Wolf Who Rules-ARC
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A New Breed of Adventure!
Tinker: just a quick-witted girl from Pittsburgh – who
happens to be responsible for depositing high elves and her
hometown humans into a melting pot of magic. Now the
draconian oni seek to destroy the elves by breeding human git
to do their evil bidding. But half-breeds who are half-human
may not be the slaves the oni imagined. The revolt is on! Its
leader? A certain newly-minted elven princess from Pittsburgh, PA
, by the name of Tinker.
The thrilling sequel to Tinker by Wen Spencer, winner
of the 2003 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer.
“Wit and intelligence… Buffy fans should
find a lot to like in [Spencer’s] resourceful
heroine.”
— Publishers Weekly
Cover art by Kurt
Miller
|
Hardcover
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events
portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to
real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
First printing, April 2006
Distributed by Simon & Schuster 1230
Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY
10020
Printed in the United
States of America
|
ISBN-10: 1-4165-2055-4 ISBN-13:
978-1-4165-2055-9
Copyright 2006 by & Wen Spencer
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original Baen Publishing
Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY
10471
http://www.baen.com
Electronic version by WebWrights
http://www.webwrights.com
|
To Ann Cecil, In many ways, elf-like.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Greg Armstrong, David Brukman, Ann Cecil,
Gail Brookhart, Kevin Hayes, Nancy Janda, Kendall
Jung, Don Kosak, June Drexler Robertson, John
Schmidt, Linda Sprinkle, Diane Turnshek, Andi Ward,
and Joy Whitfield
Baen Books by
Wen Spencer
Tinker
Wolf Who Rules
|
Wolf Who Rules-
ARC
Table of Contents
Prologue: Cup Of Tears
Chapter 1: Ghost Lands
Chapter 2: Go Ask Alice
Chapter 3: Nuts And Bolts
Chapter 4: On Gossamer Death
Chapter 5: Tree That Walks
Chapter 6: Lively Maple Flavor
Chapter 7: Things Better Left Buried
Chapter 8: Calling The Wind
Chapter 9: True Flame
Chapter 10: Storm Warnings
Chapter 11: Paper Scissors Stone
Chapter 12: Tears On Stone
Chapter 13: Ignore That Man Behind The Curtain
Chapter 14: A Parting Of Ways
Chapter 15: Sticks And Stones
Chapter 16: Little Monkey Brain
Chapter 17: A Murder Of Crows
Chapter 18: Seek You
Chapter 19: Snakes, Snails & Puppy-Dog Tails
Chapter 20: Follow The Yellow Brick Road
Chapter 21: No Place Like Home
Chapter 22: End Of The Rainbow
Chapter 23: Peace
Epilogue: Cup Of Joys
Prologue: Cup Of Tears
Elves may live forever, but their memories did not. Every
elfin child is taught that any special memory has to be polished
bright and carefully stored away at the end of a day, else it will
slip away and soon be forgotten.
Wolf Who Rules Wind, Viceroy of the Westernlands and the
human city of Pittsburgh
, thought about this as he settled before the altar of
Nheoya, god of longevity. It was one more thing he would have
to teach his new domi, Tinker. While clever beyond
measure, she had spent her childhood as a human. He had only
transformed her genetically into an elf; she lacked the hundred
years of experience that all other adult elves lived through.
Wolf lit the candle of memory, clapped to call the god's
attention to him and bestowed his gift of silver on the altar.
Normally he would wait to reach perfect calmness before starting
the ceremony, but he didn't have time. He'd spent most of the last
two days rescuing his domi, fighting her oni captors and
discovering how and why they had kidnapped her away. In truth,
he should be focusing on his many responsibilities, but the fact
that his domi had been restored to him on the eve of
Memory made him feel as it was important to observe the ritual.
He picked up the cup of tears. As a child, he couldn't
understand why anyone would want to cling to bad memories. It
had taken the royal court, with all its petty betrayals, to teach him
the importance of bitterness; you needed to remember your
mistakes to learn from them. For the first time, however, he did
not dwell on those affairs of the heart. They all seemed minor
now. His assistant, Sparrow Lifted by Wind, had taught him the
true meaning of treachery.
He replayed now all her betrayals, slowly drinking down the
warm salt water. He did not know when she started working with
the oni, perhaps as early as the first day the human's orbital
hyperphase gate shifted Pittsburgh
to Elfhome. He knew for sure that she'd spent the last
few weeks subtly detouring him away from the oni compound.
She arranged for his blade brother Little Horse to be alone, so the
oni could kidnap him and use him as a whipping boy. So many
lies and deceptions! Wolf remembered the blank look on her face
as she talked on her cell phone on that last day. He knew now the
call was from the oni noble, Lord Tomtom, alerting her that
Tinker and Little Horse had escaped. What excuse had she used
to slip away in order to intercept them? Oh yes, a member of the
clan needed someone to mediate between them and the
Pittsburgh Police. He had thanked her for sparing him from such
small responsibilities so he could focus on finding the two
people most important to him. Too bad Little Horse gave her
such a clean death.
Dawn was breaking, and the cup of tears was drained, so he
set aside his bitter memories. As light spilled into the temple, he
lifted the cup of joys.
Normally he would dwell hours on his happy childhood in
his parents household, and then, with a few exceptions, skip over
all the lonely years he spent at court, and start again as he built
his own household and settled the Westernlands. He did not have
time today. In celebration of their safety, he thought only of
Tinker and Little Horse.
Sipping his honeyed tea, he remembered Little Horse's birth
and childhood, how he grew in leaps and bounds between Wolf's
visits back home, until he was old enough to be part of Wolf's
household. He brought with him the quiet affection that Wolf
missed from his parent's home. Bitterness at Sparrow tried to
crowd in, but Wolf ignored the temptation to dwell on those
thoughts. He had only a short time left, and he wasn't going to
waste it on her.
He turned his thoughts to Tinker. A human, raised on
Elfhome, she was a delightful mix of human sensibility steeped
in elfin culture. They had met once years ago, when she saved
him from a saurus. She saved him again from a recent oni
assassination attempt. The days afterwards, as she struggled to
keep him alive, she proved her intelligence, leadership,
compassion, and fortitude. Once he realized that she was
everything that he wanted in a domi, it was as if
floodgates had opened in his heart, letting loose a flood of
emotions he hadn't suspected himself capable of. Never had he
wanted so much to protect another person. The very humanity
that he loved in her made her butterfly fragile. The only way to
keep her brightness shining was to make her an elf. At the time,
he regretted the necessity, but no longer. As a human, Tinker
would have either been taken away from the home she loved by
the NSA, or she wouldn't have survived Sparrow's betrayal. If he
had any regrets it was trusting Sparrow and underestimating the
oni.
Much as he'd like to continue dwelling on the good
memories of his beloved, there was too much to do. Reluctantly,
Wolf Who Rules blew out the candle, stood, and bowed to the
god.
The oni had forced his domi into building a gateway
between their world and the neighborhood of Turtle Creek. Since
the oni were gaining access to Earth (and ultimately Elfhome)
via the orbital hyperphase gate – Tinker used her gate to
destroy the one in orbit. Unfortunately there were side effects not
even his beloved could explain. Pittsburgh
was now stuck on Elfhome. Turtle Creek had melted
into liquid confusion. And something, most likely the orbital
gate, had fallen from the sky like shooting stars. It left them with
no way to return the humans to Earth, and an unknown number
of oni among them.
Chapter 1: Ghost Lands
There were some mistakes that "Oops" just didn't cover.
Tinker stood on the
George
Westinghouse
Bridge
. Behind her was
Pittsburgh
and its sixty-thousand humans now permanently
stranded on Elfhome. Below her, lay the mystery that at one time
had been Turtle Creek. A blue haze filled the valley; the air
shimmered with odd distortions. The land itself was a
kaleidoscope of possibilities—elfin forest, oni houses, the
Westinghouse Air Brake Plant – fractured pieces of
various dimensions all jumbled together. And it was all her fault.
Color had been leached from the valley, except for the faint
blue taint, making the features seem insubstantial. Perhaps the
area was too unstable to reflect all spectrums of light –
or maybe the full spectra of light weren't able to pass through
– the – the – she lacked a name for it.
Discontinuity?
Tinker decided that was as good a name as any.
"What are these
Ghostlands?" asked her elfin
bodyguard, Pony. He'd spoken in low Elvish. "Ghostlands" had
been in English, though, meaning a human had coined the term.
Certainly the phrase fit the ghostly look of the valley.
So maybe Discontinuity wasn't the best name for it.
A foot taller, Pony was a comforting wall of heavily-armed
and magically-shielded muscle. His real name in Elvish was
Waetata-watarou-tukaenrou-bo-taeli, which meant roughly
Galloping Storm Horse on Wind. His elfin friends and family
called him Little Horse, or
tukaenrou-tiki, which still
was a mouthful. He'd given her his English nickname to use
when they met; it wasn't until recently that she realized it was his
first act of friendship.
"I don't know what's happening here." Tinker ran a hand
through her short brown hair, grabbed a handful and tugged,
temptation to pull it out running high. "I set up a resonance
between the gate I built and the one in orbit. They were supposed
to shake each other apart. They did."
At least, she was fairly sure that they had. Something had
fallen out of the sky that night in a fiery display. Since there were
only a handful of small satellites in Elfhome's orbit, it was fairly
safe bet that she somehow yanked the hyperphase gate out Earth's
orbit.
"This was – unexpected." She meant all of it. The
orbital gate reduced to so much space debris and burnt ash on the
ground. Turtle Creek turned into Ghostlands.
Pittsburgh
stuck on Elfhome.
Even "sorry" didn't seem adequate.
And what had happened to the oni army on Onihida, waiting
to invade Elfhome through her gate? To the oni disguised as
humans that worked on the gate with her? And Riki, the tengu
who had betrayed her?
"Is it going to – get better?" Pony asked.
"I think so." Tinker sighed, releasing her hair. "I can't
imagine it staying in this unstable state." At least she hoped so.
"The second law of thermodynamics and all that."
Pony grunted a slight optimistic sound, as if he was full of
confidence in her intelligence and problem solving. Sometimes
his trust in her was intimidating.
"I want to get closer." Tinker scanned the neighboring
hillsides, looking for a safe way down to the valley's floor. In
Pittsburgh
, nothing was as straightforward as it appeared. This
area was mostly abandoned – probably with help from
the oni to keep people away from their secret compound. The
arcing line of the Rim, marking where
Pittsburgh
ended and Elfhome proper began, was defused by
advancing elfin forest. Ironwood saplings mixed with jagger
bushes – elfin trees colliding with earth weed –
to form a dense impenetrable thicket. "Let's find a way down."
"Is that wise,
domi?"
"We'll be careful."
She expected more of an argument, but he clicked his tongue
in an elfin shrug.
Pony leaned out over the bridge's railing, the spells tattooed
down his arms in designs like Celtic knots—done in Wind
Clan blue—rippled as muscle moved under skin. The hot
wind played with tendrils of glossy black hair that come loose
from his braid. Dressed in his usual wyvern-scaled chest armor,
black leather pants and gleaming knee boots, Pony seemed
oblivious to the mid-August heat. He looked as strong and
healthy as ever. During their escape, the oni nearly killed him.
She took some comfort that he was the one thing that she hadn't
totally messed up.
As they recuperated, she'd endured an endless parade of
visitors between bouts of drugged sleep, which gave the entire
experience a surreal nightmare feel. Everyone had brought gifts
and stories of Turtle Creek, until her hospice room and curiosity
overflowed.
Thanks to her new elfin regenerative abilities, she healed far
faster than when she was a human; she awoke this morning
feeling good enough to explore. Much to her dismay, Pony
insisted on bringing four more
sekasha for a full Hand.
Yeah, yeah, it was wise, considering they had no clue how
many oni survived the meltdown of Turtle Creek. She was
getting claustrophobic, though, from always having hordes of
people keeping watch over her; first the elves, then the oni, and
now back to the elves. When she ran her scrap yard –
months ago – a lifetime ago—she used to go days
without seeing anyone but her cousin Oilcan.
As Viceroy, her husband Wolf Who Rules Wind, or
Windwolf, held twenty
sekasha; Pony picked her favorite
four out of that twenty to make up a hand. The outlandish
Stormsong – her rebel short hair currently dyed blue
– was acting as a Shield with Pony. Annoyingly, though,
there seemed to be some secret
sekasha rule –
only one Shield could have a personality at any time. Stormsong
stood a few feet off, silent and watching, in full bodyguard mode
while Pony talked to Tinker. It would have been easier to pretend
that the
sekasha weren't guarding over her if they weren't
so obviously 'working.'
The bridge secured, the other three
sekasha were
being Blades and scouting the area. Pony signaled them now
using the
sekasha's hand gestures called blade talk.
Rainlily, senior of the Blades, acknowledged – Tinker
recognized that much by now – and signaled something
more.
"What did she say?" Tinker really had to get these guys
radios. She hated having to ask what was going on; until recently,
she always knew more than everyone else.
"They found something you should see."
* * *
The police had strung yellow tape across the street in an
attempt to cordon off the valley; it rustled ominously in a stiff
breeze. Ducking under the tape, Tinker and her Shields joined the
others. The one personality rule extended to the Blades; only
Rainlily got to talk. Cloudwalker and Little Egret moved off,
searching the area for possible threats.
"We found this in the middle of the road," Rainlily held out
a bulky white, waterproof envelope. "Forgiveness, we had to
check it for traps."
The envelope was addressed with all possible renditions of
her name: Alexander Graham Bell, 'Tinker' written in English,
and finally Elvish runes of 'Tinker of the Wind Clan.' The
sekasha had already slit it open to examine the contents and
replaced them. Tinker tented open the envelope and peered inside;
it held an old mp3 player and a note written in English.
"I have great remorse for what I did. I'm sorry for hurting you
both. I wish there had been another way. Riki
Shoji."
"Yeah, right." Tinker scoffed and crumpled up the note and
flung it away. "Like that makes everything okay, you damn
crow."
She wanted to throw the mp3 player too, but it wasn't hers.
Oilcan had loaned it to Riki. The month she'd been at Aum
Renau, Oilcan and Riki became friends. Or at least, Oilcan
thought they were friends, just the same as he thought they were
both humans. Riki, though, was a lying oni spy, complete with
bird-feet and magically retractable crow wings. He'd wormed his
way into their lives just to kidnap Tinker. She doubted that
Oilcan would want the player back now that he knew the truth; it
would be a permanent reminder that Oilcan's trust nearly cost
Tinker her life. But it wasn't her right to decide for him.
She jammed the player into the deepest pocket of her
carpenter's jeans. "Let's go."
Rage smoldered inside her until they had worked their way
down to the discontinuity. The mystery of the Ghostlands
deepened, drowning out her anger. The edge of the blue seemed
uneven at first, but then, as she crouched down to eye it closely,
she realized that the effect "pooled" like water, and that the
ragged edge was due to the elevation of the land – like
the edge of a pond. Despite the August heat, ice gathered in the
shadows. This close, she could hear a weird white noise, not
unlike the gurgle of a river.
She found a long stick and prodded at the blue-shaded earth;
it slowly gave like thick mud. She moved along the "shore"
testing the shattered pieces of three worlds within reach of her
stick. Earth fire hydrant. Onihida building. Elfhome ironwood
tree. While they looked solid, everything within the zone of
destruction was actually insubstantial, giving under the firm poke
of her stick.
Pony stiffened with alarm when – after examining
the stick for damage done to it and finding it as sound as before
– she reached her hand out over the line.
Oddly, there was a resistance in the air over the land
– as if Tinker was holding her hand out the window of a
moving car. The air grew cooler as she lowered her hand. It was
so very creepy that she had to steel herself to actually touch the
dirt.
It was like plunging her bare hand into snow. Bitterly cold,
the dirt gave under her fingertips. Within seconds, the chill was
painful. She jerked her hand back.
"Domi?" Pony moved closer to her.
"I'm fine." Tinker cupped her left hand around her right. As
she stood, blowing warmth onto her cold-reddened fingers, she
gazed out onto the ghost lands. She could feel magic on her new
domana senses, but normally – like strong
electrical currents—heat accompanied magic. Was the
'shift' responsible for the cold? The presence of magic, however,
would explain why the area was still unstable –
sustaining whatever reaction the gate's destruction created. If her
theory was right, once the ambient magic was depleted, the effect
would collapse and the area would revert back to solid land. The
only question was the rate of decay.
Pony picked up a stone and skipped it out across the
disturbance. Faint ripples formed where the stone struck. After
kissing 'dirt' three times, the stone stopped about thirty feet in.
For a minute it sat on the surface and then, slowly but
perceivably, it started to sink.
Pony made a small puzzled noise. "Why isn't everything
sinking?"
"I think – because they're all in the same space
– which isn't quite here but isn't really someplace else
– or maybe they're everywhere at once. The trees are
stable, because to them, the earth underneath them is as
stable as they are."
"Like ice on water?"
"Hmm." The analogy would serve, since she wasn't sure if
she was right. They worked their way around the edge, the hilly
terrain making it difficult. At first they found sections of paved
road or cut through abandoned buildings, which made the going
easier. Eventually, though, they'd worked their way out of the
transferred Pittsburgh
area and into Elfhome proper.
On the bank of a creek, frozen solid where it overlapped the
affected area, they found a dead black willow tree, lying on its
side, and wide track of churned dirt were another willow had
stalked northward.
Pony scanned the dim elfin woods for the carnivorous tree.
"We must take care. It is probably still nearby; they don't move
fast."
"I wonder what killed it." Tinker poked at the splayed root
legs still partly inside the discontinuity. Frost like freezer burn
dusted the wide, sturdy trunk. Otherwise it seemed undamaged;
the soft mud and thick brush of the creek bank had cushioned its
fall so none of its branches or tangle arms had been broken. "Lain
would love an intact tree." The xenobiologist often complained
that the only specimens she ever could examine were the non-
ambulatory seedlings or mature trees blown to pieces to render it
harmless. "I wish I could get it to her somehow."
The tracks of both trees, Tinker noticed, started in the
Ghostlands. Had the willow been clear of the discontinuity at the
time of the explosion – or had the tree died after reaching
stable ground?
"Let me borrow one of your knives." Tinker used the knife
Pony handed her to score an ironwood sapling. "I want to be able
to track the rate of decay. Maybe there's a way I could accelerate
it."
"A slash for every one of your feet the sapling stands from
the ghost lands?" Pony guessed her system.
"Yeah." She was going to move on to the next tree but he
held out his hand for his knife. "What?"
"I would rather you stay back as much as possible from the
edge." He waited with the grinding power of glaciers for her to
hand back his knife. "How do you feel, domi?"
Ah, the source of his sudden protectiveness. It was going to
be a while before she could live down overestimating herself the
night of the fighting. Instead of going quietly to the hospice,
she'd roamed about, made love, and did all sorts of
silliness—and of course, fell flat on her face later. It
probably occurred to him that if she nose-dived again, she would
end up in the Ghostlands.
"I'm fine," she reassured him.
"You look tired." He slashed the next sapling, and she had to
admit he actually made cleaner, easier to see marks than she did,
robbing her of all chance to quibble with him.
She made a rude noise. Actually, she was exhausted
– nightmares had disrupted her sleep for the last two
days. But she didn't want to admit that; the sekasha might
gang up on her and drag her back to the hospice. That was the
problem with bringing five of them – it was much harder
to bully them en masse – especially since they were all a
foot taller than her. Sometimes she really hated being five foot
nothing. Standing with them was like being surrounded by
heavily armed trees. Even now Stormsong was eyeing her
closely.
"I'm just – thinking." She mimed what she hoped
looked like deep thought. "This is very perplexing."
Pony bought it, but he trusted her, perhaps more than he
should. Stormsong seemed unconvinced, but said nothing. They
moved on, marking saplings.
* * *
With an unknown number of oni scattered through the forest
and hidden disguised among the human population of Pittsburgh,
Wolf did not want to be dealing with the invasion of his
domi's privacy, but it had to be stopped before the Queen's
representative arrived in Pittsburgh. Since all requests through
human channels failed, it was time to take the matter into his
own hands.
Wolf stalked through the broken front door of the
photographer's house, his annoyance growing into anger.
Unfortunately, the photographer – paparazzi was the
correct English word for him, but Wolf was not sure how to
decline the word out—in question was determined to
make things as difficult as possible.
Over the last two weeks, Wolf's people had worked through
a series of false names and addresses to arrive at a narrow row
house close to the Rim in Oakland
. The houses to either side had been converted into
businesses, due to their proximately to the enclaves. While the
racial mix of the street was varied, the next door neighbors were
Chinese. The owners had watched nervously as Windwolf broke
down the photographer's door, but made no move to interfere.
Judging by their remarks to each other in Mandarin, neither did
they know that Wolf could speak Mandarin in addition to
English, nor were they surprised by his presence – they
seemed to think the photographer was receiving his due.
Inside the house, Wolf was starting to understand why.
One long narrow room took up most of the first floor
beyond the shattered door. Filth dulled the wood floors and
smudged the once white walls to an uneven gray. On the right
wall, at odds with the grubby state of the house, was video
wallpaper showing recorded images of Wolf's domi,
Tinker. The film loop had been taken a month ago, showing a
carefree Tinker laughing with the five female sekasha of
Wolf's household. The image had been carefully doctored and
scaled so that it gave the illusion that one gazed out a large
window overlooking the private garden courtyard of
Poppymeadow's enclave. Obviously feeling safe from prying
eyes, Tinker lounged in her nightgown, revealing all her natural
sexuality.
Wolf had seen the still pictures of Tinker in a digital
magazine but hadn't realized that there was more. Judging by the
stacks of cardboard boxes, there was much more. He flicked
open the nearest box and found DVDs titled: Princess Gone
Wild, Uncensored.
"Where is he?" Wolf growled to his First, Wraith Arrow.
Wraith tilted his head slightly upward to indicate upstairs.
"There's more."
At the top of the creaking wooden stairs, there was a large
room stark of furniture. A camouflage screen covered the lone
window, projecting a blank brick wall to the outside world. A
camera on a tripod peered through a slit in the screen, trained
down at the enclaves. This room's video wallpaper replayed
images captured this morning, a somber Tinker sitting alone
under the peach trees, dappled sunlight moving over her.
Wolf moved the camera and device's artificial intelligence
shrank Tinker's image into one corner and went to live images as
the zoom lens played over Poppymeadow's enclave where Wolf's
household was living. Not only did the balcony provide a clear
view over the high stone demesne wall, but into the windows of
all the buildings, from the main hall to the coach house. One of
Poppymeadow's staff was changing linen in a guest wing
bedroom; the camera automatically recognized the humanoid
form and adjusted the focus until she filled the wall. The window
was open, and microphone picked up her humming.
"I haven't done anything illegal," a man was saying in the
next room in English. "I know my rights! I'm protected by the
treaty."
Wolf stalked into the last room. His
sekasha had
broken down the door to get in. The only piece of furniture was
an unmade bed that reeked of old sweat and spent sex. His
sekasha had a small rat of a man pinned against the far wall.
On the wall, images of Wolf's
domi moved through
their bedroom at Poppymeadow's, languishingly stripping out of
her clothes. "You want to do it?" She asked huskily. Wolf could
remember the day, had replayed it in his mind again and again as
his last memory of her when he thought he had lost her. "Come
on, we have time."
She dropped the last piece of clothing on the floor, and the
camera zoomed in tighter to play down over her body. Wolf
snarled out the command for the winds and slammed its power
into the wall. The wall boomed, the house shuddering at the
impact, and the wallpaper went black. Tinker's voice, however,
continued with a soft moan of delight.
"Hey! Hey!" the man cried in English. "Do you have any idea
how expensive that is? You can't just smash in here and break my
stuff. I have rights."
"You had rights. They've been revoked." Wolf returned to
the balcony and knocked the camera from its tripod. The
wallpaper showed a somersault of confusion as the camera
flipped end over end. When it struck pavement, it shattered into
small unrecognizable pieces, and the wallpaper flickered back to
the previously recorded loop of Tinker sitting in the garden.
"Evacuate the area," Wolf ordered in low Elvish. "I'm razing
these buildings."
Apparently the man understood Elvish, because he yelped
out, "What? You can't do that! I've called the police! You can't
do this! This is
Pittsburgh
! I have rights!"
As if summoned by his words, a commotion downstairs
announced the arrival of the Pittsburgh Police.
"Police, freeze." A male voice barked in English. "Put down
the weapons."
Wolf felt the
sekasha downstairs activate their
shields, blooms of magic against his awareness. Bladebite was
saying something low and fast in High Elvish.
"
Naekanain," Someone cried in badly accented
Elvish—
I do not understand – while the
first speaker repeated in English, "Put down the weapons!"
Wolf cursed. Apparently the police officers didn't speak
Elvish and his
sekasha didn't speak English. Wolf called
the winds and wrapped them about him before going to the top of
the stairs.
There were two dark blue uniformed policemen crouched in
the front door, keeping pistols leveled at the
sekasha who
had their
ejae drawn. The officers looked human but with
oni, appearances could be deceiving. Both were tall enough to be
oni warriors. The disguised warriors favored red hair while one
policeman was pale blonde and the other dark brown. The blonde
motioned with his left hand, as if trying to keep both his partner
and the elves from acting.
""
Naekanain," The blonde repeated, and then added.
"
Pavuyau Ruve. Czernowski, just chill. They're the
viceroy's personal guard."
"I know who the fuck they are, Bowman."
"If you know that," Wolf said, "Then you know that they
have a right to go where I want them to go, and do what I want
them to do."
Bowman flicked a look up at him and then returned his
focus on the
sekasha. "Viceroy, have them put down their
weapons."
"They will only when you do," Wolf said. "If you have not
forgotten, we are at war."
"But not with us," Bowman growled.
Czernowski scoffed, and it saddened Wolf that he was closer
to the mark.
"The oni have been living in
Pittsburgh
as disguised humans for years," Wolf said. "Until
we're sure you're not oni, we must treat you as if you were.
Lower your weapons."
Bowman considered the request for a minute, eyeing the
sekasha as if he was considering how likely it was that he
and his partner could overwhelm Wolf's guard. Wolf wasn't sure
if Bowman's hesitation was born from over estimating his own
abilities, or total ignorance of the
sekasha's.
Finally, Bowman made a show of cautiously holstering his
pistol. "Come on, Czernowski. Put it away."
The other policeman seemed familiar, although Wolf wasn't
sure how; he rarely interacted with the Pittsburgh Police. Wolf
studied the two men. Unlike elves, where one could normally
guess a person's clan, humans needed badges and patches to tell
themselves apart. The officers' dark blue uniforms had shoulder
patches and gold badges identifying them as Pittsburgh Police.
Bowman's brass nameplate read: B. Pedersen. Czernowski's
nameplate was unhelpful, giving only a first initial of "N."
"I know you," Wolf said to Czernowski.
"I would hope so," The officer said. "You took the woman
that was going to be my wife away from me. You ripped her right
out of her species. You might think you've won, but I'm getting
her back."
Wolf recognized him then—this was Tinker's Nathan,
who bristled at him when Wolf collected his
domi from
the Faire. The uniform had thrown Wolf; he hadn't realized the
man was a police officer. At the Faire, Czernowski had acted like
a dog guarding a bone. Even though Tinker had stated over and
over again that she was leaving with Wolf, Czernowski had clung
to her, refusing to let her leave.
"Tinker is not a thing to be stolen away," Wolf told the man.
"I did not
take her. She chose me, not you. She is my
domi now."
"I've seen the video tape," Nathan indicated the open box of
DVDs. "I know what she is, but I don't care. I still love her, and
I'm going to get her back."
"Who gives a fuck?" The thrice damned photographer
shouted behind Wolf. "It doesn't give these pointed ear royalist
freaks the right to break down my door and trash my stuff. I'm a
tax paying American! They can't—"
There was a loud thud as he was slammed up against his
broken wall to silence him.
"Sir, can you step aside?" Bowman started cautiously
upstairs before Wolf answered.
Wolf stepped back to make way for the two policemen.
The policemen took in the open window, the recording of
Tinker in the garden, the smashed down door, the broken
wallpaper now stained with blood, and the broken-nosed
paparazzi in Dark Harvest's hold.
"It's about time," the photographer cried. "Get these goons
off me!"
"Please step away from him." Bowman told Harvest, his
hand dropping down to rest on his pistol. He repeated the order
in bad Elvish. "
Naeba Kiyau."
"He's to be detained." Wolf wanted it clear what was to be
done with the photographer before relinquishing control of him.
"And these buildings evacuated so I can demolish them."
"You can't do that." Bowman pulled out a pair of handcuffs.
"According to the treaty..."
"The treaty is now null and void. I am now the law in
Pittsburgh
, and I say that this man is to be detained indefinitely
and these buildings will be demolished."
"The fuck you are," Czernowski spat the words. "In Pittsburgh
we're the law and you're guilty of breaking and
entering, assault and battery, and I'm sure I can think of a few
more."
Czernowski reached for Wolf's arm and instantly had three
swords at his throat.
"No." Wolf shouted to keep the police from being killed.
Into the silence that suddenly filled the house, Tinker's
recorded voice groaned, "Oh gods, yes, right there, oh, that's so
good."
Bowman caught Czernowski as the policeman started to
surge forward with a growl. "Czernowski!" Bowman slammed
him against the wall. "Just deal with it! He's rich and powerful
and she's fucking him. What part of this does not make sense to
you? He drives a Rolls Royce and all the elves in Pittsburgh
grovel at his feet. You think any bitch would pick a
stupid Pole like you when she could have him?"
"He could have had anyone. She was mine."
"The fuck she was." Bowman growled. "If you'd scored once
with her, all the bookies in
Pittsburgh
would know. You were always a long shot in the
betting pool, Nathan. You were too stupid for her – and
too dumb to realize that."
Czernowski glared at his partner, face darkening, but he
stopped struggling to stand panting with his anger.
Bowman watched his partner for a minute before asking,
"Are we good now?"
Czernowski nodded and flinched as Tinker's recorded voice
gave a soft wordless moan of delight.
Bowman crossed to a section of the broken wall and pressed
something and the sound stopped. "Viceroy, none of us like this
any more than you do, but under international law, as of five
years ago, this scumbag is within his rights to make this video."
"He's under elfin law now, and what he has done is
unforgivable."
"Your people don't have technology capable of this."
Bowman waved a hand at the wallpaper. "So you don't have laws
to govern capturing digital images."
Wolf scoffed at the typical human sidestepping. "Why do
humans nitpick justice to pieces? Can't you see that you've frayed
it apart until it doesn't hold anything? There is right and then
there is wrong. This is wrong."
"This isn't my place to decide, Viceroy. I'm just a cop. I only
know human law, and as far as I last heard, human law still
applies."
"The treaty says that any human left on Elfhome during
Shutdown falls under elfin rule. The gate in orbit has failed
– it is currently and always will be – Shutdown."
Bowman wiped the expression off his face. "Until my
superiors confirm this, I have to continue to function with
standard protocol and I can't arrest this man."
"Then I'll have him executed."
"I can put him in protective custody," Bowman said.
"As long as protective custody means a small cell without a
window, I'll agree to that," Wolf said.
"We'll see what we can do." Bowman moved to handcuff the
photographer.
Wolf felt a sudden deep yet oddly distanced vibration, as if a
bowstring had been drawn and released to thrum against his
awareness. He recognized it – someone nearby was
tapping the power of the Wind Clan Spell Stone. Wolf thought
that he and Tinker were the only Wind Clan domana in
Pittsburgh
– and he hadn't taught Tinker even the most
basic spells...
As the vibration continued, an endless drawing of power
from the stones, cold certainty filled him. It could only be Tinker.
* * *
Tinker and her sekasha had neared the far side of the
Ghostlands, crossing once again into
Pittsburgh
but on the opposite side of the valley. The road
climbed the steep hill in a series of sharp curves. As they crossed
the cracked pavement, Stormsong laughed and pointed out a
yellow warning street sign. It depicted a truck about to tip over as
it made the sharp turn – a common sight in
Pittsburgh
– but someone had added words to the
pictograph.
"What does it say?" Pony asked.
"Watch for Acrobatic Trucks." Stormsong translated the
English words to Elvish.
The others laughed and moved on, scanning the mixed
woods.
"You speak English?" Tinker fell into step with Stormsong.
"Fuckin' A!" Stormsong said with the correct scornful tone
that such a stupid question would be posed.
Tinker tripped and nearly fell in surprise. Stormsong caught
Tinker by the arm and warned her to be careful with a look. Most
of Tinker's time with Windwolf's sekasha had been spent
practicing her High Elvish, a stunningly polite language.
Stormsong had just dropped a mask woven out of words.
"For the last twenty-some years, I pulled every shift I could
to stay in Pittsburgh
—" Stormsong continued. "–even if it
meant bowing to that that stuck-up bitch, Sparrow."
"Why?" Tinker was still reeling. Many elves first learned
English in England
when Shakespeare still lived and kept the
lilting accent even if they modernized their sentence structure and
word choice. Stormsong spoke true Pitsupavute,
sounding like a native.
"I like humans." Stormsong stepped over a fallen tree in one
long stride and paused to offer a hand to Tinker – the
automatic politeness now seemed jarringly out of place. "They
don't give a fuck what everyone else thinks. If they want
something that's right for them, they don't worry about what the
rest of the fucking world thinks."
The warrior's bitterness surprised Tinker. "What do you
want?"
"I had doubts about being a sekasha." She shrugged
like a human, lifting one shoulder, instead of clicking her tongue
like an elf would. "Not any more. Windwolf gave me a year to
get my head screwed on right. I like being sekasha. I do
have – as the humans say – issues."
That explained the short blue hair and the slight rebel air
about her.
Stormsong suddenly spun to the left, pushing Tinker behind
her even as she shouted the guttural command to activate her
magical shields. Magic surged through the blue tattoos on her
arms and flared into a shimmering blue that encompassed her
body. Stormsong drew her ironwood sword and crouched into
readiness.
Instantly other sekasha activated their shields and
drew their swords as they pulled in tight around Tinker. They
scanned the area but there was nothing to see.
They were in the no-man's land of the Rim, where tall young
Ironwoods mixed with Earth woods and jagger bushes in a thick,
nearly impassable tangle. They stood on a deer trail, a path only
one person wide, meandering through the dense underbrush. For
a moment no one moved or spoke. Tinker realized that the birds
had gone silent; even they didn't want to draw the attention of
whatever spooked Stormsong.
Pony made a gesture with his left hand in blade talk.
"Something is going to attack," Stormsong whispered in
Elvish, once again becoming the sekasha. "Something
large. I'm not sure how soon."
"Yatanyai?" Pony whispered a word that Tinker
didn't recognize.
Stormsong nodded.
"What does she see?" Tinker whispered.
"What will be," Pony indicated that they should start back
the way they had come. "We're in a position of weakness. We
should retreat to —"
Something huge and sinuous as a snake flashed out of the
shadows. Tinker got the impression of scales, a wedge-shaped
head, and a mouth full of teeth before Pony leaped between her
and the monster. The creature struck Pony with a blow that
smashed him aside, his shields flashing as they absorbed the brunt
of the damage. It whipped toward Tinker, but Stormsong was
already in the way.
"Oh, no, you don't!" The female sekasha blocked a
savage bite at Tinker. "Get back, domi – you're
attracting it!"
A blur of motion, the beast knocked Stormsong down, biting
at her leg, her shield gleaming brilliant blue between its teeth.
The Blades swung their swords, shouting to distract the creature.
Releasing Stormsong, the creature leapt to perch high up the
trunk of an oak. As it paused there, Tinker saw it fully for the
first time.
It was long and lean, twelve feet from nose to tip of
whipping tail. Despite a shaggy mane, its hide looked like blood
red snake scales. Long necked and short legged, it was weirdly
proportioned; its head seemed almost too large for its body, with
a heavy jawed mouth filled with countless jagged teeth. Clinging
to the side of the tree with massive claws, it hissed at them,
showing the teeth.
Its mane lifted like a dog's hackles, and a haze shimmered to
life over the beast, like heat waves coming off hot asphalt. Tinker
could feel the presence of magic on her domana senses,
like static electricity prickling against the skin. The second blade,
Cloudwalker, fired his pistol. The bullets struck the haze
– making it flare at the point of impact – and
dropped to the ground, inert. Tinker felt the magic strengthen as
the kinetic energy of the bullet fed into the spell, fueling it.
"It's a shield!" Tinker cried out in warning. "Hitting it will
only make it stronger."
Stormsong got to her feet, biting back a cry of pain. "Go,
run, I'll hold it!"
Pony caught Tinker by her upper arm, and half carried her,
half dragged her through the thicket.
"No!" Tinker cried, knowing that if it weren't for her safety,
the others wouldn't abandon one of their own.
"Domi," Pony urging her to run faster. "If we can
not hit it, then we have no hope of killing it."
Tinker thought furiously. How do you hurt something you
can't hit but could bite you? Wait – maybe that was it!
She snatched the pistol from the holster at Pony's side and jerked
out of his hold. Here, under the tall ironwoods, the jagger
brushes had grown high, and animals had made low tunnel-like
trails through them. Ducking down, Tinker ran down a path, the
gun seeming huge in her hands, heading back toward the
wounded sekasha. The thorns tore at her bare arms and
hair.
"Tinker domi!" Pony cried behind her.
"Its shield doesn't cover its mouth!" she shouted back.
She burst into the clear to find Stormsong backed to a tree,
desperately parrying the animal's teeth and claws. It smashed
aside her sword and leapt, mouth open.
Tinker shouted for its attention, and pulled the gun's trigger.
She hadn't aimed at all, and the bullet whined into the
underbrush, missing everything.
As beast turned to face her, and Stormsong shouted
warning—a wordless cry of anger, pain and
dismay—Tinker realized the flaw in her plan. She would
need to shove the pistol into the creature's mouth before
shooting. "Oh fuck."
It was like being hit by a freight train. One moment the beast
was running at her and then everything become a wild tumble of
darkness and light, dead leaves, sharp teeth and blood. Everything
stopped moving with the creature pinning her to the ground with
one massive claw. Then it pulled—not on her skin
or muscle, but something deeper inside her, something
intangible, that she didn't even know existed. Magic flooded
through her – hot and powerful as electricity – a
seemingly endless torrent from someplace unknown to the
monster—and she was just the hapless conduit.
She had lost the gun in the wild tumble. She punched at its
head, trying to get it off her as the magic poured through her. The
massive jaws snapped down on her fist – and suddenly
the creature froze—teeth holding firm her hand, not yet
breaking skin. Its eyes widened, as if surprised to see her under it,
her hand in its mouth. She panted, scared now beyond words, as
the magic continued to thrum through her bones and skin. Her
hand seemed so very small inside the mouth of teeth.
A sword blade appeared over her, the tip pressing up against
the creature's shields, aimed at its right eye. The tip slid forward
slowly as if it was being pressed through concrete.
"Get off her," Pony growled, leaning his full weight onto his
sword, little by little driving the point through the shields.
"Now!"
For a moment, they seemed stuck in amber – the
monster, Pony, her – caught in place and motionless.
There came a high thrilling whistle from way up high, bursting
the amber. The creature released her hand and leapt backwards.
She scrambled wildly the other direction. Pony caught hold of
her, hugging her tight with his free hand, his shields spilling
down over her, encompassing her.
"Got her!" he cried, and backed away, the others closing
ranks around them.
The whistle blew again, so sharp and piercing a sound that
even the monster checked to looked upwards.
Someone stood on the
Westinghouse
Bridge
that spanned the valley, doll-small by the distance.
Against the summer blue sky, the person was only a dark
silhouette – too far way to see if he was man, elf or oni.
The whistle thrilled, and focused on the sound, Tinker realized
that it was two notes, close together, a shrill discord.
The monster shook its head as if the sound hurt and bounded
away, heading for the bridge, so fast it seemed it nearly teleported
from place to place.
The whistler spread out great black wings, resolving all
question of race. A tengu. The oni spies created by blending oni
with crows. Tinker could guess which one – Riki. What
she couldn't guess was why he had just saved them, or how.
"Domi." Pony eclipsed the escaping tengu and his
monstrous purser. He peering intently at her hands and then
tugged at her clothing, examining her closely. "You are hurt."
"I am?"
"Yes." He produced a white linen handkerchief that he
pressed to a painful area of her head. "You should sit."
She started to ask why, but sudden blackness rushed in, and
she started to fall.
Chapter 2: Go Ask Alice
Tinker fell a long time in darkness.
She found herself at the edge of the woods near Lain's
house, the great white domes of the Observatory gleaming in
moonlight. The ironwood forest stood solemn as a cathedral
before her. Something white flickered through the night woods,
brightness in humanoid form. Like a moth, Tinker moved toward
the light, entering the forest.
A woman darted ahead of her, wearing an elfin gown
shimmering as if formed of fiber optics tapped to a searchlight
– brightness weaving through the forest dimness. She
was so brilliant white that it hurt to look at her. A red ribbon
covered her eyes and trailed down the dress, blood red against the
white. On the ground, the ribbon snaked out into the distance.
It came to Tinker, knowledge seeping into her like oil into a
rag that she knew the woman and they were searching for
someone. In the distance was a thumping noise, like an axe biting
into wood.
"He knows the paths, the twisted way." The woman told
Tinker while they searched for this mystery person. "You have to
talk to him. He'll tell you how to go."
"We're looking in the wrong place," Tinker called.
"We fell down the hole and through the looking glass." The
woman cried back. "He's here! You only have to look!"
Tinker scanned the woods and saw a dark figure flitting
through the trees, keeping pace with them. It was delicate-boned
woman in a black mourning dress. A blindfold of black lace
veiled her eyes. Tears ran unchecked down her face. At her feet
were black hedgehogs, nosing about in the dead litter of the
forest floor. In the trees surrounding Black and the hedgehogs
was a multitude of crows. The birds flitted from limb to limb,
calling "Lost! Lost!" in harsh voices.
"Black knows all about him." Tinker said. "Why don't we
ask her?"
"She is lost in her grief," White breathed into Tinker's ear.
"There is no thread between you. She has no voice that you will
listen to."
The thumping noise came from the direction that they
needed to head, speeding up until it sounded like helicopter
rotors beating the air.
"Wait!" Tinker reached out to catch hold of White, to warn
her. She missed, grabbing air. "The queen is coming. You've
murdered time. It's always six o'clock now."
"We can't stand still!" White caught Tinker's hand and they
were flying low, like on a hoverbike, dodging trees, the ground
covered with a checkerboard design of black and white. "We have
to run as fast as we can to keep in the same place. Soon we won't
be able to run at all and then all will be lost!"
"Lost! Lost!" cried the crows and Black flew like a silent
shadow on Tinker's other side. They had left the hedgehogs
behind. The red ribbon of White's blindfold raced on ahead of
them, coiling like a snake.
"He eats the fruit of the tree that walks." White stopped
them at edge of a clearing. The ribbon coiled into the clearing
and vanished into the ground. "Follow the tree to the house of
ice and sip sweetly of the cream."
Feeling with blind fingers, White followed the ribbon, hand
over hand, out into the clearing. The bare forest floor was black,
and grew blacker still, until the woman was sheer white against
void with red thread wrapped around her fingers. Tinker took
hold of the thread and followed out into the darkness. Beyond the
edge of the clearing, she started to float as if weightless. Tinker
tried to grip tight to the red ribbon, but it was so thin that she lost
track of it and started to fall upwards. The woman caught hold of
her, pulling her close and wrapped the red thread tight around her
fingers, making a cat's cradle. "There, no matter what, you can
always find me with this."
Turning away, the woman pulled on the ribbon and pearls
started to pop out of the ground, strung on the thread. "It starts
with a pearl necklace."
Tinker was drifting upwards, faster and faster. Black and her
crows flew up to meet her in a rustle of wings, crying "lost, lost."
* * *
Tinker opened her eyes to summer sky framed by oak leaves.
Acorns clustered on the branches, nearly ready to fall. A cardinal
sung its rain song someplace overhead.
With a slight rustle, Pony leaned over her, bruised and
battered himself, worry in his eyes. "Domi, are you
well?"
Tinker blinked back tears. "Yes, I'm fine." She sat up, trying
to ignore the pain in her head. "How is everyone else?"
"Stormsong is hurt. We have called for help but we should
start for the hospice."
"Its eyes are open," Stormsong said from where she lay on
her side, a bloody bandage around the leg that the creature had
bitten. "It's not coming back."
"What the hell does that mean?" Tinker asked.
"It means what it means," Stormsong groaned.
"There is no sign of the beast." Rainlily added.
"Okay," Tinker said only because they seemed to be waiting
for her to say something. How did she end up in charge?
Almost in answer, a sudden roar of wind announced the
arrival of Wolf Who Rules Wind, head of the Wind Clan, also
known as her husband, Windwolf. Riding the winds with the
Wind Clan's magic, he flew down out the sky and landed on
barren no-man's-land of the Rim. Dressed in elfin splendor, his
duster of cobalt blue silk, hand-painted with a stylized white
wolf, whipped out behind him like a banner. He was beautiful in
the way only elves could be – tall, lean, and board
shouldered with a face full of elegant sharp lines. With a word
and gesture, he dismissed his magic. Released, the winds sighed
away.
Beauty, power and the ability to fly like superman—
what more could a girl want?
"Beloved," Windwolf knelt beside her and folded her into
his arms. "What happened? Are you hurt? I felt you tap the clan's
Spell Stones and pull a massive amount of power."
The 'stones' were granite slabs inscribed with spells located
on top of a vastly powerful ley line that the domana
accessed remotely via their genome. Until Windwolf unleashed
his rage on the oni, Tinker hadn't realized the power that the
stones represented. In one blinding flash of summoned
lightening, it suddenly became clear why the domana
ruled the other elfin castes. Somehow, the monster had tapped
funneled the power through her.
"Oh, is that what the fuck it did to me?" And with that, she
lost control of the tears she'd been keeping at bay. What was it
about him that made her feel so safe in a way not even Pony
could? She hugged him tightly, trusting he would make it right.
As she wallowed in the luxury of being sheltered by the only
force besides nature that seemed larger than herself, Windwolf
turned his attention Pony.
"Little Horse, what happened?" Windwolf's voice rumbled
in his chest under her head, like contained thunder. "Who is
anyone hurt?"
"We were attacked by a very large creature," Pony went on
to describe the fight in a few short sentences, ending with,
"Stormsong took the brunt of the damage."
"We need to get her to the hospice." Tinker pulled free of
Windwolf's hug, smeared the tears out of her eyes and started for
Stormsong. "The thing bit her in the leg."
Windwolf crossed to Stormsong in long strides, beating
Tinker to the sekasha's side. The forest floor was
annoyingly uneven; after stumbling slightly, Tinker slowed to
baby steps. Pony hovered protectively close as if he expected her
to pitch face first into the dead leaves. The big gray Rolls Royce
they'd left on the other side of the valley and an ambulance had
picked their way through the shattered streets to stop fifty odd
yards short of their location.
"Considering how fucked we were, I'm fine." Stormsong
slapped Windwolf's hands away from the bloody bandage on her
leg. "We didn't stop it – it just left."
Heat flushed over Tinker, and the sounds around her went
muffled, as if someone wrapped invisible wool around her head.
It was dawning on her that she'd been stupid and nearly got them
all killed. By returning to Stormsong, she'd pulled the other
sekasha back to a fight that they should have lost. She should
be dead right now. So fucking dead.
Stormsong glanced up at Tinker, frowned and murmured
something to Windwolf, giving him a slight push away from her.
Windwolf looked up at Tinker and stood to sweep her off her
feet and into his arms.
"Hey, I can walk!" Tinker cried.
"I know." He carried her toward the Rolls Royce. "I have
seen you do it."
Tinker sighed at the nuances lost in the translation. This was
how she ended up married to Windwolf – she accepted
his betrothal gift without realizing he was proposing to her.
"There is nothing wrong with my legs."
He eyed her bare legs draped over his arm. "No. There is not.
They are very nice legs."
She studied him. All told, they had spent very little time with
each other and she was still getting to know him. She was
beginning to suspect, though, that he had a very subtle but strong
sense of humor. "Are you teasing me?"
He said nothing but the corners of his eyes crinkled with a
suppressed smile.
She smacked him lightly in the shoulder for teasing her.
"You don't have to carry me!"
"But I like to."
"Windwolf," she whined.
He kissed her on her forehead. "You might think you are
well, but you are in truth pale and wobbly. You have done what
was needed. Let me care for you."
If she insisted on walking, she ran the risk of falling flat on
her face. What harm could letting him carry her, except to her
pride? Like so often since he charged into her life, Windwolf left
only bad choices for her to make in order to protect her sense of
free will – and she was too smart to choose stupidity.
Sighing, she lay her head on his shoulder and let him carry her.
He tucked her into the Rolls and slid in beside her. Pony got
into the front, alongside the sekasha who was driving.
She noticed that her T-shirt was shredded over her stomach.
Under the tattered material, five shallow claw marks cut across
her abdomen; barely breaking the skin, the wounds were already
crusted over with scabs. A fraction of an inch deeper, and she
would have been gutted. She started to shake.
"All is well, you are fine." Windwolf murmured, holding
her.
"I felt so helpless. There was nothing I could do to hurt it. I
wish I could do the things you do."
"You can. I gave you that ability when I made you a Wind
Clan domana."
"I know, I know, I have the genetic key to the Wind Clan
Spell Stones." Which was how the monster sucked power
through her. "What I don't know is how to use the Spell
Stones. I want to learn."
"I was wrong not to teach you earlier." He took her hand. "I
allow myself to be distracted from my duties to you at Aum
Renau; I should have started to teach you then."
"You'll teach me now?"
"Tomorrow we will start your lessons," he kissed her
knuckles. "You will also have to learn how to use a sword."
"Shooting practice with a gun would probably be more
useful."
"The sword is for your peers, not your enemies. Currently
you have the queen's protection. No one can call insult on you or
challenge you to a duel. But that protection will not last forever."
"Pfft, like random violence solves anything."
"True, it rarely does, but you need to know how to protect
yourself and your beholden."
She made another noise of disgust. "What you
elves—" she saw the look on his face and amended it
to— "we elves call civilized. Can I still have the gun?"
"Yes, beloved, you may have the gun too. I will find comfort
knowing you can defend yourself."
"Especially with a monster running around that sees me as
some kind of power drink." She winced at her tone – he
wasn't the one she was upset with.
"Reinforcements should be arriving soon, but until then
Pittsburgh
will not be safe."
"What reinforcements?"
"After you and Little Horse were kidnapped, I realized that
there were more oni in the area than Sparrow previously led me
to believe. I sent for reinforcements; the Queen is sending troops
via airship from Easternlands. They should arrive shortly.
Unfortunately, this will pull the Fire clan and the probably the
Stone clan into the fight – which is why I'm thinking of
you learning how to use a sword."
"Why is it a bad thing that other clans are going to help fight
the oni? Isn't this everyone's problem?"
"We hold only what we can protect." Windwolf squeezed
her hand; she wasn't sure if it was to comfort her or to seek
comfort for himself. "By admitting that we need help, we have
put our monopoly on Pittsburgh
at risk. The other clans might want part of the city for
services rendered in fixing this problem. The humans will fall
under someone else's rule."
"You've got to be kidding! Why?"
"Because we can not protect all of
Pittsburgh
from the oni. The Crown will mediate a
compromise."
"Couldn't your father—as head of the Wind clan
– have sent us help?"
"He has. He sent
domana to Aum Renau and the
other East Coast settlements. It is a great comfort to me to know
that they are protected. The
domana aren't that numerous,
and the clans that can help are limited to those who have spell
stones within range of
Pittsburgh
."
"This is all my fault," Tinker whispered.
"Hush, this battle is part of a war that started before even I
was born."
She snuggled against him, logic failing to squash the guilty
feeling inside of her. She was distracted, however, by something
very hard under her. "Do you have something in your pocket? Or
are you just happy to see me?"
"What? Oh, yes." Windwolf pulled a small fabric bundle out
of his pants pocket. "This is for you."
"What's this?" Tinker eyed it tentatively. Accepting a similar
package from Windwolf had indicated her acceptance of his
marriage proposal – when she didn't realize the
significance of his gift. She still had mixed feelings about being
married to Windwolf. As a lover, Windwolf was all that she
would want—warm, gentle, and caring wrapped in a sexy
body – and she loved him deeply.
It was the whole marriage thing – having someone
else's will and future joined to hers. They were building 'their
home' for 'their people' and someday, maybe, 'their children.'
Being the Viceroy's wife, too, came with more responsibilities
than she wanted; people were entrusting her with their lives. So
far, the good outweighed the bad – but with elves "till
death do us part" meant a very long time.
"Before the Queen summoned me from
Pittsburgh
, I ordered clothes and jewelry to be made for you. I
know that they are not of the style you might pick for yourself. It
is important, though, that you look your best in front of the
crown and the other clans."
"Okay." She pulled loose the bow and unwrapped the fabric.
Inside were four small velvet pouches with drawstring pulls. She
opened the first to the glitter of gems. "Oh!"
She gasped as she poured diamonds out into her palm. Over
a foot of necklace studded with pea-sized diamonds. "Oh my!
They're gorgeous!"
As she lifted them up, the afternoon sun prismed into a
million tiny rainbows.
"They will look lovely against your skin." Windwolf
dropped a kiss on her throat.
The second bag spilled rubies into her hand like fire, but as
she lifted up the strand, it reminded her of the red ribbon in her
dream. The third bag held a matching bracelet.
"They're beautiful," she said truthfully, but still put them
away.
The fourth bag held a pearl necklace. She couldn't keep the
dismay off her face.
"You don't like them?"
"I had a bad dream after the beast knocked me out. I was
looking for something in a forest with this woman. She had a
long red ribbon tied around her eyes and on the other end of it,
was a pearl necklace."
She'd wanted him to say "it was just a dream," but instead he
said, "Tell me all of your dream."
"Why?"
"Sometimes dreams are warnings. It is not wise to ignore
them."
So she said, "It was just a dream." How could he rebuke her
so easily with just his eyes? "I'm still me. I'm still mostly human
– not elf. I would know by now if I had the ability to see
the future."
"In elves it is carried by the female line; being that humans
and elves can interbreed with fertile results, we must be very
similar." He put away the pearl necklace. "It is the nature of
magic to splinter things down to possibilities. Even humans
without magic can see where the splintering will happen, and the
possible outcomes. Humans call it an 'educated guess.' In the
past, where magic would leak through natural gates from
Elfhome to Earth, there were often temples with oracles
predicting the future."
"So it doesn't matter if I'm mostly human or partly elf?"
"Tell me your dream." Windwolf ran the back of his hand
lightly down her cheek.
So she described what she could remember. "Both women
are someone I know but not really. Movie stars or something like
that – I've only seen pictures of them."
"Both women wore blindfolds? The
intanyei seyosa
wears one when she's predicting. It helps block out things that
would distract her from her visions, but also it is a badge of her
office."
Tinker remembered then her one encounter with the Queen's
intanyei seyosa, Pure Radiance. The oracle had worn a
white dress and red blindfold.
"So I'm dreaming that they're dreaming? That's very Escher-
esque."
Windwolf looked confused.
"Escher is a human artist that my grandfather liked; his
pictures are all tricks of perspective."
"I see."
"Well, I don't. What does it mean?" She prodded the bags
with a finger. "That you were going to give me jewelry? What is
so dangerous about the necklaces?"
"Dreams are rarely straightforward. Most likely the
necklaces represent something else."
"Like what?"
"I do not know, but it might be wise to find out."
Chapter 3: Nuts And Bolts
Wolf spotted Wraith at the fringe of the Ghostlands when he
flew back to Turtle Creek. He'd left his
domi in the care
of his household at Poppymeadow's enclave and returned to help
deal with the beast that attacked her. He dropped down to land
beside his First.
"I don't know what Storm Horse was thinking." Wraith
growled in greeting. "How did he end up with all the babies?"
Little Horse had chosen the five youngest
sekasha to
make up the Hand that accompanied Tinker into Turtle Creek;
not one of them was over two hundred. True, any death would
have been grievous, but to lose the five youngest would have
been a blow to the close-knit band of warriors.
"They are the ones my
domi is most comfortable
with." Wolf knew that Wraith was truly rattled if he was using
the nickname, as some of the "babies" were in truth older than
Wolf. His First Hand didn't like to remind him that he was
impossibly young for his level of responsibilities.
"Oni, they could have handled," Wraith allowed and then
handed a sheet of paper to Wolf. "But not an oni dragon. I'm
amazed any of them are still alive."
Wolf recognized Rainlily's fluid hand in the drawing. The
low slung creature looked like a cross between a ferret and a
snake. "An oni dragon? Are you sure?"
Wraith clicked his tongue. "It's much smaller than the one
we fought when we closed the gate between Earth and Onihida,
and the coloring is different. It might be just a less dangerous
cousin, like we have the wyvern cousins to our dragons, or
perhaps a hatchling. It would explain how they survived."
The battle had been shortly before Wolf was born. A Stone
Clan trading expedition had discovered the way from Earth to
Onihida by accident. When the survivors managed to return to
Elfhome with their tale of capture and torture, the clans united to
send a force to Earth to stop the oni spreading from Onihida to
Earth, and then, possibly to Elfhome. Wraith Arrow and others of
Wolf's First Hand had been part of the oni war.
"Are oni dragons that dangerous?" Wolf folded the paper
and tucked it away. He would have to let the Earth
Interdimensional Agency know of this new threat if they couldn't
kill the beast quickly. The EIA could best spread warnings
through the humans.
"We lost two dozen sekaska in the caves to the beast. We
couldn't hurt it. It could—" Wraith frowned as he searched
for a word. "—
sidestep through walls as if they
didn't exist, and it called magic like you do."
"How did you kill it?"
"When the Stone Clan pulled down the gate and the
connection between the worlds broke, its attack pattern totally
changed. It dropped its shield and became like a mink in a
chicken coop, stupid with bloodlust. We boxed it in so it couldn't
turn and we hacked it to pieces."
"Maybe the oni was controlling it magically. Little Horse
said that the tengu used a whistle to call it off them—
perhaps the sound only triggered a controlling spell. Earth
doesn't have magic."
"So their control over it vanished and we were fighting the
true beast?"
Wolf nodded. "Perhaps."
"So the key is to kill the controller first."
"Perhaps." Wolf didn't want to fall into a wrong mindset. He
crouched beside the torn earth and spilt blood to find the
monster's tracks. They were as long as his forearm, with five
claw marks splayed like a hand. Pressed into the dirt at the center
of one track was one of Tinker's omnipresent bolts, a bright point
of polished aluminum glittering in the black earth. It must have
fallen from her pocket during the fight. Wolf picked it out of the
dirt, realizing for the first time the size of his beloved compared
to what attacked her. Gods above, sometimes he wished her sense
of self preservation matched her courage; she couldn't keep
leaping into the void and swimming back. One of these times, the
void was going to drink her down. He rolled the bolt around his
palm to shake off the dirt, thinking he should talk to her about
being more careful, only he didn't want to fall into the trap of
becoming her teacher.
Wraith crouched beside Wolf, and stirred his fingers through
the dirt. "
Domi showed great courage in protecting Little
Horse. She needs, though, someone who can steer her away from
the dangers. Little Horse is lost at summer court."
From Wraith's tone, the
sekasha also thought that
Windwolf was too deep in the first throes of love to think
clearly. Perhaps he was. "Are you volunteering?"
Wraith tilted his head. "Do you want me to?"
Wolf considered, tumbling the bolt through fingers. Wraith
was not the first to come forward in the last two days and let him
know that they'd be willing to change allegiance to Tinker. He'd
given them all permission to advance their case to Tinker since
she needed at least four more
sekasha to make a Hand.
Wraith, though, was his First, and Wolf depended heavily on
him. Without Sparrow, losing Wraith would cripple Wolf. "No. I
need you. Others plan to offer, she will have plenty to choose
from."
"Yes, but will they guide her?"
Do I want her guided? That was the true question. He'd
benefited greatly by choosing
sekasha who had served his
grandfather, but they had brought subtle pressure to bear on him
at all times. This conversation itself was a perfect example of
their influence on him. Their persuasion extended out to the rest
of the household, reinforcing the caste differences so that Wolf
was always correctly above everyone. When the Queen
summoned Wolf to Aum Renau, he'd left Little Horse behind to
guard over Tinker. The youngest of the
sekasha, his blade
brother had also been raised in a household where the caste lines
had been allowed to blur. Little Horse would be the open
minded, affectionate, and least likely to try and change Tinker.
Wolf had hated the necessity to make her elf in body – he
didn't want to force her, even by subtle persuasion, to become elf
in mind and habit.
No, I do not want her guided in the way that Wraith
would.
He would speak with Tinker, but not point her toward the
older
sekasha. He would allow her and Little Horse to
find those they were most comfortable with.
"On this, I will act." He let Wraith know that the
conversation was closed, that he would not discuss it farther. He
turned his attention back to the oni dragon.
The main fight area was a chaos of torn earth and blood. The
sekasha might be able to read the course of events, but to
him it was only churned earth. The bark of surrounding trees was
gouged in the dragon's five clawed pattern.
"It had
domi pinned. Little Horse attempted to
penetrate its shield." Wraith pointed at a spot on the ground, and
at the nearest scored tree. "It leapt to that tree. Rainlily said that
the tengu was on the bridge, so that tree there –" Wraith
pointed to a distant tree with claw marks half way up the
towering trunk, "is the next set."
The leap meant the creature was stunningly powerful
without magic.
"Let's see where the trail leads."
* * *
The railing of the bridge was scored deep by the dragon's
claws. After that, however, the track became impossible to
follow by the naked eye. The sekasha considered the
bridge deck, scuffing it with their boots.
"Too much metal," Wraith voiced the sekasha's
collective opinion.
Wolf nodded, he thought as much. Using magic to track was
rarely possible in Pittsburgh
with its ominous web of metal in the roads, the
buildings, and the power lines overhead.
There was whistle from the rear guard, indicating the arrival
of a friendly force. Still, the sekasha around him went
alert when a limo belonging to the EIA pulled to a stop at the far
end of the bridge. The oni had infiltrated every level of the U.N.
police force; they could no longer automatically assume the EIA
was friendly.
With a cautiousness that made it clear that he understood his
position, Director Derek Maynard got out of his limo and walked
the rest of the distance to Wolf. Apparently Maynard had spent
the morning dealing with humans, as he was in dressed in the
dark solid suit that spoke of power among men. Wolf thought it
might be the way they perceived color.
"Wolf Who Rules ze Domou." Over the years,
Maynard had picked up much of the elfin body language. He
projected politely constrained anger as he bowed elegantly.
"Director." Wolf used his title without his name to mildly
rebuke him.
Maynard bowed his head slightly, acknowledging the
censure. He paused for a minute, nostrils flared, before speaking.
He looked worn and tired. Time wore Maynard down at an
alarming rate; in twenty short years he had gone from a young
man to middle age. Gazing at him, Wolf realized that in a few
decades he'd lose his friend.
If I could have only made him an elf too. But no, that
would have destroyed Maynard's value as a "human"
representative.
"Windwolf," Maynard chose to continue in English,
probably because it placed him in the less subservient role. "I
wish you would have warned me about declaring the treaty void."
Wolf sighed—it was going to be one of those
conversations. "You know the terms.
Pittsburgh
could exist as a separate entity only while it
continued to return to Earth."
"You've said nothing in the last two days about voiding the
treaty."
"And I haven't said anything about the sun setting, but it has
and will."
"The sun setting does not cut me off at the knees."
Wolf glanced down at Maynard's legs, and confirmed that
they were still intact. Ah, an English saying he hadn't heard
before. "Derek, pretend I don't understand human politics."
"The treaty is between the humans and the elves." Maynard
followed the human tendency to talk slowly and in short
sentences in the face of confusion. It made the time to
enlightenment agonizingly long, even for an elf. "But the treaty is
the basis for many agreements between
United States
and the United Nations. It makes Pittsburgh
neutral territory controlled by a UN peacekeeper
force – the EIA – for the duration of the treaty."
"Ah, with the treaty void, Pittsburgh
reverts to control of the United
States
."
"Yes!"
"No."
"No?" Maynard looked confused.
"Pittsburgh
now belongs to the Wind Clan, and I decide who will
be my representative with the humans and I choose you."
Maynard took a deep breath as he pressed his palms together,
prayer-like, in front of his mouth. He breathed out, took another
breath. Windwolf was starting to wonder if he was praying.
"Wolf, I thank you for your trust in me," Maynard said finally.
"But for me to continue acting as Director of the EIA, it would
require me to disregard all human laws – and I can not do
that."
"There are no human laws anymore. Humans must obey
elfin laws now."
"That's not acceptable. I know you're the viceroy, and as
such Pittsburgh falls under your control,
but the humans of Pittsburgh
will not accept you unilaterally abolishing all human
laws and rights."
"These were conditions agreed to by your own people."
"Well, shortsighted as it might have been, it was assumed
that if something happened to the gate that
Pittsburgh
would return to Earth."
"Yes, it was." Wolf did not point out that humans were
typically shortsighted, rarely looking to past the next hundred
years. "But we knew that sooner or later we would have to deal
with humans wanting to or needing to remain on Elfhome."
"Yes, of course," Maynard said dryly. He gazed down at the
blue paleness of the Ghostlands. "Is your domi sure that
we're truly stranded? We're still a week before scheduled
Shutdown."
"Something fell from orbit. She believes it to be the gate."
"But she could be wrong."
"It's unlikely."
"Let us say that we wait a week to be sure before calling the
treaty null and void."
"A week will not make any difference."
"Ah, then it will be no problem." Maynard spread his hands
and smiled as if Wolf had agreed.
In that moment, Wolf could see the tactfully charming
young officer he hand selected out of the U.N. security force to
act as the liaison between human and elf. Maynard had been so
young back then. Wolf smiled sadly. "And if I agree to a week?"
"During this week, we draw up an interim treaty that
basically extends the original treaty."
"No." Windwolf shook his head. "We could create an
interim treaty but the original treaty can not stand. It makes
humans too autonomous."
"Pittsburgh
has existed as an independent state for thirty years."
"No, not Pittsburgh
, humans. All elves belong to a household and to a
clan. They hold a very specific position within our society. They
are responsible to others, and others are responsible for them. It's
the very foundation of our culture, and if humans are to be part
of our world, then they must conform to our ways."
"You mean—you want humans to form households?
Set up enclaves?"
"Yes. It's imperative. All of our laws are structured on the
assumption that the people under our laws are part of our
society. You can't be as independent as most humans are and still
be part of us."
* * *
They searched late into the evening but found nothing more
of the dragon. Storm clouds had gathered throughout the day, and
as dusk became night, it started to rain. Unable to track the
dragon farther, Wolf and his sekasha returned to the
enclave. He checked first to see how his domi was doing.
Tinker lay in the center of their shared bed, a dark curl of walnut
on the cream satin sheets. Wolf paused beside the footboard to
watch his beloved sleep. Despite everything, he found great
comfort in seeing her back where she belonged, safe among the
people who loved her.
A saigin flower sat on the night table, scenting the
warm air with its narcotic fragrance. Little Horse slept in a chair
beside the bed. The hospice healers had stripped off his wyvern
armor; fresh bruises and healing spells overlaid the pale circles of
bullet holes from two days ago.
I almost lost them both to the oni, Wolf thought and
touched his blade brother's shoulder. "Little Horse."
The sekasha opened his eyes after a minute, rousing
slowly. "Brother Wolf. I only meant to sit down for a moment."
He looked drowsily to the flower beside him. "The saigin
must have put me asleep."
The narcotic was starting to color Wolf's senses with a
golden haze, so he opened the balcony doors to let in rain-damp
air.
"Are you well?" Wolf took the other chair, waiting for Little
Horse to wake up from his drugged sleep, wondering if he'd
made a mistake pairing his blade brother with Tinker. They were
both so young to go through so much.
"I'm bruised, that is all." Little Horse rubbed at his eyes. "My
shields protected me."
"Good."
"I was thinking about the oni leader, Lord Tomtom, before I
drifted off. He checked on our progress either at noon or at
midnight. Some days he would make two inspections. It occurred
to me that he was rotating between compounds, overseeing two
or three of them."
"So the number of oni warriors in the area might be much
greater than the sixty you counted?"
Little Horse nodded. "From what I observed, though, the
warriors are like sea wargs." His blade brother named a mammal
that gathered in colonies on the coast; the male animals fought to
gather harems of females, and any cub left unprotected was
usually killed and eaten by its own kind. "Command goes to the
largest of group and he rules by cruelty and fear. They fight
among themselves, but I saw no weapon practice or drills. I
believe that not one of their warriors would be match for a
sekasha."
"That is good to know." It backed what Maynard had told
him at one point. Warned by Tinker, Maynard had begun to
secretly sift through his people two months earlier. Using
Tinker's description of "cruel and ruthless people with no sense
of honor" he found the hidden oni fairly simple to find. So far
intensive magical testing had proved his guesses correct.
Little Horse glanced toward the bed and a smile stole onto
his face, making him seem younger still. "Despite their large size
and savageness, she terrorized them."
Wolf laughed. Little Horse yawned widely, so Wolf stood
up and pulled his blade brother to his feet. "Go to bed. The others
can keep watch."
"Yes, Brother Wolf." Little Horse hugged him. It was good,
Wolf decided, that he paired Tinker with his blade brother. They
would protect each other's open and affection nature from the
stoic older sekasha.
After steering Little Horse to his room, Wolf detoured to
check on Singing Storm. He expected to find her sleeping when
he cracked her door. She turned her head, though, and slit open
her eyes. A smile took control of her face. Still she greeted him
with a semi-formal, "Wolf Who Rules."
He lowered the formality between them. It was her ability to
see him as nothing more than a male that made him love her so.
"How is my Discord?"
Her smile deepened. "Good and just got better."
"I'm glad." He leaned down and kissed her. She murmured
her enjoyment, running her hands up his chest to tangle in his
hair. She tasted candy sweet from her favorite gum.
"I've missed you," she whispered into his ear. She meant
intimately like this, as she had guarded over him every day for the
last two months. Taking Tinker to be his domi, however,
meant an abrupt change in their relationship. They hadn't even
had a chance to discuss it afterwards.
"I'm sorry."
She nipped him on the earlobe in rebuke. "No matter who, if
they were the right one, you would have wanted this."
"It was graceless." He had given her only a few hours
warning of his intention to offer marriage to Tinker. She knew
him well enough to know that he would want a monogamous
relationship as long as Tinker was willing to give him one.
"When did we start to care about grace? Wasn't that the
whole point of leaving court, all the false elegance? I like that
we're honest with one another – and I like her –
which is not surprising since I like humans."
"She's an elf now." Wolf gently reminded her.
"In the body, but not in the mind. She speaks low elfin as if
she was born to it, yes, but she doesn't know our ways, Wolf. If
you don't have time to teach her, then get her a tutor."
Wolf found himself shaking his head. "No. I don't want a
stranger trying to force her into court elegance."
"Are you afraid that she will lose all that makes her
endearing to you?"
Only Discord would dare to say that to him – but
then – that was another reasons he loved her. She would
risk annoying him to make him face what needed to be faced. For
her, he sighed and considered the possibility.
"No," he said after thinking it through. "Yes, I love her
humanity and I'll mourn it if she loses it completely, but she is so
much more than that."
"Then have someone teach her. She nearly got us all killed
today because she couldn't bear to sacrifice me."
He knew better than to argue with Discord on that but was
pleased with Tinker's decision. It was Tinker's courage and ability
to pull off the impossible that had initially attracted him to her,
and he would have been deeply saddened to lose Singing Storm.
"I'm trying to find a solution to this. I know she needs to be
taught our customs, but I don't want her to necessarily conform."
"I never said anything about conforming," Discord nuzzled
into his neck. "Conforming is for chickens."
He laughed into her short blue hair. "That's my Discord." He
kissed her and drew away to consider her. From her hair to her
boots, Discord challenged everything elfin. Yet of all his
sekasha, she was the only one that had grown up at Court
and had high etiquette literally beaten into her. There was no one
more knowledgeable, yet least likely to force those skills onto
Tinker.
"What is it that you want of me?" she asked.
"You know me too well." He tugged on her rat tail braid. "I
want you to keep close to my domi and be there when she
needs guidance."
"Pony is her First." Discord switched English, a sign that she
wanted to be bluntly truthful. "I'll be stomping all over his toes. I
don't want to piss him off. He's one of the few that never said
shit to me about being a mutt."
"Pony is not the type to put pride before duty. He loves
Tinker, but he knows that he doesn't fully understand her. He
hasn't spent enough time in Pittsburgh
, away from our people..."
"Like me?" It was point of sadness between them. For a
decades they ignored all the little signs that they could not be
more than domou and beholden. The fact that she would
chose Pittsburgh
over being with him had made clear that while they
were good together, they were not right.
"Like you." Wolf took her hand, kissed it, and moved on.
"Humans are still mysterious to him."
She thought for a moment and then returned to Elvish. "As
long as it does not anger Storm Horse, I will be there for her."
Chapter 4: On Gossamer Death
The next morning, shortly after dawn, the oni made their
first attack. Wolf heard a muffled roar and then the loud
anguished wail of a wounded gossamer. Luckily, his people were
already awake and ready. Only Tinker, having been drugged the
night before, still slept.
"Have Poppymeadow lock down the enclave," Wolf told
Little Horse. "I'm leaving you just with her guards and Singing
Storm. Everyone else with me."
Wolf arrived at the airfield, though too late to scry the
direction of the attack. All he could do was watch the gossamer
die in the pale morning light. The great living airship wallowed
on the ground, its translucent body undulating in pain. The
remains of the gondola lay under it, crushed by the massive
heaving body. The clear blood of the gossamer pooled on the
ground, scenting the air with the ghost of ancient seas.
"We can't get close enough to heal the wound." The
gossamer's navigator was weeping openly. "Even if we could, I
doubt we could save her. It's a massive wound, and she's lost too
much fluid. My poor baby."
The gossamer let out a long low breathy wail of pain.
"Did you see where it came from?" Wolf wasn't sure what
"it" was since none of the crew had seen the attack clearly.
The navigator shook his head. "I felt it hit before I heard
anything. She shuddered, and then started to go down, and I
jumped clear."
"Here comes another one!" Wraith shouted as he pointed at
some type of rocket flashing toward them.
Wolf flung up his widest shield, protecting the crew and
sekasha surrounding him. "Stay close!"
The rocket struck his wind wall and exploded into a fireball
that curved around them, following the edges of his shield. The
deflected energy splashed back in a wave of pulverized earth, like
a stone thrown into mud.
A piece of metal skimmed overhead and struck the
gossamer. The shrapnel smashed the gossamer sideways, blasting
through the nerve center of the creature. The airship gave one last
agonizing wail and collapsed.
Wolf shifted carefully to maintain his shield and did a wind
scry. The scrying followed the disturbance of the rocket path
through the air, making it visible to him. It pointed back to a
window a few houses down from the paparazzi's spy perch. The
Rim had razed all the buildings between the airfield and the street
at the first Startup, so he had an equally clear shot back at the
sniper.
Wolf summoned a force strike and flung it along the scry.
The power arrowed away, plowing a furrow in a straight line for
the human structure. The force strike punched its way through
the building, reducing the structure instantly to a cloud of dust
and a pile of rubble strewn into the alley behind it.
"Have someone escort the crew to safety." Wolf told his
First. "The rest, come with me."
Maintaining his shield forced him to move slowly toward
the human buildings, following the rut carved out by the force
strike. The dust expanded, shrouding the area as he crossed the
no-man's-land of the Rim.
"Keep the winds close," Wraith murmured as they reached
the street. "There may be more than one nest."
Wolf nodded his understanding. The
sekasha
activated their shields and moved out of his protection. The
house had been two stories tall. It made a large hill of rubble,
capped by the broken rooftop. If there were any survivors, they'd
have to be dug out.
Maynard emerged out of the dust, followed by a score or
more of his people in EIA uniforms. All of the EIA were spell-
marked, verifying that they were human.
"Wolf Who Rules." Maynard bowed and signaled his people
toward the rubble.
"Maynard." Wolf nudged his shield slightly so it wrapped
Maynard in his protection.
"What happened?" Maynard eyed the rubble as his people
started to sift through it.
Wolf indicated the dead airship with his eyes; maintaining
his shields limited his ability to motion with his hands.
"Someone fired on what is mine. I returned fire."
Maynard glanced at the distortion around them. "How long
can you keep up your shields?"
"There is no reason for concern." The Wind clan's spell
stones rested on a powerful
fiutana that provided
unlimited magic. "My gossamer is dead, but my crew is all safe.
For that I am thankful."
A call came from the EIA digging through the rubble. Most
of the roof had been shifted off. In the debris of the second floor
was a female huddled under a sturdy table. She appeared human,
as small and dark as Wolf's
domi. Old bruises, like
purple and yellow flowers, marked her face and arms; someone
beat her on regular occasions.
She gazed at Wolf with fear. "Don't let them have me! We're
like cockroaches to them! Razing this neighborhood is just the
start of them stomping us out!"
The human workers moved reluctantly aside to let the
sekasha claim her. Wraith took out his leather bound spell
case, and slipped out a
biatau and pressed it to the
female's arm.
She whimpered and one the watching EIA said, "It doesn't
hurt. We've all had it done to us."
The simple spell inscribed onto the paper of the
biatau was merely the first of the spells that the EIA had been
subjected to, but it was the quickest and easiest to use as a first
screening process. The oni had relied on an optical disguise spell
that let them appear human; the
biatau, when activated,
would shatter the illusion and allow their true form show.
Wraith spoke the verbal command and the spell activated.
There was, however, no change to the woman's appearance.
Maynard sighed deeply, as if he saw all the dangerous
complications that the woman presented. "She's human."
"Unfortunately." Wolf motioned that the EIA should take
her prisoner.
"Here's another one." Bladebite called.
The second person was a large male, badly hurt. Wraith took
out another
biatau with the same spell and used it on the
male. There was a ripple of distortion and the male's features
shifted slightly to a more feral looking face with short horns
protruding from his forehead.
"Oni." Wraith growled out the word.
"He's badly hurt," Maynard said. "The prison has a medical
ward. We can take him there."
Wraith jerked the oni up onto his knees.
"Wolf," Maynard said quickly and quietly. "We have
protocols on how prisoners are to be treated. The Geneva
Convention states that the wounded and sick shall be collected
and cared for."
"We do not accede," Wolf said, "to your Geneva
Convention."
In one clean motion, Wraith unsheathed his sword and
beheaded the oni.
The woman shrieked and tried to launch herself toward the
dead body.
"Wolf, you can't do this!" Maynard growled.
"It has been done," Wolf said.
Maynard shook his head. "The treaty, which the elves signed,
states that you will adhere to the Geneva Convention in the
treatment of prisoners."
"For human prisoners," Wolf said. "We will not take oni
prisoners."
Maynard frowned. "That is the only option you're
entertaining? A massacre of all the oni?"
"They breed like mice," Wolf said. "We do not fight for
today, or this year, or even this century, but for this millennium
– and to do so, we must be ruthless. If we leave a
hundred alive, in a few years they will be several thousand in
number, and in a thousand years, millions. We can not allow
them to live, or they will crowd us out of our own home."
"You can't let the elves do this!" the woman wailed. "If we
don't stop the elves, they'll turn on us next."
"It's their world." Maynard leveled his gaze and words at his
watching men, aiming his words at them alone. "Not ours."
"It was their world!" the woman shouted. "We stuck here
now, so it's ours too."
There was a flaw in Maynard's logic. The old arguments that
Maynard could have used to counter her were useless now. Her
railing, unfortunately, could lead the humans to dangerous
ground, so Wolf interceded.
"We are willing to share with humans. We do not wish to
share with oni. A full contingent of royal troops is on its way to
Pittsburgh
. When they arrive here, their goal will be to find and
kill every oni that ever stepped foot on Elfhome. My people have
committed genocide before and have full plans to do it again. I
strongly caution you do not put the human race between the royal
troops and our enemy."
Whatever impact his words had, however, were lost when
the woman suddenly looked past Wolf and shrieked. Wolf turned
to see what she was focused on. One of the EIA workers had a
small squirming creature in his arms. As the man neared, Wolf
realized that the creature was a child, species so far
undetermined, but human looking.
Wolf sighed. He had hoped it wouldn't come to this; that he
would only have to deal with adult oni. Certainly among all of
the elves, there were no children. In fact, he was fairly sure that
– not counting his
domi's unusual
status—Little Horse was the youngest elf in
Pittsburgh
. Unfortunately, when one could breed like mice, one
did.
The nametag of the EIA worker holding the child read "U.D.
Akavia."
"The child needs to be tested, Akavia," Wolf said.
Akavia's brown eyes went wide; he hadn't considered that the
child was anything but what it appeared.
"No!" the woman sympathizer cried. "Don't give those
monsters my baby!"
Akavia glanced to the woman and then down at the child
whimpering in his arms. "She's just a little girl."
"We need to know if she is human or oni." Wolf tried to
pose the statement in a non-threatening way.
"She can't hurt anyone." Akavia covered the girl's small head
with a protective hand. His eyes went past Wolf to the
sekasha behind him.
Of course the human saw only the child, not the female that
would be an adult in a few decades, nor the army she could
produce in the years to come. In truth, even to Wolf, she looked
small and helpless.
"Let us test her," Wolf said. "If she is human, we will give
her back."
Akavia's eyes narrowed in suspicion. "And if she's oni?"
Yes, Wolf thought as he scanned the hostile faces of the
heavily-armed EIA force that outnumbered his
sekasha,
that would be a problem.
He sensed the tension going through his
sekasha
who were growing impatient. He had no doubt that his people
would walk unscathed away from a fight with the EIA, but the
EIA might not understand this, and he needed all the allies he
could muster.
Maynard moved between Wolf and Akavia. Maynard's face
set into hard lines, as if he bracing himself for a fight. With Wolf
or with his own people? "Let us test her."
He left unsaid: Let us at least find out if we have cause to
fight.
Wolf nodded. "That is acceptable."
"Uri David." Maynard motioned to Akavia. Wolf shifted his
shields to include the EIA subordinate so Maynard could take the
girl into his arms.
"Wraith." Wolf indicated that the
sekasha was to
hand Akavia the
biatau.
Akavia placed the spell against the child's bruised and dusty
arm. When the spell activated, there was no change to the girl's
appearance. Relief went through the EIA.
"It proves nothing," Wraith growled. "It's probably mixed
blood. The female has all but admitted that she's coupled with the
monster."
Maynard's gaze skipped to Wraith and then came back to
Wolf.
Please, his eyes implored,
let her go.
Wolf studied the child. She gazed at him with eyes as brown
and innocent as his
domi's. He didn't want to kill this
child. Wolf steeled himself and forced himself remember that an
oni wouldn't waver in killing an elfin child nor a human child.
His people counted on him to do the right thing, no matter how
difficult the right thing might be.
How could he could he winnow the monster from the
human?
"Little one, what's your name?" Wolf asked the girl.
"Zi." The girl pointed to the woman. "Mommy's sad."
"Yes, she is. So am I." Wolf let his face show his inner
sorrow.
Zi considered him gravely, and then leaned out to pat him
gently on the cheek. "Don't be sad. Everything will be a-okay."
Wolf threw out his hand to keep the
sekasha from
reacting. "She has compassion; oni don't have that capacity."
Wraith slowly took his hand from his sword hilt. "So human
empathy is a dominant trait?"
"So it seems." Wolf gave the girl a slight smile. "Yes, Zi,
everything will be a-okay."
Chapter 5: Tree That Walks
The dying echoes of thunder pulled Tinker out of the dark
sludge of drugged sleep. She opened her eyes to see shadows
moving across an unfamiliar ceiling.
Where am I?
For one panic moment, she thought she was back in the oni
compound with the kitsune projecting illusions into her mind.
She fought her sheets to sit up, heart pounding, to scan the
luxurious bedroom.
Saijin-induced sleep still clung to
her like thick mud, making it hard to think. It took Tinker a
minute of comparing all the various places she had slept in the
last two months to finally recognize the room. It was the
bedroom she and Windwolf shared a month ago at
Poppymeadow's enclave. She remembered now the massive
poster bed, the carved paneling, and the view to the courtyard
orchard. The window stood open to a warm summer morning,
letting in air sweet with ripening peaches. Dappled sunlight
played across the walls and ceiling. Tinker flopped back into the
decadent nest of satin sheets and down pillows, tempted to go
back to sleep.
But if she did, she'd probably have another nightmare.
Her groan summoned Pony from his attached bedroom.
"Good morning,
domi."
Eyes still closed, she grunted at him. "It's not fair to expect
me to be polite before I'm fully awake. Where's Windwolf? Did
he get back safely last night?"
"He was needed at the Faire Grounds this morning. He took
everyone except Stormsong with him."
"How is Stormsong?"
"Her leg bothers her slightly, but she is whole. She is
practicing in the swordhall."
That was good news. Tinker heaved herself back up and
rubbed a heavy crust of sleep from her eyes. "Gods, I hate
saigin. It turns my brain to taffy. What's that for?"
That being one of the
sekasha's pistols. While the
gun itself was of human make, the blacked tooled leather holster
and belt were elfin. Pony laid it on the bed, a coil of dangerous
black on the sea of cream.
"Wolf Who Rule wished you to have it."
Oh, yeah, I asked for a gun.
"It is specially made for the
sekasha." Pony settled
on the bed beside her. "Only parts of it are metal, and those are
insulated with plastic, so they don't interfere with our shields.
Once you learn magic, it will be important that you don't wear
metal."
There was an elaborate system of wood buckles, D-rings and
ties to support the weight of the pistol on the hip without metal.
In place of a metal snap, the belt maker had used a heavy plastic
substitute.
"Is it loaded?"
"Not yet. I thought you would like to get comfortable with it
first."
So they played with the gun. Taking it part. Putting it
together. Strapping on the holster (although it had a tendency to
slide on her long silky nightgown.) Drawing the pistol smoothly.
Holding it with both hands to keep it steady. Aiming it. And
finally, how to load and unload it.
"Wolf Who Rules wants you to start the basics of the sword
fighting," Pony said. "It would be unwise for you to wear a
sword until you are able to use it. Guns are simple. Point and
pull the trigger."
"I'm fine with that." She had no interest in swords. They
relied too much on brute force. At five foot nothing, it didn't
matter how smart she was, she wasn't going to win a sword fight
with an elf. "Okay. I think I'm ready to face the day."
"In that?" Pony indicated her current nightgown and holster
outfit.
"I thought I'd start a new fashion statement." Nevertheless,
she started to look for the clothes she had on the day before. She
was going to have to do something about clothes. After being
kidnapped twice, she was left with only one t-shirt and one pair
of carpenter pants. Everything else in her closet was elfin gowns.
Pony guessed what she was looking for. "They took your
clothes to be cleaned."
"Oh no." She went to the window and looked out. Beyond
the orchard wall was the kitchen garden and the clothes lines.
Windwolf's household staff was hanging up the laundry. Her
jeans dangled between several pairs of longer legged pants. Her t-
shirt? Oh yes, that had been cut to ribbons by the dragon. "Oh
pooh."
Well, she could wear a dress and just go clothes shopping.
Of course she didn't have any cash in hand, nor did she ever
receive the promised replacements for the ID that the oni stole
the night she saved Windwolf's life. It could be sitting in her
mailbox back at her loft – if the EIA had been so stupid
as to mail it out after she was kidnapped by the oni. Oh gods,
what if she'd been declared legally dead after the oni 'staged' her
death?
She did have Windwolf's entire household at hand. Surely
one of the elves was savvy enough to go to the store and buy her
clothes. She considered the elves in the garden washing
clothes—by hand – in large wooden tubs. Okay,
she had clothes at her loft.
Was it a good thing or a bad thing that she was now fashion
aware enough to know that those clothes were too scruffy?
Tinker sighed. "I really don't want to run around Turtle
Creek in a dress."
"
Domi, I would rather wait until we could gather a
Hand. It would not be wise for us to go alone."
Tinker wasn't getting the hang of the elfin 'we' despite
having Pony at her side every moment for nearly two months.
She was thinking of just trotting over by herself and seeing how
much the Ghostlands had shrunk. Well, she supposed that could
wait.
She used her walk-in closet as a dressing room, stripping out
of the gun belt and her nightgown. She considered her informal
gowns, called day dresses. She had bullied the staff into taking
off the long sleeves, but the dresses still had bodices that
accented her chest, tight waists, and flowing skirts. Her choices
were sable brown, forest green or jewel red, all in gleaming fairy
silk that clung to her like wet paint. The red one, at least, had
pockets and a shorter skirt. She had to admit that she looked
fairly kicky with her new gunbelt riding low on her hip. She
added her polished black riding boots and the ruby jewelry that
Windwolf had given her. She practiced drawing her pistol and
pointed it at the mirror. "You looking at me? Uh? You looking
at me?"
"No,
domi, I can not see you." Pony said from the
other side of the closet door.
She laughed, holstering the pistol. "Did Windwolf find the
monster that attacked me and kill it?"
"No."
"Okay." She came out of the closet. "Since we can't do
anything about Turtle Creek, let's focus on the monster."
"
Domi, I do not think we should go after the dragon
alone."
"Dragon?"
"It was an oni dragon and very difficult to kill."
"Well, yeah, which is why I should figure out how to kill it.
The oni probably have more than one. There has to be a way to
take down its shields so anyone with a gun can kill it."
Pony looked at her nervously, as if he suspected she was
going to hunt down the oni dragon and poke it with sticks.
Tinker felt the need to reassure him that she didn't have
anything that radical in mind. "I want to start with Lain; she's a
xenobiologist. When you've got a problem outside your field of
specialty, you go to an expert."
* * *
A flat bed semi-trailer sat parked in front of Lain's stately
Victorian mansion. A yellow canvas tarp covered something
lumpy. The xenobiologist stood on the trailer, leaning on her
crutch, watching Tinker park the Rolls. Something about Lain's
face made Tinker suspect that somehow the trailer was her fault.
"I thought you might turn up today." Lain said.
"Well, apparently I need a small army to go back to Turtle
Creek, and Windwolf has all the sekasha today except
Pony and Stormsong."
Said sekasha had already split up into Blade and
Shield. Stormsong had moved off to scout the area as a Blade.
Pony trailed behind Tinker, acting as Shield.
"So, I thought I'd come talk to you about the monster that
attacked me yesterday." Tinker said. "The sekasha are
saying it's an oni dragon."
"Ah." Lain made a sound of understanding. "I suppose I
should thank you for your present."
"Present?" Tinker eyed the trailer apprehensively. What had
she done now without realizing it?
Lain flipped up one corner of tarp to reveal limp willowy
branches. "They told me that you sent it."
The black willow! "He eats the fruit of the tree that
walks." Tinker shivered as recognition shivered down her
spine. It was just too weird having another part of her dream
show up with her name attached to it. "I sent it?"
"That's what they told me," Lain said.
Tinker could remember finding the tree, but she –
she didn't order this. Or had she? She turned to Pony. "Did I
ask...?" His look of concentration made her realize that she had
been so rattled that she was still speaking English; she switched
Elvish. "Did I ask to have the black willow brought here?"
"You said you would love to give it to Lain."
That apparently that had been enough of an order for Pony.
Tinker really had to keep in mind that the sekasha took
her word as law. While she had been smothered in attention, the
elves had bound up the long limp branches and sturdy trunk-feet
and hauled it to the Observatory hill. Once at Lain's, however,
they'd abandoned it – trailer and all.
Lain had warned her once about elves bearing gifts. Tinker
winced, realizing that she had become one of said elves.
"I'm sorry, Lain." She made sure she was speaking English,
afraid that she might insult Pony for her own stupidity. "I didn't
know they were going to bring it here and dump it on you."
"It's a matter of gift horses and teeth, I suppose." Laying her
crutch down, Lain nimbly swung down off the trailer, her upper
body muscles cording to make up for her weakened legs. On the
ground, Lain reached up for her crutch, and then turned to rap
Tinker smartly on the head with her knuckles. "Learn to think
before you open that mouth of yours."
"Ow!" Tinker winced. "I'm bruised there."
"You are?" Lain tilted Tinker's head to examine her scalp,
combing aside her short hair with gentle fingertips. "What from?
That creature that attacked you?"
"Yeah."
Lain smelt as always of fresh earth and crushed herbs and
greens. "Ah, you'll live." She rubbed the sore area lightly. "Give
the nerve receptors something else to think about."
Tinker mewed out a noise of protest and pain at the
treatment.
Lain held her at arm's length then and looked down over
Tinker, shaking her head. "I never thought I'd see you in a dress.
That's a beautiful color for you."
Tinker showed off her rubies and her pistol, making Lain
laugh at the contrast. "Do you want the tree?"
"A fully intact specimen? Of course!" Lain let her quiet
scientific glee with the black willow show. "I saw my first black
willow my first Startup; they flew me in on an air force jet to
look at the forest where Pittsburgh
had been the night before. I didn't want to come; I was
still wrapped up in being crippled. Then I saw that wall of green,
all those ironwoods as tall as sequoias. Out of the forest came a
black willow, probably seeking a ley line, and the ground shook
when it moved. God, it was instant nirvana – an alien
world coming to me when I could no longer go to it."
A hot heady mix of delight and embarrassment flushed
through Tinker; she wanted to hear more about how thoughtful
she been, yet she knew how little she actually contributed toward
getting the tree moved. "I thought you might like it."
"I love it! But not necessarily here." Lain motioned toward
her house. "I'm not totally convinced that the willow is dead. It
might be just dormant after a massive system shock. I'd rather not
have it reviving on my doorstep."
The tree that walks... "Yeah, that might be a bad idea. I
can get a truck and move the trailer...someplace."
"What would be best is storing it at near freezing
temperatures. The cold will keep it dormant if it's still alive."
Tinker eyed the fifty-three foot semi-trailer. "Well, getting it
off the trailer wouldn't be hard – I can get a crane to do
that – but shoving it into something refrigerated
– that's going to be hard."
"I have faith." Lain limped toward her house, calling back. "I
know you'll be able to figure it out."
Ah, the disadvantages of being well known.
Stormsong was on the porch. She flashed through an 'all
clear' signal and indicated that she hadn't been inside the house.
"Let us clear the house first,
domi." Pony said.
She wanted to whine "it's just Lain's house." The
sekasha
had risked death for her, though, so she only sighed and sat
down on the porch swing. "Can I have the willow cut up?"
"No."
"I didn't think so. That would make life too simple." She
swung back and forth, the wind blowing up her skirt in a cooling
breeze. "It would be easiest if we could keep the tree on the
trailer and put it all into one large refrigerator. I could build one,
but not quickly. Is there a large freezer unit that we can borrow?"
"There's Reinholds," Lain said.
"The ice cream factory?"
"I doubt they're using all their warehouses."
"That's true." The hundred year old company was one of the
many
Pittsburgh
businesses that survived being transplanted to another
universe. Elves loved ice cream. Being stranded on Elfhome,
however, limited Reinhold's production. Things such as sugar
and chocolate all needed to be shipped in from Earth.
Pony reappeared at the door, and indicated with a nod and
hand sign that the house was clean of menace. The
sekasha took up guard at the doors, giving Tinker the privacy she was
beginning to treasure so much.
It had been two months since Tinker last been in Lain's
house, the longest time in her life between visits. It was
comforting to find it unchanged – large high ceiling
rooms full of leather furniture, stained wood, leaded glass and
shadows.
Lain made a call to Reinholds to check on their freezer
capacity. Apparently Reinholds shuffled her through various
departments, as she repeated herself between long pauses. Tinker
raided her fridge for breakfast. There were strawberries and fresh
whipped cream, so Lain wasn't kidding when she had said that
she expected Tinker to arrive.
The call ended with Lain hanging up with a sigh. "They have
one large unit that has been shut down for some time. They're
still trying to find someone that knows something about it; they'll
call me back." She picked up the teakettle and limped to the sink
to fill it. "You cut your hair again."
"Yeah, I cut it." It annoyed Tinker that her voice suddenly
shook. When she took a razor to her hair, her oni guard mistook
it as a suicide attempt; the following struggle came close to
getting Pony killed. Immediately afterwards, she went back to
dipping circuit plates – it was stupid that tears now
burned her eyes. She concentrated on stabbing a strawberry in the
whipping cream.
"I know you hate it when people pry," Lain said quietly.
"God knows, between myself, your grandfather and that crazy
half-elf Tooloo as role-models, it's no wonder you insist on
keeping everyone at arm's length."
Tinker could guess where this was going. "I'm fine!"
Lain busied herself with teacups, the faint ring of china on
china filling the silence between them. The teakettle started to
rattle with a pre-whistle boil. "God, I wish children came with
instruction manuals. I only want to do what's best for you
– but I don't know what that is. I never have."
"I'm fine," Tinker actually managed to keep her voice level
this time.
The teakettle peeped, a final warning before a full scream.
Lain turned off the fire and stood there a moment, watching the
steam pour out of the shimmering pot. Taking a deep cleansing
breath, she sighed it out and asked, "Lemon Lift or Constant
Comment?"
"The Lemon Lift." Tinker said.
"The EIA made Turtle Creek off-limits when the fighting
broke out." Lain moved the teacups carefully to the table, and
changed the subject with equal deftness. "No one has been able to
get down to look at these Ghostlands. What did you find?"
Tea was only a medium to transport honey, so while Tinker
coaxed it to maximum viscosity, she told Lain about what she
found.
"Can you fix it?" Lain asked.
"I'm a genius – not a god. I don't even know what
it is. But by the laws of thermodynamics, it should
collapse. I had Pony score the trees around the edge. Once I can
back into the valley, I'll check on the rate it's decaying."
Tinker sipped her tea and then changed the subject. "What I
really came here to talk to you about is the monster that attacked
me. It's an oni dragon."
"There were warnings on the television last night and the
radio this morning. Yet another beastie for us to worry about."
Tinker knew that she shouldn't feel responsible—but
she did anyhow. She had made the discontinuity that the dragon
had passed through to get to
Pittsburgh
. "The dragon generates a shield of magic that protects
it. According to the Pony and Stormsong, Windwolf's First Hand
fought one of these things
nae hae." The elf phrase,
meaning "too many years to count" dropped out of Tinker's
mouth like she had been born to the concept of living forever.
She found it a little disturbing. "Apparently the shield also
protects it from magical weapons like spell arrows. They think
Windwolf will be able to kill it – but he can't be
everywhere at once. We need a more mundane way of dealing
with the beastie."
"Do you know if it's a natural creature or a bio-engineered
one?" Lain took out her datapad and opened a new file to take
notes.
"No. The oni didn't mention anything to me about the
dragon, and the
sekasha don't know. What's the
difference?"
"The result of creatures of evolving in an environment full
of magic is often they can use magic to their own benefit. Take
the black willow; it's mutated from tree with all the standard
limitations to a highly effective predator. By in large, though, the
bio-engineered creatures tend to be more dangerous than the
randomly mutated creatures."
"Like the wargs?" Tinker knew that the wolf-like creatures
had been created for war but now ranged wild in the forest
surrounding
Pittsburgh
.
"Yes. The wargs not only have the frost breath, but they
show no signs of aging or disease and their wounds heal at a
speed that suggests a spell somehow encoded at cellular level.
They're massive, intelligent, and aggressive in nature."
"So the question is 'how much did the oni dragon get in their
DNA gift baskets?'"
"Yes. But let's start with the basics. We've never
encountered an Elfhome dragon – we only know that
they exist because the elves keep telling us that they do –
and that we really don't want to study them closely."
Tinker laughed at that comment.
"Is this dragon mammal or reptile?" Lain asked.
"I'm not sure. It had scales, but it also had some sort weird
mane. It was long, and lean, with big square jaw." Tinker put her
hands up to approximate the size of the head. "Short legs with big
claws that it could pick things up with."
Lain made a slight amused sound and got up to put the
teakettle back on the stove. "Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!"
It took Tinker a moment to identify the quote, a poem out of
Alice
through the Looking Glass.
"We fell down the hole and through the looking
glass."
The sudden connection with her dream was like a slap.
White's face jolted into her mind again. With the addition of the
book title, though, she remembered where she seen White before.
"You know, I had the oddest dream about Boo-boo Knees."
Lain whipped around to face her. "Boo?"
"At least, I think it was Boo-boo."
"H-h-how do you know about Boo's nickname?"
"The picture. It has her name on the back of it."
"Which picture?"
"The one in the book." When Lain continued to stare at her
in confusion, Tinker went to scan the bookcases until she found
the book in question:
The Annotated
Alice. Complete in one book was both
Alice in
Wonderland and
Alice through the Looking Glass and
What She Found There with copious footnotes that
explained layer upon layers of meaning in what seemed to be just
a odd little children's story. Tinker had discovered the book when
she was eight. Lain apparently had forgotten the photo tucked
into the book, but Tinker hadn't.
It was an old two-dimensional color photo, a young woman
with short purple hair. She hovered in mid-air, the Earth a
brilliant blue moon behind her. She challenged the camera with a
level brown-eyed gaze and a set jaw, as if she was annoyed with
its presence. On her right temple was a sterile adhesive bandage.
Written on the back was "Even in zero gravity, I find things to
bang myself on. Love. Boo-boo Knees."
At the point Tinker had found it, she'd never seen a two-
dimensional photograph; neither her grandfather or Lain were
ones for personal pictures. From its limited perspective to the
name of Boo-boo Knees, she'd found it fascinating. She stared at
it until – ten years later – she could have drawn it
from memory.
The picture was where she carefully returned it, marking the
place where one story ended and another started.
"Oh!" Lain took the photo. "I've forgotten about that."
"Who is she?"
Why am I dreaming about her? Tinker
flipped through the book, remembering now nearly forgotten
passages echoing back from the dream. The tea party with the
Mad Hatter murdering time, leaving his watch stuck at six
o'clock. The checkerboard layout that they flown over. Alice and
the Red Queen hand in hand, like the Tinker and White had been
in the dream, racing to stay in place.
"That's Esme," Lain identified White as her younger sister.
"It is?" Tinker reclaimed the photo. She had always imagined
Esme as a younger version of Lain, but Esme looked nothing like
her. Come to think of it – Tinker had never seen a picture
of Esme before, not even her official NASA mission photo.
"I'm not surprised you're dreaming of her," Lain was saying
as Tinker continued to search the photo for the cause of her
dreams. "You're bound to be upset about the gate and the
colonists."
Was that the true reason? The dream seemed so real
compared to the rest of her nightmares. She didn't know Boo-boo
Knees was Lain's sister, and Lain had many retired astronauts as
friends, so Tinker had no reason to assume that this was a picture
of a colonist. And why all the
Alice
in Wonderland references? Were they just reminders
of where the photo was stored – or that the colonist had
dropped into a mirror reflection of Earth. Certainly there was
nothing to say that Earth had only two reflections: Elfhome and
Onihida.
"Lost, lost," The crows had cried.
According to Riki, the first colony ship, the
Tianlong
Hao was crewed entirely by tengu. If Black was a tengu
female, that would explain the crows – but what about
the hedgehogs? Tinker flipped through the book, found a picture
of
Alice
with a flamingo and a hedgehog. The queen was
screaming, "Off with his head!" Was this some oblique reference
to the queen of the elves?
"Oh, this is going to give me a headache," Tinker murmured.
Down the hall, the phone rang. Lain gave her an odd,
worried look and went to answer it.
Tinker found herself alone with the photograph of Lain's
younger sister, looking defiantly out at her. "Why am I dreaming
of you? I don't know where you are. I don't know how to save
you. Hell, I don't even know how to save
Pittsburgh
."
Lain limped back into the kitchen. "That was Reinholds. The
freezer in question is shut down because the compressor needs
repaired. They said if I have someone to repair the unit, we could
store the tree there. They'll even throw in some free ice cream."
"He eats the fruit of the tree that walks," Tinker suddenly
remembered all of what White – Esme – had
said. "Follow the tree to the house of ice and sip sweetly of the
cream."
"I'll go look at the compressor." Tinker kept hold of the
book. She had a bad feeling she was going to reread the silly
thing. "And see if I can fix it. I think I
have to do this.
Can you do me a favor in the meantime? See if you can find out
anything about this oni dragon." Tinker described the magical
shield that the dragon generated. "If we have to fight it again, I
want to be able to hurt it."
Chapter 6: Lively Maple Flavor
For years, Tinker had thought of herself as famous. The
invention and mass production of the hoverbike made Tinker's
name well-known even before she started to race. True, few
people realized that the girl in the 'Team Tinker' shirt
was
the famed inventor/racer; still, she often got a reaction when she
introduced herself.
But she wasn't prepared for the welcome she received at the
Reinholds offices.
The receptionist looked up as Tinker and her bodyguards
entered. "Can I help..." the woman started, and then her gaze
shifted from Pony to Tinker, and her question ended in a high
squeal that drew everyone's eyes. "Oh, my god! Oh, my god! It's
the fairy princess!"
Tinker glanced over her shoulder, hoping that there would
be a female in diaphanous white behind her. No such luck.
"Pardon?"
"You're her!" The woman jumped up and down, hands to her
mouth. "You're Tinker, the fairy princess!"
Other office people came forward. One woman had a slickie
in hand, which she held out with a digital marker. "Can you
autograph this for me, vicereine?"
Vice-what? Tinker felt a smile creeping onto her face in
response to all the brightly smiling people gathering around her.
The slickie was titled: Tinker, the new fairy princess. The cover
photo was of Tinker, a crown of flowers disguising her
haphazard haircut, looking fey and surprisingly pretty.
"What the hell?" Tinker snatched the slickie from woman.
When in gods' name was this taken? And by who?
She thumbed the page key, flipping through the pictures and
text. The first half-dozen photographs were of Windwolf, taken
across seasons and at various locations, looking studly as usual.
The text listed out Windwolf's titles—viceroy, clan head
for Westernlands, cousin to the queen – and added Prince
Charming.
"Oh, gag me." She flipped on and found herself. It was a
copy of the front cover. When was it taken? She couldn't
remember any time appearing in public with a crown of flowers.
The only time she had flowers in her hair like this was ...
Oh, no! Oh, please, no. She frantically flipped on, hoping
that she was wrong. Two more head shots, and then there it was
– her in her nightgown, the one that looked like cream
poured over her naked body. Oh, someone was so dead meat.
The morning after returning from the Queen's court, she had
breakfasted in the private garden courtyard of Poppymeadow's
enclave. She had been alone with the female
sekasha
– and some pervert with telephoto lens. Thankfully,
because of the distance involved, the photo was 2-D with limited
pan and zoom feature.
"Can you sign it, vicereine?" The owner of the digital
magazine asked.
"Sign?" Tinker slapped the slickie to her chest – she
didn't even want to give it back.
The woman held out her marker. "Could you make it out to
Jennifer Dunham?"
Tinker stared at the marker, wondering what to do. Certainly
she couldn't ask her bodyguards – she suspected that they
would not take the invasion of her privacy well. Not that the
picture was all that indecent, but more that they failed to protect
her. She fumbled with getting the slickie back to its cover picture
without flashing it at her bodyguards, scribbled her name in the
corner and thrust it back.
"I'm here about the broken freezer unit that Lain Shanske
called about." Time to escape to something simple,
understandable, and easily fixed. This freezer repair sounded like
a good greasy project to let her forget all the big, unsolvable
problems. "You said that if it was fixed, she could use it."
"That was me that she talked to." One man separated himself
from the crowd. "Joseph Wojtowicz, you can call me Wojo,
most people do. I'm the general manager here." Halfway through
his handshake, he seemed to think he'd made a blunder in
etiquette and bowed over her hand. "Yes, if you can get the unit
working, she's more than welcome to it."
"Well, let's go see it." Tinker indicated that they should go
out of the office, away from the crowd of people who were
showing signs of producing cameras. "I want to see if it's actually
big enough to hold the tree."
Thus they managed to escape, no picture taken, through the
offices and to a back street. Stormsong lead the way, moving
through the maze of turns as if she worked at the offices. Pony
trailed behind, keeping back the curious office staff with dark
looks.
"I heard about the monster attacking you yesterday," Wojo
didn't seem to notice her
sekasha, focusing only on
Tinker as they rounded a corner and took a short flight of cement
steps up onto a loading dock. "Are you okay? It sounds like you
had a nasty fight on your hands."
Gods, first Lain and now him. How many people had heard
about the fight at Turtle Creek? "I'm fine."
"That's good! That's good! I knew your grandfather, Tim
Bell. He was—" Wojo paused to consider a polite way to
describe her grandfather. "— quite a character."
"Yeah, he was."
"This is it, here." He stopped before a large door padlocked
shut. He pulled out a keyring and started to sort through the keys.
"It was our main building before Startup. After that, it was so
unpredictable that we only used it for overflow. Four years ago,
we stopped being able to use it at all."
By Startup, he meant the first time
Pittsburgh
went to Elfhome. In typical fashion, Pittsburghers
used Startup to mean that first time, and each consecutive time,
after Shutdown returned
Pittsburgh
to Earth. Shutdown itself was a misnomer because
the gate never fully shutdown, only powered down sharply, a fact
that she had counted on when she set out to destroy it. The oni
could have stopped the resonance only by completely shutting off
the orbital gate, something it wasn't designed to do easily. The
poor crew that maintained the gate probably had no clue what
was happening or how to stop it. Tinker tried not to think of the
poor souls trying to save themselves before the gate shook itself
to pieces. Had they abandoned the structure? Were there ships in
orbit around Earth that could rescue them? Or had they too
phased into space over Elfhome, doomed to rain down with the
fiery pieces of the gate?
I've killed people, she thought with despair, and I don't even
know how many, or what race they've belonged to.
"Well, I'll be damned." Wojo turned away from the door,
frowning at his key ring as if it had failed him. "None of these
keys fit the lock. I guess the key was taken off this ring when we
stopped using the building. I'll be right back."
Pony and Stormsong were conferring in whispers. Tinker
caught enough to realize that Stormsong was translating for
Pony. Was having her
sekasha understand
everything
worth the convenience of not having to repeat herself?
A slight chiming caught Tinker's attention. Across the street
sat a small shrine to a local ley god, its prayer bells ringing in the
slight breeze.
The gods of the ley were all faces of the god of magic,
Auhoya, the god of chaos and plenty. Tinker was never sure how
he could be many different gods and yet still be one individual,
but she'd learn that with gods, one didn't try to understand like
one would with science. They were. Auhoya was shown always
with a horn and a two edged sword. She supposed in some ways,
magic was a lot like science, used to make or destroy.
She clapped her hands to call the gods attention to her,
bowed low, and added a silver dime to the horde already littering
the shrine.
"Help me to make things right." Adding a second dime, she
whispered. "Help me to never mess up this badly again."
"Tinker
ze domi," Someone said behind her, using
the formal form of her title.
She turned and found Derek Maynard, head of the EIA,
standing behind her. If Windwolf was prince of the Westernlands,
then Director Maynard was prince of
Pittsburgh
. Certainly, there was a similarity in their appearance,
as Maynard was elf tall and elf stylish. He wore his hair in a long,
blonde braid, a painted silk duster, and tall, polished boots. She
noted that while he was primarily in white, his accents –
earrings, waistcoat, and duster – were all Wind Clan
blue.
"Maynard? You're about the last person I expected to run
into here. Is the EIA out of ice cream?"
"I'm here to see you." Maynard bowed elegantly, weirding
her out. For years she had been terrified of the EIA, and now its
Director was treating her like a princess.
"Me?" To her annoyance, the word came out as a squeak.
Obviously, someone wasn't completely over their fear.
"I heard of the attack on you yesterday..."
"Hell, does everyone in
Pittsburgh
know about that?"
"Possibly. It made the newspaper. How are you feeling?"
"I wish people would stop asking."
"Forgiveness." He swept a critical gaze down over her,
taking in her silk dress, black leather gun belt, and polished riding
boots. "I am glad to see you well."
"You chased me down just to see how I was?"
"Yes." He motioned toward the shrine. "Did you convert
after Windwolf made you an elf?"
"I was raised in the religion," she said. "My grandfather was
an atheist or agnostic, depending on his mood. Tooloo often
babysat me when I was a child; she thought if I wasn't watched
over by human gods, I should be protected by elfin ones."
"Has anyone ever taught you about human religion?"
"Grandpa taught us to exchange Christmas presents and Lain
lights candles at Hanukkah."
"Lain Shanske? I take it that she's Jewish."
"By blood, although not totally by faith. It seems a weird
compulsion that she fights, like she doesn't want to believe,
saying she's not going to do Hanukkah but at the last minute, she
pulls out the candles and lights them."
Maynard nodded, as if Lain's behavior wasn't bizarre. "I
understand."
"I don't. If you try to talk to her about the Jewish God
– one minute she's saying that her god is the only true
god, and the next minute, she'll be telling me that scientifically,
her creation story is impossible. It's like she wants me to know
her religion, but doesn't want me to believe it, because she
doesn't believe it—but she does."
"Things that you're told as a child – your fear, your
religion, your bigotry—become so much apart of you
that's it hard to remove them when you grow to be adult.
Sometimes you don't realize such things are there until the
moment of truth, and then it is suddenly impossible to miss as a
third arm, and as hard to cut off."
"You talk like you've been through it."
"There have been a few times where all I could do was kiss
dirt and pray."
Stormsong scoffed slightly, reminding Tinker that this
wasn't a private conversation. On the heels of that, she
remembered that this was the second most important person in
Pittsburgh
after Windwolf—and he had come looking for
her.
"You didn't come here to ask me about my religion."
"Actually, in a way, I had," Maynard said. "You do realize
that
Pittsburgh
's treaty with the elves is now null and void?"
"No. Why would it be void?"
"The basic underlying principle of the treaty is that
Pittsburgh was a city of
Earth
only temporarily visiting Elfhome. Every article was
written with the idea that humans would and could return to
Earth."
"Shit! Okay, I didn't realize that." She frowned at him,
wishing she wasn't so tired. Surely this conversation had to be
making some kind of sense, but she was missing the connection.
What did her religion have to do with the treaty?
"Little one," Stormsong took out a pack of Juicy Fruit gum
and offered Tinker a piece. "He wants to know how human you
are after everyone has had a chance to fuck your brain over for
the last few months. He needs your help but he doesn't know if
he can trust you."
Ooooh. Tinker took the gum to give herself a moment to
think.
"Succinct as ever, Stormsong." Maynard also accepted a
piece.
"That's why you love me." Stormsong stepped back out of
the conversation, becoming elfin again.
The last time Tinker remembered talking with Maynard
was—before she'd been summoned by the queen. She'd
warned him about the oni. Slowly unwrapping the gum, she tried
to remember if she had seen Maynard after that. No, the oni had
kidnapped her while she was on her way to see him. Yeah, she
could see why he might be concerned she'd been
somehow—damaged.
That still begged the question of what the hell he expected
her to do in regard of negotiating a new treaty. As a business
owner, she found all regulations set up in the original one to be
baffling, perplexing, mystifying, bewildering... and any other
word that meant confusing.
"Look, I can help with junkyards, hoverbike racing, and
advanced physics." She sighed and put the gum in her mouth. For
a moment the taste – not Juicy Fruit as she remembered
but something similar—only a hundred times better
– distracted her. It was like getting kicked in the mouth.
"Wow." She checked the bright yellow wrapper in her hand. Oh
yes, she was an elf now, and things tasted different.
Maynard was frowning, waiting for her to finish her point.
"Um—" What had she been saying? Oh yes, her areas
of expertise. "But I've discovered that I know very little about
anything else."
"You're Windwolf's
domi."
"And this makes me an expert on—what? I don't
know you well enough to discuss my sex life and quite frankly,
the only place I get to see my husband is in bed."
"Whether you like it or not,
ze domi, that makes you
a player in
Pittsburgh
. There are sixty thousands humans that need you on
their side."
"Fine, I'm on their side. Rah, rah, rah! That still doesn't give
me a clue how to help. Fuck, I tried to help the elves and look at
the mess I made. You can't screw up much more than Turtle
Creek."
"A lot of elves see this as a win-win situation. If you had
permanently returned
Pittsburgh
back to Earth, it would have been perfect."
"Some of us would have been pissed," Stormsong said.
Maynard gave Stormsong a look that begged her to be quiet.
"Look," Tinker said. "If shit hits the fan, I promise I will
move heaven and earth to protect the people of this city, but I am
not a political animal. At this point in time, I don't even want to
try to tackle anything that can't be solved with basic number
crunching."
Maynard was still gazing at Stormsong, but in a more intent
fashion now. Stormsong wore an odd stunned look, like
someone had hit her with a cattle prod.
"Stormsong?" Tinker scanned the area, looking for danger.
"You will," Stormsong murmured softly in a voice that put
chills down Tinker's spine.
"I will
what?" Tinker shivered off the feeling.
"Move heaven and earth to protect what you love,"
Stormsong whispered.
"What the hell does that mean?" Tinker asked.
Stormsong blinked and focused on Tinker. "Forgiveness,
ze domi," she said in High Elvish, disappearing behind her
most formal mask. "My ability is erratic and I'm untrained. I
– I am not certain..."
"If that's the case, I'm satisfied." Maynard acted as if
Stormsong had said something more understandable.
"Forgiveness,
ze domi, I must take my leave.
Nasadae
."
"
Nasadae." Tinker echoed, mystified. What the fuck
just happened? Maynard bowed his parting. Stormsong had gone
into
sekasha mode. And the conversation had been in
English, so asking Pony would be pointless.
Wojo returned with the keys. "I see you've found the cause
of all our problems." He indicated the shrine marking the ley line.
"As soon as the magic seeped into the area after the first Startup,
the whole unit went whacky. It was the weirdest thing I'd ever
seen—including waking up the day before."
"Huh?" She was having trouble switching gears. That's it,
I'm won't fight any monsters today and go to bed early.
Wojo misunderstood her grunt of confusion. "I lived out in
West View right on the Rim – almost didn't come with
the rest of the city. My place looked down on I-279. Every
morning, I'd get up, have coffee, and check traffic out my back
window. That first Startup, I looked out, and there was nothing
but trees. I thought maybe I was dreaming. I actually went and
took a cold shower before going back and looking again."
Tinker added a shower and maybe a nightcap to her 'must get
sleep' list – if she could find either.
"I never realized how noisy the highway was until
afterwards," Wojo continued blithely. "When the forest is still,
its absolute quiet, like the world is wrapped in cotton. And the
wind through the trees – that green smell—I just
love it."
Tinker bet Stormsong would know where to find booze and
hot water.
"But between the wargs, the saurus and the black willows,
West View was just too isolated – I was way out past the
scientist commune on Observatory Hill. It's all ironwood forest
now. I have a nice place up to
Mount Washington
, beautiful view of the city, and it's much safer up
there. And hell, with gas prices what they are, it makes sense to
take the incline down the hill and take the light rail over."
"Yeah, yeah," Tinker agreed to shut him up and indicated the
door. "Let's see what you have."
Wojo unlocked the padlock, freed it from the bolt, and
opened the door.
Before her transformation, ley lines seemed nearly mystical
– lines of force running like invisible rivers. The little
shrines erected by the elves on strong ley lines served as the only
warning for why the normal laws of physics would suddenly
skew off in odd directions, as the chaos of magic was applied to
the equation. "I hit a ley," embedded itself into the
Pittsburgh
language, blaming everything from acts of nature to
bad judgment on the unseen presence.
But now, as a
domana, she could see magic. The
door swung open to reveal a room filled with the shimmer of
power.
"Sweet gods," she breathed, earning a surprised look from
Wojo and making the
sekasha move closer to her.
The magic flowed at a purple on the far end of the visible
spectrum, lighting the floor to such near-invisible intensity that it
brought tears to her eyes. The high ceiling absorbed most of that
light, so it stayed cloaked in shifting shadows. Heat spilled out of
the room, flushing her to fever hot, and seconds later, the sense
of lightness seeped up her legs, slowly filling her until she felt
like she would float away.
"What?" Wojo asked.
"It's a very strong ley line," Tinker said.
Wojo made a slight surprised hrumpf to this.
She considered what she was wearing. An active spell with
this much force behind it, snarled by something metal on her,
could be deadly. She wasn't sure how dangerous this much latent
magic might pose. "You might want to empty your pockets."
She pulled off her boots, emptied her pockets into them, and
took off her gun belt. Since the
sekasha caste couldn't
sense magic, she told Pony and Stormsong, "This ley seems
almost as strong as the Spell Stones."
"The shrine indicates a
fiutana," Pony explained.
"Like the one that the spell stones are built on."
"What's that?" Tinker asked.
Pony explained, "A single point where magic is much
stronger than normal, welling up, like spring waters."
"If you're coming in," she told the two warriors, "Strip off
all metal. And I mean all."
The
sekasha started paper, scissors, stone to see
which was going in, and which would stay behind with the
weapons.
There was a light switch by the door; Tinker cautiously
flipped it on, but nothing happened.
"Light bulbs pop as soon as you carry them into the room,"
Wojo explained, "so we stopped installing them."
"We needed a light source shielded from magic." Tinker
flipped the switch back to off. "I don't think even a plastic
flashlight would work."
"No, they pop too." Wojo took out two spell lights and held
out one to her. "These are safe, but you'll want to watch
– they're really bright."
With this much magic around, that wasn't surprising.
She wrapped her hand tight around the cool glass orb before
activating it. Her fingers gleamed dull red, her bones lines of
darkness inside her skin. Carefully, she uncovered a fraction of
the orb, and light shafted out a painfully brilliant white.
Stormsong won paper, scissors, stone and opted for coming
inside. She ghosted into the room ahead of Tinker, her shields
outlining her in blue brilliance, her wooden sword ready. Tinker
waiting for Stormsong to flash the 'all clear' signal before
entering the warehouse.
The cement floor was rough and warm under her stocking
feet. She walked into the room, feeling like she should be
wading. It lacked the resistance of water, but she could sense a
current, a slow circular flow, and a depth.
Wojo followed, oblivious to magic. "This is the space. Is it
big enough? If we can get the refrigerator unit to work?"
Tinker considered the loading dock, the wide door and the
large room. They would have to transfer the tree from the flatbed
to something that wheeled, then shift both back onto the flatbed
to get the tree up to the loading dock height and still able to shift
it back into the cooler. Given that they'd have to fit a forklift in
to help with the transfer, it would be a tight fit, but certainly
doable.
"Yeah, this will do." Of course they would have to drain off
the massive excess of magic. Strong magic and heavy machinery
did not mix well. "You had the cooling unit running for, what,
ten years? I'm surprised you managed to keep it running that
long."
"More like fourteen." Wojo said. "Your grandfather,
actually, came over just after Startup and set us up so it worked
fine for years. It didn't break down until after he died."
The machine room was off the back of the refrigerated
room, through a normal sized door in the insulated wall. The
compressor itself was normal. The cement around it, however,
had been inscribed with a spell. A section had overloaded,
burning out a section of the spell. She'd never seen anything like
it.
"My grandfather did this?" Tinker asked.
"Yes." Wojo nodded. "He heard about the trouble we were
having and volunteered to fix it. We were a little skeptical. Back
then, no one knew anything about working magic. People are
picking magic up, but still, no one had a clue how to fix what he
did when it broke."
Tinker's family had the edge that they were descendent from
an elf trapped on Earth. Her father, Leonardo Dufae, developed
his hyperphase gate based off the quantum nature of magic after
studying the family's codex. It was main reason Tinker had been
able to build a gate when no one on Earth had yet figured out
how to copy her father's work.
"Define whacky." Tinker asked.
"What?" Wojo said.
"You said that it went whacky after the first startup."
"Ah, well, the compressor seemed to work like a pump. The
magic was so thick that you could see it. It blew every lightbulb
on the block. The forklifts kept burning out but then they'd skitter
across the room, just inches off the floor. Loose paper would
crawl up your leg like a kitten. It was just weird."
Yes, that fell under whacky. She knew that the electric
forklifts had engines that could short to form a crude anti-gravity
spell – it was what gave her the idea for hoverbikes. The
loose paper was new. Perhaps they had something printed on
them that had animated them.
"We finally just shut it down and gave all the ice cream to
the Queen's army." Wojo wave his hand to illustrate emptying
out the vast storage area. "Kind of an ice breaker –
pardon the pun. A thousand gallons of the cookie batter,
chocolate fudge, and peanut butter. Luckily, the Chinese paid for
the inventory loss and it hooked the elves on our ice cream."
Tinker sighed, combing her fingers back through her short
hair. "Well, no matter what, I'll have to drain off the magic;
basically set up a siphon that funnels magic to a storage unit. I
have one set up for my electromagnet since a ley line runs
through my scrapyard." She used to think of it as a strong ley
line, but it was just a meandering stream compared to this flood.
"But that won't handle a flood like you're talking about."
"Whatever your grandfather did worked for years."
The question was – what had her grandfather done?
To start from scratch would take time she didn't have, not with
the black willow warming in the sun. Luckily, he kept
meticulous records on anything he ever worked on. "I'll go
through his things and see if I can find a copy of the spell."
Chapter 7: Things Better Left Buried
The treaty between the elves and humans banned certain
humans from
Pittsburgh
as it traveled back and forth between the worlds:
criminals, mentally insane, and orphans. When her grandfather
died, her cousin Oilcan had been seventeen and Tinker had just
turned thirteen. Facing possible deportation, dealing with her
grandfather's things had been the last thing on Tinker's mind.
Truth be told, she'd run a little mad at the time, resisting Lain and
Oilcan's attempts to have her move in with them. She roamed the
city, hiding from her grief, and sleeping wherever night found
her. Terrified that she was going to lose the only world she'd ever
known, she drank it down in huge swallows.
Only when Oilcan turned eighteen, able to be her legal
guardian, did they settle back into a normal life. With money
from licensing her hoverbike design, she set up her scrap yard
business, moved into a loft, and laid claim to a sprawling garage
between the two. Her grief, however, had been too fresh to deal
with her grandfather's things; Oilcan and Nathan Czernowski
packed up them up and stored them away in a room at the back of
the garage.
Even now – looking at the small mountain of boxes,
draped in plastic, smelling of age – it was tempting to
just shut the door on the emotional landmines that the boxes
might hold.
"
Domi," Pony said quietly behind her. "What are we
looking for here?"
"My grandfather created the spell at the ice cream factory. I
need to find his notes on it so I can fix it quickly. I figure it's in
one of these boxes."
Pony nodded, looking undaunted by the task. "How can we
help?"
Backing out of the whole tree mess wasn't really an option;
she already had too many people involved. The dust, however,
was making her nose itch.
"Can you take these boxes out to the parking pad?" She
waved toward the square of sun-baked cement. "After I look
through a box, you can put it back."
The first box she opened was actually some of their old
racing gear. Inside were a dozen of their FRS walkie-talkies,
heavily shielded against magic. She'd upgraded the team to
earbuds, and mothballed the handheld radios.
"Score!" she cried. "This is just what I wanted!"
"What are they?" Pony picked one up. "Phones?"
"Close. I want to make it so the Hands can communicate
over distance better. These are a little bit clunky but they're easy
to use."
Oddly, Stormsong thought this was funny. She took the box,
saying mysteriously, "This should be interesting."
* * *
Tinker supposed it could be worse. Her grandfather had been
methodical in organizing his things. Oilcan kept everything
carefully separated as he packed the boxes. Still she couldn't find
anything filed under Reinholds, Refrigeration, Ice Cream, or the
type of compressor that Reinholds used.
"Ze domi," Stormsong murmured politely.
Tinker sighed. Random searching wasn't going to work.
"What is it, Stormsong?"
"I want to thank you for yesterday."
"Yesterday?" Tinker found the Aa-Ak box and sat down
beside it. "Can you put these boxes in alphabetical order?"
Stormsong started to rearrange the boxes, but switched to
English, losing her polite mask. "Look, little one, you're a good
kid – your heart is in the right place – so I guess I
do have to thank you for that stupidity you pulled yesterday. If
you hadn't come back, I'd be dead. But I had made my peace with
that – being sekasha is all about choosing your
life and your death – so don't ever pull that shit
again. You really fucked up. When that thing hit you, you should
have been so much dead meat – and would have been a
huge waste – because you are a good kid. The kind I
would have been happy dying to protect – do you
understand?"
Tinker blinked at her for moment, before finding her voice.
"I thought I figured out a way to kill it."
"It wasn't your place to kill it."
"What? I lost at paper, scissors,
stone?"
"You know what I hate about being a sekasha? It's
the domana. We sekasha spend our lives learning
the best way to handle any emergency. We train and train and
train – and then have to kowtow to some domana
who is just winging it because they've got the big guns. Do you
know what? Just because you've got the big brains, or the kick
ass spells, doesn't mean you know everything. Next fight, shut
the fuck up and do what you're told, or I'm going to bitch slap
you."
It took Tinker a moment to find her voice. "You know, I
think I like you better when you speak Elvish."
Stormsong laughed, "And I like you better when you speak
English. You're more human."
Tinker controlled the urge to stick out her tongue. She
deserved Stormsong's criticism since she had screwed up. Still,
she suddenly felt like crying. Oh joy. The last few weeks had left
her rubbed raw. Instead, she pushed the Aa-Ak box toward
Stormsong, saying, "I'm done with this one," and moved on. At
least, having had her say, Stormsong took the box away without
comment.
Under "Birth" Tinker found birth certificates for everyone in
the family but herself. She pulled Oilcan's and had Stormsong put
it in the car. Under "Dufae" she found the original Dufae Codex
carefully sealed in plastic. She'd only worked with the scanned
copy that her father made.
"Wow." That too she pulled out and had put in the Rolls to
take home with her. The next book started with E's, and toward
the back was a thick file folder marked simply: Esme. "What the
hell?"
Tinker pried the file out of the box, flipped it open and
found Esme Shanske looking back. She ruffled quickly through
the file. It was all information on Esme. NASA bios. Newspaper
clippings. Photographs. It threw her into sudden and complete
confusion.
"What are you doing here?" She asked Esme's photo. "I
wasn't looking for you. What was I looking for?" She had to
think a moment before remembering that she wanted to find her
grandfather's notes on the spell at Reinholds so the walk-in
freezer could function again so she could store the black willow.
But why? "Why am I doing this again?"
Lain wanted the black willow (thus the whole reason it was
salvaged in the first place) and it might revive—good
reason to lock the tree in the cooler. The cooler was broken. She
needed to fix it. They were all nice, sane, and logical links in a
chain.
What made it all weird were her dreams and Esme popping
up in odd places. It jarred hard with Tinker's orderly conception
of reality. It pushed her into an uncomfortable feeling that the
world wasn't as solid and fixed as she thought it was. She wanted
to ignore it all, but Windwolf had said that it wasn't wise to
ignore her dreams.
Perhaps if she dealt with them in a scientific manner, they
wouldn't seem so – frighteningly weird.
She got her datapad and settled in the sun to write out what
she remembered of the dream, and what had already materialized.
The pearl necklace headed the list, since it was the first to appear.
Second was the black willow and the ice cream. She considered
the hedgehogs of the dream and the flamingoes in the book's
illustrations and decided her future might be decidedly weird.
And who was the Asian woman in black? She felt that the
woman had to be tengu because of the crows. She had felt,
however, that she knew the woman, just as she knew Esme.
Perhaps she was another colonist, which was why the birds kept
repeating, "Lost." Riki had told her that the first ship was crewed
by tengu. Then it hit her – Riki lied about everything. She
flopped back onto the sun warm cement and covered her eyes.
Gods, what was she doing? Trying to apply logic to dream
symbols was not going to work! So how was she going to figure
out the future with only dreams and possible lies?
* * *
"Domi," Pony's voice and the touch of his hand on
her face yanked Tinker out of her nightmare. "Wake up."
Tinker opened her eyes and struggled awake. She lay on the
warm, rough cement of the parking pad. Stormsong was doing a
leisurely prowl in the alley. Pony knelt beside her, sheltering her
from the sun. She groaned and rubbed at her eyes; they burned
with unshed tears. "What is it?"
"You were having a nightmare."
She grunted and sat up, not wanting to fall back to sleep,
perhaps to dream. Lately dreaming was a bitch. The oni had really
force-fed her id some whoppers, not that her imagination really
needed it, no thank you.
"Domi?" His dark eyes mirrored the concern in his
murmured question. "Are you all right?"
"It was just a bad dream." She yawned so deep her face felt
like it would split in half. "How can I sleep and wake up more
tired?"
"You've only been asleep for a few minutes." He shifted so
that he sat beside her. "Nor was it restful sleep."
"You're telling me." In her dreams, she hadn't been able to
save him from being flayed of his tattoos. She leaned against his
bare arm, his skin and tattoos wonderfully intact, glad for the
opportunity to reassure herself without making a big deal of it.
Just a nightmare.
He smelled wonderful. After weeks together, she knew his
natural scent. He was wearing some kind of cologne, an enticing
light musk. She felt the now familiar desire uncoil inside her.
Gods, why did stress make her want to lick honey off his rock-
hard abs? Was this some kind of weird primitive wiring –
most of us are going off to be eaten by saber tooth tigers, so let's
fuck like crazy before the gene pool lessens? Or was she
uniquely screwed up?
Every night with Pony among the oni had been a torture of
temptation. There had been only one bed and she had been stupid
enough to insist that they share it. She would lay awake,
desperately wanting to reach out to him—to be
held—to be made love to—to be taken care of. She
managed to resist because of a little voice that reminded her that
she would swap Pony for Windwolf in heartbeat—that it
was her husband she really wanted. There been no way to kick
Pony out of the bed without admitting how much she wanted
him, so he and her secret temptation stayed.
Even now she fought the urge to plant little kisses on his
bicep. I'm a married woman. I'm married and I do love
Windwolf. She couldn't even imagine being married to Pony,
although she wasn't sure why – he was to-die-for cute.
Unfortunately, she could imagine having hot sex with him. She
sighed as her curiosity stirred to wonder what running her tongue
up the curve of his arm would taste like. Now I've done it
– it will eat me alive wondering...
"Domi, what is it?"
Embarrassment burned through her. "N-N-Nothing. I'm just
tired. I haven't been sleeping well."
"Have you found what you needed?" He asked.
"No." She shook her head and yawned again. She saved her
notes on the datapad and handed Esme's file to him. "Put this in
the Rolls. I'll get back to work."
Luckily the information she was looking for was in the F's,
under Flux Compression Generator. Huh? Normally
compressing a magnetic field would generate more amperes of
current than a lightning bolt and cause an electromagnetic pulse.
What in hell was her grandfather thinking? But there was no
mistaking the Reinhold floor layout, and the accompanying notes
on the spell. With the folder, it should be fairly simple to recreate
her grandfather's spell
She heard the scrape of boots on the cement behind her. The
sekasha were probably bored to tears.
"This is what I was looking for." She got to her feet and
brushed the dust from her skirt. She looked up and was startled
to find the sekasha forming a wall of muscle between her
and Nathan Czernowski. The sight of him put a tingle of
nervousness through her. "Nathan? What are you doing here?"
"I saw the Rolls and figured that it had to be you."
"Yeah, it's me." She busied herself with the boxes as an
excuse not to look at him, wondering why she felt so weird until
she remembered where they'd left off. Last time she'd seen him,
he – he – she didn't even want to assign a word to
it.
Nathan had been like an older brother to her and Oilcan. He
hung around the garage and scrap yard on his off hours, drinking
beer with them, and shooting the breeze. On racing days, he acted
as security for her pit. She knew all his sprawling family
members, had attended their weddings and funerals and birthday
parties. There wasn't another man in
Pittsburgh
that she would have let into her loft while she was
dressed only in a towel. Nobody else she would have thought
herself utterly safe with.
Then he'd held her down, tore off her towel, and tried to
push into her.
In one terrifying second, he'd become a large, frightening
stranger. She had never considered before how tall he was, how
strong he was, or how easily he could do anything he wanted
with her.
He hadn't actually done—it. He'd stopped. He seemed
to be listening to her. She would never know if he actually would
have gotten off her, and let her up, and gone back to the Nathan
she knew because Pony had come to her rescue.
A day later she'd been snatched up by the Queen's Wyverns,
dragged away to attend the royal court, and then kidnapped by the
oni, where she witnessed true evil. She hadn't thought of Nathan
once in all that time. She wasn't sure what she felt now.
"I heard about the monster—" Nathan started.
"You and all of Pittsburgh
. I'm fine!"
"I see." Nathan gazed her wistfully. "You look beautiful."
"Thanks." She knew it was mostly the jewel red silk dress.
She also knew that it clung to her like paint where it wasn't
exposing vast amounts of skin. Suddenly she felt weirdly under-
dressed.
They stood a moment in nervous silence. Finally, Nathan
wet his lips and said, "I'm sorry. I went way over the line, and I'm
– so – sorry."
She burned with sudden embarrassment; it was like being
naked under him again. "I don't want to talk about it."
"No, I'm ashamed of what I did, and I want to
apologize—though I know that really doesn't cut it." His
voice grew husky with self-loathing. "I would have killed another
man for doing it. That I was drunk and jealous excuses nothing."
"Nathan, I don't know how to deal with this."
"I just loved you so much. I still do. It kills me that I lost
you. I just don't want you to hate me."
"I don't hate you," she whispered. "I'm pissed to hell at you.
And I'm a little scared of you now. But I don't hate you."
At least she didn't think she did. He had stopped –
that counted for something—didn't it? More than
anything, she felt stupid for letting it happen. Everyone had told
her that things wouldn't work out between her and Nathan
– and she had ignored them.
They stood in awkward silence. It dawned on her that
sekasha were still between her and Nathan, a quiet angry
presence. She realized that Pony must have told Stormsong who
Nathan was and what he'd done, and embarrassment burned
through her. Once again she was having her nose ground into the
fact that she was being constantly watched. She pushed past the
sekasha and Nathan, wondering how much detail had
Pony told Stormsong. She could trust Pony with her life, but not
her privacy; she wasn't even sure he understood the concept.
When she reached the Rolls, she was tempted to climb in
and drive away, but would mean leaving the storage room half
unpacked. She dropped the file in the back of the car, beside the
other things she'd set aside to take home. Nathan and the
sekasha had trailed her out to the Rolls. Somehow, out in the
alley, she felt more claustrophobic, their presence made
unavoidable by the fact that they had followed her en masse.
"I have what I need," she told Pony and then realized she had
said that already. "Everything needs put back."
"Yes, domi." Pony signaled to Stormsong to return
to the storage room; he remained with Tinker.
Nathan stayed too. His police cruiser sat behind the Rolls.
For some reason the Pittsburgh Police had doubled up and Bue
Pedersen waited patiently for Nathan to finish.
"Bowman," Tinker nodded to Bue.
"Hiya, Tinker." Bue nodded back.
"They tell me that you're his domi." Nathan meant
Windwolf.
"Yeah." She fiddled with the bracelet. She had no wedding
ring to flash as proof. Elves apparently don't go for those kind of
things.
"You know, everyone's going on and on as if you got
married to him and you're a princess now, but Tooloo says that
you're not his wife."
Her heart flipped in chest. "What?"
"Tooloo says that Windwolf didn't marry you."
She stared at him dumbfounded for a minute before she
thought to say, "And you believed her? Tooloo lies. You
ask her five times in a row when her birthday is and she'll tell you
a different date each time!"
He looked down at her bare fingers. "Then why was there no
wedding? Why no ring?"
She tried to ignore the weird cartwheeling in her chest.
"Nathan, it's not – they – they don't do things like
we do."
He gave a cold bitter laugh. "Yeah, like changing someone's
species without asking them."
"He asked!" she snapped. She just hadn't understood.
"Come on, Tink. I was there. You had no idea what he had
done to you. You still don't know. You think you're married.
Hell, half the city thinks you're married. But you're not."
She shook her head and clung to the one thing she knew for
sure. "Tooloo lies about everything. She hates Windwolf. She's
lying to you."
"Tink–"
"I don't have time for this bullshit! Stormsong, we're
leaving! Just the lock the door and come."
* * *
"The humans farm—grass?" Bladebite prodded the
green rectangle of sod laid down in the palace clearing.
"Convenient, isn't it?" Wolf pointed out, although he
suspected that his First Hand wouldn't see it as such.
"It's unnatural." Bladebite grumbled. "Grass already grows
quickly – why would they want it to instantly appear?"
Wolf rubbed at his temple were a headache was starting to
form. 'Quickly,' of course, was all a matter of perspective. The
palace clearing was still raw wound of earth from the cutting
down the ironwoods and tearing up the massive stubs. Until the
dead gossamer could be cleared, the clearing would have to
double as an airfield. Wolf knew his First Hand reflected what
most elves would think of the sod. It couldn't be helped. After
last night's rainfall, the clearing was turning into a pit of mud.
Wolf had delegated cleaning up the gossamer body to
Wraith Arrow, an imperfect match of abilities and task, but
currently the best he could hope for as Tinker had apparently
found some project on the North Side that was taking up her
time. Reports were drifting back, along with a box of walkie-
talkies.
His First Hand viewed the devices with the same open
suspicion as the sod. Luckily, while Wraith dealt with the
gossamer, Cloudwalker filled the fifth position. The 'baby'
sekasha was cautiously prodding the buttons on the walkie-
talkie.
While his Hands kept alert for trouble, Wolf focused on
getting the clearing ready for the arrival of the Queen's Troops.
The settlements on the East Coast reported that a dreadnaught
had passed overhead, so it would be arriving soon.
"You're not going to take down the oaks – are you?"
The human contractor pointed out the massive wind oaks. "That
would be a crying shame."
Wolf hated the idea of cutting down the trees for a single
day's use of the clearing. While the trees were spellworked to be
extremely long-lived, their acorns rarely sprouted hardy saplings,
and thus the trees continued to be quite rare. Wolf had been sure
that finding five so close to Pittsburgh
was a sign of the gods' blessings. He had chose the
site because of the trees and planned to build the palace around
them.
He paced the clearing, trying to remember the dreadnaught's
size. Would there be room for it to land without taking down the
trees? While he did, he wondered about the oni's attack. Why kill
the gossamer? Thinking with a cold heart, he realized that it
would have made more sense for the oni to attack
Poppymeadow's in the middle of the night. The ley line through
the enclaves wasn't strong enough to support aggressive defense
spells. The rocket would have triggered the alarms, but Wolf
wouldn't have been able to call his shields in time.
One would think that the oni would have realized by now
that Wolf was their strongest adversary. But maybe he was
overestimating their grasp on the situation. Taking himself out of
the equation, he considered the question again. Why the
gossamer? There had been a second gossamer in plain sight,
waiting for mooring. True that airship had fled the area and it
would probably take hours for its navigator to coax the beast
back to Pittsburgh
. Perhaps the oni hoped to isolate Wolf by killing both
his ships before he could react. Perhaps they didn't realize that he
had already sent for support.
While the gossamer's death was a pity, he was glad that the
oni attacked it and not the enclaves. He had lost two of his
sekasha this century. He did not want to lose another.
Wolf became aware that the sekasha had stopped a
human from approaching him while he was thinking. He focused
on the man with pale eyes and a dark goatee. "What is it that you
want?"
"I'm the city's coroner." The man took Wolf's question as
permission to close the distance. Bladebite stopped the human
with a straight arm and a cold look.
"I am not familiar with that word." Wolf said.
"I'm – I'm the one that deals with the dead."
"I see." Wolf signaled to his Hand to let the man advance.
Sparrow had dealt with this man, since Wolf had always been
wounded the two times his people had been killed.
"Tim Covington." The coroner held out his hand to be
shaken.
Wolf considered the offered hand. The other domana
would not allow such contact – a broken finger would
leave them helpless. Humans needed to be schooled in day to day
manners – but was now the time to start? He decided that
today, he would keep to human politeness and shook
Covington
's hand. At least the man introduced himself first,
which would be correct for both races.
"Wolf Who Rules Wind."
"I was down the street, dealing with the oni bodies, and they
said you were here."
"We only executed one oni."
Covington
looked away, clearly disturbed. "They unburied two
more dead males when they brought in the backhoe."
"Why do you seek me out? I have no dead."
"I've been coroner for nearly ten years. I dealt with both
Lightning Strike and Hawk Scream."
Covington
named the two fallen sekasha.
"They have been given up to the sky."
"Well, I prepared Sparrow but no one has come for her. The
enclaves – they have no phones. I wasn't sure what to
do."
Bladebite recognized Sparrow's English nickname. He spat
on the ground in disgust.
"No one will come for Sparrow." Wolf turned back to
pacing the clearing.
"What do you mean?"
Covington
fell in step with Wolf.
"Sparrow betrayed her clan. We will have nothing to do with
her now. Deal with her body as if she was an oni."
