for a moment, just sat back and considered the events and the role he
and his God-given stones had played.
"For
years I have wondered if I chose correctly in taking the stones," Avelyn
explained a moment later. "Always have I been followed by doubts, by fears
that my actions were not truly in the spirit of God but only in my own
misguided interpretation of that spirit."
"Today
proves you right, then," Elbryan said quietly.
Avelyn
nodded, feeling truly vindicated. A moment later, he caught the look that
passed between Elbryan and Pony, and politely excused himself. There were many
wounded in the encampment that night, including some who might need further
help from Avelyn and his hematite.
"I
could not save Weedy Meadow," Elbryan said to the woman when they were
alone.
Pony looked
all around, leading Elbryan's gaze to the men and women, to the children who
would have surely died this day had not the ranger and his friends ushered them
away.
"I am
satisfied," Elbryan admitted. "The town could not be saved, but so
different this is from the day of our own tragedy."
"We did
not have a ranger to look over us," Pony replied with a grin.
That smile
could not hold, though, lost in the bittersweet blend of tragedy present and
tragedy past. The two moved closer together, huddled in each other's arms
before the fire, and said not another word, each lost in their memories of
their own loss but with the satisfaction that this day, they had been the
difference.
CHAPTER 40
Nightbird the Leader
"They
are not burning the town," Elbryan remarked as he, Pony, Bradwarden, and
Avelyn looked toward Dundalis.
"Why
would they?" the centaur asked. "The place was empty before they ever
got there."
"True
enough," Elbryan replied, for the folk of Dundalis, with sixty-three
witnesses from Weedy Meadow and a score from End-o'-the-World telling tales of
utter disaster, had not been hard to convince. All of Dundalis' folk had
followed Elbryan into the woods to the camps the ranger and his friends had
constructed, hidden deep and far from the trails.
"But
neither did they burn Weedy Meadow," Pony observed, "nor
End-o'-the-World before that."
Elbryan
looked grimly at Bradwarden.
"Supply
towns," the centaur said, his tone grave.
"That
means they are continuing south," Avelyn remarked, his voice cracking on
the words. "How far?"
"Few
villages south of here," Bradwarden said. "Nothing much all the way
to the great river."
"Palmaris,"
Avelyn muttered helplessly.
A long,
silent moment passed as the gravity of the situation settled more deeply over
the four friends.
"We can
do little to stop such an army," Elbryan declared. "But our duty is
threefold: to hurt the monsters in any way that we can, to send word ahead so
that the villages and even the great city are not caught unaware, and to care
for those who have fallen under our protection."
"A
hundred and sixty," Bradwarden said. "And I haven't yet counted them
all. Worse, no more than a third o' them're able to fight against the likes of
a single goblin."
"We
must work with them, then," Elbryan declared, "usher those who cannot
fight to safety and use those who can and will do battle to our best
advantage."
"A huge
task, ranger," Bradwarden remarked.
Elbryan
stared at him long and hard.
"I'm
with ye," the centaur grumbled a moment later, "though not for the
taste o' powrie, I tell ye. Tough little bugs!"
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn howled.
They went to
the task that very day, sorting the refugees into those who would stay and
fight with Elbryan, and those who would be sent to safer havens, into caves
that Bradwarden knew of some distance to the east of Dundalis or even into the
more human-controlled southlands, if a route could be found. When they finished
the initial round, Elbryan found that he had more than seven score who would
need to be relocated, leaving him just over twenty able-bodied warriors. And
they were indeed a ragtag band; the best among them, other than Pony, Bradwarden,
and Avelyn, was probably unreliable Paulson or the always irritating,
disagreeable Tol Yuganick.
Pony pointed
out that very fact to Elbryan when they sat together that evening. "You
should send him south with the refugees," she noted, indicating the
grumbling Tol, who was walking about the encampment, bullying any who crossed
his path.
"He is
strong and good with a spear," Elbryan countered.
"And
he'll fight you all the way," Pony said. "Tol will demand control,
and his continuing rage will certainly put him, and any who follow him, into a
position from which there will be no escape."
Elbryan
couldn't really disagree. At least with Paulson, the ranger had some idea that
the man was willing to follow directions; Paulson and his two companions, after
all, had laid traps on the hillsides east of Weedy Meadow exactly as Elbryan
had bade them.
"Send
him off with the unfit," Pony said again, more forcefully. "Let
Belster O'Comely deal with the brute, else I fear that you and Tol will cross
swords, and it would not do for you to be killing one of our own in front of
the others."
Elbryan
thought she was perhaps being a bit overdramatic, but he had to admit that he
and Tol had come close to blows several times over the previous few
months―and then in situations not nearly as tense as the one that surely
lay before them.
"When
will you send the band south?" Pony asked, wisely giving Elbryan some
breathing room before he was forced into such a difficult decision.
"Paulson,
Cric, and Chipmunk are off scouting the area even now," the ranger
replied, "swinging west to confirm the occupation of Weedy Meadow and
End-o'-the-World and then south to see what roads lie open. When they return in
a few days, we might decide what to do with the refugees."
Pony nodded,
considering the plan. "If they will soon return, then they will not go far
to the south, not to the next villages in line, Caer Tinella and Landsdown, and
certainly not to Palmaris," she reasoned. "You must send an emissary
soon if the southland is to be properly warned."
Elbryan
sighed deeply, agreeing fully with her observation. He knew the proper course
before him, knew the perfect choice, a person possessed of both tact and
skills, battle and horsemanship, but it was a decree the ranger did not wish to
utter.
Pony did it
for him. "Symphony will bear me?" she asked, drawing the ranger's
gaze to her own.
Elbryan
paused and looked long and hard at the woman, at his love. They had been
reunited for so short a time, how could he bear to part with her again? Despite
that turmoil, Elbryan found himself nodding. Symphony would indeed carry Pony;
the great stallion had already indicated as much to Elbryan.
"Then I
will be away before the dawn," Pony said firmly.
Elbryan
sighed again, and Pony took his face in her hands, turned him to her, and
pulled him close, kissing him gently.
"I will
go all the way to Palmaris, if I must," she promised, "and then I
will return to your side. Symphony will see me there and back again. No goblin,
no powrie, no giant will catch me."
Elbryan, who
had felt the wind, the rush of Symphony's run, didn't doubt that for a minute.
"And you must return to me," he whispered, "to fight beside me
and to lie beside me in the quiet night, when all the troubles of the day must
be put to peace."
Pony kissed
him again, longer and harder this time. All around them, the camp was settling
down, save the occasional grumble from ugly Tol, and the pair slipped away
sometime later into the forest to a private place.
True to her
word, Pony was riding hard to the south as the sun crested the eastern horizon.
She had not gone without two meetings, though, one a very private discussion
with Elbryan and the other, unexpectedly, with Brother Avelyn, who was waiting
for her when she walked out of the camp.
"Symphony
is not far," the monk explained. "I saw him on that ridge just a few
minutes ago. Waiting for you, I should guess."
Pony gave a
crooked smile, her wonderment at the continuing intelligence shown by the
animal―now seeming to be so much more than an ordinary
horse―clearly displayed on her features.
"As I
was waiting for you," Avelyn huffed.
"Symphony
would not carry us both," Pony said dryly.
"What?"
asked Avelyn. "Ho, ho, good laugh, that!"
The man's
mirth disappeared almost immediately, and the suddenly grim set of his heavy
jowls made Pony believe he was concerned for her safety.
"I will
return," she promised.
Avelyn nodded.
"And all the faster," he explained, holding forth a silver circlet,
"with this."
Pony took
the band tentatively, knowing as soon as she saw the gemstone set in the silver
in front that this was much more than something ornamental. The gem was unlike anything
she had seen before, yellowish-green with a black streak down its middle.
"Cat's
eye," Avelyn explained. He took the circlet back from her and set it about
her forehead.
"With
it, you will see clearly in the dark of night," the monk explained.
Indeed, the
mounting light of dawn still a while away seemed suddenly brighter to Pony. Not
brighter, exactly, but every object became much more distinct. Pony looked at
Avelyn, suddenly very appreciative of the training he had given her with the
magical stones but somewhat surprised that she could call forth the magic of
this cat's eye so readily.
"How is
it that the stone will work so easily for me?" she asked. "And am I
now ready to unleash fireballs and bolts of lightning as you did in the battle
in Weedy Meadow?" Pony's expression grew sly. "Is the power, then,
wholly of the stones?" she asked. "And if that is so, then why is
Avelyn so blessed?"
"Ho,
but that hurt!" the good-natured monk bellowed. "Ho, ho, what!
Blessed indeed, say some, but cursed, say I, with such a supportive friend as
this!"
"Ho,
but that hurt!" Pony echoed, imitating Avelyn's voice, and they shared a
much-needed laugh.
"The
power comes from both stone and user," Avelyn explained in all
seriousness, a lesson he had explained to her many times during their weeks on
the road. "Some stones, though, such as the turquoise I gave to Elbryan
and he to Symphony, can be altered to perform their magic continually, whoever
their holder might be. Stones become magical items, so to speak, useful to the
layman. I have seen such minor charms, and so have you, I would guess, among
the farmers or the minor seers of the lands."
"And
you prepared this one," Pony reasoned, tapping the cat's eye.
"For
you," replied Avelyn, "or for myself or perhaps for Elbryan. Ho, ho,
what! Wherever it is most needed, I say, and now, that will be with you. Take
it and use it to guide Symphony well through the night when our enemies will
not be aware."
A snort from
the side caught their attention and they turned to see the magnificent stallion
standing again atop the nearby ridge, eager to run, as if he had been
eavesdropping on their conversation.
"I
doubt Symphony will need much guidance," Pony said, "day or
night."
"Use it
to keep your head from smacking into low branches, then." Avelyn laughed,
drawing a short-lived smile from Pony.
Short-lived,
because it was time for the woman to go.
Avelyn
turned her around suddenly as soon as she had started away. The monk held his
hand out to her, and when she took it, he gave her another stone, a piece of
graphite, the stone used to create lightning.
"Perhaps
you are ready," Avelyn said with respect.
Pony
clenched the graphite tightly, nodded once, and walked away.
The day was
clear and crisp but bitterly cold, the north wind blowing steadily, and Elbryan
had to wonder if winter would ever give up its grip upon the land.
Later that
morning, the ranger gathered together the men and a few women who would remain
with him as his fighting force. "We cannot defeat the enemy that has come
to our homes," he told them bluntly. "They are too great in
number."
That brought
a few grumbles, including. a sarcastic, "Inspirational," from Tol
Yuganick.
"But we
can hurt them," Elbryan went on. "And perhaps our efforts here will
make the war―"
"War?"
Tol demanded.
"You
still think this no more than a raiding party?" Elbryan scolded. "Ten
thousand goblins have passed through Weedy Meadow since its fall, passed
through and continued south."
Tol snorted
and waved his hand dismissively.
"Our
efforts here will make the war easier on those in the south," Elbryan said
loudly, to quench the rising dissent, "to help Caer Tinella and Landsdown,
and even Palmaris, where we believe this army to be headed."
"Bah!"
Tol snorted. "The words of a fool, I say! The goblin scum have taken
Dundalis, so to Dundalis we must go, to drive them far."
"To
die," Elbryan put in before the big man could gain any momentum.
"Only to die." Elbryan walked over to stand right before Tol, the
tension mounting with each step. They were about the same height, but Tol, with
his barrel-like torso and ample belly, was heavier.
The man
puffed out his chest and glared hard at the ranger.
"I'll
not stop any who wish to follow Tol Yuganick into Dundalis," the ranger
said after a long and tense moment, "or into Weedy Meadow or
End-o'-the-World or wherever else you choose as your graveyard. These woods
have many places I can camp so you'll not be able to betray me when the goblins
pull off your fingernails or hold you down and smash your privates with hammers."
Even Tol
blanched a bit at that notion.
"No,
you'll not betray me or my cause, but neither will I cry for your pain, neither
will I risk those who wisely choose my way, to rescue those who willingly went
to such a death."
It was
enough for one day, Elbryan decided, for the first day of putting his soldiers
in line, so the ranger slowly walked away from Tol, then off the field to the
edge of the forest, where stood an amused Bradwarden.
"Oh,
nice touch with the hammer story," the centaur greeted him.
Elbryan gave
a wry smile, but it couldn't last. He was too concerned with Pony's opinion of
Tol as a troublemaker and with the fact that Pony was probably already many
miles away.
"We've―ye've
a long way to go to get them in line," the centaur remarked.
Elbryan was
all too aware of that grim fact.
"But I
gave ye little credit when ye didn't kill the three rogues," Bradwarden
offered.
"You
said I should have killed them," the ranger reminded, drawing an
embarrassed snort from the centaur.
"So I
did! So I did!" Bradwarden replied. "And the three've proven
themselves worthy o' yer mercy ten times over!"
"They
are valuable allies," Elbryan added.
"Ye'll
have a tougher time with that one," Bradwarden remarked, lifting his
bearded chin toward Tol Yuganick, who was still standing in the small field,
looking none too happy. "He's not for respecting ye, ranger. Might that ye
should take him into the woods and beat him about."
Elbryan only
smiled, but Bradwarden's suggestion did not seem like such a bad idea.
The mood of
all the encampment brightened considerably that night when a dozen
stragglers―more refugees from End-o'-the-World and mostly under the age
of fifteen―wandered in, seeming dazed and sorely hungry; several had
minor wounds, but otherwise all were physically sound. They told their
remarkable tale to the group, and then their two leaders, a middle-aged couple,
repeated the story in depth to Elbryan and Avelyn.
They had
fled the town with the others as the goblin horde descended upon it, heading
for the forest. But they had not gotten away cleanly and were forced to
separate from the main group. Later that night, they had found themselves
cornered in a rocky ravine by powries and a pair of giants, but, as the woman
explained it, "The air came alive, like the buzzing of a million
bees;" and when the confusion ended, all their would-be murderers lay
dead, the victims of many small puncture wounds.
It sounded
all too familiar to Elbryan Wyndon.
"Then
we were guided," the man added, "through the woods by night, camping
in the day."
"By
whom?" the ranger asked eagerly. "Who was it that led you to this
place?"
The man
shrugged and pointed to one young boy, sleeping near the fire, a lad of no more
than six years. "Shawno said he talked to them," the man explained.
" 'Tools,' he called them."
"Tools?"
echoed Avelyn, mystified.
"Not
'Tools,'" Elbryan explained. "Touel." The ranger looked hard at
the boy. He would have to speak with that one in the morning, after the child
had rested and eaten.
CHAPTER 41
Tempest
"Uncle
Mather?"
Elbryan
waited for a long while in the dimly lit cave, the day outside gray and hinting
again of snow. He was not physically uncomfortable, for this place he had been
using as Oracle, a hole beneath a wide pine, remained surprisingly dry; and,
sheltered from the bite of the north wind, the air was not so cold.
The ranger
was anxious, and he wanted to converse with the spirit this late afternoon, to
tell his uncle Mather of the responsibilities that had befallen him, of the
abrupt change that had come into his life, into the lives of all the folk on
the borders of the Wilderlands. He realized then that Pony had been his
sounding board, his confidant, and that since she had returned to him, he had
not often been to Oracle.
But now Pony
was gone, on the road with Symphony.
The ranger
prayed that his uncle Mather would respond openly this time, would offer him
some solid answers, as Pony had done, but that had never before been the way of
the Oracle. This time, Elbryan feared, the answers and the strength were not
within him, waiting for him to discover them.
He called
again, softly, then again nearly half an hour later, when the cave had grown so
dark that the keen-eyed ranger could hardly make out the edges of the mirror,
let alone any spirit image within the glass.
Elbryan
closed his eyes and recounted the events in his mind. The boy from
End-o'-the-World, Shawno, had been of little help, but Elbryan remained
convinced that it was indeed the Touel'alfar who had rescued that fleeing group
from the monstrous hordes.
But where
were the elves, then? Surely Belli'mar Juraviel, if he was in the area, would
have made some contact with Elbryan.
Surely
Tuntun would have to come to him, if for no other reason than to tell him how
miserably he had failed in protecting the three towns!
The ranger
was startled when he opened his eyes to see the reflection of a small light, a
candle, burning softly in the depths of the mirror, its sharp glow dulled by a
whitish haze whose source Elbryan could not discern.
No, it was
not a reflection, the ranger suddenly realized, but a light within the glass!
A moment
later, Elbryan sucked in his breath, for there, at the corner of the glass
stood the quiet apparition of, he knew in his heart, his father's brother.
"Uncle
Mather," he said softly, "glad I am that you heeded my call this
troubled day."
The image
stood silently, unblinking.
Where to
begin? Elbryan wondered. "The towns have fallen, all three," he blurted,
"but many of the folk escaped, including nearly all those from Weedy
Meadow and all of Dundalis."
The image
hardly moved, but Elbryan sensed the spirit was pleased with Elbryan, if not
with the situation.
"And so
we are hiding," the ranger went on, "and it is difficult, for winter
remains. Now I must get those who cannot fight to safety in the south; that I
know and am already seeking to arrange. And the southland will be warned by
Pony, my beloved, returned to me and flying fast across the miles upon
Symphony. But as for the rest, Uncle Mather, for those who would remain and
fight, my course is unclear."
The ranger
paused and waited, hoping for some response.
"I
would choose to use them against the invaders," Elbryan said at length,
when no answer was forthcoming. "I can form them into something devilish,
a swift and secret band that strikes our enemy in the night and flies away
before the goblins and powries can retaliate."
Again, the
ranger had the feeling that the specter was pleased.
"So
much stronger shall we be if my suspicions are correct," Elbryan went on,
"if the Touel'alfar are in the area, ready to lend their silverel bows to
our cause. Do you know? Are they somewhere close..."
Elbryan's
voice trailed off as the image in the mirror shifted, as though the lens that
was the mirror was drawing back from that single shielded candle, widening to
include many others, little burning huts of snow, they seemed, set in a
familiar field.
"Uncle
Mather?" Elbryan asked, but the image of the specter was no more, just the
field of candles, flickering under the dulling whiteness, dying, gradually
dying, until the mirror, until all the small cave, went absolutely dark.
Elbryan sat
there for a long while, considering the course before him. The moon had set
when he at last crawled out of the hole, and there, waiting for him, fiddling
with some stones, was Brother Avelyn. The monk had set a torch in the nook of a
low branch of a nearby tree, its orange light casting twisted shadows across
the ground.
"Cold
night," the monk remarked dryly. "A true friend would have come out
much earlier."
"I knew
not that you were here waiting," Elbryan replied, and then he paused and
looked hard at the man. "I did not know that you even knew of this
place."
"Shown
to me by the stones," the monk replied, and he held up one of the stones,
a coin-sized quartz.
"You
sought me out, then."
"We
have much work before us, my friend," said Avelyn.
Elbryan
didn't disagree.
"This
is no simple raid, not even a simple invasion," said Avelyn.
"A simple
invasion?" echoed Elbryan, for surely the words sounded curious when put
together. "Can an invasion be simple?"
"If it
is without greater purpose," replied the monk. "Powries have oft come
to Honce-the-Bear's coastline, striking hard and charging inland until their
thirst for blood and pillage is sated. Then their ranks break apart from their
constant infighting, they go away, and the land heals. It has been that way for
all of time, I believe."
"But
this time is different," reasoned the ranger.
"That is
my fear," said Avelyn.
"Yet it
would seem as if this monstrous force of creatures so hateful and so different
from one another would be more likely to turn on itself," Elbryan said.
"So
they would," muttered Avelyn. "So they would, were it not for a guiding
hand of the greatest strength."
Elbryan
leaned back against the wide tree, having nothing to offer on that point. He
remembered the murmuring of the elves soon before his departure, the whispers
of a dactyl demon awakened in the north. "And if you are right?" he
asked finally.
Avelyn's
face turned grave. "Then I see my destiny," the monk remarked.
"Then I understand what prophetic, divine being guided my hand when I
filled my pouch with the stones of St.-Mere-Abelle. Even the choice of which
stones to take was made for me, then, by something above―"
"I envy
you your faith," said the ranger. "For myself, I feel that our
destiny is our own to choose, our mistakes our own to make, our choices wrought
of freedom."
Avelyn
thought for a moment, then nodded. "A different way of looking at the same
thing," he decided. "My choice that day was based on all that had
transpired previously in my life, was the culmination of a course that had
begun long before I entered the Abellican Order. I feel that I am right with my
God, ranger, and if my suspicions as to the nature of the beast are true, then
I see my course before me. That is all. I thought I should let it be known to
you."
"Because
you are leaving."
"Not
yet," Avelyn replied quickly, "and know that I am with you, at your
command. I will use the stones and all my talents, and all my body in whatever
course you set. For now."
Elbryan
nodded, satisfied that the monk would be of great help―as he had already
been. The ranger didn't underestimate Avelyn in the least; without the man and
his magic, many more would have fallen at Weedy Meadow. And by Elbryan's
measure, Avelyn's bravery in all that he had done―in taking the stones
and fleeing St.-Mere-Abelle, in facing Brother Justice, and in aiding against
the monsters―was above question.
"Do you
believe in visions?" the ranger asked suddenly. "In prophecy?"
Avelyn
looked at him hard. "Did I not just say as much?" he returned.
"And
how is one to know if a vision is true or a deception?" the ranger asked.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn boomed. "You've seen something this night in your
hole!"
Elbryan
smiled. "But how am I to know its source and its outcome?"
Avelyn
laughed all the harder. "The responsibility weighs on you heavily,"
the monk replied. "You consider the vision more closely because so many
people depend upon you now, because any course you take will draw many others
in your wake. Ho, ho, what! Relieve your mind of the burden, then decide, my
friend. What would be your course had you seen this vision without the responsibilities
that have been placed on your strong shoulders?"
Elbryan
paused for a long while, studying this man, thinking Avelyn as wise as any of
the elves who had been so instrumental in the making of Elbryan the Nightbird.
Then he knew
what he must do. And with only a few hours of darkness left before him, and
without Symphony to take him swiftly, he knew that he must make haste.
"Your
pardon, my friend," he said.
"A
vision calls?"
Elbryan
nodded.
"Would
you need my company, then?" Avelyn asked.
Elbryan looked
at him again and was glad of the man's offer. He felt that he might indeed need
help this night, but he understood, too, that the vision, whatever it foretold,
was for him alone. He walked to Avelyn and patted the huge man on the shoulder.
"I need you to help Bradwarden," he explained, "to keep the
people on the right course."
Avelyn
didn't look over his shoulder to watch the ranger disappear into the night.
The
diamond-shaped grove was eerily quiet, with no rustle of wind nor the call of
any animal, of any night bird, to stir the still air. Elbryan wished that he
had gotten here before moonset, when he could better see the rolling fields of
snow surrounding the dark grove. He considered the sack he had retrieved before
coming out to this place, bulging with candles, and he wondered if he should
first light the area.
It didn't
matter, the ranger decided boldly, and went to work. He moved slowly and
carefully about the field, building domes of snow the size of his two cupped
hands. Then he carefully hollowed each out and placed a single candle within.
When he was finished with his task, when he had but one candle remaining, the
ranger put flint to steel and lit it, then went steadily about the field,
lighting each candle in turn, until all the area was glowing softly from two
score muffled lights, points in the darkness.
Elbryan knew
not how long the candles would last, how long it would take their heat to melt
the snow domes above them, the droplets falling to extinguish the flames. He
stood for a long time and the domes burned―too long, it seemed to him,
and he suspected then that something beyond the ordinary was happening here,
that some other force was at work in keeping those candles burning.
He heard his
name called softly. Turning to the dark row of stately pines, the ranger
instinctively understood the source. He moved inside the grove, across the
covering of snow to the secret cairn.
Something
was terribly wrong, Elbryan realized, terribly out of sorts, as if the very
harmony of this place had somehow been stolen away. Suddenly this holy place,
this place he had presumed prepared by the Touel'alfar themselves, seemed to
him no sanctuary at all.
Elbryan
leaned heavily on Hawkwing, staring at the cairn, and it took him some time to
realize that he could see the stones far too distinctly, that there was simply
too much light here.
Its source
was the cairn itself, glowing green!
Elbryan
could hardly draw breath as he noticed one of the top stones shift. He wanted
to turn and flee; every survival instinct within the ranger told him to run
away.
But he could
not flee, held in place by something he did not understand, by something beyond
the power of his own will.
The cairn
blew outward, weirdly, slowly and not violently, all the rocks rolling up atop
one another to form walls on either side of the grave; the light intensified so
that Elbryan could see clearly the remains within, rotted and withered, a
hollow shell of the man they had once been.
His staff
was up in front of him now, defensively, as if ready for whatever would come
next, but the alert ranger nearly swooned when that corpse opened its eyes,
showing two red dots of light when it sat up suddenly, its back too stiff and
straight, that posture alone showing that it was far from natural.
"Be
gone, demon," the ranger whispered ineffectively.
As if some
wire were attached to its back, the zombie stood suddenly, moving straight up
without use of its hands, without bending its legs.
Elbryan fell
back a step―again came that urge to flee, his mind telling him that this
monster was too great for him―but he planted Hawkwing firmly and used it
to support his position, holding steady before the undead thing.
"Who
are you?" Elbryan demanded. "What manner of creature? Of what weal,
good or evil?"
That last
question echoed in Elbryan's mind, sounding ridiculous, for what manner of
goodly force could so torture a body at rest? Still, the ranger did not dismiss
his knowledge that this was a blessed place, that this body, and the soul that
had inhabited it in life, had been elf-friend, at least.
The
creature's arms came up, reaching straight out toward the ranger, in a posture
that might be threatening or pleading.
But then the
undead thing was there, right before him, propelled by something other than its
legs―was there, barely a foot away, its bony fingers clasped about the
ranger's throat!
Elbryan
grabbed at the arm and tried futilely to break the impossibly strong hold. He
tried to yell out in protest, but had no breath. How he wished that Avelyn were
there! That the monk would step in and blast this wicked thing with the magical
stones!
But no, the
ranger remembered. The vision was for him alone; this fight was for him alone.
Clearing his panic, Elbryan brought Hawkwing up between the zombie's arms,
grabbed the staff at both ends and twisted it, using its leverage to break the
hold.
For a
moment, he thought the twist would break his own neck instead, but finally, he
wriggled free, jumped back a step, and smashed his staff hard against the side
of the creature's head.
He might
have hit it with a blow of his breath, he realized, as the monster didn't
flinch in the least, just came on steadily, those straight arms reaching again
for his throat.
Elbryan went
into a sidelong dive, meaning to put some distance between himself and the
monster, thinking that he should string his bow and let fly some stinging
arrows.
But when he
came up from the roll, the zombie was there, suddenly, magically. The ranger
got his staff and his arm up to block, but the creature's backhand sweep was
too heavy, sending Elbryan tumbling back the other way.
He came up
in a run and ducked low to avoid another blow―for again, the zombie had
somehow beaten him to the spot―and scrambled through the thick pine
branches, cutting this way and that, trying to keep away from any predictable
course.
Twice he
turned corners to see the monster waiting for him. One time he ducked the
attack, skidding to his knees but coming right back up agilely to run on. The
second time, the ranger got grabbed painfully by the shoulder but somehow
squirmed free before the monster could crush him in a hug.
Soon Elbryan
was at the edge of the grove, standing before the candled field.
The monster
was across the way, off to the side.
Elbryan's
jaw slackened at the familiar sight, at the exact image he had last seen in the
minor, except that the zombie now stood where the specter of his uncle Mather
had stood before. All was too quiet, too serene.
"Uncle
Mather?" he asked the thing.
Then it was
before him, so suddenly, clubbing him with those rock-stiff arms, sending him
tumbling back into the pines.
Elbryan felt
warm blood rolling from one ear and had to shake his head repeatedly to force
the dizziness away. The creature, whatever it was, could hit like a giant!
He turned a
corner within a triangle of tight pines, expecting correctly that the zombie
would be there. Up came Hawkwing in a blurring defensive circle, Elbryan
working brilliantly to parry and dodge the deceptively quick strikes of the
stiff-limbed monster, then even countering once, twice, thrice with a deft
stab, a sudden club to the side of the monster's head, and a third stab, this
one nailing the zombie right between the eyes.
The vicious
blows seemed not to affect the creature at all.
Across came
its clubbing arm, and Elbryan, confused, dove away from the blow, taking the
hit but not hard as he fell. He rolled through several branches, coming to his
feet again in full flight, wondering what he might do against the likes of this
monster, fearing that the dactyl itself had come against him, had lured him to
this spot that he might be destroyed once and for all.
He crashed
through a tangle of branches to find the zombie standing before him. Not
surprised, the ranger continued on,
bringing his staff down hard, right into the creature's face.
It didn't
flinch, except to smack Elbryan across the shoulder with one arm, stealing his
forward momentum and launching him sideways instead.
"I have
to get a sword," the ranger lamented, glad that the branches had softened
his tumbling fall. Then he was up and running, hoping to put some distance
between himself and the creature, that he might devise some strategy. He
wondered if he should flee the area, into the deeper forest where he was more
at home.
Elbryan
dismissed that thought; however futile his efforts seemed, he had played a part
in bringing this creature to the world, and he must see to its destruction.
He ran on
instead through the winding ways of the grove, cutting down every side path,
trying to keep his movements unpredictable so that the monster could not appear
before him. All the while, he was circling in toward the heart of the grove,
moving determinedly toward the ruined cairn.
He came
through the last line of trees into the green light. The opened grave loomed
before him, and the zombie monster appeared right behind him! The creature
pounded him hard between the shoulder blades, launching him into a forward roll
that ended abruptly when he crashed against some of the cairn rocks.
Dazed,
bleeding, Elbryan pulled himself up to his elbows, looking over the edge of the
cairn. He knew that he must get up and run, knew that the monster was stalking
in from behind.
The ranger
froze in place, staring wide-eyed into the open pit. There, positioned as if it
were the very heart of the grave, lay a sword―and not just any common
sword but a work of art, a beautiful, gleaming treasure. If the tip of its
blade was set upon the ground, the end of its balled hilt would not have
reached Elbryan's waist, and the width of the blade was no more than the
distance between the knuckle and first joint of Elbryan's smallest finger, but
there was an unmistakable solidity and strength to the weapon, an aura of
power.
The ranger reached
in to the limit of his arm, to find that the sword was just out of range.
He heard the
zombie right behind him.
Then,
somehow, the sword was in his hand, and Elbryan spun and swept the weapon in a
furious arc. Bluish-white light trailed the length of its path, stealing the
green hue, and the zombie fell back and growled.
Elbryan
scrambled to his feet, trying to inspect the blade without losing sight of his
dangerous opponent. The sword was incredibly light; a blood trough ran down the
center of the blade―and that blade was forged of silverel, the ranger
suddenly recognized! The crosspiece, which curved back toward the tip of the
blade, was similarly forged of the precious elven metal and tipped in gold; the
hilt was wrapped in blue leather, tied tight by unmistakable silverel strands.
Most wondrous of all, though, was the ball anchoring the hilt, a balance to the
blade, for it, too, was of silverel, but was hollowed and set with such a
gemstone as Elbryan had never seen―blue and with patches of gray and
white like storm clouds crossing an autumn sky. And there was a power in that
gem, the ranger knew, magic such as the magic of Avelyn's stones.
Elbryan let
Hawkwing fall to the ground―he wondered if he would ever again need to
use the bow as a staff―and brought the sword out before him, weaving it
slowly, feeling its balance.
He tossed it
easily from hand to hand, moving it in the sword-dance, then thrusting the
sword out to keep the zombie at bay, swinging it wide to entice the monster in.
But the
zombie showed the man new respect and stayed back, growling, the red dots of
light that were its eyes glowing furiously.
"Come
on, then," Elbryan said quietly. "You would have me dead, so come
along and play."
The zombie
fell back into the branch tangle; Elbryan rushed to follow.
But the
creature was gone, out of sight, and the ranger realized that he, too, had to
keep moving, that the fight had become even more a game of cat and mouse, for
this time, both he and the zombie were the cats.
He stayed on
the narrow trails mostly, using his speed, hoping to spot the monster before it
was right beside him. He decided to angle his way back to the candlelit field
and was not surprised when he arrived there to find the zombie waiting for him.
The ranger understood then that this was how it was supposed to be, that this
challenge on this field had been predetermined. He stalked toward the monster,
and it came to him slowly at first, then in a furious rush, its arms flailing
wildly.
Elbryan earned and struck, fell back on his heels, tumbled
sidelong in a roll, and came right back in a ferocious charge, that magnificent
sword leading. Now his hit did indeed sting the zombie, the sword tearing a
deep gash in the rotted flesh, smacking hard against a rib.
The zombie
came across with a sweeping backhand that caught ducking Elbryan hard across
the shoulder. But the ranger stubbornly held his position and stood straight,
stabbing at the ribs again and then sweeping the blade in an arc for the
monster's neck.
Up came a
zombie arm to block; the sword's gemstone flared with sudden power and the
blade crackled with energy, as if it had caught a bolt of white lightning and
held it fast.
The sword
severed that blocking arm cleanly, right above the elbow and slashed across the
face of the ducking monster.
Blinded, the
zombie fell back and howled in agony, but Elbryan was upon it in an instant,
the mighty sword diving through the monster's chest in a quick thrust, then
coming out and sweeping down diagonally, shearing through the collarbone, down
and across, deep into the rotted chest.
The zombie
went hard to the ground and burst apart with a bright green flash that sent
Elbryan stumbling backward, that sent all the world spinning in the ranger's
eyes.
Elbryan
awakened sometime later, the eastern sky just brightening with dawn, his head
cradled in his arms atop the bottom stones of the intact cairn.
"Whole
again?" he asked skeptically, or perhaps, he realized, it had been whole
all along.
The ranger
started to rise but found that every bone in his body ached, and only then did
he realize how cold he was. He put his head back down, wondering if he would
die out here, alone, and cold, wondering what had brought such a nightmare.
Then a
curious thought hit him, and he looked up, truly puzzled, staring hard at the
cairn.
"Uncle
Mather?" he asked breathlessly, and he knew that it was true, that this
was the grave of his uncle Mather, the ranger.
But, he
wondered, had it all been a dream, then? The monster? The sword?
Too
intrigued to feel his pain, the ranger struggled to his feet, and as he came up
above the stones, he saw, on the ground at the head of the cairn, a familiar,
beautiful sword.
Elbryan
stiffly reached out his hand and started around to retrieve the weapon, but the
sword came to him, floating to his grasp!
He held it
up before his admiring gaze, studying the craftsmanship, the gleaming silverel,
the magnificent gemstone pommel, the blue, the storm clouds.
"Tempest,"
he whispered, suddenly realizing the significance of that unique gemstone. This
was Tempest, Mather's sword, one of the six ranger swords forged by the elves
in a time long past.
"Indeed,"
came a melodic voice from behind and above.
Elbryan spun
to see Belli'mar Juraviel sitting calmly on a low branch, smiling at him.
"Mather's
sword," Elbryan said.
"No
more," replied Juraviel. "Elbryan's sword, earned in the dark of
night."
The ranger
could hardly draw breath.
"My old
friend," Elbryan said at length, "all the world has gone mad, I
fear."
Juraviel
only nodded, unable to disagree.
CHAPTER 42
Reputation
Winter's icy
grip weakened at last, more than three weeks after the vernal equinox. Snow
still fell, but often it turned in mid-storm to a cold rain, and ground that
had been deep with white powder was now slick with gray slush. The change came
as a mixed blessing to Elbryan and his forest band. While their lives certainly
became more comfortable, their nights no longer spent so closely huddled to a
fire that their eyebrows singed, winter's relaxed grip offered the invading
monsters even more mobility. Now goblin, powrie, and fomorian giant patrols
struck deep into the forest, and though these scouts were often discovered and
destroyed by Elbryan's people, the danger to the group increased daily.
Pony still
had not returned from the south. After three weeks, though, Paulson and his two
trapper companions had come back with a fairly thorough description of the
monstrous army's movements. It was as they had feared: the monsters using the
occupied towns as base and supply camps while they sent their dark tendrils
further south, first in probes, but soon, so Paulson believed, in great
numbers.
"They'll
strike Landsdown within a week, unless we get hit with another storm,"
Paulson explained grimly.
"The
season's past," Avelyn remarked. "There will be no more storms severe
enough to slow our enemies."
Elbryan
agreed; Belli'mar and the other elves―who remained far in the shadows
about the human camps, hidden from all save the ranger and the centaur had told
him as much.
"Then
Landsdown's to fall," said Paulson.
"We
must get word to them," Avelyn offered, looking at the ranger, who in turn
looked at Paulson.
"We
already telled some farmers," Paulson explained, "and yer girl's been
through with the same news."
