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Eric
Van Lustbader THE
VEIL OF A THOUSAND TEARS Book
Two of The Pearl
Tor
Books by Eric Van Lustbader The
Ring of Five Dragons
The
Veil of a Thousand Tears This
is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this
novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously. THE
VEIL OF A THOUSAND TEARS Copyright © 2002 Eric Van Lustbader All
rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or
portions thereof, in any form. This
book is printed on acid-free paper Map
by Ellisa Mitchell Edited by David G. Hartwell A
Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC 175
Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010 www.tor.com Tor*
is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. Library of
Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Lustbader,
Eric. Veil
of a thousand tears / Eric Van Lustbader.—1st ed. p.
cm.—(The pearl; v. 2) "A Tom Doherty Associates book."
ISBN 0-312-87236-4 (alk. paper) I. Title. PS3562.U752
V45 2002 813'.54—dc21 2002019002 First
Edition: July 2002 Printed
in the United States of America 0987654321 For
David, Linda, and Tom
Book One:
Of the fifteen Spirit Gates, Sunken Gate is the one
in which the spirit lies, turning over leaves of fortune and the
future; it is here that promise begins, and dreaming ends,
—Utmost Source,
The Five Sacred Books of Miina 1
Riane and Giyan were alone in the Library of the Abbey of Warm
Current. It was midnight. A cold wind sighed through thorned sysal
trees, and rhythmic pulses rippled through the dense bedrock beneath
the abbey, where the power bourns wove themselves like strands of the
Great Goddess Miina's ruddy hair. The
Library, columned, marble-clad, lay dreaming like a castle keep in
the fastness of the fortresslike complex. The Ramahan abbey had been
abandoned for many years before Riane and her friends—the
Kun-dalan sorceress Giyan, the V'ornn Rhynnnon Rekkk Hacilar, the
Kun-dalan Resistance leader Eleana, the Rappa named Thigpen—had
made it their sanctuary some weeks before. Khagggun packs roamed the
countryside searching for them. Once, they had swept through the
abbey, and it was only Giyan's sorcery that had saved them. She had
roused them from sleep and, gathering up all evidence of their stay,
they had fled into the nearby forest, there to wait in stony silence
for the enemy to depart. The
abbey itself, sacked decades before by the V'ornn invaders, was
half-burned and crumbling when they had first come upon it.
Gimnopedes nested in untidy eaves. Spiders turned shadowy corners
into delicately veined cities. A beautiful sysal tree had, for
decades, grown up through thick plaza paving to split the lintel of
the east-facing temple. The hoary knuckles of its basal roots
displaced the artful pattern of the stone, an ironic comment on how
life reclaims the void and transforms it. The Library, alone,
remained intact, having been protected by a powerful spell that Giyan
had counteracted in order to gain entry. Riane
looked at Giyan, tall, slim, beautiful, golden, radiant, save for the
blackened crusts of the sorcerous chrysalides that covered her hands
and forearms. Even now, she could scarcely believe that they had been
reunited. Giyan's presence gave her a sense of profound dislocation.
She was not simply Riane, a sixteen-year-old orphaned Kundalan girl
who could not remember her parents or where she came from. She was
also the V'ornn Annon Ashera, eldest son of Eleusis Ashera. Eleusis
had been regent of Kundala until a ruthless coup by his archenemy,
Prime Factor Wennn Stogggul, and the head of Eleusis' own elite
bodyguard, Kinnnus Morcha. Riane's
searching gaze caught Giyan's whistleflower-blue eyes. "Every
time you look at me I see surprise on your face." Giyan's
heart ached, for she heard the sentiment behind the formal words, the
fragile sentence Riane could not bear to speak: Do you still love me?
"It is a marvelous moment, to be here with you, alone, in
private. To be able to call you Teyjattt." Teyj were the
beautiful multicolored four-winged birds the Gyrgon—the V'ornn
technomage caste—bred and took with them wherever they went. "Little
Teyj. You loved calling me that when Annon was a child." A
sudden fear, a stab in Giyan's heart. "And Annon did not?" A
moment's pause. "Annon did not, I think, appreciate your love.
He did not know what to do with it." "It
is odd the way you phrase it." "I
am no longer Annon." Riane spread her hands. "Annon is
dead. All Kundala knows it." "And
we? What do we know?" Riane
looked up at the magnificent dome of the Library, encrusted with a
mosaic of Kundala and the sinuous star constellations surrounding it.
Composed of millions of tiny colored glass tiles, fitted cunningly
together as only the Kundalan artisans could, the dome produced an
ethereal glow like a perpetual sunrise or sunset. Beneath this
sheltering sky she felt safe from both Annon's enemies and those of
the Dar Sala-at. For Annon was not simply the heir to the Ashera
Consortium. He and the former Riane together—this unique fused
entity—were the Dar Sala-at, the chosen one of Miina,
prophesied to find The Pearl, the most powerful, mysterious, and
ancient artifact of Kundala, to lead the Kundalan out of their
one-hundred-and-one-year enslavement to the technologically superior
V'ornn. "Here,
alone, together," she said at length, "we can share a dead
past. Like ghosts conjuring the root stew of life." "Stirring
the cauldron." "Yes."
Riane smiled a painful smile. "Making something special of it." She
saw movement out of the corner of her eye. The vigilant figure of
Rekkk Hacilar passed before the high, leaded window to the east. His
long, tapering, hairless skull was cloaked in a battle helm
fashioned, it was said, from the skull of a fallen Krael, and he held
his shock-sword at the ready. His purple armor glittered darkly. Once
a Khagggun—the V'ornn military caste—he had declared
himself Rhynnnon, turning his back on his caste, turning his efforts
to a greater cause. In this case, he had dedicated himself to the
service of the now dead Gyrgon, Nith Sahor. Because Nith Sahor wanted
the Dar Sala-at found and kept safe, Rekkk had sworn himself to
protect Riane. Now he was also Giyan's lover. "We
have been given a unique gift, haven't we?" Giyan said. "A
second chance." Rekkk,
in the ruins of the courtyard outside, began a ritualistic set of
thrusts and parries with Eleana. She was the same age as Riane. Her
V'ornn shock-sword looked massive in her delicate white hands, but
she swung the twin blades deftly through the night air. Under Rekkk's
tutelage she was quickly becoming an expert in its use. They
practiced endlessly. He said it took his mind off his wounds,
physical and emotional. Riane
watched her for a moment, her heart in her throat. Annon and Eleana
had fallen in love. Now, like everyone else, Eleana believed Annon
was dead. As for Riane—this new Riane—she loved Eleana
still, and did not know what to make of this love or what to do with
it. Giyan,
attendant to Riane's gaze, said, "You long to tell her, I know." "I
love her so. I will always love her." "And
your love makes you want to confess everything." Riane's silence
was as good as an answer. "But you cannot. If you tell her who
you really are, you put her life—and yours—in grave
jeopardy." "She
is Resistance. She is used to secrets." "Not
this kind. It will be too much. Like a mountain on her shoulders." "Perhaps
you underestimate her." They
all heard the sound at once and froze. Their eyes rose skyward as the
drone of the Khagggun hoverpods, bristling with ion cannons,
flattened the soughing of the wind, silenced the twitter of night
birds. There ensued a period of heart-pounding terror, as if the
breathable elements were being sucked from the atmosphere. They could
see the pale ion trails, ephemeral as smoke, lighted by moonslight,
making baleful runes beneath the tremulous clouds. Tense moments
later, the drone drifted away, fading from an echo into a stillness
that made their ears ache. Riane
and Giyan exchanged a look of relief, and Riane returned her gaze to
Eleana, her eyes filled with the girl's lithe movements. Dark lashes.
Moonslight on her cheekbones. Soft swell of her belly. "Or is it
something else? You do not trust her." "It
isn't simply a matter of trust," Giyan said carefully. "Isn't
it?" Riane said this rather more sharply than she had intended. "I
have told you. It is written in Prophesy that of the Dar Sala-at's
allies one will love her, one will betray her, one will try to
destroy her." "It
could not mean Eleana. Not her." "No."
Giyan's voice was soft, gentling. "You would not think so, I
know." "She
is carrying Kurgan's child." Kurgan was Wennn StoggguTs eldest
son; he had once been Annon's best friend. "She will need our
help and support in the days ahead." "You
are the Dar Sala-at. You have larger issues to contend with." "She
is still haunted by her rape at Kurgan's hands. What is larger than
an individual's anguish?" "The
destiny of our people." "The
destiny of our people is built on anguish. You of all Kundalan would
be the first to acknowledge that." Giyan
gazed in astonishment at Riane, golden-haired, sun-bronzed,
firm-muscled from her beloved mountain climbing, and thought that
this strong, beautiful girl might easily have sprung from her loins
had she taken a Kundalan between her thighs. "You must forgive
me, Tey-jattt," she said. "I have lived my entire life with
secrets. First, keeping hidden my Gift for Osoru sorcery, which has
been daemonized by the Ramahan- Then, concealing my status as Lady
from the V'ornn, who would have killed me had they known. Finally,
keeping your true identity a secret, which, had it become known,
would have gotten you killed. These have been the boundaries of my
life." Through
the five arched windows set into the Library's thick walls, light
from two of Kundala's five moons fired the glass tiles, lending them
the depth of three dimensions. Giyan, caught in the moonsglow, seemed
to throb with sorcerous energy. Her white robes were pale as the snow
cloaking the jagged crests of the massive Djenn Marre mountain chain
to the north. Her hands and forearms, dead black from the chrysalides
covering them, were the only parts of her that did not shine like
beacons. The chrysalides had formed after she had violated the sacred
circle of the Nanthera, in a futile attempt to keep Annon alive. Well
she might have, since he was her son. She had borne the son of the
regent, Eleusis Ashera. This was a potentially dangerous fact she had
told no one, not Rekkk, not Annon himself. From the beginning,
Eleusis had impressed upon her the need for absolute secrecy.
Periodically, the Gyrgon sent Khagggun packs to round up the children
born to Kundalan females as a result of V'ornn rapes. These
half-breeds, though outwardly looking like any other V'ornn, were
taken by V'ornn Genomatekks to Receiving Spirit, the vast medical
facility in Axis Tyr that had once been a Kundalan hospice. What
experiments were perpetrated upon them there even Eleusis had not
been able to discover. Giyan
shook her head. "Still, I will not tell you what to do, This
must be your decision." "Whatever
decision I make," Riane said, "I promise you that it will
not be a rash one." "I
cannot ask for more, Dar Sala-at." She
returned her attention to the book Giyan had given her to study.
Giyan, like her twin, was a Ramahan priestess. But, unlike Bartta who
had practiced Kyofu, the Black Dreaming sorcery, before her death in
a sorcerous conflagration, she was a practitioner of Osoru, Five Moon
sorcery. Riane, too, had the Gift; Giyan had passed it on to Annon.
She was just beginning her Osoru studies, but she was impatient to
become a sorceress-adept like Giyan. Though Stogggul and Morcha were
dead, though she had defeated the powerful Kyofu sorceress Malistra,
the Dar Sala-at's enemies were legion. And far more powerful than
Malistra. They had worked their dark schemes and plots through her;
when she had died, Riane was certain, they had moved on, enlisting
others to battle for them. But there was another matter, more
immediate, that needed explaining. She
set down the book full of complex Old Tongue runes, and approached
Giyan. Dust motes hung suspended in the air, flaring as they hit the
lamplight. One full moon, the palest green of new grass, hung
suspended in a pane of glass, an insect caught in a spider's web. "Have
you so quickly finished your lesson, Teyjattt?" Thick hair of
spun copper cascaded around Giyan's long neck, settled on her square
shoulders like liquid light. "In
truth, my mind is too filled with questions to absorb any more."
Riane put her hands on the long ammonwood refectory table that ran
the length of the Library. "You must tell me if you know why I
wasn't able to open the Storehouse Door." For
the longest time Giyan said nothing. Doubtless she was thinking, as
Riane was, of the Storehouse Door set eons ago by Miina into the
caverns beneath Middle Palace. The
Storehouse was where Miina had secreted The Pearl for the time when
Prophesy said it would be needed. Kundalan lore held that it could
only be reopened by the Dar Sala-at, using the Ring of Five Dragons.
But the Door could only be opened by the Dar Sala-at. Defeating the
Dark sorceress Malistra, Riane had tried to open the Door with the
Ring, but it had stayed firmly shut. Why? Giyan
was about to speak when sudden pain clouded her features. She gasped,
grabbed at the chrysalid on her right forearm. "Giyan—" "It
is all right," she whispered. "Already the pain is
passing." Beads of perspiration hung in her hairline. "I
want to help." "Alas,
wanting will not make it so." Tears trembled in the corners of
her eyes. She was white-faced, and took a moment to compose herself
before she went on. "There is only one reason the Ring of Five
Dragons would not open the Door for you. Miina put one last safeguard
in place when She built the Storehouse. Impossible as it sounds, the
Portal between this realm and the Abyss has somehow been breached.
There are daemons here where they have been banished for eons. As
long as they are in this realm, the Door cannot be opened even by
you." Riane
felt her heart turn over painfully in her chest. "The Tzelos—" "Yes.
You have seen the Tzelos twice, once as part of a spell cast on you,
once as a sorcerous Avatar of Kyofu. But I must conclude that the
Tzelos has manifested itself here. It is a daemon from the Abyss. It
has crossed over into our world." "But
how?" Giyan's
eyes grew dark. "I fear it is my doing." "Yours?
I do not understand." "Conjuring
the Nanthera posed grave risks," Giyan said. "Not the least
of which was opening the Portal to the Abyss." In a last-ditch
effort to save Annon from his enemies, Giyan and Bartta had conjured
the Nanthera, temporarily opening a forbidden Portal to the Abyss.
Thus, Annon's essence, all that made him unique, had been
transmigrated into the body of Riane, a Kundalan girl dying of duur
fever. He was saved while his V'ornn body was delivered up to his
enemies. Thus had he joined with Riane to become the Dar Sala-at, the
chosen of Miina. Upon this new Riane rested the future of Kundala. "But
you told me that the Nanthera does so under a number of careful and
powerful safeguards." "True.
But I violated one of them. I reached back through the sorcerous
circle to try to get you. I couldn't help myself. I ..." She put
a hand to her head. Riane
encircled her with her arm. "Even if you are right, even if that
is what has happened, what's done is done. It doesn't matter how the
Portal seal was violated. What matters is sealing it again." Giyan
shook her head. "It is more complicated than that, Dar Sala-at.
When Miina created the Abyss to imprison the daemons and
arch-daemons, She seeded it with seven Portals, each of which She
provided with a different sorcerous lock. This was a safeguard. Even
if an arch-daemon—Pyphoros or one of his three
offspring—somehow managed to slip through one Portal, the other
locks should protect us. For only when all seven Portals are opened
simultaneously can all the daemons escape into our realm." Giyan
walked back and forth in a tight anxious orbit. "The real
problem is not the Tzelos but the archdaemon who brought it through." Riane
stared at her. "An archdaemon in this realm?" "The
consequences will be catastrophic," Giyan said. "Unless we
can find the archdaemon and somehow neutralize him, the damage he can
do is incalculable." "But
surely if he is here someone would have seen this . . . archdaemon by
now." "On
the contrary. Archdaemons cannot appear for long in their own form
until all the seven Portals are open. They must take hosts—possess
them, work through them. Their infiltration is more difficult to
detect and therefore more insidious. Legend tells us that their
control of their hosts is imprecise. The hosts'
actions may, from time to time, appear out of character because the
archdaemon does not have immediate access to all their knowledge.
However, that can change over time." "We
must either destroy them both or return them to the Abyss,"
Riane said. "Otherwise, I will never be able to open the
Storehouse Door. I will never find The Pearl." Giyan,
flexing her fingers inside their eerie shells, smiled grimly. "We
must speed up your sorcerous training. Thigpen and I can only do so
much. Miina's Sacred Texts, Utmost
Source and The
Book of Recantation, both of which you have
read, require interpretation so that you may understand the inner
workings of language as science, science as sorcery. The
interpretations require the precise mixtures, constructs of phrases,
incantations, theories, ideas, whispers, shadows, and light. Once you
have absorbed these lessons, you must practice those interpretations
over and over until they are ingrained in you, until they become part
of you." A
shadow passed across Riane's face. "Mother could have taught
me," she whispered. "But Mother is dead." She was
wearing turquoise silk robes made from Mother's garments after a
terrible Kyofu spell had caused Riane mistakenly to kill her. The
murder had been foretold in Prophesy, but that did not make it any
easier to live with. Giyan
stirred. When she gazed at her child, transformed, she saw great
promise, but never without the pain of regret. Regret that she could
never tell Annon that he was her son, regret that she had been forced
to hide him inside Riane, to leave Riane with Bartta, who had abused
Riane terribly. Claws in the lining of her stomach. "Mother
would have been the first to tell you that no one teacher will
suffice." She vibrated with her child's sorrow, wished she could
take it all upon herself. "Your journey is long, Dar Sala-at,
arduous and complex. There is someone who I must get you to as
quickly as possible. She will commence your studies. Her name is
Jonnqa. She is an imari at Nimbus, a kashiggen in the Northern
Quarter of Axis Tyr." "What
could a mistress of pleasure at a salamuuun palace have to teach me?" A
small smile played across Giyan's lips. "Again you sound like a
V'ornn. I know you are impatient, Teyjattt, but you must get it
through your head that you have much to learn. There are no
shortcuts, sorcerous or otherwise. As I said, the Dar Sala-at's path
is a most difficult one. Up to now your life has been as a male
V'ornn of high privilege or as a Ramahan cloistered in the Abbey of
Floating White. In both instances you were protected from the
everyday world. Both these lives are now at an end." "I
do not understand." Giyan
turned around the book she had been reading so Riane could see the
Old Tongue text. "You see here, in the days before the V'ornn,
when lightning played across the sky, when all of Miina's magical
beasts—the Rappa, the narbuck, the perwillon, even the Ja-Gaar
and the Five Sacred Dragons—roamed the land and the skies, all
Kundalan were in harmony." She turned the page. "Females
and males alike shared everything, including power. The Ramahan, too,
included priests and priestesses." "But
then a cabal of male Ramahan wrested control from Mother," Riane
said. "They held her captive for more than a century." "Until
you found her and freed her." Giyan, sensing Riane's disquiet,
continued. "But here is the important thing. Nowadays, male
Kundalan treat our females as inferiors, just as the male V'ornn do
their own females. This is what you will be up against when you
venture out into the world." She closed the book with a snap.
"It makes my blood run cold. It is a manifestation of the worst
thing the V'ornn have done to us. Do you know what that is, Riane?" "That
they have taken away our freedom." "That
is evil, but it is not the worst." "That
they have killed and tortured tens of thousands of us." "Terrible,
yes." She shook her head. "But the worst is being done now,
systematically. The V'ornn use time, ideas, the masses against us.
Why do you think the youngest Kundalan males treat their female
counterparts with contempt? Because it is all they know. Each day
brings new converts to the new Goddessless religion of Kara. Where
did Kara begin, do you think? With the V'ornn, of course." Riane
was startled. "Are you certain? Annon did not know this." "I
daresay most V'ornn do not. It is a device of Gyrgon origin. And yet
it continues to win converts. With every generation the great
Kundalan narrative that Miina labored so hard and long to teach Her
children is being eaten away by V'ornn acid. You saw as much when you
were at the Abbey of Floating White. Osoru is no longer taught,
Sacred Scripture has been distorted beyond recognition. And the worst
part is that those
distortions are being accepted by the acolytes. They cannot see the
truth because the morality inside the abbey has been murdered, and
without morality truth has no dominion." Tears
stood in the corners of Giyan's eyes. Riane felt her pain as if it
were her own. The V'ornn-ness inside her recoiled at the words, at
the emotions, at the implication of what the V'ornn had perpetrated.
This disconnect made her feel weak and dizzy, so that she was obliged
to grab the table edge lest she pitch over onto the gleaming floor. "Understand
this, Riane," Giyan whispered. "Time is the great ally of
the liar because when lies are repeated long enough, the truth fades
and is forgotten. Then the lies become the truth. History is remade,
and all is lost." Riane
thought of how Bartta, who had run the abbey, had murdered her friend
Asta and pretended it was an accident. She recalled how Bartta had
tortured her and almost killed her. Bartta was wicked, but Bartta had
come to believe the distortions and lies she herself had made up. She
was perpetrator and victim rolled into one. "And
yet..." Giyan's
whistleflower-blue eyes regarded her levelly, and a kind of current
passed between them, a language of their own design begun with
Annon's first memory. What a powerful thing such a language can be,
for it flows in the blood, informs the bone with unshakable
knowledge. "And
yet, what mystery beats within the V'ornn heart," Giyan
whispered. "There was Eleusis, brave, compassionate Eleusis;
there is Rekkk, brave, compassionate Rekkk. And most mysterious of
all, perhaps, there was the Gyrgon Nith Sahor, who gave his life for
us." "And
yet, what mystery beats within the Kundalan heart," Riane
answered her, "for you to raise Annon and not hate him as a
mortal enemy, for you to love him as if he were your own flesh and
blood, for you to save him from the enemies of the Ashera at risk to
your own life." "The
enemies of the Ashera are my enemies," Giyan said simply. When
she spoke thus her power was undeniable, defeating even that last
bastion of V'ornn maleness that still beat within Riane's soul. "I
love you, Giyan," Riane said. "I find it miraculous that
you of all Kundalan are the Lady destined to guide the Dar Sala-at." "I
love you more than life itself, Teyjattt." A tear slid down
Giyan's cheeks. She reached out for her child, but could feel nothing
through the inconstant electrical jolts delivered by the chrysalides. "Together
we will labor to bring back Miina's sacred narrative in all its
glory," Riane said with a resolved heart. "I
fear we will labor greatly." Riane
felt something inside her quail. She knew from experience that there
was something oracular about Giyan. Then Annon's V'ornn-ness took
over, and she said: "If this is our destiny, then so be it." Giyan
smiled through her tears. "When you speak thus I am reminded of
Nith Sahor. I miss him. His death was a terrible loss to our
cause." "I
only met the Gyrgon once." Riane said. "But without his
help I would not have reached the Storehouse Door in time to stop the
Tym-nos device from destroying Kundala." "You
would have appreciated his wisdom, might very well have come to like
him. It is a great pity he was an anomaly among Gyrgon." For
the first time, Riane saw the title of the book Giyan had been
reading: Darkness and Its Constituents. She gestured with a
sun-bronzed hand. "Is the Tzelos described in there?" Giyan
smiled grimly and reopened the book. Riane saw a line drawing,
filling up an entire page, precise as an architectural blueprint, of
the horrific beast she had seen in Otherwhere. The drawing was
fascinating and repellent at the same time. "A
profane experiment of Pyphoros' gone terribly wrong," Giyan
said. "Like all his experiments." "What
was he trying to do?" "Create
life, something only the Maker can do." "The
Great Goddess Miina?" "Can
give life, so it is written. But that is not the same. Even Miina is
not the Maker. She cannot create a new life out of the elemental
components of the Cosmos." "But
She created Kundala." "Ah,
no. She bade the Sacred Dragons to create Kundala, and they did so
with the help of The Pearl. They caused matter to cleave to matter.
They brought fire and air, water and earth. Metal from dark distant
stars. When Kundala was born, in the Time before the Imagining, the
hand of the Maker moved and the Kundalan appeared." Riane
stood for a time absorbing her words. The weight of history lay
upon the shelves ringing the Library, voices of Kundalan ancestors
disturbed from their long slumber by the discussion of Creation. The
faintest stirring seemed to play against her cheek, a liquification
of the light reflected off the mosaic sky, the exhalations of
generations past. Hopes, fears, dreams alive here in the twinkling
mosaic stars, the burnished continents, the rakkis-dark seas. She
felt all over again her deep and abiding love for this woman who had
raised Annon, who had saved him from certain death, who had been
willing to sacrifice everything, including her life, to save the
V'ornn child she had raised. Part of her would never understand that
miracle; another part felt only gratitude. Typical.