Cloudwalker suddenly trotted up to them, looking
concerned. "Domou! We have a problem."
"What is it?" Wolf cocked his fingers to call the winds.
Cloudwalker pointed to the oak trees. Humans had chained
themselves to the massive trunks.
"How did they get there?" Wolf glanced around at the three
Hands of sekasha scattered across the clearing.
Cloudwalker blushed with embarrassment. "We—we
tested them and they were not oni. They had no weapons."
They did have a banner that said, "Save the oaks." Wolf had
heard of this type of lunacy, but never seen it in action. How did
they get organized so quickly?
"We did not realize that they were not part of the human
work crew," Cloudwalker finished. "So we let them pass. What
do you want us to do with them?"
Wolf didn't completely trust his sekasha to solve the
problem without involving swords. He didn't want dead peaceful
protesters. "Call Wraith Arrow – he has the EIA helping
him. Have them send the police to arrest these humans."
Covington
waited as if there was more he needed. Wolf turned
to him.
"I'm not sure what to do with the oni," Covington
continued their conversation. "Do you know their
practices?"
"I am told that they in times of plenty, they feed their dead to
their hounds," Wolf said. "In times of famine, they eat both their
dead and their dogs."
"I don't believe that's true. That's the kind of sick propaganda
that always gets generated in a war."
"Elves do not lie." Wolf paused to consider the areas he just
paced off. He believed that the one section of the clearing was
large enough for the dreadnaught to land easily, even in high
winds. The other sections, however, were deceptively small
– they should mark the areas in some manner.
"Everyone lies." Covington
demonstrated in two words the humans' greatest
strength and weakness. They were able to look at anything and
see it as human. It gave them great ability to empathize but it also
kept them from seeing others clearly.
"Our society is built on blind trust," Wolf said. "Lying is not
an option for us."
But Covington
couldn't see it. Perhaps it was too big for him to
grasp. The need for truth came from everything from their
immortality, to their fragile memory, to the ancient roots of the
clans, to the interdependency of their day to day lives. Tinker,
though, seemed to understand it to her core.
"Treat Sparrow as you see fit." Wolf knew that
Covington
would be true to his human nature, and treat her with
respect, but unknowingly consign the dead elf to the horrors of
embalming fluid, a coffin and a grave instead of open sky. "Ask
the EIA what to do with the oni bodies. Be aware that there will
be more. Many more."
* * *
Tinker's grandfather always said that you needed a plan for
everything from baking a cake to total global domination. He
taught her the minutia of project management along with
experimental and mathematical procedure. Over the years, she
had put the skill to good use, from starting a small salvage
business at age fourteen, to thwarting the oni army with just her
wits and one unarmed sekasha.
The truly wonderful thing about focusing on a complex
project was there wasn't time to think of messy, extraneous
details like elfin wedding customs. Just trying to drain off the
buildup of magic out of the cooler required creative scavenging
for parts and guerilla raids across the city for workers. She
designed four jury-rigged pumps that used electromagnets to
siphon magic into steel drums of magnetized iron fillings.
Unfortunately, the drums would slowly leak magic back out, so
they would have to rotate them out, letting them sit someplace
until inert. While the siphons were inside the cooler, she sat the
drums outside, so whoever changed them didn't need to enter the
locked room. The walls seemed solid enough – she
would have to check the architectural drawings to be sure, but
certainly reinforcing the door wouldn't hurt.
The more she considered safety procedures, the less sure she
was this was a good idea. The project, however, was rampaging
beyond her ability to stop it. The Reinholds' employees were
searching out drawings and adding bars to the door, the EIA was
sending a tractor-trailer truck to Lain's, a dozen hastily drafted
elves were gathering to help with the move, and she'd given out
her promises like Halloween candy.
Why was she doing this again? Was her only reason some
nonsense out of a dream? Or was she really focusing on the tree
so she didn't have to consider that Tooloo was right?
Afraid that she'd fry any of her computer equipment, she had
stuck to low-tech project management. Settling on the loading
dock's edge, she wrote 'domi' on her pad of paper and
then slowly circled it again and again as her thoughts spun
around the question.
Without question, she was Windwolf's domi
– the queen herself had confirmed that. Tinker had
assumed that domi meant wife; for a long time she
simply translated it as wife. Later, she had sensed that it didn't
mean quite the same thing. And Windwolf never used the English
word 'wife' or for that matter, 'married.' He'd given her some
beans, a brazier and a dau mark. She rubbed at her dau between
her eyebrows, feeling the slight difference in skin texture under
the blue glyph. What the hell kind of wedding ceremony was
that? And nothing else? Hell, when Nathan's cousin Benny had
been married by the justice of the peace, they still had a wedding
reception afterwards. Surely the elves did something to
celebrate a marriage – so why hadn't there been
something?
If domi didn't mean wife, what did it mean? She had
talked to Maynard two months ago about it, she'd gotten the
impression it meant she was married, but now she couldn't recall
the exact words that Maynard had used. What she remembered
distinctly, was how Maynard had been carefully trying to keep his
balance on the fence between the humans and the elves. Had she
heard only what she wanted to hear? Certainly it would make a
neater package for Maynard if Windwolf married Tinker instead
of just carried her off to be a live-in prostitute.
Whispering in the bottom of her soul was a small voice that
called her a glorified whore. She couldn't ignore the fact that the
only thing she did with Windwolf was have sex. Great sex. Wives
did more than that – didn't they? Nathan's mother and
sisters went grocery shopping, cooked for their husbands and
cleaned up the dirty dishes but Lemonseed handled all that for
Windwolf. Wives washed clothes – Nathan's sisters
actually had long discussions on the best ways to get out stains.
Dandelion, however, headed the laundry crew.
Without thinking about it, she started a decision tree,
branching out 'wife' and 'whore.' What difference did it make
to her? She never worried about being a "good girl" but at
the same time, she had always been contemptuous of women
who were either too dumb or too lazy to do real work, using
their bodies instead of their brain to make a living. Could she
live with all of Pittsburgh
knowing that she was a glorified whore?
Stormsong squatted down beside her, took the pencil from
her hand, and scratched out 'whore' and 'wife' and wrote 'lady.'
"That, domi, is the closest English word. It means 'one
who rules.' It denotes a position within the clan that oversees
households that have allegiance to them but are not directly part
of their household."
"Like the enclaves?"
"Yes, all the enclaves of Pittsburgh
owe fidelity to Wolf Who Rules. He chose people he
thought could function as heads and supported the building of
their households. It is a huge undertaking to convince people to
leave their old households and shift to a new one. To leave the
Easternlands – to come this wilderness – to settle
beside the uneasy strangeness of Pittsburgh
–" Stormsong shook her head and switched to
English. "You have no fucking idea how much trust these people
have in Wolf."
"So why did he choose me? And why do these people listen
to me?"
"I think that he sees greatness in you and he loves you for it.
And they trust him."
"So they don't really trust me?"
"Ah, we're elves. We need half a day to decide if we need to
piss."
"So – I'm not married to him?"
Stormsong tilted her head side to side, squinting as she
considered the two cultures. "The closest English word is
'married' but it's too – small – and common."
"So, it's grand and exotic—and there's no ceremony
for it?"
Stormsong nodded. "Yup, that's about it."
A hoverbike turned into the alley with a sudden roar.
Stormsong sprang to her feet, her hand going to her sword. Pony
checked the female
sekasha with a murmur of "
Nagarou" identifying Tinker's cousin Oilcan as the sister's
son of Tinker's father.
Oilcan swooped around the extra barrels and dropped down
to land in front of the loading dock where Tinker sat.
"Hey!" Oilcan called as he killed his hoverbike's engine.
"Wow! Look at you."
"Hey yourself!" Tinker tugged down her skirt, just in case
she was flashing panty. Gods, she hated dresses. "Thanks for
coming."
"Glad to help." He leaned against the chest high dock. Wood
sprites was what Tooloo had called them as kids – small,
nut brown from head to bare toes, and fey in the way people used
to think elves would look. Beneath his easy smile and summer
stain of walnut, though, he seemed drawn.
"You okay?" She nudged him in the ribs with her toe.
"Me?" He scoffed. "I'm not the one being attacked by
monsters every other day."
"Bleah." She poked him again to cover the guilty feeling of
making him so worried about her. "It's like –
what—nearly noon? And there's not a monster in sight."
"I'm glad you called." He pulled out a folded newspaper.
"Otherwise I might have been worried. Did you see this?"
"This" was a full front-page story screaming "Princess
Mauled." She hadn't seen a photographer yesterday when
Windwolf carried her through the coach yard but apparently one
had seen her. She flopped back onto the cement. "Oh, son of a
turd."
Oilcan nudged against her foot, as if seeking the closeness
they had just moments before. "I'm sorry, I shouldn't have shown
it to you."
"You didn't take the picture." Lying down felt too good, like
she could easily drift to sleep. She sat back up and held out her
hand for the paper. "Let me see how bad it really is."
She looked small, helpless and battered in Windwolf's arms,
covered with an alarming amount of blood. The picture caption
was "Viceroy Windwolf carries Vicereine Tinker to safety after
she and her bodyguards were attacked by a large wild animal."
"What the hell is a vicereine?" she asked.
"Wife of the viceroy."
"Oh." There, she was married, the newspaper said so. "It still
sounds weird."
"Vicereine?"
"All of it. Vicereine. Princess. Wife. Married. It seems
unreal for some reason."
She scanned the story. It was odd that while it was she and
the five elf warriors in the valley, all the information came from
human sources. It listed her age and previous address, but only
gave Stormsong's English name, not her full elfin one of
Linapavuata-watarou-bo-taeli which meant Singing Storm
Wind. And the
sekasha were labeled "royal bodyguards."
Was it because the reporter didn't speak Elvish, or was it because
the elves didn't like to talk about themselves? She learned
nothing except the news had a very human slant. It was odd that
she hadn't noticed before.
"Even after all this time, you don't feel married?" Oilcan
asked.
She made a rude noise and nudged him again in the ribs with
her toe. "No. Not really. It doesn't help that Tooloo is spreading
rumors that I'm not."
"She is? Why?"
"Who knows why that crazy half-elf does anything?" Tinker
wasn't sure which was worse: that Tooloo was considered an
expert on elfin culture, or that the people Tinker cared about
most all shopped at Tooloo's general store. Her lies would
spread out from McKees Rocks like a virus with an authenticity
that the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette couldn't touch.
"Hell," she continued. "It was like three days before I even
figured out that I was married – I don't even remember
what I said when he proposed."
"Does he treat you well?" Oilcan asked. "Doesn't yell at
you? Call you names? Try to make you feel stupid?"
She made the kick a little harder. "He's good to me. He treats
me like a princess."
"Ow!" He danced away, laughing. "Okay, okay. I just don't
want to see you hurt." He sobered, and added quietly. "My dad
always waited until we were home alone."
His father had beaten his mother to death in a drunken rage.
When Oilcan came to live with them, he was black and blue from
head to knees, and flinched at a raised hand.
"Windwolf isn't like your dad." She tried not to be angry at
the comparison; Oilcan was only worried about her. "If nothing
else, he's a hell of lot older than your dad."
"This is a good thing?"
Tinker clicked her tongue in an elfin shrug without thinking
and then realized what she'd done. "The elves have been so much
more patient than I could ever imagine being. Windwolf has
moved the whole household to
Pittsburgh
to make me happy, because to them, living here for a
couple decades is nothing."
"Good."
"Now, are you going to help me with this tree?" She asked.
"I'll think about it." He grinned impishly.
Chapter 8: Calling The Wind
She had to learn not to be surprised when Windwolf popped
up at odd times.
She was stretched out on the back room's floor, making a
copy of her grandfather's spell. Her attempts with a camera
failed, the magical interference corrupting the digital image.
After what it had done to the camera, she decided against
bringing in her datapad to scan it. Instead she had Reinhold's find
a roll of brown packaging paper. She covered the floor with
paper, and now was making a tracing by simply rubbing crayons
lightly across the paper, pressing harder when she felt the
depression of the spell tracings. Working with the damaged spell
made her nervous, and her dress was driving her nuts, so she
stripped down to underwear and socks and Oilcan's t-shirt.
She'd worn the black crayon out, so she upended the box,
spilling the rest of the crayons out onto the floor beside her. The
array of colors splayed out on the floor shoved all other thoughts
from her mind. She used to make magic pencils by mixing metal
filings into melted crayons, poured into molds and then wrapped
with construction paper. The only bulk supply of crayons were
the packs of sixty-four different shades, which she would
separate into the eight basic colors: red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, purple,
black and white. It
got so she could look at a spray of crayons and see those eight
– but she was seeing twelve now.
Since becoming an elf, she knew she saw the world slightly
differently. Things she thought were beautiful had been suddenly
nearly garish or clashed weirdly. This was the first time that she
had proof that Windwolf had somehow changed her basic vision.
"There you are," Windwolf's voice came from above her.
She glanced up to find him standing beside her. "What are
you doing here?"
"I was told that you were here – drawing
pictures—mostly naked."
"Pfft." She focused back on the paper, not sure how she felt
about knowing that her vision been changed. In a way, it was like
getting glasses – right? "I only took my boots, bra, and
dress off."
"I see."
She glanced over her shoulder at him and blushed at how he
was looking at her. "Hey!"
He grinned and settled cross-legged besides her, resting his
hand on the small of her back. "This is an odd beast."
It took her a moment to realize he meant the damaged spell,
not her.
"Do you recognize it?"
"In a manner of speaking. It is not a whole spell." He studied
the circuits. "This is only an outer shell – one that control
effects put out by another spell."
She had been focusing on the various subsections and hadn't
realized that they didn't form a complete spell. Her knowledge of
magic came solely from experimentation and her family's codex,
which itself seemed to be an eclectic collection of spells.
"It's possible that this machine sets up a spell-like effect."
Windwolf motioned to the compressor. "And this shell modifies
that effect."
"Oh, yes. The heat exchanger could be acting like a spell."
"These are Stone Clan runes. See this symbol?" He traced
one of the graceful lines. "This subsection has to do with
gravitational force – which falls within earth magic."
"I didn't realize it was Stone Clan."
"Where did you learn it?" he asked.
"My family has a spell codex that's been handed down for
generations."
"This means that your forefather was a Stone Clan
domana."
"How can you be so sure?"
"Such spells are closely guarded. The clan's powers rest on
the control of their element."
"Maybe he stole it." That appealed to her, a master thief as
an ancestor.
"With your family's sense of honor, that is unlikely."
That pleased her more. She abandoned the tracing to roll
over and smile up at him. "So my family is honorable, eh?"
He put his warm palm on her bare stomach to rub lazy
circles there. "Very. It shows in everything you and your cousin
do."
"Hmm." She enjoyed the moment, gazing up at him. The
look in his eyes always made her melt inside. It still stunned her
that someone could be directing such love toward her. How did
she get so lucky? Of course her brain cared more about puzzles.
"But I couldn't feel magic before you made me your
domi."
Windwolf shook his head. "The magic sense is a recessive
trait. It would have quickly vanished in the following generations
of mating with humans."
"Would I be able to use their spell stones?"
"I doubt it very much." Windwolf shook his head. "Only part
of that is ability, though; the rest is politics. Even if you
somehow retained the needed genes, the Stone Clan will not train
my
domi."
"That's a bitch."
There was a slight noise and Windwolf glanced toward it.
One of the
sekasha that came with him, Bladebite, took
up post by the door from the machine room into the warehouse.
The pallets with the black willow filled the dim room now. The
door out to summer was just a distant rectangle of light on the
other side of the tree. For a moment, all of their attention was on
the still tree. Thankfully, the siphons were working – she
could sense no overflow of magic—and the tree remained
dormant. She needed to finish up so they could kick on the
compressor and take the refrigeration room down to freezing.
The siphons should allow the compressor to work without the
spell.
"I do not like you working close to that thing," Windwolf
said. "The
sekasha would not be able to kill it if it
roused."
"I know. It usually takes dynamite and a bulldozer to take
one down. But I think my dreams are saying that it's a key to
protecting what we have."
"Dreams are hard to interpret."
"Yeah, yeah, I know. That's one thing I did learn with the
whole pivot stuff – this dream stuff is counter intuitive.
What feels like the wrong thing is sometimes the right thing."
The Queen's oracle, Pure Radiance, had foreseen that Tinker
would be the one person that could block the oni invasion of
Elfhome – the pivot on which the future would turn.
Oracles seemed to operate on the Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle; apparently telling Tinker how she was going to stop
the oni would keep Tinker from doing it. Considering Chiyo's
mind reading ability and Sparrow's betrayal, it was just as well
that the oracle had been obscure. Thinking back, though, Pure
Radiance must have known more than she told Tinker; having
Tinker dragged to Aum Renau and kept there for three weeks
allowed Tinker to strengthen her body, build a strong relationship
with Pony, and learn skills she needed to kill Lord Tomtom, the
leader of the oni.
Nevertheless, the key to stopping the oni had been doing
what they wanted her to do – which seemed to
completely defy logic.
"At least travel with a full Hand," Windwolf said. "Chose
four more – any one of them would be proud to pledge
to you."
"I don't want to take your people from you. Besides, didn't
you say that once I took Pony that I couldn't set him aside
without making him look bad? How could you give me yours
without insulting them?"
"I can not give them to you. They must offer themselves to
you. It is their hearts, which I can not rule, which you accept."
There were times she felt like the conversation had been run
through a translator one too many times. "How can I just choose
four at random? Wouldn't that be me asking and you giving?"
"They have let me know that if you need them, they would
be willing to go. I have released all of them from their pledge so
that they are free to go."
"All of them?"
Windwolf nodded. "With the exception of Wraith Arrow. I
need him. You have gained much respect with the
sekasha. And I am greatly pleased."
"Wow."
"What do you think of Stormsong? Do you fit with her?"
Fit with her? That was an interesting choice of words. Not
"like her" which was what she expected Windwolf to ask. "She's
a pistol. Sometimes it seems like she's two different people,
depending on which tongue she's speaking."
"A language can govern your thoughts. You can not think of
something if you have no words for it. English is a richer
language than Elvish, infused with countless other tongues over
time. And in so many ways, English is freer. Elvish is layered
heavily with politeness to enforce the laws of our society."
Tinker considered. Yes, politeness came more readily to her
when she spoke Elvish. It was only when she was using the very
formal, very polite High Elvish that she noticed – and
then it was because it felt like being handcuffed into being nice.
"I like speaking English with you," Windwolf said. "I feel
like I can just be me – the male that loves you –
and not the lord and ruler of our household. That we show each
other our true faces when we talk like this."
"Yeah, I noticed that when Stormsong drops into High
Elvish, it's like she puts on a mask."
"We speak so little High Elvish here compared to court. My
mother says that this rough country is making me uncouth
– I'm too plainspoken after being around humans so long.
She expects me to come home wrapped in bearskins."
She couldn't believe that anyone could think of him, and all
his smooth elegance, as uncouth. "Oh, please."
"If you're determined, you can be eloquently insulting in
High Elvish. Court makes an art out of it. I don't have the
patience for that – which has earned me a label of
boorish."
"Idiots, they deserve a bloody nose."
"My little savage." He pulled her into his arms and kissed
her soundly. "I love you dearly – and don't ever lose your
fierce heart – but please, pick no fights, not until you've
learned to defend yourself."
She skirted promising him anything by kissing him.
"Are you done here?" He asked much later.
"With this part." Reluctantly she slipped out of his arms to
lift up the paper that had been covering the spell. "I dug through
my grandfather's things and found his notes on this project. I need
to compare this to what he has and then fix it. I'll finish it up
tomorrow."
"Good," Windwolf said. "There is much we have to do and
things I want to do. For instance, I want to talk to you about what
direction we're going with the computing center."
"The what?" She asked before remembering. When she
returned to
Pittsburgh
area during Shutdown, she realized that technology
on Elfhome was non-existent. >From electrical power to
Pittsburgh
's limited Internet, everything went with the city when
it returned to Earth. In a fit of panic, she'd razed ten acres of
virgin forest and drafted a small army to start work on building
infrastructure. Since she was kidnapped only hours into the
project, she hadn't even gotten the chance to ask belated
permission let alone finish it. "Oh. That. I wasn't sure –
you know – if you even considered it a good idea."
"I think it's an excellent idea."
"I haven't even thought about it since that morning."
"You left quite detailed plans." He brushed his hand along
her cheek. "I made a few changes and had it finished. I'd like to
expand it, though, we probably should wait until the oni have
been dealt with."
"But
Pittsburgh
is kind of stuck here now. What's the point?"
"The point is that
Pittsburgh
, right or wrong, feels too human for elves to make
technology their own. It's like our cooks in Poppymeadow's
kitchen; they can cook there, but it's not their kitchen, so they
bow out and eat whatever Poppymeadow's staff makes. The
changes I made to the computing center were ways to make it
more comfortable for our people to use."
"Wow, I never thought of that." In truth, she wasn't thinking
about anyone but herself that morning. "How long to you think
we can keep this level of technology, though, without Earth?"
"Once the oni are dealt with, we will find a way back to
Earth." Windwolf promised with his eyes.
"
Pittsburgh
is never going back. The only way to affect all of
Pittsburgh
is from orbit. Even if we managed to start a space
program, we'd have to get the alignment perfect so the enclaves
stay here and then sending
Pittsburgh
to the right universe..." She shivered. "I don't want
that kind of responsibility."
"You and I can shake the universe until we find a way." He
kissed her brow. "But first things first. Come, get dressed, and let
me teach you magic."
* * *
Much to her surprise, he took her to the wide open field
where they had been building the new Viceroy's palace. Oddly, a
gossamer was moored here instead of the Faire Grounds. They
pulled to the edge of the abandoned project and got out of the
Rolls. The entire thirty acres had been covered with sod.
"Why here?" She swung up onto the gray phantom's hood.
The wind swept woman of its hood ornament – the spirit
of ecstasy—seemed so appropriate for the Wind Clan. She
wondered if that was how Windwolf ended up with the Rolls
Royces.
"The spell stones represent massive power," Windwolf
settled beside her on the hood. "Poppymeadow would probably
be annoyed if you lost control of the winds in her orchard."
There was a typical Windwolf answer. Did he sidestep the
real question on purpose or was he teasing her with his very dry
humor or did they just simply have a fundamental
miscommunication problem?
"You're going to teach me how to fly?"
"No." He said slowly. "You will learn how, some day, but
not from me, not today."
Her disappointment must have showed, as he actually
explained more.
"I have sent for a sepana autanat," Windwolf told
her. "But arrangements must be made, and such things take time."
"A what?"
"He trains the clan children in magic." He paused to search
out the English word. "A teacher."
"Oh." She had so few teachers in her life that the idea of a
total stranger teaching her was unsettling. "Can't you just teach
me yourself?"
"I wish I could, but there are things I don't remember of the
early lessons. And there were so many silly learning games we
played that even now I don't understand why we did them. I
suspect that they were to teach focus and control."
"What kind of games?"
He gave an embarrassed smile. "You will laugh." He stood
up, squared his shoulders, and closed his eyes. Taking a breath,
he raised his hands to his head, and eyes still closed, splayed out
his fingers like tree branches waving in a breeze. "Ironwood stand
straight and tall." He dropped his hands slightly so his thumbs
were now in his ears, and he flapped the hands. "Gossamer flies
over all." Hands to nose this time. "Flutist plays upon his pipe.
Cook checks to see if fruit is ripe." He touched index fingers
together. "Around and around, goes the bee." He spun in place
three times. "Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah."
He clapped five times and launched into the song again,
faster this time, and then again, faster still. Windwolf was right;
she had to giggle at him. He was so regally beautiful, yet he
purposely used a childish singsong voice as he wiggled his
fingers, spun in place, and clapped his hands. After the third
round, he collapsed besides her, laughing. "Well, you're supposed
to do that faster and faster, until you're too dizzy."
"What is that supposed to teach you?"
"I don't know." He lay back onto the warm hood to watch
the clouds roll overhead, considering. "I think—it might
have been staying aware where your body is regardless of what
you're doing. That is very important in controlling magic. There
is much for you to learn, and not all of it has to do with
controlling the winds."
She scoffed at that understatement. "I thought I knew a lot
about elves, about clans and everything, but I'm finding that I
don't know anything at all. Like I didn't know each clan had their
own spells."
Windwolf considered her for a moment, sadness gathering at
the edges of his eyes. "Yes, there is so very much you need to
learn. I suppose some history can not hurt, and probably help
make sense of our people."
She had heard one long history lesson from Tooloo, but
Tooloo tended to twist things to her own unique way of looking
at things. "Yeah, it might help."
"In the beginning all elves were much like humans, as
evidenced by the fact that we can still interbreed," Windwolf
started. "Perhaps—there is a chance—that the first
elves were humans, lost through the gateways from Earth to
Elfhome – or maybe humans are the ones that became
lost. We were tribes scattered, hither and yon, and in our
homelands, we practiced the magic that was strongest. Back then,
magic was considered holy, and those that used magic were our
priests, and they were the first of the clan leaders."
This was different than what Tooloo had told her, in tone if
not in fact.
"I don't understand." Tinker asked. "I thought all magic is the
same. It's just a general force harnessed by the mechanics of a
spell."
"Yes, and no. The Wind Clan spells have been refined for
millennia, but they are based on certain natural properties. The
Wind Clan, according to legends, started in the high steppe lands.
For countless generations, those free-born tribes used their
magic, and were slowly changed by it. That's where the genetic
stamp developed that allows you to key to one set of spell stones
or another."
"But didn't the Skin Clans gather all those tribes together
and force them to be the same?"
"They tried. They would conquer a tribe and do all they
could to stamp out its culture. Burning temples. Killing the
leaders, the scholars, and the priests. Skin Clan were ruthless
masters, but we were not totally helpless. We managed to hide
away some of our priests, keep them hidden for centuries. We
formed secret societies that evolved into the clans. As slaves all
we had to call our own was our life, our honor, and our pledge
to protect and to serve. But those were weapons strong enough
to overthrow the Skin Clan."
"So – since everything had to be kept secret
– ceremonies like weddings were a big no-no?" If so,
then her marriage to Windwolf made a lot more sense.
"Yes, we could not afford to be discovered. Simple words,
whispered between two people, were all we could trust."
"How did the domana end up ruling?"
"The clan leaders realized that the only way we could win
against the Skin Clan was to use their greatest abilities against
them. Once the Skin Clan became immortal, they ordered all their
bastards killed. We started to hide away healthy babies, offering
up stillborn and deformed infants in their place. They were
protected by the clan so that they could protect the clan."
Tooloo had told her a version of this, only somehow not as
noble, not so desperate. Quick Blade, Windwolf's great-
grandfather, had been one of the babies hidden away and died
fighting for his adopted clan's freedom.
"After we won the war with the Skin Clan, we suffered a
thousand years of war between ourselves. Clan against Clan.
Caste against Caste. Elf against Elf. We had lived so long in
slavery that we had no idea how to be free. It was the sekasha
that held us together – they demanded that the clan
structure should be maintained when the other castes would have
abandoned it."
"I would have thought it was the domana that would
kept the clans intact."
"The other castes feared that we would become cruel
monsters like our fathers. The sekasha guards us
– from harm and from ourselves. More than one
domana has been put down by his own Hand."
"Why did sekasha want the domana in
charge instead of just taking power themselves?"
It was as if Windwolf never considered the "why" of it. He
frowned and thought for minute. "I am not sure. It is the way they
wanted it. Perhaps it was because with the domana's
access to the spell stones, the sekashas' choices were
limited to putting the domana in power, destroying the
stones, or killing all the domana. While they are
sekasha first, they are fiercely loyal to their clans. It is their
nature to be so. And as such, it would go against their nature to
weaken their clan."
"So the spell stones and the domana stayed."
Windwolf nodded. "And we have had what passes as peace
for thousands of years – because of the sekasha."
Tinker glanced over to where Pony and Stormsong stood.
Close enough to protect. Far enough away to give her and
Windwolf a sense of privacy. Who was really in charge? On the
surface, it would seem she was – but if she was –
why was she stuck with sekasha watching her when she
rather be alone?
"In the Westernlands, the Wind Clan has only the Spell
Stones at Aum Renau." Windwolf returned to his magic lesson.
"On the other side of the ocean, there are many other sets. They
are arranged so that our clan can travel widely and stay within
range of a set."
"What's the range of a set?"
"The stones can reach one mei; Pittsburgh
is one third mei from the coast."
It finally explained one mysterious elfin measurement.
Unlike human measurements which were exact, the mei
was said to be roughly a thousand human miles but subject to
change. At Aum Renau, Windwolf had shown her how he cast a
trigger spell. It set up a quantum level resonance between him
and the spell stones, in essence a conduit for the magic to follow.
Power jumped the distance. It had been his
demonstration at Aum Renau that had given her the idea of how
to destroy both gates. Magic, though, could be influenced by the
moon's orbit and other factors, so the exact distance would be
variable – which fit the quantum-based system.
The distance limit also explained why only two clans were
coming to help them deal with the oni.
"So, the Stone Clan and Fire Clan have a set of stones within
a mei?"
"Yes."
"And spell stones from different clans can overlap." Tinker
wanted to be sure she had it right.
"Yes. The domana's genetic key determines which one they
pull from. The spells are slightly different. In the terms of battle,
the Stone Clan is much weaker in attack, but they are superior in
defense. Their specialty is mining, farming and architecture."
Architecture was the forefather of engineering. It kind of
made sense—her being Stone Clan and a genius in the hard
science.
"Do we actually fight with them?"
"Yes and no. There has been no open warfare between the
clans for two thousand years, not since the Fire Clan established
the monarchy. To a human, that might be seem like lasting peace,
but my father saw battle as a young man, and our battles have
merely become more covert. Fighting is limited to assassinations
and formal duels."
The concept of elves wanting her dead was somewhat
unnerving.
"You are under the Queen's protection," Windwolf
continued. "So you will be fairly safe from the other clans for the
time being. I want to teach you, however, a shielding spell so you
can defend yourself."
"Oh cool."
He laughed and distanced himself from the Rolls. "Have you
been taught the rituals of prayer?"
She nodded.
"Good. First you must find your center, just as you do for a
ritual." He stood straight and took a deep cleansing breath.
"Hold your fingers such." He held out his right hand, thumb
and index rigid, middle fingers cocked oddly.
She copied the position and he made minute changes to her
fingers.
"Each finger has several degrees. Laedin." He tucked
her index finger into a tight curl, and then, gliding his finger
along the top of hers, showed her that there needed to be a
straight line from the back of her hand to the knuckle. "
Sekasha." He uncurled her finger to the second knuckle and
corrected a slight tendency to bend at the first knuckle. "
Domana." He had to hold her finger straight so she only bent
the tip. "Full Royal." This was a stiff finger.
"Bows to no one," Tinker said.
"Exactly. You must be careful with your hands. A broken
finger can leave you defenseless."
"The first step is to call on the Spell Stones. You use a full
suit – king and queen" these were thumb and pinkie held
straight out "Domana, sekasha, laedin."
Tinker laughed as she tried to get her fingers to cooperate.
"There are finger games you can play to get them to do this
fluidly." He patiently corrected small mistakes in her hands. "In
the base spells, correct positioning is not as vital, but later, a
finger out of place will totally change the effect of your spell."
"This does get easier?"
"Yes, with practice."
"To calls winds and cast the spells, you need to hold your
hand before your mouth." He raised his hand to his mouth and
demonstrated the desired distance and then dropped his hand to
continue speaking. "Don't touch your face with your hand, but
you should feel as if you're almost touching your nose. Also if
you were to breathe out, like you blowing out a candle, the
center point of your breath would hit this center joint of your
fingers."
"Okay." She held up her hand and found it was harder to not
touch her nose than she thought.
"When I was little, my brothers and I would practice fighting
with each other and in the heat of battle, sometimes we ended up
punching ourselves in the nose."
Tinker laughed.
"Now, listen to the command to call the winds, and then to
cancel." He raised his right hand to his mouth.
"Daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaae."
Tinker felt the tremor in the air around Windwolf, like a
pulse of a bass amplifier, first against her magic sense, and then
against her skin.
Mentally, she knew that his body was taking the place of a
written spell; his voice started the resonance that would establish
a link between him and the spell stones, over three hundred miles
away. Despite everything she knew, his summoning of power out
of thin air somehow seemed more magical than any act she ever
witnessed.
He dismissed the power with another gesture and spoken
command.
"Now, you try it."
She felt the magic resonance deep in her bones, and then it
bloomed around her, enveloping her. Carefully she dismissed it.
"Very good. Once you tap the stones, you are connected to
them. That means you need to immediately use the power, or
dismiss it. Casting a spell that you hold, like a shield, keeps the
connection open until you end the spell. Casting a spell like a
force strike breaks the link immediately."
She nodded her understanding, trusting that when he taught
her the various spells, he would tell which category they fell into.
"The shielding spell I'm going to teach you is the most basic
of all the spells, but it is very powerful. With the power that the
spell stones tap, it is nearly impenetrable."
"Nearly?"
"I do not know anything that could breach it – but I
am afraid that you might find something – so I
put in a cautionary note."
She stuck at her tongue at him. "You make me sound like a
trouble maker."
"You do not make trouble – it finds you. And it is
always sorry when it does."
She laughed. "Flattery will get you everywhere."
He kissed her then, making her melt against his body. They
spent a few pleasant minutes kissing, and then he set her firmly
down.
"You need to learn this, my love. You need to be able to
protect yourself and your beholden."
"Yeah, I know. Teach away. I'm all ears."
"You summon the power and then shape it." He called forth
the power, paused deliberately, and the changed the position of
his hand and spoke a new command. The magic pulsing with
potential changed, distorting the air around them so they stood
inside a transparent sphere.
He held his stance. "Nothing can get in unless you allow it.
It will last as long as you desire – but you must be
careful with your movements." He moved slowly around to
demonstrate the range of motion desired to maintain the shield.
"Notice you must keep you hand in the correct position. If you
shift your fingers or move your hand too quickly, you lose the
connection for the shield."
He flapped his hands loosely and the shields vanished.
"Ugh!" Tinker cried. "It seems dangerously easy to lose your
shield when you least want to."
"There are weaker shields that don't require you to hold your
position. The sekasha spell for example allows them to
continue fighting without disrupting their shield. The difference
in strength is –" he paused to consider a comparison.
"—an inch of steel versus a foot."
"Oooh. I see." That messed with her head. She had assumed
that sekasha provided protection to the domana
during battle – keeping them safe as they called down
lightening and such. It seemed that the truth was that the
domana were heavy tanks during fighting. They were able to
take massive damage as well as deal it. It seemed that the
sekasha must be for day to day life, allowing the domana
to sleep and eat without fear.
Windwolf called up the shield again and this time showed
her how to properly cancel the shield. "It is best for you to get
into the habit to intentionally drop the shield than just to relax
your position."
It seemed easy enough, once you got past bending your
fingers into pretzels. Tinker managed to initialize the resonance
conduit, trigger the shield spell, hold it for a minute, and then
cancelled the shield spell.
"What about air? If you keep up the shield, do you run out
of air?"
"No. Air slowly leeches in, as does heat and cold. The shield
will protect you for a period of time in fire, but eventually the
heat and smoke will overcome you."
"Ah, good to know."
"Someone comes." Stormsong murmured softly, looking
east.
The sekasha pulled in tight as they watched the
eastern skyline.
"Listen," Wraith Arrow said.
After a moment, Tinker heard the low drone of engines in
the distance.
"It has to be the dreadnaught," Windwolf said.
"They're coming," Tinker murmured, wondering who 'they'
might be.
"Yes." Windwolf tugged on her wrist. "We need to return to
the enclave."
Tinker glanced at him in surprise. She would have thought
they would stay to greet the newcomers.
"I am not sure who the queen has sent," Windwolf
explained. "I want to look our best. Can you change quickly?"
She supposed it depended on your idea of quickly. "I think I
can. What should I wear?"
"The bronze gown, please."
"That's not the most formal one I have."
He smiled warmly at her. "Yes, but I love to see you in it."
She blushed and tried not to worry about how she was going
to get into the dress quickly.
As they got into the Rolls, a shadow passed overhead
accompanied by the low rumble of large engines. A dreadnaught
slid out from behind the hill to hover near the tree line. She'd
forgotten how massive the blend of airship and armored
helicopter was; it dwarfed the ironwoods, its four massive
rotator blades beating a storm of leaves out into the meadow.
Barrels of heavy guns bristled from the black hull, like the spiked
hide of a river shark. The gossamer moored at the clearing stirred
nervously in the presence of the large predator-like craft. As they
watched, the mooring lines were cast off and the gossamer gave
way to the dreadnaught.
The thumping of the rotors suddenly echoed into her
memories of her dream. In the background, constantly, had been
the same sound.
She shivered at the foreknowledge, and wondered what her
dream had been trying to warn her of.
Chapter 9: True Flame
At Poppymeadow's enclave, she discovered one of the
sekasha had called ahead. Half the females of Windwolf's
staff ambushed her at the door and hurried her to room. She tried
not to mind as they clucked and fussed over her, pulling her out
of clothes, washing her face, neck and hands, and pulling the
formal gown over her head. Certainly she wouldn't be able to
dress quickly without them, but their nervousness infected her.
At least she was confident about how she looked. The dress
was a deep, rich, mottled bronze that looked lovely against her
dusky skin. Over the bronze silk was another layer of fine, nearly
invisible fabric with a green leaf design, so that when the bronze
silk moved, it seemed like sunlight through forest leaves.
Unfortunately, it still had long sleeves that ended in a fingerless
glove arrangement and the dainty matching slippers.
"Oh please, can I wear boots?"
"You'll be outside, so the boots are appropriate."
Lemonseed proclaimed and her best suede ankle boots were
produced, freshly brushed.
Tinker stepped into the boots, the females fastened the row
of tiny hooks and eyes made of cling vine and ironwood down
the back of the gown, and she was dressed.
Windwolf waited by the car, wearing the bronze that
matched her underdress and a duster of the leaf pattern of her
overdress. His hair unbound in a shimmering black cascade down
his back.
"Where is your jewelry?" He asked.
"They wanted me to wear the diamonds." She held out both
necklaces. "But I thought the pearls would look better. I told
them I'd let you pick."
"The pearls do look better," Windwolf took the diamond
necklace and fastened in place. "But the diamonds are for formal
occasions such as this. The pearls would be for more intimate
times, such as a private dinner party."
Sighing, she surrendered the pearls back to Lemonseed for
safekeeping. "We're just going out to the clearing and saying
'howdy' aren't we?"
"We are greeting the Queen's representative who can strip us
of everything if they deem us unable to protect what we hold.
Appearance is everything."
"They can't
really take everything – can
they?"
"It is unlikely." Windwolf swept her into the Rolls. "Please,
beloved, be on your best behavior. Keep to High Elvish –
and forgive me – but speak as little as possible, since
your High Elvish is still weak."
Great, the Queen's representative hadn't even landed and
already she was being made to feel like a scruffy junkyard dog.
Her annoyance must have shown on her face, because Windwolf
took her hand.
"Beloved, please, promise me to keep that cutting wit of
yours sheathed."
"I promise." She growled, but silently reserved the right to
kick anyone that truly pissed her off.
* * *
Tinker could see why Windwolf opted to dress first. True
the dreadnought had landed and its many gangplanks were
lowered. There was, however, no sign of the Queen's
representative. A sea
of Fire Clan red
moved around the ship as the Queen's Wyverns secured the area
with slow thoroughness. Their Rolls was checked at the entrance
to the clearing where Wyverns already erected a barrier. After
their identities were verified, the Rolls was directed to a
shimmering white tent of fairy silk. An ornate rug already
carpeted the tent. Servants were setting up a teak folding-table,
richly carved chairs, a map chest and a tea service.
Leave it to elves to do everything with elegance.
The Queen's Wyverns were tall with hair the color of fire
pulled back and braided into a thick cord. Like the Wind Clan sekasha, they wore vests of wyvern-scale armor, and
permanent spell tattoos scrolled down their arms; both were done
in shades of red that matched their hair.
All of Windwolf's sekasha had come with them and
formed two walls of blue in the sea of red. Seeing all the
sekasha in mass, Tinker realized not only how much alike the
Wyverns looked, but also how much the Wind Clan sekasha
– slightly shorter with black hair – looked
the same. Only Stormsong stood out with her short blue hair.
"Are the
sekasha of the various clans separate
families?" Tinker whispered to Windwolf as she held out a hand
to him, so he could help her out of the car. Experience had taught
her that the long skirts loved to wrap tight around her ankles as
she got in and out of cars and carriages – she had nearly
gone face first into the dirt several times.
"Hmm?" Windwolf steadied her as she scrambled out.
"They look alike." Once out, she twitched her skirts back
into place.
"The Skin Clan liked their
sekasha to match
– like coach horses. They would bio engineer a
generation to suit them and then breed them one to another. They
would kill all the children that didn't express the desired traits,
weeding out stock until it bred true, like drowning litters of
puppies when a mutt gets into a pure breed's kennel."
"That's horrible!"
"That's why we rebelled against them. Why we will have
nothing to do with the oni who are so much like them."
"This one has the domana genome?" Lord Tomtom had said
when he held her prisoner. "Perhaps I'll get my own litter on her."
Tinker shivered as she remembered Tomtom's clinical gaze on
her. No wonder the elves hated and feared the oni so much.
Alertness spread through the Wyverns, like ripples in a pool,
moving outward. A figure in white and gold emerged from the
dreadnaught. With the focus of every person on the field tight on
him, the tall male strode across the meadow to join them at the
tent. He wore a vest of gold scale, white leather pants, and a
duster of white fairy silk that flared out behind him as he walked.
He ducked into the tent and nodded to Windwolf. "Viceroy."
Windwolf bowed. "Prince General."
Prince? He had the Queen's glorious beauty – the
radiant white skin, the vivid blue eyes and oh-so-gold hair
twisted into a
sekasha-like braid.
Tinker carefully followed Windwolf's suit as to how low to
bow. Not that she needed to worry, for the elf prince didn't even
glance in her direction. The duster settled around him, revealing
that it had a delicate white on white design of wyverns and
flames.
"Well, it took a hundred and ten years." Surprisingly, the
Prince General used low Elvish. He has a deep voice with a hint
of rasp, as if he'd spent the day shouting. "But as I said, it was
only a matter of time before you would be calling for help and
then I would have to come save your sorry ass. Of course you
never could do things small – you had to go find a nest of
oni for me to wrestle."
Windwolf grinned hugely. "True!"
"Young pup!" The prince returned the smile and gave
Windwolf a rough hug. "It is good to see you again. It has been
too long."
"I have been busy."
"So I've heard."
"True Flame, this is my
domi, my beloved Tinker of
the Wind Clan. Beloved, Prince General True Flame of the Fire
Clan."
The prince turned his vivid gaze onto her and his eyebrows
arched up in surprise. "So this is your child-bride. They said she
was little..."
"Spare her your razor truth, please, True. I love her dearly
and do not wish to see her hurt."
True Flame snorted. "She better learn to guard her heart.
Those vultures of court will rip her to shreds."
"I don't plan to take her to court..."
"Can we stop talking like I am not here?" Tinker matched
True Flame's Low Elvish. A look from Windwolf told her that
regardless of what True Flame did, she was expected to speak
High Elvish.
"Certainly, cousin," True Flame said.
"Cousin?" Tinker glanced to Windwolf in confusion.
"My mother is the youngest daughter of Ashfall," Windwolf
said, and then, seeing Tinker's blank look, added. "Ashfall was
our first king."
True Flame gave Windwolf a look that clearly asked, '
She doesn't know that?'
"Grandfather has been dead for
nae hae," Windwolf
said.
"We've only had three rulers," True Flame said. "Ashfall,
Halo Dust, and Soulful Ember."
"Yes, my knowledge of all things elfin is lacking." Tinker
acknowledged and managed to bite down on 'I'm sure, however,
you're equally ignorant of buckyballs.'
Be nice to the male
that can take everything away from you, she reminded
herself, and managed to force her mouth into a slight smile.
Thank gods, Windwolf seemed to be friends with him.
True Flame took in the weak smile and turned back to
Windwolf with a slight look of distaste.
"Once you come to know her, True, you will see why I
chose her."
True Flame clicked his tongue and waved toward the table.
"Time will tell. Most of your choices continue to mystify me. Sit.
Let us discuss this mess you're in."
He pulled a map from the chest and spread it on the table. It
showed the city of
Pittsburgh
and the surrounding areas of Elfhome in detail.
"First, what is happening here?" True Flame pointed at
Turtle Creek on the map. "The whole area seems –
wrong."
Windwolf explained the events that lead to Tinker creating
the Ghostlands.
True Flame looked at Tinker with slight surprise, sweeping
a look down over her, before saying, "She's surprisingly
destructive for her size."
"That's part of her appeal," Windwolf agreed.
She kicked Windwolf under the table, which earned her
another warning look. She gave the look back at him. Being nice
was one thing, having them gang up on her was another.
"Can the oni cross from their world to ours through this
unstable area?" At least True Flame asked her directly.
"I don't know," Tinker said. "I need to study the area more.
In theory, there should not be enough energy to keep it unstable."
"We think at least one creature has come through."
Windwolf said. "My domi was attacked in the valley yesterday by
what we believe is an oni dragon. It is unlikely that the oni could
have smuggled such a creature across all the borders of Earth
– so it stands to reason that it's a new arrival."
"Then we will have to wait until this area is secure," True
Flame tapped Turtle Creek on the map, "before you can continue
your study."
"If the oni can come through, then we're in trouble," Tinker
said. "They had an army poised to come through my pathway.
With a few hours of study, I can..."
"Child, you will stay out of this valley until I give you
leave," True Flame said.
"I am not a child." Tinker snapped.
"You have learned your
esva?" True Flame asked.
Tinker didn't know the word. She glanced to Windwolf.
"No, she hasn't." Windwolf said quietly, as if holding in
anger. "You know it takes years of study."
"A
domi protects her warriors as they protect her,"
True Flame said. "Until we know the enemy's strength, we will
not endanger any of our people by pushing them onto the
frontlines with a helpless child to protect."
Windwolf put a hand to her shoulder as if he expected her to
say something rude. Tinker, however, found herself glancing at
Stormsong and Pony standing with the Wind Clan's
sekasha
. She hadn't been able to protect her people – she
nearly got them killed. She looked away, embarrassed by True
Flame's correct reading, and that she had failed Pony and the
others so completely.
True Flame took her silence as agreement and moved on.
"Have you been able to determine any other oni stronghold?"
"Not yet. Tinker killed their leader, Lord Tomtom, but the
size of their organization and the type of operations that they
were carrying out suggested a number of subordinates, which we
haven't identified nor located."
True Flame grunted and signaled for tea to be poured. A
servant moved forward to fill the delicate china tea bowls. After
a month at Aum Renau, Tinker knew that talking was a no-no
without Windwolf's glance her direction; some elf bullshit about
appreciating the act of being civilized. She distracted herself with
the honey and milk. True Flame studied the map of the sprawling
Earth city and expanse of Elfhome wilderness, ignoring the tea.
Silence would rule until True Flame, as highest ranked person at
the table, spoke.
"The oni weakness has always been their own savageness,"
he said finally. "To keep his underlings in check, an oni keeps his
people weak and in disorder. There is no chain of command.
Once you killed this Lord Tomtom, it was each dog for himself
until one could emerge as strongest."
True Flame locked his gaze on Tinker. "Each elf knows who
is above them, and who is beneath them, and that neither
relationship is stronger than the other. Those who serve are to be
protected, those who protect, are to be served. We are not wild
animals thinking only of ourselves, but a society that works only
when we each know our position and act accordingly."
Tinker forced herself to sip her tea and chose her words
carefully. "Having seen the oni up close, there is no need to
convince me which is better."
She expected another angry look from Windwolf, but his
eyes filled with sorrow, which only made her more
uncomfortable than his annoyance would have. She focused on
her tea instead.
"The rest of my force will be arriving on gossamers shortly,"
True Flame said. "I was afraid that you'd be overrun before they
could arrive, so I came on ahead."
"Thank you," Windwolf said. "If my beloved's aim had not
been true, all would have been lost before you arrived."
"Tonight, we can bivouac in this field, and tomorrow, we'll
start securing the city." He ran his hand over the great expanse of
wilderness. "The Stone Clan is traveling under escort of my
force. I will have no choice but reward them for their service."
"I know that." Windwolf said in a carefully neutral tone.
It hurt to see him sit there and take it. She couldn't just sit
there and watch him bow his head and have the Stone Clan
swoop in to take what he had carved out of raw wilderness.
"Wolf Who Rules didn't summon
Pittsburgh
here. And there was no way he could have kept the
humans off Elfhome – not even killing every last human
would have done that – because then there would have
been retaliation. The door was open to the oni by no fault of his."
"I know that," True Flame said.
"Then why should he be punished and the Stone Clan
rewarded? You claim that our society works because everyone
works together. What benefit would the Stone Clan reap if the
world was flooded by oni? Wolf Who Rules has put everything
on the line – where is his reward?"
"Because it is the law of our people: you hold only what you
can protect. It is the law that kept the peace for thousands of
years."
"Beloved," Windwolf said quietly. "It is not as unfair as it
seems. We are making a choice. Does the city fall to Stone Clan,
who are honorable elves, or to oni?"
"I wouldn't turn over a – a – a—warg
to the oni." That was an unfortunate choice of words as it
reminded her of the warg at the oni camp and poor, poor
– but hopefully dead – Chiyo. How could
someone she hated trigger such remorse? One thing was
certain—she cried much too easily lately. "This sucks,"
she snapped in English, wanting to blot the evidence of tears out
of her eyes, but the damn fancy sleeves of her gown were in the
way. She turned away from True Flame; she didn't want him to
see her crying. Yeah, yeah, impress the elf on how grown up you
are and bawl like a baby.
There was movement beside her and she realized Pony had
moved up to her side. It took everything she had not to reach for
him.
"If I may be excused," she hated that her voice shook. "I wish
to go back to the enclave."
"You may go." True Flame said.
She reached for Pony's arm. He got her up and away
smoothly, almost as if tears weren't blinding her. So much for
appearances.
* * *
A full Hand peeled off to accompany her and Pony back to
the enclave. Somehow, just having Pony there clearing a path to
her bedroom refuge made it possible to blink back the tears and
get herself under control. Still she was fumble fingered with
emotion as she tried to undo the hooks of her dress.
She finally gave up. "Can you undo me?"
Pony stood behind her and unhooked the tiny fasteners down
the back of dress. "Domi, do not be upset. True Flame
can see that your heart is in the right place."
She groaned at the echo of what Stormsong had said to her.
"They will put that on my gravestone. Here lies Tinker, her heart
was in the right place, but her foot was in her mouth and god
knows where her brain went."
He chuckled. "Usually we judge ourselves harsher than
anyone does."
It was a relief to let the dress slither down to the floor. She
stepped out of the pool of silk and picked it up, not wanting it to
be ruined. She had messed up enough things already today.
"So, Wolf Who Rules's mother is—" Tinker paused
to recall the various words the elves used to denote relationships.
This was made tricky because she wasn't sure if True Flame
mother or father was the connection. If True Flame was Soulful
Ember's brother, then his father was King Halo Dust. What was
the word for paternal aunt? "— father's sister to True
Flame?"
"Yes. Longwind and Flame Heart formed an alliance of the
Wind Clan and Fire Clan. Wolf Who Rules spent his doubles at
court under the Queen's Care, learning the fire esva. It
was there that he gained the favor of his royal cousins."
"What is that? Esva?" She hung up the dress and
considered what was in the closet to wear—all elfin
gowns and the sexy white nightgown that she didn't feel like
wearing. She wanted the familiar comfort of cotton. Had her
shorts dried yet?
"An esva is all the spells scribed into a clan's spell
stones."
"Wait. Fire? Wolf Who Rules is Wind Clan."
"He is both. He is the only one of his family that can access
both Clan's spell stones. It was expected that he would chose to
be Fire Clan, but he chose Wind Clan instead."
"Why?" She found the t-shirt she had borrowed off of
Oilcan and sniffed at it. It was a little stinky. She wondered when
Oilcan had last washed it.
"I can guess it was because he was born and raised in the
Wind Clan," Pony said. "Such things are hard to ignore, but I can
not be sure. You will have to ask him."
The bedroom door opened and another of Windwolf's
sekasha, Bladebite, stepped into the room. His gaze went
down over Tinker; it was the heated calculating look a male gives
a female. Suddenly the bra, underwear and diamond necklace that
had been plenty of clothes with Pony felt like nothing.
She clutched the t-shirt to her chest. "What is it, Bladebite?"
"It is time you finished your First Hand. I came to offer
myself to you."
Oh shit. What should she do? She'd managed to screw up
every single one of these encounters over the last two months,
entering relationships with a careless 'yes.' After the look he'd
given her, though, she didn't want to say yes – but would
'no' be a deadly insult? She started to turn toward Pony, but
Bladebite caught her arm, forcing her to look at him.
"This is between you and I, not him." Bladebite said. "You're
making your preferences fairly clear to us all, but they're not
wisely thought out. I have the experience you need. You should
fill your Hand with strong males, not mutts like Singing Storm."
"What the hell is wrong with her?"
"Since you obviously have no taste for Galloping Storm
Horse..." Bladebite used Pony's true elfin name.
"I love Pony." She snapped, and blushed red as she realized it
was true. When did that happen? "Things have changed since we
left Aum Renau. We've been through a lot together."
"And if a fruit is tempting, you take a bite when you're most
hungry."
What the hell did that mean?
"I offer all of me to you," Bladebite continued. "Do you
accept?"
"I – I – I," she stammered. I don't know
what the hell to say. The bedroom's dressing mirror was
behind Bladebite. She could see Pony; his jaw was clenched but
he made no move to interfere. Apparently Bladebite was right
– it was up to her to say yes or no. Her reflection
reinforced that she was nearly naked, the glitter of diamonds the
only thing visible besides the t-shirt clutched to her chest. She
never thought of herself as short, either, until something like this
forcibly reminded her that the elves were all a foot taller.
"I can't make that decision now," she finally managed to
force out. "I'm upset and not thinking clearly."
"You don't need to think. Just accept me."
Not think? Gods, he might as well be saying not breathe.
"No." And then seeing the look on his face. "Not now. I'm too
upset."
"We can't afford another spectacle—" Bladebite
started.
But apparently she'd said the magic words. Pony's "on duty"
light went on, and he shifted from behind Tinker to between her
and Bladebite.
"Tinker ze domi," Pony used her most formal title
and High Elvish, "said that she is upset and will decide later.
Please, Bladebite, go."
The words were polite but Pony's tone was cold as steel.
Bladebite gaze locked with Pony's. For a moment, she was
afraid that the older
sekasha would draw his sword. He
nodded though and bowed slightly to her. "Good night then,
ze domi."
She started to shake when the door closed behind him.
"I am sorry,
domi. Until you refused him, I could
not act."
"Was I right to say no?"
"I am disappointed only in him. He has the years to know
that you were upset and could not make such decisions."
She got dressed, annoyed that her hands still shook. Why
was she veering all over the place emotionally? Maybe she was
going to get her period. Usually she wasn't this hormonal, but she
hadn't had one as an elf yet. Oh, she hoped that wasn't the case;
thousands of years like this would drive her mad. How often did
elves get periods? It had been over two months since her last one
as a human. Oh gods, what if she was pregnant? Of course that
made her feel weepy again.
"I need something to drink." She said. "Can you ask
Poppymeadow to find us a bottle of—" What was that
stuff called again? "Ouzo?" Wait, if she was pregnant, should she
be drinking? And if she was just getting her period, what did
elves use? Pads? Tampons? Magic? Hopefully a period only
lasted the normal five days – surely even elves couldn't
do—that—for more than a week. Damn it, when
Windwolf made her an elf, he should have given her an owner's
manual for her new body.
She fumbled with her necklace and failed to get it off. "Oh
please, Pony, get this off me."
Pony undid the necklace. "I will get you something to eat
and drink, and then perhaps you should take a nap. You have
been through much lately,
domi, and you are worn
down."
"I want to practice magic." She needed to learn how to
protect her people.
"It would be difficult and dangerous the way you are now."
She supposed that was true. "Okay, okay. Something to eat
and a nap – and I need to talk to Stormsong about
– female – things."
Chapter 10: Storm Warnings
Wolf had watched his
domi retreat with concern. He
expected her to be gnawing at the prince's ankles instead of
breaking down into tears. He felt guilty for chiding her as he had.
The oni must have affected her more deeply than he originally
thought. He felt badly too that he had been pleased that she hadn't
bedded Little Horse while they were prisoners together; he
wanted her to himself as long as possible. Perhaps, if she had
slept with Little Horse, she would have fared better.
At least she had turned to her beholden when she lost
control of her emotions. As much as Wolf wished he could have
taken her back to the enclave and comfort her, all of his people
and the humans of
Pittsburgh
needed him to stay and deal with Prince True Flame.
Is this how the humans lived all their life? Having things
that they desperately wanted to do – comfort their love
ones, teach them what they needed to know—but with no
time to do it? No wonder they seemed to rail at life so.
True Flame sat watching him, expression carefully neutral.
"Being the pivot—" Wolf sighed and shook his head.
"It has subjected her to extraordinarily difficult choices. She's
only had hours to recover her center."
"This is recovered?"
"No, and it worries me."
True Flame glanced away, as if embarrassed by what he saw
on Wolf's face. "Forgiveness, Wolf. We get along because we
both have no need for empty politeness – but I remember
now that politeness can render much needed gentleness to the
soul. I will keep my sword sheathed from now on."
"Thank you."
"There will be nothing that I can do when the Stone Clan
arrives except to remind them that she is under my sister's
protection. She will have to interact with them, and they will take
advantage of her."
Wolf nodded unhappily. "It will be like trying to keep wargs
from the lambs at this point. I wish there was some way I could
keep her safe until she has had time to heal from whatever the oni
has done to her."
True Flame shook his head. "They'll arrive tomorrow with
my troops. I can delay the
aumani a day, on the pretense
of giving them time to settle in."
"Thank you." In their current situation, a day was most he
could have hoped for. "Who have they sent?"
"Earth Son, Jewel Tear, and
Forest
Moss."
Wolf breathed out; the threesome was tailored for hostile
opposition to him. He knew nothing of Forest Moss and thus
could not foresee what danger lay there. Judging by the others,
there was a good possibility, however, that this was an ancient
member of the Stone Clan, to offset Wolf's youth. Earth Son's
father was one of the three children of King Ashfall used to ally
the strongest of the clans to the crown via marriage. Obviously
Earth Son's inclusion was to eliminate Wolf's advantage with
True Flame – at least in theory.
The Stone Clan had always misunderstood the nature of the
alliance, and considered it a failure. The alliance had only
produced Earth Son. While he showed his father's gene type in
his height, his eyes, and his temper, his gene expression did not
include attunement to the spell stones. Earth Son could not use
the fire
esva. When Earth Son came to court, he treated
his Fire Clan cousins as strangers, and was regarded as such by
them.
In comparison, Wolf's parents produced ten children, half of
which inherited their mother's genome and pledged to the Fire
Clan. Wolf grew up seeing the royal family an extension of his
own and when he went to court, he fell under his older brothers
and sister's protection. Earth Son seemed to fail to understand the
slight differences in their position. He only saw the younger elf
being rewarded with favor he thought he was due, and held it
against Wolf.
The Stone Clan could barely find a delegate more ill-suited
to deal with Wolf – but they had managed. Wolf spent a
decade at summer court, thinking he and Jewel Tear were
soulmates, the other half of each other, and all the other lyrical
nonsense you thought while blindly in love. A hundred years and
meeting Tinker had taught him that he'd been wrong about the
entire nature of love. He and Jewel Tear had drifted apart soon
after he came of age and his ambitions took him to the
wilderness of the Westernlands. That the Stone Clan included her
in the delegation probably meant he misjudged their relationship.
So these three were coming to his holdings and dealing with
his people?
True Flame looked out at the sod covered clearing and the
dense forest of tower ironwoods beyond. "What the god's name
were you thinking of, leaving everything behind for this
wilderness?"
"I was thinking of leaving everything behind for this
wilderness."
"I've never understood why you're wasting yourself here."
"What would I be doing at court? Nothing has changed there
since we last interacted with humans. We had completely
stagnated. We had the same base of technology as the humans,
and yet we didn't develop the car, or the computer, the telephone
or the camera."
"We have no need of them."
"It doesn't bother you that we sat completely still for
hundreds of years while they raced ahead?"
"Less than three hundred years, pup. It passed like a lazy
summer afternoon in my life."
Wolf clenched his jaw against this. He'd heard the like all his
life from elves younger than True Flame's two thousand years.
"Every agricultural advance since the days of poking the holes in
the ground with sharp sticks, we've stolen from the humans. The
plow. Crop rotation. Fertilization. You're old enough to
remember the great famines."
True Flame gave him a look that would have silenced him as
a child.
Wolf refused to be rebuked. The events of the last three
decades had proved him right. "It's as if we get locked into one
mindset – this is how the world is and can't conceive or
desire something more. I tracked back all our advances while I
was at court—"
"I've heard this theory of yours, Wolf."
"Have you? Have you really listened to my words and
thought it through?"
"True there were times of famine, and yes, we went to Earth
and saw how to increase crop production and put those
techniques to use. But we have lived in peace for thousands of
years with all that we could want – why should we
clutter up our lives with gadgets?"
Wolf sighed. "You never listened. Not to anything I ever
said, did you? I told you over a hundred years ago that sooner or
later, the humans would come to us. And I'm telling you now, it's
only a matter of time before another race finds us."
* * *
One instructional conversation with Stormsong, one stiff
drink, one mystery meal of pan-fried wild game (what in gods'
name had drumsticks that size?), and one short nap, and Tinker
was feeling much better.
According to Stormsong, her emotional swings were from
exhaustion. It would be a year before Tinker would need to
worry about a period. Nor, Stormsong said as she poured a
generous round of ouzo, could Tinker be pregnant. "Drink, eat,
sleep," Stormsong repeated Pony's advice, only more succinctly.
It was fairly clear that discussions had taken place
while Tinker was asleep. There was an undercurrent running
through the sekasha and they were metaphorically
tiptoeing around her as if she would break. She wasn't sure which
was more annoying – that they felt that they needed to
tiptoe—or that they were doing such a horribly obvious
job at it. At least it kept Bladebite from hounding her, although
he was clearly sulking.
Much to Tinker's disgust, Stormsong coaxed her out to the
enclave's bathhouse. She went only because the enclave's had no
showers and the last time she done more than wallow in a sink
was at the hospice. She was starting to stink even to herself. She
thought she hated elfin bathing – the cold water pre-scrub
gave new meaning to the word unpleasant – but when she
discovered that the bathhouse was both communal and mixed
sex, she decided to loathe elfin bathing. As far as she was
concerned, if the gods wanted them naked, they wouldn't have
invented clothing.
The bath at least was stunning, done in jewel-toned mosaics
with marble columns and a great skylight of beveled glass. The
minerals had been added to the hot water, so it was hazy to the
point that it gave a small level of privacy. And the sekasha seemed well-practiced with using the towels to keep
themselves discreet until the water covered them. Thankfully
Bladebite didn't join them, though, surprisingly, Pony did. The
eye-candy of Pony covered only by steaming water, however,
didn't outweigh the negative of being the shortest, darkest,
smallest-breasted female present.
"Relax." Stormsong had proved to be naturally a pale white
blonde – a fact Tinker hadn't really wanted to know. "We
won't eat you."
"At least we won't." Rainlily smiled with a glance toward
Pony.
Tinker stood up – realized that she was flashing
them all – and sat back down to hide in the hazy water. "I
am not amused."
Stormsong splashed Rainlily, "Shush you."
"If we don't tease her," Rainlily said, "she'll think elves are
just as prudish as humans. I've never understood how they can be
so blatant with their sexual imagery, and yet in relationships with
one another, they are so narrow minded. As if a heart can hold
only one love at a time, and you have to empty out one before
there's room for another."
"Let her cope with one thing at a time," Pony watched
Tinker with a worried gaze.
"I'm fine," she told him and wondered why she had to say
that so often lately.
"One lover gets boring after thirty or forty years," Rainlily
said. "It's like peanut butter on a spoon, it's really good, but with
chocolate sometimes, it's even better."
Tinker knew that elves loved peanut butter as much as they
loved Juicy Fruit gum and ice cream. Considering her experience
with the gum, she really had to track down a jar of peanut butter.
Stormsong moaned at the suggested of peanut butter and
chocolate. She added, "Or peanut butter and strawberry jam on
fresh bread."
"Peanut butter on toast," Sun Lance held up her hand as if
she held a piece of toasted bread by its crust. "Where the bread is
crunchy and the peanut butter is all hot and runny."
"Raisin bread toast." Tinker modified Sun Lance's
suggestion to her favorite way to eat peanut butter before she
became an elf.
"Peanut butter, pretzels, chocolate," Rainlily listed out, "and
that marshmallow fluff all mixed together."
"Oh that explains Cloudwalker and Moonshadow at the
same time," Stormsong murmured.
"Nyowr," Rainlily growled with a smile, which was the
Elvish version of a cat's meow.
"Peanut butter on apple slices," Sun Lance said.
"On a banana," Tinker said.
"On Skybolt," Rainlily said knowingly.
"Oh yes, that's nice," Stormsong agreed.
Tinker was going to need a scorecard to track the
sekasha's relationships.
"Peanut butter ice cream," Pony said.
"Peanut butter ice cream!" The females all sighed.
"Unless domi takes another sekasha, though,
then her options are limited." Rainlily pointed out. "There's Pony,
and then there's Pony."
"That's still peanut butter and," Stormsong thought a
moment, before finishing. "Virgin honey."
Rainlily eyed Pony and smiled. "Definitely virgin honey."
Pony blushed and looked down.
"And Wolf Who Rules is peanut butter ice cream," Sun
Lance said.
That triggered a chorus of agreement from the females.
Tinker had one moment of feeling pleased that she married the
prize male and then realization hit her like a two by four to the
head. She gasped out in shock.
"
Domi?" All four
sekasha instantly reacted,
moving toward her as they scanned the building for enemies.
"Windwolf! You've all slept with him?"
The female warriors exchanged glances.
"Well?" she pressed.
"Yes,
domi," Stormsong said quietly. "But not since
he's met you."
Was that really supposed to make her feel better? Well,
giving it a moment to sink in, yes it did. She knew that Windwolf
had to have had lovers before her – she just didn't expect
to be naked in a tub with them at any point. There were two other
female
sekasha. Tinker supposed they were ex-lovers too.
Windwolf's household number seventy-five – she didn't
even know how many were female, but most of the sizeable
kitchen staff was. The possible number staggered her. "Any
females from the rest of the household?"
The
sekasha blinked at her in surprise.
"No,
domi, that wouldn't be proper." Was it a good
thing or a bad that Stormsong was keeping to Elvish?
"Only the
sekasha are
naekuna," Pony
explained.
"You're what?"
"
Naekuna." Pony sat up slightly in the water to point
at a tattoo on his hipbone. She blushed and looked away. "We can
turn on and off our fertility."
"It is considered best if a
domi and
domou
chooses among their beholden
sekasha for their lovers."
Stormsong had a similar tattoo on her hip. "The security of the
household is not compromised and we're
naekuna."
Tinker had one moment of relief until she realized that she
had to interact with the five female
sekasha on a daily
basis. She stared at Stormsong, Sun Lance, and Rainlily, unsure
how to cope with the sudden knowledge that these females had
slept with Windwolf. They knew what a good lover he was
– probably helped him perfect his technique. What if
– as the whole peanut butter conversation had suggested
– Windwolf wanted variety? How did one deal with that?
The crushing weight of inevitability that you would have to
share? With such drop-dead beautiful females no less?
Elves always were so focused on today. You couldn't get
them to talk about the past.
Nae hae, too many years to
count, it happened long ago, why bother? The future was the
future, why stress over it bearing down on you?
Given long enough time, the smallest probability came
reality. Sooner or later, you would live through all the possible
futures. Nor would the past really be a true indicator of the
future as you worked through one unlikely chance to the next.
Did the elves wear blinders just to keep sane?
"Are you all right?" Pony asked.
"Um, let me get back to you about that."
* * *
"Ze domou," Wraith Arrow was operating at
maximum respect now that the Fire Clan had arrived. Or more
specifically, since the Wyverns arrived. Wolf found himself
wondering if perhaps the sekasha had chosen their king
based on his Hands than his clan. "Forest Moss is one of those
who traveled to Onihida when the pathway was found. He and
the sekasha, Silver Vein in Stone, were the only two that
managed to survive their capture by the oni."
At one time, certain caves and rock formations created
Pathways that let a person walk from one world to the next.
Anyone without the ability to detect a ley line could search
closely for the Pathway, even to the point of stepping in and out
of worlds, and never find it. The dangers of traveling to Earth
were great. The Pathways themselves came and went like the
tides of the ocean, apparently affected by the orbit of the moon.
Earth had no magic, leaving the domana powerless and
the sekasha without their shields. Still, all the clans sent
out domana and their sekasha to barter silk and
spices for steel and technology. To circumvent the dangers, the
pathways were mapped out carefully, and traders crossed back to
the safety of Elfhome as often as possible. In one remote area on
Earth, a new pathway was discovered, and eagerly explored.
Unfortunately it was a pathway that led to Onihida. Of the
twenty that went on the expedition, only two returned to
Elfhome.
Wolf considered what he knew of that doomed expedition,
which was very little since it happened before he was born.
Unlike humans who seemed to be driven to chronicle out their
life and make it public, elves kept such things private. Everything
he knew about the oni and Onihida came from questioning his
First Hand. He had selected Wraith Arrow and the others for
their knowledge of the humans and Earth, not thinking he'd ever
need their familiarity with the oni.
"So you've met him?" Wolf asked.
Wraith nodded. "They had tortured him, healed him, and
then tortured him again. It broke his mind."
That was two hundred and fifty years ago. Had Forest Moss
recovered?
It made Wolf wonder about Tinker and her time with the
oni. What had they done to her to change her so much? Wolf felt
a wave of sadness and anger. His domi had been so brave,
trusting and strong.
Wraith continued his report. "Silver Vein did not look to
Forest Moss. The Stone domou had a vanity Hand, which
he lost. Last that I had heard, he had not gained another Hand."
"He's coming here without sekasha?"
Wraith nodded.
What game was this? Why include someone that lacked the
most basic abilities of building a household? Did this mean that
the Stone Clan didn't intent to create holdings in Pittsburgh
?
* * *
"I'm not sure you should be trying to call the spell stones."
Stormsong was the only one that actually voiced the doubt all of
them were clearly thinking as they followed her through the
enclave's enclosed gardens.
"I'm fine." She said for what seemed the millionth time in
the last three days.
"You spent a month working around the clock," Stormsong
started. "And you haven't—"
"Shhh!" Tinker silenced and worked to find her center.
Getting her fingers into the full suit position took a moment of
concentration. Bringing her hand to her mouth, she vocalized the
trigger word. The magic spilled around her, pulsing with
potential. Carefully, she shifted her fingers to the shield position
and spoke the trigger. The magic wrapped around her, distorting
the air.
"Yes!" Without thinking, she threw up her hands in
jubilation and the shield vanished. "Oops!"
The sekasha were too polite to comment. Finding
her center was harder while burning with embarrassment. Her
heart still leapt up when she called up her shield but she managed
not to move this time. She held it for several minutes and then
practiced at looking around, and then moving, without forgetting
to maintain her hand positions.
"Okay," Tinker said. "Can I talk? Can you hear me?"
Pony grinned at her. "We can hear you. As long as you don't
have your hands near your mouth, you can talk – but it's
not always wise."
She dismissed the magic. Only after the power drained
completely away did she celebrate. Laughing, she hugged Pony.
"I did it!"
He surprised her by hugging her tightly back. "Yes, you did."
The walkie-talkie chirped and Stormsong answered with a
"Yes? It is nothing – she is only practicing."
Tinker grimaced. She forgot Windwolf would notice her
tapping the spell stones. "That's Wolf Who Rules?"
"Yes, ze domi," Stormsong said.
"Sorry, Windwolf!" Tinker called. "But I did it! I called the
shields!"
Stormsong listened for a moment and then said. "He says
'very good' and wants to know if you plan to continue
practicing?"
"For a while." It occurred to her that the stones might only
support one user. "That isn't a problem for him – is it?"
"No, domi." Pony answered the question. "Both of
you can use the stones at the same time."
Stormsong listened and then said goodbye. "Wolf Who
Rules merely wanted to be sure you were fine. Practice away, he
said."
So she did until she momentarily forgot how to dispel the
magic. When at last the magic washed away, Pony came and took
her hands in his.
"Please, domi, go to bed. You can do more
tomorrow."
* * *
Tinker woke from her nightmare to a dark bedroom. For a
moment, she couldn't figure out where she was. She'd fallen
asleep in so many places lately. She eyed the poster bed, wood
paneling, and open window – oh yes—her
bedroom at Poppymeadow. Even awake, her dreams crowded in
on her. She put out a hand and found Windwolf's comforting
warmth. It was all she needed to push away the darkest
memories.
Sighing, she snuggled up to her husband. This is one of the
unexpected joys of being married, her secret treasure. She had
never realized how lonely she was at night. Back in her loft, any
light noise had her out of bed, and once awake, she often found
herself getting dressed and wandering out into the sleeping city,
in search of something she'd couldn't name or identify. Before
Windwolf, if asked, she would have said she was perfectly happy
– but if she had been, how could she be so much happier
now?
She was just noticing something hard digging into her side,
when she realized it was Pony beside her, not Windwolf. While
Pony wore his loose pajamas, he slept on top of the blankets
beside her, instead of under them with her. It was his sheathed ejae beneath her – she'd rolled on top of it when she
cuddled up to him.
"Pony?" She tugged the sword out from under her, dropped
it behind him. His presence confused her.
"What is it, domi?" he asked sleepily.
It took her another minute to sort through memories and
dreams to know what reality should be. They weren't still
prisoners of the oni and her husband really should be in
bed with her. "Where's Windwolf?"
Pony rubbed at his face. "Hmmm? He's probably still with
Prince True Flame. There was much to do before the troops
arrived tomorrow."
"I had a bad dream about Windwolf. He couldn't see Lord
Tomtom. I could but the black willows were holding
me—I couldn't move – couldn't warn him."
"Hush." Pony hugged her loosely. "Tomtom is dead. Wolf
Who Rules is safe. It was only a dream – nothing more.
Go back to sleep."
"What if the oni attacked?" She started to get up but he
tightened his hold.
"No, no, Wolf would want you to sleep. You're exhausted,
domi. You're going to make yourself sick if you do not
sleep."
She groaned because she was so very tired but the nightmare
pressed in on her. "I can't go back to sleep. Windwolf could be in
trouble."
"He's fine."
"How do you know? We were asleep. He could be fighting
for his life right now." Oh gods, she was turning into such a
drama queen. Go to bed, go to bed, go to bed, she told
herself, but she couldn't banish the memories.
"Oh, domi," Pony crooned. "When I was little and
my mother was out with Longwind – Windwolf's father
– I'd be worried just like you are now. And my father
would say, 'look at the clear sky, see the stars? If the Wind Clan
fought tonight, the wind would throw clouds around, and
lightning would be everywhere.'"
She relaxed onto his bare shoulder, gazing out the
bedroom's wind at the peach trees beyond, standing still against a
crystalline sky. "What did you do when it stormed?"
Pony chuckled, a good warm sound that did much to banish
away her fears. "Ah, you've spotted the weakness in my father's
ploy."
It puzzled her that his mother was out with Longwind when
he was fighting until she realized that both of Pony's parents
would have been sekasha. Pony's mother must be
beholden to Windwolf's father.
"What is your mother like?" she asked.
"Otter Dance? She is sekasha," Pony said as if that
explained everything. Perhaps it did. "We of the Wind Clan
sekasha are known to be playful and lucky where the Fire
Clan sekasha are considered hot tempered and rude.
When we come together in large cities, we of the Wind Clan like
to gamble and win, and the Fire Clan tends to lose and start
fights. Almost every night ends in a brawl, everyone black and
blue."
He smelt wonderful. His braid was undone and his hair was
a cascade of black in the moonlight. As if it had a mind of its
own, her hand drifted down over his chest, feeling the hard
muscles under the silk shift.
"Hmmm," was all she managed as exhaustion –
thankfully – was beating out desire.
"I do not know which my mother loves more – to
gamble or brawl." Pony went on to expand his mother's
adventures in both, but she slipped back to sleep.
* * *
Tinker woke twice more that night. The second time was
another nightmare, this of being chased by Fu Lions through the
ironwoods. Pony was there again to soothe away her fear. The
third time was Windwolf finally returning home, but by then she
could barely stir.
"How is she?" Windwolf whispered in the darkness.
"She woke twice with nightmares of oni." Pony's voice came
from near the door.
The bed shifted with the changing of the guard.
"Thank you, Little Horse, for keeping her well."
"I wish I could do more," Pony whispered. "But I could not
keep the dreams from her. May you have more luck than I. Good
night, Brother Wolf."
Chapter 11: Paper Scissors Stone
"I would be happier if one of the other heads took them."
Ginger Wine eyed the trucks arriving with the Stone Clan
luggage.
Wolf nodded, staying silent. In truth, none of the heads of
households wanted the Stone Clan taking up occupancy at their
enclave. Ginger Wine, however, lost the decision because not
only was she was the junior-most head, but her enclave was also
the smallest, meaning she would put the smallest number of
Wind Clan folk out when the Stone Clan turned her enclave into
a temporary private residence. The households of the three
incoming
domana was reported to be less than forty
people combined. Ginger Wine's enclave had fifty guest beds,
thus a loss of only ten beds.
"I've never hosted someone from the Stone Clan before,"
Ginger Wine said. "I hope they eat our food. We don't have
spices or the pans to cook Stone dishes, but I will not have them
in my kitchens."
Wolf could not understand the fanaticism with which the
enclaves defended their kitchens. He had had to settle several
disputes between his own household and Poppymeadow's. He
had learned, though, that there was only one correct answer. "If
they will not eat, they will not eat."
Ginger Wine chewed on one knuckle watching as the
luggage was unloaded onto the pavement. The first trunks off,
logically for a war zone, were the
sekasha's secondary
armor. Sword and bow cases followed. As Ginger Wine's people
struggled to lift off the shipping containers holding spell arrows,
she murmured around her finger. "I want double my normal
remuneration."
"Done."
Wolf arranged to have his Rolls Royces ferry the Stone Clan
domana from the palace clearing. The first pulled up in
front of Ginger Wine's and a single male got out. As there were
no
sekasha attending the male, this had to be Forest
Moss. Wolf couldn't tell if the male was pure Stone Clan
genome. Forest Moss had the clan's compact build and dusky
skin tone. His hair, though, fell shocking white against his dark
skin. The lids of his left eye were sewn shut and concave,
following the bone line of his skull, showing that the eye had
been fully removed. Scars radiated around the empty socket, as if
something thin and heated been dragged from the edge of face to
just short of the eye. The scar at the corner of the eye, however,
continued into his eye. After a score of near misses, that last one
had burned out the eye.
The right side of Moss' face was smooth and whole,
including the brown eye that glared at Wolf.
"
Forest Moss on Stone." Moss gave
a coldly precise bow.
"Wolf Who Rules Wind."
Moss' one good eye flicked over him and scanned the
sekasha. Without the matching eye, Wolf found it difficult to
read the male. "Yes, you are. And these are your lovelies. Very,
very nice."
Wolf took the comment as a compliment and acknowledged
it with a nod. There seemed, however, something more to it
– like oil mixed in water, invisible until they separated.
"Otter Dance's son," Forest Moss said. "He comes of age
this year, does he not?"
What did this battered soul want of Little Horse? "Yes."
"Tempered Steel." Forest Moss named Little Horse's
paternal grandfather as he held up his left hand. He lifted his right
hand, saying, "And Perfection." Who was Otter Dance's mother.
He put his hands together and kissed his fingertips. "What a
creature the Wind Clan has crafted."
It was a mistake to respond to Forest Moss' first comment;
Wolf would not repeat his mistake. While the
sekasha
could be ruthlessly practical, it was insulting to suggest anything
but chance had brought the two most famous
sekasha
bloodlines together in one child.
Wolf gave him a hard stare, warning him not to continue on
the subject.
"What a look! But I am mad. Such looks are seen only by my
left eye." Forest Moss touched his ruined cheek to indicate his
empty eye socket. He cocked his head, as something occurred to
him. "The last thing I saw from this eye was Blossom Spring
from Stone being drowned in the pisshole by her First, Granite.
The oni had raped all the females from the start. The
sekasha
had their
naekuna but the
domana—"
Forest Moss sighed and whispered.
"Those mad dogs are so fertile they can even spawn themselves
on us. Of course—a half-breed child would have given the
oni access to the
domana genome – so the
sekasha
had to act. The oni had taken Granite's arms and right leg,
one bone at a time. They thought they had made him helpless, but
still he managed to pin Blossom facedown in the sewage. She
thrashed beneath him for so long – I would have thought
drowning was faster. It was quiet. So very quiet. None of us
daring to say a word until it was over. Shhhhh. Quiet as mice,
least the oni hear and realized that their rabid seed had taken and
carry her off to bear their puppies."
Wolf steeled himself to keep from stepping back a step from
the elf. Was Forest Moss as mad as he seemed, or was this an act
to let him be as rude as he wanted? Or was the male deluding
only himself, thinking that he was "acting"?
"What of your
domi?" Forest Moss leaned close to
whisper, his one eye bright. "Did those rabid beasts fuck her? Fill
her up with their seed? Will there be puppies to drown in the
pisspot?"
Wolf would not validate this conversation by explaining that
Tinker would be infertile from her transformation long after the
danger of pregnancy was past – regardless of what the oni
did to her. "You will not speak of my
domi again."
"I am not the one to fear. All your lovelies standing around
you are the ones to fear. They hold our lives in their holy hands,
judging every breath we take. They have to be strong because
we're so weak. I fully expect that someday one of them will
decide I'm too damaged to live."
"Hopefully soon."
Forest Moss laughed bitterly. "Yes, yes, actually, soon
would be nice. I'm too afraid to do it myself. I am a coward you
know. Everyone knows. That's why I have no
sekasha."
* * *
Ginger Wine had heard the whole exchange. A gracious
host, she bowed elegantly and offered to escort Forest Moss to
his room, but a tightness around her eyes meant she was keeping
fury in check. Wolf's people might not know Tinker, but she was
his
domi, and they wouldn't take criticism of her lightly.
While he suspected the humans might blame Tinker for
Pittsburgh
being stranded, the elves always knew it was only a
matter of time before the odd cycle of Shutdown and Startup
would end. Humans never continued anything for long. As long
as the Ghostlands didn't present them with more problems, most
elves would see Tinker's solution as a good one.
Alertness went through his Hand, and Wolf turned to find
Jewel Tears standing there.
She wore the deep green that always looked so beautiful on
her. Her dark hair braided with flowers and ribbons, most likely
taking an hour to create. She had two spell spheres orbiting her.
One cooled the air about her. The other sphere triggered favorite
scent memories in those around her. The spheres always had
made him leery. He knew that it was impossible for the spheres
to collide with anything, but he always flinched when they got
too near his head. Nor did it help that the one always made Jewel
Tears smell like his blade mother, Otter Dance.
Around them the sekasha acknowledged each other's
presence and waged their still and silent dominance battle. Not
that it was much of a contest – Jewel had only been able
to recruit a vanity hand of recent doubles. Against his First Hand,
they were just babies.
"Wolf Who Rules Wind." Jewel Tears smiled warmly at
him, and bowed lower than necessary, almost spilling her breasts
out of her bodice.
"Jewel Tears on Stone." He bowed to her, wondering what
her flagrant display meant. Was this strictly a personal invitation,
however improper, or was the Stone Clan making use of her?
She stepped forward, rising up on her toes as if she meant to
kiss him. He stopped her with a look. The spell spheres orbited
them as she stood frozen in place.
"Wolf," she whimpered.
"You are not my
sekasha, nor are you my
domi
."
"I should be!" She jerked her chin up and glared at him.
"You asked me! I told you that I needed time to consider it. I
finally make my decision, pack my household to join you here in
the Westernlands, and I get your letter saying that you were
taking a human – a human – as your
domi."
"I gave you a hundred years. When I was at court last, thirty
years ago, we did not even speak to one another."
"I – I was busy, as were you. And a letter? You
could not come and tell me yourself?"
"There was no time." He wondered what she hoped to gain
with this tactic. He would not break his vow to Tinker, no matter
how guilty Jewel tried to make him feel. Because Jewel never
responded, she had no legal recourse.
She reached out to neaten his sleeve. "We courted for years
– that slow exquisite dance of passion. The boat rides on
Mist
Lake
with the whiting of swans. The picnics in the
autumn woods. The winter masquerades. We took the time that
is proper, to learn each other, to know that we were right for each
other. What do you know of this – this – female?
How can you know anything?"
He knew even if he tried to explain how a lifetime of
understanding could be distilled out of twenty-four hours, she
would not believe him. The elves never did – with the
exception of Little Horse. "I knew enough. This is not court,
where you have eternity to decide, because nothing changes. I
was willing to risk whatever may come because if I did not put
out my hand, and take her then, she would have been lost to me
forever."
"What of your commitment to me?"
Wolf controlled a flash of anger. "I waited. You did not
answer. I moved on."
"I needed time to think!" she cried and then looked annoyed
that she had raised her voice. "I thought you knew me well
enough to understand my position. I do not have your resources
as the son of the clan leader – a favored cousin to the
Queen. You would have been forgiven for taking a
domi
outside your clan. Both Wind and Fire want you merely because
of the other clan's interest; Wind would never turn you out for
the Fire to take in. I do not have your luxury. I had to consider
long and hard my responsibilities to my household before
committing to you. I couldn't risk not being able to support them
if neither Wind nor Stone sponsored me."
"If you had come to me, told me your concerns, I could have
done something to guarantee that you would always have Wind
Clan sponsorship." Even as he said it, though, he knew that it was
better that she hadn't. He had made a mistake in asking her to be
his
domi. When he brought her to the Westernlands,
dismay had spread across her face when she realized they would
spend the rest of their lives in the wilderness, far from court. It
had opened his eyes; he had fooled himself in how well they
suited one another. He'd been willing to honor that commitment
a hundred years ago, even after that realization. Even as recently
as thirty years ago, he might have still taken her as his
domi.
In the last two decades, though, he had considered himself
released of his pledge.
Jewel tried to make it all seem his fault. "I was supposed to
trust you to take care of me when you couldn't be bothered to
explain anything to me? You would go off and leave me with no
idea what you had planned, what you were doing, when you were
going to come back."
"I trusted you to do what you needed to do. I thought you
trusted me."
A look flashed across her face before being hidden away, but
he knew her too well not to recognize it and could guess her
thoughts. One thing you learn well at court was to trust no one.
Not only did she not trust him, she thought him weak for
expecting it.
But this left one question. "What made you finally decide?"
he asked.
Her nostrils flared and she glanced away from him. "Things
have not gone well for me. Some of my ventures failed –
I had miscalculated the risks involved on one and in trying to
cover my losses, things – cascaded. I was forced to give
up my holdings." Her voice dropped to a whisper. "My household
was losing faith in me."
So coming to him was not an act of love but of desperation.
It would also explain what she was doing here now –
without holdings, she would lose her household and then her
clan sponsorship. Jewel Tears was too proud and ambitious to
live under someone else's rule. If she was that destitute, though,
she wouldn't have the funds to set up a holding at
Pittsburgh
; it could only mean that the Stone Clan chose her and
advanced her stake money.
Did the Stone Clan think that if something happened to
Tinker, he would turn to Jewel Tears? How far were they willing
to go to put their theory to test? He knew Jewel well enough to
know that she would let nothing stand in her way of her
ambitions. That had been one of the things he loved about her.
* * *
Tinker wished the machine room didn't feel so much like a
trap. Whoever designed the room had never considered that there
would be anything as dangerous as the black willow between the
back room and the front door. Being around the black willow
made everyone nervous. There were no signs, however, of it
reviving despite a full day of summer heat. Oilcan rotated the
steel drums of metal filings, taking the ones saturated with magic
to some place to drain and replaced them with fresh drums.
Tinker could see no overflow of magic. Still, the sekasha
all kept their shields activated just to use up local ambient magic.
She had the old spell jack hammered out of place. She was
now carefully prepping the site to lay down the new spell and
cement it into place.
Stormsong settled beside her, her sheathed ejae
across her knees, her shields a blue aura around her. "Do you
mind if we talk?"
"Isn't that what we're doing?"
Stormsong gave a slight laugh, and then continued with
great seriousness. "It's not my place to advise you. It should be
Pony, as your only beholden, or Wraith Arrow, who is
Windwolf's First, but—" Stormsong sighed and shook her
head. "Wraith Arrow won't cross that line and Pony –
that boy has a serious case of hero worship for you."
"Pony?"
"You can do no wrong in his eyes. You know all, see all,
understand all – which
leaves you up the shit creek because you really don't and he won't
tell you squat, because he thinks you already know."
"So you're going to tell me?"
"You rather walk around with your head up your ass and not
know it?"
Tinker groaned. "What am I'm doing wrong now?"
"You need to choose four more sekasha, at
minimum."
Tinker sighed. "Why? Things are working fine this way."
"No, it's not, and you're the only one that doesn't see that.
For instance, Pony is just a baby to the rest of us."
"He's at least a hundred." She knew he was an adult,
although just barely, like she had been as an eighteen-year-old
human. Unfortunately, now she fell into a nebulous zone of
being just barely adult for years and years.
"He just left the doubles this year." Meaning last year, he
could use two numbers to indicate his age. "Only half of
Windwolf's
sekasha are in the triples – the rest
are older."
"How old are you?" Tinker was fairly sure Stormsong was
one of the younger
sekasha. She was starting to be able to
look at elves and see their age indicators. It was odd, to have her
concept of Windwolf slowly change from "adult" to "her age" as
her perception of all elves changed.
"I'm two hundred." Which made her Pony's age, because to
the elves that hundred year difference barely counted.
"So we're all same approximately the same age."
"You wish." Stormsong took out a pack of Juicy Fruit gum
and offered her a stick. "Yeah, physically Pony and I are like a
human teenagers, but we've still had a hell of lot longer than you
to figure out people."
Tinker took the gum and let the taste explode in her mouth.
"What's your point? Is Pony old or young?"
"That is my point." Stormsong took a piece for herself and
put away the pack. "He's the youngest of the
sekasha, but
he's your First."
"Are you trying to confuse me?"
"Anything regarding you, Pony is in charge, but he's the
youngest of the
sekasha."
This was starting to make her head hurt. "Are you talking
...seniority?"
"Seniority. Seniority." Stormsong took out a small
dictionary, flipped through it, and read off the entry for seniority.
"Precedence of position, especially precedence over others of the
same rank by reason of a longer span of service."
"Oh that's not fair," Tinker complained. "You get a
dictionary. I want one for Elvish."
"We don't have such things." Stormsong put away the
dictionary. "They would be too useful."
Tinker had to put "Elvish Dictionary" on her project list.
"Yes." Stormsong continued. "Pony needs seniority over
those he commands, which he doesn't have because none of us
are yours. What's more when the bullets start to fly, we need to
know which way to jump. Pony doesn't need to think. But the
rest of us—we have pledged our lives to Windwolf
– it's him we should be thinking of – but we
know that only Pony is watching over you."
"I told Windwolf I'd think about this."
"Humans have a wonderful saying: assume is making an ass
out of 'u' and me. Windwolf assumes that Pony will guide you in
your choice, and Pony assumes that you know all."
"So you're doing it."
"Hell, someone has to."
"If it's Pony's job, shouldn't I just tell him that I don't know
shit?"
Stormsong gave her a look that Tinker recognized from
years of being a child genius.
"Oh gods," Tinker cried. "Don't look at me that way!"
"What way?"
"The 'what a clever little thing' look. It horrifies me how
long I'm going to have to put up with that now that I'm an elf."
Stormsong laughed, and then lapsed into Low Elvish,
sounding properly contrite. "Forgiveness, domi."
"Oh, speak English."
"Yes," Stormsong said in English. "You should talk to Pony,
since those you hold need to work well with him. Let me give
you pointers he might not think of – he is still new at
this. Blind leading the blind and all that shit."
"You're not going to take 'later' as an answer?"
"Kid, how splattered with shit do you need to get before you
realize it's hitting the fan? We're fuck deep in oni, Wyverns and
Stone Clan. Now is not the time to be worrying about chain of
command."
Stormsong had a way of driving the point home with a
sledgehammer. Tinker just wished she wasn't the one being
hammered. "Fine, point away."
"What all
sekasha want is seniority. To be First.
Failing that – in the First Hand." Top five she meant.
"Forever at the bottom is a bitch. Pony was wise to seize the
chance to be your First once he saw what you were made of.
You've proved yourself with keeping both Windwolf and Pony
safe from the oni – that's what a good
domi does
– so all of us are willing to fill your Hand."
"But..." Tinker swore she could hear a 'But' in there
somehow.
"It would be best for all—" Stormsong paused and
then added, "—in my opinion— that you don't
choose from Windwolf's First Hand."
"Why not?"
"Most
domana fill their First Hand with
sekasha
just breaking their doubles. The
domana want the
glory a hand gives them, and the
sekasha see it as a way
to be in First Hand. We call it a vanity hand. The thing is that
most
domana can't attract a Second Hand because not
only the incentive of being First is gone, the
sekasha of
the Second Hand have to be willing to serve under the First
Hand. Likewise the Third Hand knows that they will be junior to
the First Hand and the Second. Adding into this is the personality
of the
domana: does the positive of being beholden to
that
domana outweigh the negative of not having
seniority? Many
domana can only hold vanity hands."
"Okay." Tinker had assumed that all
domana had
multiple hands. Apparently not.
"Windwolf's grandfather – Howling –
helped tear us away from the Skin Clan and form the monarchy
that keeps the clans from waging endless war. When he was
assassinated, his
sekasha became Longwind's –
but not as his First or Second, since those were already filled."
"Ouch." Tinker wondered how this related.
"Yes, it was a step down for them – but they saw it
fitting since they failed Howling," Stormsong said. "Windwolf
wanted his First Hand to advise him on setting up in this new
land, setting up new towns and lines of trade, something he didn't
think doubles could help him do. So he approached the
sekasha of his grandfather's Hands and they accepted. It
would make them First Hand again, but more importantly, they
believed in him. Wolf Who Rules has always lived up to his
name."
"So, the First Hand, they're all thousands of years old?"
"Yes."
"Okay." So maybe she wasn't so good at guessing age
– none of the
sekasha struck her as older than late
twenties in human terms. Tinker finished setting the non-
conductive pins that would hold the spell level. "Can you take
down your shield? I'm going to set the compressor spell into
place."
Tinker didn't want to risk brushing the spell tracing up
against an active spell. Stormsong spoke the command that
deactivated her shields. A slight pricking that Tinker hadn't really
noticed vanished, making her aware by its absence that she had
been feeling the active magic.
"Thanks." Tinker took the filigreed sections of the spell out
of their protective packing and fit them into place.
Stormsong watched her for a few minutes before continuing
her explanation. "It was his First Hand that let Windwolf to pull
a Second and Third Hand made up of triples and quads."
"So why—" Tinker paused to make sure all the pieces
of the spell were stable and level. "Why shouldn't I take any of
Windwolf's First? Wouldn't that help me, like it helped him?"
"It would help at a cost to Pony. There's no way he could be
First to one of Windwolf's First Hand. Also, the First Hand are
the ones that see you most as a child that needs firm guidance
until you finish growing up. Lastly, they're all technophobes."
"Ick!" Tinker picked up her cordless soldering iron and
started to tack together the pieces of the spell with careful,
practiced solders.
"The younger
sekasha won't bring you as much
honor as those from Windwolf's First Hand but they'll be the
ones that 'fit' with you best. When
Pittsburgh
appeared, Windwolf realized that he needed
sekasha willing to learn technology—and that recent
doubles would be the most open-minded. That's when he picked
up his Fourth Hand."
"You don't think Pony will know that they'll fit best?"
Stormsong sighed. "Pony's mother, Otter Dance, is
Windwolf's blade mother."
"His what?"
"Otter Dance is Longwind's favorite lover among his
sekasha." Stormsong explained.
Tinker was missing the significance. "Pony is Windwolf's
brother?"
"Genetically – no – but emotionally
– yes—in a way."
"Oookay." Tinker wondered what Windwolf's mother felt
about it. Did she see her husband having a lover as some kind of
a betrayal? Or did the fact there was even a special name
– blade mother – mean that it was somehow
expected. Certainly Stormsong seemed to think this was nothing
hugely remarkable.
"It has been assumed since Pony's birth, that he'd look to
Windwolf," Stormsong continued. "In my opinion – that
assumption did what all assumptions do."
"Make an ass out of you and me?"
"Yes. Pony is fucking amazing, but neither Windwolf nor
Pony seems to realize it. Windwolf still sees Pony as a child, and
he's not!"
Tinker thought about Pony doing exercises up in their oni
cell, wearing only his pants—chiseled muscles moving
under silken skin dripping with sweat. "My husband needs his
eyes checked."
Stormsong laughed. "I'm glad you snatched Pony up. As
long as you don't do something to fuck him up, maybe he'll one
day realize how special he is. Until then, he's going to
overcompensate for what he sees as his own weakness. Pony
might point you toward someone from the First Hand and then
try to bow out – all in the name of doing right by you."
Tinker focused on the last of the solders, clenching her jaw
in annoyance at Stormsong's comments about Pony and
Windwolf. It felt wrong to hear anything negative about either
one of them, like she was being disloyal. Really, what did she
know about Stormsong other than she was one of Windwolf's
trusted bodyguards? Besides the fact that she nearly died for
Tinker?
Tinker sighed as she forced herself to consider that maybe
Stormsong was right about all this – that it was vital she
pick out four more guards immediately and that Pony needed a
good slap up against the head. She found herself remembering
that Pony had waited without comment for her to decide to
accept Bladebite.
"Is Bladebite from Windwolf's First Hand?" Tinker tried to
sound causal about it.
Stormsong nodded.
And if Tinker hadn't dodged the question, she would be
stuck with Bladebite trying to control her. She sighed. "How do I
tell Bladebite no?" Surely she didn't have to tell him yes just
before he offered. That would be a stupid system – but
the elves never struck her as completely logical. "Can I tell him
no?"
"You can say that you don't think you fit with him. That's
copasetic."
Copasetic. Tinker shook her head, remembering the days
immediately after she became an elf – everything made
more confused by the fact that Pony didn't speak English or
understand the differences between the two cultures.
"When the Queen called Windwolf to Aum Renau," Tinker
said, "why didn't Windwolf leave you with me?"
"My mother is Pure Radiance and my father is the Queen's
First. They have not seen me for a hundred years and wanted me
there. Windwolf thought it unwise to not bring me."
Tinker stared at the elf in amazement. "The oracle and a
Wyvern? What the hell are you doing with Wind Clan?"
"I had—issues—with court. Windwolf offered
me a chance to escape all that and I jumped. Considering what
my mother named me, she probably wasn't totally surprised."
Yes, Stormsong sounded more like a Wind Clan name than
Fire Clan.
It occurred to Tinker then what 'fit' was about. She felt
comfortable sitting and talking with Stormsong. Annoying as the
truth was, Tinker trusted her judgment. And it would be good to
have someone that understood what it felt like to be the outsider.
"So," Tinker said to Stormsong. "Are you offering?"
Stormsong looked puzzled a moment, and then surprised.
"To be yours?"
"Yeah. I – I think we work."
Stormsong blinked at her a few moments before standing,
the scrape of her boots on the cement loud in the silence that fell
between them.
"I can understand if you don't want to." Tinker busied herself
checking the solders. All that was needed was to cement the spell
into place, wait for the cement to cure, and the black willow
could be safely stored indefinitely. Or at least, until it she figured
out what her dreams meant.
"I want to be honest with you." Stormsong paced the
perimeter of the room in her long legged stride. "But it's like
opening a vein. It's a painful, messy thing to do."
Tinker lifted her hand to wave that off. "I don't think I can
deal with painfully messy at the moment."
"You should know stuff like this before you ask. That was
the whole point of the conversation. You have to make informed
choices."
Tinker made a noise. "I've been doing fairly well lately
blindly winging it through mass chaos."
Stormsong scoffed and then sighed. "I'm probably the most
misbegotten mutt puppy ever born to the elves. Most people
think my mother made a horrible mistake having me. I don't fit in
anywhere."
"At least you stayed an elf, instead of jumping species like I
did."
Stormsong laughed. "There are times I wished I could. Just
be human. Lose myself among them. But a hundred years of
sekasha brainwashing made that all impossible. I can't walk
away from it. I tried, but I can't. I like being
sekasha too
much."
"Not to belittle your difficulties, but I really don't get the
problem. You're a
sekasha. I need
sekasha. We
work together well – at least I think we do. Or is that you
hate my guts?"
"I would die for you."
Tinker wished that people would stop saying that to her. "I'll
take that as a 'no, I don't hate you' and frankly, I'd rather you
didn't die. Now,
that's painful and messy, and not just for
you."
Stormsong laughed and then bowed low to Tinker. "Tinker
domi, I would be honored to be yours. I will not
disappoint you."
Chapter 12: Tears On Stone
At first glance, Turtle Creek seemed the same to Tinker.
Sunlight shafted through the discontinuity in rays of blue. Mist
rising off the chill gathered into banks of blue haze and then
drifted out of the valley, existing momentarily as white clouds,
before burning away in the summer heat. True, royal troops
showed up as splashes of Fire Clan red – thus the lifting
of the ban on Turtle Creek—but otherwise nothing
seemed to have changed. It remained one big hole in reality.
Tinker led her Hand down into the valley to where they'd
marked the trees. The first sapling they found had nine slashes
into its bark – which should have meant it would be nine
feet from the edge of the discontinuity.
"That looks only five feet to me." Tinker fingered the mark,
wondering if someone might have added slashes after they left.
"Barely five." Pony pointed at the next tree along the edge of
the blue.
The tree was marked with seven slashes but the blue came
almost to its roots.
"This is bad." Tinker murmured.
"
Domi." Pony had moved on ahead and pointed now
at a tree inside the effect.
She joined him at the edge of the blue; there were four
slashes in bark of the ghostly tree. "Shit, the discontinuity has
grown. How is that possible?" She motioned to the
sekasha
that they were leaving.
"Now what?" Stormsong asked.
"I'm going to need some equipment, then we're coming
back."
* * *
Tinker scanned her camera with an infrared attachment over
the valley, watching the screen on her workpad instead of looking
through the eyepiece. In one window, the video feed showed the
thermal picture, and in other windows, programs reduced the
images into mathematical models. At the center of the
Ghostlands, she spotted a familiar circle.
"Something wrong, domi?" Pony asked.
She realized that she had gasped at her discovery. "Oh
– this here – this looks like our gate. See, here is
the ironwood ring and here is the ramp over the threshold."
"It is lying on its side?"
"Yes. The current probably toppled it, though I'm not sure
what is causing the current. It might be simple" – her
Elvish failed her. Did they have a word for convection? "Heat
rises and cold falls. Basic science. It's what makes the winds
blow. I think this is the same thing on a micro-scale –
like a pot boiling."
"Why not like a pond freezing?"
"I don't know. Perhaps because there's a pool of magic
below this, heating the bottom, but it's losing massive amounts
of energy before it hits the surface – thus the reason for
the cold."
"Ah." Pony nodded like he understood.
"Do you see this point here? Right where the gate is lying.
Can you shoot this arrow to that point?"
"With the line and weight attached?"
"Yes."
Pony considered for a moment. "Stormsong would be
better."
Among the sekasha, Pony was considered the better
archer. Her surprise must have shown as Pony waved over
Stormsong and explained what Tinker wanted.
"When I have to make a shot, I do it with my eyes closed,"
Stormsong said. "I see where the arrow needs to be."
"Ooookay." Tinker handed her the end of the line.
Stormsong attached the line to an arrow, nocked it in her
compound bow, pulled taut the string and closed her eyes. For a
moment she stood there, aiming blind, and then let loose the
bowstring. The arrow soared straight and true as if it had nothing
weighing it down, nor trailing behind. The reel whizzed as the
line snaked out after the arrow, the numbers on the meter
blurring as they counted up the feet. Near the point Tinker
wanted, but not exactly, the arrow shot into the ghost ground of
the discontinuity. It appeared on Tinker's screen as a dot of red
heat compared to the artic cold of the land, too far to the right.
The reel fell quiet and the line ran taut out into the discontinuity.
Tinker sighed. "Close enough for horseshoes and
discontinuities."
"It's where it has to be," Stormsong defended her shot.
"I'm trying to see how deep the discontinuity runs. I figure it
is deepest at the gate – it's close enough for that."
Tinker clicked on her mouse and meter fed its number into
the computer: 100 yards. Already the arrow chilled to blue,
blending into the rest of chilled landscape.
"Why does it matter how deep it is?" Pony asked as the reel
started to click out as the arrow sank.
Tinker shrugged. "Because I don't know what else to do at
the moment. I'm just fiddling around, poking at it until
something comes to me."
"Will not the current effect this measurement?" Pony asked.
"Oh, damn." She muttered in English, and then dropped back
to low Elvish. "Yes, it will." He was right. There was no way to
know what was drift and what was the weighted end sinking. "I'll
have to measure the drift and correct the measurements."
At least it gave her an excuse to reel in the arrow and try
again to thread it through the heart of the gate. She flipped on the
winch. The slack reeled in quickly but then the line went taut, and
the winch slowed.
"Well, I'll be damned," Tinker said.
"What is it, domi?" Pony asked.
"The arrow hit something."
"The arrow went where it was needed." Stormsong repeated.
There was times Tinker really hated Elfhome –
magic screwed with everything. "I didn't think anything would be
solid enough to catch on the line."
"The line is solid."
"Yes, it is." She gasped as implications dawned on her.
"Pony, you're a genius. The line is solid."
"I can not be that smart, domi, because I do not
understand why that excites you."
"Well, it is an important observation. An object from this
reality stays in this reality even after sinking into the
discontinuity."
"How is this important?"
"I do not know, but it is something I did not know before."
"Ah. I see."
The object appeared on the thermal scan, an oddly shaped
mass of slightly lighter blue. By the naked eye, she could make
out a boil of disturbance beyond the where the line cut into the
earth, creating a sharp v-shaped wake.
"It is big, whatever it is," Tinker said.
Pony unsheathed his sword.
"I doubt if it is anything living." Tinker backed up
regardless. Gods knows what she was dragging in from between
realities. "It is at – at..." she had to teach Pony English or
learn more Elvish. What was Elvish for absolute zero? "It is
frozen."
The thing hit shore. For a moment she thought it was a large
turtle, and then line kept reeling, rolling it. Long fingered webbed
hands and a vaguely human-looking face heaved out of the earth,
rimmed with frost.
"Oh gods!" Tinker leapt back and the other sekasha
drew their swords. The reel protested the sudden heavy load as
the frozen body hit solid earth, the line vibrating. She killed the
power before the line could snap. "Don't touch it!"
"I think it is dead." Pony had his sword at its throat just in
case.
"The cold itself is dangerous. Don't touch it directly, but get
it out."
Tinker kept her distance. The sekasha looped straps
carefully around the outstretched limbs and hauled the thing out
of the liquid earth. The creature was half Tinker's height, had
turtle shell but long scaly limbs, webbed feet and hands. Long
straight black hair fringed a bare, depressed spot on a human-like
head, and its face was a weird cross of a chubby monkey and a
turtle. It wore a harness of leather with various pointy things that
could be weapons attached to it.
Pony pricked the creature with his sword, eyed the wound.
"It does not bleed. It is indeed frozen."
"Ooookay," Tinker said. "It is probably safe to assume that it
will stay dead, even if it thaws out."
"An elf would." Pony sheathed his sword.
"What do you think it is?" Tinker asked.
"It's a kappa." A voice called from above them.
Tinker and her Hand turned, looking upwards. Riki perched
on branches of an ironwood, high overhead. He ducked back,
behind the trunk, as the sekasha pulled out their pistols.
"Wait, don't fire." Tinker ordered. "Riki! Riki! What the hell
is this?"
"I told you." He peered out around the trunk. "It's a kappa.
Ugly little brats aren't they? In
Japan
, it's believed that they get their great
strength from water in that brain depression and if you can trick
them into bowing and spilling out the water, they have to return
to the water realm to regain their strength."
Stormsong signed 'kill him?' in blade talk. Tinker signed
back 'wait.'
"It's an oni?" Tinker asked. "Or an animal?"
"That's a blurred line with the oni," Riki said. "I think you
would call it oni – they're fairly clever in a homicidal
way. The greater bloods made them by mixing animals with
lesser bloods, just like Tomtom did with Chiyo. Legend has it
that they used monkeys and turtles – a pretty sick mix if
you ask me."
"I didn't see any while we were making the gate."
"There aren't any in Pittsburgh
. They're clever, but not enough to pass as a human."
"So you're saying it came through the gate?"
"The oni use them for special ops; they're strong swimmers
and wrestlers."
Tinker looked back into the discontinuity, the slow drift of
blue mist. What were the oni up to? Were they just testing these
strange waters to see where they led – or were they trying
to salvage the gate?
Then again, was Riki telling the truth that there were no
kappa in Pittsburgh
?
"What are you doing here, Riki?"
"I need to talk to you."
"Talk? Talk about what? How can I even trust anything that
comes out of that lying mouth of yours?"
"I'm sorry, Tinker, about everything that happened. I'm really
am. I know you're pissed the hell at me, but I need to talk to you
about the dragon."
"What dragon?"
"The one that attacked you. The one I pulled off you. The
one that might have killed you and all your people if I hadn't
called it."
"So it was a dragon?"
"Not an Elfhome dragon, but yes, a dragon."
"An Onihida dragon?"
"What does it matter where it's from? It's a freaking dragon.
Can we just move on?"
"Just answer the fucking question!" She shouted at Riki. "It's
rather simple. Was it an Onihida dragon?"
Riki paced the limb like an agitated crow. "For a long, long
time dragons were worshipped as gods, both on Earth and
Onihida. They lived in 'the heavens' and had great powers that
they often used to help humans and tengu alike. All the legends
about dragons go on about the heavens and traveling from to
Onihida or Earth and back. What that mystical shit might have
actually been talking about is travel between universes. So
dragons may be native to Onihida – or might be from
someplace else. I don't know."
If Riki had told her the truth about his childhood, he was
raised on Earth and probably was less in tune with the mystical
than she was. Not that she was particularly "in tune."
"The dragon cast an oni shield spell." She pointed out the
flaw in Riki's "not from Onihida" logic.
"No, that's not oni magic, its dragon magic. The oni true
bloods figured out how to enslave dragons and stole it from
them."
So he said – but how could she know if he was
telling the truth. "Dragon magic? Oni magic? What's the
difference?"
"Originally oni magic was only bio-engineering, just like the
elves."
"So the solid hologram stuff? Like your wings?"
"That's dragon magic."
"And the tengu? They're both oni and dragon magic?"
Riki did an angry little hop. "Tinker! I just want to ask you
one simple question, not give you a history lesson."
"What do you want, Riki?"
"The dragon – when it attacked you – did it
mark you with a symbol or tattoo or something like that?"
"Strange that you ask, but yeah, it put one right here." She
half-turned and patted her butt cheek. "It says 'kiss my ass.'"
Stormsong snickered.
"I know how pissed you must be, Tinker. Believe me, if this
wasn't important, I wouldn't come anywhere near you."
She scoffed at that. "What does this mark do?"
"So it marked you?" Judging by the excitement in his voice,
it was very important to him.
Stormsong shoved Tinker suddenly behind her and activated
her shields with a shout. At the movement, Riki jerked back out
of sight. A second later, a bullet struck the tree truck where Riki
had been standing, ricocheted, and struck Stormsong's shield.
"Shields,
domi." Pony triggered his own and pulled
his sword.
Tinker felt a kick of magic from the west. She forced herself
to find her center and cast the trigger spell. Her heart was
pounding as the distorted into her shield.
Sekasha emerged from the forest shadows; their wyvern
armor and tattoos were the black of the Stone Clan. Five in all
– a full Hand, the back two acting as blades, which meant
they had someone to guard. They halted some twenty feet off,
tense and watchful.
"Lower your weapons," a female shouted in High Elvish.
"Lower yours! This is Wind Clan holding!" Tinker shouted
angrily.
"It's a royal holding," The stone clan's
domi came
out from behind one of the ironwoods. "And you're conversing
with the enemy."
The
domi was short for an elf, several inches shorter
than her
sekasha, but willowy graceful as any other high
caste female Tinker had ever seen. She wore an emerald green
underdress and an overdress with a forest of wildly branching
trees over it. Her hair was gathered into elaborate braids, dark
and rich as otter fur, twined with emerald ribbons and white
flowers. Two small gleaming orbs circled around her, like tiny
planets caught in her gravity.
"Yeah, I was talking to him," Tinker almost dropped her
shield but then she realized that her
sekasha hadn't put
away their swords. "It's a good way to find out things you don't
know. Like who are you?"
"Hmm, short and vulgar – you must be Wolf Who
Rules'
domi. What was your name again? Something
unpronounceable."
"This is one of my issues from court." Stormsong murmured
in English. "Lowest ranking introduces themselves first; it's a
matter of honor. You outrank her, so she should go first. She's
trying to provoke you since she can't call insult; you are still
under the Queen's protection."
"Fuck that. Who the hell is she?"
"Her name is Jewel Tears on Stone. She and the rest of the
Stone Clan arrived this morning."
"Is she right about this being a royal holding now?"
"Unfortunately, yes."
"Shit!"
"You are talking to me, not her." Jewel Tear picked her way
gracefully toward Tinker. Despite the sweltering heat and her
long gown, there was no sweat on her creamy white skin. "You
are Wolf Who Rules'
domi?
Tinkle? Thinker?"
Screw this. "Can you introduce us, Stormsong?"
"Me doing it would be a breach of etiquette and be
considered extremely rude."
"Good. Do it."
Stormsong executed an elegant bow and said. "Jewel Tears
on Stone, this is our Beloved Tinker of Wind."
Amazing how they all reacted as if she slapped Jewel Tears.
All the Stone Clan
sekasha moved forward as if to attack.
"Hold." Jewel Tears snapped. She glared at Tinker for a
moment, but murmuring, "You are such a rude little beast. I
don't know if I should be flattered or horrified that Wolf Who
Rules chose you after I cut him loose."
Tinker glanced to Stormhorse, who nodded slightly,
confirming that yes this was an old girlfriend of Windwolf's.
Well, if it was a battle of wits that this bitch wanted, she came to
the right place. "That proves what they say."
"Which is?"
"Only an idiot would turn down Wolf Who Rules."
"Your arrogance is only matched by your ignorance."
"I'd rather be unlearned than moronic – since it's so
much easier to cure."
"When Prince True Flame learns of your treason, he will
cure that arrogance too."
"I might have been talking to the tengu – but you let
him get away." Tinker pointed out.
Jewel Tears spoke a spell and made a motion and magic
pulsed underfoot, pushing up through the ground, the low ferns
and then the trees to the every ends of the leaves. Tinker
felt
the ten
sekasha standing around them, even Rainlily
standing behind her. She and Jewel Tears
echoed
differently – their
domana shields creating the
change, or maybe their innate magical talents. Around them there
were birds and animals unseen but now
sensed.
She didn't, however,
feel Riki – and by her
angry look – neither did Jewel Tears.
"Horse piss!" Jewel Tears hissed quietly.
"I was trying to get as much information out of the tengu as
I could." Tinker rubbed Jewel Tears' nose in it. Interestingly, the
female didn't take it gracefully.
"The oni subverted you when they held you prisoner."
"No, they did not." Pony answered the charge. "I stand as
witness to my
domi – by my blood and my
blade—she never bowed her will to them."
There was noise of something coming through the woods
toward them. Jewel Tears triggered her sonar spell again and the
forest was alive with
sekasha moving toward them, and
at least two other
domana. Tinker was going to have to
learn that spell.
"True Flame is coming. We'll see what he has to say."
A wave of red washed around them as Wyverns surrounded
them, and then, comfortingly, a tight knot of blue as True Flame
and Windwolf entered the clearing. Jewel Tears dropped her
shields, so Tinker followed suit.
True Flame glanced at the kappa all but forgotten on the
ground, and then to Tinker and Jewel Tears. "What is going on
here? Where did that kappa come from?"
"I pulled that out of the Ghostlands." Tinker stepped forward
and gave it a slight kick to demonstrate it was frozen solid. "The
Ghostlands must have instantly sucked the body heat out of it."
"She was talking with a tengu." Jewel Tears indicated the
empty treetops.
"Yes, I was." Tinker saw no point to deny it. "We have
history together. He betrayed me to the oni and I beat the snot out
of him for it. He found me and started the conversation."
"What did you speak about?" True Flame asked.
"I'm not sure what he wanted – they nearly killed me
shooting at him."
Windwolf had moved between Jewel Tears and Tinker just
as a
sekasha would, his shields still up so he seemed to
shimmer with anger. With Tinker's explanation, he took a step
toward Jewel Tears. "How dare you?"
Jewel Tears jerked up her chin. "That was an unfortunate
and unforeseeable accident. Forgiveness, Tinker
ze
domi."
Tinker nodded but Windwolf shook his head.
"If you harm my
domi," Windwolf growled. "It will
not be to the Fire Clan that you'll be answering to."
"Wolf Who Rules." True Flame snapped.
"I will not suffer future 'unfortunate' accidents. There will
no forgiveness."
True Flame studied Windwolf for a moment and then
nodded. "That is your right."
Windwolf caught Tinker's hand. "Come." And he pulled her
out of the clearing.
"Wait, my stuff."
"Leave it."
"No!" She jerked her hand free. "I'm not done here."
"You are for right now."
"No, no, no. I'm sick of this. Come here, go there, do this.
My grandfather died five years ago, thank you, and I was happy
making my own decisions for myself."
"This is royal holdings now." Windwolf swept a hand to take
in the whole valley. "I can not make her leave."
"So you're making me?" Tinker cried.
"Yes."
"No."
"Beloved. I do not trust her. I can not stay here and watch
over you now and I can not make her leave."
As always, he seemed to cover all the options –
leaving her no good choice but to do what he wanted.
This time she shook her head. "No. Again and again, you
don't tell me enough to form my own options. All I know are
your options and I'm not playing that anymore."
"Be reasonable."
"Reasonable? What is reasonable about taking the smartest
person in this city and making them deaf and blind? I'm supposed
to walk away from my work, leaving behind my currently
irreplaceable equipment, because some female from the other
side of the world is not playing nice in my backyard?"
"I told you that I can not stay and I can not make her leave."
"And those are the only options because they're the only
ones you have thought of? You know, if I had a level playing
field I could come up with options of my own."
"I do not have time to explain it all."
"Of course not. You never have time."
"Beloved..."
"Don't 'Beloved' me. Did you know—until Pony told
me it—I didn't know the name of your mother? That I
didn't know that you – and I—could use Fire Clan
Spell Stones? I don't even know when I'm going to have a period!
I'm stuck in this stranger's body and no one tells me diddly. And
when did I agree to be called Beloved Tinker? I think I should at
least be able to pick out my own name."
Windwolf looked stunned at her outburst and after a
moment, said quietly, "Your name is ... short."
"Tinker isn't my real name. My real name is Alexander
Graham Bell."
"It is? I did not know that."
"Score one for me."
"Beloved – Tinker—Alexan..der?" He
floundered for a moment. "Isn't that considered a male name?"
"I can hold my own with Jewel Tears. I'm not done here, and
I'm not leaving my stuff."
"No, you can not hold your own." Windwolf caught her by
her shoulders. "Do not ever think that you can. Only you can
sense her magic – so it possible for her to attack you
without your
sekasha knowing it. She could make a tree
fall, the ground give way, dozens of little ways that you
do
not know."
"You really think she would try to kill me?"
"Yes."
"Any one of us," Stormsong added in English, "Can make a
bullet ricochet and hit a target. The tengu was a convenient
excuse."
Tinker turned to her and saw in her eyes that none of her
sekasha took the event as an accident. They hadn't relaxed
until Windwolf and True Flame appeared.
"But why?" she asked.
"Because the Stone Clan stands to gain much if you are dead
and I'm distracted. Because she is a self-centered, ambitious
bitch."
That was unnerving. She kicked at the dirt, not wanting to
leave, hating that once again she was bowing to his limited
options. "Can we can get True Flame to order her out of the
area?"
"No, we must let her try and fix this valley."
Tinker laughed. "With what?"
"Magic."
She doubted that greatly, but she was up against the wall of
her own ignorance. "I'm the one that made this mess. I'll be the
one that fixes it."
"That is quite possible. Stone Clan, however, has assured
True Flame that they can quickly fix the Ghostlands, while you
said you needed to study it further. Everyone knows that you
were being realistic – but True Flame had to believe the
Stone Clan or it would be an insult to them."
"God forbid he insults them." Tinker growled and looked
back toward the discontinuity's edge and her abandoned
equipment.
"
Domi, I will bring your things." Stormsong offered.
"I am not totally ignorant of these computer things."
Since Stormsong could manage the Rolls Royce and the
walkie-talkie, she should be able to disconnect the equipment and
carry it back to the enclave unharmed. Tinker sighed and nodded.
"Okay. Thank you."
Windwolf signaled that Cloudwalker would accompany
Stormsong, and the two
sekasha moved off.
"There is so much I need to know," Tinker said to him. "And
if we're really going to be husband and wife – you need
to take the time for me. How do you expect me to trust you when
you keep throwing me in the pool to sink or swim?"
He sighed deeply and scrubbed his hands over his face. "I
want to be there for you – protect you – but I
can't. It's killing me that you're in the water and floundering
– but the only other option I have is to lock you away
someplace safe – and that would only kill you faster. The
only thing that kept me sane so far is knowing that you're actually
very good at finding your own way out of the water."
* * *
After seeing his domi safely back to Poppymeadow's, Wolf
went in search of Earth Son to lodge his complaint. He found
Earth Son at the palace clearing, pacing it out as if he planned to
claim the piece of land for himself. Apparently the Stone Clan domana had expected the aumani as soon as they
arrived in Pittsburgh; Earth Son wore a full tunic of rich green
silk and a gold burnt velvet duster with a stone horse pattern.
Like Jewel, he had a spell orb keeping him cool in the muggy
Pittsburgh
summer.
Wolf closed the distance between them. "Earth Son, I will
have a word with you."
Earth Son had inherited his father's height, so he was slightly
taller than Wolf. He tried to use it to look down on Wolf, but
then ruined the effect by doing a sketchy bow. "Wolf Who
Rules."
Wolf was too angry to acknowledge the veiled insult of
Earth Son's greeting. "Has the Stone Clan all run mad? We do
not know the number of the oni forces, and the way between our
worlds is not fully shut, and you're already asking for a clan
war."
"Us?" Earth Son feigned confusion.
"I may be young, but I spent my doubles at court. I recognize
power maneuvering when I see it."
"You are seeing things that are not there – like your
so-called oni." Earth Son's First, Thorne Scratch, tried to silence
her domou with a hand on his shoulder. Earth Son
flicked the female sekasha's hand away. "I have been out
for hours doing scrys." He waved toward the forest beyond the
clearing. "And found nothing remotely resembling an oni. 'I can
see the shadows of the oni on the wall,' is that not what you said
at Court? Apparently that's all that you've seen –
shadows! You're jumping at phantoms if you ask me."
Wolf didn't even bother with magic. He stepped forward and
caught Earth Son by the throat. "Listen you little turd, my domi is
under the Queen's Protection which means you are not to attack
her. But if you can't get that through that rock skull of yours,
then understand this – if she is hurt in any way—I
will hunt you down and tear out your throat."
"You would not dare." Earth Son managed to whisper.
"I started with nothing here. I can do it again. If my domi is
killed, I will let the crown strip me bare to have my revenge. Do
not think our royal cousin will protect you either – after
you shit all over the queen's commands, True Flame will not stop
me."
"I can not be held accountable for what that the
others—"
"You are clan head for this area and I will hold you
responsible."
"Forest Moss is mad!"
"If you didn't want the disadvantages that the mad one brings
with him, you shouldn't have chosen him."
"I didn't choose him."
Earth Stone's Hand looked relieved as the clearing filled
with Wyverns.
"Wolf," True Flame followed on the wash of red. "Let him
go."
Wolf released Earth Son, turning over this new piece of
information. He knew that Earth Son did not have considerable
standing in the Stone Clan, but he thought that Earth Son would
have at least been party to picking out the clan domana
that would be under him. Now that Wolf had talked with Forest
Moss and Jewel Tears, learned their situations, their inclusion
seemed less an personal attack on the Wind Clan, and more a
statement of the Stone Clan's assessment of Pittsburgh. They had
sent two of their most disposable domana. Or was the
count three?
In the clans, birth did not guarantee rank. It was
acknowledged, though, that children of the clan leaders learned
much observing their parent. Genetically, too, the leaders were
the best that the clans had to offer. True, barring accident or
assassination, it was unlikely clan head would ever change
– but as his mother's only child, Earth Son was a likely
future leader. Then again, he had arrived with only one Hand.
Was he escort for the other two, or fellow exile? If the later,
what had Earth Son done to be sent to
Pittsburgh
?
"I did nearly a hundred scrys," Earth Son reported to True
Flame while he rubbed his throat. "There's no oni here."
"The oni are savage but not stupid," Wolf snapped. "Acting
quickly is not to their advantage. They are hiding themselves well
and waiting for the best time to strike."
Earth Son scoffed at this. "If that was the case, they should
have struck while you were here alone, with even your voice
turned against you."
"They tried. They failed." Wolf did not mention how near the
assassination had came to succeeding. The brutal attack killed
one of his sekasha, damaged one of his hands, and
stranded him deep in Pittsburgh
's territory just as it returned to Earth. If not for
Tinker, the plot would have succeeded. "If the Ghostlands can be
used to their advantage, they will wait for reinforcements."
"Wolf is right," True Flame said. "That they managed to stay
hidden for nearly thirty years shows that they have patience. No
matter what happens, we need you to ferret them out."
Chapter 13: Ignore That Man Behind The Curtain
Tinker sat high up on a towering cross, clinging to the cross-
brace. Black was sitting at the very end of the cross-brace,
sobbing quietly. The delicate-boned woman wore a puffy black
mourning gown and a crown. Laying beside her was a long wand
with a star attached to it. Her host of crows sailed over head,
cawing "Lost, Lost!"
With a flurry of wings, Riki perched on the tip of the brace
between Tinker and Black. He was wearing an odd red outfit.
"There's no shame in being afraid of heights. Most people are."
"Oh, go away monkey boy." She snapped.
"I'm not a flying monkey," the tengu said. "I gave that up.
You melted the witch, so I got out of my no-compete contract.
I'm working strictly as a freelance crow. The health benefits suck,
but I make my own hours."
Tinker pointed to the sobbing Black. "Why is she crying?"
"She gave her heart to the tin man but she lost him." Riki
told her. "Not even the wizard can fix that."
"Hey!" On the ground, Esme gazed up at them, wearing blue
checked overalls and red ruby boots. "You can't get down.
You're not smart enough. You're head is full of straw."
"I'll figure a way down," Tinker shouted back.
"Falling will work," Riki said.
And Tinker was falling.
The dream seemed to hiccup and she was safe on the ground
then. Esme had a wicker basket and a little black dog. Pony was
there, his hair loose and curly as a mane, whiskers, cat-ears and
tail to finish the cat-look. Oilcan too, looking like he was made
out of metal.
"You have Black's heart?" Tinker asked Oilcan.
"I have no heart." He thumped on his chest and it echoed.
"That was a different tin man." Esme butted between the two
of them. "We need to find the wizard! Only he can solve all our
problems."
"I can take you to the wizard." Oilcan squeaked as he moved
his arm to point down a yellow brick road that lead into a dark
forest of black willows. "But we don't need to hurry, it's only six
o'clock."
"We've murdered time," Esme took out a pocket watch. It
seemed to be coated with butter. "It's always six o'clock –
we have to run to stay in the same place."
"We will have to go through the trees." Pony's cattail danced
nervously behind him.
"I don't know if that's smart," Tinker said.
"Of course you don't, you have straw for brains." Esme
picked straw out of Tinker's head to prove her point. "Look!
See!" She held out the straw of evidence. "We have to get to the
wizard. He's the only one to give you brains so you can solve this
problem."
"But the road ended with the tree." Tinker pointed out as
they crept forward, clinging to one another.
"It's not the tree," Esme said. "It's the fruit."
The trees turned, their gnarled faces looking at them with
wooden eyes. They were black willow trees but there were apples
– red and tempting – in their branches.
"You need the fruit." Esme pushed her hard toward the trees.
The trees plucked the apples from their branches and flung
them like hard rain at Tinker.
* * *
Tinker flailed her way out of her sheets to sit up in bed. It
was very early morning by the pale light in the window –
the birds hadn't yet started to stir. Windwolf was awake though,
and dressing.
"I didn't mean to wake you." He came to kiss her. His shirt
was still unbuttoned, and she burrowed into his warmth.
"I had another dream about the Black, Esme and the black
willow."
"Esme?"
"I figured out who White was – she's Lain's sister."
"Ah, the one in white—you're dreaming that she's
dreaming." He wrapped his arms around her, kissing her hair.
"Hm? Oh, yes, the Escher thing." Gods, it felt so right to be
held by him.
"Have you talked to Stormsong?"
"Yeah. She—we fit."
He tipped her head back to gaze intently into her face.
"You've accepted her? To be your beholden?"
She gave a tiny nod. It sounded like some kind of wedding
vow. Was this what elf society was all about—getting
married again and again, only without sex? "Yes. To be mine."
Windwolf gave her his smile that warmed her to her toes. "I
release her to you. But—"
"But?"
"But that is not what I meant. You should talk to Stormsong
about your dreams. She has some training in
yatanyai.
She might be able to help you determine what they mean."
"She does?"
"It was thought she would be an
intanyei seyosa but
in the end, she had too much of her father's temperament."
Windwolf kissed Tinker again and slipped out of her hold. "I
need to go. True Flame expects me. Why don't you go back to
sleep?"
She eyed the bed. She was still tired, but to sleep would
most likely mean another dream.
"I'll send Pony to you." Windwolf buttoned up his shirt.
"I'd rather have you." She settled back into the warm
softness.
Windwolf smiled. "I am glad of that, but alas, you can not
have me, so you must make do with Pony."
Did he really know what that sounded like in English? She
curled into ball and resolved to be asleep before Pony joined her.
And she was.
* * *
Another day, another dress. She really had to do something
about clothing. She picked out the Wind Clan blue dress and had
the staff add pockets to it while she ate. Breakfast proved that
Windwolf's household was still intent on mothering the life out
of her. They stacked the garden table with plates of pastries,
omelets, and fresh fruit. Tinker eyed the collection of dishes with
slight dismay.
"If they keep this up, they're going to make me fat," Tinker
complained.
"Eat." Stormsong pointed at bench, indicating that she was
to sit. "You and Pony both lost weight since Aum Renau."
Pony nodded, acknowledging that this was the truth. "You
should eat."
"Pft." Tinker began loading a plate. "Fine, but you both have
to eat too."
A sign of their "fit," they ate at first in companionable
silence, then drifted into a conversation about which of the
sekasha would work well with them. Of Windwolf's four
Hands, they came up with a list of seven possible candidates to
fill the three open positions of Tinker's First Hand.
"We can spend a few days pairing with others to see who
works best with you." Pony meant Tinker. "Windwolf chose all
of his sekasha so we work well together, and we've had
years to learn each other's ways."
"What are your plans for today?" Stormsong asked. "Are we
finished with that tree?"
"I don't know," Tinker whined. "I had another dream about
it. Windwolf said I should talk to you about it."
"You dream?" Stormsong said.
"I don't want to believe that I do," Tinker said, "but things
keep showing up out of my dreams."
"Dreams are important," Stormsong said. "They let you see
the future."
"Oh gods help me if this is my future," Tinker muttered.
"Tell me this dream," Stormsong said.
"Well, I had a couple, and they're all centering around two
people, and the tree." Tinker explained the first dream and then
the discovery of Esme's identity, and then last night's dream,
ending with, "And I don't have a clue where all that
weirdness came from."
Stormsong cocked her blue head with a faint disbelieving
look on her face. "It sounds like Wizard of Oz."
"What's that?" Tinker asked.
"It's a movie," Stormsong said.
Tinker had never heard of such a movie. "What's it about?"
"It's about – It's about – It's odd." Stormsong
said. "Maybe you should just see it."
* * *
Since Tooloo rented videos, Tinker gave her a call.
"I'm looking for the Wizard of Oz."
"Well, follow the yellow brick road," Tooloo said and hung
up.
Somehow, Tinker had totally forgotten how maddening it
was to deal with Tooloo. She hit redial, and explained, "I'm
looking for the movie called Wizard of Oz."
"You should have said so in the first place."
"Can you set it aside? I'll be by to pick it up." And while she
was there, she'd find out why Tooloo had lied to Nathan.
"No, you won't." Tooloo said.
Amazing that someone can give you an instant headache
over the phone. "Yes, I will."
"You can come but the movie won't be here."
"Oh, did someone else rent it?"
"No."
"Tooloo!" Tinker whined. "This is so simple – why
can't I rent the movie if no one has it?"
"I never had it."
"You didn't?" Tinker asked.
"It was fifty years old when the first Shutdown hit, and I
couldn't stand it after having to watch it every year for thirty
years running."
Should she even ask why Tooloo had to watch it
every year? No, that would only make her head hurt more. "So
that's a 'no'?"
"Yes," and Tooloo hung up.
Tinker sat drumming her fingers as she considered her
phone. Should she call Tooloo back and try to find out why
Tooloo was telling people she wasn't married to Windwolf? Go
and visit the crazy half-elf in person? She suspected that even if
she could understand the logic behind Tooloo's action, she
wouldn't be able to change it so the half-elf would stop.
She decided to focus on her dream. Where had she seen the
movie? Her grandfather thought movies were a waste of time, so
that left Lain.
"I don't have that movie," Lain stated when Tinker called and
asked.
"Are you sure?"
"Yes, I'm sure. Esme insisted that we watched it every year
after Thanksgiving. God knows why they picked Thanksgiving. It
always gave me nightmares. I would be quite happy never to see
that stupid movie again."
"Esme liked it?"
"She always identified too much with Dorothy, though she
never understood why Dorothy wanted to come back home.
Esme would go on and on about if she was Dorothy, she would
stay in Oz, which would make my mother cry. Every
Thanksgiving we have this huge family fight about watching it,
Esme would win, mother would cry, and I'd have nightmares."
They said their goodbyes like polite people and Tinker hung
up. Where had she seen this movie?
She called Oilcan. She never watched a movie alone, so he
most likely had seen it with her. "Hey, I'm trying to remember
something. Did you see Wizard of Oz with me?"
"The what?"
"It's a movie called Wizard of Oz. It's about Dorothy who
goes to Oz." That much of the story Tinker had gathered from
Lain, although she wasn't clear where Oz was. Africa
?
"It's not ringing any bells."
She sighed. "If I track this down, do you want to watch with
us?"
"A movie night? Cool. Sure. Meet you at your loft?"
She hadn't considered where to watch the movie once she
found it. She suddenly realized it had been two months since
she'd been home to her loft. Weirder yet, she didn't want to go
– as in 'not want to go to the dentist because it would
hurt' way. Why the hell did she feel that way? Her system made
Oilcan's look like a toy, which was why they always used her
place. But she was cringing at the thought of doing movie night
at her loft.
"Tink?" Oilcan asked.
This was stupid—it was her home. "Yeah, my place."
"See you later then."
"Later."
She slumped forward onto the table, resting her check on its
smooth surface. Three phone calls, she hadn't yet stirred out of
the garden, and already she was emotionally raw and tired. Damn,
she wished she could get a good night's sleep. Her exhaustion felt
like it was teaming up with all her problems, conspiring to keep
her off balance.
"Domi," Stormsong said quietly. "When I saw the
movie, I rented it from Eides."
At least something was working out in her life.
* * *
Eide's Entertainment was an institution in Pittsburgh
, down on Penn Avenue
in the Strip District. Established in the 1970s as a
comic bookstore, it been one of the many landmarks that
somehow not only survived but also flourished when
transplanted to Elfhome. It was a Mecca
of human culture, which not only humans but also
elves went on pilgrimage to. Tinker and Oilcan would always hit
the shop once immediately after Startup to see what was new,
and then several times a month to see what used music and
videos were brought in by other customers. Besides music,
videos, and comic books, the store was treasure trove of
collectible items: non-sport cards, magazines, big little books,
pulps, and out of print books.
Ralph raised his hand to them as they entered. "Hey, Lina,
long time no see. I've got that Nirvana CD you wanted in the
back."
It wasn't until Stormsong touched hands with Ralph in a
rocker's version of the handshake that Tinker realized he had been
talking to Stormsong. Lina? Ah yes, Linapavuata, which was
Elvish for "singing." Ralph looked past the elf, saw Tinker.
"Tinker-tiki!" Ralph used Tinker's racing nickname, which
meant Baby Tinker. "Look at you!" He ran a finger over Tinker's
ear point, making her burn with embarrassment. "Like the ear
job. Love the dress. You're looking fine."
Pony slapped Ralph's hand way and reached for his blade,
but Stormsong kept him from drawing his ejae.
"Their ways are not ours." Stormsong murmured in High
Elvish to Pony, and then dropped to Low Elvish to continue.
"Ralph, this is Galloping Storm Horse on Wind, he looks to
Tinker ze
domi—and she is very off-limits now."
"Forgiveness." Ralph bowed and used passable Low Elvish.
"Does that make you Tinker of the Storms?"
"Beloved Tinker of Wind." Pony corrected Ralph with a
growl.
Ralph glanced to Stormsong and read something on her face
that made him decide to flee. "Let me go get that CD."
Tinker turned to Pony who was still glaring after Ralph.
"What was that about?"
"He should show you respect," Pony said.
Stormsong clarified in English. "'Baby Tinker' is
disrespectful, nor should he have touched you."
"I've known him for years!" Tinker stuck with low Elvish.
She didn't want to cut Pony out of the conversation. "Oilcan and
I go to his parties. Tinker-tiki is what all the elves call me."
"Used to call you," Pony said. "No elf would be so impolite
to use it now."
"Only because they fear you would call insult," Stormsong
implied, with a glance, that Pony would use his blade in dealing
with anyone that insulted Tinker.
"Like – kill them?" Tinker asked.
"We have the right to mete out punishment as we see fit,"
Pony explained. "By the blood and the sword."
Oh boy. The little things people don't tell her. "You can't
just whack the head off anyone that pisses you off!"
"If the insult is severe, yes, we can." Pony said. "
Sekasha
are divine warriors, who answer only to the gods."
"We have the right," Stormsong said. "Our training guides
us not to take the options allowed to us."
"Look, if I'm insulted, I'll punch the guy myself. As far as
I'm concerned, you guys are just here for oni and monsters with
sharp teeth."
"Yes,
domi." Stormsong gave an elaborate bow.
Pony looked unhappy but echoed, "Yes,
domi."
Which didn't make Tinker happy, because she felt like she
was somehow the bad guy for not letting them lop off heads right
and left. Worse, she
knew it was all really Windwolf's
fault since her life got weird the exact second that he entered it.
Suddenly she was very annoyed with him—but didn't want
to be – which made her grumpier. She tried to ignore the
whole confusing swarm of emotions and thumped over to the
video rental section. The
sekasha and stinging feelings,
unfortunately, followed close behind.
She'd never actually rented video from Eides before and
their categories confused her. There seemed to be two of every
category. "Why two?"
"These are bootleg copies with subtitles in Low Elvish."
Stormsong pointed out a sign in Elvish that Tinker had missed
because a male elfin customer stood in front of it, flipping
through the anime.
The elf noticed Stormsong with widening eyes, bowed low
and moved off with a low murmured "Forgiveness."
"The other elves – they're afraid of you?" Tinker
noticed that all the elves in the store covertly watched the
sekasha and had cleared out of their path.
"If they do not know us, yes," Stormsong spoke quietly so
her words wouldn't carry. "You are one that sleeps in the nest of
dragons. You do not know how rare we are – or how
dangerous."
"What makes you so special?"
"The Skin Clan did; they created the perfect warrior."
Tinker was afraid to ask how this gave them the right to
head lopping in general, so she focused on why they were here
– to rent Wizard of Oz. Knowing that Pony would be
watching the movie with her, Tinker scanned only the translated
videos. Unlike the originals in their glossy colorful boxes, the
translated videos had plain white covers with Low Elvish printed
onto the spines. She pulled out one at random and studied it. The
movie was 'The Wedding Singer' which had been translated to
'The Party Singer." Was it a bad translation or was there actually
no Elvish word for wedding? How could the elves exist without
the most basic of life ceremonies?
Tinker put the movie back, and scanned the shelves.
Stormsong had been searching too, and now pulled out a
box and handed it to Tinker. "This is it."
The translator hadn't even tried to find Elvish to match the
words Wizard and Oz. Instead, the title was phonetically spelled
out.
Tinker turned and found Tommy Chang leaning against the
end of the DVD rack, watching her with his dangerous cool. He
was wearing a black tank top that showed off the definition in his
muscled arms, a corded leather bracelet, and his signature
bandana. Tommy organized raves, the cock fights in
Chinatown, and the hover bike races – the
last being how she knew him best.
"Hi, Tommy." Somehow, the normal greeting sounded
dorky. Something about his zen-like menace made her feel like a
complete techno geek. If she didn't watch it, she ended up
overcompensating around him.
He lifted his chin in acknowledgement. "I wasn't sure if
they'd let you out." He glanced toward Pony. "They keep you on a
short leash. In a dress, even."
"Piss off." That was a record.
"Aren't we touchy now we're an elf?"
"Excuse me, but I've had one fucked over month."
"So I heard." And then, surprisingly, he added. "Glad you're
still breathing."
"Thanks."
"You still going to ride for Team Tinker?"
She felt a flash of guilt as she realized that she hadn't
thought about racing in months. Last she had heard Oilcan had
taken over the riding. "How is my team doing?"
"It's been Team Big Sky's season since," he lifted a finger to
indicate her appearance, "the whole elf thing."
That made sense. Oilcan was heavier than she was, had a
different center of gravity, and was less aggressive on the turns.
Team Bonzai would have lost their edge when the oni stole
Czerneda's custom-made delta. That left John Montana, Captain
of Team Big Sky, with the only other delta in the racing circuit,
and his half-brother, Blue Sky, a good match to her build and
skills.
"So – you going back to riding?" Tommy asked.
"I don't know. A lot of shit has hit the fan that I need to deal
with before I can think about that."
A flash of Wyvern red outside made Tommy look toward
the store windows. "Yup, a lot of shit."
* * *
Her loft smelled of garbage. Months ago – a lifetime
ago – she, Oilcan and Pony had eaten, washed dishes, left
trash in the can to be taken out, left and never came back.
Stormsong was too polite to say anything, carefully sticking to
low Elvish. Even after they'd opened the windows and let in the
cool evening air, the place depressed Tinker with its ugliness. She
had lived alone at human speed; always too busy cramming in
what was important to her to deal with beautifying the place she
lived. All the furniture was all battered and mismatched used
stuff she picked up cheap. The couch been clawed by someone
else's cats, the leather recliner was cracking with age, and the
coffee table was something she welded together and topped with
a piece of glass. The walls were the same dark green from the
loft's last occupant – not that you could see a whole lot
of them as her cinderblock and lumber bookshelves covered most
of them and overflowed with her books. She had nothing
beautiful – everything was just serviceable and in need of
a good cleaning.
She knew it could be made pretty. She had time now, if she
wanted to take it. The place could be cleaned, painted, and
furnished. She could even hire carpenters to make her bookcases
and kitchen cabinets. There was no room, though, for all the
people in her life now. The place was for one busy person that
was barely there or a married couple with no interests outside
one another. Windwolf would never fit – his life was too
big – and she didn't want to live without him. Without
Pony. And of late, not without Stormsong either.
She didn't fit into her old life anymore. This wasn't her home
anymore, and it saddened her for reasons she couldn't understand.