Elbryan
perked his ears up considerably at that bit of news.
"But
will they listen?" Avelyn wanted to know.
"Who's
to make them?" asked Paulson.
Elbryan
closed his eyes and considered that. Indeed, the men and women of the frontier
towns north of Palmaris could be a stubborn lot! The ranger decided then that
it was time to put Belli'mar's troop to good use. The mobile elves could get to
Landsdown ahead of the monsters, and if the sight of an elf didn't shake some
sense into thick heads, then let the folk of Landsdown get what they deserved!
"I will
see to Landsdown," the ranger promised, and he moved on to other matters.
"What of our own folk?"
"We've
got a hundred not taking well to the life," said Bradwarden. "Tough
enough folk, but we've asked too much o' them."
"Is
there any place we might take them?" the ranger asked.
The three
trappers were at a loss; Brother Avelyn could think of no sanctuary closer than
St. Precious in Palmaris, but how they could ever get a hundred people that far
south without alerting the monsters was beyond the monk. Bradwarden's
expression told the ranger that the centaur was thinking along the same lines
as he, that the elves and the sanctuary of their hidden home might prove
valuable here. But Elbryan, who had lived long in Andur'Blough Inninness,
didn't think it likely that so many humans, however desperate their situation might
be, would be invited in. Belli'mar Juraviel, easily the friendliest of the
elven band, and the one most acquainted with humans, had even refused to be
seen among the encampments, explaining that his presence would probably only
frighten those too foolish to know friend from foe.
"Then
we must make a place for them," the ranger decided, "and keep them
away from our enemies until such time as we may usher them far to the south,
behind the militia lines of Honce-the-Bear's Kingsmen." He looked at
Paulson, Cric, and Chipmunk. "See to it," he bade them, and they
nodded.
Good
soldiers, Elbryan mused.
The next
week moved along uneventfully. Elbryan, Bradwarden, and Avelyn came upon a
group of a dozen goblins chopping firewood, and summarily destroyed them. When
a fomorian came rushing to the goblins' rescue, Bradwarden tripped the giant,
and the first thing it saw when it looked up―and the last thing it ever
saw―was the fierce ranger glaring down at it, powerful Tempest sweeping
down.
Elbryan had
little contact with the elves that week. He had met with Juraviel soon after
his fireside discussion with his more conventional commanders, and the elf had
reluctantly agreed to send a handful of his fellows south to warn Landsdown.
"I fear
that we are being dragged into the middle of a fight that is meant for
humans," Juraviel had groaned, to which Elbryan only lightly responded,
"Of your own accord."
At the end
of the week, Juraviel and Tuntun came to the ranger with welcome news indeed.
"The folk of Landsdown are on the road south ahead of the advancing
monsters," Juraviel explained. "Every one."
"And they
are being met and ushered more swiftly by soldiers of your king," added
Tuntun.
"My
thanks to you and yours," the ranger said solemnly with a low bow.
"Not to
us"―Tuntun laughed―"for the folk were on the road before
we ever arrived."
Elbryan's
expression turned quizzical.
"Your
thanks to her," explained Juraviel, and on cue, Pony stepped out of the
shadows of a thick spruce.
Elbryan
rushed to her, embracing her in a huge hug. It took him some time to realize
that the elves had announced her, and thus, that the elves had met her! He
looked from Pony back to Juraviel and Tuntun.
"You
had already told her of us," Juraviel said dryly.
"But I
believe our appearance shocked her anyway," added Tuntun, again, in better
spirits than was normal for the surly elf.
"I was
still in Landsdown, the last one there, when they came upon me," Pony
explained.
Elbryan
looked her over carefully, satisfied that she, was not injured, only muddy and
weary from so long a ride.
"All
the way to Palmaris," she answered his unspoken question. "No horse
will ever match the run of Symphony! He took me all the way to Palmaris without
complaint, and all the way back at equal speed. The kingdom is alerted now, the
soldiers are on the road, and our enemies will win no more victories by surprise."
Elbryan
lifted his hand to brush back a stray lock of the woman's thick, dirty hair. He
turned his fingers gently to flick a speck of mud from her cheek, though his
gaze never left her shining blue eyes. How much he loved her, admired her,
respected her! He wanted to crush her to him, to make love to her forever, and
to protect her―and that was his dilemma, for if he tried to protect this
marvelous woman, Jilseponie Ault, then he would surely be stealing the very
essence of her, the will and the strength that he so loved.
"All
the world should thank you," he whispered. He turned to make a remark to
the elves, but the pair, so wise in the ways of all the world, were long gone,
granting the lovers their privacy.
"They
knew we were out here, in great numbers, and now they wonder why the signs have
lessened," Elbryan explained to Avelyn, the ranger astride his horse,
beside the standing man just inside the cover of thick trees lining a
bowl-shaped field. A blanket of slushy snow still covered the field, shining
blue-white in the pale light of a bright half moon. Diagonally, across the
field to the northwest, moving through the stark lines of thinner trees, came
three forms, obviously goblin scouts.
"Perhaps
they will believe that we have all departed," Avelyn offered hopefully.
Indeed, more than two thirds of the human group had gone further to the east,
leaving less than forty warriors at Elbryan's disposal, not counting the
secretive elves, whose number even the ranger didn't know.
"That
would be their mistake," the ranger answered grimly.
The tone of
his voice made Avelyn glance his way, and the monk was glad to see that Tempest
was still sheathed at the side of the saddle Belster O'Comely had commissioned
for Elbryan before the coming of the monsters, and that Hawkwing was likewise
in place, on a holder that looped the bow about a quiver of arrows.
But then, to
Avelyn's surprise, Elbryan stepped Symphony out of the shadows onto the mild
southern slope of the bowl-shaped vale, out of cover.
Across the
way, perhaps a hundred yards, the goblins stopped and stared, then scrambled
among the trees, fitting arrows to bowstrings.
"Elbryan!"
Avelyn whispered harshly. "Come back!"
The ranger
sat quietly, cutting a regal figure, his bow and sword at rest.
Three arrows
went up into the night sky, errant shots that landed far short or far wide of
the ranger.
"They
do not even believe that we can see them," Elbryan said quietly, obviously
amused.
Avelyn
scrambled out to Elbryan's side, putting Symphony between him and the goblins.
"Better that we had not seen them," the monk huffed, "or better
still that they had not seen us!"
"Calm,
my friend," the ranger replied as another arrow thudded into the snowy
ground, barely twenty feet away. Brave Symphony held perfectly steady; Elbryan
wished that his human friend had as much faith.
Avelyn
peeked under Symphony's head, to see that the goblins had gone to the bottom of
the field's slope, still under the respectable cover of the stark deciduous
trees.
"Three
shots at a time, and they're likely to get lucky," Avelyn remarked. The
monk looked up to see Elbryan slowly bringing Hawkwing to bear, then, with
hardly a movement;. letting fly an arrow.
Avelyn
looked back in time to see a goblin catch it in his chest. He couldn't see the
arrow, of course, just the sudden jerk of the dark silhouette, followed by a
backward drop to the ground. The other two scrambled in sudden retreat,
slipping as they tried to get back up the slope.
Elbryan held
his pose, his bowstring fully drawn and perfectly steady.
"Get
them quick," Avelyn prodded.
"It
must be sure," Elbryan answered. "There can be no miss." He
waited as the goblin pair weaved, then at last found his opening and let fly,
the arrow cutting a straight, swift line to take a second goblin in the side of
the head. The one remaining howled and scrambled, fell to its belly, and slid
halfway back to the bottom.
"Oh,
get him!" cheered Avelyn. "Ho, ho, what!"
But Elbryan
had put up his bow, sitting calmly on Symphony, his head tilted back, his eyes
closed, as if he were simply enjoying the breeze of the moonlit night.
"What?"
Avelyn asked, the monk watching the goblin running off once again to the top of
the ridge and then beyond, lost from view. "Ho, ho, what?"
Elbryan
slowly opened his eyes and looked down at the man. "It is all about
reputation," the ranger explained, and he turned Symphony and started
walking back to the trees.
"Reputation?"
Avelyn echoed. "You let the last one get away! It will surely report that
we have not left, that we, that you, at least, remain. . ." The monk's
voice trailed off and a smile spread across his round face. Of course, the
terrified goblin would return, blabbering its report. Of course, the goblin
would tell them that the mysterious ranger on his mighty stallion remained,
would tell them that death waited for them in the forest.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn bellowed in sincere admiration. "Let them know of
Elbryan, then!"
"No,"
the ranger corrected. "Let them know of Nightbird. Let them know and let
them be afraid."
Avelyn
nodded as he watched the ranger and his mount melt away into the forest night.
Indeed, he thought, and well they should be afraid!
Elbryan did
his sword-dance, as he had done so many times in Andur'Blough Inninness.
Tempest weaved its wondrous lines about him slowly―turning, stooping, and
rising in perfect balance. One foot followed the other and then took up the
lead: step, step, thrust, and retreat.
All flowed
slowly, beautifully. He was the embodiment of the warrior, this muscular naked
man, the height of harmony, one with his weapon.
From the
trees behind Elbryan, Pony and Avelyn watched awestruck. They had come upon the
scene quite accidentally, and the monk, seeing Elbryan first and seeing that he
was quite naked, had tried to turn Pony down a different path. But she, too,
had spotted the man, and no amount of coercing from Avelyn would deflect her.
In watching
Elbryan, his graceful moves, his trancelike intensity, Pony came to know so
much more of him, to see him as clearly as if she were lying in his arms,
sharing his heights of passion and joy.
This was
different but no less intense, she realized. Like their coupling, this was a
joining of body and spirit, a physical meditation somehow above the norm of
human experience, somehow sacred.
Avelyn had seen
this type of practice before―it was not so different from the physical
training the monks received at St.-Mere-Abelle―but he had never seen a
dance as graceful as Elbryan's, as perfectly harmonious.
And Tempest,
seeming no more than an extension of the ranger, only added to that beauty, the
light sword swishing about, leaving a glowing trail of bluish-white.
"We
should be away," the monk whispered to Pony as Elbryan came to one long
pause in his routine.
Pony didn't
disagree; perhaps they were indeed peeping at something which was Elbryan's
alone. But as the ranger started his movements again, as Tempest came up and
about, perfectly level and parallel with his broad shoulders, she found that
she could not turn away.
Nor could
Avelyn.
Elbryan
finished soon after and slumped to the grass; Pony and Avelyn stole away.
When Pony
met Elbryan more than an hour later, she had to work hard to hide her feelings
of guilt, her feelings that she had somehow violated him. Finally, it was too
much.
"I saw
you this morning," she admitted.
Elbryan
raised an eyebrow.
"At
your exercise," Pony admitted. "I―I did not mean..." She
stopped, stammering, and lowered her gaze.
"And
were you alone?" said Elbryan.
Something in
his tone brought Pony's gaze up to meet his, and in the hint of a smile at the
corner of his mouth, the woman found the truth revealed.
"You
already knew!" she accused.
Elbryan
brought a hand to his chest, as if wounded.
"You
knew!" Pony said again, and she slapped her hand against his shoulder.
"But I
did not know if you would tell me," the ranger said evenly, and Pony
backed away.
"We
came upon you by accident," the woman explained. Pony glared at him.
"Yes,
you and Avelyn," Elbryan revealed.
After a long
pause, Pony asked bluntly, "Are you angry?"
Elbryan
smiled warmly. "There is nothing I wish to hold secret from you."
"But I
remained," she went on, "I watched you until the end of your
dance."
"I
would have been disappointed if the sight of me so could not hold you in
place," Elbryan said playfully, and all tension was abruptly gone.
Pony wrapped
the man in a hug then, and gave him a deep kiss. "Will you teach it to
me?" she asked. "The dance, I mean."
Elbryan
looked hard into her face. "It was a gift to me from the
Touel'alfar," he explained. "A gift that I will, in turn, offer to
you, but only with the blessings of the elves."
Pony was
honored, and she moved to kiss Elbryan again, but a rustle at the side caught
her attention.
Paulson
moved out of the brush. "The caravan must've traveled half the
night," he said, referring to a goblin supply train they had been watching,
coming from the north. "We hit it today, or it makes Weedy Meadow."
"Are
they still along the river?" asked Elbryan.
The big man
nodded.
Elbryan
looked at Pony, who understood her role; and without further bidding, she ran
off to find Avelyn and gather together those warriors who had been put under
her charge.
Elbryan
closed his eyes and sent his thoughts into the forest, to Symphony―the
stallion grazing, as always these days, not so far away.
"Let us
be off," the ranger then said to Paulson, "to prepare the battlefield
as best suits us."
There was no
high ground in the path of the caravan, except those hills surrounding Weedy
Meadow, and that locale would be too close to the occupied village. Elbryan and
his forces had to go out further to the north, had to intercept and destroy the
caravan before any aid could come from the monsters already encamped in the
area.
But there
was no high ground, just thick woodlands, giving way to the brown and gray
stones that lined the riverbank. At least the river would form a barrier to
their enemies, the ranger thought, preventing an easy escape.
"Two
groups coming," Bradwarden explained, catching up to Elbryan and the
others as they determined their attack routes. "Small one in front,
goblins mostly, but with a giant helping, cutting the trees and clearing the
way."
"For
wagons?" Elbryan asked, and he hoped that he was right.
"War
engines," the centaur explained. "Two big contraptions, catapults,
all set on wheels and pulled by three giants each."
"Too
many," muttered Paulson, standing at Elbryan's side.
The ranger
looked at the man, no coward certainly, and wasn't sure that he could disagree.
Seven giants―at least―and a host of powries and goblins might
indeed be more than the ranger and his band could handle.
"Well, we
can hit at them anyway," Paulson offered a moment later. "But we best
be ready to run off if the tide turns against us."
Elbryan
looked at Bradwarden. "What of scouts?" he asked.
"Oh,
they've plenty o' goblin rats running about the trees," the centaur replied,
smiling widely as he lifted a twig to pick his teeth. "Two less,
now," he said mischievously.
The ranger
made a subtle movement, one that only Bradwarden caught, putting his finger up
beside his ear, indicating a pointy ear, thus an elf.
The centaur
nodded; the elves were in the area, and Elbryan was confident that he and his
band would not have to worry much about any goblin scouts.
Pony came
riding in then on a roan mare, one of several wild horses that would allow
themselves to be ridden. Brother Avelyn came huffing and puffing behind her,
the monk trotting along without complaint.
"The
most important task before us is the destruction of the war engines,"
Elbryan decided. "For surely they will be put to deadly use against the
towns to the south, even against the high walls of Palmaris."
The ranger
paused for a while and considered all that he had heard. "How many in the
front group?" he asked the centaur.
"Ah, a
motley bunch," Bradwarden replied sourly, as if even speaking of the
creatures left a foul taste in his mouth. "A dozen, I'd say, hacking at
the trees, tearing at them, while the giant clears what's fallen. Ugly
wretches. I'll kill the lot of them, if ye want."
Elbryan
almost believed that the centaur would do just that. "Can you handle a giant?"
he asked.
Bradwarden
snorted as if the very question were insulting.
The ranger
turned to Pony. "Take ten and the centaur," he explained. "You
must destroy that front group and quickly. The rest will come in with me to cut
off the main caravan, right in between the groups."
"Facing
six giants?" Paulson asked skeptically.
"Drawing
their attention," the ranger explained, "long enough for Avelyn to
burn the powrie catapults. After that, we can scatter as we must, but my hope
is that many monsters will be dead in the wreckage."
"But
they have scouts," Paulson argued. "They might be knowing we're about
afore e'er we get near them."
"The
scouts are all dead," Elbryan said firmly. Paulson, and many others,
looked at him hard.
"Yer
elfin friends?" the big man asked. "I'm not sure I'm liking
that."
"Tell
me that after the battle," Elbryan replied wryly, then to Pony he shouted,
"Be off!"
Paulson
sighed, accepting the ranger's word for it. He was surprised when Pony tapped
him on the shoulder, indicating that she wanted him and Cric and Chipmunk to
work with her group up front.
"We
will come straight in at them along the riverbank," Pony explained to
Elbryan as she and the others moved away.
"And we
hit from the side, through the trees," the ranger replied. He nodded at
his beloved. He could feel that tingling excitement, prebattle, and he knew
Pony felt it, too. Indeed, there was danger for him and for Pony, but this was
their life, this was their destiny, and for all the horror and all the fear, it
was exciting.
Elbryan had
to grit his teeth and let the front group of monsters move past his position,
though with every hack of a goblin axe against one of the beautiful trees, the
ranger wanted to rush out and cut the creature down.
The goblins
and their giant escort moved along slowly but steadily, and soon after, Elbryan
and his companions heard the rumble of the war engines, the grunts of the
towing giants.
"Hold
until they are right upon us," the ranger instructed, "then let fly
your arrows and loose your spears. Aim for the giants only," the ranger
quickly added. "They are the most dangerous. If we can bring a couple of
them down with the first volley, our enemies will be at a sore
disadvantage."
"And if
we don't?" surly Tol Yuganick grumbled. "Are we to run in front of
six giants to be squashed?"
"We hit
at them as hard as we safely can," the ranger replied evenly, trying to
keep his continuing frustration with the disagreeable man out of his voice,
"and then, when we must, we flee. A single caravan is not worth risking
many casualties."
"Easy
for you," Tol snapped back, "up on that fast horse of yours. The rest
of us are running, and I'm not thinking that many can outrun the likes of a
giant!"
Elbryan
glared at the man, wishing that Pony had taken him with her group, or even that
Tol had been sent off to the east with the other refugees. Tol was a fierce
fighter, but the amount of discord he caused made him a detraction, not an
asset.
"Wait
until they close," the ranger said again, addressing the whole group.
"They think that they have scouts in place, and will be caught unawares.
Concentrate your missiles on the giants pulling the front catapult. Let us see
what remains after the first volley."
He turned to
Avelyn then. "How many will you need with you?"
The monk shook
his head. "None," he replied. "Just keep their attention ahead
of them, and I will get in behind! Stay back from the catapults, I warn you. I
am feeling quite powerful this day!"
With that,
the monk scrambled off into the brush, and Elbryan nearly laughed aloud
watching him go, watching the light step that had come over Brother Avelyn
Desbris. The monk had found peace within himself, ironically, in the midst of a
war, a battle that Avelyn knew justified the actions that had weighed so
heavily on him these last years.
Elbryan
turned his attention back to the scene before him, ten yards of trees, followed
by a few yards of cleared brush, a dozen feet of river stones, and then the
river itself, waters rushing fast with the beginning of the spring melt. He heard
the rumble of the war engines above that watery voice and discerned, by the
alternating sounds, both sharp and muffled, that the caravan was moving right
along the edge of the riverbank.
The ranger
motioned to his companions, who started slinking from tree to tree, setting up
their shots. Elbryan held his place, behind the tangled branches of two close
hemlocks. He glanced about for the elves, and hoped that they were nearby. None
in all the world could better concentrate their shots, and even a giant, the
ranger knew from personal experience, could be brought down by the small
arrows.
Up in front,
one of the women signaled that the caravan was nearly upon them.
Elbryan
fitted an arrow to Hawkwing and eyed his course. He contacted Symphony
telepathically, and the horse nickered softly.
The first of
the giants came into sight, bending low, pulling hard, a heavy harness strapped
across its torso. Two others were close behind, in similar posture.
Elbryan felt
the anxious gazes of his companions upon him, waiting for him to start it all.
He was somewhat concerned that no sounds of battle came to him from further
south, from the lead group, but he and his companions were committed, he knew,
and would have to trust that Pony would not let the goblins and giant get
behind them, cutting off any quick retreat.
The ranger
let fly his first arrow even as he kicked his heels against Symphony's ribs and
the horse leaped forward.
The lead
giant grunted, more in surprise than in pain, when the bolt dove into its
shoulder, and then all the air about the monster and its two companions erupted
as a dozen arrows and nearly that many spears came slicing in.
Elbryan
fired again and again, scoring a hit each time as Symphony guided him to the
open ground before the caravan. By the time he got there, the lead giant was
down and dead, the other two were scrambling to get out of their encumbering
harnesses, while a score of powries and twice that number of goblins were
hooting and rushing about, grabbing for weapons or diving for cover.
Out came
several of Elbryan's companions, right behind him, and all of them, and the
ranger too, breathed a sigh of relief to finally hear the sound of battle
behind them.
One of the
powries stood tall on the first catapult, barking out commands.
The ranger's
next shot laid the dwarf low.
Pony charged
in hard, running her horse right across the lead line of goblins, her sword
slashing hard across the face of one, then darting out to stick a second in the
throat. This was the easy part, she knew, for she and her companions had caught
the monsters by surprise, and diminutive goblins couldn't take a solid hit.
Before the woman had even swung her sword, half the small creatures lay dead or
squirming in agony on the ground.
But then
there was the not so little matter of a fomorian giant.
Pony tugged
hard on her mare's mane, turning the horse when she saw the behemoth moving to
intercept. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw the galloping charge of
Bradwarden, the centaur singing at the top of his considerable voice, waving a
huge cudgel as easily as if it were a tiny baton.
The giant
braced as the centaur came in, but Bradwarden skidded short and leaped about,
putting his tail closest to the monster. Thinking that the centaur had changed
his mind and was trying to flee, the giant lunged for that tail, but
Bradwarden's haunches came up high, the centaur kicking out with both his hind
legs, hard hooves perfectly aligned with the stooping monster's ugly face.
The giant
staggered backward, its legs buckling under it.
Singing
wildly, the centaur charged in, bashing the monster about the head with his
heavy club.
Then Pony
rushed by, her sword slashing a line across the side of the giant's neck.
"Hey,
but ye're stealing me fun!" the centaur protested, leaping about again and
snapping off a second mighty double kick, this one connecting on the giant's
massive chest and throwing the monster flat to the ground.
Bradwarden
smiled, seeing Pony run down another goblin, seeing all the wretched creatures
falling fast before the deadly group. And seeing, most of all, the giant, dazed
and helpless, up on its elbows, its head lolling about.
Perfect
height for an underhand swing.
The second
giant went down before it ever got out of the harness. The third did get out,
but Elbryan put an arrow into its eye, and half a dozen other arrows hit it in
the neck and face.
It, too,
slumped to the ground.
Of more
concern, though, were the powries, taking up their weapons, and the giants from
the second catapult, out of their harnesses and with hardly a scratch on them.
"Hurry,
Avelyn," Elbryan muttered under his breath. "Do not delay."
"Here
comes Jilly! Flying fast!" one man cried, and Elbryan was truly glad for
the timing and for the much-needed boost to his group's tentative morale. The monstrous
troop in the south had been overrun, so it seemed.
"Concentrate
your shots on the giants!" the ranger bellowed, and then under his voice,
he repeated, "Hurry, Avelyn."
* * *
Bradwarden
galloped off to catch the woman and her fast-flying roan, but the centaur
skidded to a stop, seeing Chipmunk teasing free a pair of daggers from a dead
goblin, but with tears streaming down his face.
"It's
Cric!" the man wailed. "Oh, my Cric!"
Bradwarden
followed his gaze to a tumble of a pair of goblins and, unmistakably, a
bald-headed human lying among them.
"He's
dead!" the small nervous man declared.
"Where
is yer third?" the centaur asked. "The big one?"
"Paulson's
running up ahead," Chipmunk explained. "Says he'll kill every goblin,
every powrie, every giant."
"Get on
me back, man, and hurry!" the centaur ordered, and Chipmunk did just that.
On they charged, Bradwarden singing a rousing song and Chipmunk forcing away
his tears, locking them behind a wall of sheer anger.
Avelyn
crouched behind a tree, barely ten feet from the side of the trailing catapult.
The monk's frustration mounted, for though two of the giants had run off toward
the fighting up front, the third had remained defensively in place, with a host
of powries staying up on the catapult, some of them with crossbows.
Avelyn would
have to get closer, he knew, for his fireball to have any real effect, but if
he went out in the open, he figured that he would be grabbed or shot down
before he ever loosed the magical blast.
The monk
understood the situation up front, understood that Elbryan could not buy him
very much more time without endangering many lives. He called up his serpentine
shield and, purely on instinct, he rushed out of the brush and dove to the
ground, rolling right under the catapult.
He heard
the. powries crying out, knew that he hadn't much time, and tried to focus on
the ruby, on its mounting energy.
Then the
giant was kneeling beside the catapult, its face down to the ground, its long
arm reaching under for poor Avelyn.
He had to
roll away, but then, stopped suddenly as a small crossbow bolt skipped off the
ground right beside him. He glanced back to see a pair of powries crawling
under the war engine, coming for him with prodding spears.
Avelyn
closed his eyes and prayed with all his heart. He felt the tingling power of
the ruby, as if it were begging for release; he imagined the sudden stabbing
pain when the powries drew near.
Avelyn's
eyes popped open, the man staring into the ugly face of the giant.
"Ho,
ho, what!" the monk howled in glee, and boom! a ball of flame engulfed the
catapult, incinerated the powries crawling in behind the monk, and blinded the
giant in front of him. The great wooden structure went up like a huge candle;
those unsuspecting powries standing atop it cried out and dove for the ground,
rolling to extinguish the flames. One unfortunate dwarf dove right in the path
of the howling giant. The fire on that particular dwarf was indeed extinguished
as a huge booted foot crushed the diminutive creature flat. The burning giant
continued on with hardly a thought for the dwarf, running blindly, swatting
futilely at the flames. It slammed into a young tree, snapping branches and
stumbling, but held its balance―stupidly, for the ground offered its only
chance of smothering the flames―and ran on.
Avelyn
clutched the serpentine tightly as burning chips of wood sizzled down around
him. The gem wouldn't protect him from smoke, he knew, and so he realized he
had to get out from under the burning war engine. He started to work himself to
one side, but then a wheel succumbed to the flames and the gigantic catapult
creaked and rocked to the side, pinning the monk.
"Oh,
help me," Avelyn breathed, trying to squeeze back the other way. "Ho,
ho, what?"
Avelyn's
blast did much to even the odds, leaving only two giants and a score of powries
against Elbryan's thirty. The ranger could not accept such an even fight,
though, for if he lost a fifth of his force, it would be too many for the gains
of this one encounter. He started to call for a retreat, holding Pony back as
she galloped up beside him on her strong roan, but then Bradwarden came by,
singing again, a rowdy tune, with a growling Chipmunk on his back, daggers in
hand.
"Halt!"
Elbryan called to the centaur, but even as he spoke there came a sudden humming
sound, a noise the ranger recognized as the thrumming of many delicate but
deadly elvish bows.
Several
powries tumbled from the lead catapult.
Bradwarden
bore down on the closest giant, Chipmunk leading the way with a hurled dagger,
then a second, third, and fourth in rapid succession, all aimed perfectly for
the behemoth's face, all hitting the mark and digging in deeply with the
strength of the man's rage driving them.
The giant
howled in agony and clutched at its torn face with both hands, and Bradwarden
hit it in full stride, bowling it to the ground.
Elbryan
could not halt the flow of his furious forces then, certainly not wild-eyed
Paulson, who dodged the thrust of a powrie spear, lifted the dwarf into the
air, and tossed it a dozen feet, to crack its head against a tree trunk.
The
remaining giant ran away into the woods; those powries out of the immediate
rush scattered, wanting no more of this wild band.
"Take
apart the second catapult!" Elbryan commanded his forces. "Feed its
logs to Avelyn's fire."
"Where
is Avelyn?" Pony asked as her roan trotted past Symphony.
"In the
forest with the elves, likely," said Elbryan. "Perhaps in pursuit of
the giant."
As if on
cue, the burning catapult creaked again and slanted over farther. Elbryan
stared at it, sensed something amiss.
"No,"
the ranger murmured, slipping down from his horse. He started walking toward
the burning thing, then began running, scrambling to the ground as close as he
could get to the catapult's highest edge. Elbryan peered through the thick
smoke. There were two bodies near him, and he was relieved to recognize them as
powries.
"But
what were the powries doing under the catapult?" the ranger asked with
sudden horror.
"Bring
a beam!" he shouted, standing tall and hopping excitedly. "A lever! And
quickly!"
"Avelyn,"
Pony breathed, catching on to the source of her lover's distress.
Most of the
fighting was finished―several men and the centaur had already begun
taking apart the intact catapult. Bradwarden, working at the catapult's long
arm and great counterweight, heard the ranger's desperate call.
Chipmunk
popped out the last fastening peg, and, with the strength of a giant, the
centaur lifted free the huge beam. Men scrambled to help him, but even with all
of the hands, the best they could do was drag the beam to Elbryan and the
burning catapult.
"Ropes
to the other side," Elbryan commanded, as he and several others began
setting one end of the long pole under the highest side of the burning
catapult. "It must be pulled right over, and swiftly!"
They tugged,
they lifted with all their strength. Pony got Symphony and her roan around the
back, ropes looped about the war engine and tied to the tugging horses.
Finally, with one great heave, the group uprighted the catapult, which fell
over with a tremendous groan of protest and a huge shower of orange-yellow
sparks.
There lay
Avelyn, motionless and soot covered.
Elbryan
rushed to him, as did all the others, Pony pushing her way through to be beside
this man she had come to love as a brother.
"He
does not breathe!" Elbryan cried, pushing hard on the man's chest, trying
to force the air into him.
Pony took a
different tack, going for the monk's pouch, fumbling with the stones until she
at last brought forth the hematite. She had no idea how to proceed―Avelyn
had not formally trained her with this most dangerous of stones―but she
knew that she must try. She sent her thoughts into the stone, remembered that
Avelyn had done as much for her, and indeed, for Elbryan.
She prayed
to God, she begged for help, and then, though she did not believe that she had
accessed the stone's power in the least, she felt a soothing hand above her
own, and looked down to see the monk staring up at her, smiling faintly.
"Hot
one," Avelyn said between coughs that brought forth black spittle.
"Ho, ho, what!"
"'The
design was impressive," Elbryan admitted to Belli'mar Juraviel and Tuntun,
the elves sitting with the ranger at Avelyn's bedside much later that night.
Avelyn
opened a sleepy eye to regard his newest companions. He had known the elves
were about, of course―everyone in the camp did―but he had never
actually seen one of the Touel'alfar before. He stayed quiet and closed his
eyes once more, not wanting to scare the sprites away.
Too late;
Elbryan had noticed the movement.
"I fear
that your prophecies of doom hold much truth," the ranger said, shaking
Avelyn a bit to show that he was speaking to him.
Avelyn
opened one eye, locked stares not with Elbryan but with the elven pair.
"I give
you Belli'mar Juraviel and Tuntun," the ranger said politely, "two of
my tutors, two of my dearest friends."
Avelyn
opened wide his eyes. "Well met, what," he said boisterously, though
he wound up coughing again, not yet ready for such exertion.
"And to
you, good friar," said Juraviel. "Your power with the stones is
encouraging."
"And
great will that power need to be," added Tuntun. "For a darkness has
come to the world."
Avelyn knew
that all too well, had known it since the days immediately after his departure
from St.-Mere-Abelle―had known it, in retrospect, since his journey to
Pimaninicuit. He closed his eyes again and lay still, too weary to speak of
such things.
"We
know beyond doubt that these monsters are not simple raiders but a cohesive and
organized force," Elbryan stated.
"They
are guided," Tuntun agreed, "and held together."
"We
need to speak of this another time," said Juraviel, indicating the monk,
who seemed as if he had drifted off to sleep once more. "For now, we have
the immediate battles before us."
Both elves
nodded and slipped quietly out of the tent, past the sleeping soldiers and the
alert guards without a whisper, seeming to all about as no more than windblown
leaves or the shadow of a bird.
Elbryan sat
with Avelyn for the rest of the night, but the monk did not stir. He was deep
in thought, in sleep at times, recalling all that he had heard of the darkness
that was on the land, of the demon dactyl and the blackness within men's
hearts.
"Our
master will not be pleased," Gothra the goblin whined, the one-handed
creature hopping frantically about the small room.
Ulg Tik'narn
regarded his fellow general sourly. The powrie had little love of goblins and
found Gothra a pitiful whining creature. The powrie could not deny Gothra's
statement, though, and gave the goblin more credit than he gave Maiyer Dek, for
the giant was perfectly oblivious of their increasingly desperate situation.
The villages had been captured, that was true, but too few humans had been
killed, and this mysterious Nightbird and his friends were wreaking havoc on
every supply group that came down from the north, something the merciless
dactyl had certainly noticed―the arrival of the spirit who called himself
Brother Justice confirmed that fact.
And Ulg
Tik'narn knew that he, most of all, would be blamed for the interfering humans.
But the powrie was not without allies of its own, and was not without a plan.
CHAPTER 43
A Place of Particular Interest
"Tearing
and scarring!" the centaur wailed, stomping about, splashing in the mud
and puddles and smashing his heavy club against the ground. A drenching rain
fell all about the region, turning the last of the snow to slush and softening
the ground.
"They
are cutting the evergreens in the vale north of Dundalis," Elbryan
explained grimly to Pony. "All of them."
"Then
the day is all the grayer," she replied, looking in the general direction
of what had once been her home. Of all the places in the area, only Elbryan's
private grove was more beautiful than the pine vale and the caribou moss, and
none elicited more wistful memories from the young woman.
"We can
stop them," the ranger said suddenly, seeing the profound pain on Pony's
fair features. He sighed as he finished, though, for he and Bradwarden had just
concluded a similar conversation in which the centaur had called for an attack,
but Elbryan had reasoned that the clear-cutting might be no more than a trap
set for their band. They had become a large thorn in the side of the invading army,
and no doubt the monstrous leaders in Dundalis and the other villages wanted to
get the secretive band out in the open and deal with them once and for all.
Goblins were stupid things, but powries were not, Elbryan knew, and he
understood that these dwarvish generals would recognize the importance of
beauty to the humans.
"Too
close to Dundalis," Pony lamented. "They would have reinforcements
upon us before we could do any real harm to their clear-cutters."
"But if
we sting them and send them running," Bradwarden argued again, "might
that they'll be thinking twice before going back in that valley!"
Pony looked
at Elbryan, the Nightbird. This was his game, his force to command. "I
would like to hit at them," she said quietly, "if for no other reason
than to show my respect for the land they despoil."
Elbryan
nodded grimly. "What of Avelyn?"
"He is
in no state to entertain thoughts of battle," Pony replied with a shake of
her head, the movement spraying little droplets of water from her thick, soaked
hair. "And he is busy with his gemstones, looking far, so he said."
Elbryan had
to be satisfied with that; any work Avelyn was doing was likely vital, for the
monk was at least as dedicated as Elbryan himself, or any of the others out
here. "Symphony can bring us only a handful of horses," the ranger
stated, improvising, thinking out loud. "We'll take only as many as can
ride, and only volunteers."
"My
roan will bear me," said Pony.
"I ride
when I'm walking." The centaur laughed.
Elbryan
replied with a smile, then fell within his thoughts, calling out through the
rain and the trees to Symphony, the black stallion not so far away. Within the
hour, seven riders, Paulson and Chipmunk among them―both still fuming
over the loss of Cric―and Bradwarden beside them, set out through the
forest, making their winding way toward the evergreen valley. The elves were
with them, as well, Elbryan knew, shadowing their every move, serving as silent
scouts.
They arrived
at the northern slope of the valley without incident, to look down upon a score
of powries, a like number of goblins, and a pair of giants, clearing away the
trees. This was one of the few times of the year when the ground in the vale was
brown, for the caribou moss wasn't in season and the snow was all but gone.
Still, the sight of the low, neat evergreens was impressive, a reminder to the
ranger and Pony of the beauty of this place, this valley that they had so
treasured in their youth.
"We
stay close, we hit fast, and we get away," Elbryan explained; addressing
them all but eyeing Paulson directly. The big man, so pained by the loss of his
friend, was likely to ride right out the other end of the valley, the ranger
realized, and charge into Dundalis, killing everything in his paths. "Our
mission here is not to kill them all―we've not the numbers for such a
task―but to scare them and sting them, to chase them away in the hope
that they will fear to leave the shelter of the village."
Pony,
Paulson, and Chipmunk went with Elbryan, moving down to the left, while the
other three followed Bradwarden down to the right. The rain intensified then,
as did the wind, sheets of water blowing past, making them and their mounts all
thoroughly miserable. But Elbryan welcomed the deluge. The monsters were as
miserable as they, he knew, and the noise of the storm would cover their
approach, perhaps even their first attacks. The one drawback was that the
elves, even then moving into position lower on the slope, would have a
difficult time with their bows.
No matter,
the ranger mused as he picked his way among the low pines, wide of the area
where the monsters hacked away. Today was a day for swords, then, and Elbryan
felt comfortable indeed drawing Tempest and laying the magnificent sword across
his lap.