The V'ornn searched for answers to everything—this is,
doubtless, what led the species to continue its long lonely quest
through the Cosmos. This is doubtless what drove the Gyrgon to
continue their mysterious experiments. Looking for the answers: who
are we, where did we come from, where are we going. It was said that
the Gyrgon lusted after immortality, that they wished for nothing
less grand than to be like the god, Enlil, they had rejected. Was it
the truth? No one knew. The Gyrgon were masters of secrecy,
subterfuge, misdirection. They were already demigods in their way,
powerful, manipulative, remote. Except for Nith Sahor. "And
where was Miina?" Riane asked with a teenager's directness. "Did
She see the Maker?" "She
slept," Giyan said with the simple power of faith. "And
when She woke, we were here, Her name already on our lips." She
would have continued. Her mouth was partly open, the next words about
to be released, when she felt a dreadful hammerblow of pain. With a
moan, she slid to her knees, hugging her arms close to her slender
waist. Riane knelt beside her, held her as tenderly as once Giyan had
held Annon when his young body had trembled with ague. At
that moment, a shadow fell between them, and they looked out the
window to see a crowned owl crossing before the full moon on huge
silent brindled wings. An omen, Giyan thought, her heart
constricting. Miina has sent us a sign. And
then it seemed as if the crowned owl had crashed through the window,
or perhaps it was the moonslight itself that had been transmogrified
to a solid column of energy. The books flew off the table, their
pages ruffling like the feathers of angry birds. Others exploded off
the shelves, great ranks rising in unison in response to the
disturbance. Riane
herself was flung backward, skidding across the floor, trying to
right herself, being shoved sideways by the unknown force. She
fetched up against a heavy ammonwood chair, which had crashed over
onto its side. A leg struck her rib cage painfully. She
saw Giyan, her back arched, her arms stretched upward, pulled as if
by invisible cords. Drafts of air, cold as death, circled the
Library, howling, so that when Riane tried to call out to Giyan her
voice was swept away. Riane's heart turned over. As she watched with
mounting horror, Giyan rose into the air. An
eerie glow was emanating from the chrysalides that covered Giyan's
hands and forearms. They were black no longer, but had begun to turn
an ash grey. As their color lightened, thin layers peeled off and,
like plates of armor, whirled around and around in the vortex. Upon
reaching the periphery, they were hurled like ice-white missiles,
slicing through books, furniture. They lodged in the fluted columns,
in the carved lintels above the doors, in the walls themselves. Riane
ducked as one passed centimeters from her head. It made a sinister
whistling sound as it spun away like the beveled blades of a fan. She
tried to stand and fell back in a heap. All the heat was being sucked
out of the Library. A chill entered her bones, sheathing them in
pearly frost, making of their marrow a dry white ash. Breath caught
in her lungs, painful as a sandstorm, as if the air itself were being
torn asunder, remade into something dark, dense with menace, wicked
as sin. At
last, the chrysalides had let go of Giyan, the sheaths had come off,
and her hands and forearms stood revealed, thick with sinuous red
veins and ropey yellow arteries, standing out in convolute profusion. Her
eyes were wide and staring, their blue turned an eerie opalescent
white, and in their center pinprick black pupils. Her mouth was drawn
back in the rictus normally associated with death. Through her long,
thickly flowing hair was now wound shards of a dark metallic
substance that at once cradled the back of her head, curling up into
corkscrewed points, a kind of thorned crown, living things that
shifted and shimmered in the lamplight, glimmered and glistened as
they wove themselves into a pattern of hideous design. The
moonlight, flooding through the rent window, was pale, insubstantial.
The dust motes held in its columns shivered. Riane felt herself
caught as if in a deep dream, her limbs felt like deadweights, her
thoughts slow as frozen sap. As in a nightmare, she felt both
terrified and helpless. She had the presence of mind to understand
that her very helplessness compounded the terror, and yet that
knowledge was of little use to her. Her mind was filled with an awful
martial drumbeat that foretold her losing Giyan once again. She did
not think that she could bear it. But
now there was no more time for thought. Giyan fixed her with her
bizarre and frightening white eyes and her left arm came down,
describing a shallow arc that brought her hand to point directly at
Riane. Riane could see in the center of each palm a corkscrewed spike
similar to the elements of the thorned crown piercing her flesh right
through, though there was no blood or even any semblance of a wound.
Rather, the spike seemed part of her, as, indeed, the crown seemed to
have grown from the bones of her skull. She
saw the vein-wrapped forefinger unfurl, the black nail, long and
gleaming, extending from it. Riane felt displaced, separated from the
world around her. Her Third Eye opened in response to the horror and
saw blood all around her, buckets of blood, cauldronsful, a veritable
ocean of blood, life draining away down an ancient stone drain
clogged with eons of blackened moss and decay, the slimy debris of
time. Here was a moment she would remember all her life, a moment
that would haunt her waking hours and stalk her dreams, Giyan is
dead, long live . . . What? What foul beast had the Lady become? As
best she could, she cast about for a counterspell to the sorcerous
transformation the chrysalides had worked on Giyan, but she knew so
few spells, and none of them seemed right. You are untrained. Even
with a power as great as yours you are at a grave disadvantage
against your enemies without the knowledge of the ancients, Mother
had told her. This is why you must exercise extreme caution. This
is why you must keep your identity hidden as much as you can until
your schooling in the sorcerous arts is compete. Oh,
yes, Mother was right. And so was Giyan. Her enemies had wasted no
time in mounting another attack. In desperation, she spoke the words
of the Old Tongue, conjuring Earth Granary, the most potent of Osoru
healing spells. At
almost the same instant, she heard the quick sizzle, as of frying
flesh. It made her skin crawl, her heart beat fast. And then all the
breath was knocked out of her as the sorcerous spell hit her dead on.
It was well that she had cast Earth Granary, for it afforded her a
measure of protection, the difference between life and death. She
flickered between consciousness and unconsciousness as she crawled
painfully across the Library floor, and she set all her reserves of
energy into redoubling the spell, holding it close around her, so
that it would
not fly apart in a thousands shreds, exposing her entirely to the
ferocious attack. And,
then, there it was, leaking from the suppurating ends of Giyan's
fingertips: the Tzelos, writhing in its noncorporeal state as the
thing that had been Giyan gave birth to the daemon from the Abyss. The
rotting cor-meat stink of the Tzelos assaulted her. It was black as
steaming pitch, its twelve-legged body segmented like an insect's,
its bloated thorax protected by a hard carapace. Its long flat ugly
head, brown-black, shiny as obsidian, was guarded by monstrous
serrated mandibles. Twelve faceted eyes, burning like garnets, fixed
on her. Riane
struggled to rise as the spell dissipated, drew her dagger, preparing
to defend herself. Giyan was moving, but Riane's attention was wholly
taken up with the advancing Tzelos. And then she saw something out of
the corner of her eye, a furry, six-limbed creature with triangular
ears, a long, striped, puffy tail, and dark, intelligent eyes.
Thigpen was Rappa. "Thigpen,
get back!" Riane cried. The
creature ignored her. Shaking off her dizziness, she grabbed an
upended lamp, hurled it in a sidearm motion. It struck the Tzelos and
passed right through it. An illusion, just like the one that had
appeared when she had mistakenly killed Mother. The Tzelos rushed at
her, and she instinctively steeled herself. "Ignore
it," Thigpen said. "Use your Third Eye to distinguish what
is real and what is not." Riane
felt a brief chill, like ice sliding down the back of her neck. Giyan
began to rise off the ground. Her arms were spread wide, her head
thrust slightly back, her jaw clenched and set. Employing the
sorcerous sight from her Third Eye, Riane detected another presence
inside Giyan. It coiled inside her like a gigantic serpent, spiraling
up her spine. With a sickening shock, Riane realized that it had
entered her brain. The presence was levitating her. Riane
watched, stunned, as Giyan, her long hair writhing like a nest of
bloodworms, flew toward the broken window and passed through it. "We
must not allow her to escape," Thigpen cried. "Something
has taken possession of her! I can feel it!" Riane said. "What
is happening?" "It
is Malasocca," Thigpen whispered. "It means 'Dark Night of
the Soul'. I do not know the way of it; I'm not sure anyone alive
does. But I understand this much: piece by piece, her spirit is being
replaced by that of a daemon. If we cannot stop her, if she heeds the
call, if she vanishes, she will be lost to us, Riane. Lost for all
time." Thigpen was scampering across the floor, ignoring the
shards of glass that stuck to the pads of her slender handlike paws.
"Worse, she will be replaced by our most implacable enemy." "How
do we stop that from happening?" "If
the host body is destroyed, the daemon is returned to the Abyss,"
Thigpen said. "I
will not kill her." "It
is the way of the Malasocca," Thigpen replied. "There
must be another way." "I
do not know of any. The daemon is still vulnerable now, but not for
much longer." "Still.
I will not harm her." Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching, a sure sign of her acute distress. "I
love Giyan as much as you do, Dar Sala-at, but terrible forces have
been unleashed. Before this is over, you may very well wish you had
killed her while you had the chance." Riane,
gaining the windowsill, balanced precariously for a moment, gathering
equilibrium and momentum before launching herself upward with
outstretched arms, grabbing Giyan around the ankles. Thigpen, just
behind her, shrieked a warning as she leapt to the ground. Giyan
glared down, her unholy eyes alight, and cold fire sprang from her
fingertips. Riane cried out and released her grip, falling two meters
into the sere grass just outside the shattered window. Above, the
pale fire traveled across her back until it reached the image of the
Tzelos. There, it seemed to be sucked up into the daemon's outline,
filling it out, causing it to pulse and glow. A nasty rustling arose,
as of an army of insects ominously on the march. The
Tzelos swiveled its flat triangular head. A kind of crusty substance
bubbled out of a series of palpitating apertures behind its faceted
eyes. Its wicked-looking mandibles clicked together. Riane could see
Rekkk and Eleana, weapons raised, approaching the daemon. But surely
it was the sight of Giyan so hideously transformed that caused the
look of consternation on their faces. "Lady—"
Eleana began before she choked on her words. "Giyan,
what the N'Luuura has befallen you?" Rekkk's face was white and
strained. "The
chrysalides have broken open," Riane said. "We
must help her." Thigpen regarded them each in turn with her dark
intelligent eyes. "Mercy, yes, we must help her now or all is
lost." Rekkk
leapt over the wreckage of the broken window. Fearless, Eleana was
just behind him. The Tzelos reared up on three sets of hind legs. Its
upper appendages lashed out, trailing glistening cilia behind them. A
wedge of mouth opened just as Rekkk swung his shock-sword and the
Tzelos vomited up a gout of a yellow sticky substance that clung to
the blades. The pitch of their vibration altered, causing a blow-back
pulse that sent a wave of agonizing pain up Rekkk's arm. Eleana
was following in his wake, her shock-sword drawn back. Riane could
see the tension in her arm, saw her concentrated completely on the
daemon, saw what she failed to see, Giyan's right arm sweeping
downward and, with it, a shower of crystalline sparks. A terrified
gimnopede, frightened out of its nest, launched upward. Caught in the
spiral band of the sparks, it turned black and rigid, plummeting like
a rock to the ground. The
spirals were almost at Eleana's height when Riane threw herself
forward. Eleana skittered, her booted foot slipping, and, as she
toppled over, the scythes of crystalline sparks passed centimeters
above her. Riane caught her, cradled her, aware in one
all-encompassing instant that Eleana's heat and warmth, her scent,
wound around her, binding her. Just
above where they lay, the air was sizzling, momentarily drained of
heat. Then Eleana, the entire world, dropped away down a well. Riane
felt the dislocation that came when she shed her corporeal body,
crossed over into Ayame, the deep trance-state of Osoru. In
Otherwhere, she confronted a horrible sight: the great bird Ras
Shamra, Giyan's sorcerous Avatar, was caged, its powerful wings
pinioned at its side. The image of the real Giyan was imprisoned by
some unknown wicked force. Ras Shamra saw her, uttered a
soul-shattering cry that shook the very foundations of the sorcerous
realm. When Riane tried to approach the cage, Ras Shamra became
frantic, shrieking over and over, throwing its body against the bars
until it bled in many places. "Stop!
Stop!" Riane cried. "I
only want to help you!" But
Ras Shamra would not stop. If anything, as Riane approached, the
Avatar become even more frantic. Riane
began the ritual for the Star of Evermore, the spell she had used to
free Mother, to try to break the bars of the sorcerous cage. But as
she did so, a shadow fell over Otherwhere. She looked up, the
incantation frozen in her throat. A great Eye was opening, the Eye of
Ajbal, and now she knew why Ras Shamra was shrieking. It was trying
to warn her. She knew she was no match for this powerful spell.
Indeed, it had once almost undone Giyan herself. "Don't
give up," she said to the image of Giyan. "I will
come back for you, no matter how long it takes," Giving
Ras Shamra one last look of longing, she abandoned Otherwhere, only
to hear Thigpen's sorrowful cry: "Gone." Eleana
and Rekkk turned at the hollow sound emanating from deep inside
Thigpen. The
Rappa was weeping, crystalline tears rolling freely down her furred
cheeks, dripping off her muzzle. "She's gone." And
they saw she was right. The daemon Tzelos had vanished into the night
sky and, with her, their beloved Giyan. 2 Rescendance
The
V'ornn regent's palace in Axis Tyr, once the Ramahan Middle Palace,
was a seething hive of activity. Lines of functionaries, ministers,
petitioners from all castes snaked through the long, columned,
light-strewn antechambers, overflowed the vast and magnificent public
rooms like surf at high tide. All were clamoring for a fragment of
the new regent's attention. Kurgan,
ignoring them, ignoring the duties of his office, went up a staircase
where he was sure to avoid being seen and walked quickly and silently
through his quarters. These private chambers were much changed. In
the days when Eleusis Ashera had ruled the space they exhibited the
sober orderliness of the career diplomat. Intimate groupings of
chairs where Eleusis met with ministers and brokered deals were
surrounded by mementos of a career built upon judicious compromise.
It was, at bedrock, a working residence. After Kurgan's father, Wennn
Stogggul, had Eleusis Ashera assassinated and briefly attained the
office of regent, he had employed a host of Mesagggun and Tuskugggun
to transform the residence. The result was a kind of opulence rarely
seen save among an elite cadre of Bashkir lords. Over his family's
protestations, Kurgan had immediately auctioned off his father's vast
collection of artwork, a deliberate act of cruelty and disrespect
that had pleased him immensely. Nowadays, the chambers had about them
the spare, masculine functionality of a Khagggun Line-General's
quarters. Racks of war trophies—weapons stripped from the alien
dead on far-flung battlefields light-years distant—hung upon
the walls in precisely aligned rows, gleaming with oil and wax,
cataloged, arrayed in alphabetical order. But
he often felt stifled here. Worse, bored and disgusted, surrounded as
he was by ministers, court Bashkir, aides, flunkies, and the like.
Having mastered the art of appearing busy while doing nothing at all,
they were worse than contemptible; they were deadly dull. He
discovered that they expended astonishing effort defending their tiny
slice of the fiefdom, to the ruination of those around them. They
were like wyr-hounds, sun-dazed by the dazzle of the regent's court.
They barked and bit each other mercilessly. These efforts had with an
alarming swiftness begun to emit the foul odor of inertia. And yet,
as Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin had pointed out, he was powerless to
dismiss them because of their intimate knowledge of the day-to-day
functioning of the regent's office, whose complexities were
staggering. As far as he could see, the weight of protocol kept the
functioning to the bare minimum. Quite un-V'ornnlike, in his opinion,
and it made him wonder whether this situation had been created by the
Gyrgon to keep the regent from making any changes at all. This stasis
he meant to crack wide open, whether or not the Gyrgon approved. Axis
Tyr was the center of life on Kundala. But in a way only he could
comprehend this was beside the point. Axis Tyr was a city tainted by
ignominious defeat, a place that in Kundalan lore had been holy and
now was desecrated by the V'ornn occupation. In fact, the V'ornn were
headquartered in the city's two most sacred structures. As regent, he
lived and worked here, the former Middle Palace, while the Gyrgon had
transformed the Abbey of Listening Bone into their Temple of
Mnemonics. Truth
to tell, what he liked best was to see for himself these
humiliations, to see these open wounds in the hollow-eyed stares of
the Kundalan who were allowed into the city. Their diminished status
enlarged him all the more. Due to V'ornn innovation and technology,
Axis Tyr was a humming metropolis beneath the sadness and despair.
Kundalan plots were everywhere—in fact, to Olnnn's dismay
Kurgan encouraged them. He could sense the desperation that
accompanied the formation of ragged cadres, misaligned alliances,
jury-rigged governments-in-exile. Snatches of seemingly innocent
conversations overheard down this alley or along the edge of that
plaza harbored secrets that made the air tremble like the rising of
heat currents. It was a game—ferreting out the collusion,
identifying the conspirators, apprehending them just when it appeared
to them that they were on the verge of success. Then he had the
pleasure of meting out the punishment for their transgressions. Beyond
the regent's quarters lay a vast labyrinth of rooms, corridors,
loggias largely unexplored since the time the Ramahan who had ruled
from this place were slaughtered. He walked through the chambers,
ornate in the fevered Kundalan style, whose purposes were long
forgotten. Now they were littered with goblets and plates, furry with
cobwebs and dust. Vestiges of unknown celebrations or rites. Through
skylights, oculi, open loggias were patinaed by the melancholy
autumnal light. Frescoes frowned down at him. Sculptures were
rendered irrelevant by the long occupation. Fueled by his hatred for
his father, he had spent a great deal of time and effort in the
meticulous planning of his ascension to the regency but none at all
in the contemplation of the office itself. How
hollow rang the silence in the aftermath of his victory! He had
burned to become regent. Aided by Olnnn Rydddlin, he had concocted an
intricate scheme whereby his father and his mentor, once allies, had
destroyed each other. But now that he had achieved his dream the
seemingly self-reproducing minutiae of running a planet were plowing
him under. How had Eleusis Ashera had the patience to deal with this
host of jabbering sycophants? No wonder his own father had been a
failure at it. He hated Eleusis all the more for excelling at
something for which he himself clearly lacked all aptitude. A
sickly-sweet odor was everywhere absorbed into the furniture, the
carpets, even, he was convinced, the marble-clad walls which, when he
came near, seemed to exude the must of death. Unable to bear the
weight of melancholy a moment longer, he stepped out onto an
unfamiliar balcony with braided porphyry columns and darkly gleaming
tile-work balustrade. Leaning over the edge, he looked out over the
city, the bright splashes of color, the insectlike droning from
crisscrossing hover-pods, the crunch of fallen leaves underfoot, the
skein of clogged streets rippling away in all directions, the bobbing
heads of passersby, the V'ornn gleaming bald and coppery, the
Kundalan with their hair, thick and loose, the babble of voices, the
smells of spices and oils and broiling meat and burning metal. A
young Kundalan female, laden with packages, passed below him. Her
long, lustrous hair hung down to her buttocks. She paused long enough
to switch her burden from one shoulder to the next. In the process,
her hip canted out, her hair swung from one shoulder blade to the
other and back. He felt a stirring in his tender parts. He had a
definite thing for Kundalan females of a certain type, the single
trait he had inherited from his father. V'ornn, who were utterly
hairless, often found the luxuriant growth on Kundalan females an
exotic and powerful aphrodisiac. Her face moved from shadow to light
and unbidden a memory surfaced of spying on just such a female when
he and Annon had been out hunting, the female he had taken by force,
the female he and Annon had almost come to blows over. He
and Annon had been best friends, sharing everything despite the
rivalry between their families. Or perhaps they had bonded so closely
because of that rivalry, because defiance ran strong in both
their bloodstreams. Up until that moment, he had considered Annon to
be more or less mild-mannered. The wild look in his eye that day was
something to behold. If was as if he had let his guard down and
showed a side of himself that Kurgan had never seen before. He
sighed, leaning on the balustrade, watching the Kundalan female
vanish in the current of the thronged street. Thinking of the female
and of Annon he was reminded of the life he had left behind and,
again, the melancholy welled up inside him. Times like these he
missed Annon with a fierceness he could not have imagined when Annon
had been alive. To be best friends with an Ashera was ironic in the
extreme. That friendship had vexed his father no end. He began to
smile, his melancholy lifting somewhat. Only he of all the Stogggul
siblings had provoked in his father that certain choleric look. And
Marethyn, of course, but that was different. She was Tuskugggun, a
female. He
heard his name being called, but he neither moved nor responded. He
waited for the Gyrgon Nith Batoxxx to approach him through the dimly
lighted rooms. Even with his back turned, he could feel the Gyrgon's
presence, the slow atomic crawl along the skin of his arms that would
have stirred his hair had he any to stir. He could see what the two
of them had in common. Besides their ambition and the agendas they
kept hidden from one another, they were conquerors in the center of
things living off the fruit of their conquest. All about them were
the remains of the Kundalan beasts who had fallen beneath the ion
sizzle of their shock-swords, and with the merest flick of their
hands they could cause this wounded mass to move this way or that, to
do or say anything that on a whim they might think of. Having
a Gyrgon around the palace had its benefits. For one thing, it made
those around him anxious; he fed off the slow shredding of their
nerves. For another, Gyrgon had about them the distinct aroma of
power, of secrets being carried just beneath the glittering alloy
skin of their exomatrices. It
was a great pity that he could not abide this particular Gyrgon, who,
in his disguise as the Old V'ornn, had been his teacher and mentor.
He had been forced to pledge himself to Nith Batoxxx, a noxious state
of affairs he detested and would not long tolerate. Now that he had
become regent his goal was to find the weakness in the Gyrgon
Comradeship and exploit it to gain access to the treasure trove of
new technology they created and zealously kept under lock and key.
They were all—V'ornn and Kundalan alike—under the
Gyrgon's ion-mailed thumb, and this hegemony he fervently wished to
overthrow. Not
that it would be easy. Not with this particular Gyrgon riding such
close herd on him. Nith Batoxxx in his guise as the Old V'ornn had
trained Kurgan to become regent. Why? And what else did this Gyrgon
want from him? It irked him to think that without the Gyrgon's help
and guidance he would be just another sixteen-year-old Bashkir scion,
learning how to run his family's Consortium. "You
cannot hide from me," Nith Batoxxx said from the edge of the
shadowed interior. "You know this very well." Light spun
off the black alloy of his exomatrix. Protected within it, he looked
vaguely insectoid. "And yet here you are, alone." His
mailed hand moved along the wall, a constant threat. "Shirking
your office." He
was unlike any other Gyrgon in the Comradeship, Kurgan at least knew
that much. Though what precisely made him different was a perplexing
mystery. His
long gaunt face was a pale amber. A complex spiderweb of ter-tium and
germanium circuitry ran across the taut skin starting from the crown
of his skull down the back and along the sides of his neck. Ruby
pupils studded obsidian-black eyes. At the point of each cheekbone
was implanted a tertium neural-net stud that pulsed to the beating of
his hearts. "What
is it you want of me?" Kurgan said curtly. In
two long strides, the Gyrgon closed the space between them. With a
lazy, almost contemptuous gesture, the tip of his mailed forefinger
touched Kurgan on his breastbone. Kurgan fell to his knees, his legs
turned to water. But even in his pain he would not cry out; the Old
V'ornn had trained him better than that. "It
is not for you, not for any V'ornn, to ask questions of me, Stogggul
Kurgan." Nith
Batoxxx towered over him. Kurgan had the good sense not to move,
not even to look up. A crackling of hyperexcited ions had commenced,
bringing with it the unmistakable whiff of death. Nith Batoxxx held
his hand just above Kurgan's bent head. "You
believe you can get the better of me. A bitter misapprehension, you
will find." The Gyrgon said this softly, his voice drifting, it
seemed, on the burnished late-afternoon sunshine. "You have the
arrogance of youth. You are fearless. You can outwit a Gyrgon. This
is what you believe." Staring
down, Kurgan could only see the Gyrgon's tertiurn-studded boots. A
vertical row of glittering black metallic talons marched up the
center of each boot. He felt his hearts beating fast. As always, he
paid very close attention not only to what Nith Batoxxx was saying
but also how he said it. "Fear
is my currency, Stogggul Kurgan. Never forget that. I can sniff out
the fear in even the staunchest spirit." Of a sudden, Nith
Batoxxx knelt and, with his forefinger beneath Kurgan's chin, lifted
his head. There was no pain this time at the contact. The ion fire
sizzled, quiescent for the moment. "The truth is you hold your
fear close inside you where no one can see. But I will get it out of
you." No
one knows me, Kurgan thought. But Annon had, reluctant though he
was to admit this.