Perching on the couch's overstuffed arm, she tried to cheer
herself up with an inventory of what replaced her old life. A stud
muffin of a husband with wads of cash who was crazy in love
with her. A luxurious room at the best enclave. Fantastic food
for every meal. A best friend that was now sitting beside her on
the couch, eyeing her with concern.
"What is wrong?" Pony asked quietly.
"I think I'm homesick," she whispered and leaned her
forehead against his shoulder. "Look at this place. It's a dump.
And I miss it. Isn't that the stupidest thing you've ever heard?"
He pulled her into his lap and held her in his arms. "It is not
stupid. It only means you lived with joy here, and it is sorrowful
to put joyful things aside."
"Bleah." She sniffed away tears that wanted to fall. "I was
lonely, I just never let myself know how much. I made the
computers all talk, just so I felt like someone else was there."
"You can grieve for something lost, even if it was not
perfect."
The front door open and Oilcan walked in. "Hey," he
announced, not noticing that he started Stormsong to attention.
He balanced boxes and a carton of bottles. "I didn't think you
would have anything to eat here, so I brought food." He settled
the various boxes onto the coffee table. "Hey, what's with the sad
face?"
"I'm just tired." She didn't want him to know how lonely she
had been, or think that she was unhappy with her life now. "I've
been having all these bad dreams. It's put me on edge. It's like I've
been rubbed down to all nerves."
"Ah, yeah, that can happen." Oilcan suffered from horrible
nightmares when he first came to
Pittsburgh
. For that first year, she'd climb into his bed late at
night, armed with boxes of tissues, to get him to stop crying. It
was one of the reasons she led and he followed despite the fact he
was four years older.
"Scrunches?" He asked her if she needed held, just as she
once asked him.
"Pony has it covered." She leaned against Pony. "What's in
the boxes?"
"Chicken satay with peanut sauce." He lifted up the first lid
to show off the sewers of marinated chicken. "Curry puffs, fried
shumai, thai roll, pad thai noodles, and drunken chicken."
He went into the kitchen to collect dishes and silverware.
"We'll get fat eating all this." She helped herself to one of
the thai rolls, dipping it into the sweet chili sauce. He must have
come straight from the Thai place as the thin fried wrapper was
still piping hot.
"Feed the body, feed the soul, you sleep better." Oilcan
handed her one of the plates and found room for the others on the
crowded table.
"Feed on spirits," Stormsong added as she examined the
bottles of alcohol. "Hard cider, vodka coolers, and beer?"
"Beer is for me. Figured I'd bring a mix for you guys."
"These are good." Stormsong handed a cooler to Tinker.
"The cider carries less of a punch, so Pony and I should stick to
them."
"Ah, leave the hard drinking to me." Tinker twisted off the
top. Half a cooler, a curry puff and a plate of pad thai noodle
later, she realized that the rubbed raw feeling had vanished, and
the loft felt like home again.
* * *
Tooloo had mentioned that the movie was old, but Tinker
still was surprised when it started in only sepia tones. Dorothy
was a whiny, stupid, spoiled brat who was clueless on how to
manage a rat-sized dog. When Tinker was Dorothy's age, she was
an orphan and running her own business. Esme identified with
this girl? That didn't bode well.
The Earth the movie showed was flat, dusty and featureless.
Tinker was with Esme – why would anyone pine for
that?
"Is that what Earth is like?" Pony asked.
"I don't know – I've never been to Earth." Tinker
groaned at yet another stupid thing that the girl did. "I'm not sure
I can take a full ninety minutes of this."
"It—changes." Stormsong said.
And change it did as a tornado sucked the house up into the
air and plopped it down in glorious color. Dorothy's dress turned
out to be blue checked and she acquired glittering red high heels
that they called "slippers," the source of Esme's overalls and red
boots in Tinker's dream.
It took Tinker several minutes for Tinker to realize how
Glenda the Good Witch worked into her dream. "That's Black.
She had the wand and the crown. And she was crying."
"I think I would cry if I was stuck in a dress like that,"
Stormsong said.
Tinker had to agree with that assessment. Tiny little people
in weird clothes surrounded Dorothy and talked in rhyming
singsong voices.
"Oh this is so weird." Tinker whispered.
"Does this make more sense in English?" Pony asked.
"No, not really," she told him. "Do they ever stop singing?"
"Not much." Stormsong said as the munchkins escorted
Dorothy to the edge of town and waved cheerfully goodbye.
"Oh, of course they're happy to see her go; she's a cold-
blooded killer," Tinker groused as Dorothy discovered a talking
scarecrow. "Oh gods, they're singing again."
Dorothy and scarecrow found the apple trees that threw
fruit, and then the tin man, whose first word was "Oilcan." Tinker
huddled against Pony, growing disquieted.
"What is it, domi?" Pony asked.
"How did I know? I didn't see this movie before, but so
many things are just like my dream."
"Maybe we did see it and forgot," Oilcan said.
"Something this weird?" Tinker asked. "And we both
forgot?"
Pony's lion showed up next. Tinker scowled at the screen. It
annoyed her that she didn't understand how she had dreamed this
movie—and that her dream self had cast Pony in such a
cowardly character. "All these people are dysfunctional,
delusional idiots."
Finally the foursome plus dog found the Wizard who turned
out to be a fraud.
"What was this dream trying to tell me?" Tinker asked.
"I am not sure," Stormsong said. "Normally an untrained
dreamer borrows symbols uncontrollably – and this
movie is rife with them. Everything from the Abandoned Child
archetype to Crossing the Return Threshold."
"Huh?" The only threshold crossing Tinker knew about
related to chaos theory.
"Dream mumbo-jumbo." Stormsong waved a toward the
television screen.
The wizard/fraud had produced a hot air balloon, and was
saying goodbye. "...am about to embark upon a hazardous and
technically unexplainable journey to the outer stratosphere."
"Dorothy is taking a heroic journey," Stormsong continued.
"She crosses two thresholds, one out of the protected realm of
her childhood, and the other completes her journey, by returning
to
Kansas
. If you were familiar with this movie, I would say
you were seeking to move past your old identity and claim one
that reflects growth. The tornado could be a symbol of the
awakening of sexuality, especially suppressed desire."
Tinker resisted the sudden urge to shift out of Pony's arms.
"I didn't dream about the tornado."
"Yeah, well, the odd thing is that you're not familiar with the
movie. So the question is: where is the symbolism coming
from?"
"Don't look at me!" Tinker closed her eyes and rested her
head on Pony's shoulder. "So, what should I do next?"
"Tell me your last dream again."
"I'm up high with Riki and he's a flying monkey. He's got the
whole costume, and I'm the scarecrow. Riki talks about me
melting the witch and setting him free. Then I'm on the ground,
and Esme is there as Dorothy, Pony was the lion, and Oilcan was
the tin man."
The movie was obviously drawing to a close as Dorothy
tried to convince people that her journey had been real.
"We wanted to go to the wizard," Tinker said. "But the road
ends with the black willows, but they're also the trees in the
movie that throw their apples. Esme keeps saying we need the
fruit. I don't know. Do black willows even have fruit?"
Thankfully the movie was over and the credits rolled.
"I am not sure," Stormsong said slowly, "but I think,
domi, finding out more about this Esme would be best."
"I'm going to have to talk to Lain about a lot of things." She
went to her phone mumbling, "Fruit. Esme. Flying monkeys.
Yellow brick roads. Munchkins."
She got Lain's simple unnamed AI. "It's Tinker."
"Tinker," Lain's recorded voice came on. "I'm going to be
spending the next few days at Reinholds with the black willow. If
you need me, you can find me there."
Tinker hung up without leaving a message. Sighing, she
considered her home network. She should take it out before
someone broke in and stole it. Pushing back from her desk, she
lazily spun in her chair, scanning her loft. "I should really
– you know – move out."
Oilcan glanced around, bobbing his head in agreement.
"Yeah, unless you get divorced, I don't see you living here again.
Well, I've got to go. I still have those last drums on the flat bed. I
need to go dump them with the rest."
"See ya." She continued to spin, thinking of what she needed
for the move. A truck. Boxes. People. As she considered how
many boxes and how many people, she realized what little she
really needed to move. Her computer. Her books. Her underwear.
Most of her clothes were ratty hand-me-downs of Oilcan's, or
too oil-stained to wear around the elves. Her battered furniture,
her unmatched dishes, and all her other sundry things were just
odds-and-ends she picked up over time and weren't worth
keeping. She could have a yard sale. She could make up a flyer
and put an ad in the newspaper. They would need a way to tag all
her stuff, a cash box with a starter kit of change, a tent case it
rained. They could sell hot dogs and sauerkraut to raise more
money – except she didn't need money. Hell, a yard sale
was a stupid idea.
She spun in her chair as plans came to mind and proved
unneeded. And where would she move her stuff to? She
supposed the computer could live in her bedroom at the enclave,
but what about all her books? Her jury-rigged bookcases would
clash horribly with the elegant hand-craved furniture. She could
probably get bookcases. Snap her fingers. Make it so. But where
would she put them?
Windwolf didn't fit into her life, but did she fit into his
either?
She bumped into something and stopped spinning.
Stormsong stood beside her, looking down at her. "You're
going to make yourself sick doing that."
"Pshaw." She stood up and toppled over.
Pony caught her and carefully put her back into the chair.
"I wish you guys wouldn't hover." Tinker snarled as they
stood over her.
Pony crouched down so he was now eye level with her.
"You are still upset."
She sighed and leaned her forehead on his shoulder. "I don't
like being like this. This isn't me. I feel like I'm living without my
skin. Everything hurts."
He put his arms around her and eased her into his lap. "
Domi, I have been with you every day for some time now. I
have seen you happy and relaxed. I have seen you bored. I have
seen you snarling into the face of the enemy. And you were
always yourself until two days ago. Something has changed."
"Do you think the oni dragon did something more to me that
just draw magic through me?"
He considered for a few minutes, and then shook his head. "I
do not know,
domi."
"How do we check?" She asked.
He and Stormsong exchanged looks.
"Let's go to the hospice," Stormsong said. "And have them
check you."
* * *
The hospice people poked and prodded and did various
spells on her and shook their heads and sent her home feeling
even more unbalanced. Her beholden fended off Windwolf's
household, else she probably would have been doused again with
saigin and put to bed. Ironically, the only place she had to
retreat to was her bedroom which didn't feel like home.
"There's no me in this room!" She paced on the bed just to
get as tall as the sekasha. "This is not a room I live in. I
need a computer. And a television. Internet connection! Is it any
wonder that I feel like I'm going nuts when the most mechanical
item in this suite is the toilet? Hell, I don't know even where to
find my stuff! Where is my datapad? Where's – where's
– shit, I don't even own anything anymore!"
The sekasha nodded, wisely saying nothing, probably
thinking she was insane.
"I mean, how am I suppose to do anything? I know I have
stuff. I had you put stuff in the car to bring home. Where did it
go?"
"I will find it." Stormsong said and went off to search. She
returned while Tinker was still pacing the bed with the mp3
player Riki left for her at Turtle Creek, the Dufae codex, her
grandfather's files on the flux spells and Esme, and a bottle of
ouzo. Of course everything cleaned and given lovely linen
binders tied with silk ribbons. Elves!
Tinker settled down with the file and a glass of ouzo. Smart
female Stormsong. Must keep her. She tossed the player onto the
nightstand where she might remember to take it to Oilcan,
dropped the codex and the flux folder onto the floor, and opened
up Esme's file. As she noticed earlier, the file contained general
public information. NASA bios. Newspaper clippings.
Interspersed into it, though, was detailed personal information.
One paper was a genealogy chart of Esme's parents going back a
dozen generations on both sides. Another set of papers
chronicled out medical histories for family members. Another
sheet claimed to be account numbers for a Swiss bank account.
Tinker weeded these unique papers out, wondering how and why
her grandfather had such information on Lain's sister. Lain
herself, she could understand. But Esme?
Last item in the file was an unlabeled manila envelope. She
opened it up to find a photo of her father and Black wrapped in
each other arms, looking blissfully happy.
"Who the hell?" Tinker flipped picture but the back was
blank.
"What is it?"
"This is Black." Without her blindfold or hands covering her
face, Black was clearly a tengu. She had the black hair, the blue
eyes, and the prominent nose that in the males was very beak-like.
"This is Oilcan?" Stormsong pointed to Leo.
"No, my father." Tinker looked in the envelope to see what
else was inside.
There was a handwritten note stating:
Two can play this silence game. I'm not going to let you
pressure me into leaving her just so you can have grandkids. I've
made a deposit at a sperm bank, just in case things change. I don't
know what else I can do to make you happy. The next step is
yours. If you don't call, this is the last you'll hear of me.
The attached form noted that Leonardo Da Vinci Dufae had
deposited sperm to be held in cryo-storage for his personal use.
The last sheet of paper in the file was a form from fertility
clinic on Earth. Tinker read over it three times before its full
import hit her. It was a record of her conception.
Esme Shenske was her mother.
* * *
She was still shaking when she found Lain at Reinholds'.
The xenobiologist was dressed in winter clothing and running the
slim willowy limbs through a machine. She glanced up as Tinker
stormed into the big freezer.
"What is it, dear?" Lain paused to pluck something off the
limb and place it in a jar.
"Look at this! Look!" Tinker thrust the form into Lain's
hands.
Lain took the paper, scanned it, and said quietly. "Oh."
"Oh? Oh? That's all you have to say?"
"I'm not sure what to say."
Something about Lain's tone, the lack of surprise, her uneasiness got through, and after a
stunned moment, Tinker cried, "You knew!"
"Yes, I knew."
"You've known all along!"
"Yes."
"How could you lie to me all this time? I thought you..."
She swallowed down the word "loved", terrified to have to hear
it denied. "...cared for me."
"I love you. I have wanted to tell you about Esme for so very
long, but you have to understand, I couldn't."
"Couldn't?"
Lain sighed and her breath misted in the freezing cold. "You
don't know everything. There's so much that I had to keep from
you."
"What the hell does that mean?"
"It means what it means." Lain busied herself labeling the
jar; the contents wriggled like worms. "Don't come storming in
here all hurt and emotional about something that can't be
changed."
"You could have told me!"
"No, I couldn't have," Lain said.
"Tinker, my sister is your mother. See how easy!"
And then cause and effect kicked in. "Oh my gods, you're my
aunt."
"Yes, I am."
"But what about those tests you did to show Oilcan and I
were still related? You used your own DNA as a comparison."
"I didn't use my own. I used a stored test result. I wanted to
make it clear that you and Oilcan are still cousins."
Tinker could only stare, feeling betrayed.
"Oh put the hurt eyes away. I have been here for you, loving
you as much as humanly possible. What does it matter you called
me Lain instead of Aunt Lain? I have always given you the care I
would give my niece, no matter what you or anyone else might
know." Lain snorted with disgust. "I always thought that Esme
was a result of lavish parenting until you came along –
daily I've been stunned to realize it was all actually genetic."
"That hurts." Tinker snapped.
"What does?"
"That you could look at me and see my mother and never
share that with me."
"Nothing about your birth and life has been cut and dried. I
suppose that was one reason I wasn't that surprised when
– out of the blue – you changed species."
A sound of hurt forced itself out of Tinker, and Lain came
to fold her into a hug.
"Oh ladybug, I'm sorry, but I did my best."
"Can we get out of here and talk? It's very creepy and cold."
"Oh, love." Lain sighed, rubbing Tinker on her back. "This is
the only time I'm actually going to be able to do this."
Tinker pulled out of her hold. "What are you doing that's so
damn important?"
"I'm justifying all your hard work at preserving this." Lain
gave her a hard look that meant that she thought Tinker was
acting spoiled. "I'm scanning the structure of living limbs before
this thing wakes up."
"What are these?" Tinker picked one of the jars. Inside,
small reddish-brown capsules had broken open, spilling out tiny,
hairy green seed-like things, all wriggling like worms.
"Those are its seeds," Lain said. "It's possible that the
Ghostlands somehow drained the tree of magic and made it
inactive. It hasn't accumulated enough to wake, but the seeds
need less magic."
"Seeds – are – fruit, aren't they?"
"Yes, dear." Lain focused on the limbs.
Okay, I have the fruit. Now what? Tinker eyed the seeds
as they wriggled about. "I think –"
"Yes?"
"I think – Esme is trying to drive me nuts."
"Ah, that means you're family."
Tinker shoved the jar at Pony to keep while she continued
her argument. "Why didn't you tell me? Why did you and
Grandpa keep it a secret? Why Esme? Was she in love with my
father?"
"I never knew why Esme did any of the things she did. She
certainly never explained herself. I don't think she ever knew your
father. I didn't think she knew your grandfather and yet –
somehow – they managed to create you. She called me
from a roadside pay phone right before she left Earth. She told
that she'd hidden clues to her greatest treasure in my house the
last time she had visited but wouldn't say anything more. She
kept repeating, 'the evil empire might be listening, and I don't
want them to have it' like she was some type of rebel spy."
"Huh?" Tinker felt as if the conversation just veered around
a blind corner. "What evil empire?"
"That's what we called our family; the empire of evil. Our
stepfather was Ming the Merciless, his son was Crown Prince
Kiss Butt and our half brothers were Flying Monkeys Four and
Five."
Tinker fought to ignore the sudden intrusion of Wizard of
Oz into the conversation. "I was her greatest treasure?"
"Yes." Lain went back to examining the limbs. "Although
I'm stunned that she had the maturity to recognize that. I was
expecting something more trivial like her diary, or bearer bonds
she'd stolen off our stepfather. But no, it was a copy of that form,
and your grandfather's address, and a note saying 'Watch over my
child. Don't tell the empire of evil – or a world away
won't be far enough.' No please, no thank you, no why she had
done it."
"So you're not happy that I was born?"
"Don't you twist that into something personal. I thought
– and still think – it was horribly selfish and
irresponsible of her, as if a child needed no more care than a
dandelion seed. Throw it to the wind and hope for best." Lain
made a sound of disgust. "Which is so like Esme."
"I don't understand, though, why you didn't tell me?"
"I didn't think it was wise to trust such a secret to a child.
Could you have kept it from Oilcan?"
"Oilcan wouldn't have told anyone."
"Tooloo?"
Tinker looked away. Yes she would have trusted Tooloo,
but who knew what Tooloo would have done with the
information. Just look at what the half-elf was doing now
– spreading lies about her not being married. "You could
have told me when Grandpa died."
"Yes, I could have, but I didn't." Lain found another
wriggling bundle and dropped it into a specimen jar. "My family
are takers. If there was something they want, they have the money
and power to take it. No one can stand against them for every
long. They go above, around and sometimes through people to
get what they want."
"But–But– what does that have to do with
not telling me about Esme?"
"I don't think until you met Windwolf and had seen the kind
of power he wields that you could have possibly understood our
family. One word to the wrong person, and they could have
snatched you back to Earth, and nothing that you, your
grandfather, or even I could have done would stop them."
Chapter 14: A Parting Of Ways
Tinker fled the freezing cold of Reinhold's and stumbled out
into the baking heat of the summer evening. Oh gods, could her
life get any more fucked over? Everyone she thought she knew
was turning into total strangers. Tooloo was telling everyone she
wasn't married, Lain was her aunt and her grandfather had lied
and lied and lied. He had always told her that her mother was
dead at the time of her conception and that her egg had been
stored at the same donor bank as her father's sperm. He
maintained that he randomly selected the egg from a vast list of
anonymous donors. He took the truth to his grave, not breathing
one word that she had living family as close as Lain. He died and
left her and Oilcan with no one to turn to. She'd gone nearly mad
with fear and grief, and he had lied about everything, and then left
them all alone.
"
Domi, where are we going?" Pony asked quietly
beside her.
She blinked and paid attention for the first time to where
they were. They were walking up
Ohio
River Boulevard
, half way to
McKees
Rocks
Bridge
. The two Rolls Royces followed slowly behind her,
effectively blocking traffic – not that there was any on
this lonely stretch of road late in the evening. "I don't know. How
the hell am I supposed to know. What day is it? I never know
what day it is anymore. Do you know how long it's been since
I've seen a calendar? Thursday I destroyed the world and Friday I
slept. Saturday we moved to the enclave and slept some more.
Sunday a dragon used me for a straw. Monday I was on the front
cover of the newspaper. Tuesday I got another person to follow
along behind me and ask me impossible questions and I dreamed
about my mother – who may or may not be dead
– and this mystery person, Black. Wednesday. Today is
Wednesday."
"If you say it is," Pony murmured.
"Tomorrow is Thursday. Thursday is the day I take scrap
metal to the steel mill. They cut me a check. I drive downtown,
deposit the check except for fifty bucks. I stop at Jenny Lee
Bakery in
Market Square
and pick up a dozen chocolate thumbprint cookies.
Thursdays the thumbprints are fresh. I head back to work and put
in a few hours paying bills and filling orders. I cut Oilcan his
paycheck and give it to him so he can go to the bank before it
closes. We get together with Nathan and Bowman and some of
the other cops at the Church Brew Works in the Strip. I get the
pierogies or the pizza or the buffalo wings – I like being
flexible—and try expensive beer. I liked beer. Now it just
tastes like piss."
As if she'd summoned him, a Pittsburgh Police cruiser
pulled over on the other side of the road slightly ahead of her and
Nathan got out.
"Tinker?" He came across the four lanes toward her. "What
the hell are you doing?"
"How the hell am I supposed to know? I was never an elf
before. I was never in charge of anyone. People left me alone. I
could go all day without seeing anyone but Oilcan or you. I
cooked my own food. Washed my own clothes. It's not like I
blow up the world everyday."
Nathan walked backwards, staying a few feet ahead of her,
scanning the bodyguards and the Rolls Royces. "Are you," he
asked quietly, "trying to go home?"
"I don't know." And she didn't. She was nearly to the
intersection where she could continue on Ohio River Boulevard
or cross over the McKees Rocks Bridge or head up to Lain's
house – not that Lain was home – but really, she
had not a clue which direction she was going to go –
although she was starting to suspect that it would be straight
through – staying on Ohio River Boulevard until it hit
the Rim.
"Do you want me to take you home? Or to Oilcan's? Lain's?
Tooloo's? I can take you to a woman's shelter if you want. I am a
cop; you can trust me to help you if you need help."
She made a rude noise. "How do you know who you can
trust? How do you know when people are telling you the truth?"
"Tinker, I'm sorry that – I know that doesn't forgive
anything – but I'm sorry. I really thought you felt
something for me. I thought that was why you said you wanted to
go out on a date. But it's just like I offered a kid candy; I talked
about dating and of course, you were curious. I should have
known what you're like with something new. You don't stop
until you know everything."
She hit the intersection and needed to make a choice. She
nearly went straight through, but then realized that it was getting
dark, and none of the streetlights worked out that way. She
veered left, almost decided on going across the bridge, but
realized that going to her loft would be depressing, and she didn't
want to talk to Tooloo, not now, she'd probably strangle the
crazy half-elf. She continued looping to the left. Nathan had a
good idea; she should go talk to Oilcan. But that seemed silly,
since the shortest way to Oilcan's was the way she came. Of the
four ways out of the intersection, however, only going to Lain's
house remained, and she didn't want to go there either.
She kept walking, now distinctly making a full circle in the
center of the road. The Rolls Royces halted at the intersection,
silver ghosts in the twilight. Pony ground to a halt behind her,
watching her with a faintly worried look.
"Tinker, are you all right?" Nathan asked.
"Do I look all right? Seriously! I don't think so. Something
has definitely come loose. But can they find out what's wrong?
Nope. Can't do that."
"Tink." Nathan caught her by the wrist. "If you're not feeling
right, walking around in the night isn't going to solve anything.
Let me take you to Lain."
"No!" She tried to tug her hand free. "I don't want to see her.
She lied to me!"
Nathan ignored her attempts to get loose, pulling her toward
his police cruiser. "Then let me take you to your cousin."
"Pony!" Tinker cried, turning to the
sekasha.
She saw the blur of the
ejae's blade and was only
registering its meaning when Nathan's life blood sprayed across
her face. His hand tightened a moment on her wrist, and then his
fingers went limp. She stared numbly as his hand slipped off her
and his body crumbled to the ground with a heavy thud.
With the strength of a black hole, Nathan's body dragged her
gaze down to it. He lay on his side, his wide shoulders canted
back so she could see the thick column of his neck. The skin up
to the sword cut was unblemished white, and then his neck
stopped abruptly in a meaty collar of muscle, bone, and gaping
pipes. Blood still fountained rhythmically from a severed vein.
She opened her mouth but couldn't form any words. She
dropped to her knees beside Nathan and touched him –
felt the warmth and solidness of his body. His heart still
pounded, wild and frantic, pumping out his blood with lessening
force until it shuddered to a stop.
What just happened? Nathan can't be dead – he was
just talking to me.
She looked up to Pony and saw he had drawn his sword.
Blood dripped from his blade. She whimpered, realizing she had
cried out to Pony and he'd reacted as he'd been trained. She had
gotten Nathan killed.
An oddly shaped object on the ground behind Pony caught
her eye, and she gazed at it for a minute, puzzled, until she
realized it was the back of Nathan's severed head.
She had killed Nathan.
A sound struggled up out of her chest. She pushed a hand
against her mouth to keep it in and felt a sticky wetness on her
face. She jerked her hand away from her face, stared at the blood
covering her hand, and a loud, wordless keen forced its way out
of her. Once free, it would not stop. She knelt there, wailing, as
her stained hands fluttered about her as if they were trying to
escape the sudden brutal reality.
"
Domi." Pony crouched beside her, gathering her
into his arms. "Tinker
domi."
She rocked in his arms, keening, holding out her stained
hands so he could see the blood on them. Anguish, dark and wild
as flood waters, poured into her.
Pony picked her up. Tears blinded her and she slipped into
the black swirling hurting, losing sense of everything but the
guilt and grief. Fear was creeping in now, as she couldn't stop
herself, as if she'd been pushed out of her own body by the raw
distress. Only Pony's warm, strong presence kept her from falling
into complete panic. Slowly she became aware that he had carried
her back to the Rolls, and they had driven back to the enclave.
Voices of Lemonseed and others of the household came out of
the darkness that she seemed to be trapped in.
When Pony sat her down and let her go, Tinker cried out and
reached blindly for him.
"I am here,
domi." He pressed close to her as he
tenderly washed the blood from her face. "I will not leave you.
Nothing could take me from you."
They were in the bathroom of her suite at Poppymeadow's.
He'd stripped off his sharp-edged wyvern armor. She wrapped her
arms and legs around him, clinging to him.
"
Domi.
Domi." Pony crooned. "
Domi, please, stop crying."
She tried to push out words, but they came out strangled
cries.
"
Domi, please." Pony carried her into the bedroom
and sat on the edge of the bed. "If I'm to understand you, you
have to speak Elvish."
"I am!" She wailed, and choked out the words, "I – I
wa-wa-want Windwolf" as if they were huge boulders. She
needed him there, now, holding her, comforting her, making love
to her, to drive away the pain.
"
Domi, Stormsong is looking for him." Pony wiped
the tears from her face. "We do not know if he will be able to
come." The thought of being alone threatened to submerge her
into anguish. "Oh,
domi, please don't cry."
She buried her face into Pony's hair and breathed in his spicy
musk scent, warmed by his body. She felt the play of his muscles
under his fine cotton undershirt. Desire, suddenly monstrous in
strength, surged through her. This time she didn't even try to
resist, terrified of falling back into the dark gnawing pain. She
abandoned herself to her need and kissed Pony.
He shifted his head up, giving her full access to his mouth.
He tasted of cinnamon. She fumbled with his clothes, wanting to
feel him, to anchor herself. The undershirt tore under her
desperation, parting to reveal the chiseled lines of his body. He
pulled the tattered cloth out of the way, giving her access to his
warm skin and hard muscle.
While in the oni cell, she'd been so good, keeping her eyes
and hands on a tight leash. Now, she nuzzled down his body to
every point she'd resisted, sought out the parts of him that she
had only caught glimpses of. He moaned as she freed him from
his clothes and savored all his velvet hardness with her mouth.
He reached for her, pulled her up to his mouth, kissed her
deeply. He rolled them so she was under him. His body eclipsed
the rest of the world, blotting out everything else, so that all she
could think of was him. His broad shoulders moving downwards.
His strong calloused hands sliding up her dress. His soft hair
falling free of his braid to pour over her stomach like silk. His
mouth on her, coaxing her into pleasure.
She came gripped him tightly as her climax roared through
her. It burned away the overpowering grief and pain that had been
threatening to swamp her. Letting go of Pony, she slumped back
into the sheets, feeling empty and fragile as a broken eggshell.
Worry filled Pony's dark eyes as he moved up to lean over
her. His erection pressed against her, seeking her entrance. There
was a quiet little voice, though, in the back of her head, saying it
was time to stop this, that she'd already taken it too far.
"Pony," she whispered.
He froze. "
Domi?"
She swallowed and stroked his check with a trembling hand.
"I don't think," she whispered, "it would be wise to go farther."
"I never thought this was wise." He slid sideways so he was
no longer pressed against her opening.
She laughed but her laughter broke in the middle and
became a sob. "Oh, Pony, he loved me and I killed him."
"Oh,
domi, please don't cry."
"I have to. If I try to keep it in, I'll just go under again." It
still hurt, but it wasn't the drowning flood of pain.
She was still crying when the door opened and Windwolf
walked into the bedroom.
"Windwolf!" She pushed at Pony so she could get up.
Windwolf's eyes widened at the sight of her on the bed with
Pony. He shouted a command, summoning wind magic. It spilled
into the room, the potential glittering at the edge of her teary
vision.
Pony was jerked backwards off her and thrown across the
room. His shields flared seconds before he hit the wall with a
crash – elaborate inlaid paneling splintering under him.
He landed on the floor, coiled to spring, one his swords
miraculously in his hand.
"No!" Tinker leapt between Windwolf and Pony. Sword
aside, she could guess which one was the more dangerous of the
two. "Stop it, Windwolf! Don't hurt him! He didn't do anything."
"It doesn't look like
nothing to me." Windwolf
glared furiously at the
sekasha. "Did he hurt you?"
"No!"
"Why are you crying then?"
"I killed Nathan!"
Windwolf went still and quiet, gazing down at her. "You
did?" he finally asked.
"Yes," Tinker said.
"No, she did not." Pony murmured. "I killed him, as is my
right."
"He only did what I told him to do!" she cried and realized
that in the same manner, Pony had made love to her. He had
thought it unwise, but he had done what she asked of him.
Oh gods, she made love with Pony.
"Oh, shit," she sniffed. "I think I'm going to cry again. I'm
sorry, Windwolf. I didn't realize Pony would do anything I told
him.
Anything. That he trusted me to do – the
wise thing – not the stupid. This is all my fault."
Windwolf sighed and glanced to Pony. "Leave us."
"Domnae." Pony used the non-possessive form, bowing
slightly to Windwolf, but didn't otherwise move.
"Pony," Tinker murmured in Elvish. "Go, I need to talk to
Wolf Who Rules alone."
Pony sheathed his sword and bowed out of the room.
That left her alone with her husband, wrapped in Windwolf's
silence.
He reached for her and she flinched back. "I would never,"
he said huskily without dropping his arm, "strike you."
She closed the distance between them and allowed him take
her in a loose embrace. "I'm sorry. I was so hurt and confused.
I've been though so much lately. Do you know that there's a
slickie out there with pictures of me in my nightgown? That
when I get attacked, it makes headlines in the newspaper? That
women scream when they see me?"
He said nothing for several minutes and then whispered into
her hair. "Are you unhappy being my
domi?"
She hugged him then, suddenly afraid of losing him. "It's
just – it's just..." she sobbed. "When humans get married
there's a ring, and a church and people throw rice at you and you
get your picture next to the obituaries, and there's just the two of
you, together, all the time, and no body else to get in the middle
and confuse things. There's no oni or royal princes or dragons or
nudie pictures!"
"Beloved," he said after a minute of silence. "I'm not sure if
that's a yes or a no."
"Exactly!"
He considered another minute and picked her up and carried
her to the bed.
"I'm sorry," she cried. "I'm sorry. I've broken us."
"We are not broken." Windwolf eased her down and lay
carefully beside her. "You are hurt and need healing –
that's all."
* * *
Tinker was trying to write her full elfin name in the sand of
the enclave's garden. She knew the runes but any time she went to
scribe them out, the letters would creep and crawl oddly.
"You're dreaming," Stormsong stood beside her, a ghost of
sky blue. "Those kind of things never work. The part of your
mind that processes them is asleep. You need dream runes. I
could write what you want."
"No, no, I have to be able to do this. I'm the only one that
can do this."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes, I'm sure."
Something moved in the darkness of the garden around
them. Stormsong activated her shields and they enveloped both of
them, brilliant pale blue that was nearly white. "Go away. You're
not wanted here."
"Give her to us," Esme prowled the darkness. She was the
color of old blood. Black stood weeping in the woods with her
host of crows oddly silent – only a rustle of many wings
in the night. "We need her. We murdered time and now it's
always six o'clock."
"No. I won't let you have her."
"You're not stopping us." Esme pressed a dark hand to the
gleaming shell of Stormsong's shield, the light shafting through
her spread fingers like solid spears. "You might be able to keep
them out, but not me."
"You're hurting her!" Fear filtered into Stormsong's voice.
"Leave her alone."
Esme moved counter-clockwise around them, trailing her
hand across the shield's radiant, a dark mote on pale brilliance.
"There is too much to lose to worry about hurting her."
"Go away." Stormsong growled.
Esme had made a complete circle around them, testing the
boundaries of Stormsong's protection. They stood as odd mirror
reflections of each other – hair short and spiked –
red dark to the point of almost black versus blue paled to nearly
white.
"I won't let you in," Stormsong said.
"We don't have time for this!" Esme balled up her hand into
a tight fist of blackness, and punched into the light.
Stormsong's shield failed like a candle snuffed. Tinker fell
into darkness.
"...focusfocusfocus...," she whispered into the black.
A world snapped into being around her, but she ignored it to
focus on the control panel in front of her. She punched a set of
keys, ones she practiced until her hands ached. Even as she
entered the codes, and the world jerked hard to the right, alarms
screamed to life.
She hit the intercom pad. "All hands suit up! Suit up!" She
shouted, knowing what was coming. "Brace for impact!"
She looked up and found she hadn't seen the full truth.
Instead of one colony ship looming in the great blackness of
space, the feed from the front cameras showed several ships
colliding together—heaving, twisting, and buckling. For a
moment, she could only stare – stunned. Compartments
of the ships were collapsing like crushed soda cans—their
atmosphere spraying out in plumes of instantly freezing gushers.
She wasn't able to stop it. It was going to happen anyhow.
"We're going to hit! We're going to hit!" Alan Voecks
screamed those hated words that had haunted her nightmares for
months.
Something cartwheeled toward them, jetted on a haze of
frozen oxygen. As it grew larger, she realized it was a human
– without a spacesuit. There was time to recognize the
face – Nicole Pinder of the Anhe Hao –
before the body hit the camera. That front screen went to static...
* * *
Tinker bolted out of the dream. She was tight in Stormsong's
arms, panting from the remnants of her terror. "Oh gods! Oh
gods!"
"It is over," Stormsong rubbed her back soothingly. "You
are safe with us."
"Something went wrong," Tinker cried. "That's what they've
been trying to tell me. Something went wrong."
"Well?" Windwolf spoke from the foot of the bed.
Tinker sat up to discover the room was full of silent people,
all watching her sleep. In addition to Windwolf and Pony, Wraith
Arrow and Bladebite stood guard. "What the hell?"
"There are other dreamers," Stormsong said, as if answering
a question Tinker had missed. "One seems to be domi's
mother. The others might not be able to reach domi
alone, but her mother's blood connection is giving them all
access to domi. Domi's mother is quite strong
but untrained and with the morals of snake; she does not care that
what she's doing is hurting domi. They are crowding into
domi's dreams, leaving her unable to cope with her own
nightmares."
"Why now?" Windwolf asked. "It's been eighteen years."
"It might be that becoming an elf awakened latent abilities in
domi," Stormsong said. "Or it might be something that
happened when the dragon pulled magic through her at the edge
of the Ghostlands. I can't stop them. United as they are, they are
too strong. Something must be done or they will drive the
domi mad."
"Will giving her
sanjin help?" Windwolf asked.
"Please, not
sanjin," Tinker whimpered. "I hate that
stuff. The oni forced it on me."
Windwolf gave her a look full of raw grief.
"No,
sanjin will only make things worse,"
Stormsong said. "Now she can wake up from the nightmare,
breaking its hold on her. Drugged, she would be trapped in her
dreams."
"Oh please," Tinker cried. "Not that."
"There are some drugs," Stormsong said, "that she can take
for a limited time that will keep her from dreaming completely.
Someone more trained and gifted in dreaming would know better
what to do."
"I like the idea of not dreaming." Tinker crawled across the
bed to Windwolf, who took her into his lap.
"You need to dream," Stormsong said. "Dreams are how
your mind heals you from emotional harm. The oni rode you
hard, but you were able to heal yourself each night and stay
strong. Your mother is raping the very core of you. She will
destroy you if we don't stop this."
"Can we use some other terms for this?" Tinker asked.
"Something non-sexual? This is my mother we're talking about.
Ick."
"Find what she needs for now," Windwolf ordered. "I will
send for a dreamer."
Chapter 15: Sticks And Stones
Wolf made time the next morning to pray at the enclave's
shrine. Last night, he had the hospice deliver drugs for Tinker and
sent a message to the
intanyei seyosa caste in the
Easternlands, but now there was nothing more he could do for
his
domi except pray. It filled him with helpless rage that
the ones tormenting her were so far outside his reach. He had
thought the time he spent wounded and helpless in Tinker's care
were the worst possible torment, but this was far, far worse.
Even when she had been held captive, there had been at least
something he could do, the illusion of making a difference. Now
he could only watch as the female he loved slowly go mad.
Worse, he could not even stay with her and comfort her. He
needed to attend the formal negotiations between the clans. For
the sake of everyone that counted on him, he needed to be
centered and calm when he wanted to be raging at the universe.
At least he had the comfort of knowing that his
domi was
in the care of Little Horse and Discord, who both loved her well,
and they were supported by the rest of his household. He prayed
to the gods that they too lend their aid to his
domi.
* * *
Maynard was waiting outside the enclave when Wolf headed
to the aumani. "We need to talk," Maynard said in
greeting.
"I do not have time." Wolf headed down the street toward
Ginger Wine's enclave. It had been decided before the Stone Clan
arrived that Ginger Wine's public dining area would be
considered neutral ground for the three clans. At that time he
liked the idea of keeping the sanctity of Poppymeadow's
– now he wished he could stay close to Tinker, even
though she was still sleeping.
"I have a dead cop missing a head on Ohio River Boulevard
," Maynard continued in English, falling in step with
Wolf. "And people are saying they saw a lot of sekasha in
the area before he died. Tell me that this isn't what it sounds like.
My people are scared enough without your people killing cops."
Wolf gritted his teeth to control his anger. Lashing out at his
ally would not help the situation any. "You have a dead rapist
missing a head."
"How could he have raped her? She doesn't go anywhere
without her sekasha. Do you know how bad this looks?"
"It was after I transformed her. I left Tinker at my hunting
lodge with a full Hand to guard her but somehow, she ended up
back in Pittsburgh
with only Galloping Storm Horse." It put Little Horse
in a difficult position as there was no way for him to
communicate with rest of the Hand, short of driving back to the
remote lodge. "Your police officer forced his way into Tinker's
home, stripped her nude, pinned her down and tried to enter her."
Maynard looked like a person just handed a poisonous
snake. "Tinker says that Czernowski forced her?"
"My blade brother does not know many English words, but
he does know 'no' and 'stop' and 'don't.' My domi was
threatening to gouge out Czernowski's eyes when Storm Horse
intervened."
"Oh, fuck." Maynard whispered and then sighed. "That was
two months ago. Why did they kill him yesterday?"
"The domana are forbidden to take lovers outside
their caste other than their sekasha. I made Tinker
domana caste because it was the only way we could be
together. It also means she is now strictly off limits to humans.
Czernowski would not keep his distance. He stated at the
paparazzi's that he could take Tinker back. Last night, he
attempted to pull her into his car."
Czernowski's intentions might have been innocent, but he
had crossed the line of Little Horses' patience. Wolf could
sympathize only with Little Horse. His blade brother, seeing
Tinker spiraling downward, had been given the opportunity to
take action – had been given a way to make at least one
thing right—had been given a target. In the light of
Tinker's imbalance, Czernowski's death had been inevitable.
"Stupid fucking idiot." Maynard growled, but it wasn't clear
if who he meant. Wolf chose to believe he meant Czernowski.
"This was the last thing we needed, Wolf. My people are not
going to trust yours after this."
"Did they truly trust us before?"
Maynard glanced away and ignored the question, which
meant the answer was 'no.' "Which one of your people killed
Czernowski?"
"Sekasha are exempt of all laws except the ones of
their own making."
"So you're not going to tell me?"
"There is no need for you to know."
"What am I suppose to tell the police? Czernowski's
family?"
"What is done is done and can not be undone," Wolf said. "I
have other problems to attend."
Maynard acknowledged the dismissal with a hard look but
took himself away.
* * *
Ginger Wine intercepted Wolf in her front gardens, bowing
low.
"What is wrong?"
Ginger Wine's face tightened and she glanced down the
garden path. There were only her own laedin caste guards in
sight. "These," she hissed in English, "Conceited, pompous,
arrogant Stone Clan pigs—that is what is wrong. I should
have asked for four times my normal fee, instead of twice. The
way they eat, you'd think they were hollow."
"I can not do anything about arrogance and gluttony. Have
they done anything wrong?"
She let out her breath in a long sigh, and then stood nudging
a rock in the garden path. "It just everything is – off;
nothing seems right. Everyone is tripping over one another,
plates are being dropped, laundry is being mislaid and they eat
and eat and eat." She looked pleadingly up to Wolf. "Everyone is
frightened of them. We've lived so long with just you and your sekasha, I actually forgot how the world really is; what it is
to live in fear."
"Do you want them out?"
She looked away, chewing on her bottom lip. Finally she
shook her head. "No. Things are not that bad – perhaps it
will settle down after another day or two – once we grow
used to them." She laid her hand on Wolf's arm. "Please,
domou, get rid of these oni so we can go back to our
comfortable life."
He patted her hand. "We will work hard to resolve this
quickly."
Ginger Wine gave Wolf a tight smile. "Thank you. Please,
let me show you to the dining room."
As they entered the elegant dining room, there was a crash
from the far kitchens, followed by loud sobbing. Ginger Wine
sighed, begged his pardon and hurried off toward the kitchen. A
large round table with six chairs stood in the center of the room.
All the extra tables had been cleared, leaving the space bare and
echoing. While only five domana were attending, there
would be fifteen sekasha and a server from each clan.
Wolf considered the sixth chair. Tinker should attend the
meeting, but she was in no mental state to do so. He ordered a
chair to be removed. Unfortunately, Jewel Tears arrived as the
chair was being carried out.
"Your
domi is not attending?" Jewel Tears managed
to put malice into the innocent words.
"No." Wolf warned her with a look that he did not wish to
discuss it farther.
Jewel went with great purpose to lay claim to her chair.
True Flame arrived with a shifting of the
sekasha
and a new contest of rank between them. "So this is where we
will be?"
"Yes, your highness." Jewel Tears appropriated the role of
hostess. She bowed low, displaying her charms to the prince.
True Flame recognized her with a slight cold nod. Wolf's
cousin never approved of Jewel Tears. It had been a source of
bitterness between him and Wolf, even afterwards, as it had been
hard to acknowledge that his cousin had been right all along.
Wolf could only hope that his decisions with Jewel Tears
wouldn't now taint True Flame's opinion of Tinker.
True Flame glanced at the table and then to Wolf. "Five
chairs?"
"My
domi will not be able to attend," Wolf wished
Jewel Tears wasn't standing there, reminding True Flame of his
bad choices in the past. "She is—" He found himself at
loss for words. What was Tinker? "—not herself."
"An interesting choice of words," Jewel Tears murmured.
Wolf ignored her.
Earth Son arrived with Forest Moss in tow. They made their
bows to True Flame.
All parties gathered, they settled at the table to start the
aumani, a formal meeting of clans.
Windwolf was sure if they captured any oni and needed to
torture information out of them, an
aumani would be
perfect for it. He sat across from Earth Son, studiously ignoring
the servants as they laid out the elaborate table settings. Between
the Skin Clan's love of elaborate power icons, and the thousands
of years that the clans needed to conduct meetings in secrecy,
elves had had the use of symbology beaten almost out of them.
There had to be some deep buried need left in them that seeped
out at times like this. How else explain the pure white table
runner, the scattering of blood red roses, the black ceramic place
settings, and the glasses of sapphire blue? The lit candle. The
smoking incense. The polished pebble. All the colors and the
elements of three Clans were subtlety present on the table.
They sat in reflective silence until the servers withdrew from
the table. True Flame sipped his tea, opening the meeting. They
drank, waiting for him to speak.
"So that we can all be of one mind," True Flame broke the
silence. "Wolf Who Rules Wind, tell us our past."
Wolf recounted the last few weeks since the meeting of the
three clans at Aum Reanu. Knowing that he would lose face with
True Flame for holding back information, he tried to be as
thorough as possible in Tinker's kidnapping, Lord Tomtom's
killing and the discovery of Sparrow's treachery.
"And what of the Ghostlands?" Earth Son asked when Wolf
came to an end. "Is your
domi's gate still functioning?"
"Perhaps," Wolf admitted. "Something is keeping Turtle
Creek unstable." "Stupidity upon stupidity," Jewel Tears scoffed.
"She shouldn't have built them a gate."
"I defy you," Windwolf said, "Unarmed and captive by a
ruthless enemy to do better."
"Defy, there's an interesting concept, indicating lack of
cooperation." Earth Son said.
"Yes," Jewel Tears said. "I wouldn't have cooperated."
"She cooperated because it's now in her nature to be
cooperative," Forest Moss said. "Wolf Who Rules remade her
and blessed her with our mothers' curse – to be yielding.
Why else would we need the
sekasha to guard over us.
We can not stand against anything, especially our own nature.
How can you sitting there with never a moment of stark helpless
fear in your life understand? Our mothers were bred to lie on
their back, spread their legs and not whimper too loudly
– unless their master liked it when she screamed. If it
wasn't for the steel of our fathers' ambition, we would be cattle
in the field."
"You may count yourself one of the cattle, but I do not,"
Earth Son said.
"Yes, yes, let us not listen to the one that has been under the
heated blade. No, he did not have his eyes forced open to the
truth just before one was seared out." Forest Moss spat. "You
can not hope to understand what it is like. To lie there unable to
move as they ready the tools of your destruction. The first time,
oh, you can be so very brave because you don't know what is
coming; everything in your imagination is just a pale shadow of
the pain. It's the second and the third, when you've been so well
taught, then the very smell of hot metal makes your heart race.
You see the torch only once, right before they strap you down,
but the hiss of the gas flame haunts your nightmares for years to
come. You lay there, listening to the invisible dance of their
preparations, the scrape of boots, the rattle of the cutting blades
in a metal tray, the creak of tightening leather restraints and
there's nothing, nothing, you can do."
"She wasn't tortured," Earth Son pointed out.
"Clever female knew the truth—"
Forest
Moss said. "– the truth you're refusing to
see."
"If she didn't do something the gate in orbit would remain
functional." Windwolf reminded the others. "The gate we
couldn't shut down. Yes, the result poses a threat, but it is now in
our realm, where
we can deal with it ourselves."
"We will solve this problem you caused," Earth Son said.
"Damn these humans and their gate."
"We can't blame this on them," Wolf said. "We elves went to
Onihida and lead the oni to Earth. If we hadn't done that, none of
this would have happened."
He did not bother to point out that in truth, it was the Stone
Clan that had gone to Onihida.
Earth Son countered it as if he made the statement aloud.
"The humans built the gate in orbit."
Wolf shook his head. "The oni stranded on Earth used the
humans to build the gate – and manipulated them to keep
it functioning."
"Why are you defending them?" Earth Son snapped. "It's
unlikely that they're all innocent in this."
"Yes, some might be guilty," Wolf allowed. "But not all of
them."
Earth Son waved the truth away. "Bah, they're just as bad as
the oni – breeding like mice."
"Fie, fie," Forest Moss whispered. "We were all blind beings
even before the oni burned out our eyes. Why should such
arrogant fools as we listen to the warnings of the human natives?
Of course the caves were a mystical place with mysterious
goings and monstrous comings. What importance to us that
humans were forever losing their way to other worlds and rarely
coming back? What did it matter that we recognize nothing of
ourselves in the stories?"
"Oh, please, shut him up," Jewel Tears hissed.
"Oh! Oh!" Forest Moss leapt to his feet and wailed, waving
his hands over his head. "It's all so ugly! No, no, who cares if
perchance we might learn something important? We must close
our ears to this wailing of a madman!"
"
Forest Moss!" True Flame
snapped. "Sit!"
The male sat so abruptly that Wolf wondered if the outburst
had been yet another example of Forest Moss using his
reputation of being mad.
"Does anything he has to say have any relevance to what we
need to do here?" Jewel Tears asked. "It seems to me that our
task is simple. Do findings to track down the oni nests and burn
them out. Instead we are sitting here constantly being distracted
by the mad one's ramblings. By his own account, he was
shortsighted in his venture. So he was caught and tortured
– but all that hinges on one gross error – on the
first moment of discovery, he should have fought their way clear
and returned to the pathway."
"I had dealt with discovery by humans many times," Forest
Moss said. "A show of power, a few trinkets, and we would be
safe enough to pass on. How was I to know that the oni were
monsters under the skin?"
"I'm trying to determine what the Stone Clan brings to the
table," True Flame said. "And what they will come away with."
Earth Son made an opening bid. "Since the Wind Clan is
demonstrating that it can not hold the Westernlands, we will take
them over."
Wolf shook his head and ticked off his strong points. "We
are providing access to the fire
esva. Without our
assistance, you would have to deal the oni and a dragon with only
defensive spells."
"You can't withhold the fire
esva from the crown,"
Earth Son stated.
Was he being naïve, or clumsy in his attempt to
undermine the Wind Clan's position?
"I did not suggest that," Wolf used small words. "I'm only
pointing out that we are providing attack spells on two fronts,
plus my four Hands, and ten enclaves. The Wind Clan can hold
its own here – the same can not be said of the Stone
Clan."
"Yet you called for help."
"Because we did not know then – nor know now
– the strength of the oni," Wolf stated. "We would rather
give up some part of our holdings than give the oni a stronghold
here."
"Which the crown sees as a strength, not a weakness," True
Flame said. "We are limiting the amount awarded to Stone Clan.
The area in question will be
Pittsburgh
and the surrounding land. Excluded will be the
enclaves owned by the Wind Clan households."
"We want both virgin land and that from Earth," Earth Son
said.
"And I want the
sekasha, Galloping Storm Horse On
Wind," Forest Moss said.
Startled silence went through the room.
"Never." Wolf snarled.
"If you release him, he can serve me." Moss pressed on.
"He looks to my
domi." Wolf said. "He is her First.
She also holds Singing Storm on Wind."
"That cross caste mistake?" Moss made a sound of disgust.
"Your
domi can release Galloping Storm Horse and keep
the mutt."
"She will not release him." Wolf was sure of this. "She loves
him dearly. The oni captured him because they knew he would be
an effective whipping boy for her. All that she did was to protect
him."
"It is a simple thing—"
Forest Moss started.
The Stone Clan's First, Thorne Scratch and Tiger Eye, and
True Flame's First, Red Knife stepped forward to loom over
their
domana's shoulder. Wolf felt Wraith Arrow behind
him, joining the other First at the table.
"This is not for you to discuss." Red Knife said quietly. "No
beholding will be broken in this manner."
Earth Son coughed and carried on. "We're asking for a
hundred thousand
sen of virgin land for each of us, plus
half of the city, to be rewarded immediately."
The land, ultimately, Wolf did not care about. The three
hundred thousand
sen was a small price to pay for the
safety of his people – and perhaps all of Elfhome. He did
not want, however, to put humans under the care of the Stone
Clan. He shook his head. "I granted the humans an extension of
their treaty to work out issues among themselves. I think at this
time it would be unwise to start procedures on dividing up the
city."
"Who gave you the authority to agree to that?" Earth Son
asked.
True Flame glanced at Earth Son. "As Viceroy, it was in his
authority to do so. But I must ask, on what basis?"
"We're not entirely sure that the orbital gate no longer
functions. If my
domi failed to destroy and only damaged
it, it is possible
Pittsburgh
will return to Earth."
"Yes, dividing the city could be premature," True Flame
said. "How soon will we know?"
"Shutdown was scheduled for two days from now at
midnight," Wolf said. "But if the gate is only damaged, then the
humans might delay Shutdown for weeks. Without
communication with Earth, it is impossible to know."
"Are we truly going to wait for something that may never
happen?" Earth Son asked.
"We are elves, we have time," Wolf said.
"Most convenient for the Wind Clan." Earth Son said.
"We will wait three days, and then speak again on dividing
the city," True Flame took out maps of the area. "Let us discuss
virgin land."
Chapter 16: Little Monkey Brain
After a long, long cottony warm sleep, Tinker was able to
view the last few days with a saner eye. Thinking of Nathan
threatened to reduce her back to the painful void of grief, so she
considered the last dream with Esme and Black. Obviously,
something had drastically gone wrong with Esme, but what did
her mother think Tinker could do for her? Esme was in space
– someplace – in another universe, far, far away.
And who was Black? The tengu woman obviously had been on
Earth to meet Tinker's father, but where was she now? Why was
Tinker dreaming about her in conjunction with Esme? Was it
because Black was a tengu colony and on one of the ships that
Esme crashed into?
The dreams of Alice and Dorothy – little girls lost
far from home – held a sad irony; Esme thought Dorothy
should stay in Oz – but obviously that wasn't what she
wanted for herself now. So what did she want from Tinker? Even
if Esme's ship crashed, that would have taken place eighteen
years ago, shortly before Tinker was born.
In the movie the yellow brick road started when Dorothy
crashed the house into Oz – bringing a stain of sepia on a
world of lush color. The discontinuity appeared as a stain of
blue. Tinker's nightmares had gotten out of hand the same day
that the Ghostlands formed – even if the first one with
Esme and Black came two days later. The first dream had been
Alice
in Wonderland, the second Wizard of Oz, and the last
was Esme going through the hyperphase gate; little girls crashing
into other worlds.
Tinker sprawled in the enclave garden, watching the sun
shift through the tree branches. As usual, she had a full Hand
standing around, doing nothing but watch her think. They shifted
to full alert as someone came through the gate into this private
area. Lemonseed carried in a tray of tea and cookies –
midmorning snack. Tinker started to sit up but Lemonseed tsked
at her and crouched beside her to layout a mini-picnic. Exquisite
china bowls of pale tea. Little perfect cookies. A platter of rich
rosewood. A small square of printed silk.
Esme wasn't the only girl that fell into another world.
"Can you have lunch packed?" Tinker knew that the
enclave's staff most likely had the meal half-finished. "We're
going out."
"Yes,
domi." Lemonseed bowed and left to make it
so.
"Where are we going?" Stormsong asked.
We? How did it get to this point that she was so
comfortable with having all these people in her life? No, she
guessed she wasn't really that at ease – but the edges of
her discomfort were wearing away. Like the fact that she could
strip in front of Pony without thinking. That it took Lemonseed's
arrival to remind her that an entire staff of nearly a hundred
people were poised around her – waiting for her to do
something. Anything. Be the
domi. Save the world again.
"The scrap yard," she told Stormsong but thought 'Home.'
She drained the tea to be polite, gathered up the cookies and
went to change.
* * *
Two newspapers, still neatly folded and bagged, lay in the
driveway of the scrap yard. She picked them up on their way in,
wonder why Oilcan hadn't brought them in. Tinker expected to
find her cousin at work and was both relieved and disappointed
that he wasn't. She didn't know how he would take Nathan's
death. Too her, it was a dark well of guilt and grief with a
crumbling edge. She was trying to keep her distance just so she
could keep functioning. Ironically, she was fairly sure she could
deal with Oilcan being angry at her more than she could help him
with his grief.
"You know – I just don't get it." Stormsong said as
Tinker was puttering around her workshop off of the junkyard's
offices, trying to get back into being herself.
"Get what?" Tinker asked.
"This place, you, and Windwolf – it just
doesn't—doesn't make sense."
"Yeah, I've never understood why he fell in love with
someone like me."
"I do. You can go toe to toe with him. It's this place that
doesn't make sense. You two are too big for something like this."
"Big?"
"With your abilities – why did you limit yourself to
this tiny corner of the world?"
That sounded like Lain – who had always pushed for
her to go to college, leave Pittsburgh
, do something more with her life. She thought her
plans were big enough, but it suddenly dawned on her that they
were plans she laid when she was thirteen. They seemed huge
when she was a child – even though they were larger than
what other people planned – but yes, she'd grown to fit,
and then the limits were starting to chafe. Had Lain seen a truth
that she herself was blind to?
She veered from that line of thinking. She distracted herself
by poking at her insecurities. "I think it's fairly obvious what
attracted Windwolf to me – I look like Jewel Tears. She's
his prefect woman. And I can't measure up to that –
elegance."
"No. You only think that because you've never met Otter
Dance."
"Pony's mother?"
"Ever notice that Pony is the shortest of the
sekasha? Otter Dance is half Stone Clan
sekasha."
Tinker turned to look at Pony standing beside Cloudwalker;
he was a half a head shorter yet wider in the shoulders and deeper
in the chest than Cloudwalker. Pony was the most compact elf
she'd ever met until the Stone Clan arrived. Now that she looked
at him, she could see points of similarity. His eyes were brown
where everyone else was blue. The shape of his face was
different.
"You mean we – Jewel Tears and I – look
like Otter Dance?"
"To know Otter Dance is to love her. Personality wise,
you're much more like Otter Dance than Jewel Tears could ever
pretend to be – and she did try."
Tinker wasn't sure how to feel about that. She cleared her
iboard. She needed a project – something big and
complex – to keep from thinking about Nathan and all
the messy bits of her life. Something that would help keep Pittsburgh
safe from the elves, the oni—and the dragon.
Oh gods, in all the chaos she forgotten about the dragon. There
was a worthwhile project, especially since she hadn't collected
enough data on the Ghostlands yet.
She called up an animation program and created a quick
rough model of the dragon, using a ferret body, a male lion's
head and a snake skin to cover the frame. Dragging the dragon
model out onto the iboard, she let it gallop across the vast white.
There had been a spell painted onto the dragon's hide. She wasn't
sure what the spell did. Was it how the dragon raised its shield or
was it how the oni were using to control it? It seemed to her that
the wild waving of the mane might have triggered the
spell—much like the domana hand gestures
triggered their shields.
"What do you think?" She asked Pony. "How did it raise its
shield?"
Pony put his hands to his head and wriggled his fingers. "It's
mane."
Stormsong and the others that had been in the valley with her
that morning nodded in agreement.
Okay, so the mane worked like domana fingers. She
paused the dragon, added a "shield" effect to her model, and
restarted the animation. "Next question is – does
anything breach the shield?"
"Our shields do not stop light and air, because we must see
and breathe," Pony said. "They also have a limit to the force they
can absorb at one moment. They will take a hundred shots fired
in a hundred heartbeats, but not a hundred fired in one heartbeat."
"So light and air." Tinker opened a window in the corner of
the iboard and noted this.
"Spell arrows don't affect the dragon," Cloudwalker
reminded her.
Tinker wrote: different frequency of light? And then
thinking of Pony driving his sword point through the shield, she
added, "Speed of kinetic weapon?"
"Pony, can I see your sword?"
He drew his sword and held it out to her to examine.
"Careful, domi, it is very sharp."
She knew that the ejae had magically tempered
ironwood blades, but she never examined them closely before. It
was single length of rich cherry colored wood with a bone guard.
The very tip came to a fine point. There was no sign of the spell
that created the blade, which she supposed was necessary since
the sekasha used their swords while shield spells were
active. The surface area of the tip was smaller than a bullet; if
they both struck at the same speed, the ejae would have a
greater PSI. Pony's slow push through the dragon's shield meant
that wasn't the factor.
She wasn't sure how they could use a "slow" weapon against
the dragon. It would be unlikely that the beastie would ever
standstill like that again. She considered a giant glue trap, sleep
gas, and mega stun guns. They all had their drawbacks from
"what do you use as bait?" to "would it do anything but just piss
the dragon off?" That got her wondering about what would affect
the dragon once they got past its shields. Where were its vital
organs? Would poison necessarily kill it? Elves couldn't tolerate
some of the food humans ate in abundance. The inverse could be
true – what was poisonous for Elfhome creatures might
not hurt the dragon.
Maybe the stupid dream was telling her that she needed to
melt the dragon with a bucket of water. Waterjets had jet speeds
around Mach 3 and could cut through several inches of steel. She
didn't have any in her junkyard, but perhaps she could salvage
one and modify it...
The sekasha's were rubbing off on her. She really
liked the simple "hit it with a big gun" solution. Too bad they
couldn't simply make the shield go away so "a big gun" was a
safe bet.
Her stomach growled. She realized that she had spent hours
in front of the iboard.
"What time is it?" Maybe she should take a break to eat the
packed lunch.
"I'm not sure. That clock is broken." Stormsong pointed to
an old alarm clock that Tinker had dismantling to use in a
project.
We're murdered time, it's always six
o'clock.
Wait – wasn't that a line from Alice in
Wonderland? During the tea party, didn't they talk about
time not working for them? She sorted through the things she
brought from the enclave, found the book, and flipped through it.
Under the drawing of the Mad Hatter, there was a footnote that
caught her eye.
"Arthur Stanley Eddington, as well as less distinguished
writers on relativity theory, have compared the Mad Tea Party,
where it is always six o'clock, with that portion of De Sitter's
model of the cosmos in which time stands eternally still. (See
Chapter 10 of Eddington's Space Time and Gravitation.)"
"Oh shit." Tinker took out her datapad and pulled up her
father's plans on the gate.
"Shit?" Pony asked.
"Excrement." Stormsong translated. "It's a curse."
"Shit," Pony echoed.
"That aside, what did you figure out?" Stormsong asked.
"I made a huge mistake in the variable for time on the gate
equations. And if I did it – I bet the oni did too. These
plans, as they stand – all the spaceships would have
arrived at the same moment. That's why they collided."
"When did they go to?" Pony asked.
"I think – that they were held in time – until
the gate was destroyed. They finished their journey – all
five ships – three days ago."
"Your mother found herself in great danger and you're her
only link to home," Stormsong murmured.
"Yeah, at which point, she started to hound me with
nightmares." Tinker tugged at her hair. "But what the hell am I
supposed to do? I mean, the good news is that obviously she's
alive—for now. The gods only know
where she is.
She could be on the other side of the galaxy. And which galaxy?
This one? Earth's? Onihida? We're talking a mind-boggling large
haystack to lose a needle in. Even if she was in space over
Elfhome,
what am I to do? What could I
possibly
do?"
"Forget the egotistical she-snake," Stormsong said. "You
have pressing duties here. Her problems are not your concern."
"But why then, do things keep turning up? Like the pearl
necklace, the black willow, and Reinholds? The dreams relate to
me and my world, somehow. Don't they?"
Tinker saw a troubled look spread across Stormsong's face
before the
sekasha turned away, hiding her unease.
"Oh, don't do that!" Tinker picked up the morning's
newspaper, still tightly folded in its bag, and aimed a smack at
Stormsong's back.
Stormsong caught the newspaper before it connected and
gave her a hard look.
"I need help here," Tinker jerked the newspaper free. "This is
part of the whole working together. I need to know what you
know about dreaming."
Stormsong sighed. "That is a wound I don't like to dig into.
Everyone assumed that my mother had some great vision when
she conceived me – and no one invested more into that
myth than me. But I did not have the talent or the patience for it. I
was too much my father. I like solving problems with a sword.
And I don't like feeling like I'm failing you."
Tinker fussed with getting the newspaper out of its bag so
she didn't have to face Stormsong's pain. "You're not failing me."
Speaking of failing someone, the newspaper's headline was
"Policeman Slain."
Nathan's body was draped with a white cloth in the island of
light on the black river of night highway.
Nathan Czernowski,
age 28, found beheaded on Ohio River
Boulevard. She stood there
clutching the newspaper as faintness swept through her. How
could seeing it in print make it more real than seeing his body
lying in front of her?
Stormsong continued, "As you're finding out the hard way,
dreamers can join for a gestalt effect, but unless they share foci,
the ending dream is conflicted."
Tinker pulled her attention away from the newspaper.
"What?"
"Dreams are maps for the future." Stormsong held out her
right hand. "If the dreamers share foci—" Stormsong
pressed her hands, matching up the fingers. "Then the two maps
overlaid remain easy to understand. But if the dreamers don't
share foci—" Stormstorm shifted her hands so her fingers
crosshatched. "There is a conflict. It becomes difficult, if not
impossible, to tell which element belongs to which foci. The
pearl necklace was from your foci. The wizard of oz, it appears,
to be from your mother."
"Foci being...?"
Stormsong pursed her lips. "Foci reflect goals and desires.
Among elves, that is one's clan and household. I'm not sure
humans can share foci like elves can. Humans are more –
self-centered."
The newspaper screamed at how self-centered Tinker had
been.
"So, Esme, Black and I are operating at cross-purposes."
Tinker folded the accusing headline away and went to stuff it in
the recycling bin. "And my dreams may or may not have anything
to do with helping with the mess we're in."
"Yes, there is no telling. At least, I can't, not with my
abilities. Wolf has sent for help from my mother's people. They
might be able to determine something since they share our foci in
regards to the oni."
"Where my mother could care less."
"Exactly."
Tinker dropped the paper into the recycling bin, the top
newspaper caught her eye. The headline read: Viceroy's Guard
Kill Five Snipers, Gossamer Slain. She lifted out the paper.
When did this happen?
The paper was dated Tuesday. Tuesday? Wasn't she awake
on Tuesday? Yes, she was—she had spent Tuesday at
Reinholds – why hadn't anyone told her? The paper also
reported that the EIA declared martial law, that the treaty been
temporarily extended until Sunday, and plans to screen everyone
living in
Chinatown. How did she miss
all this? She dug through the pile of papers uncovering growing
chaos that she been oblivious to. Wednesday's paper had stories
on the lock down of the city by the royal elfin troops, a wave of
arrests of suspected human sympathizers, the execution of more
disguised oni, and the start of a rationing system as fears of the
Pittsburgh
dollar collapsing triggered massive stockpiling.
Above the headline was an extra banner proclaiming: Four Days
to Treaty End.
Four days? Was that today?
The other unread paper was dated Friday. She had lost at
least a day to drugged sleep. The top banner read: Two Days to
Treaty End. The Pittsburgh Police had called a blue flu strike
when the EIA closed Nathan's murder case.
Oh, gods, what a mess.
"What day is this?" she asked Stormsong. "Did I sleep
through Saturday too?"
"It is Friday." Stormsong said.
"
Domi," Pony said from the door. "It is the lone
one."
Lone one?
The
sekasha escorted in Tooloo, who must have
walked up the hill from her store. Tinker stared at her with new
eyes. Not that the female had changed; Tooloo was as she had
always been Tinker's entire life. There were no new creases in the
face full of wrinkles. Her silver hair still reached her ankles.
Tinker even recognized her faded, purple silk gown and battered
high-top tennis shoes – Tooloo had been wearing them
when Tinker and Pony helped her milk her cows two months ago.
Only now Tinker realized how odd it was for an elf in a
world of elves to live alone. What clan and caste had she been
born into? Why wasn't she part of a household? Was it because
she was a half-elf? If she was half human, born and raised on
Earth, how could she be so fluid in High Elvish, and know all
things arcane? If she was a full, blooded elf, trapped on Earth
when the pathways were dismantled, why hadn't she gone back to
her people? The three centuries was a short time for elves.
Tinker doubted if Tooloo would tell her if she asked.
Tooloo had always refused to be known. She went by an obvious
nickname, neither human nor elfin in origin. Not once, in
eighteen years that Tinker knew her, had she ever mentioned her
parents. She would not commit to an age, the length of time she
lived on earth, not even a favorite color.
Tooloo squirmed in Cloudwalker's hold. "Oh, you
murderous little thing! You had to satisfy that little monkey brain
of yours. I told you, starve the beast called curiosity – but
noooo, you had to play with Czernowski and now you've killed
him."
Tinker felt sad as she realized she'd lost yet another part of
her life. "I didn't mean for Nathan to get killed."
"Oh, you didn't mean to! Do you think those threadbare
words will heal his family, all off grieving over his headless
body?"
"I'm sorry it happened." Tinker swallowed down on the pain
that words caused her. "I—I—wasn't paying
attention when I should have been – and I'm so sorry
– but there's nothing I can do. I was wrong. I should have
listened to you from the very start – but I didn't see where
all this was going to lead."
"Pawgh, this is all Windwolf's fault – killing my
bright wee human and making a dirty Skin Clan scumbag in her
image." Tooloo spat.
"This has nothing to do with Windwolf making me an elf."
"Does it? My wee one never had such superciliousness of
power."
"Supercil-whatis?"
Tooloo glanced at Pony standing behind Tinker. "Giving you
sekasha is like giving an elephant roller-skates –
stupid, ridiculous and dangerous."
Tooloo could say what she wanted about her, but now she
was going too far to include the
sekasha too.
"Yes, I killed Nathan," Tinker said, "but I'm not the only one
to blame. I'm a stupid clueless little girl, but you've lived with
humans for over 200 years – you knew exactly how
Nathan would react if –" and then it dawned on Tinker
and she gasped with horror. "Oh sweet gods, you wanted him to
think I was a whore! You deliberately misled him! You evil she-
goat!"
Tooloo slapped her hard across the face enough to make
stars dance in her vision.
Tinker heard the
sekasha draw their blades and threw
out her hands to keep Nathan's death from repeating. "No! No!
Don't you dare hurt her!" Once she was sure that she was obeyed,
she turned back to the stranger who raised her. "Why? Why did
you do that to Nathan? You had to see it coming!"
"Because nothing else would have slapped you out of
wallowing in your own piss. The city is about to run with blood
unless you do something. Czernowski was the sacrificial lamb to
save this city."
"I was trying to! I don't know how!"
"Use that little monkey brain of yours! The elves are about
to march all over this city with jack boots. I've lived with humans
for hundreds of years. They are good, compassionate people. I
lived through the American Revolutionary War, its Civil War,
the fight for woman suffrage, and the struggle for civil rights
– and all those advancements for equality among humans
is about to be flushed down the crapper. It's already started
– they're searching through
Chinatown, dragging people out of their homes and testing them and
killing them where they stand."
Tinker glanced to Stormsong since the rant had been in
English. Stormsong nodded in confirmation. "Why didn't anyone
tell me?"
"You've been too fragile."
She couldn't trust Tooloo's version of this; the 'lone one'
kept whatever truths she had to herself. Nor, as much as she
loved them, count on the elves in her life to understand what it
was to be human. Tinker gathered up the newspapers; she needed
their human-biased facts. And Maynard – she needed to
talk to Maynard.
* * *
Red was becoming a predominant color in Pittsburgh
, like an early autumn. They encountered four
roadblocks on the way to the EIA offices; all manned by
laedin caste Fire Clan soldiers.
"If True Flame has this many warriors, why do we need the
Stone Clan?" Tinker had let Pony drive, but she hung over the
front seat to talk to him and Stormsong. The backseat was
crowded with the other three
sekasha.
"Stone Clan magic can find individuals in a wilderness and
things hidden in the ground." Pony told her.
"It's like calling in bloodhounds," Stormsong said in
English.
Tinker remembered the sonar-like spell that Jewel Tears
used. Yes, that should make finding the oni hidden in the forest
easier. She wondered how the Stone Clan would fare, though, in
the steel-riddled city.
"And if you can not solve the problem with the Ghostlands,"
Cloudwalker added. "They should be able to. They closed the
natural pathways after the first invasion."
Stormsong made a rude noise. "There is a difference
between collapsing caves and dealing with whatever is wrong
with Ghostlands."
"The Ghostlands should collapse on their own." Tinker was
growing less sure of that – she would have expected the
rate of decay to be faster. This morning marked the fourth day
since she reduced Turtle Creek to chaos. Now there was
something not everyone could claim: I reduced a square mile of
land into pure chaos. It made her sound like a small atomic
warhead—someone dropped a Tinker on us!
The EIA offices directed her back across the Allegheny
River to
Chinatown. There she found
Maynard overseeing the testing of the Chinese population. A mix
of
laedin caste soldiers and Wyverns were systematically
emptying a house, putting the occupants into a line to be tested
by the EIA. As she approached, it became clear that the process
was hampered by the fact that most of the elves and many of the
Chinese didn't speak English.
East
Ohio Street
was cacophony of shouted instructions, crying and
pleading. The coroner van – identified by bold letters
– stood at the far end of the street. Blood scented the hot
summer air. And for one dizzy moment, she was back on
Ohio River Boulevard
, splattered with Nathan's blood.
"Domi, are you alright?" Pony murmured into her
ear as he supported her by the arm. He'd activated his shields at
some point and they now spilled down over her.
She nodded.
"It is clear!" One of the Wyverns came out of a nearby
building shouted in High Elvish.
There was a pulse of magic, and she felt the house,
from the pipes underneath it to the tip of the chimneys. There
wasn't anyone inside. Apparently that was the point. On some
unheard command, the Wyverns moved down to the next
building. Annoyingly, because of her height, Tinker couldn't see
through the crowd to spot the Stone Clan domana
directing the search.
"Is Jewel Tears here?" she asked Stormsong, who could see
over the heads of most of the humans.
Stormsong shook her head. "It is the mad one, Forest Moss."
"Oh, joy," Tinker muttered. "Where is Maynard?"
"This way." Pony kept hold of her elbow.
She thought they would have to push their way through the
crowd, but as they approached the humans and elves, the crowd
parted as shoved by an invisible wedge. In the human faces there
was a mix of fear and hope. They wanted her to be one of them
but afraid she was wholly an elf.
The crowd was avoiding a section of sidewalk. As Tinker
drew even with it, she saw that is was covered with congealing
blood, thick with black flies. As the sekasha brushed
passed, some of the flies rose in fat, heavy buzzing. The rest
continued to feed.
"I want this to stop," Tinker whispered to Pony, dreading his
answer.
"This is by order of the crown," Pony said. "There is nothing
you can do to stop it."
Maynard saw Stormsong first and then scanned downwards
to find Tinker. "What are you doing here?"
"I want to talk to you about this stuff." Tinker waved the
newspaper at Maynard.
"I'm busy at the moment. Why don't you get your husband to
explain it to you?"
"Because you're here. I have the power to pin you down and
make you explain it to me. And you'll use words I can
understand."
Maynard glanced at the paper. "What don't you understand?
That article is fairly clear."
"What can I do?"
He gave her a long unreadable look before saying, "I'm not
sure. Windwolf bought us some time, but without proof that the
gate is in orbit and possibly repairable, that time runs out
Sunday."
Figures, after everything she had gone through to destroy the
gate, she now had to save it.
"So," Tinker said. "If I can prove the damn thing is still up
there, would that help?"
Maynard's eyes widen in surprise. "You think you can do
that?"
It was tempting to say yes, but she had to be honest. "I don't
know. I can try. It's a fucking discontinuity in Turtle Creek,
across at least two or three universes. If Earth is one of those
universes, there might be a way to use the Ghostlands to
communicate."
"The elves are keeping everyone away from the Ghostlands,"
Maynard said. "The scientists at the commune are ready to storm
the place for chance to study it."
"Keep them away from it," Tinker said. "At least until we
can make sure the Fire Clan and the Stone Clan don't kill them
on sight."
Maynard looked away, as if to hide what he thought. When
he turned back, his face was back to its carefully neutral
– nearly elfin – facade.
"What do you fucking want from me?" Tinker cried. "I was
raised in a junkyard!"
"You're the only one in a position to understand fully what
is to be human," Maynard said, "and still be able to do anything
about this situation."
"But I don't know what to do."
"I know you don't." Maynard said but didn't add anything
more – which would have been a big help.
There was pulse from Forest Moss and this time the
building wasn't empty. She – and Forest Moss –
picked up two people still inside on the second floor. A shout
went up. Tinker turned to see the Wyverns swarmed in through
the door of tiny second-hand shop. Like flashbulbs going off, she
felt spells flaring the small rooms into brilliance, one after
another. The Wyverns quickly worked to room with the hidden
couple.
"Oh, no." Tinker started for the store.
Stormsong pulled her short. "They are only killing oni."
Was that supposed to make it better? Much as she hated the
kitsune, she didn't want to see Chiyo beheaded. She didn't want
Riki anymore dead than she wanted Nathan hurt.
"We can't go in there – it would be asking for fight."
Stormsong kept hold of her. "One we can not win. Wait. Please."
Much as she wanted to protect the strangers, she couldn't
bear the thought of sacrificing her sekasha.
Tinker nodded numbly and pulled out of Stormsong's hold.
"Let's get closer."
She lost sight of the storefront beyond the wall of backs.
This time her sekasha had to clear a path, pushing people
aside to make what they thought was a wide enough path for her.
Maybe if she was an elephant.
The Wyverns muscled out only one person. They dragged
him to a white-haired elf, announcing, "We killed one inside
– it tried to run. This one is spell marked, but it was with
an oni."
It was Tommy Chang.
"Kill him." The male domana said.
"No!" Tinker plunged forward, forced her way through the
towering Wyverns to Tommy's side. "Don't hurt him!"
The white haired elf turned and Tinker gasped at the damage
done to his face.
"Ah, what honest horror!" The half-blinded elf said. "You
must be the child bride. Not much to you – how did you
come out in one piece?"
"Because they underestimated me." Tinker tugged Tommy's
arm out of the wyvern's hold. "Look, he's been tested. He's not
oni."
"He might be mixed blood," said the half-blinded elf.
"Who gives a flying fuck?" Tinker snarled in English.
"Domi," Stormsong murmured behind her.
"He's not one of them." Tinker switched back to High
Elvish.
"How do you know?" Forest Moss asked. "From what I
hear, the tengu fooled you."
She was not going to let them kill someone she knew. She
stared at Tommy, trying to remember something that would
prove he was what she thought he was – to herself as
much as to them. Maddeningly, he said nothing in his own
defense, just stood there, wrapped in his bulletproof cool. Didn't
he know that no one was swordproof?
True, she'd trusted Riki blindly, but she didn't know oni
existed, and had awarded him the trust she gave all strangers. Her
world had been a different place not so long ago.
"I know because –" she started in order to stall them.
Because she'd known Tommy half her life. His family had owned
a restaurant in Oakland
since before Startup. He'd been a driving force
organizing the hoverbike racing, and most summers she saw him
on a weekly basis. He wasn't a stranger. She wouldn't
immediately say he was "good" people. He had a temper and a
reputation of being ruthless when it came to business; that didn't
make him any more evil than her. She suspected the elves
wouldn't accept those facts as a good argument for his humanity.
Riki had proved her judgment was flawed.
What could she say as proof that these elves would accept?
They were growing impatient for her answer.
"Because—" and then unexpectedly, Riki provided
the answer. "Because when the tengu came looking for me, he
didn't know where to find me."
That puzzled them, which was fine, as she needed to cram a
lot into this argument to make it sound.
"Two years ago, Tommy bought a custom delta hoverbike
off me. He needed to write a check, and there were the pink slips
– forms to show transfer of ownership for tax reasons. I
told him my human name, which was Alexander Graham Bell."
Which of course triggered a round of teasing from Tommy, and
occasionally afterwards, he'd call her 'Tinker Bell.' "I even told
him why I was called that." In truth, she had been trying to stem
the teasing with a sympathy play since Tommy's mother had also
been murdered. "And that my father was the man who invented
the orbital gate. I told him – he didn't tell the oni."
That seemed to buy it for the Wyverns. They released their
hold on Tommy.
Magic suddenly flared across her senses, like a gasoline pool
catching flame. Tinker spun around but there was nothing to see.
Forest Moss made a motion, and she turned to watch him call on
the Stone Clan Spell Stones and use the magic to trigger his
shields. Around them, the Wyverns and her Hand went alert.
"What was that? Did you feel that?" She asked Forest Moss.
"It was a spell breaking." Forest Moss cocked the fingers of
his left hand and brought them to his mouth. "Ssssstada."
The spell Forest Moss triggered was a variation of the
ground radar. A long, narrow wedge of power formed from the
male elf to the river's edge. He shifted his right hand, and the
wedge swept northward through Chinatown. At the heart of the
Chinatown,
he hit an intense writhing of power.
"How odd," Forest Moss said.
"What is that?" Tinker noted that Tommy, being smart, had
vanished while they had been distracted.
Forest Moss gave her an odd look. "It's a ley scry. It lets me
see recent and active disturbances in the ley lines. I don't know
what that spell was supposed to do, but it just violently altered,
and it's now acting as a pump on a
fiutana."
"Oh shit. The black willow."
* * *
The great doors of the refrigerated warehouse stood open to
the summer heat. Magic flowed down over the loading down in a
purple haze of potential. Tinker cautiously pulled the Rolls
around, trying to angle the car so they could see into the cave
darkness, but the dock was too high, and the door, facing the
afternoon eastern sky, was cave dark. Tinker flicked on the
headlights, but even the high beams failed to illuminate the
interior.
"I want a closer look." Tinker put the Rolls into park. She
wished she could leave the engine running, but it would be a
mistake with this much free magic in the area.
She got out and the sekasha followed. Magic flooded over
her, hot and fast. The heat tossed the chimes on the ley shrine,
making them jangle in shrill alarm. A smell like burnt cinnamon
mixed with a taste like heated honey. The invisible brilliance
hinted by the shimmering purple made her eyes water.
"Be careful." She blinked away tears. "The magic is all
around us."
"Even we can see that." Stormsong's shields outlined her in
hard, blue radiance. "Your shields, domi."
Yeah, now would be a good time for that.
Tinker set up a resonance with the spell stones and then
triggered her shield spell. Once the winds were wrapped around
her, she waded up the steps, making sure that she didn't disturb
the spell by gesturing.
The padlock had been cut off with a bolt cutter. Her spell
hadn't failed; someone had broken in and sabotaged it.
Violet sparkled and shifted in the black of the warehouse,
casting patterns of shadows and near light. Tinker couldn't see
anything that looked like the black willow. Stormsong tried the
lights, but the switch had no effect.
"The flood would have popped the light bulbs." There was
no way Tinker was going in there blind. "Do we have a light?"
"Yes." Pony took out a spell light, closed his left hand tight
around the glass orb, and activated it. He played a thin beam of
searchlight intensity over the room.
They had left the black willow tied down on pallets. The
restraints lay in tatters. Splitters of wood marked the pallet's
destruction. The fork lift sat upended like a child's toy. Dead
leaves rode convection currents, dancing across the cement floor
with a thin, dry skittering noise.
"Where is it?" Tinker whispered.
"I don't see it." Pony swept the room again.
"Neither do I." Tinker glanced back to the street. Where was
Forest Moss? That ground radar thing would come in handy just
about now. "Let's turn off the compressor and at least stop this
flood."
They moved through the warehouse to the back room. The
small windowless room was empty of trees, with only the
purring compressor to wreak havoc. A crowbar lay across the
metal tracings of her spell, encircled with charring. Odd
distortions wavered around the compressor.
Cursing, she started for the breaker box.
"Domi, no!" Stormsong caught her shoulder and
stilled her. "Stay here at the door. Let Cloudwalker do it."
"The willow isn't in here." Tinker nevertheless stayed at the
door as Stormsong asked while Cloudwalker crossed to the
breaker box and cut the power to the compressor. "See, no
dan—"
Her only warning was the ominous rustle of leaves, and then
the forklift struck her shield from behind. She yelped, spinning
around to see the forklift rebound back across the warehouse.
"Shields!" Stormsong shouted.
Tinker had let her shields drop in her surprise. She fumbled
through the resonance set up as Pony's narrow light played off
the suddenly close wizen "face" of the black willow. They had to
have walked straight past, somehow blind to it. It filled the
warehouse now, blocking them from the door. It lifted a foot
root and replanted it in booming sound that shook the floor. Its
branches rattled as it blindly felt the confines of the room. A
dozen of the arms encountered the upended forklift, scooped it
up again and flung it at her.
Tinker snapped through the shield spell, already wincing, as
the forklift sailed toward her. At the last second the winds
wrapped tight around her and the forklift struck the distortion's
edge.
"Shit!" Tinker swore as the forklift bounced back across the
warehouse to wedge itself sidewise into the far door. "There's no
other door, right?"
"No,
domi," Pony said.
Tinker wasn't sure to be amazed or annoyed that Pony
sounded so calm, as if she could pull doorways out her butt. "Oh
damn, oh damn, oh damn. Okay, I know I'm smarter than this
tree."
The black willow lifted another root foot and shook the
world as it planted it back down, a few yards closer to them,
instantly pulverizing the cement floor, digging roots down into
the building's footing.
"But I have some doubts," Tinker admitted, "that brains are
going to win over brawn this time."
What did she have to work with? She scanned the room of
bare concrete block as the willow stomped ponderously closer.
Crow bar.
Boom! Compressor. Five
sekasha.
Five
ejae.
Boom! Circuit breaker box.
"Stormsong, what do you know about electricity?" Tinker
asked the most tech savvy of her Hand.
"Nothing useful," Stormsong said.
Boom!
"Nothing?" Tinker squeaked.
"It lives in a box in the wall." Stormsong detailed out what
she knew. "It goes away if you don't pay for it."
Boom!
Right – nothing useful. Scratch having Stormsong
rig an electrical weapon. Just as well, good chance they'd just
electrocute themselves.
The black willow stretched out its hundreds of whipping
branches to scrabble at her shield. Tinker forced herself to scan
the room again, and ignore the massive creature trying to reach
her.
"The roof! It's only plywood and rubber. See if you can cut
through."
The tree found the gap between the top of the tall doorway
and her shield. The thin branches pushed through the space,
caught hold of the doorjamb and started to pull.
"Oh, shit!" Tinker cried. "If it makes the door larger, I'm not
going to be able to hold it! It's coming in!"
There was a pulse of magic from Forest Moss, instantly
defining the Stone Clan elf with Wyverns out by the Rolls, and
themselves, pinned inside by the black willow.
"
Forest Moss!" Tinker shouted.
"Get it off us!"
The concrete walls buckled under the strain, tearing free to
leave sawtooth openings, exposing twisted and snapped rebar.
The branches flung the debris against the back wall of the
warehouse like mad shovels.
"Forest Moss, get it–"
And suddenly the branches wrapped around her, cocooning
her shield in living wicker, and lifted her off the ground.
"
Domi!" Pony shouted.
The black willow heaved her up. Its branches creaked as it
tried to crush her shields down.
Oh please hold! Oh please hold!
A dark orifice opened in the crook where its main limbs
branched from massive trunk. As the tree tried to stuff her into
the fleshy maw, she realized what the opening was.
They have mouths! I wonder if Lain knows that. Oh shit, it's
trying to eat me!
Luckily the diameter of her shielding was larger than its
mouth. It was trying to fit a golf ball into a beer bottle. She held
still and silent, afraid to disrupt her shields. Smell of burnt
cinnamon and honey filled her senses and her vision
blurred—the tree fading slightly—even as it
repeatedly jammed her up against its mouth.
It has some kind of hallucinogen – that's how we
missed it, she thought.
And then the tree flung her through the wall.
The street beyond was a flicker of brightness, and then she
plowed through a confusion of small, dim, dusty rooms of an
abandon office building beyond. She felt Forest Moss track her
through the building. His power flashed ahead of her, surged
through the next building in her flight path, and locked down on
all the load bearing supports.
The white haired shit was going to pull the building down
on her! She'd be buried alive – shields or not!
Dropping her shields, she made a desperate grab for a
battered steel desk as she flew over it. She missed the edge and
left five contrails across its dusty top. A floor to ceiling window
stood beyond the desk. She smashed through the window into
open sky.
I'm going to die.
And then Riki caught her, wrapping strong arms around her
and labored upwards in a loud rustle of black wings.
"Riki!" She clung to the tengu, heart thudding like a motor
about to shake itself apart. Yeah, yeah, she was still pissed at
him. She'll let him know that – after he put her down
safely.
Chapter 17: A Murder Of Crows
"Stop squirming or I might drop you." Riki growled through
teeth gritted with the effort to carry Tinker aloft.
She glanced down and went still in shock of being dangled
mid-air forty feet up and climbing. "Shouldn't we be going
down?"
"Down is good for you – very bad for me."
"Damn it, Riki, my people need me. Put me down!" Tinker
found herself gripping his arms so he couldn't just drop her.
"There's so many things wrong with that statement that I
don't have breath to explain it all."
Movement at the window she'd smashed out of caught her
eye and with relief she saw Cloudwalker pointing up at her.
Moments later Pony and the others joined him at the opening.
"Oh, thank gods." Tinker breathed.
Riki rose above the roofline. The crown of the black willow
bristled in the street beyond. Its booming footsteps echoed up
from the canyon of buildings. She felt a great surge of magic and
a massive fireball suddenly engulfed the tree. Whoa! Apparently
Prince True Flame had arrived. No wonder the tengu didn't want
to land.
Riki dipped down behind the next building, out of sight of
her Hand. Black smoke billowed behind them. He flew straight
west – as the saying went—as the crow flies, faster
than a man could run despite being weighed down by her. When
he reached the
Ohio River, he turned and
followed its course.
Where the hell was he taking her? It occurred to her that he
couldn't have been just passing by and caught her by luck.
"You planned this! You knew if you screwed with my spell,
I'd come to fix it."
"Would you believe this had nothing to do with you?"
"No."
"Believe it not, the world does not revolve around Tinker
the Great."
How far could Riki fly? Could he keep up his speed, or had
that been a sprint? And what did he want with her?
She tried to form a plan to escape. Riki, though, wouldn't
underestimate her – he knew her too well. Of all the
people in
Pittsburgh
, he could match wits with her. Her first thought was
to force him to drop her into the river. The large dark form of a
river shark swimming under the water, following their passage,
killed that plan. They followed the
Ohio
around its gentle bends, and
Pittsburgh
vanished behind the swell of the surrounding hills.
Once the city was out of sight, Riki climbed the steep hill that
once was
Bellevue
and crossed the Rim. There he dove into the
ironwoods. The forest canopy rushed toward them, seeming to
her a solid wall of green. Riki though flicked through openings
she hadn't seen, darting through slender upper branches to finally
land on a thick bough, close to the massive trunk.
The moment they landed, Tinker twisted in his hold and
swung at him hard as she could, aiming for his beak-like nose.
"God damn it!" He caught her hand and twisted her arm
painfully up behind her back. He leaned his weight against her,
pinning her to the trunk. "Just hold still!"
Cheek pressed to the rough gray bark, Tinker saw for the
first time how far up the tree they stood – the forest floor
lay a hundred feet below. Normally she didn't mind heights
– only normally she wasn't this high up with an enemy
spy. She felt stopped struggling, fear trying to climb up out of her
stomach. She swallowed down on it – she had to keep her
head.
Riki grabbed her right wrist, and then catching hold of her
left, bound both hands behind her with a thin plastic strap. Once
she was bound helpless, he turned her around. He wore war
paint—streaks of black under his vivid blue eyes and
shock of black hair. His shirt was cut on the same loose lines of
the muscle shirt he wore often during her captivity by the oni, but
of glossy black scale armor. On his feet, with their odd bird-like
toes, he wore silver tips that looked razor-sharp.
"What do you want?" She was pleased she didn't sound as
scared as she was.
"I'm not going to hurt you."
"Somehow I don't believe you." She wriggled slightly to
indicate her tied wrists. It made her teeter alarmingly on the
branch, so she carefully scrunched down until she straddled the
thick limb. There, perfectly safe. Ha!
Riki watched her with a cocked head. "There's no shame in
being afraid of heights. Most people are."
She stared at him with shock. That was exactly what he said
in her dream – wasn't it? She glanced downward and felt
déjà vu; they'd been up high in her nightmare.
"What do you want?" she asked. "Are you going to turn me
over to the oni again?"
"No. When you killed Lord Tomtom, we Tengu managed to
break free of the oni."
"I gave that up. You melted the witch, so I got out of my no-
compete contract."
This was seriously weird.
"Riki, who is the wizard of oz?"
"Huh?"
"I had a dream and you were in it."
"And you and you and you too," Riki quoted the movie.
"Oh good, at least you know the source. In my dream, I was
trying to get to the wizard of Oz."
"Ooookay, and I thought I was deep in left field. Oh this is
sad."
"Do have any idea who he might be?"
"The wizard?" Riki pulled a pack of cigarettes out of his
back pocket, tapped out a cigarette, lit it and took a deep drag.
"Hmmm, in the movie the wizard was the traveling performer
that Dorothy met when she ran away from home. Chances are
then, he's someone you've met but don't recognize now."
Taking another drag, Riki vented the smoke out of his nose
in twin columns as he thought. "His nature is changing; some
perceive him as great and powerful, others see him as foolish,
but he's the only character that fully understood both
Kansas
and Oz. Most likely, you're looking for someone
with great knowledge, but his intelligence is disguised
somehow." Riki gazed off into the forest, eyes unfocused,
thinking. "Like Dorothy, he's a traveler between worlds, just as
lost..."
Riki's eyes snapped back in focus. "Impatience. He's your
wizard."
"Who?"
"Impatience. The dragon that you fought at Turtle Creek."
She tried to fit the name of "Impatience" with the countless
jagged teeth and massive snaky body.
"See, intelligence disguised." Riki waved his cigarette,
reminding her of the astronomer post docs when they went into
lecture mode. "Legends say that a dragon has a body and a spirit,
and you can encounter the one without the other. Usually in the
old stories, the dragons send their spirits out to cross great
distances – but while they're doing it, it's a very unwise
thing to approach them. The lights are on, but no one's home."
"Running on autopilot?"
"Let's just say that there's more than one story about
someone getting their head bitten off while a dragon's spirit is
absent."
She remembered with great clarity the sense of intelligence
filling the dragon's eyes—its surprise at having a hand
clamped into its mouth. "So you're saying the dragon was
unconscious at the time he attacked me."
"Probably."
That would certainly explain how she managed to walk away
with nothing more than a sore hand. "So where is this dragon
now?"
"Even if I knew that, I wouldn't tell you. I want Impatience
for the tengu. That's what I was doing at Reinholds. The oni had
set a trap for it, using the fountain as a lure."
"The oni?"
"Impatience was one of two dragons the oni had waiting on
Onihida for the invasion. The other is Malice, who is much
bigger. Somehow Impatience managed to slip the oni's hold on
him and escape."
"So, on top of the royal troops and the oni, we have an
unaligned dragon running loose in
Pittsburgh
."
"Well, a party is only fun if you invite lots of interesting
people."
She stuck her tongue out at him. "How do you plan to find
Impatience?"
"I don't know.
You apparently have to follow the
yellow brick road."
In her dream, though, the road ended with the tree. This was
going to drive her mad. In the silence between them, she heard a
slight noise from Riki's hip pocket. He frowned, slipped out a
cell phone and answered it with a cautious, "Hello?"
As he listened, his look changed to worry. "You're where?
Jesus Christ what are you doing there? Oh fuck. Yes I said that,
what do you expect me to say? No—don't –
don't..." Riki sighed. "Put your cousin on. No, no, not Joey!
Keiko." Riki waited a moment until the phone could be traded
off on the other side of the conversation. "Yeah, I'm here. What's
going on?"
Riki listened for several minutes, grimacing as if what he
heard pained him. "I'll be there in a few minutes. Hang tight."
Riki tucked away his phone. "Change of plans."
"You're letting me go?"
"Sorry," he actually managed to look it. "I'll never have this
chance again. I can't throw it away." He pulled out a silk scarf
and tied it over her eyes. "I don't want you to know where we're
going." He took firm hold of her and jerked her off her feet.
"This time, don't wriggle so much."
She felt him leap, knew that he left the safety of the tree, and
nearly screamed at the knowledge. His wings rustled out, caught
the air, and they swooped upwards.
Fifteen or twenty minutes later, Riki dove down and wove
through light and shadows to land again. Numb from dangling,
her legs folded under her. Riki lowered her down to a prone
position and then knelt behind her, panting with exertion.
Their landing site seemed too flat to be a tree branch but it
swayed slightly with the rustling of the wind.
"Damn it, Riki, where are we?"
Riki tugged down her blindfold. She lay just inside the door
of a tiny cabin; only eight-foot square, it would have been
claustrophobic if it actually contained furniture.
"We're at a cote," he panted. "Emergency shelter."
The cabin seemed to be made of scrap lumber. The one
small round window letting in light held glass, and the high
ceiling bristled with nails, indicating that the roof was shingled,
so the cabin was weatherproofed.
"Stay put." He stepped past her to pull something off a set of
shelves on the back wall. "There's no safe way down to ground.
I'll be back."
Cabin, hell, it was a tree house. Under any other
circumstance, she would have been entranced with the notion.
Riki took a deep breath and stepped backwards out the door,
spreading his black wings.
"Stay," he repeated and flapped away.
Not trusting his word, she struggled to her feet and went to
the door. The view straight down made her step backwards
quickly. It was a place strictly for birds. If her hands weren't
bound behind her back, she could get to the massive branch just
outside the door, but there was nowhere to go from there. The
tree was too wide, and the lowest branch too far from the ground
to allow climbing down. She could see nothing but virgin forest
through both the door and window, not even a glimpse of sun or
river to give a clue which direction they flown.
The cote was cunningly made. A brace along the back wall
provided the one anchor point so the stress of the shifting tree
could not tear the room apart. The front of cabin rested on a
beam yoked over side branches. A loft bed nearly doubled the
floor space. A generous overhang meant the front door could
hang open even during a rain shower to let in light without the
weather. The outside of the cabin had been painted gray and black
in a pattern that mimicked ironwood bark.
She kicked shut the door but the latch was too high for her
to shift with her hands bound.
The shelves on the back wall were stocked with survival
gear: warm clothing and blankets in plastic bags, extra plastic
bags, rolls of duct tape, a serious first aid kit, ammo for guns,
flashlights, two box knives, waterproof matches, bottled spring
water, a water purifier kit, a small cooler filled with power bars
and military rations, and even a roll of toilet paper. Judging by
the shape of the bag, Riki had taken a set of clothes with him.
She fumbled with one of the box knives, blindly sawing at
the plastic strap binding her wrists. The blade kept slipping,
nicking her wrists, before she finally managed to cut through.
She bandaged her wrists, looking at what she had to work with. A
rope ladder from strips of blanket, reinforced with the duct tape?
Or perhaps she should just try to jump Riki and take his cell
phone. No, he'd gone to meet someone, so he could return with
others.
As if the thought summoned the tengu, Riki kicked the door
open. She snatched up the box knife and spun around to face Riki
as he dropped in through the doorway. He wasn't alone. He had a
child with him – a little boy in an oversized black hooded
sweatshirt.
"Riki!" She started toward him, angry at the tengu, and afraid
for the boy.
Riki looked up, saw the knife in her hand, and his face went
cold. She had always suspected that the tengu treated her with kid
gloves. Suddenly, it was if a stranger was looking at her, one who
would hurt her if she took another step forward.
She stopped, and reached out with her empty hand. "Don't
hurt him."
Still tight in Riki's hold, the boy glanced over his shoulder at
her, and blinked in surprise. He had the tengu's coarse straight
black hair, electric blue eyes and sharp features – though
his nose wasn't so nearly beak-like as Riki's. "Oh, hello," the
tengu boy said with no fear in his voice. "I'm Joey. Joey Shoji.
Who are you?"
With a rustle of wings, two slightly older tengu children
crowded the doorway. Wearing blue jeans and torn t-shirts, they
would have seemed like human children except for the way they
clung to the sides of the doorway with bird-like feet, fanning the
air with black wings. The girl looked thirteen and sported the
black war paint and sharp spurs that Riki wore. The boy was
younger – eleven? Ten? Both had Riki's dark wild hair
and sharp features.
"Hey, what's a girl during here?" The boy asked in English
and hopped into the cote.
The girl scowled and remained hovering at the door. "She's
an elf – the fairy princess."
"What's an elf?" Joey asked.
"She's still a girl elf, Keiko," The boy insisted.
"What's an elf?" Joey asked again.
"It means I have pointed ears." Tinker tapped on her left ear.
She used it as a distraction to put the knife on the shelves as
causally as she could. The two younger kids studied her ear, but
Riki and Keiko's eyes followed the knife.
The coldness left Riki's face, but he still watched her
carefully. "This is Mickey and Keiko." He released the littlest
one. "And Joey. They're my younger cousins."
"Should we really be telling her our names?" Keiko asked.
"What's she doing here?"
Joey pulled off the adult-sized sweatshirt he was drowning
in. Underneath he had a ragged t-shirt like the other two –
the back torn open to reveal the elaborate spell tattooed from
shoulder to waistline, in black. "Look, look, I have wings too!"
He spoke a word, and magic poured through the tracings,
making them shimmer like fresh ink. The air hazed around him,
and the wings unfolded out of the distortion, at first holographic
in appearance, ghosts of crow wings hovering behind him, fully
extended. Then they solidified into reality, skin and bone merged
into his musculature of his back, glistening black feathers, all
correctly proportioned for his thin, child's body.
"Wow," Tinker said. "Those are cool."
Keiko hopped into the cote to catch hold of Joey and pulled
him away from Tinker, giving her a dark distrusting look.
Riki said something in the oni harsh tongue that made the
younger tengu look at Tinker with surprise.
"Her?" Keiko cried. "No way!"
Riki shrugged, making his wings rustle. "She's the one that
killed Lord Tomtom. The dragon went to her. I have to check."
"Wait," Tinker said. "This all about the tattoo you think the
dragon put on me?"
"Yes." Riki nodded.
"Are you nuts?" Tinker said.
"No, just desperate. Please, take off your dress."
"Oh you have to be kidding." Tinker took a step back and
realized how crowded the tiny cabin had just gotten with tengu
wings. "I am not taking off my dress in front of all of you."
Riki touched Joey's shoulder. "Wings, Joey. Keiko and
Mickey, you too."
The boys spoke spell commands and their wings vanished.
Riki picked them up, one at a time, and swung them up to the loft
bed. They sat on the edge, dangling down their three-toed feet
until Riki said, "Nyh, nyh, all the way up. Quiet little birds."
Keiko crossed her arms, flared out her wings, and leveled a
hostile look at Riki. "I'm a warrior."
Riki glared at the tengu girl until the girl added something in
oni. "A witness? Yes, I guess you're right."
"Yeah, I'm supposed to act as if that's better?" Tinker asked.
"Take off your shirt, let me look at you, and if you don't
have the mark, I'll let you go."
Tinker scoffed. "Yeah, sure."
"I promise," Riki said.
Like that was worth anything.
"Don't be such a chicken shit!" Keiko said.
Riki slapped the tengu girl on the back of the head. "Hey,
you're not helping. Would you want to take off your clothes in
front of strangers?"
Keiko blushed and stuck out her tongue at her cousin.
Riki returned his attention to Tinker. "Come on. Just do it
quick and it'd be over."
"I don't have any mark."
Riki's face went neutral, if all emotion drained out, leaving
only resolve.
Tinker considered if she wanted her dress forcibly taken off.
There wasn't any running away, and while Keiko was young, the
tengu girl was as tall as she was. Probably if Tinker trying calling
the winds she'd end up in a wrestling match before she got the
spell off. "Fine. I'll take it off."
She struggled out of her dress, and as she feared, bra had to
go.
"It would be over her heart, wouldn't it?" Keiko looked as
uncomfortable with Tinker's nudity as Tinker felt.
"It should." Riki took Tinker's hands and examined her arms
carefully, even to the point of undoing the bandages and peering
under them. It wasn't as bad as Tinker feared. She realized it was
the kids' presence; she trusted Riki not to do anything with them
there – watching. Hopefully she was right.
"Okay," Riki finally said. "You can get dressed."
"Does she have it? Does she have it?" Mickey called from
the loft.
"No." Riki glanced down at Keiko. "Can you make it to the
near cote without stopping? It's going to be dark and we'll need
to move quietly and fast."
Keiko screwed up her face, torn between saying yes and
admitting the truth. Finally she hunched her shoulders, looked
away, and said, "No."
Riki tousled the girl's short black hair. "It's better that you
tell the truth now. I'll take Joey and then come back to guide you
two. Rest up."
"What about her?" Keiko asked, and then added quietly.
"You promised her."
If it wasn't her freedom they were talking about, it would
have been funny to see Riki realize how screwed he was. He
could start to ferry the kids back home, but it would leave her
alone with at least two of them. Taking her home meant all three
kids would be alone for a much longer time – perhaps a
very long time if he ran into trouble with the elves. He looked
her in sudden panic.
She sighed and waved her hand. "Take care of them first."
"Promise me that you won't hurt them."
She scoffed. "Who is going to protect me from them?"
A wry smile came and went. "I'm trusting you two to
behave. Understand?"
"Yes, Riki," Mickey said.
Keiko nodded, watching Tinker.
"Joey?" Riki motioned to the littlest tengu and the boy flung
himself out of the loft into Riki's arms. "Ooomph! Settle down,
you little monster. Here, sweatshirt on first." Riki knelt and
pulled the sweatshirt onto the boy. "Remember, once we leave,
no talking. Quiet little birds."
Joey mimed locking his mouth and throwing away the key.
"Good boy," Riki picked up the child and gave them a
worried look. "Remember there are oni in the woods. Keep it
down and no lights."
"Quiet little birds." Mickey said.
Riki wavered at the door, Joey clinging to his neck. "Tinker
– I love them much as you love Oilcan. Everything I've
done has been for them. Please – just – just wait
for me to get back."
* * *
The tengu kids took the loft bed and Tinker settled by the
door, her back to the wall so she could keep an eye on them.
Keiko continued to stare at her. Mickey swung his legs. Dusk fell
on the forest and darkness crawled into the cabin.
"How far does Riki have to go?"
Mickey started to say something but Keiko poked him.
"We're not allowed to say."
"What are you doing so far away anyhow?"
"Joey just got his wings." Mickey said. "We were on his first
long flight and got cut off by a troop of oni moving through the
area. We tried to go around them and got lost. When we hit the
city's edge, Keiko said we should call Riki. I'm the one that
remembered the number."
"Then all you would do was cry." Keiko said.
Mickey pulled up his legs, curling into himself.
Keiko gave him a look of remorse and then swung down.
She rummaged through the shelves and then handed up a bottle
of water and a power bar to her younger cousin. "Here. You can
have the last chocolate one."
Keiko put a second bottle and bar up beside Mickey.
Wordlessly, she left an offering of food and water for Tinker
down on the floor, carefully staying outside of Tinker's reach,
and then swung back to the loft.
Tinker hadn't had a power bar as an elf – she
expected something tasteless. She was surprised how good it
tasted. "Oh, these are yummy."
Mickey nodded in agreement, instantly happy by Keiko's
offering. "I didn't think elves could speak English."
Keiko pinched Mickey.
"Ow! What?"
"Don't display how ignorant you are. She was a human until
the viceroy turned her into an elf a few months ago."
Mickey looked at Tinker, recognition dawning on him. "Oh,
she's the Dufae girl?"
"Yes." Keiko said.
Fear filled Mickey's face.
"Why are you scared of me?" Tinker asked.
"We know what Riki had to do to you." Mickey whispered.
"How he had to turn you over to the oni."
"Riki didn't want to us to come to Elfhome," Keiko said.
"He said that either the elves would find us, or the oni would.
Better stay on Earth where we were at least free. But the oni
came to our house and took Joey hostage. Riki sent us on ahead
to be with our aunt, but he stayed to work for the oni – to
try and get Joey back."
"He never told me about you."
"If he told you, then the kitsune would know, and then the
oni would know. He couldn't tell you the truth about anything
– or he'd put us in danger."
"You hate the tengu now – don't you?" Mickey
whispered.
A few days ago, Tinker probably would have said yes. She
knew that when she found the MP3 player, she'd been angry
enough to beat Riki to a pulp again. Now, with the dead in Chinatown, and the children looking at her in
fear, she couldn't hate all the innocent strangers. "No."
Keiko scoffed, disbelieving. "I'd never forgive anyone that
did that to me."
"I saw what Lord Tomtom did to those that failed him
– and it scared the living shit out of me." She shuddered
with the memory of the torture; the flash of bright blades and
white of bone stripped clean of flesh. "I was willing to do almost
anything to keep the knives away from me."
"So you forgive Riki?"
There was something about the darkness that demanded
honesty. "I'm still angry at him. But I was with the oni for nearly
a month—I can understand why he did it and don't think I
can hate him for it. He took my shit and never complained, and
when he could, he protected me."
There was a sudden roar outside and a hoverbike –
lift engines at full – popped up and landed on the massive
branch outside the door. Its headlight flooded the room with
stark white blinding light.
Tinker stood and called magic, wrapping the wind around
her.
"Tinker domi!" Stormsong's voice came out of the
light.
"Stormsong?" Tinker squinted into the glare.
The headlight snapped off. Stormsong sat on a custom delta
Tinker had done for a charity auction last year. Somehow
Stormsong had managed to land and balance on the branch
– it was going to take work to get it down in one piece.
In her right hand the sekasha held a shotgun resting
across the handlebars and trained at the cabin door.
"How the hell did you find me?" Tinker asked.
"I closed my eyes and went where I was needed." Stormsong
glanced beyond Tinker to the kids. "They're tengu."
Tinker realized that her being safe meant the kids were now
in danger. "I promised that they wouldn't be hurt."
"That was a silly thing to do," Stormsong said.
"They're just kids." Tinker moved to protect them with her
shield.
"Kids grow up," Stormsong said.
Tinker shook her head. "I can't let you hurt them. I
promised."
"Yes, Tinker ze domi." Stormsong said in High
Tongue.
Tinker released the winds. The kids huddle against the back
corner of the loft bed.
"We won't hurt you," she told them, "but I need to leave."
"Hey," Keiko called. She pulled off a necklace and
scrambled forward to dangle it out to Tinker. "Take this. It will
protect you."
"From what?"
"Tengu."
Tinker looped the necklace over her neck and picked her way
out onto the branch. "How the hell did you get a hoverbike the
whole way up here? I know the lift engine can't do a hundred feet
straight up – or down."
"Flying blind." Stormsong uncocked her shotgun and
holstered it. "Hang tight to me – this is going to be tricky.
And you might want to close your eyes."
Tinker clung tight to Stormsong, trying to let her trust of the
bodyguard override her knowledge of the hoverbike's limitations.
Stormsong didn't even turn on bike's headlight, just raced the
bike's engine and then tipped them over the edge. A squeak of
fear leapt up Tinker's throat – followed by her heart
– as they nose-dived. They hit a lower branch that cracked
under the lift drive and suddenly they were corkscrewing madly.
She gripped Stormsong tight. She felt more than saw the blur off
tree trunks and branches as they kissed off them. Seconds later
they straightened out and roared through the darkness –
Pony on a second hoverbike waiting on the ground running along
side of them.
"Thank you," Stormsong called back.
"What for? You rescued me."
"Yes, but you trusted me to do my job."
Chapter 18: Seek You
The sekasha
suggested a bath and bed, but Tinker didn't want to unwind and
take it easy. Things in Pittsburgh were bad, and getting worse, and like it or not, she
was one of the few people that had the power to fix things. The
only question was how.
She placated the
sekasha by agreeing to dinner and
took her datapad with her to the enclave's private dining hall.
Maynard thought that opening a line of communication with
Earth would be key. Yeah, right, just phone home. Riki had said
that the dragon was the wizard of Oz, and implied that dragons
understood how to move from world to world. She didn't know
where the dragon was, however, and from the sounds of it, both
the oni and tengu were searching hard for it. Follow the yellow
brick road? What road?
Ohio River
Boulevard
? I-279? The last lead she had was the black willow
tree and last she saw of that, it was flambé.
Wait, she had gotten seeds from the black willow. At least,
she thought she did. She had Windwolf's staff track the small jar
down, and the MP3 player. Watching the seeds wriggle in the
glass, she listened to the songs recorded on the player. It was one
of Oilcan's favorite elf rock groups, playing a collection of songs
that her cousin had wrote for them. If you didn't know Oilcan,
the songs seemed to be about lost lovers. Tinker knew that they
were about his mother. Odd how the words could stay the same
but knowledge changed the meaning.
Tinker laid her head on the table and remembered Riki in
another light.
Pony ran his hand across her back, a delicious feeling that
uncoiled a sudden deep need. On the heels of that, like cracking
open a bottle full of dark storm winds, a confusing wash of
emotions.
"Don't do that." Tinker shifted away from his touch and tried
to cork the bottle. She was too fragile for that.
"Have I hurt you?" Pony asked.
She shook her head.
"All day, you have avoided me as if I had. I need to
understand – what have I done wrong? We are not fitting
this way."
She had? She hadn't even been aware of it. "It's not you. It's
me. I-I've so totally—" Unfortunately there wasn't an
Elvish match for the word 'fucked up,' so she stuck in the
English, "everything and everyone."
"Fuck," Pony repeated the English curse. "Can you teach me
that?"
"No!" She realized he meant the word's meaning, not the
actual action. "It means intercourse." And once she saw the
confusion in Pony's face as he tried to plug in the meaning into
her sentence, she added, "It's a curse word generally meaning
– well – anything you want it to mean. It's one of
the more versatile words we have."
"How do you conjugate it?"
"Fuck, Fucking, Fucked when used as a verb. It can be used
as a noun, indicate person, place or thing, generally derogatory."
This was the not the conversation she thought she'd be having
with Pony this evening. "It could also be combined –
creatively – with other words. Fuck-head. Fuck-off.
Fuck-wad."
"I'm starting to understand a little more about human
fascination with sex."
"Besides the fact that it's so damn fun?"
"What is damn?"
"Pony!"
"I feel that it is time that I learned English."
She felt a pang of guilt knowing that Pony hadn't understood
any of Nathan's last words, that he had only seen her struggling in
Nathan's hold and her cry for help. "Yes, that would be good."
"Why do you feel this way? That you have 'fucked up?' You
have done the best you can against very difficult situations."
"
Pittsburgh
is stuck here on Elfhome. Nathan is dead. Half the
people I know probably hate my guts now. I'm not sure even
Oilcan or Lain will ever want to see me again. I cheated on my
husband, and seduced you! How is that 'the best?' Gods forbid, if
I had done my worse!"
He reached out and pulled her back, into his lap.
"Pony." She wriggled, trying to escape him.
"
Domi," he whispered into her hair, his lips brushing
the tips of her ears, sending a shiver of want through her. "Have I
no will of my own? Am I your puppet?"
She stared into his dark eyes and felt cold dread take hold. "I
don't want to talk about this."
"Because if you're in control, I am not to blame for my
actions?"
"Pony, please."
"And if I am not under your control, does that make me a
terrifying stranger? Someone that you do not know?"
She clung to him then, afraid that he would slip away from
her. "Please, Pony, you're the only thing sane about my life right
now."
"You are being unfair to both of us to say that what
happened was only by your hand. I am not your puppet. You did
not act alone. You can not be solely responsible."
"You do what I tell you to do. I told you I wanted sex and
you gave it to me."
"I choose to do what you tell me." He took her hand and
nuzzled her wrist. "I was pleased that you trusted me enough to
turn to me and to stop when you changed your mind."
"I'm just supposed to use you? Get off and then throw you
across the room? Like you're some kind of—" She was
going to say 'vibrator' but elves didn't a word for battery-operated
sex toys. Nor did she want to hurt him more by being crude.
"— substitute for my husband?"
"That is what I am. I am to be here for you when Wolf can
not be."
"But – But —And you're okay with that?"
"I have lived my entire life knowing that as a
sekasha, if I became a
domi's beholden, that she
might take me to bed. And I knew, when I offered myself to you
that meant all of me. My life is yours. My love is yours. And I
have watched you fight the demon spawn themselves to keep me
from harm. Nothing happened yesterday that I did not know
might happen, that I wanted to stop, and that I am sorry about
– except the part about being thrown across the room."
If he thought this was going to make her feel better, he was
wrong. She felt worse, and struggled to keep from showing it.
Obviously she sucked at it as sadness filled his eyes.
"I did not realize until Stormsong explained that humans are
so – singular – with their love. It is not our way."
Pony used the inclusive "our" meaning that they both belonged to
it: she was one of them. "That is why we
sekasha are
naekuna; so you can turn to us if you need us."
"Oh, Pony, I might have the body of an elf, but in
here—" she tapped her temple. "I'm still a human. I can't
commit to one person—heart and soul—and then
take another one to bed, without feeling like I'm doing something
wrong. I just can't."
"I know." He said it with quiet acceptance in his voice, and
then nothing more. After a minute, she leaned against him and
soaked in his calmness. It still felt wrong to stay so close, so
intimate with him when she was married to Windwolf. Her
logical side, though, was starting to recognize what Pony must
know – that while she was emotionally fully human now,
that in a hundred years or so, she would slowly grow to be elf
inside as well as out. And to elves – a hundred years was
a very short time.
Well, sitting wallowing in her own pain wasn't going to help
Pittsburgh
. Time to pull rabbits out of her butt. How could she
communicate across realities when Earth wouldn't have a
receiver for her transmitter? She already tested Turtle Creek for
radio waves, and nothing recognizable was coming through. She
entertained the idea of linking two phones together with a phone
line and tossing one into the discontinuity. No, a phone would
sink like the gate had. So would messages in bottles.
She sighed and slid out of Pony's lap. "Time to get busy. I
need to do some modeling."
Communication with Earth was a simple science problem.
What was happening in
Pittsburgh
was a vast sociological problem in which she didn't
know how to solve. She didn't even know where she stood in
regards to it. How far did her responsibility extend? Were the
elves right in hunting down all the oni and killing them? The
scientist in her could see the simple logic of it. Both races were
immortal, only the oni were prolific and the elves weren't. If the
elves did nothing, the oni would win eventually out of default.
Morally, genocide was wrong – did the elves have a
choice? It wasn't like the gods had put both races on one world.
The oni had invaded, which put them in the wrong. It would be
stupid to put them in the right simply because they failed to kill
the elves first.
And what about the tengu, who seemed to be a race separate
from the oni and on Elfhome against their will? What was her
responsibility to them? Riki had betrayed her, but if the tengu
children were telling the truth, he had been forced to choose
between her and his cousins. She knew she would move the
world to protect Oilcan; how could she hold Riki's betrayal
against him when that meant putting the children into danger?
And how many tengu were there on Elfhome? Would she be
protecting Riki, the three kids and the unnamed 'aunt' or were
there more? A dozen? A hundred?
Where did her responsibility begin and end? Could she
protect all the humans and the tengu too? Or to keep the humans
safe, would she have to ignore what was morally right?
And under it all was the dark suspicion that she didn't really
have the power to protect anything, despite what Tooloo might
think. True Flame thought she was a useless child. The Stone
Clan was trying to kill her. Windwolf had lent her his power, but
if she took a stand against him, would he take it back?
* * *
When Wolf asked Tinker to be his domi, he
suspected that she would be able to lead. Certainly, when she
spoke, people obeyed. She didn't seem to be aware that she had
the quality, but the day she saved his life, everyone listened to her
without quarreling. Time and time again since then there had
been satisfying – although usually mystifying –
proof that he was right about her. He found his domi
deep in another mysterious project in the middle of the Westinghouse
Bridge
, overlooking the Ghostlands.
"What is this?" Wolf pointed to a large cylindrical machine
beside his domi.
"This is an Imperial Searchlight." Tinker patted the three-
foot tall light fixture. "It uses a Xenon 4000 watt bulb to output
155,000 lumens. They say that the output is visible at distances
of more than twenty kilometers."
Wolf eyed the wires snaking away to either end of the
bridge. "Do you have more than one?"
"Three. I tried to get four, but these babies are hard to find in
Pittsburgh
– and a bitch to move. They weigh nearly two
hundred pounds and then you need almost four hundred pounds
of ballast so they don't tip over. I put the other two on either hill
to get maximum spread."
Tinker settled at the table at the center of the bridge. "I've
got them tied together to this control board. I'm trying to track
down a manual on—" she paused to eye her screen closely.
"Ah, there, Morse code."
Wolf crouched beside her. "You're going to use the light to
communicate?"
She smiled and leaned down to touch her forehead to his.
"Exactly. By the composition of the buildings inside the
Ghostlands, it's clear that Earth is one of the dimensions
intersected by this discontinuity. The blue shift of the area seems
to indicate that certain spectrums of light are being absorbed and
only the blue is reflecting back to us."
"So other spectrums are traveling on through to the other
dimensions?"
"I think so. If we communicate with Earth, we might be able
to get them to help. I'm just a little worried that no one on their
end will be paying attention – this will only work in the
middle of night."
"They're missing a city with sixty thousands souls. They're
paying attention."
"Well – there is that." She kissed him and went back
to work.
"Have you considered that the oni will see this too?"
"Yes, I know, that's a flaw in the plan. We'll have to consider
any communication from another world as suspect."
He considered this problem as she typed. "It is unfortunate
that the EIA had been compromised. Maynard might have had a
way to verify any communication from the U.N. is authentic."
"Hmmm, hadn't considered that angle. Human agencies that
have security protocols. Wait—I wonder – what
happened to those NSA agents?"
"The human agents that tried to kidnap you?"
His tone made her glance at him and giggle. "Oh don't look
like that. They only wanted to protect me from the oni. They
actually were nice, once they stopped trying to drag me back to
Earth."
"Maynard will know where they are, if they are in
Pittsburgh
."
She took out a cell phone and made it beep repeatedly. "I
would have never dreamed having the God of Pittsburgh's phone
number in my address book."
"He is not God of Pittsburgh. He is our servant."
"Somehow I doubt that he sees it that way." Her face
changed as the call went through. "Oh, hi, yeah, this is Tinker.
Say, do you know what happened to the NSA agents? Briggs and
Durrack? Really?" She listened for a moment. "Oh cool! Can you
send them out to Turtle Creek? I need them out here. Thanks."
As she hung up, Wolf wondered what Maynard made of the
phone call. It was a perfect example, though, of his
domi's leadership skills. She saw the need and did what was needed to
fill it without guidance from him. All she needed was the
authority of her title. And she probably did not realize how rare
the ability was.
"They didn't leave last Shutdown, so they're stuck here." She
relayed what she learned. "They've been working with him.
Apparently when they kidnapped me, he put them through a
detailed background check. They're one of the few people in
Pittsburgh
he could trust to be who they said they were. He was
using them to weed through the EIA's databases to find altered
files and recover the original data."
Her walkie-talkie beeped and one of the work crews
reported in that the other two searchlights were in place and
pointed down into the valley. The walkie-talkies tickled him to
no end. That was what he wanted for his people – the
ease of communication that humans had.
Tinker glanced up into the night sky. Full dark lay full on the
land and the stars gleamed brilliant overhead. "What do you
think? Is it dark enough?"
"It will not get any darker without clouds."
"These lights are about two hundred times brighter than a
normal light bulb," Tinker warned him. "You shouldn't look
directly at them when they're on. Okay, let's see if it works."
Tinker radioed the other two units with "Turn them on."
The three beams of light cut brilliant down into the valley.
Mid-way the light shifted to blue, somewhat muted, but still
dazzling in the pitch darkness.
"Hmm, that's a good sign." Tinker murmured.
"Did you plan tonight because of the lack of moon?" Wolf
asked.
"I'd love to say yes, but actually we just got lucky." Tinker
clicked her keyboard, activating her program. The searchlights
started to flash. "I've written a short script in Morse
code—C-Q-C-Q-C-Q-D-E-S-1-K—and
interspersed it with three minutes of darkness."
"What does that mean?"
"This manual says it means 'calling any station this is
designation station one, listening.' I'm not sure if that's totally
correct Morse, but I figure its close enough for horseshoes."
She saw his smile, and her eyes widened as she realized what
she said, and then she smiled too. He'd asked her to be his
domi after playing horseshoes with her.
The searchlights snapped off, plunging them into darkness,
and Tinker slid down into his lap.
"Did you—" Tinker whispered to him. "Did you have
lovers other than Jewel Tears – and the
sekasha?"
"A few. Not many. I had my insane ideas of coming to the
Westernlands and establish a holding here."
She made a small unhappy sound.
"If I had known you were in my future, I would have
waited," he whispered. "Think, this way I came to you a skilled
lover. This way one of us knew how it was done."
"I can build a hypergate jump gate, I'm sure I could have
figured sex out. Insert Tab M into Slot F. Repeat until done."
Windwolf laughed. "You delight me."
"Good. You delight me too."
* * *
Wolf considered the steep hills of the valley and the
Ghostland below. "All things considered, I think we better
strengthen our position. We're going to stir the oni up doing
this."
Tinker looked up with surprise. "Oh! I hadn't considered
that."
He was learning that his domi became so fixated on
a puzzle that she ignored the outside world. It meant that she
could lock all of her brilliance onto finding a solution, but it left
her open to being blindsided.
"I will take care of it." He stood up and kissed her brow.
* * *
The NSA agents arrived in their sleek grey sedan was so out
of place in Pittsburgh that it didn't need the D.C. plates to
identify it as out of town. Nobody drove new cars because the
parts were too hard to find, and no one knew how to service
them. Corg Durrack and Hannah Briggs got out of the car
cautiously, as if they were trying not to spook the heavily-armed
elves.
Both NSA agents though looked like they could hold their
own with the sekasha.
The tall, leggy Briggs wore her clingy black outfit that
looked like wet paint, and slid in and out of the shadows with
feline grace. A Batman utility belt with small mystery packs had
been added to her ensemble, slung low on her hips, holstering her
exotic long barreled handgun. Tinker couldn't tell if Briggs was
now flaunting her weapon, or just displaying the one that was
impossible to conceal.
Corg Durrack had a boyish face and the body of a comic
book hero. He carried his usual peace offering of a white wax
paper bag, which he held out Tinker with grin. "Your favorite."
"I'll be the judge." Tinker opened to the bag to find her
favorite cookies – chocolate frosting thumbprint cookies
from Jenny Lee. "This is spooky. How did you know?"
"It's our job to know." Durrack winked.
Briggs scoffed at this, and drifted back into the darkness.
"So what's our little mad scientist up to now?" Durrack
settled down beside Tinker's chair where Windwolf had been a
short time before. The searchlight flashed the work area with
brightness as it cycled through the short message.
Tinker stuck her tongue out at him. "You know, I thought
Maynard kicked you two out of
Pittsburgh
months ago."
"You were only the top of our to-do list. It took 24 hours of
negotiations, but we stayed in this mud hole after the last
Shutdown."
She laughed at the look of disgust on Durrack's face. "You
don't like our fair city?"
"This isn't our world and the elves seem determined to
remind us of that every chance they get. Besides its like getting
stuck in a time warp;
Pittsburgh
is missing a lot of the simple conveniences of home.
The television sucks here. And I would kill for Starbucks."
"Starbucks?" Tinker said. "Sounds Elvish. Who is he?"
Durrack gave her an odd look.
"What else is on your to-do list?" Tinker asked.
"Little of this, little of that." Durrack said. "Gather
intelligence."
"In
Pittsburgh
?"
"You're got five or six races stuffed under one roof, it
makes for lots of secrets floating around."
"How do you get six?"
Corg ticked them off on his fingers. "The elves, the humans,
the oni, the tengu, the mixed bloods, and now a dragon –
which the tengu say is a sentient being."
The searchlight fell dark, dropping them into blackness.
Tinker wasn't sure why, but she found it annoying that the
NSA had apparently talked to the tengu about the dragon. "I
didn't know you were so friendly with the tengu."
"Politics has nothing to do with friendship." Durrack's voice
came out of the darkness. "It's doing whatever you have to do to
protect what's yours.
Pittsburgh
might be under U.N. control, but its people are
Americans and it's our duty to protect them."
"You realize the tengu lie."
"Everyone lies."
"The elves don't. They see it as dishonorable."
"They might not lie, but they dance around the truth. Like
yesterday, during that little encounter you had with the tree. You
analyze the events and it's fairly clear that the Stone Clan tried to
kill you. Forest Moss withheld his support until you were
captured by the tree, and the building you should have landed in
collapsed for no apparent reason."
"I know."
"He made elegant excuses why he was so slow, but it was all
bullshit. He wanted that tree to kill you."
"I know. You don't have to rub it in."
"Are they trying to keep you from building another gate? If
there is a way to travel back and forth between
Pittsburgh
and Earth, the treaty stays intact."
She hadn't considered that as the reason why the Stone Clan
wanted her eliminated. "Nothing I could build would transport
the entire city."
"At this point, I'd take a trapdoor back to Earth."
Tinker laughed. "And I'm not sure I can really build a gate
that works right. Look at the mess I made with this one."
The searchlight flared on, bathing the discontinuity with
brilliance.
"Is it getting bigger?" Durrack asked.
Tinker nodded. "And oni are coming through it."
"Yeah, I saw the kappa you pulled out. The oni are sick
puppies to warp their people into monsters like that. You know,
the more I find out about the oni, the more I think the elves are
right in wiping them out. The problem is collateral damage."
"I don't think the tengu are all that bad." Tinker whispered
what she hadn't had the courage to say to Windwolf.
"The tengu aren't oni." Durrack said. "They were mountain
tribes of humans living on Onihida, descendants of people that
ended up there by mistake. The story goes that half of them were
killed on a battlefield trying to resist the oni, and the true blood
that defeated them merged the survivors with the carrion crows
that been feeding on their fathers and brothers. Twisted little tale,
isn't it?"
"But it is true?"
"Their DNA supports the claim."
The searchlight finished its cycle and dropped them into
silent darkness.
If the story was true, then the tengu had been screwed from
the very start, the moment their ancestors lost their way and fell
from Earth.
"I'm going to do everything I can to protect the humans of
Pittsburgh
," Tinker said. "But I don't know what I can do for the
tengu."
"From what I've seen, there's not much anyone can do for
the tengu."
* * *
"How long are we going to do this?" Durrack asked an hour
later, when darkness fell over them yet again.
"Until the lightbulbs burn out, my husband loses his
patience, I figure out something better – or they answer
us."
"Want to bet which happens first?"
"My bet is that they answer us, or the bulbs burns out. The
lifespan of these bulbs are rated at a thousand hours, but there's
no telling how many hours they have left."
"And there are no replacements bulbs?" Durrack guessed.
"Nope, not unless Earth can sling them through the
Ghostlands."
"Are we going to be able to tell if they're answering us?"
"I have a collection of detecting devices aimed at the valley
to catch heat, light, sound and motion."
"Where are you aiming the spotlights?"
"At the buildings. I'm not sure if the air over the valley is
part of the discontinuity, so I'm not positive if light passing
through it will be visible on another dimension. The buildings
though, will either reflect the light or absorb it, which in theory
make them more visible on all dimensions, either way –
but I could be wrong."
"This just seems so basic. If it could work, then Earth
should have –"
Blue slashed upwards, out of the darkness, pulsing in the
rhythm of Morse Code.
"They're responding!" Tinker scrambled to kill her
transmission program. Her detectors were already translating the
flashes.
Calling S1, this is S2, listening.
"It's Earth!" she said.
"You don't know that. Here." Durrack nudged her away
from the keyboard. "This is where I come in –
remember?"
The searchlights flashed quickly through code and then went
dark.
"What are you saying?" Tinker asked.
"I'm requesting verification. It might take them a while to
dig someone up that can answer... or they might have someone
standing by.
Fort
Meade isn't that far from the
Pittsburgh
border."
The valley went dark and then a reply blazed back.
"Someone standing by?" Tinker asked.
"No, they want to know if
Pittsburgh
is safe on Elfhome."
"Depends on your definition of safe."
Durrack laughed and typed. "I'm repeating my request. Never
give info unless you're sure of who is listening."
"Most likely the oni on Onihida can see this."
"Exactly."
* * *
Wolf returned to his domi to find her looking
unhappy.
"What is it?"
"We've verified we're talking to Earth. The gate is gone, just
like we thought. Pittsburgh
is stranded."
"You are still communicating?"
"We're comparing notes – seeing if we can use the
Ghostlands to our advantage, or close it up somehow. From the
sounds of it, though, Earth is still fighting over who has
jurisdiction."
A runner from Poppymeadow threaded his way through the
sekasha to hold out a piece of paper. "A distant voice
came from Aum Renau, relayed from Court."
Wolf took the folded paper, opened it, and read the five
English words within: Follow the yellow brick road. He
frowned at the message and flipped the paper over, hoping for
more. No. That was it.
"What does it say?" Tinker asked.
He handed it to her. "It's from the Pure Radiance. I sent
word to the intanyei seyosa caste asking for help with
your dreams. I don't understand this."
"Follow the yellow brick road? Follow the yellow brick
road? Just point the sucker out and I will. So far, I hadn't found
any road—bricked yellow or otherwise—
figuratively, literally, allegorically."
"You understand it?"
"No!" She sighed deeply. "But it looks like I have to figure it
out."
Chapter 19: Snakes, Snails & Puppy-Dog Tails
Tinker kicked the blackened remains of the willow tree. It
had died on the waterfront, leaving a burnt trail from the
warehouse. Several buildings along its path had scorch marks
where the burning tree had brushed up against them while
staggering toward the river.
"Okay, let's take it from the top. We're off to see the wizard,
the wonderful wizard of Oz."
"Because?" Pony asked.
"Because – because –because—
because." Tinker didn't know. Did she ever know?
"Because of the wonderful things he does," Stormsong
deadpanned.
Tinker glared at her. "In the dream, the yellow brick road led
to the willow trees." She gave the tree another kick. "Which
threw apples at us. Esme told me to follow the fruit to find the
wizard – which is the dragon."
She followed the black path of soot and cinders back toward
the warehouse. "Lain gave me one of the seeds, but I couldn't
figure out anything interesting with it. Most of the times it
doesn't even wriggle. So obviously fruit is something else.
Whatever it is, it will lead us to the dragon. The dragon is the
desired end product – not the fruit."
"I am not sure it would be wise to face the dragon again."
Pony said. "We barely survived the last fight."
"I know, I know, I know. Riki did say that it needs magic to
become sentient, and once it used me to tap the spell stones, it
–" She paused. "Wait. Riki said that the oni messed with
the spell to trap the dragon. What if the 'fruit' is just magic?"
"In the movie," Stormsong said. "The apples were gathered
up by Dorothy, the scarecrow, and the tin man."
"No, the tin man came in during the apple scene, Dorothy
was picking—" Tinker stopped with sudden realization.
"Oh, gods, Oilcan! He was hauling the overflow cans away
– when was the last time anyone saw him?"
"The day we watched the movie," Pony said. "Wednesday."
Neither Oilcan or the flatbed had been at the junk yard on
Friday. He had left two days of newspapers in the drive. Feeling
sick, she fumbled with her phone, picking his number off her
address book. His phone rang three times and dropped to voice
mail. Trying not to panic, she called the scrap yard and then his
apartment, getting only voice mail. Where had he taken the
barrels? Had he said? No, just that he had to dump them. Where
could he have taken them? They had gone through nearly a
hundred barrels before she got the spell repaired—a
massive pool of magic to dump haphazardly, but
Pittsburgh
had lots of big empty places. Still, the barrels and the
steel filings represented a good bit of money once the magic
leached out – so he would probably leave them on land
that they owned. That left one place – the barn.
She dialed the land line to the barn. She expected his
machine to pick up after three rings, but it continued ringing. She
clung to the phone, whispering, "Oh, please answer."
On the twelfth ring, the phone clattered off the hook, and
Oilcan said breathlessly, "Yeah?"
"Oh thank gods, are you all right?"
"I'm fine. What's wrong?"
She laughed, not even sure where to start on that question.
"Did you take the barrels from Rienholds to the barn?"
"Yeah, they're here."
"Look, I think you're in a lot of danger. I want you to leave
the barn."
"What's going on, Tink?"
"It's all rather complicated. I think my dreams are telling me
to trap the dragon and do something with it."
"Trap it?"
"Yeah, the barrels are the fruit." That sounded sane! "Look,
you're in danger there. Just go home and let me deal with it."
There was only silence from Oilcan.
"Are you okay?" Tinker asked again.
"I'm kind of in the middle of the something. You know
– I don't want to mess with the flow. Why don't you
come out and we'll talk about what has gone down since
Wednesday."
Wednesday. Nathan died Wednesday. Did Oilcan know? If
he didn't, she didn't want to tell him over the phone – not
that she really wanted to tell him face to face, either.
"Okay, I'll see you in a couple of minutes."
* * *
Oilcan used a barn deep in the South Hills as a retreat. Just
as she tinkered on machines, he played with art. It was a side of
him that few people saw, as he seemed to think it revealed too
much of his soul. Sometimes he welded bits and pieces taken
from the scrap yard into mechanical ogres, other times he painted
dark and abstract murals. Those he kept at his retreat and only
friends got to see. She knew he kept journals with poetry that he
never showed anyone, not even her. The only form of his art that
he shared was music he composed, a fusion of traditional elfin
music with snarling, angry human rock; that he didn't perform
but sold to local bands under the penname of Orphan.
Art wasn't something that Tinker had patience for. She liked
computer logic of true or false, knowing if something worked or
didn't with a flip of a switch or a turn of a key. She could help
Oilcan animate his ogres, but she could never see why the
sculpture had to take a certain form, or move in a certain way, or
make a certain sound. She couldn't perceive what made one piece
"right" despite how many times Oilcan tried to explain it.
It was mid-morning when they drove up the driveway lined
with wild lilac bushes. The flatbed was parked in the apple
orchard, its bed littered with fallen apples. Across the road, the
magic gleamed purple in the shadows of the tractor shed, stuffed
full with the barrels.
Tinker had debated bringing two Hands with her. She wanted
a small army between her and the dragon, but in the end, she
decided that if Oilcan was fine, that most likely she was wrong
about the barrels. Certainly, it was a stretch in logic to get from
the black willow to the barn.
"Not that there's any real logic involved in this," she
complained as she parked the Rolls away from both apples and
magic. It had been easier to drive than constantly interrupt her
thoughts to give directions. "It would be simpler to believe that
the oni drove me stark raving mad than all this dream hocus
pocus."
"You are not mad." Pony got out, taking point.
"My mother would have not directed us to 'follow the
yellow brick road' if you were only mad." Stormsong kept close
to Tinker as they headed for the large barn doors.
Denial, the most misshapen of Oilcan's animated ogres,
lurched out of the lilacs. It moaned out its low recording of
"nooo, nooo, nooo," as it wrung its crooked arms around its
deformed head.
Instantly her guard had all weapons out and leveled at the
mechanical sculpture.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa!" Tinker cried. "Don't shoot it!"
"What is it, domi?" Pony kept his machine gun
trained on it.
"It's a sculpture," she said.
Denial folded back down, stretching out a third hand
stretched to grasp in their direction. The guards backed up,
unnerved by the thing as its recording changed to a wordless
keening.
"It does not look like art to me." Pony reluctantly slung his
gun onto his back and motioned to the others to stand down.
"Well," Tinker admitted, "sometimes it doesn't seem that
much like art to me, either, but that's what it is."
She pointed out the motion sensor by the door; Pony had
tripped it as he moved ahead of her. "That activates it, though,
that's new. I wonder..."
The big door rolled open, and Oilcan called, "Hey!" in
greeting.
"Hey," she said back. "What's with Denial?"
"Just using him as a doorbell." He eyed the guards with their
hands still riding their weapons. "Can – can we leave
them here? I don't want them shooting anything by mistake."
Considering what else he had in the way of art, Tinker didn't
blame him. She held up a hand to her sekasha. "Stay."
The
sekasha peered into the barn. The back door was
rolled the full way open, flooding the cluttered floor with light.
They didn't look happy, but stayed put outside while Oilcan
rolled the door shut.
"You really have to leave." Tinker followed him through the
clutter. From the looks of it, he'd been camping out here for the
last few days. "This might be a total longshot, but its really
dangerous here if I'm right. What did you do to your answering
machine?"
Oilcan glanced down at the dissembled unit, the parts
carefully arrayed on a blank canvas like a piece of art. "Ah, it got
taken apart. What are you going to do with the dragon?"
She groaned as she hadn't considered that far ahead. "Gods if
I know! He's the wizard of Oz."
"And that means?"
"Riki – Riki wove this whole theory that sounded so
right about the dragon being the wizard, but it just hit me
– Riki lied and lied about so much. Yeah, so his reasons
were good, but he has this history of twisting things to suit his
goals."
Thinking of Riki, she pulled the player out of her pocket.
"Here. Riki says he's sorry."
As Oilcan stood looking at the player, the oni dragon snaked
out of the shadows to stop beside Oilcan. Its eyes gleamed in the
dimness, its mane flowing like a bundle of snakes.
"
Yanananam mmmoooootaaaa summbaaaa
radadada," the dragon said with a deep breathy voice, the
words rumbling against her skin like the purr of a big engine.
"Aaaaah huuu ha."
"Oh shit!" Tinker jerked back, fumbling for the pistol on her
hip.
"It's okay!" Oilcan held up his hands to ward off her action.
"He won't hurt you. He's friendly."
"Friendly?"
"Yeah, see?" Oilcan patted the huge head butting up against
him. "He scared the shit out of me. But he talked – and
– well – I listened."
She backed up regardless, wanting distance between her and
it. "You can understand it?"
"Actually – no."
"Mmmananan pooooo kaaa."
It was weird to watch such a huge thing speaking, but there
was no mistaking the rumble of syllables and consonants for
anything but language.
"So you have no idea what's it's saying."
"No." Oilcan shrugged with a sheepish grin. "Sorry. But
come here, look at this."
After the surprise of the dragon, Tinker wasn't sure she
wanted to see what else he had to show her. Oilcan walked down
the stone steps to be what used to the milking stalls. The dragon
glanced back and forth between her and Oilcan. Apparently
realizing that they were all to follow Oilcan, it finally bounded
after him. Despite its short legs, and ferret-like humping run, its
gait remained fluid.
"We've been working at communicating," Oilcan was
saying. "We finally resorted to drawing. It's been –
educational."
In the back was a little dragon nest complete with rumpled
blankets, a barrel of drinking water, and a large dog dish of well
chewed bones. Drawings covered the walls. She recognized
Oilcan's hand in the ones done in chalk. Scratched into the wall,
the dragon's pictures were fluid and elegant and
incomprehensible.
"Educational? Really?" she asked after several minutes of
trying to understand the alien pictograms.
"It's just so different how he sees the world. Here," he
pointed out his map of
Pittsburgh, with the
two rivers converging to make the
Ohio River, and the many skyscrapers and bridges. "After I drew this,
he made this."
Less stylistic than the other dragon drawings, it was a series
of wavering lines, some lightly etched and others deeply gouged.
She studied it for a moment, keenly aware of the huge monster
shifting beside them. It seemed completely random, but she
trusted Oilcan's intelligence. If he said this meant something, it
did. If the dragon recognized Oilcan's
Pittsburgh
– was this how he saw the city? It was the
deep pit on the North side, roughly at the location of Reinholds
that triggered the recognition. "He's drawn the ley lines."
"Yes. I think it was the magic in the barrels that drew him
here." Oilcan pointed out a blank area of the wall. "And look at
this."
"At wh—?"
The dragon nosed her aside – jolting her heart into a
fierce pounding—and raised a long, sharp claw to the
wall. In a nerve-grating rasp, it lightly sketched a dot at the center
of Turtle Creek and radial lines outward, carefully linking the
radials up to existing ley lines. The dragon glanced up at her,
making sure she was watching, and then flattened its great paw
and smudged away the dot and lines, creating the same blank
space.
"There's no magic." She whispered.
"Tooloo has always said the dragons can't exist without
magic." Oilcan absently scratched the dragon's jaw, getting a deep
purr-like rumble from it.
"So as long as we keep him saturated in magic, he's safe."
"Yeah."
Tinker thought of the barrels stacked in the tractor shed.
They represent a huge pool of magic, but a leaky one, draining
away. "He can't stay here, then. I have no idea how long the
magic will last from the barrels, but it's an artificial environment.
Sooner or later, it's going to be drained."
"Yeah, I know."
"Oilcan! This isn't some stray dog. Look what I found,
Grandpa, can I keep it? It didn't work with the warg puppy."
"This isn't a warg, this is an intelligent being that can talk,
and create art, and communicate. Look!" He pointed out set of
small pictures. "It has a written language!"