The blade
came up swiftly as the ranger passed around one bushy spruce, to see the
branches jostled by something within.
Belli'mar
Juraviel popped his head out in plain view; Elbryan heard Paulson and Chipmunk
suck in their breath behind him, their first real sight of the ever-elusive
elves.
"They
are behind the ridge in great numbers," Juraviel said to the ranger.
"Many giants among them, and those with stones for throwing! Be gone from
this place, oh, be gone!"
Before
Elbryan could begin to respond, the elf disappeared within the thick boughs,
and then a rustle across the way told Elbryan that Juraviel had exited the back
side of the tree and was probably long gone already.
"Trap,"
the ranger whispered harshly to his three companions, and he kicked Symphony
into a run. The four widened their line, weaving about the trees, coming
suddenly upon a group of powries and goblins, the monsters too startled to
react.
Elbryan
leaned low in the saddle and slashed one across the face, then drove Tempest
into the chest of another as Symphony thundered past. Chipmunk took one in the
eye with a dagger and cut the ear off another as it tried to dive aside, while
Pony scattered a trio of goblins, the whining creatures more than willing to
run away.
Paulson's
maneuvers were more direct, the bearish man running down one powrie, trampling
it under his mount, then splitting the skull of another with his heavy axe.
Roaring and charging, looking for another target, the big man guided his horse
out to the side of the others, cut a close circuit of one tree, and ran smack
into a fomorian giant, the horse and rider bouncing more than the behemoth.
Paulson fell
from his mount into the mud and looked up to see the giant, a bit dazed but far
from defeated, shove his horse aside, then take up its monstrous, spiked club.
He knew that
he would soon be with poor Cric.
He was weak
and sore, but he could wait no longer. Brother Avelyn understood that he and
his friends, that all the world, needed answers, needed to know the exact cause
of this invasion. And so he fell into the enchantment of his powerful hematite,
let his spirit walk free of his battered body, and then let it fly upon the
winds.
He looked to
the south, to Dundalis and the fight in the vale. He saw the monsters readied
on the hill, beginning their charge, organized as an army and not a simple
collection of marauding tribes.
Avelyn could
do nothing except pray that Elbryan and his riders were swift enough and lucky
enough to get away.
The monk's
thoughts turned him back to the north, and there he went with all speed. Soon
he was far beyond the sounds of battle, the forest rushing past beneath his
floating spirit. How free he felt, as he had on that long-ago day―that
day a million years ago in another life, it seemed―when Master Jojonah
had first let him walk outside of his corporeal form, when he had floated above
St.-Mere-Abelle to see the carvings on the monastery roof.
Yet another
caravan of monsters, laden with engines of war and moving inexorably south,
washed those peaceful thoughts from Avelyn's mind.
He came past
the storm, out of the rain, but though the sky was brighter, the scene before
the monk, the towering outline of the Barbacan, was not. Avelyn felt the evil,
feared the evil, and knew suddenly that if he went in that dark place now, he
would not get out.
Still, his
spirit moved toward the Barbacan, drawn by the monk's need to know. He floated
up past the towering spires of natural stone, over the southern lip of the barrier
mountains, and looked down upon a blackness more complete than any moonless
night.
If ten
thousand monsters had marched south, five times that number were gathered here,
their dark forms filling the valley from this southern mountain wall all the
way to the plain between the black arms of a singular, smoking mountain some
miles to the north.
A smoking
mountain! It was alive with the magic of molten stone, the magic of demon
dactyls.
Avelyn
didn't need to go any closer, and yet he felt compelled to do so, driven by
curiosity, perhaps.
No, it
wasn't curiosity, the monk realized suddenly, nor was it any false hope that he
might do battle with the creature then and there. Yet he could not deny the tug
of that lone, smoking mountain, calling to him, compelling him . . .
He had been
noticed; there could be no other answer! The demon dactyl had sensed his spirit
presence and was trying to draw him in, to destroy him. That realization
bolstered Avelyn's strength, and he turned away, the southlands wide before
him.
"You
have come to join with us," came a soft call, more a telepathic message
than an actual voice, though Avelyn recognized the tone of the speaker. His
spirit swung about again, and there, coming over a rocky bluff, was the ghost
of the man who had trained beside him all those years in St.-Mere-Abelle, the
man who had gone to Pimaninicuit to share in the glory of their God, and who,
so it now seemed, had fallen so very far.
"To
join with us," Quintall had said. To join with us.
"You
court demons," Avelyn's spirit cried out.
"I have
learned the truth," Quintall countered. "The light within the
shadows, revealing the lies―"
"You
are a damned thing!"
Avelyn
sensed the spirit's amusement. "I am with the victor," Quintall
assured him.
"We
will fight you, every mile, every inch!"
Again, the
amusement. "A minor inconvenience and no more," Quintall replied.
"Even as we speak, your mighty champion and your precious companion are
dying. You cannot win, you cannot hide."
The spirit
stopped abruptly as Avelyn, boiling with outrage, attacked, his spirit flying
fast against the nearly translucent outline of the evil ghost, locking with the
creature, their battle as much one of wills as of physical strength.
They
wrestled about, their power borne of faith, Avelyn's for his God, and
Quintall's for the demon dactyl. They twisted and gouged, floating about and
through the bare windblown rocks of the
Barbacan. Quintall's grasp was the darkness of the demo cold, drawing the very
life force from his opponent. Avelyn's grasp was the sharpness of light burning
his foe.
They locked
in agony, neither gaining an advantage, rolling and floating, and finally, they
were apart, facing each other, circling, loathing.
Avelyn knew
he could not win, not here, not with the demon dactyl so close, and the notion
that the ghost knew something about Elbryan and Pony that he did not bothered
Avelyn more than a little. Even worse, their fight would draw unwanted
attention from the smoking mountain, the monk feared; and if the dactyl came
upon him as he battled this evil spirit, he would surely be destroyed.
Avelyn was
strangely unafraid of that possibility, would go willingly to his God's side if
his death came in a battle with this purest of evil. But the monk had to put
his own desires aside, for the others back in the forest would need to know
what he had learned, would need to know of the smoking mountain and the
Barbacan, the confirmation of their dark suspicions.
Avelyn would
get his fight, he decided, but not until the world was properly warned.
"You
are a damned thing, Quintall," he said to his dark foe, but the ghost only
laughed and came on.
Avelyn
resisted the urge to meet that charge and his spirit flew away, soaring fast
for the south. He heard the taunts of Quintall, the ghost wrongly thinking the
monk had fled in fear, and he ignored those barbs as meaningless.
Avelyn hoped
that he and Quintall would meet again.
Pony and
Chipmunk continued their wild ride, weaving about the pines, cutting sharp
corners, Pony's sword flashing, Chipmurk's seemingly endless stream of daggers
spinning out. Or, when either of them was too close for such weapons, they
merely spurred their powerful steeds on, running down the helpless powries or
goblins that ventured into their path.
Even those
monsters not in panic, even those trying to get some angle on the riders, could
do little against the sheer power and speed of the rushing horses.
"To me!
To me!" Pony heard Bradwarden call, and she led the way to the centaur and
his three companions, who were enjoying similar success.
Elbryan,
though, did not follow. He was not surprised. by the disappearance of Paulson;
the man was too consumed lay grief and rage, and in truth, the ranger feared
that he should not have brought Paulson out here, not now, not so soon after
Cric's demise.
The ranger
was surprised, however, when he saw the big man's delay was not by choice, when
he saw Paulson scrambling in the mud, trying desperately to stay out of reach
of a giant's smashing club. Elbryan kicked Symphony into a straight charge. He
wished that he had Hawkwing readied, that he could lead the way with a stinging
arrow. He let the horse serve as missile instead, rushing in right beside the
engaged giant, slamming against the creature as it stooped low in its attempt
to get at Paulson.
The giant
slipped down into the mud; Symphony staggered and slid but held his balance.
"Run!"
Elbryan cried to the man, and terrified Paulson didn't have to be told twice.
He scrambled about the pines, blinded by the rain and by sheer terror. He fell
in the mud, but was scrambling up even as he hit the ground, his legs pumping
desperately.
Elbryan
tried to keep a rear guard, thought to go and, scoop Paulson into the saddle
behind him, but then realized that such a maneuver would cost them both too
much time, would allow the stubborn giant to fall over them. And Elbryan had no
time to spend in battling such a foe, not here, not now, for all the southern
slope of the valley was thick with monsters, including many giants, most
carrying sacks of heavy stones. Rocks began bouncing all about the valley
floor, skipping in the mud, more likely to squash powrie or goblin than any of
the eight attackers, though that possibility did little to dissuade the
monstrous reinforcements.
Elbryan
noted to his relief that Pony, Bradwarden, and the others were making a clean
escape, running fast in a line up the north slope, back for the cover of the
deeper forest. The ranger noted, too, that Paulson's riderless mount was close
behind them, and while he was glad that the horse had escaped, he was not
pleased by the sight.
Now Paulson
would have to run all the way out of the valley, and he would never make it
unless Elbryan and Symphony could cause enough confusion behind him. On the
ranger went, now taking and deftly stringing Hawkwing, weaving a zigzag course
about the pines, and letting fly an arrow whenever a monster showed its ugly
face.
He kept up
the dodging, the quick bursts to break free of any flanking movements, for
several minutes, but time was soon working against him as more and more
monsters poured onto the valley floor, as his options for flight lessened. A
glance back showed the ranger Paulson's lumbering form at least he thought the
dark speck scrambling up the southeastern slope was Paulson―but showed
him also the huge form of the stubborn giant in close pursuit.
His game was
ended, the ranger knew, and he spun Symphony in a tight circle about the next
tree―poked a powrie hiding amid the thick boughs in the eye with Hawkwing
for good measure―then cut a straight line in pursuit of Paulson and the
giant.
Huge stones
splattered in the mud all about him, stripping the branches from the sides of
nearby trees, and the shouts of a hundred monsters followed Elbryan out of that
valley.
But those
shouts were fast receding, Symphony's great strides outdistancing the pursuit,
and sheer luck saw the ranger through the shower of giant-thrown stones. He got
over the lip of the valley, spotted the distant form of the lumbering giant,
and plunged fast among the skeletal forms of the leafless trees.
Paulson was
caught; he tripped over an exposed root and went facedown into the mud and
slush. He heard the giant's victorious laughter, imagined the spiked club
coming up high, and covered his head with his hands, though he realized that
meager defense would do him little good.
The giant
was indeed closing for the kill, lifting its deadly weapon, when an arrow
thudded hard into its back, turning its evil laughter into a sudden wheeze.
Outraged, the behemoth spun.
Elbryan
stood right up on Symphony's back, the horse in full gallop. He drew out
Tempest and put his bow to the saddle. The giant was near a wide-branching elm
with thick, solid limbs.
"Be
quick and be sure," the ranger said to Symphony, who understood his plan
perfectly.
The horse
angled near a second elm, its branches intertwined with the one near the giant,
and Elbryan leaped away, running, surefooted, along one rain-slicked limb.
The giant
turned and stared curiously as the suddenly riderless horse continued to bear
down upon it, but the monster, after a moment's thought, seemed satisfied with
that and lifted its club to meet Symphony's charge.
At the last
second, the horse veered sharply to the side, and the giant lunged, and only
then did the stupid fomorian notice the second form, running along the
branches, running right by its bending form.
Tempest
flashed like blue-white lightning, tearing a long line across the monster's
throat. The giant came up with a roar and swung hard, but Elbryan had already
dropped off the back of the limb, and that sturdy branch stopped the club far
short of the mark. Under the limb came Elbryan, Tempest stabbing, then slashing
upward into the monster's loins as it tried futilely to extract its spiked club
from the stubborn branch.
And even
worse for the giant than the stabbing, searing pain down low was the wound
across its throat, the wound that spurted blood wildly and refused to allow the
monster to draw breath. Its rage played. out, as the terrible wound and the
flying blood took away the monster's strength. The giant let go of the club,
then, and staggered backward; grasping at its torn throat. It looked down
through blurred eyes to see the wicked man back atop his stallion, the other
man, the easy prey, climbing up behind him.
The giant
reached for Elbryan and Paulson, but its senses were playing tricks now and the
men were fully twenty feet away. Reaching, reaching, the giant overbalanced and
fell to the ground.
The behemoth
heard the hooves receding into the forest, heard the distant voice of a human
female, and then the darkness closed in.
CHAPTER 44
The Revelations of Spirits
"It was
a trap, set for you, who lived once in Dundalis," Juraviel said. The elf
sat with Pony and Elbryan near Mather's grave in the diamond-shaped grove.
Tuntun was nearby, along with the other elves who had come to the area, and
who, Juraviel had informed Elbryan, would soon be returning to Andur'Blough
Inninness.
"How
would they know that?" Elbryan asked, not yet willing to believe that the
cutting, in the evergreen vale had been done specifically for them.
"They
knew that many of the folk battling them had fled Dundalis," Juraviel
answered. "The village was deserted before they arrived. It would follow
that they understood the valley north of the town to be an important place,
perhaps even a sacred place."
"No,"
Pony argued. "They would not believe it to be more important than was the
village itself, and that we deserted."
"And I
doubt that powries, and certainly not goblins and giants, hold any appreciation
for beauty," Elbryan added.
Juraviel
fell silent, digesting the logical arguments. Still, it bothered the elf that
the monsters had gone into that particular valley.
It bothered
Elbryan, too, for the scarring of the evergreens made no sense. The monsters'
take of lumber would not have been useful; the spruce and pines were too short
for catapults, too wet and sappy for wood fires, and too pliable for any
construction. With deeper forests all about them, filled with taller trees of
harder wood, why would the powries go into the evergreen, valley? Only to lure
their enemies, Elbryan had to reason, particularly Jilseponie and him, the two
to whom the valley was indeed sacred.
But it made
no sense to the ranger, for the plan was too subtle. How might the monsters
have garnered such information about the leaders of their enemies?
"They
knew," Elbryan said flatly: "They had to know."
"How?"
Juraviel demanded.
A whistle
from the trees―from Tuntun, they realized―alerted them of a
visitor, and a moment later, Brother Avelyn ambled in to join them. He looked
much better, seeming his old bouncy self, except for a slight limp.
"Ho,
ho, what?" Pony said to him playfully, drawing a smile from the monk.
"They
knew," Avelyn remarked as he sat down hard on the ground. "They knew,
and they know much of us. Too much."
"How
have you discerned this?" Juraviel asked.
"A
ghost told me," Avelyn replied. Elbryan perked up his ears, wondering if
the monk had been in contact with Uncle Mather.
"While
you fought in the valley, I went far to the north," the monk explained.
"I tell you now that this force which has come upon us is but a
predecessor, a testing probe, and that our enemy, the demon dactyl, has many
times this number of soldiers to send down upon us."
"Then
we are doomed," Pony whispered.
"Our
enemy has another ally, as well," Avelyn went on, looking directly at
Elbryan. "The ghost of a man you killed, in my defense."
"Brother
Justice," the ranger reasoned.
Avelyn
nodded. "His name is Quintall," he said, for the other title seemed
perfectly ridiculous now. "I spoke with this ghost briefly, before we
battled, and I tell you, he knew of us, of you and of Pony."
"He and
I once did battle," the ranger reminded.
Avelyn was shaking
his head before Elbryan even finished the predictable sentence. "He knew
that you were in trouble, in the valley. He predicted that both of you would be
slain."
"Then
it was a trap," Juraviel said.
"Indeed,"
remarked Avelyn. "They knew how best to draw us―you two, at
least," he said to Elbryan and Pony.
"How
could they?" Pony wanted to know. "Brother―Quintall did not
know us well, certainly did not know our affinity with the pine vale."
"Perhaps
the ghost has been about us," came a voice from a nearby tree. The group
glanced over to see Tuntun sitting calmly on a branch.
That seemed
plausible enough, but Avelyn suspected that he would have sensed Quintall's
presence had the spirit indeed been about. "Perhaps," the monk
admitted, "or might it be that Quintall is not the only one who has fallen
to the darkness of the dactyl?"
To the small
group whose very lives depended on absolute secrecy, there could have been no
more unsettling possibility than that of a traitor in their midst. A thousand
questions filtered through Elbryan's and everyone else's thoughts as he
considered each person of the band. When he came to privately question the
loyalty of Bradwarden, the ranger realized that this exercise was truly folly.
"We
know no such thing," Elbryan said firmly after a lengthy pause in the
conversation. "Likely it was the ghost, a spy for our enemies. Or perhaps
the powries are more cunning than we first believed. Perhaps they have
prisoners hidden away and have tortured information from them."
"None from
Dundalis, surely," argued Pony. "None who might know of our fondness
for the valley."
"It is
all speculation," the ranger insisted. "Dangerous thoughts. How will
we function if there remains no trust among us? No," he decided, his stern
tone showing that he would brook no compromise on this point, "we will not
cast suspicion on any in our group. We will not speak of this outside our
immediate circle, and not speak of it at all unless some more substantial
evidence can be found."
"We
must be careful then," Avelyn offered.
"Will
this grove be next?" Pony asked, a question that unnerved Elbryan.
"All
the world will be next," Tuntun said, shifting the focus, "if
Avelyn's words are true."
"They
are," the monk insisted. "I saw the monstrous gathering in such
numbers as I would never have imagined."
"In
greater numbers than their nature would allow," agreed Juraviel,
"were they not guided."
Pony, who
hadn't been involved in the previous discussion at Avelyn's bedside, seemed not
to understand.
"Powries
and goblins would not ally for long if there was not a greater power, a greater
evil, holding them together," Juraviel explained.
Pony looked
at Avelyn, thinking of his prophecies of doom all those weeks together on the
road, thinking of the weakness of the world the monk constantly berated and of
the name he gave to it. "The dactyl?" she asked. "You are
certain?"
"The
dactyl is awake," Avelyn said without hesitation.
"As we
feared in Caer'alfar," Juraviel added.
"But I
thought that the dactyl was the weakness in men's hearts," Pony reasoned,
"not a physical being."
"It is
both," Avelyn explained, recalling the training he had received at
St.-Mere-Abelle and thinking it ironic now that those same men who had taught
him of the demon dactyl had, through their own weakness and impiety, helped to
facilitate the return of the monster. "It is the weakness of man that
allows the demon to come forth, but when it does, it is a physical monster
indeed, a being of great power who can command the wills of those with evil in
their hearts, who can dominate the monstrous hordes and tempt men such as
Quintall, men who have fallen from the ways of God, to its side."
"There
are more beliefs than those of your church," Tuntun put in dryly.
"And
all our gods are one God," Avelyn replied quickly, not wanting to offend
the elf. "A God of differing names perhaps, but of similar tenets. And
when those tenets are misinterpreted," the monk went on, his voice turning
grave, "when they are used for personal gain or as a means of exacting
punishment or forcing submission upon others, then let all of Corona beware,
for the demon dactyl will rouse from its slumbers."
"It is
a dark time," Juraviel agreed.
Elbryan
bowed his head but in thought and not in despair. Such philosophical discussions
did not elude the ranger, but Elbryan understood that his role here was to
consider their position in terms of their day-to-day existence, that he might
properly guide those folk, closer to two hundred than to one, who had come
under his care. At that moment, the ranger had more immediate problems than
some mythical monster hundreds of miles away, for if there was indeed a traitor
in their midst, then the threat would increase.
* * *
"They
knew, Uncle Mather," Elbryan whispered when at last the image came to him
at Oracle. "They knew that scourging the valley would wound me, would,
perhaps, even bring me out of hiding. So how can they know of me, more than the
name of Nightbird, which I have not hidden, and of my exploits against them?
How could they know of my loves, of a place that is special only within my
heart?"
The ranger
sat back, leaning on the back wall of the small cave. He continued to stare
silently, not expecting an answer but hoping that, as was often the case, the
image of his uncle Mather would guide him through the jumble of his own
thoughts, to reason through his dilemma.
He saw
another image in the mirror―or was it merely in his mind?―one of a
man he had selected to go along on the raid to the evergreen vale, but who had
refused, claiming sickness. Elbryan knew well that the man had not been ill,
and he considered the sudden cowardice truly out of character. But with no time
for such petty problems, the ranger had dismissed the incident.
Elbryan
envisioned again the return of the battered group to the main encampment:
Paulson ,dropping down wearily from Symphony's back, Pony leaning against
Bradwarden as if, were it not for the centaur's solid frame, she would have
simply tumbled over to the ground. He saw reflected in the mirror those images
that had been peripheral to him at that time: a supposedly ill man standing at the
side of the camp and, more important, the expression on that man's face, hardly
noticed at the time, but clear now to Elbryan.
The man was
surprised, truly surprised, that they had returned.
Using all
the stealth he had learned in his years with the Touel'alfar, Elbryan followed
Tol Yuganick out of the encampment late one dark night, several days after the
abandoned raid on the evergreen valley.
The big man,
supposedly in search of firewood, looked back over his broad shoulders often,
Elbryan noted, obviously trying to ensure that he was not being followed. His
precaution did little against the stealthy skill of the ranger, though, and so
Tol was oblivious of Elbryan's presence, obviously so, when he met with a
bandy-limbed powrie less than two miles from the band's present hideout.
"I did
as you demanded," Elbryan heard the big man complain. "I delivered
them, right where I said I would."
"Yach!
Ye said the ranger," the powrie grumbled back, "and his woman friend.
Ye made no talk of other warriors or of that wretched centaur!"
"Did
you think Nightbird would be so foolish as to go so near Dundalis alone?"
"Silence!"
the powrie snapped at him. "Take care yer attitude, Tol Yuganick;
Bestesbulzibar is not far, I promise, and he hungers for human flesh."
Elbryan
silently mouthed the unfamiliar name and noted how Tol's ruddy face blanched at
the mere mention. The ranger didn't know what this creature, Bestesbulzibar,
might be, but his respect for it as an enemy was already considerable.
"We
must defeat Nightbird," the powrie insisted, "and soon. My master has
noticed the problems here, though we are many leagues behind the battle lines,
and my master is not pleased."
"That
is your problem, Ulg Tik'narn, and not my own!" Tol growled. "You
have used me, powrie, and left a foul taste in my mouth that no river could
wash out were I to swallow the whole of it!"
Elbryan
nodded, glad that the man felt some remorse for his traitorous actions.
"And
I'm done with you and with Bestesbulzibar the winged devil!" He turned
indignantly on his heel and started to stride away.
"Yach,
and with the ghost that finds yer dreams," the powrie asked slyly,
"the ghost who beckons to Bestesbulzibar's every call?"
Tol Yuganick
hesitated and turned back.
"And
what might Nightbird do if he discovers your treachery?" Ulg Tik'narn
asked.
"We had
a deal," Tol protested.
"We
have a deal," Ulg Tik'narn corrected. "Ye'll do as I say, fool human,
or me master will destroy ye most unpleasantly."
Tol bowed
his head, his face contorting as he struggled, pragmatism against conscience.
"Ye
already a fallen thing," the powrie went on, chuckling. "Yer course
cannot be reversed, yer errors cannot be corrected. Ye delivered Nightbird to
us once, and now ye must do so again, for unless he's taken, there'll be no
rest for ugly Tol Yuganick, no sleep that will evade the intrusions of the
ghost Quintall, no path that will get you far enough from the flight of
Bestesbulzibar, who is all-powerful."
Elbryan
could hardly draw breath at the realization that he and his little band had
made such an impact on the very heart of this monstrous army. He recognized the
name of the turncoat spirit, of course, and considering that the powrie
referred to Quintall as but a pawn of Bestesbulzibar, the ranger suspected the
identity of that creature.
"There
is a grove," Tol began reluctantly, "diamond-shaped."
The words
stirred Elbryan; he put an arrow to Hawkwing before he even realized and had
the bow leveled, its mark the space between treacherous Tol's eyes.
"It is
even more special to the ranger, a place that he will not allow to be defiled,
whatever the odds," Tol went on.
Elbryan
didn't want to kill the man; whatever Tol's weakness, the ranger didn't want to
shoot him dead without explanation, without hearing the threats that had been
laid upon the man to turn him so.
But Elbryan
held no such sympathy for powries, and so he shifted the angle of the bow just
a bit, gritted his teeth, and let fly, the arrow whipping across the twenty
feet, unerringly, so he thought. At the last moment, the arrow turned in
mid-flight, thudding hard into a tree. Ulg Tik'narn was away in the blink of an
eye, running fast into the forest night, but before Tol could move, the ranger
leaped before him, Tempest in hand. A glance at the fleeing powrie told Elbryan
that the creature posed no immediate threat.
Tol, on the
other hand, had his huge sword in hand, eyeing Elbryan nervously.
"I
heard," the ranger said, "everything."
Tol didn't
reply, just glanced around, looking for an escape.
"You
cannot outrun me in the woods at night," Elbryan said evenly.
"Then
you outrun me," the big man retorted. "I've wanted your head since
the first day we met, smelly ranger, and be gone now or be sure that I'll get
it!"
Elbryan
recognized the true fear behind that bluff. Tol had no desire to fight him, had
no desire to face the mighty cut of Tempest.
"Throw
your weapon to the ground," Elbryan said calmly.
"I'll
not play judge to you, Tol Yuganick, not out here. You come with me back to the
camp and speak your crimes plainly, and let us see what the people choose for
you."
Tol scoffed
at the notion. "Drop my weapon, that you might more easily wrap a noose
about my neck?" he said.
"Unlikely,"
the ranger replied. "The folk are merciful."
Tol spat at
him. "I give you one last chance to run," he said.
"Do not
do this," Elbryan warned, but Tol came upon him in a wild rush, his heavy
sword slashing.
Tempest
flashed left, parried up, went out left again and then right, Elbryan easily
fending off the clumsy attacks. The ranger poked the smaller blade ahead,
bringing its tip near the hilt of Toys jabbing sword as he deftly sidestepped
the large man's forward thrust. A twist of Elbryan's wrist brought Tempest's
blade hard against the big man's hand, and a further twist turned Tol's hand
right over awkwardly.
Elbryan
shoved wide his sword arm, and Tol's weapon went flying harmlessly to the side,
splashing down into a muddy puddle.
The big man
gasped in desperation, unarmed and eyeing the deadly ranger.
"Do
not," Elbryan began, but Tol turned and stumbled away.
Elbryan
flipped Tempest up above his head, lining the blade for a throw. He held back,
though, as Tol passed the nearest tree, as a pair of muscled equine legs
flashed out, connecting solidly on the side of the man's head, launching him
head over heels to crash hard at the base of a wide ash tree.
Bradwarden
stepped into the small clearing.
"I
followed him out here," Elbryan explained.
"And I
followed yerself," the centaur replied. "And I was carrying Avelyn on
me back. Ye should be more to looking past yer arse, though yer target's past
yer nose."
Elbryan
glanced all about. "And where is the monk?"
"Chasing
a powrie," Bradwarden explained. "Said not to worry about that little
one."
Elbryan looked
over at Tol, the man's head lolling about on his shoulders. He was in a sitting
position, wedged in tightly against the hard trunk.
"I'll
not presume to judge him," the ranger said.
"Always
for mercy, as ye were with the three rogue trappers."
"And that
choice was the best," Elbryan reminded.
"Aye,
but this one is not," the centaur insisted. "This one's a fallen
thing, with no redeeming. His crime cannot be tolerated, so I say, for he'd
have given us all to the beast to save his skin." Bradwarden eyed the
dazed man contemptuously. "He knows it, too. Sure’n that ye're showing him
less mercy by letting him live with the terrible thing he's done."
"I'll
not play judge."
"But I
will," Bradwarden said firmly. "Ye might want to be going now, me
friend. Avelyn might be needing ye, and ye might want to not be watching
this."
Elbryan eyed
the brutal centaur squarely, but understood that he had little power to sway
Bradwarden's determination. And whatever his feelings of mercy, Elbryan would
not battle Bradwarden for the sake of Tol Yuganick, who had indeed fallen too
far. He looked back at Tol, the man oblivious and probably already mortally
wounded by the powerful kick.
"Be
merciful," the ranger said to Bradwarden. "He laments his
choice."
"He
made the choice willingly."
"Even
if that is true, mercy is friend to the just," Elbryan insisted.
Bradwarden
nodded somberly, and Elbryan scooped up Hawkwing and ran off into the night,
behind the departing powrie, though the ranger held faith that Avelyn would know
how to deal with the dwarf. Less than ten steps into the woods, he heard a
single thump, a centaur's kick against a head propped by a tree trunk, and he
knew that it was finished.
He felt sick
to his stomach, but he could not disagree, not out here with so many lives at
stake. Tol had chosen, and Tol had paid for his choice.
Around a
bend far down the dark trail, the ranger happened upon a band of powries lying
on the ground, most dead but some still twitching in the last moments of their
lives. A lightning bolt had hit them, the ranger realized, and he knew that he
was close.
He paused
end tuned his senses to the night, and he heard speaking, not so far away.
Running fast, but silently, Elbryan soon spotted Avelyn, making fast work of
yet another powrie, the burly monk holding the dwarf under his arm, repeatedly
slamming the creature's head into a tree trunk.
Elbryan
meant to stop there, but a movement farther to the south along the trail caught
his attention. He came in sight of the last powrie―the one, Ulg Tik'narn,
who had been speaking with Tol Yuganick. Sliding down to one knee, Elbryan had
Hawkwing up and leveled. Again his shot was true, but again, the arrow swerved
at the last possible moment and flew off harmlessly into the night.
Frustrated,
the ranger abandoned his bow and ran on, sword in hand.
The powrie,
apparently realizing that it could not possibly outdistance the long-legged
human, skidded to a stop and turned about, a gleaming, serrated sword in hand.
"Nightbird,"
the dwarf breathed. "Yach, ye die!"
Elbryan said
nothing, just came in hard and fast, batting Tempest twice against the powrie's
blade, then thrusting the sword through the opened defenses, straight for the
unarmored dwarf's heart.
The blade
turned aside, compelled by some force Elbryan did not understand, and the
startled ranger was overbalanced suddenly, falling forward. He slapped his free
hand across desperately, accepting the hit on his open palm from the smiling
powrie's sword.
"What?"
the ranger asked, skidding aside and turning to squarely face this deceptive
foe.
Laughing,
Ulg Tik'narn advanced.
From a short
distance away, Brother Avelyn watched the scene curiously, saw Elbryan perform
another apparently successful attack, only to have Tempest fly wide at the last
instant. The ranger was not caught unaware this time, though, and he held his
balance and reverted to defensive posture quickly enough to prevent any
stinging counters.
Avelyn put
away the stone he was holding, graphite, for the lightning had been of little
effect on this one when he had last used it. There was something very unusual
about this powrie, the monk realized, some defensive magic that Avelyn did not
understand.
He took out
the carbuncle he had taken from dead Quintall, fell into its magic even as
Elbryan slashed his weapon―to no avail―twice at the laughing
powrie's head.
Then Avelyn
saw the reason, saw clearly the powrie's studded bracers, glowing fiercely with
enchantment.
"Good
enough, then," the monk growled. "Ho, ho, what!" Avelyn took out
the other stone he had retrieved from dead Quintall, the powerful sunstone, and
he sent its focused energies out.
"Yach,
ye can not kill me, foolish Nightbird," Ulg Tik'narn was saying, holding
wide his short arms and steadily advancing on the confused Elbryan. "Me
master protects me. 'Bestes―"
The word
ended with a gurgle as the waves of magic suppression rolled over the
dactyl-forged bracers, as Tempest pierced through the dwarf's chest.
"I do
not know the name," Juraviel admitted, looking across the campfire at
Elbryan.
"But I do,"
Avelyn put in, resting his bulk against a fallen log. "Bestesbulzibar,
Aztemephostophe, Pelucine, Decambrinezarre --"
"All
names of the dactyl demons," Juraviel said, for two of the strange titles
rang familiar to the elf.
"Then
we know, if the powrie can be believed, that there is indeed a beast, a
physical beast, guiding our enemy," said Pony.
"Then
we know," Avelyn said with certainty, and he threw down the enchanted
bracers, evil items that the monk would not allow to be worn. "I have
known for some time of this beast and of its home."
"The
Barbacan," said Elbryan.
"The
smoking mountain," Avelyn added.
A long
moment of silence ensued, all five―the three humans, Juraviel, and
Tuntun―feeling the weight of confirmation. and feeling suddenly vulnerable.
There was indeed a very real dactyl, and it controlled Quintall's ghost,
and―whether through Quintall or reports from its monstrous
forces―it knew of their raiding band, knew of Nightbird.
Avelyn stood
up and started away; Pony rushed to catch up to him.
"I know
my destiny," he said to her quietly, though Elbryan, who had moved to
follow, and the two elves, with their keen ears, heard him clearly. "I
know now why I was compelled by the spirit of God to steal the stones and run
from St.-Mere-Abelle."
"You
mean to go to the Barbacan," Pony reasoned.
"I have
seen the army that has gathered there," Avelyn replied. "I have seen
the darkness that will soon sweep down upon us, upon all the kingdom:
St.-Mere-Abelle and Palmaris, Ursal, and even to Entel on the Belt-and-Buckle.
Perhaps far Behren is not safe."
The monk
turned back to look Pony directly in the eye, then past her, to Elbryan.
"We cannot defeat the dactyl and its minions," Avelyn insisted.
"Our people have grown weak, and the elves have become too isolated and
too few. The only way in which the darkness might be averted is if our enemy is
decapitated, if the binding force that holds powrie beside hated goblin, if the
sheer evil willpower that focuses the wild giants is destroyed."
"You
mean to travel hundreds of miles to do battle with a creature of such
power?" Elbryan asked skeptically.
"No
army gathered by all the human kingdoms could get near the dactyl," Avelyn
replied, "but I might."
"A
small group might," Pony added, looking at Elbryan.
The ranger
considered that notion for a moment, then nodded grimly.
Pony looked
back at Avelyn, stared deeply into the eyes of this man who had become to her
as a brother. She saw the pain there, the fear that was not present when the
monk had proclaimed that he alone would go. Avelyn was afraid for her, and not
for himself.
"You
say it is your destiny," Pony remarked, "and so, since fate has put
me beside you, is it mine."
Avelyn was
shaking his head, but Pony pressed on.
"Do not
even think to try to stop me," she insisted. "Where am I to be safe,
in any case? Here, when the powries lay traps meant for us? In the southland,
perhaps, running ahead of the advancing hordes?"
"Or
even in the elven home?" Juraviel added grimly, unexpectedly lending support
to Pony's argument.
"'Where
indeed?" asked the woman. "I would rather confront the monster
face-to-face, to stand by Avelyn's side as he meets his destiny, as all the
world holds its breath."
Avelyn
looked at Elbryan as if he expected the ranger to protest. How could Elbryan,
so obviously in love with Pony, allow her to go?
But Avelyn
didn't fully understand the nature of that love.
"And I
will stand by Pony's side," the ranger said firmly. "And by
Avelyn's."
The monk's
expression was one of sheer incredulity.
"Was
not Terranen Dinoniel an elf-trained ranger?" Elbryan asked, looking about
and finally settling his gaze on Juraviel and Tuntun.
"He was
half-elf, as well," Tuntun put in, as if that fact put the legendary hero
somewhat above Elbryan's station.
"Then I
will have to go along to make up the other half," Juraviel said somberly.
He met Tuntun's wide-eyed stare without surprise. "With Lady Dasslerond's
blessings, of course," he said.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn burst out suddenly, surprised and obviously pleased by
the unexpected support. But the boisterous moment could not last, not with so
grim a prospect as a journey to the Barbacan before them. The monk looked in
turn at each of them and nodded, then walked off to be alone with his conscience
and his courage.
When Elbryan
and Pony left the elves, they were surprised to find an eavesdropping friend,
standing only a dozen or so paces into the forest, unseen and unheard despite
his great bulk.
"Ah,
but I knew it'd come to this," Bradwarden said.
"Humans"―the centaur spat derisively―"always
thinking o' ways to be remembered." He shook his head. "Get yer
saddlebags for me, then, yell need one to carry supplies, and better if that
one knows how to get away from trouble."
"You
intend to accompany us?" Elbryan asked.
"A long
road," the centaur replied. "Ye'll be needing me pipes to soothe yer
nerves, don't ye doubt!"
Part Five
THE BEAST
It is settled, Uncle Mather, a new stasis, a level of play. Our
enemies know of us, and there is certainly concern among their ranks, but they
have a bigger goal before them and that diversion gives us some hope, gives us
the ability to proclaim with confidence that they will not catch us.
But neither will we deliver any significant blows. A pair of
catapults fell before our fires, but what are they compared to the hundreds of
war engines in a line rolling down from the Barbacan? We have killed nearly a
dozen giants in the last two weeks, but how significant are they when a
thousand more march against Honce-the-Bear? And now that we are known, our
enemies take precautions, moving about in larger, better-prepared bands. Each
kill comes harder.