"Your
only danger, Stogggul Kurgan, will come from forgetting that I know
you." He
put his long, lupine face so close to Kurgan's that Kurgan could
smell the mingled scent of clove oil and burnt musk corning off him
in waves. It was so strong it made him momentarily dizzy. "That
night in the caverns, the night of the Ring of Five Dragons, did you
come across the Dar Sala-at? This is what I need to know." Nith
Batoxxx's voice had changed slightly, darkening in timbre and seeming
disconnected from his body. "No,"
Kurgan replied, carefully monitoring this change. "That
is a very great pity. I know the Dar Sala-at exists," Nith
Batoxxx continued in this same eerie voice. "He was there that
night, lured by the promise of the Ring. I could feel his power; he
engaged Malistra in sorcerous battle. But you tell me you never saw
him." "That's
right." "Even
though I sent you to find him." "It
was chaos down there. Rekkk Hacilar was hiding in Haaar-kyut armor.
He was causing havoc everywhere. I was diverted." "It
is imperative that I know the Dar Sala-at's identity, do you
understand me?" "Not
in the least." The lies in among the truth had sprung
surprisingly easily to his lips. He had, indeed, met the Dar Sala-at
that night in the caverns below the regent's palace. To his
consternation the Dar Sala-at was a young female. He did not know her
name, but he was absolutely certain that he could pick her out of a
crowd at fifty meters. This was his secret, hoarded for a time when
its use would be of most value to him. He would never tell Nith
Batoxxx, nor anyone else until it served his purpose. "The
Dar Sala-at is one of the few who is destined to know the location of
the seven Portals." "What
are they?" "You
simply cannot manage not to ask questions, can you?" Nith
Batoxxx looked at him out of glittering eyes. "The Portals are
important because they lead to ... a land of riches." Why
had the Gyrgon hesitated? Kurgan asked himself. Was he lying? And, if
so, why? "I
know the location of three of them, but not the other four." "Why
do you need to know the location of all seven?" Nith
Batoxxx threw him an evil smile. "None can be fully opened
unless all are opened simultaneously. This is a fiendishly difficult
process. The first step is to locate all seven Portals. Then we will
move on to the next stage of our assault." "I
noticed you said our." The
Gyrgon abruptly rose and strode to the balustrade. The silence
stretched to a kind of breaking point, forcing Kurgan to turn and
look. It seemed to him—and not for the first time—that
Nith Batoxxx's posture had altered subtly from his normal very erect
carriage. Was it his imagination, or were the Gyrgon's shoulders
twisted slightly, one higher than the other? He rose and obediently
followed Nith Batoxxx outside. "This
is why I have named you regent, Stogggul Kurgan. You are of such
tender years to rule Kundala, but if I am any judge, you are the
right one to rule." "These
Portals—" "All
you need know is that whoever brings me their location will be
handsomely rewarded. Pray that it is you, Stogggul Kurgan." Kurgan
said nothing. He felt somehow as if he and the Gyrgon were doing a
balancing act on a high wire in the dark. One false step, one word
spoken out of place and he would fall into utter blackness. Nith
Batoxxx's gloved hand gripped the balustrade. "Hear me now,
Stogggul Kurgan. I wish the construction of Za Hara-at to resume.
This you will order posthaste. You will resurrect from its tomb the
ancient city of the Korrush." The
voice sent a small shiver down Kurgan's spine. "Yes,
Nith Batoxxx." He knew when to acquiesce. Was there something
here for him, a long-buried secret, a glimmer of the lever by which
he would unlock the mysteries of the technomages' power? "Cement
your business relationship with SaTrryn Sornnn." "I
know he is the other major partner in the proposed construction,"
Kurgan said. "I know that my father agreed to move Bronnn Pallln
aside, the leading candidate for Prime Factor, in order to name this
young scion of the SaTrryn Consortium to this important office."
He liked the initiative Sornnn SaTrryn had taken, liked that he
hadn't been intimidated by the powerful Pallln Consortium. But what
he liked best of all about Sornnn SaTrryn was ambition, a trait he
could relate to without reservation. His own ambition was, after all,
what had impelled him into an alliance with Olnnn Rydddlin. "Other
than that I know very little about him." "He
is on familiar terms with the Korrush," Nith Batoxxx went on in
his eerily disembodied voice. "He has been to Za Hara-at many
times. These are vital assets." To
me or to you? Kurgan wondered. To the Gyrgon, he said, "May
I ask why you have changed your mind? Up until now you have been the
most vehement opponent of Za Hara-at being rebuilt." "That
was because of Ashera Eleusis." Nith Batoxxx's voice abruptly
snapped back to normal. He turned to impale Kurgan's with his lambent
crimson stare. "Ashera Eleusis was a dangerous heretic. He
wished for an equality between V'ornn and Kundalan. That is why he is
dead." Why
was Eleusis Ashera dangerous? Kurgan asked himself. How could
any V'ornn be dangerous to a Gyrgon? Then something clicked
inside his head. "It was not my father who engineered the coup
that felled Eleusis Ashera. You did." "I
manipulated your father," Nith Batoxxx said. "Does that
come as a surprise to you?" "Not
really, no. My father was weak-willed." "Unlike
you." Was
he being ironic? Kurgan wondered. Behind his back, his fist clenched
white and trembling. "Go
now," Nith Batoxxx said with a dismissive gesture. "There
is much for you to accomplish before darkness falls and the
Rescendance begins." What
would you have me say, regent?" "First," Kurgan said,
"get down on your knees." He
saw the brief flare in Jerrlyn's eyes before he acquiesced. He looked
over the top of the bowed back of the Kundalan to scan the crowds
lining the great hall. They were packed in between the immense
gold-jade and green-porphyry columns. The columns were fluted. Their
capitals were carved into the faces of fantastic creatures. Jerrlyn
was the head of the Fourth Agrarian Commune District. As such, he was
a highly respected Kundalan among his race. This, of course, meant
little to Kurgan other than arousing his curiosity as to just how
deeply involved Jerrlyn was in the Resistance. "Now,"
he nodded, "you may continue." "What
would you have me tell you?" Jerrlyn began again. "There
have been thirteen deaths among my Commune this month alone. Last
month there were only five. Have we displeased you in some way,
regent?" Kurgan
sat forward. "Are you implying that I am in any way responsible
for these deaths?" "Not
at all," Jerrlyn said hastily. "But the deaths are all
unexplained, all from unnatural causes. It does seem likely that they
were perpetrated by the Khagggun." "What
proof have you of this allegation?" "My
Commune is in terror." "You
have no proof. Just as likely the individuals were killed by your own
Resistance forces. These extremists view you as collaborators." "We
have discovered ion-fire wounds on many of the dead." "All
the more reason to suspect your own Resistance. There has been over
the past year an escalation in the theft of Khagggun weaponry from
secured depots in and around the city." He smiled. "To
date, we have not apprehended the perpetrators, but your pleas give
me an idea. If
you would be so cooperative as to supply the names of those involved
in the thievery, I would speak to my Star-Admiral. I am certain that
I could convince him to guarantee the safety of your Commune." "Then
we would be collaborators." Kurgan
sighed as he sat back. "Jerrlyn, I grow weary of your whining. I
have given you a solution to your problem." "An
unacceptable solution! I am the leader of the largest Commune on the
north continent. We supply you with seventy percent of your
foodstuffs." "I
know full well the percentages harvested from each of the seven
Communes, Jerrlyn. After all, it is we V'ornn who carved up the
territories and created the Commune system. It is so much more
efficient than the helter-skelter structure you had in place. Each
Commune has now tripled its output since inception. An impressive
advance, even you must admit." "Yes,
but the bulk of the increase goes to feed the V'ornn populace,
leaving us less than we had before. And then there is the matter of
our tithes—" "Ah,
the tithes you pay us. Now we come to the heart of the matter." "Your
father increased the tithes just before he died. They are killing
us." "No,"
Kurgan corrected. "As I have pointed out, your own Resistance is
killing you. Do what I ask and in addition to keeping your Commune
safe I will consider rolling back the tithes." Jerrlyn
shook his head. "Even if I did know, I would not betray—" Kurgan
jumped up. "Then the tithes are doubled." "What?"
Jerrlyn was aghast. "Regent, I beg you—!" "This
outcome is a direct result of your own truculence. Do you think you
are playing with an ill-informed dolt? I am nothing like my father.
We shall now see what breaks your back. Do not return here with your
piteous plaints until you are prepared to meet my terms." At
the imperious wave of his hand, a pair of Haaar-kyut detached
themselves from their positions and took Jerrlyn away. As
soon as the Kundalan had been hauled from his sight, he gestured to
the Star-Admiral to come to his side. Olnnn Rydddlin was tall and
thin to the point of emaciation, with an unnaturally pale, pinched
face, whose occasional baleful smile turned his eyes into fusion
lamps. His formidable countenance was embraced by those who served
under him, but there were many Bashkir who distrusted a V'ornn marked
by Kundalan sorcery. Never mind that he was a brave warrior, had
sacrificed his leg in single-minded pursuit of their enemies, Rekkk
Hacilar and his Kundalan skcettta, Giyan. It was Giyan whose
loathsome spell had stripped the skin, flesh, and sinew from that
leg, leaving only bare bones. It was another Kundalan sorceress,
Malistra, who had saved him. Now the Star-Admiral kept that leg
unarmored. Through sheer force of will he had transformed the
ensorceled bones from a source of embarrassment into his hallmark, a
symbol of his bravery. And so the rank-and-file Khagggun loved him,
this strange, ambitious, deeply bitter Khagggun not many years
Kurgan's elder. But what of the high command, those upper-echelon
generals and admirals far older and more experienced than he? How
could they not hate him and envy him at least a little for his
breathtakingly swift advancement over them? Kurgan had determined to
keep a close eye on the Star-Admiral. Olnnn Rydddlin was the only
other V'ornn who knew that he had plotted his own father's demise. To
ensure that remained a secret he would kill even an ally because he
knew better than most V'ornn the bitter choices ambition forced upon
you. To
win is everything, the Old V'ornn had taught him. To win at
everything is to be alone. For
the moment, then, he would treat Olnnn Rydddlin as a trusted
compatriot, so that when the time came, before his power could become
a threat, he could slip a knife between his ribs. Toward that end, he
had already formulated a plan that fit in with his overall scheme to
find some form of leverage he could use against the Gyrgon. What did
the Gyrgon prize most? Stasis. It followed, then, that what they
feared most was change, change from within. If that happened and if
he could present them with a solution, he would have his leverage
with them. "It
seems that you have been quite effective in terrorizing this
Commune," he said with just the right amount of praise in his
voice. "Those
were your orders, regent," Olnnn Rydddlin replied. "I
am simply following one of the basic precepts of armed occupation,
Star-Admiral. One that I have no doubt is familiar to you. Namely,
keeping the populace in a constant state of terror ensures that they
cannot think, plan, or organize competently. Perpetual disorientation
is the order of the day for these Kundalan." "Absolutely,
regent. This is one of the reasons their Resistance is virtually
ineffective. You cannot have a properly functioning military without
support from a viable political system. The adults are too busy
wondering who the next victim will be to produce a leader with real
vision, and because we have ensured that their children are
systematically losing touch with their religion and their past,
because we have left them with nothing, they have lost the ability to
fight for what is theirs." Kurgan,
seeing the self-satisfied expression on Olnnn Rydddlin's face,
immediately felt an urge to wipe it off. "What
good is all that when these thefts continue?" he said shortly.
"Disturbing enough that you are losing ion cannons to the
Kundalan Resistance but your inability to apprehend the criminals is
undermining our air of invincibility." Olnnn
Rydddlin stiffened at the rebuke. "Regent, I have studied the
reports of these thefts at length and have come to the inescapable
conclusion that the Kundalan Resistance is being aided by a V'ornn
traitor. There is simply no other plausible explanation for the
continued success of these thefts. On their own, the Kundalan are
incapable of circumventing the increasing levels of security
Line-General Lokck Werrrent and I have put in place." "We
are both but newly placed in high office," Kurgan said. "We
need to show the Gyrgon that he was correct in putting his faith in
us. We need results, not excuses." "Yes,
regent." Kurgan
rose from the regent's chair, beckoned Olnnn to come closer still.
"There is a matter about which you must be informed," he
said softly. He knew he had to word this in just the right way. "The
Gyrgon Comradeship has been closely monitoring the embedding of
okum-mmon in Khagggun, due them on their ascendance to Great Caste
status and, to be honest, they are troubled." "What
by, regent?" "There
appears to be a greater degree of difficulty among your caste in
adjusting to the implant." This was an outright lie, part of his
plan to keep the Khagggun—and especially Olnnn Rydddlin
himself—from gaming too much power. "I
confess that I had not heard this, regent." "Of
course not. It is Comradeship business." "But
it directly affects us!" Olnnn said. "That
is why you must trust in the wisdom of the Comradeship,
Star-Admiral," he went on soothingly. "Of course they have
your best interests at hearts. All officers of the rank of General
and higher have already received the okummmon. That being the case,
the Comradeship has decided to suspend further implantation. But the
Gyrgon assure me that will be only until they can assess the
ramifications of the period of adjustment." "This
sounds suspiciously like discrimination to me." "Keep
your voice down." The conversation was not going the way Kurgan
had planned it. He had meant for Olnnn Rydddlin to believe he was
being taken into the regent's confidence. Instead, he had become
defensive. "Star-Admiral, there is Nith Batoxxx not ten paces
away," Kurgan said with what he felt was just the right amount
of persuasion. "If he even suspected that I had confided this to
you, I guarantee you he would be thoroughly displeased." "You
do not subscribe to this point of view, regent, do you?" Olnnn
said, somewhat alarmed. "Certainly
not," Kurgan lied. "Have you forgotten that it was I who
sponsored you as my Star-Admiral? Rest assured that at the
Summon-ings I am your greatest advocate. But even I cannot gainsay
the Comradeship. And besides, according to the Genomatekks at
Receiving Spirit, there is cause for concern. You would not want to
put your Khagggun in any precipitate danger, would you?" "I
will be candid, regent. I do not like this sudden turn of events." "Nor
do I, my friend. I counsel you to be patient. Their concern will
pass; I myself will see to it. In any event, one thing you must
learn. It never pays to second-guess the Gyrgon." The
Ancestor Tent was huge, covering one square hectare in the center of
Axis Tyr. It was made of a neural-net monofilament the color of dried
V'ornn blood, indigo, the color of mourning. Inside, at its center,
on a draped tertium podium, floating in a stasis field of
hyper-excited ions, were the two hearts—one large, one small—of
the dead regent, Wennn Stogggul. Before that, the body had been
prepared by a sect of Genomatekks known as Deirus. By Gyrgon decree,
the dead regent lay in state in the forecourt of the regent's palace
so that all V'ornn could pay their respect. The mourning period
lasted six weeks, after which the preparations for the Rescendance
could begin. Tonight, nine weeks after his death, the hearts of Wennn
Stogggul would be transmuted in the rite of Rescendance. All
around the perimeter of the tent—in the light of many fusion
lamps—the new regent's Haaar-kyut, his personal bodyguards clad
in horned battle armor, ranged at regular intervals. They scrutinized
the somber crowds with a restless energy, an inbred contempt, as if
wishing for some unexplained or unruly behavior so they could tear
someone limb from limb. As Sornnn SaTrryn watched, he was reminded of
the lymmnals, the furred, six-legged animals used as guards by the
tribes of the Korrush, the Great Northern Plain of Kundala's north
continent. The lymmnals were pulled prematurely from their mother's
teats, fed warm blood until their lust for it was all-consuming, and
then were half-starved. They were trained as attack animals. As such,
they were fiercely loyal, and when they were loosed their aggression
was complete, terrible to behold. Like the lymmnals, these
Haaar-kyut, in their distinctive purple armor, were edgy, itching for
combat. "Ten
days I have been at this," one Haaar-Kyut whispered to another. "Bashkir
custom," said the other out of the side of his mouth. "We
performed the rite of Rescendance on Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha
within an hour of his death." "We
Khagggun have no time to waste on prolonged mourning rituals,"
the first one rejoined. "We
live for battle," acknowledged the second. "But all we are
given is this." Sornnn
SaTrryn, smiling, continued past more Khagggun arrogantly shouldering
their way through the throng. Their sudden proliferation, like
poisonous mushrooms after a prolonged rain, was an evil sign, one of
many he had observed as he had made his way into the capital city. He
entered the tent now, wearing his wariness like a mantle of subdued
sorrow and respect, and made his way toward the new regent. Kurgan
was standing near the baein, the hearts receptacle. Sornnn was
somewhat taken aback to see a particularly sinister-looking Gyrgon
standing not too far away. There was a zone of emptiness around the
Gyrgon. He was being given a wide berth even by the Haaar-kyut, who
averted their gazes, glaring even more darkly at the assembled
mourners the better to cover their fear. Every V'ornn, it seemed,
whether Great Caste or Lesser Caste, was frightened of the Gyrgon. They
were V'ornn of another hue—reclusive technomages who spent
their time in their vast laboratories trying to unlock the mysteries
of the Cosmos. All V'ornn technology flowed from them. They guarded
their discoveries with a zeal that bordered on obsession, and they
were the sole pipeline, feeding the new technologies to the others
only when and where they saw fit. Though the regent ruled Kundala, he
served at the pleasure of the Gyrgon. He, like every other Great
Caste V'ornn, had an okummmon, a quasi-organic neural net designed by
the Gyrgon, implanted into the inside of his left forearm. Using the
okummmon, the Gyrgon would periodically Summon the regent to their
presence, there to feed him his own worst fears, the better to bend
him to their will, there to order him to carry out their edicts,
continuing their rule by proxy. Sornnn
lifted a slender goblet of fire-grade numaaadis from the tray of a
passing Mesagggun and slowly sipped it, using the gesture to cover
his scrutiny of the new players with whom he was sharing this fresh
playing field. Kurgan Stogggul, scion of the powerful but troubled
Stogggul Consortium, took up most of his attention. He was no more
than a child, and yet he had with breathtaking swiftness ascended to
a heady office. There were among the ranks of Bashkir those who were
prone to dismiss the new regent as a temporary aberration who would
sooner rather than later be swept away on the tide of history. Seeing
him now, Sornnn disagreed. There were arrogance and ambition in
abundance here, no doubt of that, but in the sharp, angular features
Sornnn recognized a keen intelligence. Besides, he could not have
been named regent without the consent of the Gyrgon. Obviously, they
saw in him something the Bashkir naysayers did not. As
he continued to approach the new regent, he observed that the
Gyrgon's black eyes had pupils the color of rubies. They met his for
a moment, then passed on. He felt a chill sweep through him, as if he
had been stripped not only of his robes but his skin and flesh as
well. With an inward shudder, he turned his attention back to the
young regent. In truth, he had been preparing himself for this
encounter for some time, hoping, on the one hand, that this day would
not come for many years, suspecting, on the other hand, that it would
come sooner than anyone imagined. As a direct consequence of his
foresight, he had spent weeks analyzing the intelligence his
Consortium had compiled on Kurgan. He had known almost instantly that
he would have a far more difficult time with the son than he had with
the father. It could not be helped. Koura, as they said in the
Korrush. It is written. Kurgan
saw Sornnn SaTrryn when he was still a few meters away. Sornnn
SaTrryn was tall, lean, with a vaguely dangerous air. He had pale
blue eyes that, like all the SaTrryn, were almost almond in shape,
and the agile, long-fingered hands of a professional conjurer. Kurgan
saw with ill-concealed distaste that he was wearing a wide-striped
robe of the kind worn by the tribes of the Korrush. The bright colors
were dull with the dust of hard travel. "Forgive
my appearance on the night of your father's Rescendance, Kurgan
Stogggul," Sornnn said in his deep, commanding voice. "As
you can plainly see, I hastened here directly from the Korrush so
that I could pay my respects." He appeared to have absorbed the
absolute stillness of the wild and primitive Korrush tribes from whom
his Consortium bought the spices they sold. Kurgan
inclined his head, his night-black eyes ever avid, ever watchful, a
pair of midnight pillagers. He was dressed in a formal robe of
deepest indigo. He disliked the color, was uncomfortable wearing it
now. He burned to don the regent's royal purple. "At a time like
this, it is good to have my Prime Factor close at hand once more." "I
have heard that Wennn Stogggul's death was sudden and tragic,"
Sornnn SaTrryn said, breaking into Kurgan's thoughts. "You and I
have something in common, regent." "Indeed.
Your own father died some months ago, yes?" Sornnn
inclined his head in sad assent. Kurgan
glanced fleetingly to his left, saw Star-Admiral Olnnn Ry-dddlin
sizing up the young Prime Factor, compiling a mental list as one does
with an enemy, trying to divine his strengths and his weaknesses. He
turned back and to cover his brief inattention signed to one of the
nearby servants to bring them drinks. They were delivered a moment
later on a chased-copper tray. Sornnn SaTrryn exchanged his empty
goblet for a full one. When the Soul Departure Toast had been gravely
made, the fire-grade numaaadis consumed, Kurgan asked, "Where in
the Korrush have your travels taken you?" "I
was for the past weeks in the area of Okkamchire." "Those
names sound alike to me," he said. "By all reports the
Korrush is a primitive place, so I hear. Dust, kuomeshal dung. An
altogether unpleasant way, it seems to me, to make a living." "Exquisitely
woven rugs, a drink that makes even fire-grade numaaadis taste like
water." Sornnn SaTrryn's smile was gentle, disarming. "An
enchanting village of tents that moves about at the will of the
chieftain, or on a whim of the weather." He paused. "Then,
again, the spice trade has proved enormously lucrative." Kurgan
grinned, on firm ground again. "Well worth the buzz of
bloodflies and the stink of kuomeshal dung, I imagine." "Absolutely,
regent." "Well,
then, I daresay I won't admonish you for spending so much time there.
On the other hand . . ." He paused, having seen his sister
Marethyn making her way through the throng. She was certain to make a
scene as she had done on the day of his father's death; it remained
only to discover what sort of scene. "Yes,
regent," Sornnn SaTrryn said expectantly. "On the other
hand?" Kurgan
returned his attention to his Prime Factor. "On the other hand,
it is my wish to resurrect Eleusis Ashera's plan to rebuild Za
Hara-at." Sornnn's
smile was a kilometer wide. "Why this is magnificent news,
regent! Truly magnificent!" "The
ruins are currently being excavated, are they not?" "Yes.
For years now, the Beyy Das, one of the Five Tribes of the Korrush,
have been carefully unearthing the bones of the ancient city. But the
work is both difficult and dangerous. There have been a number of
cave-ins because of old silicate mines that were buried for centuries
as well as devastating raids by the Jeni Cerii, a rival tribe." "I
shall have to assign a detachment of Khagggun to stand guard over our
Mesagggun." "That
might be wise, regent," Sornnn SaTrryn said. "But I would
caution them to keep well away from the site itself, as it is a holy
place." "Only
for the primitives of the Korrush. But in these matters I understand
you are the expert, so I shall heed your advice." He nodded.
"Excellent, Sornnn SaTrryn. I am pleased that we have begun on
such a productive note." "It
is my hope that you will allow me to accompany you on your first trip
to the Korrush." "But
I have no such trek planned." "The
SaTrryn are partners with the Stogggul Consortium in the building of
Za Hara-at, the so-called City of One Million Jewels. I think it
would be wise for the regent to make a tour of the site." Kurgan
considered for a moment. "Well, one thing is clear, you were
taught well how to speak." He showed his teeth. "Very well.
I will leave it to you to make all the arrangements. But for now,
Prime Factor, I must excuse myself. The Rescendance will begin
shortly, and I must prepare myself." "Of
course. Thank you for this interview, regent. Again, my respects to
you and to your late father." "As
you have said, you came quickly and from a distance. I will not soon
forget your loyalty." With
a nod, Sornnn SaTrryn bade the regent a formal farewell, and was gone
in a swirl of Korrush-woven fabric. Kurgan
stood looking after him for a moment or two, lost in contemplation.