"How do you know? That could be – be –
anything!"
He gave her an annoyed look. "Did it or did it not just
communicate something meaningful to you?"
She sighed. "Yes."
The sekasha were just going to love this.
* * *
"What?" Stormsong asked for about the third time in the
row when Tinker updated the sekasha on the current plan.
"We need to move the dragon to the scrap yard. It's got a
strong ley line running through it, so the dragon will stay sentient
there. But the flatbed is a double clutch manual transmission, so
if none of you can drive manual, then I'm going to have to
–"
Stormsong caught her by the hand, dragged her to the side of
the barn into the old apple orchard.
"Hey, hey, hey, what are you doing?" Tinker cried.
"What am I doing?" Stormsong snatched up an apple and
flung it at Tinker. "What am I doing?"
The apple smacked the barn wall, blossoming into a flower
of rotten sweetness unnervingly close to Tinker's head.
"What fucking part of that don't you understand?" Tinker
shouted at her.
"You – are – too – trusting!"
Stormsong flung apples to emphasize her words – one
apple per word. They whizzed past Tinker so closely she felt their
passage. "And – too—slow—at –
putting – up – your—shields."
There was now a halo of spattered fruit outlining Tinker.
"I get the point! I get the point!" Tinker called up her shield.
"See, shield! Happy?"
"Happy?" Stormsong snorted, picked an apple from the tree
instead of the ground, and polished it against her black jeans until
it gleamed with promise. "Here!" She tossed the apple in a lazy
arc toward Tinker.
Tinker moved her hands to catch the apple and her shield
vanished.
"You're – too— trusting!"
The first apple hit Tinker in the shoulder in a painful
splatter. The second and third were intercepted mid-air by other
apples so that they exploded in front of her, spraying her with
apple bits.
"Stop it." Pony had another apple ready. Part of Tinker was
impressed that he could knock apples out of the air – the
other part wanted to know where the hell he was for the first
volley. "She is the domi. She leads us."
"She's going to get herself killed!" Stormsong growled.
"What she says is true," Pony said. "The dragon can not stay
here. The truck is the only vehicle that will carry it. She and
Oilcan are the only ones that know how to drive it – and
he will be focused on keeping the creature calm. The fewer
people we involve in moving the beast, the less likely the oni will
learn that we have it."
"How can you support this plan?"
"The domana's self-centered creativity is why we
chose to obey them. We need their drive. Trust her, she will make
it work."
"Or die trying." Stormsong muttered. "This is insanity."
"Is it? We have the scarecrow." Pony pointed at Tinker and
then tapped his chest. "The lion. The tin man." He pointed at
Oilcan's metal sculpture. "And the apple trees." He held up the
apple in his hand. "And the apples being thrown at the
scarecrow."
Stormsong's eyes went wide.
"There, see!" Tinker cried. "It's crazy with a purpose."
"And that is supposed to make me feel better?" Stormsong
snarled. "What are you going to do with dragon now that you
found him?"
Tinker held up her finger, indicating they were to wait, and
pulled out her datapad. "Give me a few minutes. I've been
keeping notes on the dreams. Off hand, I don't remember
anything. Wait—how about this – Esme said 'he
knows the paths, the twisted way, the garden path. You have to
talk to him. He'll tell you the way.'"
"The way? To where."
"Obviously where I need to go."
* * *
It was like having a very large, hyper-active five year
old in her workshop. The dragon flowed in and out of the various
rooms of the trailer, carrying on a running commentary in its
rumbling voice, as it examined everything with its massive but
manipulative paws. After rescuing her scanner, their radio base,
and antique CD player, Tinker realized what happened to Oilcan's
answering machine and started to fear.
"Okay, okay, I think first thing in communicating would be
– to – get a record of what it's saying." She
snatched her camera from the dragon before he could dissemble
it. She flipped out her tripod, snapped the camera to it, and
caught Cloudwalker by the hand and dragged him to the camera.
"Here, keep the dragon – the dragon's image – in
this little window." Great, she was actually dealing with two
groups of technology-challenged people. "And we'll build a
dictionary of his words."
"I was trying to do that." Oilcan distracted the dragon from
her computer systems with a flashlight. "But usually it's hard to
tell where one word starts and another ends."
"...mmmenananannaaaaaaapoooookaaaammmammamamyyyyyya
aanananammmmoooo...." The dragon rumbled while
clicking the flashlight on and off, and then dissembled it and
sniffed at the batteries.
"Yeah, I can hear that." Tinker had microphones planted in
the offices so she could trigger her computers without a headset.
"Sparks
, are you active?"
"Yes, boss." Her office AI answered.
"Filter audio pick up into separate voice prints and put it up
on the workshop screen."
"Okay, boss."
As she hoped Impatience's ramblings easily divided out. "
Sparks
, record this track." She tapped the bass rumbles of the
dragon's voice. "Convert to phonetics and indicate all pauses and
breaks."
Impatience stuffed the batteries back into the casing,
screwed on the lid and tried the switch. When the flashlight didn't
light, the dragon took it back apart and eyed the pieces carefully.
Apparently it had spotted the "this way up" diagram stamped on
the plastic as it eyed the batteries closely, repacked them into the
casing and turned it on. This time it was rewarded with a beam of
light. "Huuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuu."
One word down.
"Okay." Tinker pulled up the recordings she had made of
Turtle Creek and directed them to her largest monitor. "Since I
don't have a clue how I'm suppose to help my mother, let's see
what he has to say about my biggest problem: the Ghostlands."
* * *
The great Westinghouse
Bridge
had fallen. The Ghostlands had lapped up against
the center most support column and toppled it. Two of its four
great arching spans now lay in ruins on the valley floor, slowly
leeching to blue. The remaining two spans would soon follow.
Wolf gazed down at the ruin, trying to not to let dismay
overtake him. "There's nothing you can do?"
Jewel Tears glared at the valley as if it personally defied her.
"Not in time. At the rate it's expanding, it will involve the main
river shortly."
She meant the Monongahela River,
which flowed past the mouth of the Turtle Creek.
"The creek froze solid," Wolf said. "You don't think river
will freeze?"
"If I understand this correctly, the worlds are mirror
images." Jewel pointed out at the river. "Where there is a river
here, there is one on Onihida?"
"Yes."
"I can't predict what will happen when the force of the river
meets this, but what I fear is that the oni can make use of it. As
they are now, the Ghostlands are a deathtrap. The forces are
funneling downward, like the pit of ant lion. The river might
allow the oni to pass unchecked through the Ghostlands."
"How soon?"
"Only a few more days." She turned away from the
Ghostlands and him. "Something has to be done. They say your
domi can work miracles. Since this is her fault, it would
be good for her to fix her mistake."
Yes, he needed to talk to Tinker. He had faith that once she
was given opportunity to study the situation, she would find a
solution. He brought a second Hand just so he could have one of
the sekasha "baby" along to operate the walkie-talkie.
"Find out where domi is," Wolf said to Wraith and turned
back to Jewel Tears. "I want Stone Clan to keep their distance
from my domi. After what happened with the black willow, I do
not trust any of you near her."
Jewel Tears looked away, giving a slight huff of indignation
but didn't deny the implication that they meant Tinker harm.
Wraith came back with unease clear on his face. Wolf
bowed his leave taking and headed for his Rolls.
"What is it?" Wolf asked Wraith once they were out of the
Stone Clan's hearing.
"Domi is at the scrap yard. The dragon is there."
Wolf's heart leap at the news. "She's fighting the dragon?"
"No. Apparently, she's—talking – to it."
* * *
"No, I'm not talking to it." Tinker said with much disgust in
her voice. She smelled of apples, butter and sugar, and her face
had mysterious streaks of color paste on it – but
otherwise she looked unharmed. "It's giving me math lessons
– and I think my head is going to explode."
"Math lessons?" There were times he wondered if his
English wasn't as strong as he thought it was.
His domi's workshop was normally ordered chaos,
but it now looked like a storm front had passed through it. The
digital wall boards were covered with elaborate designs and fluid
pictures. Print outs were tacked to bare walls, extending the
boards to each side and up onto the ceiling. A television cycled
through pictures of the Ghostlands. Machines either half built, or
partially dissembled covered all the table surfaces and the floor
was littered with magazines, engine parts, and chewed tires.
The only sign of the dragon itself was its long tail sticking
out from behind the worktable, thumping against the floor with a
force that shook the entire trailer.
"I think its math." Tinker tugged at her hair as if she wanted
to tear it out. "Whoever said math is the universal language
should be hunted down and shot. Or maybe they thought that
sentient creatures wouldn't have the attention span of a gnat."
"So you're safe with it?"
Tinker glanced toward Stormsong instead of the dragon for
some reason. "I – don't know. It seems playful as a
puppy, but it has sharp teeth – lots of them – in a
big mouth."
Wolf shifted sideways until he could see around the table.
Tinker's nagarou, Oilcan, and the dragon stared at a
television screen while they manipulated something in their
hands. On the television screen, a small human female in a
skimpy red dress fought a tall muscle bound creature with
energetic kicks and punches. The fight ended abruptly with the
words WINNER flashing on the screen and the female bouncing
around cheerfully. Oilcan groaned and slumped to one side.
"He – he learns fast." Tinker shook her head. "I've
never met anyone that intimidated me with their intellect before
– but I always thought that the person that did would be
more —"
"Human?"
Tinker waved her hand, as if trying to sift out a better word,
and then nodded. "I suppose that would work. The language is a
huge barrier to understanding what's he's trying to explain to
me."
"Have you learned anything useful?"
"This was educational." Tinker caught Wolf's arm and
pulled him to the kitchen. On the counter was an odd sculpture.
A rainbow of creamy paste whirled upwards like a tornado with
paper plates dividing the various colors. It was supported by a
silvery aluminum plate, which had been balanced on a base of
soda cans.
The paste was the source of the color streaks on Tinker's
face, and the smell of butter and sugar. Wolf smeared some off
her face. "And this is...?"
"Frosting. Long story. Doesn't matter anymore. This,"
Tinker pointed to the structure. "I think this is a model of the
Ghostlands. Look he's sculptured the frosting into a Roy G. Biv
spectrum and at each color shift there's a universe marker
– the paper plates. Well—at least I think that's
what they are."
Tinker took out a camera from her dress pocket, and flipped
up the screen. "I filmed it all." She played a minute of the dragon
building the sculpture, rumbling in a low steady tone. "What we
need is someone that speaks dragon. But, until then –"
she folded the camera back up and stuffed it into her dress
pocket. "This is what I think it's trying to tell me. Look, can you
see down into the middle of this? He made a big production of
dropping a lug nut down into there, and did a lot of pointing and
talking. He took it out and dropped it a couple of times. And then
the math started. I think— he's trying—maybe
– to say that my gate is still active."
"Can you stop the Ghostlands from expanding?"
"If I can figure out a way to remove my gate, yes, I think it
might close the Ghostlands completely. What I think is happening
is this." She dragged him to the whiteboard.
Tinker swept her hand across dragon writing and the English
words 'save: yes no' appeared. She touched the 'yes' and the board
went white. Drawing a straight horizon line, she turned to him.
"This is Turtle Creek before the chaos started. According to
Stormsong, when you originally surveyed this area a hundred
years ago, there was a fiutana here," she added a large
purple oval under the line. "Now Lord Tomtom talked about
protective spells that the oni had cloaking their compound, so I
think this is why the oni were based here – which almost
might indicate where their other camps are and why you can't
find them."
Yes, that would explain much. "If the other springs in the
area are cloaked, then we know that the oni are using them. Look
for what is missing instead of what is there."
"Huh? Oh, yes, that would work. Now, my gate was here."
She drew in a black circle above the line, and then added a second
black circle at the bottom of the board. "And that's the gate in
orbit. I set up a resonance between then." The resonance was
represented by a wavy line connecting the two black circles that
ran through the heart of the purple spring oval. "I think what
Impatience is telling me is that along this line, a discontinuity
emerged, which immediately affected the land under my gate."
She turned and typed on a keyboard. The television which
had been cycling pictures of Turtle Creek stopped on a blur of
blue. "This is thermal readings of the discontinuity. It's hard to
see, but this area here." She tapped a circle at the heart of the
screen. "That's the same size and shape as my gate, lying on its
side."
Tinker turned back to the white board, and drew a series of
black circles stacked inside the pool of purple. "See, as it sinks,
the area affected by the gate would expand." She stepped back
from the board, gazing at it. "I'm not a hundred percent sure this
is an accurate model, but it explains why the effect is growing."
"Even though the gate in orbit was destroyed?"
"Each gate was designed to operate independently."
"So if we remove the gate, the discontinuity will heal?"
Tinker sighed. "I don't know. If I'm right, and we can get the
gate out, it will at least stop the Ghostlands from growing."
Wolf considered what Jewel Tears claimed about the current
forces working in the valley. "That would be good enough for
now. We need to do something quickly."
"Well, I'm not getting anything done here." She picked up
various items and slipped them into her pocket. "I can get to
work on the retrieval now."
Chapter 20: Follow The Yellow
Brick Road
Stone Clan chose to wait until the next morning to protest
Wind Clan's actions. Wolf wasn't sure why they had delayed, so
he stood and listened to Earth Son rant on about protocol and
etiquette.
"Wind Clan is insulting us at every step. Look," Earth Son
pointed up the tall iron wood scaffolding to where Tinker stood,
overseeing the installation of her scrap yard crane. Little Horse
was up in the scaffolding with her, but the rest of her Hand were
keeping to the ground. "Wind Clan's domi hasn't come
down to hear our complaints."
Wolf made a show of glancing around. "We did not know
this was to be a formal aumani. I see the rock, but where
is the incense and the flame?"
Wolf surprised True Flame into a smile, but the prince
caught himself and gave him a hard look.
"Do we need to call an aumani?" True Flame's look
warned him not to make light of it.
Wolf spread his hands to show that he didn't know. "Jewel
Tears came to me and stated that the Stone Clan could not solve
this problem before—"
"It was not her place to make that decision!" Earth Son
snapped. "I will say when the Stone Clan can or can not do
something."
Wolf glanced at Jewel Tears but she had her court mask on,
letting none of her emotions show. There was no way to judge if
this was an honest miscommunication within the Stone Clan, or
a contrived situation. If it was the later, then politically it had
been a mistake to act.
Wolf would have to salvage the situation by forcing True
Flame to disregard political protocol for the sake of military
imperative. "If the information she gave us was accurate, then
what is important is that the oni are prevented from using the
Ghostlands –"
"Are you saying that I'm lying?" Earth Son seemed eager for
Wolf to slander him.
Wolf considered Earth Son for a minute. Was he that blind
to the dangers that they were facing? "I'm saying that there are
tens of thousands of oni and an oni dragon on the other side of
the Ghostlands, and it would be good to keep them there."
Earth Son waved that concern aside. "Your untrained
domi and her Hand survived the first dragon."
"Do not mistake that creature for a true oni dragon." True
Flame had studied Impatience at Tinker's workshop. The prince
pointed out that not only was the 'dragon' much smaller than the
creatures he fought; it also had one more digit per foot.
Tinker theorized that since the spell painted onto
Impatience's scales had been washed or rubbed away, the dragon
might be free from the oni's control. Regardless, they still didn't
know how to cage or effectively fight the beast. All options
weighed, it was decided to leave the creature in Oilcan's care as
an ally instead of treating it as a foe. According to the tengu,
however, and confirmed by some mysterious means by the NSA
agents, there was a second, larger dragon by the name of Malice
still on Onihida. Plans to update the Stone Clan on the dragons,
however, had been waylaid by Earth Son's attack on Tinker's
operation.
Wolf pushed the conversation back to the military
implications. "Jewel Tears stated that if the Ghostlands expand to
the river, there will be a shift in forces that will allow the oni to
push their army through."
Jewel Tears' mask slipped and she gave him a look of pure
hatred.
Earth Son scoffed. "They'll be pinned between the river and
the Ghostlands. With five domana, seventy sekasha, the
dreadnaught and the royal troops, we can easily deal with the oni
as they emerge..."
True Flame lost his patience. "If the oni send a dragon
across first, we will be too engaged with it to block the oni. We
will do whatever it takes to close the Ghostlands before anything
more can come through."
Earth Son recognized that he was threading on an edge with
the prince and retreated with, "I am not saying we ignore the
Ghostlands. I am saying that this is a Stone Clan specialty..."
"Are you being hampered by the Wind Clan domi?"
True Flame snapped. "She will not be using magic, since, as you
pointed out, she is untrained."
Earth Son smoothed his face to court mask to consider his
options. Finally he said, "No, we will not be hampered."
True Flame nodded and turned to Wolf. "Have you found
the maps?"
"Yes. There are four possible sites not counting the
fiutana that was located here and the one at the ice house."
"What maps?" Earth Son growled.
"My domi believes that the oni are camping on
fiutana. I had my people pull up the original survey maps for
this area, showing the fiutana."
"Have you scryed out any fiutana?" True Flame
asked Earth Son.
"No."
They waited for Earth Son to elaborate, but he didn't.
Behind them were shouts and the crack of splintering wood.
Wolf turned to see a massive oni dragon surge up out of the
Ghostlands. It shouldered aside the scaffolding, shattering it to
pieces. Tinker and Little Horse were falling from their high
perch. Little Horse had been near the ladder and was falling with
the tumble of heavy timbers. Tinker, though, had been far out at
end of the boom, over the liquid blue.
"No!" Wolf shouted as a call on the Wind Clan Spell Stones
thrummed across his senses.
Tinker hit the ground, sending up a spray of blue, and then
sank down into the ground. Ripples spread out from where she
disappeared. And then all sense of her vanished. The Ghostland
went smooth and her call to the stones broke off abruptly.
"Wolf!" Stormsong struggled with Little Horse, who had
fallen to the "shore" of the Ghostlands and was now trying to
fling himself into the blue. "Stop him! He'll only die! She's gone
already."
Wolf gasped, feeling her words stab through him. No,
Tinker couldn't be gone.
The dragon scrambled out of the blue, clawing up the shore
with feet as large as the Rolls Royce. It shook dirt from its
massive head, growling low and loud as thunder. Its seemingly
endless body heaved up out of the chaos.
"Wolf!" Stormsong had Little Horse pinned but it left her
vulnerable to the dragon now turning its attention to the small
figures at its feet.
Wolf called the wind. The dragon's head whipped toward
him as if it sensed the magic gathering around Wolf. He aimed a
force strike on the dragon and flung the spell at the beast. As the
magic arrowed at the dragon, it crouched low and its mane lifted.
A shield effect shimmered into existence. The force strike
slammed into the shield and was swallowed up.
Jewel Tears flung up a force wall between the dragon and
the elves, curving it to include Stormsong and Little Horse. A
fire strike from True Flame hit the dragon's shield, the blaze
curled harmless around it.
The dragon sprang away, landing among the rubble of the
fallen bridge.
Wolf started to summon lightening when it leaped again,
landing this time on the far section of the bridge still standing,
high above the valley. A third leap took it out of sight.
Since the call lightening spell took both hands, he couldn't
cast a scrying spell.
Beside him, Jewel Tears cast a ground scry. "It took flight. I
can't track it through the air."
True Flame cast his more inclusive, weaker scry of flame.
"It's out of your range already, Wolf."
Wolf locked his jaw against a growl of impatience, forcing
himself to remain silent as he canceled the lightening call. The
spell was too dangerous to leave in a potential state. The power
neutralized, he started to call the winds to fly after the dragon.
True Flame caught Wolf's wrist, stilling his hand. "No, I
will not allow you to fight it alone. It's too dangerous."
"It killed my domi!" Wolf snarled.
"No." Stormsong dragged Little Horse up to Wolf, as if she
was afraid to let the young sekasha go. "Domi's
on the yellow brick road." Stormsong's eyes were soft and
dreamy. "She's talked to the wizard. She's gone now to steal the
flying broomstick from the witch and the flying monkeys."
* * *
Tinker fell into the cold blue air. She shouted the trigger to
her shields seconds before plunging into the dark blue mass of
out-of-phase ground. The blue deepened to midnight black, and
then all sensation fell away, as if she had no longer had a body.
Was she dead? She had felt the shields form around her in a flood
of magic, and the deepening cold of the Ghostlands, but now she
sensed nothing.
Suddenly, something hit her from her left. Startled, she lost
her shields, and she smacked into a flat, hard surface and then slid
down it, to land hard on something horizontal to
whatever she struck. Pain shot up from her left leg. She lay
panting in darkness. The air was hot, dry, and tainted with smoke.
Nearby, water gurgled through unseen pipes. A distant
hammering was muffled as if carried through a thick wall.
What had she hit first? Sliding her hand along the smooth
floor, she found a right angle that rose up in a wall of steel. But
how did she hit a wall sideways when she'd been falling down?
And where was she now?
She sat up and pain jolted up her leg again. Wincing, she felt
down to her ankle and discovered that she was bleeding. "Shit."
And then she remembered – she hadn't been alone on the
scaffolding. She searched the area around her with blind hands.
"Pony! Oh, gods, Pony!"
There was a loud, metal clank and then the squeal of hinges
as a door opened somewhere out in the darkness. Someone was
coming. It dawned on her that might not be a good thing; the
Ghostlands had been the oni compound. She groped at her side
and found her pistol.
A flashlight flicked on some fifty feet away, its light a solid
beam in smoky air. As it swept the room, her eyes adjusted, and
she made out the figure of a being standing in the open doorway.
The shock of hair, the sharp beak of a nose, and the tall lean body
suggested a tengu.
She covered her mouth and nose to muffle her breathing.
The tengu moved toward her, shining his flashlight onto
pieces of equipment on either side of the room – large
tanks, pipes, pumps, and pieces of computer monitoring stations.
'Go away, go away, go away,' she thought hard at
him.
The tengu paused at one of the monitoring stations,
checking the gauges there, and then moved to the second one.
Grunting at what he found, he turned and ran his light high along
the back wall. The beam swept over her head, moved on, stopped
and returned to a point a few feet above her.
Gripping her pistol tight, she glanced up to see what caught
the tengu's attention. A smear of fresh blood led down to her.
'Don't look. Just move on. There's nothing here to see.'
Inexorable, the light slid downwards to shine on her.
Squinting against the brilliance, she pointed her pistol at the
tengu. "That's far enough."
"Well, well," the tengu spoke English with a heavy accent,
the flashlight obscuring his features. "You're what's down here
making so much noise."
"Where is Pony? What have you done to him?"
Confusion filled the tengu's face. "We don't have any ponies
here."
"Where am I?"
"You don't know?"
"Answer me, damn it!"
"Water storage."
That explained the tanks, pipes and liquid sounds. "Okay,
you're going to walk me out of here."
"Walk?" He closed the distance between and crouched down
in front of her, twisting the flashlight's base so it became a
lantern, bathing them both in soft light. He was an older version
of Riki, from the electric blue eyes under thick unruly black hair
to the bird-like cock of his head. "Walk where?"
She tried to hold the gun steady but reaction from her fall
was setting in, making her tremble. "Out of this place."
"You – you want to go outside?"
"Yes."
"Where exactly do you think we are?" He seemed more
puzzled than alarmed, ignoring her gun to search her eyes.
"Water Storage."
"Which is ...where?"
"What is so hard to understand about this? I've got a gun and
I'm willing use it. You either get me out, or I'll shoot you."
"Okay, okay, my English, it's good but not perfect. I don't
understand what you want, Princess."
"Oh, please, don't call me that; technically I am not a
princess."
"Oookay." He acted like this was a hard concept to wrap his
brain around. "What should I call you?"
"Tinker. Of the Wind Clan."
"I'm Jin Wong."
Tinker knew she had heard the name before, but she couldn't
place it. "Jin, I want to go home, and you're going to take me."
He sighed and shook his head. "I'm sorry, Tinker, but you're
going to need to give me the gun before I can take you
anywhere."
"Like hell."
"You're hurt."
"I'm fine." And she scrambled to her feet to prove it. When
she tried to put weight on her left foot, though, pain jolted up her
ankle.
Jin had stood with her – as to be expected, he was at
least a foot taller than she was. He wore a dark polo shirt with
his name embroidered over his heart, dark nylon pants and white
socks, all stained with soot, oil and blood. He stepped to her as
she sagged back against the wall, hissing against the sudden
agony.
"Don't touch me." She stopped him by raising the pistol.
"I'm not going to hurt you."
"Are all you tengu liars at birth?"
"No," he said after a moment of surprised silence. "Our
mothers' give us lying lessons so we can tell when someone is
lying."
He looked down at her foot to indicate what he thought she
was lying about.
"My ankle is just twisted," Tinker snapped.
"Just to point out the obvious, if you shoot me, you're going
to have to crawl out of here." He held out his hand. "And I'm not
going to let you out of this room with the gun. So just give me
the pistol, and I'll do what you want."
"I give you my gun and you'll turn me over to the oni."
"There are no oni here."
"Liar."
"We lie, but tengu still have honor. I give you my
word—you won't be harmed."
They stood there at impasse, half in shadows, the gun
growing heavy in her hand. She had fought to the death before,
but she'd never shot someone in cold blood. She wasn't sure she
could actually do it and live with herself afterwards—
certainly not after exchanging names and carrying on a civil
conversation.
"I'm so screwed." Sighing, she unloaded the pistol, pocketed
the clip, checked the chamber and handed him the empty gun.
"I'll take care of you." He tucked the pistol between two
pipes near the ceiling, way out of her reach. "I promise."
"Bleah." She wished she could believe him. Had Riki broken
his word? Or had he actually never given her any promises,
knowing full well that he couldn't keep them? She couldn't
remember.
Jin produced sterile bandages out of his pocket and dealt
with the shallow, bleeding cut on her ankle. He slipped an arm
around her, then and helped her up. As he supported her, they
headed toward the door.
The room was a maze of tanks and pipes, gurgling
ominously. At the end of the room, they stepped through a low
steel door, reminiscent of old submarine movies, and into
another low ceiling room of mystery machines. What the hell did
the oni have buried under Pittsburgh
? She seethed with anger that Rikki hadn't warned her
about this.
"What the hell is this place, anyway?" she asked.
"This is life support."
She scoffed at that. Life support made it sound like a damn
space ship.
At the far end of the room, she could see there was a narrow,
tall window. It gave her pause. Who put a window in an
underground area? She forced Jin to detour through the
equipment to look out it. At first she only saw night sky, above
and below them, which confused her more. When she fallen? It
was mid-morning – wasn't it? And how do you fall
into the ground and end up above it? The stars more brilliant
than she ever seen them. And they seemed to be moving –
which really meant she was.
A planet rose on the horizon, filling it completely.
She'd seen enough photos of Earth from orbit to recognize
the luminescent blue swirled with gleaming white clouds. The
sight of it punched the air out of her; she stood gasping, like a
fish suddenly finding itself out of water, trying to get her breath
back. The planet rose, filling the window, evidence that the ship
she was on was rotating to maintain artificial gravity.
"No—we can't be – this isn't possible. This is
a trick. I can't be in space. I was in
Pittsburgh
. You don't fall in Pittsburgh
and land in orbit." She couldn't be in space. Could
she? "You don't fall in Pittsburgh
and land in orbit," she whispered again. But she
hadn't fallen to ground, but into the discontinuity – who
knew what all was tied into that knot of realities? "Oh gods,
where am I?"
"Apparently quite lost." Jin tightened his hold on her, as if he
expected her to collapse. Considering how weak she suddenly
felt, it was probably a good idea.
"Lost! Lost!" cried the crows in her
dreams.
She realized where she must be. She had fallen straight to
Esme. "You're part of the tengu crew of the Tianlong Hao."
"I was the Captain."
"Was?"
"This is the Dahe Hao." Jin leaned over her shoulder
to tap on the window, drawing her attention back outside.
"There's the Tianlong Hao."
The ship had continued to rotate and a vast debris field of
broke ships slid into view. The great long cylindrical ships were
shattered to pieces. Parts were folded like soda cans. The space
around them hazed and glittering from frozen moisture and
oxygen trapped in the same orbit as the ships. The bodies of
astronauts tumbled in among the litter.
She covered her mouth to keep in a cry of dismay. Still her
shock came out in low whimpers.
"The Dahe managed to rescue most of my crew
minutes after the accident," Jin said quietly. "We saved crew
from the Zhenghe Hao and the Anhe Hao, but the
Minghe Hao re-entered before we could get to it, along
with parts of what we think was the gate."
"Jin!" A female voice called from beyond an open hatch.
"Did you find what the hell made the loud bang?"
"Yes!" Jin shouted. "We somehow picked up a visitor."
"What kind of visitor?" The female snapped.
"The gun-waving elfin kind." Jin shouted.
"Have you fucking flipped?" The female voice drew closer.
"An elf?"
"Yes, an elf," Jin called.
"Jin." There was something familiar about the female's
voice. "There were no elves on any of the crew lists."
Jin cocked his head at Tinker and made a slight noise of
discovery. "You did fall from Pittsburgh
."
A purple-haired woman appeared at the door and Tinker
recognized her. It was Esme. She hadn't changed from when
Lain's photo had been taken, with the tiny exception of the
bandage on her forehead. On her temple was a pink line of
recently healed flesh. Like Jin, she was marked with soot, blood,
and exhaustion.
"Well, I'll be fucked." Esme had Lain's voice, only slightly
more raspy, as if she had shouted her throat raw. "Well, it's about
time you got your scrawny ass up here."
"You had a gun-waving elf princess on order?" Jin asked.
"Not exactly. I had a dream. And you were there." Esme
pointed at Jin and then Tinker. "And you."
"I'm starting to understand the appeal of Kansas
," Tinker grumbled.
Jin looked at Tinker in surprise. "You forgot your little
dog."
"I'm Dorothy," Esme corrected him. "She's the scarecrow.
So, how the hell did you get here?"
"I fell," Tinker said.
"Down the rabbit hole?" Esme asked.
"More or less," Tinker said.
"Great, you can get us out of this fucking mess," Esme
asked.
Tinker could only laugh bitterly. "I not even sure
where
I am, let alone how to get out. What planet is that?
Elfhome? Onihida?"
Esme glanced at Jin with narrowing eyes. "Onihida?"
"The tengu homeworld," Tinker said. "Or don't
you
know about the tengu?"
"We've covered that little speed bump," Esme said dryly,
still looking at Jin. Then she shrugged. "All things considered,
finding out that half the crew isn't human is just all part of the
weirdness."
"It doesn't matter which planet it is," Jin said. "We've lost all
our shuttles in the crash. We can't land. Normally that wouldn't
be a problem, the ship is designed to support its crew for decades
– but we've got the survivors of four ships on board."
"I think its Elfhome." Esme turned back to Tinker. "At least,
Pittsburgh
is down there. Every now and then, we pick up a FM
station." Esme named a couple of
Pittsburgh
radio stations. "It sounds like a fucking war has
broken out."
"More or less," Tinker said.
"Oh joy." Esme indicated that they should start in the
direction she had come from. "Hopefully you have something
other than straw in that head of yours, because I've got a mess for
you to fix."
"Aren't you supposed to be the expert?" Tinker let Jin pick
her up and carry her. All the little speed bumps, as Esme would
put it, had finally gotten the best of her.
"Yes, I am," Esme lead through the next section of the ship.
Smoke hazed the air here, and red lights flashed unattended. "But
you're the scarecrow."
"What the hell does that mean?" Tinker asked.
"It means what it means," Esme opened a hatch, stepped
through and closed it after Jin. The light was dim in this section,
but air was clean. The floor was cluttered with crew sleeping. At
a glance, at least half of the sleepers were wounded. "All fucking
logic went out the window about seven days ago."
Stormsong had said that when her dreaming powers had told
her that Impatience was no longer a danger to them. Esme
sounded like she was operating on the same skewed logic
– she wanted Tinker to fix the mess that the colonists
were in because the dreams said she would.
Oh great, yet another group of people expecting me to pull
rabbits out of my hat.
For the first time in her life, Tinker felt intimidated by a
piece of hardware. She knew that a spaceship was a delicate
balance of systems, a spider web pretending to be a simple tin
can, with the lives of everyone inside dependant on it. "Look, I
really don't know a whole lot about spaceships."
"I'll use terms you can understand," Esme said. "My ship is
sinking and I can't bail fast enough."
"Okay," Tinker said. "Exactly how does a spaceship 'sink'?"
"The jump did something to my computers." Esme stopped
beside a work station with a monitor showing static. The front
panel had already been pulled, and the boards inside gleamed
softly with magic. "I'm getting—all sorts of weird
errors—and I'm starting to lose systems completely."
"Well, doh," Tinker dug through her pockets until she found
a length of wire and her screwdriver set. "Magic is causing your
systems to crash."
"Magic?" Esme echoed, looking mystified.
Tinker realized that none of the colonist could see the
magic. "That's Elfhome and this universe has magic. Your
computer systems aren't shielded for it."
"Oh fuck, it is blindingly obvious, isn't it?" Esme pressed
her palm to her forehead, took a deep breath and let it out. "I
should have thought of that when I started to dream true again.
Okay. This system controls my engines. Right after the crash, I
pulled into what should have been a stable orbit and started up
the rotation that allows for the artificial gravity. We're drifting
though. If I don't correct our orbit, we're going enter the planet's
astrosphere – and my ship is not designed to survive
retry."
"Okay." Tinker took the lantern from Jin and started to strip
it for parts. "We need to first siphon off the magic, and then
create shielding for the system. Here's what I need..."
* * *
Tinker had never worked with astronauts before and was
amazed how quickly they learned. While Esme had fired the
positioning jets to stop the ship's rotation and pulled them back
into a stable orbit, Jin drafted a team of people to drain excess
magic off the computer equipment. Despite Esme's "you're the
scarecrow" statements, everyone seemed hesitant about Tinker
actually working with the ship's systems. After Tinker trained the
astronauts, she found herself in a supervisory-only position. She
floated in place, stranded by the lack of gravity, with an ice pack
strapped to her ankle.
For some reason—whether is was because Tinker
missed the event, or because she was the ultimate outsider as an
elf, or because she had magically appeared – the
astronauts started to tell her their stories. They gone through a
harrowing experience, filled with confusion, death, lucky
chances, small miracles, and a great deal of heroics. At the core
of it all was Esme, riding roughshod over rules and logic,
ruthless in purpose, making one lucky guess after another. Esme,
everyone agreed, forged a miracle, salvaging what should have
been complete disaster.
Even Esme opened up to Tinker when they found
themselves alone together. "One summer, while I was in college,
I went to visit my older sister on Elfhome. Two months on
another world – it seemed like exotic vacation. Then the
dreams started – like I had some third eye that had been
forced open and I was made to see. Some of what I had to do was
so very clear, like changing my master's degree to astrophysics
and applying to NASA. Some of it was – blind faith
– that it would matter. Somehow."
"I hate to tell you this, but I have no idea how to help you
beyond this."
"This buys me time, which is what I needed most,
Scarecrow" Esme scowled at her screens. "It gives me a chance to
figure out what the fuck to do next."
"Don't call me Scarecrow. I rented the movie and watched it.
Everyone in that movie was a dysfunctional idiot."
"You didn't read the books? The scarecrow is the wisest
being in Oz and rules the kingdom after the wizard and Dorothy
leaves."
Tinker found the news vaguely disturbing. "That doesn't
help."
"It's like flying blind in the clouds – you have to
have faith in what instruments tell you. The dreams tell me that I
needed you. Things are still iffy—but I have a chance now
to make everything right."
Tinker was torn between relief and annoyance that Esme
seemed to think Tinker's part was done. She didn't want to be
responsible for all the astronauts, but she didn't want to be stuck
in space either. She didn't know what else to do. She couldn't
even stay decent. Without gravity to constrain it, the skirt of
Tinker's red silk dress developed a life of its own, determined to
show off her panties as often as possible. Still, she had hoped
they had gotten past all the dream bullshit. She hated not having
an obvious direction to go, a clear-cut problem to solve. The
path here had been so convoluted, the clues so obscure, that she
would have never guessed where it was taking her. She supposed
that she could only do everything she could imagine, and hope
that one of them was the right thing.
Sighing, Tinker nudged one of the magic sinks. "These are
just makeshift. They'll fill quickly and then leak. We'll have to
burn off the magic until we can create a large, permanent storage
tank."
"How do we do burn it?" Esme asked.
"You burn it off by doing spells," Tinker explained. "It can
be used to create heat, light, cool things off, do healing—"
"Healing?" Jin seized hold of the word, proving that her
'private' conversation with Esme had been just an illusion.
Tinker pulled out her datapad and made sure it worked.
"Well, I have spells for healing but I don't know much
about—"
Jin didn't let Tinker finish. He scooped her up and they flew
through the ship as if Jin had wings. "We've got so many
wounded that we've wiped out the Dahe's supplies. Most
of the medical supplies on the other ships were destroyed."
"I really don't know much about healing," Tinker finally
managed to finish her statement.
"We're desperate. Some of our people – we can't do
any more for them."
"Are they tengu?" Tinker asked.
He stopped and looked down at her. "You won't help us?"
"I didn't say that – although a 'please' would go a
long way. It makes a difference what spells I use. Some won't
work on humans – but they might work on tengu."
"Please, help my people. I beg you. They're dying."
She felt shame and anger at the same time that he would
think she would let a wounded person die merely because of
some biological difference she could barely see. "I'll do what I
can. I just don't know how much that will be."
The infirmary was a tiny cramped place stained with blood,
filled with people hooked to machines. The beds were more like
cocoons with nylon bags holding the patients flat. Jin paused at
the first bed to gaze at a blonde man laying there.
"What happened to Chan Way Kay?"
"Sorry, Jin, we lost her." A man said from back of the room.
"This is Wai Sze Wong," Jin turned Tinker's attention to the
patient to her other side. "She's tengu."
Wai Sze was Black from Tinker's dream. More a sparrow
than a crow, she was a little female with delicate wrists and
fingers. Massive bruising on Wai Sze ran the range from deep
purple to pale yellow. Apparently they had run out of surgical
tape, as black electrical tape held splints on Wai Sze's left arm
and leg in place. The monitors on her showed an unsteady
heartbeat.
Tinker gasped in the shock of recognition and the extent of
Wai Sze's injuries. "I – I—can only guess at how
to help her."
"So guess." Jin gave her a look that spoke of trust and
confidence. "We have done all we can, and she's only getting
worse. If you can't save her, then we're going to lose her."
Tinker sighed and tried to think. Riki had recuperated
quickly from the savage beating Tinker had given him, so the
tengu probably had recuperative powers similar to the elves.
Tinker had saved Windwolf's life with a spell that focused magic
into his natural healing powers. The ambient level of the ship,
while enough to wreck havoc on the unshielded computer
systems, was actually quite low. If the tengu's ability was close
enough to the elves, the same spell might save Wai Sze. She
searched the memory of her datapad and found that she did have
the spell downloaded.
"Do you have transferable circuit paper?" Tinker asked.
Jin nodded.
"Okay," Tinker said. "I need the first magic sink we set up,
some power leads, and a computer connection so I can print on
the circuit paper."
One of these days she had to learn bio magic. She hated
gambling with people's lives. Hopefully today wasn't going to be
the day that she guessed wrong.
She explained to the doctor how she needed Wai Sze
prepped while Jin set people off to fetch the sinks and leads, and
then Jin took her to print off the spell.
"If this spell works, we can use it on all the tengu." She
explained to Jin how it focused magic on the tengu's natural
abilities. "But it's useless on humans. For them, I'll need to see if
there is a spell for their specific injury in my codex. It will be a
much slower process."
"Let's save the spell onto this system, that way, if Wai Sze
shows improvement, I can come back and print off more spells
while you start working with the humans."
When they returned, they found Wai Sze stripped bare to her
waist. Burning with embarrassment, Tinker peeled the protective
sheet from the circuit paper and pressed the spell to Wai Sze's
small chest as Jin watched her intently. It required a lot of
fiddling to make sure it was smoothed down over the hills and
valleys of Wai Sze's breasts. On the female's hip was a tattoo of a
lion overlaying the Leo star constellation, Leo's heart—the
star Regulus – a blaze of blue-white in its chest. Tinker
used it to change the subject. "She's a Leo?"
"Hmm? Oh, that, no, it's for Gracie's husband, Leo. He got a
tattoo for her in the same place, a little bird."
Gracie was obviously the Americanization of Wai Szi's
name. Leo was the name of Tinker's father, killed by the tengu
before she was born. Surely it was an odd coincidence. "He's a
tengu?"
"No, Leo was human. He was my college roommate at M.I.T
– and my best friend for many years."
"Was?"
Jin glanced at her sharply. Whatever he saw on her face
made his hard look softened. "Leo and Gracie were like Romeo
and Juliet. They fell madly in love at first sight. Their families
didn't want them to be together. They got secretly married. And it
all ended in senseless tragedy. Leo was killed in an accident, and
for the last five years, Gracie has been suicidal with grief. Crows
mate for life."
"Leo's family didn't want him to marry her?" Tinker asked.
"They knew she was tengu?"
"No. We were Chinese – that was enough."
Yes, that would have been enough. Much as she loved her
grandfather, she knew the truth of his bigotry. She had been
wondering why she dreamed of Gracie. Now she could only
remember how the little tengu female had endlessly wept in her
dreams.
Tinker had taped the leads to power distributor ring of the
spell and hooked the other ends to the battery. "You check to
make sure all the metal is clear of the spell. It would distort the
effect of the spell, which could be deadly. The activation word is
pronounced this way."
Jin listened closely, and then nodded as the outer ring
powered up, casting a glowing sphere over the rest of the spell.
The healing spell itself kicked in, the timing cycle ring clicking
quickly clockwise as the magic flowed through the spell in a
steady rhythm. "How long before we can tell if it's going to
work?"
Tinker shrugged. "On an elf, I could tell immediately."
As they watched, color flushed back into Gracie's face and
her breathing grew deeper. The machines monitoring her health
verified that her heart was stabilizing.
Jin clapped his hands, just like an elf would, to summon the
attention of the gods to him, and then whispered a prayer. Tinker
floated in place, gazing at the female who would have been her
mother, if everything had gone differently. Had it been chance
that put Gracie on the same ship as Esme – or some
dream inspired plan of Tinker's real mother?
Jin finished his prayer and turned to Tinker. "Thank you.
Truly you must have been sent by the gods to us."
"No, just the wizard of Oz."
Chapter 21: No Place
Like Home
Wolf was ready to kill something. When they should have
been reacting quickly, instead they stalled with negotiations. He
demanded that one of the Stone Clan return to the enclaves to
guard the noncombatants. Earth Son assigned the task to Jewel
Tears but then tried to maneuver True Flame into qualifying it as
a failure on Wolf's part to protect the enclaves.
"I can choose to protect the enclaves," Wolf said, "and leave
you to face the dragon."
"We will have the dreadnaught." Earth Son pointed out.
"No, we won't." True Flame snapped. "Human weapons
can't pierce the dragon shielding. The dreadnaught is good at
spotting and attacking ground troops. It would be an aerial
banquet table for the dragon."
"We should travel light." True Flame continued. "One Hand
each. The fewer we have to protect the better."
Wolf let Wraith chose which of his
sekasha would
remain. Wolf drew Little Horse and Stormsong aside; of the
sekasha returning to the enclaves, they were the ones best
suited to interacting with humans. "Call Maynard. Let him know
what his people might be facing. They need to know that their
weapons won't work on this."
* * *
Even as Jewel Tears and the extra sekasha left, Earth Son
was still arguing True Flame's decision. "We should wait until it
comes to us. Running around, looking for it will only weaken
our position."
Wolf scoffed at this idea. "Sit here on our hands while it
does what it will to the city?"
"Property damage can be fixed later," Earth Son said.
"And what of the humans?" Wolf said.
Earth Son had the gall to say, "I do not know why you fuss
so. They are short lived anyhow."
"I think we should go and be the heroes." Forest Moss struck
a heroic pose. "Females are attracted to males of action."
"What females?" Earth Son cried.
"Poor Earth Son, I might have one blind eye—"
Forest Moss tapped his cheek under his ruined eye and the
reached out to tap both of Earth Son's. "—but apparently
you have two."
Earth Son slapped away Moss' hand. "I am not blind."
"Then you must see that this city is filled with fertile young
females? There are so few domana females, and they are
a choosy lot. The law prevents us from taking lovers outside our
own caste who is not sekasha with naekuna, and
the sekasha frown on us making another caste into
domana – that would be too much like our Skin Clan
fathers. Would not the sane plan be to follow Wolf Who
Rules' path, winnow out the perfect female from the thousands
and thousands of humans and make her elfin?"
"No!" Earth Son flinched back from the mad one. "Are you
even capable of recognizing sanity?"
Forest Moss thought a moment and then shrugged. "The sad
truth is: I am not sure. But nor am I sure I care. I have found a
certain freedom in madness. Ah, but it is oh so lonely. I do not
wish to be alone anymore. Unfortunately, I have fallen into a
paradox. As domana, you can not attract a household
without sekasha, but the sekasha no longer trust
me. I failed to protect what was mine. What a small mistake led
to my downfall, nor did I make it alone. At our first encounter
with the oni, despite their displays of friendship, we should have
fought. One miscalculation and all was lost. Lost forever."
"I fell in love," Windwolf stated coldly. "Do not mistake my
honest passion for calculated convenience."
Forest Moss made little flicking motions with his hand.
"Feh, feh, I will love her. She will, after all, win me what I wish
for the most. I tried to show my responsibility and leadership by
holding dogs, and monkeys and small birds. Surely keeping safe
such fragile packages of life shows some ability to protect? Alas,
no elf has offered themselves into my keeping."
"And this mad plan would bring you respect?" Earth Son
looked puzzled.
"Beloved Tinker holds two sekasha. I'm told that she
lacks a full Hand merely due to the limits of time. That even the
renowned Bladebite offered to her. Surely there is another female
of the same caliber in this city."
"No." Windwolf growled. "My domi is a rare and
treasured find."
Forest Moss refused to be distracted from his plan. "Ah,
well, I will have to settle for some lesser gem then. Let us be off.
There is a dragon to kill, and females to impress."
With the elder Stone Clan male strutting off, Earth Son had
no choice but to agree to go after the dragon. It made sense now
that Forest Moss tried to use the aumani to gain Little
Horse. Although young, Little Horse's bloodlines meant young
sekasha would be willing to look to him as First. There
was some sound reasoning to that – as well as this
current plan of Forest Moss. Both, however, were equally
distasteful.
Hopefully Malice would cut short Forest Moss' plan.
* * *
Tinker spent hours in the infirmary, choosing out spells out
of the Dufae Codex, modifying them to work with the batteries,
printing them off, and casting them. She was learning that she
wasn't cut out to be a doctor; having to touch strangers so
intimately was still unnerving.
Being weightless was at once a joy and a constant reminder
that she wasn't on Elfhome. What had happened when she fell
into the Ghostlands? Pony had been up on the scaffolding with
her. Had he fallen into the deadly cold and died? Or had he fallen
through, like her, and was now lost on another world, or out in
space? The possibilities terrified her. She wouldn't allow herself
to even consider what that might have happened to Windwolf.
There was, however, the dreadful knowledge that Windwolf
would put himself between Malice and
Pittsburgh
, and continue until either he or Malice was dead. She
had to get back and help Windwolf – somehow.
The largest drawback to being weightless was that you didn't
fall down when you fell asleep. One moment she was drifting in
a niche, waiting for some crew to move past, trying to think of a
weapon that could kill Malice. The next she was wondering if
there was enough black willow left to make lively maple
flavored ice cream. Dragons, Oilcan was telling her over the
phone, had a weakness for sweets.
"You're going to have to make it." She became aware that
she had made the phone from two tin cans and a long string of
red thread strung between them. The thread vibrated as they
talked, a blur of red, resonating to their voices. Resonation was
the key to everything. "It's really easy to make. Just follow
grandpa's recipe."
She realized then that the ice cream had been what they
needed all along – but she had taken the recipe with her.
While she considered this, she drifted through the wall of
spaceship. Space, it turned out, was all sticky, sweet black
treacle. Here was all the molasses they would want. She could
make the ice cream out of this – only how did she get it
back to Pittsburgh
? Fling it from orbit? No, no, it would all burn up
before it hit Pittsburgh
.
"Domi?"
Tinker looked up. Stormsong was drifting toward her, a
flowing angel of hazy gleaming white. The sekasha had
one hand on the red thread and was following it to Tinker's tin
can phone. "Stormsong, I'm stuck in the treacle."
"No, you aren't." Stormsong held out her hand and Tinker
caught hold of it. It felt warm and intangible as a sunbeam.
"Remember."
"Remember what?" Tinker cried as Stormsong hazed to a
nebulous gleaming form.
"There's no place like home." Stormsong whispered, brilliant
now.
Tinker blinked against the brilliance. Stormsong had
transformed to a shimmering ghost of Impatience. She clung to
some of his snaky mane.
"Sssssaaaammmmmmaaananana." Impatience's
voice rumbled against her skin.
A loud gasp made Tinker turn her head. Jin floated a few
feet away, gazing at her with amazement. They were back in the
infirmary, the wall beside her lumpy and cold and the smell of
smoke and blood omnipresent.
Am I still sleeping? Tinker looked back at Impatience.
"
Huuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuu." Impatience rumbled and
faded away.
Jin drifted toward her. His eyes still wide as he gazed at her.
"Remember what?"
Tinker scrubbed at her face. Was she awake or still asleep?
Her right hand felt warmer than her left – like she had
held it over a open flame. "There's no place like home."
"That's it?"
Dragons have a weakness of sweets and space is treacle?
"Maybe." Tinker realized that if she was awake now –
somehow Jin had experienced part of her dream. "Did you hear
Stormsong?"
"The dragon's name is Stormsong? That doesn't sound like a
dragon name."
Was pinching yourself an accurate test to see if you're
awake? If it was, then she was awake. "You
saw the
dragon?"
Jin nodded. "And I heard it. It said: remember."
"You understood what it said?"
"I'm
Providence
's child."
"You're what?"
Jin cocked his head in his bird-like inspection of her. "You
walk with the dragons but don't know their way?"
"No."
Jin crossed to her side and settled beside her. "
Providence
is the guardian spirit of the tengu. Each generation a
tengu child is born with the mark of
Providence
upon him." The tengu undid his shirt buttons to
expose his chest. Over his heart was a red birthmark that looked
like the flowing outline of a dragon. "We're taught the language
of the dragons."
A whole mysterious part of her life suddenly made sense.
"This is what he was looking for."
"The dragon?"
"No, Riki. He kidnapped me and made me strip. He wanted
to know if Impatience marked me but he didn't tell me what the
mark was for."
"Who is Riki?" Jin asked.
"A tengu – stuck between a rock and a hard place.
Apparently he tried to stay out of the oni control, but they took
his younger cousin, Joey, hostage. It put us on opposite sides,
which is too bad, because I think we could have been good
friends."
Jin reached out and touched the necklace Keiko had given
her. She'd forgotten she was even still wearing it. "Did he give
you that?"
"No, his younger cousin Keiko did. She said it would
protect me from tengu."
"It will." He tugged it out of her neckline so it laid overtop.
"But you've got keep it out where it can be seen. So we can tell
you're under the protection of the
Chosen blood."
"The what?"
"I'm the
Chosen one. The spiritual
leader of my people. I decide the path for my people and they
follow me. Riki and his cousins are all my nieces and nephews.
In my absence, my people are turning to them."
"Which made them targets for the oni wanting to control the
tengu."
Jin nodded.
Having experienced people turning to you for leadership,
Tinker felt sudden sympathy for Riki. "One thing I don't get.
These people are astronauts and still buy 'the chosen one'
bullshit?"
"When you're born a mythical creature, you tend to have a
different mindset on these things."
"Wait – so—all this colonization –
going back to Onihida stupidity was your idea?"
Jin looked away. For a moment, Tinker thought he wouldn't
answer, but he sighed, and said, "We're half bird—we can't
breed with humans – not without magic. Yes a couple
hundred of us came to Earth before the elves destroyed the
pathway, but it wasn't a big enough gene pool. For generations
we've been careful not to interbreed, but we were coming to a
dead end. We had to find someway to get back to Onihida and the
rest of our tribe. You have no idea what its like to see genocide
bearing down on you."
"If Riki was looking for a chosen one, then that means the
tengu don't have a leader."
"It seems like it."
Tinker yawned. "When this is all over, I think I'm going to
sleep for a week. Are we going to get gravity back?"
"We did another course correction, but it seems like
something is pulling us down toward the planet. It's already
pulled all the debris into reentry. We're not spinning up this time
to save fuel."
"So – if we don't do anything, eventually the ship
will be pulled out of orbit?"
"It seems like it."
Tinker groaned. She didn't want to deal with dreams! "No
place like home – that's what Dorothy says to get home.
The stupidity was that she had the means to get home the entire
time, she just didn't know it. I have no idea how that Glenda bitch
gets away with being the 'good' witch. What do I have on me?"
She unloaded her pockets, letting the items float in orbit
around her. Although the dress had limited pocket space, she still
managed to fit amount of stuff into them. Not only did she have
her datapad, she also had her camera with the recording of
Impatience trying to teach her – something.
"Oh my, these could be my ruby slippers!"
* * *
Tracking Malice proved difficult, despite his size. The
massive dragon leaped and bounded and shifted through
buildings like it was a ghost, leaving a shattered trail. Wolf
chafed at the slower speeds that others traveled, but True Flame
would not relent, and Wolf had to acknowledge that the older elf
had battle experience, where he did not.
The trail led up the Monongalia
River
valley to beyond the Rim, and then disappeared
without a trace.
"There is something wrong here," Wraith whispered to Wolf
as his Hand gathered close. "Smell the blood?"
Wolf gazed at the still, boulder strewn forest around them.
There was a slight blurring to the trees, as if a mist hazed the air.
He would not have noticed it if the sekasha hadn't called
his attention to it. Pulling out a survey map for the area, he
confirmed his suspicions.
"I think this might be an oni encampment, covered by an
illusion."
The sekasha pulled their ejae, readying themselves
for a possible ambush.
Forest Moss did a ground scry, took a few steps and
repeated it several times until he stopped beside an ironwood
sapling. "Wolf Who Rules, break this tree."
Wolf aimed a force strike at the sapling and unleashed it.
The sapling vanished when the leading edge of his blow
struck it. A tall square stone, inscribed with spells, replaced the
sapling for a heartbeat before disintegrating into rubble. An oni
camp sprang into being around them. The boulders changed into
rough cabins. Mossy logs became well-gnawed humanoid
carcasses. Blood soaked the ground and everywhere was dragon
tracks.
"All the magic flowed toward the sapling." Forest Moss
nudged the remains of the crude oni spell stone.
The
sekasha moved out to search the cabins.
"Malice has wallowed in magic and feasted on oni." True
Flame used his sword tip to point out that the skulls were
horned. "Maybe it slipped its bonds, like the little one did."
"There were no spell markings on Malice." Wolf wondered
too the significance of the dragon's name. Tinker had called
Impatience 'hyper.' If the dragon's names reflected a personality,
perhaps one named Malice needed no prodding to wreak havoc.
"I am not sure what the other beast is, but there is no
mistake here, this is an oni dragon." True Flame pointed out a
four-toed print in the dirt. "The little beast has five claws like the
hand of an elf."
Red Knife reported for the
sekasha, saying that the
cabins were empty of oni and any evidence of what they planned.
"There were, though, a hundred oni here only hours ago."
"It is a good thing that we delayed, then." Earth Son earned a
sharp look from even his First, Thorne Scratch. "We would have
had to face both oni and the dragon at the same time."
Instead both had vanished away after having time to lay
cooperative plans.
The dragon tracks led down to the river.
Earth Son made a sound of disgust, eyeing muddy water.
"None of us will be able to track it in that."
"If Malice was sent by the oni on Onihida to distract us, then
he will circle back to the city and attack." Wolf was glad that
Jewel Tears was protecting the enclaves. While the Stone Clan
was weak on attack spells, they had the strongest defensive spells.
"We should return."
True Flame nodded.
* * *
Tinker and Jin found a working computer station and with
some jury rigging managed to get her state-of-art camera
interfaced with the two decade old systems.
"I recorded about six hours so this is going to take a while."
Tinker started the play back.
"...we'll build a dictionary of his words," her recorded
voice started out the recording. Cloudwalker had been filming
the dragon but having trouble tracking it as it moved through the
scrapyard's offices.
"Riki says the dragon's name is Impatience," Tinker said,
"but Riki has lied to me – a lot."
Jin attention was on the recording. He nothing but he
frowned slightly at this.
"...mmmenananannaaaaaaapoooookaaaammmammamamyyyyyya
aanananammmmoooo..." Impatience rambled on the recording.
"I'm not familiar with the name." Jin paused the recording
after another minute of the dragon's monologue. "Dragons
usually use a lot of words to say anything. Like 'a pleasantly
warm but not too warm, sunny, cloudless, time of the day that
isn't dawn but the sun hasn't quite reached its zenith' for good
morning. It considered rude to get to the point too quickly. When
you talk to a dragon, you're supposed to elaborate as much as
possible."
"Dragon Etiquette 101?" Tinker asked.
"Historically, rude tengu are dragon snacks. This dragon,
however, is being very to the point. He might come across as
impatient to other dragons, which would explain his name."
"So you understand him."
"Yes, so far he's said 'what is this object? Oh, this moves.
Ah, it makes light. I wonder how. This part twists. What are
these? I see. It does not work without those. Why does it not
make light? Have I broken it? It seemed as if it was suppose to
come apart. A diagram. I must have them backwards. Ha, ha, ha."
"Yeah, I got the laughing part."
A female astronaut flew into the cabin with tengu grace,
"Wai Szi is awake and wants to see the scarecrow."
* * *
The tiny tengu woman was awake and looking surprisingly
well compared to how awful she had been before. She gasped as
Tinker swam into the infirmary. "Oh my, you are here!
Oh, look at you! You're so beautiful."
Tinker blushed. As a female elf in a deep jewel red silk dress
in zero gee, she was attracting a lot of attention from the crew.
"It's the dress."
"Ah, yes, it not so practical in space, is it, my dear? Xiao
Chen, can you find her something to wear?"
Xiao Chen had been the crewmember that summoned them
to Gracie's side. The tengu female nodded, cocking her head to
study Tinker's size before moving off, graceful as a bird in flight.
Jin looked at Tinker as if noticing the silk flowing around
her for the first time and then smiled. "I don't know. It's good for
morale. At least with the guys."
Tinker smacked him and found herself floating backwards.
He laughed, and caught Tinker before she could hit
something. "I am only joking."
"Shoo, shoo!" Gracie shooed Jin away. "I want to talk to her
without your noisy squawking."
Jin smiled fondly at his cousin and flew away.
Gracie held out her unbroken hand to Tinker. "Let me look
at you." Gracie had tears in her eyes, which Tinker expected, but
not the brilliant smile that the fragile tengu bestowed on her.
Tinker found herself smiling back. "You've got Leo's eyes and
his smile."
"Yeah, I guess. The patented Dufae face."
"I'm so happy to see it. It hurt so much that I hadn't been able
to give Leo a baby. It made losing him all the more horrible. He
was a wonderful, wonderful man and he was utterly gone."
It occurred to Tinker for the first time how awful to lose
your husband—never see him again—and a sudden
fear took root in her. What if she couldn't get back to Windwolf?
What if she never saw him again?
"There, there, my love." Gracie wiped Tinker's tears away.
"We'll get you back to him somehow."
"Yeah, I know, we're working on it." Tinker sniffed.
"Let me see your leg. I know Jin, he probably didn't think to
clean that cut. He might be Dalai Lama of the crows, but he's
hopeless with first aid."
Gracie deftly took off the bandage, gently cleaned the wound
and applied an antiseptic and re-bandaged the cut.
"Are you a medic?" Tinker asked her.
"I'm the ship's xenobiologist," Gracie said.
"You're kidding."
Gracie looked up in surprise, and Tinker found herself
talking about Lain, and then about Esme. "Have you told her? I
don't think she's realized who you are yet."
Tinker shook her head. "Right now, it's all too weird. I don't
even want to think about it. Besides, I'm kind of ticked at her.
Not about leaving me. About everyone having to lie to me about
it because – I don't know – some strange family
stuff. I didn't know the truth for eighteen years. She can not know
for a couple of days. I'll tell her later."
Xiao Chen flew into the area, carrying a set of clothes.
"These should fit our scarecrow."
"I don't know if I like that nickname." Tinker took the
clothes and drifted awkwardly as she checked the pant size
against her waist.
Xiao Chen laughed. "I am sorry. Just so long, we did not
know your name, just that you were the scarecrow."
"Did tell everyone about your dream?" Tinker asked Gracie.
Xiao Chen, though, answered. "All of us that slept that night
shared Wai Szi's dream – that is her ability. She is our
dream crow."
"In some ways, we are more bird than human," Gracie said.
"Can you see the future? How am I going to get us out of
this mess?"
Gracie shook her head. "Where one person can determine the
future, the way is clear, but we're in a tangle of possibilities.
Many people can push the future one way or another. This is a
time when everyone will determine the end."
Since there were no private places, Tinker turned her back
and they pretended to ignore her, talking in Chinese, as she
changed. She tried not to feel like they were talking about her.
Certainly with the ship falling out of orbit, they had plenty of
things to discuss. At least with the dress on, she was able to
change panties and pull on her pants without flashing them. The
pants were a little loose, but Xiao Chen had included a length of
nylon cord to serve as a belt.
Tinker turned back around and pulled on the knotted cord. "I
look the part of the scarecrow now."
The tengu laughed.
"I've been greedy." Gracie reached out and squeezed Tinker's
hand. "I've kept you here too long. Thank you for letting me see
you."
Tinker hugged her goodbye and returned to the task of
finding out how to get them back home to Windwolf.
* * *
Impatience, it turned out, had been trying to teach her a
spell. It incorporated math, something that Elvish spells didn't
do, and used magic to manipulate time and space. It took
everything she knew and pushed it in a new direction using an
entirely new symbol set. Jim translated the words and then, later,
the number system that Impatience used but looked mystified by
most of what he was saying.
"You understand this?" Jin asked.
"Yes, yes. The roots of elfin magic is here, but taken to
another order of understanding. This is recognizing the quantum
nature of magic and its effects across boundaries of
realities. My god, I really screwed up. I never considered that I
could warp the fabric of space and time on this kind of scale."
"What?" Jin cried in surprise. "
You made this
mess?"
"I had help. Okay, here's what happened." She found a
marker in her pocket and drew a planet on the nearest wall. "The
oni forced me to build a down-sized gate on Elfhome. I set up a
resonance between my gate and the orbital gate." She drew both
gates in their proper positions and the wavy resonance line
between them. "Now Leo's gate was flawed. The time coordinate
was never set." She drew the ships entering the orbital gate. "So
the default time coordinate became the moment of the gate's
destruction – or around midnight eastern standard time,
seven—eight days ago."
She totally lost track of space since she landed on the
spaceship.
Jin understood the result. "Thus the collision."
"Yeah. Old news. This is the important part – all the
ships, when they passed through the gate, must have picked up
the resonance signature." She drew a ship on the other side of the
gate, labeled it
Dahe Hao and continued the wavy line to
it. "As long as there are objects in orbit, the resonance will
continue, which is why the discontinuity hasn't collapsed. It's
because of this link, that when I fell into the Ghostlands, I ended
up onboard. For every action, though, there is an equal and
opposite reaction. Basically the power spike originates here on
Elfhome and travels in this direction." She drew an arrow parallel
to the wavy line through the planet. "The multi-universe is trying
to drag the
Dahe Hao back along this line." She drew a
second arrow from the ship running beside the resonance path
toward the planet. "Again, as long as the discontinuity continues,
the
Dahe Hao will be affected by this force."
She turned and was startled to find her audience had grown
from Jin to about twenty crew members. "Um, well, this isn't all
bad. We can use this force to our advantage. The entire ship and
everyone on it is keyed to
this location." She underlined
Turtle Creek. "Now if you look at this section of the text." She
pointed to the screen. "This is a spell. It creates a sphere of
hyperphase. All we need to do is cast this spell which will step
the ship into hyperphase and follow the line of force back to
Pittsburgh
."
"That's
all?" Esme said.
Tinker turned back and found her audience had grown again.
Esme and another twenty crewmembers crowded the small area.
"My biggest concern is power. If the amount of magic we feed
into the spell is too small, it will just punch a hole in the middle
of the ship. We need enough power that we can guarantee that the
entire ship goes. Even if we think we have sufficient magic, we
probably should gather everyone close to the spell, and close all
the hatches between the sections of the ship."
"What we've collected isn't enough?" Esme asked.
"I don't think so and access time on it is slow. The spell is
set up to mimic how the dragons cast magic with their mane.
With elf magic, there's a timing ring around the spell that
controls the power coming in. It makes the magic a slow steady
burn. This spell takes all the free magic and converts it in one
burst." Tinker sketched the ship and put an 'x' roughly center of
the ship. "It's kind of like dropping a stone into a pool of water.
Splash!" She drew in the initial impact in a large circle around the
'x'. "That's the rock hitting the surface. There seems to be some
resulting ripples in the fabric of space." She added larger circles
around the first, and then shaded in the space between the circles.
"I'm not sure what the ripples will do, but I can't imagine the
delay factor will be good for the structural integrity of the ship."
"In other words," Jin sought to clarify what she said. "Part
the ship returns to
Pittsburgh
seconds before the next section goes?"
"Yes. Leo's gate, however flawed, did transfer all the ship to
the same second. These ripples would have a different time
coordinate, so probably we're looking at pieces of the ship
arriving in
Pittsburgh
– unless we hit it with a damn big rock."
"So where do we get it?"
"I don't know. If we could tap the spring under Turtle Creek,
that would work, but I don't see any evidence that power is
seeping through."
* * *
There was no sign of Malice in
Oakland
when Wolf and the others returned to the enclaves.
Maynard had set up a command center in the building across the
street from Poppymeadow's. He and the NSA agents had set up
lookout posts across the city, linked by radio.
"Unless it can go invisible, it hasn't appeared in the city yet,"
Maynard tapped three points on the map. "Between the Cathedral
of Learning, the USX building and Mount
Washington, we can see for miles – and
Stormsong said that this thing was huge."
Wolf nodded. "Unfortunately, it will be dark soon."
Someone was hammering upstairs. The hammering stopped,
and something large moved overhead accompanied with odd
rhythmic clicking noise.
Wolf cocked his head, trying to place the sound. "What is
that?"
Stormsong glanced toward Earth Son standing in the street,
just outside the open door, and lowered her voice. "Domi's
nagarou brought the little dragon, so the humans can see
what we're fighting."
Interesting how one afternoon could change your
perspective on size.
Maynard had caught Stormsong's caution and spoke quietly
in English. "Briggs and Durrack are seeing what works against
it."
Wolf couldn't decide if this was ingenious or unwise. He
found the stairs leading up to the one large open room taking up
the entire second story. The windows had been boarded shut and
mattresses leaned against the walls. The dragon and others were
in the far corner, standing around a computer set up on the floor.
While Oilcan and Durrack were focused on the screen, Briggs
and Little Horse and Cloudwalker were standing back and
watching the dragon.
All beings – dragon, humans and elves –
looked up when he arrived with his Hand.
"Domou." Little Horse acknowledged his arrival.
"What are you doing here?" Wolf thought he had sent his
blade brother back to the enclaves.
"There is nothing I can do for domi, but she would
want her nagarou safe. Surely, the oni will try and take
back the little dragon."
Wolf glanced at his domi's
nagarou. There was so much of Tinker in his appearance
that it hurt – her mouth, her eyes, and her haphazard
haircut. In the hectic last two months, he'd not spoken once to the
young man. Wolf realized now that Tinker was Oilcan's only
family; he was now quite alone. Wolf could not imagine it; an elf
only found himself alone if he was exiled from his clan. Clans
were so vast, that natural disaster would lay low entire
households and families and there would still be someone left to
be responsible for the orphans.
Wolf had been lax toward Oilcan because he was an adult
– if he was an elf, Oilcan would have chosen a clan that
superseded all family responsibilities. That had been wrong of
Wolf. Even if he lifted Tinker out of her species, it did not
completely free her of her culture's obligations – and as
her domou, her responsibilities was his own. But beyond
that, it been wrong of him to be a stranger to the one person that
Tinker loved as much as life.
Oilcan cautiously separated himself from the dragon, as if
he didn't fully trust either the dragon or the warriors from either
race. "Wolf Who Rules." Oilcan gave a proper bow. "I heard
about Malice on the scanner," he said in High Tongue. Sorrow
filled his eyes as he spoke, and then was firmly put aside. "I
thought we might learn something from Impatience."
"Thank you, nagarou. That was wise of you." Wolf
dropped to low Elvish, and put a hand to the young man's
shoulder.
A smile flashed over Oilcan's face, then vanished as he
sighed. "Unfortunately, most of what we've found out so far isn't
good."
"I did not expect anything else. What have we found out?"
"Well, there was a question if Impatience and Malice are
both really dragons, given their size and various other
differences. From what we've pieced together, we think they are.
In Chinese mythology, the four claw dragons are considered
common dragons but the imperial dragon has five claws. We
think the variations are racial instead of species differences, and
possibly represent political differences too."
"Tengu worship five claws—they—
compassionate guardians of tengu in past," Durrack spoke very
rough low Elvish. "Four claws – they have bad
reputation – they work with the oni without being
enslaved. Malice is not enslaved."
"Now, the dragons can't maintain its shields all the time,"
Oilcan patted Impatience on the head, showing that the little
dragon's shields were currently down. "It takes them
approximately thirty seconds to raise their shields."
Durrack abandoned low Elvish, to add in English. "If we
could catch Malice completely unaware, a sniper might be able to
take him out with a well-placed bullet. But once his shield goes
up, things get tricky."
Oilcan murmured a translation to Little Horse and
Cloudwalker, and then added in Elvish. "The shields, while they
use ambient magic, they're very efficient and translate all kinetic
energy – including the motion of the dragon's body
– somehow into magic. Bullets, rockets,
baseballs—" Oilcan nudged a ball on the floor that they
apparently had been using in their experiments. "–
anything you can throw at them—will only make them
stronger."
"And they can keep the shields up while they phase through
walls." Durrack patted a wooden partition erected next to him.
Impatience took this as a request to demonstrate his phasing
abilities. His mane lifted up and he shimmered into a ghostly
haze and leapt through the wall and returned.
"Good boy!" Oilcan produced a large gumball from his
pocket and gave it to the dragon, who chewed it with obvious
relish. "We believe your lightening will cross the barrier because
it's composed of a different type of energy particle."
"Electricity works." Durrack lifted up half a cattle prod. "We
established that."
Impatience snatched the cattle prod out of the NSA agent's
hand and phased it into the wall. When the little dragon let go,
the cattle prod remained as part of the wall. The other half, Wolf
noticed, was already part of the wall. Apparently the little dragon
didn't like that test.
"As a one shot deal, pepper spray will work." Durrack
picked up an aerosol can. "Of course, it only annoys the hell out
of them, and then the dragon changes it shields so that gas won't
penetrate."
"I'm stunned you are all still alive." Wolf realized that
Impatience had to be remarkably forgiving to put up with these
experiments.
"We talked first." Oilcan said.
Briggs scoffed. "We drew pictures and did a lot of
pantomime."
"He seems to understand what's going on." Oilcan said. "He
seems to hate both Malice and the oni, but he's made it clear that
he can't beat Malice in a fight."
"How do oni enslave the dragons in the first place? Do the
tengu say?"
Durrack shook his head. "No."
Wolf wondered if this was the truth. While he trusted Oilcan
to be as forthright as Tinker, the NSA clearly saw themselves as
separate powers with all that implied.
* * *
After the accident, and the various course corrections, the Dahe Hao's low orbit didn't put them within range of the
Wind Clan spell stones at Aum Renau. After discussing their fuel
situation and the reliability of their engines, they decided to look
for stones elsewhere within a mei. The spell stones were
large enough, and distinctive enough that the pattern recognition
software found several sets. It was impossible to distinguish
which clan the stones belonged to, but they found four grouped
together in the place the crew nicknamed
Giza
.
"There are four major clans – wind, fire, water,
stone – so I think it's a
safe bet that it's one set for each major clan." At least, Tinker
hoped it was. She knew there were lesser clans, but she didn't
know anything about them. "At this speed, though, we're already
out of range, so I'll have to wait until next orbit to check."
"You've got about an hour and a half then." Esme murmured
a curse as something flashed red on her monitor. "But we're
drifting again. We're going to have to do another course
correction."
"Try and keep us in this orbit," Tinker said. "A mei is
only a thousand miles, give or take a couple hundred miles. If we
drop much closer to the equator, we'll be out of range."
Tinker then retreated to work on printing out the spell. Jin
tracked her down a short time later.
"Gracie wanted to be sure you got something to eat." Jin
held out a container.
"Pft." Tinker waved away the offering. "If I eat, I'll have to
figure out how you go to the bathroom up here, and I figure
that's not going to be a pleasant activity."
Jin laughed, still holding out the cup-sized container. "You
have to eat."
"What is it?"
"Cream of tomato soup."
"Oh! My favorite." She took the container and found that it
was warm. As she snapped it open and sipped the rich creamy
broth, Jin swung up to perch across from her.
"It was your father's favorite too." Jin sipped his own soup.
"I can see Leo in you. Hear him in the way you talk. It makes me
happy."
"Why?"
"Leo was my best friend for many years. I'm glad that in a
way, he is living on through you."
"If he was such a good friend, why did you kill him?"
She expected him to deny it, but he only gazed at her, sorrow
filling his eyes.
"I –I made a mistake. We never told Leo that we
were tengu. And he never told us – at least, not until it
was too late – that he was elfin. We kept our secrets from
one another, and in the end, it killed Leo."
"I don't understand," Tinker said.
"Leo and I met at M.I.T. We both had radical ideas, ones that
made us unpopular. We believed that magic existed—that
there were other realms that could be visited via magical portals.
Of course, we had the proof in our very blood, but that we never
told anyone, even each other." Jin sighed, shaking his head. "It
seems so obvious now. Dufae. How did we miss it?"
"What really happened? My grandfather never told me
details."
"When Leo showed us his gate design, a possibility opened
up to us. A paradise for the tengu. It became the flock dream, a
bright promise at the end of a path through dark woods full of
unseen danger. To be able to chose one's mate out of love, and
not a carefully ordered breeding plan. To be able to fly. To walk
under the sun in our true form, and not to be always hidden. I
went to the kitsune, who are powerful in the Chinese government
and talked to them about funding. They involved other parties. It
was dangerous, I know, but I thought I understood all the factors.
What I didn't know was Leo was an elf – that he knew
exactly what the oni were – and that he wouldn't
cooperate with them."
"Halfway through the meeting with the investors, Leo just
freaked. He told them that he would never help the oni build a
gate. And worse, he told them why. As much as the elves feared
the oni, the oni of Earth feared the elves. He stormed out the
meeting. I went after him. We were arguing –" Jin fell
silent for a minute. "It happened so fast. One moment he was
standing beside me on the street corner, arguing with me and the
next he was dead in the middle of the road. I didn't even see what
happened."
Jin sighed. "I wasn't driving the car. I didn't push him out
into its path. But I brought death to him. And I can only say I'm
sorry. And I am truly am. I loved him like a brother."
All Tinker could imagine was Nathan out on the road, his
blood on her. Oh gods, she didn't want to cry again. She squeezed
her eyes tight on the sudden burn of tears. "How do you deal with
knowing that you fucked up so bad? That you killed someone
that loved you? That trusted you?"
"Accept the truth of what happened, and then forgive
yourself. They would if they could."
She laughed bitterly. "Why would they?"
"Because they loved you."
She pressed the palms of her hands into her eyes, and
struggled to get back in control of herself. The truth of what
happened? The truth was that she had ignored all the warning
signs with Nathan. She had to pay attention, think about the
consequences of her actions. Like now – she was
desperately trying to get back to Pittsburgh
, but what if she was totally wrong? With sudden
terror, she saw the implications of her actions. She was taking Dahe Hao to Pittsburgh
. She might be saving the human crew, but she was
dooming the tengu crew to genocide.
"I'm worried about what will happen to the tengu when we
reach Pittsburgh
. The elves are killing people that they just suspect are
oni. And I know they will see tengu as oni."
"You still don't think of yourself as one of them?"
"No, not really. Wait – how do you know?"
"For the last week, all we've dreamed about is you –
all the weird twists and turns your life has taken." Jin picking up
the camera. Cloudwalker had trouble tracking the hyperactive
dragon through the trailer and caught her and Pony in the
viewfinder instead. "We've seen what you've done to keep your
sekasha safe."
"You know everything?" She wondered if this was why she
been having such horrible nightmares lately.
"Enough. Your fight with the foo dogs. Your
transformation from a human. Your fight with the oni lord." Jin
played a few seconds of recording as Pony acknowledged one of
her requests with a slight bow. "This is just proof of what we
already knew. You're the Wind Clan domi, guarded by a
Hand of sekasha, one of which is another dreamer."
"Her name is Stormsong."
"You told me."
"I don't know what to do about this," Tinker admitted. "If we
don't do the spell, I don't think anyone will survive. If we do the
spell, then you end up in the mess in
Pittsburgh
."
Jin reached out and tapped Tinker's forehead, reminding her
of the dau marked onto her forehead. "You have the power to
protect us. You could make us part of your household. We could
be yours, as these sekasha are yours."
"Mine?" Tinker squeaked. "Why would you want that?"
"Because we trust you more than we trust the oni."
That wasn't saying much.
"I don't know if that would work," Tinker said. "The elves
make a big thing about beholding. The sekasha promises to serve
in exchange for protection. That everyone fits into society
– someone above them responsible for them, but they are
answerable to."
"It seems fairly simple. I will promise that the tengu will
obey you and you promise to protect us."
"You're serious? You would listen to what I told you to
do?"
Jin nodded.
"Are you sure your crew is okay with obeying some snot-
nosed kid?"
"Leo's daughter who talks with dragons? Yes, I am sure."
She opened her mouth and then closed it, reminding herself
to think about implications and complications this time. She
supposed that the tengu could make up a household like
Poppymeadow's, where the crew would be under Jin and the
tengu captain would be under her, yet they wouldn't be directly
part of her household. She wished that she knew more about how
the enclaves worked, but she suspected that they were like all
things elfin, where an exchange of promises were enough to bind
both parties. But how would the tengu fit into her life? There
was terror deep inside her, one she didn't want to look at closely,
if she promised the tengu to protect them, it would have to be
against the people that she loved the most. What would she do if
Windwolf refused to acknowledge her claim on the tengu? She
didn't want to think about Windwolf systematically killing the
tengu she had gotten to know. She didn't want him to be the type
of person who could do it. Yet she couldn't stop thinking of
Nathan dead in the road because she was married to Windwolf.
Of the bloody streets of
Chinatown. Of
Tommy Chang within moments of being cut down.
If she committed to the tengu, then she might have to fight
even Windwolf to keep them safe.
I can't. I can't.
She pressed trembling hands to her mouth. But if she didn't
protect them, who would? How could she stand aside and let
them be killed and do nothing to save them? "I'll do my best to
protect you, but you have to remember to do what I say, or I
won't have the power to stop the elves from killing you all."
"I promise. You will have obedience of the tengu."
Her life had so many strings attached that she felt like a
puppet.
"Hey! Scarecrow!" Esme called over the ship's intercom.
"We're getting close to your mark in five minutes!"
Tinker swam back to the bridge, blinking on the salt burning
in her eyes.
"Two minutes," Esme announced.
They waited in tense silence, bathed in the soft earthshine.
"In ten," Esme said quietly.
Tinker made sure she had her fingers in the correct position.
"We're in range."
Tinker brought her hand to her mouth and said the trigger
word. Nothing happened. Her heart jolted with the sudden spike
of fear. "Daaaaaaae." Still nothing. She checked her finger
positions and carefully announced the trigger word. Zip. "Daaae.
Daaaaae. Dae. Daaaaaaae."
"And we're out of range," Esme said.
"Oh, fuck," Tinker said.
"Just checking – it didn't work?" Jin asked.
"No." Tinker rubbed the heels of her hand into her eyes.
"Well, you better think of something else, Scarecrow." Esme
said. "We only have fuel for one more burn."
* * *
"How's it going?" The tengu Ushi asked. Tinker was finding
that while the humans treated her with slight condescension after
the initial novelty wore off, the tengu regarded her with odd mix
of awe and affection. The ratio of worship versus familial
warmth seemed to be dependent on how well they knew her
father. Either way, they kept seeking her out, wanting to know if
she was comfortable, or needed anything. It was driving her to
distraction.
"I'm still thinking." Thinking she needed to find a hiding
place. "We're at about two hundred miles above Elfhome's
surface, crossing over Spell Stones in Giza
around eighteen miles per second. The reach of the
Spell Stones are one mei, which is approximately one
thousand miles, which means that theoretically we're within their
reach for about a minute and a half."
"Why are they important?"
"They're a source of a lot of magic. If I could pull on them,
then I could use the magic to trigger the spell."
She covered her eyes to think. Apparently Ushi took the cue
that he was distracting her; when she opened her eyes again, he
was gone. Too bad all her problems didn't solve themselves so
neatly.
Why couldn't she call the spell stones? They were in range,
more than a minute, nearly two, and a call took less than one.
Something had to be interfering with the call. Was it that there
wasn't enough ambient magic to fuel the initial call? Tinker ran
her hand across the wall of the ship, focusing on her magic sense.
She could feel the latent magic. It was as strong as a ley line, but
with a strange texture. It was like the difference between silk and
wool. Magic on Elfhome flowed, smooth and quick. The magic
here buzzed with static. If the call was suppose to be resonance
of magic across the DNA signature of the domana, then
perhaps that chaotic nature of the magic on the ship was creating
too much static to that call.
Perhaps if she could filter the background magic to one
frequency – oh, gods – how the hell did she do
that? She groaned and pulled at her hair. The sekasha had
magic stored in the beads woven into their hair which guaranteed
that if they were in a magic poor area, they still could trigger
their shields and have a few minutes of protection. She never
examined them but knew in essence that they were a metal ball,
insulated with glass that acted like her power sinks. She believed
that storing the magic in a "clean" enough medium would reduce
the static. So, she should be able to use a sink just like they used
the beads. The problem probably would be eliminating the
background magic so only the stored magic was active.
Wait, if she modified the Reinhold's spell based on
Impatience's theorems, she might be able to trigger magic
equivalence to a wide-scale electromagnetic pulse. It would
basically clean the slate. The danger would be that it wasn't only
on the magic wavelength, but included the electronics of the ship.
She could accidentally kill all the computers maintaining the
ship's life supports. That would be bad.
But if she wiped out the build up, and then used one
shielded source to do a call on the Wind Clan Spell stones
– would that be enough magic to trigger the jump? It
might. Too bad she couldn't pull from a second set...
Or could she? She had felt the Stone Clan magic. She had
watched Forest Moss call on the Stone Clan's spell stones. Did
she remember the hand positions and vocalization? Yes, she was
sure.
She was nearly quivering now with possibilities. If she could
pull on both stones, at once – wait—at
once—that kind of meant at the same moment. Since the
vocalization was different she couldn't do both. She wished she
could pace. She thought better pacing. She settled for bouncing
between the walls, flying through the air.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa!" Jin suddenly caught her, and brought
her to a stand still. "You're going to hurt yourself doing that."
"I can't say two things at once! I considered sampling the
resonance, but I suspect that the genetic key equates to vibrations
in the quantum nature of magic – not that I know that for
sure – and certain I'm at a loss as to how to test that
theory. There isn't time for me to invent a device that can sample
how the magic interplays with molecular level, or the equipment
we probably need to recreate that resonance. And according to all
my last dream, resonance was the key to everything. And if
getting home isn't the full ball of wax –"
"Shhhhhh." Jin put his finger to his lips.
She frowned at him and then put her finger over his lips.
"Do that again."
"Tinker, listen."
"No, do the 'shhh' thing again."
"Shhhh." Jin repeated and then said, with her finger still in
place. "We're picking up the radio from
Pittsburgh
again. They say that Malice is attacking
Oakland
."
"I need to get home. And I think I know how."
* * *
True Flame drew Wolf aside to speak quietly with him.
"You and I have the only attack spells that have a hope of hurting
Malice. We need to pair off with the Stone Clan. They'll provide
defense while we focus on attack. Which do you want? Forest Moss or Earth Son?"
The mad one or the male that hated him? Both had good
cause to see him dead. If they were wise, they would hold their
political maneuverings until after the dragon was dead. Where
Forest Moss lacked sanity, Earth Son lacked political savvy;
Wolf did not think either was rational enough for wisdom. While
he trusted Jewel Tears to defend the enclaves, he was not sure he
could entrust his safety to her. From True Flame's perspective,
however, Jewel Tears' youth made her unfit material for the front
line, so it was a moot point.
"I rather not stake my life – and the lives of my
people—on the Stone Clan." Wolf spoke the blunt truth.
"I realize that." True Flame said. "But we will need both
hands to our most powerful attack spells, which means no
shield."
"In that case, I don't want to take Hands into this battle. I do
not want to leave them at the mercy of the Stone Clan."
True Flame nodded. "That would be wise."
"I'll take Earth Son." When faced two evils, Wolf would
rather deal with the known.
* * *
When True Flame announced the pairing, Earth Son shook
his head.
"I do not like this pairing. Forest Moss will go with Wolf."
"You will go with Wolf."
"I see reason for the pairing, and as clan head I should be
with you."
"I have given the choice of partners to Wolf since he is in
disadvantage," True Flame said. "We don't have time for this.
You are to pair with Wolf."
Thorne Scratch stepped forward to murmur in Earth Son's
ear. The Stone Clan domou cast a dark look at his First
and then smoothed his face to the unreadable mask of court.
Wolf wondered what Thorne had to say to Earth Son.
"So my mewling infant of a cousin, I swear that was the last
time that you'll twist matters to get an unfair advantage."
* * *
Clouds boiled across the sky. Wolf could sense a magical
shifting of the winds, as if someone called them with a spell.
"I think the dragon is coming."
"Wolf." Storm held out something. "This goes in your ear.
It's like the walkie-talkie but smaller. Nagarou wanted
you to have it. You should be able to use it without it interfering
with your magic – I tested it with my shield."
Wolf took the small bud of plastic. "How does it –"
Storm fitted it into Wolf's ear. "Nagarou has gone to
act as a spotter with the NSA. He is in the Cathedral. He will talk
to you."
"Windwolf, this is Oilcan." The young man's stated calmly
in Wolf's ear. "The dragon is in south east
Oakland
, at the intersection of Bates
Street
and Boulevard of the Allies. It's seems to be
leveling houses."
Which meant it was less than a mile away.
Wolf did a wide range scry and caught the passage of
something large in that area. Earth Son finished his spell and as
he shook his head, Wolf lost the scry on the dragon.
"This way," Wolf started to walk.
Forbes Avenue
was a major street in Oakland
with multiple lanes leading from the downtown out
to the Rim. The EIA had stopped traffic in the city, erecting
barriers. To his right, at the center of its lush lawn, was the
towering Cathedral of Learning with Oilcan at its summit. To his
left was the massive stone Carnegie museum.
"Tell me how to get to Bates," Wolf said.
"Go through that parking lot your left." Oilcan started into
the directions.
True Flame indicated that he would continue down Forbes Avenue
, following his scry.
The boil of clouds had darkened to angry gray, with streaks
of black where thunderheads were starting to build. When Wolf
reached the top of Bates Street
and looked down the hill it climbed, he saw that the
shield around the massive dragon created a miasma that was
forming the clouds. He understood now why the humans thought
his lightening would be able to strike – it was the perfect
lightening weather. Cloaked by his shields, Malice moved within
the misty darkness, showing only flashes of himself.
"Call your shields," Wolf told Earth Son. "Keep him back,
otherwise the lightening will arc to us."
Remember, you can't trust Earth Son, Wolf thought to
himself, and called on the winds in order to summon his
lightening.
The darkness shifted, as if Malice had turned, and the gleam
of his eyes appeared in the miasma and then vanished.
"He's shifting to your right." Oilcan's voice was flat with the
effort to keep the information concise. "He stopped just around
the corner, behind the brick house."
Wolf didn't know how Oilcan could tell from his perch
above the miasma but Wolf knew the humans had their ways.
Magic thrummed around him, ready to be used. He shifted
through his call lightening spell. His right hand primed the
clouds as his left hand readied the ground. Magic flooded the
street on a hot wave of air that flared out his duster. The hairs on
his arms lifted as the magic shifted into potential. He felt it reach
critical point and he brought his hands together, aiming the
channel through which the lightening would run. The faint leader
flashed downward out of the belly of the clouds, and then the
return stroke leapt from behind the brick, up to meet the leader
with a deafening clap of thunder. The blinding column of light
flared the dark miasma to white haze, and the thunder rumbled as
the stroke climbed up into the sky.
Malice roared in pain and anger. The lightening licked the
sky, as leader and return stroke danced back and forth over the
open channel.
"He's coming at you!" Oilcan said.
"Keep him back!" Wolf shouted at Earth Son and started
another call.
Earth Son locked into place, both hands set into shields. He
was holding a force wall set half a block around them and
another shield wrapped tight around himself. The lightening
flared again and again. Wolf could feel the thunder in his bones.
Malice stepped through the brick house, coiling like a
ghost snake. His eyes gleamed blood red. Down Malice's left
flank was a massive smoking wound.
Wolf felt twin spikes of magic flash through the area and a
moment later a fire strike bloomed around the ghost Malice. The
dragon ignored the flames, rushing toward Earth Son's force
wall. Wolf focused on the growing potential, waiting for it to hit
the critical point. He could only cast the spell, though, if Earth
Son kept the dragon at a distance.
The lightening died and darkness closed in around them.
"He's through your shield!" Oilcan cried. "He's through your
shield!"
Malice must have stepped through Earth Son's shield the
same way he had walked through the house. There was no time
for Wolf to change to spells.
"Earth Son, cover me damn you!"
In the dark, the ghost Malice was a presence felt, not seen or
heard, bearing down on him. A fire flare went off, lighting the
area. Malice loomed over them, transparent as smoke. As the
dragon snapped into solid form, a shield wrapped around Wolf.
Forest Moss was protecting him.
The dragon struck him. The shield held, but the ground
underneath didn't. The pavement under his feet lifted, and he was
airborne.
He had a dozen heartbeats to realize that Forest Moss had
been able to save him from the blow, but that he wouldn't be
wholly protected at the landing. And then he hit.
"Windwolf! Windwolf!" Oilcan shouted over the radio.
"He's still after you! Can you hear me! Malice is coming for
you!"
Pain shot up from Wolf's right hand. Hissing, he looked
down and found his fingers bent at impossible angles. He cursed,
hunching over his hand. He could attack or defend, but not both
now.
"Windwolf?" Oilcan called to him again.
"I hear you."
"The oni are attacking the dreadnaught."
Wolf cursed. "Get a message to True Flame. Tell him to
deal with the oni. I'll keep Malice busy."
* * *
A backup source for magic was shielded, the spells were
printed off and floated in place, the computers were turned off,
and the crew was gathered around her. She cast the magical
magnetic pulse spell and it flashed through her like a cold wind,
leaving her feeling strangely empty. With sudden panic, she
realized that her body might be a living computer.
Oh gods, I hope that didn't destroy my ability to call the
stones!
Esme powered up the workstation beside her. "Well, it didn't
kill our computers. We're coming up to spell stone range in two
minutes."
Tinker triggered the first spell that pumped the filtered
stored magic out. It was a relief to feel the magic start to pool
around her feet. Tinker had told the astronauts they needed
silence, and they had taken her seriously. They watched now,
silent, fearful. More than one had their eyes closed, and lips
moving in prayer.
Esme indicated that they were at the one minute mark.
Tinker made sure her fingers on both hands were in the
correct position, and then stood, waiting.
Esme held up her fingers then and counted the last ten
seconds down silently. When she nodded, Jin – with
Tinker's right hand nearly touching his mouth – and Xiao
Chen—on Tinker's left – pronounced the
activations words for the Wind and Stone Clans.
Magic flooded through the connection. Tinker let it run for
thirty seconds by Esme's silent count. She could feel the purity of
it, but the edges were starting to tangle, caught by the magnetic
field of the ship. She dropped her hands and the tengu went silent.
The activation word for the dragon spell was a simple. She
spoke it into the tense silence.
The universe went dark and formless.
Gravity tumbled Tinker and the others into a pile of bodies.
The "floor" now formed walls up to the matching bulkhead
ceiling. They untangled themselves.
"It worked." By the tone of her voice, Xiao Chen hadn't
expected it to.
Tinker wanted to say "Of course" but the way her life had
been going, the mind boggled as to all the ways it might have
screwed up. "We're on a planet but which one?"
Esme glanced upwards to the window far over their heads.
"Don't know yet."
"We landed well." Jin headed up the ladder. Tinker followed.
"That was not a landing." Esme called after them.
"We're on the ground," Tinker said. "Engines down, bridge
up. That's good enough for me."
"You do realize that this ship is nearly a half mile long?"
Esme said.
Oops.
Jin reached the window. He turned his head this way and
that, studying the view intently, before announcing. "Trees.
Nothing but trees."
"It's not Onihida or Earth then," Tinker said. "I hope its
Elfhome, or we ended up someplace totally new."
"That was the point of the colonization program as far as the
humans were concerned." Someone said from below.
"There's an airlock at mid-section." Jin kept climbing
upwards. "We might be able to get a better view."
Tinker only gave the window a passing glance. The trees
looked like ironwoods but it was difficult to tell. They were ten
or twenty feet above the canopy. If this was Turtle Creek, then
she just erected the tallest structure in
Pittsburgh
– for however long it remained standing.
* * *
The airlock opened to summer dusk. There was a narrow
ridge that wrapped around the ship. Tinker carefully picked her
way around and found what she most wanted to see –
Pittsburgh
. Clouds boiled over Oakland
, but no lightening flashed from them. Was that a
good sign or bad? Had Malice killed Windwolf?
They had "landed" in Turtle Creek, neatly replacing the
Ghostlands with the massive bulk of the ship's engines. The
Dahe Hoa would have taken out the center section of the
Westinghouse
Bridge
if it hadn't already fallen. The remaining spans of
the bridge butted up against the side of the ship just ten feet
down from the ridge she stood on.
And like one of her impossible dreams, Pony stood on the
bridge, looking up at her. He lifted up his arms and motioned for
her to jump to him. Relief flooded through her like a weakness.
Her legs started to buckle, so she leapt to him.
Pony caught her and pulled her close. "Domi."
"Oh, Pony, I was so scared that you were killed." She hugged
him tightly, burying her face into the warmth of his neck,
smelling his scent.
"I thought I lost you." His voice was husky with emotion.
She kissed him on the strong line of his jaw. He turned his
head and captured her mouth with his and kissed her deeply. He
tasted of the enclave peaches; the sweetness poured through her
like warm honey; she clung to him, letting the feeling push out
the fear and worry.
Tinker realized that Stormsong was beside her. She burned
with sudden embarrassment at the way she was acting. Knowing
that neither elf would see it as wrong didn't help.
She broke the kiss but couldn't bring herself to let go of
Pony. With one hand, she reached out to Stormsong to pull her
into a three-way huddle. "And you too. I was worried sick about
both of you."
"What? I don't get a kiss?" Stormsong teased.
Tinker laughed and kissed her quickly on the lips. Then
holding them close, she whispered. "Is Windwolf all right?
Where is he? What's happened?"
"We can not get close enough to the museum to look for
Wolf," Pony said. "Malice, though, appears to be searching for
something, so we think that Wolf has eluded him."
"The oni has stolen the dreadnaught and taken it downriver,"
Stormsong said. "Our greatest fear has been that while Malice
kept us busy, the oni would push an army through the
Ghostlands."
"Well, I stopped that." Tinker gave a weak laugh.
As Pony and Stormsong updated her, Cloudwalker, Rainlily
and Little Egret joined them at the end of the bridge. She greeted
them with hugs. It felt good to be surrounded by her people.
The sekasha shifted to face crewmembers picking
their way around the edge of the ship. It was Esme with Jin and
handful of the tengu crew members.
"It's okay. I've taken the tengu as my beholden."
"Are you sure that's wise?" Pony asked.
"Yes."
"Okay." She took a deep cleansing breath. She pressed her
palms to her eyes and considered current obstacles and possible
tools. If Malice was hunting Windwolf, then they would have to
hunt Malice. The EMP spell that she used to clear the ship should
work on Malice. They needed, however, a big gun to take
advantage of it – a very big gun. She could think of only
one place they could get such a gun. "Okay, we're going to need
the dreadnaught."
"What's a dreadnaught?" Jin asked.
"I suppose you could call it an attack helicopter on steroids,"
Tinker said. "It's more a flying fortress. It's armed with a variety
of heavy guns, from machine guns to cannons, and can carry a
large number of troops into any location. The elves built them
with magic in mind – so they're very low tech, and thus
extremely clunky."
"And you want us to take it out?" Jin asked.
"No," Tinker said. "We need it to take on Malice."
"Take it over?" Stormsong said. "Are you fucking insane?"
She held up her hands to ward off Stormsong's objections.
"While we were at Aum Renau, I got inside of the dreadnaughts.
I think it was part of me being the pivot – they didn't
know what I would need to stop the oni, so they told me anything
I wanted to know – full access to everything."
"Yes," Stormsong hissed, her eyes going soft and vague.
"The pivot keeps turning until the door is fully shut."
Tinker shivered. "Oh, that creeps me out. I took detailed
notes and I scanned them into my datapad – I was
thinking of making a few for the Wind Clan."
"You would," Jin murmured.
"The big question is – do we have anyone that
knows how to fire the guns?" Tinker expected that they would
need to track down some the Fire Clan crew. Surprisingly, all the
sekasha pointed to themselves.
"We were all taught how when we were in Aum Renau,"
Pony explained. "After you showed an interest in the airship."
"They didn't miss a trick with me being the pivot, did they?
How the hell did I miss—never mind, don't answer that."
"We will need a pilot," Stormsong said. "The oni killed the
dreadnaught's crew."
"How close is it to Earth's aircraft?" Esme had worked her
way down to the bridge. She spoke Elvish, which surprised
Tinker and also made her realize that Jin had been speaking it
too.
"The controls are modeled after a helicopter," Tinker said.
"I'm your pilot then." Esme noted Tinker's surprise. "I'm the
best fucking pilot you're going to find. It's the magic. On
Elfhome, I can fly blindfolded." Tinker remembered Stormsong's
ability with the hoverbike and realized that Esme probably had
the same type of talent. "Taking over controls mid-air might be
tricky – but should be a piece of cake compared to some
of the NASA simulations."
"You know," Durrack called out of the gathering twilight
announcing the NSA's arrival. "We're going to have to reclassify
you to force of nature."
"Oh good." Tinker said. "We're going to do an assault on the
dreadnaught and we could use your help."
Briggs scoffed as she joined Durrack. "And she's not even
trying to be scary."
* * *
Tinker kept losing count of their numbers. They would need
a tengu to get every non-tengu up to the dreadnaught while it was
in flight. The problem was that she kept forgetting to count
herself, or she added herself to both elves and humans. It was
really starting to bug her.
"Eighteen," She hissed to herself. "Nine tengu and nine
people without wings."
While the elves and the NSA agents arranged transportation
and weapons, and the sekasha magical supplies, she and
the ship tengu gathered high tech gear.
"I found the dreadnaught," Durrack called as Jin winged her
down to the bridge. Dusk was deepening into night. "The oni
took it downriver to Shippensport and took over the nuclear
power plant."
"Without power, the humans will be crippled." Pony pointed
out the logic of the oni's attack.
As if we didn't have enough to worry about. "Did they
damage the nuclear plant?"
"No, they haven't. They just took it off the grid. EIA has
dispatched a team to take it back, but they don't have any way to
fight Malice. They're leaving him to us."
"Did you find everything?" Getting a nod, she motioned
toward the yellow delivery truck that the NSA had produced.
"Let's go."
* * *
Malice cocked head, as if listening carefully.
Suddenly there was a massive boom, loud beyond
description. A shock wave of air suddenly blasted through the
streets, and a moment later, there was an echo under foot.
What was that?
Someone looped an arm under Wolf's and pulled him to his
feet.
"Shhhh," A male hissed, and then added in English. "Don't
use magic."
The male was an Asian human. He tucked in under Wolf's
arm, supporting him.
As Malice crashed loudly through the rubble, the man
guided Wolf backwards, unhurried. Malice scanned the room,
swinging his head back and forth, as if searching for them
without seeing them. What magic was this that the man had?
A cold chill went down Wolf's back as he realized that the
male's ears were furred and pointed like a cat's. This was an oni
like Lord Tomtom. Judging by Malice's seemingly blind search,
the oni was keeping the dragon from seeing them. But why was
the oni helping Wolf?
Malice stilled and the oni froze in place. The dragon cocked
its head as if listening closely. The oni male tightened his hold on
Wolf as if worried that Wolf could act. Wolf, however, was
under no illusions as to how useless his magic was at the
moment.
The great beast grumbled, its voice like thunder, and it
sniffed deeply. The massive head turned toward them and Malice
stared long at where they stood. The oni stared back, gripping
Wolf tightly.
Was the dragon truly fooled, or was Wolf the one being
deceived? It was an uncomfortable thought – as was the
awareness that the oni had hold of his good hand, making him
totally helpless between the two.
Malice stalked forward, muttering deeply. The dragon
stopped again, now only a dozen paces from them. Malice
rumbled out, seemingly in disgust; its breath washed over them.
The oni slipped a plastic jar out of his pocket, and carefully
shook it, quietly sifting out a bright red powder. Malice sniffed
deeply again, forming runnels in the dust at their feet. The dragon
flung back its head, gave a series of deep coughing roars and
shuffled back suddenly, away from them.
The oni jerked Wolf backwards and they hurried to a
staircase at the corner of the room, and down the steps into
darkness. Behind them, Malice smashed loudly, roaring, but
Wolf couldn't tell in which direction the dragon was heading
– after them or away. In the complete darkness, they
made a series of quick turns. Either the oni could see in the
darkness or was running blind with one hand on the wall.
"What is that red powder?" Wolf asked.
"Cayenne pepper."
They turned again, and the black gave way. A grate stood
half-open to a dimly lit tunnel crowded by three pipes thick
around as an elf. The oni pulled Wolf into the tunnel and shut the
grate.
"This way," the oni male said.
The floor was curved, making walking difficult. A hundred
feet down, the tunnel joined another. Wolf knew that they
couldn't be inside the museum any more.
"What is this place?" Wolf asked.
"You ask a lot of questions."
"I like knowing where I stand."
"Yeah, nice when you can get it." The oni kept walking.
"These are the old steam tunnels that used to heat all of Oakland
."
"Who are you?"
"My name is my own to have." The oni said.
"That makes it awkward to thank you."
The oni paused to look at him. Finally, he said, "You can
call me Tommy."
"Tommy," Wolf bowed. "Thank you."
Tommy grunted as if surprised.
"You are Lord Tomtom's son?" Wolf asked.
Tommy started down the tunnel without seeing if Wolf
followed. "His bastard. Don't think that you did a disfavor to me
by killing him. Quite the opposite. I would have killed him
myself if I thought I could have gotten away with it."
"I see."
"No you don't. You have no idea. He raped my mother just
to see if he could get a human pregnant. It took him months to
get her knocked up, and kept her tied to the bedpost the entire
time. Even after I was born, he'd come to our place and beat the
snot out of both of us and rape her again, just because he could."
"Is that why you helped me?"
Tommy glanced at Wolf, ears laid back. At the next
intersection, he paused to ask quietly, "What am I?"
"You? You're an oni."
"The fuck I am. I'm a human."
"Your father—"
"Was a sadist pig." Tommy stalked off. "So my good, kind,
beat-to-death mother doesn't count, even though she contributed
half my genes, gave birth to me, and raised me to be a man? A
human man. I'm not one of them. Not that that means shit
to you elves."
Wolf had never considered that the half-oni would think of
themselves as human. How could he refute the difference that
mindset made in a person? Making Tinker an elf had not changed
her basically human outlook. If the half-oni had the capacity of
human compassion, then it had to be logical that they could be
revolted by the oni's lack of it.
"It means something to me," Wolf told Tommy.
Tommy stared at him again, as if trying to see into the inner
workings of his mind. Perhaps he could. "We know that the plan
is to kill all of us mixed blood alongside of the oni, but we're
more willing to gamble on you elves being humane than the oni."
How ironic, that both sides were looking for humanity in the
other.
"We don't want to be their slaves," Tommy continued.
"We've had thirty years of that shit."
"Then why didn't you leave? There's a full planet for you
'humans' to go to."
Tommy made a sound of disgust. "It's all so black and white
to you elves? I don't get how you can live so long and not realize
the world is full of gray. We didn't leave because we couldn't."
"Why couldn't you?"
"You can't just walk out at Shutdown. The U.N. has fences
and guards and you have to have the right papers or they throw
you in prison. And even if you get past the guards, you need a
birth certificate and social security numbers and high school
diplomas to live in United
States
. And you need money, or you're out on the
street and starving."
"And you don't have these things?"
"The oni are masters of keeping power to themselves.
They've got all the paperwork. They try to keep us from learning
how to speak and read English. They know how much money
we're making, and they'll beat we us half to death if they even
suspect we're trying to keep a little on the side. We don't know
how many oni there are in Pittsburgh
– who is a disguised oni and who isn't
– so we can't even turn to the humans for help. The oni
spy on us as much as they spy on you."
Wolf wasn't sure if Tommy was telling him the truth, but
certainly it would explain how the oni kept control of the half-
breeds. He could see ways around the oni enslavement –
until then he remembered that all the half-oni would have been
born and raised in the oni control. A child could be kept ignorant,
molded into believing it was helpless.
Tommy stopped him with a hand on his shoulder. The half-
oni's ears twitched. Wolf caught an echo of harsh voices. He
would have to accept it as real.
"There are oni ahead of us," Tommy whispered. "We can't
go this way. I can only cloud their sight and they have noses like
dogs."
Wolf nodded, and followed Tommy back to a tunnel they'd
passed before. They went through a maze of turns and up a flight
of stairs to go through another grate into a basement stacked high
with cardboard boxes. The labels indicated that the boxes once
held cans of food. Just as Wolf wondered if they still contained
their original contents, Tommy opened a door and the smell of
cooking food flooded over them.
Beyond the door was a large kitchen filled with Asians. A
low right-angled counter divided the kitchen off from the
restaurant's dining room. The long leg into the dining room was a
bakery display case filled with buns and breads.
"What are you doing here, Tommy?" One of the cooks, an
old man, asked in Mandarin as he took a tray of buns from the
oven. "Bringing him here?"
"The oni are in the steam tunnels," Tommy answered in the
same tongue.
"Ugh!" the old man grunted. "You get us all killed."
Wolf looked at the crowded kitchen. "These are all mixed
bloods?"
"No." Tommy wove through the cooks. "These are all
humans. That was my great-uncle."
A herd of children galloped into the kitchen from a back
room. Some could pass as human – might even be fully
human – but mixed in were children with horns and tails.
With cries of dismay, in ones and twos, the adults yanked the
children out of Wolf's path, leaving only one child standing
alone.
The little female looked up at him fearlessly and he knew
her. Zi.
"Hi." She cocked her head, puzzled by his presence. She had
a cookie in either hand. She held one up to him. "Do you want a
cookie?" And when he hesitated, she added. "I didn't drop it or
anything."
"Thank you." Wolf took the cookie with his left hand and
bowed slightly to her. "That is very nice of you."
"Come on." Tommy caught him by the left wrist, and said in
rough low Elvish. "If oni find you here—they kill
everyone."
"What is she doing here?" Wolf resisted being moved. He
had demanded that the little female be kept away from people
that would poison her against elves.
"No one else would take her. The humans are afraid of the
oni and the oni don't give a shit. Look at me, I'm Lord Tomtom's
son, and even I don't get a disguise to protect me."
Wolf scanned the kitchen, seeing this time that the children
were in the arms of only small-framed, battered women. There
were only two males, men made fragile by time. They used
Mandarin in their fearful cries, and it was Chinese written on the
signs posted around the room. The skin clan used this kind of
slavery – transporting women out of their homelands to
places they couldn't speak the language and then tied them down
with children.
He understood now Tommy's hate. It was the same hate that
fueled the genocide of the Skin Clan.
Tommy suddenly pushed him back against the wall. "Stay
still! I don't have my father's talent – I can't mask a
moving object from multiple watchers. They will kill
everyone if they find you here!" He glanced to his uncle.
"Mask the scent!"
The uncle opened the fridge, took out a container and flung
the contents on the grill. An eye-watering reek filled the air.
"Onions! Pepper!"
While some of the women quickly herded the children
upstairs, others took out knives and attacked onions and bright
red peppers. Tommy's focus was on the door. Moments later, it
opened, and oni warriors crowded into the restaurant. There were
a dozen large, red haired, horned males. They had war paint on
their faces and carried machine guns and swords. They snarled in
Oni, wrinkling up their noses against the assault of smell.
The leader was the tallest among them. He set four of the
warriors to watch the street and barked orders to the others.
Three warriors raided the bakery counter. The rest moved into the
kitchen and back rooms. The leader picked out a female, shoved
her face down onto one of the tables, tore away her skirt, and
forced himself into her with brutal casualness. The woman
pressed knuckles into her mouth, stifling whimpers. No one else
appeared even to notice, but Tommy locked down hard on Wolf's
good arm.
The bakery raiders stuffed their mouths and pockets and then
flung the buns to other warriors.
Outside came a deep roar from Malice echoed up the street.
"He sounds hungry." The leader spoke Mandarin so that the
humans could understand. "He's probably looking for something
to eat."
The warriors bayed with laughter and gestured at the
frightened women. "We can feed him one of these fat sluts. That
one looks like it has a fat ass."
The leader finished with the woman he was raping and
slapped her buttocks. "Yes, a nice fat ass."
Their hunger satisfied, the warriors pelted each other with
bread. The leader barked an order. The warriors gathered again at
the front of the restaurant. The last one out of the backroom,
though, was carrying a whimpering, squirming Zi.
"Look what they have." The warrior held the little female
out by the back of her shirt.
The leader took her by her throat. He turned and shook the
child at the human like rag doll. "What is this doing here?"
"The EIA—" Uncle stuttered. "They imprisoned her
crazy mother."
The leader grunted. "If the elves find this here, they'll know
that this place belongs to us."
"We'll move her." Uncle held out his arms but moved no
closer to the warriors.
Without word or warning the oni leader broke Zi's neck.
Everyone had told Wolf about the oni savageness –
but he hadn't comprehended it fully until too late. He gasped out
in shock as the oni leader dropped the child's limp body onto the
floor.
"Malice is coming. Throw this out onto the street for him to
eat."
Wolf breathed in and anger burned through him like fire.
Nothing mattered but to see these monsters dead. He jerked his
arm free of Tommy, summoned a force strike and slammed it
into the back of the oni leader. The front of the restaurant
exploded out as the strike drove the oni male across the street.
He made a bloody star on the far building. The warriors
scrambled for cover, pulling out their machine guns.
"Hold still you stupid elf fuck!" Tommy growled.
Wolf braced himself as he flicked through a fire burst. The
oni bullets chewed through the other side of the restaurant.
Apparently between Wolf's sudden attack and Tommy clouding
their minds, the oni were disoriented to where Wolf was really
standing. The fire burst went off, igniting three of the oni into
columns of flame.
Wolf slammed a force strike at the last oni. A second bloody
star joined the first.
"What the fuck was that?" Tommy screamed. "She was dead!
This does nothing but make you feel better! All those women and
children are now dead because you had to be a hero!"
Someone as young as the half-oni couldn't understand that
to be immortal was to have forever to regret. Wolf knew if he
had let the oni walk away unpunished, he would not be able to
live with himself. But Tommy was right. He brought danger
down on the rest – the human mothers and half-oni
children.
"I'll see that they're safe until this is done."
"Yeah, that will make the kids safe! Until you kill them for
no other reason than their mothers were raped by the wrong
species."
"I give you my word – they will not be harmed."
Tommy caught himself from saying anything else, and stood,
fists balled, panting.
"Windwolf?" Oilcan murmured in Wolf's ear. "If you're the
one that just took out the Chang's restaurant, Malice is coming
your way."
Wolf glanced out in the street where the oni still burned like
massive candles. "Malice is coming. Get the others. We need to
move to someplace safe."
Tommy's cat ears flicked. "Oh fuck. He is." Tommy went off
to gather the women and children.
Wolf gazed again the wreckage he was leaving behind.
Tinker was rubbing off on him.
Chapter 22: End Of The Rainbow
Briggs drove in the front while the rest
of them sat in the back. Tinker had grabbed a flex screen from the
ship and now spread it out on the floor. Downloading the
dreadnaught's layout and defenses, they planned the assault.
"The dreadnaught's biggest weakness is
that it wasn't built with an aerial attack in mind. It's like a turtle,
with lots of service hatches down in through its shell. Also it
tends to be blind in the butt. I was going to fix that with a turret
on top."
"Prince True Flame said that it was
useless fighting the dragon because it couldn't defend from
attacks above." Pony said.
"That's true," Tinker said. "So we're
going to have to kill Malice before he has a chance to close."
"Oh, fun." Esme muttered.
"But the airship is vulnerable to the
tengu," Tinker said. "I think if we fly up behind it, we can
approach it unseen – but it leaves a very choppy wake."
"We can handle it, domi." Jin waved off
the worry.
Domi. That drove her commitment to
them home and left her a little breathless. I'm responsible for
them – and I'm taking them straight into danger. But what
recourse did she have? Just as the elves were not about to let the
oni live, the oni couldn't leave any of the elves alive either.
"We need three things." Tinker forced
herself to focus on the plan and not how badly it might end. "We
need to keep the ship in the air, pick where it goes, and fire the
cannons. So, that means, we need to secure the fore and aft engine
compartments, the cannon turrets, and the bridge."
Pony gazed at the plan for a moment,
and then pointed to the access hatch nearest to the rear which
opened to the aft engine compartment. "We'll enter here. Once
we've secured it, we'll break into teams. These tengu are good
with machines – yes?" Getting a nod from Tinker, Pony
continued. "There are three doors to this area including the hatch,
so Little Erget and four tengu will stay."
Jin assigned Xiao Chen and two of the
other tengu to the aft team.
"The rest of us will then move to the
fore engine compartment and take it." Pony traced a route across
the top of the airship to the forward-most service hatch. "Four
doors open to this area, but we'll control what's beyond these two
doors. Rainlily and four of the tengu will hold this position. We
split here. Domi and Cloudwalker will take the bridge with Esme,
Jin and Durrack – which should be lightly manned and
will have only one door not controlled by us. Stormsong and
Briggs will come with me. We'll take the main cannon turret
– which will be heavily manned."
Tinker explained how she planned to kill
Malice. "Now when this spell goes off, you're going to lose your
shields and it might take a minute or two before normal level of
magic is restored." She warned her Hand. "Your beads should be
protected from the spell effects, so if you save the power in them,
you can recast your shields immediately."
The sekasha nodded, indicating that they
understood.
Durrack pressed his hand to his ear and
listened to it intently. "Okay. Understand." He knocked on the
partition to the driver's cabin. "Briggs? Where are we?"
"Nearly to
McKees
Rocks
Bridge," Briggs
answered.
"The dreadnaught is here." Durrack
tapped the map just down river
of Neville's Island, and then
ran a finger up the Ohio River towards
Pittsburgh. "They're following the river."
"If we're carrying others, we won't be
able to climb fast." Jin said. "We should start high, like the edge
of a cliff or on top of a building."
"They'll come over the bridge," Pony
pointed to the bridge. "We can wait on the supports. The bridge
will give us cover, and then the tengu can take us aloft."
"That will work." Jin said.
* * *
Nearly a mile and a half long, the McKees
Rocks
Bridge stretched across the
wide, flat Ohio River valley in a
complex string of structures—more a chain of bridges
than one single bridge. The part that actually sat above the river
was a seven hundred plus foot trussed arch bridge. On both sides
of the elegant steel curve were two massive stone pylons. They
hid the truck in the shadows of the western pylons.
The cloudy night was on their
side—it cloaked them in darkness.
"I hear it," Jin put out a hand to Tinker.
"I'll take you up."
The other eight tengu paired off with the
humans and elves.
It was short spring up to the arching
steel. They crouched down, tucking themselves in the crossbeams.
The roar of the dreadnaught grew
louder.
"There! See it?" Jin whispered.
Twin searchlights appeared in the
distance, slashing downwards. The cockpit was a pale gleam
between them. The dreadnaught moved up the broad valley,
keeping between the hills that flanked the Ohio River
. The searchlights played back and forth in a narrow
arc, directly in front of the airship.
Durrack glanced up river toward the
darkened city and then back to the oncoming dreadnaught.
"They're probably following the river because it's the most
recognizable landmark they can see with the power out."
"Lucky for us," Jin said. "They're going
slow so they don't hit anything. That will make it easier for us to
get to it."
In the dark, the true size of the
dreadnaught was lost. It was a wedge of darkness behind the
searchlights' brilliance. They crouched in the bridge's shadows as
the gleaming spots moved across the shimmer of the water,
encountered the bridge, and played up and over the network of
steel struts. Tinker held still, heart hammering, trying not to think
about the machine gun cannons. Her luck on this kind of thing
had been so bad lately.
The cockpit slid overhead, and the belly
of the dreadnaught followed, the air throbbing. Ushi with Pony
leapt upwards, the rustle of his black wings spreading lost under
the rumble of the dreadnaught's engines. As he took his first
downstroke, Xiao Chen with Stormsong vaulted after him. Niu
and Zan rose together. Tinker lost sight of them in the
dreadnaught's eclipse.
Jin took hold of Tinker and murmured,
"Hang on." And then they were airborne.
Amazingly, in some strange heart
stopping manner, winging upwards was fun. In her flights with
Riki, she had been so concerned about their end destination that
she never noticed the thrill of flying. Did it say something about
her that as long as she knew where they were going, she could
now enjoy the ride?
Jin landed them between Ushi and Xiao
Chen.
"I think I envy you." Stormsong
murmured to Xiao Chen.
Tinker smothered a laugh, and
whispered. "Yeah, once you get used to it, it's fairly cool."
"It's wood!" Jin whispered, running his
hand over the hull's surface.
"Of course," Tinker whispered. "These
are elves."
Her Hand activated their shields. Pony
asked a question with blade talk. Getting a nod from the others,
he opened the hatch and the sekasha dropped down into dim
engine room.
* * *
She had never seen the elves really
fighting before. Not a full Hand against hordes, unconcerned for
her protection because she was safe behind her own shield. She
hadn't expected it to be so beautiful. Their swordplay became a
fluid dance with the oni seeming like paper cutouts instead of real
opponents. The dreadnaught, though, was buzzing like a kicked
beehive, and they spread themselves thin.
On the bridge, Tinker used her shield to
back the oni warriors away from the door. Cloudwalker slipped
around her on the right and Durrack went left.
"Don't shoot any of the instruments!"
Tinker had her pistol out, but was afraid to fire. She rarely hit
what she aimed at and all the controls were vital to their success.
"I – don't – miss."
Durrack picked his shots with deliberation. "Someone get the
pilot before he crashes us!"
Two warriors blocked Tinker.
"Esme, the pilot." Jin spun on one heel
and kicked one of the warriors out of Tinker's path. Tinker hedged
sideways, covering Esme as her mother scrambled into the low
cockpit.
The ship banked hard to the left, rushing
toward the hills that lined the valley, Esme struggled with the oni
pilot.
"Tinker!" Esme cried. "We need to lift!
Pull up on the collective."
Dropping her shield, Tinker scrambled
into the cockpit and grabbed hold of the collective control stick
and pulled up. The engines roared louder and they started to
climb.
"Tinker!" Jin shouted warning, and she
ducked instinctively.
Bullets sprayed the windshield just over
her head. A dozen bullet holes reduced the Plexiglas to a haze of
cracked glass.
The oni pilot kicked Tinker backwards.
She hit the cracked windshield; it held for a moment then gave
way. She screamed, flailing and caught hold of the pilot's leg as
she fell. Her weight jerked him half out the cockpit. He grabbed
the edge of the cockpit before he fell the full way out. They
dangled far above the last mile of the I-279 before it ended at the
Rim; the oni pilot holding onto the airship and Tinker onto his
leg.
"Jin!" Esme shouted, struggling to keep
the airship aloft and reach for the oni pilot at the same time. "I
can't reach her!"
Jin shouted; his words resonated against
Tinker's senses with magic.
The oni pilot clawed at the edge of
cockpit, trying to pull himself up. He grasped the windshield
wiper and started to pull himself up.
The wiper snapped and he fell –
and Tinker with him.
Tinker screamed and Esme –
staring down at her – cried out in dismay.
Then someone caught Tinker's wrist, and
she was jerked hard in both directions.
"Let go of him!" Keiko cried, flapping
madly. "I can't catch you both; we'll all fall."
"No! No! No!" The pilot wailed,
dangling upside down by Tinker's grip on his leg. But she wasn't
strong enough to hold his weight by one hand. He slipped out of
her hold and plunged downward again. The clouds had slid away
and moonlight gleamed silver on the pavement below. The pilot
dwindled to doll-size but still hit the road a loud carrying thud, a
sudden burst of wet on the gray pavement.
"Shit, shit, shit!" Keiko cried as they
continued to slowly fall. "You're still too heavy."
Xiao Chen swooped down and tried to
intercept them.
Keiko hissed in anger, bringing up her
razor-sheathed feet. "She's charmed by the Chosen
's blood. She's not to be hurt!"
"You heard her," Riki glided in. "She's
charmed by my line!"
"It's only Xiao—" Tinker yelped
as Keiko suddenly passed her to Riki in a mid-air fling.
"I got you." Riki said it as if this was
supposed to be comforting. "Keiko!"
The tengu female was heading for the
airship. "I was called! He's here! He called!"
"Keiko!" Riki shouted, chasing after the
teenager. "Wait! Damn it, Tinker, who is on that dreadnaught?"
"Your uncle Jin."
"That's not possi—" Riki gasped
as they swept back in through the shattered windshield and he saw
Jin. "Uncle Jin?"
Jin reached out and pulled Tinker out of
Riki's hold. "Are you okay?"
"I'm fine." Tinker fought the need to
cling to Riki, Jin, or Durrack. I'm safe inside. I'm safe inside.
"What the hell is going on? Where did
you come from?" Riki gazed in stunned amazement at the tengu,
elves and humans.
"We got her. She's safe." Durrack had
found the speaker tubes to the gun turret and engine rooms.
Cloudwalker and Keiko were holding the door that boomed with
the oni's attempts to break it down. "Tinker, your cousin says that
Malice has Windwolf pinned down in
Oakland. If you don't want to be a widow,
we better get going."
It took Tinker a second to realize that
Durrack had received the last part via his earbud radio and not the
speakertube. Yeah, yeah, she was fine.
"What?" Riki cried as "You're taking on
Malice? Are you nuts?"
"I've got a plan." Tinker wondered if that
sounded anywhere reassuring. She couldn't stop trembling. "Do
we have the guns?"
"The Storms are holding the guns."
Durrack meant Storm Horse and Stormsong.
Tinker hugged herself, panting, trying to
remember said plan. She was missing something important.
"Oilcan? Wait? Where's Impatience? I don't want to take him out
with this spell—he'll revert to a wild animal and kill
anyone near him."
"He's in the Cathedral with your
cousin," Durrack said.
"Okay, I really don't want Impatience in
the spell range then." Tinker thought a moment. "Tell Oilcan to
put distance between him and Impatience – just to be on
the safe side. Esme, let's do a strafing run on Malice."
"And NASA thought it covered all
possible flight simulations." Esme banked the ship hard back
toward city.
Clouds continued to clear, and the city
resolved out of the darkness. Their shadow ran on ahead of them.
Esme climbed out of the river valley, and crested over the hill
district to the flat plain of Oakland.
"Where is Malice?" Tinker asked
Durrack.
"See that dark cloud?" Durrack pointed
at billow of darkness that looked like smoke. "That's him."
"Oh, good, he's at least a half mile from
the Cathedral." Tinker started to unload her bag, setting up for the
spell. "Let's get his attention. Esme, get ready to run. Pony, can
you hear me?"
"Yes, domi."
"Shoot Malice with one of the cannons.
He's going to come fast, so get ready with the other cannon. Fire
the second cannon when my spell takes your shield down."
"Yes, domi," Pony said.
Esme had edged sideways so that they
hung over Fifth Avenue where it spilled down the hill toward the
flood plain of Uptown. The cannon thundered, deafening at the
close range. The shell whistled away. It hit the edge of the miasma
and the black deepened. Something stirred in the darkness.
Massive eyes gleamed at the heart of the cloud and then Malice
uncoiled and lifted from the ground.
"Here he comes!" Tinker cried.
Esme scuttled the airship backwards,
roaring out over Uptown, keeping the cannons pointed toward the
onrushing dragon. "Come on, come on."
Suddenly Malice dove into the ground.
"Where the fuck did he go?" Esme cried.
"He's phased!" Durrack shouted. "He can
move through solid objects!"
"Oh, you've got to be shitting me!" Esme
flung the airship forward and they raced up Fifth Avenue, into the heart
of Oakland.
"Where are you going?" Tinker cried.
"You said run." Esme put all power into
forward motion, tilting the airship to fit down the narrow places
of Fifth Avenue
. They lost something – hopefully not vital
– as they took out one the red lights over the street.
"Not this way!" Tinker cried, pointing at
the towering Cathedral that stood over
Oakland, where Oilcan was with
Impatience.
"It had to be this way!" Esme snapped.
Tinker looked behind them. Malice rose
out of the ground where they would have been if they had
continued toward Uptown. "Okay, this is good."
"He'll come after us," Esme said. "Trust
me. When you run, it's like you put out a sign that says 'free
lunch.' It's an easy way to make even the smartest ones get
stupid."
Perhaps she was right; Malice was
giving chase, coiling through the air like a snake in water. Esme
banked around the curve of the Hill, nearly clipping the top of
houses.
"It's like trying to drag race in a
Volkswagen." Esme complained.
Tinker had been watching the Cathedral
dwindle behind them. She realized now that they were heading
into downtown, the most densely populated area in
Pittsburgh.
"No, not this way either!" Tinker pointed
away from the city. "I don't want to open fire in the middle of the
city!"
"I don't either." Esme said as they nearly
skimmed across the Veterans
Bridge and ducked
into the forest of skyscrapers. "But we need time for me to get
turned around and facing him."
They wove through the buildings, the
gleam of the cockpit reflecting in the glass walls as they streaked
by.
"Okay, keep going west," Tinker pointed
out west just in case Esme didn't know. "After you get out of the
city, try to get Malice south of us, up against Mount
Washington. It's a blank slate. We can open fire on
him there."
Esme suddenly squeaked in surprise and
banked hard to the right. A moment later Malice came through a
skyscraper and fire jetted out of his mouth. The night went bright
with the flame, the light reflecting off the canyon of glass around
them.
"Oh shit!" Esme banked again, somehow
dodging both the flame and the PPG tower. She clipped the side
of the Fifth Avenue Place. "Oh shit—we lost our front
right props." She fought the ship to keep it from careening out of
control. "No one said anything about him breathing fire!"
"He's a dragon," Jin said. "That's what
they do!"
"We've got a fire up here!" One of the
tengu shouted from the front engine room.
"We're running out of city." Durrack
warned.
"I know, I know, I know." Tinker was
loath to open fire in the city, but if Malice took the airship down,
they'll lose the guns and then they'll all die. Point
Park was going to
have to do. "Get ready people!"
Esme wrenched the airship about as they
roared over the empty expense of the park. Malice flew at them.
Tinker watched him come, spell in hand, waiting for him to get
clear of the city.
When he cleared the highway dividing
city from the park, she cast the spell.
The coldness flashed over her. The
wings vanished from the tengu's back. Cloudwalker's shield
winked out. The miasma of Malice's shield vanished and he fell,
twisting madly as he plunged out of the sky. The cannons roared.
One of the shells caught him in the left eye, blasting his head
backwards.
"I'm losing it!" Esme shouted as the
dreadnaught slid sideways toward the massive Fort
Pitt
Bridge. "We're
going down!"
Tinker called for her shields and nothing
happened. The ambient magic in the area hadn't recovered from
the flux spell yet. "Oh shit."
And then they hit the bridge.
* * *
Wolf braced himself for the worse. He
trusted that Tinker would somehow kill the dragon, but he was
afraid she leapt one too many times into the void. As he hurried
toward the downed dreadnaught, his fears only deepened. The
airship had struck the first span of the twin decked bridge and then
crashed into Monongahela River. The
crumbled wreckage laid half in and half of the water. Human
emergency crews gathered on the shore and on the water, trucks
and boats with bright flashing lights.
Wolf pushed through the tightest knot of
people find Little Egret lying unconscious on the pavement. A
pair of soaked tengu were giving the young sekasha CPR. As he
watched, Little Egret coughed and sputtered weakly back to life.
Oilcan had told him that the astronaut tengu were helping Tinker
kill the dragon. He assumed that these two were part of that crew.
"Where's Tinker?" Wolf asked the two
tengu.
"We were in the aft engine room." The
tengu female indicated the submerged section of the dreadnaught
and then made a vague motion at the part smashed up against the
bridge. "She was in the cockpit."
He left a healer from the hospice with
Little Egret and moved on, working his way around the airship.
One section was still burning, and the humans were frantically
trying to douse out the flames. Wolf caught snatches of their
conversations that focused on the live ammo still on board the
ship.
There was a body under a white sheet.
He paused to draw aside the sheet. A male tengu, badly burned.
Little Horse, Discord and Briggs were
on the other side of the wreckage along with more dead and
wounded. They worked with the Pittsburgh Fire Fighters and
more tengu, hacking at the splintered wood hull.
"Domi was on the bridge with
Cloudwalker." Little Horse hacked at a section of the hull with
his ejae. "Rainlily took in too much smoke, but she got out
without being burned. Two of tengu with her were not so lucky.
You were hurt?"
Wolf held up his spell-covered hand,
careful not to flex. "Just this but it's healing." Wolf glanced over
the many dead laid out and covered. "How many tengu did you
take with you?"
"Those are oni." Discord was favoring
the leg bitten by the dragon earlier in the week. "Most we killed
taking the dreadnaught."
Blood on the pavement showed that
there had been fighting after the crash too.
A cry went up and people were lifted
free of the wreckage. A tengu male and female, both young, face
painted for war. They were battered but alive.
"Were they with you or against you?"
Wolf asked.
"They caught domi when she was
knocked from the dreadnaught." Little Horse said.
"Domi promised that all tengu would be
under her protection," Discord added.
"All?" Wolf indicated that the war-
painted tengu were not to be harmed. "How many does that
include?"
Discord shrugged and then gave a wry
smile. "I do not think domi bothered to find out."
More survivors were lifted out.
Durrack, a woman, and another pair of tengu, these from the
spaceship.
"I can see shielding!" Little Horse cried.
"Cloudwalker has his shield up!"
"He and domi should be the only ones
left." Discord said.
They cut carefully through the shattered
wood and broken instruments to the young sekasha. Despite his
shield, he'd been knocked unconscious. He still protected Tinker,
however, in his loose hold. Wraith leaned into the hole they had
cut and whispered to Tinker the word to deactivate Cloudwalker's
shields, which needed to be spoken close to the sekasha's heart. It
felt like eternity before the hurt and dazed Tinker understood
what was wanted of her and the shimmering blue of the shields
vanished.
The healers from the hospice cast spells
to make sure they could be safely removed, then, the two were
lifted carefully out of the womb of twisted wreckage. Only then
could Wolf hold Tinker in his arms and reassure himself that she
had emerged once again safely out the void. She seemed so small
and fragile without her normal vibrant personality.
"Oh, thanks gods, I was so worried
about you," she murmured as if it had been him in the airship.
"The others?"
"Your Hand is safe." He spared her the
news of the dead tengu.
She cried in dismay at the extent of the
damage to the airship. "Oh, I crashed True Flame's dreadnaught!
He's going to be angry."
"He will not care. It is a thing. All things
wear out – just usually not in such a spectacular fashion."
Tinker groaned.
"Do not worry, beloved. He will be only
concerned that you and yours are safe and that the dragon is
dead."
Tinker whimpered against his shoulder.
"Windwolf, I've made the tengu mine."
"So I've heard."
"Please, don't hurt them. I promised
them that they will be safe."
"They are safe."
"You won't hurt them?"
"I will protect them safe for you." He
kissed her carefully. "Rest."
True Flame and the Stone Clan were
arriving, so he reluctantly, he gave Tinker over to the healers and
the protection of her beholden.
True Flame stopped on the edge of the
roadway where he could see the dead dragon, the crashed
dreadnaught, and in the distance, like an exclamation mark in the
weak morning sky, the towering spaceship.
"You were right, Wolf."
"I was?"
"She's surprisingly destructive for one
so small. I am starting to see why you love her so—she is
the right size for you."
"Yes, she is."
A shout caught his attention. Little
Horse and Wraith Arrow were holding the Stone Clan sekasha
back from the tengu.
"What's going on here?" True Flame
stalked down to the river's edge.
"These tengu are still alive." Earth Son
stood behind his First, Thorne Scratch. He pointed at the battered
and soaked tengu who had given Little Egret CPR.
"Yes," Wolf noticed that the Wyverns
were watching. A whispered discussion was being passed through
their ranks. "And they are staying that way. My domi has taken the
tengu as beholden."
"They are oni," Earth Son snapped. "We
must eliminate the monsters before they can breed to dangerous
numbers."
"The tengu and the half-oni are no
different than the elves," Wolf pitched his argument to True
Flame and the silent sekasha. "We were created by the skin clan,
as they were created by the oni. They are turning on the oni as we
turned on the skin clan. Yes the oni are as evil as the skin clan
– but we merely need to look at ourselves to know that
good can come from evil."
"Tengu flock together." Forest Moss
drifted into the conversation, his tone light, as if he was
discussing clouds. Wolf could not tell how the mad one felt on
the issue. "Their loyalty to one another will supersede any claim
that they make to you. If you act against one of their brethrens,
they will turn on you."
"Tinker ze domi holds all the tengu."
The astronaut tengu named Jin said.
True Flame looked at Jin. "All? How
many are all?"
The war-painted male stepped forward,
apparently speaking for the Elfhome-based tengu. "We don't have
a full count. It has too dangerous to count, least the oni ever
found out what we were doing."
"Which was?" Wolf asked.
"We hoped to be free here on Elfhome,"
Riki said. "So in the last twenty-eight years, all of the tengu of
Earth and Onihida have come to Elfhome."
"All?" True Flame glanced over the ten
living tengu. "Are we speaking hundreds? Thousands? Millions?"
"Several thousand." Riki glanced to Jin
to see if he should be more specific and got a nod. "We believe
around twenty thousand."
Which meant they greatly outnumbered
the oni now trapped on Elfhome.
True Flame turned to Wolf. "How does
your domi possibly think she could hold all of them?"
"Through me. I am Jin Wong. I am the
heart and soul and voice of the tengu. I speak, and all will listen."
"I doubt this greatly." True Flame said.
Jin raised his hands and gave out a call.
It resonated with magic, as if his voice alone triggered some spell.
He turned to North and called. He faced the West and called.
Even as he faced the South and called, a rustle of wings
announced the arrival of a great flock of tengu. The sky went dark
with the crow black feathers. Warriors all, faces painted, and feet
sheathed in sharpened steel. They carried guns holstered to their
hips. They settled silently on the bridge trusses, the tops of
buildings, and street lights.
When the last tengu went still, Jin called
again, magic pulsing out from him. It echoed off the buildings
and the hillside across the river. He turned, gazing at them, as if
he too was stunned by the massive numbers of them. "I am Jin
Wong! I have returned to our people!"
And the tengu flock shouted back, "Jin!
Jin! Jin!"
Jin raised his hands and the flock fell
silent. "We are entering into an alliance with the elves. We are
taking Tinker ze domi as our protector. Under her, I hope that
first time our people will live in peace, security, and prosperity."
The flock roared in approval, a
deafening sound that washed over them. Jin raised his hand,
commanding silence, and receiving instant obedience.
"Jin offered his people," Wolf said in the
silence. "Domi offered her protection. Such an agreement, once
made, no other person could break that oath."
"This is true." True Flame said.
Earth Son had cast his shield,
encompassing only him and his sekasha. "She can't hold them.
This is preposterous."
"They fit the model of a household with
Jin as the head," Wolf said.
"Only clan heads can hold that many
people," Earth Son said. "And she is nothing but a –"
"She is my domi and we are the clan
heads of the Westernlands," Wolf growled. "Forest Moss is right.
You are a blind. Tinker has closed the Ghostlands." Wolf pointed
to Malice's massive body. "She killed the dragon that four of us
could not harm. She has made a peace with a force that we didn't
even know existed. Do not assign her your limitations. We can
hold the tengu."
"They are monsters!" Earth Son shouted.
Wolf shook his head. "They were once
human, forced into their shape by cruel masters. They have fought
beside my domi to kill the dragon. They have protected my
youngest sekasha from harm."
"You are a traitor to your people," Earth
Son spat the accusation and then looked to True Flame, as if
challenging the prince to refute it.
True Flame said nothing, waiting to see
the outcome of the debate.
Wolf directed his argument to the
Wyvern and the Stone Clan sekasha as he knew that his Hands had
already decided on the issue – or they wouldn't have
defended the tengu. But their decision was based on their trust of
him. The others would need convincing. "My people are those
that offer me their loyalty, be they elfin, human, tengu, or half-
blooded oni. It is my duty as domana to extend protection to those
weaker than I am."
"It is our duty to keep our race pure,"
Earth Son said.
"That is our Skin Clan forefathers
speaking. Kill the misbegotten children. Eliminate the unwanted
genetic line. Ignore trust, obedience, loyalty, and love in the
search for perfection. It was the Skin Clan, but it not our way."
"This is insanity. They breed like mice.
All of them do. The oni and the humans. This is our world. If we
don't eliminate them, they will overwhelm us."
"If they offer their loyalty and we give
them our protection – do they not become one of us?
They do not lessen us – they make us greater."
Earth Son worked his mouth for a
minute, and then finally cried. "No! No, no, no! They are filthy
lying creatures. I am Stone Clan head of the Westernlands, and I
say that the Stone Clan will never accept this!"
"I do not care what the Stone Clan
accepts." Wolf cocked his fingers, wondering if Earth Son would
be as stupid as actually start a fight with all the tengu assembled.
Since Earth Son was holding shields, he could strike quickly.
"Know this – the tengu are Wind Clan now. I will protect
them."
Earth Son made a motion. It was a start
of a spell. What spell Wolf would never know. Wolf snapped his
hand up to summon the winds, even though he would be too late
to block the attack. Thorne Scratch reacted first. With deliberate
calm, she struck out and beheaded Earth Son.
"We will not follow the path of the Skin
Clan." Thorne Scratch cleaned the blood from her ejae.
Red Knife, True Flame's First, nodded.
"Those that offer loyalty will be protected."
Jewel Tears gazed down at Earth Son's
body. "As temporary Stone Clan head of the Westernlands, I
recognize that non-elfin can be beholden."
Chapter 23: Peace
Tinker woke slowly. She had been dreaming, but for once, it
was a pleasant dream of the new viceroy palace being complete.
She had walked from room to room to room, marveling that all
this was hers. Theirs.
When she opened her eyes, she knew instantly she was in her
own bed at Poppymeadow's because Windwolf lay beside her, his
black hair poured like silk across the cream satin sheets.
Contentment poured through her like warm honey. She snuggled
closer to him. For once the taffy thickness of the
saijin-
induced sleep didn't seem threatening. If she was with Windwolf,
then everything was right with the world.
And then with sudden dark coldness, she remembered the
tengu. She had promised to protect them but then let the elves
drug her. What had she been thinking of? The elves would have
only seen the tengu as enemies.
She sat up, hands to her mouth to hold in the cries of
dismay. What had happened after she was carried away? Was Jin,
Grace and Xiao Chen and all the others already dead?
"Beloved?" Windwolf sat up beside her.
"Oh gods, I failed them! I promised Jin I would protect the
tengu! I failed them."
"You did not. You are my
domi. Your promises are
mine. I protected them. It was, after all, the right thing to do."
She knew, in a way she wouldn't have know a week ago,
what she had asked of him, and how different he had to be from
other elves to understand. There been a secret fear hiding inside
of her that he wouldn't understand, and instead of being a
powerful protector, he was in truth a ruthless killer. That cold
knot of fear dissolved.
"Oh, thank you!" She hugged him tight. She didn't need
anything else but to be in his arms and hear his heart beating. She
snuggled closer, wanting to drown in the
saijin-laced
honey contentment. She never wanted to let him go; never wanted
to risk losing him forever again.
"It was the least I could do after you solved that small
dragon problem I had," he said it with complete seriousness, but
there was laughter in his eyes.
She laughed, tangling her fingers in his hair and pulling him
down to kiss her. She delighted in his taste, the feel of his hands
on her, finding the hem of her nightgown to slide up her bare
skin.
"I love you," she murmured. "I'm never letting you go."
His gaze went serious and deep. "I am going no where, my
love."
Only a time later, after a proper renewal of their
relationship, did she think about another small dragon problem.
"What happened with Impatience when we did the flux
spell? Is Oilcan okay?"
"He is fine." Windwolf smoothed away her greatest fear.
"Your spell did not affect the little dragon. And the tengu have
been quite useful already. With their help, we had a long
discussion with Impatience about creating a pathway to Earth.
The question is where to put it."
"What about the Squirrel Hill tunnels? They go nowhere
now."
Windwolf considered for a moment and then nodded. "Yes,
that would be expedient."
Using the tunnels would open four lanes of traffic between
Elfhome and Earth and yet be easily controlled. "Wow."
"I told you, beloved, you and I would shake the universe
until we find a way."
Epilogue: Cup Of Joys
Elves may live forever, but their memories did not. Every
elfin child is taught that any special memory had to be polished
bright and carefully stored away at the end of a day, else it would
slip away and soon be forgotten. The eve of Memory was past,
but Wolf wanted to share the ceremony with his
domi
– even if somewhat belated. They had time now. He
wanted her to know how to save the memories of all that had
happened in the last few days, the good along with the bad.
Wolf settled before the altar of Nheoya, god of longevity.
His beloved sat down beside him.
Tinker took a deep breath and let it out in deep, heart-felt
sigh. "This is going to be like being dragged through thorns
– there's so much I regret. So many ways I've fucked up."
"This is not to punish yourself, beloved. Nothing is gained
from that. The worth comes from reflecting on the events
– removed from the passion that blinded you at the time
– and learning from the mistakes."
"Easier said than done."
"Think of it as something that has happened to someone else
– the person that you used to be and not the person you
are now."
She nodded and lit the candle of memory. Together, they
clapped to call the god's attention to them and bestowed their
gifts of silver on the altar. They sat in companionable silence,
waiting to reach perfect calmness before starting the ceremony.
Wolf reached his center quickly, but waited until Tinker was
ready to pick up the cup of tears and taste the bitter memories.
He allowed himself to reflect on his failure with Jewel Tears
and the bitter things she had to say to him. There was some truth
in what she had to say. He allowed silence to create a gulf
between his heart and hers, so that their dreams took different
form. He would have to remember this, remind himself to keep
his heart open to his beloved, so that they could share their
dreams.
Dawn was breaking, and the cups of tears were drained, so
they set aside their bitter memories. As light spilled into the
temple, they lifted the cup of joys.
All Wolf's new moments of happiness centered on Tinker.
They were scattered through his days, bright like diamonds. As he
took them out, played them close and stored them away, he found
a pattern to them. In every occasion, he had known he had at last
found the one that could not only understand his vision, but see
possibilities that he hadn't considered, and had the ability to make
it real. He found at the root of it all, a loneliness he hadn't
allowed himself to acknowledge, an awareness that he had been
totally alone while surrounded by people, an emptiness now
completely filled.
"Are you okay?" Tinker asked him in English.
He smiled. He had told her that he felt most free speaking
English, and by her answering look, she remembered. "Yes, I am
very content at this moment."
"Good. So am I." But then unease seeped into her eyes.
"What is it, beloved?"
"You probably have someplace to go, something you need
to do."
He held out his hand to her, and she took it, interlacing their
fingers. "What I need is to sit here with my
domi and talk
about what we want to do next."
THE END
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A New Breed of Adventure!