So we will survive for the time, I believe, but we will do nothing
decisive, not here, halfway between the fighting front and the source of the
invasion. Yet, if Brother Avelyn is correct, if his destiny lies in the north
and we can deliver him there, if he can battle and defeat the demon dactyl,
then our enemies will be without their binding force. Who will quell the
ancient and deep hatred between powrie and goblin when Bestesbulzibar is gone?
It is likely that all the invasion will disintegrate into separate groups,
fighting one another as much as the folk of the kingdom. It is likely that most
of the giants, normally reclusive beasts, will turn back for their mountain
homes, far from the villages of humans.
I do laugh when I consider how simple it all sounds, for I know
that the path ahead is the darkest that ever I will tread, and that the end of
that path is darker still.
Dark, too, is the journey for those men and women I leave behind,
who will continue the fight while ushering their more helpless kin to a safer
place―if one can ever be found. I hold no comforting illusions; that
group is in danger as great as my own. Eventually, if they cannot find a haven,
they will be killed, one at a time, perhaps, as was poor Cric, or perhaps the
goblins will discover their camp in the night and slaughter them all.
What clouds are these that so cover our heads, blacker than the
blackest storm?
It is the life that fate has chosen for us, Uncle Mather. It is
the life that fate has thrust upon us, and I am proud indeed that few, so very
few, have shrunk before their sudden, unasked for responsibilities. For every
Tol Yuganick there are a hundred, I say, who will not give in to
any threat, to any torture, who share loyalty and courage and who
willingly take up the fight, even if that means their death, that their kin
might win out.
I am a ranger, trained to accept duty, however harsh, and to
accept whatever fate holds for me during the execution of that duty. That is my
debt and my honor. I will fight, with all the skills the elves gave me, with
all the weapons at my disposal, for those tenets I hold dear for
the protection of innocents and for the higher principles of
justice above all else. And on that course, in these times, I have by reason of
necessity become leader of the folk of the three villages. But they, these
innocents placed in the path of war, and not I, are the true heroes of the day,
for each of them―the trappers who could have been far from harm's way;
Bradwarden, whose fight this is not; Belster O'Comely and Shawno of
End-o'-the-World―each of them willingly fights on, though they are not
bound by debt. Every man, every woman, every child willingly takes up arms
because of their common heritage, because they understand the value of unity,
because they care for the fate of those in the towns to the south.
I understand now what it means to be a ranger, Uncle Mather. To be
a ranger is to accept the frailties of humanity with the knowledge that the
good outweighs the bad, to serve as an example, often an unappreciated one,
that when darkness descends upon those about you―even many of those who,
perhaps, persecuted you―they will recognize your value and follow that
lead. To be a ranger is to show by example those about you what they might be
when the need arises, to reflect openly the better aspects of what as in every
human character.
The men and women I leave behind will serve as I have served, will
lift up the spirits and the will, the courage and the conviction, of all those
they subsequently meet.
And for myself, I pledge now that I will deliver Brother Avelyn to
the Barbacan, to the fiendish head of our enemy. And if I perish in the
journey, then so be it. If all of us, my beloved Pony included, perish and
fail, then let another take up my sword and my cry.
The blackness will not fall complete until the last free human
spirit has succumbed.
-ELBRYAN THE NIGHTBIRD
CHAPTER 45
Parting
It took
Elbryan and the other leaders of the rebel force several days to get everything
organized with the twenty-five warriors and eight score refugees they would leave
behind. The remaining band would cease its hit-and-hide warfare and concentrate
on getting all the folk to safer points in the south, trying to parallel the
advancing army without engaging it.
For those
few heading north to the Barbacan, it was a difficult parting, but especially
so for Elbryan, who had come to feel as a ... father to these people, as their
trusted protector. If they were found and destroyed, the ranger knew he would
never forgive himself.
But the
other argument was more compelling; if the dactyl could not be defeated, then
there would be no safe havens, then all the world as the humans knew it would
be destroyed. Pony reminded the ranger often that he had trained those warriors
who would escort the refugees, that they went with not only his blessing but
also his woodland skills. And, like a father who has watched his children grow
beyond his protection, Elbryan had to let them go.
His course,
a darker road by far, lay the other way.
They set out
at an easy pace, with Elbryan riding Symphony―but only for a short
distance―that he might hasten out to run a perimeter guard, and with Pony
and Avelyn walking beside Bradwarden, who had pipes in hand, but wouldn't start
playing until they had put the monstrous enclaves of Dundalis, Weedy Meadow,
and End-o'-the-World far behind them.
Just out of
sight of the encampment, the small group came upon a party of elves―there
might have been five―or there might have been twenty, so fleeting were
their glimpses of the ever-elusive sprites―dancing amid the budding
branches of several trees.
"What
says Lady Dasslerond?" Elbryan inquired of Belli'mar Juraviel.
"Fare
well, says she," replied the elf. "Fare well to Elbryan the
Nightbird, to Jilseponie, to good Brother Avelyn, to mighty Bradwarden,
and," he finished with a flurry, beating his tiny wings furiously to set
himself gently down on the ground, "to Belli'mar Juraviel, who will
represent Caer'alfar on this most important quest!" The elf dipped a low
bow.
Elbryan
looked up at Tuntun, who was sitting on the branch and smiling―a grin
that did not seem so sincere to the perceptive ranger. "See to him,
Nightbird," the elven female said threateningly. "I will hold you
personally responsible for my brother's safety."
"Ho,
and a mighty responsibility that is, when facing the likes of a demon
dactyl!" howled Bradwarden.
"If I
had my say, Belli'mar Juraviel would remain with his own," Elbryan
replied. "Of course, if I had my way, then
Pony―Jilseponie―would remain with the folk of the three sacked
villages, as would Avelyn, and Bradwarden's pipes would greet the dawn each day
in this forest, his home."
"Ho,
ho, what!" bellowed Avelyn. "Brave Nightbird would fight the beast
alone!"
"Aye,
and cut a killing swath through the army ye seen 'tween the arms o' the dactyl's
mountain!" added Bradwarden.
Elbryan
could only laugh at their jibes. He kicked Symphony into a short gallop,
rushing down the path.
"Fare
well to you, Nightbird!" he heard Tuntun call, and then he was alone,
riding the perimeter, glad for this newest addition to the party, despite his
comments to the contrary.
He sensed a
movement not far away and asked Symphony to walk slowly. He relaxed when
Paulson and Chipmunk came onto the path, some distance ahead and apparently
oblivious of him.
"If we
missed them, I'll beat ye silly," the large man huffed at Chipmunk, who
wisely shifted to the side, out of arm's reach. Elbryan did not miss the fact
that they were dressed for the road, though the others would not be going to
join with the refugees until the next morning. The ranger moved his mount into
the cover of a pair of pines and let the two approach, hoping to discern their
intent, thinking that they might have had enough of it all and were striking
out on their own.
Aside from
Paulson's typical grumbling, he caught no direction to their conversation.
"My
greetings," he said suddenly as they neared, startling the pair.
"And to
yerself," said Paulson. "Glad I am that we did not miss yer
departure."
"Have
you plans of your own?"
Paulson eyed
him directly. "What's for us with Elbryan gone?" he wanted to know.
The ranger
looked hard at the man, then shrugged. "We will need to get the refugees
to the south. There can be no further delays."
"Ye've
got more than a score of fighters for that task," Paulson answered.
"A
score that will need Paulson and Chipmunk to lead them," Elbryan reasoned.
"They'll
more listen to Belster O'Comely," Paulson argued. "And the able man's
already taken charge, by all accounts from the big camp. Our job here is
done."
"Then
you are free of responsibility," Elbryan replied, "to go as you will,
where you will. And to go with my thanks and the gratitude of all who survived
the invasion."
Paulson
looked at Chipmunk, and the small man nodded nervously.
"With
you," Paulson said suddenly. "The way we're seeing it, the goblin
that killed Cric was sent by this Bestesbulzi-thing, so we're holding it
responsible."
Elbryan's expression was skeptical.
"Are ye
knowing anyone better for the woods?" Paulson argued.
"Ye
just said that we were free to choose," Chipmunk added sheepishly, ducking
behind Paulson's bulk as he spoke.
The others
caught up to the ranger then, Bradwarden―with Juraviel nestled
comfortably on his back, the elf tucked between the heavy packs―moving up
right beside Elbryan.
"Our
friends Paulson and Chipmunk would like to join us," the ranger explained.
"We
decided that a small group'd get through all the better," Bradwarden
complained.
"The
two of us take up less room than yerself alone, centaur," Paulson argued.
Elbryan
smiled wryly at Bradwarden before the fearsome centaur could take offense.
"True enough," the ranger agreed.
"And
we're knowing the ways of the woods," Paulson went on, "and the ways
of our enemies. Ye get in a fight and ye'll be glad that me and Chipmunk are
with ye."
Elbryan
looked at Bradwarden again, since he and the centaur had been unofficially
accepted as the leaders of the expedition. Bradwarden's hardened visage fast
softened under the ranger's plaintive look. "Come along then," he said
to the two men. "But one bad word for me piping and I'll be eating more
than the meat that's on me back!"
So they set
out then, seven strong. Seven against the tens of thousands and―in odds
that seemed even less favorable―seven mortals against one demon dactyl.
At the edge of the forest surrounding Dundalis, Elbryan slipped down from his
mount.
"Run
free, my friend," he said to the horse. "Perhaps I shall return to
you." The horse did not immediately run off, but stood stamping the
ground, as if in protest.
The ranger
sensed that the stallion did not want to remain behind, and for a moment,
Elbryan entertained the thought of riding all the way. But how could he do that
in all good conscience, when he knew that Symphony might not be able to cross
the mountainous Barbacan, and certainly would not be able to go into Aida's
tunnels with him.
"Run
on!" he commanded, and Symphony bolted out of the immediate area, but
stood quiet in the shadows of some trees not far away.
So it was
Elbryan, and not the horse, who walked away, when the others caught up to him.
It was not an easy thing for the ranger to do.
They struck
out west more than north, wanting to cut a wide circuit around the long caravan
that Avelyn had magically observed. Even from several miles to the north and
west of End-o'-the-World, from atop a hillock, they could see a long line of
dust rising into the air, moving south, descending upon Dundalis and the other
towns.
"All
the way to the Belt-and-Buckle," Avelyn remarked grimly, and from that vantage
point, it seemed impossible that the monk might be wrong.
There were
no roads out here once the group got beyond the logging areas of
End-o'-the-World. The forest was old, with tall, dark trees and sparse
undergrowth, and there were rivers to follow, some whose waters had come all
the way down from the high peaks of the Barbacan. Occasionally, the group came
upon a lone house or a few clustered together, the real frontier families,
living beyond even the meager civilization of the three small villages. It was
not a comforting thing for the seven to find that every house they chanced
upon, including one whose occupants had been friends of Paulson's band, was
deserted.
They found
the reason the tenth day out, when Elbryan noted a line of tracks preceding
them in the muddy riverbank.
"Goblins,"
the ranger informed his companions, "and a few humans."
"Could
be a rogue band," Bradwarden offered, "and nothing to do with our
enemy in the north."
"Goblins
been in this region for a thousand years," Paulson added. "Me
friends've fought with them often, so they telled me."
"But do
goblins normally take prisoners?" the ranger wanted to know, and that
admittedly unusual circumstance tipped them off that this was no chance
incident, no rogue band.
The demon
will draw all the goblins from all the holes, Avelyn had warned.
How Elbryan
wished he still had Symphony with him, that he could ride fast to catch up to
the band!
"We
slip back into the woods to avoid them," Bradwarden said. "No problem
with that."
"Except
that they have prisoners," Pony was fast to interject.
"We're
not knowing that," Bradwarden replied.
"Human
tracks with the goblins," Avelyn argued.
"Might
be that they had prisoners," Bradwarden answered bluntly.
Elbryan was
about to argue the point with the centaur, to point out that, whatever their
mission, they first had to see if there were people in need of their
assistance, when he got some unexpected help from Paulson.
"They're
running an army," the big man reasoned, "so they're needing slaves.
If this raiding group is in league with the dactyl, then they're knowing better
than to kill those who might be worked to death."
Bradwarden
threw up his arms in defeat, and motioned for Elbryan to run on and see what he
might see. The ranger did just that, circling west of the riverbank as he made
his way to the north. He came upon them at last at a bend in the river, where
the goblins―many goblins!―had stopped to drink, but were keeping a
score of humans, three quarters of them women and children, back from the badly
desired water.
The ranger
bowed his head as he considered the options. Thankfully, there were no giants
or even powries to be seen, but there were at least fifty goblins down there,
with several, Elbryan noted, wearing the black-and-gray insignia of the
dactyl's army. Even if he and his powerful band attacked the group, how might
they stop the goblins from killing the prisoners?
Elbryan went
back to report to his companions, expecting that a furious argument would
ensue. Was their mission the overriding factor here, for if they attacked and
were beaten back, killed, or captured, then who would go on to the smoking
mountain to stand against the demon dactyl?
"Only
fifty?" Bradwarden huffed. "And only goblins? I'll warm me bow on the
first score, trample the second score, and give me club a taste on the last
ten!"
"How do
we hit them without endangering the prisoners?" the ever-pragmatic Pony
asked. The question was not meant to dissuade any attack, Elbryan knew in
looking at his determined companion, but to logically guide the group in the
best possible direction.
"We
separate them," Elbryan answered. "If even one or more ventures away
into the woods, lags behind, or gets too far in front. . ."
Six grim
nods came back at the ranger. Within the hour, they were shadowing the caravan,
learning their enemies' movement, discerning the pecking order among the goblin
ranks. At one point, when the riverbank grew more narrow and impassible, the
goblins sent a group of six out to find a new route.
They died
quickly, quietly, cut down by bows and daggers, by flashing sword and crushing
cudgel. So fast and complete was the massacre that Avelyn never used his magic.
The monk did get in close enough to one wounded goblin to finish it with a
flurry of deadly punches, but he kept his magical energy in reserve.
When it
became apparent that the first six would not return, the goblins sent out a
couple more to find them. Elbryan, Juraviel, and Bradwarden shot them down as
soon as they were out of sight of the caravan.
"They
are onto us," Pony reasoned when the band of seven moved back to view the
main group, goblins rushing about nervously, tightening the ropes do the
prisoners, herding the miserable humans together. The worst of it for the
onlookers came whenever a goblin beat a human, particularly when one slapped a
small child to the ground. Gritting his teeth, holding discipline supreme to
emotion, Elbryan held his companions at bay. The goblins were wary, he reminded
them all; this was not the time to strike.
"We
hide the bodies," Elbryan plotted, "and let any more scouts they send
out go unhindered. Let them find the paths. When, they are on the move again,
the forest thick about them, we hit them hard."
"Aye,"
the centaur agreed. "Give them a couple of hours to think that their
miserable kin just ran away. Let them drop their guard again, and then we'll
take the lot of them and pay them back for every slap."
Elbryan
looked to Avelyn. "You must play an important role," the ranger said.
"We will cut the goblins to pieces, I do not doubt, but only your magic
can protect the prisoners long enough."
The monk
nodded grimly, then looked at Pony. Elbryan did as well, sensing that the pair,
Avelyn and Pony, shared a secret. The ranger's expression grew even more
incredulous when he noticed Avelyn hand a piece of graphite to her, and green
malachite after that.
The goblins
did indeed send out another pair of scouts, and these two moved unhindered
through the woods, then went back to the main group reporting no sign of their
missing eight companions. Since desertions among goblin ranks were surely not
an uncommon thing, the goblin leaders seemed to relax almost immediately, and
with new trails found, they soon started the caravan along its plodding way
once more.
And again,
they were shadowed, every step, and even led, though they did not know it, by
the ranger as he scouted out the perfect spot for the ambush. Elbryan had found
just what he was looking for, a narrow pass between a steep, high ridge and a
muddy pond, and was returning to lay out the plans when he found that his hand
was being forced.
Pony's
expression was the first indication that something was wrong, and as soon as he
gained a vantage point on the monsters, the ranger figured it out. A dispute had
arisen between one or more of the prisoners and their goblin captors, and now
the humans were being punished once more. Elbryan winced with every blow,
feeling the pain as acutely as if the goblin's club had been aimed at him; but
again, he tried to hold back, tried to keep perspective and hold the greater
goal above his emotions.
But then one
prisoner, a young man of about the same age Elbryan had been when Dundalis was
first overrun, was pulled from the line. The goblins' intentions for this one
soon became obvious; they meant to make him an example. The young, man was
forced to his knees, his head pulled low, exposing the back of his neck.
"No,
no, no," Elbryan whispered, and truly he was torn. All the plan and all
the prisoners had a better chance if the ambush was carefully plotted and
choreographed, and yet how could the ranger stand idly by and watch this
unfortunate young man be sacrificed?
Elbryan
could not watch idly, of course, and as soon as Hawkwing came up, the others
realized that the time for action was upon them.
The goblin's
sword went up high, but fell harmlessly to the ground as Elbryan's arrow
slammed into the creature's chest. Elbryan came charging through the trees,
screaming wildly, readying another arrow.
Goblins
scrambled, one calling out commands―until its words became a gurgle, its
mouth filled with its own blood, Elbryan's second arrow deep in its throat.
"Oh
hurry!" Avelyn cried to Pony, for the two had laid plans of how they might
get to the prisoners.
Pony was
trying to hurry, concentrating with all her will on the malachite. She had done
this before, in practice with Avelyn, but now the pressure was intense, the
price of failure too great.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn howled at her. "You know that you can do it, and do
it well, my girl!"
The
encouragement pushed her over the edge, into the depths of the stone's magic.
She felt her weight lessening, felt as light as a feather.
Avelyn
lifted her easily from the ground and threw her in the direction of the
monstrous caravan. Pony floated up as she went, grabbing the branches of trees
and propelling herself along. She crossed over Elbryan, the ranger engaged with
sword now, battling a line of goblins and, amazingly, driving them back.
She crossed
over the goblins, scrambling high and keeping quiet, until she was, at last,
directly above the huddled group of prisoners. Pony held her breath, noting the
movements of the goblins, thinking by their actions and by the snatches of
screamed commands she caught that they were indeed planning to harm the human
prisoners.
The woman
looked worriedly at the other stone Avelyn had given her, then at her own
sword, wondering which she would be better to trust. Either way, her situation
was about to become desperate.
Elbryan's
rage did not relent. Two goblins rushed to intercept him, but he batted their
weapons aside with a furious two-handed swipe of Hawkwing. He dropped the bow
as it moved past the creatures; and in the same lightning-fast movement, drew
out Tempest, thrusting it into the belly of the closest creature. The ranger
punched out with his free hand; connecting solidly on the other goblin's chin,
and he charged on, tearing free his sword.
The stunned
goblin rubbed its chin and tried to rise to follow, but Bradwarden was right on
the ranger's heels and was quick to trample the wretched thing into the dust.
Then the
centaur was beside Elbryan, singing at the top of his voice, running goblins
down and clubbing goblins down. Their momentum carried them deep into the
goblin ranks, but began to ebb as the creatures finally organized a defense
about them.
The goblins
came at them in a semicircular formation, but the integrity of the monstrous
line was compromised quickly, for Belli'mar Juraviel, perched on a branch some
distance away, plucked at them with his tiny but deadly bow.
At the same
time, Paulson and Chipmunk caught up to their fighting companions, the small
man leading his way in with a line of hurled daggers.
"On me,
back!" the centaur roared to Elbryan. "We'll get to the prisoners!"
But not in
time, Elbryan thought, looking past the goblin ranks to the pitiful group. He
prayed that Pony and Avelyn would do their part well, and wondered if his rage
had betrayed them all.
* * *
Avelyn could
hardly see the goblin ranks and knew not at all which creature was in charge.
As soon as Pony was away, the monk searched for some hiding spot for his bulky
frame, but realized that he had little time to spare. He settled for a clump of
birch trees, throwing his body into their midst as he threw his mind into the
hematite he tightly clutched. He was into his spirit-walking, already rushing
fast away, before his great bulk ever settled amid the tangled branches.
The monk's
spirit flew past Juraviel, the sensitive elf taking note, though the ghostly
form was surely invisible. He swept past Paulson and Chipmunk, past Bradwarden
and Elbryan, past the front ranks of goblins, until he came to the miserable
prisoners and the monstrous guards about them. One in particular was calling
out commands, and Avelyn's spirit made a straight line to that body, pushed
into the physical form, and battled for control.
Possession
was never easily accomplished, a difficult and dangerous practice, but no one
in all the world could summon the powers of the stones as thoroughly as Avelyn
Desbris, and the monk was desperate now, for the safety of others and not for
himself.
He ejected
the goblin's spirit almost immediately and continued barking out commands, but
these did not concern the prisoners at all. "Flee!" he yelled to his
charges. "Run to the trees, into the forest. Run away! Run away!"
Many goblins
did just that, more than eager to be gone since the furious ranger and the
powerful centaur were crushing through their ranks.
Others,
though, meant to get their taste of human blood before they left.
Pony saw
them, two of them, ruining from the area of the fight but angling their course
and their weapons to pound the prisoners as they passed. The woman's
concentration was taxed to its limit as she tried to fall into her other stone
while maintaining the weightlessness of the malachite, all the while, keeping
her eyes on the monsters, measuring their progress.
She was out
of time. Her mind let go of the malachite and she dropped the ten feet to the
ground, landing right between the surprised goblins.
They
screamed, Pony screamed, and they spun about bringing their weapons to bear, as
the woman grabbed their shoulders.
Pony was
quicker, falling into the stone, the graphite.
There came a
sharp crack, a sudden black flash; and the two goblins fell to the ground,
twitching violently as they died.
"Forget
the woman!" Avelyn the goblin chief cried to another monster that was
swinging about to bear down on Pony, and the monk rushed to intercept. He tried
something new then, connecting his mind back to his physical body and bringing
in new magic from a second stone that his own form clutched, as he went.
"Kill
humans!" the goblin howled in Avelyn's face, but the monk reached up with
an arm that more resembled that of a tiger than of a human or a goblin. He took
away the creature's protest as he took away its face.
"Ho,
ho, what!" the monk-turned-goblin roared, eyeing the transformed arm.
"It worked!"
Indeed it
had; Avelyn had reached out across the distance, had connected with his own
physical being while holding control of the goblin's form. But the strain had
been great, too great, and the monk felt himself losing control immediately,
his spirit soaring back past the fighting, back to the birch trees. In his last
effort of will, right before he lost consciousness, the monk reached back out
to the goblin's body, and as the creature became aware of its physical form
once more, it found its own arm―or at least an arm that was connected to
its body―moving up to claw viciously at its own face.
The
surprised, confused creature stumbled backward, its other, normal appendage
grabbing at its torn face. Surprise turned to horror, to agony, as it stumbled
near Pony, and the woman drove her sword into its back, its tip poking right through
the goblin's chest.
Pony then
turned her attention to the prisoners, bidding them to run off, out of harm's
way. Most of the men and a few women would not go, however. Wearing masks of
grief, no doubt for loved ones this monstrous band had slain, they charged the
other way, into those monsters battling Elbryan and the others, fighting with
weapons they snatched from goblin dead, with sticks or rocks found on the
ground, or with their bare hands.
It was over
in a matter of minutes, with more than a score of goblins lying dead, the rest
running, scattering into the forest. Several humans had been injured, as had
Bradwarden―though the tough centaur thought little of his cuts and
bruises―and Avelyn returned to them shortly, on unsteady legs, carrying the
worst headache the monk had ever known. Still, without complaint, the good monk
used his hematite once more, this time to lessen the wounds of the injured.
Elbryan
gathered up Paulson and Chipmunk and called to Juraviel, the four moving out
from the gathering to ensure the goblins were not rallying for any
counterattack.
In more than
an hour of searching, the foursome found only a pair of goblins hiding in one
spot, and another running stupidly in circles.
So the
ambush had worked, near to perfection, and the prisoners were free, but that
left the ranger with a new dilemma and a new and unasked for responsibility.
"Belster
is no doubt many miles to the south by now," Avelyn reasoned, "out of
our reach. Even if I use the stones to contact him, we'll not easily get to him
and hand off our new friends."
"They
are, a tough lot," Pony added hopefully, "but inexperienced with
goblins and the like."
Paulson gave
her a sidelong, incredulous glance.
"With
these goblins, at least," the woman corrected. "They've not battled
the army of the dactyl before."
Paulson
conceded that point,
"It
would take us weeks to prepare them correctly, that they might have a chance of
escaping on their own," the woman finished.
Elbryan
absorbed all their words, sifted through their suggestions. After a moment, his
gaze settled on Paulson and Chipmunk.
The big man
understood that gaze well; Elbryan had never asked him and Chipmunk to come
along, had, in fact absolved them of all responsibilities. But the ranger was
about to place a new responsibility on the pair, Paulson realized. He wanted
Paulson and Chipmunk to shoulder the burden of the new refugees and find a way
to take them south. Paulson, full of anger at the loss of his dear friend, did
not want to abandon this quest and neither did Chipmunk, but they would for the
sake of the refugees. That realization struck the big man profoundly; for the
first time in many years; he felt like a part of something larger than himself,
a cohesive circle of comrades, of friends.
"There
is another choice before us," Belli'mar Juraviel said from the low
branches of a nearby tree. The elf had been keeping a low profile, not wanting
to frighten the skittish refugees. The sight of Bradwarden had unnerved the
folk almost as much as had the sight of the goblins, and the elf thought it
better to hit them with one surprise at a time.
The group
looked up to the elf, resting easily, his legs crossed at the ankles, feet
dangling a few. yards above their heads.
"There
is a place where they might know shelter, not so far from here," the elf
remarked.
Hopeful nods
came from every head, except for Elbryan. Juraviel's tone intimated something
more profound to the ranger, that not only was there a mere place for shelter,
but a very special place indeed. Elbryan remembered the run that had brought
him to Dundalis, Nightbird's first journey. He had crossed the Moorlands,
coming from the west. Now he and his troop were once again west of the
Moorlands, though miles farther north.
"We can
get them there, then, and continue on our way," Pony reasoned.
"Not
we," Juraviel, replied, "but I alone. This place is not so far, but
not so close, a week's march, perhaps."
"In a
week, we could bring them almost all the way back to Dundalis," Bradwarden
reasoned.
"To what
end?" asked the elf. "No one remains, to help them there, and all
that area is full of monsters. The place I speak of holds many allies, and
there are no monsters, of that I am sure."
"You
speak of Andur'Blough Inninness," Elbryan reasoned, and when the elf
didn't immediately deny it, the ranger knew that his guess was correct.
"But will your Lady accept so many humans into the elven home? The place
is secret, its borders closed and well hidden."
"The
times are not normal," Juraviel replied. "Lady Dasslerond gave a
score of us leave to join in your struggles, to go out and take stock of the
happenings in the wider world. She will not refuse entry to the humans, not
now, with darkness all about them." The elf gave a smile. "Oh, do not
doubt that we shall put enchantments over them, a bit of boggle in their meals,
perhaps, to keep them disoriented that our paths remain hidden when they are
turned out into the wider world once more."
"We
should all go," reasoned Pony, who desperately wanted to view the elven
home, who could sit for hours and hours to listen to Elbryan's tales of the
magical place.
Elbryan,
too, was tempted, would have loved to see Andur'Blough Inninness again,
especially now, to bolster his resolve before he completed this all-important,
perilous journey. The ranger knew better, though. "Every day we spend
moving to the south, and every day it takes us to get back even to this spot:
our enemies strike deeper into our homeland and more people die," he said
calmly.
"I
shall take them alone," Juraviel announced. "As you recognized your
destiny, Brother Avelyn, so I recognize my own. You will introduce me to the
folk in the morning and I will lead them away to safety."
Elbryan
looked long and hard at his winged friend. He wanted Juraviel along on this
journey, needed the elf's wisdom and courage to bolster his own. But Juraviel
was right; he alone could take the refugees to safety, and though the quest to
the Barbacan was paramount, the needs of so many innocents could not be
ignored.
In the morning
came the second painful parting.
"So
there, you are at long last!" Tuntun cried to Symphony when she spotted
the stallion trotting across a field north of Weedy Meadow. Most of the elves
were long gone, some shadowing the human band that had gone to the south, but
most on the road back to Andur'Blough Inninness. Tuntun and a couple of others
had remained in the area, though, to continue their survey of the invading
army.
This wasn't
the place where Tuntun wanted to be.
The elf had
been searching for Symphony, her desires formulating into a definite plan.
She
approached the horse tentatively, but soon found that she could indeed connect
with the stallion. The turquoise was tuned to Elbryan, but Tuntun, with her
elvish blood, could make some sense of it, could fathom the horse's greatest
desires, at least, if, not his actual thoughts.
Symphony was
apparently in complete agreement with her.
Tuntun had
little trouble getting the great stallion to accept her, and Symphony leaped
away as soon as the elf climbed atop him, running fast for the north and west.
CHAPTER 46
The Fiend's Fiend
He couldn't
feel the stone beneath his feet, and he hated that fact of his existence more
than anything else in all the world, more even than he hated this monster, this
demon, his savior. For all the benefits of this wraithlike existence, Quintall
missed the tangible sensations of his mortal form, the feel of grass or stone
on his bare feet, the smell of dinner cooking, of brine when he looked out over
All Saints Bay, the taste of shellfish or of the exotic herbs the Windrunner
had taken on at Jacintha.
He stood
now, or rather floated, in the dactyl's great columned hall at Aida before the
obsidian throne and the monstrosity that was his god.
"We
will be in Palmaris by midsummer,"' Bestesbulzibar explained, coming
forward in his seat, the rough folds of its red hide shining in the orange glow
of the lava rivers, pouring down through the walls and onto the floor at either
side of the wide dais. "And Ursal shall be besieged when the season turns
to autumn. Then the winter snows will not work against us as we roll on to the
south, to Entel and the mountain range that separates the kingdoms."
"And
will we stop there?" the spirit asked.
"Stop?"
scoffed the dactyl. "We will entreaty with Behren's many chieftains; then
find ways to use them against one another, and finally, when they do not expect
war, we will sweep south. And all the world will be mine. Let humanity know its
age of darkness."
Quintall
couldn't disagree with the dactyl's reasoning. There were minor points
untouched, to be sure. Alpinador, despite the brutal border raids and the
subsequent, determined march to the coast, remained intact, but the northern
kingdom was not an organized place and was not populous enough to pose any real
threat.
"It is
an age well earned," Bestesbulzibar said. "Your kin have only
themselves to blame for the coming storm; their own weakness opened the
way." The demon waved its wings and a rush of hot air passed through
Quintall, a sensation the spirit somehow felt. And with that blow, Quintall
remembered.
He
remembered in incredible detail: all that he had been, all the promises of his
mortal life. He remembered St.-Mere-Abelle, the journey to Pimaninicuit. He
remembered Avelyn, damned Avelyn, and the rivalry. He heard again Avelyn's
voice, his screams of protest when the Windrunner had been sunk, a voice
touched, Quintall now knew, by God. He remembered chasing the rogue monk, the
tales in town after town of the mad friar and his words of warning, words that
rang all too true now.
Quintall
looked at his demon master; he knew the dactyl had shown him his mortal
memories only to torment him. Since he had come to Aida, since the moment of
his mortal death when the hematite broach had somehow transported his spirit to
Bestesbulzibar Quintall had remembered only that last encounter and not the
path that had led him to Avelyn and the monk's powerful friends.
But
now―now he remembered. Everything. And he knew that he was a doomed
thing, knew the dactyl's claims were true, that Avelyn's warnings were true.
The weakness of mankind, the impiety of. the Abellican Church, the murders of
the Windrunner's crew, his own jealousy of Brother Avelyn―all these
things had fed the demon dactyl, had awakened the darkness that now encroached
upon the world.
Quintall
loathed Bestesbulzibar but realized he was powerless against the fiend,
realized he had fallen to the dactyl and that he could not escape.
Bestesbulzibar
extended its hand palm down and telepathically demanded that Quintall pay
homage.
The doomed
spirit took the hand and kissed it.
There could
be no redemption.
And Quintall
knew the demon read his every thought, that his hopelessness only made the
creature something more.
"You
are useful to me," Bestesbulzibar said suddenly, "as you visit the
dreams of men such as the fool Yuganick, as you walk unnoticed among our
enemies. But I can do all that, Quintall."
The dactyl
paused, and Quintall, in light of the last statement, expected that his time
was at its end, that he would be blasted out of existence or thrown into a
bottomless pit of eternal torment.
"I need
more from you," the dactyl decided. Bestesbulzibar looked from Quintall to
one of the lava rivers. "Yes," the creature muttered, talking more to
itself than to the ghost. It moved across the dais, dipped one arm into the
molten flow, then looked back at Quintall.
"Yes,"
the dactyl said again. "Do you not long to feel the sensations of the
corporeal world once more?"
Quintall did
indeed.
"I can
do that, my stooge. I can give you life, real life, once more."
Quintall
felt his spirit drifting toward the creature, though it was surely an
unconscious movement.
"I can
make you something greater," the demon whispered, and again the great
black wings beat softly and a gust of hot wind passed through the spirit. After
the gust, the heat remained.
The heat
remained, and Quintall understood he was feeling the warmth of the lava!
Bestesbulzibar
began a long, slow chant in a language the spirit did not understand, a
guttural, cracking language of clicks and sounds that could only be equated
with an old man clearing his phlegm-filled throat. Bestesbulzibar then spat
upon Quintall, and the goo did not pass through the spirit, but struck him and
stuck to him. Bestesbulzibar repeated the action over and over until Quintall
was thoroughly slimed, then the fiend grabbed the spirit and, as Quintall
screamed out in instinctive protest, plunged Quintall into the lava.
All the
world was blackness, was searing heat and unbearable agony, and Quintall knew
no more.
He awoke
later, much later, though he was unaware of the passage of time. He was in the
throne room still, standing, not floating, upon the solid floor.
He was a
creature of lava; shaped like a man, shaped roughly as he had once been with
arms and legs, rock hard torso and head, and joints somehow fluid, molten and
glowing bright orange but not dripping away. He felt awkward, but he felt! He
looked on in amazement as he opened and closed his black, orange-striped hand,
understood the unearthly strength in that grip, and knew he could crush a
stone―or the head of an enemy.
The head of
Avelyn.
Bestesbulzibar's
wicked laughter drew Quintall from his contemplations.
"Are
you pleased?" the demon asked.
Quintall did
not know how to answer. He began to speak, but the sound of his own voice, of a
voice that resonated like a rock slide, frightened him.
"You
will grow accustomed to your new body, my stooge, my general," the dactyl
teased, "my assassin. No giant could stand before you, and no man. When
Palmaris falls, you will lead my army into the city, and you will take the seat
of Honce-the-Bear's deposed King when Ursal is mine."
His power,
sheer strength, was dizzying, overwhelming. Images of conquest flooded
Quintall's every thought. He felt he could destroy Palmaris all by himself,
that no weapon, that no man, could possibly stand before him.
"Train
your new body," Bestesbulzibar instructed. "Feel its powers and
limitations and apply all that you once learned of the martial arts to this
form. You are my general now, and my assassin. Let all men, let all creatures
of Corona, tremble before you."
The fiend
ended with yet another hideous laugh, but this time, Quintall heard his own
grating voice joining in.
"The
war goes well, my pet," the dactyl went on. "While you were asleep,
your spirit binding to this gift I gave you, I viewed the southland, the
unstoppable progress. Palmaris falls before midsummer, I say, and another powrie force sails to join us, makes fast
for the Broken Coast. One army will march south, the other west, inland, until
they join at the very gates of Ursal! Who will stand before them? The feeble King
of Honce-the-Bear?"
"I know
nothing of kings," Quintall replied.
"But
you do!" the dactyl teased. "You know of your Father Abbot, the
doddering old fool, and even he is a more worthy foe than the jester who sits
on the throne of Honce-the-Bear. Who will stand before the beast then?"
The answer
seemed obvious to fallen Quintall. No one would stand before the beast, before
his master, before his god. Suddenly, the man-turned-spirit-turned-lava monster
wanted desperately to smash through the gates of Ursal, to take his place on
the throne of Honce-the-Bear.
Even more
than that, Quintall wanted to visit St.-Mere-Abelle, to face Father Abbot
Markwart and Master Jojonah, to make them grovel at his stony feet and then
step upon them and squash them, grind them to death. They had used him, he
understood now, all too clearly. They had used him in sending him to
Pimaninicuit, and then again when they turned him into something less than
human, when they, turned him into Brother Justice, the instrument of their anger.