Olnnn Rydddlin, finished with the last-minute instructions to the
Haaar-kyut guards, crossed the tent to stand beside him. "What
news of the fugitives we seek?" "We
are closing in, regent." "Careful,
Star-Admiral. We have been down this road before" "This
time is different." Kurgan's
eyes cut to Olnnn Rydddlin's face, a book with so many hidden
passages, an ally and a danger. "Then shortly they shall be in
custody, is that correct, Star-Admiral?" Olnnn
inclined his head. Marethyn
Stogggul waited until she saw the Star-Admiral take his leave of her
brother before she attempted to approach him. She was a tall, willowy
Tuskugggun with a beautiful, regal face, intelligent, wide-apart
eyes, and sensual lips. Whether she was aware of it or not, she
possessed some of Kurgan's swagger, unusual in a V'ornn female. Hers
was the kind of body that V'ornn males dreamed of, yet in her dress
and her movements she was wholly unself-conscious about her
attractiveness. She
had been standing with all the other females, in a roped-off section
of the tent beyond whose periphery they were enjoined from roaming.
By now, she had had her fill of small talk and gossip, discussions of
the relative tensile strength of tertium versus tritanium, the warp
and weft of textiles. From across the rope barrier she caught
snippets of male conversations that had at their root the angling for
deals, the ferreting out of negotiating weaknesses, business
rivalries, grudges, envy, ambition. The stuff of life! She
put a smile on her face even though she was dreading this encounter.
As a Tuskugggun who believed, quite heretically, that her gender
should be the equal of males, she held no especial feeling for the
male members of her family who, because of her views, were prone to
give her even shorter shrift than her sister or her mother. She had
learned early in life how to be independent. Unlike her ambitious
brother, Kurgan, and her spoiled sister, Oratttony, she did not trade
on the reputation or power of the Stogggul Consortium, even after her
father had become regent. Wennn Stogggul had despised her, and she
had seen no reason not to return the emotion. In fact, it had given
her no small pleasure to be openly contemptuous of him, to berate him
for all but abandoning his firstborn son, Terrettt, to the suspect
therapies dispensed by cold and strange Deirus at Receiving Spirit.
She alone, of all the family, visited Terrettt in his awful sterile
quarters among the lunatics, and she went without fail three times a
week. How many times had she begged her mother, cajoled her, then
tongue-lashed her for cruelty. "He
is your son!" Marethyn had shouted at her mother. "I
have never thought of him that way," her mother had said in a
voice drained of emotion. "And I never will." Shaken,
Marethyn had said, "Then I am no longer your daughter." Somewhere
inside Terrettt's skewed brain, she knew, he was grateful for each
visit, even though he rarely expressed it. He acted differently when
she was with him, she didn't need Deirus to tell her that, though
they often did. As
Kurgan turned toward her, she was acutely aware of her mother, of
Oratttony and her brood, the other females of the family obediently
standing behind the indigo silken cord, removed from the place of
honor where only the Stogggul males were allowed. For all Oratttony's
sharp tongue she lacked the courage to emerge from the pen to which
tradition had unfairly consigned her, but her eyes grew dark and
turbulent at the sight of Marethyn doing just that. "Are
you mad?" Kurgan said into her face. Those
were the first words her brother had uttered to her since the day of
their father's death. "I
bring Terrettt's good wishes to you, as well as his regrets at not
being able to attend the Rescendance." A
twisted smile flared across Kurgan's face for a moment before dying
out. "You are mad, sister. My brother is capable
only of drooling out of the side of his mouth. Anything more
difficult would likely split his head asunder." "I
knew it." Though she had promised herself she would remain calm,
her rage overcame her. "You deliberately blocked my attempts to
bring him here." "Of
course I did. I could not have him embarrassing the entire family in
front of all of Axis Tyr." "He
is your brother, the firstborn son. Wennn Stogggul was his father,
too. He has a right—" "Let
me tell you something," Kurgan hissed. "My brother has
as much right to be here today as you do confronting me like
this. He is a dangerous mad V'ornn and nothing more. I am my father's
only true heir, never forget that." He glared at her as if
daring her to gainsay him. "If you do not leave this instant, I
will order my Haaar-kyut to escort you to your proper place behind
the—" "And
embarrass the Consortium in front of all of Axis Tyr? I think not."
She lifted her hands against the gathering darkness of his
expression. "Keep your animals to their tight leash. I have said
all that I came to say." He
stiffened his spine. "And had it fall on deaf ears." She
inclined her head. "As always, brother." Her eyes were cold
as the jagged tips of the Djenn Marre. "You do not disappoint
me." In
urgent need of flexing his sorcerous leg, Star-Admiral Olnnn
Ry-dddlin stalked in a scimitar-shaped arc through V'omn decked out
in their best finery. All castes showed their grief in the
appropriate manner: Khagggun had replaced the left arm of their
battle armor with one of an indigo color; the Bashkir wore wide
indigo sashes, Mesagggun had painted their faces indigo; Genomatekks
and Deirus wore indigo bands around their skulls; Tuskugggun,
cordoned off to their own sections to either side, wore indigo
sifeyn. Olnnn
ate little, slept even less. And when he did finally drift off, his
dreams were rife with eerie and disturbing images, harsh cries and
insistent murmurings that jolted him awake, sweating, his hearts
thundering in his chest. He was never without pain in his leg,
needles in his marrow, a shocking sensation to a V'ornn inured to
most pain. And when it didn't pain him it was stiff. Keeping still
is a liability. This Khagggun saying had become quite literal for
him. The
Haaar-kyut he passed bowed to him as they sought his approval. It was
more than they had done for Kinnnus Morcha, the previous
Star-Admiral. As he moved in his rather awkward gait, he kept the
regent as the fulcrum of his arc. He meant to give the impression of
wanting to get a better sense of those who had power, longed for
power, would never have the power and thus were envious of those who
did. But, in fact, he was searching for Line-General Lokck Werrrent. Olnnn
was a Khagggun born of parents he hardly knew, the youngest of four
brothers, all of whom, it often seemed, lived to humiliate him, a
self-made officer unlike so many of his acquaintance who had traded
on their family name. He had no family name; no family at all,
abandoned by brothers both alive and dead. Alone in the world, he had
grown strong of his own accord. As a child, his life had promised
nothing; now he had almost everything he had ever dreamed of,
everything others who had assumed themselves his better desired and,
now that he was here at the pinnacle, would never have. And
yet he was on edge. In the short time since Kurgan had become regent
Olnnn had noticed a certain tension arising between them. The regent
asked unreasonable things of him, and when he failed to achieve them,
blamed him. Then there was the matter of the baffling thefts from
Khagggun storehouses. Despite the regent's opinions, Olnnn was
convinced that the SaTrryn Consortium was behind the collaboration.
They had a history of alliances with the Korrush tribes.
Consequently, it was possible to suspect that Sornnn SaTrryn had
"gone native." On the other hand, the regent clearly liked
Sornnn SaTrryn, so Olnnn knew that he had to tread lightly or not at
all. That meant somehow discrediting Sornnn SaTrryn without
implicating himself in any way. He needed plausible deniability, and
for this he required a stalking-horse. "Star-Admiral." He
turned to see the face of Bronnn Pallln, round as a Kundalan moon,
glistening with a faint sheen of sweat. "I have been here four
hours, long before most Bashkir, and I still have not been able to
gain an audience with Kurgan Stogggul." "The
official mourning period is not yet over, Bronnn Pallln," Olnnn
said, craning his neck for a glimpse of Line-General Lokck Werrrent.
"And he is preoccupied with the vicissitudes of his office." "His
father and my father were—" "I
think it would be best to put off any audiences for the time being." "I
have been patient for nine long weeks, should that not count for
something?" Bronnn Pallln whined. "I was hoping that I
could at last show Kurgan Stogggul what a mistake his father made in
naming Sornnn SaTrryn as Prime Factor over me." All
at once, the conversation was of extreme interest to Olnnn. It was as
if his wish to find a stalking-horse had been heard and granted by
some mysterious force. One more reason to keep this Bashkir from
talking to the regent. "On the eve of Wennn Stogggul's
Rescendance I hardly think it prudent to tell the regent that his
father made a mistake, do you?" "Possibly
not. But by rights the office of Prime Factor should be mine. Wennn
Stogggul had all but promised it to me when Sornnn SaTrryn—" "Kurgan
Stogggul's temper is as legendary as it is volatile. But I imagine,
Bronnn Pallln, that I need hardly remind you of that." "Indeed,
no, Star-Admiral." Olnnn
put his forefinger to his lips, tapped lightly in a show of
contemplation that was entirely false. "However, your words have
moved me." "They
have?" Bronnn Pallln appeared stunned. "Indeed."
He put a hand on Bronnn Pallln's meaty shoulder and steered him away
from the regent. That was when he caught sight of the Line-General in
question. "Let us speak of this matter in a day or two when the
sorrow of the Rescendance has settled." "Certainly,
Star-Admiral." Bronnn Pallln appeared to be trembling slightly
as he allowed himself to be led back to his Consortium. "It
would be my greatest pleasure." Olnnn
left him quickly behind, striding over to the towering figure of
Line-General Lokck Werrrent. He was the commander of the Kha-gggun
forces for the Sudden Lakes quadrant and, as such, wielded the most
power among the general ranks. He was an intimidating-looking V'ornn,
even among Khagggun. His large, square head seemed almost all jutting
jaw and beetling brow. His eyes, sunk deeply beneath that brow,
smoldered with what he liked to call the passion of discipline. He
was old enough to be Olnnn's father yet he had no offspring of his
own. Because, he said, he was married to his service to the V'ornn. "Star-Admiral,
good to see you once again!" he said in a deep resonant voice
that could seemingly shake the rafters of the largest hall or
gallery. "And
you as well, Line-General." Olnnn gripped Lokck Werrrent's
wrist. "It seems to me that these days we do not see one another
often enough." "I
am at your disposal, Star-Admiral. I will arrive at your quarters
first thing tomorrow morning." "No,
you won't. And you will not make any sudden changes in your official
schedule." Lokck
Werrrent's mighty brows knit tightly together. They knew each other
so well that he did not ask questions that could not now be answered.
"I am off to Dobbro Mannx's for my weekly dinner and a spirited
round of hobbnixx tomorrow at the twenty-first hour. Shall we meet
for a drink beforehand?" "Do
you have a venue in mind?" Olnnn was not a social animal; save
for the raucous Blood Tide on the Promenade at Harborside, he was not
conversant with Axis Tyr's many taverns. "Judging
by the gravity of your mood we should meet someplace unfrequented by
Khagggun. Do you know Spice Jaxx's?" "I
am afraid I do not." "It
is in the center of the spice market. It is marked by a
red-and-orange awning. You cannot miss it." "Tomorrow
at twenty hours, then." Ah,
the scion of the SaTrryn Consortium. I see you have brought a little
of the Korrush back to Axis Tyr." Sornnn turned at the sound of
the female voice. "Marethyn Stogggul." His face was utterly
neutral as he turned to face her. "I have not seen you since,
hmm, when was it exactly?" "Two
days after your father's death," she said. "Do you not
remember?" "A
thousand pardons." There was a quizzical expression on his face.
"As a matter of fact I do not." "I
was there. Representing the Stogggul family. Members of the
Consortium attended as well." "Ah,
yes. Well, there were so many attendees during the two weeks of
mourning." "And
you in shock." "Yes." "I
trust you have recovered from the tragic loss." "One
never fully recovers from such a shock," Sornnn said. "How
can one ever replace one's father?" "How,
indeed." "Ah,
that was thoughtless of me. This is, after all, your father's
Res-cendance." "Save
your condolences for someone who needs them," she said shortly. "How
have you been?" he said, piercing the awkward silence. "My
own work goes well, though business at the atelier is somewhat
static." "But
your brother's work." "Ah,
yes. Terrettt's paintings always sell." "And
he is?" "The
same." "Such
a pity." "I
thank you for your concern, Sornnn SaTrryn." She turned her head
slightly, as if watching for a moment someone or something behind his
left shoulder. "Look there," she said softly. "A
Deirus comes." Sornnn
turned to see a solemn figure clad in the ash-grey tunic of the
Deirus. "Look
how those around him wrinkle their noses and step aside when he comes
near," Marethyn said. "It
is true enough," Sornnn said. "Deirus are not well liked." "Well,
that is an understatement. They are considered sexual deviants and,
as such, pariahs." "Another
of your causes, Marethyn? Don't you have enough already?" Sornnn
was acutely aware of Olnnn Rydddlin's movements. It seemed clear that
he was shadowing them. "Considering
the criminal experiments the Genomatekks at Receiving Spirit perform
on the unfortunate children of V'ornn-Kundalan origin, their contempt
for Deirus is hypocritical." Marethyn made a face. "And why
should any difference—the Deirus' especially—mean that
they are fit only to serve the dying and the insane?" "That
way no one of importance will catch their 'disease', as the Gyrgon
put it," Sornnn said dryly. "As
if it actually were a disease. As if there was anything wrong
in males loving males. I daresay they are more loving in their
relationships than you males are with us females." "What's
the matter, Marethyn," he said mockingly, "don't you
believe in true love?" . "Should I?" "I
thought all Tuskugggun did." "I
thought no males did." "The
Deirus included? Poor fools! Save for their aberration they could
take their place among the highly regarded Genomatekks instead of
toiling on their own among the dead, the dying, and the insane." "It
is disgusting how they are abused. The periodic raids—" "It
is the Gyrgon way of ensuring that the aberrant behavior does not
spread outside the Deirus caste," Sornnn said. "On
such barbarism turns the Modality!" Marethyn lifted a goblet of
numaaadis off the tray of a passing servant. "What news of the
Kor-rush?" "The
Korrush abides. It is almost entirely the same, despite the ravages
of our occupation." Marethyn
took a sip of the liquor. It burned her throat like fire. "The
Gyrgon feel the tribes are beneath their notice." "Like
blood-fleas on a hindemuth's backside. Apparently so." "But
you know better." "My
Consortium makes its living from their spices." "I
have wondered." She cocked her head. "Why do you bother
trading with them? Why not simply go in with a wing of Khagggun and
take the spices? We have taken everything of value from the
Kundalan." "Not
yet everything, I warrant. But that is another story." He pursed
his lips meditatively. Having all this time kept Olnnn Rydddlin in
the corner of his eye, he became convinced that the Star-Admiral was
subtly following him like the mysterious dark mote on the Kundalan
sun. "To answer your question, let me see, how best to put it?
There is no answer." "By
which you mean that the Gyrgon are planning something in the
Korrush." "Did
I say that?" "Not
in so many words." He
frowned. "I think it would be best not to put words in my
mouth." "How
could you accuse me of such a thing? I am but a lowly Tus-kugggun,
after all. I doubt I have the intelligence to put words in your
mouth." "You
are as barbed as a sysal tree." "And
twice as obdurate, so it is said." "Which
is no lie, I see." He could see Olnnn Rydddlin smiling slightly
as he passed close by. "The
only thing I can see is that you are as dull and stupid as every
other Bashkir." "Now
I am offended." "Try
not to take it personally," Marethyn said as she turned away.
"According to some, I have amassed quite a reputation for
offensive behavior." As
Nith Batoxxx watched Kurgan begin the rite of Rescendance, his mind
was elsewhere. How could it be otherwise? What Gyrgon would concern
himself with day-to-day V'ornn affairs? Death was of interest to Nith
Batoxxx only inasmuch as it was a path not to be taken. In truth, it
was deeply disturbing being here in a public spot, amid the swirl,
glitter, and constant movement of a gigantic throng, exposed to life
outside the Temple of Mnemonics, where he had his laboratory. The
cacophony of voices alone made him slightly uneasy, as if sunk within
the crowd's incessant rustling, its restless energy, he had
difficulty hearing himself think. Even filtered through the neural
nets of his biosuit the acuity of sensation made him feel as if he
was being rubbed raw. He gritted his teeth against it, the muscles at
the side of his jaw bunched and spasmed. Possibly,
however, his agitation had something to do with the bronze neural-net
serpent that had been his link to his pawn, the Kundalan sorceress
Malistra. Though Malistra had been killed by the Dar Sala-at, the
serpent that had been with her had escaped, returning back to its
master. But when Nith Batoxxx had fed it into his okummmon, returning
to its original ionic state, he had discovered that it had somehow
been damaged. While he could access the record of the battle, he
could not see the identity of the Dar Sala-at. This seemed impossible
to him, and thus the defeat was bitterer still, and had made him
grind his teeth in fury and frustration. As
these unpleasant thoughts whirled through him, he swiveled his head
this way and that. He saw a clutter of Bashkir drinking and talking
under their breath, Mesagggun ripe from the mines, the power plants,
the underground conduits, Tuskugggun, their heads covered in sifeyn,
the traditional cowls all decent females wore over their heads. He
could feel their fear of him, basked in it, allowed it to calm his
jittery nerves. V'ornn and Kundalan alike, they were of no
consequence to him save in all the ways he could conjure for them to
wipe his tender parts. They were nothing more than extra pairs of
hands and feet, there to do his bidding before being lopped off as
they outlived their usefulness. Which
line of thought led him straight back to Kurgan Stogggul. In exchange
for Nith Batoxxx's help in gaining swift ascendancy to the regent's
office, Kurgan had pledged himself into Nith Batoxxx's service.
Forever. He was an ambitious lad. And highly motivated. He was far
more clever than his father ever was. And just as ruthless. He was
not averse to getting his hands wet with another's blood. Perhaps he
even reveled in it. But was he up to the task in store for him? This
was a question Nith Batoxxx intended to answer without undue delay. But
not this day. This day he was required to stand quietly and observe
the world around him, feeling the constant ion fire of his neural
nets as they compiled detailed notes, a library of minutiae,
transmitted not to the main cluster of Gyrgon data crystals, but to a
lone crystal, throbbing blue-white in a secret compartment of his
laboratory, a place hidden even from the supposedly omniscient eyes
of the Comradeship. It was a task he loathed; it reduced him to the
role of messenger, data-processor, librarian. It was demeaning and
obnoxious, yet he performed these seemingly unending tasks flawlessly
and without a word of protest. Protest was impossible in these
circumstances. I
am in a foul and bitter mood, he silently cried. And why is
that? But he knew. He knew as surely as he knew that the blighted
sun of Kundala with its purple spot would rise in precisely three
hours, twenty-three minutes, 17.973 seconds. He felt the lack, the
lack of a worthy adversary. He had done battle with his nemesis, Nith
Sahor, wounded him grievously, wounding him unto death. And now that
Nith Sahor was gone, Nith Batoxxx felt the void in his world, felt,
in fact, the warp and weft of reality somehow flat and dulled.
Without Nith Sahor to oppose him, he was bored. And sad. Imagine
that! Mourning the death of one's bitterest enemy. At another time,
he might have laughed at the absurdity of the notion. He
had despised Nith Sahor and all he had stood for. Nith Sahor had
deserved his fate, had deserved the execution Nith Batoxxx had
delivered upon him. He had been seduced by Kundalan lore, Kundalan
history, Kundalan sorcery. He had seen merit where there was only
swill. He had confused a conjurer's trick with true insight, had
mistaken myth for knowledge. Worse still, he had wanted to rock the
very foundations of the Comradeship. He had begun to doubt the basic
Precepts that all Gyrgon know are true and right from the moment
their cortical nets are hardwired into their brains, the Precepts
from which the main data crystal bank had been programmed Precepts
that had been downloaded into the V'ornn databank just before their
homeworld was destroyed. Nith Sahor believed the Precepts were
suspect. It was his contention that noxious emissions from that
unimaginable conflagration had interfered with the data transfer, so
that what came through was either corrupted or highly fragmented. He
had blasphemed against the Comradeship—against the V'ornn race
itself. He was a traitor of the most virulent kind, for he sought not
only betrayal but subversion. In the end, his delusions had led him
to conspire with the enemy, first Eleusis Ashera, the former regent,
then the sorceress Giyan and her turncoat consort, the Rhynnnon Rekkk
Hacilar. Nith
Batoxxx's blood seethed when he thought of Nith Sahor and his vile
treachery, and this only made him feel the void all the more, for it
was true that his own power rose most keenly, most vividly against a
powerful enemy. And now that enemy was gone, consigned to the frozen
wastes of N'Luuura, if there was any justice in the world. Greenish
moonslight slanted through the open sides of the Ancestor Tent, the
combined energy of the throng sizzled, heating the tent like a photon
reactor. The air tasted musty to him, crowded as it was with
V'ornndom, the huge line of mourners snaking into the tent on one
side, out the other, an unending serpent. He wished only to be back
in his laboratory, to lose himself in his experiments. He watched
from slitted eyes the crowd eating and drinking and talking in hushed
tones, heaving like a mass of foolish cattle, and he hated them all.
What concerned them? The insignificant events of their petty lives,
the minute quotidian dance that he—that all Gyrgon save Nith
Sahor—had long ago foresworn. For the Gyrgon had looked into
the face of eternity, and after that sight nothing could ever be the
same again. It was a magnificent, towering, orgiastic feeling to hold
the stuff of the Cosmos in the neural net of one's gloved hand, to
manipulate it, to catch the shimmer of its remaining mysteries, to be
held spellbound by the microscopic orbits of the energy that composed
all life. Yes,
his experiments made his contempt for the inferior castes
universal—almost universal. There was one here who did interest
him somewhat. He let his ruby eyes alight for a moment upon Kurgan
Sto-gggul, who was looking imperious, proud, dangerous—all the
things that Nith Batoxxx, in his guise as the Old V'ornn, had taught
Kurgan from a very early age. Kurgan Stogggul was a conundrum worthy
of Nith Batoxxx's superior intellect and scientific curiosity. Some
special fate had touched Kurgan at the moment of his birth, some
destiny far beyond most V'ornn's imagining. And
in a very real sense Nith Batoxxx had brokered that special fate. Nith
Batoxxx moved to Kurgan's side, and a pinwheel of space and silence
formed around them. V'ornn and Kundalan alike averted their gaze.
Their fear was palpable, but it did nothing to dispel this discontent
that covered him like a mourner's veil. "It
is the appointed hour," he said softly, eerily. "The
Rescendance must commence." Kurgan
approached the baein. Nith Batoxxx watched as he turned a knob on the
baein. The hearts of the dead regent pulsed and, in the simulation of
the return to life, commenced to melt, dissolving into a thick
blue-black liquid that drained into the Soul Chalice. Silence
passed through the vast crowd like a photonic wave. Nith Batoxxx
could hear them quietly breathing, a beast at bay. Not a word was
spoken. All eyes were on Kurgan as he lifted the chalice, which was
made of crystal, so all could see the liquefied hearts within. Kurgan
faced the assembled throng, intoned the Prayer for Rescendance, which
ended with the familiar phrase, "Life is death, death is life."
Then Kurgan drained all the liquid from the chalice.
3 Conundrums
Whatever
are we to do," Eleana said, "now that Giyan is gone?"
They were all huddled together under the light of the three moons,
Riane, Rekkk, Eleana and the six-legged Rappa, Thigpen. "Rescue
her," Rekkk said with a warrior's straightforward logic. "That
will be anything but simple," Thigpen warned. Riane
told them of Giyan's suspicions about the origins of the chrysalides. "But
Giyan is such a powerful sorceress," Eleana said. "How
could she be imprisoned?" "This
is Malasocca, dread sorcery of the highest order." Riane
recognized the word as being Venca, the root language of the Ramahan
Old Tongue; the language of the Druuge, the nomadic tribes who
inhabited the trackless wastes of the Great Voorg, who were said to
be the descendants of the first Ramahan. Thigpen's
whiskers twitched in anxiety. "I warrant its like has not been
seen on Kundala for many centuries. It is ancient, from the Time
before the Imagining. Only the death of the host will counteract it."