Tinker: just a quick-witted girl from Pittsburgh – who
happens to be responsible for depositing high elves and her
hometown humans into a melting pot of magic. Now the
draconian oni seek to destroy the elves by breeding human git
to do their evil bidding. But half-breeds who are half-human
may not be the slaves the oni imagined. The revolt is on! Its
leader? A certain newly-minted elven princess from Pittsburgh, PA
, by the name of Tinker.
The thrilling sequel to Tinker by Wen Spencer, winner
of the 2003 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer.
“Wit and intelligence… Buffy fans should
find a lot to like in [Spencer’s] resourceful
heroine.”
— Publishers Weekly
Cover art by Kurt
Miller
|
Hardcover
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events
portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to
real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
First printing, April 2006
Distributed by Simon & Schuster 1230
Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY
10020
Printed in the United
States of America
|
ISBN-10: 1-4165-2055-4 ISBN-13:
978-1-4165-2055-9
Copyright 2006 by & Wen Spencer
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original Baen Publishing
Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY
10471
http://www.baen.com
Electronic version by WebWrights
http://www.webwrights.com
|
To Ann Cecil, In many ways, elf-like.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Greg Armstrong, David Brukman, Ann Cecil,
Gail Brookhart, Kevin Hayes, Nancy Janda, Kendall
Jung, Don Kosak, June Drexler Robertson, John
Schmidt, Linda Sprinkle, Diane Turnshek, Andi Ward,
and Joy Whitfield
Baen Books by
Wen Spencer
Tinker
Wolf Who Rules
|
Wolf Who Rules-
ARC
Table of Contents
Prologue: Cup Of Tears
Chapter 1: Ghost Lands
Chapter 2: Go Ask Alice
Chapter 3: Nuts And Bolts
Chapter 4: On Gossamer Death
Chapter 5: Tree That Walks
Chapter 6: Lively Maple Flavor
Chapter 7: Things Better Left Buried
Chapter 8: Calling The Wind
Chapter 9: True Flame
Chapter 10: Storm Warnings
Chapter 11: Paper Scissors Stone
Chapter 12: Tears On Stone
Chapter 13: Ignore That Man Behind The Curtain
Chapter 14: A Parting Of Ways
Chapter 15: Sticks And Stones
Chapter 16: Little Monkey Brain
Chapter 17: A Murder Of Crows
Chapter 18: Seek You
Chapter 19: Snakes, Snails & Puppy-Dog Tails
Chapter 20: Follow The Yellow Brick Road
Chapter 21: No Place Like Home
Chapter 22: End Of The Rainbow
Chapter 23: Peace
Epilogue: Cup Of Joys
Prologue: Cup Of Tears
Elves may live forever, but their memories did not. Every
elfin child is taught that any special memory has to be polished
bright and carefully stored away at the end of a day, else it will
slip away and soon be forgotten.
Wolf Who Rules Wind, Viceroy of the Westernlands and the
human city of Pittsburgh
, thought about this as he settled before the altar of
Nheoya, god of longevity. It was one more thing he would have
to teach his new domi, Tinker. While clever beyond
measure, she had spent her childhood as a human. He had only
transformed her genetically into an elf; she lacked the hundred
years of experience that all other adult elves lived through.
Wolf lit the candle of memory, clapped to call the god's
attention to him and bestowed his gift of silver on the altar.
Normally he would wait to reach perfect calmness before starting
the ceremony, but he didn't have time. He'd spent most of the last
two days rescuing his domi, fighting her oni captors and
discovering how and why they had kidnapped her away. In truth,
he should be focusing on his many responsibilities, but the fact
that his domi had been restored to him on the eve of
Memory made him feel as it was important to observe the ritual.
He picked up the cup of tears. As a child, he couldn't
understand why anyone would want to cling to bad memories. It
had taken the royal court, with all its petty betrayals, to teach him
the importance of bitterness; you needed to remember your
mistakes to learn from them. For the first time, however, he did
not dwell on those affairs of the heart. They all seemed minor
now. His assistant, Sparrow Lifted by Wind, had taught him the
true meaning of treachery.
He replayed now all her betrayals, slowly drinking down the
warm salt water. He did not know when she started working with
the oni, perhaps as early as the first day the human's orbital
hyperphase gate shifted Pittsburgh
to Elfhome. He knew for sure that she'd spent the last
few weeks subtly detouring him away from the oni compound.
She arranged for his blade brother Little Horse to be alone, so the
oni could kidnap him and use him as a whipping boy. So many
lies and deceptions! Wolf remembered the blank look on her face
as she talked on her cell phone on that last day. He knew now the
call was from the oni noble, Lord Tomtom, alerting her that
Tinker and Little Horse had escaped. What excuse had she used
to slip away in order to intercept them? Oh yes, a member of the
clan needed someone to mediate between them and the
Pittsburgh Police. He had thanked her for sparing him from such
small responsibilities so he could focus on finding the two
people most important to him. Too bad Little Horse gave her
such a clean death.
Dawn was breaking, and the cup of tears was drained, so he
set aside his bitter memories. As light spilled into the temple, he
lifted the cup of joys.
Normally he would dwell hours on his happy childhood in
his parents household, and then, with a few exceptions, skip over
all the lonely years he spent at court, and start again as he built
his own household and settled the Westernlands. He did not have
time today. In celebration of their safety, he thought only of
Tinker and Little Horse.
Sipping his honeyed tea, he remembered Little Horse's birth
and childhood, how he grew in leaps and bounds between Wolf's
visits back home, until he was old enough to be part of Wolf's
household. He brought with him the quiet affection that Wolf
missed from his parent's home. Bitterness at Sparrow tried to
crowd in, but Wolf ignored the temptation to dwell on those
thoughts. He had only a short time left, and he wasn't going to
waste it on her.
He turned his thoughts to Tinker. A human, raised on
Elfhome, she was a delightful mix of human sensibility steeped
in elfin culture. They had met once years ago, when she saved
him from a saurus. She saved him again from a recent oni
assassination attempt. The days afterwards, as she struggled to
keep him alive, she proved her intelligence, leadership,
compassion, and fortitude. Once he realized that she was
everything that he wanted in a domi, it was as if
floodgates had opened in his heart, letting loose a flood of
emotions he hadn't suspected himself capable of. Never had he
wanted so much to protect another person. The very humanity
that he loved in her made her butterfly fragile. The only way to
keep her brightness shining was to make her an elf. At the time,
he regretted the necessity, but no longer. As a human, Tinker
would have either been taken away from the home she loved by
the NSA, or she wouldn't have survived Sparrow's betrayal. If he
had any regrets it was trusting Sparrow and underestimating the
oni.
Much as he'd like to continue dwelling on the good
memories of his beloved, there was too much to do. Reluctantly,
Wolf Who Rules blew out the candle, stood, and bowed to the
god.
The oni had forced his domi into building a gateway
between their world and the neighborhood of Turtle Creek. Since
the oni were gaining access to Earth (and ultimately Elfhome)
via the orbital hyperphase gate – Tinker used her gate to
destroy the one in orbit. Unfortunately there were side effects not
even his beloved could explain. Pittsburgh
was now stuck on Elfhome. Turtle Creek had melted
into liquid confusion. And something, most likely the orbital
gate, had fallen from the sky like shooting stars. It left them with
no way to return the humans to Earth, and an unknown number
of oni among them.
Chapter 1: Ghost Lands
There were some mistakes that "Oops" just didn't cover.
Tinker stood on the
George
Westinghouse
Bridge
. Behind her was
Pittsburgh
and its sixty-thousand humans now permanently
stranded on Elfhome. Below her, lay the mystery that at one time
had been Turtle Creek. A blue haze filled the valley; the air
shimmered with odd distortions. The land itself was a
kaleidoscope of possibilities—elfin forest, oni houses, the
Westinghouse Air Brake Plant – fractured pieces of
various dimensions all jumbled together. And it was all her fault.
Color had been leached from the valley, except for the faint
blue taint, making the features seem insubstantial. Perhaps the
area was too unstable to reflect all spectrums of light –
or maybe the full spectra of light weren't able to pass through
– the – the – she lacked a name for it.
Discontinuity?
Tinker decided that was as good a name as any.
"What are these
Ghostlands?" asked her elfin
bodyguard, Pony. He'd spoken in low Elvish. "Ghostlands" had
been in English, though, meaning a human had coined the term.
Certainly the phrase fit the ghostly look of the valley.
So maybe Discontinuity wasn't the best name for it.
A foot taller, Pony was a comforting wall of heavily-armed
and magically-shielded muscle. His real name in Elvish was
Waetata-watarou-tukaenrou-bo-taeli, which meant roughly
Galloping Storm Horse on Wind. His elfin friends and family
called him Little Horse, or
tukaenrou-tiki, which still
was a mouthful. He'd given her his English nickname to use
when they met; it wasn't until recently that she realized it was his
first act of friendship.
"I don't know what's happening here." Tinker ran a hand
through her short brown hair, grabbed a handful and tugged,
temptation to pull it out running high. "I set up a resonance
between the gate I built and the one in orbit. They were supposed
to shake each other apart. They did."
At least, she was fairly sure that they had. Something had
fallen out of the sky that night in a fiery display. Since there were
only a handful of small satellites in Elfhome's orbit, it was fairly
safe bet that she somehow yanked the hyperphase gate out Earth's
orbit.
"This was – unexpected." She meant all of it. The
orbital gate reduced to so much space debris and burnt ash on the
ground. Turtle Creek turned into Ghostlands.
Pittsburgh
stuck on Elfhome.
Even "sorry" didn't seem adequate.
And what had happened to the oni army on Onihida, waiting
to invade Elfhome through her gate? To the oni disguised as
humans that worked on the gate with her? And Riki, the tengu
who had betrayed her?
"Is it going to – get better?" Pony asked.
"I think so." Tinker sighed, releasing her hair. "I can't
imagine it staying in this unstable state." At least she hoped so.
"The second law of thermodynamics and all that."
Pony grunted a slight optimistic sound, as if he was full of
confidence in her intelligence and problem solving. Sometimes
his trust in her was intimidating.
"I want to get closer." Tinker scanned the neighboring
hillsides, looking for a safe way down to the valley's floor. In
Pittsburgh
, nothing was as straightforward as it appeared. This
area was mostly abandoned – probably with help from
the oni to keep people away from their secret compound. The
arcing line of the Rim, marking where
Pittsburgh
ended and Elfhome proper began, was defused by
advancing elfin forest. Ironwood saplings mixed with jagger
bushes – elfin trees colliding with earth weed –
to form a dense impenetrable thicket. "Let's find a way down."
"Is that wise,
domi?"
"We'll be careful."
She expected more of an argument, but he clicked his tongue
in an elfin shrug.
Pony leaned out over the bridge's railing, the spells tattooed
down his arms in designs like Celtic knots—done in Wind
Clan blue—rippled as muscle moved under skin. The hot
wind played with tendrils of glossy black hair that come loose
from his braid. Dressed in his usual wyvern-scaled chest armor,
black leather pants and gleaming knee boots, Pony seemed
oblivious to the mid-August heat. He looked as strong and
healthy as ever. During their escape, the oni nearly killed him.
She took some comfort that he was the one thing that she hadn't
totally messed up.
As they recuperated, she'd endured an endless parade of
visitors between bouts of drugged sleep, which gave the entire
experience a surreal nightmare feel. Everyone had brought gifts
and stories of Turtle Creek, until her hospice room and curiosity
overflowed.
Thanks to her new elfin regenerative abilities, she healed far
faster than when she was a human; she awoke this morning
feeling good enough to explore. Much to her dismay, Pony
insisted on bringing four more
sekasha for a full Hand.
Yeah, yeah, it was wise, considering they had no clue how
many oni survived the meltdown of Turtle Creek. She was
getting claustrophobic, though, from always having hordes of
people keeping watch over her; first the elves, then the oni, and
now back to the elves. When she ran her scrap yard –
months ago – a lifetime ago—she used to go days
without seeing anyone but her cousin Oilcan.
As Viceroy, her husband Wolf Who Rules Wind, or
Windwolf, held twenty
sekasha; Pony picked her favorite
four out of that twenty to make up a hand. The outlandish
Stormsong – her rebel short hair currently dyed blue
– was acting as a Shield with Pony. Annoyingly, though,
there seemed to be some secret
sekasha rule –
only one Shield could have a personality at any time. Stormsong
stood a few feet off, silent and watching, in full bodyguard mode
while Pony talked to Tinker. It would have been easier to pretend
that the
sekasha weren't guarding over her if they weren't
so obviously 'working.'
The bridge secured, the other three
sekasha were
being Blades and scouting the area. Pony signaled them now
using the
sekasha's hand gestures called blade talk.
Rainlily, senior of the Blades, acknowledged – Tinker
recognized that much by now – and signaled something
more.
"What did she say?" Tinker really had to get these guys
radios. She hated having to ask what was going on; until recently,
she always knew more than everyone else.
"They found something you should see."
* * *
The police had strung yellow tape across the street in an
attempt to cordon off the valley; it rustled ominously in a stiff
breeze. Ducking under the tape, Tinker and her Shields joined the
others. The one personality rule extended to the Blades; only
Rainlily got to talk. Cloudwalker and Little Egret moved off,
searching the area for possible threats.
"We found this in the middle of the road," Rainlily held out
a bulky white, waterproof envelope. "Forgiveness, we had to
check it for traps."
The envelope was addressed with all possible renditions of
her name: Alexander Graham Bell, 'Tinker' written in English,
and finally Elvish runes of 'Tinker of the Wind Clan.' The
sekasha had already slit it open to examine the contents and
replaced them. Tinker tented open the envelope and peered inside;
it held an old mp3 player and a note written in English.
"I have great remorse for what I did. I'm sorry for hurting you
both. I wish there had been another way. Riki
Shoji."
"Yeah, right." Tinker scoffed and crumpled up the note and
flung it away. "Like that makes everything okay, you damn
crow."
She wanted to throw the mp3 player too, but it wasn't hers.
Oilcan had loaned it to Riki. The month she'd been at Aum
Renau, Oilcan and Riki became friends. Or at least, Oilcan
thought they were friends, just the same as he thought they were
both humans. Riki, though, was a lying oni spy, complete with
bird-feet and magically retractable crow wings. He'd wormed his
way into their lives just to kidnap Tinker. She doubted that
Oilcan would want the player back now that he knew the truth; it
would be a permanent reminder that Oilcan's trust nearly cost
Tinker her life. But it wasn't her right to decide for him.
She jammed the player into the deepest pocket of her
carpenter's jeans. "Let's go."
Rage smoldered inside her until they had worked their way
down to the discontinuity. The mystery of the Ghostlands
deepened, drowning out her anger. The edge of the blue seemed
uneven at first, but then, as she crouched down to eye it closely,
she realized that the effect "pooled" like water, and that the
ragged edge was due to the elevation of the land – like
the edge of a pond. Despite the August heat, ice gathered in the
shadows. This close, she could hear a weird white noise, not
unlike the gurgle of a river.
She found a long stick and prodded at the blue-shaded earth;
it slowly gave like thick mud. She moved along the "shore"
testing the shattered pieces of three worlds within reach of her
stick. Earth fire hydrant. Onihida building. Elfhome ironwood
tree. While they looked solid, everything within the zone of
destruction was actually insubstantial, giving under the firm poke
of her stick.
Pony stiffened with alarm when – after examining
the stick for damage done to it and finding it as sound as before
– she reached her hand out over the line.
Oddly, there was a resistance in the air over the land
– as if Tinker was holding her hand out the window of a
moving car. The air grew cooler as she lowered her hand. It was
so very creepy that she had to steel herself to actually touch the
dirt.
It was like plunging her bare hand into snow. Bitterly cold,
the dirt gave under her fingertips. Within seconds, the chill was
painful. She jerked her hand back.
"Domi?" Pony moved closer to her.
"I'm fine." Tinker cupped her left hand around her right. As
she stood, blowing warmth onto her cold-reddened fingers, she
gazed out onto the ghost lands. She could feel magic on her new
domana senses, but normally – like strong
electrical currents—heat accompanied magic. Was the
'shift' responsible for the cold? The presence of magic, however,
would explain why the area was still unstable –
sustaining whatever reaction the gate's destruction created. If her
theory was right, once the ambient magic was depleted, the effect
would collapse and the area would revert back to solid land. The
only question was the rate of decay.
Pony picked up a stone and skipped it out across the
disturbance. Faint ripples formed where the stone struck. After
kissing 'dirt' three times, the stone stopped about thirty feet in.
For a minute it sat on the surface and then, slowly but
perceivably, it started to sink.
Pony made a small puzzled noise. "Why isn't everything
sinking?"
"I think – because they're all in the same space
– which isn't quite here but isn't really someplace else
– or maybe they're everywhere at once. The trees are
stable, because to them, the earth underneath them is as
stable as they are."
"Like ice on water?"
"Hmm." The analogy would serve, since she wasn't sure if
she was right. They worked their way around the edge, the hilly
terrain making it difficult. At first they found sections of paved
road or cut through abandoned buildings, which made the going
easier. Eventually, though, they'd worked their way out of the
transferred Pittsburgh
area and into Elfhome proper.
On the bank of a creek, frozen solid where it overlapped the
affected area, they found a dead black willow tree, lying on its
side, and wide track of churned dirt were another willow had
stalked northward.
Pony scanned the dim elfin woods for the carnivorous tree.
"We must take care. It is probably still nearby; they don't move
fast."
"I wonder what killed it." Tinker poked at the splayed root
legs still partly inside the discontinuity. Frost like freezer burn
dusted the wide, sturdy trunk. Otherwise it seemed undamaged;
the soft mud and thick brush of the creek bank had cushioned its
fall so none of its branches or tangle arms had been broken. "Lain
would love an intact tree." The xenobiologist often complained
that the only specimens she ever could examine were the non-
ambulatory seedlings or mature trees blown to pieces to render it
harmless. "I wish I could get it to her somehow."
The tracks of both trees, Tinker noticed, started in the
Ghostlands. Had the willow been clear of the discontinuity at the
time of the explosion – or had the tree died after reaching
stable ground?
"Let me borrow one of your knives." Tinker used the knife
Pony handed her to score an ironwood sapling. "I want to be able
to track the rate of decay. Maybe there's a way I could accelerate
it."
"A slash for every one of your feet the sapling stands from
the ghost lands?" Pony guessed her system.
"Yeah." She was going to move on to the next tree but he
held out his hand for his knife. "What?"
"I would rather you stay back as much as possible from the
edge." He waited with the grinding power of glaciers for her to
hand back his knife. "How do you feel, domi?"
Ah, the source of his sudden protectiveness. It was going to
be a while before she could live down overestimating herself the
night of the fighting. Instead of going quietly to the hospice,
she'd roamed about, made love, and did all sorts of
silliness—and of course, fell flat on her face later. It
probably occurred to him that if she nose-dived again, she would
end up in the Ghostlands.
"I'm fine," she reassured him.
"You look tired." He slashed the next sapling, and she had to
admit he actually made cleaner, easier to see marks than she did,
robbing her of all chance to quibble with him.
She made a rude noise. Actually, she was exhausted
– nightmares had disrupted her sleep for the last two
days. But she didn't want to admit that; the sekasha might
gang up on her and drag her back to the hospice. That was the
problem with bringing five of them – it was much harder
to bully them en masse – especially since they were all a
foot taller than her. Sometimes she really hated being five foot
nothing. Standing with them was like being surrounded by
heavily armed trees. Even now Stormsong was eyeing her
closely.
"I'm just – thinking." She mimed what she hoped
looked like deep thought. "This is very perplexing."
Pony bought it, but he trusted her, perhaps more than he
should. Stormsong seemed unconvinced, but said nothing. They
moved on, marking saplings.
* * *
With an unknown number of oni scattered through the forest
and hidden disguised among the human population of Pittsburgh,
Wolf did not want to be dealing with the invasion of his
domi's privacy, but it had to be stopped before the Queen's
representative arrived in Pittsburgh. Since all requests through
human channels failed, it was time to take the matter into his
own hands.
Wolf stalked through the broken front door of the
photographer's house, his annoyance growing into anger.
Unfortunately, the photographer – paparazzi was the
correct English word for him, but Wolf was not sure how to
decline the word out—in question was determined to
make things as difficult as possible.
Over the last two weeks, Wolf's people had worked through
a series of false names and addresses to arrive at a narrow row
house close to the Rim in Oakland
. The houses to either side had been converted into
businesses, due to their proximately to the enclaves. While the
racial mix of the street was varied, the next door neighbors were
Chinese. The owners had watched nervously as Windwolf broke
down the photographer's door, but made no move to interfere.
Judging by their remarks to each other in Mandarin, neither did
they know that Wolf could speak Mandarin in addition to
English, nor were they surprised by his presence – they
seemed to think the photographer was receiving his due.
Inside the house, Wolf was starting to understand why.
One long narrow room took up most of the first floor
beyond the shattered door. Filth dulled the wood floors and
smudged the once white walls to an uneven gray. On the right
wall, at odds with the grubby state of the house, was video
wallpaper showing recorded images of Wolf's domi,
Tinker. The film loop had been taken a month ago, showing a
carefree Tinker laughing with the five female sekasha of
Wolf's household. The image had been carefully doctored and
scaled so that it gave the illusion that one gazed out a large
window overlooking the private garden courtyard of
Poppymeadow's enclave. Obviously feeling safe from prying
eyes, Tinker lounged in her nightgown, revealing all her natural
sexuality.
Wolf had seen the still pictures of Tinker in a digital
magazine but hadn't realized that there was more. Judging by the
stacks of cardboard boxes, there was much more. He flicked
open the nearest box and found DVDs titled: Princess Gone
Wild, Uncensored.
"Where is he?" Wolf growled to his First, Wraith Arrow.
Wraith tilted his head slightly upward to indicate upstairs.
"There's more."
At the top of the creaking wooden stairs, there was a large
room stark of furniture. A camouflage screen covered the lone
window, projecting a blank brick wall to the outside world. A
camera on a tripod peered through a slit in the screen, trained
down at the enclaves. This room's video wallpaper replayed
images captured this morning, a somber Tinker sitting alone
under the peach trees, dappled sunlight moving over her.
Wolf moved the camera and device's artificial intelligence
shrank Tinker's image into one corner and went to live images as
the zoom lens played over Poppymeadow's enclave where Wolf's
household was living. Not only did the balcony provide a clear
view over the high stone demesne wall, but into the windows of
all the buildings, from the main hall to the coach house. One of
Poppymeadow's staff was changing linen in a guest wing
bedroom; the camera automatically recognized the humanoid
form and adjusted the focus until she filled the wall. The window
was open, and microphone picked up her humming.
"I haven't done anything illegal," a man was saying in the
next room in English. "I know my rights! I'm protected by the
treaty."
Wolf stalked into the last room. His
sekasha had
broken down the door to get in. The only piece of furniture was
an unmade bed that reeked of old sweat and spent sex. His
sekasha had a small rat of a man pinned against the far wall.
On the wall, images of Wolf's
domi moved through
their bedroom at Poppymeadow's, languishingly stripping out of
her clothes. "You want to do it?" She asked huskily. Wolf could
remember the day, had replayed it in his mind again and again as
his last memory of her when he thought he had lost her. "Come
on, we have time."
She dropped the last piece of clothing on the floor, and the
camera zoomed in tighter to play down over her body. Wolf
snarled out the command for the winds and slammed its power
into the wall. The wall boomed, the house shuddering at the
impact, and the wallpaper went black. Tinker's voice, however,
continued with a soft moan of delight.
"Hey! Hey!" the man cried in English. "Do you have any idea
how expensive that is? You can't just smash in here and break my
stuff. I have rights."
"You had rights. They've been revoked." Wolf returned to
the balcony and knocked the camera from its tripod. The
wallpaper showed a somersault of confusion as the camera
flipped end over end. When it struck pavement, it shattered into
small unrecognizable pieces, and the wallpaper flickered back to
the previously recorded loop of Tinker sitting in the garden.
"Evacuate the area," Wolf ordered in low Elvish. "I'm razing
these buildings."
Apparently the man understood Elvish, because he yelped
out, "What? You can't do that! I've called the police! You can't
do this! This is
Pittsburgh
! I have rights!"
As if summoned by his words, a commotion downstairs
announced the arrival of the Pittsburgh Police.
"Police, freeze." A male voice barked in English. "Put down
the weapons."
Wolf felt the
sekasha downstairs activate their
shields, blooms of magic against his awareness. Bladebite was
saying something low and fast in High Elvish.
"
Naekanain," Someone cried in badly accented
Elvish—
I do not understand – while the
first speaker repeated in English, "Put down the weapons!"
Wolf cursed. Apparently the police officers didn't speak
Elvish and his
sekasha didn't speak English. Wolf called
the winds and wrapped them about him before going to the top of
the stairs.
There were two dark blue uniformed policemen crouched in
the front door, keeping pistols leveled at the
sekasha who
had their
ejae drawn. The officers looked human but with
oni, appearances could be deceiving. Both were tall enough to be
oni warriors. The disguised warriors favored red hair while one
policeman was pale blonde and the other dark brown. The blonde
motioned with his left hand, as if trying to keep both his partner
and the elves from acting.
""
Naekanain," The blonde repeated, and then added.
"
Pavuyau Ruve. Czernowski, just chill. They're the
viceroy's personal guard."
"I know who the fuck they are, Bowman."
"If you know that," Wolf said, "Then you know that they
have a right to go where I want them to go, and do what I want
them to do."
Bowman flicked a look up at him and then returned his
focus on the
sekasha. "Viceroy, have them put down their
weapons."
"They will only when you do," Wolf said. "If you have not
forgotten, we are at war."
"But not with us," Bowman growled.
Czernowski scoffed, and it saddened Wolf that he was closer
to the mark.
"The oni have been living in
Pittsburgh
as disguised humans for years," Wolf said. "Until
we're sure you're not oni, we must treat you as if you were.
Lower your weapons."
Bowman considered the request for a minute, eyeing the
sekasha as if he was considering how likely it was that he
and his partner could overwhelm Wolf's guard. Wolf wasn't sure
if Bowman's hesitation was born from over estimating his own
abilities, or total ignorance of the
sekasha's.
Finally, Bowman made a show of cautiously holstering his
pistol. "Come on, Czernowski. Put it away."
The other policeman seemed familiar, although Wolf wasn't
sure how; he rarely interacted with the Pittsburgh Police. Wolf
studied the two men. Unlike elves, where one could normally
guess a person's clan, humans needed badges and patches to tell
themselves apart. The officers' dark blue uniforms had shoulder
patches and gold badges identifying them as Pittsburgh Police.
Bowman's brass nameplate read: B. Pedersen. Czernowski's
nameplate was unhelpful, giving only a first initial of "N."
"I know you," Wolf said to Czernowski.
"I would hope so," The officer said. "You took the woman
that was going to be my wife away from me. You ripped her right
out of her species. You might think you've won, but I'm getting
her back."
Wolf recognized him then—this was Tinker's Nathan,
who bristled at him when Wolf collected his
domi from
the Faire. The uniform had thrown Wolf; he hadn't realized the
man was a police officer. At the Faire, Czernowski had acted like
a dog guarding a bone. Even though Tinker had stated over and
over again that she was leaving with Wolf, Czernowski had clung
to her, refusing to let her leave.
"Tinker is not a thing to be stolen away," Wolf told the man.
"I did not
take her. She chose me, not you. She is my
domi now."
"I've seen the video tape," Nathan indicated the open box of
DVDs. "I know what she is, but I don't care. I still love her, and
I'm going to get her back."
"Who gives a fuck?" The thrice damned photographer
shouted behind Wolf. "It doesn't give these pointed ear royalist
freaks the right to break down my door and trash my stuff. I'm a
tax paying American! They can't—"
There was a loud thud as he was slammed up against his
broken wall to silence him.
"Sir, can you step aside?" Bowman started cautiously
upstairs before Wolf answered.
Wolf stepped back to make way for the two policemen.
The policemen took in the open window, the recording of
Tinker in the garden, the smashed down door, the broken
wallpaper now stained with blood, and the broken-nosed
paparazzi in Dark Harvest's hold.
"It's about time," the photographer cried. "Get these goons
off me!"
"Please step away from him." Bowman told Harvest, his
hand dropping down to rest on his pistol. He repeated the order
in bad Elvish. "
Naeba Kiyau."
"He's to be detained." Wolf wanted it clear what was to be
done with the photographer before relinquishing control of him.
"And these buildings evacuated so I can demolish them."
"You can't do that." Bowman pulled out a pair of handcuffs.
"According to the treaty..."
"The treaty is now null and void. I am now the law in
Pittsburgh
, and I say that this man is to be detained indefinitely
and these buildings will be demolished."
"The fuck you are," Czernowski spat the words. "In Pittsburgh
we're the law and you're guilty of breaking and
entering, assault and battery, and I'm sure I can think of a few
more."
Czernowski reached for Wolf's arm and instantly had three
swords at his throat.
"No." Wolf shouted to keep the police from being killed.
Into the silence that suddenly filled the house, Tinker's
recorded voice groaned, "Oh gods, yes, right there, oh, that's so
good."
Bowman caught Czernowski as the policeman started to
surge forward with a growl. "Czernowski!" Bowman slammed
him against the wall. "Just deal with it! He's rich and powerful
and she's fucking him. What part of this does not make sense to
you? He drives a Rolls Royce and all the elves in Pittsburgh
grovel at his feet. You think any bitch would pick a
stupid Pole like you when she could have him?"
"He could have had anyone. She was mine."
"The fuck she was." Bowman growled. "If you'd scored once
with her, all the bookies in
Pittsburgh
would know. You were always a long shot in the
betting pool, Nathan. You were too stupid for her – and
too dumb to realize that."
Czernowski glared at his partner, face darkening, but he
stopped struggling to stand panting with his anger.
Bowman watched his partner for a minute before asking,
"Are we good now?"
Czernowski nodded and flinched as Tinker's recorded voice
gave a soft wordless moan of delight.
Bowman crossed to a section of the broken wall and pressed
something and the sound stopped. "Viceroy, none of us like this
any more than you do, but under international law, as of five
years ago, this scumbag is within his rights to make this video."
"He's under elfin law now, and what he has done is
unforgivable."
"Your people don't have technology capable of this."
Bowman waved a hand at the wallpaper. "So you don't have laws
to govern capturing digital images."
Wolf scoffed at the typical human sidestepping. "Why do
humans nitpick justice to pieces? Can't you see that you've frayed
it apart until it doesn't hold anything? There is right and then
there is wrong. This is wrong."
"This isn't my place to decide, Viceroy. I'm just a cop. I only
know human law, and as far as I last heard, human law still
applies."
"The treaty says that any human left on Elfhome during
Shutdown falls under elfin rule. The gate in orbit has failed
– it is currently and always will be – Shutdown."
Bowman wiped the expression off his face. "Until my
superiors confirm this, I have to continue to function with
standard protocol and I can't arrest this man."
"Then I'll have him executed."
"I can put him in protective custody," Bowman said.
"As long as protective custody means a small cell without a
window, I'll agree to that," Wolf said.
"We'll see what we can do." Bowman moved to handcuff the
photographer.
Wolf felt a sudden deep yet oddly distanced vibration, as if a
bowstring had been drawn and released to thrum against his
awareness. He recognized it – someone nearby was
tapping the power of the Wind Clan Spell Stone. Wolf thought
that he and Tinker were the only Wind Clan domana in
Pittsburgh
– and he hadn't taught Tinker even the most
basic spells...
As the vibration continued, an endless drawing of power
from the stones, cold certainty filled him. It could only be Tinker.
* * *
Tinker and her sekasha had neared the far side of the
Ghostlands, crossing once again into
Pittsburgh
but on the opposite side of the valley. The road
climbed the steep hill in a series of sharp curves. As they crossed
the cracked pavement, Stormsong laughed and pointed out a
yellow warning street sign. It depicted a truck about to tip over as
it made the sharp turn – a common sight in
Pittsburgh
– but someone had added words to the
pictograph.
"What does it say?" Pony asked.
"Watch for Acrobatic Trucks." Stormsong translated the
English words to Elvish.
The others laughed and moved on, scanning the mixed
woods.
"You speak English?" Tinker fell into step with Stormsong.
"Fuckin' A!" Stormsong said with the correct scornful tone
that such a stupid question would be posed.
Tinker tripped and nearly fell in surprise. Stormsong caught
Tinker by the arm and warned her to be careful with a look. Most
of Tinker's time with Windwolf's sekasha had been spent
practicing her High Elvish, a stunningly polite language.
Stormsong had just dropped a mask woven out of words.
"For the last twenty-some years, I pulled every shift I could
to stay in Pittsburgh
—" Stormsong continued. "–even if it
meant bowing to that that stuck-up bitch, Sparrow."
"Why?" Tinker was still reeling. Many elves first learned
English in England
when Shakespeare still lived and kept the
lilting accent even if they modernized their sentence structure and
word choice. Stormsong spoke true Pitsupavute,
sounding like a native.
"I like humans." Stormsong stepped over a fallen tree in one
long stride and paused to offer a hand to Tinker – the
automatic politeness now seemed jarringly out of place. "They
don't give a fuck what everyone else thinks. If they want
something that's right for them, they don't worry about what the
rest of the fucking world thinks."
The warrior's bitterness surprised Tinker. "What do you
want?"
"I had doubts about being a sekasha." She shrugged
like a human, lifting one shoulder, instead of clicking her tongue
like an elf would. "Not any more. Windwolf gave me a year to
get my head screwed on right. I like being sekasha. I do
have – as the humans say – issues."
That explained the short blue hair and the slight rebel air
about her.
Stormsong suddenly spun to the left, pushing Tinker behind
her even as she shouted the guttural command to activate her
magical shields. Magic surged through the blue tattoos on her
arms and flared into a shimmering blue that encompassed her
body. Stormsong drew her ironwood sword and crouched into
readiness.
Instantly other sekasha activated their shields and
drew their swords as they pulled in tight around Tinker. They
scanned the area but there was nothing to see.
They were in the no-man's land of the Rim, where tall young
Ironwoods mixed with Earth woods and jagger bushes in a thick,
nearly impassable tangle. They stood on a deer trail, a path only
one person wide, meandering through the dense underbrush. For
a moment no one moved or spoke. Tinker realized that the birds
had gone silent; even they didn't want to draw the attention of
whatever spooked Stormsong.
Pony made a gesture with his left hand in blade talk.
"Something is going to attack," Stormsong whispered in
Elvish, once again becoming the sekasha. "Something
large. I'm not sure how soon."
"Yatanyai?" Pony whispered a word that Tinker
didn't recognize.
Stormsong nodded.
"What does she see?" Tinker whispered.
"What will be," Pony indicated that they should start back
the way they had come. "We're in a position of weakness. We
should retreat to —"
Something huge and sinuous as a snake flashed out of the
shadows. Tinker got the impression of scales, a wedge-shaped
head, and a mouth full of teeth before Pony leaped between her
and the monster. The creature struck Pony with a blow that
smashed him aside, his shields flashing as they absorbed the brunt
of the damage. It whipped toward Tinker, but Stormsong was
already in the way.
"Oh, no, you don't!" The female sekasha blocked a
savage bite at Tinker. "Get back, domi – you're
attracting it!"
A blur of motion, the beast knocked Stormsong down, biting
at her leg, her shield gleaming brilliant blue between its teeth.
The Blades swung their swords, shouting to distract the creature.
Releasing Stormsong, the creature leapt to perch high up the
trunk of an oak. As it paused there, Tinker saw it fully for the
first time.
It was long and lean, twelve feet from nose to tip of
whipping tail. Despite a shaggy mane, its hide looked like blood
red snake scales. Long necked and short legged, it was weirdly
proportioned; its head seemed almost too large for its body, with
a heavy jawed mouth filled with countless jagged teeth. Clinging
to the side of the tree with massive claws, it hissed at them,
showing the teeth.
Its mane lifted like a dog's hackles, and a haze shimmered to
life over the beast, like heat waves coming off hot asphalt. Tinker
could feel the presence of magic on her domana senses,
like static electricity prickling against the skin. The second blade,
Cloudwalker, fired his pistol. The bullets struck the haze
– making it flare at the point of impact – and
dropped to the ground, inert. Tinker felt the magic strengthen as
the kinetic energy of the bullet fed into the spell, fueling it.
"It's a shield!" Tinker cried out in warning. "Hitting it will
only make it stronger."
Stormsong got to her feet, biting back a cry of pain. "Go,
run, I'll hold it!"
Pony caught Tinker by her upper arm, and half carried her,
half dragged her through the thicket.
"No!" Tinker cried, knowing that if it weren't for her safety,
the others wouldn't abandon one of their own.
"Domi," Pony urging her to run faster. "If we can
not hit it, then we have no hope of killing it."
Tinker thought furiously. How do you hurt something you
can't hit but could bite you? Wait – maybe that was it!
She snatched the pistol from the holster at Pony's side and jerked
out of his hold. Here, under the tall ironwoods, the jagger
brushes had grown high, and animals had made low tunnel-like
trails through them. Ducking down, Tinker ran down a path, the
gun seeming huge in her hands, heading back toward the
wounded sekasha. The thorns tore at her bare arms and
hair.
"Tinker domi!" Pony cried behind her.
"Its shield doesn't cover its mouth!" she shouted back.
She burst into the clear to find Stormsong backed to a tree,
desperately parrying the animal's teeth and claws. It smashed
aside her sword and leapt, mouth open.
Tinker shouted for its attention, and pulled the gun's trigger.
She hadn't aimed at all, and the bullet whined into the
underbrush, missing everything.
As beast turned to face her, and Stormsong shouted
warning—a wordless cry of anger, pain and
dismay—Tinker realized the flaw in her plan. She would
need to shove the pistol into the creature's mouth before
shooting. "Oh fuck."
It was like being hit by a freight train. One moment the beast
was running at her and then everything become a wild tumble of
darkness and light, dead leaves, sharp teeth and blood. Everything
stopped moving with the creature pinning her to the ground with
one massive claw. Then it pulled—not on her skin
or muscle, but something deeper inside her, something
intangible, that she didn't even know existed. Magic flooded
through her – hot and powerful as electricity – a
seemingly endless torrent from someplace unknown to the
monster—and she was just the hapless conduit.
She had lost the gun in the wild tumble. She punched at its
head, trying to get it off her as the magic poured through her. The
massive jaws snapped down on her fist – and suddenly
the creature froze—teeth holding firm her hand, not yet
breaking skin. Its eyes widened, as if surprised to see her under it,
her hand in its mouth. She panted, scared now beyond words, as
the magic continued to thrum through her bones and skin. Her
hand seemed so very small inside the mouth of teeth.
A sword blade appeared over her, the tip pressing up against
the creature's shields, aimed at its right eye. The tip slid forward
slowly as if it was being pressed through concrete.
"Get off her," Pony growled, leaning his full weight onto his
sword, little by little driving the point through the shields.
"Now!"
For a moment, they seemed stuck in amber – the
monster, Pony, her – caught in place and motionless.
There came a high thrilling whistle from way up high, bursting
the amber. The creature released her hand and leapt backwards.
She scrambled wildly the other direction. Pony caught hold of
her, hugging her tight with his free hand, his shields spilling
down over her, encompassing her.
"Got her!" he cried, and backed away, the others closing
ranks around them.
The whistle blew again, so sharp and piercing a sound that
even the monster checked to looked upwards.
Someone stood on the
Westinghouse
Bridge
that spanned the valley, doll-small by the distance.
Against the summer blue sky, the person was only a dark
silhouette – too far way to see if he was man, elf or oni.
The whistle thrilled, and focused on the sound, Tinker realized
that it was two notes, close together, a shrill discord.
The monster shook its head as if the sound hurt and bounded
away, heading for the bridge, so fast it seemed it nearly teleported
from place to place.
The whistler spread out great black wings, resolving all
question of race. A tengu. The oni spies created by blending oni
with crows. Tinker could guess which one – Riki. What
she couldn't guess was why he had just saved them, or how.
"Domi." Pony eclipsed the escaping tengu and his
monstrous purser. He peering intently at her hands and then
tugged at her clothing, examining her closely. "You are hurt."
"I am?"
"Yes." He produced a white linen handkerchief that he
pressed to a painful area of her head. "You should sit."
She started to ask why, but sudden blackness rushed in, and
she started to fall.
Chapter 2: Go Ask Alice
Tinker fell a long time in darkness.
She found herself at the edge of the woods near Lain's
house, the great white domes of the Observatory gleaming in
moonlight. The ironwood forest stood solemn as a cathedral
before her. Something white flickered through the night woods,
brightness in humanoid form. Like a moth, Tinker moved toward
the light, entering the forest.
A woman darted ahead of her, wearing an elfin gown
shimmering as if formed of fiber optics tapped to a searchlight
– brightness weaving through the forest dimness. She
was so brilliant white that it hurt to look at her. A red ribbon
covered her eyes and trailed down the dress, blood red against the
white. On the ground, the ribbon snaked out into the distance.
It came to Tinker, knowledge seeping into her like oil into a
rag that she knew the woman and they were searching for
someone. In the distance was a thumping noise, like an axe biting
into wood.
"He knows the paths, the twisted way." The woman told
Tinker while they searched for this mystery person. "You have to
talk to him. He'll tell you how to go."
"We're looking in the wrong place," Tinker called.
"We fell down the hole and through the looking glass." The
woman cried back. "He's here! You only have to look!"
Tinker scanned the woods and saw a dark figure flitting
through the trees, keeping pace with them. It was delicate-boned
woman in a black mourning dress. A blindfold of black lace
veiled her eyes. Tears ran unchecked down her face. At her feet
were black hedgehogs, nosing about in the dead litter of the
forest floor. In the trees surrounding Black and the hedgehogs
was a multitude of crows. The birds flitted from limb to limb,
calling "Lost! Lost!" in harsh voices.
"Black knows all about him." Tinker said. "Why don't we
ask her?"
"She is lost in her grief," White breathed into Tinker's ear.
"There is no thread between you. She has no voice that you will
listen to."
The thumping noise came from the direction that they
needed to head, speeding up until it sounded like helicopter
rotors beating the air.
"Wait!" Tinker reached out to catch hold of White, to warn
her. She missed, grabbing air. "The queen is coming. You've
murdered time. It's always six o'clock now."
"We can't stand still!" White caught Tinker's hand and they
were flying low, like on a hoverbike, dodging trees, the ground
covered with a checkerboard design of black and white. "We have
to run as fast as we can to keep in the same place. Soon we won't
be able to run at all and then all will be lost!"
"Lost! Lost!" cried the crows and Black flew like a silent
shadow on Tinker's other side. They had left the hedgehogs
behind. The red ribbon of White's blindfold raced on ahead of
them, coiling like a snake.
"He eats the fruit of the tree that walks." White stopped
them at edge of a clearing. The ribbon coiled into the clearing
and vanished into the ground. "Follow the tree to the house of
ice and sip sweetly of the cream."
Feeling with blind fingers, White followed the ribbon, hand
over hand, out into the clearing. The bare forest floor was black,
and grew blacker still, until the woman was sheer white against
void with red thread wrapped around her fingers. Tinker took
hold of the thread and followed out into the darkness. Beyond the
edge of the clearing, she started to float as if weightless. Tinker
tried to grip tight to the red ribbon, but it was so thin that she lost
track of it and started to fall upwards. The woman caught hold of
her, pulling her close and wrapped the red thread tight around her
fingers, making a cat's cradle. "There, no matter what, you can
always find me with this."
Turning away, the woman pulled on the ribbon and pearls
started to pop out of the ground, strung on the thread. "It starts
with a pearl necklace."
Tinker was drifting upwards, faster and faster. Black and her
crows flew up to meet her in a rustle of wings, crying "lost, lost."
* * *
Tinker opened her eyes to summer sky framed by oak leaves.
Acorns clustered on the branches, nearly ready to fall. A cardinal
sung its rain song someplace overhead.
With a slight rustle, Pony leaned over her, bruised and
battered himself, worry in his eyes. "Domi, are you
well?"
Tinker blinked back tears. "Yes, I'm fine." She sat up, trying
to ignore the pain in her head. "How is everyone else?"
"Stormsong is hurt. We have called for help but we should
start for the hospice."
"Its eyes are open," Stormsong said from where she lay on
her side, a bloody bandage around the leg that the creature had
bitten. "It's not coming back."
"What the hell does that mean?" Tinker asked.
"It means what it means," Stormsong groaned.
"There is no sign of the beast." Rainlily added.
"Okay," Tinker said only because they seemed to be waiting
for her to say something. How did she end up in charge?
Almost in answer, a sudden roar of wind announced the
arrival of Wolf Who Rules Wind, head of the Wind Clan, also
known as her husband, Windwolf. Riding the winds with the
Wind Clan's magic, he flew down out the sky and landed on
barren no-man's-land of the Rim. Dressed in elfin splendor, his
duster of cobalt blue silk, hand-painted with a stylized white
wolf, whipped out behind him like a banner. He was beautiful in
the way only elves could be – tall, lean, and board
shouldered with a face full of elegant sharp lines. With a word
and gesture, he dismissed his magic. Released, the winds sighed
away.
Beauty, power and the ability to fly like superman—
what more could a girl want?
"Beloved," Windwolf knelt beside her and folded her into
his arms. "What happened? Are you hurt? I felt you tap the clan's
Spell Stones and pull a massive amount of power."
The 'stones' were granite slabs inscribed with spells located
on top of a vastly powerful ley line that the domana
accessed remotely via their genome. Until Windwolf unleashed
his rage on the oni, Tinker hadn't realized the power that the
stones represented. In one blinding flash of summoned
lightening, it suddenly became clear why the domana
ruled the other elfin castes. Somehow, the monster had tapped
funneled the power through her.
"Oh, is that what the fuck it did to me?" And with that, she
lost control of the tears she'd been keeping at bay. What was it
about him that made her feel so safe in a way not even Pony
could? She hugged him tightly, trusting he would make it right.
As she wallowed in the luxury of being sheltered by the only
force besides nature that seemed larger than herself, Windwolf
turned his attention Pony.
"Little Horse, what happened?" Windwolf's voice rumbled
in his chest under her head, like contained thunder. "Who is
anyone hurt?"
"We were attacked by a very large creature," Pony went on
to describe the fight in a few short sentences, ending with,
"Stormsong took the brunt of the damage."
"We need to get her to the hospice." Tinker pulled free of
Windwolf's hug, smeared the tears out of her eyes and started for
Stormsong. "The thing bit her in the leg."
Windwolf crossed to Stormsong in long strides, beating
Tinker to the sekasha's side. The forest floor was
annoyingly uneven; after stumbling slightly, Tinker slowed to
baby steps. Pony hovered protectively close as if he expected her
to pitch face first into the dead leaves. The big gray Rolls Royce
they'd left on the other side of the valley and an ambulance had
picked their way through the shattered streets to stop fifty odd
yards short of their location.
"Considering how fucked we were, I'm fine." Stormsong
slapped Windwolf's hands away from the bloody bandage on her
leg. "We didn't stop it – it just left."
Heat flushed over Tinker, and the sounds around her went
muffled, as if someone wrapped invisible wool around her head.
It was dawning on her that she'd been stupid and nearly got them
all killed. By returning to Stormsong, she'd pulled the other
sekasha back to a fight that they should have lost. She should
be dead right now. So fucking dead.
Stormsong glanced up at Tinker, frowned and murmured
something to Windwolf, giving him a slight push away from her.
Windwolf looked up at Tinker and stood to sweep her off her
feet and into his arms.
"Hey, I can walk!" Tinker cried.
"I know." He carried her toward the Rolls Royce. "I have
seen you do it."
Tinker sighed at the nuances lost in the translation. This was
how she ended up married to Windwolf – she accepted
his betrothal gift without realizing he was proposing to her.
"There is nothing wrong with my legs."
He eyed her bare legs draped over his arm. "No. There is not.
They are very nice legs."
She studied him. All told, they had spent very little time with
each other and she was still getting to know him. She was
beginning to suspect, though, that he had a very subtle but strong
sense of humor. "Are you teasing me?"
He said nothing but the corners of his eyes crinkled with a
suppressed smile.
She smacked him lightly in the shoulder for teasing her.
"You don't have to carry me!"
"But I like to."
"Windwolf," she whined.
He kissed her on her forehead. "You might think you are
well, but you are in truth pale and wobbly. You have done what
was needed. Let me care for you."
If she insisted on walking, she ran the risk of falling flat on
her face. What harm could letting him carry her, except to her
pride? Like so often since he charged into her life, Windwolf left
only bad choices for her to make in order to protect her sense of
free will – and she was too smart to choose stupidity.
Sighing, she lay her head on his shoulder and let him carry her.
He tucked her into the Rolls and slid in beside her. Pony got
into the front, alongside the sekasha who was driving.
She noticed that her T-shirt was shredded over her stomach.
Under the tattered material, five shallow claw marks cut across
her abdomen; barely breaking the skin, the wounds were already
crusted over with scabs. A fraction of an inch deeper, and she
would have been gutted. She started to shake.
"All is well, you are fine." Windwolf murmured, holding
her.
"I felt so helpless. There was nothing I could do to hurt it. I
wish I could do the things you do."
"You can. I gave you that ability when I made you a Wind
Clan domana."
"I know, I know, I have the genetic key to the Wind Clan
Spell Stones." Which was how the monster sucked power
through her. "What I don't know is how to use the Spell
Stones. I want to learn."
"I was wrong not to teach you earlier." He took her hand. "I
allow myself to be distracted from my duties to you at Aum
Renau; I should have started to teach you then."
"You'll teach me now?"
"Tomorrow we will start your lessons," he kissed her
knuckles. "You will also have to learn how to use a sword."
"Shooting practice with a gun would probably be more
useful."
"The sword is for your peers, not your enemies. Currently
you have the queen's protection. No one can call insult on you or
challenge you to a duel. But that protection will not last forever."
"Pfft, like random violence solves anything."
"True, it rarely does, but you need to know how to protect
yourself and your beholden."
She made another noise of disgust. "What you
elves—" she saw the look on his face and amended it
to— "we elves call civilized. Can I still have the gun?"
"Yes, beloved, you may have the gun too. I will find comfort
knowing you can defend yourself."
"Especially with a monster running around that sees me as
some kind of power drink." She winced at her tone – he
wasn't the one she was upset with.
"Reinforcements should be arriving soon, but until then
Pittsburgh
will not be safe."
"What reinforcements?"
"After you and Little Horse were kidnapped, I realized that
there were more oni in the area than Sparrow previously led me
to believe. I sent for reinforcements; the Queen is sending troops
via airship from Easternlands. They should arrive shortly.
Unfortunately, this will pull the Fire clan and the probably the
Stone clan into the fight – which is why I'm thinking of
you learning how to use a sword."
"Why is it a bad thing that other clans are going to help fight
the oni? Isn't this everyone's problem?"
"We hold only what we can protect." Windwolf squeezed
her hand; she wasn't sure if it was to comfort her or to seek
comfort for himself. "By admitting that we need help, we have
put our monopoly on Pittsburgh
at risk. The other clans might want part of the city for
services rendered in fixing this problem. The humans will fall
under someone else's rule."
"You've got to be kidding! Why?"
"Because we can not protect all of
Pittsburgh
from the oni. The Crown will mediate a
compromise."
"Couldn't your father—as head of the Wind clan
– have sent us help?"
"He has. He sent
domana to Aum Renau and the
other East Coast settlements. It is a great comfort to me to know
that they are protected. The
domana aren't that numerous,
and the clans that can help are limited to those who have spell
stones within range of
Pittsburgh
."
"This is all my fault," Tinker whispered.
"Hush, this battle is part of a war that started before even I
was born."
She snuggled against him, logic failing to squash the guilty
feeling inside of her. She was distracted, however, by something
very hard under her. "Do you have something in your pocket? Or
are you just happy to see me?"
"What? Oh, yes." Windwolf pulled a small fabric bundle out
of his pants pocket. "This is for you."
"What's this?" Tinker eyed it tentatively. Accepting a similar
package from Windwolf had indicated her acceptance of his
marriage proposal – when she didn't realize the
significance of his gift. She still had mixed feelings about being
married to Windwolf. As a lover, Windwolf was all that she
would want—warm, gentle, and caring wrapped in a sexy
body – and she loved him deeply.
It was the whole marriage thing – having someone
else's will and future joined to hers. They were building 'their
home' for 'their people' and someday, maybe, 'their children.'
Being the Viceroy's wife, too, came with more responsibilities
than she wanted; people were entrusting her with their lives. So
far, the good outweighed the bad – but with elves "till
death do us part" meant a very long time.
"Before the Queen summoned me from
Pittsburgh
, I ordered clothes and jewelry to be made for you. I
know that they are not of the style you might pick for yourself. It
is important, though, that you look your best in front of the
crown and the other clans."
"Okay." She pulled loose the bow and unwrapped the fabric.
Inside were four small velvet pouches with drawstring pulls. She
opened the first to the glitter of gems. "Oh!"
She gasped as she poured diamonds out into her palm. Over
a foot of necklace studded with pea-sized diamonds. "Oh my!
They're gorgeous!"
As she lifted them up, the afternoon sun prismed into a
million tiny rainbows.
"They will look lovely against your skin." Windwolf
dropped a kiss on her throat.
The second bag spilled rubies into her hand like fire, but as
she lifted up the strand, it reminded her of the red ribbon in her
dream. The third bag held a matching bracelet.
"They're beautiful," she said truthfully, but still put them
away.
The fourth bag held a pearl necklace. She couldn't keep the
dismay off her face.
"You don't like them?"
"I had a bad dream after the beast knocked me out. I was
looking for something in a forest with this woman. She had a
long red ribbon tied around her eyes and on the other end of it,
was a pearl necklace."
She'd wanted him to say "it was just a dream," but instead he
said, "Tell me all of your dream."
"Why?"
"Sometimes dreams are warnings. It is not wise to ignore
them."
So she said, "It was just a dream." How could he rebuke her
so easily with just his eyes? "I'm still me. I'm still mostly human
– not elf. I would know by now if I had the ability to see
the future."
"In elves it is carried by the female line; being that humans
and elves can interbreed with fertile results, we must be very
similar." He put away the pearl necklace. "It is the nature of
magic to splinter things down to possibilities. Even humans
without magic can see where the splintering will happen, and the
possible outcomes. Humans call it an 'educated guess.' In the
past, where magic would leak through natural gates from
Elfhome to Earth, there were often temples with oracles
predicting the future."
"So it doesn't matter if I'm mostly human or partly elf?"
"Tell me your dream." Windwolf ran the back of his hand
lightly down her cheek.
So she described what she could remember. "Both women
are someone I know but not really. Movie stars or something like
that – I've only seen pictures of them."
"Both women wore blindfolds? The
intanyei seyosa
wears one when she's predicting. It helps block out things that
would distract her from her visions, but also it is a badge of her
office."
Tinker remembered then her one encounter with the Queen's
intanyei seyosa, Pure Radiance. The oracle had worn a
white dress and red blindfold.
"So I'm dreaming that they're dreaming? That's very Escher-
esque."
Windwolf looked confused.
"Escher is a human artist that my grandfather liked; his
pictures are all tricks of perspective."
"I see."
"Well, I don't. What does it mean?" She prodded the bags
with a finger. "That you were going to give me jewelry? What is
so dangerous about the necklaces?"
"Dreams are rarely straightforward. Most likely the
necklaces represent something else."
"Like what?"
"I do not know, but it might be wise to find out."
Chapter 3: Nuts And Bolts
Wolf spotted Wraith at the fringe of the Ghostlands when he
flew back to Turtle Creek. He'd left his
domi in the care
of his household at Poppymeadow's enclave and returned to help
deal with the beast that attacked her. He dropped down to land
beside his First.
"I don't know what Storm Horse was thinking." Wraith
growled in greeting. "How did he end up with all the babies?"
Little Horse had chosen the five youngest
sekasha to
make up the Hand that accompanied Tinker into Turtle Creek;
not one of them was over two hundred. True, any death would
have been grievous, but to lose the five youngest would have
been a blow to the close-knit band of warriors.
"They are the ones my
domi is most comfortable
with." Wolf knew that Wraith was truly rattled if he was using
the nickname, as some of the "babies" were in truth older than
Wolf. His First Hand didn't like to remind him that he was
impossibly young for his level of responsibilities.
"Oni, they could have handled," Wraith allowed and then
handed a sheet of paper to Wolf. "But not an oni dragon. I'm
amazed any of them are still alive."
Wolf recognized Rainlily's fluid hand in the drawing. The
low slung creature looked like a cross between a ferret and a
snake. "An oni dragon? Are you sure?"
Wraith clicked his tongue. "It's much smaller than the one
we fought when we closed the gate between Earth and Onihida,
and the coloring is different. It might be just a less dangerous
cousin, like we have the wyvern cousins to our dragons, or
perhaps a hatchling. It would explain how they survived."
The battle had been shortly before Wolf was born. A Stone
Clan trading expedition had discovered the way from Earth to
Onihida by accident. When the survivors managed to return to
Elfhome with their tale of capture and torture, the clans united to
send a force to Earth to stop the oni spreading from Onihida to
Earth, and then, possibly to Elfhome. Wraith Arrow and others of
Wolf's First Hand had been part of the oni war.
"Are oni dragons that dangerous?" Wolf folded the paper
and tucked it away. He would have to let the Earth
Interdimensional Agency know of this new threat if they couldn't
kill the beast quickly. The EIA could best spread warnings
through the humans.
"We lost two dozen sekaska in the caves to the beast. We
couldn't hurt it. It could—" Wraith frowned as he searched
for a word. "—
sidestep through walls as if they
didn't exist, and it called magic like you do."
"How did you kill it?"
"When the Stone Clan pulled down the gate and the
connection between the worlds broke, its attack pattern totally
changed. It dropped its shield and became like a mink in a
chicken coop, stupid with bloodlust. We boxed it in so it couldn't
turn and we hacked it to pieces."
"Maybe the oni was controlling it magically. Little Horse
said that the tengu used a whistle to call it off them—
perhaps the sound only triggered a controlling spell. Earth
doesn't have magic."
"So their control over it vanished and we were fighting the
true beast?"
Wolf nodded. "Perhaps."
"So the key is to kill the controller first."
"Perhaps." Wolf didn't want to fall into a wrong mindset. He
crouched beside the torn earth and spilt blood to find the
monster's tracks. They were as long as his forearm, with five
claw marks splayed like a hand. Pressed into the dirt at the center
of one track was one of Tinker's omnipresent bolts, a bright point
of polished aluminum glittering in the black earth. It must have
fallen from her pocket during the fight. Wolf picked it out of the
dirt, realizing for the first time the size of his beloved compared
to what attacked her. Gods above, sometimes he wished her sense
of self preservation matched her courage; she couldn't keep
leaping into the void and swimming back. One of these times, the
void was going to drink her down. He rolled the bolt around his
palm to shake off the dirt, thinking he should talk to her about
being more careful, only he didn't want to fall into the trap of
becoming her teacher.
Wraith crouched beside Wolf, and stirred his fingers through
the dirt. "
Domi showed great courage in protecting Little
Horse. She needs, though, someone who can steer her away from
the dangers. Little Horse is lost at summer court."
From Wraith's tone, the
sekasha also thought that
Windwolf was too deep in the first throes of love to think
clearly. Perhaps he was. "Are you volunteering?"
Wraith tilted his head. "Do you want me to?"
Wolf considered, tumbling the bolt through fingers. Wraith
was not the first to come forward in the last two days and let him
know that they'd be willing to change allegiance to Tinker. He'd
given them all permission to advance their case to Tinker since
she needed at least four more
sekasha to make a Hand.
Wraith, though, was his First, and Wolf depended heavily on
him. Without Sparrow, losing Wraith would cripple Wolf. "No. I
need you. Others plan to offer, she will have plenty to choose
from."
"Yes, but will they guide her?"
Do I want her guided? That was the true question. He'd
benefited greatly by choosing
sekasha who had served his
grandfather, but they had brought subtle pressure to bear on him
at all times. This conversation itself was a perfect example of
their influence on him. Their persuasion extended out to the rest
of the household, reinforcing the caste differences so that Wolf
was always correctly above everyone. When the Queen
summoned Wolf to Aum Renau, he'd left Little Horse behind to
guard over Tinker. The youngest of the
sekasha, his blade
brother had also been raised in a household where the caste lines
had been allowed to blur. Little Horse would be the open
minded, affectionate, and least likely to try and change Tinker.
Wolf had hated the necessity to make her elf in body – he
didn't want to force her, even by subtle persuasion, to become elf
in mind and habit.
No, I do not want her guided in the way that Wraith
would.
He would speak with Tinker, but not point her toward the
older
sekasha. He would allow her and Little Horse to
find those they were most comfortable with.
"On this, I will act." He let Wraith know that the
conversation was closed, that he would not discuss it farther. He
turned his attention back to the oni dragon.
The main fight area was a chaos of torn earth and blood. The
sekasha might be able to read the course of events, but to
him it was only churned earth. The bark of surrounding trees was
gouged in the dragon's five clawed pattern.
"It had
domi pinned. Little Horse attempted to
penetrate its shield." Wraith pointed at a spot on the ground, and
at the nearest scored tree. "It leapt to that tree. Rainlily said that
the tengu was on the bridge, so that tree there –" Wraith
pointed to a distant tree with claw marks half way up the
towering trunk, "is the next set."
The leap meant the creature was stunningly powerful
without magic.
"Let's see where the trail leads."
* * *
The railing of the bridge was scored deep by the dragon's
claws. After that, however, the track became impossible to
follow by the naked eye. The sekasha considered the
bridge deck, scuffing it with their boots.
"Too much metal," Wraith voiced the sekasha's
collective opinion.
Wolf nodded, he thought as much. Using magic to track was
rarely possible in Pittsburgh
with its ominous web of metal in the roads, the
buildings, and the power lines overhead.
There was whistle from the rear guard, indicating the arrival
of a friendly force. Still, the sekasha around him went
alert when a limo belonging to the EIA pulled to a stop at the far
end of the bridge. The oni had infiltrated every level of the U.N.
police force; they could no longer automatically assume the EIA
was friendly.
With a cautiousness that made it clear that he understood his
position, Director Derek Maynard got out of his limo and walked
the rest of the distance to Wolf. Apparently Maynard had spent
the morning dealing with humans, as he was in dressed in the
dark solid suit that spoke of power among men. Wolf thought it
might be the way they perceived color.
"Wolf Who Rules ze Domou." Over the years,
Maynard had picked up much of the elfin body language. He
projected politely constrained anger as he bowed elegantly.
"Director." Wolf used his title without his name to mildly
rebuke him.
Maynard bowed his head slightly, acknowledging the
censure. He paused for a minute, nostrils flared, before speaking.
He looked worn and tired. Time wore Maynard down at an
alarming rate; in twenty short years he had gone from a young
man to middle age. Gazing at him, Wolf realized that in a few
decades he'd lose his friend.
If I could have only made him an elf too. But no, that
would have destroyed Maynard's value as a "human"
representative.
"Windwolf," Maynard chose to continue in English,
probably because it placed him in the less subservient role. "I
wish you would have warned me about declaring the treaty void."
Wolf sighed—it was going to be one of those
conversations. "You know the terms.
Pittsburgh
could exist as a separate entity only while it
continued to return to Earth."
"You've said nothing in the last two days about voiding the
treaty."
"And I haven't said anything about the sun setting, but it has
and will."
"The sun setting does not cut me off at the knees."
Wolf glanced down at Maynard's legs, and confirmed that
they were still intact. Ah, an English saying he hadn't heard
before. "Derek, pretend I don't understand human politics."
"The treaty is between the humans and the elves." Maynard
followed the human tendency to talk slowly and in short
sentences in the face of confusion. It made the time to
enlightenment agonizingly long, even for an elf. "But the treaty is
the basis for many agreements between
United States
and the United Nations. It makes Pittsburgh
neutral territory controlled by a UN peacekeeper
force – the EIA – for the duration of the treaty."
"Ah, with the treaty void, Pittsburgh
reverts to control of the United
States
."
"Yes!"
"No."
"No?" Maynard looked confused.
"Pittsburgh
now belongs to the Wind Clan, and I decide who will
be my representative with the humans and I choose you."
Maynard took a deep breath as he pressed his palms together,
prayer-like, in front of his mouth. He breathed out, took another
breath. Windwolf was starting to wonder if he was praying.
"Wolf, I thank you for your trust in me," Maynard said finally.
"But for me to continue acting as Director of the EIA, it would
require me to disregard all human laws – and I can not do
that."
"There are no human laws anymore. Humans must obey
elfin laws now."
"That's not acceptable. I know you're the viceroy, and as
such Pittsburgh falls under your control,
but the humans of Pittsburgh
will not accept you unilaterally abolishing all human
laws and rights."
"These were conditions agreed to by your own people."
"Well, shortsighted as it might have been, it was assumed
that if something happened to the gate that
Pittsburgh
would return to Earth."
"Yes, it was." Wolf did not point out that humans were
typically shortsighted, rarely looking to past the next hundred
years. "But we knew that sooner or later we would have to deal
with humans wanting to or needing to remain on Elfhome."
"Yes, of course," Maynard said dryly. He gazed down at the
blue paleness of the Ghostlands. "Is your domi sure that
we're truly stranded? We're still a week before scheduled
Shutdown."
"Something fell from orbit. She believes it to be the gate."
"But she could be wrong."
"It's unlikely."
"Let us say that we wait a week to be sure before calling the
treaty null and void."
"A week will not make any difference."
"Ah, then it will be no problem." Maynard spread his hands
and smiled as if Wolf had agreed.
In that moment, Wolf could see the tactfully charming
young officer he hand selected out of the U.N. security force to
act as the liaison between human and elf. Maynard had been so
young back then. Wolf smiled sadly. "And if I agree to a week?"
"During this week, we draw up an interim treaty that
basically extends the original treaty."
"No." Windwolf shook his head. "We could create an
interim treaty but the original treaty can not stand. It makes
humans too autonomous."
"Pittsburgh
has existed as an independent state for thirty years."
"No, not Pittsburgh
, humans. All elves belong to a household and to a
clan. They hold a very specific position within our society. They
are responsible to others, and others are responsible for them. It's
the very foundation of our culture, and if humans are to be part
of our world, then they must conform to our ways."
"You mean—you want humans to form households?
Set up enclaves?"
"Yes. It's imperative. All of our laws are structured on the
assumption that the people under our laws are part of our
society. You can't be as independent as most humans are and still
be part of us."
* * *
They searched late into the evening but found nothing more
of the dragon. Storm clouds had gathered throughout the day, and
as dusk became night, it started to rain. Unable to track the
dragon farther, Wolf and his sekasha returned to the
enclave. He checked first to see how his domi was doing.
Tinker lay in the center of their shared bed, a dark curl of walnut
on the cream satin sheets. Wolf paused beside the footboard to
watch his beloved sleep. Despite everything, he found great
comfort in seeing her back where she belonged, safe among the
people who loved her.
A saigin flower sat on the night table, scenting the
warm air with its narcotic fragrance. Little Horse slept in a chair
beside the bed. The hospice healers had stripped off his wyvern
armor; fresh bruises and healing spells overlaid the pale circles of
bullet holes from two days ago.
I almost lost them both to the oni, Wolf thought and
touched his blade brother's shoulder. "Little Horse."
The sekasha opened his eyes after a minute, rousing
slowly. "Brother Wolf. I only meant to sit down for a moment."
He looked drowsily to the flower beside him. "The saigin
must have put me asleep."
The narcotic was starting to color Wolf's senses with a
golden haze, so he opened the balcony doors to let in rain-damp
air.
"Are you well?" Wolf took the other chair, waiting for Little
Horse to wake up from his drugged sleep, wondering if he'd
made a mistake pairing his blade brother with Tinker. They were
both so young to go through so much.
"I'm bruised, that is all." Little Horse rubbed at his eyes. "My
shields protected me."
"Good."
"I was thinking about the oni leader, Lord Tomtom, before I
drifted off. He checked on our progress either at noon or at
midnight. Some days he would make two inspections. It occurred
to me that he was rotating between compounds, overseeing two
or three of them."
"So the number of oni warriors in the area might be much
greater than the sixty you counted?"
Little Horse nodded. "From what I observed, though, the
warriors are like sea wargs." His blade brother named a mammal
that gathered in colonies on the coast; the male animals fought to
gather harems of females, and any cub left unprotected was
usually killed and eaten by its own kind. "Command goes to the
largest of group and he rules by cruelty and fear. They fight
among themselves, but I saw no weapon practice or drills. I
believe that not one of their warriors would be match for a
sekasha."
"That is good to know." It backed what Maynard had told
him at one point. Warned by Tinker, Maynard had begun to
secretly sift through his people two months earlier. Using
Tinker's description of "cruel and ruthless people with no sense
of honor" he found the hidden oni fairly simple to find. So far
intensive magical testing had proved his guesses correct.
Little Horse glanced toward the bed and a smile stole onto
his face, making him seem younger still. "Despite their large size
and savageness, she terrorized them."
Wolf laughed. Little Horse yawned widely, so Wolf stood
up and pulled his blade brother to his feet. "Go to bed. The others
can keep watch."
"Yes, Brother Wolf." Little Horse hugged him. It was good,
Wolf decided, that he paired Tinker with his blade brother. They
would protect each other's open and affection nature from the
stoic older sekasha.
After steering Little Horse to his room, Wolf detoured to
check on Singing Storm. He expected to find her sleeping when
he cracked her door. She turned her head, though, and slit open
her eyes. A smile took control of her face. Still she greeted him
with a semi-formal, "Wolf Who Rules."
He lowered the formality between them. It was her ability to
see him as nothing more than a male that made him love her so.
"How is my Discord?"
Her smile deepened. "Good and just got better."
"I'm glad." He leaned down and kissed her. She murmured
her enjoyment, running her hands up his chest to tangle in his
hair. She tasted candy sweet from her favorite gum.
"I've missed you," she whispered into his ear. She meant
intimately like this, as she had guarded over him every day for the
last two months. Taking Tinker to be his domi, however,
meant an abrupt change in their relationship. They hadn't even
had a chance to discuss it afterwards.
"I'm sorry."
She nipped him on the earlobe in rebuke. "No matter who, if
they were the right one, you would have wanted this."
"It was graceless." He had given her only a few hours
warning of his intention to offer marriage to Tinker. She knew
him well enough to know that he would want a monogamous
relationship as long as Tinker was willing to give him one.
"When did we start to care about grace? Wasn't that the
whole point of leaving court, all the false elegance? I like that
we're honest with one another – and I like her –
which is not surprising since I like humans."
"She's an elf now." Wolf gently reminded her.
"In the body, but not in the mind. She speaks low elfin as if
she was born to it, yes, but she doesn't know our ways, Wolf. If
you don't have time to teach her, then get her a tutor."
Wolf found himself shaking his head. "No. I don't want a
stranger trying to force her into court elegance."
"Are you afraid that she will lose all that makes her
endearing to you?"
Only Discord would dare to say that to him – but
then – that was another reasons he loved her. She would
risk annoying him to make him face what needed to be faced. For
her, he sighed and considered the possibility.
"No," he said after thinking it through. "Yes, I love her
humanity and I'll mourn it if she loses it completely, but she is so
much more than that."
"Then have someone teach her. She nearly got us all killed
today because she couldn't bear to sacrifice me."
He knew better than to argue with Discord on that but was
pleased with Tinker's decision. It was Tinker's courage and ability
to pull off the impossible that had initially attracted him to her,
and he would have been deeply saddened to lose Singing Storm.
"I'm trying to find a solution to this. I know she needs to be
taught our customs, but I don't want her to necessarily conform."
"I never said anything about conforming," Discord nuzzled
into his neck. "Conforming is for chickens."
He laughed into her short blue hair. "That's my Discord." He
kissed her and drew away to consider her. From her hair to her
boots, Discord challenged everything elfin. Yet of all his
sekasha, she was the only one that had grown up at Court
and had high etiquette literally beaten into her. There was no one
more knowledgeable, yet least likely to force those skills onto
Tinker.
"What is it that you want of me?" she asked.
"You know me too well." He tugged on her rat tail braid. "I
want you to keep close to my domi and be there when she
needs guidance."
"Pony is her First." Discord switched English, a sign that she
wanted to be bluntly truthful. "I'll be stomping all over his toes. I
don't want to piss him off. He's one of the few that never said
shit to me about being a mutt."
"Pony is not the type to put pride before duty. He loves
Tinker, but he knows that he doesn't fully understand her. He
hasn't spent enough time in Pittsburgh
, away from our people..."
"Like me?" It was point of sadness between them. For a
decades they ignored all the little signs that they could not be
more than domou and beholden. The fact that she would
chose Pittsburgh
over being with him had made clear that while they
were good together, they were not right.
"Like you." Wolf took her hand, kissed it, and moved on.
"Humans are still mysterious to him."
She thought for a moment and then returned to Elvish. "As
long as it does not anger Storm Horse, I will be there for her."
Chapter 4: On Gossamer Death
The next morning, shortly after dawn, the oni made their
first attack. Wolf heard a muffled roar and then the loud
anguished wail of a wounded gossamer. Luckily, his people were
already awake and ready. Only Tinker, having been drugged the
night before, still slept.
"Have Poppymeadow lock down the enclave," Wolf told
Little Horse. "I'm leaving you just with her guards and Singing
Storm. Everyone else with me."
Wolf arrived at the airfield, though too late to scry the
direction of the attack. All he could do was watch the gossamer
die in the pale morning light. The great living airship wallowed
on the ground, its translucent body undulating in pain. The
remains of the gondola lay under it, crushed by the massive
heaving body. The clear blood of the gossamer pooled on the
ground, scenting the air with the ghost of ancient seas.
"We can't get close enough to heal the wound." The
gossamer's navigator was weeping openly. "Even if we could, I
doubt we could save her. It's a massive wound, and she's lost too
much fluid. My poor baby."
The gossamer let out a long low breathy wail of pain.
"Did you see where it came from?" Wolf wasn't sure what
"it" was since none of the crew had seen the attack clearly.
The navigator shook his head. "I felt it hit before I heard
anything. She shuddered, and then started to go down, and I
jumped clear."
"Here comes another one!" Wraith shouted as he pointed at
some type of rocket flashing toward them.
Wolf flung up his widest shield, protecting the crew and
sekasha surrounding him. "Stay close!"
The rocket struck his wind wall and exploded into a fireball
that curved around them, following the edges of his shield. The
deflected energy splashed back in a wave of pulverized earth, like
a stone thrown into mud.
A piece of metal skimmed overhead and struck the
gossamer. The shrapnel smashed the gossamer sideways, blasting
through the nerve center of the creature. The airship gave one last
agonizing wail and collapsed.
Wolf shifted carefully to maintain his shield and did a wind
scry. The scrying followed the disturbance of the rocket path
through the air, making it visible to him. It pointed back to a
window a few houses down from the paparazzi's spy perch. The
Rim had razed all the buildings between the airfield and the street
at the first Startup, so he had an equally clear shot back at the
sniper.
Wolf summoned a force strike and flung it along the scry.
The power arrowed away, plowing a furrow in a straight line for
the human structure. The force strike punched its way through
the building, reducing the structure instantly to a cloud of dust
and a pile of rubble strewn into the alley behind it.
"Have someone escort the crew to safety." Wolf told his
First. "The rest, come with me."
Maintaining his shield forced him to move slowly toward
the human buildings, following the rut carved out by the force
strike. The dust expanded, shrouding the area as he crossed the
no-man's-land of the Rim.
"Keep the winds close," Wraith murmured as they reached
the street. "There may be more than one nest."
Wolf nodded his understanding. The
sekasha
activated their shields and moved out of his protection. The
house had been two stories tall. It made a large hill of rubble,
capped by the broken rooftop. If there were any survivors, they'd
have to be dug out.
Maynard emerged out of the dust, followed by a score or
more of his people in EIA uniforms. All of the EIA were spell-
marked, verifying that they were human.
"Wolf Who Rules." Maynard bowed and signaled his people
toward the rubble.
"Maynard." Wolf nudged his shield slightly so it wrapped
Maynard in his protection.
"What happened?" Maynard eyed the rubble as his people
started to sift through it.
Wolf indicated the dead airship with his eyes; maintaining
his shields limited his ability to motion with his hands.
"Someone fired on what is mine. I returned fire."
Maynard glanced at the distortion around them. "How long
can you keep up your shields?"
"There is no reason for concern." The Wind clan's spell
stones rested on a powerful
fiutana that provided
unlimited magic. "My gossamer is dead, but my crew is all safe.
For that I am thankful."
A call came from the EIA digging through the rubble. Most
of the roof had been shifted off. In the debris of the second floor
was a female huddled under a sturdy table. She appeared human,
as small and dark as Wolf's
domi. Old bruises, like
purple and yellow flowers, marked her face and arms; someone
beat her on regular occasions.
She gazed at Wolf with fear. "Don't let them have me! We're
like cockroaches to them! Razing this neighborhood is just the
start of them stomping us out!"
The human workers moved reluctantly aside to let the
sekasha claim her. Wraith took out his leather bound spell
case, and slipped out a
biatau and pressed it to the
female's arm.
She whimpered and one the watching EIA said, "It doesn't
hurt. We've all had it done to us."
The simple spell inscribed onto the paper of the
biatau was merely the first of the spells that the EIA had been
subjected to, but it was the quickest and easiest to use as a first
screening process. The oni had relied on an optical disguise spell
that let them appear human; the
biatau, when activated,
would shatter the illusion and allow their true form show.
Wraith spoke the verbal command and the spell activated.
There was, however, no change to the woman's appearance.
Maynard sighed deeply, as if he saw all the dangerous
complications that the woman presented. "She's human."
"Unfortunately." Wolf motioned that the EIA should take
her prisoner.
"Here's another one." Bladebite called.
The second person was a large male, badly hurt. Wraith took
out another
biatau with the same spell and used it on the
male. There was a ripple of distortion and the male's features
shifted slightly to a more feral looking face with short horns
protruding from his forehead.
"Oni." Wraith growled out the word.
"He's badly hurt," Maynard said. "The prison has a medical
ward. We can take him there."
Wraith jerked the oni up onto his knees.
"Wolf," Maynard said quickly and quietly. "We have
protocols on how prisoners are to be treated. The Geneva
Convention states that the wounded and sick shall be collected
and cared for."
"We do not accede," Wolf said, "to your Geneva
Convention."
In one clean motion, Wraith unsheathed his sword and
beheaded the oni.
The woman shrieked and tried to launch herself toward the
dead body.
"Wolf, you can't do this!" Maynard growled.
"It has been done," Wolf said.
Maynard shook his head. "The treaty, which the elves signed,
states that you will adhere to the Geneva Convention in the
treatment of prisoners."
"For human prisoners," Wolf said. "We will not take oni
prisoners."
Maynard frowned. "That is the only option you're
entertaining? A massacre of all the oni?"
"They breed like mice," Wolf said. "We do not fight for
today, or this year, or even this century, but for this millennium
– and to do so, we must be ruthless. If we leave a
hundred alive, in a few years they will be several thousand in
number, and in a thousand years, millions. We can not allow
them to live, or they will crowd us out of our own home."
"You can't let the elves do this!" the woman wailed. "If we
don't stop the elves, they'll turn on us next."
"It's their world." Maynard leveled his gaze and words at his
watching men, aiming his words at them alone. "Not ours."
"It was their world!" the woman shouted. "We stuck here
now, so it's ours too."
There was a flaw in Maynard's logic. The old arguments that
Maynard could have used to counter her were useless now. Her
railing, unfortunately, could lead the humans to dangerous
ground, so Wolf interceded.
"We are willing to share with humans. We do not wish to
share with oni. A full contingent of royal troops is on its way to
Pittsburgh
. When they arrive here, their goal will be to find and
kill every oni that ever stepped foot on Elfhome. My people have
committed genocide before and have full plans to do it again. I
strongly caution you do not put the human race between the royal
troops and our enemy."
Whatever impact his words had, however, were lost when
the woman suddenly looked past Wolf and shrieked. Wolf turned
to see what she was focused on. One of the EIA workers had a
small squirming creature in his arms. As the man neared, Wolf
realized that the creature was a child, species so far
undetermined, but human looking.
Wolf sighed. He had hoped it wouldn't come to this; that he
would only have to deal with adult oni. Certainly among all of
the elves, there were no children. In fact, he was fairly sure that
– not counting his
domi's unusual
status—Little Horse was the youngest elf in
Pittsburgh
. Unfortunately, when one could breed like mice, one
did.
The nametag of the EIA worker holding the child read "U.D.
Akavia."
"The child needs to be tested, Akavia," Wolf said.
Akavia's brown eyes went wide; he hadn't considered that the
child was anything but what it appeared.
"No!" the woman sympathizer cried. "Don't give those
monsters my baby!"
Akavia glanced to the woman and then down at the child
whimpering in his arms. "She's just a little girl."
"We need to know if she is human or oni." Wolf tried to
pose the statement in a non-threatening way.
"She can't hurt anyone." Akavia covered the girl's small head
with a protective hand. His eyes went past Wolf to the
sekasha behind him.
Of course the human saw only the child, not the female that
would be an adult in a few decades, nor the army she could
produce in the years to come. In truth, even to Wolf, she looked
small and helpless.
"Let us test her," Wolf said. "If she is human, we will give
her back."
Akavia's eyes narrowed in suspicion. "And if she's oni?"
Yes, Wolf thought as he scanned the hostile faces of the
heavily-armed EIA force that outnumbered his
sekasha,
that would be a problem.
He sensed the tension going through his
sekasha
who were growing impatient. He had no doubt that his people
would walk unscathed away from a fight with the EIA, but the
EIA might not understand this, and he needed all the allies he
could muster.
Maynard moved between Wolf and Akavia. Maynard's face
set into hard lines, as if he bracing himself for a fight. With Wolf
or with his own people? "Let us test her."
He left unsaid: Let us at least find out if we have cause to
fight.
Wolf nodded. "That is acceptable."
"Uri David." Maynard motioned to Akavia. Wolf shifted his
shields to include the EIA subordinate so Maynard could take the
girl into his arms.
"Wraith." Wolf indicated that the
sekasha was to
hand Akavia the
biatau.
Akavia placed the spell against the child's bruised and dusty
arm. When the spell activated, there was no change to the girl's
appearance. Relief went through the EIA.
"It proves nothing," Wraith growled. "It's probably mixed
blood. The female has all but admitted that she's coupled with the
monster."
Maynard's gaze skipped to Wraith and then came back to
Wolf.
Please, his eyes implored,
let her go.
Wolf studied the child. She gazed at him with eyes as brown
and innocent as his
domi's. He didn't want to kill this
child. Wolf steeled himself and forced himself remember that an
oni wouldn't waver in killing an elfin child nor a human child.
His people counted on him to do the right thing, no matter how
difficult the right thing might be.
How could he could he winnow the monster from the
human?
"Little one, what's your name?" Wolf asked the girl.
"Zi." The girl pointed to the woman. "Mommy's sad."
"Yes, she is. So am I." Wolf let his face show his inner
sorrow.
Zi considered him gravely, and then leaned out to pat him
gently on the cheek. "Don't be sad. Everything will be a-okay."
Wolf threw out his hand to keep the
sekasha from
reacting. "She has compassion; oni don't have that capacity."
Wraith slowly took his hand from his sword hilt. "So human
empathy is a dominant trait?"
"So it seems." Wolf gave the girl a slight smile. "Yes, Zi,
everything will be a-okay."
Chapter 5: Tree That Walks
The dying echoes of thunder pulled Tinker out of the dark
sludge of drugged sleep. She opened her eyes to see shadows
moving across an unfamiliar ceiling.
Where am I?
For one panic moment, she thought she was back in the oni
compound with the kitsune projecting illusions into her mind.
She fought her sheets to sit up, heart pounding, to scan the
luxurious bedroom.
Saijin-induced sleep still clung to
her like thick mud, making it hard to think. It took Tinker a
minute of comparing all the various places she had slept in the
last two months to finally recognize the room. It was the
bedroom she and Windwolf shared a month ago at
Poppymeadow's enclave. She remembered now the massive
poster bed, the carved paneling, and the view to the courtyard
orchard. The window stood open to a warm summer morning,
letting in air sweet with ripening peaches. Dappled sunlight
played across the walls and ceiling. Tinker flopped back into the
decadent nest of satin sheets and down pillows, tempted to go
back to sleep.
But if she did, she'd probably have another nightmare.
Her groan summoned Pony from his attached bedroom.
"Good morning,
domi."
Eyes still closed, she grunted at him. "It's not fair to expect
me to be polite before I'm fully awake. Where's Windwolf? Did
he get back safely last night?"
"He was needed at the Faire Grounds this morning. He took
everyone except Stormsong with him."
"How is Stormsong?"
"Her leg bothers her slightly, but she is whole. She is
practicing in the swordhall."
That was good news. Tinker heaved herself back up and
rubbed a heavy crust of sleep from her eyes. "Gods, I hate
saigin. It turns my brain to taffy. What's that for?"
That being one of the
sekasha's pistols. While the
gun itself was of human make, the blacked tooled leather holster
and belt were elfin. Pony laid it on the bed, a coil of dangerous
black on the sea of cream.
"Wolf Who Rule wished you to have it."
Oh, yeah, I asked for a gun.
"It is specially made for the
sekasha." Pony settled
on the bed beside her. "Only parts of it are metal, and those are
insulated with plastic, so they don't interfere with our shields.
Once you learn magic, it will be important that you don't wear
metal."
There was an elaborate system of wood buckles, D-rings and
ties to support the weight of the pistol on the hip without metal.
In place of a metal snap, the belt maker had used a heavy plastic
substitute.
"Is it loaded?"
"Not yet. I thought you would like to get comfortable with it
first."
So they played with the gun. Taking it part. Putting it
together. Strapping on the holster (although it had a tendency to
slide on her long silky nightgown.) Drawing the pistol smoothly.
Holding it with both hands to keep it steady. Aiming it. And
finally, how to load and unload it.
"Wolf Who Rules wants you to start the basics of the sword
fighting," Pony said. "It would be unwise for you to wear a
sword until you are able to use it. Guns are simple. Point and
pull the trigger."
"I'm fine with that." She had no interest in swords. They
relied too much on brute force. At five foot nothing, it didn't
matter how smart she was, she wasn't going to win a sword fight
with an elf. "Okay. I think I'm ready to face the day."
"In that?" Pony indicated her current nightgown and holster
outfit.
"I thought I'd start a new fashion statement." Nevertheless,
she started to look for the clothes she had on the day before. She
was going to have to do something about clothes. After being
kidnapped twice, she was left with only one t-shirt and one pair
of carpenter pants. Everything else in her closet was elfin gowns.
Pony guessed what she was looking for. "They took your
clothes to be cleaned."
"Oh no." She went to the window and looked out. Beyond
the orchard wall was the kitchen garden and the clothes lines.
Windwolf's household staff was hanging up the laundry. Her
jeans dangled between several pairs of longer legged pants. Her t-
shirt? Oh yes, that had been cut to ribbons by the dragon. "Oh
pooh."
Well, she could wear a dress and just go clothes shopping.
Of course she didn't have any cash in hand, nor did she ever
receive the promised replacements for the ID that the oni stole
the night she saved Windwolf's life. It could be sitting in her
mailbox back at her loft – if the EIA had been so stupid
as to mail it out after she was kidnapped by the oni. Oh gods,
what if she'd been declared legally dead after the oni 'staged' her
death?
She did have Windwolf's entire household at hand. Surely
one of the elves was savvy enough to go to the store and buy her
clothes. She considered the elves in the garden washing
clothes—by hand – in large wooden tubs. Okay,
she had clothes at her loft.
Was it a good thing or a bad thing that she was now fashion
aware enough to know that those clothes were too scruffy?
Tinker sighed. "I really don't want to run around Turtle
Creek in a dress."
"
Domi, I would rather wait until we could gather a
Hand. It would not be wise for us to go alone."
Tinker wasn't getting the hang of the elfin 'we' despite
having Pony at her side every moment for nearly two months.
She was thinking of just trotting over by herself and seeing how
much the Ghostlands had shrunk. Well, she supposed that could
wait.
She used her walk-in closet as a dressing room, stripping out
of the gun belt and her nightgown. She considered her informal
gowns, called day dresses. She had bullied the staff into taking
off the long sleeves, but the dresses still had bodices that
accented her chest, tight waists, and flowing skirts. Her choices
were sable brown, forest green or jewel red, all in gleaming fairy
silk that clung to her like wet paint. The red one, at least, had
pockets and a shorter skirt. She had to admit that she looked
fairly kicky with her new gunbelt riding low on her hip. She
added her polished black riding boots and the ruby jewelry that
Windwolf had given her. She practiced drawing her pistol and
pointed it at the mirror. "You looking at me? Uh? You looking
at me?"
"No,
domi, I can not see you." Pony said from the
other side of the closet door.
She laughed, holstering the pistol. "Did Windwolf find the
monster that attacked me and kill it?"
"No."
"Okay." She came out of the closet. "Since we can't do
anything about Turtle Creek, let's focus on the monster."
"
Domi, I do not think we should go after the dragon
alone."
"Dragon?"
"It was an oni dragon and very difficult to kill."
"Well, yeah, which is why I should figure out how to kill it.
The oni probably have more than one. There has to be a way to
take down its shields so anyone with a gun can kill it."
Pony looked at her nervously, as if he suspected she was
going to hunt down the oni dragon and poke it with sticks.
Tinker felt the need to reassure him that she didn't have
anything that radical in mind. "I want to start with Lain; she's a
xenobiologist. When you've got a problem outside your field of
specialty, you go to an expert."
* * *
A flat bed semi-trailer sat parked in front of Lain's stately
Victorian mansion. A yellow canvas tarp covered something
lumpy. The xenobiologist stood on the trailer, leaning on her
crutch, watching Tinker park the Rolls. Something about Lain's
face made Tinker suspect that somehow the trailer was her fault.
"I thought you might turn up today." Lain said.
"Well, apparently I need a small army to go back to Turtle
Creek, and Windwolf has all the sekasha today except
Pony and Stormsong."
Said sekasha had already split up into Blade and
Shield. Stormsong had moved off to scout the area as a Blade.
Pony trailed behind Tinker, acting as Shield.
"So, I thought I'd come talk to you about the monster that
attacked me yesterday." Tinker said. "The sekasha are
saying it's an oni dragon."
"Ah." Lain made a sound of understanding. "I suppose I
should thank you for your present."
"Present?" Tinker eyed the trailer apprehensively. What had
she done now without realizing it?
Lain flipped up one corner of tarp to reveal limp willowy
branches. "They told me that you sent it."
The black willow! "He eats the fruit of the tree that
walks." Tinker shivered as recognition shivered down her
spine. It was just too weird having another part of her dream
show up with her name attached to it. "I sent it?"
"That's what they told me," Lain said.
Tinker could remember finding the tree, but she –
she didn't order this. Or had she? She turned to Pony. "Did I
ask...?" His look of concentration made her realize that she had
been so rattled that she was still speaking English; she switched
Elvish. "Did I ask to have the black willow brought here?"
"You said you would love to give it to Lain."
That apparently that had been enough of an order for Pony.
Tinker really had to keep in mind that the sekasha took
her word as law. While she had been smothered in attention, the
elves had bound up the long limp branches and sturdy trunk-feet
and hauled it to the Observatory hill. Once at Lain's, however,
they'd abandoned it – trailer and all.
Lain had warned her once about elves bearing gifts. Tinker
winced, realizing that she had become one of said elves.
"I'm sorry, Lain." She made sure she was speaking English,
afraid that she might insult Pony for her own stupidity. "I didn't
know they were going to bring it here and dump it on you."
"It's a matter of gift horses and teeth, I suppose." Laying her
crutch down, Lain nimbly swung down off the trailer, her upper
body muscles cording to make up for her weakened legs. On the
ground, Lain reached up for her crutch, and then turned to rap
Tinker smartly on the head with her knuckles. "Learn to think
before you open that mouth of yours."
"Ow!" Tinker winced. "I'm bruised there."
"You are?" Lain tilted Tinker's head to examine her scalp,
combing aside her short hair with gentle fingertips. "What from?
That creature that attacked you?"
"Yeah."
Lain smelt as always of fresh earth and crushed herbs and
greens. "Ah, you'll live." She rubbed the sore area lightly. "Give
the nerve receptors something else to think about."
Tinker mewed out a noise of protest and pain at the
treatment.
Lain held her at arm's length then and looked down over
Tinker, shaking her head. "I never thought I'd see you in a dress.
That's a beautiful color for you."
Tinker showed off her rubies and her pistol, making Lain
laugh at the contrast. "Do you want the tree?"
"A fully intact specimen? Of course!" Lain let her quiet
scientific glee with the black willow show. "I saw my first black
willow my first Startup; they flew me in on an air force jet to
look at the forest where Pittsburgh
had been the night before. I didn't want to come; I was
still wrapped up in being crippled. Then I saw that wall of green,
all those ironwoods as tall as sequoias. Out of the forest came a
black willow, probably seeking a ley line, and the ground shook
when it moved. God, it was instant nirvana – an alien
world coming to me when I could no longer go to it."
A hot heady mix of delight and embarrassment flushed
through Tinker; she wanted to hear more about how thoughtful
she been, yet she knew how little she actually contributed toward
getting the tree moved. "I thought you might like it."
"I love it! But not necessarily here." Lain motioned toward
her house. "I'm not totally convinced that the willow is dead. It
might be just dormant after a massive system shock. I'd rather not
have it reviving on my doorstep."
The tree that walks... "Yeah, that might be a bad idea. I
can get a truck and move the trailer...someplace."
"What would be best is storing it at near freezing
temperatures. The cold will keep it dormant if it's still alive."
Tinker eyed the fifty-three foot semi-trailer. "Well, getting it
off the trailer wouldn't be hard – I can get a crane to do
that – but shoving it into something refrigerated
– that's going to be hard."
"I have faith." Lain limped toward her house, calling back. "I
know you'll be able to figure it out."
Ah, the disadvantages of being well known.
Stormsong was on the porch. She flashed through an 'all
clear' signal and indicated that she hadn't been inside the house.
"Let us clear the house first,
domi." Pony said.
She wanted to whine "it's just Lain's house." The
sekasha
had risked death for her, though, so she only sighed and sat
down on the porch swing. "Can I have the willow cut up?"
"No."
"I didn't think so. That would make life too simple." She
swung back and forth, the wind blowing up her skirt in a cooling
breeze. "It would be easiest if we could keep the tree on the
trailer and put it all into one large refrigerator. I could build one,
but not quickly. Is there a large freezer unit that we can borrow?"
"There's Reinholds," Lain said.
"The ice cream factory?"
"I doubt they're using all their warehouses."
"That's true." The hundred year old company was one of the
many
Pittsburgh
businesses that survived being transplanted to another
universe. Elves loved ice cream. Being stranded on Elfhome,
however, limited Reinhold's production. Things such as sugar
and chocolate all needed to be shipped in from Earth.
Pony reappeared at the door, and indicated with a nod and
hand sign that the house was clean of menace. The
sekasha took up guard at the doors, giving Tinker the privacy she was
beginning to treasure so much.
It had been two months since Tinker last been in Lain's
house, the longest time in her life between visits. It was
comforting to find it unchanged – large high ceiling
rooms full of leather furniture, stained wood, leaded glass and
shadows.
Lain made a call to Reinholds to check on their freezer
capacity. Apparently Reinholds shuffled her through various
departments, as she repeated herself between long pauses. Tinker
raided her fridge for breakfast. There were strawberries and fresh
whipped cream, so Lain wasn't kidding when she had said that
she expected Tinker to arrive.
The call ended with Lain hanging up with a sigh. "They have
one large unit that has been shut down for some time. They're
still trying to find someone that knows something about it; they'll
call me back." She picked up the teakettle and limped to the sink
to fill it. "You cut your hair again."
"Yeah, I cut it." It annoyed Tinker that her voice suddenly
shook. When she took a razor to her hair, her oni guard mistook
it as a suicide attempt; the following struggle came close to
getting Pony killed. Immediately afterwards, she went back to
dipping circuit plates – it was stupid that tears now
burned her eyes. She concentrated on stabbing a strawberry in the
whipping cream.
"I know you hate it when people pry," Lain said quietly.
"God knows, between myself, your grandfather and that crazy
half-elf Tooloo as role-models, it's no wonder you insist on
keeping everyone at arm's length."
Tinker could guess where this was going. "I'm fine!"
Lain busied herself with teacups, the faint ring of china on
china filling the silence between them. The teakettle started to
rattle with a pre-whistle boil. "God, I wish children came with
instruction manuals. I only want to do what's best for you
– but I don't know what that is. I never have."
"I'm fine," Tinker actually managed to keep her voice level
this time.
The teakettle peeped, a final warning before a full scream.
Lain turned off the fire and stood there a moment, watching the
steam pour out of the shimmering pot. Taking a deep cleansing
breath, she sighed it out and asked, "Lemon Lift or Constant
Comment?"
"The Lemon Lift." Tinker said.
"The EIA made Turtle Creek off-limits when the fighting
broke out." Lain moved the teacups carefully to the table, and
changed the subject with equal deftness. "No one has been able to
get down to look at these Ghostlands. What did you find?"
Tea was only a medium to transport honey, so while Tinker
coaxed it to maximum viscosity, she told Lain about what she
found.
"Can you fix it?" Lain asked.
"I'm a genius – not a god. I don't even know what
it is. But by the laws of thermodynamics, it should
collapse. I had Pony score the trees around the edge. Once I can
back into the valley, I'll check on the rate it's decaying."
Tinker sipped her tea and then changed the subject. "What I
really came here to talk to you about is the monster that attacked
me. It's an oni dragon."
"There were warnings on the television last night and the
radio this morning. Yet another beastie for us to worry about."
Tinker knew that she shouldn't feel responsible—but
she did anyhow. She had made the discontinuity that the dragon
had passed through to get to
Pittsburgh
. "The dragon generates a shield of magic that protects
it. According to the Pony and Stormsong, Windwolf's First Hand
fought one of these things
nae hae." The elf phrase,
meaning "too many years to count" dropped out of Tinker's
mouth like she had been born to the concept of living forever.
She found it a little disturbing. "Apparently the shield also
protects it from magical weapons like spell arrows. They think
Windwolf will be able to kill it – but he can't be
everywhere at once. We need a more mundane way of dealing
with the beastie."
"Do you know if it's a natural creature or a bio-engineered
one?" Lain took out her datapad and opened a new file to take
notes.
"No. The oni didn't mention anything to me about the
dragon, and the
sekasha don't know. What's the
difference?"
"The result of creatures of evolving in an environment full
of magic is often they can use magic to their own benefit. Take
the black willow; it's mutated from tree with all the standard
limitations to a highly effective predator. By in large, though, the
bio-engineered creatures tend to be more dangerous than the
randomly mutated creatures."
"Like the wargs?" Tinker knew that the wolf-like creatures
had been created for war but now ranged wild in the forest
surrounding
Pittsburgh
.
"Yes. The wargs not only have the frost breath, but they
show no signs of aging or disease and their wounds heal at a
speed that suggests a spell somehow encoded at cellular level.
They're massive, intelligent, and aggressive in nature."
"So the question is 'how much did the oni dragon get in their
DNA gift baskets?'"
"Yes. But let's start with the basics. We've never
encountered an Elfhome dragon – we only know that
they exist because the elves keep telling us that they do –
and that we really don't want to study them closely."
Tinker laughed at that comment.
"Is this dragon mammal or reptile?" Lain asked.
"I'm not sure. It had scales, but it also had some sort weird
mane. It was long, and lean, with big square jaw." Tinker put her
hands up to approximate the size of the head. "Short legs with big
claws that it could pick things up with."
Lain made a slight amused sound and got up to put the
teakettle back on the stove. "Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!"
It took Tinker a moment to identify the quote, a poem out of
Alice
through the Looking Glass.
"We fell down the hole and through the looking
glass."
The sudden connection with her dream was like a slap.
White's face jolted into her mind again. With the addition of the
book title, though, she remembered where she seen White before.
"You know, I had the oddest dream about Boo-boo Knees."
Lain whipped around to face her. "Boo?"
"At least, I think it was Boo-boo."
"H-h-how do you know about Boo's nickname?"
"The picture. It has her name on the back of it."
"Which picture?"
"The one in the book." When Lain continued to stare at her
in confusion, Tinker went to scan the bookcases until she found
the book in question:
The Annotated
Alice. Complete in one book was both
Alice in
Wonderland and
Alice through the Looking Glass and
What She Found There with copious footnotes that
explained layer upon layers of meaning in what seemed to be just
a odd little children's story. Tinker had discovered the book when
she was eight. Lain apparently had forgotten the photo tucked
into the book, but Tinker hadn't.
It was an old two-dimensional color photo, a young woman
with short purple hair. She hovered in mid-air, the Earth a
brilliant blue moon behind her. She challenged the camera with a
level brown-eyed gaze and a set jaw, as if she was annoyed with
its presence. On her right temple was a sterile adhesive bandage.
Written on the back was "Even in zero gravity, I find things to
bang myself on. Love. Boo-boo Knees."
At the point Tinker had found it, she'd never seen a two-
dimensional photograph; neither her grandfather or Lain were
ones for personal pictures. From its limited perspective to the
name of Boo-boo Knees, she'd found it fascinating. She stared at
it until – ten years later – she could have drawn it
from memory.
The picture was where she carefully returned it, marking the
place where one story ended and another started.
"Oh!" Lain took the photo. "I've forgotten about that."
"Who is she?"
Why am I dreaming about her? Tinker
flipped through the book, remembering now nearly forgotten
passages echoing back from the dream. The tea party with the
Mad Hatter murdering time, leaving his watch stuck at six
o'clock. The checkerboard layout that they flown over. Alice and
the Red Queen hand in hand, like the Tinker and White had been
in the dream, racing to stay in place.
"That's Esme," Lain identified White as her younger sister.
"It is?" Tinker reclaimed the photo. She had always imagined
Esme as a younger version of Lain, but Esme looked nothing like
her. Come to think of it – Tinker had never seen a picture
of Esme before, not even her official NASA mission photo.
"I'm not surprised you're dreaming of her," Lain was saying
as Tinker continued to search the photo for the cause of her
dreams. "You're bound to be upset about the gate and the
colonists."
Was that the true reason? The dream seemed so real
compared to the rest of her nightmares. She didn't know Boo-boo
Knees was Lain's sister, and Lain had many retired astronauts as
friends, so Tinker had no reason to assume that this was a picture
of a colonist. And why all the
Alice
in Wonderland references? Were they just reminders
of where the photo was stored – or that the colonist had
dropped into a mirror reflection of Earth. Certainly there was
nothing to say that Earth had only two reflections: Elfhome and
Onihida.
"Lost, lost," The crows had cried.
According to Riki, the first colony ship, the
Tianlong
Hao was crewed entirely by tengu. If Black was a tengu
female, that would explain the crows – but what about
the hedgehogs? Tinker flipped through the book, found a picture
of
Alice
with a flamingo and a hedgehog. The queen was
screaming, "Off with his head!" Was this some oblique reference
to the queen of the elves?
"Oh, this is going to give me a headache," Tinker murmured.
Down the hall, the phone rang. Lain gave her an odd,
worried look and went to answer it.
Tinker found herself alone with the photograph of Lain's
younger sister, looking defiantly out at her. "Why am I dreaming
of you? I don't know where you are. I don't know how to save
you. Hell, I don't even know how to save
Pittsburgh
."
Lain limped back into the kitchen. "That was Reinholds. The
freezer in question is shut down because the compressor needs
repaired. They said if I have someone to repair the unit, we could
store the tree there. They'll even throw in some free ice cream."
"He eats the fruit of the tree that walks," Tinker suddenly
remembered all of what White – Esme – had
said. "Follow the tree to the house of ice and sip sweetly of the
cream."
"I'll go look at the compressor." Tinker kept hold of the
book. She had a bad feeling she was going to reread the silly
thing. "And see if I can fix it. I think I
have to do this.
Can you do me a favor in the meantime? See if you can find out
anything about this oni dragon." Tinker described the magical
shield that the dragon generated. "If we have to fight it again, I
want to be able to hurt it."
Chapter 6: Lively Maple Flavor
For years, Tinker had thought of herself as famous. The
invention and mass production of the hoverbike made Tinker's
name well-known even before she started to race. True, few
people realized that the girl in the 'Team Tinker' shirt
was
the famed inventor/racer; still, she often got a reaction when she
introduced herself.
But she wasn't prepared for the welcome she received at the
Reinholds offices.
The receptionist looked up as Tinker and her bodyguards
entered. "Can I help..." the woman started, and then her gaze
shifted from Pony to Tinker, and her question ended in a high
squeal that drew everyone's eyes. "Oh, my god! Oh, my god! It's
the fairy princess!"
Tinker glanced over her shoulder, hoping that there would
be a female in diaphanous white behind her. No such luck.
"Pardon?"
"You're her!" The woman jumped up and down, hands to her
mouth. "You're Tinker, the fairy princess!"
Other office people came forward. One woman had a slickie
in hand, which she held out with a digital marker. "Can you
autograph this for me, vicereine?"
Vice-what? Tinker felt a smile creeping onto her face in
response to all the brightly smiling people gathering around her.
The slickie was titled: Tinker, the new fairy princess. The cover
photo was of Tinker, a crown of flowers disguising her
haphazard haircut, looking fey and surprisingly pretty.
"What the hell?" Tinker snatched the slickie from woman.
When in gods' name was this taken? And by who?
She thumbed the page key, flipping through the pictures and
text. The first half-dozen photographs were of Windwolf, taken
across seasons and at various locations, looking studly as usual.
The text listed out Windwolf's titles—viceroy, clan head
for Westernlands, cousin to the queen – and added Prince
Charming.
"Oh, gag me." She flipped on and found herself. It was a
copy of the front cover. When was it taken? She couldn't
remember any time appearing in public with a crown of flowers.
The only time she had flowers in her hair like this was ...
Oh, no! Oh, please, no. She frantically flipped on, hoping
that she was wrong. Two more head shots, and then there it was
– her in her nightgown, the one that looked like cream
poured over her naked body. Oh, someone was so dead meat.
The morning after returning from the Queen's court, she had
breakfasted in the private garden courtyard of Poppymeadow's
enclave. She had been alone with the female
sekasha
– and some pervert with telephoto lens. Thankfully,
because of the distance involved, the photo was 2-D with limited
pan and zoom feature.
"Can you sign it, vicereine?" The owner of the digital
magazine asked.
"Sign?" Tinker slapped the slickie to her chest – she
didn't even want to give it back.
The woman held out her marker. "Could you make it out to
Jennifer Dunham?"
Tinker stared at the marker, wondering what to do. Certainly
she couldn't ask her bodyguards – she suspected that they
would not take the invasion of her privacy well. Not that the
picture was all that indecent, but more that they failed to protect
her. She fumbled with getting the slickie back to its cover picture
without flashing it at her bodyguards, scribbled her name in the
corner and thrust it back.
"I'm here about the broken freezer unit that Lain Shanske
called about." Time to escape to something simple,
understandable, and easily fixed. This freezer repair sounded like
a good greasy project to let her forget all the big, unsolvable
problems. "You said that if it was fixed, she could use it."
"That was me that she talked to." One man separated himself
from the crowd. "Joseph Wojtowicz, you can call me Wojo,
most people do. I'm the general manager here." Halfway through
his handshake, he seemed to think he'd made a blunder in
etiquette and bowed over her hand. "Yes, if you can get the unit
working, she's more than welcome to it."
"Well, let's go see it." Tinker indicated that they should go
out of the office, away from the crowd of people who were
showing signs of producing cameras. "I want to see if it's actually
big enough to hold the tree."
Thus they managed to escape, no picture taken, through the
offices and to a back street. Stormsong lead the way, moving
through the maze of turns as if she worked at the offices. Pony
trailed behind, keeping back the curious office staff with dark
looks.
"I heard about the monster attacking you yesterday," Wojo
didn't seem to notice her
sekasha, focusing only on
Tinker as they rounded a corner and took a short flight of cement
steps up onto a loading dock. "Are you okay? It sounds like you
had a nasty fight on your hands."
Gods, first Lain and now him. How many people had heard
about the fight at Turtle Creek? "I'm fine."
"That's good! That's good! I knew your grandfather, Tim
Bell. He was—" Wojo paused to consider a polite way to
describe her grandfather. "— quite a character."
"Yeah, he was."
"This is it, here." He stopped before a large door padlocked
shut. He pulled out a keyring and started to sort through the keys.
"It was our main building before Startup. After that, it was so
unpredictable that we only used it for overflow. Four years ago,
we stopped being able to use it at all."
By Startup, he meant the first time
Pittsburgh
went to Elfhome. In typical fashion, Pittsburghers
used Startup to mean that first time, and each consecutive time,
after Shutdown returned
Pittsburgh
to Earth. Shutdown itself was a misnomer because
the gate never fully shutdown, only powered down sharply, a fact
that she had counted on when she set out to destroy it. The oni
could have stopped the resonance only by completely shutting off
the orbital gate, something it wasn't designed to do easily. The
poor crew that maintained the gate probably had no clue what
was happening or how to stop it. Tinker tried not to think of the
poor souls trying to save themselves before the gate shook itself
to pieces. Had they abandoned the structure? Were there ships in
orbit around Earth that could rescue them? Or had they too
phased into space over Elfhome, doomed to rain down with the
fiery pieces of the gate?
I've killed people, she thought with despair, and I don't even
know how many, or what race they've belonged to.
"Well, I'll be damned." Wojo turned away from the door,
frowning at his key ring as if it had failed him. "None of these
keys fit the lock. I guess the key was taken off this ring when we
stopped using the building. I'll be right back."
Pony and Stormsong were conferring in whispers. Tinker
caught enough to realize that Stormsong was translating for
Pony. Was having her
sekasha understand
everything
worth the convenience of not having to repeat herself?
A slight chiming caught Tinker's attention. Across the street
sat a small shrine to a local ley god, its prayer bells ringing in the
slight breeze.
The gods of the ley were all faces of the god of magic,
Auhoya, the god of chaos and plenty. Tinker was never sure how
he could be many different gods and yet still be one individual,
but she'd learn that with gods, one didn't try to understand like
one would with science. They were. Auhoya was shown always
with a horn and a two edged sword. She supposed in some ways,
magic was a lot like science, used to make or destroy.
She clapped her hands to call the gods attention to her,
bowed low, and added a silver dime to the horde already littering
the shrine.
"Help me to make things right." Adding a second dime, she
whispered. "Help me to never mess up this badly again."
"Tinker
ze domi," Someone said behind her, using
the formal form of her title.
She turned and found Derek Maynard, head of the EIA,
standing behind her. If Windwolf was prince of the Westernlands,
then Director Maynard was prince of
Pittsburgh
. Certainly, there was a similarity in their appearance,
as Maynard was elf tall and elf stylish. He wore his hair in a long,
blonde braid, a painted silk duster, and tall, polished boots. She
noted that while he was primarily in white, his accents –
earrings, waistcoat, and duster – were all Wind Clan
blue.
"Maynard? You're about the last person I expected to run
into here. Is the EIA out of ice cream?"
"I'm here to see you." Maynard bowed elegantly, weirding
her out. For years she had been terrified of the EIA, and now its
Director was treating her like a princess.
"Me?" To her annoyance, the word came out as a squeak.
Obviously, someone wasn't completely over their fear.
"I heard of the attack on you yesterday..."
"Hell, does everyone in
Pittsburgh
know about that?"
"Possibly. It made the newspaper. How are you feeling?"
"I wish people would stop asking."
"Forgiveness." He swept a critical gaze down over her,
taking in her silk dress, black leather gun belt, and polished riding
boots. "I am glad to see you well."
"You chased me down just to see how I was?"
"Yes." He motioned toward the shrine. "Did you convert
after Windwolf made you an elf?"
"I was raised in the religion," she said. "My grandfather was
an atheist or agnostic, depending on his mood. Tooloo often
babysat me when I was a child; she thought if I wasn't watched
over by human gods, I should be protected by elfin ones."
"Has anyone ever taught you about human religion?"
"Grandpa taught us to exchange Christmas presents and Lain
lights candles at Hanukkah."
"Lain Shanske? I take it that she's Jewish."
"By blood, although not totally by faith. It seems a weird
compulsion that she fights, like she doesn't want to believe,
saying she's not going to do Hanukkah but at the last minute, she
pulls out the candles and lights them."
Maynard nodded, as if Lain's behavior wasn't bizarre. "I
understand."
"I don't. If you try to talk to her about the Jewish God
– one minute she's saying that her god is the only true
god, and the next minute, she'll be telling me that scientifically,
her creation story is impossible. It's like she wants me to know
her religion, but doesn't want me to believe it, because she
doesn't believe it—but she does."
"Things that you're told as a child – your fear, your
religion, your bigotry—become so much apart of you
that's it hard to remove them when you grow to be adult.
Sometimes you don't realize such things are there until the
moment of truth, and then it is suddenly impossible to miss as a
third arm, and as hard to cut off."
"You talk like you've been through it."
"There have been a few times where all I could do was kiss
dirt and pray."
Stormsong scoffed slightly, reminding Tinker that this
wasn't a private conversation. On the heels of that, she
remembered that this was the second most important person in
Pittsburgh
after Windwolf—and he had come looking for
her.
"You didn't come here to ask me about my religion."
"Actually, in a way, I had," Maynard said. "You do realize
that
Pittsburgh
's treaty with the elves is now null and void?"
"No. Why would it be void?"
"The basic underlying principle of the treaty is that
Pittsburgh was a city of
Earth
only temporarily visiting Elfhome. Every article was
written with the idea that humans would and could return to
Earth."
"Shit! Okay, I didn't realize that." She frowned at him,
wishing she wasn't so tired. Surely this conversation had to be
making some kind of sense, but she was missing the connection.
What did her religion have to do with the treaty?
"Little one," Stormsong took out a pack of Juicy Fruit gum
and offered Tinker a piece. "He wants to know how human you
are after everyone has had a chance to fuck your brain over for
the last few months. He needs your help but he doesn't know if
he can trust you."
Ooooh. Tinker took the gum to give herself a moment to
think.
"Succinct as ever, Stormsong." Maynard also accepted a
piece.
"That's why you love me." Stormsong stepped back out of
the conversation, becoming elfin again.
The last time Tinker remembered talking with Maynard
was—before she'd been summoned by the queen. She'd
warned him about the oni. Slowly unwrapping the gum, she tried
to remember if she had seen Maynard after that. No, the oni had
kidnapped her while she was on her way to see him. Yeah, she
could see why he might be concerned she'd been
somehow—damaged.
That still begged the question of what the hell he expected
her to do in regard of negotiating a new treaty. As a business
owner, she found all regulations set up in the original one to be
baffling, perplexing, mystifying, bewildering... and any other
word that meant confusing.
"Look, I can help with junkyards, hoverbike racing, and
advanced physics." She sighed and put the gum in her mouth. For
a moment the taste – not Juicy Fruit as she remembered
but something similar—only a hundred times better
– distracted her. It was like getting kicked in the mouth.
"Wow." She checked the bright yellow wrapper in her hand. Oh
yes, she was an elf now, and things tasted different.
Maynard was frowning, waiting for her to finish her point.
"Um—" What had she been saying? Oh yes, her areas
of expertise. "But I've discovered that I know very little about
anything else."
"You're Windwolf's
domi."
"And this makes me an expert on—what? I don't
know you well enough to discuss my sex life and quite frankly,
the only place I get to see my husband is in bed."
"Whether you like it or not,
ze domi, that makes you
a player in
Pittsburgh
. There are sixty thousands humans that need you on
their side."
"Fine, I'm on their side. Rah, rah, rah! That still doesn't give
me a clue how to help. Fuck, I tried to help the elves and look at
the mess I made. You can't screw up much more than Turtle
Creek."
"A lot of elves see this as a win-win situation. If you had
permanently returned
Pittsburgh
back to Earth, it would have been perfect."
"Some of us would have been pissed," Stormsong said.
Maynard gave Stormsong a look that begged her to be quiet.
"Look," Tinker said. "If shit hits the fan, I promise I will
move heaven and earth to protect the people of this city, but I am
not a political animal. At this point in time, I don't even want to
try to tackle anything that can't be solved with basic number
crunching."
Maynard was still gazing at Stormsong, but in a more intent
fashion now. Stormsong wore an odd stunned look, like
someone had hit her with a cattle prod.
"Stormsong?" Tinker scanned the area, looking for danger.
"You will," Stormsong murmured softly in a voice that put
chills down Tinker's spine.
"I will
what?" Tinker shivered off the feeling.
"Move heaven and earth to protect what you love,"
Stormsong whispered.
"What the hell does that mean?" Tinker asked.
Stormsong blinked and focused on Tinker. "Forgiveness,
ze domi," she said in High Elvish, disappearing behind her
most formal mask. "My ability is erratic and I'm untrained. I
– I am not certain..."
"If that's the case, I'm satisfied." Maynard acted as if
Stormsong had said something more understandable.
"Forgiveness,
ze domi, I must take my leave.
Nasadae
."
"
Nasadae." Tinker echoed, mystified. What the fuck
just happened? Maynard bowed his parting. Stormsong had gone
into
sekasha mode. And the conversation had been in
English, so asking Pony would be pointless.
Wojo returned with the keys. "I see you've found the cause
of all our problems." He indicated the shrine marking the ley line.
"As soon as the magic seeped into the area after the first Startup,
the whole unit went whacky. It was the weirdest thing I'd ever
seen—including waking up the day before."
"Huh?" She was having trouble switching gears. That's it,
I'm won't fight any monsters today and go to bed early.
Wojo misunderstood her grunt of confusion. "I lived out in
West View right on the Rim – almost didn't come with
the rest of the city. My place looked down on I-279. Every
morning, I'd get up, have coffee, and check traffic out my back
window. That first Startup, I looked out, and there was nothing
but trees. I thought maybe I was dreaming. I actually went and
took a cold shower before going back and looking again."
Tinker added a shower and maybe a nightcap to her 'must get
sleep' list – if she could find either.
"I never realized how noisy the highway was until
afterwards," Wojo continued blithely. "When the forest is still,
its absolute quiet, like the world is wrapped in cotton. And the
wind through the trees – that green smell—I just
love it."
Tinker bet Stormsong would know where to find booze and
hot water.
"But between the wargs, the saurus and the black willows,
West View was just too isolated – I was way out past the
scientist commune on Observatory Hill. It's all ironwood forest
now. I have a nice place up to
Mount Washington
, beautiful view of the city, and it's much safer up
there. And hell, with gas prices what they are, it makes sense to
take the incline down the hill and take the light rail over."
"Yeah, yeah," Tinker agreed to shut him up and indicated the
door. "Let's see what you have."
Wojo unlocked the padlock, freed it from the bolt, and
opened the door.
Before her transformation, ley lines seemed nearly mystical
– lines of force running like invisible rivers. The little
shrines erected by the elves on strong ley lines served as the only
warning for why the normal laws of physics would suddenly
skew off in odd directions, as the chaos of magic was applied to
the equation. "I hit a ley," embedded itself into the
Pittsburgh
language, blaming everything from acts of nature to
bad judgment on the unseen presence.
But now, as a
domana, she could see magic. The
door swung open to reveal a room filled with the shimmer of
power.
"Sweet gods," she breathed, earning a surprised look from
Wojo and making the
sekasha move closer to her.
The magic flowed at a purple on the far end of the visible
spectrum, lighting the floor to such near-invisible intensity that it
brought tears to her eyes. The high ceiling absorbed most of that
light, so it stayed cloaked in shifting shadows. Heat spilled out of
the room, flushing her to fever hot, and seconds later, the sense
of lightness seeped up her legs, slowly filling her until she felt
like she would float away.
"What?" Wojo asked.
"It's a very strong ley line," Tinker said.
Wojo made a slight surprised hrumpf to this.
She considered what she was wearing. An active spell with
this much force behind it, snarled by something metal on her,
could be deadly. She wasn't sure how dangerous this much latent
magic might pose. "You might want to empty your pockets."
She pulled off her boots, emptied her pockets into them, and
took off her gun belt. Since the
sekasha caste couldn't
sense magic, she told Pony and Stormsong, "This ley seems
almost as strong as the Spell Stones."
"The shrine indicates a
fiutana," Pony explained.
"Like the one that the spell stones are built on."
"What's that?" Tinker asked.
Pony explained, "A single point where magic is much
stronger than normal, welling up, like spring waters."
"If you're coming in," she told the two warriors, "Strip off
all metal. And I mean all."
The
sekasha started paper, scissors, stone to see
which was going in, and which would stay behind with the
weapons.
There was a light switch by the door; Tinker cautiously
flipped it on, but nothing happened.
"Light bulbs pop as soon as you carry them into the room,"
Wojo explained, "so we stopped installing them."
"We needed a light source shielded from magic." Tinker
flipped the switch back to off. "I don't think even a plastic
flashlight would work."
"No, they pop too." Wojo took out two spell lights and held
out one to her. "These are safe, but you'll want to watch
– they're really bright."
With this much magic around, that wasn't surprising.
She wrapped her hand tight around the cool glass orb before
activating it. Her fingers gleamed dull red, her bones lines of
darkness inside her skin. Carefully, she uncovered a fraction of
the orb, and light shafted out a painfully brilliant white.
Stormsong won paper, scissors, stone and opted for coming
inside. She ghosted into the room ahead of Tinker, her shields
outlining her in blue brilliance, her wooden sword ready. Tinker
waiting for Stormsong to flash the 'all clear' signal before
entering the warehouse.
The cement floor was rough and warm under her stocking
feet. She walked into the room, feeling like she should be
wading. It lacked the resistance of water, but she could sense a
current, a slow circular flow, and a depth.
Wojo followed, oblivious to magic. "This is the space. Is it
big enough? If we can get the refrigerator unit to work?"
Tinker considered the loading dock, the wide door and the
large room. They would have to transfer the tree from the flatbed
to something that wheeled, then shift both back onto the flatbed
to get the tree up to the loading dock height and still able to shift
it back into the cooler. Given that they'd have to fit a forklift in
to help with the transfer, it would be a tight fit, but certainly
doable.
"Yeah, this will do." Of course they would have to drain off
the massive excess of magic. Strong magic and heavy machinery
did not mix well. "You had the cooling unit running for, what,
ten years? I'm surprised you managed to keep it running that
long."
"More like fourteen." Wojo said. "Your grandfather,
actually, came over just after Startup and set us up so it worked
fine for years. It didn't break down until after he died."
The machine room was off the back of the refrigerated
room, through a normal sized door in the insulated wall. The
compressor itself was normal. The cement around it, however,
had been inscribed with a spell. A section had overloaded,
burning out a section of the spell. She'd never seen anything like
it.
"My grandfather did this?" Tinker asked.
"Yes." Wojo nodded. "He heard about the trouble we were
having and volunteered to fix it. We were a little skeptical. Back
then, no one knew anything about working magic. People are
picking magic up, but still, no one had a clue how to fix what he
did when it broke."
Tinker's family had the edge that they were descendent from
an elf trapped on Earth. Her father, Leonardo Dufae, developed
his hyperphase gate based off the quantum nature of magic after
studying the family's codex. It was main reason Tinker had been
able to build a gate when no one on Earth had yet figured out
how to copy her father's work.
"Define whacky." Tinker asked.
"What?" Wojo said.
"You said that it went whacky after the first startup."
"Ah, well, the compressor seemed to work like a pump. The
magic was so thick that you could see it. It blew every lightbulb
on the block. The forklifts kept burning out but then they'd skitter
across the room, just inches off the floor. Loose paper would
crawl up your leg like a kitten. It was just weird."
Yes, that fell under whacky. She knew that the electric
forklifts had engines that could short to form a crude anti-gravity
spell – it was what gave her the idea for hoverbikes. The
loose paper was new. Perhaps they had something printed on
them that had animated them.
"We finally just shut it down and gave all the ice cream to
the Queen's army." Wojo wave his hand to illustrate emptying
out the vast storage area. "Kind of an ice breaker –
pardon the pun. A thousand gallons of the cookie batter,
chocolate fudge, and peanut butter. Luckily, the Chinese paid for
the inventory loss and it hooked the elves on our ice cream."
Tinker sighed, combing her fingers back through her short
hair. "Well, no matter what, I'll have to drain off the magic;
basically set up a siphon that funnels magic to a storage unit. I
have one set up for my electromagnet since a ley line runs
through my scrapyard." She used to think of it as a strong ley
line, but it was just a meandering stream compared to this flood.
"But that won't handle a flood like you're talking about."
"Whatever your grandfather did worked for years."
The question was – what had her grandfather done?
To start from scratch would take time she didn't have, not with
the black willow warming in the sun. Luckily, he kept
meticulous records on anything he ever worked on. "I'll go
through his things and see if I can find a copy of the spell."
Chapter 7: Things Better Left Buried
The treaty between the elves and humans banned certain
humans from
Pittsburgh
as it traveled back and forth between the worlds:
criminals, mentally insane, and orphans. When her grandfather
died, her cousin Oilcan had been seventeen and Tinker had just
turned thirteen. Facing possible deportation, dealing with her
grandfather's things had been the last thing on Tinker's mind.
Truth be told, she'd run a little mad at the time, resisting Lain and
Oilcan's attempts to have her move in with them. She roamed the
city, hiding from her grief, and sleeping wherever night found
her. Terrified that she was going to lose the only world she'd ever
known, she drank it down in huge swallows.
Only when Oilcan turned eighteen, able to be her legal
guardian, did they settle back into a normal life. With money
from licensing her hoverbike design, she set up her scrap yard
business, moved into a loft, and laid claim to a sprawling garage
between the two. Her grief, however, had been too fresh to deal
with her grandfather's things; Oilcan and Nathan Czernowski
packed up them up and stored them away in a room at the back of
the garage.
Even now – looking at the small mountain of boxes,
draped in plastic, smelling of age – it was tempting to
just shut the door on the emotional landmines that the boxes
might hold.
"
Domi," Pony said quietly behind her. "What are we
looking for here?"
"My grandfather created the spell at the ice cream factory. I
need to find his notes on it so I can fix it quickly. I figure it's in
one of these boxes."
Pony nodded, looking undaunted by the task. "How can we
help?"
Backing out of the whole tree mess wasn't really an option;
she already had too many people involved. The dust, however,
was making her nose itch.
"Can you take these boxes out to the parking pad?" She
waved toward the square of sun-baked cement. "After I look
through a box, you can put it back."
The first box she opened was actually some of their old
racing gear. Inside were a dozen of their FRS walkie-talkies,
heavily shielded against magic. She'd upgraded the team to
earbuds, and mothballed the handheld radios.
"Score!" she cried. "This is just what I wanted!"
"What are they?" Pony picked one up. "Phones?"
"Close. I want to make it so the Hands can communicate
over distance better. These are a little bit clunky but they're easy
to use."
Oddly, Stormsong thought this was funny. She took the box,
saying mysteriously, "This should be interesting."
* * *
Tinker supposed it could be worse. Her grandfather had been
methodical in organizing his things. Oilcan kept everything
carefully separated as he packed the boxes. Still she couldn't find
anything filed under Reinholds, Refrigeration, Ice Cream, or the
type of compressor that Reinholds used.
"Ze domi," Stormsong murmured politely.
Tinker sighed. Random searching wasn't going to work.
"What is it, Stormsong?"
"I want to thank you for yesterday."
"Yesterday?" Tinker found the Aa-Ak box and sat down
beside it. "Can you put these boxes in alphabetical order?"
Stormsong started to rearrange the boxes, but switched to
English, losing her polite mask. "Look, little one, you're a good
kid – your heart is in the right place – so I guess I
do have to thank you for that stupidity you pulled yesterday. If
you hadn't come back, I'd be dead. But I had made my peace with
that – being sekasha is all about choosing your
life and your death – so don't ever pull that shit
again. You really fucked up. When that thing hit you, you should
have been so much dead meat – and would have been a
huge waste – because you are a good kid. The kind I
would have been happy dying to protect – do you
understand?"
Tinker blinked at her for moment, before finding her voice.
"I thought I figured out a way to kill it."
"It wasn't your place to kill it."
"What? I lost at paper, scissors,
stone?"
"You know what I hate about being a sekasha? It's
the domana. We sekasha spend our lives learning
the best way to handle any emergency. We train and train and
train – and then have to kowtow to some domana
who is just winging it because they've got the big guns. Do you
know what? Just because you've got the big brains, or the kick
ass spells, doesn't mean you know everything. Next fight, shut
the fuck up and do what you're told, or I'm going to bitch slap
you."
It took Tinker a moment to find her voice. "You know, I
think I like you better when you speak Elvish."
Stormsong laughed, "And I like you better when you speak
English. You're more human."
Tinker controlled the urge to stick out her tongue. She
deserved Stormsong's criticism since she had screwed up. Still,
she suddenly felt like crying. Oh joy. The last few weeks had left
her rubbed raw. Instead, she pushed the Aa-Ak box toward
Stormsong, saying, "I'm done with this one," and moved on. At
least, having had her say, Stormsong took the box away without
comment.
Under "Birth" Tinker found birth certificates for everyone in
the family but herself. She pulled Oilcan's and had Stormsong put
it in the car. Under "Dufae" she found the original Dufae Codex
carefully sealed in plastic. She'd only worked with the scanned
copy that her father made.
"Wow." That too she pulled out and had put in the Rolls to
take home with her. The next book started with E's, and toward
the back was a thick file folder marked simply: Esme. "What the
hell?"
Tinker pried the file out of the box, flipped it open and
found Esme Shanske looking back. She ruffled quickly through
the file. It was all information on Esme. NASA bios. Newspaper
clippings. Photographs. It threw her into sudden and complete
confusion.
"What are you doing here?" She asked Esme's photo. "I
wasn't looking for you. What was I looking for?" She had to
think a moment before remembering that she wanted to find her
grandfather's notes on the spell at Reinholds so the walk-in
freezer could function again so she could store the black willow.
But why? "Why am I doing this again?"
Lain wanted the black willow (thus the whole reason it was
salvaged in the first place) and it might revive—good
reason to lock the tree in the cooler. The cooler was broken. She
needed to fix it. They were all nice, sane, and logical links in a
chain.
What made it all weird were her dreams and Esme popping
up in odd places. It jarred hard with Tinker's orderly conception
of reality. It pushed her into an uncomfortable feeling that the
world wasn't as solid and fixed as she thought it was. She wanted
to ignore it all, but Windwolf had said that it wasn't wise to
ignore her dreams.
Perhaps if she dealt with them in a scientific manner, they
wouldn't seem so – frighteningly weird.
She got her datapad and settled in the sun to write out what
she remembered of the dream, and what had already materialized.
The pearl necklace headed the list, since it was the first to appear.
Second was the black willow and the ice cream. She considered
the hedgehogs of the dream and the flamingoes in the book's
illustrations and decided her future might be decidedly weird.
And who was the Asian woman in black? She felt that the
woman had to be tengu because of the crows. She had felt,
however, that she knew the woman, just as she knew Esme.
Perhaps she was another colonist, which was why the birds kept
repeating, "Lost." Riki had told her that the first ship was crewed
by tengu. Then it hit her – Riki lied about everything. She
flopped back onto the sun warm cement and covered her eyes.
Gods, what was she doing? Trying to apply logic to dream
symbols was not going to work! So how was she going to figure
out the future with only dreams and possible lies?
* * *
"Domi," Pony's voice and the touch of his hand on
her face yanked Tinker out of her nightmare. "Wake up."
Tinker opened her eyes and struggled awake. She lay on the
warm, rough cement of the parking pad. Stormsong was doing a
leisurely prowl in the alley. Pony knelt beside her, sheltering her
from the sun. She groaned and rubbed at her eyes; they burned
with unshed tears. "What is it?"
"You were having a nightmare."
She grunted and sat up, not wanting to fall back to sleep,
perhaps to dream. Lately dreaming was a bitch. The oni had really
force-fed her id some whoppers, not that her imagination really
needed it, no thank you.
"Domi?" His dark eyes mirrored the concern in his
murmured question. "Are you all right?"
"It was just a bad dream." She yawned so deep her face felt
like it would split in half. "How can I sleep and wake up more
tired?"
"You've only been asleep for a few minutes." He shifted so
that he sat beside her. "Nor was it restful sleep."
"You're telling me." In her dreams, she hadn't been able to
save him from being flayed of his tattoos. She leaned against his
bare arm, his skin and tattoos wonderfully intact, glad for the
opportunity to reassure herself without making a big deal of it.
Just a nightmare.
He smelled wonderful. After weeks together, she knew his
natural scent. He was wearing some kind of cologne, an enticing
light musk. She felt the now familiar desire uncoil inside her.
Gods, why did stress make her want to lick honey off his rock-
hard abs? Was this some kind of weird primitive wiring –
most of us are going off to be eaten by saber tooth tigers, so let's
fuck like crazy before the gene pool lessens? Or was she
uniquely screwed up?
Every night with Pony among the oni had been a torture of
temptation. There had been only one bed and she had been stupid
enough to insist that they share it. She would lay awake,
desperately wanting to reach out to him—to be
held—to be made love to—to be taken care of. She
managed to resist because of a little voice that reminded her that
she would swap Pony for Windwolf in heartbeat—that it
was her husband she really wanted. There been no way to kick
Pony out of the bed without admitting how much she wanted
him, so he and her secret temptation stayed.
Even now she fought the urge to plant little kisses on his
bicep. I'm a married woman. I'm married and I do love
Windwolf. She couldn't even imagine being married to Pony,
although she wasn't sure why – he was to-die-for cute.
Unfortunately, she could imagine having hot sex with him. She
sighed as her curiosity stirred to wonder what running her tongue
up the curve of his arm would taste like. Now I've done it
– it will eat me alive wondering...
"Domi, what is it?"
Embarrassment burned through her. "N-N-Nothing. I'm just
tired. I haven't been sleeping well."
"Have you found what you needed?" He asked.
"No." She shook her head and yawned again. She saved her
notes on the datapad and handed Esme's file to him. "Put this in
the Rolls. I'll get back to work."
Luckily the information she was looking for was in the F's,
under Flux Compression Generator. Huh? Normally
compressing a magnetic field would generate more amperes of
current than a lightning bolt and cause an electromagnetic pulse.
What in hell was her grandfather thinking? But there was no
mistaking the Reinhold floor layout, and the accompanying notes
on the spell. With the folder, it should be fairly simple to recreate
her grandfather's spell
She heard the scrape of boots on the cement behind her. The
sekasha were probably bored to tears.
"This is what I was looking for." She got to her feet and
brushed the dust from her skirt. She looked up and was startled
to find the sekasha forming a wall of muscle between her
and Nathan Czernowski. The sight of him put a tingle of
nervousness through her. "Nathan? What are you doing here?"
"I saw the Rolls and figured that it had to be you."
"Yeah, it's me." She busied herself with the boxes as an
excuse not to look at him, wondering why she felt so weird until
she remembered where they'd left off. Last time she'd seen him,
he – he – she didn't even want to assign a word to
it.
Nathan had been like an older brother to her and Oilcan. He
hung around the garage and scrap yard on his off hours, drinking
beer with them, and shooting the breeze. On racing days, he acted
as security for her pit. She knew all his sprawling family
members, had attended their weddings and funerals and birthday
parties. There wasn't another man in
Pittsburgh
that she would have let into her loft while she was
dressed only in a towel. Nobody else she would have thought
herself utterly safe with.
Then he'd held her down, tore off her towel, and tried to
push into her.
In one terrifying second, he'd become a large, frightening
stranger. She had never considered before how tall he was, how
strong he was, or how easily he could do anything he wanted
with her.
He hadn't actually done—it. He'd stopped. He seemed
to be listening to her. She would never know if he actually would
have gotten off her, and let her up, and gone back to the Nathan
she knew because Pony had come to her rescue.
A day later she'd been snatched up by the Queen's Wyverns,
dragged away to attend the royal court, and then kidnapped by the
oni, where she witnessed true evil. She hadn't thought of Nathan
once in all that time. She wasn't sure what she felt now.
"I heard about the monster—" Nathan started.
"You and all of Pittsburgh
. I'm fine!"
"I see." Nathan gazed her wistfully. "You look beautiful."
"Thanks." She knew it was mostly the jewel red silk dress.
She also knew that it clung to her like paint where it wasn't
exposing vast amounts of skin. Suddenly she felt weirdly under-
dressed.
They stood a moment in nervous silence. Finally, Nathan
wet his lips and said, "I'm sorry. I went way over the line, and I'm
– so – sorry."
She burned with sudden embarrassment; it was like being
naked under him again. "I don't want to talk about it."
"No, I'm ashamed of what I did, and I want to
apologize—though I know that really doesn't cut it." His
voice grew husky with self-loathing. "I would have killed another
man for doing it. That I was drunk and jealous excuses nothing."
"Nathan, I don't know how to deal with this."
"I just loved you so much. I still do. It kills me that I lost
you. I just don't want you to hate me."
"I don't hate you," she whispered. "I'm pissed to hell at you.
And I'm a little scared of you now. But I don't hate you."
At least she didn't think she did. He had stopped –
that counted for something—didn't it? More than
anything, she felt stupid for letting it happen. Everyone had told
her that things wouldn't work out between her and Nathan
– and she had ignored them.
They stood in awkward silence. It dawned on her that
sekasha were still between her and Nathan, a quiet angry
presence. She realized that Pony must have told Stormsong who
Nathan was and what he'd done, and embarrassment burned
through her. Once again she was having her nose ground into the
fact that she was being constantly watched. She pushed past the
sekasha and Nathan, wondering how much detail had
Pony told Stormsong. She could trust Pony with her life, but not
her privacy; she wasn't even sure he understood the concept.
When she reached the Rolls, she was tempted to climb in
and drive away, but would mean leaving the storage room half
unpacked. She dropped the file in the back of the car, beside the
other things she'd set aside to take home. Nathan and the
sekasha had trailed her out to the Rolls. Somehow, out in the
alley, she felt more claustrophobic, their presence made
unavoidable by the fact that they had followed her en masse.
"I have what I need," she told Pony and then realized she had
said that already. "Everything needs put back."
"Yes, domi." Pony signaled to Stormsong to return
to the storage room; he remained with Tinker.
Nathan stayed too. His police cruiser sat behind the Rolls.
For some reason the Pittsburgh Police had doubled up and Bue
Pedersen waited patiently for Nathan to finish.
"Bowman," Tinker nodded to Bue.
"Hiya, Tinker." Bue nodded back.
"They tell me that you're his domi." Nathan meant
Windwolf.
"Yeah." She fiddled with the bracelet. She had no wedding
ring to flash as proof. Elves apparently don't go for those kind of
things.
"You know, everyone's going on and on as if you got
married to him and you're a princess now, but Tooloo says that
you're not his wife."
Her heart flipped in chest. "What?"
"Tooloo says that Windwolf didn't marry you."
She stared at him dumbfounded for a minute before she
thought to say, "And you believed her? Tooloo lies. You
ask her five times in a row when her birthday is and she'll tell you
a different date each time!"
He looked down at her bare fingers. "Then why was there no
wedding? Why no ring?"
She tried to ignore the weird cartwheeling in her chest.
"Nathan, it's not – they – they don't do things like
we do."
He gave a cold bitter laugh. "Yeah, like changing someone's
species without asking them."
"He asked!" she snapped. She just hadn't understood.
"Come on, Tink. I was there. You had no idea what he had
done to you. You still don't know. You think you're married.
Hell, half the city thinks you're married. But you're not."
She shook her head and clung to the one thing she knew for
sure. "Tooloo lies about everything. She hates Windwolf. She's
lying to you."
"Tink–"
"I don't have time for this bullshit! Stormsong, we're
leaving! Just the lock the door and come."
* * *
"The humans farm—grass?" Bladebite prodded the
green rectangle of sod laid down in the palace clearing.
"Convenient, isn't it?" Wolf pointed out, although he
suspected that his First Hand wouldn't see it as such.
"It's unnatural." Bladebite grumbled. "Grass already grows
quickly – why would they want it to instantly appear?"
Wolf rubbed at his temple were a headache was starting to
form. 'Quickly,' of course, was all a matter of perspective. The
palace clearing was still raw wound of earth from the cutting
down the ironwoods and tearing up the massive stubs. Until the
dead gossamer could be cleared, the clearing would have to
double as an airfield. Wolf knew his First Hand reflected what
most elves would think of the sod. It couldn't be helped. After
last night's rainfall, the clearing was turning into a pit of mud.
Wolf had delegated cleaning up the gossamer body to
Wraith Arrow, an imperfect match of abilities and task, but
currently the best he could hope for as Tinker had apparently
found some project on the North Side that was taking up her
time. Reports were drifting back, along with a box of walkie-
talkies.
His First Hand viewed the devices with the same open
suspicion as the sod. Luckily, while Wraith dealt with the
gossamer, Cloudwalker filled the fifth position. The 'baby'
sekasha was cautiously prodding the buttons on the walkie-
talkie.
While his Hands kept alert for trouble, Wolf focused on
getting the clearing ready for the arrival of the Queen's Troops.
The settlements on the East Coast reported that a dreadnaught
had passed overhead, so it would be arriving soon.
"You're not going to take down the oaks – are you?"
The human contractor pointed out the massive wind oaks. "That
would be a crying shame."
Wolf hated the idea of cutting down the trees for a single
day's use of the clearing. While the trees were spellworked to be
extremely long-lived, their acorns rarely sprouted hardy saplings,
and thus the trees continued to be quite rare. Wolf had been sure
that finding five so close to Pittsburgh
was a sign of the gods' blessings. He had chose the
site because of the trees and planned to build the palace around
them.
He paced the clearing, trying to remember the dreadnaught's
size. Would there be room for it to land without taking down the
trees? While he did, he wondered about the oni's attack. Why kill
the gossamer? Thinking with a cold heart, he realized that it
would have made more sense for the oni to attack
Poppymeadow's in the middle of the night. The ley line through
the enclaves wasn't strong enough to support aggressive defense
spells. The rocket would have triggered the alarms, but Wolf
wouldn't have been able to call his shields in time.
One would think that the oni would have realized by now
that Wolf was their strongest adversary. But maybe he was
overestimating their grasp on the situation. Taking himself out of
the equation, he considered the question again. Why the
gossamer? There had been a second gossamer in plain sight,
waiting for mooring. True that airship had fled the area and it
would probably take hours for its navigator to coax the beast
back to Pittsburgh
. Perhaps the oni hoped to isolate Wolf by killing both
his ships before he could react. Perhaps they didn't realize that he
had already sent for support.
While the gossamer's death was a pity, he was glad that the
oni attacked it and not the enclaves. He had lost two of his
sekasha this century. He did not want to lose another.
Wolf became aware that the sekasha had stopped a
human from approaching him while he was thinking. He focused
on the man with pale eyes and a dark goatee. "What is it that you
want?"
"I'm the city's coroner." The man took Wolf's question as
permission to close the distance. Bladebite stopped the human
with a straight arm and a cold look.
"I am not familiar with that word." Wolf said.
"I'm – I'm the one that deals with the dead."
"I see." Wolf signaled to his Hand to let the man advance.
Sparrow had dealt with this man, since Wolf had always been
wounded the two times his people had been killed.
"Tim Covington." The coroner held out his hand to be
shaken.
Wolf considered the offered hand. The other domana
would not allow such contact – a broken finger would
leave them helpless. Humans needed to be schooled in day to day
manners – but was now the time to start? He decided that
today, he would keep to human politeness and shook
Covington
's hand. At least the man introduced himself first,
which would be correct for both races.
"Wolf Who Rules Wind."
"I was down the street, dealing with the oni bodies, and they
said you were here."
"We only executed one oni."
Covington
looked away, clearly disturbed. "They unburied two
more dead males when they brought in the backhoe."
"Why do you seek me out? I have no dead."
"I've been coroner for nearly ten years. I dealt with both
Lightning Strike and Hawk Scream."
Covington
named the two fallen sekasha.
"They have been given up to the sky."
"Well, I prepared Sparrow but no one has come for her. The
enclaves – they have no phones. I wasn't sure what to
do."
Bladebite recognized Sparrow's English nickname. He spat
on the ground in disgust.
"No one will come for Sparrow." Wolf turned back to
pacing the clearing.
"What do you mean?"
Covington
fell in step with Wolf.
"Sparrow betrayed her clan. We will have nothing to do with
her now. Deal with her body as if she was an oni."