So now Bestesbulzibar had done the same thing, but in Quintall's estimation,
the demon dactyl was by far the worthier master.
"You
will watch over Aida and serve in my absence," Bestesbulzibar announced.
Quintall
knew better than to question the beast at all.
That very
night, the demon swept out of its mountain home, flying fast to the south to
its minions. In mere hours, Bestesbulzibar covered the hundreds of miles to the
base at Dundalis, where it found a rattled Gothra of the goblins and Maiyer Dek
of the fomorian giants arguing fiercely.
How their
words caught in their throats, how all the camp about them fell to stunned
silence, when the dactyl dropped between them, when the absolute darkness fell
from the night sky.
"Tell
me!" the dactyl demanded, and both started talking at once, and both were
silenced by a mere threatening glare. Bestesbulzibar looked at Maiyer Dek
squarely.
"Our
camps swell to bursting," the giant chieftain explained, even its
thunderous voice seeming meek before the demon. "More should be sent south
to face the armies of our enemy!"
The demon's
eyes flared with fire. Its head snapped about, an accusing glare falling over
the trembling goblin.
"Ulg
Tik'narn cannot be found," Gothra stated. "Likely he is dead."
"So?"
The demon snorted, for there seemed no shortage of potential replacements.
"The
region is not secured," the goblin went on. "Nightbird owns the
forest."
"He is
a thorn!" Maiyer Dek roared. "And a charging giant does not stop to
pluck a thorn!"
"A
thorn that interrupts supply―" Gothra began, but he was cut short by
the bloodcurdling shriek of the demon dactyl.
"Enough!"
the beast thundered. "You mean to stall our thousands for the sake of this
one man, this Nightbird?"
"Each
area must be secured in t-turn," the goblin stuttered, realizing that this
discussion was not going very well. Goblins by nature were conservative in
their warfare tactics, securing territories one by one, then methodically
moving along, rarely attacking unless complete victory could be assured.
Bestesbulzibar
had little patience with that.
"I
demand Palmaris, yet you hold back thousands to retain this pitiful
village?" the dactyl roared.
"No,"
Gothra protested. The goblin general wanted to explain its reasoning, wanted to
make its master see that supply lines might be interrupted, equipment and
needed reinforcements destroyed or delayed, and that the result in the south,
at Palmaris's very gate, perhaps, could be disastrous.
Gothra, no
fool―at least by goblin standards―wanted to argue his point in
logical, rational terms, but all that came from the goblin's mouth was an
agonized scream as Bestesbulzibar reached out with one hand, clamping the
goblin's head and pulling Gothra in. Smiling wickedly, Bestesbulzibar lifted
its other hand so that all could see, then extended one finger, and with a
thought, lengthened the fingernail into a terrible claw. A sudden, impossibly
long swipe brought a shriek from Gothra, and the demon shoved the goblin back.
Gothra
stared down at the line of blood running from forehead to crotch, then looked
back at the demon.
Bestesbulzibar's
hand reached out and clenched the air, and the demon's magic grabbed at
Gothra―or at least at the goblin's skin, pulling it from the goblin's
body as completely as if the demon were helping Gothra out of clothing. The
fleshless thing fell quivering, dying, to the ground.
Not a sound
came from about the beast as, clothing and all, the dactyl devoured the torn
skin of Gothra.
"Who
was Ulg Tik'narn's second?" Bestesbulzibar asked.
There came
no immediate reply, but then one trembling powrie was pushed forward from the
ranks to stand before the master.
"Your
name?"
"Kos―"
the dwarf's voice trailed off, lost in the terrified gasps.
"He is
Kos-kosio Begulne," Maiyer Dek offered.
"And
where did Kos-kosio Begulne stand on this issue?" the dactyl asked.
Maiyer Dek
smiled confidently. "He wished to move south," the giant lied, for
Maiyer Dek liked the thought of Kos-kosio, not a strong personality, in command
of the powrie forces. "Or at least to strike hard and quickly at the petty
human raiders, that the issue be settled and the greater road be open."
The demon
nodded, seeming pleased, and Kos-kosio stood a bit straighter.
"You
are the powrie commander now, Kos-kosio Begulne," Bestesbulzibar
announced. "And you and Maiyer Dek shall share the leadership of the
goblins until a suitable replacement for Gothra can be found."
Bestesbulzibar shared his glowering visage with all gathered near. "You
two I charge with delivering Palmaris on the Masur Delaval by midsummer's eve.
I will see you at the gates of Palmaris, my generals, and if I find need to see
you before those gates are mine, then look upon Gothra's fate as your
own!"
With a
flourish, a thunderous beating of wings, and a bit of magic to make the flames
of the main fire in the camp leap high into the night, the demon dactyl took
wing, flying fast for the west to view the other occupied villages, to see its
massing might spread out beneath it. Satisfied as End-o'-the-World was left
behind, the beast turned northward, thinking to swoop low over the newest
caravan plodding south, to encourage its minions and to strike fear in their
hearts all at once.
But
something else caught the beast's attention, some sensation, some presence the
dactyl had not felt in many centuries. Lower went the demon, and slower,
turning tight circles, sharp eyes scouring the terrain, keen ears tuning to
every sound.
There was an
elf about, Bestesbulzibar knew. One of the Touel'alfar, the dactyl demon's most
ancient and hated of enemies.
CHAPTER 47
One Harmony
The night
was still, and undeniably beautiful. Every so often a cloud would rush overhead,
pushed by southwestern breezes, but for the most part the stars shone crisp and
clear, and the smell of spring was everywhere, the smell of new life.
It was a
lie, Elbryan knew, all of it. The smell of new life would fast give way to the
smell of goblins, powries, and giants, and the stench of death. All this
serenity would be shattered under the thunderous march of the black horde, the
crack of powrie whip, the rolling war engines.
It was a
cruel lie: the quiet, the serenity, the spring breeze.
A movement
to the side caught the wary ranger's attention, but he did not go for his
weapon, recognizing the light, graceful step and the smell―like a field
of distant flowers, the gentle fragrance carried on soft breezes―of the
woman so dear to him. Pony came through the brush lightly, wearing only a soft
silken nightshirt that didn't reach her knees. Her hair was down now, loose and
wild, and it framed her fair face in a sensual manner, brushing her cheeks, one
thick lock wrapped down and about her chin, that sent Elbryan's heart pumping.
She looked
at the man and smiled, then crossed her arms to ward the breeze and turned,
staring up at the night canopy.
"How
could I have brought you out here?" the ranger said to her, moving up
behind her and touching her gently on the shoulder.
Pony bent
her head atop that hand and shifted backward, leaning against Elbryan.
"How might you have stopped me?" she asked.
The ranger
chuckled softly and kissed the woman's hair, wrapping his strong arms about
her. How indeed? he wondered, marveling, as always, at Pony's free spirit. He
could not truly love Pony, he knew, could not love who she was, if he meant to
control her, for surely any attempt to harness Pony would defeat the very free
spirit that Elbryan so adored. She was his in heart, but her own in will, and
the ranger could not have stopped her from coming along, short of knocking her
unconscious and tying her in a cave!
The woman
turned within Elbryan's grasp, her soft face just below his, looking up at him.
Elbryan
stared at her for a long, silent moment. An image of her lying dead at the end
of a goblin spear came to him and he looked away suddenly, looked up at the
stars, and wondered how he would live, what point there would be in going on
with his life, if anything happened to Pony.
He felt her
hand brushing against his cheek, and then the touch grew more firm as Pony
turned his face back to look into her own. "We are each of us in
danger," she reminded him. "And I might die, as Elbryan might
die."
"Do not
even utter such horrors."
"Possibilities,"
Pony corrected; "chances that we each took of our own volition, chances
borne in duty. I would not want to live in the world that will be if the dactyl
is not destroyed; rather that I had died fighting the fiend in the faraway
Barbacan . . ." Her voice trailed off and she rose to her tiptoes, her
lips brushing Elbryan's in a gentle kiss. "Rather that I died beside my
friend, my love."
He started
to look away again, unable to come to terms with that distinct possibility, but
Pony's hand caught his chin firmly, forcefully, and turned him back to face
her, all gentleness suddenly gone from her fair features.
"I am a
warrior," the woman declared. "I have fought all of my life, since
the day I wandered the road from destroyed Dundalis. I see my duty as no less
than your own."
"Of
course not," Elbryan quickly agreed.
"And if
I am to die, then let it be in battle," Pony said through gritted teeth:
"Let it be against the demon dactyl, delivering Avelyn, that the foul beast
might be destroyed. I am a warrior, my love. Do not begrudge me a fitting
end!"
"I
would rather that your end and my own be together a hundred years hence,"
Elbryan replied, a helpless smile finding its way across his face.
Pony reached
up to touch that smile and felt the sharp stubble of the ranger's beard,
several days grown. "Ah, but my love," she said quietly, "put
that fine elvish blade of yours to use on that beard, else I fear my face will
glow from your scraping."
"More
than your face, my love," Elbryan teased, and he lifted Pony up before
him, biting her softly just under the chin, then turning his face so that his
beard rubbed against her neck.
She slid
back down, keeping tight to him, until their eyes met, and suddenly the play
was gone from their smiles, all teasing lost in sudden intensity, in the
knowledge that their time together might be nearing a very brutal end. Pony
kissed him then, hard and passionately, her hands moving to grab tightly at his
thick hair, to pull him even closer, though there was already no space between
them.
Elbryan
wrapped her even more tightly, squeezing her in his powerful grasp. One arm
slipped down to the back of her bare leg, then up under the nightshirt, over
the smooth skin of her buttocks, gently up her back, bracing her as Elbryan
slowly shifted her down to the ground.
"Potion,"
Avelyn argued.
Bradwarden
snorted. "Potion o' dizziness, then. What fool brewed such a magic as
that? A drink to set ye on the ground, when a club might do a better job!"
"Potion
of courage!" Avelyn protested, taking a deep swig, then wiping his forearm
across his face.
"Potion
o' hiding," Bradwarden said seriously, changing the tone.
Avelyn
stared hard at the centaur.
"Oh, I
been known to have me drinks," the centaur said. "'Tis boggle I'm
favoring, and not a potion in all the world'll kick ye harder than that. But
I'm drinking at times for celebrating, me friend, at the solstice and the
equinox, and not for hiding."
The
accusation hit the monk hard, especially considering the source. Avelyn had
grown quite close to Bradwarden over the first weeks of their journey, a bond
more of respect than friendship. Now there was no mistaking the somber,
accusing tone of the normally jovial centaur; Bradwarden did not approve of the
monk's little flask.
"Perhaps
you simply do not have as much to hide from," the monk said quietly,
defiantly lifting the flask to his lips.
He didn't
drink, though, not then, held back by an unrelenting stare.
"The
more ye hide, the more ye need to hide," Bradwarden replied. "Ye look
at me, Brother Avelyn. Ye look into me eyes to know that no lie comes from me
lips."
Avelyn
lowered the flask and stared hard at Bradwarden.
"Ye did
no wrong in taking the stones," the centaur said.
"What
foolishness is that?" the monk protested.
"Ah,
but ye cannot hide from me, Avelyn Desbris," Bradwarden said without
hesitation, his confidence only bolstered by the monk's too loud protestation.
"Ye're not afraid of yer kinfolk, not the monks, not any other Brother
Justice that might come hunting ye. No, me friend, ye're afraid o' Avelyn, of
what ye did and of yer eternal soul. Did ye stain it, then?"
"You
know nothing."
"Ho,
ho, what!" the centaur boomed in a fair imitation of Avelyn. "I know
the ways o' men, the ways o' Avelyn. I know that yer drinking yer 'potions o'
courage' is no more than yer hiding from yer own past, from decisions ye
made―and good ones at that! Hear me now, because I would not lie to ye,
I'd have no reason to lie to ye: ye did right in running, in taking the stones,
even in killing the man who meant to kill yerself. Ye did what ye had to do, me
friend, and so let go yer guilt, I say, and see better the road ahead. Ye said
ye knew yer destiny, and I'm believing in that destiny, else I'd not have come.
Ye're meant to face the dactyl, I say, to destroy the beast, and so ye will,
but only if yer mind's clear, and only if yer heart's clear."
The words,
coming from so mysterious, so wise, and aged a creature, hit Avelyn profoundly.
He looked back at his flask and saw it for the first time as an enemy, a sign
of weakness.
"Ye're
not for needing yer potion," Bradwarden said. "Aye, but when ye beat
the dactyl, then I'll take ye out for a bit o' boggle, and ye'll know what it
means to see the world turn!" He reached out and grabbed Avelyn's wrist,
pulling the flask further from the man, and locking gazes. "Avelyn needs
not to hide from Avelyn," he said in all seriousness, and the monk, after
a pause, nodded slowly.
"From
the dactyl, now!" Bradwarden said suddenly, satisfied that he had gotten
his point through. "Now, ye're wanting to hide from the dactyl until the
time's right, but ye'll find yer flask a bit small for that!"
Avelyn said
nothing, just nodded again. He was amazed that Bradwarden had so seen through
him, had looked so clearly into his heart and soul, and had recognized the
taint of guilt there. This drink that he always kept handy was no potion of
courage but an admission of cowardice, a means for hiding from his own past.
Avelyn
continued to stare at Bradwarden, and smiled as the centaur smiled, as the monk
tossed the flask into the brush.
Now,
finally, Avelyn could face his destiny with no regrets for the path that had
led him to this place.
The centaur
took up his pipes then and softly played, for such was the magic of
Bradwarden's song that no goblin, no monster, no human, no animal even, could
possibly discern its source in the forest night. His tune, mournful and hopeful
all at once, calmed Avelyn and bolstered his resolve. It floated through the
trees to caress the lovers, and further out to where Paulson and Chipmunk kept
a watchful eye on the forest night.
And thus the
group was bound by Bradwarden's song, one band, one purpose, one harmony.
The quiet
night brought no such rest for Tuntun and Symphony. The elf watched the
stallion closely to see if he was tiring, but the great horse ran on and on,
slipping through the leafy shadows like the passage of Sheila herself, running
to the horizon and beyond.
They had a
quest, these two, every bit as vital to them as the hunt for the dactyl was to
the seven who had left before them. For Tuntun, the sting of being left out of
that all-important journey had not diminished, and no logical arguments could
change the way the elf felt about it. Tuntun's stake in destroying the dactyl
was no less than Juraviel's or that of any other elf or human. But it was more
than that, the elf knew, and she had to admit it to herself, for it was her
heart and not her mind that had forced her out here. Tuntun had to rush along,
had to chase the group, in part because Belli'mar Juraviel―her closest
friend despite their constant squabbling―was among them, but also in part
because Nightbird led that troop. The elf could no longer deny her feelings for
the ranger. She had played an important role in getting Elbryan to this point
and, as a mother clings to her child, Tuntun could not bear to let him go off
without her.
Yes, it as
Nightbird more than anything else that had the sprite riding hard through the
forest night. It was the man she had trained, the man she had grown to love.
She trusted in the ranger―never had she seen Elbryan's better―but
even so, she would stand beside him in this, his darkest of hours, in this, his
pinnacle of glory.
The elf bent
her head low over Symphony's flying mane and bade the horse to run on, and
Symphony, as connected to the ranger as she, needed no encouragement and no
outward guidance.
CHAPTER 48
Enemies Ancient
"You
and your friends saved us all, I do not dispute," Jingo Gregor said, his
voice cracking from the strain of the last few weeks, the overwhelming
surprises and horrors. "Yet are we to walk willingly to a place of
enchantment?" He looked pleadingly at the boughs, at the rarely seen guide
who had led him and his companions through a trackless region, heading south
and with towering mountains now in sight.
"Better
that than to face the goblin hordes," Belli'mar Juraviel answered. "I
offer refuge, a haven as safe as any place in all the world. And the offer is
not given lightly, I assure you, Master Jingo Gregor. You are as strange to the
Touel'alfar as are we to you, and the valley that is home to my people is not
open to humans. Yet I take you there, for if I do not, then surely you and all
your companions will perish."
"I am
not ungrateful, good Juraviel," Jingo Gregor replied.
"Just
wary," Juraviel finished for him, moving down the tree so that the man
could see him clearly, one of the few views the elf had allowed to any of the
humans. "And well you should be, given the tragedies that have come to you
and your clan. But I am not your enemy."
"That
much has been proven," Jingo agreed.
"Then
rest easy, for Andur'Blough Inninness is not so far," Juraviel said to
him. "Consider yourself blessed to look upon the elven valley of
mists." There was an unconscious edge to that last statement, reflecting
Juraviel's own doubts about this decision to take humans to the secret valley.
True, Elbryan had been taken in and trained; true, Lady Dasslerond had allowed
Juraviel, Tuntun, and the others to go out to find the ranger and help him with
his fight. But to take humans to Andur'Blough Inninness without the express
permission of Lady Dasslerond was indeed a stretch of the Lady's compassion,
and Juraviel was not certain that the troop wouldn't simply be turned away;
perhaps the paths into the misty valley would be altered and hidden even from
Juraviel. Lady Dasslerond was merciful, the elf knew, but she was, above that,
pragmatic and protective of her realm. The welfare of the Touel'alfar she
placed above all else, perhaps even above the lives of a score of unfortunate
human refugees.
Despite the
hints of doubt in Juraviel's tone, Jingo Gregor seemed satisfied with the
words―a speech Juraviel had offered to the man several times over the
last few days. Juraviel held nothing but sympathy for this ragged group, many
of whom had lost loved ones in the goblin raids upon their homes, and most of
whom had been tortured and violated by the wretched creatures. The elf would
offer those comforting words to any and all, as often as they needed to hear
them, reassuring the poor folk even though he himself wasn't so certain of the
outcome.
Jingo Gregor
moved off then, back to the warmth of the campfire and his eighteen companions.
Juraviel, too, moved back toward the campfire, tightening his perimeter watch,
though the humans had no idea of the elf's movements, so silent was he as he
crossed the higher boughs of the budding trees.
The fire
burned low―it had never been truly high, for Juraviel opted for caution,
though he was fairly certain there were no monsters in the area, no organized
groups anyway. Now the fire was no more than embers, their orange glow casting
faint illumination over the resting forms of the humans, the light seeming
appropriate for the rhythmic breathing of the sleeping folk.
Juraviel,
too, was near to sleep, the elf comfortably nestled in the V of a high branch.
He should have been watching the ground, he knew, but in accord with the
wistful nature of his kind, his eyes kept lifting skyward to the stars and the
mysteries.
And then to
something else, something darker and more sinister, moving swiftly across the
sky, heading for the camp, for Juraviel. The elf sensed the presence of the
demon dactyl as surely as the dactyl sensed him, felt the awfulness, the
sheerest of evil, the coldest of deathly chill.
With great
effort, Juraviel pulled his thoughts from the night sky and the approach of
doom and slipped quickly, down, branch to branch, finally dropping right in the
middle of the camp. He ran about, kicking at feet, whispering harshly, until
all the humans were roused.
"Be gone!"
the elf commanded. "Flee to the forest in groups of five and four, each in
a direction of your own!"
Questions
came at him, and at the stupefied leaders of the group, but Juraviel did not
relent. "Tarry not!" the elf warned "For death comes on wing! Be
gone to the forest!"
The dactyl
was close, so close! The humans scrambled, trying to gather some things, trying
to put on boots, at least, as they stumbled and were pulled to the darkness of
the forest night.
Juraviel
remained at the glowing fire pit until all had gone, his eyes ever skyward,
looking for the blackest of forms.
He felt it,
he saw it, the dactyl swooping down from on high, rushing past the tangle of
branches with hardly a care, spinning at the last moment, halting its descent
to land lightly on the ground opposite the diminutive elf.
Juraviel
drew out his slender sword but wondered what use it might be against the
horrific demon. He prayed that all the folk would rush back in at the monster
and join in his fight, but it was a wish that the elf had to dismiss, knowing
that if the folk did come to his aid, they would all perish with him.
"Touel'alfar,"
the demon dactyl remarked in its mighty voice. "Not many are your kind.
Not so strong, not so strong."
"Be
gone from this place, demon," Juraviel responded in as firm a voice as he
could muster. "You have no hold over me, no claim to my heart or my soul.
I am the master here, and I reject you and your lies!"
The dactyl
laughed at him, mocking his words and his courage, making him feel like an
insignificant thing. "Why do you believe that I want claim to such
worthless things as your heart and soul, elf ?" the demon growled.
"Your heart, perhaps," Bestesbulzibar teased, "that I might
feast upon it, savoring the sweet blood of a Touel'alfar."
As he spoke,
Bestesbulzibar slowly began to circle the fire, and Juraviel moved as well,
keeping the embers between him and the demon―though when he thought about
it, the elf realized that the flames, were they blazing high, would prove no
barrier at all to the creature of the fiery pits of the underworld.
"Why
are you out, Touel'alfar?" Bestesbulzibar asked. "Why are you away
from your valley―yes, I know of your valley. I have seen many things
since I have awakened, foolish elf, and I know that your kind is diminished
greatly, that your world is smaller now, a mere canyon in a world that is grown
too wide and too human. So why are you away, elf? What is it that brings you so
far from home?"
"The
darkness of the demon dactyl," Juraviel answered firmly. "Your shadow
has roused the Touel'alfar, foul beast, for you are not unknown to us."
"But
what shall you do about Bestesbulzibar?" the dactyl roared suddenly, and
sudden, too, was the monster's rush, a quick burst right across the fire,
scattering embers in a blinding shower. Juraviel struck fast and hard with his
small sword, scoring a solid hit, but that hardly, slowed the great beast whose
armored hide held even the elvish blade at bay, whose clawed hand slapped the
sword from Juraviel's hand while the demon's other hand grabbed the elf by the
throat, lifting him easily up into the air.
"Oh,"
Bestesbulzibar moaned, as if in ecstasy. "I could tear it out, elf,"
the demon teased, running the claws of his free hand over Juraviel's tiny
chest, "and hold it up before your eyes, biting into its red flesh even as
you watched it beat its last."
"I do
not fear you," Juraviel gasped with what little breath, remained to him.
"Then
you are a fool," Bestesbulzibar replied. "Do you know what comes
after life, elf ? Do you know what awaits you?" The demon laughed
wickedly, bellowing thunderously into the still night.
"No
torment. . . " Juraviel gasped.
"For
you are true of heart," Bestesbulzibar mimicked evilly, and then the beast
laughed again all the louder. "No torment," the fiend agreed.
"Nothing! Do you hear? Nothing, elf. There is no afterlife for a miserable
wretch such as thee! Only unknowing blackness. Savor your precious seconds;
foolish elf. Beg me to let you see one more dawn."
Juraviel
said nothing. He tried hard to hold to his faith, whose precepts insisted that
a good life would indeed be rewarded in the afterlife. He considered Garshan
Inodiel, who was God to the elves, a god of justice and promise, not unlike the
god of the humans. But in the face of the darkness that was Bestesbulzibar,
Belli'mar Juraviel knew despair.
"But
why are you out?" the demon asked again, giving a sidelong, scrutinizing,
glance at the elf. "And what do you know?"
Juraviel
closed his eyes and said nothing. He expected to be tortured, to have his limbs
torn from his body, perhaps, until he confessed all he knew, until he betrayed
his friends who had gone to the Barbacan. No, I must not think of that! the elf
told himself firmly, and he turned his thoughts once more to Garshan Inodiel,
trying to blanket everything else under the serenity of his God.
But then, in
perhaps the worst torture of all to the valiant Touel'alfar, Juraviel felt the
encroachment, felt the dark and cold presence of Bestesbulzibar creeping into
his thoughts, scouring his mind. He opened his eyes in horror to see the
demon's contorted features, flaming eyes closed as Bestesbulzibar concentrated,
using his magic to scour the elf's brain.
Juraviel
fought valiantly, but he was overmatched. The more he tried not to think of
Elbryan and the others, the more they were revealed to Bestesbulzibar. The
demon would get what it wanted, he feared, would devour him, and then would be
off to devour his friends!
"Avelyn,"
Bestesbulzibar whispered.
"No!"
Juraviel cried, and he kicked out with all his strength, his foot slamming the
demon right in the eye. The wriggling elf broke free and tumbled to the ground.
He tried to scamper away, but Bestesbulzibar towered over him, looking down,
laughing, teasing.
"You do
not belong here," came a sudden, melodious voice, one that caught and held
the demon's attention. Both Bestesbulzibar and Juraviel turned to see Lady
Dasslerond come out of the brush, flanked by a dozen other elves, bows and
swords in hand.
"You
live still!" the demon howled at the sight of the Lady of Caer'alfar, an
elf he had known centuries before.
"And
you walk Corona again," the Lady replied, "and surely all of the
world weeps at the sight."
"Surely
all of the world should!" Bestesbulzibar retorted. "Where is your
Terranen Dinoniel now, Dasslerond? Who will stand before me this time?" As
he spoke the last, he turned his ominous gaze upon Juraviel, and the poor elf
shook with the fear that he had given his friends away.
"Who,
Dasslerond?" the demon insisted. "You or this pitiful elf that cowers
before me?" Bestesbulzibar looked all around at the encircling sprites,
and laughed more loudly than ever. "All of you together, then? Well done,
I say; and let us commence. Better for me that the nuisance of the Touel'alfar
be done with here and now!"
"I'll
not fight you," Lady Dasslerond replied coolly. "Not here." That
said, she held aloft a huge green gemstone, shining with power, its
illumination turning everything in the area a shade of green―everything
except Bestesbulzibar, for the shadow of the demon could not be overcome by any
light.
"What
trick is this?"` the fiend protested. "What foolish―" The
words were lost in the demon's throat as all the world began to shift and
change, features blending together in a greenish mist and then growing clear
again, crystalline under the stars, bright and beautiful.
They were in
Andur'Blough Inninness―all of them. Lady Dasslerond and Juraviel, all the
elves and the refugees, and Bestesbulzibar.
"What
trick?" the fiend roared, suddenly angry, suddenly recognizing that he
should not be in this place, the very heart of elvish power.
"I
invite you to my home, creature of shadow," Lady Dasslerond answered, her
voice edged with weariness from the tremendous exertion of power it had taken
to transport the group―or, in effect, to change the very ground beneath
their feet. "You cannot defeat me here, not now."
The demon
growled and considered the words, felt the strength of the Lady and her fellows
in this, their domain. "But soon," Bestesbulzibar promised.
The Lady
held aloft the green gemstone, the heart of Andur'Blough Inninness, now shining
fiercely.
Bestesbulzibar's
unearthly roar, one of pain and outrage, stole her breath. "So you saved
the pitiful elf and the humans he escorted," the fiend sneered. "What
good will it prove when all the world is mine?" Out came the black wings
and the demon dactyl lifted away to the hum of elvish bows, the melodious
tumult of elvish insults.
Any true joy
felt by the Touel'alfar at the demon dactyl's retreat was short-lived, though.
By necessity, Lady Dasslerond had allowed Bestesbulzibar to tread upon this,
their most sacred and secret of places, and though the fiend was correct,
Bestesbulzibar could not yet face them all in Andur'Blough Inninness, they had
done nothing to diminish the demon.
Juraviel
joined Lady Dasslerond as she stood over the spot from where Bestesbulzibar had
departed. The ground that had been under the fiend's clawed feet was blackened
and torn.
"A
wound that will not heal," the Lady said despondently.
Juraviel
knelt to better inspect the ground. He could smell the rot there: the earth
itself was tainted from the fiend's presence.
"A
festering wound that will slowly spread," the Lady admitted. "We must
tend the ground about this spot vigilantly, for if ever we fail to counter with
our magic and our song the rot that is Bestesbulzibar, it will grow within our
valley."
Juraviel
sighed and looked hopelessly at his Lady, his guilt obvious upon his fair face.
"The
dactyl grows strong," she said, not accusingly.
"I have
failed."
Lady
Dasslerond looked at him incredulously.
"The
demon knows," Juraviel admitted. "The demon knows of Elbryan, of
Avelyn, and the plan."
"Then
pity Elbryan," the Lady replied. "Or hold faith in Nightbird and in
Brother Avelyn, whose heart is true. They went north to do battle with
Bestesbulzibar, and so they shall."
Juraviel
continued to look down upon the black scar that the demon had left upon the
ground of his precious home. Indeed, Bestesbulzibar had grown strong to so
taint the very land of Andur'Blough Inninness. Juraviel's Lady had bid him to
hold faith, and so he would, but the fear was obvious on his face as he looked
from the scar to the north.
"And
now we have duties," Lady Dasslerond went on, speaking more loudly,
directing her words at all the elves. "All of us. We have unexpected
guests who must be comforted and then taken from our homeland to a place of
their own kind, a place of safety―if any place in the world remains
safe." She looked back down at the black scar upon her beautiful valley.
"We have much work to do," she said softly.
CHAPTER 49
Hunted
"The
terrain grows more wild, Uncle Mather, more fitting to the nature of our
enemies. The trees are older, never harvested by humans, and darker. The
animals do not fear us, do not respect our weapons or our cunning."
Elbryan
rested back against the diagonal tree root in this impromptu room of Oracle,
digesting his own words. They were true enough; in this region so far to the
north of any known human settlements, all the world seemed somehow larger and
more imposing. The towering mountains that formed the dread Barbacan loomed
less than a day's march away, dominating the northern horizon, making the
travelers feel smaller still.
"It
brings me mixed feelings," the ranger went on. "I fear for our
safety―will I be able to protect my friends, not necessarily from the
threats of our enemy but from the simple truths of survival in this region? And
yet, out here, I am somewhat more free than ever, more true to the training the
elves have given me. There is no room for error in the far north, no margin of
safety, and that keeps me ever vigilant, on my guard, tingling with wariness. I
am afraid, and thus, I am alive."
Again,
Elbryan sat back, smiling at the irony of it all. I am afraid, and thus, I am
alive.
"If
given the opportunity, most people would choose a life of quiet luxury,"
he said softly, "would choose to surround themselves with servants, with
concubines, even. That is their mistake, for out here, danger ever present, I
am ten times more alive than ever they could be. And with the challenge that is
Pony and with the challenge I hope that I pose for her I am many times more
satisfied. It is, I believe, the difference between physical satisfaction and
true lovemaking, the difference between release and passion. I may die soon
following this course before me, but out here, at one with my spirit and my
nature, on the edges of catastrophe, I have lived many times more than most
will ever know.
"So I
do not regret this journey that fate has laid before me, Uncle Mather, nor do I
regret that the others―Bradwarden and Avelyn, Paulson and Chipmunk, and
most of all, Pony―have been swept along this course. I pity Belli'mar
Juraviel, that he could not see it through, that duty turned his path."
Elbryan put
his chin in his palm, resting, thinking, and staring always at the faint image
at the corner of the mirror. It was true, all of it; he hated the death and the
suffering, of course, but he could not deny his excitement, and the sense of
righteousness, the belief that he was indeed making a difference in the world.
He looked
closely at Mather's image, seeking a smile of approval or a frown that would
indicate his feelings were not true but merely a contrived defense against
despair. He looked closely, and he saw a shadow beginning to creep in across
the glassy surface within the depths of the mirror. The ranger sighed, thinking
this a sign of disapproval, thinking that he might have fallen into a trap of
justifications, but gradually he came to understand that it was not a cloud
emanating from Mather or from his own true feelings. Elbryan began to
understand that it was something else, something darker by far.
Elbryan sat
bolt upright, unblinking. "Uncle Mather?" he asked breathlessly, a
coldness creeping into his very body.
A coldness,
a blackness, a living death.
The ranger's
mind was whirling, trying to make sense of the undeniable event. Only one
creature could bring such darkness, he realized, and then, suddenly, he
understood. Whether Mather had facilitated the warning from the other side of
life, or whether it was simply a connection wrought of the magic of Oracle,
Elbryan neither knew nor cared. What he did know was that the demon dactyl was
searching for him; for them, sending its otherworldly vision out far and wide.
Fear gripped
Elbryan as he realized that his own use of Oracle might be helping his enemy
locate him and his friends. He leaped up, slamming his head against the roots
and ground that formed the cave's ceiling, and rushed to the mirror, turning it
down, breaking all connection. He scrambled for the exit then, pulling down the
blanket and wrapping it about the mirror, then crawled out into the waning
daylight, calling for Avelyn.
* * *
From the
flow of molten lava, the demon dactyl pulled its latest creation―a
glowing spike, a tapering spear―and held it aloft.
"Fools
all." The beast laughed, eyeing its masterpiece, a weapon that would find
and destroy the pitiful humans seeking Aida. Into the spike, the beast sent its
vision, the telltale tracings of human-woven magic. Into the spike, the demon
sent its power, the strength of the underworld, the strength to burn.
Then the
beast called to its elite guards, the armored giants, and to their leader,
Togul Dek.
When the
brute was before the dark master, Bestesbulzibar held forth the glowing spear.
Togul Dek
hesitated, feeling the heat, the intense magical strength.
Bestesbulzibar
thrust the nine-foot spike forward and growled a final warning, and Togul Dek,
more fearful of the demon than of the fiery implement, grasped it without
further hesitation, though the giant winced as his flesh touched the diabolical
weapon.
Togul Dek's
expression became one of surprise, for the spike felt cool to the touch.
"Take
ten with you," Bestesbulzibar commanded. "Humans approach my throne.
The spear will lead you."
"Does
Bestesbulzibar who is King want any living?" the giant asked, barking each
word.
The dactyl
scoffed as if the notion were absurd, revealing that he did not think these
pitiful few worthy of his time and energy.
"Bring
me their heads," he instructed. "You may eat the rest."
The giant
stamped one boot and spun away, collecting its ten closest allies among the
elite guard and sweeping out of the throne room.
The dactyl
dismissed the remaining guards and moved back to one of the glowing lava
rivers, dipping his clawed fingers into the fiery stone, feeling the power of
the magic that was his alone to command, musing again about the darkness of his
complete rule.
"How
could I have been such a fool?" Avelyn lamented, dropping his round head
into his plump hands.
"How
so?" Pony demanded, realizing they had no time for doubts and blame. Each
challenge had to be met without regret for past decisions.
"I
should have known that the dactyl would search us, out, should have anticipated
his magical vision," Avelyn replied.
"We do
not know that the dactyl has searched us out," Elbryan interjected.
"Perhaps the shadow at Oracle was but a warning. We have met with few
enemies since our departure, only one organized group that we even know was
part of the demon's army. Why should Bestesbulzibar―"
"Speak
not that name aloud so close to the dactyl's home!" Avelyn warned.
"Do not even think it, if you can so discipline your thoughts!"
Elbryan
nodded an apology to Avelyn and to all the fearful others. "We do not know
that it is too late," the ranger said softly.
"Ye put
up the guard, then?" Bradwarden asked.
Avelyn
nodded. Using the sunstone he had taken from Quintall, he had enacted a shield
against divining magic. It was not a difficult enchantment, actually; and one
that powerful Avelyn could maintain with the focused sunstone for a very long
time without severely taxing his energies for other magics.
It was one
that Avelyn should have enacted, he now realized, even as they set out from the
region of Dundalis.
"Stupid!"
Paulson grumbled, eyeing the monk dangerously, and then he stormed away.
Elbryan was
quick to follow, catching up to the man, grabbing him by the elbow, and leading
him farther from the camp behind a shielding wall of evergreens where they
could speak in private.
"You
did not mention that we should enact such a protective shield," the ranger
pointed out.
"I
ain't no wizard," Paulson argued. "I didn't even know about such a
thing."
"Then
it is good that we have Avelyn with us, who can block the demon's sight."
"If the
damned demon ain't upon us even now," Paulson retorted, and he glanced
about nervously as he spoke the grim words.
"I'll
not tolerate any placement of blame on this journey," Elbryan said
sternly.
Paulson
stared at him long and hard, finally relenting under the ranger's unblinking
stare. Instead of growing defensive, as was his nature, the big man tried hard
to see things from Elbryan's perspective. Finally, he nodded. "It's good
that Avelyn is with us," he said sincerely.
"We'll
get there," Elbryan promised, and started away.
"Hey,
ranger," Paulson called after Elbryan had gone a few steps. Elbryan turned
to regard the man, noting his grin.
"We'll
get there, eh?" Paulson cracked. "Ye sure that's a good thing?"
"I am
sure it is not," Elbryan replied, matching the big man's grin.
From the
edge of a high, rocky bluff, crouched defensively behind the stone, the
companions watched the latest caravan wind its way out of the Barbacan. Goblins
comprised the bulk of the line, trudging with heads down, looking thoroughly
miserable, especially those chained to the various powrie war engines
catapults, ballistae, and great corkscrew boring machines meant to drive huge
holes in castle walls.