The creature looked from face to face. "We may have to accept
that the Lady is lost to us." "There
must be a way," Riane said. "We
will go after her," Rekkk said firmly. "Surely all of us
together—" "That
is precisely what we will not do." Thigpen, her
triangular ears laid flat against the ruddy fur of her head, stood up
on her two sets of sturdy hind legs. "If we do, she will kill us
all, of that there can be no doubt. And even if by some miracle one
of us remains alive, what then? Which one of us will plunge a blade
through her heart to free her?" "Then
what do you propose?" Eleana put her hands on her hips. "I,
for one, am unwilling to sit idly by while some daemon from the Abyss
steals Lady Giyan's soul from her." Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching madly. "Your loyalty to Lady Giyan is
touching, dear. I am not questioning what is in your heart, merely
how the volatile emotion of love is played out." She steepled
her slender fingers, tapping the long nails together rhythmically.
"The plight of the Lady Giyan aside, I cannot impress upon you
the extreme danger the Malasocca poses for all of us, for it presages
the dread return of the daemons to our realm." "You
don't know—" Rekkk began. "Ah,
but I do know." Thigpen opened her jaws. Her slender yellow
tongue rolled from the back of her mouth a small spherical object.
She plucked it from between her teeth, held it aloft for them to see.
In its depths clouds seemed to form and dissipate in a never-ending
pattern. "This tells me there is a future—not the
future, mind—but certainly one possible future in
which you and Riane go after Giyan and die by her hand." "More
Kundalan mumbo jumbo!" said Rekkk. "I don't believe a word
of it!" He scabbarded his shock-sword. "I am going after
her and, somehow, I will find a way to free her." It was clear
that he wasn't really listening, wasn't thinking straight. "You're
not going anywhere yet," Riane said. Thigpen's words had chilled
her to the marrow. "For a start, you don't even know where Giyan
went," Riane pointed out. "She
is right, Rekkk." Eleana sighed. "I want to go after Lady
Giyan as much as you do. But for the moment, at least, it seems we
have little choice but to listen to what Thigpen has to say." The
night was growing cold, and they had already been chilled by the
horror they had all witnessed. Following Riane's suggestion, they
climbed through the shattered window, returning to the Library,
pulling up heavy ammonwood chairs in a rough circle beside the long
refectory table. "Before
I listen to any more of this," Rekkk growled, "I want an
explanation as to how you could possibly know the future." Thigpen,
curling her furry body in the chair seat, sighed. "As I said, it
is only one possible future out of many." "How
many?" Eleana asked. "A
great many, my dear. An infinite number." Rekkk
was far too agitated to sit still. He sprang up almost immediately
and, crossing the tiled floor, busied himself with piling split logs
into the huge blackened fireplace and starting a fire. "The
explanation," he said. "Patience,
warrior." He
turned from his work. "What little I possessed went with Giyan.
Proceed with all due haste." The
Rappa showed them the tiny sphere again. 'As Riane can attest, those
of us who can Thrip have residing within us a wormlike creature known
as a mononculus." Eleana
made a sound. Her face showed her disgust. "Is
this true, Riane?" Rekkk asked, brushing soot from his hands.
"Do you carry one of these creatures inside you?" "Yes.
It is essential in order to continue Thripping. As you move through
the Realms you pick up all sorts of energies, some of them quite
noxious. The mononculus acts as a kind of filter, metabolizing the
energies, purging our systems." "What
Riane does not yet know," Thigpen said, "is that the
mononculus absorbs all sorts of radiation as one Thrips. The Realms
are infinite. They exist side by side, as well as layered upon one
another. When one Thrips there is no time or space—at least not
as we understand it. All the Realms exist at once. Therefore, it is
not surprising that many oddments are inadvertently picked up along
the way." She rolled the sphere between her fingers. "Slivers
of the past, or the future become embedded in our beings. They are
harmful to us so the mononculus takes charge of them. Unlike the
radiation, it cannot metabolize these slivers so it does the next
best thing. It binds them together, around and around." Riane
took the sphere from Thigpen, peered at it intently. "Until it
makes this." "Precisely."
Thigpen appeared pleased. "Then it expels the object." Having
successfully started the fire, Rekkk came and stood beside Riane.
"But the future? The past?" "How
shall I say it?" Thigpen used a forefinger to scratch behind one
ear. "Think of sunlight glancing off water, or lamplight
reflecting off a pane of crystal. Think of these glimmers caught in
the corner of your eye, seen but not seen. This is what the sphere is
made up of." Eleana,
too, drew close, to better inspect the object of curiosity. "And
you saw the future—a future—in there." Thigpen
nodded solemnly. "Somewhere, someplace, sometime, it happened
just as I have said. Riane and Rekkk perish at the hands of the
daemon that Lady Giyan is becoming." "N'Luuura
take it!" Rekkk cursed. Eleana
looked shrewdly at the Rappa. "Then we must ensure that that
particular future never happens." Thigpen
sat up. "My dear, you have grasped the essential nature of the
matter." She looked at Rekkk. "Do you understand this,
impetuous warrior?" "She
is my true love, Rappa. Do you understand that?" She
gently laid a paw on his arm. "Better than you could ever
imagine, brave one." "Well,
then, give me an alternative to finding Giyan and battling the daemon
that possesses her. This talk of prophecy gives me a headache." "We
will find Giyan," Riane said. "But first we must find the
way to displace the daemon without killing her." She saw Thigpen
watching her with glittering eyes. "A strong arm and a brave
heart are not enough to defeat daemons. We must use knowledge." Scowling,
Rekkk said, "I do not understand, Dar Sala-at." "One
thing I have learned about daemons," Riane continued, "is
that they are made of fire. Battle them in a straightforward manner
with might and main and they simply grow stronger. Think of it this
way, they are like bloodthirsty reavers—the harder you push
them, the harder they push back. But like reavers they are
limited—clever in their own way—but with no deep
understanding." "The
Dar Sala-at is quite correct," Thigpen said. "Evil repeats
itself over and over in an unending pattern. Evil is powerful,
implacable, a deadly force, certainly so, but it has no free will. It
is programmed, shall we say, to achieve its goal. Therefore, its
actions are—what is the best way to put it? Its actions are
mechanical, predictable." "At
last we come to it," Rekkk cried. "The chink in the enemy's
armor!" "But
this is pure evil we are speaking of now; therefore, nothing is quite
what it appears to be." Eleana
frowned. "What do you mean?" "What
I tell you now is vital to our survival." Thigpen looked into
each of their faces in turn. 'The nature of evil, the very thing that
is the chink in its armor, as Rekkk so colorfully put it, is often
its greatest strength. For its mechanical, predictable methods can
prove all too hypnotic to the likes of us." "That's
preposterous!" Rekkk blurted out. "Surely all of us have
proved time and again that we know good from evil." "Of
course you have," Thigpen said. "But consider, Rekkk.
Malistra was able to crawl inside you, to take you over so completely
that you tried to kidnap the Dar Sala-at. And would have succeeded,
mind you, had Riane not been so resourceful and quick of wit." "That
will never happen again," Rekkk said darkly. It was clear he did
not care to remember that incident. "Rekkk,
I know you believe that. I am absolutely sure your intentions are
good." Thigpen tapped her nails together. "However, inside
all of us is a dark place. You know it, Rekkk, because you have been
there. The Ramahan call it White Bone Gate. There resides all the
rage, despair, envy, greed, all the negative emotions we harbor.
Unlike Rekkk, most of us are not even aware this place exists. In
fact, we'd likely deny it. The point is that daemons instinctively
know how to open White Bone Gate, how to manipulate us so that the
emotions pent up in that dark place inside us come swarming out. The
closer we get to evil, the more time spent in its company, the more
likely White Bone Gate will be breached, the more likely that dark
place will be opened and all the sewage will spill out, polluting us,
dazzling us, leading us astray. That is why Riane is correct when she
says that we must have knowledge. We must know precisely what we are
doing before we confront the daemon that is taking over Giyan." "Then
tell us!" Rekkk thundered. "Alas,
I cannot. I don't know enough about the Malasocca." "Who
does, then?" Eleana asked with a quick warning look at Rekkk's
strangled cry. "No
one I know of." Thigpen spread her arms. "But look around
you. We have the collected wisdom of the blessed Ramahan here at our
fingertips." "I
can't read Old Tongue Kundalan and neither can Rekkk," Eleana
pointed out. Thigpen
clucked her yellow tongue against the roof of her mouth. "But
Riane and I—" "I
have another idea," Riane broke in. "Giyan told me who I
needed to see for the next stage of my sorcerous training. Jonnqa, an
imari at the Nimbus kashiggen in Axis Tyr. I think we should go
there. I would wager she can help us." Thigpen
shook her head. "That is precisely what we will not do." "I
vote we go," Rekkk said shortly. "I have been to Nimbus. I
know where it is, and I am familiar with its interior layout. Right
now it's our best chance." Thigpen
thumped her thick, striped tail loudly against the chair back.
"Listen to me for a moment. We must assume the worst, that the
daemon already has possession of Giyan's most recent memories. That
being the case, it is a good bet that Giyan—and the Tzelos—will
be looking for Riane there." She held up the tiny sphere.
"Nimbus is the place where it happens, Rekkk, where you and
Riane die. You must avoid that future. You cannot go there." There
was a small silence into which the whistle of the wind intruded,
causing the branches of the trees to dip and wave. They scratched
against the side of the Library. An owl hooted mournfully. Rekkk
grunted, stalking out through the ruined window. "I
guess you and Riane had better start your research right away,"
Eleana said, before following Rekkk outside. For
some time, they stood together looking at the gathering sunrise. A
chill wind, the first taste of autumn, fluttered their garments,
crept up their arms and legs. "This
inaction is intolerable," Rekkk said at length. "Somewhere
out there she's imprisoned, in pain, fighting for her life." "You
can't think about that now," Eleana said softly. He
threw his head back, shouted into the dawn. "That's all I can
think about since it happened. It's all I will think about
until she is safe at my side." "Then
you are in serious danger of driving yourself mad." "Good.
I deserve nothing less." "What
are you talking about?" "I
should have protected her." "That's
absurd. Giyan herself, with all her powerful sorcery, couldn't
protect herself. You could not have helped her, Rekkk. You know
that." When
he did not reply, she reached up and tugged at him. "Rekkk, look
at me." Reluctantly, he turned. "This isn't about not being
able to protect Giyan, is it?" He
glared at her, then could not continue to meet her gaze. When he
tried to turn his head away, she guided it back with hands on his
cheeks. "Talk to me, Rekkk." He
broke away, went stumbling down along one of the abbey paths. Eleana
followed him, and when at length he stopped she came up to him. He
had his hand curled around the bole of the sysal tree that had grown
up through the lintel of the east-facing temple, splitting it
asunder. Eleana
put a hand gently on the small of his back. "Funny,"
he said in a hoarse whisper, "how something as innocuous as a
tree can break through stone and mortar." He shook his head. "I
mean, half the time you don't even notice trees, do you? They live at
the periphery of your vision, there but not there. You take them for
granted." "Rekkk,"
she whispered, "what is it?" He
looked up into the rustling branches. "This tree is like . . ."
He closed his eyes for a moment. "Like that place inside me—what
did Thigpen call it?" "White
Bone Gate." He
nodded. "The place Malistra touched inside of me, twining like a
serpent in the darkness. The place I never knew was there, the place
that lived at the periphery of my consciousness. She took possession
of it, made me into . . ." He snatched his hand from the sysal
tree as if it had caught fire. "Rekkk,
please—" "Don't
you see?" He turned to her. "The same thing is happening to
Giyan now—only it's worse for her, far worse. She's being taken
over body and soul, remade into something . . . horrific, unholy,
evil." "We'll
find her, Rekkk, we'll save her. Have faith." "Faith."
He laughed harshly. "You don't know what it's like to have
something of pure evil crawling around inside you, boring into your
brain, imprisoning you. The horror of it!" He took her hand in
his. Pray
it never happens to you, Eleana. Pray to your Great Goddess Miina to
spare you from that fate." Eleana
led him over to a stone bench. "You're exhausted, Rekkk. Let's
sit for a while and speak of other things. Or not speak at all."
She took his hand in hers. "Together, we will watch the sun come
up and marvel at its beauty. We will count the colors in the clouds
and free our minds. We will let our hearts rest from our pain." We
have set ourselves a difficult task," Thigpen said as she took
down a stack of books from the Library shelves. "Tell
me something I do not already know." Thigpen
took note of Riane's tone of voice as she watched her thumb through
The Origins of Darkness. "On the other hand, we have a
great advantage. You are able to read and absorb text at an
astonishing pace." Riane
was aware of the weakness of the thrumming beneath her feet, Each
abbey was built atop a major nexus point on the sorcerous grid of
power bourns that enmeshed Kundala. Each nexus was different. The
meaning of both these facts had been lost for more than a century.
All night, she had felt the bourns stuttering, like the belabored
breath of a patient. Riane
voiced a suspicion that had been forming. "You persuaded us not
to go after Giyan because you are trying to protect me." "That
is one reason, yes. But if you think I lied to you—" "The
time for protecting me is past, don't you think?" "Not
at all," Thigpen said sharply. "You know so little about
your fate. You are the Dar Sala-at and yet. . ." Riane
watched her carefully. "You
are young. Your Gift is raw, only partially trained. You are only in
the first flower of your ascendancy. Plus, you are female. You do not
yet fully appreciate the difficulty this will present. We have been
awaiting the advent of the Dar Sala-at, yes, because you will lead us
out of our time of bondage. But even the Ramahan who believe in you
most fervently have been expecting a male savior. This will come as a
great shock to them when you reveal yourself, and there will be the
inevitable cabal of naysayers. It is written that you will have a
holy protector at your side." "The
Prophesies again. How is it that I have not been told about this holy
protector before?" "The
Prophesies are written down now, but they came down to the Ramahan
orally, through numerous generations. There are thousands of them,
intertwining like tropical vines. Many intersect, others overlap or
even are contradictory. There is a Prophesy that has been interpreted
by some to indicate that the Dar Sala-at will be a male. But if, as
we believe, these Prophesies have their origins in Miina, the
complexities, the entanglements, even the paradoxes make sense. Miina
never viewed us as Her slaves. We have free will in most matters.
This is why the prophesies must be interpreted; this is why some of
them will be proved true and others false. Our lives are complex,
even at times seemingly paradoxical. In any case, the future is
unknown. What, otherwise, would be the point of living? Still, the
Prophesies exist and so the Seers interpret, but, as you know, the
Seers soon go mad, and die." "You
must be this holy protector, then." "I?"
Thigpen laughed. "He is known as the Nawatir, a fierce and
relentless warrior. He springs into being through sorcerous
transformation. His coming marks the next step in your evolution, Dar
Sala-at. As for me, I am and always will be a Rappa, a member of a
race close to Miina, once companions to the first Ramahan until we
were falsely accused of killing Mother and forced into hiding." Riane
looked down. Who would be her Nawatir? How could she know? She put
aside for the moment her questions and began to read. The pages of
the tome flip-flip-flipped past her eyes. After a time, she became
lost in the text, and then, suddenly the text began to dissolve. Her
head felt light, and she knew another memory of Riane's former life,
before the dying husk had been joined with Annon, had broken off from
the glacier buried deep in their mind . . . She
was walking along an ice-encrusted ridge. A blue wind scoured her
with frozen snow. At the top of the world high amid the ragged peaks
of the Djenn Marre she moved with slow deliberate strides. She kept
the air, so thin it barely existed, deep in her lungs. Her heart beat
fast as her breathing slowed. She was tired but, somehow, at the same
time exhilarated. A sudden cry caused her to turn, and she saw the
bird winging in on a thermal current, its snow-white wings and
black-and-white-speckled body hurtling toward her. It was huge,
larger than any bird Annon had ever seen or read about. It was three
times her size. She held her ground as it approached. It studied her
with piercing blue eyes, and feelings of comfort and of love
enveloped her. She spoke to it in a language— With
a start Riane sat up straight. She had spoken to the giant bird in
Vencal What had she said? But the memory stopped there, as if it were
a storybook whose pages had been maliciously ripped out. She massaged
her head, trying to will the memory to continue. She could never do
it. The memories surfaced, presented themselves, isolated fragments
of the original Riane's life, in their own time, in their own
mysterious way. There was simply no controlling them. It was like
working on a vast and unknowable puzzle. She had a number of pieces
now, but so far she could not see where they fit together. Riane
looked over at Thigpen, who had opened the first book on the stack.
She sat, reading, her tail curled around her, on the refectory table,
humming a little to herself. This sight served to jolt Riane back
into reality, and she grew angry. "Don't
you care?" she said. "What?"
Thigpen looked up, blinking. "Don't
you care at all that Giyan is being slowly destroyed?" Thigpen
sat up straight. "My dear Riane, of course I care. I care a
great deal. But panicking about it isn't going to do anyone any good,
least of all Giyan." "But
you seem so frightfully calm!" "A
state of being I have spent centuries cultivating." She padded
down the table toward Riane. "Rappa tend to have high blood
pressure, you know. Comes from eons of being the favorite food of the
Ja-Gaar. See one coming, we keel right over, like as not. Shocking
lapse in the survival instinct, let me tell you. Still, such a
deficiency makes the smart of the species smarter, eh? If you've got
a brain in your cranium, you're forced to figure out ways to keep the
old pressure under control, aren't you? Otherwise, you're dead meat.
So, yes, I am calm, and you should be, too. Promotes clarity of
thought, which is what is required of us now." "Of
course you're right, but, . ." All at once, a memory surfaced
and her heart contracted. "Thigpen, Giyan told me that in order
for the Tzelos to be in our Realm it had to be carried here by an
archdaemon." The
Rappa's eyes opened wide. "Then we have another enemy to deal
with. Oh, dear!" Riane's
eyes grew fierce. "I lost her once, Thigpen. By some miracle I
got her back. And now, now . . ." Her hands balled into fists.
"I swear to you that I will move the stars to save her."
Her voice shook and tears stood in the corners of her eyes. "But
how? How?" "Patience,
Dar-Sala-at, we have only just begun to—" "To
N'Luuura with patience!" Riane swept books off the table. The
two looked at each other for several trembling moments. "I need
a sign, Xhigpen." Riane was almost pleading. "Something to
tell us that we have a chance to get her back." Thigpen
leapt lightly onto the floor. "This is a time of great testing."
She began to gather the scattered books one by one. "You must
find that sign inside yourself, Dar Sala-at." She scrambled
under the table to get the last book. "This is a time—"
Silence. "Thigpen?" The
Rappa backed out from under the table. "Riane, look there!" Riane
got down on her hands and knees, ducked under the refectory table
overhang. And that is when she saw it, lying innocently deep in the
shadows. She glanced upward, saw where it had been affixed to the
underside of the table. Doubtless, the coming of the Malasocca had
dislodged it. Thigpen
sniffed at it, her snout quivering nervously. "V'ornn
technology. What is it?" It
was about the size and shape of a seedpod, but it was made of tertium
and germanium, dull as an overcast day. "It is a duscaant, a
Khagggun recording device." Thigpen
sat back. "That cannot be good. What on Kundala is it doing
here?" Riane
held it up to direct light and it vanished. "An object of
stealth, of clandestine watching. It is a stealer of secrets, a
repository of information." Thigpen
regarded it as if it were a packet of V'ornn explosives. "We
should destroy the dread thing. Now." "No." Thigpen
shuddered. "But—" "As
you know, no V'ornn can penetrate the Library now, not even a Gyrgon.
The logical conclusion is that the duscaant was secreted here before
the spell was cast." Riane turned the thing over, pressed a
hidden stud with her fingernail. "Here is the date on which it
was placed here and activated." Thigpen
bent closer, read with rising alarm the V'ornn numbers. "That is
five years before the abbey was invaded, its members dragged away to
V'ornn interrogation chambers some ninety years ago." Her eyes
flickered up to Riane's face like flames. "How? How could a
Gyrgon listening device be planted inside these walls? How could such
a thing be?" "You
know," Riane said slowly and deliberately, "because there
can be only one answer." Thigpen's
eyes were wide and staring. "A Ramahan collaborator." Riane
nodded. "Someone very powerful. Doubtless a sorceress." For
they both knew that the Gyrgon dealt only with individuals who, in
their own ways, wielded great power. "That is why we will not
destroy it. In here, perhaps, resides a clue to the identity of that
collaborator." "Or
fooling with a Gyrgon object will get us killed." Thigpen rubbed
her cheek with the back of a forepaw. "We will discuss this no
further, and certainly not mention it to the others. There is already
far too much anxiety floating around for my liking. Let us resume our
reading, and leave this conundrum for another day." A
while later, Eleana appeared, bearing plates of cold food and
tankards of water, which she placed before them, her eyes asking the
question she was afraid to voice. Neither of them said a word, and
she retreated, ashen-faced. Riane briefly rested her bleary eyes on
Eleana's form before returning to her reading. The books in this
Library were maddening. They assumed knowledge that she did not
possess even though she had memorized both of Miina's Sacred Volumes.
The result was somewhat akin to looking at the pictures in a book
while not being able to read the accompanying text. Some references
were simply incomprehensible. For others, she could extrapolate some
things, infer others, but without a clear understanding of the
overarching principles and theories under which everything operated
she could not be certain her conclusions were correct. Perhaps, she
surmised, the problem stemmed from the fact that the books predated
both Utmost Source and The Book of Recantation. What
came before these two holy pillars of Mima's rule? Riane did not know
and clearly Thigpen didn't either. She felt like an infant invading
an adult domain. There was so much she longed to know, so much
sitting right here at her fingertips. It was maddening. If only she
could understand what she was reading! Giyan was right. She needed
more training, that much was indisputable. Toward
evening, she said, "I may have found something. The Ma-lasocca
is transformational, it says here." "Now
we are getting somewhere." "Apparently,
daemons possess only knowledge of Kyofu sorcery, not Osoru. If they
knew both they would be able to conjure Eye Window spells, which are
much more powerful." "But
Giyan is an Osoru sorceress." "Yes,"
Riane said, "and that is the point of her possession. Once the
Malasocca is complete the daemon will have access to all her
knowledge, including Osoru." Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching fearfully. "And then it will
know—" Riane
nodded. "Everything. Yes." "But
in the distant past before Miina cast the daemons into the Abyss
there were incidents of Malasocca." "The
daemons gain possession of the knowledge only while they are in the
host body. Once they are cast out, they cannot retain it." "Well,
that is something, at least. But. . ." Thigpen's eyes were dark
with foreboding as she voiced the question they had both been afraid
to ask. "How long do we have before Lady Giyan is completely
taken over by the daemon?" "It
doesn't say; this is only a passing reference." Riane continued
to read. "It does say that after the halfway point it becomes
increasingly more difficult to reverse the transmogrification." "By
what means can we effect the reversal?" Riane
shook her head. "But there is a word here. Maasra." She
frowned. "It is neither Old Tongue nor, to my knowledge, Venca." "
Cross-references? " "None
that I can find." "Then
this mysterious word is the only clue we have." Thigpen
stretched and yawned, her yellow tongue curling up. "What we
need is a first-class dialectician." "Where
on Kundala are we going to find that?" Thigpen
took up a piece of meat, sniffed it. "As it happens I know one."
She wrinkled her nose as she popped the morsel into her mouth.
"Unfortunately, he's dead."
4 Madness
Is As Madness Docs
The
Sea of Blood was choppy in the following southwest wind, dark as
ludd-wine, dark as its namesake. Small fishing boats bobbed in the
slips at the wharf and, farther out, the tall-masted ships of the
Sarakkon, the wild seafaring race of Kundala's southern continent,
rode uneasily at anchor. The Sarakkon believed in many gods, female
and male. The great, arcing prows of their trading ships were carved
into their brooding visages—part Sarakkon, part fearsome beast. From
the south-facing window high up in Receiving Spirit, Marethyn
Stogggul had a splendid view of the Sarakkonian vessels currently
loading and unloading their cargo. The Kundalan especially prized
kingga, a decorative hardwood with magnificent striations, as well as
foodstuffs of an exotic nature that could not be grown in the harsher
climate here on the northern continent. In exchange, the Kundalan
sold their fanciful dry goods, bolts of handmade cloth and casks of
thick, sweet mead the Sarakkon coveted. But Marethyn also knew there
was other Sarakkon cargo, not openly spoken of—laaga, for
instance, the dried, ground leaf which, when smoked or chewed,
produced a pronounced narcotic effect that was highly addictive. It
was a crude and dangerous drug, especially when compared to
salamuuun. On the other hand, while salamuuun was not addictive,
laaga was far cheaper, and readily available in the city's back
alleys. The Ashera Consortium kept tight control on salamuuun,
allowing it to be sold only in licensed kashiggen. With
a sigh, Marethyn turned back into the stark white interior of the
madness ward and smiled into her brother's blank face. "I
saw your brother, Kurgan," she said without leaking a trace of
the anger she felt in her hearts. "I told him how aggrieved you
were not to be at the Rescendance. I gave him your respects, and he
asked me to give you his. You were greatly missed at the rite." Terrettt
did not respond or give any indication that he had heard her. He sat
in a chair, his torso bent forward and tense, his robes hanging
loosely on his too-thin frame. His black eyes, sunk deep in their
sockets, burned too brightly, as with a high fever. Before him was a
drawing table with an angled top. On it was a huge sheet of paper,
along with an array of precisely aligned drawing implements. He was
drawing with quick, jerky movements of his hand and forearm. His
artistic accomplishments were undeniable but also quite unfathomable.