Cloudwalker suddenly trotted up to them, looking
concerned. "Domou! We have a problem."
"What is it?" Wolf cocked his fingers to call the winds.
Cloudwalker pointed to the oak trees. Humans had chained
themselves to the massive trunks.
"How did they get there?" Wolf glanced around at the three
Hands of sekasha scattered across the clearing.
Cloudwalker blushed with embarrassment. "We—we
tested them and they were not oni. They had no weapons."
They did have a banner that said, "Save the oaks." Wolf had
heard of this type of lunacy, but never seen it in action. How did
they get organized so quickly?
"We did not realize that they were not part of the human
work crew," Cloudwalker finished. "So we let them pass. What
do you want us to do with them?"
Wolf didn't completely trust his sekasha to solve the
problem without involving swords. He didn't want dead peaceful
protesters. "Call Wraith Arrow – he has the EIA helping
him. Have them send the police to arrest these humans."
Covington
waited as if there was more he needed. Wolf turned
to him.
"I'm not sure what to do with the oni," Covington
continued their conversation. "Do you know their
practices?"
"I am told that they in times of plenty, they feed their dead to
their hounds," Wolf said. "In times of famine, they eat both their
dead and their dogs."
"I don't believe that's true. That's the kind of sick propaganda
that always gets generated in a war."
"Elves do not lie." Wolf paused to consider the areas he just
paced off. He believed that the one section of the clearing was
large enough for the dreadnaught to land easily, even in high
winds. The other sections, however, were deceptively small
– they should mark the areas in some manner.
"Everyone lies." Covington
demonstrated in two words the humans' greatest
strength and weakness. They were able to look at anything and
see it as human. It gave them great ability to empathize but it also
kept them from seeing others clearly.
"Our society is built on blind trust," Wolf said. "Lying is not
an option for us."
But Covington
couldn't see it. Perhaps it was too big for him to
grasp. The need for truth came from everything from their
immortality, to their fragile memory, to the ancient roots of the
clans, to the interdependency of their day to day lives. Tinker,
though, seemed to understand it to her core.
"Treat Sparrow as you see fit." Wolf knew that
Covington
would be true to his human nature, and treat her with
respect, but unknowingly consign the dead elf to the horrors of
embalming fluid, a coffin and a grave instead of open sky. "Ask
the EIA what to do with the oni bodies. Be aware that there will
be more. Many more."
* * *
Tinker's grandfather always said that you needed a plan for
everything from baking a cake to total global domination. He
taught her the minutia of project management along with
experimental and mathematical procedure. Over the years, she
had put the skill to good use, from starting a small salvage
business at age fourteen, to thwarting the oni army with just her
wits and one unarmed sekasha.
The truly wonderful thing about focusing on a complex
project was there wasn't time to think of messy, extraneous
details like elfin wedding customs. Just trying to drain off the
buildup of magic out of the cooler required creative scavenging
for parts and guerilla raids across the city for workers. She
designed four jury-rigged pumps that used electromagnets to
siphon magic into steel drums of magnetized iron fillings.
Unfortunately, the drums would slowly leak magic back out, so
they would have to rotate them out, letting them sit someplace
until inert. While the siphons were inside the cooler, she sat the
drums outside, so whoever changed them didn't need to enter the
locked room. The walls seemed solid enough – she
would have to check the architectural drawings to be sure, but
certainly reinforcing the door wouldn't hurt.
The more she considered safety procedures, the less sure she
was this was a good idea. The project, however, was rampaging
beyond her ability to stop it. The Reinholds' employees were
searching out drawings and adding bars to the door, the EIA was
sending a tractor-trailer truck to Lain's, a dozen hastily drafted
elves were gathering to help with the move, and she'd given out
her promises like Halloween candy.
Why was she doing this again? Was her only reason some
nonsense out of a dream? Or was she really focusing on the tree
so she didn't have to consider that Tooloo was right?
Afraid that she'd fry any of her computer equipment, she had
stuck to low-tech project management. Settling on the loading
dock's edge, she wrote 'domi' on her pad of paper and
then slowly circled it again and again as her thoughts spun
around the question.
Without question, she was Windwolf's domi
– the queen herself had confirmed that. Tinker had
assumed that domi meant wife; for a long time she
simply translated it as wife. Later, she had sensed that it didn't
mean quite the same thing. And Windwolf never used the English
word 'wife' or for that matter, 'married.' He'd given her some
beans, a brazier and a dau mark. She rubbed at her dau between
her eyebrows, feeling the slight difference in skin texture under
the blue glyph. What the hell kind of wedding ceremony was
that? And nothing else? Hell, when Nathan's cousin Benny had
been married by the justice of the peace, they still had a wedding
reception afterwards. Surely the elves did something to
celebrate a marriage – so why hadn't there been
something?
If domi didn't mean wife, what did it mean? She had
talked to Maynard two months ago about it, she'd gotten the
impression it meant she was married, but now she couldn't recall
the exact words that Maynard had used. What she remembered
distinctly, was how Maynard had been carefully trying to keep his
balance on the fence between the humans and the elves. Had she
heard only what she wanted to hear? Certainly it would make a
neater package for Maynard if Windwolf married Tinker instead
of just carried her off to be a live-in prostitute.
Whispering in the bottom of her soul was a small voice that
called her a glorified whore. She couldn't ignore the fact that the
only thing she did with Windwolf was have sex. Great sex. Wives
did more than that – didn't they? Nathan's mother and
sisters went grocery shopping, cooked for their husbands and
cleaned up the dirty dishes but Lemonseed handled all that for
Windwolf. Wives washed clothes – Nathan's sisters
actually had long discussions on the best ways to get out stains.
Dandelion, however, headed the laundry crew.
Without thinking about it, she started a decision tree,
branching out 'wife' and 'whore.' What difference did it make
to her? She never worried about being a "good girl" but at
the same time, she had always been contemptuous of women
who were either too dumb or too lazy to do real work, using
their bodies instead of their brain to make a living. Could she
live with all of Pittsburgh
knowing that she was a glorified whore?
Stormsong squatted down beside her, took the pencil from
her hand, and scratched out 'whore' and 'wife' and wrote 'lady.'
"That, domi, is the closest English word. It means 'one
who rules.' It denotes a position within the clan that oversees
households that have allegiance to them but are not directly part
of their household."
"Like the enclaves?"
"Yes, all the enclaves of Pittsburgh
owe fidelity to Wolf Who Rules. He chose people he
thought could function as heads and supported the building of
their households. It is a huge undertaking to convince people to
leave their old households and shift to a new one. To leave the
Easternlands – to come this wilderness – to settle
beside the uneasy strangeness of Pittsburgh
–" Stormsong shook her head and switched to
English. "You have no fucking idea how much trust these people
have in Wolf."
"So why did he choose me? And why do these people listen
to me?"
"I think that he sees greatness in you and he loves you for it.
And they trust him."
"So they don't really trust me?"
"Ah, we're elves. We need half a day to decide if we need to
piss."
"So – I'm not married to him?"
Stormsong tilted her head side to side, squinting as she
considered the two cultures. "The closest English word is
'married' but it's too – small – and common."
"So, it's grand and exotic—and there's no ceremony
for it?"
Stormsong nodded. "Yup, that's about it."
A hoverbike turned into the alley with a sudden roar.
Stormsong sprang to her feet, her hand going to her sword. Pony
checked the female
sekasha with a murmur of "
Nagarou" identifying Tinker's cousin Oilcan as the sister's
son of Tinker's father.
Oilcan swooped around the extra barrels and dropped down
to land in front of the loading dock where Tinker sat.
"Hey!" Oilcan called as he killed his hoverbike's engine.
"Wow! Look at you."
"Hey yourself!" Tinker tugged down her skirt, just in case
she was flashing panty. Gods, she hated dresses. "Thanks for
coming."
"Glad to help." He leaned against the chest high dock. Wood
sprites was what Tooloo had called them as kids – small,
nut brown from head to bare toes, and fey in the way people used
to think elves would look. Beneath his easy smile and summer
stain of walnut, though, he seemed drawn.
"You okay?" She nudged him in the ribs with her toe.
"Me?" He scoffed. "I'm not the one being attacked by
monsters every other day."
"Bleah." She poked him again to cover the guilty feeling of
making him so worried about her. "It's like –
what—nearly noon? And there's not a monster in sight."
"I'm glad you called." He pulled out a folded newspaper.
"Otherwise I might have been worried. Did you see this?"
"This" was a full front-page story screaming "Princess
Mauled." She hadn't seen a photographer yesterday when
Windwolf carried her through the coach yard but apparently one
had seen her. She flopped back onto the cement. "Oh, son of a
turd."
Oilcan nudged against her foot, as if seeking the closeness
they had just moments before. "I'm sorry, I shouldn't have shown
it to you."
"You didn't take the picture." Lying down felt too good, like
she could easily drift to sleep. She sat back up and held out her
hand for the paper. "Let me see how bad it really is."
She looked small, helpless and battered in Windwolf's arms,
covered with an alarming amount of blood. The picture caption
was "Viceroy Windwolf carries Vicereine Tinker to safety after
she and her bodyguards were attacked by a large wild animal."
"What the hell is a vicereine?" she asked.
"Wife of the viceroy."
"Oh." There, she was married, the newspaper said so. "It still
sounds weird."
"Vicereine?"
"All of it. Vicereine. Princess. Wife. Married. It seems
unreal for some reason."
She scanned the story. It was odd that while it was she and
the five elf warriors in the valley, all the information came from
human sources. It listed her age and previous address, but only
gave Stormsong's English name, not her full elfin one of
Linapavuata-watarou-bo-taeli which meant Singing Storm
Wind. And the
sekasha were labeled "royal bodyguards."
Was it because the reporter didn't speak Elvish, or was it because
the elves didn't like to talk about themselves? She learned
nothing except the news had a very human slant. It was odd that
she hadn't noticed before.
"Even after all this time, you don't feel married?" Oilcan
asked.
She made a rude noise and nudged him again in the ribs with
her toe. "No. Not really. It doesn't help that Tooloo is spreading
rumors that I'm not."
"She is? Why?"
"Who knows why that crazy half-elf does anything?" Tinker
wasn't sure which was worse: that Tooloo was considered an
expert on elfin culture, or that the people Tinker cared about
most all shopped at Tooloo's general store. Her lies would
spread out from McKees Rocks like a virus with an authenticity
that the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette couldn't touch.
"Hell," she continued. "It was like three days before I even
figured out that I was married – I don't even remember
what I said when he proposed."
"Does he treat you well?" Oilcan asked. "Doesn't yell at
you? Call you names? Try to make you feel stupid?"
She made the kick a little harder. "He's good to me. He treats
me like a princess."
"Ow!" He danced away, laughing. "Okay, okay. I just don't
want to see you hurt." He sobered, and added quietly. "My dad
always waited until we were home alone."
His father had beaten his mother to death in a drunken rage.
When Oilcan came to live with them, he was black and blue from
head to knees, and flinched at a raised hand.
"Windwolf isn't like your dad." She tried not to be angry at
the comparison; Oilcan was only worried about her. "If nothing
else, he's a hell of lot older than your dad."
"This is a good thing?"
Tinker clicked her tongue in an elfin shrug without thinking
and then realized what she'd done. "The elves have been so much
more patient than I could ever imagine being. Windwolf has
moved the whole household to
Pittsburgh
to make me happy, because to them, living here for a
couple decades is nothing."
"Good."
"Now, are you going to help me with this tree?" She asked.
"I'll think about it." He grinned impishly.
Chapter 8: Calling The Wind
She had to learn not to be surprised when Windwolf popped
up at odd times.
She was stretched out on the back room's floor, making a
copy of her grandfather's spell. Her attempts with a camera
failed, the magical interference corrupting the digital image.
After what it had done to the camera, she decided against
bringing in her datapad to scan it. Instead she had Reinhold's find
a roll of brown packaging paper. She covered the floor with
paper, and now was making a tracing by simply rubbing crayons
lightly across the paper, pressing harder when she felt the
depression of the spell tracings. Working with the damaged spell
made her nervous, and her dress was driving her nuts, so she
stripped down to underwear and socks and Oilcan's t-shirt.
She'd worn the black crayon out, so she upended the box,
spilling the rest of the crayons out onto the floor beside her. The
array of colors splayed out on the floor shoved all other thoughts
from her mind. She used to make magic pencils by mixing metal
filings into melted crayons, poured into molds and then wrapped
with construction paper. The only bulk supply of crayons were
the packs of sixty-four different shades, which she would
separate into the eight basic colors: red, orange, yellow, green,
blue, purple,
black and white. It
got so she could look at a spray of crayons and see those eight
– but she was seeing twelve now.
Since becoming an elf, she knew she saw the world slightly
differently. Things she thought were beautiful had been suddenly
nearly garish or clashed weirdly. This was the first time that she
had proof that Windwolf had somehow changed her basic vision.
"There you are," Windwolf's voice came from above her.
She glanced up to find him standing beside her. "What are
you doing here?"
"I was told that you were here – drawing
pictures—mostly naked."
"Pfft." She focused back on the paper, not sure how she felt
about knowing that her vision been changed. In a way, it was like
getting glasses – right? "I only took my boots, bra, and
dress off."
"I see."
She glanced over her shoulder at him and blushed at how he
was looking at her. "Hey!"
He grinned and settled cross-legged besides her, resting his
hand on the small of her back. "This is an odd beast."
It took her a moment to realize he meant the damaged spell,
not her.
"Do you recognize it?"
"In a manner of speaking. It is not a whole spell." He studied
the circuits. "This is only an outer shell – one that control
effects put out by another spell."
She had been focusing on the various subsections and hadn't
realized that they didn't form a complete spell. Her knowledge of
magic came solely from experimentation and her family's codex,
which itself seemed to be an eclectic collection of spells.
"It's possible that this machine sets up a spell-like effect."
Windwolf motioned to the compressor. "And this shell modifies
that effect."
"Oh, yes. The heat exchanger could be acting like a spell."
"These are Stone Clan runes. See this symbol?" He traced
one of the graceful lines. "This subsection has to do with
gravitational force – which falls within earth magic."
"I didn't realize it was Stone Clan."
"Where did you learn it?" he asked.
"My family has a spell codex that's been handed down for
generations."
"This means that your forefather was a Stone Clan
domana."
"How can you be so sure?"
"Such spells are closely guarded. The clan's powers rest on
the control of their element."
"Maybe he stole it." That appealed to her, a master thief as
an ancestor.
"With your family's sense of honor, that is unlikely."
That pleased her more. She abandoned the tracing to roll
over and smile up at him. "So my family is honorable, eh?"
He put his warm palm on her bare stomach to rub lazy
circles there. "Very. It shows in everything you and your cousin
do."
"Hmm." She enjoyed the moment, gazing up at him. The
look in his eyes always made her melt inside. It still stunned her
that someone could be directing such love toward her. How did
she get so lucky? Of course her brain cared more about puzzles.
"But I couldn't feel magic before you made me your
domi."
Windwolf shook his head. "The magic sense is a recessive
trait. It would have quickly vanished in the following generations
of mating with humans."
"Would I be able to use their spell stones?"
"I doubt it very much." Windwolf shook his head. "Only part
of that is ability, though; the rest is politics. Even if you
somehow retained the needed genes, the Stone Clan will not train
my
domi."
"That's a bitch."
There was a slight noise and Windwolf glanced toward it.
One of the
sekasha that came with him, Bladebite, took
up post by the door from the machine room into the warehouse.
The pallets with the black willow filled the dim room now. The
door out to summer was just a distant rectangle of light on the
other side of the tree. For a moment, all of their attention was on
the still tree. Thankfully, the siphons were working – she
could sense no overflow of magic—and the tree remained
dormant. She needed to finish up so they could kick on the
compressor and take the refrigeration room down to freezing.
The siphons should allow the compressor to work without the
spell.
"I do not like you working close to that thing," Windwolf
said. "The
sekasha would not be able to kill it if it
roused."
"I know. It usually takes dynamite and a bulldozer to take
one down. But I think my dreams are saying that it's a key to
protecting what we have."
"Dreams are hard to interpret."
"Yeah, yeah, I know. That's one thing I did learn with the
whole pivot stuff – this dream stuff is counter intuitive.
What feels like the wrong thing is sometimes the right thing."
The Queen's oracle, Pure Radiance, had foreseen that Tinker
would be the one person that could block the oni invasion of
Elfhome – the pivot on which the future would turn.
Oracles seemed to operate on the Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle; apparently telling Tinker how she was going to stop
the oni would keep Tinker from doing it. Considering Chiyo's
mind reading ability and Sparrow's betrayal, it was just as well
that the oracle had been obscure. Thinking back, though, Pure
Radiance must have known more than she told Tinker; having
Tinker dragged to Aum Renau and kept there for three weeks
allowed Tinker to strengthen her body, build a strong relationship
with Pony, and learn skills she needed to kill Lord Tomtom, the
leader of the oni.
Nevertheless, the key to stopping the oni had been doing
what they wanted her to do – which seemed to
completely defy logic.
"At least travel with a full Hand," Windwolf said. "Chose
four more – any one of them would be proud to pledge
to you."
"I don't want to take your people from you. Besides, didn't
you say that once I took Pony that I couldn't set him aside
without making him look bad? How could you give me yours
without insulting them?"
"I can not give them to you. They must offer themselves to
you. It is their hearts, which I can not rule, which you accept."
There were times she felt like the conversation had been run
through a translator one too many times. "How can I just choose
four at random? Wouldn't that be me asking and you giving?"
"They have let me know that if you need them, they would
be willing to go. I have released all of them from their pledge so
that they are free to go."
"All of them?"
Windwolf nodded. "With the exception of Wraith Arrow. I
need him. You have gained much respect with the
sekasha. And I am greatly pleased."
"Wow."
"What do you think of Stormsong? Do you fit with her?"
Fit with her? That was an interesting choice of words. Not
"like her" which was what she expected Windwolf to ask. "She's
a pistol. Sometimes it seems like she's two different people,
depending on which tongue she's speaking."
"A language can govern your thoughts. You can not think of
something if you have no words for it. English is a richer
language than Elvish, infused with countless other tongues over
time. And in so many ways, English is freer. Elvish is layered
heavily with politeness to enforce the laws of our society."
Tinker considered. Yes, politeness came more readily to her
when she spoke Elvish. It was only when she was using the very
formal, very polite High Elvish that she noticed – and
then it was because it felt like being handcuffed into being nice.
"I like speaking English with you," Windwolf said. "I feel
like I can just be me – the male that loves you –
and not the lord and ruler of our household. That we show each
other our true faces when we talk like this."
"Yeah, I noticed that when Stormsong drops into High
Elvish, it's like she puts on a mask."
"We speak so little High Elvish here compared to court. My
mother says that this rough country is making me uncouth
– I'm too plainspoken after being around humans so long.
She expects me to come home wrapped in bearskins."
She couldn't believe that anyone could think of him, and all
his smooth elegance, as uncouth. "Oh, please."
"If you're determined, you can be eloquently insulting in
High Elvish. Court makes an art out of it. I don't have the
patience for that – which has earned me a label of
boorish."
"Idiots, they deserve a bloody nose."
"My little savage." He pulled her into his arms and kissed
her soundly. "I love you dearly – and don't ever lose your
fierce heart – but please, pick no fights, not until you've
learned to defend yourself."
She skirted promising him anything by kissing him.
"Are you done here?" He asked much later.
"With this part." Reluctantly she slipped out of his arms to
lift up the paper that had been covering the spell. "I dug through
my grandfather's things and found his notes on this project. I need
to compare this to what he has and then fix it. I'll finish it up
tomorrow."
"Good," Windwolf said. "There is much we have to do and
things I want to do. For instance, I want to talk to you about what
direction we're going with the computing center."
"The what?" She asked before remembering. When she
returned to
Pittsburgh
area during Shutdown, she realized that technology
on Elfhome was non-existent. >From electrical power to
Pittsburgh
's limited Internet, everything went with the city when
it returned to Earth. In a fit of panic, she'd razed ten acres of
virgin forest and drafted a small army to start work on building
infrastructure. Since she was kidnapped only hours into the
project, she hadn't even gotten the chance to ask belated
permission let alone finish it. "Oh. That. I wasn't sure –
you know – if you even considered it a good idea."
"I think it's an excellent idea."
"I haven't even thought about it since that morning."
"You left quite detailed plans." He brushed his hand along
her cheek. "I made a few changes and had it finished. I'd like to
expand it, though, we probably should wait until the oni have
been dealt with."
"But
Pittsburgh
is kind of stuck here now. What's the point?"
"The point is that
Pittsburgh
, right or wrong, feels too human for elves to make
technology their own. It's like our cooks in Poppymeadow's
kitchen; they can cook there, but it's not their kitchen, so they
bow out and eat whatever Poppymeadow's staff makes. The
changes I made to the computing center were ways to make it
more comfortable for our people to use."
"Wow, I never thought of that." In truth, she wasn't thinking
about anyone but herself that morning. "How long to you think
we can keep this level of technology, though, without Earth?"
"Once the oni are dealt with, we will find a way back to
Earth." Windwolf promised with his eyes.
"
Pittsburgh
is never going back. The only way to affect all of
Pittsburgh
is from orbit. Even if we managed to start a space
program, we'd have to get the alignment perfect so the enclaves
stay here and then sending
Pittsburgh
to the right universe..." She shivered. "I don't want
that kind of responsibility."
"You and I can shake the universe until we find a way." He
kissed her brow. "But first things first. Come, get dressed, and let
me teach you magic."
* * *
Much to her surprise, he took her to the wide open field
where they had been building the new Viceroy's palace. Oddly, a
gossamer was moored here instead of the Faire Grounds. They
pulled to the edge of the abandoned project and got out of the
Rolls. The entire thirty acres had been covered with sod.
"Why here?" She swung up onto the gray phantom's hood.
The wind swept woman of its hood ornament – the spirit
of ecstasy—seemed so appropriate for the Wind Clan. She
wondered if that was how Windwolf ended up with the Rolls
Royces.
"The spell stones represent massive power," Windwolf
settled beside her on the hood. "Poppymeadow would probably
be annoyed if you lost control of the winds in her orchard."
There was a typical Windwolf answer. Did he sidestep the
real question on purpose or was he teasing her with his very dry
humor or did they just simply have a fundamental
miscommunication problem?
"You're going to teach me how to fly?"
"No." He said slowly. "You will learn how, some day, but
not from me, not today."
Her disappointment must have showed, as he actually
explained more.
"I have sent for a sepana autanat," Windwolf told
her. "But arrangements must be made, and such things take time."
"A what?"
"He trains the clan children in magic." He paused to search
out the English word. "A teacher."
"Oh." She had so few teachers in her life that the idea of a
total stranger teaching her was unsettling. "Can't you just teach
me yourself?"
"I wish I could, but there are things I don't remember of the
early lessons. And there were so many silly learning games we
played that even now I don't understand why we did them. I
suspect that they were to teach focus and control."
"What kind of games?"
He gave an embarrassed smile. "You will laugh." He stood
up, squared his shoulders, and closed his eyes. Taking a breath,
he raised his hands to his head, and eyes still closed, splayed out
his fingers like tree branches waving in a breeze. "Ironwood stand
straight and tall." He dropped his hands slightly so his thumbs
were now in his ears, and he flapped the hands. "Gossamer flies
over all." Hands to nose this time. "Flutist plays upon his pipe.
Cook checks to see if fruit is ripe." He touched index fingers
together. "Around and around, goes the bee." He spun in place
three times. "Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah."
He clapped five times and launched into the song again,
faster this time, and then again, faster still. Windwolf was right;
she had to giggle at him. He was so regally beautiful, yet he
purposely used a childish singsong voice as he wiggled his
fingers, spun in place, and clapped his hands. After the third
round, he collapsed besides her, laughing. "Well, you're supposed
to do that faster and faster, until you're too dizzy."
"What is that supposed to teach you?"
"I don't know." He lay back onto the warm hood to watch
the clouds roll overhead, considering. "I think—it might
have been staying aware where your body is regardless of what
you're doing. That is very important in controlling magic. There
is much for you to learn, and not all of it has to do with
controlling the winds."
She scoffed at that understatement. "I thought I knew a lot
about elves, about clans and everything, but I'm finding that I
don't know anything at all. Like I didn't know each clan had their
own spells."
Windwolf considered her for a moment, sadness gathering at
the edges of his eyes. "Yes, there is so very much you need to
learn. I suppose some history can not hurt, and probably help
make sense of our people."
She had heard one long history lesson from Tooloo, but
Tooloo tended to twist things to her own unique way of looking
at things. "Yeah, it might help."
"In the beginning all elves were much like humans, as
evidenced by the fact that we can still interbreed," Windwolf
started. "Perhaps—there is a chance—that the first
elves were humans, lost through the gateways from Earth to
Elfhome – or maybe humans are the ones that became
lost. We were tribes scattered, hither and yon, and in our
homelands, we practiced the magic that was strongest. Back then,
magic was considered holy, and those that used magic were our
priests, and they were the first of the clan leaders."
This was different than what Tooloo had told her, in tone if
not in fact.
"I don't understand." Tinker asked. "I thought all magic is the
same. It's just a general force harnessed by the mechanics of a
spell."
"Yes, and no. The Wind Clan spells have been refined for
millennia, but they are based on certain natural properties. The
Wind Clan, according to legends, started in the high steppe lands.
For countless generations, those free-born tribes used their
magic, and were slowly changed by it. That's where the genetic
stamp developed that allows you to key to one set of spell stones
or another."
"But didn't the Skin Clans gather all those tribes together
and force them to be the same?"
"They tried. They would conquer a tribe and do all they
could to stamp out its culture. Burning temples. Killing the
leaders, the scholars, and the priests. Skin Clan were ruthless
masters, but we were not totally helpless. We managed to hide
away some of our priests, keep them hidden for centuries. We
formed secret societies that evolved into the clans. As slaves all
we had to call our own was our life, our honor, and our pledge
to protect and to serve. But those were weapons strong enough
to overthrow the Skin Clan."
"So – since everything had to be kept secret
– ceremonies like weddings were a big no-no?" If so,
then her marriage to Windwolf made a lot more sense.
"Yes, we could not afford to be discovered. Simple words,
whispered between two people, were all we could trust."
"How did the domana end up ruling?"
"The clan leaders realized that the only way we could win
against the Skin Clan was to use their greatest abilities against
them. Once the Skin Clan became immortal, they ordered all their
bastards killed. We started to hide away healthy babies, offering
up stillborn and deformed infants in their place. They were
protected by the clan so that they could protect the clan."
Tooloo had told her a version of this, only somehow not as
noble, not so desperate. Quick Blade, Windwolf's great-
grandfather, had been one of the babies hidden away and died
fighting for his adopted clan's freedom.
"After we won the war with the Skin Clan, we suffered a
thousand years of war between ourselves. Clan against Clan.
Caste against Caste. Elf against Elf. We had lived so long in
slavery that we had no idea how to be free. It was the sekasha
that held us together – they demanded that the clan
structure should be maintained when the other castes would have
abandoned it."
"I would have thought it was the domana that would
kept the clans intact."
"The other castes feared that we would become cruel
monsters like our fathers. The sekasha guards us
– from harm and from ourselves. More than one
domana has been put down by his own Hand."
"Why did sekasha want the domana in
charge instead of just taking power themselves?"
It was as if Windwolf never considered the "why" of it. He
frowned and thought for minute. "I am not sure. It is the way they
wanted it. Perhaps it was because with the domana's
access to the spell stones, the sekashas' choices were
limited to putting the domana in power, destroying the
stones, or killing all the domana. While they are
sekasha first, they are fiercely loyal to their clans. It is their
nature to be so. And as such, it would go against their nature to
weaken their clan."
"So the spell stones and the domana stayed."
Windwolf nodded. "And we have had what passes as peace
for thousands of years – because of the sekasha."
Tinker glanced over to where Pony and Stormsong stood.
Close enough to protect. Far enough away to give her and
Windwolf a sense of privacy. Who was really in charge? On the
surface, it would seem she was – but if she was –
why was she stuck with sekasha watching her when she
rather be alone?
"In the Westernlands, the Wind Clan has only the Spell
Stones at Aum Renau." Windwolf returned to his magic lesson.
"On the other side of the ocean, there are many other sets. They
are arranged so that our clan can travel widely and stay within
range of a set."
"What's the range of a set?"
"The stones can reach one mei; Pittsburgh
is one third mei from the coast."
It finally explained one mysterious elfin measurement.
Unlike human measurements which were exact, the mei
was said to be roughly a thousand human miles but subject to
change. At Aum Renau, Windwolf had shown her how he cast a
trigger spell. It set up a quantum level resonance between him
and the spell stones, in essence a conduit for the magic to follow.
Power jumped the distance. It had been his
demonstration at Aum Renau that had given her the idea of how
to destroy both gates. Magic, though, could be influenced by the
moon's orbit and other factors, so the exact distance would be
variable – which fit the quantum-based system.
The distance limit also explained why only two clans were
coming to help them deal with the oni.
"So, the Stone Clan and Fire Clan have a set of stones within
a mei?"
"Yes."
"And spell stones from different clans can overlap." Tinker
wanted to be sure she had it right.
"Yes. The domana's genetic key determines which one they
pull from. The spells are slightly different. In the terms of battle,
the Stone Clan is much weaker in attack, but they are superior in
defense. Their specialty is mining, farming and architecture."
Architecture was the forefather of engineering. It kind of
made sense—her being Stone Clan and a genius in the hard
science.
"Do we actually fight with them?"
"Yes and no. There has been no open warfare between the
clans for two thousand years, not since the Fire Clan established
the monarchy. To a human, that might be seem like lasting peace,
but my father saw battle as a young man, and our battles have
merely become more covert. Fighting is limited to assassinations
and formal duels."
The concept of elves wanting her dead was somewhat
unnerving.
"You are under the Queen's protection," Windwolf
continued. "So you will be fairly safe from the other clans for the
time being. I want to teach you, however, a shielding spell so you
can defend yourself."
"Oh cool."
He laughed and distanced himself from the Rolls. "Have you
been taught the rituals of prayer?"
She nodded.
"Good. First you must find your center, just as you do for a
ritual." He stood straight and took a deep cleansing breath.
"Hold your fingers such." He held out his right hand, thumb
and index rigid, middle fingers cocked oddly.
She copied the position and he made minute changes to her
fingers.
"Each finger has several degrees. Laedin." He tucked
her index finger into a tight curl, and then, gliding his finger
along the top of hers, showed her that there needed to be a
straight line from the back of her hand to the knuckle. "
Sekasha." He uncurled her finger to the second knuckle and
corrected a slight tendency to bend at the first knuckle. "
Domana." He had to hold her finger straight so she only bent
the tip. "Full Royal." This was a stiff finger.
"Bows to no one," Tinker said.
"Exactly. You must be careful with your hands. A broken
finger can leave you defenseless."
"The first step is to call on the Spell Stones. You use a full
suit – king and queen" these were thumb and pinkie held
straight out "Domana, sekasha, laedin."
Tinker laughed as she tried to get her fingers to cooperate.
"There are finger games you can play to get them to do this
fluidly." He patiently corrected small mistakes in her hands. "In
the base spells, correct positioning is not as vital, but later, a
finger out of place will totally change the effect of your spell."
"This does get easier?"
"Yes, with practice."
"To calls winds and cast the spells, you need to hold your
hand before your mouth." He raised his hand to his mouth and
demonstrated the desired distance and then dropped his hand to
continue speaking. "Don't touch your face with your hand, but
you should feel as if you're almost touching your nose. Also if
you were to breathe out, like you blowing out a candle, the
center point of your breath would hit this center joint of your
fingers."
"Okay." She held up her hand and found it was harder to not
touch her nose than she thought.
"When I was little, my brothers and I would practice fighting
with each other and in the heat of battle, sometimes we ended up
punching ourselves in the nose."
Tinker laughed.
"Now, listen to the command to call the winds, and then to
cancel." He raised his right hand to his mouth.
"Daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaae."
Tinker felt the tremor in the air around Windwolf, like a
pulse of a bass amplifier, first against her magic sense, and then
against her skin.
Mentally, she knew that his body was taking the place of a
written spell; his voice started the resonance that would establish
a link between him and the spell stones, over three hundred miles
away. Despite everything she knew, his summoning of power out
of thin air somehow seemed more magical than any act she ever
witnessed.
He dismissed the power with another gesture and spoken
command.
"Now, you try it."
She felt the magic resonance deep in her bones, and then it
bloomed around her, enveloping her. Carefully she dismissed it.
"Very good. Once you tap the stones, you are connected to
them. That means you need to immediately use the power, or
dismiss it. Casting a spell that you hold, like a shield, keeps the
connection open until you end the spell. Casting a spell like a
force strike breaks the link immediately."
She nodded her understanding, trusting that when he taught
her the various spells, he would tell which category they fell into.
"The shielding spell I'm going to teach you is the most basic
of all the spells, but it is very powerful. With the power that the
spell stones tap, it is nearly impenetrable."
"Nearly?"
"I do not know anything that could breach it – but I
am afraid that you might find something – so I
put in a cautionary note."
She stuck at her tongue at him. "You make me sound like a
trouble maker."
"You do not make trouble – it finds you. And it is
always sorry when it does."
She laughed. "Flattery will get you everywhere."
He kissed her then, making her melt against his body. They
spent a few pleasant minutes kissing, and then he set her firmly
down.
"You need to learn this, my love. You need to be able to
protect yourself and your beholden."
"Yeah, I know. Teach away. I'm all ears."
"You summon the power and then shape it." He called forth
the power, paused deliberately, and the changed the position of
his hand and spoke a new command. The magic pulsing with
potential changed, distorting the air around them so they stood
inside a transparent sphere.
He held his stance. "Nothing can get in unless you allow it.
It will last as long as you desire – but you must be
careful with your movements." He moved slowly around to
demonstrate the range of motion desired to maintain the shield.
"Notice you must keep you hand in the correct position. If you
shift your fingers or move your hand too quickly, you lose the
connection for the shield."
He flapped his hands loosely and the shields vanished.
"Ugh!" Tinker cried. "It seems dangerously easy to lose your
shield when you least want to."
"There are weaker shields that don't require you to hold your
position. The sekasha spell for example allows them to
continue fighting without disrupting their shield. The difference
in strength is –" he paused to consider a comparison.
"—an inch of steel versus a foot."
"Oooh. I see." That messed with her head. She had assumed
that sekasha provided protection to the domana
during battle – keeping them safe as they called down
lightening and such. It seemed that the truth was that the
domana were heavy tanks during fighting. They were able to
take massive damage as well as deal it. It seemed that the
sekasha must be for day to day life, allowing the domana
to sleep and eat without fear.
Windwolf called up the shield again and this time showed
her how to properly cancel the shield. "It is best for you to get
into the habit to intentionally drop the shield than just to relax
your position."
It seemed easy enough, once you got past bending your
fingers into pretzels. Tinker managed to initialize the resonance
conduit, trigger the shield spell, hold it for a minute, and then
cancelled the shield spell.
"What about air? If you keep up the shield, do you run out
of air?"
"No. Air slowly leeches in, as does heat and cold. The shield
will protect you for a period of time in fire, but eventually the
heat and smoke will overcome you."
"Ah, good to know."
"Someone comes." Stormsong murmured softly, looking
east.
The sekasha pulled in tight as they watched the
eastern skyline.
"Listen," Wraith Arrow said.
After a moment, Tinker heard the low drone of engines in
the distance.
"It has to be the dreadnaught," Windwolf said.
"They're coming," Tinker murmured, wondering who 'they'
might be.
"Yes." Windwolf tugged on her wrist. "We need to return to
the enclave."
Tinker glanced at him in surprise. She would have thought
they would stay to greet the newcomers.
"I am not sure who the queen has sent," Windwolf
explained. "I want to look our best. Can you change quickly?"
She supposed it depended on your idea of quickly. "I think I
can. What should I wear?"
"The bronze gown, please."
"That's not the most formal one I have."
He smiled warmly at her. "Yes, but I love to see you in it."
She blushed and tried not to worry about how she was going
to get into the dress quickly.
As they got into the Rolls, a shadow passed overhead
accompanied by the low rumble of large engines. A dreadnaught
slid out from behind the hill to hover near the tree line. She'd
forgotten how massive the blend of airship and armored
helicopter was; it dwarfed the ironwoods, its four massive
rotator blades beating a storm of leaves out into the meadow.
Barrels of heavy guns bristled from the black hull, like the spiked
hide of a river shark. The gossamer moored at the clearing stirred
nervously in the presence of the large predator-like craft. As they
watched, the mooring lines were cast off and the gossamer gave
way to the dreadnaught.
The thumping of the rotors suddenly echoed into her
memories of her dream. In the background, constantly, had been
the same sound.
She shivered at the foreknowledge, and wondered what her
dream had been trying to warn her of.
Chapter 9: True Flame
At Poppymeadow's enclave, she discovered one of the
sekasha had called ahead. Half the females of Windwolf's
staff ambushed her at the door and hurried her to room. She tried
not to mind as they clucked and fussed over her, pulling her out
of clothes, washing her face, neck and hands, and pulling the
formal gown over her head. Certainly she wouldn't be able to
dress quickly without them, but their nervousness infected her.
At least she was confident about how she looked. The dress
was a deep, rich, mottled bronze that looked lovely against her
dusky skin. Over the bronze silk was another layer of fine, nearly
invisible fabric with a green leaf design, so that when the bronze
silk moved, it seemed like sunlight through forest leaves.
Unfortunately, it still had long sleeves that ended in a fingerless
glove arrangement and the dainty matching slippers.
"Oh please, can I wear boots?"
"You'll be outside, so the boots are appropriate."
Lemonseed proclaimed and her best suede ankle boots were
produced, freshly brushed.
Tinker stepped into the boots, the females fastened the row
of tiny hooks and eyes made of cling vine and ironwood down
the back of the gown, and she was dressed.
Windwolf waited by the car, wearing the bronze that
matched her underdress and a duster of the leaf pattern of her
overdress. His hair unbound in a shimmering black cascade down
his back.
"Where is your jewelry?" He asked.
"They wanted me to wear the diamonds." She held out both
necklaces. "But I thought the pearls would look better. I told
them I'd let you pick."
"The pearls do look better," Windwolf took the diamond
necklace and fastened in place. "But the diamonds are for formal
occasions such as this. The pearls would be for more intimate
times, such as a private dinner party."
Sighing, she surrendered the pearls back to Lemonseed for
safekeeping. "We're just going out to the clearing and saying
'howdy' aren't we?"
"We are greeting the Queen's representative who can strip us
of everything if they deem us unable to protect what we hold.
Appearance is everything."
"They can't
really take everything – can
they?"
"It is unlikely." Windwolf swept her into the Rolls. "Please,
beloved, be on your best behavior. Keep to High Elvish –
and forgive me – but speak as little as possible, since
your High Elvish is still weak."
Great, the Queen's representative hadn't even landed and
already she was being made to feel like a scruffy junkyard dog.
Her annoyance must have shown on her face, because Windwolf
took her hand.
"Beloved, please, promise me to keep that cutting wit of
yours sheathed."
"I promise." She growled, but silently reserved the right to
kick anyone that truly pissed her off.
* * *
Tinker could see why Windwolf opted to dress first. True
the dreadnought had landed and its many gangplanks were
lowered. There was, however, no sign of the Queen's
representative. A sea
of Fire Clan red
moved around the ship as the Queen's Wyverns secured the area
with slow thoroughness. Their Rolls was checked at the entrance
to the clearing where Wyverns already erected a barrier. After
their identities were verified, the Rolls was directed to a
shimmering white tent of fairy silk. An ornate rug already
carpeted the tent. Servants were setting up a teak folding-table,
richly carved chairs, a map chest and a tea service.
Leave it to elves to do everything with elegance.
The Queen's Wyverns were tall with hair the color of fire
pulled back and braided into a thick cord. Like the Wind Clan sekasha, they wore vests of wyvern-scale armor, and
permanent spell tattoos scrolled down their arms; both were done
in shades of red that matched their hair.
All of Windwolf's sekasha had come with them and
formed two walls of blue in the sea of red. Seeing all the
sekasha in mass, Tinker realized not only how much alike the
Wyverns looked, but also how much the Wind Clan sekasha
– slightly shorter with black hair – looked
the same. Only Stormsong stood out with her short blue hair.
"Are the
sekasha of the various clans separate
families?" Tinker whispered to Windwolf as she held out a hand
to him, so he could help her out of the car. Experience had taught
her that the long skirts loved to wrap tight around her ankles as
she got in and out of cars and carriages – she had nearly
gone face first into the dirt several times.
"Hmm?" Windwolf steadied her as she scrambled out.
"They look alike." Once out, she twitched her skirts back
into place.
"The Skin Clan liked their
sekasha to match
– like coach horses. They would bio engineer a
generation to suit them and then breed them one to another. They
would kill all the children that didn't express the desired traits,
weeding out stock until it bred true, like drowning litters of
puppies when a mutt gets into a pure breed's kennel."
"That's horrible!"
"That's why we rebelled against them. Why we will have
nothing to do with the oni who are so much like them."
"This one has the domana genome?" Lord Tomtom had said
when he held her prisoner. "Perhaps I'll get my own litter on her."
Tinker shivered as she remembered Tomtom's clinical gaze on
her. No wonder the elves hated and feared the oni so much.
Alertness spread through the Wyverns, like ripples in a pool,
moving outward. A figure in white and gold emerged from the
dreadnaught. With the focus of every person on the field tight on
him, the tall male strode across the meadow to join them at the
tent. He wore a vest of gold scale, white leather pants, and a
duster of white fairy silk that flared out behind him as he walked.
He ducked into the tent and nodded to Windwolf. "Viceroy."
Windwolf bowed. "Prince General."
Prince? He had the Queen's glorious beauty – the
radiant white skin, the vivid blue eyes and oh-so-gold hair
twisted into a
sekasha-like braid.
Tinker carefully followed Windwolf's suit as to how low to
bow. Not that she needed to worry, for the elf prince didn't even
glance in her direction. The duster settled around him, revealing
that it had a delicate white on white design of wyverns and
flames.
"Well, it took a hundred and ten years." Surprisingly, the
Prince General used low Elvish. He has a deep voice with a hint
of rasp, as if he'd spent the day shouting. "But as I said, it was
only a matter of time before you would be calling for help and
then I would have to come save your sorry ass. Of course you
never could do things small – you had to go find a nest of
oni for me to wrestle."
Windwolf grinned hugely. "True!"
"Young pup!" The prince returned the smile and gave
Windwolf a rough hug. "It is good to see you again. It has been
too long."
"I have been busy."
"So I've heard."
"True Flame, this is my
domi, my beloved Tinker of
the Wind Clan. Beloved, Prince General True Flame of the Fire
Clan."
The prince turned his vivid gaze onto her and his eyebrows
arched up in surprise. "So this is your child-bride. They said she
was little..."
"Spare her your razor truth, please, True. I love her dearly
and do not wish to see her hurt."
True Flame snorted. "She better learn to guard her heart.
Those vultures of court will rip her to shreds."
"I don't plan to take her to court..."
"Can we stop talking like I am not here?" Tinker matched
True Flame's Low Elvish. A look from Windwolf told her that
regardless of what True Flame did, she was expected to speak
High Elvish.
"Certainly, cousin," True Flame said.
"Cousin?" Tinker glanced to Windwolf in confusion.
"My mother is the youngest daughter of Ashfall," Windwolf
said, and then, seeing Tinker's blank look, added. "Ashfall was
our first king."
True Flame gave Windwolf a look that clearly asked, '
She doesn't know that?'
"Grandfather has been dead for
nae hae," Windwolf
said.
"We've only had three rulers," True Flame said. "Ashfall,
Halo Dust, and Soulful Ember."
"Yes, my knowledge of all things elfin is lacking." Tinker
acknowledged and managed to bite down on 'I'm sure, however,
you're equally ignorant of buckyballs.'
Be nice to the male
that can take everything away from you, she reminded
herself, and managed to force her mouth into a slight smile.
Thank gods, Windwolf seemed to be friends with him.
True Flame took in the weak smile and turned back to
Windwolf with a slight look of distaste.
"Once you come to know her, True, you will see why I
chose her."
True Flame clicked his tongue and waved toward the table.
"Time will tell. Most of your choices continue to mystify me. Sit.
Let us discuss this mess you're in."
He pulled a map from the chest and spread it on the table. It
showed the city of
Pittsburgh
and the surrounding areas of Elfhome in detail.
"First, what is happening here?" True Flame pointed at
Turtle Creek on the map. "The whole area seems –
wrong."
Windwolf explained the events that lead to Tinker creating
the Ghostlands.
True Flame looked at Tinker with slight surprise, sweeping
a look down over her, before saying, "She's surprisingly
destructive for her size."
"That's part of her appeal," Windwolf agreed.
She kicked Windwolf under the table, which earned her
another warning look. She gave the look back at him. Being nice
was one thing, having them gang up on her was another.
"Can the oni cross from their world to ours through this
unstable area?" At least True Flame asked her directly.
"I don't know," Tinker said. "I need to study the area more.
In theory, there should not be enough energy to keep it unstable."
"We think at least one creature has come through."
Windwolf said. "My domi was attacked in the valley yesterday by
what we believe is an oni dragon. It is unlikely that the oni could
have smuggled such a creature across all the borders of Earth
– so it stands to reason that it's a new arrival."
"Then we will have to wait until this area is secure," True
Flame tapped Turtle Creek on the map, "before you can continue
your study."
"If the oni can come through, then we're in trouble," Tinker
said. "They had an army poised to come through my pathway.
With a few hours of study, I can..."
"Child, you will stay out of this valley until I give you
leave," True Flame said.
"I am not a child." Tinker snapped.
"You have learned your
esva?" True Flame asked.
Tinker didn't know the word. She glanced to Windwolf.
"No, she hasn't." Windwolf said quietly, as if holding in
anger. "You know it takes years of study."
"A
domi protects her warriors as they protect her,"
True Flame said. "Until we know the enemy's strength, we will
not endanger any of our people by pushing them onto the
frontlines with a helpless child to protect."
Windwolf put a hand to her shoulder as if he expected her to
say something rude. Tinker, however, found herself glancing at
Stormsong and Pony standing with the Wind Clan's
sekasha
. She hadn't been able to protect her people – she
nearly got them killed. She looked away, embarrassed by True
Flame's correct reading, and that she had failed Pony and the
others so completely.
True Flame took her silence as agreement and moved on.
"Have you been able to determine any other oni stronghold?"
"Not yet. Tinker killed their leader, Lord Tomtom, but the
size of their organization and the type of operations that they
were carrying out suggested a number of subordinates, which we
haven't identified nor located."
True Flame grunted and signaled for tea to be poured. A
servant moved forward to fill the delicate china tea bowls. After
a month at Aum Renau, Tinker knew that talking was a no-no
without Windwolf's glance her direction; some elf bullshit about
appreciating the act of being civilized. She distracted herself with
the honey and milk. True Flame studied the map of the sprawling
Earth city and expanse of Elfhome wilderness, ignoring the tea.
Silence would rule until True Flame, as highest ranked person at
the table, spoke.
"The oni weakness has always been their own savageness,"
he said finally. "To keep his underlings in check, an oni keeps his
people weak and in disorder. There is no chain of command.
Once you killed this Lord Tomtom, it was each dog for himself
until one could emerge as strongest."
True Flame locked his gaze on Tinker. "Each elf knows who
is above them, and who is beneath them, and that neither
relationship is stronger than the other. Those who serve are to be
protected, those who protect, are to be served. We are not wild
animals thinking only of ourselves, but a society that works only
when we each know our position and act accordingly."
Tinker forced herself to sip her tea and chose her words
carefully. "Having seen the oni up close, there is no need to
convince me which is better."
She expected another angry look from Windwolf, but his
eyes filled with sorrow, which only made her more
uncomfortable than his annoyance would have. She focused on
her tea instead.
"The rest of my force will be arriving on gossamers shortly,"
True Flame said. "I was afraid that you'd be overrun before they
could arrive, so I came on ahead."
"Thank you," Windwolf said. "If my beloved's aim had not
been true, all would have been lost before you arrived."
"Tonight, we can bivouac in this field, and tomorrow, we'll
start securing the city." He ran his hand over the great expanse of
wilderness. "The Stone Clan is traveling under escort of my
force. I will have no choice but reward them for their service."
"I know that." Windwolf said in a carefully neutral tone.
It hurt to see him sit there and take it. She couldn't just sit
there and watch him bow his head and have the Stone Clan
swoop in to take what he had carved out of raw wilderness.
"Wolf Who Rules didn't summon
Pittsburgh
here. And there was no way he could have kept the
humans off Elfhome – not even killing every last human
would have done that – because then there would have
been retaliation. The door was open to the oni by no fault of his."
"I know that," True Flame said.
"Then why should he be punished and the Stone Clan
rewarded? You claim that our society works because everyone
works together. What benefit would the Stone Clan reap if the
world was flooded by oni? Wolf Who Rules has put everything
on the line – where is his reward?"
"Because it is the law of our people: you hold only what you
can protect. It is the law that kept the peace for thousands of
years."
"Beloved," Windwolf said quietly. "It is not as unfair as it
seems. We are making a choice. Does the city fall to Stone Clan,
who are honorable elves, or to oni?"
"I wouldn't turn over a – a – a—warg
to the oni." That was an unfortunate choice of words as it
reminded her of the warg at the oni camp and poor, poor
– but hopefully dead – Chiyo. How could
someone she hated trigger such remorse? One thing was
certain—she cried much too easily lately. "This sucks,"
she snapped in English, wanting to blot the evidence of tears out
of her eyes, but the damn fancy sleeves of her gown were in the
way. She turned away from True Flame; she didn't want him to
see her crying. Yeah, yeah, impress the elf on how grown up you
are and bawl like a baby.
There was movement beside her and she realized Pony had
moved up to her side. It took everything she had not to reach for
him.
"If I may be excused," she hated that her voice shook. "I wish
to go back to the enclave."
"You may go." True Flame said.
She reached for Pony's arm. He got her up and away
smoothly, almost as if tears weren't blinding her. So much for
appearances.
* * *
A full Hand peeled off to accompany her and Pony back to
the enclave. Somehow, just having Pony there clearing a path to
her bedroom refuge made it possible to blink back the tears and
get herself under control. Still she was fumble fingered with
emotion as she tried to undo the hooks of her dress.
She finally gave up. "Can you undo me?"
Pony stood behind her and unhooked the tiny fasteners down
the back of dress. "Domi, do not be upset. True Flame
can see that your heart is in the right place."
She groaned at the echo of what Stormsong had said to her.
"They will put that on my gravestone. Here lies Tinker, her heart
was in the right place, but her foot was in her mouth and god
knows where her brain went."
He chuckled. "Usually we judge ourselves harsher than
anyone does."
It was a relief to let the dress slither down to the floor. She
stepped out of the pool of silk and picked it up, not wanting it to
be ruined. She had messed up enough things already today.
"So, Wolf Who Rules's mother is—" Tinker paused
to recall the various words the elves used to denote relationships.
This was made tricky because she wasn't sure if True Flame
mother or father was the connection. If True Flame was Soulful
Ember's brother, then his father was King Halo Dust. What was
the word for paternal aunt? "— father's sister to True
Flame?"
"Yes. Longwind and Flame Heart formed an alliance of the
Wind Clan and Fire Clan. Wolf Who Rules spent his doubles at
court under the Queen's Care, learning the fire esva. It
was there that he gained the favor of his royal cousins."
"What is that? Esva?" She hung up the dress and
considered what was in the closet to wear—all elfin
gowns and the sexy white nightgown that she didn't feel like
wearing. She wanted the familiar comfort of cotton. Had her
shorts dried yet?
"An esva is all the spells scribed into a clan's spell
stones."
"Wait. Fire? Wolf Who Rules is Wind Clan."
"He is both. He is the only one of his family that can access
both Clan's spell stones. It was expected that he would chose to
be Fire Clan, but he chose Wind Clan instead."
"Why?" She found the t-shirt she had borrowed off of
Oilcan and sniffed at it. It was a little stinky. She wondered when
Oilcan had last washed it.
"I can guess it was because he was born and raised in the
Wind Clan," Pony said. "Such things are hard to ignore, but I can
not be sure. You will have to ask him."
The bedroom door opened and another of Windwolf's
sekasha, Bladebite, stepped into the room. His gaze went
down over Tinker; it was the heated calculating look a male gives
a female. Suddenly the bra, underwear and diamond necklace that
had been plenty of clothes with Pony felt like nothing.
She clutched the t-shirt to her chest. "What is it, Bladebite?"
"It is time you finished your First Hand. I came to offer
myself to you."
Oh shit. What should she do? She'd managed to screw up
every single one of these encounters over the last two months,
entering relationships with a careless 'yes.' After the look he'd
given her, though, she didn't want to say yes – but would
'no' be a deadly insult? She started to turn toward Pony, but
Bladebite caught her arm, forcing her to look at him.
"This is between you and I, not him." Bladebite said. "You're
making your preferences fairly clear to us all, but they're not
wisely thought out. I have the experience you need. You should
fill your Hand with strong males, not mutts like Singing Storm."
"What the hell is wrong with her?"
"Since you obviously have no taste for Galloping Storm
Horse..." Bladebite used Pony's true elfin name.
"I love Pony." She snapped, and blushed red as she realized it
was true. When did that happen? "Things have changed since we
left Aum Renau. We've been through a lot together."
"And if a fruit is tempting, you take a bite when you're most
hungry."
What the hell did that mean?
"I offer all of me to you," Bladebite continued. "Do you
accept?"
"I – I – I," she stammered. I don't know
what the hell to say. The bedroom's dressing mirror was
behind Bladebite. She could see Pony; his jaw was clenched but
he made no move to interfere. Apparently Bladebite was right
– it was up to her to say yes or no. Her reflection
reinforced that she was nearly naked, the glitter of diamonds the
only thing visible besides the t-shirt clutched to her chest. She
never thought of herself as short, either, until something like this
forcibly reminded her that the elves were all a foot taller.
"I can't make that decision now," she finally managed to
force out. "I'm upset and not thinking clearly."
"You don't need to think. Just accept me."
Not think? Gods, he might as well be saying not breathe.
"No." And then seeing the look on his face. "Not now. I'm too
upset."
"We can't afford another spectacle—" Bladebite
started.
But apparently she'd said the magic words. Pony's "on duty"
light went on, and he shifted from behind Tinker to between her
and Bladebite.
"Tinker ze domi," Pony used her most formal title
and High Elvish, "said that she is upset and will decide later.
Please, Bladebite, go."
The words were polite but Pony's tone was cold as steel.
Bladebite gaze locked with Pony's. For a moment, she was
afraid that the older
sekasha would draw his sword. He
nodded though and bowed slightly to her. "Good night then,
ze domi."
She started to shake when the door closed behind him.
"I am sorry,
domi. Until you refused him, I could
not act."
"Was I right to say no?"
"I am disappointed only in him. He has the years to know
that you were upset and could not make such decisions."
She got dressed, annoyed that her hands still shook. Why
was she veering all over the place emotionally? Maybe she was
going to get her period. Usually she wasn't this hormonal, but she
hadn't had one as an elf yet. Oh, she hoped that wasn't the case;
thousands of years like this would drive her mad. How often did
elves get periods? It had been over two months since her last one
as a human. Oh gods, what if she was pregnant? Of course that
made her feel weepy again.
"I need something to drink." She said. "Can you ask
Poppymeadow to find us a bottle of—" What was that
stuff called again? "Ouzo?" Wait, if she was pregnant, should she
be drinking? And if she was just getting her period, what did
elves use? Pads? Tampons? Magic? Hopefully a period only
lasted the normal five days – surely even elves couldn't
do—that—for more than a week. Damn it, when
Windwolf made her an elf, he should have given her an owner's
manual for her new body.
She fumbled with her necklace and failed to get it off. "Oh
please, Pony, get this off me."
Pony undid the necklace. "I will get you something to eat
and drink, and then perhaps you should take a nap. You have
been through much lately,
domi, and you are worn
down."
"I want to practice magic." She needed to learn how to
protect her people.
"It would be difficult and dangerous the way you are now."
She supposed that was true. "Okay, okay. Something to eat
and a nap – and I need to talk to Stormsong about
– female – things."
Chapter 10: Storm Warnings
Wolf had watched his
domi retreat with concern. He
expected her to be gnawing at the prince's ankles instead of
breaking down into tears. He felt guilty for chiding her as he had.
The oni must have affected her more deeply than he originally
thought. He felt badly too that he had been pleased that she hadn't
bedded Little Horse while they were prisoners together; he
wanted her to himself as long as possible. Perhaps, if she had
slept with Little Horse, she would have fared better.
At least she had turned to her beholden when she lost
control of her emotions. As much as Wolf wished he could have
taken her back to the enclave and comfort her, all of his people
and the humans of
Pittsburgh
needed him to stay and deal with Prince True Flame.
Is this how the humans lived all their life? Having things
that they desperately wanted to do – comfort their love
ones, teach them what they needed to know—but with no
time to do it? No wonder they seemed to rail at life so.
True Flame sat watching him, expression carefully neutral.
"Being the pivot—" Wolf sighed and shook his head.
"It has subjected her to extraordinarily difficult choices. She's
only had hours to recover her center."
"This is recovered?"
"No, and it worries me."
True Flame glanced away, as if embarrassed by what he saw
on Wolf's face. "Forgiveness, Wolf. We get along because we
both have no need for empty politeness – but I remember
now that politeness can render much needed gentleness to the
soul. I will keep my sword sheathed from now on."
"Thank you."
"There will be nothing that I can do when the Stone Clan
arrives except to remind them that she is under my sister's
protection. She will have to interact with them, and they will take
advantage of her."
Wolf nodded unhappily. "It will be like trying to keep wargs
from the lambs at this point. I wish there was some way I could
keep her safe until she has had time to heal from whatever the oni
has done to her."
True Flame shook his head. "They'll arrive tomorrow with
my troops. I can delay the
aumani a day, on the pretense
of giving them time to settle in."
"Thank you." In their current situation, a day was most he
could have hoped for. "Who have they sent?"
"Earth Son, Jewel Tear, and
Forest
Moss."
Wolf breathed out; the threesome was tailored for hostile
opposition to him. He knew nothing of Forest Moss and thus
could not foresee what danger lay there. Judging by the others,
there was a good possibility, however, that this was an ancient
member of the Stone Clan, to offset Wolf's youth. Earth Son's
father was one of the three children of King Ashfall used to ally
the strongest of the clans to the crown via marriage. Obviously
Earth Son's inclusion was to eliminate Wolf's advantage with
True Flame – at least in theory.
The Stone Clan had always misunderstood the nature of the
alliance, and considered it a failure. The alliance had only
produced Earth Son. While he showed his father's gene type in
his height, his eyes, and his temper, his gene expression did not
include attunement to the spell stones. Earth Son could not use
the fire
esva. When Earth Son came to court, he treated
his Fire Clan cousins as strangers, and was regarded as such by
them.
In comparison, Wolf's parents produced ten children, half of
which inherited their mother's genome and pledged to the Fire
Clan. Wolf grew up seeing the royal family an extension of his
own and when he went to court, he fell under his older brothers
and sister's protection. Earth Son seemed to fail to understand the
slight differences in their position. He only saw the younger elf
being rewarded with favor he thought he was due, and held it
against Wolf.
The Stone Clan could barely find a delegate more ill-suited
to deal with Wolf – but they had managed. Wolf spent a
decade at summer court, thinking he and Jewel Tear were
soulmates, the other half of each other, and all the other lyrical
nonsense you thought while blindly in love. A hundred years and
meeting Tinker had taught him that he'd been wrong about the
entire nature of love. He and Jewel Tear had drifted apart soon
after he came of age and his ambitions took him to the
wilderness of the Westernlands. That the Stone Clan included her
in the delegation probably meant he misjudged their relationship.
So these three were coming to his holdings and dealing with
his people?
True Flame looked out at the sod covered clearing and the
dense forest of tower ironwoods beyond. "What the god's name
were you thinking of, leaving everything behind for this
wilderness?"
"I was thinking of leaving everything behind for this
wilderness."
"I've never understood why you're wasting yourself here."
"What would I be doing at court? Nothing has changed there
since we last interacted with humans. We had completely
stagnated. We had the same base of technology as the humans,
and yet we didn't develop the car, or the computer, the telephone
or the camera."
"We have no need of them."
"It doesn't bother you that we sat completely still for
hundreds of years while they raced ahead?"
"Less than three hundred years, pup. It passed like a lazy
summer afternoon in my life."
Wolf clenched his jaw against this. He'd heard the like all his
life from elves younger than True Flame's two thousand years.
"Every agricultural advance since the days of poking the holes in
the ground with sharp sticks, we've stolen from the humans. The
plow. Crop rotation. Fertilization. You're old enough to
remember the great famines."
True Flame gave him a look that would have silenced him as
a child.
Wolf refused to be rebuked. The events of the last three
decades had proved him right. "It's as if we get locked into one
mindset – this is how the world is and can't conceive or
desire something more. I tracked back all our advances while I
was at court—"
"I've heard this theory of yours, Wolf."
"Have you? Have you really listened to my words and
thought it through?"
"True there were times of famine, and yes, we went to Earth
and saw how to increase crop production and put those
techniques to use. But we have lived in peace for thousands of
years with all that we could want – why should we
clutter up our lives with gadgets?"
Wolf sighed. "You never listened. Not to anything I ever
said, did you? I told you over a hundred years ago that sooner or
later, the humans would come to us. And I'm telling you now, it's
only a matter of time before another race finds us."
* * *
One instructional conversation with Stormsong, one stiff
drink, one mystery meal of pan-fried wild game (what in gods'
name had drumsticks that size?), and one short nap, and Tinker
was feeling much better.
According to Stormsong, her emotional swings were from
exhaustion. It would be a year before Tinker would need to
worry about a period. Nor, Stormsong said as she poured a
generous round of ouzo, could Tinker be pregnant. "Drink, eat,
sleep," Stormsong repeated Pony's advice, only more succinctly.
It was fairly clear that discussions had taken place
while Tinker was asleep. There was an undercurrent running
through the sekasha and they were metaphorically
tiptoeing around her as if she would break. She wasn't sure which
was more annoying – that they felt that they needed to
tiptoe—or that they were doing such a horribly obvious
job at it. At least it kept Bladebite from hounding her, although
he was clearly sulking.
Much to Tinker's disgust, Stormsong coaxed her out to the
enclave's bathhouse. She went only because the enclave's had no
showers and the last time she done more than wallow in a sink
was at the hospice. She was starting to stink even to herself. She
thought she hated elfin bathing – the cold water pre-scrub
gave new meaning to the word unpleasant – but when she
discovered that the bathhouse was both communal and mixed
sex, she decided to loathe elfin bathing. As far as she was
concerned, if the gods wanted them naked, they wouldn't have
invented clothing.
The bath at least was stunning, done in jewel-toned mosaics
with marble columns and a great skylight of beveled glass. The
minerals had been added to the hot water, so it was hazy to the
point that it gave a small level of privacy. And the sekasha seemed well-practiced with using the towels to keep
themselves discreet until the water covered them. Thankfully
Bladebite didn't join them, though, surprisingly, Pony did. The
eye-candy of Pony covered only by steaming water, however,
didn't outweigh the negative of being the shortest, darkest,
smallest-breasted female present.
"Relax." Stormsong had proved to be naturally a pale white
blonde – a fact Tinker hadn't really wanted to know. "We
won't eat you."
"At least we won't." Rainlily smiled with a glance toward
Pony.
Tinker stood up – realized that she was flashing
them all – and sat back down to hide in the hazy water. "I
am not amused."
Stormsong splashed Rainlily, "Shush you."
"If we don't tease her," Rainlily said, "she'll think elves are
just as prudish as humans. I've never understood how they can be
so blatant with their sexual imagery, and yet in relationships with
one another, they are so narrow minded. As if a heart can hold
only one love at a time, and you have to empty out one before
there's room for another."
"Let her cope with one thing at a time," Pony watched
Tinker with a worried gaze.
"I'm fine," she told him and wondered why she had to say
that so often lately.
"One lover gets boring after thirty or forty years," Rainlily
said. "It's like peanut butter on a spoon, it's really good, but with
chocolate sometimes, it's even better."
Tinker knew that elves loved peanut butter as much as they
loved Juicy Fruit gum and ice cream. Considering her experience
with the gum, she really had to track down a jar of peanut butter.
Stormsong moaned at the suggested of peanut butter and
chocolate. She added, "Or peanut butter and strawberry jam on
fresh bread."
"Peanut butter on toast," Sun Lance held up her hand as if
she held a piece of toasted bread by its crust. "Where the bread is
crunchy and the peanut butter is all hot and runny."
"Raisin bread toast." Tinker modified Sun Lance's
suggestion to her favorite way to eat peanut butter before she
became an elf.
"Peanut butter, pretzels, chocolate," Rainlily listed out, "and
that marshmallow fluff all mixed together."
"Oh that explains Cloudwalker and Moonshadow at the
same time," Stormsong murmured.
"Nyowr," Rainlily growled with a smile, which was the
Elvish version of a cat's meow.
"Peanut butter on apple slices," Sun Lance said.
"On a banana," Tinker said.
"On Skybolt," Rainlily said knowingly.
"Oh yes, that's nice," Stormsong agreed.
Tinker was going to need a scorecard to track the
sekasha's relationships.
"Peanut butter ice cream," Pony said.
"Peanut butter ice cream!" The females all sighed.
"Unless domi takes another sekasha, though,
then her options are limited." Rainlily pointed out. "There's Pony,
and then there's Pony."
"That's still peanut butter and," Stormsong thought a
moment, before finishing. "Virgin honey."
Rainlily eyed Pony and smiled. "Definitely virgin honey."
Pony blushed and looked down.
"And Wolf Who Rules is peanut butter ice cream," Sun
Lance said.
That triggered a chorus of agreement from the females.
Tinker had one moment of feeling pleased that she married the
prize male and then realization hit her like a two by four to the
head. She gasped out in shock.
"
Domi?" All four
sekasha instantly reacted,
moving toward her as they scanned the building for enemies.
"Windwolf! You've all slept with him?"
The female warriors exchanged glances.
"Well?" she pressed.
"Yes,
domi," Stormsong said quietly. "But not since
he's met you."
Was that really supposed to make her feel better? Well,
giving it a moment to sink in, yes it did. She knew that Windwolf
had to have had lovers before her – she just didn't expect
to be naked in a tub with them at any point. There were two other
female
sekasha. Tinker supposed they were ex-lovers too.
Windwolf's household number seventy-five – she didn't
even know how many were female, but most of the sizeable
kitchen staff was. The possible number staggered her. "Any
females from the rest of the household?"
The
sekasha blinked at her in surprise.
"No,
domi, that wouldn't be proper." Was it a good
thing or a bad that Stormsong was keeping to Elvish?
"Only the
sekasha are
naekuna," Pony
explained.
"You're what?"
"
Naekuna." Pony sat up slightly in the water to point
at a tattoo on his hipbone. She blushed and looked away. "We can
turn on and off our fertility."
"It is considered best if a
domi and
domou
chooses among their beholden
sekasha for their lovers."
Stormsong had a similar tattoo on her hip. "The security of the
household is not compromised and we're
naekuna."
Tinker had one moment of relief until she realized that she
had to interact with the five female
sekasha on a daily
basis. She stared at Stormsong, Sun Lance, and Rainlily, unsure
how to cope with the sudden knowledge that these females had
slept with Windwolf. They knew what a good lover he was
– probably helped him perfect his technique. What if
– as the whole peanut butter conversation had suggested
– Windwolf wanted variety? How did one deal with that?
The crushing weight of inevitability that you would have to
share? With such drop-dead beautiful females no less?
Elves always were so focused on today. You couldn't get
them to talk about the past.
Nae hae, too many years to
count, it happened long ago, why bother? The future was the
future, why stress over it bearing down on you?
Given long enough time, the smallest probability came
reality. Sooner or later, you would live through all the possible
futures. Nor would the past really be a true indicator of the
future as you worked through one unlikely chance to the next.
Did the elves wear blinders just to keep sane?
"Are you all right?" Pony asked.
"Um, let me get back to you about that."
* * *
"Ze domou," Wraith Arrow was operating at
maximum respect now that the Fire Clan had arrived. Or more
specifically, since the Wyverns arrived. Wolf found himself
wondering if perhaps the sekasha had chosen their king
based on his Hands than his clan. "Forest Moss is one of those
who traveled to Onihida when the pathway was found. He and
the sekasha, Silver Vein in Stone, were the only two that
managed to survive their capture by the oni."
At one time, certain caves and rock formations created
Pathways that let a person walk from one world to the next.
Anyone without the ability to detect a ley line could search
closely for the Pathway, even to the point of stepping in and out
of worlds, and never find it. The dangers of traveling to Earth
were great. The Pathways themselves came and went like the
tides of the ocean, apparently affected by the orbit of the moon.
Earth had no magic, leaving the domana powerless and
the sekasha without their shields. Still, all the clans sent
out domana and their sekasha to barter silk and
spices for steel and technology. To circumvent the dangers, the
pathways were mapped out carefully, and traders crossed back to
the safety of Elfhome as often as possible. In one remote area on
Earth, a new pathway was discovered, and eagerly explored.
Unfortunately it was a pathway that led to Onihida. Of the
twenty that went on the expedition, only two returned to
Elfhome.
Wolf considered what he knew of that doomed expedition,
which was very little since it happened before he was born.
Unlike humans who seemed to be driven to chronicle out their
life and make it public, elves kept such things private. Everything
he knew about the oni and Onihida came from questioning his
First Hand. He had selected Wraith Arrow and the others for
their knowledge of the humans and Earth, not thinking he'd ever
need their familiarity with the oni.
"So you've met him?" Wolf asked.
Wraith nodded. "They had tortured him, healed him, and
then tortured him again. It broke his mind."
That was two hundred and fifty years ago. Had Forest Moss
recovered?
It made Wolf wonder about Tinker and her time with the
oni. What had they done to her to change her so much? Wolf felt
a wave of sadness and anger. His domi had been so brave,
trusting and strong.
Wraith continued his report. "Silver Vein did not look to
Forest Moss. The Stone domou had a vanity Hand, which
he lost. Last that I had heard, he had not gained another Hand."
"He's coming here without sekasha?"
Wraith nodded.
What game was this? Why include someone that lacked the
most basic abilities of building a household? Did this mean that
the Stone Clan didn't intent to create holdings in Pittsburgh
?
* * *
"I'm not sure you should be trying to call the spell stones."
Stormsong was the only one that actually voiced the doubt all of
them were clearly thinking as they followed her through the
enclave's enclosed gardens.
"I'm fine." She said for what seemed the millionth time in
the last three days.
"You spent a month working around the clock," Stormsong
started. "And you haven't—"
"Shhh!" Tinker silenced and worked to find her center.
Getting her fingers into the full suit position took a moment of
concentration. Bringing her hand to her mouth, she vocalized the
trigger word. The magic spilled around her, pulsing with
potential. Carefully, she shifted her fingers to the shield position
and spoke the trigger. The magic wrapped around her, distorting
the air.
"Yes!" Without thinking, she threw up her hands in
jubilation and the shield vanished. "Oops!"
The sekasha were too polite to comment. Finding
her center was harder while burning with embarrassment. Her
heart still leapt up when she called up her shield but she managed
not to move this time. She held it for several minutes and then
practiced at looking around, and then moving, without forgetting
to maintain her hand positions.
"Okay," Tinker said. "Can I talk? Can you hear me?"
Pony grinned at her. "We can hear you. As long as you don't
have your hands near your mouth, you can talk – but it's
not always wise."
She dismissed the magic. Only after the power drained
completely away did she celebrate. Laughing, she hugged Pony.
"I did it!"
He surprised her by hugging her tightly back. "Yes, you did."
The walkie-talkie chirped and Stormsong answered with a
"Yes? It is nothing – she is only practicing."
Tinker grimaced. She forgot Windwolf would notice her
tapping the spell stones. "That's Wolf Who Rules?"
"Yes, ze domi," Stormsong said.
"Sorry, Windwolf!" Tinker called. "But I did it! I called the
shields!"
Stormsong listened for a moment and then said. "He says
'very good' and wants to know if you plan to continue
practicing?"
"For a while." It occurred to her that the stones might only
support one user. "That isn't a problem for him – is it?"
"No, domi." Pony answered the question. "Both of
you can use the stones at the same time."
Stormsong listened and then said goodbye. "Wolf Who
Rules merely wanted to be sure you were fine. Practice away, he
said."
So she did until she momentarily forgot how to dispel the
magic. When at last the magic washed away, Pony came and took
her hands in his.
"Please, domi, go to bed. You can do more
tomorrow."
* * *
Tinker woke from her nightmare to a dark bedroom. For a
moment, she couldn't figure out where she was. She'd fallen
asleep in so many places lately. She eyed the poster bed, wood
paneling, and open window – oh yes—her
bedroom at Poppymeadow. Even awake, her dreams crowded in
on her. She put out a hand and found Windwolf's comforting
warmth. It was all she needed to push away the darkest
memories.
Sighing, she snuggled up to her husband. This is one of the
unexpected joys of being married, her secret treasure. She had
never realized how lonely she was at night. Back in her loft, any
light noise had her out of bed, and once awake, she often found
herself getting dressed and wandering out into the sleeping city,
in search of something she'd couldn't name or identify. Before
Windwolf, if asked, she would have said she was perfectly happy
– but if she had been, how could she be so much happier
now?
She was just noticing something hard digging into her side,
when she realized it was Pony beside her, not Windwolf. While
Pony wore his loose pajamas, he slept on top of the blankets
beside her, instead of under them with her. It was his sheathed ejae beneath her – she'd rolled on top of it when she
cuddled up to him.
"Pony?" She tugged the sword out from under her, dropped
it behind him. His presence confused her.
"What is it, domi?" he asked sleepily.
It took her another minute to sort through memories and
dreams to know what reality should be. They weren't still
prisoners of the oni and her husband really should be in
bed with her. "Where's Windwolf?"
Pony rubbed at his face. "Hmmm? He's probably still with
Prince True Flame. There was much to do before the troops
arrived tomorrow."
"I had a bad dream about Windwolf. He couldn't see Lord
Tomtom. I could but the black willows were holding
me—I couldn't move – couldn't warn him."
"Hush." Pony hugged her loosely. "Tomtom is dead. Wolf
Who Rules is safe. It was only a dream – nothing more.
Go back to sleep."
"What if the oni attacked?" She started to get up but he
tightened his hold.
"No, no, Wolf would want you to sleep. You're exhausted,
domi. You're going to make yourself sick if you do not
sleep."
She groaned because she was so very tired but the nightmare
pressed in on her. "I can't go back to sleep. Windwolf could be in
trouble."
"He's fine."
"How do you know? We were asleep. He could be fighting
for his life right now." Oh gods, she was turning into such a
drama queen. Go to bed, go to bed, go to bed, she told
herself, but she couldn't banish the memories.
"Oh, domi," Pony crooned. "When I was little and
my mother was out with Longwind – Windwolf's father
– I'd be worried just like you are now. And my father
would say, 'look at the clear sky, see the stars? If the Wind Clan
fought tonight, the wind would throw clouds around, and
lightning would be everywhere.'"
She relaxed onto his bare shoulder, gazing out the
bedroom's wind at the peach trees beyond, standing still against a
crystalline sky. "What did you do when it stormed?"
Pony chuckled, a good warm sound that did much to banish
away her fears. "Ah, you've spotted the weakness in my father's
ploy."
It puzzled her that his mother was out with Longwind when
he was fighting until she realized that both of Pony's parents
would have been sekasha. Pony's mother must be
beholden to Windwolf's father.
"What is your mother like?" she asked.
"Otter Dance? She is sekasha," Pony said as if that
explained everything. Perhaps it did. "We of the Wind Clan
sekasha are known to be playful and lucky where the Fire
Clan sekasha are considered hot tempered and rude.
When we come together in large cities, we of the Wind Clan like
to gamble and win, and the Fire Clan tends to lose and start
fights. Almost every night ends in a brawl, everyone black and
blue."
He smelt wonderful. His braid was undone and his hair was
a cascade of black in the moonlight. As if it had a mind of its
own, her hand drifted down over his chest, feeling the hard
muscles under the silk shift.
"Hmmm," was all she managed as exhaustion –
thankfully – was beating out desire.
"I do not know which my mother loves more – to
gamble or brawl." Pony went on to expand his mother's
adventures in both, but she slipped back to sleep.
* * *
Tinker woke twice more that night. The second time was
another nightmare, this of being chased by Fu Lions through the
ironwoods. Pony was there again to soothe away her fear. The
third time was Windwolf finally returning home, but by then she
could barely stir.
"How is she?" Windwolf whispered in the darkness.
"She woke twice with nightmares of oni." Pony's voice came
from near the door.
The bed shifted with the changing of the guard.
"Thank you, Little Horse, for keeping her well."
"I wish I could do more," Pony whispered. "But I could not
keep the dreams from her. May you have more luck than I. Good
night, Brother Wolf."
Chapter 11: Paper Scissors Stone
"I would be happier if one of the other heads took them."
Ginger Wine eyed the trucks arriving with the Stone Clan
luggage.
Wolf nodded, staying silent. In truth, none of the heads of
households wanted the Stone Clan taking up occupancy at their
enclave. Ginger Wine, however, lost the decision because not
only was she was the junior-most head, but her enclave was also
the smallest, meaning she would put the smallest number of
Wind Clan folk out when the Stone Clan turned her enclave into
a temporary private residence. The households of the three
incoming
domana was reported to be less than forty
people combined. Ginger Wine's enclave had fifty guest beds,
thus a loss of only ten beds.
"I've never hosted someone from the Stone Clan before,"
Ginger Wine said. "I hope they eat our food. We don't have
spices or the pans to cook Stone dishes, but I will not have them
in my kitchens."
Wolf could not understand the fanaticism with which the
enclaves defended their kitchens. He had had to settle several
disputes between his own household and Poppymeadow's. He
had learned, though, that there was only one correct answer. "If
they will not eat, they will not eat."
Ginger Wine chewed on one knuckle watching as the
luggage was unloaded onto the pavement. The first trunks off,
logically for a war zone, were the
sekasha's secondary
armor. Sword and bow cases followed. As Ginger Wine's people
struggled to lift off the shipping containers holding spell arrows,
she murmured around her finger. "I want double my normal
remuneration."
"Done."
Wolf arranged to have his Rolls Royces ferry the Stone Clan
domana from the palace clearing. The first pulled up in
front of Ginger Wine's and a single male got out. As there were
no
sekasha attending the male, this had to be Forest
Moss. Wolf couldn't tell if the male was pure Stone Clan
genome. Forest Moss had the clan's compact build and dusky
skin tone. His hair, though, fell shocking white against his dark
skin. The lids of his left eye were sewn shut and concave,
following the bone line of his skull, showing that the eye had
been fully removed. Scars radiated around the empty socket, as if
something thin and heated been dragged from the edge of face to
just short of the eye. The scar at the corner of the eye, however,
continued into his eye. After a score of near misses, that last one
had burned out the eye.
The right side of Moss' face was smooth and whole,
including the brown eye that glared at Wolf.
"
Forest Moss on Stone." Moss gave
a coldly precise bow.
"Wolf Who Rules Wind."
Moss' one good eye flicked over him and scanned the
sekasha. Without the matching eye, Wolf found it difficult to
read the male. "Yes, you are. And these are your lovelies. Very,
very nice."
Wolf took the comment as a compliment and acknowledged
it with a nod. There seemed, however, something more to it
– like oil mixed in water, invisible until they separated.
"Otter Dance's son," Forest Moss said. "He comes of age
this year, does he not?"
What did this battered soul want of Little Horse? "Yes."
"Tempered Steel." Forest Moss named Little Horse's
paternal grandfather as he held up his left hand. He lifted his right
hand, saying, "And Perfection." Who was Otter Dance's mother.
He put his hands together and kissed his fingertips. "What a
creature the Wind Clan has crafted."
It was a mistake to respond to Forest Moss' first comment;
Wolf would not repeat his mistake. While the
sekasha
could be ruthlessly practical, it was insulting to suggest anything
but chance had brought the two most famous
sekasha
bloodlines together in one child.
Wolf gave him a hard stare, warning him not to continue on
the subject.
"What a look! But I am mad. Such looks are seen only by my
left eye." Forest Moss touched his ruined cheek to indicate his
empty eye socket. He cocked his head, as something occurred to
him. "The last thing I saw from this eye was Blossom Spring
from Stone being drowned in the pisshole by her First, Granite.
The oni had raped all the females from the start. The
sekasha
had their
naekuna but the
domana—"
Forest Moss sighed and whispered.
"Those mad dogs are so fertile they can even spawn themselves
on us. Of course—a half-breed child would have given the
oni access to the
domana genome – so the
sekasha
had to act. The oni had taken Granite's arms and right leg,
one bone at a time. They thought they had made him helpless, but
still he managed to pin Blossom facedown in the sewage. She
thrashed beneath him for so long – I would have thought
drowning was faster. It was quiet. So very quiet. None of us
daring to say a word until it was over. Shhhhh. Quiet as mice,
least the oni hear and realized that their rabid seed had taken and
carry her off to bear their puppies."
Wolf steeled himself to keep from stepping back a step from
the elf. Was Forest Moss as mad as he seemed, or was this an act
to let him be as rude as he wanted? Or was the male deluding
only himself, thinking that he was "acting"?
"What of your
domi?" Forest Moss leaned close to
whisper, his one eye bright. "Did those rabid beasts fuck her? Fill
her up with their seed? Will there be puppies to drown in the
pisspot?"
Wolf would not validate this conversation by explaining that
Tinker would be infertile from her transformation long after the
danger of pregnancy was past – regardless of what the oni
did to her. "You will not speak of my
domi again."
"I am not the one to fear. All your lovelies standing around
you are the ones to fear. They hold our lives in their holy hands,
judging every breath we take. They have to be strong because
we're so weak. I fully expect that someday one of them will
decide I'm too damaged to live."
"Hopefully soon."
Forest Moss laughed bitterly. "Yes, yes, actually, soon
would be nice. I'm too afraid to do it myself. I am a coward you
know. Everyone knows. That's why I have no
sekasha."
* * *
Ginger Wine had heard the whole exchange. A gracious
host, she bowed elegantly and offered to escort Forest Moss to
his room, but a tightness around her eyes meant she was keeping
fury in check. Wolf's people might not know Tinker, but she was
his
domi, and they wouldn't take criticism of her lightly.
While he suspected the humans might blame Tinker for
Pittsburgh
being stranded, the elves always knew it was only a
matter of time before the odd cycle of Shutdown and Startup
would end. Humans never continued anything for long. As long
as the Ghostlands didn't present them with more problems, most
elves would see Tinker's solution as a good one.
Alertness went through his Hand, and Wolf turned to find
Jewel Tears standing there.
She wore the deep green that always looked so beautiful on
her. Her dark hair braided with flowers and ribbons, most likely
taking an hour to create. She had two spell spheres orbiting her.
One cooled the air about her. The other sphere triggered favorite
scent memories in those around her. The spheres always had
made him leery. He knew that it was impossible for the spheres
to collide with anything, but he always flinched when they got
too near his head. Nor did it help that the one always made Jewel
Tears smell like his blade mother, Otter Dance.
Around them the sekasha acknowledged each other's
presence and waged their still and silent dominance battle. Not
that it was much of a contest – Jewel had only been able
to recruit a vanity hand of recent doubles. Against his First Hand,
they were just babies.
"Wolf Who Rules Wind." Jewel Tears smiled warmly at
him, and bowed lower than necessary, almost spilling her breasts
out of her bodice.
"Jewel Tears on Stone." He bowed to her, wondering what
her flagrant display meant. Was this strictly a personal invitation,
however improper, or was the Stone Clan making use of her?
She stepped forward, rising up on her toes as if she meant to
kiss him. He stopped her with a look. The spell spheres orbited
them as she stood frozen in place.
"Wolf," she whimpered.
"You are not my
sekasha, nor are you my
domi
."
"I should be!" She jerked her chin up and glared at him.
"You asked me! I told you that I needed time to consider it. I
finally make my decision, pack my household to join you here in
the Westernlands, and I get your letter saying that you were
taking a human – a human – as your
domi."
"I gave you a hundred years. When I was at court last, thirty
years ago, we did not even speak to one another."
"I – I was busy, as were you. And a letter? You
could not come and tell me yourself?"
"There was no time." He wondered what she hoped to gain
with this tactic. He would not break his vow to Tinker, no matter
how guilty Jewel tried to make him feel. Because Jewel never
responded, she had no legal recourse.
She reached out to neaten his sleeve. "We courted for years
– that slow exquisite dance of passion. The boat rides on
Mist
Lake
with the whiting of swans. The picnics in the
autumn woods. The winter masquerades. We took the time that
is proper, to learn each other, to know that we were right for each
other. What do you know of this – this – female?
How can you know anything?"
He knew even if he tried to explain how a lifetime of
understanding could be distilled out of twenty-four hours, she
would not believe him. The elves never did – with the
exception of Little Horse. "I knew enough. This is not court,
where you have eternity to decide, because nothing changes. I
was willing to risk whatever may come because if I did not put
out my hand, and take her then, she would have been lost to me
forever."
"What of your commitment to me?"
Wolf controlled a flash of anger. "I waited. You did not
answer. I moved on."
"I needed time to think!" she cried and then looked annoyed
that she had raised her voice. "I thought you knew me well
enough to understand my position. I do not have your resources
as the son of the clan leader – a favored cousin to the
Queen. You would have been forgiven for taking a
domi
outside your clan. Both Wind and Fire want you merely because
of the other clan's interest; Wind would never turn you out for
the Fire to take in. I do not have your luxury. I had to consider
long and hard my responsibilities to my household before
committing to you. I couldn't risk not being able to support them
if neither Wind nor Stone sponsored me."
"If you had come to me, told me your concerns, I could have
done something to guarantee that you would always have Wind
Clan sponsorship." Even as he said it, though, he knew that it was
better that she hadn't. He had made a mistake in asking her to be
his
domi. When he brought her to the Westernlands,
dismay had spread across her face when she realized they would
spend the rest of their lives in the wilderness, far from court. It
had opened his eyes; he had fooled himself in how well they
suited one another. He'd been willing to honor that commitment
a hundred years ago, even after that realization. Even as recently
as thirty years ago, he might have still taken her as his
domi.
In the last two decades, though, he had considered himself
released of his pledge.
Jewel tried to make it all seem his fault. "I was supposed to
trust you to take care of me when you couldn't be bothered to
explain anything to me? You would go off and leave me with no
idea what you had planned, what you were doing, when you were
going to come back."
"I trusted you to do what you needed to do. I thought you
trusted me."
A look flashed across her face before being hidden away, but
he knew her too well not to recognize it and could guess her
thoughts. One thing you learn well at court was to trust no one.
Not only did she not trust him, she thought him weak for
expecting it.
But this left one question. "What made you finally decide?"
he asked.
Her nostrils flared and she glanced away from him. "Things
have not gone well for me. Some of my ventures failed –
I had miscalculated the risks involved on one and in trying to
cover my losses, things – cascaded. I was forced to give
up my holdings." Her voice dropped to a whisper. "My household
was losing faith in me."
So coming to him was not an act of love but of desperation.
It would also explain what she was doing here now –
without holdings, she would lose her household and then her
clan sponsorship. Jewel Tears was too proud and ambitious to
live under someone else's rule. If she was that destitute, though,
she wouldn't have the funds to set up a holding at
Pittsburgh
; it could only mean that the Stone Clan chose her and
advanced her stake money.
Did the Stone Clan think that if something happened to
Tinker, he would turn to Jewel Tears? How far were they willing
to go to put their theory to test? He knew Jewel well enough to
know that she would let nothing stand in her way of her
ambitions. That had been one of the things he loved about her.
* * *
Tinker wished the machine room didn't feel so much like a
trap. Whoever designed the room had never considered that there
would be anything as dangerous as the black willow between the
back room and the front door. Being around the black willow
made everyone nervous. There were no signs, however, of it
reviving despite a full day of summer heat. Oilcan rotated the
steel drums of metal filings, taking the ones saturated with magic
to some place to drain and replaced them with fresh drums.
Tinker could see no overflow of magic. Still, the sekasha
all kept their shields activated just to use up local ambient magic.
She had the old spell jack hammered out of place. She was
now carefully prepping the site to lay down the new spell and
cement it into place.
Stormsong settled beside her, her sheathed ejae
across her knees, her shields a blue aura around her. "Do you
mind if we talk?"
"Isn't that what we're doing?"
Stormsong gave a slight laugh, and then continued with
great seriousness. "It's not my place to advise you. It should be
Pony, as your only beholden, or Wraith Arrow, who is
Windwolf's First, but—" Stormsong sighed and shook her
head. "Wraith Arrow won't cross that line and Pony –
that boy has a serious case of hero worship for you."
"Pony?"
"You can do no wrong in his eyes. You know all, see all,
understand all – which
leaves you up the shit creek because you really don't and he won't
tell you squat, because he thinks you already know."
"So you're going to tell me?"
"You rather walk around with your head up your ass and not
know it?"
Tinker groaned. "What am I'm doing wrong now?"
"You need to choose four more sekasha, at
minimum."
Tinker sighed. "Why? Things are working fine this way."
"No, it's not, and you're the only one that doesn't see that.
For instance, Pony is just a baby to the rest of us."
"He's at least a hundred." She knew he was an adult,
although just barely, like she had been as an eighteen-year-old
human. Unfortunately, now she fell into a nebulous zone of
being just barely adult for years and years.
"He just left the doubles this year." Meaning last year, he
could use two numbers to indicate his age. "Only half of
Windwolf's
sekasha are in the triples – the rest
are older."
"How old are you?" Tinker was fairly sure Stormsong was
one of the younger
sekasha. She was starting to be able to
look at elves and see their age indicators. It was odd, to have her
concept of Windwolf slowly change from "adult" to "her age" as
her perception of all elves changed.
"I'm two hundred." Which made her Pony's age, because to
the elves that hundred year difference barely counted.
"So we're all same approximately the same age."
"You wish." Stormsong took out a pack of Juicy Fruit gum
and offered her a stick. "Yeah, physically Pony and I are like a
human teenagers, but we've still had a hell of lot longer than you
to figure out people."
Tinker took the gum and let the taste explode in her mouth.
"What's your point? Is Pony old or young?"
"That is my point." Stormsong took a piece for herself and
put away the pack. "He's the youngest of the
sekasha, but
he's your First."
"Are you trying to confuse me?"
"Anything regarding you, Pony is in charge, but he's the
youngest of the
sekasha."
This was starting to make her head hurt. "Are you talking
...seniority?"
"Seniority. Seniority." Stormsong took out a small
dictionary, flipped through it, and read off the entry for seniority.
"Precedence of position, especially precedence over others of the
same rank by reason of a longer span of service."
"Oh that's not fair," Tinker complained. "You get a
dictionary. I want one for Elvish."
"We don't have such things." Stormsong put away the
dictionary. "They would be too useful."
Tinker had to put "Elvish Dictionary" on her project list.
"Yes." Stormsong continued. "Pony needs seniority over
those he commands, which he doesn't have because none of us
are yours. What's more when the bullets start to fly, we need to
know which way to jump. Pony doesn't need to think. But the
rest of us—we have pledged our lives to Windwolf
– it's him we should be thinking of – but we
know that only Pony is watching over you."
"I told Windwolf I'd think about this."
"Humans have a wonderful saying: assume is making an ass
out of 'u' and me. Windwolf assumes that Pony will guide you in
your choice, and Pony assumes that you know all."
"So you're doing it."
"Hell, someone has to."
"If it's Pony's job, shouldn't I just tell him that I don't know
shit?"
Stormsong gave her a look that Tinker recognized from
years of being a child genius.
"Oh gods," Tinker cried. "Don't look at me that way!"
"What way?"
"The 'what a clever little thing' look. It horrifies me how
long I'm going to have to put up with that now that I'm an elf."
Stormsong laughed, and then lapsed into Low Elvish,
sounding properly contrite. "Forgiveness, domi."
"Oh, speak English."
"Yes," Stormsong said in English. "You should talk to Pony,
since those you hold need to work well with him. Let me give
you pointers he might not think of – he is still new at
this. Blind leading the blind and all that shit."
"You're not going to take 'later' as an answer?"
"Kid, how splattered with shit do you need to get before you
realize it's hitting the fan? We're fuck deep in oni, Wyverns and
Stone Clan. Now is not the time to be worrying about chain of
command."
Stormsong had a way of driving the point home with a
sledgehammer. Tinker just wished she wasn't the one being
hammered. "Fine, point away."
"What all
sekasha want is seniority. To be First.
Failing that – in the First Hand." Top five she meant.
"Forever at the bottom is a bitch. Pony was wise to seize the
chance to be your First once he saw what you were made of.
You've proved yourself with keeping both Windwolf and Pony
safe from the oni – that's what a good
domi does
– so all of us are willing to fill your Hand."
"But..." Tinker swore she could hear a 'But' in there
somehow.
"It would be best for all—" Stormsong paused and
then added, "—in my opinion— that you don't
choose from Windwolf's First Hand."
"Why not?"
"Most
domana fill their First Hand with
sekasha
just breaking their doubles. The
domana want the
glory a hand gives them, and the
sekasha see it as a way
to be in First Hand. We call it a vanity hand. The thing is that
most
domana can't attract a Second Hand because not
only the incentive of being First is gone, the
sekasha of
the Second Hand have to be willing to serve under the First
Hand. Likewise the Third Hand knows that they will be junior to
the First Hand and the Second. Adding into this is the personality
of the
domana: does the positive of being beholden to
that
domana outweigh the negative of not having
seniority? Many
domana can only hold vanity hands."
"Okay." Tinker had assumed that all
domana had
multiple hands. Apparently not.
"Windwolf's grandfather – Howling –
helped tear us away from the Skin Clan and form the monarchy
that keeps the clans from waging endless war. When he was
assassinated, his
sekasha became Longwind's –
but not as his First or Second, since those were already filled."
"Ouch." Tinker wondered how this related.
"Yes, it was a step down for them – but they saw it
fitting since they failed Howling," Stormsong said. "Windwolf
wanted his First Hand to advise him on setting up in this new
land, setting up new towns and lines of trade, something he didn't
think doubles could help him do. So he approached the
sekasha of his grandfather's Hands and they accepted. It
would make them First Hand again, but more importantly, they
believed in him. Wolf Who Rules has always lived up to his
name."
"So, the First Hand, they're all thousands of years old?"
"Yes."
"Okay." So maybe she wasn't so good at guessing age
– none of the
sekasha struck her as older than late
twenties in human terms. Tinker finished setting the non-
conductive pins that would hold the spell level. "Can you take
down your shield? I'm going to set the compressor spell into
place."
Tinker didn't want to risk brushing the spell tracing up
against an active spell. Stormsong spoke the command that
deactivated her shields. A slight pricking that Tinker hadn't really
noticed vanished, making her aware by its absence that she had
been feeling the active magic.
"Thanks." Tinker took the filigreed sections of the spell out
of their protective packing and fit them into place.
Stormsong watched her for a few minutes before continuing
her explanation. "It was his First Hand that let Windwolf to pull
a Second and Third Hand made up of triples and quads."
"So why—" Tinker paused to make sure all the pieces
of the spell were stable and level. "Why shouldn't I take any of
Windwolf's First? Wouldn't that help me, like it helped him?"
"It would help at a cost to Pony. There's no way he could be
First to one of Windwolf's First Hand. Also, the First Hand are
the ones that see you most as a child that needs firm guidance
until you finish growing up. Lastly, they're all technophobes."
"Ick!" Tinker picked up her cordless soldering iron and
started to tack together the pieces of the spell with careful,
practiced solders.
"The younger
sekasha won't bring you as much
honor as those from Windwolf's First Hand but they'll be the
ones that 'fit' with you best. When
Pittsburgh
appeared, Windwolf realized that he needed
sekasha willing to learn technology—and that recent
doubles would be the most open-minded. That's when he picked
up his Fourth Hand."
"You don't think Pony will know that they'll fit best?"
Stormsong sighed. "Pony's mother, Otter Dance, is
Windwolf's blade mother."
"His what?"
"Otter Dance is Longwind's favorite lover among his
sekasha." Stormsong explained.
Tinker was missing the significance. "Pony is Windwolf's
brother?"
"Genetically – no – but emotionally
– yes—in a way."
"Oookay." Tinker wondered what Windwolf's mother felt
about it. Did she see her husband having a lover as some kind of
a betrayal? Or did the fact there was even a special name
– blade mother – mean that it was somehow
expected. Certainly Stormsong seemed to think this was nothing
hugely remarkable.
"It has been assumed since Pony's birth, that he'd look to
Windwolf," Stormsong continued. "In my opinion – that
assumption did what all assumptions do."
"Make an ass out of you and me?"
"Yes. Pony is fucking amazing, but neither Windwolf nor
Pony seems to realize it. Windwolf still sees Pony as a child, and
he's not!"
Tinker thought about Pony doing exercises up in their oni
cell, wearing only his pants—chiseled muscles moving
under silken skin dripping with sweat. "My husband needs his
eyes checked."
Stormsong laughed. "I'm glad you snatched Pony up. As
long as you don't do something to fuck him up, maybe he'll one
day realize how special he is. Until then, he's going to
overcompensate for what he sees as his own weakness. Pony
might point you toward someone from the First Hand and then
try to bow out – all in the name of doing right by you."
Tinker focused on the last of the solders, clenching her jaw
in annoyance at Stormsong's comments about Pony and
Windwolf. It felt wrong to hear anything negative about either
one of them, like she was being disloyal. Really, what did she
know about Stormsong other than she was one of Windwolf's
trusted bodyguards? Besides the fact that she nearly died for
Tinker?
Tinker sighed as she forced herself to consider that maybe
Stormsong was right about all this – that it was vital she
pick out four more guards immediately and that Pony needed a
good slap up against the head. She found herself remembering
that Pony had waited without comment for her to decide to
accept Bladebite.
"Is Bladebite from Windwolf's First Hand?" Tinker tried to
sound causal about it.
Stormsong nodded.
And if Tinker hadn't dodged the question, she would be
stuck with Bladebite trying to control her. She sighed. "How do I
tell Bladebite no?" Surely she didn't have to tell him yes just
before he offered. That would be a stupid system – but
the elves never struck her as completely logical. "Can I tell him
no?"
"You can say that you don't think you fit with him. That's
copasetic."
Copasetic. Tinker shook her head, remembering the days
immediately after she became an elf – everything made
more confused by the fact that Pony didn't speak English or
understand the differences between the two cultures.
"When the Queen called Windwolf to Aum Renau," Tinker
said, "why didn't Windwolf leave you with me?"
"My mother is Pure Radiance and my father is the Queen's
First. They have not seen me for a hundred years and wanted me
there. Windwolf thought it unwise to not bring me."
Tinker stared at the elf in amazement. "The oracle and a
Wyvern? What the hell are you doing with Wind Clan?"
"I had—issues—with court. Windwolf offered
me a chance to escape all that and I jumped. Considering what
my mother named me, she probably wasn't totally surprised."
Yes, Stormsong sounded more like a Wind Clan name than
Fire Clan.
It occurred to Tinker then what 'fit' was about. She felt
comfortable sitting and talking with Stormsong. Annoying as the
truth was, Tinker trusted her judgment. And it would be good to
have someone that understood what it felt like to be the outsider.
"So," Tinker said to Stormsong. "Are you offering?"
Stormsong looked puzzled a moment, and then surprised.
"To be yours?"
"Yeah. I – I think we work."
Stormsong blinked at her a few moments before standing,
the scrape of her boots on the cement loud in the silence that fell
between them.
"I can understand if you don't want to." Tinker busied herself
checking the solders. All that was needed was to cement the spell
into place, wait for the cement to cure, and the black willow
could be safely stored indefinitely. Or at least, until it she figured
out what her dreams meant.
"I want to be honest with you." Stormsong paced the
perimeter of the room in her long legged stride. "But it's like
opening a vein. It's a painful, messy thing to do."
Tinker lifted her hand to wave that off. "I don't think I can
deal with painfully messy at the moment."
"You should know stuff like this before you ask. That was
the whole point of the conversation. You have to make informed
choices."
Tinker made a noise. "I've been doing fairly well lately
blindly winging it through mass chaos."
Stormsong scoffed and then sighed. "I'm probably the most
misbegotten mutt puppy ever born to the elves. Most people
think my mother made a horrible mistake having me. I don't fit in
anywhere."
"At least you stayed an elf, instead of jumping species like I
did."
Stormsong laughed. "There are times I wished I could. Just
be human. Lose myself among them. But a hundred years of
sekasha brainwashing made that all impossible. I can't walk
away from it. I tried, but I can't. I like being
sekasha too
much."
"Not to belittle your difficulties, but I really don't get the
problem. You're a
sekasha. I need
sekasha. We
work together well – at least I think we do. Or is that you
hate my guts?"
"I would die for you."
Tinker wished that people would stop saying that to her. "I'll
take that as a 'no, I don't hate you' and frankly, I'd rather you
didn't die. Now,
that's painful and messy, and not just for
you."
Stormsong laughed and then bowed low to Tinker. "Tinker
domi, I would be honored to be yours. I will not
disappoint you."
Chapter 12: Tears On Stone
At first glance, Turtle Creek seemed the same to Tinker.
Sunlight shafted through the discontinuity in rays of blue. Mist
rising off the chill gathered into banks of blue haze and then
drifted out of the valley, existing momentarily as white clouds,
before burning away in the summer heat. True, royal troops
showed up as splashes of Fire Clan red – thus the lifting
of the ban on Turtle Creek—but otherwise nothing
seemed to have changed. It remained one big hole in reality.
Tinker led her Hand down into the valley to where they'd
marked the trees. The first sapling they found had nine slashes
into its bark – which should have meant it would be nine
feet from the edge of the discontinuity.
"That looks only five feet to me." Tinker fingered the mark,
wondering if someone might have added slashes after they left.
"Barely five." Pony pointed at the next tree along the edge of
the blue.
The tree was marked with seven slashes but the blue came
almost to its roots.
"This is bad." Tinker murmured.
"
Domi." Pony had moved on ahead and pointed now
at a tree inside the effect.
She joined him at the edge of the blue; there were four
slashes in bark of the ghostly tree. "Shit, the discontinuity has
grown. How is that possible?" She motioned to the
sekasha
that they were leaving.
"Now what?" Stormsong asked.
"I'm going to need some equipment, then we're coming
back."
* * *
Tinker scanned her camera with an infrared attachment over
the valley, watching the screen on her workpad instead of looking
through the eyepiece. In one window, the video feed showed the
thermal picture, and in other windows, programs reduced the
images into mathematical models. At the center of the
Ghostlands, she spotted a familiar circle.
"Something wrong, domi?" Pony asked.
She realized that she had gasped at her discovery. "Oh
– this here – this looks like our gate. See, here is
the ironwood ring and here is the ramp over the threshold."
"It is lying on its side?"
"Yes. The current probably toppled it, though I'm not sure
what is causing the current. It might be simple" – her
Elvish failed her. Did they have a word for convection? "Heat
rises and cold falls. Basic science. It's what makes the winds
blow. I think this is the same thing on a micro-scale –
like a pot boiling."
"Why not like a pond freezing?"
"I don't know. Perhaps because there's a pool of magic
below this, heating the bottom, but it's losing massive amounts
of energy before it hits the surface – thus the reason for
the cold."
"Ah." Pony nodded like he understood.
"Do you see this point here? Right where the gate is lying.
Can you shoot this arrow to that point?"
"With the line and weight attached?"
"Yes."
Pony considered for a moment. "Stormsong would be
better."
Among the sekasha, Pony was considered the better
archer. Her surprise must have shown as Pony waved over
Stormsong and explained what Tinker wanted.
"When I have to make a shot, I do it with my eyes closed,"
Stormsong said. "I see where the arrow needs to be."
"Ooookay." Tinker handed her the end of the line.
Stormsong attached the line to an arrow, nocked it in her
compound bow, pulled taut the string and closed her eyes. For a
moment she stood there, aiming blind, and then let loose the
bowstring. The arrow soared straight and true as if it had nothing
weighing it down, nor trailing behind. The reel whizzed as the
line snaked out after the arrow, the numbers on the meter
blurring as they counted up the feet. Near the point Tinker
wanted, but not exactly, the arrow shot into the ghost ground of
the discontinuity. It appeared on Tinker's screen as a dot of red
heat compared to the artic cold of the land, too far to the right.
The reel fell quiet and the line ran taut out into the discontinuity.
Tinker sighed. "Close enough for horseshoes and
discontinuities."
"It's where it has to be," Stormsong defended her shot.
"I'm trying to see how deep the discontinuity runs. I figure it
is deepest at the gate – it's close enough for that."
Tinker clicked on her mouse and meter fed its number into
the computer: 100 yards. Already the arrow chilled to blue,
blending into the rest of chilled landscape.
"Why does it matter how deep it is?" Pony asked as the reel
started to click out as the arrow sank.
Tinker shrugged. "Because I don't know what else to do at
the moment. I'm just fiddling around, poking at it until
something comes to me."
"Will not the current effect this measurement?" Pony asked.
"Oh, damn." She muttered in English, and then dropped back
to low Elvish. "Yes, it will." He was right. There was no way to
know what was drift and what was the weighted end sinking. "I'll
have to measure the drift and correct the measurements."
At least it gave her an excuse to reel in the arrow and try
again to thread it through the heart of the gate. She flipped on the
winch. The slack reeled in quickly but then the line went taut, and
the winch slowed.
"Well, I'll be damned," Tinker said.
"What is it, domi?" Pony asked.
"The arrow hit something."
"The arrow went where it was needed." Stormsong repeated.
There was times Tinker really hated Elfhome –
magic screwed with everything. "I didn't think anything would be
solid enough to catch on the line."
"The line is solid."
"Yes, it is." She gasped as implications dawned on her.
"Pony, you're a genius. The line is solid."
"I can not be that smart, domi, because I do not
understand why that excites you."
"Well, it is an important observation. An object from this
reality stays in this reality even after sinking into the
discontinuity."
"How is this important?"
"I do not know, but it is something I did not know before."
"Ah. I see."
The object appeared on the thermal scan, an oddly shaped
mass of slightly lighter blue. By the naked eye, she could make
out a boil of disturbance beyond the where the line cut into the
earth, creating a sharp v-shaped wake.
"It is big, whatever it is," Tinker said.
Pony unsheathed his sword.
"I doubt if it is anything living." Tinker backed up
regardless. Gods knows what she was dragging in from between
realities. "It is at – at..." she had to teach Pony English or
learn more Elvish. What was Elvish for absolute zero? "It is
frozen."
The thing hit shore. For a moment she thought it was a large
turtle, and then line kept reeling, rolling it. Long fingered webbed
hands and a vaguely human-looking face heaved out of the earth,
rimmed with frost.
"Oh gods!" Tinker leapt back and the other sekasha
drew their swords. The reel protested the sudden heavy load as
the frozen body hit solid earth, the line vibrating. She killed the
power before the line could snap. "Don't touch it!"
"I think it is dead." Pony had his sword at its throat just in
case.
"The cold itself is dangerous. Don't touch it directly, but get
it out."
Tinker kept her distance. The sekasha looped straps
carefully around the outstretched limbs and hauled the thing out
of the liquid earth. The creature was half Tinker's height, had
turtle shell but long scaly limbs, webbed feet and hands. Long
straight black hair fringed a bare, depressed spot on a human-like
head, and its face was a weird cross of a chubby monkey and a
turtle. It wore a harness of leather with various pointy things that
could be weapons attached to it.
Pony pricked the creature with his sword, eyed the wound.
"It does not bleed. It is indeed frozen."
"Ooookay," Tinker said. "It is probably safe to assume that it
will stay dead, even if it thaws out."
"An elf would." Pony sheathed his sword.
"What do you think it is?" Tinker asked.
"It's a kappa." A voice called from above them.
Tinker and her Hand turned, looking upwards. Riki perched
on branches of an ironwood, high overhead. He ducked back,
behind the trunk, as the sekasha pulled out their pistols.
"Wait, don't fire." Tinker ordered. "Riki! Riki! What the hell
is this?"
"I told you." He peered out around the trunk. "It's a kappa.
Ugly little brats aren't they? In
Japan
, it's believed that they get their great
strength from water in that brain depression and if you can trick
them into bowing and spilling out the water, they have to return
to the water realm to regain their strength."
Stormsong signed 'kill him?' in blade talk. Tinker signed
back 'wait.'
"It's an oni?" Tinker asked. "Or an animal?"
"That's a blurred line with the oni," Riki said. "I think you
would call it oni – they're fairly clever in a homicidal
way. The greater bloods made them by mixing animals with
lesser bloods, just like Tomtom did with Chiyo. Legend has it
that they used monkeys and turtles – a pretty sick mix if
you ask me."
"I didn't see any while we were making the gate."
"There aren't any in Pittsburgh
. They're clever, but not enough to pass as a human."
"So you're saying it came through the gate?"
"The oni use them for special ops; they're strong swimmers
and wrestlers."
Tinker looked back into the discontinuity, the slow drift of
blue mist. What were the oni up to? Were they just testing these
strange waters to see where they led – or were they trying
to salvage the gate?
Then again, was Riki telling the truth that there were no
kappa in Pittsburgh
?
"What are you doing here, Riki?"
"I need to talk to you."
"Talk? Talk about what? How can I even trust anything that
comes out of that lying mouth of yours?"
"I'm sorry, Tinker, about everything that happened. I'm really
am. I know you're pissed the hell at me, but I need to talk to you
about the dragon."
"What dragon?"
"The one that attacked you. The one I pulled off you. The
one that might have killed you and all your people if I hadn't
called it."
"So it was a dragon?"
"Not an Elfhome dragon, but yes, a dragon."
"An Onihida dragon?"
"What does it matter where it's from? It's a freaking dragon.
Can we just move on?"
"Just answer the fucking question!" She shouted at Riki. "It's
rather simple. Was it an Onihida dragon?"
Riki paced the limb like an agitated crow. "For a long, long
time dragons were worshipped as gods, both on Earth and
Onihida. They lived in 'the heavens' and had great powers that
they often used to help humans and tengu alike. All the legends
about dragons go on about the heavens and traveling from to
Onihida or Earth and back. What that mystical shit might have
actually been talking about is travel between universes. So
dragons may be native to Onihida – or might be from
someplace else. I don't know."
If Riki had told her the truth about his childhood, he was
raised on Earth and probably was less in tune with the mystical
than she was. Not that she was particularly "in tune."
"The dragon cast an oni shield spell." She pointed out the
flaw in Riki's "not from Onihida" logic.
"No, that's not oni magic, its dragon magic. The oni true
bloods figured out how to enslave dragons and stole it from
them."
So he said – but how could she know if he was
telling the truth. "Dragon magic? Oni magic? What's the
difference?"
"Originally oni magic was only bio-engineering, just like the
elves."
"So the solid hologram stuff? Like your wings?"
"That's dragon magic."
"And the tengu? They're both oni and dragon magic?"
Riki did an angry little hop. "Tinker! I just want to ask you
one simple question, not give you a history lesson."
"What do you want, Riki?"
"The dragon – when it attacked you – did it
mark you with a symbol or tattoo or something like that?"
"Strange that you ask, but yeah, it put one right here." She
half-turned and patted her butt cheek. "It says 'kiss my ass.'"
Stormsong snickered.
"I know how pissed you must be, Tinker. Believe me, if this
wasn't important, I wouldn't come anywhere near you."
She scoffed at that. "What does this mark do?"
"So it marked you?" Judging by the excitement in his voice,
it was very important to him.
Stormsong shoved Tinker suddenly behind her and activated
her shields with a shout. At the movement, Riki jerked back out
of sight. A second later, a bullet struck the tree truck where Riki
had been standing, ricocheted, and struck Stormsong's shield.
"Shields,
domi." Pony triggered his own and pulled
his sword.
Tinker felt a kick of magic from the west. She forced herself
to find her center and cast the trigger spell. Her heart was
pounding as the distorted into her shield.
Sekasha emerged from the forest shadows; their wyvern
armor and tattoos were the black of the Stone Clan. Five in all
– a full Hand, the back two acting as blades, which meant
they had someone to guard. They halted some twenty feet off,
tense and watchful.
"Lower your weapons," a female shouted in High Elvish.
"Lower yours! This is Wind Clan holding!" Tinker shouted
angrily.
"It's a royal holding," The stone clan's
domi came
out from behind one of the ironwoods. "And you're conversing
with the enemy."
The
domi was short for an elf, several inches shorter
than her
sekasha, but willowy graceful as any other high
caste female Tinker had ever seen. She wore an emerald green
underdress and an overdress with a forest of wildly branching
trees over it. Her hair was gathered into elaborate braids, dark
and rich as otter fur, twined with emerald ribbons and white
flowers. Two small gleaming orbs circled around her, like tiny
planets caught in her gravity.
"Yeah, I was talking to him," Tinker almost dropped her
shield but then she realized that her
sekasha hadn't put
away their swords. "It's a good way to find out things you don't
know. Like who are you?"
"Hmm, short and vulgar – you must be Wolf Who
Rules'
domi. What was your name again? Something
unpronounceable."
"This is one of my issues from court." Stormsong murmured
in English. "Lowest ranking introduces themselves first; it's a
matter of honor. You outrank her, so she should go first. She's
trying to provoke you since she can't call insult; you are still
under the Queen's protection."
"Fuck that. Who the hell is she?"
"Her name is Jewel Tears on Stone. She and the rest of the
Stone Clan arrived this morning."
"Is she right about this being a royal holding now?"
"Unfortunately, yes."
"Shit!"
"You are talking to me, not her." Jewel Tear picked her way
gracefully toward Tinker. Despite the sweltering heat and her
long gown, there was no sweat on her creamy white skin. "You
are Wolf Who Rules'
domi?
Tinkle? Thinker?"
Screw this. "Can you introduce us, Stormsong?"
"Me doing it would be a breach of etiquette and be
considered extremely rude."
"Good. Do it."
Stormsong executed an elegant bow and said. "Jewel Tears
on Stone, this is our Beloved Tinker of Wind."
Amazing how they all reacted as if she slapped Jewel Tears.
All the Stone Clan
sekasha moved forward as if to attack.
"Hold." Jewel Tears snapped. She glared at Tinker for a
moment, but murmuring, "You are such a rude little beast. I
don't know if I should be flattered or horrified that Wolf Who
Rules chose you after I cut him loose."
Tinker glanced to Stormhorse, who nodded slightly,
confirming that yes this was an old girlfriend of Windwolf's.
Well, if it was a battle of wits that this bitch wanted, she came to
the right place. "That proves what they say."
"Which is?"
"Only an idiot would turn down Wolf Who Rules."
"Your arrogance is only matched by your ignorance."
"I'd rather be unlearned than moronic – since it's so
much easier to cure."
"When Prince True Flame learns of your treason, he will
cure that arrogance too."
"I might have been talking to the tengu – but you let
him get away." Tinker pointed out.
Jewel Tears spoke a spell and made a motion and magic
pulsed underfoot, pushing up through the ground, the low ferns
and then the trees to the every ends of the leaves. Tinker
felt
the ten
sekasha standing around them, even Rainlily
standing behind her. She and Jewel Tears
echoed
differently – their
domana shields creating the
change, or maybe their innate magical talents. Around them there
were birds and animals unseen but now
sensed.
She didn't, however,
feel Riki – and by her
angry look – neither did Jewel Tears.
"Horse piss!" Jewel Tears hissed quietly.
"I was trying to get as much information out of the tengu as
I could." Tinker rubbed Jewel Tears' nose in it. Interestingly, the
female didn't take it gracefully.
"The oni subverted you when they held you prisoner."
"No, they did not." Pony answered the charge. "I stand as
witness to my
domi – by my blood and my
blade—she never bowed her will to them."
There was noise of something coming through the woods
toward them. Jewel Tears triggered her sonar spell again and the
forest was alive with
sekasha moving toward them, and
at least two other
domana. Tinker was going to have to
learn that spell.
"True Flame is coming. We'll see what he has to say."
A wave of red washed around them as Wyverns surrounded
them, and then, comfortingly, a tight knot of blue as True Flame
and Windwolf entered the clearing. Jewel Tears dropped her
shields, so Tinker followed suit.
True Flame glanced at the kappa all but forgotten on the
ground, and then to Tinker and Jewel Tears. "What is going on
here? Where did that kappa come from?"
"I pulled that out of the Ghostlands." Tinker stepped forward
and gave it a slight kick to demonstrate it was frozen solid. "The
Ghostlands must have instantly sucked the body heat out of it."
"She was talking with a tengu." Jewel Tears indicated the
empty treetops.
"Yes, I was." Tinker saw no point to deny it. "We have
history together. He betrayed me to the oni and I beat the snot out
of him for it. He found me and started the conversation."
"What did you speak about?" True Flame asked.
"I'm not sure what he wanted – they nearly killed me
shooting at him."
Windwolf had moved between Jewel Tears and Tinker just
as a
sekasha would, his shields still up so he seemed to
shimmer with anger. With Tinker's explanation, he took a step
toward Jewel Tears. "How dare you?"
Jewel Tears jerked up her chin. "That was an unfortunate
and unforeseeable accident. Forgiveness, Tinker
ze
domi."
Tinker nodded but Windwolf shook his head.
"If you harm my
domi," Windwolf growled. "It will
not be to the Fire Clan that you'll be answering to."
"Wolf Who Rules." True Flame snapped.
"I will not suffer future 'unfortunate' accidents. There will
no forgiveness."
True Flame studied Windwolf for a moment and then
nodded. "That is your right."
Windwolf caught Tinker's hand. "Come." And he pulled her
out of the clearing.
"Wait, my stuff."
"Leave it."
"No!" She jerked her hand free. "I'm not done here."
"You are for right now."
"No, no, no. I'm sick of this. Come here, go there, do this.
My grandfather died five years ago, thank you, and I was happy
making my own decisions for myself."
"This is royal holdings now." Windwolf swept a hand to take
in the whole valley. "I can not make her leave."
"So you're making me?" Tinker cried.
"Yes."
"No."
"Beloved. I do not trust her. I can not stay here and watch
over you now and I can not make her leave."
As always, he seemed to cover all the options –
leaving her no good choice but to do what he wanted.
This time she shook her head. "No. Again and again, you
don't tell me enough to form my own options. All I know are
your options and I'm not playing that anymore."
"Be reasonable."
"Reasonable? What is reasonable about taking the smartest
person in this city and making them deaf and blind? I'm supposed
to walk away from my work, leaving behind my currently
irreplaceable equipment, because some female from the other
side of the world is not playing nice in my backyard?"
"I told you that I can not stay and I can not make her leave."
"And those are the only options because they're the only
ones you have thought of? You know, if I had a level playing
field I could come up with options of my own."
"I do not have time to explain it all."
"Of course not. You never have time."
"Beloved..."
"Don't 'Beloved' me. Did you know—until Pony told
me it—I didn't know the name of your mother? That I
didn't know that you – and I—could use Fire Clan
Spell Stones? I don't even know when I'm going to have a period!
I'm stuck in this stranger's body and no one tells me diddly. And
when did I agree to be called Beloved Tinker? I think I should at
least be able to pick out my own name."
Windwolf looked stunned at her outburst and after a
moment, said quietly, "Your name is ... short."
"Tinker isn't my real name. My real name is Alexander
Graham Bell."
"It is? I did not know that."
"Score one for me."
"Beloved – Tinker—Alexan..der?" He
floundered for a moment. "Isn't that considered a male name?"
"I can hold my own with Jewel Tears. I'm not done here, and
I'm not leaving my stuff."
"No, you can not hold your own." Windwolf caught her by
her shoulders. "Do not ever think that you can. Only you can
sense her magic – so it possible for her to attack you
without your
sekasha knowing it. She could make a tree
fall, the ground give way, dozens of little ways that you
do
not know."
"You really think she would try to kill me?"
"Yes."
"Any one of us," Stormsong added in English, "Can make a
bullet ricochet and hit a target. The tengu was a convenient
excuse."
Tinker turned to her and saw in her eyes that none of her
sekasha took the event as an accident. They hadn't relaxed
until Windwolf and True Flame appeared.
"But why?" she asked.
"Because the Stone Clan stands to gain much if you are dead
and I'm distracted. Because she is a self-centered, ambitious
bitch."
That was unnerving. She kicked at the dirt, not wanting to
leave, hating that once again she was bowing to his limited
options. "Can we can get True Flame to order her out of the
area?"
"No, we must let her try and fix this valley."
Tinker laughed. "With what?"
"Magic."
She doubted that greatly, but she was up against the wall of
her own ignorance. "I'm the one that made this mess. I'll be the
one that fixes it."
"That is quite possible. Stone Clan, however, has assured
True Flame that they can quickly fix the Ghostlands, while you
said you needed to study it further. Everyone knows that you
were being realistic – but True Flame had to believe the
Stone Clan or it would be an insult to them."
"God forbid he insults them." Tinker growled and looked
back toward the discontinuity's edge and her abandoned
equipment.
"
Domi, I will bring your things." Stormsong offered.
"I am not totally ignorant of these computer things."
Since Stormsong could manage the Rolls Royce and the
walkie-talkie, she should be able to disconnect the equipment and
carry it back to the enclave unharmed. Tinker sighed and nodded.
"Okay. Thank you."
Windwolf signaled that Cloudwalker would accompany
Stormsong, and the two
sekasha moved off.
"There is so much I need to know," Tinker said to him. "And
if we're really going to be husband and wife – you need
to take the time for me. How do you expect me to trust you when
you keep throwing me in the pool to sink or swim?"
He sighed deeply and scrubbed his hands over his face. "I
want to be there for you – protect you – but I
can't. It's killing me that you're in the water and floundering
– but the only other option I have is to lock you away
someplace safe – and that would only kill you faster. The
only thing that kept me sane so far is knowing that you're actually
very good at finding your own way out of the water."
* * *
After seeing his domi safely back to Poppymeadow's, Wolf
went in search of Earth Son to lodge his complaint. He found
Earth Son at the palace clearing, pacing it out as if he planned to
claim the piece of land for himself. Apparently the Stone Clan domana had expected the aumani as soon as they
arrived in Pittsburgh; Earth Son wore a full tunic of rich green
silk and a gold burnt velvet duster with a stone horse pattern.
Like Jewel, he had a spell orb keeping him cool in the muggy
Pittsburgh
summer.
Wolf closed the distance between them. "Earth Son, I will
have a word with you."
Earth Son had inherited his father's height, so he was slightly
taller than Wolf. He tried to use it to look down on Wolf, but
then ruined the effect by doing a sketchy bow. "Wolf Who
Rules."
Wolf was too angry to acknowledge the veiled insult of
Earth Son's greeting. "Has the Stone Clan all run mad? We do
not know the number of the oni forces, and the way between our
worlds is not fully shut, and you're already asking for a clan
war."
"Us?" Earth Son feigned confusion.
"I may be young, but I spent my doubles at court. I recognize
power maneuvering when I see it."
"You are seeing things that are not there – like your
so-called oni." Earth Son's First, Thorne Scratch, tried to silence
her domou with a hand on his shoulder. Earth Son
flicked the female sekasha's hand away. "I have been out
for hours doing scrys." He waved toward the forest beyond the
clearing. "And found nothing remotely resembling an oni. 'I can
see the shadows of the oni on the wall,' is that not what you said
at Court? Apparently that's all that you've seen –
shadows! You're jumping at phantoms if you ask me."
Wolf didn't even bother with magic. He stepped forward and
caught Earth Son by the throat. "Listen you little turd, my domi is
under the Queen's Protection which means you are not to attack
her. But if you can't get that through that rock skull of yours,
then understand this – if she is hurt in any way—I
will hunt you down and tear out your throat."
"You would not dare." Earth Son managed to whisper.
"I started with nothing here. I can do it again. If my domi is
killed, I will let the crown strip me bare to have my revenge. Do
not think our royal cousin will protect you either – after
you shit all over the queen's commands, True Flame will not stop
me."
"I can not be held accountable for what that the
others—"
"You are clan head for this area and I will hold you
responsible."
"Forest Moss is mad!"
"If you didn't want the disadvantages that the mad one brings
with him, you shouldn't have chosen him."
"I didn't choose him."
Earth Stone's Hand looked relieved as the clearing filled
with Wyverns.
"Wolf," True Flame followed on the wash of red. "Let him
go."
Wolf released Earth Son, turning over this new piece of
information. He knew that Earth Son did not have considerable
standing in the Stone Clan, but he thought that Earth Son would
have at least been party to picking out the clan domana
that would be under him. Now that Wolf had talked with Forest
Moss and Jewel Tears, learned their situations, their inclusion
seemed less an personal attack on the Wind Clan, and more a
statement of the Stone Clan's assessment of Pittsburgh. They had
sent two of their most disposable domana. Or was the
count three?
In the clans, birth did not guarantee rank. It was
acknowledged, though, that children of the clan leaders learned
much observing their parent. Genetically, too, the leaders were
the best that the clans had to offer. True, barring accident or
assassination, it was unlikely clan head would ever change
– but as his mother's only child, Earth Son was a likely
future leader. Then again, he had arrived with only one Hand.
Was he escort for the other two, or fellow exile? If the later,
what had Earth Son done to be sent to
Pittsburgh
?
"I did nearly a hundred scrys," Earth Son reported to True
Flame while he rubbed his throat. "There's no oni here."
"The oni are savage but not stupid," Wolf snapped. "Acting
quickly is not to their advantage. They are hiding themselves well
and waiting for the best time to strike."
Earth Son scoffed at this. "If that was the case, they should
have struck while you were here alone, with even your voice
turned against you."
"They tried. They failed." Wolf did not mention how near the
assassination had came to succeeding. The brutal attack killed
one of his sekasha, damaged one of his hands, and
stranded him deep in Pittsburgh
's territory just as it returned to Earth. If not for
Tinker, the plot would have succeeded. "If the Ghostlands can be
used to their advantage, they will wait for reinforcements."
"Wolf is right," True Flame said. "That they managed to stay
hidden for nearly thirty years shows that they have patience. No
matter what happens, we need you to ferret them out."
Chapter 13: Ignore That Man Behind The Curtain
Tinker sat high up on a towering cross, clinging to the cross-
brace. Black was sitting at the very end of the cross-brace,
sobbing quietly. The delicate-boned woman wore a puffy black
mourning gown and a crown. Laying beside her was a long wand
with a star attached to it. Her host of crows sailed over head,
cawing "Lost, Lost!"
With a flurry of wings, Riki perched on the tip of the brace
between Tinker and Black. He was wearing an odd red outfit.
"There's no shame in being afraid of heights. Most people are."
"Oh, go away monkey boy." She snapped.
"I'm not a flying monkey," the tengu said. "I gave that up.
You melted the witch, so I got out of my no-compete contract.
I'm working strictly as a freelance crow. The health benefits suck,
but I make my own hours."
Tinker pointed to the sobbing Black. "Why is she crying?"
"She gave her heart to the tin man but she lost him." Riki
told her. "Not even the wizard can fix that."
"Hey!" On the ground, Esme gazed up at them, wearing blue
checked overalls and red ruby boots. "You can't get down.
You're not smart enough. You're head is full of straw."
"I'll figure a way down," Tinker shouted back.
"Falling will work," Riki said.
And Tinker was falling.
The dream seemed to hiccup and she was safe on the ground
then. Esme had a wicker basket and a little black dog. Pony was
there, his hair loose and curly as a mane, whiskers, cat-ears and
tail to finish the cat-look. Oilcan too, looking like he was made
out of metal.
"You have Black's heart?" Tinker asked Oilcan.
"I have no heart." He thumped on his chest and it echoed.
"That was a different tin man." Esme butted between the two
of them. "We need to find the wizard! Only he can solve all our
problems."
"I can take you to the wizard." Oilcan squeaked as he moved
his arm to point down a yellow brick road that lead into a dark
forest of black willows. "But we don't need to hurry, it's only six
o'clock."
"We've murdered time," Esme took out a pocket watch. It
seemed to be coated with butter. "It's always six o'clock –
we have to run to stay in the same place."
"We will have to go through the trees." Pony's cattail danced
nervously behind him.
"I don't know if that's smart," Tinker said.
"Of course you don't, you have straw for brains." Esme
picked straw out of Tinker's head to prove her point. "Look!
See!" She held out the straw of evidence. "We have to get to the
wizard. He's the only one to give you brains so you can solve this
problem."
"But the road ended with the tree." Tinker pointed out as
they crept forward, clinging to one another.
"It's not the tree," Esme said. "It's the fruit."
The trees turned, their gnarled faces looking at them with
wooden eyes. They were black willow trees but there were apples
– red and tempting – in their branches.
"You need the fruit." Esme pushed her hard toward the trees.
The trees plucked the apples from their branches and flung
them like hard rain at Tinker.
* * *
Tinker flailed her way out of her sheets to sit up in bed. It
was very early morning by the pale light in the window –
the birds hadn't yet started to stir. Windwolf was awake though,
and dressing.
"I didn't mean to wake you." He came to kiss her. His shirt
was still unbuttoned, and she burrowed into his warmth.
"I had another dream about the Black, Esme and the black
willow."
"Esme?"
"I figured out who White was – she's Lain's sister."
"Ah, the one in white—you're dreaming that she's
dreaming." He wrapped his arms around her, kissing her hair.
"Hm? Oh, yes, the Escher thing." Gods, it felt so right to be
held by him.
"Have you talked to Stormsong?"
"Yeah. She—we fit."
He tipped her head back to gaze intently into her face.
"You've accepted her? To be your beholden?"
She gave a tiny nod. It sounded like some kind of wedding
vow. Was this what elf society was all about—getting
married again and again, only without sex? "Yes. To be mine."
Windwolf gave her his smile that warmed her to her toes. "I
release her to you. But—"
"But?"
"But that is not what I meant. You should talk to Stormsong
about your dreams. She has some training in
yatanyai.
She might be able to help you determine what they mean."
"She does?"
"It was thought she would be an
intanyei seyosa but
in the end, she had too much of her father's temperament."
Windwolf kissed Tinker again and slipped out of her hold. "I
need to go. True Flame expects me. Why don't you go back to
sleep?"
She eyed the bed. She was still tired, but to sleep would
most likely mean another dream.
"I'll send Pony to you." Windwolf buttoned up his shirt.
"I'd rather have you." She settled back into the warm
softness.
Windwolf smiled. "I am glad of that, but alas, you can not
have me, so you must make do with Pony."
Did he really know what that sounded like in English? She
curled into ball and resolved to be asleep before Pony joined her.
And she was.
* * *
Another day, another dress. She really had to do something
about clothing. She picked out the Wind Clan blue dress and had
the staff add pockets to it while she ate. Breakfast proved that
Windwolf's household was still intent on mothering the life out
of her. They stacked the garden table with plates of pastries,
omelets, and fresh fruit. Tinker eyed the collection of dishes with
slight dismay.
"If they keep this up, they're going to make me fat," Tinker
complained.
"Eat." Stormsong pointed at bench, indicating that she was
to sit. "You and Pony both lost weight since Aum Renau."
Pony nodded, acknowledging that this was the truth. "You
should eat."
"Pft." Tinker began loading a plate. "Fine, but you both have
to eat too."
A sign of their "fit," they ate at first in companionable
silence, then drifted into a conversation about which of the
sekasha would work well with them. Of Windwolf's four
Hands, they came up with a list of seven possible candidates to
fill the three open positions of Tinker's First Hand.
"We can spend a few days pairing with others to see who
works best with you." Pony meant Tinker. "Windwolf chose all
of his sekasha so we work well together, and we've had
years to learn each other's ways."
"What are your plans for today?" Stormsong asked. "Are we
finished with that tree?"
"I don't know," Tinker whined. "I had another dream about
it. Windwolf said I should talk to you about it."
"You dream?" Stormsong said.
"I don't want to believe that I do," Tinker said, "but things
keep showing up out of my dreams."
"Dreams are important," Stormsong said. "They let you see
the future."
"Oh gods help me if this is my future," Tinker muttered.
"Tell me this dream," Stormsong said.
"Well, I had a couple, and they're all centering around two
people, and the tree." Tinker explained the first dream and then
the discovery of Esme's identity, and then last night's dream,
ending with, "And I don't have a clue where all that
weirdness came from."
Stormsong cocked her blue head with a faint disbelieving
look on her face. "It sounds like Wizard of Oz."
"What's that?" Tinker asked.
"It's a movie," Stormsong said.
Tinker had never heard of such a movie. "What's it about?"
"It's about – It's about – It's odd." Stormsong
said. "Maybe you should just see it."
* * *
Since Tooloo rented videos, Tinker gave her a call.
"I'm looking for the Wizard of Oz."
"Well, follow the yellow brick road," Tooloo said and hung
up.
Somehow, Tinker had totally forgotten how maddening it
was to deal with Tooloo. She hit redial, and explained, "I'm
looking for the movie called Wizard of Oz."
"You should have said so in the first place."
"Can you set it aside? I'll be by to pick it up." And while she
was there, she'd find out why Tooloo had lied to Nathan.
"No, you won't." Tooloo said.
Amazing that someone can give you an instant headache
over the phone. "Yes, I will."
"You can come but the movie won't be here."
"Oh, did someone else rent it?"
"No."
"Tooloo!" Tinker whined. "This is so simple – why
can't I rent the movie if no one has it?"
"I never had it."
"You didn't?" Tinker asked.
"It was fifty years old when the first Shutdown hit, and I
couldn't stand it after having to watch it every year for thirty
years running."
Should she even ask why Tooloo had to watch it
every year? No, that would only make her head hurt more. "So
that's a 'no'?"
"Yes," and Tooloo hung up.
Tinker sat drumming her fingers as she considered her
phone. Should she call Tooloo back and try to find out why
Tooloo was telling people she wasn't married to Windwolf? Go
and visit the crazy half-elf in person? She suspected that even if
she could understand the logic behind Tooloo's action, she
wouldn't be able to change it so the half-elf would stop.
She decided to focus on her dream. Where had she seen the
movie? Her grandfather thought movies were a waste of time, so
that left Lain.
"I don't have that movie," Lain stated when Tinker called and
asked.
"Are you sure?"
"Yes, I'm sure. Esme insisted that we watched it every year
after Thanksgiving. God knows why they picked Thanksgiving. It
always gave me nightmares. I would be quite happy never to see
that stupid movie again."
"Esme liked it?"
"She always identified too much with Dorothy, though she
never understood why Dorothy wanted to come back home.
Esme would go on and on about if she was Dorothy, she would
stay in Oz, which would make my mother cry. Every
Thanksgiving we have this huge family fight about watching it,
Esme would win, mother would cry, and I'd have nightmares."
They said their goodbyes like polite people and Tinker hung
up. Where had she seen this movie?
She called Oilcan. She never watched a movie alone, so he
most likely had seen it with her. "Hey, I'm trying to remember
something. Did you see Wizard of Oz with me?"
"The what?"
"It's a movie called Wizard of Oz. It's about Dorothy who
goes to Oz." That much of the story Tinker had gathered from
Lain, although she wasn't clear where Oz was. Africa
?
"It's not ringing any bells."
She sighed. "If I track this down, do you want to watch with
us?"
"A movie night? Cool. Sure. Meet you at your loft?"
She hadn't considered where to watch the movie once she
found it. She suddenly realized it had been two months since
she'd been home to her loft. Weirder yet, she didn't want to go
– as in 'not want to go to the dentist because it would
hurt' way. Why the hell did she feel that way? Her system made
Oilcan's look like a toy, which was why they always used her
place. But she was cringing at the thought of doing movie night
at her loft.
"Tink?" Oilcan asked.
This was stupid—it was her home. "Yeah, my place."
"See you later then."
"Later."
She slumped forward onto the table, resting her check on its
smooth surface. Three phone calls, she hadn't yet stirred out of
the garden, and already she was emotionally raw and tired. Damn,
she wished she could get a good night's sleep. Her exhaustion felt
like it was teaming up with all her problems, conspiring to keep
her off balance.
"Domi," Stormsong said quietly. "When I saw the
movie, I rented it from Eides."
At least something was working out in her life.
* * *
Eide's Entertainment was an institution in Pittsburgh
, down on Penn Avenue
in the Strip District. Established in the 1970s as a
comic bookstore, it been one of the many landmarks that
somehow not only survived but also flourished when
transplanted to Elfhome. It was a Mecca
of human culture, which not only humans but also
elves went on pilgrimage to. Tinker and Oilcan would always hit
the shop once immediately after Startup to see what was new,
and then several times a month to see what used music and
videos were brought in by other customers. Besides music,
videos, and comic books, the store was treasure trove of
collectible items: non-sport cards, magazines, big little books,
pulps, and out of print books.
Ralph raised his hand to them as they entered. "Hey, Lina,
long time no see. I've got that Nirvana CD you wanted in the
back."
It wasn't until Stormsong touched hands with Ralph in a
rocker's version of the handshake that Tinker realized he had been
talking to Stormsong. Lina? Ah yes, Linapavuata, which was
Elvish for "singing." Ralph looked past the elf, saw Tinker.
"Tinker-tiki!" Ralph used Tinker's racing nickname, which
meant Baby Tinker. "Look at you!" He ran a finger over Tinker's
ear point, making her burn with embarrassment. "Like the ear
job. Love the dress. You're looking fine."
Pony slapped Ralph's hand way and reached for his blade,
but Stormsong kept him from drawing his ejae.
"Their ways are not ours." Stormsong murmured in High
Elvish to Pony, and then dropped to Low Elvish to continue.
"Ralph, this is Galloping Storm Horse on Wind, he looks to
Tinker ze
domi—and she is very off-limits now."
"Forgiveness." Ralph bowed and used passable Low Elvish.
"Does that make you Tinker of the Storms?"
"Beloved Tinker of Wind." Pony corrected Ralph with a
growl.
Ralph glanced to Stormsong and read something on her face
that made him decide to flee. "Let me go get that CD."
Tinker turned to Pony who was still glaring after Ralph.
"What was that about?"
"He should show you respect," Pony said.
Stormsong clarified in English. "'Baby Tinker' is
disrespectful, nor should he have touched you."
"I've known him for years!" Tinker stuck with low Elvish.
She didn't want to cut Pony out of the conversation. "Oilcan and
I go to his parties. Tinker-tiki is what all the elves call me."
"Used to call you," Pony said. "No elf would be so impolite
to use it now."
"Only because they fear you would call insult," Stormsong
implied, with a glance, that Pony would use his blade in dealing
with anyone that insulted Tinker.
"Like – kill them?" Tinker asked.
"We have the right to mete out punishment as we see fit,"
Pony explained. "By the blood and the sword."
Oh boy. The little things people don't tell her. "You can't
just whack the head off anyone that pisses you off!"
"If the insult is severe, yes, we can." Pony said. "
Sekasha
are divine warriors, who answer only to the gods."
"We have the right," Stormsong said. "Our training guides
us not to take the options allowed to us."
"Look, if I'm insulted, I'll punch the guy myself. As far as
I'm concerned, you guys are just here for oni and monsters with
sharp teeth."
"Yes,
domi." Stormsong gave an elaborate bow.
Pony looked unhappy but echoed, "Yes,
domi."
Which didn't make Tinker happy, because she felt like she
was somehow the bad guy for not letting them lop off heads right
and left. Worse, she
knew it was all really Windwolf's
fault since her life got weird the exact second that he entered it.
Suddenly she was very annoyed with him—but didn't want
to be – which made her grumpier. She tried to ignore the
whole confusing swarm of emotions and thumped over to the
video rental section. The
sekasha and stinging feelings,
unfortunately, followed close behind.
She'd never actually rented video from Eides before and
their categories confused her. There seemed to be two of every
category. "Why two?"
"These are bootleg copies with subtitles in Low Elvish."
Stormsong pointed out a sign in Elvish that Tinker had missed
because a male elfin customer stood in front of it, flipping
through the anime.
The elf noticed Stormsong with widening eyes, bowed low
and moved off with a low murmured "Forgiveness."
"The other elves – they're afraid of you?" Tinker
noticed that all the elves in the store covertly watched the
sekasha and had cleared out of their path.
"If they do not know us, yes," Stormsong spoke quietly so
her words wouldn't carry. "You are one that sleeps in the nest of
dragons. You do not know how rare we are – or how
dangerous."
"What makes you so special?"
"The Skin Clan did; they created the perfect warrior."
Tinker was afraid to ask how this gave them the right to
head lopping in general, so she focused on why they were here
– to rent Wizard of Oz. Knowing that Pony would be
watching the movie with her, Tinker scanned only the translated
videos. Unlike the originals in their glossy colorful boxes, the
translated videos had plain white covers with Low Elvish printed
onto the spines. She pulled out one at random and studied it. The
movie was 'The Wedding Singer' which had been translated to
'The Party Singer." Was it a bad translation or was there actually
no Elvish word for wedding? How could the elves exist without
the most basic of life ceremonies?
Tinker put the movie back, and scanned the shelves.
Stormsong had been searching too, and now pulled out a
box and handed it to Tinker. "This is it."
The translator hadn't even tried to find Elvish to match the
words Wizard and Oz. Instead, the title was phonetically spelled
out.
Tinker turned and found Tommy Chang leaning against the
end of the DVD rack, watching her with his dangerous cool. He
was wearing a black tank top that showed off the definition in his
muscled arms, a corded leather bracelet, and his signature
bandana. Tommy organized raves, the cock fights in
Chinatown, and the hover bike races – the
last being how she knew him best.
"Hi, Tommy." Somehow, the normal greeting sounded
dorky. Something about his zen-like menace made her feel like a
complete techno geek. If she didn't watch it, she ended up
overcompensating around him.
He lifted his chin in acknowledgement. "I wasn't sure if
they'd let you out." He glanced toward Pony. "They keep you on a
short leash. In a dress, even."
"Piss off." That was a record.
"Aren't we touchy now we're an elf?"
"Excuse me, but I've had one fucked over month."
"So I heard." And then, surprisingly, he added. "Glad you're
still breathing."
"Thanks."
"You still going to ride for Team Tinker?"
She felt a flash of guilt as she realized that she hadn't
thought about racing in months. Last she had heard Oilcan had
taken over the riding. "How is my team doing?"
"It's been Team Big Sky's season since," he lifted a finger to
indicate her appearance, "the whole elf thing."
That made sense. Oilcan was heavier than she was, had a
different center of gravity, and was less aggressive on the turns.
Team Bonzai would have lost their edge when the oni stole
Czerneda's custom-made delta. That left John Montana, Captain
of Team Big Sky, with the only other delta in the racing circuit,
and his half-brother, Blue Sky, a good match to her build and
skills.
"So – you going back to riding?" Tommy asked.
"I don't know. A lot of shit has hit the fan that I need to deal
with before I can think about that."
A flash of Wyvern red outside made Tommy look toward
the store windows. "Yup, a lot of shit."
* * *
Her loft smelled of garbage. Months ago – a lifetime
ago – she, Oilcan and Pony had eaten, washed dishes, left
trash in the can to be taken out, left and never came back.
Stormsong was too polite to say anything, carefully sticking to
low Elvish. Even after they'd opened the windows and let in the
cool evening air, the place depressed Tinker with its ugliness. She
had lived alone at human speed; always too busy cramming in
what was important to her to deal with beautifying the place she
lived. All the furniture was all battered and mismatched used
stuff she picked up cheap. The couch been clawed by someone
else's cats, the leather recliner was cracking with age, and the
coffee table was something she welded together and topped with
a piece of glass. The walls were the same dark green from the
loft's last occupant – not that you could see a whole lot
of them as her cinderblock and lumber bookshelves covered most
of them and overflowed with her books. She had nothing
beautiful – everything was just serviceable and in need of
a good cleaning.
She knew it could be made pretty. She had time now, if she
wanted to take it. The place could be cleaned, painted, and
furnished. She could even hire carpenters to make her bookcases
and kitchen cabinets. There was no room, though, for all the
people in her life now. The place was for one busy person that
was barely there or a married couple with no interests outside
one another. Windwolf would never fit – his life was too
big – and she didn't want to live without him. Without
Pony. And of late, not without Stormsong either.
She didn't fit into her old life anymore. This wasn't her home
anymore, and it saddened her for reasons she couldn't understand.