The caravan
went on and on, exiting a pass in the dark mountain wall and forming a line
that went out of the companions' sight to the east.
"Alpinador,
too, is under siege," Elbryan reasoned.
"The
dactyl will use the summer months to drive right to the coast, no doubt where
more powries await his armies," Avelyn added, and then, considering his
own words, he snorted loudly. "Unless of course the demon's soldiers have
already driven to the coast. Ho, ho, what!"
"Then
no time for wasting," remarked Bradwarden, a few feet away, behind the
others on a lower point. The centaur obviously could not climb up the stone and
crouch, and so he had spent the last half hour waiting rather impatiently,
listening to descriptions of the exotic powrie war machines and to Paulson's
unending giant count.
"We
have to wait for Pony," Elbryan reminded the anxious centaur.
"Then
wait no more," came a voice from ahead, and the group turned as one to see
the woman moving lightly down the trail.
"There
are several passes that will get us through," she explained. "This
trail branches a quarter mile from here; the left road winds back down and out
of the range, but the right climbs higher and into the mountains, which are not
so deep."
"Is
there cover?" Elbryan asked.
Pony
shrugged. "As much as we can hope for," she replied. "Boulders
line the trail on both sides, but if our enemy has guards posted in proper
position, they will likely spot us."
"Then we
must spot them first," Elbryan said determinedly, taking up Hawkwing. He
sent Chipmunk off and running, flanking them to the left, bade Pony guard the
right, and he, himself, moved in front of Avelyn, Paulson, and Bradwarden,
taking a long lead.
Within an
hour's time, they had climbed high across the southern face of the dark
mountain, to the edge of the tree line, where the wind blew chill. Elbryan, far
in the lead and out of sight of the others, left markers showing his course,
but even with this, the ranger was fearful that they would all get separated
and lost. The Barbacan was a wild place, as untamed as any land the ranger had
ever seen; a place of huge, rocky outcroppings, jagged stones, and thick copses
of dark trees. It was a place where a trail ended abruptly in a hundred-foot
drop, or a boulder might come suddenly down upon an unwary traveler's head. A
place of the most primal danger, it was a place where the ranger felt most
alive.
A slight
noise to his right put Elbryan into a crouch, his hand going from his bow to
his sword. He slipped to shelter behind a stone, then dropped flat on his
belly, peeking out around the edge at a small ravine, a cut in the mountain
filled with trees and brush.
The noise
came again, soft footsteps, and Elbryan followed it to its source, just a
shadow moving gracefully through the tangle. He took up Hawkwing again, his
eyes never leaving the target.
And then he
relaxed as the shadow moved through a clear area.
"Pony,"
he called softly, catching her attention. He noted the stealthy manner in which
she approached, and that kept him on his guard.
"Goblin,"
she whispered from a short distance, not daring to cross the last clearing to
come beside Elbryan, "high and to the left beyond the twin pines and
behind the jutting stone."
Elbryan
scanned in that direction, but had to move out from his rock even to spot the
jutting stone. He nodded as the place, though not the goblin, came into view.
"How
many?"
"I saw
but one," Pony answered. "There could be more, further to the left
and down."
Elbryan
glanced back along the trail. He had moved from shadow to shadow, and it was
unlikely that the goblin had spotted him from that distance, but Avelyn, and
particularly Bradwarden, would have trouble being inconspicuous. By the ranger's
calculations, the trailing trio would soon be well within the goblin's view.
He noted a
movement up above, a dark shape coming atop the jutting rock. Torn and
uncertain, the ranger fitted an arrow to Hawkwing. "If there are more,
they'll soon know of us," he whispered.
"Perhaps
I can get behind the spot," Pony replied.
Elbryan
started to ponder that possibility, then noted the goblin's attention was
occupied by something back along Elbryan's path.
"It
knows of us," the ranger explained, and up came his bow. The shot was
fully a hundred yards, and he had no more of a target than the goblin's head
and shoulders, and in the crosswinds of a mountain face. His arrow hit the mark
right down the middle, and the dark form fell away.
There came a
cry and a second shape darted out from behind the boulder, scrambling away.
"We are
known!" the ranger called to Pony and the pair jumped up and started in
pursuit, though they had little hope of catching a creature in this wild
tangle. Just a few steps away, though, they skidded to a sudden stop, seeing
the goblin coming back, staggering out of a copse and across an expanse of bare
rock.
They watched
curiously as the monster jerked suddenly, then fell over, and a moment later,
Chipmunk appeared from the brush behind the creature, scampering up to retrieve
his daggers.
"Well
done," Elbryan said, though the man was far from earshot.
"And a
good thing it is," Pony added.
"All
three of us," the ranger instructed, "and get Paulson as well. We
must search the area to make sure that no other sentinels were nearby to
witness the kills."
The four did
just that, circling the area and spying out the spot from every conceivable
angle, looking for goblins or any signs that goblins had been about. When they
were at last convinced that the kills had been unnoticed, Elbryan hustled them
along, coming to a bowl-shaped depression as night descended across the wild
mountains. The ranger would have liked to go farther, but they could not travel
the difficult and dangerous terrain in the dark, and they certainly could light
no torches.
They set
their camp with confidence that their progress had gone undetected; they could
not know that a giant carried a weapon which had sensed the kills and had led
its wielder right to the spot of the disposed goblin carcasses, a spot not so
far from their encampment.
The night
was cool and quiet, save the moan of the wind across mountain stones. Elbryan
and Pony sat close, huddled under a blanket. To the side loomed the huge shape
of Bradwarden, the centaur using its bulk to shield Avelyn from the wind.
Paulson and Chipmunk were out and about, guarding the perimeter.
"Tomorrow
we climb more sheer faces," Elbryan said with some concern.
"Oh,
don't ye worry," Bradwarden assured him. "I'll find me way."
"I am
more concerned with Avelyn," the ranger remarked. As if on cue, the
snoozing monk rolled over and snored loudly. "He is in no shape for
this."
"He
will make it," Pony said with determination. "I have traveled with
Avelyn for many months and have never known him to complain. He sees this as
his destiny; he will not be denied by any mountain obstacles."
Elbryan
studied Avelyn for a long while, considering his own experiences with the man,
and conceded the point.
"Besides,"
noted the centaur, "he's getting the best of sleep."
Again as if
on cue, the monk shifted and snored.
"Chipmunk?"
Paulson whispered, his voice quickly buried under the moaning wind. "Is
that yerself?" The big man crouched lower, peering intently at a group of
trees, the source of the unmistakable sound of a footstep.
Only then
did Paulson realize that there seemed to be one extra tree in the group.
"Damnation," he whispered, turning to run.
A spinning
sliver, flickering in the quiet light, spun right past his head, causing him to
cry out and fall away. He hit the ground, looking back toward the giant, noting
its surprised, jerky movement as Chipmunk's dagger hit it squarely in the chest
with a metallic ring.
"Come
on, then!" the big man cried, scrambling to his feet, gaining confidence
in the knowledge that his trusted comrade was nearby. The ringing sound of that
last impact played in his mind, though; giants were tough enough adversaries
without metal armor!
And this one
was indeed armored, Paulson realized as the monster closed on him. Again came
the spinning slivers, two in rapid succession, this time angled higher to hit
the monster about the head. Both did, and both were repelled by a metal helm.
"Don't
stay to fight!" Paulson called and he turned to flee, noticing then an
orange glow emanating at the giant's side. Mesmerized, the big man hesitated,
then he screamed out, realizing that the glow was a spear-like weapon carried
by a second giant! He got his weapon up to block, but the demon-forged spike
blasted right through it, right through Paulson's raised forearm, and deep into
the man's belly.
Waves of
searing agony ripped through Paulson. He had never imagined the possibility of
such pain. Hardly conscious, he felt himself lifted high into the air and then,
with a flick of the giant's huge arms, he was flying free, launched into the
night, into death.
Chipmunk ran
screaming for his life, tears of fear and horror and the loss of yet another
friend streaking his cheeks. Giants were all about him. He could feel the heat
of the orange glow following his path. He had to get back to the camp, and yet,
he realized that to do so would put them all in jeopardy, would likely bring
about the end of the quest!
Chipmunk
found a hole instead, burying himself quickly under piled leaves at the base of
a thick tree. His confidence mounted as a pair of giants stomped past,
oblivious of him. A third came rushing by, and then came the one carrying the
glowing spike.
That giant,
too, started past, but skidded to a stop just beyond the hole, compelled by the
demonic weapon.
Chipmunk
tried to cry out as his covering was pushed aside, as he looked up at the
towering, fifteen-foot-tall monster, up at the huge, awful spike. He tried to
cry out, but no sound would come forth, only a breathless gurgle, that ended
abruptly as the monstrous spike fast descended.
The cries of
the doomed pair had alerted Elbryan and the others to the danger, so they were
not unprepared when the first of the giants crashed through the brush and
charged over the rim of the bowl-shaped encampment. The leading brute,
apparently thinking the centaur a mere horse, tramped right by Bradwarden, who
stood with head and torso bowed.
As the giant
passed, Bradwarden turned, lifting his heavy bow and letting fly. The arrow hit
solidly, denting the armor plate and driving through, but not so deep as to
cause any serious wound. Three quick strides later, the centaur was upon the
giant, ramming hard into the behemoth's back. Bradwarden's heavy bow, swung as
a club, rang off the plated armor, splintering as it hit. The giant stumbled
and went down, the centaur in fast pursuit, cursing his foolishness in using
the bow and reaching for his cudgel. But two more giants were close behind,
following their friend in, now bearing down on Bradwarden.
"What
does it do?" Pony asked Avelyn as the monk held aloft a stone the woman
had not seen before, a clump of black octahedral crystals.
"It is
lodestone," Avelyn explained. "Magnetite." He went silent then,
sending his thoughts into the stone, using his magical energies to ignite those
powers within the stone. The giants were bearing down on Bradwarden in a
straight line; Elbryan had gone off to the side and was now calling out the
presence of more of the huge fomorians.
Pony left
Avelyn's side then, rusting to join with Elbryan.
The orange
glow outlined them, three more behemoths closing in. Hawkwing went to work at
once, arrow after arrow rushing down to bang hard against metal armor, into the
breastplate, then repeatedly into the visor, several tips slipping through to
sting the giant face, to make the monster howl in agony.
One of the
three fell back from the charge, clutching at its face, blinded by the sting.
Elbryan
dropped his bow and drew out Tempest as Pony scrambled by. He ordered her to
the left, toward the giant without the glowing spike, for he sensed that the
spike held some diabolical power.
Pony readily
complied, thinking that the remaining giant, smaller than the spike wielder,
would be a quicker kill―not that any giant was an easy kill! She rushed
right for it, feigning a dodge to the side as it lifted its huge sword. By far
the quicker, agile Pony went one step left, then back to the right, then
straight ahead, under the awkward cut of the giant's weapon, falling into a
headlong roll that brought her right between the monster's widespread legs.
The giant
reacted quickly, snapping straight and tall, closing its legs to entrap the
foolish human.
Pony's
graphite defeated that maneuver, though, sent a crackling bolt of energy along
the monster's inner thighs that left it swaying, legs widespread, as the woman
worked her way out the back. Now Pony went to more conventional weaponry,
drawing her sword and turning right back in on the monster, slamming the weapon
hard against the giant's lower back, seeking an opening between the protective
plates.
She found
none, but stayed behind the staggering brute, belting away as the giant tried
to turn and grab her.
Elbryan
didn't know what to make of this armored foe, and especially of its glowing
spike. Why weren't the monster's hands burning? the ranger wondered, for surely
that spike was brutally hot.
The giant
stabbed straight ahead and Elbryan left those thoughts behind, suddenly more
concerned with keeping his body from sporting very large holes. He went around
to the side with a flourish, snapping Tempest against the pursuing spike, each
hit sending a shower of orange sparks into the air.
Elbryan knew
that he had to get up higher, within striking distance of the giant's head. He
knew the terrain, had marked it clearly in his thoughts before the night had
fallen. He ran hard to the side, then leaped up atop a rounded boulder, gaining
a foothold and turning back in a quick charge to meet the rushing monster.
Tempest
snapped in, level with the giant's eyes. Up came the spike to block, but too
late, and Tempest slashed hard against the visor, twisting the giant's head
from the force of the blow.
Out came a
straight thrust of the spike; Elbryan turned his hips and skittered back. The
ranger leaped ahead and launched a vicious sidelong swipe as the heavy, awkward
spike retracted. He connected solidly on the side of the giant's head, knocking
the helm away, the behemoth staggering a long stride to the side.
"The
next will not be so blocked!" the ranger promised.
The giant
was not without a trick of its own, though. It came at Elbryan, but shifted as
Tempest came up to parry, as Elbryan's feet turned defensively sideways,
allowing the ranger to retreat back or to either side. The giant plunged the
spear down low instead, right into the boulder, and Elbryan was too surprised
to seize the momentary opening and charge ahead.
He had to
leap away instead, far out to the side, crashing through twigs and saplings,
for the boulder superheated, turned red, and then melted away right below him!
The ranger
was dazed but knew that he had to keep moving as this pile of molten stone
rolled down, igniting small, smokey fires among the twigs.
In the
sudden glow, Elbryan saw more forms moving about the perimeter, giant forms,
and between the reinforcements and that terrible glowing spike, the ranger knew
that he and his friends were overmatched.
Avelyn fell
deeper into the stone, felt its energy building to a critical mass. Lodestone
was highly magnetic; its enchantment would send it fast to a metal surface.
Impossibly fast, faster than a crossbow bolt.
The monk
fell back, nearly toppling, as the stone suddenly zipped away, flying
unerringly for the armored chest of the giant closest behind Bradwarden. It hit
with a tremendous, thump, jerking the behemoth from the ground, and then, to
Avelyn's amazement, for he had never really used magnetite before, the second
giant in line shuddered violently as well.
Bradwarden
had forced the helm off the fallen giant by then, his cudgel turning the
monster's head to mush before it could rise up. The centaur heard the commotion
close behind and turned to see both giants slumping to the ground, the closest
showing. a neatly blasted hole right through its breastplate, right through its
chest, right through its back.
"Oh,
good shot!" Bradwarden congratulated Avelyn.
The monk was
already running toward Bradwarden, toward the fallen giants, thinking to
retrieve the stone. But then there were other giants, all about, huge shadowy
forms blurring the otherwise straight line of the perimeter.
"On me
back!" the centaur cried.
"My
stone!"
"No
time!"
"Everyone
out!" came a call, Elbryan's voice. "Avelyn with Bradwarden! Myself
with Pony! Paulson with Chipmunk!" If the two are still with us! he added
silently. "Out and away, to a direction of your own choosing!"
Pony could
hardly believe what she was hearing, what she was seeing. They had come so far
together, and now they were being forced into an impromptu, hardly organized
retreat. She waited for her turning giant to align itself properly, then
scrambled back between its legs once more. Again there came that nasty crackle
of energy, and this time, the giant's muscles betrayed it, tensing with the
current, and the brute tumbled down.
Pony had no
time to stop and take advantage of the situation, though, as she scrambled for
the center of the encampment, for Avelyn and Bradwarden, hoping against hope
that they might all link together once more.
She saw the
monk lying across the centaur's back, Bradwarden's powerful legs pounding away
up the north face of the bowl, the same direction from which the first giants
had come. They made the lip and went over, and almost immediately after, all
the sky lit up with the bright flames of a tremendous fireball.
Pony fell
back, all the battle stopped for a moment, and when she caught her breath, the
woman was satisfied to hear the receding hoofbeats. Avelyn and Bradwarden, at
least, had gotten away.
But how
might she and Elbryan? Pony had to wonder as she skittered down the rocky
slope, a pair of giants in fast pursuit. Purely on instinct, the woman dove
ahead, over the giant Bradwarden had killed. She felt a rush of wind and heard
a crash behind her, a giant club smashing against armor.
Still she
scrambled, expecting to be buried at any moment, expecting her life to end with
a sudden, burning explosion.
Over the
next giant she went, trying to regain her footing. But she tripped and
stumbled, falling atop the third dead behemoth, her hand tearing against a
jagged edge in the monster's breastplate then slipping into the gore of its
torn guts.
There was
fighting right behind her! She turned and saw Elbryan darting about the giant
pair, Tempest working furiously. But he could not win! Even if he beat these
two, others were coming fast, including the one with the glowing spike!
Pony's hand
instinctively clutched onto something hard and she retracted it to find the
stone Avelyn had used. She stared at it curiously for just a moment, trying to
discern its energy.
"Run!"
came Elbryan's cry.
Pony looked
to the fight as she rose, saw Elbryan, Hawkwing in one hand, Tempest in the
other, jump out of the path of a fast descending club, then leap back suddenly
as a sword swished across. Pony cried out, thinking her love cut in half, but
Elbryan had been quick enough to dodge out of harm's way.
He planted
his feet as he landed and rushed straight ahead, screaming wildly, his sword
flow glowing a furious bluish-white, snapping to and fro, darting straight
ahead, sparking as it banged against unyielding armor.
But the
ranger's tactic worked, the sudden rush forcing the giants into a short
retreat, forcing them off balance. One went down over a fallen body, reaching
out as it fell to grab its companion. Another short hop and attack by Elbryan
had that one tumbling, too, both landing in a tangled heap.
The ranger
had no intention of jumping atop them, not with other giants bearing in. He
turned and ran as Pony ran, catching up to Pony as they scrambled together up
the north slope, following the trail of their friends. Over the lip, they saw
the effects of Avelyn's fireball, small fires here and there, the largest being
the one still burning atop the curled and blackened corpse of yet another
giant. Down the pair ran through the heat and the smoke, stumbling, but using
each other for support. They heard the roars behind them, knew that to stop was
to die.
Into the
night, the four survivors went, stumbling blindly, separated, two and two, with
a third of their party dead.
CHAPTER 50
Flight
Avelyn lay
across the centaur's back, staring more behind than ahead, praying for his
companions.
Bradwarden,
though, would not turn back and would not slow. Determined, purposeful, the
centaur pounded along the mountain trails, hooves digging firm holds and
propelling him and his all-important passenger mightily. Soon after they had
left the encampment, Avelyn had looped the cat's eye about Bradwarden's head,
and so the centaur could see in the dark and was not slowed as were the
pursuing giants ―as were their own companions.
"We
must find a defensible spot!" the monk kept shouting.
"We'll
not be stopping!" the centaur finally answered and, as if to accentuate
that point, Bradwarden lowered his human torso forward and gained speed.
"A
defensible spot!" Avelyn insisted. "To await Elbryan and Jilseponie,
to bring them in to our side and together ward off the giants!"
"No
giant'll be catching us," the centaur assured him. "Nor will Elbryan
and Pony, though I lament their loss."
"They
are not dead!" the monk insisted.
"No,"
agreed Bradwarden. "Resourceful, the both o' them. Not dead, but not for
catching us, and when ye kill the dactyl, we'll come back out and find them
both, I'm not doubting!"
Avelyn,
dumbfounded, had no answers. He could hardly believe that Bradwarden would so
leave their friends behind, deserting the pair in so perilous a situation.
Avelyn came to understand then just how determined the centaur was, just how
determined all his companions were, that he was the hope, that he alone might
do battle with the dactyl and win. Avelyn believed, and had spoken it openly
and often, that it was his destiny to meet with the hellish creature; and so
his friends meant to get him there, and if all of them perished in the process
then by their thinking, at least so be it.
A great
weight fell over the monk as he came to that realization, a responsibility
beyond anything Avelyn Desbris had ever known: greater even than his eight-year
dedication that had gotten him into St.-Mere-Abelle, to the fulfillment of his
dearest mother's lifelong desire; greater even than the task assigned him by
the Church, and by God, to go to Pimaninicuit and prepare this latest
generation of gemstones. Avelyn had been ready to argue with Bradwarden, to
insist, even if it meant dropping from the centaur's back, or using some magic
against Bradwarden, that they stop and wait for their friends. But now the
sobered monk remained silent and uncomplaining. Bradwarden meant to deliver
him, and so Avelyn must be delivered.
Or all the
deaths would be for naught.
They came
through the pass of the great Barbacan with night still thick about them,
having put many miles behind them in a furious rush. Bradwarden, clearly
exhausted, would not think of stopping, though he was glad when Avelyn
announced that he would walk and not ride for a time.
Overlooking
the valley within the mountain ring, the pair were
overwhelmed―particularly Bradwarden, who had not viewed the great
encampment before. Thousands of campfires dotted the dark plain below them,
thousands and thousands.
And beyond
the masses loomed a single dark silhouette, a conical mountain tipped by a
steady stream of dark smoke.
Aida.
"The
dactyl's home," Avelyn whispered to the centaur, and Bradwarden needed no
clarification, for both of them were staring squarely at the ominous mountain.
"We can
get down and about the camp," Bradwarden said a few moments later, after
pausing to inspect the layout. The centaur pointed to the left, to one of the
great black arms running down from the lone mountain, nearly to the base of the
mountains Bradwarden and Avelyn had just come through. "Though we're
looking at a full day o' walking," the centaur finished.
"Out in
the daylight near that swarm?" Avelyn asked doubtfully.
"Not a
choice," Bradwarden replied. "We'll get behind the mountain arm and
hope our enemy has not an army on the other side of it."
Avelyn
nodded and silently followed the indomitable centaur, denying his obvious
exhaustion.
They were
scrambling in the right direction, Elbryan knew, following their friends,
though they certainly were not gaining any ground. Every so often, the pair
crossed a low spot, a muddy puddle, and Elbryan spotted the deep tracks of
Bradwarden. Widespread tracks, he noted hopefully; the centaur was in full run.
That was
what Elbryan and Pony wanted. Duty told them that they must follow, but their
higher purpose reminded them that all that mattered was the delivery of Avelyn.
"Run on, Bradwarden," Elbryan muttered more than once, and always
Pony nodded her agreement.
Elbryan was
surprised at how easy the mountain trails were to navigate, even in the dark.
The Barbacan was an imposing range of tall rocky mountains, capped in snow
year-round with many sheer cliffs, some with drops of two or even three
thousand feet. But in this particular region, with the trail cutting between
two such peaks and thus bringing the climbers nowhere near the top, the going
remained steady and fairly easy. The ranger believed that they might see the
other side, the slope down to the valley beyond, before the dawn. Avelyn had
described the general layout to them all, had told of the valley and of the
lone mountain that maps named Aida. In that description, the monk had noted
often and hopefully that the barrier mountain range, though tall and ominous,
was not wide.
So it was
with some hope that Elbryan and Pony ran on, and though they could not possibly
match the pace of the galloping centaur, they found many occasions when they
could cross over a blocking outcropping of stone that Bradwarden would have had
to circumvent. Perhaps with the dawn, they would sight their friends again and
would be able to link up.
Even the
pursuit seemed left behind, the fumbling giants not keeping pace. Elbryan's one
fear, though, was that the behemoths knew the region and thus knew a quicker
way.
That fear
came to fruition when Elbryan and Pony entered one long narrow pass, a jumble
of boulders and scraggly trees sheltered from the strong winds, but, the pair
both silently noted, without any obvious escape routes. Halfway along the trail
through the gully, an ominous and familiar orange glow appeared―ahead of
the pair.
Out stepped
the giant, Togul Dek, still wearing no helm, its huge features twisted with
rage. Roaring at the two humans―and all the louder when Elbryan banged an
arrow off its tremendous breastplate―the behemoth jabbed its glowing
spike first into the tree at its left, then in the one at its right, sending
both up instantly as towering candles. Between the trees stepped the brute,
outlined by fire, not bothered by fire, and Elbryan and Pony noted the dark
silhouettes of another pair of giants behind it.
"Take
him head-on," the ranger instructed, and he dove to the muddy ground,
wrapping his cloak tightly about him. He came up in a dash, to the side and not
straight ahead, and Pony, trusting him, charged out from his wake, waving her
sword menacingly, drawing the spike wielder's attention.
The giant
set its huge feet wide apart and slapped the demon-created spear across its
open palm. It paid no heed to the ranger, for it knew he had nowhere to flee,
and concentrated instead on the woman, brave and foolish, walking steadily to
her doom.
Each step
came more difficult to Pony. She heard a commotion far behind and understood
that the other giants―probably three or four more, if her count at the
previous fight was accurate―had sealed off that end of the gully. Where
had Elbryan gone, she wondered, and why? Why hadn't he just put Hawkwing to
use, shooting arrow after arrow at the spike wielder's unarmored head until the
thing fell over dead? Then they could fight two against two, and try to break
out into the night.
Pony shook
the confusing possibilities from her thoughts. This was Elbryan, she reminded
herself: the Nightbird, the ranger, elven trained.
Even as her
resolve began to mount once more, she saw him, running right through the fires,
along a low branch on the tree to the giant's right. Flames licked at him, at
his soggy muddy cloak, but he scampered along, buried by the blaze, bearing
down on his unsuspecting enemy.
Pony howled
and charged, drawing the monster's full attention. She skidded up quickly and
loosed a forked bolt of crackling lightning, striking hard the leader and both
of the giants behind it.
Then, before
Togul Dek had recovered from the lightning, Elbryan was upon the brute, the
ranger running full out to the end of the branch, leaping high and hard, sword
extended, throwing his arms wide to thrust the smoldering cape behind him.
Tempest dove right into the giant's face, while Elbryan's booted feet were
planted hard against the behemoth's massive chest.
He had only
one quick strike; he had to be perfect. And so he was, mighty Tempest blasting
through bone and flesh, diving into the giant's brain.
Togul Dek
tried to respond, tried to lift the spike and bring it to bear, but the weapon
flew from the suddenly weak hands, drawing a bright line in the dark air. It
landed far to the side, upon a stone it fast reduced to flowing, molten lava,
rolling down the side of the mountain, taking the spike with it, and that, in
turn, melting all subsequent stone, the fiery avalanche gaining momentum.
Elbryan
viciously wrenched his blade free, but held his footing as the giant fell
backward, the ranger riding the behemoth like some felled tree. The two giants
behind their leader did not know what to make of the scene, had not even
noticed Elbryan until Togul Dek began that backward fall. And then, it was too
late.
Elbryan hit
the ground in a graceful forward roll, rushing up and stabbing hard, finding
the crease between one giant's huge breastplate and its pelvic armor. Throwing
his momentum firmly behind the sword, the ranger drove it in to its hilt, then
scrambled past, right between the brutes, drawing Tempest back out as he went.
He cut a sudden, sharp turn, diving into yet another roll, this one aimed at
the second giant as it swung its club. The weapon swished high of the mark,
harmlessly―for Elbryan, at least. The wounded giant, clutching its torn
guts, bent right into the weapon's path and got clipped across the forehead. It
went down hard, groaning, trying to shake the dizziness, growling against the
searing pain.
Elbryan got
in a fast strike on the still-standing brute, then darted out into the night.
He didn't think himself quick enough, though, thought the giant would get in
one hit, but then the monster inexplicably dropped its club and howled,
grasping at its visor.
Pony ran by,
stabbing the standing giant hard in the back of the leg, then rushing out to
join Elbryan.
"What
did you do to its eyes?" the ranger asked, but Pony had no answer, only
shrugged and kept on running.
Pursuit was
close and fast, forcing the tired companions to stay at full speed. They came
to a wall of stone, climbable, but Elbryan feared the giants would have an
easier time than he and Pony, that the brutes would close in and simply pluck
them off the wall before they got over.
No other
options; the ranger decided, and so he scrambled ahead, hoping to get a firm
handhold, that he might propel Pony over him, over the stone, out to freedom in
the dark night. He neared the top when he heard Pony, just a few feet below
him, cry out in surprise.
Elbryan
turned and screamed, seeing a giant reaching for his lover. Pony had no weapon
in hand―no weapon that Elbryan saw,
at least―though she had her arm extended out toward the giant.
She yelled
again, and something flew out from her grasp, rocketed into the giant's visor
with a resounding ring, and though the missile did not penetrate the helm, but
rather bounced off, it hit with tremendous force, bending and creasing the
metal into the giant's face, and the brute fell away. Pony was quick to
retrieve the stone, not willing to abandon such a powerful weapon.
Elbryan
grabbed Pony by the shoulder and hauled her up, pulling her right past him,
then pushing hard until she went over the lip of the ridge. The ranger dug in
and scrambled for all his life, and got over the rim just ahead of reaching
fingers, a second giant coming in for him.
Pony was
fast to those fingers, her sword slashing hard, taking a couple from the hand,
and then the pair were running again; and this time no pursuit was close
behind.
"What
did you do to the first at the base of the wall?" the ranger asked her.
"Lodestone,"
Pony replied. "The gem rushes to targeted metal. I wish I had a hundred
more like it!"
Elbryan
looked back in the direction of the ridge and shuddered at the sheer power of
the stone. He had thought his sword impressive, had thought himself a marvelous
warrior, and so he was, but how did that measure against the power of the
stones?
Elbryan was
glad that Pony was on his side and that Avelyn, much more powerful than the
woman, was on his side. That thought gave him hope that his monk friend would
indeed defeat the demon that had come to Corona.
Though she
didn't understand its source, Tuntun watched the growing spectacle of the fiery
avalanche with satisfaction. The elf had played only a minor role in the
battle, fired only a single arrow. But such a shot! Tuntun had put her arrow
right against a giant's visor, right through the slit! In her mind, she
replayed again its howl and saw again the sight of Elbryan and Jilseponie
running out to the safety, of the dark night.
Convinced
that they were safe for the time being, the elf had then circled back, down
below the scene of the fight, to rejoin her precious companion.
"I'll
take you no farther," she said to Symphony, patting the muzzle of this
animal that had served her so well. Even though the trails seemed easy for at
least a short distance, Tuntun decided that it would be better for her to use
stealth. Alone, the elf could run full out without any fear of detection.
"I know
that you are smart enough to get away," Tuntun whispered, and the great
horse snorted as if he understood. The elf took her pack and her
weapons―bow and a long dagger―and with a final look Symphony's way,
a final nod of appreciation, she ran off into the night.
CHAPTER 51
Aida
Elbryan and
Pony were coming down the northwestern face of the mountainous barrier when
dawn broke over the Barbacan. Only then was the size of the dactyl's gathered
army revealed, a swarming black mass that filled the whole valley between the
long arms of a lone, smoking mountain, some ten miles or so to the north.
"How
many?" Pony breathed.
"Too
many," the ranger said helplessly, having no better answer.
"And
how are we to get to the mountain?" Pony asked. "How many thousands
must we defeat even to reach its black rocky base?"
Elbryan
shook his head determinedly, somehow sure his companion's assessment was not
correct. "A few sentries perhaps," he replied. "Nothing
more."
Pony eyed
him skeptically.
"The
demon is confident," Elbryan explained, "inviting us in. The dactyl
fears no mortal man and no monster, and it has no reason to believe that we
would ever dare to move against it in such small numbers, small enough to enter
the Barbacan unnoticed."
"That
has been our hope since the beginning," Pony agreed.
"And
that is our only hope now," Elbryan said, "a hope to which we must
hold fast. If the demon sets its army to block us, then so we shall be blocked,
and not my sword, nor Avelyn's magic, not Bradwarden's strength, nor your own
assortment of weapons, will possibly get us through so many swarming monsters.
"But it
will not come to that," the ranger went on. "Even if the demon dactyl
thinks that some enemies have come to its home, as the armored giants and that
terrible spear might indicate, it remains supremely confident that none in all
the world can stand against it."
"How do
you know this?"
The simple
question seemed to catch Elbryan off his guard. Indeed, how did he know so much
about this enemy that he had never seen and had never battled before? In the
end, the ranger realized that he did not know, that he was guessing, and
hoping. He answered Pony only with a shrug, and that seemed enough. They had
come too far to worry about things they couldn't control, and so they started
along once more, quickly picking a path down the side of the mountain. They
were both weary after the long night of running, but neither entertained any,
thoughts of stopping to rest, not with so many monsters before them―and
perhaps more than a few chasing them.
An hour
later, moving across an open expanse of bare rock―the two friends feeling
very exposed indeed!―Elbryan stopped suddenly and dropped to a crouch.
Thinking danger at hand, Pony crouched as well, and reached her hand into a
pocket, fingering her few stones.
"There!"
the ranger said excitedly, pointing down across the valley to his left, toward
the western arm of Aida. Beyond that black line of stone, a black dot, a
solitary figure, moved steadily across the green carpet, making fast for a
thick copse of trees.
No, Pony
realized, not one figure, but two, a man atop a horse . . . a man atop a
centaur!
"Avelyn
and Bradwarden!" she whispered.
"Running
hard for Aida," Elbryan agreed. He looked back at Pony, his smile wide.
"And with none chasing them, and none standing before them."
Pony nodded
grimly. Perhaps her love was right, perhaps the dactyl was indeed inviting them
in. She had to wonder, though she said nothing aloud, was that a good thing?
The pair
were off the mountain within the hour, making their way along its base, weaving
in and out of boulders and patches of trees. They easily avoided the few bored
goblin sentries that were about, and every so often came upon tracks that told
them they were following the exact route Avelyn and Bradwarden had taken.
Finally they
crossed over the mountain's long arm and were surprised to find the ground very
warm under their feet. Only then did the pair realize that this line of stone
was not a solid ridge, but rather, like a living thing, was growing and
changing. Most of the ridge was hard, but every so often, the pair caught a
sudden glimpse of fiery orange, the lava flow bubbling up to the surface, then
meandering across the hardened black stone like a crawling orange slug. Within
a few minutes, each of these movements would cease, the lava gradually rolling
over itself or gathering in a depression, and then quickly cooling, its glow
fading to blackness.
"Like a
living thing," Pony remarked, taking more care where she subsequently
stepped.
"Like
the dactyl," Elbryan replied. "Flowing out from Aida, encompassing
all the world under its blackness."
It was not a
pleasant thought.
They were
several hours behind their friends, Elbryan and Pony realized when they at last
came upon the same expanse they had seen their friends traversing. There was no
apparent resistance; behind this arm of Aida, this blocking ridge of black
stone some twenty to thirty feet high, no monsters moved about and no sentries
were visible.
They went
into a copse of trees, such a stark contrast of teeming life next to the black
wall of stone, and found again the centaur's tracks. Soon a second set―the
tracks of a heavy human, of Brother Avelyn―were visible beside those of
Bradwarden, and it was not hard for the pair to surmise that the centaur might
be getting tired.
But
Bradwarden continued on; and so did Avelyn; and so did Pony and Elbryan, increasing
their pace in the hope that they might patch up to their friends before they
entered the caverns of the mountain. Perhaps, Elbryan pondered, if Avelyn and
Bradwarden were scrambling about, looking for some way into the mountain . . .
It didn't happen
that way. The ranger and Pony exited the copse of trees, then crossed through a
second and then a third, climbing to the lower reaches of Aida. As soon as they
cleared that last copse, they saw an entrance, a great gaping hole, defying the
slanting rays of the westering sun. If the appearance proved, true, if this was
indeed a way into the heart of Aida, then Avelyn and Bradwarden had long ago
gone into the mountain and might even now be standing before the demon dactyl
as Elbryan and Pony stood staring at the entrance. The anxious couple went back
into the last copse and cut sticks, wrapping them with cloth to make torches.
Then,
fearful that they would be too late, the pair split, left and right, and moved
quickly and stealthily right up to the edge of the cavern entrance. Elbryan
peeked around the stone and into the gloom; Pony did likewise from across the
way; and they were somewhat relieved to find that this was indeed a deep cavern
and that it was apparently empty.
Just inside,
Elbryan noted the hooflike depression of the centaur's track.
Keeping near
the side wall, not daring to light a torch, the pair moved in tentatively,
allowing their eyes to adjust to the rapidly diminishing light. All too soon,
they were faced with a dilemma: light the torch or walk on in near-complete
darkness.
Elbryan
winced as the fire flared to life, as if expecting all the minions of the
dactyl to descend upon him. After a few tense but uneventful moments, he
motioned to Pony, and the pair crept along, coming to a place where the tunnel
forked: one branch going right and level, the other left and down. Looking down
the right-hand side, Pony noted that the tunnel forked again just a short way
in, and the tunnel continuing to the right beyond that second fork showed yet another
side passage.
"A
veritable maze," Elbryan moaned. He fell to his knees and moved the torch
low, searching for some sign of his friends' passing, but the ground was bare,
unmarked stone.
"Straight
ahead," Pony declared a moment later, seeing her companion's frustration.
"Deeper―into the mountain, and then down and to the left at the next
fork."
She spoke
with determination, though it was only a guess―a guess that seemed as
good to Elbryan as any he might make. They moved in deeper, then began a descent
along a smooth and angled passageway. Elbryan gave up any thoughts of
continuing his scan for tracks, knowing that to do so would only slow their
progress. Avelyn and Bradwarden were wandering in here, probably as lost as
were Elbryan and Pony. Sooner or later, one of the pairs, or perhaps both,
would stumble upon the dactyl or some of its deadly minions.