No matter. Marethyn spent much of her time in her Divination Street
atelier selling the fruits of his labor alongside her own. He drew
constantly or he slept. This was his life. His
black eyes watched her briefly as she moved, then flicked downward to
his current work in progress. She wondered what he was thinking. On
the wall in front of him was a huge topographical map of the northern
continent, which she had put up after he had clawed down three
different paintings. He never had a reason for destroying the artwork
she had brought, at least none that she could determine, and it could
be said without fear of contradiction that she knew Terrettt better
than anyone, including his own mother. She
had come upon the map, rolled up and dusty, in a small curio shop on
the Street of Dreams and had seized upon it immediately as a
replacement for the ripped paintings. His room was just too
depressing without something on the walls. So far, he had not
marred it, though the only way she could be sure he was aware of it
was that its colors were slowly creeping into his newest paintings.
This seemed huge to her, an important victory for him as well as for
her. Terrettt
began to drool. She came away from the window at once to wipe his red
lips. Oblivious, he continued to draw. For a moment she studied his
face. While Kurgan was all harsh angles, cunning eyes, and an
avaricious nature, Terrettt possessed a certain serenity that was so
profound the frightening seizures that violated it were all the more
heartbreaking. Every time she looked at him she hated her family all
the more. They were too busy being embarrassed by him even to
acknowledge his existence. "What
are you working on today?" she asked as she came around to his
side of the table. "Is this the sea, the sky, the land?"
She pointed. "And what are these circles? Stars in the sky? A
constellation, perhaps?" These seven circles had begun to appear
in his work in one form or another starting several weeks ago.
That's when she had bought him the huge sheets of paper he obviously
needed. He had never before created a repeating motif—in fact,
that was one of the major elements that had separated him from other
artists who, like writers, tended to revisit the same themes,
tackling them from different angles and aspects. "Terrettt,"
she said, giving up on the drawing, "will you talk to me today?"
She sat on a chair beside him and tenderly wiped more drool off his
lips. "I would so like it if you would talk to me." She
took the brush from his fingers, engaged his eyes with the animation
of her lovely face. "Won't you try? For me?" Terrettt
sat frozen for some time. At last his mouth opened, the lower jaw
flapping up and down. "That's
right," she said excitedly. It was all she could do not to hug
him, but she had learned the hard way that he could not tolerate
physical contact. "Speak to me. I know you want to."
"Water," he enunciated slowly and painfully. "Blue."
Marethyn's hearts leapt. "Yes!" she cried. "The water
is blue. You can see it from the window." She pointed. "There!"
"Water," Terrettt said. "Black." Marethyn
frowned. "The water is black? Well, it's black at night, I
guess. Is that what you mean? Is this a drawing of the sea at night?" Terrettt's
eyes seemed to be trying to tell her more than his mouth could. An
agony of emotion contorted his face for a moment. His mouth worked
convulsively, but all that came out were unintelligible sounds,
followed by a fresh spurt of drool. "Water,"
he repeated, as Marethyn moved to clean his chin. "Black."
He pointed to the drawing he was making, his trembling forefinger
stabbing out at the circles he had drawn. "Terrettt, what are
you trying to tell me?" His
mouth worked spasmodically as he tried desperately to express
himself. All that emerged was a series of heavy grunts. Tears stood
out in his eyes, and he pounded his balled fists against his temples.
"No, Terrettt!" She tried to pull his hands away. "No!"
His face filled with blood, his eyes rolled up in his head. She
backed away just in time. He struck out at her, missed, tried again
and, instead, off-balance, fell to the floor, where he began to
thrash and foam. His eyes were as opaque as a corpse's. Marethyn
shouted, and a Deirus appeared in the doorway. "You will have to
leave now," he said as he glided up. He was tall,
stoop-shouldered, thin to the point of emaciation. His deep-set eyes
were pale and watery, as if he had been staring at the sun for too
long. The hollows beneath his cheekbones had an almost painful depth.
His hands were long and thin, their fingers stained mahogany by the
curious fluids he worked with daily. She had seen him several times
before. His name was Kirlll Qandda. Terrettt
was very quick, but he was no match for the Deirus, who was
surprisingly powerful. Unfortunately, the Deirus locked Terrettt's
wrists behind his back. The intolerable touch made him all the
wilder, his eyes rolling madly in his head, spittle flying from his
snarling lips. "It
is too dangerous for you when he is like this," Kirlll Qandda
said as he struggled to subdue Terrettt. "His
name is Terrettt. And do not talk as if he isn't here." If her
tone was sharp she felt she had just cause. Too often the Deirus'
suppressed rage at being separate from and unequal to the Genomatekks
of their caste took the form of small but galling discourtesies to
those who most depended on them. Perhaps their intensive five-year
training with the Gyrgon contributed to this superciliousness. But
though they irked Marethyn, it had never occurred to her to complain
to her father. Indeed, save for her monthly reports on Terrettt's
progress, or rather his lack of it, she had avoided him at all costs. "I
apologize," Kirlll Qandda said as he scrambled after Terrettt.
"But your brother—er, Terrettt—does not like to take
his medicine." The
Deirus had Terrettt in position, and he applied the transdermal spray
directly to her brother's eyes. Apparently, the retinas were the most
efficient pathway to the brain. Marethyn had heard stories of
desperate laaga addicts spraying their eyes with a mist distilled
from the dried and cured leaves. Slowly, the eerie, soulless look
faded from Terrettt's eyes, and his breathing returned to normal. "Why
does this happen to him?" Marethyn asked as she wiped the
spittle and flecks of blood off his face. In his frenzy, he had
bitten his lower lip. "You
must let him rest now," Kirlll Qandda said not unkindly. "We
can talk as I walk you out." She
looked up at him. Seeing her brother in such agony exhausted her.
"Tell me, Kirlll Qandda," she said,
"how long have you been on Terrettt's case?" "I
was recently transferred on, mistress." "Please
do not address me in that manner." Kirlll
Qandda appeared startled. "I do not understand. Mistress is a
term of respect." "Mistress
is a term created by males. It is demeaning. It is meant to keep
females in their place." She stood up. "I am ready to leave
now." The
hallway was bright, startling in its starkness, as starkness was not
the Kundalan way. The walls were sheets of pale featureless gypsum
fastened together with copper-headed pins. There was a beauty in
their smoothness, in the way they had been quarried and cut so that
the subtle sedimentary grain flowed in one direction. Marethyn saw
this with her practiced artist's eye. Overhead, oval skylights let in
the daylight. They passed doorways into wards similar to the one in
which Terrettt lived. In some she could see beautiful clouds of
sparkles in the air, sure indications of ion-force-field barriers.
Occupants shuffled about their quarters or stared fixedly at her as
she passed by. Their empty gazes seemed to suck the life out of her. Kirlll
Qandda smiled with his pale, watery eyes. "Terrettt's painting
gets better all the time, don't you think?" "I
would prefer you talk to me about my brother." He
sighed, as if they had come to a point in the conversation he had
been dreading. "I wish I had good news for you." There were
other Deirus in the hall now, along with several armed Khagggun. They
were passing the violent ward, and he kept her at a brisk pace. "I
wish I had any news at all." He spread his hands.
"Unfortunately, I do not. Your brother is as he was when he was
brought in here ten years ago. No therapy we have tried has had the
least effect on his condition. The seizures appear randomly. They
seem to have no apparent trigger, though stress and exhaustion are
certainly major factors." "I
understand," Marethyn said with heavy hearts. This was old news,
but at least it had been delivered by a Deirus unlike the others who
had spoken to her. "Is it really necessary to drug him so
often?" "I
am afraid that without the periodic transdermal sprays your brother's
seizures would become uncontrollable. He would injure himself, as he
did when your family first brought him here. Then there are the other
inmates to consider." "I
am grateful that he hasn't been transferred to the violent ward." "To
be perfectly honest it's been a constant struggle. Some in the
administration are ... uncomfortable with him in his current
surroundings." "And
where do you stand on this matter, Kirlll Qandda?" "I
have two of Terrettt's paintings hanging in my residence." They
had reached the staircase, a typically wide, florid Kundalan work of
art in honey-and-black onyx illuminated from above by a light-well in
the shape of an eye. Marethyn
glanced back down the hallway. It was always a jarring moment when
she left him, knowing she was free to go wherever she chose while he
was locked away in here. "Is there no hope for him at all?" The
Deirus was silent. "I
am well aware that the Gyrgon forbid you to give out any information
on your patients. But he is my brother, and I love him. Nobody else
does." Kirlll
Qandda shook his head. "I am Deirus. If I was found out, I would
be subject to—" "But,
dear, Kirlll Qandda, you are the only one who can help me."
Marethyn paused to lick her lips. "As you say, you are Deirus.
Perhaps one day you will need my help as I now need yours." She
reached out and touched him on the arm, and Kirlll Qandda's eyes
followed the movement of her hand. "You
are not afraid to touch me." "Why
should I be?" Kirlll
Qandda gave a little laugh. Quickly stifled. He nodded to her, led
her out of the crowded corridor and into a small, dimly lighted
cubicle lined with locked metal cabinets. It was deserted. He closed
the door softly behind them. "The
condition your brother has," Kirlll Qandda whispered, "well,
it defies all conventional gene therapy. Tests show that his DNA is
undamaged. His brain chemistry is, of course, abnormal, but each time
we try to rebalance him we fail." He looked at the door for a
moment, as if fearful a Khagggun or, worse, a Gyrgon would barge in.
"It is almost as if his condition continually mutates to
actively resist our best efforts." He tried to smile. "It
is something of a mystery, I am afraid, one that we have been unable
to solve. It is why Terrettt's Deirus keeps getting reassigned. The
case defeats them." "But
surely there must be—" Marethyn shook her head. "I
mean, he is a Stogggul, after all. A great artist." Just
then Kirlll Qandda's wrist-communicator buzzed and a Gen-omatekk
called his name in a sharp, imperious tone. He gave her a quick, sad
smile. "I am sorry, but now I really must be going. Good
afternoon to you, Marethyn Stogggul." He turned on his heel and
quickly went out of the cubicle. Marethyn,
gaining the door, craned her neck, briefly glimpsed a pack of
Khagggun. Some held babies roughly in their arms. Others herded a
group of small children—mixed breed, V'ornn and Kundalan. A
Gyrgon came into the hall, lifted a beckoning hand. Kirlll Qandda and
the imperious Genomatekk took charge of the group as they filed
through the doorway in which the Gyrgon stood. What are they doing
with those children? she wondered. Just then, a Khagggun noticed
her and came striding down the corridor toward her. "This
area is off-limits," he said sternly. She
took a quick step backward. It angered her that she was so easily
intimidated. "You
are ordered to leave, immediately." What
choice did she have? As she turned and descended the main staircase
she noticed a speck of Terrettt's blood like a tattoo on the back of
her hand. The
SaTrryn Consortium long-range grav-carriage, sleek and glimmering
with impeccably harnessed power, waited just outside the grounds of
the regent's palace. Kurgan could see Sornnn SaTrryn with two of his
orderlies making the last of the preparations for their overnight
trip to the Korrush. He stopped, and so did his heavily armed
Haaar-kyut escort. As he watched Sornnn go about his small routine
tasks Kurgan was once again reminded of how apart he remained from
the mainstream of V'ornn life. Oddly, deep inside he found a desire
to insert himself into the bits of overheard colloquy, but owing to
his office he could not. Ministers, Bashkir and Khagggun alike, fell
silent at his approach, their conversation cut off in midsentence.
The spell of fear he had so ruthlessly cast had worked too well, and
now here, in the very center of this glimmery web, he found himself
isolate, deprived of friends his own age, of the breath of life
essential to a still-young and growing V'ornn. By his own
machinations he had arrived prematurely at the stage of eminence
normally granted to those of advanced age who had had the advantage
of years to gain experience in how to cope. Then,
with a silent N'Luuura take it! he shrugged off his lingering
melancholy and strode to the side of the grav-carriage. It was a
gleaming copper color, perhaps ten meters long, with a smallish
cockpit up front for the pilot-captain and the navigator. Behind was
another cockpit, spacious and luxuriously appointed, for the
passengers. In the rear was space for provisions and supplies and the
like. Sornnn
SaTrryn greeted the regent as he clambered aboard. He said not a word
of protest as the pair of Haaar-kyut guards sat on either side of
him. Three hours later, deep in the Kundalan countryside, with bales
of dried wrygrass, glennan, and oatgrass neatly stacked in the yellow
fields on either side of them, Sornnn broke out the food, and they
had a midday meal. They saw folk gathering for one of the many
Kundalan festivals. At
first, they spoke of inconsequential matters, then, at Kurgan's
request, Sornnn talked at length about the Korrush. "I
cannot pretend that spending so much time among the Five Tribes has
not changed me," Sornnn said finally. "It
seems to me that Kundala had changed us all," Kurgan said,
wiping his lips. "In
what way has it changed you, regent?" The
farmers had erected a multicolored pole; they wore horned masks and
danced around a bonfire, their implements placed in a larger circle
around them. They stopped, however, as soon as they spied the
oncoming hoverpod. Quickly, they hurled their masks into the fire.
With a fearful look, they gathered up their tools and returned to
their labor. "I
think of us, of our long stay on Kundala, of being idle, of being in
one place too long, of being deprived of both home and of the forward
momentum impelling us to find another home." "Did
it ever occur to you, regent, that we may at last have found a home?" "What,
here? Kundala?" "That's
right." Sornnn nodded. "It seems to me that we V'ornn have
passed through the stage when we can continue to labor under the
delusion that there is a certain romanticism in being wanderers. I
look around me at my fellow V'ornn, and this is what I see. I see a
race that finds its wandering enervating. And being the eternal
outsider seems to be at the heart of our motivation for the
destruction we wreak on every civilization we encounter." Sornnn
said, "The one emotion, I think, that we cannot allow ourselves
is self-pity, and so we annihilate those who might harbor like the
plague that selfsame pity." "There
are those who would consider your words treasonous." "Why?
I have said nothing against the V'ornn Modality, only that I find our
creeping ennui disturbing. Surely, these are the words of a patriot."
He laughed easily. "Besides, I have little regard for the
opinions of others. I have found, regent, that even the cleverest
assault on a closed mind is a waste of time." Now
it was Kurgan's turn to laugh. "I take your meaning, Sornnn
SaTrryn, and mark it well. I suspect that there may already be
unexpected benefits to this sojourn to primitive lands." They
traveled on, north by northeast. The high haze of late summer had
been swiftly overtaken by the clear, crisp air of autumn, which was
with every day deepening into the profound cold of the Kundalan
winter. The smell of fallen leaves and kuello-fir needles, turned to
mulch by the autumnal rains, perfumed the air. Here and there a patch
of ice could be seen glistening, a harbinger of winter. The
neat geometric patterns of agriculture were rapidly replaced by long
bleak scars in the denuded hillsides, evidence of the extensive
V'ornn program of strip-mining for lortan. This lucrative operation
marched into the west like the tines of a mammoth rake, and with it
the temporary villages supporting the ragged Kundalan slaves who
worked the mines directed by their Mesagggun and Khagggun overseers.
Lortan was a dense substance that lay in thick arteries beneath the
topsoil of the hillsides. It was this homely black clay that the
V'ornn Mesagggun refined into veradium. The
oblate sun passed behind their left shoulders. Its cool, brittle
light flared against the ice-blue crags of the Djenn Marre. With the
changing of the seasons, the snow line had markedly advanced. They
could clearly mark the higher elevations, where the Abbey of Floating
White and its many-tiered
town of Stone Border were to be found farther to their northwest.
Ahead stretched the Great Northern Plain known by its inhabitants as
the Korrush. All
at once, they were engulfed in eerie twilight. Clouds massed on the
western horizon, lit up, utterly still. The sky was orange. The
entire world seemed to be on fire. Nearing the village of Im-Thera,
the vastness of the Korrush became overwhelming, the sheer immensity
of the space a kind of crushing weight. Kurgan could not explain it,
had not believed Sornnn SaTrryn when he had warned him of this
initial effect, and yet this crepuscular steppe engendered in him a
kind of existential dread. They
overflew Im-Thera, a tiny, mean-looking village of tents and not much
more. The place looked filthy to Kurgan. Probably insect-infested,
too, he thought. Nothing moved save the tent flaps, but in a small,
dusty, open space a cooking fire blazed unattended. Beside
him, Sornnn rose and, bent over, whispered something he could not
hear to the SaTrryn pilot-captain. The moment Sornnn regained his
seat the grav-carriage went into a long, swooping dive. "Regent,
I do not wish to alarm you, and I most certainly do not want your
Haaar-kyut to act precipitously," Sornnn said calmly but
authoritatively, "but I fear something is amiss." Kurgan
peered ahead of them. "No,
regent, look low the sky." Kurgan
saw a coven of large blue-black birds, circling on enormously long
wings. As he watched, one dipped down to earth, only to rise again
with something in its beak. "Cshey'in.
Carrion birds of the Korrush," Sornnn said. "They will eat
anything that is dead, but what they prefer is the flesh of
tribesmen." Kurgan
lowered his gaze to the spot above which the cshey'in were circling.
"I don't see anything." "When
we land," Sornnn continued, "it is imperative that you
remain inside the grav-carriage no matter what happens. Your guard
will keep you safe." "What
is it?" Kurgan said. "What has happened?" Far from
being frightened, he itched to feel the weight of an ion cannon in
his arms. Im-Thera,
the pathetic village of nomads, was just under a kilometer behind
them. "See
there?" Sornnn pointed. As they crested a low ridge, a warren of
earth mounds became immediately visible, below which could be
seen a subterranean gridwork of ancient walls, crumbled, clotted with
fibrous roots. To one side, a scattered rune of red, its edges
fluttering in the fitful gritty breeze. "Do you mark the
pale red robes? Those are bodies of Beyy Das, the tribe that oversees
the archaeological dig of Za Hara-at." The
SaTrryn navigator turned his hatchet face to them briefly. "Killed
only hours ago," he said in his laconic manner. "The
corpses are not yet picked clean." Sornnn
took out an ion cannon and, with admirable precision, knocked the
birds out of the sky. Their screams echoed through the emptiness. "I
take it you have a permit for that weapon," Kurgan said to cover
his admiration of Sornnn's accuracy from a swiftly moving vehicle. The
navigator reached into a forward compartment, offered an official
Khagggun yellow-red data-crystal for his inspection. He waved it
away. A
moment later, they had landed. Sornnn jumped out, his pilot-captain,
similarly armed, just behind him. The navigator took over the
grav-carriage's controls, the engine ready to lift off at the least
provocation. Kurgan's Haaar-kyut were standing on either side of him,
weapons at the ready. Warily,
Sornnn and the pilot-captain reconnoitered the site. At one end was a
long tamped-dirt ramp, which they eventually took down into the
remains of Za Hara-at itself. They were gone for some time. Kurgan
kept a keen eye out, but he saw nothing moving. The wind stuttered
and keened through the ruins, creating snatches of a mournful melody
that hinted at mysterious death and long-ago destruction. His guard
were at once vigilant and serene; they were used to off-world
missions. Kurgan had no doubt that they would give their lives in
order to save his. At
length, Sornnn and his companion reappeared. They had between 'diem a
Beyy Das tribesman. He was clearly injured. Blood streamed from a
gash in his skull, and halfway up the ramp they were obliged to half
support him back to the grav-carriage. As
they hoisted him aboard, the navigator broke out a first-aid kit. They
began to examine the Beyy Das as he slumped heavily against a
bulkhead. "A
raid, he tells us," Sornnn said, plunking himself down next to
Kurgan. "Jeni Cerii reavers. The Jeni Cerii are the most warlike
of the Five Tribes. The other tribes are subject to periodic raids.
Especially here." "Why
is that?" Kurgan asked, "Come
with me and I will show you." Sornnn stood up. "The Jeni
Cerii are long gone. It is perfectly safe now." Nevertheless,
his Haaar-kyut insisted on accompanying them down into the bowels of
Kundala. As they descended the earthen ramp, Kurgan was astonished at
how extensive the excavations were. When
he mentioned this, Sornnn replied, "Za Hara-at was a citadel of
enormous proportions. By many accounts, it was far larger than Axis
Tyr. And the excavations here are bearing that out. Already three
layers of the city have been uncovered, but only partially, even
though almost a square kilometer has been dug out. Not all of what
has been unburied has been explored." Where
the ramp ended the long-dead streets of Za Hara-at began. They
appeared to be constructed quite improbably of beaten bronze that
glowed in the gathering dusk. There were walls and windows, doors and
trestles, crossroads and corners, all unfinished or, more accurately,
frozen in the midst of their death throes, still standing, partially
decomposed. The inquisitive Korrush wind pushed through these dead
spaces with a vigor altogether lacking in the rest of the landscape. "This
is what I wanted to show you." Sornnn was kneeling in the dust.
As Kurgan watched, he ran his fingertips over runes carved from lapis
and emperor carnelian. "You see these ancient symbols? You see
how they have been desecrated with excrement? And here. This pile of
burnt bones. Bones of the ancestors of Za Hara-at, painstakingly and
reverently exhumed by the Beyy Das. The Jeni Cerii have no religion.
Za Hara-at was a Holy City, and yet they deny such a thing. But, you
see, it draws them like a magnet, though they do not know why and,
not knowing, they beat at it, defile it with an unreasoning hatred
that masks their own ignorance." Kurgan
recalled the conversation they had had over the midday meal.