Perching on the couch's overstuffed arm, she tried to cheer
herself up with an inventory of what replaced her old life. A stud
muffin of a husband with wads of cash who was crazy in love
with her. A luxurious room at the best enclave. Fantastic food
for every meal. A best friend that was now sitting beside her on
the couch, eyeing her with concern.
"What is wrong?" Pony asked quietly.
"I think I'm homesick," she whispered and leaned her
forehead against his shoulder. "Look at this place. It's a dump.
And I miss it. Isn't that the stupidest thing you've ever heard?"
He pulled her into his lap and held her in his arms. "It is not
stupid. It only means you lived with joy here, and it is sorrowful
to put joyful things aside."
"Bleah." She sniffed away tears that wanted to fall. "I was
lonely, I just never let myself know how much. I made the
computers all talk, just so I felt like someone else was there."
"You can grieve for something lost, even if it was not
perfect."
The front door open and Oilcan walked in. "Hey," he
announced, not noticing that he started Stormsong to attention.
He balanced boxes and a carton of bottles. "I didn't think you
would have anything to eat here, so I brought food." He settled
the various boxes onto the coffee table. "Hey, what's with the sad
face?"
"I'm just tired." She didn't want him to know how lonely she
had been, or think that she was unhappy with her life now. "I've
been having all these bad dreams. It's put me on edge. It's like I've
been rubbed down to all nerves."
"Ah, yeah, that can happen." Oilcan suffered from horrible
nightmares when he first came to
Pittsburgh
. For that first year, she'd climb into his bed late at
night, armed with boxes of tissues, to get him to stop crying. It
was one of the reasons she led and he followed despite the fact he
was four years older.
"Scrunches?" He asked her if she needed held, just as she
once asked him.
"Pony has it covered." She leaned against Pony. "What's in
the boxes?"
"Chicken satay with peanut sauce." He lifted up the first lid
to show off the sewers of marinated chicken. "Curry puffs, fried
shumai, thai roll, pad thai noodles, and drunken chicken."
He went into the kitchen to collect dishes and silverware.
"We'll get fat eating all this." She helped herself to one of
the thai rolls, dipping it into the sweet chili sauce. He must have
come straight from the Thai place as the thin fried wrapper was
still piping hot.
"Feed the body, feed the soul, you sleep better." Oilcan
handed her one of the plates and found room for the others on the
crowded table.
"Feed on spirits," Stormsong added as she examined the
bottles of alcohol. "Hard cider, vodka coolers, and beer?"
"Beer is for me. Figured I'd bring a mix for you guys."
"These are good." Stormsong handed a cooler to Tinker.
"The cider carries less of a punch, so Pony and I should stick to
them."
"Ah, leave the hard drinking to me." Tinker twisted off the
top. Half a cooler, a curry puff and a plate of pad thai noodle
later, she realized that the rubbed raw feeling had vanished, and
the loft felt like home again.
* * *
Tooloo had mentioned that the movie was old, but Tinker
still was surprised when it started in only sepia tones. Dorothy
was a whiny, stupid, spoiled brat who was clueless on how to
manage a rat-sized dog. When Tinker was Dorothy's age, she was
an orphan and running her own business. Esme identified with
this girl? That didn't bode well.
The Earth the movie showed was flat, dusty and featureless.
Tinker was with Esme – why would anyone pine for
that?
"Is that what Earth is like?" Pony asked.
"I don't know – I've never been to Earth." Tinker
groaned at yet another stupid thing that the girl did. "I'm not sure
I can take a full ninety minutes of this."
"It—changes." Stormsong said.
And change it did as a tornado sucked the house up into the
air and plopped it down in glorious color. Dorothy's dress turned
out to be blue checked and she acquired glittering red high heels
that they called "slippers," the source of Esme's overalls and red
boots in Tinker's dream.
It took Tinker several minutes for Tinker to realize how
Glenda the Good Witch worked into her dream. "That's Black.
She had the wand and the crown. And she was crying."
"I think I would cry if I was stuck in a dress like that,"
Stormsong said.
Tinker had to agree with that assessment. Tiny little people
in weird clothes surrounded Dorothy and talked in rhyming
singsong voices.
"Oh this is so weird." Tinker whispered.
"Does this make more sense in English?" Pony asked.
"No, not really," she told him. "Do they ever stop singing?"
"Not much." Stormsong said as the munchkins escorted
Dorothy to the edge of town and waved cheerfully goodbye.
"Oh, of course they're happy to see her go; she's a cold-
blooded killer," Tinker groused as Dorothy discovered a talking
scarecrow. "Oh gods, they're singing again."
Dorothy and scarecrow found the apple trees that threw
fruit, and then the tin man, whose first word was "Oilcan." Tinker
huddled against Pony, growing disquieted.
"What is it, domi?" Pony asked.
"How did I know? I didn't see this movie before, but so
many things are just like my dream."
"Maybe we did see it and forgot," Oilcan said.
"Something this weird?" Tinker asked. "And we both
forgot?"
Pony's lion showed up next. Tinker scowled at the screen. It
annoyed her that she didn't understand how she had dreamed this
movie—and that her dream self had cast Pony in such a
cowardly character. "All these people are dysfunctional,
delusional idiots."
Finally the foursome plus dog found the Wizard who turned
out to be a fraud.
"What was this dream trying to tell me?" Tinker asked.
"I am not sure," Stormsong said. "Normally an untrained
dreamer borrows symbols uncontrollably – and this
movie is rife with them. Everything from the Abandoned Child
archetype to Crossing the Return Threshold."
"Huh?" The only threshold crossing Tinker knew about
related to chaos theory.
"Dream mumbo-jumbo." Stormsong waved a toward the
television screen.
The wizard/fraud had produced a hot air balloon, and was
saying goodbye. "...am about to embark upon a hazardous and
technically unexplainable journey to the outer stratosphere."
"Dorothy is taking a heroic journey," Stormsong continued.
"She crosses two thresholds, one out of the protected realm of
her childhood, and the other completes her journey, by returning
to
Kansas
. If you were familiar with this movie, I would say
you were seeking to move past your old identity and claim one
that reflects growth. The tornado could be a symbol of the
awakening of sexuality, especially suppressed desire."
Tinker resisted the sudden urge to shift out of Pony's arms.
"I didn't dream about the tornado."
"Yeah, well, the odd thing is that you're not familiar with the
movie. So the question is: where is the symbolism coming
from?"
"Don't look at me!" Tinker closed her eyes and rested her
head on Pony's shoulder. "So, what should I do next?"
"Tell me your last dream again."
"I'm up high with Riki and he's a flying monkey. He's got the
whole costume, and I'm the scarecrow. Riki talks about me
melting the witch and setting him free. Then I'm on the ground,
and Esme is there as Dorothy, Pony was the lion, and Oilcan was
the tin man."
The movie was obviously drawing to a close as Dorothy
tried to convince people that her journey had been real.
"We wanted to go to the wizard," Tinker said. "But the road
ends with the black willows, but they're also the trees in the
movie that throw their apples. Esme keeps saying we need the
fruit. I don't know. Do black willows even have fruit?"
Thankfully the movie was over and the credits rolled.
"I am not sure," Stormsong said slowly, "but I think,
domi, finding out more about this Esme would be best."
"I'm going to have to talk to Lain about a lot of things." She
went to her phone mumbling, "Fruit. Esme. Flying monkeys.
Yellow brick roads. Munchkins."
She got Lain's simple unnamed AI. "It's Tinker."
"Tinker," Lain's recorded voice came on. "I'm going to be
spending the next few days at Reinholds with the black willow. If
you need me, you can find me there."
Tinker hung up without leaving a message. Sighing, she
considered her home network. She should take it out before
someone broke in and stole it. Pushing back from her desk, she
lazily spun in her chair, scanning her loft. "I should really
– you know – move out."
Oilcan glanced around, bobbing his head in agreement.
"Yeah, unless you get divorced, I don't see you living here again.
Well, I've got to go. I still have those last drums on the flat bed. I
need to go dump them with the rest."
"See ya." She continued to spin, thinking of what she needed
for the move. A truck. Boxes. People. As she considered how
many boxes and how many people, she realized what little she
really needed to move. Her computer. Her books. Her underwear.
Most of her clothes were ratty hand-me-downs of Oilcan's, or
too oil-stained to wear around the elves. Her battered furniture,
her unmatched dishes, and all her other sundry things were just
odds-and-ends she picked up over time and weren't worth
keeping. She could have a yard sale. She could make up a flyer
and put an ad in the newspaper. They would need a way to tag all
her stuff, a cash box with a starter kit of change, a tent case it
rained. They could sell hot dogs and sauerkraut to raise more
money – except she didn't need money. Hell, a yard sale
was a stupid idea.
She spun in her chair as plans came to mind and proved
unneeded. And where would she move her stuff to? She
supposed the computer could live in her bedroom at the enclave,
but what about all her books? Her jury-rigged bookcases would
clash horribly with the elegant hand-craved furniture. She could
probably get bookcases. Snap her fingers. Make it so. But where
would she put them?
Windwolf didn't fit into her life, but did she fit into his
either?
She bumped into something and stopped spinning.
Stormsong stood beside her, looking down at her. "You're
going to make yourself sick doing that."
"Pshaw." She stood up and toppled over.
Pony caught her and carefully put her back into the chair.
"I wish you guys wouldn't hover." Tinker snarled as they
stood over her.
Pony crouched down so he was now eye level with her.
"You are still upset."
She sighed and leaned her forehead on his shoulder. "I don't
like being like this. This isn't me. I feel like I'm living without my
skin. Everything hurts."
He put his arms around her and eased her into his lap. "
Domi, I have been with you every day for some time now. I
have seen you happy and relaxed. I have seen you bored. I have
seen you snarling into the face of the enemy. And you were
always yourself until two days ago. Something has changed."
"Do you think the oni dragon did something more to me that
just draw magic through me?"
He considered for a few minutes, and then shook his head. "I
do not know,
domi."
"How do we check?" She asked.
He and Stormsong exchanged looks.
"Let's go to the hospice," Stormsong said. "And have them
check you."
* * *
The hospice people poked and prodded and did various
spells on her and shook their heads and sent her home feeling
even more unbalanced. Her beholden fended off Windwolf's
household, else she probably would have been doused again with
saigin and put to bed. Ironically, the only place she had to
retreat to was her bedroom which didn't feel like home.
"There's no me in this room!" She paced on the bed just to
get as tall as the sekasha. "This is not a room I live in. I
need a computer. And a television. Internet connection! Is it any
wonder that I feel like I'm going nuts when the most mechanical
item in this suite is the toilet? Hell, I don't know even where to
find my stuff! Where is my datapad? Where's – where's
– shit, I don't even own anything anymore!"
The sekasha nodded, wisely saying nothing, probably
thinking she was insane.
"I mean, how am I suppose to do anything? I know I have
stuff. I had you put stuff in the car to bring home. Where did it
go?"
"I will find it." Stormsong said and went off to search. She
returned while Tinker was still pacing the bed with the mp3
player Riki left for her at Turtle Creek, the Dufae codex, her
grandfather's files on the flux spells and Esme, and a bottle of
ouzo. Of course everything cleaned and given lovely linen
binders tied with silk ribbons. Elves!
Tinker settled down with the file and a glass of ouzo. Smart
female Stormsong. Must keep her. She tossed the player onto the
nightstand where she might remember to take it to Oilcan,
dropped the codex and the flux folder onto the floor, and opened
up Esme's file. As she noticed earlier, the file contained general
public information. NASA bios. Newspaper clippings.
Interspersed into it, though, was detailed personal information.
One paper was a genealogy chart of Esme's parents going back a
dozen generations on both sides. Another set of papers
chronicled out medical histories for family members. Another
sheet claimed to be account numbers for a Swiss bank account.
Tinker weeded these unique papers out, wondering how and why
her grandfather had such information on Lain's sister. Lain
herself, she could understand. But Esme?
Last item in the file was an unlabeled manila envelope. She
opened it up to find a photo of her father and Black wrapped in
each other arms, looking blissfully happy.
"Who the hell?" Tinker flipped picture but the back was
blank.
"What is it?"
"This is Black." Without her blindfold or hands covering her
face, Black was clearly a tengu. She had the black hair, the blue
eyes, and the prominent nose that in the males was very beak-like.
"This is Oilcan?" Stormsong pointed to Leo.
"No, my father." Tinker looked in the envelope to see what
else was inside.
There was a handwritten note stating:
Two can play this silence game. I'm not going to let you
pressure me into leaving her just so you can have grandkids. I've
made a deposit at a sperm bank, just in case things change. I don't
know what else I can do to make you happy. The next step is
yours. If you don't call, this is the last you'll hear of me.
The attached form noted that Leonardo Da Vinci Dufae had
deposited sperm to be held in cryo-storage for his personal use.
The last sheet of paper in the file was a form from fertility
clinic on Earth. Tinker read over it three times before its full
import hit her. It was a record of her conception.
Esme Shenske was her mother.
* * *
She was still shaking when she found Lain at Reinholds'.
The xenobiologist was dressed in winter clothing and running the
slim willowy limbs through a machine. She glanced up as Tinker
stormed into the big freezer.
"What is it, dear?" Lain paused to pluck something off the
limb and place it in a jar.
"Look at this! Look!" Tinker thrust the form into Lain's
hands.
Lain took the paper, scanned it, and said quietly. "Oh."
"Oh? Oh? That's all you have to say?"
"I'm not sure what to say."
Something about Lain's tone, the lack of surprise, her uneasiness got through, and after a
stunned moment, Tinker cried, "You knew!"
"Yes, I knew."
"You've known all along!"
"Yes."
"How could you lie to me all this time? I thought you..."
She swallowed down the word "loved", terrified to have to hear
it denied. "...cared for me."
"I love you. I have wanted to tell you about Esme for so very
long, but you have to understand, I couldn't."
"Couldn't?"
Lain sighed and her breath misted in the freezing cold. "You
don't know everything. There's so much that I had to keep from
you."
"What the hell does that mean?"
"It means what it means." Lain busied herself labeling the
jar; the contents wriggled like worms. "Don't come storming in
here all hurt and emotional about something that can't be
changed."
"You could have told me!"
"No, I couldn't have," Lain said.
"Tinker, my sister is your mother. See how easy!"
And then cause and effect kicked in. "Oh my gods, you're my
aunt."
"Yes, I am."
"But what about those tests you did to show Oilcan and I
were still related? You used your own DNA as a comparison."
"I didn't use my own. I used a stored test result. I wanted to
make it clear that you and Oilcan are still cousins."
Tinker could only stare, feeling betrayed.
"Oh put the hurt eyes away. I have been here for you, loving
you as much as humanly possible. What does it matter you called
me Lain instead of Aunt Lain? I have always given you the care I
would give my niece, no matter what you or anyone else might
know." Lain snorted with disgust. "I always thought that Esme
was a result of lavish parenting until you came along –
daily I've been stunned to realize it was all actually genetic."
"That hurts." Tinker snapped.
"What does?"
"That you could look at me and see my mother and never
share that with me."
"Nothing about your birth and life has been cut and dried. I
suppose that was one reason I wasn't that surprised when
– out of the blue – you changed species."
A sound of hurt forced itself out of Tinker, and Lain came
to fold her into a hug.
"Oh ladybug, I'm sorry, but I did my best."
"Can we get out of here and talk? It's very creepy and cold."
"Oh, love." Lain sighed, rubbing Tinker on her back. "This is
the only time I'm actually going to be able to do this."
Tinker pulled out of her hold. "What are you doing that's so
damn important?"
"I'm justifying all your hard work at preserving this." Lain
gave her a hard look that meant that she thought Tinker was
acting spoiled. "I'm scanning the structure of living limbs before
this thing wakes up."
"What are these?" Tinker picked one of the jars. Inside,
small reddish-brown capsules had broken open, spilling out tiny,
hairy green seed-like things, all wriggling like worms.
"Those are its seeds," Lain said. "It's possible that the
Ghostlands somehow drained the tree of magic and made it
inactive. It hasn't accumulated enough to wake, but the seeds
need less magic."
"Seeds – are – fruit, aren't they?"
"Yes, dear." Lain focused on the limbs.
Okay, I have the fruit. Now what? Tinker eyed the seeds
as they wriggled about. "I think –"
"Yes?"
"I think – Esme is trying to drive me nuts."
"Ah, that means you're family."
Tinker shoved the jar at Pony to keep while she continued
her argument. "Why didn't you tell me? Why did you and
Grandpa keep it a secret? Why Esme? Was she in love with my
father?"
"I never knew why Esme did any of the things she did. She
certainly never explained herself. I don't think she ever knew your
father. I didn't think she knew your grandfather and yet –
somehow – they managed to create you. She called me
from a roadside pay phone right before she left Earth. She told
that she'd hidden clues to her greatest treasure in my house the
last time she had visited but wouldn't say anything more. She
kept repeating, 'the evil empire might be listening, and I don't
want them to have it' like she was some type of rebel spy."
"Huh?" Tinker felt as if the conversation just veered around
a blind corner. "What evil empire?"
"That's what we called our family; the empire of evil. Our
stepfather was Ming the Merciless, his son was Crown Prince
Kiss Butt and our half brothers were Flying Monkeys Four and
Five."
Tinker fought to ignore the sudden intrusion of Wizard of
Oz into the conversation. "I was her greatest treasure?"
"Yes." Lain went back to examining the limbs. "Although
I'm stunned that she had the maturity to recognize that. I was
expecting something more trivial like her diary, or bearer bonds
she'd stolen off our stepfather. But no, it was a copy of that form,
and your grandfather's address, and a note saying 'Watch over my
child. Don't tell the empire of evil – or a world away
won't be far enough.' No please, no thank you, no why she had
done it."
"So you're not happy that I was born?"
"Don't you twist that into something personal. I thought
– and still think – it was horribly selfish and
irresponsible of her, as if a child needed no more care than a
dandelion seed. Throw it to the wind and hope for best." Lain
made a sound of disgust. "Which is so like Esme."
"I don't understand, though, why you didn't tell me?"
"I didn't think it was wise to trust such a secret to a child.
Could you have kept it from Oilcan?"
"Oilcan wouldn't have told anyone."
"Tooloo?"
Tinker looked away. Yes she would have trusted Tooloo,
but who knew what Tooloo would have done with the
information. Just look at what the half-elf was doing now
– spreading lies about her not being married. "You could
have told me when Grandpa died."
"Yes, I could have, but I didn't." Lain found another
wriggling bundle and dropped it into a specimen jar. "My family
are takers. If there was something they want, they have the money
and power to take it. No one can stand against them for every
long. They go above, around and sometimes through people to
get what they want."
"But–But– what does that have to do with
not telling me about Esme?"
"I don't think until you met Windwolf and had seen the kind
of power he wields that you could have possibly understood our
family. One word to the wrong person, and they could have
snatched you back to Earth, and nothing that you, your
grandfather, or even I could have done would stop them."
Chapter 14: A Parting Of Ways
Tinker fled the freezing cold of Reinhold's and stumbled out
into the baking heat of the summer evening. Oh gods, could her
life get any more fucked over? Everyone she thought she knew
was turning into total strangers. Tooloo was telling everyone she
wasn't married, Lain was her aunt and her grandfather had lied
and lied and lied. He had always told her that her mother was
dead at the time of her conception and that her egg had been
stored at the same donor bank as her father's sperm. He
maintained that he randomly selected the egg from a vast list of
anonymous donors. He took the truth to his grave, not breathing
one word that she had living family as close as Lain. He died and
left her and Oilcan with no one to turn to. She'd gone nearly mad
with fear and grief, and he had lied about everything, and then left
them all alone.
"
Domi, where are we going?" Pony asked quietly
beside her.
She blinked and paid attention for the first time to where
they were. They were walking up
Ohio
River Boulevard
, half way to
McKees
Rocks
Bridge
. The two Rolls Royces followed slowly behind her,
effectively blocking traffic – not that there was any on
this lonely stretch of road late in the evening. "I don't know. How
the hell am I supposed to know. What day is it? I never know
what day it is anymore. Do you know how long it's been since
I've seen a calendar? Thursday I destroyed the world and Friday I
slept. Saturday we moved to the enclave and slept some more.
Sunday a dragon used me for a straw. Monday I was on the front
cover of the newspaper. Tuesday I got another person to follow
along behind me and ask me impossible questions and I dreamed
about my mother – who may or may not be dead
– and this mystery person, Black. Wednesday. Today is
Wednesday."
"If you say it is," Pony murmured.
"Tomorrow is Thursday. Thursday is the day I take scrap
metal to the steel mill. They cut me a check. I drive downtown,
deposit the check except for fifty bucks. I stop at Jenny Lee
Bakery in
Market Square
and pick up a dozen chocolate thumbprint cookies.
Thursdays the thumbprints are fresh. I head back to work and put
in a few hours paying bills and filling orders. I cut Oilcan his
paycheck and give it to him so he can go to the bank before it
closes. We get together with Nathan and Bowman and some of
the other cops at the Church Brew Works in the Strip. I get the
pierogies or the pizza or the buffalo wings – I like being
flexible—and try expensive beer. I liked beer. Now it just
tastes like piss."
As if she'd summoned him, a Pittsburgh Police cruiser
pulled over on the other side of the road slightly ahead of her and
Nathan got out.
"Tinker?" He came across the four lanes toward her. "What
the hell are you doing?"
"How the hell am I supposed to know? I was never an elf
before. I was never in charge of anyone. People left me alone. I
could go all day without seeing anyone but Oilcan or you. I
cooked my own food. Washed my own clothes. It's not like I
blow up the world everyday."
Nathan walked backwards, staying a few feet ahead of her,
scanning the bodyguards and the Rolls Royces. "Are you," he
asked quietly, "trying to go home?"
"I don't know." And she didn't. She was nearly to the
intersection where she could continue on Ohio River Boulevard
or cross over the McKees Rocks Bridge or head up to Lain's
house – not that Lain was home – but really, she
had not a clue which direction she was going to go –
although she was starting to suspect that it would be straight
through – staying on Ohio River Boulevard until it hit
the Rim.
"Do you want me to take you home? Or to Oilcan's? Lain's?
Tooloo's? I can take you to a woman's shelter if you want. I am a
cop; you can trust me to help you if you need help."
She made a rude noise. "How do you know who you can
trust? How do you know when people are telling you the truth?"
"Tinker, I'm sorry that – I know that doesn't forgive
anything – but I'm sorry. I really thought you felt
something for me. I thought that was why you said you wanted to
go out on a date. But it's just like I offered a kid candy; I talked
about dating and of course, you were curious. I should have
known what you're like with something new. You don't stop
until you know everything."
She hit the intersection and needed to make a choice. She
nearly went straight through, but then realized that it was getting
dark, and none of the streetlights worked out that way. She
veered left, almost decided on going across the bridge, but
realized that going to her loft would be depressing, and she didn't
want to talk to Tooloo, not now, she'd probably strangle the
crazy half-elf. She continued looping to the left. Nathan had a
good idea; she should go talk to Oilcan. But that seemed silly,
since the shortest way to Oilcan's was the way she came. Of the
four ways out of the intersection, however, only going to Lain's
house remained, and she didn't want to go there either.
She kept walking, now distinctly making a full circle in the
center of the road. The Rolls Royces halted at the intersection,
silver ghosts in the twilight. Pony ground to a halt behind her,
watching her with a faintly worried look.
"Tinker, are you all right?" Nathan asked.
"Do I look all right? Seriously! I don't think so. Something
has definitely come loose. But can they find out what's wrong?
Nope. Can't do that."
"Tink." Nathan caught her by the wrist. "If you're not feeling
right, walking around in the night isn't going to solve anything.
Let me take you to Lain."
"No!" She tried to tug her hand free. "I don't want to see her.
She lied to me!"
Nathan ignored her attempts to get loose, pulling her toward
his police cruiser. "Then let me take you to your cousin."
"Pony!" Tinker cried, turning to the
sekasha.
She saw the blur of the
ejae's blade and was only
registering its meaning when Nathan's life blood sprayed across
her face. His hand tightened a moment on her wrist, and then his
fingers went limp. She stared numbly as his hand slipped off her
and his body crumbled to the ground with a heavy thud.
With the strength of a black hole, Nathan's body dragged her
gaze down to it. He lay on his side, his wide shoulders canted
back so she could see the thick column of his neck. The skin up
to the sword cut was unblemished white, and then his neck
stopped abruptly in a meaty collar of muscle, bone, and gaping
pipes. Blood still fountained rhythmically from a severed vein.
She opened her mouth but couldn't form any words. She
dropped to her knees beside Nathan and touched him –
felt the warmth and solidness of his body. His heart still
pounded, wild and frantic, pumping out his blood with lessening
force until it shuddered to a stop.
What just happened? Nathan can't be dead – he was
just talking to me.
She looked up to Pony and saw he had drawn his sword.
Blood dripped from his blade. She whimpered, realizing she had
cried out to Pony and he'd reacted as he'd been trained. She had
gotten Nathan killed.
An oddly shaped object on the ground behind Pony caught
her eye, and she gazed at it for a minute, puzzled, until she
realized it was the back of Nathan's severed head.
She had killed Nathan.
A sound struggled up out of her chest. She pushed a hand
against her mouth to keep it in and felt a sticky wetness on her
face. She jerked her hand away from her face, stared at the blood
covering her hand, and a loud, wordless keen forced its way out
of her. Once free, it would not stop. She knelt there, wailing, as
her stained hands fluttered about her as if they were trying to
escape the sudden brutal reality.
"
Domi." Pony crouched beside her, gathering her
into his arms. "Tinker
domi."
She rocked in his arms, keening, holding out her stained
hands so he could see the blood on them. Anguish, dark and wild
as flood waters, poured into her.
Pony picked her up. Tears blinded her and she slipped into
the black swirling hurting, losing sense of everything but the
guilt and grief. Fear was creeping in now, as she couldn't stop
herself, as if she'd been pushed out of her own body by the raw
distress. Only Pony's warm, strong presence kept her from falling
into complete panic. Slowly she became aware that he had carried
her back to the Rolls, and they had driven back to the enclave.
Voices of Lemonseed and others of the household came out of
the darkness that she seemed to be trapped in.
When Pony sat her down and let her go, Tinker cried out and
reached blindly for him.
"I am here,
domi." He pressed close to her as he
tenderly washed the blood from her face. "I will not leave you.
Nothing could take me from you."
They were in the bathroom of her suite at Poppymeadow's.
He'd stripped off his sharp-edged wyvern armor. She wrapped her
arms and legs around him, clinging to him.
"
Domi.
Domi." Pony crooned. "
Domi, please, stop crying."
She tried to push out words, but they came out strangled
cries.
"
Domi, please." Pony carried her into the bedroom
and sat on the edge of the bed. "If I'm to understand you, you
have to speak Elvish."
"I am!" She wailed, and choked out the words, "I – I
wa-wa-want Windwolf" as if they were huge boulders. She
needed him there, now, holding her, comforting her, making love
to her, to drive away the pain.
"
Domi, Stormsong is looking for him." Pony wiped
the tears from her face. "We do not know if he will be able to
come." The thought of being alone threatened to submerge her
into anguish. "Oh,
domi, please don't cry."
She buried her face into Pony's hair and breathed in his spicy
musk scent, warmed by his body. She felt the play of his muscles
under his fine cotton undershirt. Desire, suddenly monstrous in
strength, surged through her. This time she didn't even try to
resist, terrified of falling back into the dark gnawing pain. She
abandoned herself to her need and kissed Pony.
He shifted his head up, giving her full access to his mouth.
He tasted of cinnamon. She fumbled with his clothes, wanting to
feel him, to anchor herself. The undershirt tore under her
desperation, parting to reveal the chiseled lines of his body. He
pulled the tattered cloth out of the way, giving her access to his
warm skin and hard muscle.
While in the oni cell, she'd been so good, keeping her eyes
and hands on a tight leash. Now, she nuzzled down his body to
every point she'd resisted, sought out the parts of him that she
had only caught glimpses of. He moaned as she freed him from
his clothes and savored all his velvet hardness with her mouth.
He reached for her, pulled her up to his mouth, kissed her
deeply. He rolled them so she was under him. His body eclipsed
the rest of the world, blotting out everything else, so that all she
could think of was him. His broad shoulders moving downwards.
His strong calloused hands sliding up her dress. His soft hair
falling free of his braid to pour over her stomach like silk. His
mouth on her, coaxing her into pleasure.
She came gripped him tightly as her climax roared through
her. It burned away the overpowering grief and pain that had been
threatening to swamp her. Letting go of Pony, she slumped back
into the sheets, feeling empty and fragile as a broken eggshell.
Worry filled Pony's dark eyes as he moved up to lean over
her. His erection pressed against her, seeking her entrance. There
was a quiet little voice, though, in the back of her head, saying it
was time to stop this, that she'd already taken it too far.
"Pony," she whispered.
He froze. "
Domi?"
She swallowed and stroked his check with a trembling hand.
"I don't think," she whispered, "it would be wise to go farther."
"I never thought this was wise." He slid sideways so he was
no longer pressed against her opening.
She laughed but her laughter broke in the middle and
became a sob. "Oh, Pony, he loved me and I killed him."
"Oh,
domi, please don't cry."
"I have to. If I try to keep it in, I'll just go under again." It
still hurt, but it wasn't the drowning flood of pain.
She was still crying when the door opened and Windwolf
walked into the bedroom.
"Windwolf!" She pushed at Pony so she could get up.
Windwolf's eyes widened at the sight of her on the bed with
Pony. He shouted a command, summoning wind magic. It spilled
into the room, the potential glittering at the edge of her teary
vision.
Pony was jerked backwards off her and thrown across the
room. His shields flared seconds before he hit the wall with a
crash – elaborate inlaid paneling splintering under him.
He landed on the floor, coiled to spring, one his swords
miraculously in his hand.
"No!" Tinker leapt between Windwolf and Pony. Sword
aside, she could guess which one was the more dangerous of the
two. "Stop it, Windwolf! Don't hurt him! He didn't do anything."
"It doesn't look like
nothing to me." Windwolf
glared furiously at the
sekasha. "Did he hurt you?"
"No!"
"Why are you crying then?"
"I killed Nathan!"
Windwolf went still and quiet, gazing down at her. "You
did?" he finally asked.
"Yes," Tinker said.
"No, she did not." Pony murmured. "I killed him, as is my
right."
"He only did what I told him to do!" she cried and realized
that in the same manner, Pony had made love to her. He had
thought it unwise, but he had done what she asked of him.
Oh gods, she made love with Pony.
"Oh, shit," she sniffed. "I think I'm going to cry again. I'm
sorry, Windwolf. I didn't realize Pony would do anything I told
him.
Anything. That he trusted me to do – the
wise thing – not the stupid. This is all my fault."
Windwolf sighed and glanced to Pony. "Leave us."
"Domnae." Pony used the non-possessive form, bowing
slightly to Windwolf, but didn't otherwise move.
"Pony," Tinker murmured in Elvish. "Go, I need to talk to
Wolf Who Rules alone."
Pony sheathed his sword and bowed out of the room.
That left her alone with her husband, wrapped in Windwolf's
silence.
He reached for her and she flinched back. "I would never,"
he said huskily without dropping his arm, "strike you."
She closed the distance between them and allowed him take
her in a loose embrace. "I'm sorry. I was so hurt and confused.
I've been though so much lately. Do you know that there's a
slickie out there with pictures of me in my nightgown? That
when I get attacked, it makes headlines in the newspaper? That
women scream when they see me?"
He said nothing for several minutes and then whispered into
her hair. "Are you unhappy being my
domi?"
She hugged him then, suddenly afraid of losing him. "It's
just – it's just..." she sobbed. "When humans get married
there's a ring, and a church and people throw rice at you and you
get your picture next to the obituaries, and there's just the two of
you, together, all the time, and no body else to get in the middle
and confuse things. There's no oni or royal princes or dragons or
nudie pictures!"
"Beloved," he said after a minute of silence. "I'm not sure if
that's a yes or a no."
"Exactly!"
He considered another minute and picked her up and carried
her to the bed.
"I'm sorry," she cried. "I'm sorry. I've broken us."
"We are not broken." Windwolf eased her down and lay
carefully beside her. "You are hurt and need healing –
that's all."
* * *
Tinker was trying to write her full elfin name in the sand of
the enclave's garden. She knew the runes but any time she went to
scribe them out, the letters would creep and crawl oddly.
"You're dreaming," Stormsong stood beside her, a ghost of
sky blue. "Those kind of things never work. The part of your
mind that processes them is asleep. You need dream runes. I
could write what you want."
"No, no, I have to be able to do this. I'm the only one that
can do this."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes, I'm sure."
Something moved in the darkness of the garden around
them. Stormsong activated her shields and they enveloped both of
them, brilliant pale blue that was nearly white. "Go away. You're
not wanted here."
"Give her to us," Esme prowled the darkness. She was the
color of old blood. Black stood weeping in the woods with her
host of crows oddly silent – only a rustle of many wings
in the night. "We need her. We murdered time and now it's
always six o'clock."
"No. I won't let you have her."
"You're not stopping us." Esme pressed a dark hand to the
gleaming shell of Stormsong's shield, the light shafting through
her spread fingers like solid spears. "You might be able to keep
them out, but not me."
"You're hurting her!" Fear filtered into Stormsong's voice.
"Leave her alone."
Esme moved counter-clockwise around them, trailing her
hand across the shield's radiant, a dark mote on pale brilliance.
"There is too much to lose to worry about hurting her."
"Go away." Stormsong growled.
Esme had made a complete circle around them, testing the
boundaries of Stormsong's protection. They stood as odd mirror
reflections of each other – hair short and spiked –
red dark to the point of almost black versus blue paled to nearly
white.
"I won't let you in," Stormsong said.
"We don't have time for this!" Esme balled up her hand into
a tight fist of blackness, and punched into the light.
Stormsong's shield failed like a candle snuffed. Tinker fell
into darkness.
"...focusfocusfocus...," she whispered into the black.
A world snapped into being around her, but she ignored it to
focus on the control panel in front of her. She punched a set of
keys, ones she practiced until her hands ached. Even as she
entered the codes, and the world jerked hard to the right, alarms
screamed to life.
She hit the intercom pad. "All hands suit up! Suit up!" She
shouted, knowing what was coming. "Brace for impact!"
She looked up and found she hadn't seen the full truth.
Instead of one colony ship looming in the great blackness of
space, the feed from the front cameras showed several ships
colliding together—heaving, twisting, and buckling. For a
moment, she could only stare – stunned. Compartments
of the ships were collapsing like crushed soda cans—their
atmosphere spraying out in plumes of instantly freezing gushers.
She wasn't able to stop it. It was going to happen anyhow.
"We're going to hit! We're going to hit!" Alan Voecks
screamed those hated words that had haunted her nightmares for
months.
Something cartwheeled toward them, jetted on a haze of
frozen oxygen. As it grew larger, she realized it was a human
– without a spacesuit. There was time to recognize the
face – Nicole Pinder of the Anhe Hao –
before the body hit the camera. That front screen went to static...
* * *
Tinker bolted out of the dream. She was tight in Stormsong's
arms, panting from the remnants of her terror. "Oh gods! Oh
gods!"
"It is over," Stormsong rubbed her back soothingly. "You
are safe with us."
"Something went wrong," Tinker cried. "That's what they've
been trying to tell me. Something went wrong."
"Well?" Windwolf spoke from the foot of the bed.
Tinker sat up to discover the room was full of silent people,
all watching her sleep. In addition to Windwolf and Pony, Wraith
Arrow and Bladebite stood guard. "What the hell?"
"There are other dreamers," Stormsong said, as if answering
a question Tinker had missed. "One seems to be domi's
mother. The others might not be able to reach domi
alone, but her mother's blood connection is giving them all
access to domi. Domi's mother is quite strong
but untrained and with the morals of snake; she does not care that
what she's doing is hurting domi. They are crowding into
domi's dreams, leaving her unable to cope with her own
nightmares."
"Why now?" Windwolf asked. "It's been eighteen years."
"It might be that becoming an elf awakened latent abilities in
domi," Stormsong said. "Or it might be something that
happened when the dragon pulled magic through her at the edge
of the Ghostlands. I can't stop them. United as they are, they are
too strong. Something must be done or they will drive the
domi mad."
"Will giving her
sanjin help?" Windwolf asked.
"Please, not
sanjin," Tinker whimpered. "I hate that
stuff. The oni forced it on me."
Windwolf gave her a look full of raw grief.
"No,
sanjin will only make things worse,"
Stormsong said. "Now she can wake up from the nightmare,
breaking its hold on her. Drugged, she would be trapped in her
dreams."
"Oh please," Tinker cried. "Not that."
"There are some drugs," Stormsong said, "that she can take
for a limited time that will keep her from dreaming completely.
Someone more trained and gifted in dreaming would know better
what to do."
"I like the idea of not dreaming." Tinker crawled across the
bed to Windwolf, who took her into his lap.
"You need to dream," Stormsong said. "Dreams are how
your mind heals you from emotional harm. The oni rode you
hard, but you were able to heal yourself each night and stay
strong. Your mother is raping the very core of you. She will
destroy you if we don't stop this."
"Can we use some other terms for this?" Tinker asked.
"Something non-sexual? This is my mother we're talking about.
Ick."
"Find what she needs for now," Windwolf ordered. "I will
send for a dreamer."
Chapter 15: Sticks And Stones
Wolf made time the next morning to pray at the enclave's
shrine. Last night, he had the hospice deliver drugs for Tinker and
sent a message to the
intanyei seyosa caste in the
Easternlands, but now there was nothing more he could do for
his
domi except pray. It filled him with helpless rage that
the ones tormenting her were so far outside his reach. He had
thought the time he spent wounded and helpless in Tinker's care
were the worst possible torment, but this was far, far worse.
Even when she had been held captive, there had been at least
something he could do, the illusion of making a difference. Now
he could only watch as the female he loved slowly go mad.
Worse, he could not even stay with her and comfort her. He
needed to attend the formal negotiations between the clans. For
the sake of everyone that counted on him, he needed to be
centered and calm when he wanted to be raging at the universe.
At least he had the comfort of knowing that his
domi was
in the care of Little Horse and Discord, who both loved her well,
and they were supported by the rest of his household. He prayed
to the gods that they too lend their aid to his
domi.
* * *
Maynard was waiting outside the enclave when Wolf headed
to the aumani. "We need to talk," Maynard said in
greeting.
"I do not have time." Wolf headed down the street toward
Ginger Wine's enclave. It had been decided before the Stone Clan
arrived that Ginger Wine's public dining area would be
considered neutral ground for the three clans. At that time he
liked the idea of keeping the sanctity of Poppymeadow's
– now he wished he could stay close to Tinker, even
though she was still sleeping.
"I have a dead cop missing a head on Ohio River Boulevard
," Maynard continued in English, falling in step with
Wolf. "And people are saying they saw a lot of sekasha in
the area before he died. Tell me that this isn't what it sounds like.
My people are scared enough without your people killing cops."
Wolf gritted his teeth to control his anger. Lashing out at his
ally would not help the situation any. "You have a dead rapist
missing a head."
"How could he have raped her? She doesn't go anywhere
without her sekasha. Do you know how bad this looks?"
"It was after I transformed her. I left Tinker at my hunting
lodge with a full Hand to guard her but somehow, she ended up
back in Pittsburgh
with only Galloping Storm Horse." It put Little Horse
in a difficult position as there was no way for him to
communicate with rest of the Hand, short of driving back to the
remote lodge. "Your police officer forced his way into Tinker's
home, stripped her nude, pinned her down and tried to enter her."
Maynard looked like a person just handed a poisonous
snake. "Tinker says that Czernowski forced her?"
"My blade brother does not know many English words, but
he does know 'no' and 'stop' and 'don't.' My domi was
threatening to gouge out Czernowski's eyes when Storm Horse
intervened."
"Oh, fuck." Maynard whispered and then sighed. "That was
two months ago. Why did they kill him yesterday?"
"The domana are forbidden to take lovers outside
their caste other than their sekasha. I made Tinker
domana caste because it was the only way we could be
together. It also means she is now strictly off limits to humans.
Czernowski would not keep his distance. He stated at the
paparazzi's that he could take Tinker back. Last night, he
attempted to pull her into his car."
Czernowski's intentions might have been innocent, but he
had crossed the line of Little Horses' patience. Wolf could
sympathize only with Little Horse. His blade brother, seeing
Tinker spiraling downward, had been given the opportunity to
take action – had been given a way to make at least one
thing right—had been given a target. In the light of
Tinker's imbalance, Czernowski's death had been inevitable.
"Stupid fucking idiot." Maynard growled, but it wasn't clear
if who he meant. Wolf chose to believe he meant Czernowski.
"This was the last thing we needed, Wolf. My people are not
going to trust yours after this."
"Did they truly trust us before?"
Maynard glanced away and ignored the question, which
meant the answer was 'no.' "Which one of your people killed
Czernowski?"
"Sekasha are exempt of all laws except the ones of
their own making."
"So you're not going to tell me?"
"There is no need for you to know."
"What am I suppose to tell the police? Czernowski's
family?"
"What is done is done and can not be undone," Wolf said. "I
have other problems to attend."
Maynard acknowledged the dismissal with a hard look but
took himself away.
* * *
Ginger Wine intercepted Wolf in her front gardens, bowing
low.
"What is wrong?"
Ginger Wine's face tightened and she glanced down the
garden path. There were only her own laedin caste guards in
sight. "These," she hissed in English, "Conceited, pompous,
arrogant Stone Clan pigs—that is what is wrong. I should
have asked for four times my normal fee, instead of twice. The
way they eat, you'd think they were hollow."
"I can not do anything about arrogance and gluttony. Have
they done anything wrong?"
She let out her breath in a long sigh, and then stood nudging
a rock in the garden path. "It just everything is – off;
nothing seems right. Everyone is tripping over one another,
plates are being dropped, laundry is being mislaid and they eat
and eat and eat." She looked pleadingly up to Wolf. "Everyone is
frightened of them. We've lived so long with just you and your sekasha, I actually forgot how the world really is; what it is
to live in fear."
"Do you want them out?"
She looked away, chewing on her bottom lip. Finally she
shook her head. "No. Things are not that bad – perhaps it
will settle down after another day or two – once we grow
used to them." She laid her hand on Wolf's arm. "Please,
domou, get rid of these oni so we can go back to our
comfortable life."
He patted her hand. "We will work hard to resolve this
quickly."
Ginger Wine gave Wolf a tight smile. "Thank you. Please,
let me show you to the dining room."
As they entered the elegant dining room, there was a crash
from the far kitchens, followed by loud sobbing. Ginger Wine
sighed, begged his pardon and hurried off toward the kitchen. A
large round table with six chairs stood in the center of the room.
All the extra tables had been cleared, leaving the space bare and
echoing. While only five domana were attending, there
would be fifteen sekasha and a server from each clan.
Wolf considered the sixth chair. Tinker should attend the
meeting, but she was in no mental state to do so. He ordered a
chair to be removed. Unfortunately, Jewel Tears arrived as the
chair was being carried out.
"Your
domi is not attending?" Jewel Tears managed
to put malice into the innocent words.
"No." Wolf warned her with a look that he did not wish to
discuss it farther.
Jewel went with great purpose to lay claim to her chair.
True Flame arrived with a shifting of the
sekasha
and a new contest of rank between them. "So this is where we
will be?"
"Yes, your highness." Jewel Tears appropriated the role of
hostess. She bowed low, displaying her charms to the prince.
True Flame recognized her with a slight cold nod. Wolf's
cousin never approved of Jewel Tears. It had been a source of
bitterness between him and Wolf, even afterwards, as it had been
hard to acknowledge that his cousin had been right all along.
Wolf could only hope that his decisions with Jewel Tears
wouldn't now taint True Flame's opinion of Tinker.
True Flame glanced at the table and then to Wolf. "Five
chairs?"
"My
domi will not be able to attend," Wolf wished
Jewel Tears wasn't standing there, reminding True Flame of his
bad choices in the past. "She is—" He found himself at
loss for words. What was Tinker? "—not herself."
"An interesting choice of words," Jewel Tears murmured.
Wolf ignored her.
Earth Son arrived with Forest Moss in tow. They made their
bows to True Flame.
All parties gathered, they settled at the table to start the
aumani, a formal meeting of clans.
Windwolf was sure if they captured any oni and needed to
torture information out of them, an
aumani would be
perfect for it. He sat across from Earth Son, studiously ignoring
the servants as they laid out the elaborate table settings. Between
the Skin Clan's love of elaborate power icons, and the thousands
of years that the clans needed to conduct meetings in secrecy,
elves had had the use of symbology beaten almost out of them.
There had to be some deep buried need left in them that seeped
out at times like this. How else explain the pure white table
runner, the scattering of blood red roses, the black ceramic place
settings, and the glasses of sapphire blue? The lit candle. The
smoking incense. The polished pebble. All the colors and the
elements of three Clans were subtlety present on the table.
They sat in reflective silence until the servers withdrew from
the table. True Flame sipped his tea, opening the meeting. They
drank, waiting for him to speak.
"So that we can all be of one mind," True Flame broke the
silence. "Wolf Who Rules Wind, tell us our past."
Wolf recounted the last few weeks since the meeting of the
three clans at Aum Reanu. Knowing that he would lose face with
True Flame for holding back information, he tried to be as
thorough as possible in Tinker's kidnapping, Lord Tomtom's
killing and the discovery of Sparrow's treachery.
"And what of the Ghostlands?" Earth Son asked when Wolf
came to an end. "Is your
domi's gate still functioning?"
"Perhaps," Wolf admitted. "Something is keeping Turtle
Creek unstable." "Stupidity upon stupidity," Jewel Tears scoffed.
"She shouldn't have built them a gate."
"I defy you," Windwolf said, "Unarmed and captive by a
ruthless enemy to do better."
"Defy, there's an interesting concept, indicating lack of
cooperation." Earth Son said.
"Yes," Jewel Tears said. "I wouldn't have cooperated."
"She cooperated because it's now in her nature to be
cooperative," Forest Moss said. "Wolf Who Rules remade her
and blessed her with our mothers' curse – to be yielding.
Why else would we need the
sekasha to guard over us.
We can not stand against anything, especially our own nature.
How can you sitting there with never a moment of stark helpless
fear in your life understand? Our mothers were bred to lie on
their back, spread their legs and not whimper too loudly
– unless their master liked it when she screamed. If it
wasn't for the steel of our fathers' ambition, we would be cattle
in the field."
"You may count yourself one of the cattle, but I do not,"
Earth Son said.
"Yes, yes, let us not listen to the one that has been under the
heated blade. No, he did not have his eyes forced open to the
truth just before one was seared out." Forest Moss spat. "You
can not hope to understand what it is like. To lie there unable to
move as they ready the tools of your destruction. The first time,
oh, you can be so very brave because you don't know what is
coming; everything in your imagination is just a pale shadow of
the pain. It's the second and the third, when you've been so well
taught, then the very smell of hot metal makes your heart race.
You see the torch only once, right before they strap you down,
but the hiss of the gas flame haunts your nightmares for years to
come. You lay there, listening to the invisible dance of their
preparations, the scrape of boots, the rattle of the cutting blades
in a metal tray, the creak of tightening leather restraints and
there's nothing, nothing, you can do."
"She wasn't tortured," Earth Son pointed out.
"Clever female knew the truth—"
Forest
Moss said. "– the truth you're refusing to
see."
"If she didn't do something the gate in orbit would remain
functional." Windwolf reminded the others. "The gate we
couldn't shut down. Yes, the result poses a threat, but it is now in
our realm, where
we can deal with it ourselves."
"We will solve this problem you caused," Earth Son said.
"Damn these humans and their gate."
"We can't blame this on them," Wolf said. "We elves went to
Onihida and lead the oni to Earth. If we hadn't done that, none of
this would have happened."
He did not bother to point out that in truth, it was the Stone
Clan that had gone to Onihida.
Earth Son countered it as if he made the statement aloud.
"The humans built the gate in orbit."
Wolf shook his head. "The oni stranded on Earth used the
humans to build the gate – and manipulated them to keep
it functioning."
"Why are you defending them?" Earth Son snapped. "It's
unlikely that they're all innocent in this."
"Yes, some might be guilty," Wolf allowed. "But not all of
them."
Earth Son waved the truth away. "Bah, they're just as bad as
the oni – breeding like mice."
"Fie, fie," Forest Moss whispered. "We were all blind beings
even before the oni burned out our eyes. Why should such
arrogant fools as we listen to the warnings of the human natives?
Of course the caves were a mystical place with mysterious
goings and monstrous comings. What importance to us that
humans were forever losing their way to other worlds and rarely
coming back? What did it matter that we recognize nothing of
ourselves in the stories?"
"Oh, please, shut him up," Jewel Tears hissed.
"Oh! Oh!" Forest Moss leapt to his feet and wailed, waving
his hands over his head. "It's all so ugly! No, no, who cares if
perchance we might learn something important? We must close
our ears to this wailing of a madman!"
"
Forest Moss!" True Flame
snapped. "Sit!"
The male sat so abruptly that Wolf wondered if the outburst
had been yet another example of Forest Moss using his
reputation of being mad.
"Does anything he has to say have any relevance to what we
need to do here?" Jewel Tears asked. "It seems to me that our
task is simple. Do findings to track down the oni nests and burn
them out. Instead we are sitting here constantly being distracted
by the mad one's ramblings. By his own account, he was
shortsighted in his venture. So he was caught and tortured
– but all that hinges on one gross error – on the
first moment of discovery, he should have fought their way clear
and returned to the pathway."
"I had dealt with discovery by humans many times," Forest
Moss said. "A show of power, a few trinkets, and we would be
safe enough to pass on. How was I to know that the oni were
monsters under the skin?"
"I'm trying to determine what the Stone Clan brings to the
table," True Flame said. "And what they will come away with."
Earth Son made an opening bid. "Since the Wind Clan is
demonstrating that it can not hold the Westernlands, we will take
them over."
Wolf shook his head and ticked off his strong points. "We
are providing access to the fire
esva. Without our
assistance, you would have to deal the oni and a dragon with only
defensive spells."
"You can't withhold the fire
esva from the crown,"
Earth Son stated.
Was he being naïve, or clumsy in his attempt to
undermine the Wind Clan's position?
"I did not suggest that," Wolf used small words. "I'm only
pointing out that we are providing attack spells on two fronts,
plus my four Hands, and ten enclaves. The Wind Clan can hold
its own here – the same can not be said of the Stone
Clan."
"Yet you called for help."
"Because we did not know then – nor know now
– the strength of the oni," Wolf stated. "We would rather
give up some part of our holdings than give the oni a stronghold
here."
"Which the crown sees as a strength, not a weakness," True
Flame said. "We are limiting the amount awarded to Stone Clan.
The area in question will be
Pittsburgh
and the surrounding land. Excluded will be the
enclaves owned by the Wind Clan households."
"We want both virgin land and that from Earth," Earth Son
said.
"And I want the
sekasha, Galloping Storm Horse On
Wind," Forest Moss said.
Startled silence went through the room.
"Never." Wolf snarled.
"If you release him, he can serve me." Moss pressed on.
"He looks to my
domi." Wolf said. "He is her First.
She also holds Singing Storm on Wind."
"That cross caste mistake?" Moss made a sound of disgust.
"Your
domi can release Galloping Storm Horse and keep
the mutt."
"She will not release him." Wolf was sure of this. "She loves
him dearly. The oni captured him because they knew he would be
an effective whipping boy for her. All that she did was to protect
him."
"It is a simple thing—"
Forest Moss started.
The Stone Clan's First, Thorne Scratch and Tiger Eye, and
True Flame's First, Red Knife stepped forward to loom over
their
domana's shoulder. Wolf felt Wraith Arrow behind
him, joining the other First at the table.
"This is not for you to discuss." Red Knife said quietly. "No
beholding will be broken in this manner."
Earth Son coughed and carried on. "We're asking for a
hundred thousand
sen of virgin land for each of us, plus
half of the city, to be rewarded immediately."
The land, ultimately, Wolf did not care about. The three
hundred thousand
sen was a small price to pay for the
safety of his people – and perhaps all of Elfhome. He did
not want, however, to put humans under the care of the Stone
Clan. He shook his head. "I granted the humans an extension of
their treaty to work out issues among themselves. I think at this
time it would be unwise to start procedures on dividing up the
city."
"Who gave you the authority to agree to that?" Earth Son
asked.
True Flame glanced at Earth Son. "As Viceroy, it was in his
authority to do so. But I must ask, on what basis?"
"We're not entirely sure that the orbital gate no longer
functions. If my
domi failed to destroy and only damaged
it, it is possible
Pittsburgh
will return to Earth."
"Yes, dividing the city could be premature," True Flame
said. "How soon will we know?"
"Shutdown was scheduled for two days from now at
midnight," Wolf said. "But if the gate is only damaged, then the
humans might delay Shutdown for weeks. Without
communication with Earth, it is impossible to know."
"Are we truly going to wait for something that may never
happen?" Earth Son asked.
"We are elves, we have time," Wolf said.
"Most convenient for the Wind Clan." Earth Son said.
"We will wait three days, and then speak again on dividing
the city," True Flame took out maps of the area. "Let us discuss
virgin land."
Chapter 16: Little Monkey Brain
After a long, long cottony warm sleep, Tinker was able to
view the last few days with a saner eye. Thinking of Nathan
threatened to reduce her back to the painful void of grief, so she
considered the last dream with Esme and Black. Obviously,
something had drastically gone wrong with Esme, but what did
her mother think Tinker could do for her? Esme was in space
– someplace – in another universe, far, far away.
And who was Black? The tengu woman obviously had been on
Earth to meet Tinker's father, but where was she now? Why was
Tinker dreaming about her in conjunction with Esme? Was it
because Black was a tengu colony and on one of the ships that
Esme crashed into?
The dreams of Alice and Dorothy – little girls lost
far from home – held a sad irony; Esme thought Dorothy
should stay in Oz – but obviously that wasn't what she
wanted for herself now. So what did she want from Tinker? Even
if Esme's ship crashed, that would have taken place eighteen
years ago, shortly before Tinker was born.
In the movie the yellow brick road started when Dorothy
crashed the house into Oz – bringing a stain of sepia on a
world of lush color. The discontinuity appeared as a stain of
blue. Tinker's nightmares had gotten out of hand the same day
that the Ghostlands formed – even if the first one with
Esme and Black came two days later. The first dream had been
Alice
in Wonderland, the second Wizard of Oz, and the last
was Esme going through the hyperphase gate; little girls crashing
into other worlds.
Tinker sprawled in the enclave garden, watching the sun
shift through the tree branches. As usual, she had a full Hand
standing around, doing nothing but watch her think. They shifted
to full alert as someone came through the gate into this private
area. Lemonseed carried in a tray of tea and cookies –
midmorning snack. Tinker started to sit up but Lemonseed tsked
at her and crouched beside her to layout a mini-picnic. Exquisite
china bowls of pale tea. Little perfect cookies. A platter of rich
rosewood. A small square of printed silk.
Esme wasn't the only girl that fell into another world.
"Can you have lunch packed?" Tinker knew that the
enclave's staff most likely had the meal half-finished. "We're
going out."
"Yes,
domi." Lemonseed bowed and left to make it
so.
"Where are we going?" Stormsong asked.
We? How did it get to this point that she was so
comfortable with having all these people in her life? No, she
guessed she wasn't really that at ease – but the edges of
her discomfort were wearing away. Like the fact that she could
strip in front of Pony without thinking. That it took Lemonseed's
arrival to remind her that an entire staff of nearly a hundred
people were poised around her – waiting for her to do
something. Anything. Be the
domi. Save the world again.
"The scrap yard," she told Stormsong but thought 'Home.'
She drained the tea to be polite, gathered up the cookies and
went to change.
* * *
Two newspapers, still neatly folded and bagged, lay in the
driveway of the scrap yard. She picked them up on their way in,
wonder why Oilcan hadn't brought them in. Tinker expected to
find her cousin at work and was both relieved and disappointed
that he wasn't. She didn't know how he would take Nathan's
death. Too her, it was a dark well of guilt and grief with a
crumbling edge. She was trying to keep her distance just so she
could keep functioning. Ironically, she was fairly sure she could
deal with Oilcan being angry at her more than she could help him
with his grief.
"You know – I just don't get it." Stormsong said as
Tinker was puttering around her workshop off of the junkyard's
offices, trying to get back into being herself.
"Get what?" Tinker asked.
"This place, you, and Windwolf – it just
doesn't—doesn't make sense."
"Yeah, I've never understood why he fell in love with
someone like me."
"I do. You can go toe to toe with him. It's this place that
doesn't make sense. You two are too big for something like this."
"Big?"
"With your abilities – why did you limit yourself to
this tiny corner of the world?"
That sounded like Lain – who had always pushed for
her to go to college, leave Pittsburgh
, do something more with her life. She thought her
plans were big enough, but it suddenly dawned on her that they
were plans she laid when she was thirteen. They seemed huge
when she was a child – even though they were larger than
what other people planned – but yes, she'd grown to fit,
and then the limits were starting to chafe. Had Lain seen a truth
that she herself was blind to?
She veered from that line of thinking. She distracted herself
by poking at her insecurities. "I think it's fairly obvious what
attracted Windwolf to me – I look like Jewel Tears. She's
his prefect woman. And I can't measure up to that –
elegance."
"No. You only think that because you've never met Otter
Dance."
"Pony's mother?"
"Ever notice that Pony is the shortest of the
sekasha? Otter Dance is half Stone Clan
sekasha."
Tinker turned to look at Pony standing beside Cloudwalker;
he was a half a head shorter yet wider in the shoulders and deeper
in the chest than Cloudwalker. Pony was the most compact elf
she'd ever met until the Stone Clan arrived. Now that she looked
at him, she could see points of similarity. His eyes were brown
where everyone else was blue. The shape of his face was
different.
"You mean we – Jewel Tears and I – look
like Otter Dance?"
"To know Otter Dance is to love her. Personality wise,
you're much more like Otter Dance than Jewel Tears could ever
pretend to be – and she did try."
Tinker wasn't sure how to feel about that. She cleared her
iboard. She needed a project – something big and
complex – to keep from thinking about Nathan and all
the messy bits of her life. Something that would help keep Pittsburgh
safe from the elves, the oni—and the dragon.
Oh gods, in all the chaos she forgotten about the dragon. There
was a worthwhile project, especially since she hadn't collected
enough data on the Ghostlands yet.
She called up an animation program and created a quick
rough model of the dragon, using a ferret body, a male lion's
head and a snake skin to cover the frame. Dragging the dragon
model out onto the iboard, she let it gallop across the vast white.
There had been a spell painted onto the dragon's hide. She wasn't
sure what the spell did. Was it how the dragon raised its shield or
was it how the oni were using to control it? It seemed to her that
the wild waving of the mane might have triggered the
spell—much like the domana hand gestures
triggered their shields.
"What do you think?" She asked Pony. "How did it raise its
shield?"
Pony put his hands to his head and wriggled his fingers. "It's
mane."
Stormsong and the others that had been in the valley with her
that morning nodded in agreement.
Okay, so the mane worked like domana fingers. She
paused the dragon, added a "shield" effect to her model, and
restarted the animation. "Next question is – does
anything breach the shield?"
"Our shields do not stop light and air, because we must see
and breathe," Pony said. "They also have a limit to the force they
can absorb at one moment. They will take a hundred shots fired
in a hundred heartbeats, but not a hundred fired in one heartbeat."
"So light and air." Tinker opened a window in the corner of
the iboard and noted this.
"Spell arrows don't affect the dragon," Cloudwalker
reminded her.
Tinker wrote: different frequency of light? And then
thinking of Pony driving his sword point through the shield, she
added, "Speed of kinetic weapon?"
"Pony, can I see your sword?"
He drew his sword and held it out to her to examine.
"Careful, domi, it is very sharp."
She knew that the ejae had magically tempered
ironwood blades, but she never examined them closely before. It
was single length of rich cherry colored wood with a bone guard.
The very tip came to a fine point. There was no sign of the spell
that created the blade, which she supposed was necessary since
the sekasha used their swords while shield spells were
active. The surface area of the tip was smaller than a bullet; if
they both struck at the same speed, the ejae would have a
greater PSI. Pony's slow push through the dragon's shield meant
that wasn't the factor.
She wasn't sure how they could use a "slow" weapon against
the dragon. It would be unlikely that the beastie would ever
standstill like that again. She considered a giant glue trap, sleep
gas, and mega stun guns. They all had their drawbacks from
"what do you use as bait?" to "would it do anything but just piss
the dragon off?" That got her wondering about what would affect
the dragon once they got past its shields. Where were its vital
organs? Would poison necessarily kill it? Elves couldn't tolerate
some of the food humans ate in abundance. The inverse could be
true – what was poisonous for Elfhome creatures might
not hurt the dragon.
Maybe the stupid dream was telling her that she needed to
melt the dragon with a bucket of water. Waterjets had jet speeds
around Mach 3 and could cut through several inches of steel. She
didn't have any in her junkyard, but perhaps she could salvage
one and modify it...
The sekasha's were rubbing off on her. She really
liked the simple "hit it with a big gun" solution. Too bad they
couldn't simply make the shield go away so "a big gun" was a
safe bet.
Her stomach growled. She realized that she had spent hours
in front of the iboard.
"What time is it?" Maybe she should take a break to eat the
packed lunch.
"I'm not sure. That clock is broken." Stormsong pointed to
an old alarm clock that Tinker had dismantling to use in a
project.
We're murdered time, it's always six
o'clock.
Wait – wasn't that a line from Alice in
Wonderland? During the tea party, didn't they talk about
time not working for them? She sorted through the things she
brought from the enclave, found the book, and flipped through it.
Under the drawing of the Mad Hatter, there was a footnote that
caught her eye.
"Arthur Stanley Eddington, as well as less distinguished
writers on relativity theory, have compared the Mad Tea Party,
where it is always six o'clock, with that portion of De Sitter's
model of the cosmos in which time stands eternally still. (See
Chapter 10 of Eddington's Space Time and Gravitation.)"
"Oh shit." Tinker took out her datapad and pulled up her
father's plans on the gate.
"Shit?" Pony asked.
"Excrement." Stormsong translated. "It's a curse."
"Shit," Pony echoed.
"That aside, what did you figure out?" Stormsong asked.
"I made a huge mistake in the variable for time on the gate
equations. And if I did it – I bet the oni did too. These
plans, as they stand – all the spaceships would have
arrived at the same moment. That's why they collided."
"When did they go to?" Pony asked.
"I think – that they were held in time – until
the gate was destroyed. They finished their journey – all
five ships – three days ago."
"Your mother found herself in great danger and you're her
only link to home," Stormsong murmured.
"Yeah, at which point, she started to hound me with
nightmares." Tinker tugged at her hair. "But what the hell am I
supposed to do? I mean, the good news is that obviously she's
alive—for now. The gods only know
where she is.
She could be on the other side of the galaxy. And which galaxy?
This one? Earth's? Onihida? We're talking a mind-boggling large
haystack to lose a needle in. Even if she was in space over
Elfhome,
what am I to do? What could I
possibly
do?"
"Forget the egotistical she-snake," Stormsong said. "You
have pressing duties here. Her problems are not your concern."
"But why then, do things keep turning up? Like the pearl
necklace, the black willow, and Reinholds? The dreams relate to
me and my world, somehow. Don't they?"
Tinker saw a troubled look spread across Stormsong's face
before the
sekasha turned away, hiding her unease.
"Oh, don't do that!" Tinker picked up the morning's
newspaper, still tightly folded in its bag, and aimed a smack at
Stormsong's back.
Stormsong caught the newspaper before it connected and
gave her a hard look.
"I need help here," Tinker jerked the newspaper free. "This is
part of the whole working together. I need to know what you
know about dreaming."
Stormsong sighed. "That is a wound I don't like to dig into.
Everyone assumed that my mother had some great vision when
she conceived me – and no one invested more into that
myth than me. But I did not have the talent or the patience for it. I
was too much my father. I like solving problems with a sword.
And I don't like feeling like I'm failing you."
Tinker fussed with getting the newspaper out of its bag so
she didn't have to face Stormsong's pain. "You're not failing me."
Speaking of failing someone, the newspaper's headline was
"Policeman Slain."
Nathan's body was draped with a white cloth in the island of
light on the black river of night highway.
Nathan Czernowski,
age 28, found beheaded on Ohio River
Boulevard. She stood there
clutching the newspaper as faintness swept through her. How
could seeing it in print make it more real than seeing his body
lying in front of her?
Stormsong continued, "As you're finding out the hard way,
dreamers can join for a gestalt effect, but unless they share foci,
the ending dream is conflicted."
Tinker pulled her attention away from the newspaper.
"What?"
"Dreams are maps for the future." Stormsong held out her
right hand. "If the dreamers share foci—" Stormsong
pressed her hands, matching up the fingers. "Then the two maps
overlaid remain easy to understand. But if the dreamers don't
share foci—" Stormstorm shifted her hands so her fingers
crosshatched. "There is a conflict. It becomes difficult, if not
impossible, to tell which element belongs to which foci. The
pearl necklace was from your foci. The wizard of oz, it appears,
to be from your mother."
"Foci being...?"
Stormsong pursed her lips. "Foci reflect goals and desires.
Among elves, that is one's clan and household. I'm not sure
humans can share foci like elves can. Humans are more –
self-centered."
The newspaper screamed at how self-centered Tinker had
been.
"So, Esme, Black and I are operating at cross-purposes."
Tinker folded the accusing headline away and went to stuff it in
the recycling bin. "And my dreams may or may not have anything
to do with helping with the mess we're in."
"Yes, there is no telling. At least, I can't, not with my
abilities. Wolf has sent for help from my mother's people. They
might be able to determine something since they share our foci in
regards to the oni."
"Where my mother could care less."
"Exactly."
Tinker dropped the paper into the recycling bin, the top
newspaper caught her eye. The headline read: Viceroy's Guard
Kill Five Snipers, Gossamer Slain. She lifted out the paper.
When did this happen?
The paper was dated Tuesday. Tuesday? Wasn't she awake
on Tuesday? Yes, she was—she had spent Tuesday at
Reinholds – why hadn't anyone told her? The paper also
reported that the EIA declared martial law, that the treaty been
temporarily extended until Sunday, and plans to screen everyone
living in
Chinatown. How did she miss
all this? She dug through the pile of papers uncovering growing
chaos that she been oblivious to. Wednesday's paper had stories
on the lock down of the city by the royal elfin troops, a wave of
arrests of suspected human sympathizers, the execution of more
disguised oni, and the start of a rationing system as fears of the
Pittsburgh
dollar collapsing triggered massive stockpiling.
Above the headline was an extra banner proclaiming: Four Days
to Treaty End.
Four days? Was that today?
The other unread paper was dated Friday. She had lost at
least a day to drugged sleep. The top banner read: Two Days to
Treaty End. The Pittsburgh Police had called a blue flu strike
when the EIA closed Nathan's murder case.
Oh, gods, what a mess.
"What day is this?" she asked Stormsong. "Did I sleep
through Saturday too?"
"It is Friday." Stormsong said.
"
Domi," Pony said from the door. "It is the lone
one."
Lone one?
The
sekasha escorted in Tooloo, who must have
walked up the hill from her store. Tinker stared at her with new
eyes. Not that the female had changed; Tooloo was as she had
always been Tinker's entire life. There were no new creases in the
face full of wrinkles. Her silver hair still reached her ankles.
Tinker even recognized her faded, purple silk gown and battered
high-top tennis shoes – Tooloo had been wearing them
when Tinker and Pony helped her milk her cows two months ago.
Only now Tinker realized how odd it was for an elf in a
world of elves to live alone. What clan and caste had she been
born into? Why wasn't she part of a household? Was it because
she was a half-elf? If she was half human, born and raised on
Earth, how could she be so fluid in High Elvish, and know all
things arcane? If she was a full, blooded elf, trapped on Earth
when the pathways were dismantled, why hadn't she gone back to
her people? The three centuries was a short time for elves.
Tinker doubted if Tooloo would tell her if she asked.
Tooloo had always refused to be known. She went by an obvious
nickname, neither human nor elfin in origin. Not once, in
eighteen years that Tinker knew her, had she ever mentioned her
parents. She would not commit to an age, the length of time she
lived on earth, not even a favorite color.
Tooloo squirmed in Cloudwalker's hold. "Oh, you
murderous little thing! You had to satisfy that little monkey brain
of yours. I told you, starve the beast called curiosity – but
noooo, you had to play with Czernowski and now you've killed
him."
Tinker felt sad as she realized she'd lost yet another part of
her life. "I didn't mean for Nathan to get killed."
"Oh, you didn't mean to! Do you think those threadbare
words will heal his family, all off grieving over his headless
body?"
"I'm sorry it happened." Tinker swallowed down on the pain
that words caused her. "I—I—wasn't paying
attention when I should have been – and I'm so sorry
– but there's nothing I can do. I was wrong. I should have
listened to you from the very start – but I didn't see where
all this was going to lead."
"Pawgh, this is all Windwolf's fault – killing my
bright wee human and making a dirty Skin Clan scumbag in her
image." Tooloo spat.
"This has nothing to do with Windwolf making me an elf."
"Does it? My wee one never had such superciliousness of
power."
"Supercil-whatis?"
Tooloo glanced at Pony standing behind Tinker. "Giving you
sekasha is like giving an elephant roller-skates –
stupid, ridiculous and dangerous."
Tooloo could say what she wanted about her, but now she
was going too far to include the
sekasha too.
"Yes, I killed Nathan," Tinker said, "but I'm not the only one
to blame. I'm a stupid clueless little girl, but you've lived with
humans for over 200 years – you knew exactly how
Nathan would react if –" and then it dawned on Tinker
and she gasped with horror. "Oh sweet gods, you wanted him to
think I was a whore! You deliberately misled him! You evil she-
goat!"
Tooloo slapped her hard across the face enough to make
stars dance in her vision.
Tinker heard the
sekasha draw their blades and threw
out her hands to keep Nathan's death from repeating. "No! No!
Don't you dare hurt her!" Once she was sure that she was obeyed,
she turned back to the stranger who raised her. "Why? Why did
you do that to Nathan? You had to see it coming!"
"Because nothing else would have slapped you out of
wallowing in your own piss. The city is about to run with blood
unless you do something. Czernowski was the sacrificial lamb to
save this city."
"I was trying to! I don't know how!"
"Use that little monkey brain of yours! The elves are about
to march all over this city with jack boots. I've lived with humans
for hundreds of years. They are good, compassionate people. I
lived through the American Revolutionary War, its Civil War,
the fight for woman suffrage, and the struggle for civil rights
– and all those advancements for equality among humans
is about to be flushed down the crapper. It's already started
– they're searching through
Chinatown, dragging people out of their homes and testing them and
killing them where they stand."
Tinker glanced to Stormsong since the rant had been in
English. Stormsong nodded in confirmation. "Why didn't anyone
tell me?"
"You've been too fragile."
She couldn't trust Tooloo's version of this; the 'lone one'
kept whatever truths she had to herself. Nor, as much as she
loved them, count on the elves in her life to understand what it
was to be human. Tinker gathered up the newspapers; she needed
their human-biased facts. And Maynard – she needed to
talk to Maynard.
* * *
Red was becoming a predominant color in Pittsburgh
, like an early autumn. They encountered four
roadblocks on the way to the EIA offices; all manned by
laedin caste Fire Clan soldiers.
"If True Flame has this many warriors, why do we need the
Stone Clan?" Tinker had let Pony drive, but she hung over the
front seat to talk to him and Stormsong. The backseat was
crowded with the other three
sekasha.
"Stone Clan magic can find individuals in a wilderness and
things hidden in the ground." Pony told her.
"It's like calling in bloodhounds," Stormsong said in
English.
Tinker remembered the sonar-like spell that Jewel Tears
used. Yes, that should make finding the oni hidden in the forest
easier. She wondered how the Stone Clan would fare, though, in
the steel-riddled city.
"And if you can not solve the problem with the Ghostlands,"
Cloudwalker added. "They should be able to. They closed the
natural pathways after the first invasion."
Stormsong made a rude noise. "There is a difference
between collapsing caves and dealing with whatever is wrong
with Ghostlands."
"The Ghostlands should collapse on their own." Tinker was
growing less sure of that – she would have expected the
rate of decay to be faster. This morning marked the fourth day
since she reduced Turtle Creek to chaos. Now there was
something not everyone could claim: I reduced a square mile of
land into pure chaos. It made her sound like a small atomic
warhead—someone dropped a Tinker on us!
The EIA offices directed her back across the Allegheny
River to
Chinatown. There she found
Maynard overseeing the testing of the Chinese population. A mix
of
laedin caste soldiers and Wyverns were systematically
emptying a house, putting the occupants into a line to be tested
by the EIA. As she approached, it became clear that the process
was hampered by the fact that most of the elves and many of the
Chinese didn't speak English.
East
Ohio Street
was cacophony of shouted instructions, crying and
pleading. The coroner van – identified by bold letters
– stood at the far end of the street. Blood scented the hot
summer air. And for one dizzy moment, she was back on
Ohio River Boulevard
, splattered with Nathan's blood.
"Domi, are you alright?" Pony murmured into her
ear as he supported her by the arm. He'd activated his shields at
some point and they now spilled down over her.
She nodded.
"It is clear!" One of the Wyverns came out of a nearby
building shouted in High Elvish.
There was a pulse of magic, and she felt the house,
from the pipes underneath it to the tip of the chimneys. There
wasn't anyone inside. Apparently that was the point. On some
unheard command, the Wyverns moved down to the next
building. Annoyingly, because of her height, Tinker couldn't see
through the crowd to spot the Stone Clan domana
directing the search.
"Is Jewel Tears here?" she asked Stormsong, who could see
over the heads of most of the humans.
Stormsong shook her head. "It is the mad one, Forest Moss."
"Oh, joy," Tinker muttered. "Where is Maynard?"
"This way." Pony kept hold of her elbow.
She thought they would have to push their way through the
crowd, but as they approached the humans and elves, the crowd
parted as shoved by an invisible wedge. In the human faces there
was a mix of fear and hope. They wanted her to be one of them
but afraid she was wholly an elf.
The crowd was avoiding a section of sidewalk. As Tinker
drew even with it, she saw that is was covered with congealing
blood, thick with black flies. As the sekasha brushed
passed, some of the flies rose in fat, heavy buzzing. The rest
continued to feed.
"I want this to stop," Tinker whispered to Pony, dreading his
answer.
"This is by order of the crown," Pony said. "There is nothing
you can do to stop it."
Maynard saw Stormsong first and then scanned downwards
to find Tinker. "What are you doing here?"
"I want to talk to you about this stuff." Tinker waved the
newspaper at Maynard.
"I'm busy at the moment. Why don't you get your husband to
explain it to you?"
"Because you're here. I have the power to pin you down and
make you explain it to me. And you'll use words I can
understand."
Maynard glanced at the paper. "What don't you understand?
That article is fairly clear."
"What can I do?"
He gave her a long unreadable look before saying, "I'm not
sure. Windwolf bought us some time, but without proof that the
gate is in orbit and possibly repairable, that time runs out
Sunday."
Figures, after everything she had gone through to destroy the
gate, she now had to save it.
"So," Tinker said. "If I can prove the damn thing is still up
there, would that help?"
Maynard's eyes widen in surprise. "You think you can do
that?"
It was tempting to say yes, but she had to be honest. "I don't
know. I can try. It's a fucking discontinuity in Turtle Creek,
across at least two or three universes. If Earth is one of those
universes, there might be a way to use the Ghostlands to
communicate."
"The elves are keeping everyone away from the Ghostlands,"
Maynard said. "The scientists at the commune are ready to storm
the place for chance to study it."
"Keep them away from it," Tinker said. "At least until we
can make sure the Fire Clan and the Stone Clan don't kill them
on sight."
Maynard looked away, as if to hide what he thought. When
he turned back, his face was back to its carefully neutral
– nearly elfin – facade.
"What do you fucking want from me?" Tinker cried. "I was
raised in a junkyard!"
"You're the only one in a position to understand fully what
is to be human," Maynard said, "and still be able to do anything
about this situation."
"But I don't know what to do."
"I know you don't." Maynard said but didn't add anything
more – which would have been a big help.
There was pulse from Forest Moss and this time the
building wasn't empty. She – and Forest Moss –
picked up two people still inside on the second floor. A shout
went up. Tinker turned to see the Wyverns swarmed in through
the door of tiny second-hand shop. Like flashbulbs going off, she
felt spells flaring the small rooms into brilliance, one after
another. The Wyverns quickly worked to room with the hidden
couple.
"Oh, no." Tinker started for the store.
Stormsong pulled her short. "They are only killing oni."
Was that supposed to make it better? Much as she hated the
kitsune, she didn't want to see Chiyo beheaded. She didn't want
Riki anymore dead than she wanted Nathan hurt.
"We can't go in there – it would be asking for fight."
Stormsong kept hold of her. "One we can not win. Wait. Please."
Much as she wanted to protect the strangers, she couldn't
bear the thought of sacrificing her sekasha.
Tinker nodded numbly and pulled out of Stormsong's hold.
"Let's get closer."
She lost sight of the storefront beyond the wall of backs.
This time her sekasha had to clear a path, pushing people
aside to make what they thought was a wide enough path for her.
Maybe if she was an elephant.
The Wyverns muscled out only one person. They dragged
him to a white-haired elf, announcing, "We killed one inside
– it tried to run. This one is spell marked, but it was with
an oni."
It was Tommy Chang.
"Kill him." The male domana said.
"No!" Tinker plunged forward, forced her way through the
towering Wyverns to Tommy's side. "Don't hurt him!"
The white haired elf turned and Tinker gasped at the damage
done to his face.
"Ah, what honest horror!" The half-blinded elf said. "You
must be the child bride. Not much to you – how did you
come out in one piece?"
"Because they underestimated me." Tinker tugged Tommy's
arm out of the wyvern's hold. "Look, he's been tested. He's not
oni."
"He might be mixed blood," said the half-blinded elf.
"Who gives a flying fuck?" Tinker snarled in English.
"Domi," Stormsong murmured behind her.
"He's not one of them." Tinker switched back to High
Elvish.
"How do you know?" Forest Moss asked. "From what I
hear, the tengu fooled you."
She was not going to let them kill someone she knew. She
stared at Tommy, trying to remember something that would
prove he was what she thought he was – to herself as
much as to them. Maddeningly, he said nothing in his own
defense, just stood there, wrapped in his bulletproof cool. Didn't
he know that no one was swordproof?
True, she'd trusted Riki blindly, but she didn't know oni
existed, and had awarded him the trust she gave all strangers. Her
world had been a different place not so long ago.
"I know because –" she started in order to stall them.
Because she'd known Tommy half her life. His family had owned
a restaurant in Oakland
since before Startup. He'd been a driving force
organizing the hoverbike racing, and most summers she saw him
on a weekly basis. He wasn't a stranger. She wouldn't
immediately say he was "good" people. He had a temper and a
reputation of being ruthless when it came to business; that didn't
make him any more evil than her. She suspected the elves
wouldn't accept those facts as a good argument for his humanity.
Riki had proved her judgment was flawed.
What could she say as proof that these elves would accept?
They were growing impatient for her answer.
"Because—" and then unexpectedly, Riki provided
the answer. "Because when the tengu came looking for me, he
didn't know where to find me."
That puzzled them, which was fine, as she needed to cram a
lot into this argument to make it sound.
"Two years ago, Tommy bought a custom delta hoverbike
off me. He needed to write a check, and there were the pink slips
– forms to show transfer of ownership for tax reasons. I
told him my human name, which was Alexander Graham Bell."
Which of course triggered a round of teasing from Tommy, and
occasionally afterwards, he'd call her 'Tinker Bell.' "I even told
him why I was called that." In truth, she had been trying to stem
the teasing with a sympathy play since Tommy's mother had also
been murdered. "And that my father was the man who invented
the orbital gate. I told him – he didn't tell the oni."
That seemed to buy it for the Wyverns. They released their
hold on Tommy.
Magic suddenly flared across her senses, like a gasoline pool
catching flame. Tinker spun around but there was nothing to see.
Forest Moss made a motion, and she turned to watch him call on
the Stone Clan Spell Stones and use the magic to trigger his
shields. Around them, the Wyverns and her Hand went alert.
"What was that? Did you feel that?" She asked Forest Moss.
"It was a spell breaking." Forest Moss cocked the fingers of
his left hand and brought them to his mouth. "Ssssstada."
The spell Forest Moss triggered was a variation of the
ground radar. A long, narrow wedge of power formed from the
male elf to the river's edge. He shifted his right hand, and the
wedge swept northward through Chinatown. At the heart of the
Chinatown,
he hit an intense writhing of power.
"How odd," Forest Moss said.
"What is that?" Tinker noted that Tommy, being smart, had
vanished while they had been distracted.
Forest Moss gave her an odd look. "It's a ley scry. It lets me
see recent and active disturbances in the ley lines. I don't know
what that spell was supposed to do, but it just violently altered,
and it's now acting as a pump on a
fiutana."
"Oh shit. The black willow."
* * *
The great doors of the refrigerated warehouse stood open to
the summer heat. Magic flowed down over the loading down in a
purple haze of potential. Tinker cautiously pulled the Rolls
around, trying to angle the car so they could see into the cave
darkness, but the dock was too high, and the door, facing the
afternoon eastern sky, was cave dark. Tinker flicked on the
headlights, but even the high beams failed to illuminate the
interior.
"I want a closer look." Tinker put the Rolls into park. She
wished she could leave the engine running, but it would be a
mistake with this much free magic in the area.
She got out and the sekasha followed. Magic flooded over
her, hot and fast. The heat tossed the chimes on the ley shrine,
making them jangle in shrill alarm. A smell like burnt cinnamon
mixed with a taste like heated honey. The invisible brilliance
hinted by the shimmering purple made her eyes water.
"Be careful." She blinked away tears. "The magic is all
around us."
"Even we can see that." Stormsong's shields outlined her in
hard, blue radiance. "Your shields, domi."
Yeah, now would be a good time for that.
Tinker set up a resonance with the spell stones and then
triggered her shield spell. Once the winds were wrapped around
her, she waded up the steps, making sure that she didn't disturb
the spell by gesturing.
The padlock had been cut off with a bolt cutter. Her spell
hadn't failed; someone had broken in and sabotaged it.
Violet sparkled and shifted in the black of the warehouse,
casting patterns of shadows and near light. Tinker couldn't see
anything that looked like the black willow. Stormsong tried the
lights, but the switch had no effect.
"The flood would have popped the light bulbs." There was
no way Tinker was going in there blind. "Do we have a light?"
"Yes." Pony took out a spell light, closed his left hand tight
around the glass orb, and activated it. He played a thin beam of
searchlight intensity over the room.
They had left the black willow tied down on pallets. The
restraints lay in tatters. Splitters of wood marked the pallet's
destruction. The fork lift sat upended like a child's toy. Dead
leaves rode convection currents, dancing across the cement floor
with a thin, dry skittering noise.
"Where is it?" Tinker whispered.
"I don't see it." Pony swept the room again.
"Neither do I." Tinker glanced back to the street. Where was
Forest Moss? That ground radar thing would come in handy just
about now. "Let's turn off the compressor and at least stop this
flood."
They moved through the warehouse to the back room. The
small windowless room was empty of trees, with only the
purring compressor to wreak havoc. A crowbar lay across the
metal tracings of her spell, encircled with charring. Odd
distortions wavered around the compressor.
Cursing, she started for the breaker box.
"Domi, no!" Stormsong caught her shoulder and
stilled her. "Stay here at the door. Let Cloudwalker do it."
"The willow isn't in here." Tinker nevertheless stayed at the
door as Stormsong asked while Cloudwalker crossed to the
breaker box and cut the power to the compressor. "See, no
dan—"
Her only warning was the ominous rustle of leaves, and then
the forklift struck her shield from behind. She yelped, spinning
around to see the forklift rebound back across the warehouse.
"Shields!" Stormsong shouted.
Tinker had let her shields drop in her surprise. She fumbled
through the resonance set up as Pony's narrow light played off
the suddenly close wizen "face" of the black willow. They had to
have walked straight past, somehow blind to it. It filled the
warehouse now, blocking them from the door. It lifted a foot
root and replanted it in booming sound that shook the floor. Its
branches rattled as it blindly felt the confines of the room. A
dozen of the arms encountered the upended forklift, scooped it
up again and flung it at her.
Tinker snapped through the shield spell, already wincing, as
the forklift sailed toward her. At the last second the winds
wrapped tight around her and the forklift struck the distortion's
edge.
"Shit!" Tinker swore as the forklift bounced back across the
warehouse to wedge itself sidewise into the far door. "There's no
other door, right?"
"No,
domi," Pony said.
Tinker wasn't sure to be amazed or annoyed that Pony
sounded so calm, as if she could pull doorways out her butt. "Oh
damn, oh damn, oh damn. Okay, I know I'm smarter than this
tree."
The black willow lifted another root foot and shook the
world as it planted it back down, a few yards closer to them,
instantly pulverizing the cement floor, digging roots down into
the building's footing.
"But I have some doubts," Tinker admitted, "that brains are
going to win over brawn this time."
What did she have to work with? She scanned the room of
bare concrete block as the willow stomped ponderously closer.
Crow bar.
Boom! Compressor. Five
sekasha.
Five
ejae.
Boom! Circuit breaker box.
"Stormsong, what do you know about electricity?" Tinker
asked the most tech savvy of her Hand.
"Nothing useful," Stormsong said.
Boom!
"Nothing?" Tinker squeaked.
"It lives in a box in the wall." Stormsong detailed out what
she knew. "It goes away if you don't pay for it."
Boom!
Right – nothing useful. Scratch having Stormsong
rig an electrical weapon. Just as well, good chance they'd just
electrocute themselves.
The black willow stretched out its hundreds of whipping
branches to scrabble at her shield. Tinker forced herself to scan
the room again, and ignore the massive creature trying to reach
her.
"The roof! It's only plywood and rubber. See if you can cut
through."
The tree found the gap between the top of the tall doorway
and her shield. The thin branches pushed through the space,
caught hold of the doorjamb and started to pull.
"Oh, shit!" Tinker cried. "If it makes the door larger, I'm not
going to be able to hold it! It's coming in!"
There was a pulse of magic from Forest Moss, instantly
defining the Stone Clan elf with Wyverns out by the Rolls, and
themselves, pinned inside by the black willow.
"
Forest Moss!" Tinker shouted.
"Get it off us!"
The concrete walls buckled under the strain, tearing free to
leave sawtooth openings, exposing twisted and snapped rebar.
The branches flung the debris against the back wall of the
warehouse like mad shovels.
"Forest Moss, get it–"
And suddenly the branches wrapped around her, cocooning
her shield in living wicker, and lifted her off the ground.
"
Domi!" Pony shouted.
The black willow heaved her up. Its branches creaked as it
tried to crush her shields down.
Oh please hold! Oh please hold!
A dark orifice opened in the crook where its main limbs
branched from massive trunk. As the tree tried to stuff her into
the fleshy maw, she realized what the opening was.
They have mouths! I wonder if Lain knows that. Oh shit, it's
trying to eat me!
Luckily the diameter of her shielding was larger than its
mouth. It was trying to fit a golf ball into a beer bottle. She held
still and silent, afraid to disrupt her shields. Smell of burnt
cinnamon and honey filled her senses and her vision
blurred—the tree fading slightly—even as it
repeatedly jammed her up against its mouth.
It has some kind of hallucinogen – that's how we
missed it, she thought.
And then the tree flung her through the wall.
The street beyond was a flicker of brightness, and then she
plowed through a confusion of small, dim, dusty rooms of an
abandon office building beyond. She felt Forest Moss track her
through the building. His power flashed ahead of her, surged
through the next building in her flight path, and locked down on
all the load bearing supports.
The white haired shit was going to pull the building down
on her! She'd be buried alive – shields or not!
Dropping her shields, she made a desperate grab for a
battered steel desk as she flew over it. She missed the edge and
left five contrails across its dusty top. A floor to ceiling window
stood beyond the desk. She smashed through the window into
open sky.
I'm going to die.
And then Riki caught her, wrapping strong arms around her
and labored upwards in a loud rustle of black wings.
"Riki!" She clung to the tengu, heart thudding like a motor
about to shake itself apart. Yeah, yeah, she was still pissed at
him. She'll let him know that – after he put her down
safely.
Chapter 17: A Murder Of Crows
"Stop squirming or I might drop you." Riki growled through
teeth gritted with the effort to carry Tinker aloft.
She glanced down and went still in shock of being dangled
mid-air forty feet up and climbing. "Shouldn't we be going
down?"
"Down is good for you – very bad for me."
"Damn it, Riki, my people need me. Put me down!" Tinker
found herself gripping his arms so he couldn't just drop her.
"There's so many things wrong with that statement that I
don't have breath to explain it all."
Movement at the window she'd smashed out of caught her
eye and with relief she saw Cloudwalker pointing up at her.
Moments later Pony and the others joined him at the opening.
"Oh, thank gods." Tinker breathed.
Riki rose above the roofline. The crown of the black willow
bristled in the street beyond. Its booming footsteps echoed up
from the canyon of buildings. She felt a great surge of magic and
a massive fireball suddenly engulfed the tree. Whoa! Apparently
Prince True Flame had arrived. No wonder the tengu didn't want
to land.
Riki dipped down behind the next building, out of sight of
her Hand. Black smoke billowed behind them. He flew straight
west – as the saying went—as the crow flies, faster
than a man could run despite being weighed down by her. When
he reached the
Ohio River, he turned and
followed its course.
Where the hell was he taking her? It occurred to her that he
couldn't have been just passing by and caught her by luck.
"You planned this! You knew if you screwed with my spell,
I'd come to fix it."
"Would you believe this had nothing to do with you?"
"No."
"Believe it not, the world does not revolve around Tinker
the Great."
How far could Riki fly? Could he keep up his speed, or had
that been a sprint? And what did he want with her?
She tried to form a plan to escape. Riki, though, wouldn't
underestimate her – he knew her too well. Of all the
people in
Pittsburgh
, he could match wits with her. Her first thought was
to force him to drop her into the river. The large dark form of a
river shark swimming under the water, following their passage,
killed that plan. They followed the
Ohio
around its gentle bends, and
Pittsburgh
vanished behind the swell of the surrounding hills.
Once the city was out of sight, Riki climbed the steep hill that
once was
Bellevue
and crossed the Rim. There he dove into the
ironwoods. The forest canopy rushed toward them, seeming to
her a solid wall of green. Riki though flicked through openings
she hadn't seen, darting through slender upper branches to finally
land on a thick bough, close to the massive trunk.
The moment they landed, Tinker twisted in his hold and
swung at him hard as she could, aiming for his beak-like nose.
"God damn it!" He caught her hand and twisted her arm
painfully up behind her back. He leaned his weight against her,
pinning her to the trunk. "Just hold still!"
Cheek pressed to the rough gray bark, Tinker saw for the
first time how far up the tree they stood – the forest floor
lay a hundred feet below. Normally she didn't mind heights
– only normally she wasn't this high up with an enemy
spy. She felt stopped struggling, fear trying to climb up out of her
stomach. She swallowed down on it – she had to keep her
head.
Riki grabbed her right wrist, and then catching hold of her
left, bound both hands behind her with a thin plastic strap. Once
she was bound helpless, he turned her around. He wore war
paint—streaks of black under his vivid blue eyes and
shock of black hair. His shirt was cut on the same loose lines of
the muscle shirt he wore often during her captivity by the oni, but
of glossy black scale armor. On his feet, with their odd bird-like
toes, he wore silver tips that looked razor-sharp.
"What do you want?" She was pleased she didn't sound as
scared as she was.
"I'm not going to hurt you."
"Somehow I don't believe you." She wriggled slightly to
indicate her tied wrists. It made her teeter alarmingly on the
branch, so she carefully scrunched down until she straddled the
thick limb. There, perfectly safe. Ha!
Riki watched her with a cocked head. "There's no shame in
being afraid of heights. Most people are."
She stared at him with shock. That was exactly what he said
in her dream – wasn't it? She glanced downward and felt
déjà vu; they'd been up high in her nightmare.
"What do you want?" she asked. "Are you going to turn me
over to the oni again?"
"No. When you killed Lord Tomtom, we Tengu managed to
break free of the oni."
"I gave that up. You melted the witch, so I got out of my no-
compete contract."
This was seriously weird.
"Riki, who is the wizard of oz?"
"Huh?"
"I had a dream and you were in it."
"And you and you and you too," Riki quoted the movie.
"Oh good, at least you know the source. In my dream, I was
trying to get to the wizard of Oz."
"Ooookay, and I thought I was deep in left field. Oh this is
sad."
"Do have any idea who he might be?"
"The wizard?" Riki pulled a pack of cigarettes out of his
back pocket, tapped out a cigarette, lit it and took a deep drag.
"Hmmm, in the movie the wizard was the traveling performer
that Dorothy met when she ran away from home. Chances are
then, he's someone you've met but don't recognize now."
Taking another drag, Riki vented the smoke out of his nose
in twin columns as he thought. "His nature is changing; some
perceive him as great and powerful, others see him as foolish,
but he's the only character that fully understood both
Kansas
and Oz. Most likely, you're looking for someone
with great knowledge, but his intelligence is disguised
somehow." Riki gazed off into the forest, eyes unfocused,
thinking. "Like Dorothy, he's a traveler between worlds, just as
lost..."
Riki's eyes snapped back in focus. "Impatience. He's your
wizard."
"Who?"
"Impatience. The dragon that you fought at Turtle Creek."
She tried to fit the name of "Impatience" with the countless
jagged teeth and massive snaky body.
"See, intelligence disguised." Riki waved his cigarette,
reminding her of the astronomer post docs when they went into
lecture mode. "Legends say that a dragon has a body and a spirit,
and you can encounter the one without the other. Usually in the
old stories, the dragons send their spirits out to cross great
distances – but while they're doing it, it's a very unwise
thing to approach them. The lights are on, but no one's home."
"Running on autopilot?"
"Let's just say that there's more than one story about
someone getting their head bitten off while a dragon's spirit is
absent."
She remembered with great clarity the sense of intelligence
filling the dragon's eyes—its surprise at having a hand
clamped into its mouth. "So you're saying the dragon was
unconscious at the time he attacked me."
"Probably."
That would certainly explain how she managed to walk away
with nothing more than a sore hand. "So where is this dragon
now?"
"Even if I knew that, I wouldn't tell you. I want Impatience
for the tengu. That's what I was doing at Reinholds. The oni had
set a trap for it, using the fountain as a lure."
"The oni?"
"Impatience was one of two dragons the oni had waiting on
Onihida for the invasion. The other is Malice, who is much
bigger. Somehow Impatience managed to slip the oni's hold on
him and escape."
"So, on top of the royal troops and the oni, we have an
unaligned dragon running loose in
Pittsburgh
."
"Well, a party is only fun if you invite lots of interesting
people."
She stuck her tongue out at him. "How do you plan to find
Impatience?"
"I don't know.
You apparently have to follow the
yellow brick road."
In her dream, though, the road ended with the tree. This was
going to drive her mad. In the silence between them, she heard a
slight noise from Riki's hip pocket. He frowned, slipped out a
cell phone and answered it with a cautious, "Hello?"
As he listened, his look changed to worry. "You're where?
Jesus Christ what are you doing there? Oh fuck. Yes I said that,
what do you expect me to say? No—don't –
don't..." Riki sighed. "Put your cousin on. No, no, not Joey!
Keiko." Riki waited a moment until the phone could be traded
off on the other side of the conversation. "Yeah, I'm here. What's
going on?"
Riki listened for several minutes, grimacing as if what he
heard pained him. "I'll be there in a few minutes. Hang tight."
Riki tucked away his phone. "Change of plans."
"You're letting me go?"
"Sorry," he actually managed to look it. "I'll never have this
chance again. I can't throw it away." He pulled out a silk scarf
and tied it over her eyes. "I don't want you to know where we're
going." He took firm hold of her and jerked her off her feet.
"This time, don't wriggle so much."
She felt him leap, knew that he left the safety of the tree, and
nearly screamed at the knowledge. His wings rustled out, caught
the air, and they swooped upwards.
Fifteen or twenty minutes later, Riki dove down and wove
through light and shadows to land again. Numb from dangling,
her legs folded under her. Riki lowered her down to a prone
position and then knelt behind her, panting with exertion.
Their landing site seemed too flat to be a tree branch but it
swayed slightly with the rustling of the wind.
"Damn it, Riki, where are we?"
Riki tugged down her blindfold. She lay just inside the door
of a tiny cabin; only eight-foot square, it would have been
claustrophobic if it actually contained furniture.
"We're at a cote," he panted. "Emergency shelter."
The cabin seemed to be made of scrap lumber. The one
small round window letting in light held glass, and the high
ceiling bristled with nails, indicating that the roof was shingled,
so the cabin was weatherproofed.
"Stay put." He stepped past her to pull something off a set of
shelves on the back wall. "There's no safe way down to ground.
I'll be back."
Cabin, hell, it was a tree house. Under any other
circumstance, she would have been entranced with the notion.
Riki took a deep breath and stepped backwards out the door,
spreading his black wings.
"Stay," he repeated and flapped away.
Not trusting his word, she struggled to her feet and went to
the door. The view straight down made her step backwards
quickly. It was a place strictly for birds. If her hands weren't
bound behind her back, she could get to the massive branch just
outside the door, but there was nowhere to go from there. The
tree was too wide, and the lowest branch too far from the ground
to allow climbing down. She could see nothing but virgin forest
through both the door and window, not even a glimpse of sun or
river to give a clue which direction they flown.
The cote was cunningly made. A brace along the back wall
provided the one anchor point so the stress of the shifting tree
could not tear the room apart. The front of cabin rested on a
beam yoked over side branches. A loft bed nearly doubled the
floor space. A generous overhang meant the front door could
hang open even during a rain shower to let in light without the
weather. The outside of the cabin had been painted gray and black
in a pattern that mimicked ironwood bark.
She kicked shut the door but the latch was too high for her
to shift with her hands bound.
The shelves on the back wall were stocked with survival
gear: warm clothing and blankets in plastic bags, extra plastic
bags, rolls of duct tape, a serious first aid kit, ammo for guns,
flashlights, two box knives, waterproof matches, bottled spring
water, a water purifier kit, a small cooler filled with power bars
and military rations, and even a roll of toilet paper. Judging by
the shape of the bag, Riki had taken a set of clothes with him.
She fumbled with one of the box knives, blindly sawing at
the plastic strap binding her wrists. The blade kept slipping,
nicking her wrists, before she finally managed to cut through.
She bandaged her wrists, looking at what she had to work with. A
rope ladder from strips of blanket, reinforced with the duct tape?
Or perhaps she should just try to jump Riki and take his cell
phone. No, he'd gone to meet someone, so he could return with
others.
As if the thought summoned the tengu, Riki kicked the door
open. She snatched up the box knife and spun around to face Riki
as he dropped in through the doorway. He wasn't alone. He had a
child with him – a little boy in an oversized black hooded
sweatshirt.
"Riki!" She started toward him, angry at the tengu, and afraid
for the boy.
Riki looked up, saw the knife in her hand, and his face went
cold. She had always suspected that the tengu treated her with kid
gloves. Suddenly, it was if a stranger was looking at her, one who
would hurt her if she took another step forward.
She stopped, and reached out with her empty hand. "Don't
hurt him."
Still tight in Riki's hold, the boy glanced over his shoulder at
her, and blinked in surprise. He had the tengu's coarse straight
black hair, electric blue eyes and sharp features – though
his nose wasn't so nearly beak-like as Riki's. "Oh, hello," the
tengu boy said with no fear in his voice. "I'm Joey. Joey Shoji.
Who are you?"
With a rustle of wings, two slightly older tengu children
crowded the doorway. Wearing blue jeans and torn t-shirts, they
would have seemed like human children except for the way they
clung to the sides of the doorway with bird-like feet, fanning the
air with black wings. The girl looked thirteen and sported the
black war paint and sharp spurs that Riki wore. The boy was
younger – eleven? Ten? Both had Riki's dark wild hair
and sharp features.
"Hey, what's a girl during here?" The boy asked in English
and hopped into the cote.
The girl scowled and remained hovering at the door. "She's
an elf – the fairy princess."
"What's an elf?" Joey asked.
"She's still a girl elf, Keiko," The boy insisted.
"What's an elf?" Joey asked again.
"It means I have pointed ears." Tinker tapped on her left ear.
She used it as a distraction to put the knife on the shelves as
causally as she could. The two younger kids studied her ear, but
Riki and Keiko's eyes followed the knife.
The coldness left Riki's face, but he still watched her
carefully. "This is Mickey and Keiko." He released the littlest
one. "And Joey. They're my younger cousins."
"Should we really be telling her our names?" Keiko asked.
"What's she doing here?"
Joey pulled off the adult-sized sweatshirt he was drowning
in. Underneath he had a ragged t-shirt like the other two –
the back torn open to reveal the elaborate spell tattooed from
shoulder to waistline, in black. "Look, look, I have wings too!"
He spoke a word, and magic poured through the tracings,
making them shimmer like fresh ink. The air hazed around him,
and the wings unfolded out of the distortion, at first holographic
in appearance, ghosts of crow wings hovering behind him, fully
extended. Then they solidified into reality, skin and bone merged
into his musculature of his back, glistening black feathers, all
correctly proportioned for his thin, child's body.
"Wow," Tinker said. "Those are cool."
Keiko hopped into the cote to catch hold of Joey and pulled
him away from Tinker, giving her a dark distrusting look.
Riki said something in the oni harsh tongue that made the
younger tengu look at Tinker with surprise.
"Her?" Keiko cried. "No way!"
Riki shrugged, making his wings rustle. "She's the one that
killed Lord Tomtom. The dragon went to her. I have to check."
"Wait," Tinker said. "This all about the tattoo you think the
dragon put on me?"
"Yes." Riki nodded.
"Are you nuts?" Tinker said.
"No, just desperate. Please, take off your dress."
"Oh you have to be kidding." Tinker took a step back and
realized how crowded the tiny cabin had just gotten with tengu
wings. "I am not taking off my dress in front of all of you."
Riki touched Joey's shoulder. "Wings, Joey. Keiko and
Mickey, you too."
The boys spoke spell commands and their wings vanished.
Riki picked them up, one at a time, and swung them up to the loft
bed. They sat on the edge, dangling down their three-toed feet
until Riki said, "Nyh, nyh, all the way up. Quiet little birds."
Keiko crossed her arms, flared out her wings, and leveled a
hostile look at Riki. "I'm a warrior."
Riki glared at the tengu girl until the girl added something in
oni. "A witness? Yes, I guess you're right."
"Yeah, I'm supposed to act as if that's better?" Tinker asked.
"Take off your shirt, let me look at you, and if you don't
have the mark, I'll let you go."
Tinker scoffed. "Yeah, sure."
"I promise," Riki said.
Like that was worth anything.
"Don't be such a chicken shit!" Keiko said.
Riki slapped the tengu girl on the back of the head. "Hey,
you're not helping. Would you want to take off your clothes in
front of strangers?"
Keiko blushed and stuck out her tongue at her cousin.
Riki returned his attention to Tinker. "Come on. Just do it
quick and it'd be over."
"I don't have any mark."
Riki's face went neutral, if all emotion drained out, leaving
only resolve.
Tinker considered if she wanted her dress forcibly taken off.
There wasn't any running away, and while Keiko was young, the
tengu girl was as tall as she was. Probably if Tinker trying calling
the winds she'd end up in a wrestling match before she got the
spell off. "Fine. I'll take it off."
She struggled out of her dress, and as she feared, bra had to
go.
"It would be over her heart, wouldn't it?" Keiko looked as
uncomfortable with Tinker's nudity as Tinker felt.
"It should." Riki took Tinker's hands and examined her arms
carefully, even to the point of undoing the bandages and peering
under them. It wasn't as bad as Tinker feared. She realized it was
the kids' presence; she trusted Riki not to do anything with them
there – watching. Hopefully she was right.
"Okay," Riki finally said. "You can get dressed."
"Does she have it? Does she have it?" Mickey called from
the loft.
"No." Riki glanced down at Keiko. "Can you make it to the
near cote without stopping? It's going to be dark and we'll need
to move quietly and fast."
Keiko screwed up her face, torn between saying yes and
admitting the truth. Finally she hunched her shoulders, looked
away, and said, "No."
Riki tousled the girl's short black hair. "It's better that you
tell the truth now. I'll take Joey and then come back to guide you
two. Rest up."
"What about her?" Keiko asked, and then added quietly.
"You promised her."
If it wasn't her freedom they were talking about, it would
have been funny to see Riki realize how screwed he was. He
could start to ferry the kids back home, but it would leave her
alone with at least two of them. Taking her home meant all three
kids would be alone for a much longer time – perhaps a
very long time if he ran into trouble with the elves. He looked
her in sudden panic.
She sighed and waved her hand. "Take care of them first."
"Promise me that you won't hurt them."
She scoffed. "Who is going to protect me from them?"
A wry smile came and went. "I'm trusting you two to
behave. Understand?"
"Yes, Riki," Mickey said.
Keiko nodded, watching Tinker.
"Joey?" Riki motioned to the littlest tengu and the boy flung
himself out of the loft into Riki's arms. "Ooomph! Settle down,
you little monster. Here, sweatshirt on first." Riki knelt and
pulled the sweatshirt onto the boy. "Remember, once we leave,
no talking. Quiet little birds."
Joey mimed locking his mouth and throwing away the key.
"Good boy," Riki picked up the child and gave them a
worried look. "Remember there are oni in the woods. Keep it
down and no lights."
"Quiet little birds." Mickey said.
Riki wavered at the door, Joey clinging to his neck. "Tinker
– I love them much as you love Oilcan. Everything I've
done has been for them. Please – just – just wait
for me to get back."
* * *
The tengu kids took the loft bed and Tinker settled by the
door, her back to the wall so she could keep an eye on them.
Keiko continued to stare at her. Mickey swung his legs. Dusk fell
on the forest and darkness crawled into the cabin.
"How far does Riki have to go?"
Mickey started to say something but Keiko poked him.
"We're not allowed to say."
"What are you doing so far away anyhow?"
"Joey just got his wings." Mickey said. "We were on his first
long flight and got cut off by a troop of oni moving through the
area. We tried to go around them and got lost. When we hit the
city's edge, Keiko said we should call Riki. I'm the one that
remembered the number."
"Then all you would do was cry." Keiko said.
Mickey pulled up his legs, curling into himself.
Keiko gave him a look of remorse and then swung down.
She rummaged through the shelves and then handed up a bottle
of water and a power bar to her younger cousin. "Here. You can
have the last chocolate one."
Keiko put a second bottle and bar up beside Mickey.
Wordlessly, she left an offering of food and water for Tinker
down on the floor, carefully staying outside of Tinker's reach,
and then swung back to the loft.
Tinker hadn't had a power bar as an elf – she
expected something tasteless. She was surprised how good it
tasted. "Oh, these are yummy."
Mickey nodded in agreement, instantly happy by Keiko's
offering. "I didn't think elves could speak English."
Keiko pinched Mickey.
"Ow! What?"
"Don't display how ignorant you are. She was a human until
the viceroy turned her into an elf a few months ago."
Mickey looked at Tinker, recognition dawning on him. "Oh,
she's the Dufae girl?"
"Yes." Keiko said.
Fear filled Mickey's face.
"Why are you scared of me?" Tinker asked.
"We know what Riki had to do to you." Mickey whispered.
"How he had to turn you over to the oni."
"Riki didn't want to us to come to Elfhome," Keiko said.
"He said that either the elves would find us, or the oni would.
Better stay on Earth where we were at least free. But the oni
came to our house and took Joey hostage. Riki sent us on ahead
to be with our aunt, but he stayed to work for the oni – to
try and get Joey back."
"He never told me about you."
"If he told you, then the kitsune would know, and then the
oni would know. He couldn't tell you the truth about anything
– or he'd put us in danger."
"You hate the tengu now – don't you?" Mickey
whispered.
A few days ago, Tinker probably would have said yes. She
knew that when she found the MP3 player, she'd been angry
enough to beat Riki to a pulp again. Now, with the dead in Chinatown, and the children looking at her in
fear, she couldn't hate all the innocent strangers. "No."
Keiko scoffed, disbelieving. "I'd never forgive anyone that
did that to me."
"I saw what Lord Tomtom did to those that failed him
– and it scared the living shit out of me." She shuddered
with the memory of the torture; the flash of bright blades and
white of bone stripped clean of flesh. "I was willing to do almost
anything to keep the knives away from me."
"So you forgive Riki?"
There was something about the darkness that demanded
honesty. "I'm still angry at him. But I was with the oni for nearly
a month—I can understand why he did it and don't think I
can hate him for it. He took my shit and never complained, and
when he could, he protected me."
There was a sudden roar outside and a hoverbike –
lift engines at full – popped up and landed on the massive
branch outside the door. Its headlight flooded the room with
stark white blinding light.
Tinker stood and called magic, wrapping the wind around
her.
"Tinker domi!" Stormsong's voice came out of the
light.
"Stormsong?" Tinker squinted into the glare.
The headlight snapped off. Stormsong sat on a custom delta
Tinker had done for a charity auction last year. Somehow
Stormsong had managed to land and balance on the branch
– it was going to take work to get it down in one piece.
In her right hand the sekasha held a shotgun resting
across the handlebars and trained at the cabin door.
"How the hell did you find me?" Tinker asked.
"I closed my eyes and went where I was needed." Stormsong
glanced beyond Tinker to the kids. "They're tengu."
Tinker realized that her being safe meant the kids were now
in danger. "I promised that they wouldn't be hurt."
"That was a silly thing to do," Stormsong said.
"They're just kids." Tinker moved to protect them with her
shield.
"Kids grow up," Stormsong said.
Tinker shook her head. "I can't let you hurt them. I
promised."
"Yes, Tinker ze domi." Stormsong said in High
Tongue.
Tinker released the winds. The kids huddle against the back
corner of the loft bed.
"We won't hurt you," she told them, "but I need to leave."
"Hey," Keiko called. She pulled off a necklace and
scrambled forward to dangle it out to Tinker. "Take this. It will
protect you."
"From what?"
"Tengu."
Tinker looped the necklace over her neck and picked her way
out onto the branch. "How the hell did you get a hoverbike the
whole way up here? I know the lift engine can't do a hundred feet
straight up – or down."
"Flying blind." Stormsong uncocked her shotgun and
holstered it. "Hang tight to me – this is going to be tricky.
And you might want to close your eyes."
Tinker clung tight to Stormsong, trying to let her trust of the
bodyguard override her knowledge of the hoverbike's limitations.
Stormsong didn't even turn on bike's headlight, just raced the
bike's engine and then tipped them over the edge. A squeak of
fear leapt up Tinker's throat – followed by her heart
– as they nose-dived. They hit a lower branch that cracked
under the lift drive and suddenly they were corkscrewing madly.
She gripped Stormsong tight. She felt more than saw the blur off
tree trunks and branches as they kissed off them. Seconds later
they straightened out and roared through the darkness –
Pony on a second hoverbike waiting on the ground running along
side of them.
"Thank you," Stormsong called back.
"What for? You rescued me."
"Yes, but you trusted me to do my job."
Chapter 18: Seek You
The sekasha
suggested a bath and bed, but Tinker didn't want to unwind and
take it easy. Things in Pittsburgh were bad, and getting worse, and like it or not, she
was one of the few people that had the power to fix things. The
only question was how.
She placated the
sekasha by agreeing to dinner and
took her datapad with her to the enclave's private dining hall.
Maynard thought that opening a line of communication with
Earth would be key. Yeah, right, just phone home. Riki had said
that the dragon was the wizard of Oz, and implied that dragons
understood how to move from world to world. She didn't know
where the dragon was, however, and from the sounds of it, both
the oni and tengu were searching hard for it. Follow the yellow
brick road? What road?
Ohio River
Boulevard
? I-279? The last lead she had was the black willow
tree and last she saw of that, it was flambé.
Wait, she had gotten seeds from the black willow. At least,
she thought she did. She had Windwolf's staff track the small jar
down, and the MP3 player. Watching the seeds wriggle in the
glass, she listened to the songs recorded on the player. It was one
of Oilcan's favorite elf rock groups, playing a collection of songs
that her cousin had wrote for them. If you didn't know Oilcan,
the songs seemed to be about lost lovers. Tinker knew that they
were about his mother. Odd how the words could stay the same
but knowledge changed the meaning.
Tinker laid her head on the table and remembered Riki in
another light.
Pony ran his hand across her back, a delicious feeling that
uncoiled a sudden deep need. On the heels of that, like cracking
open a bottle full of dark storm winds, a confusing wash of
emotions.
"Don't do that." Tinker shifted away from his touch and tried
to cork the bottle. She was too fragile for that.
"Have I hurt you?" Pony asked.
She shook her head.
"All day, you have avoided me as if I had. I need to
understand – what have I done wrong? We are not fitting
this way."
She had? She hadn't even been aware of it. "It's not you. It's
me. I-I've so totally—" Unfortunately there wasn't an
Elvish match for the word 'fucked up,' so she stuck in the
English, "everything and everyone."
"Fuck," Pony repeated the English curse. "Can you teach me
that?"
"No!" She realized he meant the word's meaning, not the
actual action. "It means intercourse." And once she saw the
confusion in Pony's face as he tried to plug in the meaning into
her sentence, she added, "It's a curse word generally meaning
– well – anything you want it to mean. It's one of
the more versatile words we have."
"How do you conjugate it?"
"Fuck, Fucking, Fucked when used as a verb. It can be used
as a noun, indicate person, place or thing, generally derogatory."
This was the not the conversation she thought she'd be having
with Pony this evening. "It could also be combined –
creatively – with other words. Fuck-head. Fuck-off.
Fuck-wad."
"I'm starting to understand a little more about human
fascination with sex."
"Besides the fact that it's so damn fun?"
"What is damn?"
"Pony!"
"I feel that it is time that I learned English."
She felt a pang of guilt knowing that Pony hadn't understood
any of Nathan's last words, that he had only seen her struggling in
Nathan's hold and her cry for help. "Yes, that would be good."
"Why do you feel this way? That you have 'fucked up?' You
have done the best you can against very difficult situations."
"
Pittsburgh
is stuck here on Elfhome. Nathan is dead. Half the
people I know probably hate my guts now. I'm not sure even
Oilcan or Lain will ever want to see me again. I cheated on my
husband, and seduced you! How is that 'the best?' Gods forbid, if
I had done my worse!"
He reached out and pulled her back, into his lap.
"Pony." She wriggled, trying to escape him.
"
Domi," he whispered into her hair, his lips brushing
the tips of her ears, sending a shiver of want through her. "Have I
no will of my own? Am I your puppet?"
She stared into his dark eyes and felt cold dread take hold. "I
don't want to talk about this."
"Because if you're in control, I am not to blame for my
actions?"
"Pony, please."
"And if I am not under your control, does that make me a
terrifying stranger? Someone that you do not know?"
She clung to him then, afraid that he would slip away from
her. "Please, Pony, you're the only thing sane about my life right
now."
"You are being unfair to both of us to say that what
happened was only by your hand. I am not your puppet. You did
not act alone. You can not be solely responsible."
"You do what I tell you to do. I told you I wanted sex and
you gave it to me."
"I choose to do what you tell me." He took her hand and
nuzzled her wrist. "I was pleased that you trusted me enough to
turn to me and to stop when you changed your mind."
"I'm just supposed to use you? Get off and then throw you
across the room? Like you're some kind of—" She was
going to say 'vibrator' but elves didn't a word for battery-operated
sex toys. Nor did she want to hurt him more by being crude.
"— substitute for my husband?"
"That is what I am. I am to be here for you when Wolf can
not be."
"But – But —And you're okay with that?"
"I have lived my entire life knowing that as a
sekasha, if I became a
domi's beholden, that she
might take me to bed. And I knew, when I offered myself to you
that meant all of me. My life is yours. My love is yours. And I
have watched you fight the demon spawn themselves to keep me
from harm. Nothing happened yesterday that I did not know
might happen, that I wanted to stop, and that I am sorry about
– except the part about being thrown across the room."
If he thought this was going to make her feel better, he was
wrong. She felt worse, and struggled to keep from showing it.
Obviously she sucked at it as sadness filled his eyes.
"I did not realize until Stormsong explained that humans are
so – singular – with their love. It is not our way."
Pony used the inclusive "our" meaning that they both belonged to
it: she was one of them. "That is why we
sekasha are
naekuna; so you can turn to us if you need us."
"Oh, Pony, I might have the body of an elf, but in
here—" she tapped her temple. "I'm still a human. I can't
commit to one person—heart and soul—and then
take another one to bed, without feeling like I'm doing something
wrong. I just can't."
"I know." He said it with quiet acceptance in his voice, and
then nothing more. After a minute, she leaned against him and
soaked in his calmness. It still felt wrong to stay so close, so
intimate with him when she was married to Windwolf. Her
logical side, though, was starting to recognize what Pony must
know – that while she was emotionally fully human now,
that in a hundred years or so, she would slowly grow to be elf
inside as well as out. And to elves – a hundred years was
a very short time.
Well, sitting wallowing in her own pain wasn't going to help
Pittsburgh
. Time to pull rabbits out of her butt. How could she
communicate across realities when Earth wouldn't have a
receiver for her transmitter? She already tested Turtle Creek for
radio waves, and nothing recognizable was coming through. She
entertained the idea of linking two phones together with a phone
line and tossing one into the discontinuity. No, a phone would
sink like the gate had. So would messages in bottles.
She sighed and slid out of Pony's lap. "Time to get busy. I
need to do some modeling."
Communication with Earth was a simple science problem.
What was happening in
Pittsburgh
was a vast sociological problem in which she didn't
know how to solve. She didn't even know where she stood in
regards to it. How far did her responsibility extend? Were the
elves right in hunting down all the oni and killing them? The
scientist in her could see the simple logic of it. Both races were
immortal, only the oni were prolific and the elves weren't. If the
elves did nothing, the oni would win eventually out of default.
Morally, genocide was wrong – did the elves have a
choice? It wasn't like the gods had put both races on one world.
The oni had invaded, which put them in the wrong. It would be
stupid to put them in the right simply because they failed to kill
the elves first.
And what about the tengu, who seemed to be a race separate
from the oni and on Elfhome against their will? What was her
responsibility to them? Riki had betrayed her, but if the tengu
children were telling the truth, he had been forced to choose
between her and his cousins. She knew she would move the
world to protect Oilcan; how could she hold Riki's betrayal
against him when that meant putting the children into danger?
And how many tengu were there on Elfhome? Would she be
protecting Riki, the three kids and the unnamed 'aunt' or were
there more? A dozen? A hundred?
Where did her responsibility begin and end? Could she
protect all the humans and the tengu too? Or to keep the humans
safe, would she have to ignore what was morally right?
And under it all was the dark suspicion that she didn't really
have the power to protect anything, despite what Tooloo might
think. True Flame thought she was a useless child. The Stone
Clan was trying to kill her. Windwolf had lent her his power, but
if she took a stand against him, would he take it back?
* * *
When Wolf asked Tinker to be his domi, he
suspected that she would be able to lead. Certainly, when she
spoke, people obeyed. She didn't seem to be aware that she had
the quality, but the day she saved his life, everyone listened to her
without quarreling. Time and time again since then there had
been satisfying – although usually mystifying –
proof that he was right about her. He found his domi
deep in another mysterious project in the middle of the Westinghouse
Bridge
, overlooking the Ghostlands.
"What is this?" Wolf pointed to a large cylindrical machine
beside his domi.
"This is an Imperial Searchlight." Tinker patted the three-
foot tall light fixture. "It uses a Xenon 4000 watt bulb to output
155,000 lumens. They say that the output is visible at distances
of more than twenty kilometers."
Wolf eyed the wires snaking away to either end of the
bridge. "Do you have more than one?"
"Three. I tried to get four, but these babies are hard to find in
Pittsburgh
– and a bitch to move. They weigh nearly two
hundred pounds and then you need almost four hundred pounds
of ballast so they don't tip over. I put the other two on either hill
to get maximum spread."
Tinker settled at the table at the center of the bridge. "I've
got them tied together to this control board. I'm trying to track
down a manual on—" she paused to eye her screen closely.
"Ah, there, Morse code."
Wolf crouched beside her. "You're going to use the light to
communicate?"
She smiled and leaned down to touch her forehead to his.
"Exactly. By the composition of the buildings inside the
Ghostlands, it's clear that Earth is one of the dimensions
intersected by this discontinuity. The blue shift of the area seems
to indicate that certain spectrums of light are being absorbed and
only the blue is reflecting back to us."
"So other spectrums are traveling on through to the other
dimensions?"
"I think so. If we communicate with Earth, we might be able
to get them to help. I'm just a little worried that no one on their
end will be paying attention – this will only work in the
middle of night."
"They're missing a city with sixty thousands souls. They're
paying attention."
"Well – there is that." She kissed him and went back
to work.
"Have you considered that the oni will see this too?"
"Yes, I know, that's a flaw in the plan. We'll have to consider
any communication from another world as suspect."
He considered this problem as she typed. "It is unfortunate
that the EIA had been compromised. Maynard might have had a
way to verify any communication from the U.N. is authentic."
"Hmmm, hadn't considered that angle. Human agencies that
have security protocols. Wait—I wonder – what
happened to those NSA agents?"
"The human agents that tried to kidnap you?"
His tone made her glance at him and giggle. "Oh don't look
like that. They only wanted to protect me from the oni. They
actually were nice, once they stopped trying to drag me back to
Earth."
"Maynard will know where they are, if they are in
Pittsburgh
."
She took out a cell phone and made it beep repeatedly. "I
would have never dreamed having the God of Pittsburgh's phone
number in my address book."
"He is not God of Pittsburgh. He is our servant."
"Somehow I doubt that he sees it that way." Her face
changed as the call went through. "Oh, hi, yeah, this is Tinker.
Say, do you know what happened to the NSA agents? Briggs and
Durrack? Really?" She listened for a moment. "Oh cool! Can you
send them out to Turtle Creek? I need them out here. Thanks."
As she hung up, Wolf wondered what Maynard made of the
phone call. It was a perfect example, though, of his
domi's leadership skills. She saw the need and did what was needed to
fill it without guidance from him. All she needed was the
authority of her title. And she probably did not realize how rare
the ability was.
"They didn't leave last Shutdown, so they're stuck here." She
relayed what she learned. "They've been working with him.
Apparently when they kidnapped me, he put them through a
detailed background check. They're one of the few people in
Pittsburgh
he could trust to be who they said they were. He was
using them to weed through the EIA's databases to find altered
files and recover the original data."
Her walkie-talkie beeped and one of the work crews
reported in that the other two searchlights were in place and
pointed down into the valley. The walkie-talkies tickled him to
no end. That was what he wanted for his people – the
ease of communication that humans had.
Tinker glanced up into the night sky. Full dark lay full on the
land and the stars gleamed brilliant overhead. "What do you
think? Is it dark enough?"
"It will not get any darker without clouds."
"These lights are about two hundred times brighter than a
normal light bulb," Tinker warned him. "You shouldn't look
directly at them when they're on. Okay, let's see if it works."
Tinker radioed the other two units with "Turn them on."
The three beams of light cut brilliant down into the valley.
Mid-way the light shifted to blue, somewhat muted, but still
dazzling in the pitch darkness.
"Hmm, that's a good sign." Tinker murmured.
"Did you plan tonight because of the lack of moon?" Wolf
asked.
"I'd love to say yes, but actually we just got lucky." Tinker
clicked her keyboard, activating her program. The searchlights
started to flash. "I've written a short script in Morse
code—C-Q-C-Q-C-Q-D-E-S-1-K—and
interspersed it with three minutes of darkness."
"What does that mean?"
"This manual says it means 'calling any station this is
designation station one, listening.' I'm not sure if that's totally
correct Morse, but I figure its close enough for horseshoes."
She saw his smile, and her eyes widened as she realized what
she said, and then she smiled too. He'd asked her to be his
domi after playing horseshoes with her.
The searchlights snapped off, plunging them into darkness,
and Tinker slid down into his lap.
"Did you—" Tinker whispered to him. "Did you have
lovers other than Jewel Tears – and the
sekasha?"
"A few. Not many. I had my insane ideas of coming to the
Westernlands and establish a holding here."
She made a small unhappy sound.
"If I had known you were in my future, I would have
waited," he whispered. "Think, this way I came to you a skilled
lover. This way one of us knew how it was done."
"I can build a hypergate jump gate, I'm sure I could have
figured sex out. Insert Tab M into Slot F. Repeat until done."
Windwolf laughed. "You delight me."
"Good. You delight me too."
* * *
Wolf considered the steep hills of the valley and the
Ghostland below. "All things considered, I think we better
strengthen our position. We're going to stir the oni up doing
this."
Tinker looked up with surprise. "Oh! I hadn't considered
that."
He was learning that his domi became so fixated on
a puzzle that she ignored the outside world. It meant that she
could lock all of her brilliance onto finding a solution, but it left
her open to being blindsided.
"I will take care of it." He stood up and kissed her brow.
* * *
The NSA agents arrived in their sleek grey sedan was so out
of place in Pittsburgh that it didn't need the D.C. plates to
identify it as out of town. Nobody drove new cars because the
parts were too hard to find, and no one knew how to service
them. Corg Durrack and Hannah Briggs got out of the car
cautiously, as if they were trying not to spook the heavily-armed
elves.
Both NSA agents though looked like they could hold their
own with the sekasha.
The tall, leggy Briggs wore her clingy black outfit that
looked like wet paint, and slid in and out of the shadows with
feline grace. A Batman utility belt with small mystery packs had
been added to her ensemble, slung low on her hips, holstering her
exotic long barreled handgun. Tinker couldn't tell if Briggs was
now flaunting her weapon, or just displaying the one that was
impossible to conceal.
Corg Durrack had a boyish face and the body of a comic
book hero. He carried his usual peace offering of a white wax
paper bag, which he held out Tinker with grin. "Your favorite."
"I'll be the judge." Tinker opened to the bag to find her
favorite cookies – chocolate frosting thumbprint cookies
from Jenny Lee. "This is spooky. How did you know?"
"It's our job to know." Durrack winked.
Briggs scoffed at this, and drifted back into the darkness.
"So what's our little mad scientist up to now?" Durrack
settled down beside Tinker's chair where Windwolf had been a
short time before. The searchlight flashed the work area with
brightness as it cycled through the short message.
Tinker stuck her tongue out at him. "You know, I thought
Maynard kicked you two out of
Pittsburgh
months ago."
"You were only the top of our to-do list. It took 24 hours of
negotiations, but we stayed in this mud hole after the last
Shutdown."
She laughed at the look of disgust on Durrack's face. "You
don't like our fair city?"
"This isn't our world and the elves seem determined to
remind us of that every chance they get. Besides its like getting
stuck in a time warp;
Pittsburgh
is missing a lot of the simple conveniences of home.
The television sucks here. And I would kill for Starbucks."
"Starbucks?" Tinker said. "Sounds Elvish. Who is he?"
Durrack gave her an odd look.
"What else is on your to-do list?" Tinker asked.
"Little of this, little of that." Durrack said. "Gather
intelligence."
"In
Pittsburgh
?"
"You're got five or six races stuffed under one roof, it
makes for lots of secrets floating around."
"How do you get six?"
Corg ticked them off on his fingers. "The elves, the humans,
the oni, the tengu, the mixed bloods, and now a dragon –
which the tengu say is a sentient being."
The searchlight fell dark, dropping them into blackness.
Tinker wasn't sure why, but she found it annoying that the
NSA had apparently talked to the tengu about the dragon. "I
didn't know you were so friendly with the tengu."
"Politics has nothing to do with friendship." Durrack's voice
came out of the darkness. "It's doing whatever you have to do to
protect what's yours.
Pittsburgh
might be under U.N. control, but its people are
Americans and it's our duty to protect them."
"You realize the tengu lie."
"Everyone lies."
"The elves don't. They see it as dishonorable."
"They might not lie, but they dance around the truth. Like
yesterday, during that little encounter you had with the tree. You
analyze the events and it's fairly clear that the Stone Clan tried to
kill you. Forest Moss withheld his support until you were
captured by the tree, and the building you should have landed in
collapsed for no apparent reason."
"I know."
"He made elegant excuses why he was so slow, but it was all
bullshit. He wanted that tree to kill you."
"I know. You don't have to rub it in."
"Are they trying to keep you from building another gate? If
there is a way to travel back and forth between
Pittsburgh
and Earth, the treaty stays intact."
She hadn't considered that as the reason why the Stone Clan
wanted her eliminated. "Nothing I could build would transport
the entire city."
"At this point, I'd take a trapdoor back to Earth."
Tinker laughed. "And I'm not sure I can really build a gate
that works right. Look at the mess I made with this one."
The searchlight flared on, bathing the discontinuity with
brilliance.
"Is it getting bigger?" Durrack asked.
Tinker nodded. "And oni are coming through it."
"Yeah, I saw the kappa you pulled out. The oni are sick
puppies to warp their people into monsters like that. You know,
the more I find out about the oni, the more I think the elves are
right in wiping them out. The problem is collateral damage."
"I don't think the tengu are all that bad." Tinker whispered
what she hadn't had the courage to say to Windwolf.
"The tengu aren't oni." Durrack said. "They were mountain
tribes of humans living on Onihida, descendants of people that
ended up there by mistake. The story goes that half of them were
killed on a battlefield trying to resist the oni, and the true blood
that defeated them merged the survivors with the carrion crows
that been feeding on their fathers and brothers. Twisted little tale,
isn't it?"
"But it is true?"
"Their DNA supports the claim."
The searchlight finished its cycle and dropped them into
silent darkness.
If the story was true, then the tengu had been screwed from
the very start, the moment their ancestors lost their way and fell
from Earth.
"I'm going to do everything I can to protect the humans of
Pittsburgh
," Tinker said. "But I don't know what I can do for the
tengu."
"From what I've seen, there's not much anyone can do for
the tengu."
* * *
"How long are we going to do this?" Durrack asked an hour
later, when darkness fell over them yet again.
"Until the lightbulbs burn out, my husband loses his
patience, I figure out something better – or they answer
us."
"Want to bet which happens first?"
"My bet is that they answer us, or the bulbs burns out. The
lifespan of these bulbs are rated at a thousand hours, but there's
no telling how many hours they have left."
"And there are no replacements bulbs?" Durrack guessed.
"Nope, not unless Earth can sling them through the
Ghostlands."
"Are we going to be able to tell if they're answering us?"
"I have a collection of detecting devices aimed at the valley
to catch heat, light, sound and motion."
"Where are you aiming the spotlights?"
"At the buildings. I'm not sure if the air over the valley is
part of the discontinuity, so I'm not positive if light passing
through it will be visible on another dimension. The buildings
though, will either reflect the light or absorb it, which in theory
make them more visible on all dimensions, either way –
but I could be wrong."
"This just seems so basic. If it could work, then Earth
should have –"
Blue slashed upwards, out of the darkness, pulsing in the
rhythm of Morse Code.
"They're responding!" Tinker scrambled to kill her
transmission program. Her detectors were already translating the
flashes.
Calling S1, this is S2, listening.
"It's Earth!" she said.
"You don't know that. Here." Durrack nudged her away
from the keyboard. "This is where I come in –
remember?"
The searchlights flashed quickly through code and then went
dark.
"What are you saying?" Tinker asked.
"I'm requesting verification. It might take them a while to
dig someone up that can answer... or they might have someone
standing by.
Fort
Meade isn't that far from the
Pittsburgh
border."
The valley went dark and then a reply blazed back.
"Someone standing by?" Tinker asked.
"No, they want to know if
Pittsburgh
is safe on Elfhome."
"Depends on your definition of safe."
Durrack laughed and typed. "I'm repeating my request. Never
give info unless you're sure of who is listening."
"Most likely the oni on Onihida can see this."
"Exactly."
* * *
Wolf returned to his domi to find her looking
unhappy.
"What is it?"
"We've verified we're talking to Earth. The gate is gone, just
like we thought. Pittsburgh
is stranded."
"You are still communicating?"
"We're comparing notes – seeing if we can use the
Ghostlands to our advantage, or close it up somehow. From the
sounds of it, though, Earth is still fighting over who has
jurisdiction."
A runner from Poppymeadow threaded his way through the
sekasha to hold out a piece of paper. "A distant voice
came from Aum Renau, relayed from Court."
Wolf took the folded paper, opened it, and read the five
English words within: Follow the yellow brick road. He
frowned at the message and flipped the paper over, hoping for
more. No. That was it.
"What does it say?" Tinker asked.
He handed it to her. "It's from the Pure Radiance. I sent
word to the intanyei seyosa caste asking for help with
your dreams. I don't understand this."
"Follow the yellow brick road? Follow the yellow brick
road? Just point the sucker out and I will. So far, I hadn't found
any road—bricked yellow or otherwise—
figuratively, literally, allegorically."
"You understand it?"
"No!" She sighed deeply. "But it looks like I have to figure it
out."
Chapter 19: Snakes, Snails & Puppy-Dog Tails
Tinker kicked the blackened remains of the willow tree. It
had died on the waterfront, leaving a burnt trail from the
warehouse. Several buildings along its path had scorch marks
where the burning tree had brushed up against them while
staggering toward the river.
"Okay, let's take it from the top. We're off to see the wizard,
the wonderful wizard of Oz."
"Because?" Pony asked.
"Because – because –because—
because." Tinker didn't know. Did she ever know?
"Because of the wonderful things he does," Stormsong
deadpanned.
Tinker glared at her. "In the dream, the yellow brick road led
to the willow trees." She gave the tree another kick. "Which
threw apples at us. Esme told me to follow the fruit to find the
wizard – which is the dragon."
She followed the black path of soot and cinders back toward
the warehouse. "Lain gave me one of the seeds, but I couldn't
figure out anything interesting with it. Most of the times it
doesn't even wriggle. So obviously fruit is something else.
Whatever it is, it will lead us to the dragon. The dragon is the
desired end product – not the fruit."
"I am not sure it would be wise to face the dragon again."
Pony said. "We barely survived the last fight."
"I know, I know, I know. Riki did say that it needs magic to
become sentient, and once it used me to tap the spell stones, it
–" She paused. "Wait. Riki said that the oni messed with
the spell to trap the dragon. What if the 'fruit' is just magic?"
"In the movie," Stormsong said. "The apples were gathered
up by Dorothy, the scarecrow, and the tin man."
"No, the tin man came in during the apple scene, Dorothy
was picking—" Tinker stopped with sudden realization.
"Oh, gods, Oilcan! He was hauling the overflow cans away
– when was the last time anyone saw him?"
"The day we watched the movie," Pony said. "Wednesday."
Neither Oilcan or the flatbed had been at the junk yard on
Friday. He had left two days of newspapers in the drive. Feeling
sick, she fumbled with her phone, picking his number off her
address book. His phone rang three times and dropped to voice
mail. Trying not to panic, she called the scrap yard and then his
apartment, getting only voice mail. Where had he taken the
barrels? Had he said? No, just that he had to dump them. Where
could he have taken them? They had gone through nearly a
hundred barrels before she got the spell repaired—a
massive pool of magic to dump haphazardly, but
Pittsburgh
had lots of big empty places. Still, the barrels and the
steel filings represented a good bit of money once the magic
leached out – so he would probably leave them on land
that they owned. That left one place – the barn.
She dialed the land line to the barn. She expected his
machine to pick up after three rings, but it continued ringing. She
clung to the phone, whispering, "Oh, please answer."
On the twelfth ring, the phone clattered off the hook, and
Oilcan said breathlessly, "Yeah?"
"Oh thank gods, are you all right?"
"I'm fine. What's wrong?"
She laughed, not even sure where to start on that question.
"Did you take the barrels from Rienholds to the barn?"
"Yeah, they're here."
"Look, I think you're in a lot of danger. I want you to leave
the barn."
"What's going on, Tink?"
"It's all rather complicated. I think my dreams are telling me
to trap the dragon and do something with it."
"Trap it?"
"Yeah, the barrels are the fruit." That sounded sane! "Look,
you're in danger there. Just go home and let me deal with it."
There was only silence from Oilcan.
"Are you okay?" Tinker asked again.
"I'm kind of in the middle of the something. You know
– I don't want to mess with the flow. Why don't you
come out and we'll talk about what has gone down since
Wednesday."
Wednesday. Nathan died Wednesday. Did Oilcan know? If
he didn't, she didn't want to tell him over the phone – not
that she really wanted to tell him face to face, either.
"Okay, I'll see you in a couple of minutes."
* * *
Oilcan used a barn deep in the South Hills as a retreat. Just
as she tinkered on machines, he played with art. It was a side of
him that few people saw, as he seemed to think it revealed too
much of his soul. Sometimes he welded bits and pieces taken
from the scrap yard into mechanical ogres, other times he painted
dark and abstract murals. Those he kept at his retreat and only
friends got to see. She knew he kept journals with poetry that he
never showed anyone, not even her. The only form of his art that
he shared was music he composed, a fusion of traditional elfin
music with snarling, angry human rock; that he didn't perform
but sold to local bands under the penname of Orphan.
Art wasn't something that Tinker had patience for. She liked
computer logic of true or false, knowing if something worked or
didn't with a flip of a switch or a turn of a key. She could help
Oilcan animate his ogres, but she could never see why the
sculpture had to take a certain form, or move in a certain way, or
make a certain sound. She couldn't perceive what made one piece
"right" despite how many times Oilcan tried to explain it.
It was mid-morning when they drove up the driveway lined
with wild lilac bushes. The flatbed was parked in the apple
orchard, its bed littered with fallen apples. Across the road, the
magic gleamed purple in the shadows of the tractor shed, stuffed
full with the barrels.
Tinker had debated bringing two Hands with her. She wanted
a small army between her and the dragon, but in the end, she
decided that if Oilcan was fine, that most likely she was wrong
about the barrels. Certainly, it was a stretch in logic to get from
the black willow to the barn.
"Not that there's any real logic involved in this," she
complained as she parked the Rolls away from both apples and
magic. It had been easier to drive than constantly interrupt her
thoughts to give directions. "It would be simpler to believe that
the oni drove me stark raving mad than all this dream hocus
pocus."
"You are not mad." Pony got out, taking point.
"My mother would have not directed us to 'follow the
yellow brick road' if you were only mad." Stormsong kept close
to Tinker as they headed for the large barn doors.
Denial, the most misshapen of Oilcan's animated ogres,
lurched out of the lilacs. It moaned out its low recording of
"nooo, nooo, nooo," as it wrung its crooked arms around its
deformed head.
Instantly her guard had all weapons out and leveled at the
mechanical sculpture.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa!" Tinker cried. "Don't shoot it!"
"What is it, domi?" Pony kept his machine gun
trained on it.
"It's a sculpture," she said.
Denial folded back down, stretching out a third hand
stretched to grasp in their direction. The guards backed up,
unnerved by the thing as its recording changed to a wordless
keening.
"It does not look like art to me." Pony reluctantly slung his
gun onto his back and motioned to the others to stand down.
"Well," Tinker admitted, "sometimes it doesn't seem that
much like art to me, either, but that's what it is."
She pointed out the motion sensor by the door; Pony had
tripped it as he moved ahead of her. "That activates it, though,
that's new. I wonder..."
The big door rolled open, and Oilcan called, "Hey!" in
greeting.
"Hey," she said back. "What's with Denial?"
"Just using him as a doorbell." He eyed the guards with their
hands still riding their weapons. "Can – can we leave
them here? I don't want them shooting anything by mistake."
Considering what else he had in the way of art, Tinker didn't
blame him. She held up a hand to her sekasha. "Stay."
The
sekasha peered into the barn. The back door was
rolled the full way open, flooding the cluttered floor with light.
They didn't look happy, but stayed put outside while Oilcan
rolled the door shut.
"You really have to leave." Tinker followed him through the
clutter. From the looks of it, he'd been camping out here for the
last few days. "This might be a total longshot, but its really
dangerous here if I'm right. What did you do to your answering
machine?"
Oilcan glanced down at the dissembled unit, the parts
carefully arrayed on a blank canvas like a piece of art. "Ah, it got
taken apart. What are you going to do with the dragon?"
She groaned as she hadn't considered that far ahead. "Gods if
I know! He's the wizard of Oz."
"And that means?"
"Riki – Riki wove this whole theory that sounded so
right about the dragon being the wizard, but it just hit me
– Riki lied and lied about so much. Yeah, so his reasons
were good, but he has this history of twisting things to suit his
goals."
Thinking of Riki, she pulled the player out of her pocket.
"Here. Riki says he's sorry."
As Oilcan stood looking at the player, the oni dragon snaked
out of the shadows to stop beside Oilcan. Its eyes gleamed in the
dimness, its mane flowing like a bundle of snakes.
"
Yanananam mmmoooootaaaa summbaaaa
radadada," the dragon said with a deep breathy voice, the
words rumbling against her skin like the purr of a big engine.
"Aaaaah huuu ha."
"Oh shit!" Tinker jerked back, fumbling for the pistol on her
hip.
"It's okay!" Oilcan held up his hands to ward off her action.
"He won't hurt you. He's friendly."
"Friendly?"
"Yeah, see?" Oilcan patted the huge head butting up against
him. "He scared the shit out of me. But he talked – and
– well – I listened."
She backed up regardless, wanting distance between her and
it. "You can understand it?"
"Actually – no."
"Mmmananan pooooo kaaa."
It was weird to watch such a huge thing speaking, but there
was no mistaking the rumble of syllables and consonants for
anything but language.
"So you have no idea what's it's saying."
"No." Oilcan shrugged with a sheepish grin. "Sorry. But
come here, look at this."
After the surprise of the dragon, Tinker wasn't sure she
wanted to see what else he had to show her. Oilcan walked down
the stone steps to be what used to the milking stalls. The dragon
glanced back and forth between her and Oilcan. Apparently
realizing that they were all to follow Oilcan, it finally bounded
after him. Despite its short legs, and ferret-like humping run, its
gait remained fluid.
"We've been working at communicating," Oilcan was
saying. "We finally resorted to drawing. It's been –
educational."
In the back was a little dragon nest complete with rumpled
blankets, a barrel of drinking water, and a large dog dish of well
chewed bones. Drawings covered the walls. She recognized
Oilcan's hand in the ones done in chalk. Scratched into the wall,
the dragon's pictures were fluid and elegant and
incomprehensible.
"Educational? Really?" she asked after several minutes of
trying to understand the alien pictograms.
"It's just so different how he sees the world. Here," he
pointed out his map of
Pittsburgh, with the
two rivers converging to make the
Ohio River, and the many skyscrapers and bridges. "After I drew this,
he made this."
Less stylistic than the other dragon drawings, it was a series
of wavering lines, some lightly etched and others deeply gouged.
She studied it for a moment, keenly aware of the huge monster
shifting beside them. It seemed completely random, but she
trusted Oilcan's intelligence. If he said this meant something, it
did. If the dragon recognized Oilcan's
Pittsburgh
– was this how he saw the city? It was the
deep pit on the North side, roughly at the location of Reinholds
that triggered the recognition. "He's drawn the ley lines."
"Yes. I think it was the magic in the barrels that drew him
here." Oilcan pointed out a blank area of the wall. "And look at
this."
"At wh—?"
The dragon nosed her aside – jolting her heart into a
fierce pounding—and raised a long, sharp claw to the
wall. In a nerve-grating rasp, it lightly sketched a dot at the center
of Turtle Creek and radial lines outward, carefully linking the
radials up to existing ley lines. The dragon glanced up at her,
making sure she was watching, and then flattened its great paw
and smudged away the dot and lines, creating the same blank
space.
"There's no magic." She whispered.
"Tooloo has always said the dragons can't exist without
magic." Oilcan absently scratched the dragon's jaw, getting a deep
purr-like rumble from it.
"So as long as we keep him saturated in magic, he's safe."
"Yeah."
Tinker thought of the barrels stacked in the tractor shed.
They represent a huge pool of magic, but a leaky one, draining
away. "He can't stay here, then. I have no idea how long the
magic will last from the barrels, but it's an artificial environment.
Sooner or later, it's going to be drained."
"Yeah, I know."
"Oilcan! This isn't some stray dog. Look what I found,
Grandpa, can I keep it? It didn't work with the warg puppy."
"This isn't a warg, this is an intelligent being that can talk,
and create art, and communicate. Look!" He pointed out set of
small pictures. "It has a written language!"