It was a
desperate situation, and both Elbryan and Pony had to remind themselves often
that they had known it would be like this from the moment they had set out from
Dundalis.
* * *
Bestesbulzibar
was outraged, and yet the demon was somewhat amused as well as it stood with
Quintall and a pair of very nervous giants, looking down the ruined slope of a
mountain. How powerful indeed was the demon-forged spike! To cause such
devastation as this, simply because it left the hand of its dying wielder and
fell across the stone!
One of the
giants continued to stammer on about bad luck and other such nonsense, trying
hard to concoct some excuse that might keep its skin attached to its body.
Bestesbulzibar wasn't listening.
"Have
they made the mountain?" the dactyl asked Quintall, indicating Aida.
The rockman
scrutinized the terrain ahead and considered the distance. He put a hand to his
chin, an oddly human gesture. And indeed, Quintall now seemed physically human.
The rough edges of his rocky body had smoothed and rounded, shaping more and
more to, the exact human form the spirit had left behind. The rockman was
recognizable again as Quintall; the features, the size, and the body dimensions
were all the same, as if the man's spirit were somehow determining the shape of
this new stone coil. Of course, his "skin" was now obsidian in
consistency as well as hue, and red lines of molten stone still striped his joints;
his eyes, too, were red pits of liquid stone. But he looked like Quintall, and
the rockman could hardly wait until the moment that Brother Avelyn saw his new
and superior body.
"Have
they?" Bestesbulzibar prompted.
Quintall
nodded. "If they ran on through the night," he answered, "and if
no others rose up against them."
"Perhaps
they will be seated upon my throne when I return to it." The dactyl
sneered, eyeing the pair of giants wickedly.
"B-bad
luck," one of the behemoths stammered.
"We
will―" the other began to promise, but the dactyl cut it short.
"You
will go and take your places with the army," Bestesbulzibar instructed.
The demon badly wanted to rip the hide from these two, and from any others of
the hunting party who had survived their encounter with the intruders and who
were now hiding nearby, fearing the demon's wrath. Or perhaps Bestesbulzibar
could take them back to Aida and throw them in the path of the deadly
Nightbird. Or, the demon mused, perhaps it would give the job of punishment to
Quintall, that Bestesbulzibar might witness the power of its newest weapon. But
the dactyl was not a stupid creature and could control its impulses, even those
bent upon destruction, which the demon loved above all else. Bestesbulzibar had
lost too many of its elite giant guardsmen already, considering the effort he
had taken to outfit the giants with armor, but, in truth, the demon figured
that it had lost little by the failure of the giants. So Brother Avelyn and the
one called Nightbird may have entered Aida; that only meant that Bestesbulzibar
might enjoy a bit of the fun of killing them.
"Come
along," the dactyl instructed Quintall. The rockman moved closer and
Bestesbulzibar lifted from the ground, hooking its powerful legs about
Quintall, and then speeding the instrument of its wrath across the valley,
above the heads of the cowering minions, and back to Aida.
Quintall,
possessed of heightened senses, whose glowing eyes could light the way along
dark tunnels, was sent to find the trail.
"We are
too low," Avelyn complained, leaning against a wall of the stuffy, tight
cavern. He kept the light of his enchanted diamond low, hoping that it would be
less conspicuous and not attract any more guards like the two powries Avelyn
and Bradwarden had just overwhelmed. That thought in mind, Avelyn kicked aside
the bloody leg of one of the dwarves and shifted himself so that he was looking
back the way they had come.
"Now
wouldn't the demon thing be at the heart?" Bradwarden asked casually,
tearing at the second powrie as he spoke. "And wouldn't a mountain's heart
be below?"
Avelyn shook
his head immediately; he just didn't feel right about the path. They had gone
down and to the left at the first fork, too soon perhaps, to be heading into
the lower chambers of this tunnel-crossed mountain. "Our enemy might be
higher," he said, "near the smoking cone, where the winged demon
might quickly fly out among its minions."
He looked
back at Bradwarden as he finished his argument, and he was sorry that he did.
"Bah,
'tis a guess and nothing more," the centaur replied, taking a huge bite
out of a powrie leg.
Avelyn
closed his eyes.
"We go
along, I say," the centaur continued, talking through its full mouth,
"choosing trails as we find them. It's all a guess, yer knowing as well as
I'm knowing."
The monk
sighed and didn't disagree. Whatever course they chose, Avelyn would
second-guess. Too much was at stake here; the monk was too much on the edge of
his nerves.
"Now
why're ye here?" Bradwarden asked simply. "Ye've come to face yer
destiny, so ye said, and so ye shall. We'll get there, me friend, and if that's
what's scaring ye, then I'm not for blaming ye. But turning back won't put us
any closer to anything, and every lost step gives more of our enemies the
chance to stumble upon us." He spat at that last thought and tossed the
tough powrie leg to the ground. "And the damned things aren't even good
eating!"
Avelyn
managed a smile and walked by the centaur, taking great care to avoid stepping
on the discarded meal. They started off again, side by side, their bulky forms
filling the narrow passageway.
"I am
not pleased by the sight," Elbryan whispered, looking down the long,
narrow descent, a ledge bordered on the left by an uneven wall and on the right
by a long drop of more than two hundred feet from where the ledge began and
only gradually diminishing as the trail moved lower. Height hardly seemed to
matter when considering the danger, though, for the drop ended in a pool of red
fire, a swirling lake of molten stone. Even from this great height, Elbryan and
Pony could feel the intense heat, and the sulfuric stench was nearly
overwhelming.
"And I
am not pleased at the prospect of backtracking all the way," Pony replied.
"Down we decided to go, and down this goes!"
"The
fumes . . ." the ranger protested, and his fears were not lost on the
woman. Pony fumbled in her pack and took out a strip of cloth, an intended
bandage. She tore it in half and wetted both strips thoroughly from her
waterskin, then tied one about her face after she handed the other to Elbryan.
The ranger,
though, had a better idea. He took the green armband from his right arm, the
one the elves said would defeat any poison, and tore it in two, handing one
strip to Pony. With a trusting nod, the woman donned the mask, as did Elbryan,
the ranger eyeing Pony all the while, admiring her gumption. The brave woman
was not easily deterred.
They needed
no torch in this place, because of the glow of the lava, and so their hands
were free as they started down, at first hugging the wall tightly―the
ledge was not narrow, but the prospects of slipping over were far too grim.
Gradually, they eased out from the wall, their pace increasing, and soon they
had put a couple hundred feet behind them, nearing the halfway point of the
descent.
Pony,
holding the lead, grew hopeful when she spotted a dark shadow along the wall
far below, a side passage, running into the mountain and away from this place:
So intent was she that she never noticed the crack running right across the
ledge in front of her.
She stepped
over it, and as she brought her weight down, the stone beneath her foot gave
way.
Pony
screamed; Elbryan grabbed her and pulled her back to safety, the pair falling
to the ledge in a jumble. The ranger scrambled to the very lip and watched the
eight-foot stone slab falling. It bounced off a jag in the wall, then spun over
and out, tumbling into the magma, where it was swallowed, disappearing with
hardly a splash.
Pony,
horrified and breathing deeply, had to slow herself down consciously. She
managed it, but the deep breaths had taken their toll, the sulfuric fumes
overwhelming her, for in the fall, she had dislodged the elven mask. She rolled
to the lip of the ledge, pulled her mask further down, and vomited.
"We must
go back," Elbryan said, putting a hand on the woman's shoulder, trying to
comfort her.
"Shorter
down than up," Pony said stubbornly, and she retched again. Then she sat
up quickly, determinedly, pulled out her waterskin and washed her face briskly,
replacing the mask and standing firm.
"A long
jump," Elbryan remarked, eyeing the break in the trail.
"An
easy leap," Pony corrected, and to prove her point, the woman took a
single running stride and sprang across the gap, landing easily and skidding
down defensively, on the lower level.
Elbryan
stared at her long and hard, admiring again that stubborn determination but
honestly wondering if she wasn't being foolhardy just to prove a point. They
had no idea if that passage down below led anywhere, after all, and the
eight-foot leap would be decidedly more difficult coming up the angled walkway.
"Easy
leap," Pony said again. The ranger managed a smile; they were going to
face a demon, after all, so how could he berate the woman for what he
considered recklessness?
Pony's eyes
widened, and Elbryan realized that she was about to scream.
The ranger
spun, drawing Tempest as he went, but the danger was not behind him, but to the
side, coming out of the solid wall. Stones burst outward; Elbryan skipped back
up the slope a few scrambling steps and dove to the ground. He turned about,
confused, and when he saw the source, he was even more confused.
Quintall
walked out onto the ledge.
Elbryan was
up in a defensive crouch, Tempest defensively before him, though he knew not
what to make of this moving rockman, this obsidian image of Brother Justice.
Quintall's
intentions were easy enough to discern. The rockman looked at Pony, then turned
back fully upon Elbryan, red-striped fingers clenching the air menacingly.
"Do you think you can win this time, Nightbird?" the demon's lackey
asked, his voice grating like stone rubbing stone.
"What
are you?" Elbryan asked breathlessly. "What manner of being, what
tormented soul?"
"Tormented?"
Quintall scoffed. "I am free, mortal fool, and shall live forever, while
your life is forfeit!" On came the rockman, stalking straight in.
Elbryan
slashed his sword across, scoring a scraping hit that didn't even slow
Quintall. The ranger jumped back a step, then lunged forward, Tempest squealing
as it deflected off Quintall's face. This hit was more substantial, Elbryan was
glad to realize, for the fine elven-forged sword cracked through the rockman's
hard skin, drawing a slight orange line.
But the line
cooled to black almost immediately, and if Quintall was hurt, he did not show
it. He came on furiously then, and launched a roundhouse left hook.
Elbryan
ducked the blow, just barely, and scampered back as Quintall's hand thundered
against the wall. The ranger glanced at that impact spot and his respect for
this enemy heightened, for where Quintall's hand had struck, the stone was
cracked and smoking.
"Will
you run away, then, and leave the woman to me?" the rockman taunted.
"I can get to her, do not doubt."
The words
made Elbryan glance down at Pony, and he saw, to his horror, that she was
readying for a jump back across the gap. "Stay down!" the ranger
yelled to her. "I will come to you!"
"You
will never get past me," Quintall remarked, accentuating his point by
slamming the stone wall again, even harder.
That
movement left an opening that the ranger could not resist. He came forward in a
rush, Tempest driving in hard and straight, striking hard; cracking through the
black shell and diving into the monster's magma interior.
Quintall howled
and launched a series of blows, but Elbryan was the quicker, already retracting
his glowing sword―and the ranger was glad to know that the fine weapon
had survived the immersion in the obviously hot interior of this wicked
foe―and snapping Tempest up left, up right, up left, in three quick
parries, then straight ahead to poke the rockman in the face once again.
But even the
great wound in the monster's belly fast closed, while Quintall's movements
became more cautious, more dangerous.
From down
below, Pony was shouting out, but Elbryan hardly took the time to consider her
words. He had to find some way to hurt this thing, and though his sword might
inflict some sting, it seemed that the wound could only be so deep.
The answer
seemed obvious, and so the ranger spent no time considering the problems with
such a course, plotting out the appropriate attack. He darted ahead again,
stabbing hard, then turned as if to run by the monster on its left, on the
outside of the ledge.
Pure
instinct dropped Elbryan to one knee, Quintall's heavy arm swishing above his
head―a blow that would have launched the ranger over the edge! Then
Elbryan came up in a reverse spin, turning in front of the rockman, going hard
against the wall, and angling to get in between Quintall and the stone.
The
monster's other arm shot out hard, slamming the wall in front of Elbryan,
preventing him from running past. He had no intention of such a course, anyway,
for he stopped short of the barrier, braced himself against the wall, and shoved
back with all his great strength.
He hardly
moved; Quintall, so solid, so strong, laughed at him.
Then Elbryan
felt the press and the heat, intense and burning from those points on the
rockman that were not hardened stone. Elbryan punched and twisted, but the
press grew ever tighter. He heard Pony scream out, but her voice seemed to come
from far away.
Then came a
sudden rush of air above the slumping ranger, and the rockman cried out, and
the grip was lessened.
Elbryan
stumbled back up the slope, wriggling away, and turned to see Quintall
clutching at his molten eyes, drops of hot magma glowing on his cheek. A second
puzzle faced the ranger when he noticed a cord, thin but strong, strung to his
left, along the wall, going past him and past Quintall. A quick tug showed
Elbryan that it was tied off a short distance up the ledge.
The ranger
had no time to stop and figure it out, for Quintall's eyes, like his other
wounds, quickly healed. On came the Nightbird, having no answers but to attack
fiercely and hope his sword would find a weakness. He slashed left, back right,
straight ahead, back to the right again, the sword ringing loudly and throwing
sparks with each impact upon the rockman.
Despite the
fact that Tempest offered no real threat, Quintall instinctively reacted, using
his solid arms to parry, using the same martial routines he had learned long
ago at St.-Mere-Abelle.
Elbryan
pressed on, Tempest hitting so often that the ringing song never paused. He
drew crack after crack in the rock man, and entertained the fleeting dope that
Quintall would simply split apart.
"Tie it
off, there!" Tuntun instructed, tossing the strong elvish cord to a
stunned Pony and pointing to a large, loose boulder, a dozen feet further down
the slope. "And be quick!" the elf demanded.
Pony was
already running, not really knowing what Tuntun had in mind, but not daring to
waste the moment in questioning. Any plan, however desperate, was better than
nothing, and nothing was exactly what Pony could figure to do. As the woman
began looping the rope, she felt the tension from the other end and,
considering that it was on the inside of the rockman, she began to figure
things out.
Tuntun flew
away, back up toward the combatants, her slender daggers in hand, both dripping
magma from Quintall's eyes.
Elbryan was
still on the offensive when the elf buzzed in, the ranger's heavy blows
whacking repeatedly against the rockman's blocking arms or every so often
slipping through to smack the monster about the torso or even across the head.
He didn't know how long he could keep it up, though, and understood that if he
did no real damage soon, his momentum would be lost, and then it would be
Quintall's turn.
But then,
suddenly, the rockman howled again, as Tuntun's arms came about his head, tiny
daggers finding their way to glowing eyes. Quintall threw his arms up mightily,
connecting a glancing blow that sent the elf fluttering way up high, one dagger
flying free, spinning down to disappear in the magma.
Elbryan
grabbed up Tempest in both hands and surged ahead, swinging an
over-the-shoulder chop with every ounce of strength he could muster. Quintall's
arm got down to block, and Tempest blasted right through it, severing the limb
halfway between wrist and elbow.
The rockman
howled again, hot magma pouring from the wound, though it, too, like all the
others, hardened fast and cooled to black, leaving a stump below the monster's
red-striped elbow joint.
Quintall
continued to roar, coming on with sheer outrage. Up above, Tuntun was screaming
at the top of her melodic voice, "Now! Now!"
Elbryan had
no idea of what the elf could mean, but Pony did. The woman put her back to the
roped boulder, squeezed in between it and the wall and braced her feet, then
pushed out with all her strength. The strong muscles in Pony's legs corded
taut; she groaned with the great effort, and the boulder slid only a fraction
of an inch.
Pony heard
the renewed fighting, the ringing blade, the roaring monster. Strength alone
would not dislodge this heavy stone; she had to be smart. She turned her
shoulders, shifting the angle a bit upward, and pushed out again. She felt the
closest edge of the stone lift from the ledge, knew that she only had to go a
bit more to get over that back edge.
Tuntun dove
for the combatants, but veered at the last second as Quintall spun, not
surprised this time. The turn cost the rockman another sting as Elbryan seized
the moment and thrust ahead, Tempest cutting hard.
"Over
the cord!" Tuntun yelled to the ranger. "Over the cord."
The meaning
came clear to Elbryan even as Pony overturned the boulder, the heavy rock
rolling off the ledge. The ranger started to leap over the suddenly taut,
suddenly moving, cord, but only made it halfway. He dropped Tempest to the
ledge and grabbed on for all his life as the boulder plummeted, its fall
pulling the elven cord from the wall, swinging it, and Quintall and Elbryan,
over the ledge.
Down they
went, screaming. They came to a sudden, jarring stop as the rope played out to
its length, the boulder jolting free of Pony's knot and spinning down, down, to
plop into the magma, where it was swallowed.
Elbryan held
on, and some five feet below him, so did Quintall, the rockman clenching his
one impossibly strong hand about the rope so powerfully that his hold was more
solid than that of the two-handed man above him.
"Climb!"
Pony cried to her love, and so Elbryan did, driving on with all speed and all
strength.
Faster still
was Quintall, the rockman, heaving mightily, launching himself up a foot or
more, then grabbing tight again. Heaving and grabbing, he was closing fast on
Elbryan, who had at least twenty feet of scrambling still ahead of him.
Pony
continued to call out encouragement. She ran up and leaped the eight-foot gap,
slamming her shin hard against the higher lip, but driving on, running to her
love.
Hand over
hand went the ranger; Pony thought he might make it. He threw one arm and
shoulder over the ledge and the woman dove to him, tugging hard. But then,
Quintall gave a great heave and caught the rope again, barely inches below
Elbryan's feet. One more leap and the ranger would be caught.
In swooped
Tuntun. Elbryan saw the desperate move and cried out for the elf to go back. He
let go with one hand, trusting in Pony to brace him, and even tried to catch
the elf as she swept below him.
Elven cord
was fine and strong, but Tuntun's dagger, too, was of elvish make, and a quick
flick of her wrist snapped the stretched rope right below Elbryan's feet.
Elbryan
caught the elf's forearm; Quintall caught her by the foot.
Then they
hung, twisting and turning, Pony looping the rope about her as a firmer brace
and tugging Elbryan's tunic desperately. The ranger's hand tightened on poor
Tuntun's forearm, his muscles bulging from the strain, but down below, heavy
Quintall's grip was even stronger.
"Pull!"
Elbryan begged Pony, for though they were working with all their might, the
ranger was slipping back over the lip.
Tuntun,
stretched, fearing that she would simply be ripped in half, recognized the
dilemma, understanding that her friends could not hoist her and the heavy
rockman. Her free hand, holding the dagger, moved upward, and she looked into
Elbryan's shining eyes.
"No,"
the man pleaded, his voice barely a whisper for the lump in his throat. He shook
his head.
Tuntun
stabbed him hard in the wrist, and then she and Quintall, were falling fast.
The stubborn rockman did not let go, would not let the elf, this wretched
creature who had doomed him, use those wings to save herself! Tuntun tried to
turn, tried to use her dagger...
Elbryan and
Pony looked away, could not watch the final drop into the molten pool, could
not witness the end of Tuntun.
They lay in
a heap on the ledge for a long while, until the continuing fumes began to
overwhelm them.
"We have
to press on," the ranger said.
"For
Tuntun," Pony agreed.
They leaped
the gap and hurried along, relieved indeed to find that the side passage at the
bottom was no dead end, but long and fairly straight.
They relit
the torch and rushed ahead, glad to put the sickening fumes and the terrible
sight behind them. Soon after, however, they came to a quick stop, spotting a
distant glow far ahead in the tunnel. Elbryan looked helplessly to the torch in
his hand; if he could see the glow . . .
Suddenly, the
light far ahead intensified, and then narrowed, shooting down the corridor,
falling over Elbryan and Pony, who had to throw up their arms to shield their
eyes.
Images of
demonic monsters filled their thoughts, images fast shattered by a cry of
"Ho, ho, what!" from the other end of the beacon.
CHAPTER 52
Through the Maze
Avelyn and
Bradwarden were thrilled to see their companions again, but their smiles could
not hold against the tears running down Pony's cheeks and the unmistakable mist
in Elbryan's eyes.
"Tuntun,"
Elbryan explained, rubbing at one eye. "She came to our aid and saved my
life, but the cost was her own."
"Perhaps
she is not quite dead," Avelyn replied, fumbling with his stone sack.
"Perhaps the hematite ―"
"Into
the magma," the ranger explained grimly, putting a hand on the monk and
shaking his head.
"A
brave lass to the end," Bradwarden noted. "Such is the way of the
Touel'alfar―finer folk I've never known." The centaur paused,
letting the eulogy hang in the air for a moment. "And what of Paulson and
the little one?" he asked.
"I do
not know that they escaped the giant fight," the ranger said.
"And
why did ye not go back and look for them?" the centaur went on, and all
three glanced Bradwarden's way with stunned expressions. How dare he accuse
Elbryan and Pony, if that was indeed what he was doing.
"Our
goal was Aida, our mission to deliver Avelyn, to destroy the dactyl,"
Elbryan said firmly, and even as he spoke the words, he understood Bradwarden's
cunning verbal maneuver. In so pointedly reminding Elbryan and the others of
the higher goal, the centaur helped them to put Tuntun's demise in proper
perspective. She was gone, but because of her, they might move on and their
higher purpose might be achieved.
That thought
driving them, the four companions pushed hard along the corridors, looking for
some sign as to which direction would get them to the demon. The passages
forked many times, and they had to choose, without any guidance other than
their own perceptions of where they might be and where the demon's lair was
likely situated.
But then, at
one such fork, Avelyn stopped suddenly, and held his arm out to prevent Elbryan
from moving down to the left.
"Right,"
the monk insisted.
Elbryan
looked at him carefully. "What do you know?" the ranger asked,
surmising from the monk's firm tone that this was no blind guess.
Avelyn had
no practical answer for his friends; it was a feeling, nothing more, but a
definite feeling, as if he were sensing the magical radiations of the
otherworldly monster. Whatever the source, Avelyn knew in his heart that he was
correct, and so he started down the right-hand corridor.
The others
followed without delay, and their hopes mounted when they came to a heavy
grate, bars set floor to ceiling, blocking the passage.
All went
well in the south, the dactyl knew. Its armies, led by Maiyer Dek and Kos-kosio
Begulne were pressing fast for Palmaris, while Ubba Banrock's northern force
had crossed the breadth of Alpinador, right to the coast, cutting the northern
kingdom in half. Banrock's powries had linked up right on schedule with the
great powrie fleet that sailed from the Julianthes, and now that fleet had put
out once more, sailing south for the Gulf of Corona.
Despite the
promising events, the demon now paced about its obsidian throne anxiously. It
felt the intrusion, the powerful magic; it knew that Quintall had been
destroyed.
The dactyl
would no longer underestimate these foes that had come to Aida. If any of them
got through the final defenses . . .
The demon
creature narrowed its eyes and grinned wickedly at the thought, at the
pleasures it would take in personally killing these intruders. For all the
misery its army caused, for all the death and agony, Bestesbulzibar had not
truly participated, other than the murders of a few upstarts or incompetents
within its own ranks.
The dactyl,
anxious as it was, hoped that some of these intruders, at least, would survive
to get to the throne room.
"Stand
far from it," Avelyn instructed, fumbling with his pouch, but Elbryan had
another idea.
"No,"
the ranger said. "Your magic will be too loud, I fear. There is another
way." Elbryan pulled off his pack and sorted through it, finally producing
the red gel the elves had given him, the same substance Belli'mar Juraviel had
put upon the darkfern those years ago in Andur'Blough Inninness, allowing
Elbryan to fell the sturdy plant with ease. Elbryan knew how strong find
resilient his bow was, and so he figured that if the softening gel would work
on darkfern, it might even defeat the metal.
He striped
the center bar, near the corridor's low ceiling. Then he took out Tempest and
called Bradwarden to him, climbing up on the centaur that his cut would be flat
across. Hoping his instincts were true, hoping that he would not damage his
marvelous sword, Elbryan drew back and swung mightily for the spot, both his
hands clenched tightly on the hilt.
Tempest
sliced right through the metal bar, then banged with a ring off the next in
line. Elbryan hopped down from the centaur and pulled the sword blade near his
face, sighing with relief when he noted it was not damaged, not even nicked.
Mighty
Bradwarden reached to the cut bar and pulled it far to the side, enough so that
the others, at least, could easily slip through.
"Well
done," Pony congratulated.
"Aye,"
Bradwarden agreed, "but I'll not be getting me bulky body through that
narrow hole."
Elbryan gave
the centaur a wink. "I've more gel," he assured them, and soon the
next bar in line was free on the top end, as well.
So they went
on, even more urgently, accepting the grate as a sure sign that they were in an
important area, probably the dactyl's own.
The passage
went on and on, widening at times so that all four could move abreast, and then
narrowing so that only Elbryan and Pony could remain in front, Avelyn behind
them, the bulky centaur at the rear of the line. They passed several side
tunnels, but this one they were traveling seemed the finest, the smoothest, and
certainly the widest, and so they continued along their chosen course. Avelyn
took care to modulate the diamond light; he cupped the gem so that the beam
would shoot out more toward the front, while he, with the cat's eye
chrysoberyl, continually glanced into the gloom behind them.
And so it
was Avelyn who first noticed the large shadowy forms slipping into the main
corridor from a side passage far behind.
"Company,"
the monk whispered, and even as he spoke, the telltale flickers of a torch
bounced across the wall from around a bend in the tunnel some three dozen paces
ahead of Elbryan.
The ranger
quickly surveyed the area, then moved the group to a narrow point―if they
were to be attacked both front and back, better that they fight in an area too
narrow to allow more than one or two enemies to come at them from either end of
the line.
The light
came around the bend, another flared behind them, showing their foes to be
fomorian giants, four in front, four in back, and all armored, as had been the
ones chasing them at the mountainous entrance to the Barbacan.
Elbryan was
glad indeed that they were not in an open field, for then they would each have
been fighting two at a time―and would have had little chance indeed. In
these tight quarters, the giants had to come in, front and back, in two ranks
of two.
"Pony
and I have the front," the ranger called.
"And
I've the back!" Bradwarden responded, clumsily turning his bulky frame
about in the narrow tunnel.
"Not
alone," Avelyn assured him, the monk moving as far up beside the centaur
as his own bulky frame would allow. Avelyn reached into a smaller pouch and
took out a handful of small prismatic celestite crystals, pale blue in color,
and began calling forth their enchantment.
"We
cannot give them the offensive edge," the ranger said to Pony. Then,
suddenly, the pair charged ahead, temporarily confusing the giants, who were
certainly not used to little people rushing at them!
Elbryan
started furiously, slapping his sword many times against the blade of the
giant's sword, finally pushing the weapon out wide enough for the ranger to get
in a solid, screeching slice that dented the monster's breastplate.
Pony went in
with equal ferocity, though her attacks were not quite as effective and she
scored only a minor hit.
It was
Elbryan, though, and not Pony, who first lost momentum, the ranger
involuntarily glancing at the side, looking at his love nearly as often as he
studied his opponent. Soon, he was dodging frantically, barely parrying a swipe
of a giant sword that would have easily lopped off his puny head.
* * *
"I wish
ye might get up here," the centaur grumbled, eyeing the leading giants.
The huge brutes couldn't quite stand side by side in the narrow corridor, but
they really didn't have to, for one of them, the trailing giant, earned a long
spear. "Oh, they'll get me two to one," the centaur groaned, swinging
his cudgel back and forth, loosening up his joints.
"We
shall see," Brother Avelyn promised sneakily, continuing his magical
summoning.
In came the
giants at full charge; Bradwarden braced and set his hind legs firmly. And then
Avelyn threw, and the corridor before the centaur erupted in a shower of
popping, stinging explosions, snapping bursts, a dozen or more, that stopped
the charge fully and had the giants scrambling, crying out in pain.
Bradwarden recovered
his wits and seized the moment, charging straight ahead, ramming the lead giant
and knocking it back and to the floor, then turning out the spear, with his
free hand, launching a heavy swing with his cudgel that connected on the side
of the second giant's helmet, knocking the protective armor clear off the
brute's head and knocking the giant against the passage wall.
Bradwarden's
second swing was even harder, all the centaur's great strength behind it
connecting solidly with the giant's vulnerable head, which was still braced
against the stone. The massive skull cracked with a tremendous sound and the
giant slumped to the floor.
But the
other fomorians were back and ready, though one seemed to be partially blinded
from the celestite explosions, and Bradwarden's momentum came to a swift halt.
Pony saw
what was happening here, and she was not pleased. She knew Elbryan trusted
her―how could he not after all their fights together?―and yet,
fighting in such proximity had him on the defensive for her sake.
That the
young woman could not tolerate, more for the practical reason that they could
not hope to win with such a posture than for any reason of pride. Pony had to
hit fast and hard, to remind her love of her prowess. She slipped the graphite
rod into her sword hand, clutching it tightly against the weapon's hilt, and
wondered if her plan would work.
Elbryan
ducked another swing, a clear opening to score a wicked hit, but he went to the
side instead, picking off a sword strike aimed for Pony―and one she could
easily have avoided on her own.
The ranger's
move did leave an opening, though, the surprised giant glancing to regard
Elbryan, and Pony rushed ahead, jabbing hard into the brute's belly. Her sword
found a bit of a crease in the armor but couldn't sink in far enough to score a
decisive hit.
No need for
that, the giant―and Elbryan―discovered a moment later, when Pony
released the stone's magical energy. A crackling black arc raced up the weapon
and leaped from its tip, right into the fomorian's belly. The giant jolted
violently, again and again, and then, when the electrical barrage finally
ended, fell back off the sword to the floor, stunned, if not dead.
The lesson
was not lost on Elbryan, who marveled at the powerful combination of sword and
stone, even as he berated himself for thinking that Pony might need his help.
Not to be outdone―and with another giant ready to take the fallen one's
place―the ranger leaped ahead and launched a series of furious attacks,
right and left and straight ahead, Tempest moving too quickly for the
fomorian's heavy sword to keep up. The mighty elvish weapon scored hit after
hit, sparks flying as it banged hard against metal armor. Finally, Elbryan
found that crease between breastplate and girdle, mentally marking the spot.
The ranger
let up for an instant, and as he expected, the giant roared and cut mightily.
Elbryan was down in a low squat before the blade ever got close to hitting him,
and he skittered under as it swooshed past. The ranger came up hard, his aim
perfect for that slight crease.
In slipped
Tempest, past the armor, tearing guts and diving deep. Elbryan moved ahead
again, wanting to be well within the arc of that monstrous sword, pushing his
blade in to the hilt. The giant reached across his back with its free hand, but
there was little strength in that grip. Elbryan jerked fiercely, once and then
again, the tearing jolts straightening the agonized fomorian. Then, seeing his
work with this one finished, the ranger tore free the blade and let the brute
fall.
The last in
line was quick to join in, swinging its huge torch as a weapon.
Pony, thick
into it with the third giant, took out a stone for yet another trick. But then
she heard more clearly the situation at the back of the line, Bradwarden
grunting, taking hits.
"Avelyn!"
the woman called, and she tossed the stone, one she knew that the monk could
put to much more deadly effect than she, over her shoulder.
It bounced
off the monk's back, catching his attention, for he was falling into the magic
of yet another gem. He noted the gift Pony had offered, though, and halted his
spell, quickly retrieving the fallen stone, the lodestone.
"Ho,
ho, what!" the monk bellowed happily, bringing the deadly gem in line.
"This is going to hurt!"
"Well,
be quick about it!" Bradwarden pleaded and then grunted, accepting a heavy
club hit on his left flank, for he was too busy keeping his other opponent's
sword at bay. The centaur had already taken a hit from that sword, and had a
huge gash on the side of his human torso to prove it.
Avelyn
called forth the energy of the stone and let it fly, swifter than any crossbow
quarrel, more powerful than any ballists bolt. It hit the sword-wielding giant
towering right in front of Bradwarden square in the chest, blasting a huge
hole, lifting the brute clear of its feet and hurling it backward, crashing
past the club wielder to slam heavily into the last in line, the pair going
down in a heap.
Bradwarden
used the moment of distraction to spin completely about, and as the club
wielder regained its balance, the centaur launched a mighty double kick against
its breastplate, knocking it back into the jumble.
"Forward!"
Avelyn cried to the group.
Elbryan
agreed wholeheartedly, and he leaped back to get beyond the swishing torch,
then rushed ahead, angling to dive between the two remaining giants at the
front, thrusting Tempest at Pony's foe as he went. The one battling Pony had to
turn to meet the attack, and took a hit from the woman even as it parried the
ranger's blade. Then, even worse for the fomorian, it got a swishing torch
across the face as its partner tried to catch up to the scrambling ranger.
Pony rushed
ahead and struck hard, sinking in her sword, calling forth the jolting energy
of the graphite once again. Though her lightning was much weaker this time, her
magical energies taxed, the giant slumped back, stunned.
Then came a
series of popping explosions in the air ahead of Pony, another celestite
barrage from Avelyn, singeing and confusing the fomorian pair.
Pony stared
curiously at the behemoth that had been battling Elbryan, at its suddenly
too-straight posture, hips forward, shoulders back. She understood as the torch
dropped away, as the brute toppled forward, sliding off the blood-dripping
Tempest.
Avelyn
flattened himself against the wall and instructed Bradwarden to run by, for
only one of the four giants that had come in at the back had any fight left in
it. Bradwarden, wounded more seriously than he had at first believed, didn't
argue, but slipped past the bulky monk, moving beside Pony, stubbornly bearing
down on the last giant in front.
The last in
the pile at the rear finally extracted itself and, seeing Avelyn standing
alone, no weapon visible, it came on wildly.
Avelyn
waited until the last possible second, then loosed the magic of his latest
stone, the malachite, into the corridor.
Suddenly,
the giant was off balance, feet barely scraping the stone. Every movement
forced a countermovement from the weightless behemoth, and so, when the stupid
thing brought its club high overhead for a mighty chop, the energy lifted the
giant from the ground and tuned it right over in midair, a slow-motion
somersault. The giant tried desperately to get at the trickster monk, but each
twist and turn only made its predicament even worse, and soon it was tumbling,
floating helplessly back down the corridor. As soon as it cleared its fallen
companions, Avelyn was upon them, reaching into the chest of one to retrieve
his deadly magnetite. He looked up to see that last giant upside down, flailing
wildly, futilely, floating even farther away.
Avelyn
snorted at the sight and turned to watch his three friends finishing the last
of that group. Then, with an almost apologetic shrug, when he noted that the
giant was far enough from his friends, the monk ran toward it, enacting a
serpentine shield and then pulling forth his powerful ruby.
Elbryan
winced as he noted the centaur's wicked wound, a bleeding gash that was fast
draining the life from poor Bradwarden.
"We
need the hematite," Pony remarked looking back toward Avelyn.
"Try
this instead," Elbryan offered, taking off his other armband, the red one,
the one the elves had soaked in permanent healing salves.
Pony took it
and went to work, while Elbryan ran ahead, both pausing, nearly tumbling, when
they heard the tremendous blast of Avelyn's fireball.
Avelyn
trotted back down the corridor, the charred giant, still floating head-down,
far behind him.
The tunnel
continued straight for a dozen paces, then turned sharply to the right, where
Elbryan had run.
"Move
along," Avelyn instructed his weary friends, and they nodded,
understanding that their task was far from finished. Pony looked at Bradwarden,
but the centaur was smiling widely, the healing salves already at work under
the red bandage.
So on they
went, Avelyn in the lead. All three stopped suddenly as Elbryan came rushing
back around the corner. The ranger hit the wall hard, using it to turn himself
so he could dive back down the corridor, and when he came up out of the roll,
the others looked past him curiously to see glowing stones fast hardening on
the floor.
"A
great red man!" the ranger explained, "with the black wings of a bat
--"
"No
man," Avelyn interrupted, knowing the truth of this newest foe, knowing
that they had at last met with the demon dactyl.
CHAPTER 53
Destiny
A wave of
molten stone splashed around the corner, driving the group back, the heat
nearly overwhelming them. A second wave, and then more―a river of the
magma―coursed around the bend, and three of the group turned in full
flight. Avelyn stood his ground, though, and went quickly to work, calling upon
his stone magic to enact a shield, constructing a magical wall, floor to
ceiling across the corridor.
The demon
fires rolled on, bearing down on the
praying monk. Pony skidded to a halt, realizing that Avelyn was not with her.
She turned and screamed out to him, even took a running step back toward the
monk, but Elbryan held her fast.
Avelyn's
faith was put to the test as the magma flow approached, as the heat
intensified. He had used this gem, serpentine, to survive in the midst of a
fireball, but he had no real knowledge of how it would work against the demon magma.
It might defeat the heat, he supposed, but what of the sheer weight of the
flowing stone?
Avelyn had
no room for such doubts. He fell deeper into his prayers, into the depths of
the stone magic. The magma was only a couple of feet away, rolling, bubbling.