"According to your unscientific theory," he said somewhat
sardonically, "they are not dissimilar to us V'ornn." "Admittedly,
philosophical theories are not provable by scientific methodology,"
Sornnn said as he regained his feet. "Nevertheless, they are
often useful in provoking spirited debate among thoughtful
individuals." He turned to Kurgan. "What do you think,
regent? Is there a similarity?" "I
will admit that rage is a major component of the V'ornn psyche,"
Kurgan said despite himself. "The
next question to ask is, why? I think you will agree that the answer
is a vital one." Kurgan's
attention was directed to a shard of a vessel clattering through the
dust devils on the bronze street. Like everything in the grave of Za
Hara-at, the shard was infused with unknown meaning. It reminded him
that there was an uneasiness here, a certain restiveness as if the
long sleep of death had never been fully accepted or had been
irrevocably disturbed by N'Luuura knew what numinous force. Kurgan,
not normally attuned to necromantic nuances, nevertheless had the
creeping sensation that something still abided here, ancient and
unknowable. He said as much to Sornnn. "I
must say that I am impressed, regent," Sornnn replied. "I
do not pretend to know the truth of it, but the Beyy Das believe that
such a thing as you speak of—whatever it may be—does
exist. They also claim that it periodically emerges from its ancient
home and kills one of their own." "Have
you seen the body of any of these so-called victims?" "As
a matter of fact, I have. It may be that he was murdered by a Jeni
Cerii raiding party, but if so they have rituals far stranger than
any of the other tribes. This corpse the Beyy Das showed me was
without either bones or blood." "That
seems impossible!" "I
certainly would have said so, regent, had I not seen the victim with
my own eyes. It was as if something had sucked the life right out of
him. All that was left was a sack of skin and desiccated flesh." Kurgan
looked around again, not with any degree of fear, but rather with
renewed interest. He wondered once again why Nith Batoxxx was now so
intent on rebuilding Za Hara-at. "Resurrecting" it, as he
had put it. What was lurking in these ancient ruins? What power did
Nith Batoxxx hope to unearth here? Kurgan was now doubly pleased that
Sornnn SaTrryn had suggested this journey, for standing in these vast
and eerie ruins, he felt
the spell of Za Hara-at enfolding him, and he knew he was one step
closer to unlocking the secrets of the Gyrgon's mind. It
was a busy night at Nimbus, and Mittelwin's attention was required in
many places at once. The old V'ornn seer who worked the plush entry
chamber, amusing clients on their way in and out of the kashig-gen,
was ill again. The local Genomatekk said it was chronic Kraelian
cytosis;
but Mittelwin knew better. She knew the signs of advanced salamuuun
addiction. No one spoke about this noxious aspect of the drug. In
fact, it was vehemently denied. Yet she knew salamuuun was addictive,
having seen the results of it too many times. One
of her imari had the night off because of a death in the family,
another had been beaten by a particularly aggressive Khagggun. By
Gyr-gon decree, there were strict laws against such behavior in the
kashig-gen. Which was not to say that it didn't happen. Mittelwin had
her own way of handling such disturbing matters. When she arrived at
the chamber, Jonnqa appeared as if she had been run down by a
hoverpod. She signed for Lace, the massive Mesagggun who worked for
her, to bind the offending client. It mattered not to her what caste
he was, when he was in her kashiggen he abided by the rules set down
by the Gyrgon or suffered the consequences. Every client was advised
of this upon entering for the first time. In
her time as dzuoko she had learned a thing or two about
punishment—and about the mechanisms of terror. She approached
the Khagggun, whom Lace had pushed down onto a chair. His arms were
bound behind his back, his ankles lashed together. Standing before
him, she spread her long legs. Slowly, she raised her floor-length
gown until it was clear to the Khagggun that she was naked
underneath. His eyes drank her in, his nostrils dilated slightly as
he scented her. She sat athwart his powerful thighs, took his head in
her hands, and kissed him hard. As she did so, she ground her hips
down on him. His tender parts began to swell, rising up to meet hers. Males
are so predictable, she thought. They think with their brains
only so long as their tender parts are dry. When
she felt him in full flower, she raised herself up, reached down with
her hand, and did something very nasty indeed. The Khagggun's eyes
opened wide. He made a sound of guttural pain that rose in pitch
and intensity. It gave
her a measure of satisfaction to be able to elicit pain from a caste
bred to be inured to it. It was an exquisite example of the
completeness of her training, a long, arduous process that broke many
of those who sought to be imari, sending them off to easier, more
appropriate careers. "
'Whosoever harms an imari shall suffer compensatory damages and
banishment from all kashiggen,' " she recited. " 'Whosoever
kills an imari shall himself be killed. Tears
stood out in the corners of the Khagggun's eyes, trembling as he
shook with agony. She had brought him not only great pain but
terrible humiliation. She saw as much in his eyes. "You
are henceforth banned from this kashiggen—from any
kashiggen," she said softly, almost gently. "You will
pay to repair the damage you have done to Jonnqa. If you cannot pay
or if you cannot pay fully, your family is liable. If you violate any
or all of these dictates, I will personally see your head on a pike." She
stood up and took Jonnqa's hand, brought her close, kissed the blood
off her face and shoulders and back. Then she took her out of there,
leaving Lace to see to the Khagggun's final disposition. Mittelwin
loved all her imari as if they were her daughters. This, too, had
been part of her training. She took Jonnqa down the dimly lighted
hallway. In the bath, she gently stripped Jonnqa, then stepped out of
her own clothes. They showered together, like two young girls.
Mittelwin used all her talents to minister to Jonnqa's contusions,
which were starting to puff up and discolor. The girl moaned a
little, and once she started to cry. Mittelwin held her tenderly
until her sobbing subsided. After
the shower she applied soothing unguents to her body and examined
more carefully the damage to her face. From her preliminary probing
she determined that nothing was broken, but Jonnqa suddenly started
to tremble as shock set in, and Mittelwin sat her down in a warm,
shadowed corner of the bath. She wrapped her tight with a thick
towel, stroked her hair, then went to the opposite end of the bath
where the fresh robes and gowns were kept in a low cupboard that ran
the entire length of the bath chamber. Kneeling, she opened the
doors, searching the neat stacks of folded clothes for just the right
outfit. She wanted something lively and gay that would help lift
Jonnqa's mood. Behind
her, Jonnqa sat very still as if afraid that any movement would
further fracture her
fragile equilibrium. Gradually, so subtly that she was not even aware
of it, the shadows around her deepened, stirring as if with an
ethereal life. A rippling commenced in the gathering darkness, out of
which appeared six pairs of ruby-red eyes, then a triangular head,
the segmented body of a gigantic insect. Thin, ciliated appendages
wrapped around Jonnqa's mouth, neck, chest, waist. There was for
Jo-nnqa a moment of terror, of searing pain, vanishing as quickly as
the corpus of the Tzelos, which had been absorbed into her body. The
struggle for control was intense but fearfully brief. By the time
Mittelwin had turned back, clothes for both of them in her arms,
Jonnqa's essence, bound and gagged inside her own mind, had
disappeared altogether.
5 Aura
Rekkk
waited until he was certain Thigpen was asleep, curled into a furry
ball on a chair in the Library before he shook Riane awake. Riane had
dropped off in the middle of a complex passage in a book called The
Gathering of Signs. She had fought sleep for as long as she
could, but the third time through the long, meandering paragraph of
dense Old Tongue prose had put her under. Morning
filled with metallic light streamed through the windows. Dull glints
of broken glass, the chirrupping of insects, the ominous drone of
hoverpods crisscrossing the countryside. "Walk
with me," Rekkk whispered, as soon as Riane's eyes opened. "I
have a proposition to discuss with you." "I'll
wake Thigpen. She ought to be—" Rekkk
was shaking his head. "Just you and me, Dar Sala-at. No one
eke." Riane
nodded and got up. Her eyes felt gritty, and her body was still sore
from her encounter with the daemons. She did not have long to wonder
what Rekkk wanted. As soon as they were outside, he began. "Of
all of us here I am the closest to Giyan." Riane
said nothing. Dew flecked their boots as they moved off the stone
path. Rekkk
went on, "I think I should have the last word when it comes to
how we're going to rescue her. I don't know about you, but I still
think our best and only option is to go to Nimbus and ask Jonnqa for
help." "You
heard about the future Thigpen saw if we do that." I
do not believe she saw anything worth talking about, but let us for a
moment set my skepticism aside. Let us assume she did, in fact, see
the future. By her own admission what she saw is one possible
future, one of an infinite number, she said. That being the case,
there must be many futures that result in us going to Nimbus, not
just the one she saw." Every
hour that passed, Riane was growing more impatient. She could see
Rekkk fraying at the edges, and Eleana was clearly terrified. The
toll on them from Giyan's transformation was enormous and would only
get worse. "What are you proposing?" But she already knew. "You
Thrip to Nimbus," Rekkk said. "You take me with you." "And
if it is a trap? If the Tzelos is already there waiting for us?" "Then
we deal with that when it happens." "That
is hardly a solution." "Perhaps
not. But the way I figure it we've got two extra things going for
us." Rekkk's face was set and grim. "First, remember that a
trap is only effective when it is a surprise. Second, that Tzelos
daemon sticks out like a Kraelian sundog in the regent's palace." Riane
kept trying to find another, less risky solution, but the fact was
there simply wasn't any. It was this or inaction. "When do you
want to go?" Rekkk
grinned. "How about right now?" Eleana
felt them go. In her dream, she had been walking side by side with
Riane, only Riane wasn't Riane at all but someone else, someone
hauntingly familiar. She felt completely at ease. In the peculiar
manner of dreams, she could see herself laughing in response to
something Riane said even while wondering how she could feel so at
ease with the Dar Sala-at, how she could be laughing knowing that
Lady Giyan was in pain. But Lady Giyan was not part of this dream,
and so the dream-Eleana banished her to another realm while she
walked with Riane or whoever Riane had become. As she took Riane's
hand, her face wreathed in a smile. Sunlight struck her in a dazzle.
They were walking in forests known to her, the haunts of her
childhood amid the foothills of the Djenn Marre. A kind of aura
emanating from the sun or from the forest itself bathed them, and
everything was perfect. For just a moment. And then it was gone, the
aura winked out, and she awoke with a start. Her heart was pounding,
and her breath was coming fast. She
scrambled up, running through the abbey, knowing Riane was not there.
Neither was Rekkk. She burst into the Library, breathed a sigh of
relief to see the Rappa safely asleep in her chair. "Thigpen!"
she called. "Wake up] Wake up! They're gone!" "Who's
gone?" Thigpen said as she stretched. "Riane
and Rekkk! I checked all over. They're not here." Thigpen
froze in midyawn. Her snout lifted, and her nostrils dilated. "I
smell a Thrip." She growled low in her throat. "By
Pyphoros' five heads!" She leapt off her chair, bounded across
the floor and out the broken window. She put her snout to the ground
and inhaled deeply. Her whiskers were twitching madly. "They
have gone to Axis Tyr, to Nimbus," she said in a disgusted
voice. "Those idiots!" "Idiots?"
Eleana echoed, taken aback. "Yes,
idiots! I told them clearly enough the likely consequences of such
foolhardy action! Which part of the warning did they not understand?"
She shook her head, her thick fur bristling, making her look twice
her normal size. "I swear I do not know what gets into these
normally thoughtful bipeds. Is it a fever of fools that suddenly
comes over them, a swoon of stupidity, an illness of illogic? What in
Miina's name is it?" "Oh,
that's simple enough," the girl said easily. "It's love." "Love?"
Thigpen's nose wrinkled up as if she had smelled something deeply
distasteful. "Well, in that case I am doubly glad I am not prone
to that pernicious affliction." "Why,
Thigpen, I do not believe you." Eleana crouched, wrists on her
knees. "You do not care what happens to Riane?" "Of
course I care! She is the Dar Sala-at, and I am duty-bound to—" "That's
not what I mean." Thigpen
snorted. "You are wasting my time." "Am
I?" Eleana reached out and stroked the Rappa's fur. "Even
you would not deny that you have established a bond with Riane." Thigpen
eyed her suspiciously. "Well, of course I have. But I fail to
see what—" "She
loves you. She counts on your advice. You are like a parent to her." "Then
why did she ignore my advice?" Thigpen said crossly. "Why
did she take Rekkk and Thrip into what is most certainly a trap?" "You
mean why did she put herself in danger." Eleana kissed Thigpen
on each furry cheek. "When we catch up with them you must ask
her that yourself." Olnn
Rydddlin leaned back, pulled his nondescript traveling cloak close
around him, and said, "I understand you used to bounce Kurgan
Stogggul on your knee." "That
was a long time ago," Bronnn Pallln said sourly. "A lot of
nu-maaadis has passed through the gullet since then." He craned
his thick, veiny neck, peering darkly at the reeking room in which
they sat. "This is the heart of surly Harborside, a place I make
it a strict point to avoid. Why are we meeting here in this noisome
Sarakkon tavern, what is it called?" "Blood
Tide." "Blood
Tide, indeed," Bronnn Pallln said with a trace of petulance.
"Had I been meeting with the regent, I daresay it would have
been in the opulence of the regent's palace." "Allow
me to say bluntly that you would not be meeting with the regent." To
which reply, Bronnn Pallln glowered glumly. "Indeed not. And
why? I am the head of a powerful and well-respected Consortium with a
long history of alliances with the Stogggul. All right, I will tell
you why not. Ever since that young interloper stuck his nose into
Wennn Stogggul's tender parts as far as the new regent is concerned I
have been relegated to second-Bashkir status." "Sornnn
SaTrryn was clever enough to make his deal with the Stogggul, and you
were not," Olnnn said, twisting the knife into the fresh wound
he had caught sight of. He leaned forward conspiratorially. "I
will tell you a secret, Bronnn Pallln. I dislike Sornnn SaTrryn as
much as you do." The
tavern was low-ceilinged, purposely dim. Filigreed lanterns hung from
the ceiling, but they were turned down low. The heartwood walls were
stained and grimy, hung with portraits of Kundalan harbormasters
dating back hundreds of years. There was a copper-topped bar along
one wall and a small raised platform along the other where the
occasional itinerant musician or comedian foolhardy enough to brave
this raucous crowd held forth. It was also the space where nightly
the Kal-llistotos champion was crowned to a serenade of bawdy songs
sung by a chorus of the challengers he had defeated. Olnnn
sat with his back against the wall at this rear corner table. From
this vantage point he could see everyone who came and went through
the front door. He also could clandestinely watch Rada, the owner of
Blood Tide, whom he often dreamed about at night. She was a
Tuskugggun of dark good looks possessed of a long tapering skull
gleaming with spiced oil, who dared wear her sifeyn folded at her
neck, leaving her head uncovered. But not bare. She had on a thin
tertium and veradhim diadem. Others had foolishly judged her to be a
Looorm on the side, for the whores were the only Tuskugggun brazen
enough to bare their skulls in public. Opposite
him, the air of defeat had left Bronnn Pallln's meaty shoulders and
he sat up a little. Distant glimmers danced behind his eyes. "Does
that mean I have an ally?" He
is so terribly anxious, Olnnn thought. He drank the sweet mead,
but what he was tasting was the other's desperation. He could see in
Bronnn Pallln's corlike eyes all his weaknesses, as if reading again
the list his staff had compiled for him. Yes, he thought now, Bronnn
Pallln was just the sort of V'ornn he needed for his
stalking-horse—weak, docile, malleable. He was interested only
in prestige and preening. Yes, indeed. He would do whatever Olnnn
told him to do. He had had the great good fortune to be the only son
of Koun Pallln, a very savvy Bashkir. When the old patriarch had
died, Bronnn Pallln found himself in charge of a first-rate
Consortium with not the slightest idea of how to run it successfully.
Perhaps that is what Wennn Stogggul recognized because, in allying
himself with Bronnn Pallln, Kurgan's father had reaped a host of
lucrative deals, raking in unconscionable profits off the top of
Pallln business in return for rendering advice on such projects as
building the spice market and renovating Receiving Spirit. Rich
percentages he was apparently willing to forgo for the Ring of Five
Dragons Sornnn SaTrryn traded in return for having Wennn Stogggul
name him Prime Factor. "Sornnn
SaTrryn was the regent's father's choice as Prime Factor," Olnnn
said. "The regent prefers you, but he cannot be seen to move
precipitately." He gained immense enjoyment from spinning this
fanciful tale. "The SaTrryn Consortium is very powerful, and the
regent has just attained his office. I think you understand." "Of
course, Star-Admiral. His power base is at a delicate juncture." "Precisely
so." 'But
these unfortunate circumstances, you see, are the problem." "Then
we must find a way to solve the problem." "Truly,
Star-Admiral? But how? Have you formulated a plan?" It
was all Olnnn could do not to laugh in the fool's face. Bronnn Pallln
was pathetically easy to manipulate. "Well, now, that all
depends." A
trio of Sarakkon burst through the door, trailed by a gust of the
chilly autumnal night. They stamped on the worn wooden floorboards
with their high shagreen boots, setting the copper and brass and jade
runes in their thick beards to jingling. Their boisterous voices
added to the general din of the place. Bronnn
Tallin's muddy eyes were alight with avarice. "On what would it
depend, Star-Admiral?" He noisily guzzled his sweet mead, a
solitary toast to his growing good fortune. "Please. I am all
ears." "That
is good, for you see my plan relies solely upon you." "Me,
Star-Admiral? I am not certain that I ..." Olnnn
stitched a smile to his face. "Ambition is a virtue in V'ornn
like us, don't you agree?" Bronnn
Pallln brightened a little. "Oh, yes, indeed, yes, Star-Admiral.
Ambition was my father's watchword. Therefore, I have made it mine." "That
is good. Ambition is what is required. Along with a healthy portion
of resourcefulness." "You
have but to ask," Bronnn Pallln said. Olnnn
signed for another round and, as he did so, absorbed the length of
Rada's legs as she bent over to gather a pair of empty goblets off
the floor where a couple of drunken Sarakkon had dropped them. Just
as the waitress was approaching their table, Olnnn hissed to Bronnn
Pallln, "Find the means to discredit Sornnn SaTrryn." "Star-Admiral?" Olnnn
waited while the fresh goblets of mead were placed onto the smeary
tabletop. Then he turned back to the waiting Bronnn Pallln and,
despite the rising din around them, lowered his voice even further.
"Listen to me, for I will say it but once." He kept his
face impassive, though Bronnn Pallln had all but crawled across the
tabletop in his gluttonous zeal. "As I have said, the regent
cannot be seen to touch Sornnn SaTrryn. If, however, it were to
become known that the SaTrryn scion was involved in some illegal
activity, well then ..." "But
the SaTrryn's reputation is unimpeachable." Olnnn
rubbed his temple where a vein beat beneath his skin. He considered
strangling Bronnn Pallln right then and there. Then he reined in his
temper, took several deep breaths, and smiled. "As Star-Admiral
of all the Khagggun I am privy to many things unknown to the general
populace. One in particular interests me greatly." Olnnn watched
Bronnn Pallln swallow the hook whole. "The Khagggun high command
suspects a high-ranking Bashkir is involved in supplying the Kundalan
Resistance with stolen ion cannons." "Star-Admiral?" "Oh,
do not look so shocked, Bronnn Pallln. As it was with Eleusis Ashera
there are V'ornn who have foolishly fallen under the malign spell of
Kundala. N'Luuura only knows why! In any event, we have been looking
for this traitor for years." Bronnn
Pallln rubbed his hands together. "Are you telling me it is the
SaTrryn, Star-Admiral?" Slowly
and carefully, Olnnn said, "That is precisely what I am saying." He
spread his damp, chubby hands. "But what would you need me for?" Strangling
would be too good a death for him, Olnnn decided. "Sornnn
SaTrryn is exceedingly clever. To date, he has eluded being
implicated in all official investigations." He waited for the
light to come on. "But you, Bronnn Pallln, are as unofficial as
it gets. When I ran into you at the Rescendance it occurred to me
that as the head of a first-tier Bashkir Consortium you would have
contacts unavailable even to me." "I
suppose that might be true enough." "All
that is required is for you to bring me the evidence." The
big Bashkir tapped his thick lips with a spatulate forefinger. "And
when Sornnn SaTrryn is removed from office . . . ?" "Pack
your bags," Olnnn lied smoothly. "I have it from the regent
himself, it will be moving day." Rekkk
Hacilar had returned to Nimbus and, to be honest, he liked it not. It
was here that he had encountered the Gyrgon Nith Sahor, first in his
guise as Mastress Kannna, later as the embodiment of Giyan herself.
While he was grateful for Nith Sahor's assistance, he could not quite
say that he missed him. Gyrgon had always made him uneasy, out it
wasn't until he had met one in person that his flesh had truly begun
to creep. There was something distinctly disconcerting about being
with a V'ornn who could change his shape at will. You never knew whom
you were talking to, what intimate knowledge you were inadvertently
giving away. No, he decided, they were better off now that Nith Sahor
was dead. He
stood in the opulent Cloud Chamber of the kashiggen and tried not to
recall the salamuuun flight he had taken with Nith Sahor. While under
the influence of the drug he had spoken with his dead mother and been
shaken to his core. As always, he was deeply uneasy with emotion of
any kind, and never more so than now. His Khagggun training had not
only submerged his emotions but had made it supremely difficult to
bring them back into the light. With good reason: emotion was the
last thing you wanted when you went into battle. It impaired
reasoning, clouded judgment. That salamuuun flight had opened the
door to the vault, so to speak. It had allowed him to express his
love for Giyan and, now, that love had brought him here to take the
first step in finding her, in saving her from the most powerful
forces of darkness. But he worried that his love for her would cause
him to make a fatal mistake that could end his life and Riane's. He
saw Mittelwin enter the Cloud Chamber, so-called because of its domed
ceiling, exquisitely enameled in the lush Kundalan style. "I
remember you," the dzuoko said. "You were here in a season
previous with Mastress Kannna." Rekkk
gave a little nod. "I
daresay you look a lot better than you did that afternoon." She
offered him her professional smile. "Bloody but not bowed,
wasn't that it?" "This
is Riane," he said, wanting desperately to change the subject. Mittelwin
eyed Riane appreciatively. "An exceptionally handsome girl—on
the cusp of becoming a young woman." Her smile widened. "In
what way may we please you?" she said in the formal kashiggen
greeting. "We
seek an hour's time with an imari." "But
of course. We have many—" "One
particular imari," Rekkk said. Now
he had caught Mittelwin's attention. "Ah, well, here at Nimbus
we are ready to satisfy all desires." She laced her long fingers
together. "Which imari do you require?" "Jonnqa." "Now
that will be something of a problem. Jonnqa is unwell at the moment."
She smiled her best professional smile. "I can offer any number
of other imari, all of the Third Rank." "It
is Jonnqa we must see," Rekkk said. Mittelwin
shook her head. "I'm afraid I cannot—" "Please,"
Riane said quietly. "It is a matter of the utmost urgency." Mittelwin
turned her attention to the Kundalan girl. There was a curious
intensity about her, an unusual strength of purpose. "We
will not tax her unduly," Riane continued. "I give you my
word." Mittelwin
stared straight into the girl's light eyes and liked what she saw.
"All right. But it may take some time to make her presentable.
You understand." "Yes,"
Riane said quickly. "Thank you, dzuoko." Mittelwin
nodded. "It is my pleasure." She indicated the ornately
carved settees. "Please make yourselves comfortable. I will have
food and drink brought to you while you wait." As
she walked down the narrow, circuitous hallway, Mittelwin wondered
what the Khagggun and the Kundalan girl could possibly want with
Jonnqa. How did they even know about her? Her clients were nothing if
not discreet. Mittelwin
frowned as she followed the corridor to her left. The beautiful old
filigreed lanterns washed the walls in long warm ellipses of light,
transforming her shadow into a tail. She made it a strict habit not
to speculate about her clients' motives, but in the case of this
Khagggun she could not help herself. For one thing, it had been made
known that he had turned Rhynnnon, that any sighting should without
delay be reported to the Khagggun or the regent's staff. Mittelwin
felt it was a sure bet that Kurgan Stogggul and Star-Admiral Olnnn
Rydddlin were bent on planting his skull atop a pike outside the
regent's palace. If that were so, she would doubtless be rewarded
handsomely for traducing them. Not that she would do anything of the
kind. She liked not the Stogggul scion, liked even less the thought
of a callow youth in such a position of power. Nothing good could
come of it. Either he would prove incompetent or exceedingly
dangerous. For
another thing, the Khagggun was now in the company of this Kundalan
girl with an uncanny strength and prescient eyes. He was treating her
not as a member of an inferior race but as an equal. This interested
her. In fact, as she thought about it she would have to say that
Rekkk Hacilar interested her greatly. She
came at length to the end of the corridor, knocked quickly on a door,
and went in. To her surprise, she found Jonnqa already awake, already
bathed, already coifed and clothed. Her face seemed astonishingly
free of bruises and puffiness. "You
have come to inform me that I have clients," Jonnqa said with
uncharacteristic bluntness. "How
did you know?" Mittelwin asked. Was there a preternatural glow
to her eyes or was it merely the lighting? The glow vanished. "I...
Why, I don't know," Jonnqa said. She seemed all at once
confused. "I was roused out of sleep by a feeling of urgency.
Thinking it a result of a full bladder I went to the bath and
relieved myself. The urgency remained. I came back here." "You
bathed." "I
do not remember." "Fixed
your hair and dressed in your finest robes." "I
did. I mean, I must have." Mittelwin
peered more closely at Jonnqa. "Your bruises looked healed. How
is that possible?" Jonnqa
said nothing. Now Mittelwin was certain something was amiss. A
muddiness had invaded the girl's eyes. Perhaps she was ill. "I
think it would be best if we put this off until another time." "No!"