"How do you know? That could be – be –
anything!"
He gave her an annoyed look. "Did it or did it not just
communicate something meaningful to you?"
She sighed. "Yes."
The sekasha were just going to love this.
* * *
"What?" Stormsong asked for about the third time in the
row when Tinker updated the sekasha on the current plan.
"We need to move the dragon to the scrap yard. It's got a
strong ley line running through it, so the dragon will stay sentient
there. But the flatbed is a double clutch manual transmission, so
if none of you can drive manual, then I'm going to have to
–"
Stormsong caught her by the hand, dragged her to the side of
the barn into the old apple orchard.
"Hey, hey, hey, what are you doing?" Tinker cried.
"What am I doing?" Stormsong snatched up an apple and
flung it at Tinker. "What am I doing?"
The apple smacked the barn wall, blossoming into a flower
of rotten sweetness unnervingly close to Tinker's head.
"What fucking part of that don't you understand?" Tinker
shouted at her.
"You – are – too – trusting!"
Stormsong flung apples to emphasize her words – one
apple per word. They whizzed past Tinker so closely she felt their
passage. "And – too—slow—at –
putting – up – your—shields."
There was now a halo of spattered fruit outlining Tinker.
"I get the point! I get the point!" Tinker called up her shield.
"See, shield! Happy?"
"Happy?" Stormsong snorted, picked an apple from the tree
instead of the ground, and polished it against her black jeans until
it gleamed with promise. "Here!" She tossed the apple in a lazy
arc toward Tinker.
Tinker moved her hands to catch the apple and her shield
vanished.
"You're – too— trusting!"
The first apple hit Tinker in the shoulder in a painful
splatter. The second and third were intercepted mid-air by other
apples so that they exploded in front of her, spraying her with
apple bits.
"Stop it." Pony had another apple ready. Part of Tinker was
impressed that he could knock apples out of the air – the
other part wanted to know where the hell he was for the first
volley. "She is the domi. She leads us."
"She's going to get herself killed!" Stormsong growled.
"What she says is true," Pony said. "The dragon can not stay
here. The truck is the only vehicle that will carry it. She and
Oilcan are the only ones that know how to drive it – and
he will be focused on keeping the creature calm. The fewer
people we involve in moving the beast, the less likely the oni will
learn that we have it."
"How can you support this plan?"
"The domana's self-centered creativity is why we
chose to obey them. We need their drive. Trust her, she will make
it work."
"Or die trying." Stormsong muttered. "This is insanity."
"Is it? We have the scarecrow." Pony pointed at Tinker and
then tapped his chest. "The lion. The tin man." He pointed at
Oilcan's metal sculpture. "And the apple trees." He held up the
apple in his hand. "And the apples being thrown at the
scarecrow."
Stormsong's eyes went wide.
"There, see!" Tinker cried. "It's crazy with a purpose."
"And that is supposed to make me feel better?" Stormsong
snarled. "What are you going to do with dragon now that you
found him?"
Tinker held up her finger, indicating they were to wait, and
pulled out her datapad. "Give me a few minutes. I've been
keeping notes on the dreams. Off hand, I don't remember
anything. Wait—how about this – Esme said 'he
knows the paths, the twisted way, the garden path. You have to
talk to him. He'll tell you the way.'"
"The way? To where."
"Obviously where I need to go."
* * *
It was like having a very large, hyper-active five year
old in her workshop. The dragon flowed in and out of the various
rooms of the trailer, carrying on a running commentary in its
rumbling voice, as it examined everything with its massive but
manipulative paws. After rescuing her scanner, their radio base,
and antique CD player, Tinker realized what happened to Oilcan's
answering machine and started to fear.
"Okay, okay, I think first thing in communicating would be
– to – get a record of what it's saying." She
snatched her camera from the dragon before he could dissemble
it. She flipped out her tripod, snapped the camera to it, and
caught Cloudwalker by the hand and dragged him to the camera.
"Here, keep the dragon – the dragon's image – in
this little window." Great, she was actually dealing with two
groups of technology-challenged people. "And we'll build a
dictionary of his words."
"I was trying to do that." Oilcan distracted the dragon from
her computer systems with a flashlight. "But usually it's hard to
tell where one word starts and another ends."
"...mmmenananannaaaaaaapoooookaaaammmammamamyyyyyya
aanananammmmoooo...." The dragon rumbled while
clicking the flashlight on and off, and then dissembled it and
sniffed at the batteries.
"Yeah, I can hear that." Tinker had microphones planted in
the offices so she could trigger her computers without a headset.
"Sparks
, are you active?"
"Yes, boss." Her office AI answered.
"Filter audio pick up into separate voice prints and put it up
on the workshop screen."
"Okay, boss."
As she hoped Impatience's ramblings easily divided out. "
Sparks
, record this track." She tapped the bass rumbles of the
dragon's voice. "Convert to phonetics and indicate all pauses and
breaks."
Impatience stuffed the batteries back into the casing,
screwed on the lid and tried the switch. When the flashlight didn't
light, the dragon took it back apart and eyed the pieces carefully.
Apparently it had spotted the "this way up" diagram stamped on
the plastic as it eyed the batteries closely, repacked them into the
casing and turned it on. This time it was rewarded with a beam of
light. "Huuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuu."
One word down.
"Okay." Tinker pulled up the recordings she had made of
Turtle Creek and directed them to her largest monitor. "Since I
don't have a clue how I'm suppose to help my mother, let's see
what he has to say about my biggest problem: the Ghostlands."
* * *
The great Westinghouse
Bridge
had fallen. The Ghostlands had lapped up against
the center most support column and toppled it. Two of its four
great arching spans now lay in ruins on the valley floor, slowly
leeching to blue. The remaining two spans would soon follow.
Wolf gazed down at the ruin, trying to not to let dismay
overtake him. "There's nothing you can do?"
Jewel Tears glared at the valley as if it personally defied her.
"Not in time. At the rate it's expanding, it will involve the main
river shortly."
She meant the Monongahela River,
which flowed past the mouth of the Turtle Creek.
"The creek froze solid," Wolf said. "You don't think river
will freeze?"
"If I understand this correctly, the worlds are mirror
images." Jewel pointed out at the river. "Where there is a river
here, there is one on Onihida?"
"Yes."
"I can't predict what will happen when the force of the river
meets this, but what I fear is that the oni can make use of it. As
they are now, the Ghostlands are a deathtrap. The forces are
funneling downward, like the pit of ant lion. The river might
allow the oni to pass unchecked through the Ghostlands."
"How soon?"
"Only a few more days." She turned away from the
Ghostlands and him. "Something has to be done. They say your
domi can work miracles. Since this is her fault, it would
be good for her to fix her mistake."
Yes, he needed to talk to Tinker. He had faith that once she
was given opportunity to study the situation, she would find a
solution. He brought a second Hand just so he could have one of
the sekasha "baby" along to operate the walkie-talkie.
"Find out where domi is," Wolf said to Wraith and turned
back to Jewel Tears. "I want Stone Clan to keep their distance
from my domi. After what happened with the black willow, I do
not trust any of you near her."
Jewel Tears looked away, giving a slight huff of indignation
but didn't deny the implication that they meant Tinker harm.
Wraith came back with unease clear on his face. Wolf
bowed his leave taking and headed for his Rolls.
"What is it?" Wolf asked Wraith once they were out of the
Stone Clan's hearing.
"Domi is at the scrap yard. The dragon is there."
Wolf's heart leap at the news. "She's fighting the dragon?"
"No. Apparently, she's—talking – to it."
* * *
"No, I'm not talking to it." Tinker said with much disgust in
her voice. She smelled of apples, butter and sugar, and her face
had mysterious streaks of color paste on it – but
otherwise she looked unharmed. "It's giving me math lessons
– and I think my head is going to explode."
"Math lessons?" There were times he wondered if his
English wasn't as strong as he thought it was.
His domi's workshop was normally ordered chaos,
but it now looked like a storm front had passed through it. The
digital wall boards were covered with elaborate designs and fluid
pictures. Print outs were tacked to bare walls, extending the
boards to each side and up onto the ceiling. A television cycled
through pictures of the Ghostlands. Machines either half built, or
partially dissembled covered all the table surfaces and the floor
was littered with magazines, engine parts, and chewed tires.
The only sign of the dragon itself was its long tail sticking
out from behind the worktable, thumping against the floor with a
force that shook the entire trailer.
"I think its math." Tinker tugged at her hair as if she wanted
to tear it out. "Whoever said math is the universal language
should be hunted down and shot. Or maybe they thought that
sentient creatures wouldn't have the attention span of a gnat."
"So you're safe with it?"
Tinker glanced toward Stormsong instead of the dragon for
some reason. "I – don't know. It seems playful as a
puppy, but it has sharp teeth – lots of them – in a
big mouth."
Wolf shifted sideways until he could see around the table.
Tinker's nagarou, Oilcan, and the dragon stared at a
television screen while they manipulated something in their
hands. On the television screen, a small human female in a
skimpy red dress fought a tall muscle bound creature with
energetic kicks and punches. The fight ended abruptly with the
words WINNER flashing on the screen and the female bouncing
around cheerfully. Oilcan groaned and slumped to one side.
"He – he learns fast." Tinker shook her head. "I've
never met anyone that intimidated me with their intellect before
– but I always thought that the person that did would be
more —"
"Human?"
Tinker waved her hand, as if trying to sift out a better word,
and then nodded. "I suppose that would work. The language is a
huge barrier to understanding what's he's trying to explain to
me."
"Have you learned anything useful?"
"This was educational." Tinker caught Wolf's arm and
pulled him to the kitchen. On the counter was an odd sculpture.
A rainbow of creamy paste whirled upwards like a tornado with
paper plates dividing the various colors. It was supported by a
silvery aluminum plate, which had been balanced on a base of
soda cans.
The paste was the source of the color streaks on Tinker's
face, and the smell of butter and sugar. Wolf smeared some off
her face. "And this is...?"
"Frosting. Long story. Doesn't matter anymore. This,"
Tinker pointed to the structure. "I think this is a model of the
Ghostlands. Look he's sculptured the frosting into a Roy G. Biv
spectrum and at each color shift there's a universe marker
– the paper plates. Well—at least I think that's
what they are."
Tinker took out a camera from her dress pocket, and flipped
up the screen. "I filmed it all." She played a minute of the dragon
building the sculpture, rumbling in a low steady tone. "What we
need is someone that speaks dragon. But, until then –"
she folded the camera back up and stuffed it into her dress
pocket. "This is what I think it's trying to tell me. Look, can you
see down into the middle of this? He made a big production of
dropping a lug nut down into there, and did a lot of pointing and
talking. He took it out and dropped it a couple of times. And then
the math started. I think— he's trying—maybe
– to say that my gate is still active."
"Can you stop the Ghostlands from expanding?"
"If I can figure out a way to remove my gate, yes, I think it
might close the Ghostlands completely. What I think is happening
is this." She dragged him to the whiteboard.
Tinker swept her hand across dragon writing and the English
words 'save: yes no' appeared. She touched the 'yes' and the board
went white. Drawing a straight horizon line, she turned to him.
"This is Turtle Creek before the chaos started. According to
Stormsong, when you originally surveyed this area a hundred
years ago, there was a fiutana here," she added a large
purple oval under the line. "Now Lord Tomtom talked about
protective spells that the oni had cloaking their compound, so I
think this is why the oni were based here – which almost
might indicate where their other camps are and why you can't
find them."
Yes, that would explain much. "If the other springs in the
area are cloaked, then we know that the oni are using them. Look
for what is missing instead of what is there."
"Huh? Oh, yes, that would work. Now, my gate was here."
She drew in a black circle above the line, and then added a second
black circle at the bottom of the board. "And that's the gate in
orbit. I set up a resonance between then." The resonance was
represented by a wavy line connecting the two black circles that
ran through the heart of the purple spring oval. "I think what
Impatience is telling me is that along this line, a discontinuity
emerged, which immediately affected the land under my gate."
She turned and typed on a keyboard. The television which
had been cycling pictures of Turtle Creek stopped on a blur of
blue. "This is thermal readings of the discontinuity. It's hard to
see, but this area here." She tapped a circle at the heart of the
screen. "That's the same size and shape as my gate, lying on its
side."
Tinker turned back to the white board, and drew a series of
black circles stacked inside the pool of purple. "See, as it sinks,
the area affected by the gate would expand." She stepped back
from the board, gazing at it. "I'm not a hundred percent sure this
is an accurate model, but it explains why the effect is growing."
"Even though the gate in orbit was destroyed?"
"Each gate was designed to operate independently."
"So if we remove the gate, the discontinuity will heal?"
Tinker sighed. "I don't know. If I'm right, and we can get the
gate out, it will at least stop the Ghostlands from growing."
Wolf considered what Jewel Tears claimed about the current
forces working in the valley. "That would be good enough for
now. We need to do something quickly."
"Well, I'm not getting anything done here." She picked up
various items and slipped them into her pocket. "I can get to
work on the retrieval now."
Chapter 20: Follow The Yellow
Brick Road
Stone Clan chose to wait until the next morning to protest
Wind Clan's actions. Wolf wasn't sure why they had delayed, so
he stood and listened to Earth Son rant on about protocol and
etiquette.
"Wind Clan is insulting us at every step. Look," Earth Son
pointed up the tall iron wood scaffolding to where Tinker stood,
overseeing the installation of her scrap yard crane. Little Horse
was up in the scaffolding with her, but the rest of her Hand were
keeping to the ground. "Wind Clan's domi hasn't come
down to hear our complaints."
Wolf made a show of glancing around. "We did not know
this was to be a formal aumani. I see the rock, but where
is the incense and the flame?"
Wolf surprised True Flame into a smile, but the prince
caught himself and gave him a hard look.
"Do we need to call an aumani?" True Flame's look
warned him not to make light of it.
Wolf spread his hands to show that he didn't know. "Jewel
Tears came to me and stated that the Stone Clan could not solve
this problem before—"
"It was not her place to make that decision!" Earth Son
snapped. "I will say when the Stone Clan can or can not do
something."
Wolf glanced at Jewel Tears but she had her court mask on,
letting none of her emotions show. There was no way to judge if
this was an honest miscommunication within the Stone Clan, or
a contrived situation. If it was the later, then politically it had
been a mistake to act.
Wolf would have to salvage the situation by forcing True
Flame to disregard political protocol for the sake of military
imperative. "If the information she gave us was accurate, then
what is important is that the oni are prevented from using the
Ghostlands –"
"Are you saying that I'm lying?" Earth Son seemed eager for
Wolf to slander him.
Wolf considered Earth Son for a minute. Was he that blind
to the dangers that they were facing? "I'm saying that there are
tens of thousands of oni and an oni dragon on the other side of
the Ghostlands, and it would be good to keep them there."
Earth Son waved that concern aside. "Your untrained
domi and her Hand survived the first dragon."
"Do not mistake that creature for a true oni dragon." True
Flame had studied Impatience at Tinker's workshop. The prince
pointed out that not only was the 'dragon' much smaller than the
creatures he fought; it also had one more digit per foot.
Tinker theorized that since the spell painted onto
Impatience's scales had been washed or rubbed away, the dragon
might be free from the oni's control. Regardless, they still didn't
know how to cage or effectively fight the beast. All options
weighed, it was decided to leave the creature in Oilcan's care as
an ally instead of treating it as a foe. According to the tengu,
however, and confirmed by some mysterious means by the NSA
agents, there was a second, larger dragon by the name of Malice
still on Onihida. Plans to update the Stone Clan on the dragons,
however, had been waylaid by Earth Son's attack on Tinker's
operation.
Wolf pushed the conversation back to the military
implications. "Jewel Tears stated that if the Ghostlands expand to
the river, there will be a shift in forces that will allow the oni to
push their army through."
Jewel Tears' mask slipped and she gave him a look of pure
hatred.
Earth Son scoffed. "They'll be pinned between the river and
the Ghostlands. With five domana, seventy sekasha, the
dreadnaught and the royal troops, we can easily deal with the oni
as they emerge..."
True Flame lost his patience. "If the oni send a dragon
across first, we will be too engaged with it to block the oni. We
will do whatever it takes to close the Ghostlands before anything
more can come through."
Earth Son recognized that he was threading on an edge with
the prince and retreated with, "I am not saying we ignore the
Ghostlands. I am saying that this is a Stone Clan specialty..."
"Are you being hampered by the Wind Clan domi?"
True Flame snapped. "She will not be using magic, since, as you
pointed out, she is untrained."
Earth Son smoothed his face to court mask to consider his
options. Finally he said, "No, we will not be hampered."
True Flame nodded and turned to Wolf. "Have you found
the maps?"
"Yes. There are four possible sites not counting the
fiutana that was located here and the one at the ice house."
"What maps?" Earth Son growled.
"My domi believes that the oni are camping on
fiutana. I had my people pull up the original survey maps for
this area, showing the fiutana."
"Have you scryed out any fiutana?" True Flame
asked Earth Son.
"No."
They waited for Earth Son to elaborate, but he didn't.
Behind them were shouts and the crack of splintering wood.
Wolf turned to see a massive oni dragon surge up out of the
Ghostlands. It shouldered aside the scaffolding, shattering it to
pieces. Tinker and Little Horse were falling from their high
perch. Little Horse had been near the ladder and was falling with
the tumble of heavy timbers. Tinker, though, had been far out at
end of the boom, over the liquid blue.
"No!" Wolf shouted as a call on the Wind Clan Spell Stones
thrummed across his senses.
Tinker hit the ground, sending up a spray of blue, and then
sank down into the ground. Ripples spread out from where she
disappeared. And then all sense of her vanished. The Ghostland
went smooth and her call to the stones broke off abruptly.
"Wolf!" Stormsong struggled with Little Horse, who had
fallen to the "shore" of the Ghostlands and was now trying to
fling himself into the blue. "Stop him! He'll only die! She's gone
already."
Wolf gasped, feeling her words stab through him. No,
Tinker couldn't be gone.
The dragon scrambled out of the blue, clawing up the shore
with feet as large as the Rolls Royce. It shook dirt from its
massive head, growling low and loud as thunder. Its seemingly
endless body heaved up out of the chaos.
"Wolf!" Stormsong had Little Horse pinned but it left her
vulnerable to the dragon now turning its attention to the small
figures at its feet.
Wolf called the wind. The dragon's head whipped toward
him as if it sensed the magic gathering around Wolf. He aimed a
force strike on the dragon and flung the spell at the beast. As the
magic arrowed at the dragon, it crouched low and its mane lifted.
A shield effect shimmered into existence. The force strike
slammed into the shield and was swallowed up.
Jewel Tears flung up a force wall between the dragon and
the elves, curving it to include Stormsong and Little Horse. A
fire strike from True Flame hit the dragon's shield, the blaze
curled harmless around it.
The dragon sprang away, landing among the rubble of the
fallen bridge.
Wolf started to summon lightening when it leaped again,
landing this time on the far section of the bridge still standing,
high above the valley. A third leap took it out of sight.
Since the call lightening spell took both hands, he couldn't
cast a scrying spell.
Beside him, Jewel Tears cast a ground scry. "It took flight. I
can't track it through the air."
True Flame cast his more inclusive, weaker scry of flame.
"It's out of your range already, Wolf."
Wolf locked his jaw against a growl of impatience, forcing
himself to remain silent as he canceled the lightening call. The
spell was too dangerous to leave in a potential state. The power
neutralized, he started to call the winds to fly after the dragon.
True Flame caught Wolf's wrist, stilling his hand. "No, I
will not allow you to fight it alone. It's too dangerous."
"It killed my domi!" Wolf snarled.
"No." Stormsong dragged Little Horse up to Wolf, as if she
was afraid to let the young sekasha go. "Domi's
on the yellow brick road." Stormsong's eyes were soft and
dreamy. "She's talked to the wizard. She's gone now to steal the
flying broomstick from the witch and the flying monkeys."
* * *
Tinker fell into the cold blue air. She shouted the trigger to
her shields seconds before plunging into the dark blue mass of
out-of-phase ground. The blue deepened to midnight black, and
then all sensation fell away, as if she had no longer had a body.
Was she dead? She had felt the shields form around her in a flood
of magic, and the deepening cold of the Ghostlands, but now she
sensed nothing.
Suddenly, something hit her from her left. Startled, she lost
her shields, and she smacked into a flat, hard surface and then slid
down it, to land hard on something horizontal to
whatever she struck. Pain shot up from her left leg. She lay
panting in darkness. The air was hot, dry, and tainted with smoke.
Nearby, water gurgled through unseen pipes. A distant
hammering was muffled as if carried through a thick wall.
What had she hit first? Sliding her hand along the smooth
floor, she found a right angle that rose up in a wall of steel. But
how did she hit a wall sideways when she'd been falling down?
And where was she now?
She sat up and pain jolted up her leg again. Wincing, she felt
down to her ankle and discovered that she was bleeding. "Shit."
And then she remembered – she hadn't been alone on the
scaffolding. She searched the area around her with blind hands.
"Pony! Oh, gods, Pony!"
There was a loud, metal clank and then the squeal of hinges
as a door opened somewhere out in the darkness. Someone was
coming. It dawned on her that might not be a good thing; the
Ghostlands had been the oni compound. She groped at her side
and found her pistol.
A flashlight flicked on some fifty feet away, its light a solid
beam in smoky air. As it swept the room, her eyes adjusted, and
she made out the figure of a being standing in the open doorway.
The shock of hair, the sharp beak of a nose, and the tall lean body
suggested a tengu.
She covered her mouth and nose to muffle her breathing.
The tengu moved toward her, shining his flashlight onto
pieces of equipment on either side of the room – large
tanks, pipes, pumps, and pieces of computer monitoring stations.
'Go away, go away, go away,' she thought hard at
him.
The tengu paused at one of the monitoring stations,
checking the gauges there, and then moved to the second one.
Grunting at what he found, he turned and ran his light high along
the back wall. The beam swept over her head, moved on, stopped
and returned to a point a few feet above her.
Gripping her pistol tight, she glanced up to see what caught
the tengu's attention. A smear of fresh blood led down to her.
'Don't look. Just move on. There's nothing here to see.'
Inexorable, the light slid downwards to shine on her.
Squinting against the brilliance, she pointed her pistol at the
tengu. "That's far enough."
"Well, well," the tengu spoke English with a heavy accent,
the flashlight obscuring his features. "You're what's down here
making so much noise."
"Where is Pony? What have you done to him?"
Confusion filled the tengu's face. "We don't have any ponies
here."
"Where am I?"
"You don't know?"
"Answer me, damn it!"
"Water storage."
That explained the tanks, pipes and liquid sounds. "Okay,
you're going to walk me out of here."
"Walk?" He closed the distance between and crouched down
in front of her, twisting the flashlight's base so it became a
lantern, bathing them both in soft light. He was an older version
of Riki, from the electric blue eyes under thick unruly black hair
to the bird-like cock of his head. "Walk where?"
She tried to hold the gun steady but reaction from her fall
was setting in, making her tremble. "Out of this place."
"You – you want to go outside?"
"Yes."
"Where exactly do you think we are?" He seemed more
puzzled than alarmed, ignoring her gun to search her eyes.
"Water Storage."
"Which is ...where?"
"What is so hard to understand about this? I've got a gun and
I'm willing use it. You either get me out, or I'll shoot you."
"Okay, okay, my English, it's good but not perfect. I don't
understand what you want, Princess."
"Oh, please, don't call me that; technically I am not a
princess."
"Oookay." He acted like this was a hard concept to wrap his
brain around. "What should I call you?"
"Tinker. Of the Wind Clan."
"I'm Jin Wong."
Tinker knew she had heard the name before, but she couldn't
place it. "Jin, I want to go home, and you're going to take me."
He sighed and shook his head. "I'm sorry, Tinker, but you're
going to need to give me the gun before I can take you
anywhere."
"Like hell."
"You're hurt."
"I'm fine." And she scrambled to her feet to prove it. When
she tried to put weight on her left foot, though, pain jolted up her
ankle.
Jin had stood with her – as to be expected, he was at
least a foot taller than she was. He wore a dark polo shirt with
his name embroidered over his heart, dark nylon pants and white
socks, all stained with soot, oil and blood. He stepped to her as
she sagged back against the wall, hissing against the sudden
agony.
"Don't touch me." She stopped him by raising the pistol.
"I'm not going to hurt you."
"Are all you tengu liars at birth?"
"No," he said after a moment of surprised silence. "Our
mothers' give us lying lessons so we can tell when someone is
lying."
He looked down at her foot to indicate what he thought she
was lying about.
"My ankle is just twisted," Tinker snapped.
"Just to point out the obvious, if you shoot me, you're going
to have to crawl out of here." He held out his hand. "And I'm not
going to let you out of this room with the gun. So just give me
the pistol, and I'll do what you want."
"I give you my gun and you'll turn me over to the oni."
"There are no oni here."
"Liar."
"We lie, but tengu still have honor. I give you my
word—you won't be harmed."
They stood there at impasse, half in shadows, the gun
growing heavy in her hand. She had fought to the death before,
but she'd never shot someone in cold blood. She wasn't sure she
could actually do it and live with herself afterwards—
certainly not after exchanging names and carrying on a civil
conversation.
"I'm so screwed." Sighing, she unloaded the pistol, pocketed
the clip, checked the chamber and handed him the empty gun.
"I'll take care of you." He tucked the pistol between two
pipes near the ceiling, way out of her reach. "I promise."
"Bleah." She wished she could believe him. Had Riki broken
his word? Or had he actually never given her any promises,
knowing full well that he couldn't keep them? She couldn't
remember.
Jin produced sterile bandages out of his pocket and dealt
with the shallow, bleeding cut on her ankle. He slipped an arm
around her, then and helped her up. As he supported her, they
headed toward the door.
The room was a maze of tanks and pipes, gurgling
ominously. At the end of the room, they stepped through a low
steel door, reminiscent of old submarine movies, and into
another low ceiling room of mystery machines. What the hell did
the oni have buried under Pittsburgh
? She seethed with anger that Rikki hadn't warned her
about this.
"What the hell is this place, anyway?" she asked.
"This is life support."
She scoffed at that. Life support made it sound like a damn
space ship.
At the far end of the room, she could see there was a narrow,
tall window. It gave her pause. Who put a window in an
underground area? She forced Jin to detour through the
equipment to look out it. At first she only saw night sky, above
and below them, which confused her more. When she fallen? It
was mid-morning – wasn't it? And how do you fall
into the ground and end up above it? The stars more brilliant
than she ever seen them. And they seemed to be moving –
which really meant she was.
A planet rose on the horizon, filling it completely.
She'd seen enough photos of Earth from orbit to recognize
the luminescent blue swirled with gleaming white clouds. The
sight of it punched the air out of her; she stood gasping, like a
fish suddenly finding itself out of water, trying to get her breath
back. The planet rose, filling the window, evidence that the ship
she was on was rotating to maintain artificial gravity.
"No—we can't be – this isn't possible. This is
a trick. I can't be in space. I was in
Pittsburgh
. You don't fall in Pittsburgh
and land in orbit." She couldn't be in space. Could
she? "You don't fall in Pittsburgh
and land in orbit," she whispered again. But she
hadn't fallen to ground, but into the discontinuity – who
knew what all was tied into that knot of realities? "Oh gods,
where am I?"
"Apparently quite lost." Jin tightened his hold on her, as if he
expected her to collapse. Considering how weak she suddenly
felt, it was probably a good idea.
"Lost! Lost!" cried the crows in her
dreams.
She realized where she must be. She had fallen straight to
Esme. "You're part of the tengu crew of the Tianlong Hao."
"I was the Captain."
"Was?"
"This is the Dahe Hao." Jin leaned over her shoulder
to tap on the window, drawing her attention back outside.
"There's the Tianlong Hao."
The ship had continued to rotate and a vast debris field of
broke ships slid into view. The great long cylindrical ships were
shattered to pieces. Parts were folded like soda cans. The space
around them hazed and glittering from frozen moisture and
oxygen trapped in the same orbit as the ships. The bodies of
astronauts tumbled in among the litter.
She covered her mouth to keep in a cry of dismay. Still her
shock came out in low whimpers.
"The Dahe managed to rescue most of my crew
minutes after the accident," Jin said quietly. "We saved crew
from the Zhenghe Hao and the Anhe Hao, but the
Minghe Hao re-entered before we could get to it, along
with parts of what we think was the gate."
"Jin!" A female voice called from beyond an open hatch.
"Did you find what the hell made the loud bang?"
"Yes!" Jin shouted. "We somehow picked up a visitor."
"What kind of visitor?" The female snapped.
"The gun-waving elfin kind." Jin shouted.
"Have you fucking flipped?" The female voice drew closer.
"An elf?"
"Yes, an elf," Jin called.
"Jin." There was something familiar about the female's
voice. "There were no elves on any of the crew lists."
Jin cocked his head at Tinker and made a slight noise of
discovery. "You did fall from Pittsburgh
."
A purple-haired woman appeared at the door and Tinker
recognized her. It was Esme. She hadn't changed from when
Lain's photo had been taken, with the tiny exception of the
bandage on her forehead. On her temple was a pink line of
recently healed flesh. Like Jin, she was marked with soot, blood,
and exhaustion.
"Well, I'll be fucked." Esme had Lain's voice, only slightly
more raspy, as if she had shouted her throat raw. "Well, it's about
time you got your scrawny ass up here."
"You had a gun-waving elf princess on order?" Jin asked.
"Not exactly. I had a dream. And you were there." Esme
pointed at Jin and then Tinker. "And you."
"I'm starting to understand the appeal of Kansas
," Tinker grumbled.
Jin looked at Tinker in surprise. "You forgot your little
dog."
"I'm Dorothy," Esme corrected him. "She's the scarecrow.
So, how the hell did you get here?"
"I fell," Tinker said.
"Down the rabbit hole?" Esme asked.
"More or less," Tinker said.
"Great, you can get us out of this fucking mess," Esme
asked.
Tinker could only laugh bitterly. "I not even sure
where
I am, let alone how to get out. What planet is that?
Elfhome? Onihida?"
Esme glanced at Jin with narrowing eyes. "Onihida?"
"The tengu homeworld," Tinker said. "Or don't
you
know about the tengu?"
"We've covered that little speed bump," Esme said dryly,
still looking at Jin. Then she shrugged. "All things considered,
finding out that half the crew isn't human is just all part of the
weirdness."
"It doesn't matter which planet it is," Jin said. "We've lost all
our shuttles in the crash. We can't land. Normally that wouldn't
be a problem, the ship is designed to support its crew for decades
– but we've got the survivors of four ships on board."
"I think its Elfhome." Esme turned back to Tinker. "At least,
Pittsburgh
is down there. Every now and then, we pick up a FM
station." Esme named a couple of
Pittsburgh
radio stations. "It sounds like a fucking war has
broken out."
"More or less," Tinker said.
"Oh joy." Esme indicated that they should start in the
direction she had come from. "Hopefully you have something
other than straw in that head of yours, because I've got a mess for
you to fix."
"Aren't you supposed to be the expert?" Tinker let Jin pick
her up and carry her. All the little speed bumps, as Esme would
put it, had finally gotten the best of her.
"Yes, I am," Esme lead through the next section of the ship.
Smoke hazed the air here, and red lights flashed unattended. "But
you're the scarecrow."
"What the hell does that mean?" Tinker asked.
"It means what it means," Esme opened a hatch, stepped
through and closed it after Jin. The light was dim in this section,
but air was clean. The floor was cluttered with crew sleeping. At
a glance, at least half of the sleepers were wounded. "All fucking
logic went out the window about seven days ago."
Stormsong had said that when her dreaming powers had told
her that Impatience was no longer a danger to them. Esme
sounded like she was operating on the same skewed logic
– she wanted Tinker to fix the mess that the colonists
were in because the dreams said she would.
Oh great, yet another group of people expecting me to pull
rabbits out of my hat.
For the first time in her life, Tinker felt intimidated by a
piece of hardware. She knew that a spaceship was a delicate
balance of systems, a spider web pretending to be a simple tin
can, with the lives of everyone inside dependant on it. "Look, I
really don't know a whole lot about spaceships."
"I'll use terms you can understand," Esme said. "My ship is
sinking and I can't bail fast enough."
"Okay," Tinker said. "Exactly how does a spaceship 'sink'?"
"The jump did something to my computers." Esme stopped
beside a work station with a monitor showing static. The front
panel had already been pulled, and the boards inside gleamed
softly with magic. "I'm getting—all sorts of weird
errors—and I'm starting to lose systems completely."
"Well, doh," Tinker dug through her pockets until she found
a length of wire and her screwdriver set. "Magic is causing your
systems to crash."
"Magic?" Esme echoed, looking mystified.
Tinker realized that none of the colonist could see the
magic. "That's Elfhome and this universe has magic. Your
computer systems aren't shielded for it."
"Oh fuck, it is blindingly obvious, isn't it?" Esme pressed
her palm to her forehead, took a deep breath and let it out. "I
should have thought of that when I started to dream true again.
Okay. This system controls my engines. Right after the crash, I
pulled into what should have been a stable orbit and started up
the rotation that allows for the artificial gravity. We're drifting
though. If I don't correct our orbit, we're going enter the planet's
astrosphere – and my ship is not designed to survive
retry."
"Okay." Tinker took the lantern from Jin and started to strip
it for parts. "We need to first siphon off the magic, and then
create shielding for the system. Here's what I need..."
* * *
Tinker had never worked with astronauts before and was
amazed how quickly they learned. While Esme had fired the
positioning jets to stop the ship's rotation and pulled them back
into a stable orbit, Jin drafted a team of people to drain excess
magic off the computer equipment. Despite Esme's "you're the
scarecrow" statements, everyone seemed hesitant about Tinker
actually working with the ship's systems. After Tinker trained the
astronauts, she found herself in a supervisory-only position. She
floated in place, stranded by the lack of gravity, with an ice pack
strapped to her ankle.
For some reason—whether is was because Tinker
missed the event, or because she was the ultimate outsider as an
elf, or because she had magically appeared – the
astronauts started to tell her their stories. They gone through a
harrowing experience, filled with confusion, death, lucky
chances, small miracles, and a great deal of heroics. At the core
of it all was Esme, riding roughshod over rules and logic,
ruthless in purpose, making one lucky guess after another. Esme,
everyone agreed, forged a miracle, salvaging what should have
been complete disaster.
Even Esme opened up to Tinker when they found
themselves alone together. "One summer, while I was in college,
I went to visit my older sister on Elfhome. Two months on
another world – it seemed like exotic vacation. Then the
dreams started – like I had some third eye that had been
forced open and I was made to see. Some of what I had to do was
so very clear, like changing my master's degree to astrophysics
and applying to NASA. Some of it was – blind faith
– that it would matter. Somehow."
"I hate to tell you this, but I have no idea how to help you
beyond this."
"This buys me time, which is what I needed most,
Scarecrow" Esme scowled at her screens. "It gives me a chance to
figure out what the fuck to do next."
"Don't call me Scarecrow. I rented the movie and watched it.
Everyone in that movie was a dysfunctional idiot."
"You didn't read the books? The scarecrow is the wisest
being in Oz and rules the kingdom after the wizard and Dorothy
leaves."
Tinker found the news vaguely disturbing. "That doesn't
help."
"It's like flying blind in the clouds – you have to
have faith in what instruments tell you. The dreams tell me that I
needed you. Things are still iffy—but I have a chance now
to make everything right."
Tinker was torn between relief and annoyance that Esme
seemed to think Tinker's part was done. She didn't want to be
responsible for all the astronauts, but she didn't want to be stuck
in space either. She didn't know what else to do. She couldn't
even stay decent. Without gravity to constrain it, the skirt of
Tinker's red silk dress developed a life of its own, determined to
show off her panties as often as possible. Still, she had hoped
they had gotten past all the dream bullshit. She hated not having
an obvious direction to go, a clear-cut problem to solve. The
path here had been so convoluted, the clues so obscure, that she
would have never guessed where it was taking her. She supposed
that she could only do everything she could imagine, and hope
that one of them was the right thing.
Sighing, Tinker nudged one of the magic sinks. "These are
just makeshift. They'll fill quickly and then leak. We'll have to
burn off the magic until we can create a large, permanent storage
tank."
"How do we do burn it?" Esme asked.
"You burn it off by doing spells," Tinker explained. "It can
be used to create heat, light, cool things off, do healing—"
"Healing?" Jin seized hold of the word, proving that her
'private' conversation with Esme had been just an illusion.
Tinker pulled out her datapad and made sure it worked.
"Well, I have spells for healing but I don't know much
about—"
Jin didn't let Tinker finish. He scooped her up and they flew
through the ship as if Jin had wings. "We've got so many
wounded that we've wiped out the Dahe's supplies. Most
of the medical supplies on the other ships were destroyed."
"I really don't know much about healing," Tinker finally
managed to finish her statement.
"We're desperate. Some of our people – we can't do
any more for them."
"Are they tengu?" Tinker asked.
He stopped and looked down at her. "You won't help us?"
"I didn't say that – although a 'please' would go a
long way. It makes a difference what spells I use. Some won't
work on humans – but they might work on tengu."
"Please, help my people. I beg you. They're dying."
She felt shame and anger at the same time that he would
think she would let a wounded person die merely because of
some biological difference she could barely see. "I'll do what I
can. I just don't know how much that will be."
The infirmary was a tiny cramped place stained with blood,
filled with people hooked to machines. The beds were more like
cocoons with nylon bags holding the patients flat. Jin paused at
the first bed to gaze at a blonde man laying there.
"What happened to Chan Way Kay?"
"Sorry, Jin, we lost her." A man said from back of the room.
"This is Wai Sze Wong," Jin turned Tinker's attention to the
patient to her other side. "She's tengu."
Wai Sze was Black from Tinker's dream. More a sparrow
than a crow, she was a little female with delicate wrists and
fingers. Massive bruising on Wai Sze ran the range from deep
purple to pale yellow. Apparently they had run out of surgical
tape, as black electrical tape held splints on Wai Sze's left arm
and leg in place. The monitors on her showed an unsteady
heartbeat.
Tinker gasped in the shock of recognition and the extent of
Wai Sze's injuries. "I – I—can only guess at how
to help her."
"So guess." Jin gave her a look that spoke of trust and
confidence. "We have done all we can, and she's only getting
worse. If you can't save her, then we're going to lose her."
Tinker sighed and tried to think. Riki had recuperated
quickly from the savage beating Tinker had given him, so the
tengu probably had recuperative powers similar to the elves.
Tinker had saved Windwolf's life with a spell that focused magic
into his natural healing powers. The ambient level of the ship,
while enough to wreck havoc on the unshielded computer
systems, was actually quite low. If the tengu's ability was close
enough to the elves, the same spell might save Wai Sze. She
searched the memory of her datapad and found that she did have
the spell downloaded.
"Do you have transferable circuit paper?" Tinker asked.
Jin nodded.
"Okay," Tinker said. "I need the first magic sink we set up,
some power leads, and a computer connection so I can print on
the circuit paper."
One of these days she had to learn bio magic. She hated
gambling with people's lives. Hopefully today wasn't going to be
the day that she guessed wrong.
She explained to the doctor how she needed Wai Sze
prepped while Jin set people off to fetch the sinks and leads, and
then Jin took her to print off the spell.
"If this spell works, we can use it on all the tengu." She
explained to Jin how it focused magic on the tengu's natural
abilities. "But it's useless on humans. For them, I'll need to see if
there is a spell for their specific injury in my codex. It will be a
much slower process."
"Let's save the spell onto this system, that way, if Wai Sze
shows improvement, I can come back and print off more spells
while you start working with the humans."
When they returned, they found Wai Sze stripped bare to her
waist. Burning with embarrassment, Tinker peeled the protective
sheet from the circuit paper and pressed the spell to Wai Sze's
small chest as Jin watched her intently. It required a lot of
fiddling to make sure it was smoothed down over the hills and
valleys of Wai Sze's breasts. On the female's hip was a tattoo of a
lion overlaying the Leo star constellation, Leo's heart—the
star Regulus – a blaze of blue-white in its chest. Tinker
used it to change the subject. "She's a Leo?"
"Hmm? Oh, that, no, it's for Gracie's husband, Leo. He got a
tattoo for her in the same place, a little bird."
Gracie was obviously the Americanization of Wai Szi's
name. Leo was the name of Tinker's father, killed by the tengu
before she was born. Surely it was an odd coincidence. "He's a
tengu?"
"No, Leo was human. He was my college roommate at M.I.T
– and my best friend for many years."
"Was?"
Jin glanced at her sharply. Whatever he saw on her face
made his hard look softened. "Leo and Gracie were like Romeo
and Juliet. They fell madly in love at first sight. Their families
didn't want them to be together. They got secretly married. And it
all ended in senseless tragedy. Leo was killed in an accident, and
for the last five years, Gracie has been suicidal with grief. Crows
mate for life."
"Leo's family didn't want him to marry her?" Tinker asked.
"They knew she was tengu?"
"No. We were Chinese – that was enough."
Yes, that would have been enough. Much as she loved her
grandfather, she knew the truth of his bigotry. She had been
wondering why she dreamed of Gracie. Now she could only
remember how the little tengu female had endlessly wept in her
dreams.
Tinker had taped the leads to power distributor ring of the
spell and hooked the other ends to the battery. "You check to
make sure all the metal is clear of the spell. It would distort the
effect of the spell, which could be deadly. The activation word is
pronounced this way."
Jin listened closely, and then nodded as the outer ring
powered up, casting a glowing sphere over the rest of the spell.
The healing spell itself kicked in, the timing cycle ring clicking
quickly clockwise as the magic flowed through the spell in a
steady rhythm. "How long before we can tell if it's going to
work?"
Tinker shrugged. "On an elf, I could tell immediately."
As they watched, color flushed back into Gracie's face and
her breathing grew deeper. The machines monitoring her health
verified that her heart was stabilizing.
Jin clapped his hands, just like an elf would, to summon the
attention of the gods to him, and then whispered a prayer. Tinker
floated in place, gazing at the female who would have been her
mother, if everything had gone differently. Had it been chance
that put Gracie on the same ship as Esme – or some
dream inspired plan of Tinker's real mother?
Jin finished his prayer and turned to Tinker. "Thank you.
Truly you must have been sent by the gods to us."
"No, just the wizard of Oz."
Chapter 21: No Place
Like Home
Wolf was ready to kill something. When they should have
been reacting quickly, instead they stalled with negotiations. He
demanded that one of the Stone Clan return to the enclaves to
guard the noncombatants. Earth Son assigned the task to Jewel
Tears but then tried to maneuver True Flame into qualifying it as
a failure on Wolf's part to protect the enclaves.
"I can choose to protect the enclaves," Wolf said, "and leave
you to face the dragon."
"We will have the dreadnaught." Earth Son pointed out.
"No, we won't." True Flame snapped. "Human weapons
can't pierce the dragon shielding. The dreadnaught is good at
spotting and attacking ground troops. It would be an aerial
banquet table for the dragon."
"We should travel light." True Flame continued. "One Hand
each. The fewer we have to protect the better."
Wolf let Wraith chose which of his
sekasha would
remain. Wolf drew Little Horse and Stormsong aside; of the
sekasha returning to the enclaves, they were the ones best
suited to interacting with humans. "Call Maynard. Let him know
what his people might be facing. They need to know that their
weapons won't work on this."
* * *
Even as Jewel Tears and the extra sekasha left, Earth Son
was still arguing True Flame's decision. "We should wait until it
comes to us. Running around, looking for it will only weaken
our position."
Wolf scoffed at this idea. "Sit here on our hands while it
does what it will to the city?"
"Property damage can be fixed later," Earth Son said.
"And what of the humans?" Wolf said.
Earth Son had the gall to say, "I do not know why you fuss
so. They are short lived anyhow."
"I think we should go and be the heroes." Forest Moss struck
a heroic pose. "Females are attracted to males of action."
"What females?" Earth Son cried.
"Poor Earth Son, I might have one blind eye—"
Forest Moss tapped his cheek under his ruined eye and the
reached out to tap both of Earth Son's. "—but apparently
you have two."
Earth Son slapped away Moss' hand. "I am not blind."
"Then you must see that this city is filled with fertile young
females? There are so few domana females, and they are
a choosy lot. The law prevents us from taking lovers outside our
own caste who is not sekasha with naekuna, and
the sekasha frown on us making another caste into
domana – that would be too much like our Skin Clan
fathers. Would not the sane plan be to follow Wolf Who
Rules' path, winnow out the perfect female from the thousands
and thousands of humans and make her elfin?"
"No!" Earth Son flinched back from the mad one. "Are you
even capable of recognizing sanity?"
Forest Moss thought a moment and then shrugged. "The sad
truth is: I am not sure. But nor am I sure I care. I have found a
certain freedom in madness. Ah, but it is oh so lonely. I do not
wish to be alone anymore. Unfortunately, I have fallen into a
paradox. As domana, you can not attract a household
without sekasha, but the sekasha no longer trust
me. I failed to protect what was mine. What a small mistake led
to my downfall, nor did I make it alone. At our first encounter
with the oni, despite their displays of friendship, we should have
fought. One miscalculation and all was lost. Lost forever."
"I fell in love," Windwolf stated coldly. "Do not mistake my
honest passion for calculated convenience."
Forest Moss made little flicking motions with his hand.
"Feh, feh, I will love her. She will, after all, win me what I wish
for the most. I tried to show my responsibility and leadership by
holding dogs, and monkeys and small birds. Surely keeping safe
such fragile packages of life shows some ability to protect? Alas,
no elf has offered themselves into my keeping."
"And this mad plan would bring you respect?" Earth Son
looked puzzled.
"Beloved Tinker holds two sekasha. I'm told that she
lacks a full Hand merely due to the limits of time. That even the
renowned Bladebite offered to her. Surely there is another female
of the same caliber in this city."
"No." Windwolf growled. "My domi is a rare and
treasured find."
Forest Moss refused to be distracted from his plan. "Ah,
well, I will have to settle for some lesser gem then. Let us be off.
There is a dragon to kill, and females to impress."
With the elder Stone Clan male strutting off, Earth Son had
no choice but to agree to go after the dragon. It made sense now
that Forest Moss tried to use the aumani to gain Little
Horse. Although young, Little Horse's bloodlines meant young
sekasha would be willing to look to him as First. There
was some sound reasoning to that – as well as this
current plan of Forest Moss. Both, however, were equally
distasteful.
Hopefully Malice would cut short Forest Moss' plan.
* * *
Tinker spent hours in the infirmary, choosing out spells out
of the Dufae Codex, modifying them to work with the batteries,
printing them off, and casting them. She was learning that she
wasn't cut out to be a doctor; having to touch strangers so
intimately was still unnerving.
Being weightless was at once a joy and a constant reminder
that she wasn't on Elfhome. What had happened when she fell
into the Ghostlands? Pony had been up on the scaffolding with
her. Had he fallen into the deadly cold and died? Or had he fallen
through, like her, and was now lost on another world, or out in
space? The possibilities terrified her. She wouldn't allow herself
to even consider what that might have happened to Windwolf.
There was, however, the dreadful knowledge that Windwolf
would put himself between Malice and
Pittsburgh
, and continue until either he or Malice was dead. She
had to get back and help Windwolf – somehow.
The largest drawback to being weightless was that you didn't
fall down when you fell asleep. One moment she was drifting in
a niche, waiting for some crew to move past, trying to think of a
weapon that could kill Malice. The next she was wondering if
there was enough black willow left to make lively maple
flavored ice cream. Dragons, Oilcan was telling her over the
phone, had a weakness for sweets.
"You're going to have to make it." She became aware that
she had made the phone from two tin cans and a long string of
red thread strung between them. The thread vibrated as they
talked, a blur of red, resonating to their voices. Resonation was
the key to everything. "It's really easy to make. Just follow
grandpa's recipe."
She realized then that the ice cream had been what they
needed all along – but she had taken the recipe with her.
While she considered this, she drifted through the wall of
spaceship. Space, it turned out, was all sticky, sweet black
treacle. Here was all the molasses they would want. She could
make the ice cream out of this – only how did she get it
back to Pittsburgh
? Fling it from orbit? No, no, it would all burn up
before it hit Pittsburgh
.
"Domi?"
Tinker looked up. Stormsong was drifting toward her, a
flowing angel of hazy gleaming white. The sekasha had
one hand on the red thread and was following it to Tinker's tin
can phone. "Stormsong, I'm stuck in the treacle."
"No, you aren't." Stormsong held out her hand and Tinker
caught hold of it. It felt warm and intangible as a sunbeam.
"Remember."
"Remember what?" Tinker cried as Stormsong hazed to a
nebulous gleaming form.
"There's no place like home." Stormsong whispered, brilliant
now.
Tinker blinked against the brilliance. Stormsong had
transformed to a shimmering ghost of Impatience. She clung to
some of his snaky mane.
"Sssssaaaammmmmmaaananana." Impatience's
voice rumbled against her skin.
A loud gasp made Tinker turn her head. Jin floated a few
feet away, gazing at her with amazement. They were back in the
infirmary, the wall beside her lumpy and cold and the smell of
smoke and blood omnipresent.
Am I still sleeping? Tinker looked back at Impatience.
"
Huuhuuhuuhuuhuuhuu." Impatience rumbled and
faded away.
Jin drifted toward her. His eyes still wide as he gazed at her.
"Remember what?"
Tinker scrubbed at her face. Was she awake or still asleep?
Her right hand felt warmer than her left – like she had
held it over a open flame. "There's no place like home."
"That's it?"
Dragons have a weakness of sweets and space is treacle?
"Maybe." Tinker realized that if she was awake now –
somehow Jin had experienced part of her dream. "Did you hear
Stormsong?"
"The dragon's name is Stormsong? That doesn't sound like a
dragon name."
Was pinching yourself an accurate test to see if you're
awake? If it was, then she was awake. "You
saw the
dragon?"
Jin nodded. "And I heard it. It said: remember."
"You understood what it said?"
"I'm
Providence
's child."
"You're what?"
Jin cocked his head in his bird-like inspection of her. "You
walk with the dragons but don't know their way?"
"No."
Jin crossed to her side and settled beside her. "
Providence
is the guardian spirit of the tengu. Each generation a
tengu child is born with the mark of
Providence
upon him." The tengu undid his shirt buttons to
expose his chest. Over his heart was a red birthmark that looked
like the flowing outline of a dragon. "We're taught the language
of the dragons."
A whole mysterious part of her life suddenly made sense.
"This is what he was looking for."
"The dragon?"
"No, Riki. He kidnapped me and made me strip. He wanted
to know if Impatience marked me but he didn't tell me what the
mark was for."
"Who is Riki?" Jin asked.
"A tengu – stuck between a rock and a hard place.
Apparently he tried to stay out of the oni control, but they took
his younger cousin, Joey, hostage. It put us on opposite sides,
which is too bad, because I think we could have been good
friends."
Jin reached out and touched the necklace Keiko had given
her. She'd forgotten she was even still wearing it. "Did he give
you that?"
"No, his younger cousin Keiko did. She said it would
protect me from tengu."
"It will." He tugged it out of her neckline so it laid overtop.
"But you've got keep it out where it can be seen. So we can tell
you're under the protection of the
Chosen blood."
"The what?"
"I'm the
Chosen one. The spiritual
leader of my people. I decide the path for my people and they
follow me. Riki and his cousins are all my nieces and nephews.
In my absence, my people are turning to them."
"Which made them targets for the oni wanting to control the
tengu."
Jin nodded.
Having experienced people turning to you for leadership,
Tinker felt sudden sympathy for Riki. "One thing I don't get.
These people are astronauts and still buy 'the chosen one'
bullshit?"
"When you're born a mythical creature, you tend to have a
different mindset on these things."
"Wait – so—all this colonization –
going back to Onihida stupidity was your idea?"
Jin looked away. For a moment, Tinker thought he wouldn't
answer, but he sighed, and said, "We're half bird—we can't
breed with humans – not without magic. Yes a couple
hundred of us came to Earth before the elves destroyed the
pathway, but it wasn't a big enough gene pool. For generations
we've been careful not to interbreed, but we were coming to a
dead end. We had to find someway to get back to Onihida and the
rest of our tribe. You have no idea what its like to see genocide
bearing down on you."
"If Riki was looking for a chosen one, then that means the
tengu don't have a leader."
"It seems like it."
Tinker yawned. "When this is all over, I think I'm going to
sleep for a week. Are we going to get gravity back?"
"We did another course correction, but it seems like
something is pulling us down toward the planet. It's already
pulled all the debris into reentry. We're not spinning up this time
to save fuel."
"So – if we don't do anything, eventually the ship
will be pulled out of orbit?"
"It seems like it."
Tinker groaned. She didn't want to deal with dreams! "No
place like home – that's what Dorothy says to get home.
The stupidity was that she had the means to get home the entire
time, she just didn't know it. I have no idea how that Glenda bitch
gets away with being the 'good' witch. What do I have on me?"
She unloaded her pockets, letting the items float in orbit
around her. Although the dress had limited pocket space, she still
managed to fit amount of stuff into them. Not only did she have
her datapad, she also had her camera with the recording of
Impatience trying to teach her – something.
"Oh my, these could be my ruby slippers!"
* * *
Tracking Malice proved difficult, despite his size. The
massive dragon leaped and bounded and shifted through
buildings like it was a ghost, leaving a shattered trail. Wolf
chafed at the slower speeds that others traveled, but True Flame
would not relent, and Wolf had to acknowledge that the older elf
had battle experience, where he did not.
The trail led up the Monongalia
River
valley to beyond the Rim, and then disappeared
without a trace.
"There is something wrong here," Wraith whispered to Wolf
as his Hand gathered close. "Smell the blood?"
Wolf gazed at the still, boulder strewn forest around them.
There was a slight blurring to the trees, as if a mist hazed the air.
He would not have noticed it if the sekasha hadn't called
his attention to it. Pulling out a survey map for the area, he
confirmed his suspicions.
"I think this might be an oni encampment, covered by an
illusion."
The sekasha pulled their ejae, readying themselves
for a possible ambush.
Forest Moss did a ground scry, took a few steps and
repeated it several times until he stopped beside an ironwood
sapling. "Wolf Who Rules, break this tree."
Wolf aimed a force strike at the sapling and unleashed it.
The sapling vanished when the leading edge of his blow
struck it. A tall square stone, inscribed with spells, replaced the
sapling for a heartbeat before disintegrating into rubble. An oni
camp sprang into being around them. The boulders changed into
rough cabins. Mossy logs became well-gnawed humanoid
carcasses. Blood soaked the ground and everywhere was dragon
tracks.
"All the magic flowed toward the sapling." Forest Moss
nudged the remains of the crude oni spell stone.
The
sekasha moved out to search the cabins.
"Malice has wallowed in magic and feasted on oni." True
Flame used his sword tip to point out that the skulls were
horned. "Maybe it slipped its bonds, like the little one did."
"There were no spell markings on Malice." Wolf wondered
too the significance of the dragon's name. Tinker had called
Impatience 'hyper.' If the dragon's names reflected a personality,
perhaps one named Malice needed no prodding to wreak havoc.
"I am not sure what the other beast is, but there is no
mistake here, this is an oni dragon." True Flame pointed out a
four-toed print in the dirt. "The little beast has five claws like the
hand of an elf."
Red Knife reported for the
sekasha, saying that the
cabins were empty of oni and any evidence of what they planned.
"There were, though, a hundred oni here only hours ago."
"It is a good thing that we delayed, then." Earth Son earned a
sharp look from even his First, Thorne Scratch. "We would have
had to face both oni and the dragon at the same time."
Instead both had vanished away after having time to lay
cooperative plans.
The dragon tracks led down to the river.
Earth Son made a sound of disgust, eyeing muddy water.
"None of us will be able to track it in that."
"If Malice was sent by the oni on Onihida to distract us, then
he will circle back to the city and attack." Wolf was glad that
Jewel Tears was protecting the enclaves. While the Stone Clan
was weak on attack spells, they had the strongest defensive spells.
"We should return."
True Flame nodded.
* * *
Tinker and Jin found a working computer station and with
some jury rigging managed to get her state-of-art camera
interfaced with the two decade old systems.
"I recorded about six hours so this is going to take a while."
Tinker started the play back.
"...we'll build a dictionary of his words," her recorded
voice started out the recording. Cloudwalker had been filming
the dragon but having trouble tracking it as it moved through the
scrapyard's offices.
"Riki says the dragon's name is Impatience," Tinker said,
"but Riki has lied to me – a lot."
Jin attention was on the recording. He nothing but he
frowned slightly at this.
"...mmmenananannaaaaaaapoooookaaaammmammamamyyyyyya
aanananammmmoooo..." Impatience rambled on the recording.
"I'm not familiar with the name." Jin paused the recording
after another minute of the dragon's monologue. "Dragons
usually use a lot of words to say anything. Like 'a pleasantly
warm but not too warm, sunny, cloudless, time of the day that
isn't dawn but the sun hasn't quite reached its zenith' for good
morning. It considered rude to get to the point too quickly. When
you talk to a dragon, you're supposed to elaborate as much as
possible."
"Dragon Etiquette 101?" Tinker asked.
"Historically, rude tengu are dragon snacks. This dragon,
however, is being very to the point. He might come across as
impatient to other dragons, which would explain his name."
"So you understand him."
"Yes, so far he's said 'what is this object? Oh, this moves.
Ah, it makes light. I wonder how. This part twists. What are
these? I see. It does not work without those. Why does it not
make light? Have I broken it? It seemed as if it was suppose to
come apart. A diagram. I must have them backwards. Ha, ha, ha."
"Yeah, I got the laughing part."
A female astronaut flew into the cabin with tengu grace,
"Wai Szi is awake and wants to see the scarecrow."
* * *
The tiny tengu woman was awake and looking surprisingly
well compared to how awful she had been before. She gasped as
Tinker swam into the infirmary. "Oh my, you are here!
Oh, look at you! You're so beautiful."
Tinker blushed. As a female elf in a deep jewel red silk dress
in zero gee, she was attracting a lot of attention from the crew.
"It's the dress."
"Ah, yes, it not so practical in space, is it, my dear? Xiao
Chen, can you find her something to wear?"
Xiao Chen had been the crewmember that summoned them
to Gracie's side. The tengu female nodded, cocking her head to
study Tinker's size before moving off, graceful as a bird in flight.
Jin looked at Tinker as if noticing the silk flowing around
her for the first time and then smiled. "I don't know. It's good for
morale. At least with the guys."
Tinker smacked him and found herself floating backwards.
He laughed, and caught Tinker before she could hit
something. "I am only joking."
"Shoo, shoo!" Gracie shooed Jin away. "I want to talk to her
without your noisy squawking."
Jin smiled fondly at his cousin and flew away.
Gracie held out her unbroken hand to Tinker. "Let me look
at you." Gracie had tears in her eyes, which Tinker expected, but
not the brilliant smile that the fragile tengu bestowed on her.
Tinker found herself smiling back. "You've got Leo's eyes and
his smile."
"Yeah, I guess. The patented Dufae face."
"I'm so happy to see it. It hurt so much that I hadn't been able
to give Leo a baby. It made losing him all the more horrible. He
was a wonderful, wonderful man and he was utterly gone."
It occurred to Tinker for the first time how awful to lose
your husband—never see him again—and a sudden
fear took root in her. What if she couldn't get back to Windwolf?
What if she never saw him again?
"There, there, my love." Gracie wiped Tinker's tears away.
"We'll get you back to him somehow."
"Yeah, I know, we're working on it." Tinker sniffed.
"Let me see your leg. I know Jin, he probably didn't think to
clean that cut. He might be Dalai Lama of the crows, but he's
hopeless with first aid."
Gracie deftly took off the bandage, gently cleaned the wound
and applied an antiseptic and re-bandaged the cut.
"Are you a medic?" Tinker asked her.
"I'm the ship's xenobiologist," Gracie said.
"You're kidding."
Gracie looked up in surprise, and Tinker found herself
talking about Lain, and then about Esme. "Have you told her? I
don't think she's realized who you are yet."
Tinker shook her head. "Right now, it's all too weird. I don't
even want to think about it. Besides, I'm kind of ticked at her.
Not about leaving me. About everyone having to lie to me about
it because – I don't know – some strange family
stuff. I didn't know the truth for eighteen years. She can not know
for a couple of days. I'll tell her later."
Xiao Chen flew into the area, carrying a set of clothes.
"These should fit our scarecrow."
"I don't know if I like that nickname." Tinker took the
clothes and drifted awkwardly as she checked the pant size
against her waist.
Xiao Chen laughed. "I am sorry. Just so long, we did not
know your name, just that you were the scarecrow."
"Did tell everyone about your dream?" Tinker asked Gracie.
Xiao Chen, though, answered. "All of us that slept that night
shared Wai Szi's dream – that is her ability. She is our
dream crow."
"In some ways, we are more bird than human," Gracie said.
"Can you see the future? How am I going to get us out of
this mess?"
Gracie shook her head. "Where one person can determine the
future, the way is clear, but we're in a tangle of possibilities.
Many people can push the future one way or another. This is a
time when everyone will determine the end."
Since there were no private places, Tinker turned her back
and they pretended to ignore her, talking in Chinese, as she
changed. She tried not to feel like they were talking about her.
Certainly with the ship falling out of orbit, they had plenty of
things to discuss. At least with the dress on, she was able to
change panties and pull on her pants without flashing them. The
pants were a little loose, but Xiao Chen had included a length of
nylon cord to serve as a belt.
Tinker turned back around and pulled on the knotted cord. "I
look the part of the scarecrow now."
The tengu laughed.
"I've been greedy." Gracie reached out and squeezed Tinker's
hand. "I've kept you here too long. Thank you for letting me see
you."
Tinker hugged her goodbye and returned to the task of
finding out how to get them back home to Windwolf.
* * *
Impatience, it turned out, had been trying to teach her a
spell. It incorporated math, something that Elvish spells didn't
do, and used magic to manipulate time and space. It took
everything she knew and pushed it in a new direction using an
entirely new symbol set. Jim translated the words and then, later,
the number system that Impatience used but looked mystified by
most of what he was saying.
"You understand this?" Jin asked.
"Yes, yes. The roots of elfin magic is here, but taken to
another order of understanding. This is recognizing the quantum
nature of magic and its effects across boundaries of
realities. My god, I really screwed up. I never considered that I
could warp the fabric of space and time on this kind of scale."
"What?" Jin cried in surprise. "
You made this
mess?"
"I had help. Okay, here's what happened." She found a
marker in her pocket and drew a planet on the nearest wall. "The
oni forced me to build a down-sized gate on Elfhome. I set up a
resonance between my gate and the orbital gate." She drew both
gates in their proper positions and the wavy resonance line
between them. "Now Leo's gate was flawed. The time coordinate
was never set." She drew the ships entering the orbital gate. "So
the default time coordinate became the moment of the gate's
destruction – or around midnight eastern standard time,
seven—eight days ago."
She totally lost track of space since she landed on the
spaceship.
Jin understood the result. "Thus the collision."
"Yeah. Old news. This is the important part – all the
ships, when they passed through the gate, must have picked up
the resonance signature." She drew a ship on the other side of the
gate, labeled it
Dahe Hao and continued the wavy line to
it. "As long as there are objects in orbit, the resonance will
continue, which is why the discontinuity hasn't collapsed. It's
because of this link, that when I fell into the Ghostlands, I ended
up onboard. For every action, though, there is an equal and
opposite reaction. Basically the power spike originates here on
Elfhome and travels in this direction." She drew an arrow parallel
to the wavy line through the planet. "The multi-universe is trying
to drag the
Dahe Hao back along this line." She drew a
second arrow from the ship running beside the resonance path
toward the planet. "Again, as long as the discontinuity continues,
the
Dahe Hao will be affected by this force."
She turned and was startled to find her audience had grown
from Jin to about twenty crew members. "Um, well, this isn't all
bad. We can use this force to our advantage. The entire ship and
everyone on it is keyed to
this location." She underlined
Turtle Creek. "Now if you look at this section of the text." She
pointed to the screen. "This is a spell. It creates a sphere of
hyperphase. All we need to do is cast this spell which will step
the ship into hyperphase and follow the line of force back to
Pittsburgh
."
"That's
all?" Esme said.
Tinker turned back and found her audience had grown again.
Esme and another twenty crewmembers crowded the small area.
"My biggest concern is power. If the amount of magic we feed
into the spell is too small, it will just punch a hole in the middle
of the ship. We need enough power that we can guarantee that the
entire ship goes. Even if we think we have sufficient magic, we
probably should gather everyone close to the spell, and close all
the hatches between the sections of the ship."
"What we've collected isn't enough?" Esme asked.
"I don't think so and access time on it is slow. The spell is
set up to mimic how the dragons cast magic with their mane.
With elf magic, there's a timing ring around the spell that
controls the power coming in. It makes the magic a slow steady
burn. This spell takes all the free magic and converts it in one
burst." Tinker sketched the ship and put an 'x' roughly center of
the ship. "It's kind of like dropping a stone into a pool of water.
Splash!" She drew in the initial impact in a large circle around the
'x'. "That's the rock hitting the surface. There seems to be some
resulting ripples in the fabric of space." She added larger circles
around the first, and then shaded in the space between the circles.
"I'm not sure what the ripples will do, but I can't imagine the
delay factor will be good for the structural integrity of the ship."
"In other words," Jin sought to clarify what she said. "Part
the ship returns to
Pittsburgh
seconds before the next section goes?"
"Yes. Leo's gate, however flawed, did transfer all the ship to
the same second. These ripples would have a different time
coordinate, so probably we're looking at pieces of the ship
arriving in
Pittsburgh
– unless we hit it with a damn big rock."
"So where do we get it?"
"I don't know. If we could tap the spring under Turtle Creek,
that would work, but I don't see any evidence that power is
seeping through."
* * *
There was no sign of Malice in
Oakland
when Wolf and the others returned to the enclaves.
Maynard had set up a command center in the building across the
street from Poppymeadow's. He and the NSA agents had set up
lookout posts across the city, linked by radio.
"Unless it can go invisible, it hasn't appeared in the city yet,"
Maynard tapped three points on the map. "Between the Cathedral
of Learning, the USX building and Mount
Washington, we can see for miles – and
Stormsong said that this thing was huge."
Wolf nodded. "Unfortunately, it will be dark soon."
Someone was hammering upstairs. The hammering stopped,
and something large moved overhead accompanied with odd
rhythmic clicking noise.
Wolf cocked his head, trying to place the sound. "What is
that?"
Stormsong glanced toward Earth Son standing in the street,
just outside the open door, and lowered her voice. "Domi's
nagarou brought the little dragon, so the humans can see
what we're fighting."
Interesting how one afternoon could change your
perspective on size.
Maynard had caught Stormsong's caution and spoke quietly
in English. "Briggs and Durrack are seeing what works against
it."
Wolf couldn't decide if this was ingenious or unwise. He
found the stairs leading up to the one large open room taking up
the entire second story. The windows had been boarded shut and
mattresses leaned against the walls. The dragon and others were
in the far corner, standing around a computer set up on the floor.
While Oilcan and Durrack were focused on the screen, Briggs
and Little Horse and Cloudwalker were standing back and
watching the dragon.
All beings – dragon, humans and elves –
looked up when he arrived with his Hand.
"Domou." Little Horse acknowledged his arrival.
"What are you doing here?" Wolf thought he had sent his
blade brother back to the enclaves.
"There is nothing I can do for domi, but she would
want her nagarou safe. Surely, the oni will try and take
back the little dragon."
Wolf glanced at his domi's
nagarou. There was so much of Tinker in his appearance
that it hurt – her mouth, her eyes, and her haphazard
haircut. In the hectic last two months, he'd not spoken once to the
young man. Wolf realized now that Tinker was Oilcan's only
family; he was now quite alone. Wolf could not imagine it; an elf
only found himself alone if he was exiled from his clan. Clans
were so vast, that natural disaster would lay low entire
households and families and there would still be someone left to
be responsible for the orphans.
Wolf had been lax toward Oilcan because he was an adult
– if he was an elf, Oilcan would have chosen a clan that
superseded all family responsibilities. That had been wrong of
Wolf. Even if he lifted Tinker out of her species, it did not
completely free her of her culture's obligations – and as
her domou, her responsibilities was his own. But beyond
that, it been wrong of him to be a stranger to the one person that
Tinker loved as much as life.
Oilcan cautiously separated himself from the dragon, as if
he didn't fully trust either the dragon or the warriors from either
race. "Wolf Who Rules." Oilcan gave a proper bow. "I heard
about Malice on the scanner," he said in High Tongue. Sorrow
filled his eyes as he spoke, and then was firmly put aside. "I
thought we might learn something from Impatience."
"Thank you, nagarou. That was wise of you." Wolf
dropped to low Elvish, and put a hand to the young man's
shoulder.
A smile flashed over Oilcan's face, then vanished as he
sighed. "Unfortunately, most of what we've found out so far isn't
good."
"I did not expect anything else. What have we found out?"
"Well, there was a question if Impatience and Malice are
both really dragons, given their size and various other
differences. From what we've pieced together, we think they are.
In Chinese mythology, the four claw dragons are considered
common dragons but the imperial dragon has five claws. We
think the variations are racial instead of species differences, and
possibly represent political differences too."
"Tengu worship five claws—they—
compassionate guardians of tengu in past," Durrack spoke very
rough low Elvish. "Four claws – they have bad
reputation – they work with the oni without being
enslaved. Malice is not enslaved."
"Now, the dragons can't maintain its shields all the time,"
Oilcan patted Impatience on the head, showing that the little
dragon's shields were currently down. "It takes them
approximately thirty seconds to raise their shields."
Durrack abandoned low Elvish, to add in English. "If we
could catch Malice completely unaware, a sniper might be able to
take him out with a well-placed bullet. But once his shield goes
up, things get tricky."
Oilcan murmured a translation to Little Horse and
Cloudwalker, and then added in Elvish. "The shields, while they
use ambient magic, they're very efficient and translate all kinetic
energy – including the motion of the dragon's body
– somehow into magic. Bullets, rockets,
baseballs—" Oilcan nudged a ball on the floor that they
apparently had been using in their experiments. "–
anything you can throw at them—will only make them
stronger."
"And they can keep the shields up while they phase through
walls." Durrack patted a wooden partition erected next to him.
Impatience took this as a request to demonstrate his phasing
abilities. His mane lifted up and he shimmered into a ghostly
haze and leapt through the wall and returned.
"Good boy!" Oilcan produced a large gumball from his
pocket and gave it to the dragon, who chewed it with obvious
relish. "We believe your lightening will cross the barrier because
it's composed of a different type of energy particle."
"Electricity works." Durrack lifted up half a cattle prod. "We
established that."
Impatience snatched the cattle prod out of the NSA agent's
hand and phased it into the wall. When the little dragon let go,
the cattle prod remained as part of the wall. The other half, Wolf
noticed, was already part of the wall. Apparently the little dragon
didn't like that test.
"As a one shot deal, pepper spray will work." Durrack
picked up an aerosol can. "Of course, it only annoys the hell out
of them, and then the dragon changes it shields so that gas won't
penetrate."
"I'm stunned you are all still alive." Wolf realized that
Impatience had to be remarkably forgiving to put up with these
experiments.
"We talked first." Oilcan said.
Briggs scoffed. "We drew pictures and did a lot of
pantomime."
"He seems to understand what's going on." Oilcan said. "He
seems to hate both Malice and the oni, but he's made it clear that
he can't beat Malice in a fight."
"How do oni enslave the dragons in the first place? Do the
tengu say?"
Durrack shook his head. "No."
Wolf wondered if this was the truth. While he trusted Oilcan
to be as forthright as Tinker, the NSA clearly saw themselves as
separate powers with all that implied.
* * *
After the accident, and the various course corrections, the Dahe Hao's low orbit didn't put them within range of the
Wind Clan spell stones at Aum Renau. After discussing their fuel
situation and the reliability of their engines, they decided to look
for stones elsewhere within a mei. The spell stones were
large enough, and distinctive enough that the pattern recognition
software found several sets. It was impossible to distinguish
which clan the stones belonged to, but they found four grouped
together in the place the crew nicknamed
Giza
.
"There are four major clans – wind, fire, water,
stone – so I think it's a
safe bet that it's one set for each major clan." At least, Tinker
hoped it was. She knew there were lesser clans, but she didn't
know anything about them. "At this speed, though, we're already
out of range, so I'll have to wait until next orbit to check."
"You've got about an hour and a half then." Esme murmured
a curse as something flashed red on her monitor. "But we're
drifting again. We're going to have to do another course
correction."
"Try and keep us in this orbit," Tinker said. "A mei is
only a thousand miles, give or take a couple hundred miles. If we
drop much closer to the equator, we'll be out of range."
Tinker then retreated to work on printing out the spell. Jin
tracked her down a short time later.
"Gracie wanted to be sure you got something to eat." Jin
held out a container.
"Pft." Tinker waved away the offering. "If I eat, I'll have to
figure out how you go to the bathroom up here, and I figure
that's not going to be a pleasant activity."
Jin laughed, still holding out the cup-sized container. "You
have to eat."
"What is it?"
"Cream of tomato soup."
"Oh! My favorite." She took the container and found that it
was warm. As she snapped it open and sipped the rich creamy
broth, Jin swung up to perch across from her.
"It was your father's favorite too." Jin sipped his own soup.
"I can see Leo in you. Hear him in the way you talk. It makes me
happy."
"Why?"
"Leo was my best friend for many years. I'm glad that in a
way, he is living on through you."
"If he was such a good friend, why did you kill him?"
She expected him to deny it, but he only gazed at her, sorrow
filling his eyes.
"I –I made a mistake. We never told Leo that we
were tengu. And he never told us – at least, not until it
was too late – that he was elfin. We kept our secrets from
one another, and in the end, it killed Leo."
"I don't understand," Tinker said.
"Leo and I met at M.I.T. We both had radical ideas, ones that
made us unpopular. We believed that magic existed—that
there were other realms that could be visited via magical portals.
Of course, we had the proof in our very blood, but that we never
told anyone, even each other." Jin sighed, shaking his head. "It
seems so obvious now. Dufae. How did we miss it?"
"What really happened? My grandfather never told me
details."
"When Leo showed us his gate design, a possibility opened
up to us. A paradise for the tengu. It became the flock dream, a
bright promise at the end of a path through dark woods full of
unseen danger. To be able to chose one's mate out of love, and
not a carefully ordered breeding plan. To be able to fly. To walk
under the sun in our true form, and not to be always hidden. I
went to the kitsune, who are powerful in the Chinese government
and talked to them about funding. They involved other parties. It
was dangerous, I know, but I thought I understood all the factors.
What I didn't know was Leo was an elf – that he knew
exactly what the oni were – and that he wouldn't
cooperate with them."
"Halfway through the meeting with the investors, Leo just
freaked. He told them that he would never help the oni build a
gate. And worse, he told them why. As much as the elves feared
the oni, the oni of Earth feared the elves. He stormed out the
meeting. I went after him. We were arguing –" Jin fell
silent for a minute. "It happened so fast. One moment he was
standing beside me on the street corner, arguing with me and the
next he was dead in the middle of the road. I didn't even see what
happened."
Jin sighed. "I wasn't driving the car. I didn't push him out
into its path. But I brought death to him. And I can only say I'm
sorry. And I am truly am. I loved him like a brother."
All Tinker could imagine was Nathan out on the road, his
blood on her. Oh gods, she didn't want to cry again. She squeezed
her eyes tight on the sudden burn of tears. "How do you deal with
knowing that you fucked up so bad? That you killed someone
that loved you? That trusted you?"
"Accept the truth of what happened, and then forgive
yourself. They would if they could."
She laughed bitterly. "Why would they?"
"Because they loved you."
She pressed the palms of her hands into her eyes, and
struggled to get back in control of herself. The truth of what
happened? The truth was that she had ignored all the warning
signs with Nathan. She had to pay attention, think about the
consequences of her actions. Like now – she was
desperately trying to get back to Pittsburgh
, but what if she was totally wrong? With sudden
terror, she saw the implications of her actions. She was taking Dahe Hao to Pittsburgh
. She might be saving the human crew, but she was
dooming the tengu crew to genocide.
"I'm worried about what will happen to the tengu when we
reach Pittsburgh
. The elves are killing people that they just suspect are
oni. And I know they will see tengu as oni."
"You still don't think of yourself as one of them?"
"No, not really. Wait – how do you know?"
"For the last week, all we've dreamed about is you –
all the weird twists and turns your life has taken." Jin picking up
the camera. Cloudwalker had trouble tracking the hyperactive
dragon through the trailer and caught her and Pony in the
viewfinder instead. "We've seen what you've done to keep your
sekasha safe."
"You know everything?" She wondered if this was why she
been having such horrible nightmares lately.
"Enough. Your fight with the foo dogs. Your
transformation from a human. Your fight with the oni lord." Jin
played a few seconds of recording as Pony acknowledged one of
her requests with a slight bow. "This is just proof of what we
already knew. You're the Wind Clan domi, guarded by a
Hand of sekasha, one of which is another dreamer."
"Her name is Stormsong."
"You told me."
"I don't know what to do about this," Tinker admitted. "If we
don't do the spell, I don't think anyone will survive. If we do the
spell, then you end up in the mess in
Pittsburgh
."
Jin reached out and tapped Tinker's forehead, reminding her
of the dau marked onto her forehead. "You have the power to
protect us. You could make us part of your household. We could
be yours, as these sekasha are yours."
"Mine?" Tinker squeaked. "Why would you want that?"
"Because we trust you more than we trust the oni."
That wasn't saying much.
"I don't know if that would work," Tinker said. "The elves
make a big thing about beholding. The sekasha promises to serve
in exchange for protection. That everyone fits into society
– someone above them responsible for them, but they are
answerable to."
"It seems fairly simple. I will promise that the tengu will
obey you and you promise to protect us."
"You're serious? You would listen to what I told you to
do?"
Jin nodded.
"Are you sure your crew is okay with obeying some snot-
nosed kid?"
"Leo's daughter who talks with dragons? Yes, I am sure."
She opened her mouth and then closed it, reminding herself
to think about implications and complications this time. She
supposed that the tengu could make up a household like
Poppymeadow's, where the crew would be under Jin and the
tengu captain would be under her, yet they wouldn't be directly
part of her household. She wished that she knew more about how
the enclaves worked, but she suspected that they were like all
things elfin, where an exchange of promises were enough to bind
both parties. But how would the tengu fit into her life? There
was terror deep inside her, one she didn't want to look at closely,
if she promised the tengu to protect them, it would have to be
against the people that she loved the most. What would she do if
Windwolf refused to acknowledge her claim on the tengu? She
didn't want to think about Windwolf systematically killing the
tengu she had gotten to know. She didn't want him to be the type
of person who could do it. Yet she couldn't stop thinking of
Nathan dead in the road because she was married to Windwolf.
Of the bloody streets of
Chinatown. Of
Tommy Chang within moments of being cut down.
If she committed to the tengu, then she might have to fight
even Windwolf to keep them safe.
I can't. I can't.
She pressed trembling hands to her mouth. But if she didn't
protect them, who would? How could she stand aside and let
them be killed and do nothing to save them? "I'll do my best to
protect you, but you have to remember to do what I say, or I
won't have the power to stop the elves from killing you all."
"I promise. You will have obedience of the tengu."
Her life had so many strings attached that she felt like a
puppet.
"Hey! Scarecrow!" Esme called over the ship's intercom.
"We're getting close to your mark in five minutes!"
Tinker swam back to the bridge, blinking on the salt burning
in her eyes.
"Two minutes," Esme announced.
They waited in tense silence, bathed in the soft earthshine.
"In ten," Esme said quietly.
Tinker made sure she had her fingers in the correct position.
"We're in range."
Tinker brought her hand to her mouth and said the trigger
word. Nothing happened. Her heart jolted with the sudden spike
of fear. "Daaaaaaae." Still nothing. She checked her finger
positions and carefully announced the trigger word. Zip. "Daaae.
Daaaaae. Dae. Daaaaaaae."
"And we're out of range," Esme said.
"Oh, fuck," Tinker said.
"Just checking – it didn't work?" Jin asked.
"No." Tinker rubbed the heels of her hand into her eyes.
"Well, you better think of something else, Scarecrow." Esme
said. "We only have fuel for one more burn."
* * *
"How's it going?" The tengu Ushi asked. Tinker was finding
that while the humans treated her with slight condescension after
the initial novelty wore off, the tengu regarded her with odd mix
of awe and affection. The ratio of worship versus familial
warmth seemed to be dependent on how well they knew her
father. Either way, they kept seeking her out, wanting to know if
she was comfortable, or needed anything. It was driving her to
distraction.
"I'm still thinking." Thinking she needed to find a hiding
place. "We're at about two hundred miles above Elfhome's
surface, crossing over Spell Stones in Giza
around eighteen miles per second. The reach of the
Spell Stones are one mei, which is approximately one
thousand miles, which means that theoretically we're within their
reach for about a minute and a half."
"Why are they important?"
"They're a source of a lot of magic. If I could pull on them,
then I could use the magic to trigger the spell."
She covered her eyes to think. Apparently Ushi took the cue
that he was distracting her; when she opened her eyes again, he
was gone. Too bad all her problems didn't solve themselves so
neatly.
Why couldn't she call the spell stones? They were in range,
more than a minute, nearly two, and a call took less than one.
Something had to be interfering with the call. Was it that there
wasn't enough ambient magic to fuel the initial call? Tinker ran
her hand across the wall of the ship, focusing on her magic sense.
She could feel the latent magic. It was as strong as a ley line, but
with a strange texture. It was like the difference between silk and
wool. Magic on Elfhome flowed, smooth and quick. The magic
here buzzed with static. If the call was suppose to be resonance
of magic across the DNA signature of the domana, then
perhaps that chaotic nature of the magic on the ship was creating
too much static to that call.
Perhaps if she could filter the background magic to one
frequency – oh, gods – how the hell did she do
that? She groaned and pulled at her hair. The sekasha had
magic stored in the beads woven into their hair which guaranteed
that if they were in a magic poor area, they still could trigger
their shields and have a few minutes of protection. She never
examined them but knew in essence that they were a metal ball,
insulated with glass that acted like her power sinks. She believed
that storing the magic in a "clean" enough medium would reduce
the static. So, she should be able to use a sink just like they used
the beads. The problem probably would be eliminating the
background magic so only the stored magic was active.
Wait, if she modified the Reinhold's spell based on
Impatience's theorems, she might be able to trigger magic
equivalence to a wide-scale electromagnetic pulse. It would
basically clean the slate. The danger would be that it wasn't only
on the magic wavelength, but included the electronics of the ship.
She could accidentally kill all the computers maintaining the
ship's life supports. That would be bad.
But if she wiped out the build up, and then used one
shielded source to do a call on the Wind Clan Spell stones
– would that be enough magic to trigger the jump? It
might. Too bad she couldn't pull from a second set...
Or could she? She had felt the Stone Clan magic. She had
watched Forest Moss call on the Stone Clan's spell stones. Did
she remember the hand positions and vocalization? Yes, she was
sure.
She was nearly quivering now with possibilities. If she could
pull on both stones, at once – wait—at
once—that kind of meant at the same moment. Since the
vocalization was different she couldn't do both. She wished she
could pace. She thought better pacing. She settled for bouncing
between the walls, flying through the air.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa!" Jin suddenly caught her, and brought
her to a stand still. "You're going to hurt yourself doing that."
"I can't say two things at once! I considered sampling the
resonance, but I suspect that the genetic key equates to vibrations
in the quantum nature of magic – not that I know that for
sure – and certain I'm at a loss as to how to test that
theory. There isn't time for me to invent a device that can sample
how the magic interplays with molecular level, or the equipment
we probably need to recreate that resonance. And according to all
my last dream, resonance was the key to everything. And if
getting home isn't the full ball of wax –"
"Shhhhhh." Jin put his finger to his lips.
She frowned at him and then put her finger over his lips.
"Do that again."
"Tinker, listen."
"No, do the 'shhh' thing again."
"Shhhh." Jin repeated and then said, with her finger still in
place. "We're picking up the radio from
Pittsburgh
again. They say that Malice is attacking
Oakland
."
"I need to get home. And I think I know how."
* * *
True Flame drew Wolf aside to speak quietly with him.
"You and I have the only attack spells that have a hope of hurting
Malice. We need to pair off with the Stone Clan. They'll provide
defense while we focus on attack. Which do you want? Forest Moss or Earth Son?"
The mad one or the male that hated him? Both had good
cause to see him dead. If they were wise, they would hold their
political maneuverings until after the dragon was dead. Where
Forest Moss lacked sanity, Earth Son lacked political savvy;
Wolf did not think either was rational enough for wisdom. While
he trusted Jewel Tears to defend the enclaves, he was not sure he
could entrust his safety to her. From True Flame's perspective,
however, Jewel Tears' youth made her unfit material for the front
line, so it was a moot point.
"I rather not stake my life – and the lives of my
people—on the Stone Clan." Wolf spoke the blunt truth.
"I realize that." True Flame said. "But we will need both
hands to our most powerful attack spells, which means no
shield."
"In that case, I don't want to take Hands into this battle. I do
not want to leave them at the mercy of the Stone Clan."
True Flame nodded. "That would be wise."
"I'll take Earth Son." When faced two evils, Wolf would
rather deal with the known.
* * *
When True Flame announced the pairing, Earth Son shook
his head.
"I do not like this pairing. Forest Moss will go with Wolf."
"You will go with Wolf."
"I see reason for the pairing, and as clan head I should be
with you."
"I have given the choice of partners to Wolf since he is in
disadvantage," True Flame said. "We don't have time for this.
You are to pair with Wolf."
Thorne Scratch stepped forward to murmur in Earth Son's
ear. The Stone Clan domou cast a dark look at his First
and then smoothed his face to the unreadable mask of court.
Wolf wondered what Thorne had to say to Earth Son.
"So my mewling infant of a cousin, I swear that was the last
time that you'll twist matters to get an unfair advantage."
* * *
Clouds boiled across the sky. Wolf could sense a magical
shifting of the winds, as if someone called them with a spell.
"I think the dragon is coming."
"Wolf." Storm held out something. "This goes in your ear.
It's like the walkie-talkie but smaller. Nagarou wanted
you to have it. You should be able to use it without it interfering
with your magic – I tested it with my shield."
Wolf took the small bud of plastic. "How does it –"
Storm fitted it into Wolf's ear. "Nagarou has gone to
act as a spotter with the NSA. He is in the Cathedral. He will talk
to you."
"Windwolf, this is Oilcan." The young man's stated calmly
in Wolf's ear. "The dragon is in south east
Oakland
, at the intersection of Bates
Street
and Boulevard of the Allies. It's seems to be
leveling houses."
Which meant it was less than a mile away.
Wolf did a wide range scry and caught the passage of
something large in that area. Earth Son finished his spell and as
he shook his head, Wolf lost the scry on the dragon.
"This way," Wolf started to walk.
Forbes Avenue
was a major street in Oakland
with multiple lanes leading from the downtown out
to the Rim. The EIA had stopped traffic in the city, erecting
barriers. To his right, at the center of its lush lawn, was the
towering Cathedral of Learning with Oilcan at its summit. To his
left was the massive stone Carnegie museum.
"Tell me how to get to Bates," Wolf said.
"Go through that parking lot your left." Oilcan started into
the directions.
True Flame indicated that he would continue down Forbes Avenue
, following his scry.
The boil of clouds had darkened to angry gray, with streaks
of black where thunderheads were starting to build. When Wolf
reached the top of Bates Street
and looked down the hill it climbed, he saw that the
shield around the massive dragon created a miasma that was
forming the clouds. He understood now why the humans thought
his lightening would be able to strike – it was the perfect
lightening weather. Cloaked by his shields, Malice moved within
the misty darkness, showing only flashes of himself.
"Call your shields," Wolf told Earth Son. "Keep him back,
otherwise the lightening will arc to us."
Remember, you can't trust Earth Son, Wolf thought to
himself, and called on the winds in order to summon his
lightening.
The darkness shifted, as if Malice had turned, and the gleam
of his eyes appeared in the miasma and then vanished.
"He's shifting to your right." Oilcan's voice was flat with the
effort to keep the information concise. "He stopped just around
the corner, behind the brick house."
Wolf didn't know how Oilcan could tell from his perch
above the miasma but Wolf knew the humans had their ways.
Magic thrummed around him, ready to be used. He shifted
through his call lightening spell. His right hand primed the
clouds as his left hand readied the ground. Magic flooded the
street on a hot wave of air that flared out his duster. The hairs on
his arms lifted as the magic shifted into potential. He felt it reach
critical point and he brought his hands together, aiming the
channel through which the lightening would run. The faint leader
flashed downward out of the belly of the clouds, and then the
return stroke leapt from behind the brick, up to meet the leader
with a deafening clap of thunder. The blinding column of light
flared the dark miasma to white haze, and the thunder rumbled as
the stroke climbed up into the sky.
Malice roared in pain and anger. The lightening licked the
sky, as leader and return stroke danced back and forth over the
open channel.
"He's coming at you!" Oilcan said.
"Keep him back!" Wolf shouted at Earth Son and started
another call.
Earth Son locked into place, both hands set into shields. He
was holding a force wall set half a block around them and
another shield wrapped tight around himself. The lightening
flared again and again. Wolf could feel the thunder in his bones.
Malice stepped through the brick house, coiling like a
ghost snake. His eyes gleamed blood red. Down Malice's left
flank was a massive smoking wound.
Wolf felt twin spikes of magic flash through the area and a
moment later a fire strike bloomed around the ghost Malice. The
dragon ignored the flames, rushing toward Earth Son's force
wall. Wolf focused on the growing potential, waiting for it to hit
the critical point. He could only cast the spell, though, if Earth
Son kept the dragon at a distance.
The lightening died and darkness closed in around them.
"He's through your shield!" Oilcan cried. "He's through your
shield!"
Malice must have stepped through Earth Son's shield the
same way he had walked through the house. There was no time
for Wolf to change to spells.
"Earth Son, cover me damn you!"
In the dark, the ghost Malice was a presence felt, not seen or
heard, bearing down on him. A fire flare went off, lighting the
area. Malice loomed over them, transparent as smoke. As the
dragon snapped into solid form, a shield wrapped around Wolf.
Forest Moss was protecting him.
The dragon struck him. The shield held, but the ground
underneath didn't. The pavement under his feet lifted, and he was
airborne.
He had a dozen heartbeats to realize that Forest Moss had
been able to save him from the blow, but that he wouldn't be
wholly protected at the landing. And then he hit.
"Windwolf! Windwolf!" Oilcan shouted over the radio.
"He's still after you! Can you hear me! Malice is coming for
you!"
Pain shot up from Wolf's right hand. Hissing, he looked
down and found his fingers bent at impossible angles. He cursed,
hunching over his hand. He could attack or defend, but not both
now.
"Windwolf?" Oilcan called to him again.
"I hear you."
"The oni are attacking the dreadnaught."
Wolf cursed. "Get a message to True Flame. Tell him to
deal with the oni. I'll keep Malice busy."
* * *
A backup source for magic was shielded, the spells were
printed off and floated in place, the computers were turned off,
and the crew was gathered around her. She cast the magical
magnetic pulse spell and it flashed through her like a cold wind,
leaving her feeling strangely empty. With sudden panic, she
realized that her body might be a living computer.
Oh gods, I hope that didn't destroy my ability to call the
stones!
Esme powered up the workstation beside her. "Well, it didn't
kill our computers. We're coming up to spell stone range in two
minutes."
Tinker triggered the first spell that pumped the filtered
stored magic out. It was a relief to feel the magic start to pool
around her feet. Tinker had told the astronauts they needed
silence, and they had taken her seriously. They watched now,
silent, fearful. More than one had their eyes closed, and lips
moving in prayer.
Esme indicated that they were at the one minute mark.
Tinker made sure her fingers on both hands were in the
correct position, and then stood, waiting.
Esme held up her fingers then and counted the last ten
seconds down silently. When she nodded, Jin – with
Tinker's right hand nearly touching his mouth – and Xiao
Chen—on Tinker's left – pronounced the
activations words for the Wind and Stone Clans.
Magic flooded through the connection. Tinker let it run for
thirty seconds by Esme's silent count. She could feel the purity of
it, but the edges were starting to tangle, caught by the magnetic
field of the ship. She dropped her hands and the tengu went silent.
The activation word for the dragon spell was a simple. She
spoke it into the tense silence.
The universe went dark and formless.
Gravity tumbled Tinker and the others into a pile of bodies.
The "floor" now formed walls up to the matching bulkhead
ceiling. They untangled themselves.
"It worked." By the tone of her voice, Xiao Chen hadn't
expected it to.
Tinker wanted to say "Of course" but the way her life had
been going, the mind boggled as to all the ways it might have
screwed up. "We're on a planet but which one?"
Esme glanced upwards to the window far over their heads.
"Don't know yet."
"We landed well." Jin headed up the ladder. Tinker followed.
"That was not a landing." Esme called after them.
"We're on the ground," Tinker said. "Engines down, bridge
up. That's good enough for me."
"You do realize that this ship is nearly a half mile long?"
Esme said.
Oops.
Jin reached the window. He turned his head this way and
that, studying the view intently, before announcing. "Trees.
Nothing but trees."
"It's not Onihida or Earth then," Tinker said. "I hope its
Elfhome, or we ended up someplace totally new."
"That was the point of the colonization program as far as the
humans were concerned." Someone said from below.
"There's an airlock at mid-section." Jin kept climbing
upwards. "We might be able to get a better view."
Tinker only gave the window a passing glance. The trees
looked like ironwoods but it was difficult to tell. They were ten
or twenty feet above the canopy. If this was Turtle Creek, then
she just erected the tallest structure in
Pittsburgh
– for however long it remained standing.
* * *
The airlock opened to summer dusk. There was a narrow
ridge that wrapped around the ship. Tinker carefully picked her
way around and found what she most wanted to see –
Pittsburgh
. Clouds boiled over Oakland
, but no lightening flashed from them. Was that a
good sign or bad? Had Malice killed Windwolf?
They had "landed" in Turtle Creek, neatly replacing the
Ghostlands with the massive bulk of the ship's engines. The
Dahe Hoa would have taken out the center section of the
Westinghouse
Bridge
if it hadn't already fallen. The remaining spans of
the bridge butted up against the side of the ship just ten feet
down from the ridge she stood on.
And like one of her impossible dreams, Pony stood on the
bridge, looking up at her. He lifted up his arms and motioned for
her to jump to him. Relief flooded through her like a weakness.
Her legs started to buckle, so she leapt to him.
Pony caught her and pulled her close. "Domi."
"Oh, Pony, I was so scared that you were killed." She hugged
him tightly, burying her face into the warmth of his neck,
smelling his scent.
"I thought I lost you." His voice was husky with emotion.
She kissed him on the strong line of his jaw. He turned his
head and captured her mouth with his and kissed her deeply. He
tasted of the enclave peaches; the sweetness poured through her
like warm honey; she clung to him, letting the feeling push out
the fear and worry.
Tinker realized that Stormsong was beside her. She burned
with sudden embarrassment at the way she was acting. Knowing
that neither elf would see it as wrong didn't help.
She broke the kiss but couldn't bring herself to let go of
Pony. With one hand, she reached out to Stormsong to pull her
into a three-way huddle. "And you too. I was worried sick about
both of you."
"What? I don't get a kiss?" Stormsong teased.
Tinker laughed and kissed her quickly on the lips. Then
holding them close, she whispered. "Is Windwolf all right?
Where is he? What's happened?"
"We can not get close enough to the museum to look for
Wolf," Pony said. "Malice, though, appears to be searching for
something, so we think that Wolf has eluded him."
"The oni has stolen the dreadnaught and taken it downriver,"
Stormsong said. "Our greatest fear has been that while Malice
kept us busy, the oni would push an army through the
Ghostlands."
"Well, I stopped that." Tinker gave a weak laugh.
As Pony and Stormsong updated her, Cloudwalker, Rainlily
and Little Egret joined them at the end of the bridge. She greeted
them with hugs. It felt good to be surrounded by her people.
The sekasha shifted to face crewmembers picking
their way around the edge of the ship. It was Esme with Jin and
handful of the tengu crew members.
"It's okay. I've taken the tengu as my beholden."
"Are you sure that's wise?" Pony asked.
"Yes."
"Okay." She took a deep cleansing breath. She pressed her
palms to her eyes and considered current obstacles and possible
tools. If Malice was hunting Windwolf, then they would have to
hunt Malice. The EMP spell that she used to clear the ship should
work on Malice. They needed, however, a big gun to take
advantage of it – a very big gun. She could think of only
one place they could get such a gun. "Okay, we're going to need
the dreadnaught."
"What's a dreadnaught?" Jin asked.
"I suppose you could call it an attack helicopter on steroids,"
Tinker said. "It's more a flying fortress. It's armed with a variety
of heavy guns, from machine guns to cannons, and can carry a
large number of troops into any location. The elves built them
with magic in mind – so they're very low tech, and thus
extremely clunky."
"And you want us to take it out?" Jin asked.
"No," Tinker said. "We need it to take on Malice."
"Take it over?" Stormsong said. "Are you fucking insane?"
She held up her hands to ward off Stormsong's objections.
"While we were at Aum Renau, I got inside of the dreadnaughts.
I think it was part of me being the pivot – they didn't
know what I would need to stop the oni, so they told me anything
I wanted to know – full access to everything."
"Yes," Stormsong hissed, her eyes going soft and vague.
"The pivot keeps turning until the door is fully shut."
Tinker shivered. "Oh, that creeps me out. I took detailed
notes and I scanned them into my datapad – I was
thinking of making a few for the Wind Clan."
"You would," Jin murmured.
"The big question is – do we have anyone that
knows how to fire the guns?" Tinker expected that they would
need to track down some the Fire Clan crew. Surprisingly, all the
sekasha pointed to themselves.
"We were all taught how when we were in Aum Renau,"
Pony explained. "After you showed an interest in the airship."
"They didn't miss a trick with me being the pivot, did they?
How the hell did I miss—never mind, don't answer that."
"We will need a pilot," Stormsong said. "The oni killed the
dreadnaught's crew."
"How close is it to Earth's aircraft?" Esme had worked her
way down to the bridge. She spoke Elvish, which surprised
Tinker and also made her realize that Jin had been speaking it
too.
"The controls are modeled after a helicopter," Tinker said.
"I'm your pilot then." Esme noted Tinker's surprise. "I'm the
best fucking pilot you're going to find. It's the magic. On
Elfhome, I can fly blindfolded." Tinker remembered Stormsong's
ability with the hoverbike and realized that Esme probably had
the same type of talent. "Taking over controls mid-air might be
tricky – but should be a piece of cake compared to some
of the NASA simulations."
"You know," Durrack called out of the gathering twilight
announcing the NSA's arrival. "We're going to have to reclassify
you to force of nature."
"Oh good." Tinker said. "We're going to do an assault on the
dreadnaught and we could use your help."
Briggs scoffed as she joined Durrack. "And she's not even
trying to be scary."
* * *
Tinker kept losing count of their numbers. They would need
a tengu to get every non-tengu up to the dreadnaught while it was
in flight. The problem was that she kept forgetting to count
herself, or she added herself to both elves and humans. It was
really starting to bug her.
"Eighteen," She hissed to herself. "Nine tengu and nine
people without wings."
While the elves and the NSA agents arranged transportation
and weapons, and the sekasha magical supplies, she and
the ship tengu gathered high tech gear.
"I found the dreadnaught," Durrack called as Jin winged her
down to the bridge. Dusk was deepening into night. "The oni
took it downriver to Shippensport and took over the nuclear
power plant."
"Without power, the humans will be crippled." Pony pointed
out the logic of the oni's attack.
As if we didn't have enough to worry about. "Did they
damage the nuclear plant?"
"No, they haven't. They just took it off the grid. EIA has
dispatched a team to take it back, but they don't have any way to
fight Malice. They're leaving him to us."
"Did you find everything?" Getting a nod, she motioned
toward the yellow delivery truck that the NSA had produced.
"Let's go."
* * *
Malice cocked head, as if listening carefully.
Suddenly there was a massive boom, loud beyond
description. A shock wave of air suddenly blasted through the
streets, and a moment later, there was an echo under foot.
What was that?
Someone looped an arm under Wolf's and pulled him to his
feet.
"Shhhh," A male hissed, and then added in English. "Don't
use magic."
The male was an Asian human. He tucked in under Wolf's
arm, supporting him.
As Malice crashed loudly through the rubble, the man
guided Wolf backwards, unhurried. Malice scanned the room,
swinging his head back and forth, as if searching for them
without seeing them. What magic was this that the man had?
A cold chill went down Wolf's back as he realized that the
male's ears were furred and pointed like a cat's. This was an oni
like Lord Tomtom. Judging by Malice's seemingly blind search,
the oni was keeping the dragon from seeing them. But why was
the oni helping Wolf?
Malice stilled and the oni froze in place. The dragon cocked
its head as if listening closely. The oni male tightened his hold on
Wolf as if worried that Wolf could act. Wolf, however, was
under no illusions as to how useless his magic was at the
moment.
The great beast grumbled, its voice like thunder, and it
sniffed deeply. The massive head turned toward them and Malice
stared long at where they stood. The oni stared back, gripping
Wolf tightly.
Was the dragon truly fooled, or was Wolf the one being
deceived? It was an uncomfortable thought – as was the
awareness that the oni had hold of his good hand, making him
totally helpless between the two.
Malice stalked forward, muttering deeply. The dragon
stopped again, now only a dozen paces from them. Malice
rumbled out, seemingly in disgust; its breath washed over them.
The oni slipped a plastic jar out of his pocket, and carefully
shook it, quietly sifting out a bright red powder. Malice sniffed
deeply again, forming runnels in the dust at their feet. The dragon
flung back its head, gave a series of deep coughing roars and
shuffled back suddenly, away from them.
The oni jerked Wolf backwards and they hurried to a
staircase at the corner of the room, and down the steps into
darkness. Behind them, Malice smashed loudly, roaring, but
Wolf couldn't tell in which direction the dragon was heading
– after them or away. In the complete darkness, they
made a series of quick turns. Either the oni could see in the
darkness or was running blind with one hand on the wall.
"What is that red powder?" Wolf asked.
"Cayenne pepper."
They turned again, and the black gave way. A grate stood
half-open to a dimly lit tunnel crowded by three pipes thick
around as an elf. The oni pulled Wolf into the tunnel and shut the
grate.
"This way," the oni male said.
The floor was curved, making walking difficult. A hundred
feet down, the tunnel joined another. Wolf knew that they
couldn't be inside the museum any more.
"What is this place?" Wolf asked.
"You ask a lot of questions."
"I like knowing where I stand."
"Yeah, nice when you can get it." The oni kept walking.
"These are the old steam tunnels that used to heat all of Oakland
."
"Who are you?"
"My name is my own to have." The oni said.
"That makes it awkward to thank you."
The oni paused to look at him. Finally, he said, "You can
call me Tommy."
"Tommy," Wolf bowed. "Thank you."
Tommy grunted as if surprised.
"You are Lord Tomtom's son?" Wolf asked.
Tommy started down the tunnel without seeing if Wolf
followed. "His bastard. Don't think that you did a disfavor to me
by killing him. Quite the opposite. I would have killed him
myself if I thought I could have gotten away with it."
"I see."
"No you don't. You have no idea. He raped my mother just
to see if he could get a human pregnant. It took him months to
get her knocked up, and kept her tied to the bedpost the entire
time. Even after I was born, he'd come to our place and beat the
snot out of both of us and rape her again, just because he could."
"Is that why you helped me?"
Tommy glanced at Wolf, ears laid back. At the next
intersection, he paused to ask quietly, "What am I?"
"You? You're an oni."
"The fuck I am. I'm a human."
"Your father—"
"Was a sadist pig." Tommy stalked off. "So my good, kind,
beat-to-death mother doesn't count, even though she contributed
half my genes, gave birth to me, and raised me to be a man? A
human man. I'm not one of them. Not that that means shit
to you elves."
Wolf had never considered that the half-oni would think of
themselves as human. How could he refute the difference that
mindset made in a person? Making Tinker an elf had not changed
her basically human outlook. If the half-oni had the capacity of
human compassion, then it had to be logical that they could be
revolted by the oni's lack of it.
"It means something to me," Wolf told Tommy.
Tommy stared at him again, as if trying to see into the inner
workings of his mind. Perhaps he could. "We know that the plan
is to kill all of us mixed blood alongside of the oni, but we're
more willing to gamble on you elves being humane than the oni."
How ironic, that both sides were looking for humanity in the
other.
"We don't want to be their slaves," Tommy continued.
"We've had thirty years of that shit."
"Then why didn't you leave? There's a full planet for you
'humans' to go to."
Tommy made a sound of disgust. "It's all so black and white
to you elves? I don't get how you can live so long and not realize
the world is full of gray. We didn't leave because we couldn't."
"Why couldn't you?"
"You can't just walk out at Shutdown. The U.N. has fences
and guards and you have to have the right papers or they throw
you in prison. And even if you get past the guards, you need a
birth certificate and social security numbers and high school
diplomas to live in United
States
. And you need money, or you're out on the
street and starving."
"And you don't have these things?"
"The oni are masters of keeping power to themselves.
They've got all the paperwork. They try to keep us from learning
how to speak and read English. They know how much money
we're making, and they'll beat we us half to death if they even
suspect we're trying to keep a little on the side. We don't know
how many oni there are in Pittsburgh
– who is a disguised oni and who isn't
– so we can't even turn to the humans for help. The oni
spy on us as much as they spy on you."
Wolf wasn't sure if Tommy was telling him the truth, but
certainly it would explain how the oni kept control of the half-
breeds. He could see ways around the oni enslavement –
until then he remembered that all the half-oni would have been
born and raised in the oni control. A child could be kept ignorant,
molded into believing it was helpless.
Tommy stopped him with a hand on his shoulder. The half-
oni's ears twitched. Wolf caught an echo of harsh voices. He
would have to accept it as real.
"There are oni ahead of us," Tommy whispered. "We can't
go this way. I can only cloud their sight and they have noses like
dogs."
Wolf nodded, and followed Tommy back to a tunnel they'd
passed before. They went through a maze of turns and up a flight
of stairs to go through another grate into a basement stacked high
with cardboard boxes. The labels indicated that the boxes once
held cans of food. Just as Wolf wondered if they still contained
their original contents, Tommy opened a door and the smell of
cooking food flooded over them.
Beyond the door was a large kitchen filled with Asians. A
low right-angled counter divided the kitchen off from the
restaurant's dining room. The long leg into the dining room was a
bakery display case filled with buns and breads.
"What are you doing here, Tommy?" One of the cooks, an
old man, asked in Mandarin as he took a tray of buns from the
oven. "Bringing him here?"
"The oni are in the steam tunnels," Tommy answered in the
same tongue.
"Ugh!" the old man grunted. "You get us all killed."
Wolf looked at the crowded kitchen. "These are all mixed
bloods?"
"No." Tommy wove through the cooks. "These are all
humans. That was my great-uncle."
A herd of children galloped into the kitchen from a back
room. Some could pass as human – might even be fully
human – but mixed in were children with horns and tails.
With cries of dismay, in ones and twos, the adults yanked the
children out of Wolf's path, leaving only one child standing
alone.
The little female looked up at him fearlessly and he knew
her. Zi.
"Hi." She cocked her head, puzzled by his presence. She had
a cookie in either hand. She held one up to him. "Do you want a
cookie?" And when he hesitated, she added. "I didn't drop it or
anything."
"Thank you." Wolf took the cookie with his left hand and
bowed slightly to her. "That is very nice of you."
"Come on." Tommy caught him by the left wrist, and said in
rough low Elvish. "If oni find you here—they kill
everyone."
"What is she doing here?" Wolf resisted being moved. He
had demanded that the little female be kept away from people
that would poison her against elves.
"No one else would take her. The humans are afraid of the
oni and the oni don't give a shit. Look at me, I'm Lord Tomtom's
son, and even I don't get a disguise to protect me."
Wolf scanned the kitchen, seeing this time that the children
were in the arms of only small-framed, battered women. There
were only two males, men made fragile by time. They used
Mandarin in their fearful cries, and it was Chinese written on the
signs posted around the room. The skin clan used this kind of
slavery – transporting women out of their homelands to
places they couldn't speak the language and then tied them down
with children.
He understood now Tommy's hate. It was the same hate that
fueled the genocide of the Skin Clan.
Tommy suddenly pushed him back against the wall. "Stay
still! I don't have my father's talent – I can't mask a
moving object from multiple watchers. They will kill
everyone if they find you here!" He glanced to his uncle.
"Mask the scent!"
The uncle opened the fridge, took out a container and flung
the contents on the grill. An eye-watering reek filled the air.
"Onions! Pepper!"
While some of the women quickly herded the children
upstairs, others took out knives and attacked onions and bright
red peppers. Tommy's focus was on the door. Moments later, it
opened, and oni warriors crowded into the restaurant. There were
a dozen large, red haired, horned males. They had war paint on
their faces and carried machine guns and swords. They snarled in
Oni, wrinkling up their noses against the assault of smell.
The leader was the tallest among them. He set four of the
warriors to watch the street and barked orders to the others.
Three warriors raided the bakery counter. The rest moved into the
kitchen and back rooms. The leader picked out a female, shoved
her face down onto one of the tables, tore away her skirt, and
forced himself into her with brutal casualness. The woman
pressed knuckles into her mouth, stifling whimpers. No one else
appeared even to notice, but Tommy locked down hard on Wolf's
good arm.
The bakery raiders stuffed their mouths and pockets and then
flung the buns to other warriors.
Outside came a deep roar from Malice echoed up the street.
"He sounds hungry." The leader spoke Mandarin so that the
humans could understand. "He's probably looking for something
to eat."
The warriors bayed with laughter and gestured at the
frightened women. "We can feed him one of these fat sluts. That
one looks like it has a fat ass."
The leader finished with the woman he was raping and
slapped her buttocks. "Yes, a nice fat ass."
Their hunger satisfied, the warriors pelted each other with
bread. The leader barked an order. The warriors gathered again at
the front of the restaurant. The last one out of the backroom,
though, was carrying a whimpering, squirming Zi.
"Look what they have." The warrior held the little female
out by the back of her shirt.
The leader took her by her throat. He turned and shook the
child at the human like rag doll. "What is this doing here?"
"The EIA—" Uncle stuttered. "They imprisoned her
crazy mother."
The leader grunted. "If the elves find this here, they'll know
that this place belongs to us."
"We'll move her." Uncle held out his arms but moved no
closer to the warriors.
Without word or warning the oni leader broke Zi's neck.
Everyone had told Wolf about the oni savageness –
but he hadn't comprehended it fully until too late. He gasped out
in shock as the oni leader dropped the child's limp body onto the
floor.
"Malice is coming. Throw this out onto the street for him to
eat."
Wolf breathed in and anger burned through him like fire.
Nothing mattered but to see these monsters dead. He jerked his
arm free of Tommy, summoned a force strike and slammed it
into the back of the oni leader. The front of the restaurant
exploded out as the strike drove the oni male across the street.
He made a bloody star on the far building. The warriors
scrambled for cover, pulling out their machine guns.
"Hold still you stupid elf fuck!" Tommy growled.
Wolf braced himself as he flicked through a fire burst. The
oni bullets chewed through the other side of the restaurant.
Apparently between Wolf's sudden attack and Tommy clouding
their minds, the oni were disoriented to where Wolf was really
standing. The fire burst went off, igniting three of the oni into
columns of flame.
Wolf slammed a force strike at the last oni. A second bloody
star joined the first.
"What the fuck was that?" Tommy screamed. "She was dead!
This does nothing but make you feel better! All those women and
children are now dead because you had to be a hero!"
Someone as young as the half-oni couldn't understand that
to be immortal was to have forever to regret. Wolf knew if he
had let the oni walk away unpunished, he would not be able to
live with himself. But Tommy was right. He brought danger
down on the rest – the human mothers and half-oni
children.
"I'll see that they're safe until this is done."
"Yeah, that will make the kids safe! Until you kill them for
no other reason than their mothers were raped by the wrong
species."
"I give you my word – they will not be harmed."
Tommy caught himself from saying anything else, and stood,
fists balled, panting.
"Windwolf?" Oilcan murmured in Wolf's ear. "If you're the
one that just took out the Chang's restaurant, Malice is coming
your way."
Wolf glanced out in the street where the oni still burned like
massive candles. "Malice is coming. Get the others. We need to
move to someplace safe."
Tommy's cat ears flicked. "Oh fuck. He is." Tommy went off
to gather the women and children.
Wolf gazed again the wreckage he was leaving behind.
Tinker was rubbing off on him.
Chapter 22: End Of The Rainbow
Briggs drove in the front while the rest
of them sat in the back. Tinker had grabbed a flex screen from the
ship and now spread it out on the floor. Downloading the
dreadnaught's layout and defenses, they planned the assault.
"The dreadnaught's biggest weakness is
that it wasn't built with an aerial attack in mind. It's like a turtle,
with lots of service hatches down in through its shell. Also it
tends to be blind in the butt. I was going to fix that with a turret
on top."
"Prince True Flame said that it was
useless fighting the dragon because it couldn't defend from
attacks above." Pony said.
"That's true," Tinker said. "So we're
going to have to kill Malice before he has a chance to close."
"Oh, fun." Esme muttered.
"But the airship is vulnerable to the
tengu," Tinker said. "I think if we fly up behind it, we can
approach it unseen – but it leaves a very choppy wake."
"We can handle it, domi." Jin waved off
the worry.
Domi. That drove her commitment to
them home and left her a little breathless. I'm responsible for
them – and I'm taking them straight into danger. But what
recourse did she have? Just as the elves were not about to let the
oni live, the oni couldn't leave any of the elves alive either.
"We need three things." Tinker forced
herself to focus on the plan and not how badly it might end. "We
need to keep the ship in the air, pick where it goes, and fire the
cannons. So, that means, we need to secure the fore and aft engine
compartments, the cannon turrets, and the bridge."
Pony gazed at the plan for a moment,
and then pointed to the access hatch nearest to the rear which
opened to the aft engine compartment. "We'll enter here. Once
we've secured it, we'll break into teams. These tengu are good
with machines – yes?" Getting a nod from Tinker, Pony
continued. "There are three doors to this area including the hatch,
so Little Erget and four tengu will stay."
Jin assigned Xiao Chen and two of the
other tengu to the aft team.
"The rest of us will then move to the
fore engine compartment and take it." Pony traced a route across
the top of the airship to the forward-most service hatch. "Four
doors open to this area, but we'll control what's beyond these two
doors. Rainlily and four of the tengu will hold this position. We
split here. Domi and Cloudwalker will take the bridge with Esme,
Jin and Durrack – which should be lightly manned and
will have only one door not controlled by us. Stormsong and
Briggs will come with me. We'll take the main cannon turret
– which will be heavily manned."
Tinker explained how she planned to kill
Malice. "Now when this spell goes off, you're going to lose your
shields and it might take a minute or two before normal level of
magic is restored." She warned her Hand. "Your beads should be
protected from the spell effects, so if you save the power in them,
you can recast your shields immediately."
The sekasha nodded, indicating that they
understood.
Durrack pressed his hand to his ear and
listened to it intently. "Okay. Understand." He knocked on the
partition to the driver's cabin. "Briggs? Where are we?"
"Nearly to
McKees
Rocks
Bridge," Briggs
answered.
"The dreadnaught is here." Durrack
tapped the map just down river
of Neville's Island, and then
ran a finger up the Ohio River towards
Pittsburgh. "They're following the river."
"If we're carrying others, we won't be
able to climb fast." Jin said. "We should start high, like the edge
of a cliff or on top of a building."
"They'll come over the bridge," Pony
pointed to the bridge. "We can wait on the supports. The bridge
will give us cover, and then the tengu can take us aloft."
"That will work." Jin said.
* * *
Nearly a mile and a half long, the McKees
Rocks
Bridge stretched across the
wide, flat Ohio River valley in a
complex string of structures—more a chain of bridges
than one single bridge. The part that actually sat above the river
was a seven hundred plus foot trussed arch bridge. On both sides
of the elegant steel curve were two massive stone pylons. They
hid the truck in the shadows of the western pylons.
The cloudy night was on their
side—it cloaked them in darkness.
"I hear it," Jin put out a hand to Tinker.
"I'll take you up."
The other eight tengu paired off with the
humans and elves.
It was short spring up to the arching
steel. They crouched down, tucking themselves in the crossbeams.
The roar of the dreadnaught grew
louder.
"There! See it?" Jin whispered.
Twin searchlights appeared in the
distance, slashing downwards. The cockpit was a pale gleam
between them. The dreadnaught moved up the broad valley,
keeping between the hills that flanked the Ohio River
. The searchlights played back and forth in a narrow
arc, directly in front of the airship.
Durrack glanced up river toward the
darkened city and then back to the oncoming dreadnaught.
"They're probably following the river because it's the most
recognizable landmark they can see with the power out."
"Lucky for us," Jin said. "They're going
slow so they don't hit anything. That will make it easier for us to
get to it."
In the dark, the true size of the
dreadnaught was lost. It was a wedge of darkness behind the
searchlights' brilliance. They crouched in the bridge's shadows as
the gleaming spots moved across the shimmer of the water,
encountered the bridge, and played up and over the network of
steel struts. Tinker held still, heart hammering, trying not to think
about the machine gun cannons. Her luck on this kind of thing
had been so bad lately.
The cockpit slid overhead, and the belly
of the dreadnaught followed, the air throbbing. Ushi with Pony
leapt upwards, the rustle of his black wings spreading lost under
the rumble of the dreadnaught's engines. As he took his first
downstroke, Xiao Chen with Stormsong vaulted after him. Niu
and Zan rose together. Tinker lost sight of them in the
dreadnaught's eclipse.
Jin took hold of Tinker and murmured,
"Hang on." And then they were airborne.
Amazingly, in some strange heart
stopping manner, winging upwards was fun. In her flights with
Riki, she had been so concerned about their end destination that
she never noticed the thrill of flying. Did it say something about
her that as long as she knew where they were going, she could
now enjoy the ride?
Jin landed them between Ushi and Xiao
Chen.
"I think I envy you." Stormsong
murmured to Xiao Chen.
Tinker smothered a laugh, and
whispered. "Yeah, once you get used to it, it's fairly cool."
"It's wood!" Jin whispered, running his
hand over the hull's surface.
"Of course," Tinker whispered. "These
are elves."
Her Hand activated their shields. Pony
asked a question with blade talk. Getting a nod from the others,
he opened the hatch and the sekasha dropped down into dim
engine room.
* * *
She had never seen the elves really
fighting before. Not a full Hand against hordes, unconcerned for
her protection because she was safe behind her own shield. She
hadn't expected it to be so beautiful. Their swordplay became a
fluid dance with the oni seeming like paper cutouts instead of real
opponents. The dreadnaught, though, was buzzing like a kicked
beehive, and they spread themselves thin.
On the bridge, Tinker used her shield to
back the oni warriors away from the door. Cloudwalker slipped
around her on the right and Durrack went left.
"Don't shoot any of the instruments!"
Tinker had her pistol out, but was afraid to fire. She rarely hit
what she aimed at and all the controls were vital to their success.
"I – don't – miss."
Durrack picked his shots with deliberation. "Someone get the
pilot before he crashes us!"
Two warriors blocked Tinker.
"Esme, the pilot." Jin spun on one heel
and kicked one of the warriors out of Tinker's path. Tinker hedged
sideways, covering Esme as her mother scrambled into the low
cockpit.
The ship banked hard to the left, rushing
toward the hills that lined the valley, Esme struggled with the oni
pilot.
"Tinker!" Esme cried. "We need to lift!
Pull up on the collective."
Dropping her shield, Tinker scrambled
into the cockpit and grabbed hold of the collective control stick
and pulled up. The engines roared louder and they started to
climb.
"Tinker!" Jin shouted warning, and she
ducked instinctively.
Bullets sprayed the windshield just over
her head. A dozen bullet holes reduced the Plexiglas to a haze of
cracked glass.
The oni pilot kicked Tinker backwards.
She hit the cracked windshield; it held for a moment then gave
way. She screamed, flailing and caught hold of the pilot's leg as
she fell. Her weight jerked him half out the cockpit. He grabbed
the edge of the cockpit before he fell the full way out. They
dangled far above the last mile of the I-279 before it ended at the
Rim; the oni pilot holding onto the airship and Tinker onto his
leg.
"Jin!" Esme shouted, struggling to keep
the airship aloft and reach for the oni pilot at the same time. "I
can't reach her!"
Jin shouted; his words resonated against
Tinker's senses with magic.
The oni pilot clawed at the edge of
cockpit, trying to pull himself up. He grasped the windshield
wiper and started to pull himself up.
The wiper snapped and he fell –
and Tinker with him.
Tinker screamed and Esme –
staring down at her – cried out in dismay.
Then someone caught Tinker's wrist, and
she was jerked hard in both directions.
"Let go of him!" Keiko cried, flapping
madly. "I can't catch you both; we'll all fall."
"No! No! No!" The pilot wailed,
dangling upside down by Tinker's grip on his leg. But she wasn't
strong enough to hold his weight by one hand. He slipped out of
her hold and plunged downward again. The clouds had slid away
and moonlight gleamed silver on the pavement below. The pilot
dwindled to doll-size but still hit the road a loud carrying thud, a
sudden burst of wet on the gray pavement.
"Shit, shit, shit!" Keiko cried as they
continued to slowly fall. "You're still too heavy."
Xiao Chen swooped down and tried to
intercept them.
Keiko hissed in anger, bringing up her
razor-sheathed feet. "She's charmed by the Chosen
's blood. She's not to be hurt!"
"You heard her," Riki glided in. "She's
charmed by my line!"
"It's only Xiao—" Tinker yelped
as Keiko suddenly passed her to Riki in a mid-air fling.
"I got you." Riki said it as if this was
supposed to be comforting. "Keiko!"
The tengu female was heading for the
airship. "I was called! He's here! He called!"
"Keiko!" Riki shouted, chasing after the
teenager. "Wait! Damn it, Tinker, who is on that dreadnaught?"
"Your uncle Jin."
"That's not possi—" Riki gasped
as they swept back in through the shattered windshield and he saw
Jin. "Uncle Jin?"
Jin reached out and pulled Tinker out of
Riki's hold. "Are you okay?"
"I'm fine." Tinker fought the need to
cling to Riki, Jin, or Durrack. I'm safe inside. I'm safe inside.
"What the hell is going on? Where did
you come from?" Riki gazed in stunned amazement at the tengu,
elves and humans.
"We got her. She's safe." Durrack had
found the speaker tubes to the gun turret and engine rooms.
Cloudwalker and Keiko were holding the door that boomed with
the oni's attempts to break it down. "Tinker, your cousin says that
Malice has Windwolf pinned down in
Oakland. If you don't want to be a widow,
we better get going."
It took Tinker a second to realize that
Durrack had received the last part via his earbud radio and not the
speakertube. Yeah, yeah, she was fine.
"What?" Riki cried as "You're taking on
Malice? Are you nuts?"
"I've got a plan." Tinker wondered if that
sounded anywhere reassuring. She couldn't stop trembling. "Do
we have the guns?"
"The Storms are holding the guns."
Durrack meant Storm Horse and Stormsong.
Tinker hugged herself, panting, trying to
remember said plan. She was missing something important.
"Oilcan? Wait? Where's Impatience? I don't want to take him out
with this spell—he'll revert to a wild animal and kill
anyone near him."
"He's in the Cathedral with your
cousin," Durrack said.
"Okay, I really don't want Impatience in
the spell range then." Tinker thought a moment. "Tell Oilcan to
put distance between him and Impatience – just to be on
the safe side. Esme, let's do a strafing run on Malice."
"And NASA thought it covered all
possible flight simulations." Esme banked the ship hard back
toward city.
Clouds continued to clear, and the city
resolved out of the darkness. Their shadow ran on ahead of them.
Esme climbed out of the river valley, and crested over the hill
district to the flat plain of Oakland.
"Where is Malice?" Tinker asked
Durrack.
"See that dark cloud?" Durrack pointed
at billow of darkness that looked like smoke. "That's him."
"Oh, good, he's at least a half mile from
the Cathedral." Tinker started to unload her bag, setting up for the
spell. "Let's get his attention. Esme, get ready to run. Pony, can
you hear me?"
"Yes, domi."
"Shoot Malice with one of the cannons.
He's going to come fast, so get ready with the other cannon. Fire
the second cannon when my spell takes your shield down."
"Yes, domi," Pony said.
Esme had edged sideways so that they
hung over Fifth Avenue where it spilled down the hill toward the
flood plain of Uptown. The cannon thundered, deafening at the
close range. The shell whistled away. It hit the edge of the miasma
and the black deepened. Something stirred in the darkness.
Massive eyes gleamed at the heart of the cloud and then Malice
uncoiled and lifted from the ground.
"Here he comes!" Tinker cried.
Esme scuttled the airship backwards,
roaring out over Uptown, keeping the cannons pointed toward the
onrushing dragon. "Come on, come on."
Suddenly Malice dove into the ground.
"Where the fuck did he go?" Esme cried.
"He's phased!" Durrack shouted. "He can
move through solid objects!"
"Oh, you've got to be shitting me!" Esme
flung the airship forward and they raced up Fifth Avenue, into the heart
of Oakland.
"Where are you going?" Tinker cried.
"You said run." Esme put all power into
forward motion, tilting the airship to fit down the narrow places
of Fifth Avenue
. They lost something – hopefully not vital
– as they took out one the red lights over the street.
"Not this way!" Tinker cried, pointing at
the towering Cathedral that stood over
Oakland, where Oilcan was with
Impatience.
"It had to be this way!" Esme snapped.
Tinker looked behind them. Malice rose
out of the ground where they would have been if they had
continued toward Uptown. "Okay, this is good."
"He'll come after us," Esme said. "Trust
me. When you run, it's like you put out a sign that says 'free
lunch.' It's an easy way to make even the smartest ones get
stupid."
Perhaps she was right; Malice was
giving chase, coiling through the air like a snake in water. Esme
banked around the curve of the Hill, nearly clipping the top of
houses.
"It's like trying to drag race in a
Volkswagen." Esme complained.
Tinker had been watching the Cathedral
dwindle behind them. She realized now that they were heading
into downtown, the most densely populated area in
Pittsburgh.
"No, not this way either!" Tinker pointed
away from the city. "I don't want to open fire in the middle of the
city!"
"I don't either." Esme said as they nearly
skimmed across the Veterans
Bridge and ducked
into the forest of skyscrapers. "But we need time for me to get
turned around and facing him."
They wove through the buildings, the
gleam of the cockpit reflecting in the glass walls as they streaked
by.
"Okay, keep going west," Tinker pointed
out west just in case Esme didn't know. "After you get out of the
city, try to get Malice south of us, up against Mount
Washington. It's a blank slate. We can open fire on
him there."
Esme suddenly squeaked in surprise and
banked hard to the right. A moment later Malice came through a
skyscraper and fire jetted out of his mouth. The night went bright
with the flame, the light reflecting off the canyon of glass around
them.
"Oh shit!" Esme banked again, somehow
dodging both the flame and the PPG tower. She clipped the side
of the Fifth Avenue Place. "Oh shit—we lost our front
right props." She fought the ship to keep it from careening out of
control. "No one said anything about him breathing fire!"
"He's a dragon," Jin said. "That's what
they do!"
"We've got a fire up here!" One of the
tengu shouted from the front engine room.
"We're running out of city." Durrack
warned.
"I know, I know, I know." Tinker was
loath to open fire in the city, but if Malice took the airship down,
they'll lose the guns and then they'll all die. Point
Park was going to
have to do. "Get ready people!"
Esme wrenched the airship about as they
roared over the empty expense of the park. Malice flew at them.
Tinker watched him come, spell in hand, waiting for him to get
clear of the city.
When he cleared the highway dividing
city from the park, she cast the spell.
The coldness flashed over her. The
wings vanished from the tengu's back. Cloudwalker's shield
winked out. The miasma of Malice's shield vanished and he fell,
twisting madly as he plunged out of the sky. The cannons roared.
One of the shells caught him in the left eye, blasting his head
backwards.
"I'm losing it!" Esme shouted as the
dreadnaught slid sideways toward the massive Fort
Pitt
Bridge. "We're
going down!"
Tinker called for her shields and nothing
happened. The ambient magic in the area hadn't recovered from
the flux spell yet. "Oh shit."
And then they hit the bridge.
* * *
Wolf braced himself for the worse. He
trusted that Tinker would somehow kill the dragon, but he was
afraid she leapt one too many times into the void. As he hurried
toward the downed dreadnaught, his fears only deepened. The
airship had struck the first span of the twin decked bridge and then
crashed into Monongahela River. The
crumbled wreckage laid half in and half of the water. Human
emergency crews gathered on the shore and on the water, trucks
and boats with bright flashing lights.
Wolf pushed through the tightest knot of
people find Little Egret lying unconscious on the pavement. A
pair of soaked tengu were giving the young sekasha CPR. As he
watched, Little Egret coughed and sputtered weakly back to life.
Oilcan had told him that the astronaut tengu were helping Tinker
kill the dragon. He assumed that these two were part of that crew.
"Where's Tinker?" Wolf asked the two
tengu.
"We were in the aft engine room." The
tengu female indicated the submerged section of the dreadnaught
and then made a vague motion at the part smashed up against the
bridge. "She was in the cockpit."
He left a healer from the hospice with
Little Egret and moved on, working his way around the airship.
One section was still burning, and the humans were frantically
trying to douse out the flames. Wolf caught snatches of their
conversations that focused on the live ammo still on board the
ship.
There was a body under a white sheet.
He paused to draw aside the sheet. A male tengu, badly burned.
Little Horse, Discord and Briggs were
on the other side of the wreckage along with more dead and
wounded. They worked with the Pittsburgh Fire Fighters and
more tengu, hacking at the splintered wood hull.
"Domi was on the bridge with
Cloudwalker." Little Horse hacked at a section of the hull with
his ejae. "Rainlily took in too much smoke, but she got out
without being burned. Two of tengu with her were not so lucky.
You were hurt?"
Wolf held up his spell-covered hand,
careful not to flex. "Just this but it's healing." Wolf glanced over
the many dead laid out and covered. "How many tengu did you
take with you?"
"Those are oni." Discord was favoring
the leg bitten by the dragon earlier in the week. "Most we killed
taking the dreadnaught."
Blood on the pavement showed that
there had been fighting after the crash too.
A cry went up and people were lifted
free of the wreckage. A tengu male and female, both young, face
painted for war. They were battered but alive.
"Were they with you or against you?"
Wolf asked.
"They caught domi when she was
knocked from the dreadnaught." Little Horse said.
"Domi promised that all tengu would be
under her protection," Discord added.
"All?" Wolf indicated that the war-
painted tengu were not to be harmed. "How many does that
include?"
Discord shrugged and then gave a wry
smile. "I do not think domi bothered to find out."
More survivors were lifted out.
Durrack, a woman, and another pair of tengu, these from the
spaceship.
"I can see shielding!" Little Horse cried.
"Cloudwalker has his shield up!"
"He and domi should be the only ones
left." Discord said.
They cut carefully through the shattered
wood and broken instruments to the young sekasha. Despite his
shield, he'd been knocked unconscious. He still protected Tinker,
however, in his loose hold. Wraith leaned into the hole they had
cut and whispered to Tinker the word to deactivate Cloudwalker's
shields, which needed to be spoken close to the sekasha's heart. It
felt like eternity before the hurt and dazed Tinker understood
what was wanted of her and the shimmering blue of the shields
vanished.
The healers from the hospice cast spells
to make sure they could be safely removed, then, the two were
lifted carefully out of the womb of twisted wreckage. Only then
could Wolf hold Tinker in his arms and reassure himself that she
had emerged once again safely out the void. She seemed so small
and fragile without her normal vibrant personality.
"Oh, thanks gods, I was so worried
about you," she murmured as if it had been him in the airship.
"The others?"
"Your Hand is safe." He spared her the
news of the dead tengu.
She cried in dismay at the extent of the
damage to the airship. "Oh, I crashed True Flame's dreadnaught!
He's going to be angry."
"He will not care. It is a thing. All things
wear out – just usually not in such a spectacular fashion."
Tinker groaned.
"Do not worry, beloved. He will be only
concerned that you and yours are safe and that the dragon is
dead."
Tinker whimpered against his shoulder.
"Windwolf, I've made the tengu mine."
"So I've heard."
"Please, don't hurt them. I promised
them that they will be safe."
"They are safe."
"You won't hurt them?"
"I will protect them safe for you." He
kissed her carefully. "Rest."
True Flame and the Stone Clan were
arriving, so he reluctantly, he gave Tinker over to the healers and
the protection of her beholden.
True Flame stopped on the edge of the
roadway where he could see the dead dragon, the crashed
dreadnaught, and in the distance, like an exclamation mark in the
weak morning sky, the towering spaceship.
"You were right, Wolf."
"I was?"
"She's surprisingly destructive for one
so small. I am starting to see why you love her so—she is
the right size for you."
"Yes, she is."
A shout caught his attention. Little
Horse and Wraith Arrow were holding the Stone Clan sekasha
back from the tengu.
"What's going on here?" True Flame
stalked down to the river's edge.
"These tengu are still alive." Earth Son
stood behind his First, Thorne Scratch. He pointed at the battered
and soaked tengu who had given Little Egret CPR.
"Yes," Wolf noticed that the Wyverns
were watching. A whispered discussion was being passed through
their ranks. "And they are staying that way. My domi has taken the
tengu as beholden."
"They are oni," Earth Son snapped. "We
must eliminate the monsters before they can breed to dangerous
numbers."
"The tengu and the half-oni are no
different than the elves," Wolf pitched his argument to True
Flame and the silent sekasha. "We were created by the skin clan,
as they were created by the oni. They are turning on the oni as we
turned on the skin clan. Yes the oni are as evil as the skin clan
– but we merely need to look at ourselves to know that
good can come from evil."
"Tengu flock together." Forest Moss
drifted into the conversation, his tone light, as if he was
discussing clouds. Wolf could not tell how the mad one felt on
the issue. "Their loyalty to one another will supersede any claim
that they make to you. If you act against one of their brethrens,
they will turn on you."
"Tinker ze domi holds all the tengu."
The astronaut tengu named Jin said.
True Flame looked at Jin. "All? How
many are all?"
The war-painted male stepped forward,
apparently speaking for the Elfhome-based tengu. "We don't have
a full count. It has too dangerous to count, least the oni ever
found out what we were doing."
"Which was?" Wolf asked.
"We hoped to be free here on Elfhome,"
Riki said. "So in the last twenty-eight years, all of the tengu of
Earth and Onihida have come to Elfhome."
"All?" True Flame glanced over the ten
living tengu. "Are we speaking hundreds? Thousands? Millions?"
"Several thousand." Riki glanced to Jin
to see if he should be more specific and got a nod. "We believe
around twenty thousand."
Which meant they greatly outnumbered
the oni now trapped on Elfhome.
True Flame turned to Wolf. "How does
your domi possibly think she could hold all of them?"
"Through me. I am Jin Wong. I am the
heart and soul and voice of the tengu. I speak, and all will listen."
"I doubt this greatly." True Flame said.
Jin raised his hands and gave out a call.
It resonated with magic, as if his voice alone triggered some spell.
He turned to North and called. He faced the West and called.
Even as he faced the South and called, a rustle of wings
announced the arrival of a great flock of tengu. The sky went dark
with the crow black feathers. Warriors all, faces painted, and feet
sheathed in sharpened steel. They carried guns holstered to their
hips. They settled silently on the bridge trusses, the tops of
buildings, and street lights.
When the last tengu went still, Jin called
again, magic pulsing out from him. It echoed off the buildings
and the hillside across the river. He turned, gazing at them, as if
he too was stunned by the massive numbers of them. "I am Jin
Wong! I have returned to our people!"
And the tengu flock shouted back, "Jin!
Jin! Jin!"
Jin raised his hands and the flock fell
silent. "We are entering into an alliance with the elves. We are
taking Tinker ze domi as our protector. Under her, I hope that
first time our people will live in peace, security, and prosperity."
The flock roared in approval, a
deafening sound that washed over them. Jin raised his hand,
commanding silence, and receiving instant obedience.
"Jin offered his people," Wolf said in the
silence. "Domi offered her protection. Such an agreement, once
made, no other person could break that oath."
"This is true." True Flame said.
Earth Son had cast his shield,
encompassing only him and his sekasha. "She can't hold them.
This is preposterous."
"They fit the model of a household with
Jin as the head," Wolf said.
"Only clan heads can hold that many
people," Earth Son said. "And she is nothing but a –"
"She is my domi and we are the clan
heads of the Westernlands," Wolf growled. "Forest Moss is right.
You are a blind. Tinker has closed the Ghostlands." Wolf pointed
to Malice's massive body. "She killed the dragon that four of us
could not harm. She has made a peace with a force that we didn't
even know existed. Do not assign her your limitations. We can
hold the tengu."
"They are monsters!" Earth Son shouted.
Wolf shook his head. "They were once
human, forced into their shape by cruel masters. They have fought
beside my domi to kill the dragon. They have protected my
youngest sekasha from harm."
"You are a traitor to your people," Earth
Son spat the accusation and then looked to True Flame, as if
challenging the prince to refute it.
True Flame said nothing, waiting to see
the outcome of the debate.
Wolf directed his argument to the
Wyvern and the Stone Clan sekasha as he knew that his Hands had
already decided on the issue – or they wouldn't have
defended the tengu. But their decision was based on their trust of
him. The others would need convincing. "My people are those
that offer me their loyalty, be they elfin, human, tengu, or half-
blooded oni. It is my duty as domana to extend protection to those
weaker than I am."
"It is our duty to keep our race pure,"
Earth Son said.
"That is our Skin Clan forefathers
speaking. Kill the misbegotten children. Eliminate the unwanted
genetic line. Ignore trust, obedience, loyalty, and love in the
search for perfection. It was the Skin Clan, but it not our way."
"This is insanity. They breed like mice.
All of them do. The oni and the humans. This is our world. If we
don't eliminate them, they will overwhelm us."
"If they offer their loyalty and we give
them our protection – do they not become one of us?
They do not lessen us – they make us greater."
Earth Son worked his mouth for a
minute, and then finally cried. "No! No, no, no! They are filthy
lying creatures. I am Stone Clan head of the Westernlands, and I
say that the Stone Clan will never accept this!"
"I do not care what the Stone Clan
accepts." Wolf cocked his fingers, wondering if Earth Son would
be as stupid as actually start a fight with all the tengu assembled.
Since Earth Son was holding shields, he could strike quickly.
"Know this – the tengu are Wind Clan now. I will protect
them."
Earth Son made a motion. It was a start
of a spell. What spell Wolf would never know. Wolf snapped his
hand up to summon the winds, even though he would be too late
to block the attack. Thorne Scratch reacted first. With deliberate
calm, she struck out and beheaded Earth Son.
"We will not follow the path of the Skin
Clan." Thorne Scratch cleaned the blood from her ejae.
Red Knife, True Flame's First, nodded.
"Those that offer loyalty will be protected."
Jewel Tears gazed down at Earth Son's
body. "As temporary Stone Clan head of the Westernlands, I
recognize that non-elfin can be beholden."
Chapter 23: Peace
Tinker woke slowly. She had been dreaming, but for once, it
was a pleasant dream of the new viceroy palace being complete.
She had walked from room to room to room, marveling that all
this was hers. Theirs.
When she opened her eyes, she knew instantly she was in her
own bed at Poppymeadow's because Windwolf lay beside her, his
black hair poured like silk across the cream satin sheets.
Contentment poured through her like warm honey. She snuggled
closer to him. For once the taffy thickness of the
saijin-
induced sleep didn't seem threatening. If she was with Windwolf,
then everything was right with the world.
And then with sudden dark coldness, she remembered the
tengu. She had promised to protect them but then let the elves
drug her. What had she been thinking of? The elves would have
only seen the tengu as enemies.
She sat up, hands to her mouth to hold in the cries of
dismay. What had happened after she was carried away? Was Jin,
Grace and Xiao Chen and all the others already dead?
"Beloved?" Windwolf sat up beside her.
"Oh gods, I failed them! I promised Jin I would protect the
tengu! I failed them."
"You did not. You are my
domi. Your promises are
mine. I protected them. It was, after all, the right thing to do."
She knew, in a way she wouldn't have know a week ago,
what she had asked of him, and how different he had to be from
other elves to understand. There been a secret fear hiding inside
of her that he wouldn't understand, and instead of being a
powerful protector, he was in truth a ruthless killer. That cold
knot of fear dissolved.
"Oh, thank you!" She hugged him tight. She didn't need
anything else but to be in his arms and hear his heart beating. She
snuggled closer, wanting to drown in the
saijin-laced
honey contentment. She never wanted to let him go; never wanted
to risk losing him forever again.
"It was the least I could do after you solved that small
dragon problem I had," he said it with complete seriousness, but
there was laughter in his eyes.
She laughed, tangling her fingers in his hair and pulling him
down to kiss her. She delighted in his taste, the feel of his hands
on her, finding the hem of her nightgown to slide up her bare
skin.
"I love you," she murmured. "I'm never letting you go."
His gaze went serious and deep. "I am going no where, my
love."
Only a time later, after a proper renewal of their
relationship, did she think about another small dragon problem.
"What happened with Impatience when we did the flux
spell? Is Oilcan okay?"
"He is fine." Windwolf smoothed away her greatest fear.
"Your spell did not affect the little dragon. And the tengu have
been quite useful already. With their help, we had a long
discussion with Impatience about creating a pathway to Earth.
The question is where to put it."
"What about the Squirrel Hill tunnels? They go nowhere
now."
Windwolf considered for a moment and then nodded. "Yes,
that would be expedient."
Using the tunnels would open four lanes of traffic between
Elfhome and Earth and yet be easily controlled. "Wow."
"I told you, beloved, you and I would shake the universe
until we find a way."
Epilogue: Cup Of Joys
Elves may live forever, but their memories did not. Every
elfin child is taught that any special memory had to be polished
bright and carefully stored away at the end of a day, else it would
slip away and soon be forgotten. The eve of Memory was past,
but Wolf wanted to share the ceremony with his
domi
– even if somewhat belated. They had time now. He
wanted her to know how to save the memories of all that had
happened in the last few days, the good along with the bad.
Wolf settled before the altar of Nheoya, god of longevity.
His beloved sat down beside him.
Tinker took a deep breath and let it out in deep, heart-felt
sigh. "This is going to be like being dragged through thorns
– there's so much I regret. So many ways I've fucked up."
"This is not to punish yourself, beloved. Nothing is gained
from that. The worth comes from reflecting on the events
– removed from the passion that blinded you at the time
– and learning from the mistakes."
"Easier said than done."
"Think of it as something that has happened to someone else
– the person that you used to be and not the person you
are now."
She nodded and lit the candle of memory. Together, they
clapped to call the god's attention to them and bestowed their
gifts of silver on the altar. They sat in companionable silence,
waiting to reach perfect calmness before starting the ceremony.
Wolf reached his center quickly, but waited until Tinker was
ready to pick up the cup of tears and taste the bitter memories.
He allowed himself to reflect on his failure with Jewel Tears
and the bitter things she had to say to him. There was some truth
in what she had to say. He allowed silence to create a gulf
between his heart and hers, so that their dreams took different
form. He would have to remember this, remind himself to keep
his heart open to his beloved, so that they could share their
dreams.
Dawn was breaking, and the cups of tears were drained, so
they set aside their bitter memories. As light spilled into the
temple, they lifted the cup of joys.
All Wolf's new moments of happiness centered on Tinker.
They were scattered through his days, bright like diamonds. As he
took them out, played them close and stored them away, he found
a pattern to them. In every occasion, he had known he had at last
found the one that could not only understand his vision, but see
possibilities that he hadn't considered, and had the ability to make
it real. He found at the root of it all, a loneliness he hadn't
allowed himself to acknowledge, an awareness that he had been
totally alone while surrounded by people, an emptiness now
completely filled.
"Are you okay?" Tinker asked him in English.
He smiled. He had told her that he felt most free speaking
English, and by her answering look, she remembered. "Yes, I am
very content at this moment."
"Good. So am I." But then unease seeped into her eyes.
"What is it, beloved?"
"You probably have someplace to go, something you need
to do."
He held out his hand to her, and she took it, interlacing their
fingers. "What I need is to sit here with my
domi and talk
about what we want to do next."
THE END
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