The monk
felt no heat, then, felt no hot wash from the molten stone. As the leading edge
passed through the serpentine barrier, it cooled suddenly; turning black and
solid, and the magma behind it began to flow over it, until it, too, cooled and
hardened.
Now Avelyn
saw a new problem brewing: if the lava continued to pile up, it would rise too
high and block the corridor, the only way they knew to get at the demon dactyl.
Boldly the monk strode forward, stepped up on the leading wall of obsidian, and
forward, too, went his magical shield, stealing the demon's heat.
Seeing the
spectacle, realizing that their friend had beaten the dactyl's attack, the
other three were quick to join him, Elbryan, Hawkwing in hand, moving right to
the side of the praying monk. They went around the bend, Avelyn stopping the
magma river fully, the demon dactyl coming in sight.
Elbryan
lifted his bow and let fly, and the dactyl, so obviously surprised to see its
enemies, took the hit squarely in the chest between its humanlike arms.
Bestesbulzibar's
eyes flared, and the demon opened wide its mouth, vomiting a stream of magma at
the group, and while the serpentine shield blocked the heat, the sheer force of
the missile-like spew knocked Avelyn and Elbryan back against the wall. The
ranger recovered quickly, growling and sending a second arrow after the first,
again with perfect aim.
The dactyl
howled, more in rage than pain, for Elbryan's arrows were but a minor
inconvenience to the mighty creature.
Avelyn,
though . . . that one presented a more troubling power.
The demon's
arms shot forward, fingers extended, and black tendrils of crackling
electricity spouted from them, biting against the wall and running the length
of the straight passage, nipping and snapping at Elbryan and Avelyn, at Pony
and Bradwarden as they followed their friends around the bend. Avelyn had no
counter ready and the demon's magic caught him and Elbryan, holding them fast
in its sparking grasp for a long painful moment, and then hurled them both backward
to crash hard against the wall. Smoke wafting from various parts of their
clothing, the pair darted in a quick retreat around the bend, pushing Pony and
Bradwarden back the way they had come.
Avelyn
desperately searched his magical repertoire, but it was Pony who struck next,
thrusting forth the graphite rod and letting loose a bolt of streaking
lightning, bouncing it off the wall, angled perfectly to skip around the bend
and bear down on the demon. Her aim was true, it seemed from the howl that came
back at them, but that howl was followed closely by a second crackling black
bolt, this one hitting with a thunderclap that launched Pony and
Avelyn―and would have sent Elbryan, as well, except that he was holding
to the sturdy centaur―flying to the floor.
"Time
for running!" Bradwarden cried.
"Take
it!" Pony called to the monk, tossing him the graphite; knowing that he
could put it to more powerful use.
"Forward,
I say!" Avelyn corrected the centaur, catching the stone and pulling Pony
to her feet. He paused for just a moment, considering the fact that his hands
were full of a confusing jumble of gems, and none of them were the particular
stone he now desired. He quickly handed two stones, the malachite and the
lighted diamond, back to Pony, then he scrambled on, taking the lead toward the
bend once more. "Now the darkness is before us, so forward, I say!"
Avelyn reached into his pouch and retrieved yet another gem, a stone he had
used to defeat dactyl-inspired magic before, in a fight with a powrie general.
Avelyn
focused the energy of the sunstone, building a wall before him, shaping it and
thrusting it forward, taking some comfort in the fact that Pony, who was behind
him, kept the diamond glowing brightly.
The dactyl
loosed another tremendous bolt as Avelyn rounded the bend, but the crackling
magic fell away to nothingness as it entered the disenchanted zone.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn roared, and all the friends came on in full charge.
Bestesbulzibar
was confused, had not seen such a display of anti-magic in all its millennia of
life. It narrowed its gaze upon Avelyn, upon the gemstone the monk held tightly
in his extended hand, and, ignoring the charge, thinking nothing of the next
stinging arrow that soared its way, the dactyl gathered all its magical energy.
They were
barely thirty feet away.
Twenty―another
arrow zipped in, deflecting off the dactyl's bone-hard forehead.
Ten feet
away, Avelyn roaring wildly, the ranger hooking his bow over his shoulder and
drawing forth his sword―an elvish sword!
The dactyl's
shriek echoed all through the tunnel maze of Aida, deafened the four friends,
and made them reach for their ears. The demon, recognizing the power of
Elbryan's silverel blade and wanting nothing to do with an elven-forged
weapon―Dinoniel had wielded such a weapon!―loosed a stream of its purest
magical force, a green line of sizzling, tingling energy aimed directly at
Avelyn, at the monk's extended hand.
The beam
stopped right before the monk, wavered there, holding Avelyn in his place,
crackling sparks flying wide, forcing Elbryan to slow and shield his eyes.
Avelyn
screamed, and the dactyl shrieked again, throwing all its magical strength,
every ounce, behind the beam.
On came the
green line, engulfing Avelyn's hand, the sunstone glowing fiercely. They held
for a long moment, the monk's will against the demon's hellish strength.
The sunstone
absorbed the dactyl energy, stole the line from the demon's hand. But Avelyn's
expression of joy, of victory, was short-lived, for the stone could not contain
such energy, and it threw it out, dispersed as green smoke into the air, the
sheer force of the expulsion throwing Elbryan and Avelyn backward into Pony and
Bradwarden, the resulting smoke filling the corridor.
None of the
group was hurt; but the momentary distraction gave the drained dactyl the time
to retreat.
"Ho,
ho, what!" Avelyn bellowed when he saw the creature half running, half
flying down the corridor, and the roaring monk was the first in pursuit.
Elbryan
scrambled to untangle himself from Pony, and charged off behind the monk, the
woman coming next, and bulky Bradwarden bringing up the rear.
They sped
past several side passages, around turns in the corridor, Avelyn leading
boldly, trying to keep the demon in sight, ready but without fear in case the
creature was waiting for him around each bend.
They raced
up some stairs, pounded fast down a long, narrow descending slope, and came at
last into a long, straight corridor, the demon visible before them. Elbryan
tried hard to get past his monk friend, then, to take up the lead and close the
distance to the monster. But Avelyn was too focused even to notice the ranger's
attempt; even to consider letting the faster Elbryan squeeze by him.
The monk was
trying furiously to bring up the magic of the sunstone again, but even if he
couldn't manage it, Avelyn meant to get to the dactyl, to tackle the damned
thing and beat it with his bare hands if he had to!
Up ahead,
the corridor widened, like the top half of an hourglass, and then ended in a
wall, broken only by a large archway, through which the demon dactyl scrambled.
Beyond this portal, Avelyn saw a huge room, braced by columns and lit by the
orange flow of molten stone.
This was the
throne room, he knew, the very heart of the demon's power. That notion only
spurred the furious monk on even more, Avelyn lowering his head and running
full out, with his telltale cry of "Ho, ho, what!" He charged through
the archway with no consideration that it might be trapped, and Elbryan, though
he slowed a bit for caution, was but two running strides behind.
The dactyl,
back on its obsidian throne, was ready for them. As Avelyn passed into the
room, he was hit full force with more demonic magic: a great gust of wind that
held the monk in his tracks, that sent the huge bronze doors to the side of
Avelyn swinging mightily.
Elbryan,
too, felt the wind and saw the doors. He screamed out and tried to buck, the
force and dive ahead, arm extended, Tempest leading.
The doors
swung closed, brushing Avelyn, spinning him about, and then slamming together
on Elbryan's forearm, smashing his bones, tearing his flesh. Tempest fell to
the floor; the doors pushed on, threatening to rip the ranger's arm off.
Bradwarden
threw Pony aside and barreled into the doors full force, but even the centaur's
great weight and strength could only move them slightly, just enough for
Elbryan to extract his arm and fall back, semiconscious, into the corridor.
Bradwarden caught him and scrambled back with him, and the bronze doors slammed
closed, leaving Avelyn alone in the throne room with Bestesbulzibar.
Or so the
monk thought. Bestesbulzibar kept his concentration on the door, using his
magic to hold it closed against the repeated slams of stubborn Bradwarden. But
then the demon's second trick became apparent as a grinding sound filled the
room and the massive stone columns began to twist and shift.
Avelyn,
grasping at the opening, was quick to retrieve Tempest, but he was no
swordsman. He felt the power of the weapon's gemstone, but it was a magic to
strengthen and enhance the blade, he believed, and nothing that the monk could
access beyond that.
The closest
two columns stretched out their stony arms, broke through the inanimate stone
holding fast their legs, and started the monk's way. With a yelp, Avelyn
skipped to the side, bringing the puny sword up defensively. These two
behemoths weren't going for him however, but for the bronze doors.
Avelyn held
his breath, thinking that the pair would throw wide the doors and fall over his
friends. To his relief, they did not, but rather they fell against the metal,
using their bulk to seal off any chance of entry. The fact that the maneuver
put those two obsidian giants out of the fighting did little to bolster Avelyn,
for eighteen of the gigantic black animations remained, all stepping forth now,
and with the doors thus barricaded, the dactyl was free to deal with this one
intruder.
The demon
leered down at the monk from its obsidian throne. "Destroy him,"
Bestesbulzibar commanded, and all the stone monsters started Avelyn's way,
except for the two holding the doors.
Avelyn took
a careful measure of their approach; they were not fast-moving things, and the
monk believed that he could keep his distance, for a while at least. He meant
to do just that, and loose whatever magic he could muster against
Bestesbulzibar, but to his surprise, the demon did not remain, leaping up from
the throne, moving to the side of the dais, and diving headlong into the lava
flow, disappearing through the floor.
Avelyn
growled in frustration and entertained the thought of using his serpentine
shield and chasing after Bestesbulzibar. He found that he had more immediate
problems, though, as two of the massive columns bore down on him. He thought to
use the sunstone, to counter the magic and disenchant the obsidian, but he
feared that the stone itself had not yet recovered from the strain in the
corridor. Up came the graphite instead, and Avelyn let loose a tremendous blast
of lightning, a thundering forked bolt that slammed both the columns and
knocked them back a step, sending cracks panning up and down their length.
Avelyn ran
between the pair, easily avoiding their lumbering attempts to grab him. The
monk lashed out with Tempest as he passed, for good measure, and the sword took
a slice of stone from the back of a giant leg. Avelyn hardly took comfort in
that successful strike, though, realizing by the extent of the damage that he
would have to hit the thing a hundred times, at least, to destroy it, and
probably a score of times on the same spot on the leg to topple it!
So it became
a game of cat and mouse, and Avelyn was the mouse. He ran all about the great
hall, igniting a fireball, and then, when that proved ineffective, resorting to
the graphite, falling into its magic again and again, stinging giant, cracking
the black stone.
After a few
minutes, the monk amazingly had three of the behemoths down, no more than great
piles of broken rubble, but Avelyn couldn't possibly maintain the pace, he
realized, for he was huffing and puffing and his magical energies were fast
depleting.
He took a
different tack then, rushing to the dais and scrambling up the steps. How
simple the evasion proved, for the giants could not maneuver their great bodies
to follow!
Now Avelyn
focused his energy on the pair holding the door, thinking to clear the path for
his friends.
He didn't
know it, but his friends were long gone.
Elbryan was
hardly conscious, with Pony holding him up and holding his smashed. arm out
from his body, trying to keep it steady. Waves of pain assaulted the ranger
with every slight shift, turned his stomach and dulled his vision. He did see
Bradwarden, slamming repeatedly, stubbornly, at the doors, not budging them in
the least.
How helpless
the ranger felt then! He had come all this way, and now was denied. Was denied!
Summoning
every ounce of his remaining strength, Elbryan managed to pull away from Pony,
taking two unsteady steps toward Bradwarden, meaning to help with the door.
"Hit it with a bolt o' yer lightning!" the centaur bade Pony.
"I gave
that stone to Avelyn," she replied, holding up her hands, showing only the
glowing diamond and the green-ringed malachite.
That news
seemed to take the resolve from the centaur. "Then it's Avelyn and the
demon," Bradwarden said, "as the monk knew it should be."
Elbryan
swooned and tumbled to the floor. His friends were beside him in an instant,
Pony propping up his head.
"Might
that ye give him this," the centaur offered, indicating the red bandage.
Pony
considered it for just a moment, but when she pulled the bandage down a bit,
she realized that Bradwarden's garish wound wasn't nearly healed, and that if
she took the bandage away, it would only open once more. Elbryan's arm was
agonizing, but not life threatening, and Pony knew her love well enough to
realize that he would be angry indeed if she risked the centaur's life to
alleviate his pain.
The woman
shook her head and looked back at Elbryan.
"Side
passages," the ranger mumbled.
Pony turned
to Bradwarden, who glanced back helplessly at the great bronze doors. "Got
nothing better," the centaur agreed, and so the three were off, Pony
supporting Elbryan and Bradwarden leading the way back down the tunnels, up the
slope and down the stairs, searching for a side passage that would get them
into the throne room from a different entrance.
Their hopes
were bolstered shortly thereafter when they heard a voice―Avelyn's
voice―cursing the demon, then crying out in pain. On they ran with all
speed; Elbryan was so strengthened by the indication that his friend might be
in trouble that he pulled away from Pony and made his own unsteady way,
stumbling often, but using Hawkwing as a crutch and moving faster than the
woman could have ushered him.
They went
down the next side passage, a narrow, winding affair, and the talking
continued, spurring them on.
Around a
bend, they saw their folly, for it was not the throne room that loomed before
them, not Avelyn at all, but the demon dactyl, standing tall across a wider
expanse of the corridor, leering at them.
"Welcome,"
the beast said in a voice that sounded like Avelyn's.
Pony looked
helplessly at her diamond, then wondered if she could make the light shine so
brightly that this creature of darkness could not withstand it. Bradwarden's
method was more straightforward, however, the centaur charging straight ahead,
singing at the top of his lungs. Elbryan moved to follow, but could not hope to
keep up.
The dactyl's
laughter mocked them. The beast lifted its arms, summoning its hellish magic.
Pony cried out, thinking they would all be destroyed.
Bestesbulzibar
did not aim the strike at them but rather at the floor beneath their feet, a
blast of explosive energy that shattered the stone, dropping the corridor's
floor out from beneath them.
The demon
cackled and turned away, its work finished.
And so it seemed
to be, as the stones and the three friends fell far away―a hundred feet,
at least, two hundred―toward a floor of jagged stalagmites.
* * *
It came up
fast through the hole in the floor at the side of the dais, rushed past the
flowing lava quickly, spewing the red stone all about. Up the demon soared, and
then it dropped, landing heavily on its muscular legs.
The monk
refused to be distracted, though this demon dactyl, the darkness of all the
world, was but a few strides away. Avelyn growled and fell deeper into the
stone, grabbed up all the power the graphite would give him, and hurled it in
three rapid blasts at the pair of stone giants guarding the door.
They blew
apart into rubble; the way was clear for Avelyn's friends, except that Avelyn's
friends were nowhere near the door.
"Well
done!" Bestesbulzibar congratulated, clapping his human hands together.
"But all for what end?"
"Nightbird!"
Avelyn cried. The monk thought to run for the doors, but there remained too
many animated columns, crowding around the dais, waiting for him to come down.
Avelyn
called out again, but the dactyl's laughter stole his voice. "They cannot
hear you, fool," Bestesbulzibar explained. "They are already
dead!"
The words
nearly knocked Avelyn from his feet, assaulted his mind and tore at his heart.
His lips moved in denial, but he suspected Bestesbulzibar would not lie to him;
given the demon's awful power, he suspected the demon wouldn't have to lie to
him!
So that left
Avelyn against the fiend, just them, facing off from five paces. Avelyn was
past grief suddenly, and without fear. He had come here to Aida, into this very
room, to battle Bestesbulzibar, to pit his God against the hellish power of the
demon. And now he was here, the best scenario he could rationally have hoped to
find. If he won now, then his friends, all of them, would not have died in
vain.
That thought
sobered the monk and calmed his nerves. He considered his repertoire, wondered
what stone magic would prove most effective against the beast, then went with
what he had in hand, his graphite.
"Wretched
beast!" Avelyn boomed, his voice resonating throughout the room. "I
deny you!"
He thrust
out his arm and loosed a tremendous bolt of sizzling blue lightning, a sharp,
crackling flash that slammed Bestesbulzibar right in the chest and drove the
demon back a couple of steps.
"You
are strong, Avelyn Desbris," the fiend growled, all its body quivering
from the continuing grasp of the electricity. The demon spread wide its black
wings and reached back with one humanlike arm, claws extended toward the
flowing lava, grabbing the power and channeling it.
Then the
demon's arms clutched tight at its chest, right where Avelyn's bolt was holding
fast, and red crackles shot forth from Bestesbulzibar's clawed hands, red to
meet Avelyn's blue bolt, joining together end to end in a showering display.
Avelyn
growled low and called to God, begging for more energy, channeling it, as pure
a conduit of godly might as ever had stood upon Corona. And that power
staggered Bestesbulzibar, nearly threw the demon to the floor.
Nearly―for
Bestesbulzibar was no conduit of power, but a source of power, and the red
bolts fought back terrifically, grabbing the ends of Avelyn's lightning and
pushing the bolt back toward the monk. Red extended to cover half the distance
between the pair, and continued to close. Avelyn shut his eyes and growled
louder, throwing every bit of himself behind the energy, and the blue bolt
gained again, drove on toward the demon.
But then the
red bolt strengthened and pushed the blue back, pushed the sizzling point of
joining inexorably back, toward Avelyn. The monk opened wide his eyes,
straining, straining, but it would not be enough, he knew then.
The demonic
red lightning inched closer.
She
shouldn't have been able to do it; none of Avelyn's training nor her own
experiences with the stones should have allowed Pony to bring forth such
energy. But sheer terror, sheer instinct, and an unselfishness that bordered on
foolhardiness, allowed for nothing less.
Pony took up
the malachite and reached out with it, somehow lending its magic not only to
Elbryan, who was within her reach, but to Bradwarden, who was far ahead of the
pair, and all three, tumbling with the broken corridor floor, were suddenly
floating more gently, drifting down as a feather might, and it took little
effort for each of them to step aside from the stalagmite teeth as they lighted
on the lower level.
"I'm
not for knowing how ye did it, girl," a thoroughly shaken Bradwarden
congratulated, "but suren I'm glad that ye did it!"
But for all
their joy, for all the centaur's gratitude toward Pony, the three found
themselves in a precarious position. Pony knew that she might fall into the
malachite once more and become nearly weightless, but the prospects of getting
anyone back up to the broken ledge seemed remote indeed, for they had no rope
to hang from such a height.
"One
way's as good as another," the centaur was quick to point out, motioning
toward a tunnel that led out of the stalagmite-filled chamber and wound its way
along the deeper tunnels of Aida.
So on they
went, with Pony holding the diamond light steady and holding poor Elbryan
steady; and Bradwarden, cudgel in hand, taking up the lead. To their dismay,
this tunnel complex proved no less a maze than the higher passageways, and most
of these corridors seemed to be leading further down and not up.
"One
way's as good as another," Bradwarden kept repeating, but it seemed to the
others that the centaur was trying to convince himself more than them.
Avelyn could
not hold it at bay. The demon's red lightning hit him with the force of a
giant's punch, launching the monk to the very edge of the raised dais. One of
the stone behemoths was at the spot almost immediately, leaning over the
helpless man, its huge hand chopping down to squash Avelyn flat.
Avelyn cried
out, thinking himself doomed, thinking that he had failed and that all the
quest was ended.
But the
stone behemoth creaked and twisted, arm moving back against its massive chest,
legs shifting together. In a few seconds, it was no more than a column again,
leaning over, and then falling.
Avelyn
rolled out of the way; the inanimate stone crashed down and rolled from the
dais.
"He is
mine!" the dactyl shrieked at the impertinent behemoth, at the
giant-turned-column that had almost stolen the fiend's most savored kill.
All the
other columns retreated then, going back near the door, dispelling any of
Avelyn's thoughts of escape.
The monk
stubbornly pulled himself up to his knees, then struggled to stand tall before
the monster. The dactyl, eyes narrowed, showing-respect for Avelyn but no fear
of the monk, stalked in.
Perhaps this
would not be a battle of magic, the monk thought suddenly. He had Elbryan's
sword after all, that most powerful of weapons. Perhaps this was to be a test
of his body against the dactyl's, a contest of physical strength.
In one fluid
movement, Avelyn lifted Tempest high and darted ahead at his foe, slashing
wildly.
He missed,
the cunning dactyl easily sidestepping and then countering with a beat of its
leathery wing, slamming the rushing Avelyn on the shoulder and launching him
head over heels to the other edge of the dais.
"You
are no swordsman," the fiend remarked, and Avelyn could hardly disagree.
Still the monk stubbornly climbed back to his feet and stalked toward the
monster more cautiously this time, prodding Tempest with shortened, measured
thrusts.
Bestesbulzibar
began to slowly circle to Avelyn's right.
Avelyn's
free hand came up, launching a handful of celestite crystals that popped in
minor explosions all about Bestesbulzibar's face. Thinking that he had his
opening, the monk charged ahead.
Bestesbulzibar
was gone in a puff of smoke, in the blink of a surprised monk's eye. Avelyn
skidded to a stop, then understood his sudden dilemma and swung about hard.
The demon,
standing right behind him, battered him with its wing again, knocking him to
the ground before the swinging sword ever got close.
Avelyn
struggled to his feet once more, stumbling toward the rear of the raised
platform.
Bestesbulzibar,
cackling with laughter, walked around him, putting Avelyn squarely between
itself and the solid wall, cutting off the one route of escape.
Avelyn had
no ideas, no plan at all. He came forward a step and began waving Tempest,
again in shortened strikes, more to buy time, to keep the fiend at bay, than
with any hope of winning.
But the
demon's patience was at its end, and Bestesbulzibar came forward in a sudden,
terrifying rush.
Out went
Tempest, a quicker thrust, aimed for the dactyl's heart, but Avelyn, for all
his training in those years at St.-Mere-Abelle, was no Terranen Dinoniel, and
the dactyl accepted a minor hit and swept aside the awkward attack with one
forearm, then quick-stepped into the opening.
Always ready
to improvise, Avelyn launched a heavy punch with his free hand and connected
solidly with the powerful beast's chest.
Before the
monk could begin to congratulate himself, he found Bestesbulzibar's free hand
around his throat, lifting him from the ground. Avelyn tried to whack with Tempest,
but the demon understood the power of the ranger sword and would not allow the
monk to bring it to bear.
"Fool,"
Bestesbulzibar thundered, squeezing harder―and Avelyn feared his head
would simply pop off! "Did you think that you could even hurt me? Hurt me,
Bestesbulzibar, who has lived for centuries, for millennia? Every day I destroy
creatures ten times your worth!"
"I deny
you!" Avelyn gasped.
"Deny?"
Bestesbulzibar echoed. "Tell me that I am beautiful."
Avelyn
stared incredulously at the demon's angular face, at the fiery eyes, the white,
pointed canines. Something about Bestesbulzibar, the sheen of the demon's skin,
the strong angles of its features, struck Avelyn profoundly as beautiful
indeed. The monk felt an overwhelming urge then to do as the demon had asked,
to admit Bestesbulzibar's beauty.
But Avelyn
saw the lie, the temptation, for what it was. He stared Bestesbulzibar right in
the eye. "I deny you," he said evenly.
The dactyl
heaved Avelyn across the dais, to slam hard into the back wall.
Avelyn
slumped low, his vision blurred, sharp explosions going off in the back of his
head. He tried to stand but slumped again, and the room at the edges of his
vision began to grow dark.
The monk
tried to get to his sunstone, thought to kill the magic in this area as he had
done in the hallway. But to what end? his reeling thoughts screamed back, for
Bestesbulzibar needed no magic to destroy him.
The dactyl
paced in, towered over him.
Avelyn
swooned; his thoughts went flying back to the glories of his life, back to
Pimaninicuit, the closest he had ever felt to his God. He saw again the island
at the start of the blessed showers, saw Brother Thagraine, poor Thagraine,
running desperately, reaching out toward the cave, toward Avelyn.
Then falling
dead, and Avelyn remembered rushing to him, remembered his horror, fast turned
to curiosity . . .
Avelyn reached
into his second pouch and pulled forth the giant amethyst crystal, the
mysterious stone humming with magical energy.
The dactyl
hesitated at the sight, at the stone aglow with teeming magic.
"What
have you?" it demanded.
In all
truth, Avelyn didn't know the answer to that question. Growling with every
inch, all pain vanished, Avelyn Desbris forced his legs under him and slid back
up the wall to stand before the hellish fiend.
The dactyl
growled and came on.
Following
instincts that he could only hope were from God, Avelyn tossed the stone into
the air, and then he and the dactyl both hesitated, surprised, for the heavy
crystal did not fall but hovered in place.
Again, with
no logical basis for the movement, Avelyn exploded into action, grabbing Tempest
in both hands and swinging mightily even as Bestesbulzibar reached for the
tantalizing stone.
Mighty
Tempest sheared right through the crystal, and the whole of it blew into dust,
shattered a thousand times.
The demon
stared dumbfoundedly at the dusty cloud, at Avelyn, as if to ask what the man
had done, and again, Avelyn had no answers.
From within
that dust cloud came a low humming noise, a growling almost, and, like a ripple
in a pond, a purplish ring emanated, rolling through Avelyn and the dactyl,
rolling out to the edges of the room, deflecting off the stone again and again,
crossing back in on itself.
More rings,
rolling, humming, mounting.
"What
have you done?" Bestesbulzibar demanded.
Avelyn, his
head throbbing once more, clutched desperately at his sunstone, though he
thought the thing a pitiful counter to the mounting strength.
The ominous
growling increased tenfold, a hundredfold, deafening Avelyn, blocking the
sounds of the dactyl's shrieks. The creature watched in amazement as its stone
columns crumbled to dust, as if the very vibrations had shattered the obsidian.
Bestesbulzibar
turned on Avelyn, murder in its flaming eyes.
The dais
lurched; a great crack opened in the floor and a gout of steam hissed through.
"Fool!"
the dactyl shrieked wildly. "Fool! What have you done?"
"Not
I," Avelyn answered under his breath, though he knew that the demon could
not possibly hear him. "Not I" The monk understood then, knew his
fate and willingly accepted it.
He hooked
the bag of stones, all but the sunstone which he still clutched tightly, over
Tempest's blade. He noticed then the stone in Tempest's pommel, and recognized
it for the first time as some sort of sunstone, an accessible gem. It was too
late for him, though, and so he grabbed the sword at mid-blade, and thrust it
straight up above his head.
The
left-hand wall of the throne room crumbled; the twin lava flows intensified,
spurting molten stone across the room.
The dactyl
shrieked and loosed a bolt of black lightning at Avelyn, but the monk was fully
into the sunstone shield then, and the magic was stolen before it ever got to
him.
Bestesbulzibar
leaped away, flew all about the room, looking for an escape. Then, with none
evident, the fiend came straight for Avelyn, thinking to punish, to tear and to
kill.
But then the
demon was tumbling, the resounding, deafening roar overcoming it in mid-flight,
stealing its concentration, stealing its strength. Bestesbulzibar crawled
across the dais, away from Avelyn―who was standing tall, shining,
praying―and toward one of the lava flows.
The hundreds
of purplish rings converged in the middle of the room.
Aida, the
very mountain itself, exploded.
Far below
the jolt sent all three of the friends, even sturdy Bradwarden, flying wildly
about the tunnel. Elbryan slammed hard, into the wall of the narrow passageway
with his already broken arm. Waves of agony assaulted him, and despite all the
courage and determination he could possibly muster, he found himself slumping
down into blackness.
Pony, too,
was dazed but not so much that she couldn't hold fast to her diamond and keep
the precious light glowing, though in the sudden burst of dust, it seemed a
meager beacon indeed. She struggled back to her feet as the rumbling continued,
as the walls and the floor beneath her feet shifted and bounced. She somehow
got to Elbryan and propped him up, hugged him tightly, thinking it fitting that
they die in each others' arms.
But then,
after what seemed like an hour but was in fact no more than a few minutes, the
rumbling stopped, and the ceiling did not fall in on them.
Pony's
relief lasted only until she managed to locate Bradwarden through the dust; the
centaur was by far the worst off. He stood braced against the corridor's
right-hand wall, wedged in tight, his human torso bent far back, arms
widespread with muscles bulging, to hold back the largest slab of stone
imaginable, to hold up the very mountain itself!
Pony gently
eased Elbryan down, then ran for the centaur, crying out his name. She pulled
out the malachite as she went, thinking to levitate the block that the centaur
might escape.
She couldn't
begin to move it; Avelyn himself, with a piece of malachite ten times this
one's strength, would not have budged so huge a slab. To Pony's. surprise,
Elbryan came up then, groggily, barely conscious, Hawkwing, in hand. With great
effort, the battered man wedged the bow in tight against the wall, trying to
use it as a lever to relieve some of the pressure on the centaur.
"Ah, me
boy, ye'll not be moving this one," the doomed centaur groaned.
"She's got me stuck, and got me dead, don't be doubting!".
Elbryan fell
back against the wall, dizzy, defeated, with no answers.
"Bradwarden,"
Pony breathed helplessly. "Oh, my friend, all the mountain would have
fallen on us but for your great strength."
"And
all the mountain'll be falling soon enough," the centaur replied.
"Run to the outside and yer freedom."
Pony's
horrified expression was all the reply Bradwarden was going to get.
"Go
on!" the centaur yelled, and the exertion cost him an inch, the huge slab
sliding ever lower, bending him backward. "Go on," he said again,
more calmly. "Ye cannot move the damned mountain! Don't ye make me death a
meaningless thing, me friends. I beg ye, get out!"
Pony looked
at Elbryan for guidance, but the man was past reasoning, slumping once again
into blackness. She stared hard at the centaur then, thinking this to be the
cruelest play of all. How could she leave so gallant a friend? How could that
be expected of her?
And yet Pony
realized the sincerity of the centaur, saw it clearly in his calm features. She
imagined herself in his position and knew what she would expect of her friends.
Pony moved
up very close to Bradwarden, bent over to him, and kissed him on the cheek.
"My friend," she said.
"Always,"
the centaur replied, and then his visage and his voice hardened. "Now run.
Ye owe me that!"
Pony nodded.
It was the most difficult thing she'd ever had to do, and yet she did not
hesitate. She pulled Elbryan up to his feet, hooked her arm under his shoulder,
and started off without looking back. The pair had barely left the corridor
when they heard the rock shift once again, heard the resigned groan of the
breaking centaur.
Pony
wandered for hours in the twisting darkness, with only the diamond light to
guide her, and that growing ever dimmer as exhaustion sapped her energy. She
found tunnels blocked by flowing lava, others by thick concentrations of
sulfurous fumes, and still others that simply ended in a solid wall or in a deep
chasm that she could not cross.
Elbryan
tried hard to keep up with her, to be less of a burden, but his legs were too
wobbly, the pain too intense. Several times, he whispered for Pony to leave him
behind, but that, of course, she could not do. Another idea came to her, then,
and she took out the malachite, lending some of its levitational magic to
Elbryan's body, greatly lessening her load.
And then
finally, as hope began to fade to empty despair, as her magical energies at
last began to fade to nothingness, the woman felt a breeze, and it was cool and
soft, not like the hot wash of flowing lava.
Pony
concentrated hard. The diamond was all but out, a pinprick of light that showed
her nothing in the heavy air. The malachite's power was no more, Elbryan
leaning heavily against her. She stumbled on, following the current,
backtracking the gentle breeze. She stumbled and fell, crawled back to her
knees and tugged Elbryan along, and then she stumbled again. It wasn't until,
exhausted beyond her limits, she rolled onto her back, that she realized that
she was out of the mountain; under a sky darkened by smoke.
Just before
Pony drifted off to sleep, one patch of that sky cleared, showing a single,
shining star, then a second, then a third.
"Avelyn,
Bradwarden, and Tuntun," the woman whispered, and merciful sleep took her.
Epilogue
It was
Elbryan and not Pony who was the first to wake, the sky still dark before the
dawn and still heavy with billowing smoke. The ranger tried hard to remember
what had happened, then he did, and he sat, head bowed, fighting away despair.
Worst of
all, Elbryan did not know Avelyn's fate, though he suspected the monk was dead.
What of the dactyl? Had the creature been consumed, or had it merely flown away
before the blast?
Elbryan
lifted his eyes at that unsettling notion, looked at the sky as if he expected
the dactyl demon to be swooping upon him even then.
What he saw
was a glow, coming from higher up on what remained of the mountain, a soft
white light atop the blasted peak.
Pony
awakened shortly thereafter, the dulled dawn just beginning, but still the glow
from atop the mountain was faintly visible. Without saying a word, the battered
pair gathered up their things and started off, up the mountain trails,
supporting each other through every step. Only when the dawn broke
fully―dimmed by the huge smoke cloud―could they appreciate the
absolute devastation that had come to the mountain and to the valley before it.
Nothing
lived down there, they both knew. Nothing could possibly have survived. All the
trees that had been on Aida's slopes were laid out flat, leafless, most of
their branches blown away. Empty logs, gray with ash, stretched away in the
gloom. Nothing moved across that gray sea, save the occasional flutter of ash,
caught by a swirl of wind. No birds flew above it, no sounds at all broke the
eerie stillness of the devastated morning.
Neither did
Elbryan or Pony speak out, too overwhelmed by the sight. They continued on
their way, struggling past broken stones and through patches of warm ash hip
deep, hoping for some answer.
They came
over the edge of the now flat-topped mountain, in sight of a huge plateau of
empty grayness―except for one tiny spot of light. Toward it they went,
trudging on, plowing through the heavy ash. They could not discern the source
until they were very close, within a dozen strides, and then they hesitated.
An arm,
Avelyn's arm, protruded from the ash, holding fast Tempest at mid-blade and
with a bag hanging below that.
Elbryan
rushed ahead, thinking to dig his friend from the ground, thinking that Avelyn
had somehow survived, had enacted a magical shield to protect himself even from
this level of destruction.
When he
reached the spot, he found his folly, found that the ground around Avelyn's arm
was solid and only lightly covered in ash, and the monk was surely dead, his
arm and hand withered, dried out, as if the great heat of the explosion had
taken all the fluid from his body.
"The
dactyl is destroyed," Pony said firmly when she arrived beside Elbryan.
"Avelyn killed it."
Elbryan
looked at her.
"Else
his gift to us would have been stolen away by the demon," the woman
reasoned, and she reached over and worked the sword and bag free of the
withered hand. The glow went away instantly, but the arm remained, extended.
Pony handed
Tempest to the ranger, and she was not surprised when she opened the bag to
find all of Avelyn's stones, except the amethyst and the sunstone, within.
"It is
a message," she said with confidence. "He gave this to us as a
message that the dactyl is defeated."
"A
message and a responsibility," Elbryan replied, looking from Pony's eyes
to the bag of gemstones. "Avelyn saved us, saved us all, but the friar is
demanding repayment."
The woman
nodded and looked, too, at the precious bag, at Avelyn's choice, at her
responsibility. "There may already be another Brother Justice on our
trail," Pony remarked.
Elbryan
lifted Tempest with his healthy arm. "Then I must mend my arm," he
replied. "Or learn to fight left-handed."
Thus,
Elbryan and Pony walked away from Avelyn's chosen grave, from Tuntun's last
breath, from Bradwarden's tomb. They crossed the ash-filled valley with great
difficulty, having to stop often from weariness, and that only making things
worse since they had no food or water.
Finally,
they made the mountains bordering the Barbacan, and just over the ridges, they
found life again and water to drink. They spent more, than a day at rest, and
when she felt strong again, Pony used the hematite to relieve much of Elbryan's
pain and to set his bones fast on the mend.
And so it
was with strides much stronger that the pair continued on their way down the
southern slopes of the Barbacan. Near the bottom, wary for any goblins or,
other monsters that might be about, they found another friend.
Elbryan
sensed Symphony's approach long before the horse came in sight. The ranger
didn't know how the stallion had gotten out there, but then he thought of a
certain elf, a stubborn and mischievous elf that had never learned to accept an
order.
"Tuntun,"
Pony remarked, figuring the riddle.
Elbryan
managed a smile. He slid Tempest into its sheath, looped Hawkwing over his
back, then climbed up, offering his hand to Pony.
They rode
easily that day, picking their careful way, wary of enemies. That night, they
camped on a high plateau, which they agreed to be the most defensible position
in the area. No monsters presented themselves, no threat at all, but the choice
of the high plateau proved a good one, for in the southern sky, reaching about
the horizon like the arms of God, shone the blessed Halo.
Pony and
Elbryan rode fast with the break of dawn, south along the wild trails, the
weary and grieving victors, the new protectors of the holy stones.