Jonnqa grabbed Mittelwin's arm then, as if abruptly becoming aware of
the breach in strict protocol between imari and dzuoko, she released
her, dropped her gaze and her voice. "Please forgive me, dzuoko.
I meant no offense." Her voice had returned to its normal tone.
"But these clients asked for me by name, did they not?" Mittelwin
said nothing, stood contemplating the girl. An unnamed fear massed in
her belly. "The clients can come back another time." "But
I wish to see them now," Jonnqa said, in that other blunter
voice. "Why?" Jonnqa
looked startled. "What?" "Why
do you want to see them now? What difference could it make?" Something
moved across the imari's face, quick and sure, a powerful eddy of
emotion like the formation of a resolve. "No difference,"
she said stonily. "Tell them to return another time if that is
your decision." "It
is," Mittelwin said firmly, as confounded as she was angry at
Jonnqa's insolent, inexplicable behavior. What was wrong? Perhaps
internal injuries had occurred during the beating she had sustained.
If so, she vowed she would make that Khagggun pay compensatory
damages beyond anything he could imagine. "Wait here until I
return," she said shortly. "I want you examined by a
Genomatekk." She had turned, her hand already on the door when
she was whirled around, assaulted by something extruding itself
through Jonnqa's nostrils, ears, open mouth, the very pores of her
skin. Mittelwin's
mind was paralyzed with disbelief, frozen with shock, gripped by
terror. The huge insectlike creature inserted the ends of its
mandibles into the side of her neck. A burning commenced, as if she
had been set on fire. Blood began to spurt, and the last thing she
saw was a flat, triangular head shooting forward to catch every drop
in its lipless mouth. Olnnn
Rydddlin whistled while he slowly peeled back a strip of skin from
the Kundalan's side. This Kundalan was one of more than a hundred
rounded up by his Khagggun during the latest sweep in his stepped-up
efforts to find Rekkk Hacilar and Giyan. He did not hear the screams,
the entreaties, did not smell the stench of terror. "Have
you seen them?" he said to the Kundalan. "If you have, tell
me precisely where." He
paused, observing politely the time of reply. When none was
forthcoming, he recommenced his peeling. Another strip. More screams.
Blood dripping from the interrogation chamber bench in the caverns
beneath the regent's palace, like moments of time running backward,
memories he had tried unsuccessfully to bury . . . First
came the aura of opalescent light, then the image of Malistra bending
over him. She was crooning in a language Olnnn Rydddlin had never
heard before, or, perhaps he was so painracked from his leg he was
hallucinating. When the sorceress Giyan had turned Malistra's own
weapon against him, his world had dissolved in a web of agony so
excruciating he could scarcely recall it. To have the skin, muscle,
tendons, ligaments, nerves eaten away from a part of your body—well,
that was something for which even a Khagggun was unprepared . . . "Where
are they?" he said in a rather mechanical voice. "The
Rhynn-non traitor, Rekkk Hacilar, the Kundalan sorceress Giyan, they
have not vanished off the face of Kundala, they are not ghosts. They
must find food to eat, a place of shelter, at the very least. You
must have heard something of them or know someone who has. This is
the only possibility." A
small silence, the blood traversing the width of the bench, dripping
off the edge, setting up a rhythm not unlike a heartbeat. With some
difficulty, he worked another strip off the fatty layer of flesh.
This was the seventh Kundalan he had interrogated today. In the cells
all around him, his Khagggun were interrogating others. A warren of
pain and blood and fear . . . Still,
the aura of opalescent light lingered in his mind, sweeping him
inward, backward in time. He would have died without Malistra's
sor-cerous intervention, he knew that much. As she remade him, a bond
had grown between them, and when she was killed another piece of him
had been flayed off. He felt her absence with every breath he took, a
pain in his side he was glad would not go away. He cherished that
pain, deep and abiding, as assurance that Malistra had not abandoned
him totally. Nights, while his swollen eyes scanned the ceiling of
his bedroom in a vain search for sleep, he felt her moving in him,
sweeping through his viscera, turning his marrow into a river down
which she sluiced. Always, she pooled in the gleaming bones of his
stripped leg. He could feel them pulsing with knowledge of her,
imagined them a quick-breathing animal beneath the covers . . . Olnnn
turned the horizontal spit he had erected just above the Kun-dalan's
eyes. Even if the Kundalan turned his head to the left or to the
right he could not fail to see the strips of his own bloody skin
hanging there as if ready to be roasted. He had devised this
particular form of interrogation, the only one he would himself
perform, not long after he had become Star-Admiral. It had come to
him in a dream, even though his nights were largely sleepless, as
they had been since Malistra had brought him back from the dead. An
aura of opalescent light and the image of her bending over him,
crooning. Her hands were moving upon him or just above him, stirring
the dark viscous air as if it were a pot of stew. What was she doing? The
Kundalan gasped, and his red-rimmed eyes at last met Olnnn's. This
particular form of interrogation always worked, Olnnn had found. It
was only a matter of time. And now that time had come. "The
Northern Quarter," the Kundalan gasped through his swollen,
bloody mouth. He had bitten his tongue and lips many times. "The
Rhynnnon and a Kundalan female. I heard they were seen earlier on
Dayblossom Street."
There is a thing I do not understand," Riane said to Rekkk as
they waited for Mittelwin to return. "The kashiggen are
Kundalan—they are, essentially, pleasure palaces, are they
not?" "To
the best of my knowledge, yes." Rekkk was standing in the Cloud
Chamber so that he had a view of the corridor down which the dzuoko
had disappeared. Periodically, he glanced that way, his hand on the
hilt of his shock-sword. He seemed preoccupied, as if listening to
Riane with one ear while the other was calibrated for trouble. "When
the V'ornn took them over for salamuuun flights they installed V'ornn
dzuoko but kept the Kundalan imari." "Uh-huh." "Dzuoko
is derived from the Old Tongue dezeke, which means 'she
who provides.' "So
what?" Clearly Rekkk was in no mood for a lesson in comparative
linguistics. "It
is a Kundalan word." She waited for a reaction that did not
come. "Used by Tuskugggun." She waited again. "Rekkk,
are you listening to me?" He
turned, a scowl on his face. "What is your point?" "The
kashiggen seems to be a place where V'ornn and Kundalan peacefully
coexist." "It's
a female thing," Rekkk said. "Why don't you ask Mittelwin
when she returns." His head swiveled and he peered long and hard
down the corridor, "If she ever returns." "But
doesn't it seem odd to you that on all of Kundala, here is the only—" "What
seems odd is how long she is taking." "I
know, but will you answer my question?" "I
imagine it's the Gyrgon's doing," he said. "It's well-known
that they frequent the kashiggen, though what they do here is any
V'ornn's guess." "You
said you were here with a Gyrgon." "Ah,
that was Nith Sahor." Rekkk had taken several steps toward the
corridor. "That was different. He brought me here for a specific
purpose. I have no more idea than you do of how Gyrgon take their
pleasures." Hearing
soft footfalls, they turned. Someone was coming down the corridor.
Riane was aware of Rekkk's rising tension, and she found herself
gripping the hilt of her dagger. Rekkk
relaxed a little when he saw Mittelwin coming toward them. "Everything
is in readiness," the dzuoko said, beckoning them forward. They
went single file, Mittelwin leading, followed by Rekkk, with Riane
taking up the rear. The farther they went the more certain Riane was
that something serious was amiss. From the moment they had entered
Nimbus, she had been using her limited knowledge of Osoru to cast a
Net of Cognition. This spell was used to identify Caa, the energy
auras thrown off by sorcerous Avatars like the Tzelos and whatever
kind of daemon it was that had invaded Giyan. However, the Net of
Cognition was so finely tuned that it could also identify the
comparatively weak auras thrown off by nonsorcerous beings. The spell
had shown her, in passing, Mittelwin's aura, and now as she walked
more and more slowly she realized that it was coming from a spot
abreast of her, then just behind her. She
stopped, retracing her steps to a left-hand branch in the corridor.
She peered down its short length. It looked like a utility hall.
Mittelwin's aura was weakening, and she hurried into the dingy narrow
space, silently opened the second door on her right, and entered the
tiny darkened chamber. Something
dripped somberly, water from a broken tap. In that instant,
Mittelwin's already weakened aura winked out. Riane fumbled for a
fusion lamp, lighted it. She saw a utility chamber. Buckets, mops,
jars of enamel, slabs of marble were neatly stacked on the floor. To
their right was a cart piled with soiled linen and robes beside a
chute to the basement where the washing was done at an appropriate
remove from the kashiggen's clients. Floor-to-ceiling cupboards lined
the wall to her left. Something caught her eye, a dark stain pooling
beneath the crack between cupboard doors. With
a sense of foreboding, she yanked open the doors, and Mittelwin,
naked, waxy in death, hollow as a shell, mummified as if she had been
dead for decades, pitched out at her.
Riane ran down the utility hall, turned into the main corridor and
picked up her pace. Where had they gone, Rekkk and Mittelwin—
or more accurately, the thing that had taken Mittelwin's place? She
cursed herself for not saying something to Rekkk, but everything
happened too quickly, she had been going purely on sorcerous
instinct, and, anyway, what could she have possibly said that would
have not alerted the daemon? "Rekkk!"
she cried. "Rekkk, where are you?" The
sliding door at the end of the corridor burst outward off its tracks,
and there was the Tzelos. Tatters of Mittelwin's robes fluttered off
its segmented body. It held Rekkk aloft by two of its skeletal
forelegs. As it charged her, Riane was horrified to see that it had
skewered Rekkk with one of its wicked-looking mandibles. For
an instant, all she could think was that the future Thigpen saw was
coming true. That was all the time the daemon needed. It was
stupefyingly quick, scuttling down the corridor straight at her.
Knowing brute force was useless against it, she conjured spell after
spell in her limited repertory, but none seemed to affect the Tzelos
in the least. It
grabbed at her with a pair of waving appendages, and she ducked away,
twisting, reaching for Rekkk. She had no thought for herself now. She
had to get Rekkk away from the thing. Wrapping her arms around
Rekkk's midsection, she hauled on his weight. But the Tzelos, clever
daemon that it was, lifted its blunt, triangular head, raking its
mandible through Rekkk's flesh. He screamed, and Riane immediately
let go. The
Tzelos made a vicious lunge for her. She used the honed edge of her
dagger to hack off the end of the closest appendage. Immediately, it
grew back. The Tzelos began to shake its head, and Rekkk screamed
again in pain. This served to focus Riane on her immediate mission.
The Tzelos was attacking again, relentless. There was precious little
room to maneuver, and so far that was working to the daemon's favor.
Time to reverse that. As
the Tzelos darted at her again, Riane leapt upon it. Using the
segments of its body, she climbed upward. One appendage, then another
whipped around her. She reversed her grip on her dagger, plung-tog it
point first into one after another of the daemon's ruby-red eyes.
What damage she was inflicting she could not say, and she did not
wait around to find out, but turned and slid Rekkk off the mandible's
spear-points. As he fell to the floor, she tried to jump after him,
but she was held suspended by the appendages, the mandibles searching
to impale her. Then she twisted free and, as she gained her feet,
began to drag Rekkk backward down the corridor. The
daemon shook itself and, as it recovered from her attack, began to
pursue. Riane looked up from her efforts. She was out of ideas. In a
moment, the thing would be on them. At
that moment, she heard a commotion behind her. In a blur of motion,
she saw a burly Mesagggun, ion cannon drawn, pounding toward them.
She shouted, trying to warn him not to fire, but it was too late. A
thin, wavering stream of pale blue light shot from the blunt muzzle
of the weapon directly at the head of the Tzelos. For a moment, the
V'ornn energy blast wreathed the daemon's head. Then the Tzelos
opened its mouth, sucking it inside it. When it emerged it was black
as death. The Tzelos spewed it out so quickly the Mesagggun had no
time to react. The instant the black stream struck him he began to
sizzle. The Mesagggun shrieked. The nauseating stench of burning
flesh filled up the corridor, making Riane gag. Still, sweating like
a cor in heat, she managed to keep hauling on Rekkk, putting more
distance between them and the Tzelos. Then
the Mesagggun was gone. Only a pile of cinders and ash remained- The
Tzelos returned its attention to Riane and Rekkk. It rushed them
again, faster than before. Riane wondered how anything so ungainly in
appearance could move so fast. In
desperation, she conjured the Spell of Forever. It was one of only
two hybrid spells she had learned. Part Osoru, part Kyofu, it was Eye
Window, most ancient of sorceries, virtually unknown among
present-day Kundalan sorceresses. Instinct had come to the fore. She
did not consciously know why she had conjured that particular spell
until it showed her what she needed to know. The Spell of Forever was
a divination spell, and like all Eye Window spells it was
exceptionally potent. It opened secret doorways. It could find things
deeply hidden, people who were lost, it could re-create past events. But
because she was inexpert, she could not immediately focus the spell's
lens. Instead of the Tzelos, she saw a flash of dark light, saw
Giyan's face, a rictus of pain, saw behind her the ragged line of a
mountain chain which, though grown grim, was nevertheless oddly
familiar, saw her wrists and ankles pinioned, to what? The
vision faded as swiftly as it had appeared, and now the lens was
focusing on the Tzelos. Almost immediately, Riane saw its vulnerable
spot. But
now the daemon was upon her and it was too late. Then, as the Tzelos
grabbed her, she heard her name being called. Thigpen! Thigpen was
here! "Quickly,"
she cried. "There is a—" She gagged as something
putrid gushed out of the daemon's mouth, covering her in an
increasingly viscous and sticky web. "Look to the—"
The web had spread over her face. She could not take air into her
lungs. She struggled, then on instinct again fell back on her
mountain climbing training. She was used to high altitudes, where the
air was gossamer thin. She had learned how to store what she needed
in her lungs until she could take the next breath. The web was
thickening, tightening, hardening. She tore it away from her mouth
long enough to shout, "Thigpen, the bottom of the thorax, left
side! There is a pale spot!" "Hang
on, Dar Sala-at!" Thigpen cried as she shot past Riane's left
ear. Her
razor-sharp teeth were bared. They sank unerringly into the tiny pale
spot on the Tzelos' thorax. She raked it with her extruded talons.
The Tzelos reared back, an eerie sound emanating from it that made
Riane want to scream. At
the same time, she felt hands upon her, felt fingers pulling the
hardening goo off her. "Dar
Sala-at, are you all right?" It
was Eleana. "I
am fine," Riane gasped. She saw the outline of the Tzelos
wavering, the center of it growing blurred, insubstantial. Thigpen
leapt back as the daemon vanished. "Look to Rekkk!" Riane
said. "I fear he has been grievously injured!" "Miina
protect him!" Eleana crouched by Rekkk's side, put her hand on
his bloody neck. Her face was white as she looked at Riane and
Thigpen. Tears were streaming down her face. "He is dying."
6 Orange
Sweet When
Sornnn SaTrryn stopped beneath the gaily striped awning of the stand
on Momentum Boulevard he was being watched. When he bought a small
bag of orange-sweet he was being watched. When he ambled through the
crowd munching on the delicious fruit he was being watched. As he
stopped to let a trio of Khagggun strut by he was being watched. And
when he passed the intersection of Divination Street he was being
watched most carefully. A
darkness at noon as clouds gathered thickly overhead. At precisely
the striking of the fifteenth hour, Marethyn Stogggul had emerged
from her atelier, locking the door behind her. She allowed Sornnn
SaTrryn a twenty-pace lead before she began to follow him down
Divination Street. He walked neither quickly nor slowly so that it
was impossible for any interested observer to judge whether there was
a purpose to his direction. Perhaps
a half mile farther on he paused before the russet-and-black awning
of Gamut, an excellent but out-of-the-way cafe. As if making up his
mind on the spur of the moment, he turned and passed between the
shanstone columns into the dimly lighted interior. Wide beaten-bronze
braziers at each corner of the cafe held flickering flames. He chose
a table in the darkest corner and sat down. A server in crimson robes
arrived, and he ordered. Marethyn
observed this ritual as she stood in the surf of the crowd making its
way up and down Divination Street. She looked around, as if unsure
where to go or what to do next. She studied the faces of Bashkir
hurrying by, of Tuskugggun, arms laden with packages of spice, Dolts
of cloth, thin titanium and germanium sheeting rolled up and tucked
under their arms. She watched the practiced movements of ^"a8ggun
as they threaded the throng, searching for mischief-makers, black
marketeers, Kundalan Resistance. A hoverpod passed overhead, lifting
the hair on Kundalan heads, stirring robes and tunics, whipping up
tiny spirals of grit. She heard the raised voices from the nearby
meat market; she turned away from a Tuskugggun of her acquaintance
before she could be recognized. A fistful of children whirled by her
at a run, laughing, pelting Kundalan servants with stones as they
went. The river of life flowed on, the details blurring now as she
wended her way between the outdoor tables of the cafe and stepped
into Gamut's grot-tolike interior. She
walked straight back to the bath, stood inside the small closed
chamber for some time. She listened to the throb of the kitchen
seeping through the wall, the heavy clip-clop of water buttren
pulling a dray as they passed on a side street, the beating of her
own hearts. An older Tuskugggun entered, and Marethyn washed her
hands though they were clean enough. Then she went out, slipped into
the seat beside Sornnn SaTrryn. He had a drink waiting for her—a
marsh queen, her favorite. He had placed a segment of orangesweet in
it, which she plucked out with her fingertips and ate with enormous
pleasure, the pleasure she felt being here with him. She smiled and
looked into his rugged, sun- and windburned face, trying to memorize
every square centimeter of it as if she would never see him again. As
a waiter hovered expectantly, Sornnn said, "We should order. I
have much to accomplish today." "We
have, at least, a little time for ourselves." When
they had ordered, and the waiter had departed, Sornnn's eyes grew
dark and serious. "Marethyn, I need to be certain. You are not
growing tired of this?" "What,
of you?" He
laughed. "Now that would, indeed, be a tragedy. No, I was
speaking of the clandestine nature of our meetings, the coldness of
our exchanges where we by chance are thrown together in public." She
knew he was thinking of the Rescendance. "On the contrary. It
amuses me to playact." "You
are so good at it." "Growing
up in my family, I learned how to be devious." She drank him in
over the rim of her pale blue glass. "Besides, I adore watching
you move through a crowd. I love standing shielded, anonymous in
throngs while you sit alone. You are apart from everyone and
everything, and I know this because you are waiting for me. You are a
magnetic current pulling me while I hold back just long enough for
the anticipation to build toward the moment when I feel the brush of
your arm against my breast." "You
missed your calling." The skin around his eyes crinkled up when
he smiled. "You should have been an actor." "Except
there are no female actors allowed." He
took her hands in his. "That very much depends on the venue." Their
lunch came: roasted gimnopedes, stuffed with clemetts, along with
wrygrass salads. "This
is another thing I love about you," she said softly. "What
other male would say that to me? What other male would treat me as an
equal? My father did not; certainly my brother—" "It
is because of Kurgan that we have kept our liaison an absolute
secret. Have we failed?" "No.
I spoke to him at the Rescendance. He has no idea." "And
yet I know the regent's spies are everywhere." She
took his hand. "What is it then?" Sornnn
bit his lip, deep in thought. "I have told you about the finbat,
have I not, one of those nocturnal creatures of the Korrush. By what
means does it fly in total darkness?" He touched the tip of his
finger to the center of his forehead, pushed the finger outward.
"Like a finbat, I sense the wall before I see it." "Are
you speaking now of Kurgan?" "He
has gone out of his way to treat me as an ally, a friend, even. But I
do not trust him." "A
wise decision, I am certain. If he has marked you as clever as well
as powerful, all the worse. I know him, Sornnn. He will brook no
rivals." "I?
I have no wish to be his rival." "I
very much doubt that you could convince him of that. He is as
paranoid as our father was." "In
that case, I will have to vigorously defend myself." "Oh,
do not say that so lightly, my love!" She squeezed his hand
hard. "The worst thing you could do would be to underestimate
him. He may be sixteen, but he has the mind of a V'ornn decades
older. He is far smarter, far more clever and ambitious than my
father ever was. There is something different about him, something
dangerous. This has been so for as long as I can remember. My father
was obsessed with taking revenge on the Ashera. Kurgan is obsessed
with taking revenge on everyone." "There
is an ancient saying passed among the tribes of the Korrush. It is
said that the ambitious fall from a great height, and when they do
nothing is left of them but their sins." Marethyn
put her hand against his cheek. "Ah, Sornnn, please do take my
warning seriously." "I
assure you that I take it very seriously, indeed." "Being
a Stogggul embarrasses me more than you could know, Sornnn. The
entire family could use a lesson in manners." "You
know very well why they shun you, Marethyn. Tuskugggun are—" "Caged,
powerless, made impotent. We are treated as little better than the
Kundalan." "Now
you are being melodramatic." "Then
I am obliged to do so in order to make my point." She tossed her
head. "All my life I have been treated by males as if I am a
mental defective, as if my opinions are laughable or, worse,
subversive." "But
your opinions are
subversive," he said with a small smile.
"You are pushing for equal status for Tuskugggun. Ours is a
caste-bound system, Marethyn. Never forget that." "Your
mind is not caste-bound." Sornnn
settled himself more comfortably beside her. "From the time I
was young my father took me with him on his treks into the Korrush. I
quickly became used to the long, arduous travel, the dust, the
windstorms, the lack of V'ornn amenities that we take for granted. I
not only got used to living without them, I grew to love the rough
tribal life. I fell in love with the Korrush. I saw the majesty
there, the magic of the landscape, the enormous sky, the pleasure in
reading the weather, in training lymmnals, in riding between the
humps of a kuomeshal. I learned to weave rugs, to excavate through
the dry red soil, to cherish a lost past, to fall asleep beneath a
blanket of stars." He took her hand. "Now the Korrush is
inside me, it has changed me forever, and I would not have it any
other way." "Nor
would I," she said. "It has made you a better V'ornn." "Remember
when we met?" "At
the consortia congress last spring." she nodded. "My art
installation was being used as decoration." "I
saw you from across the hall, in the midst of a huge throng. You were
wearing that sky-blue—" "The
male-style robes, yes." "You
caused quite a sensation." "It
was a statement." "Of
course it was. That was why they told you to leave." "The
Stogggul name only goes so far when you are Tuskugggun." "I
saw you and said to myself that I must meet this singular Tuskugggun,
not having any idea who you were." "And
when you found out that I was a Stogggul. . . ?" "I
came after you, didn't I?" "That
you did." "The
truth is I never thought of you as a Stogggul." She
looked at him skeptically. "Now that seems unlikely." "I
was too taken with you to care what family you were from." She
let out an involuntary laugh. "You must be joking." "I
love you, Marethyn." She
stared into his beautiful eyes. "My
love sees a way for you to use the power you have inside you, a way
in which you can don your male-style robes again and not be so easily
cast from the arms of society." Marethyn
felt a clutch in her stomachs. There was something about him, some
secret that both fascinated and frightened her. The longer she knew
him, the more desperately she wanted to know this secret. And yet...
Her blood ran cold with the thought of it. "And
that is what happened to me that night," her beloved was saying.
"That is what drew me to you. That is why you have become wa
tarabibi." "What
does that mean?" she breathed, though her hearts already knew. "My
beloved." Ion-cannon
fire found them as soon as they exited Nimbus. The narrow alley in
the Northern Quarter of Axis Tyr was burning with phosphorescent
tracers. "Khagggun
pack!" Eleana cried. Riane,
who was helping Eleana carry Rekkk out of the kashiggen, was still
surrounded by the Spell of Forever. "It is Olnnn Rydddlin's
pack," she said. "I can sense him." "What
can we do?" Eleana said, as they ducked, scrambling for the
cover of an inset doorway. "Carrying Rekkk, we cannot outrun
them or even hide for very long." "No
problem. We will all Thrip back to the abbey." "Absolutely
not," Thigpen said. "Thripping is devised for moving
through Realms, not within a Realm. To do so is unsafe. The effects
are cumulative—very soon it begins to permanently impair your
ability to Thrip at all. As for those without mononculi, the effects
rapidly become lethal. Rekkk is near death, and Eleana is with child.
I cannot sanction Thripping. We all stay." An
ion-cannon burst exploded the window beside the doorway in which they
were huddled, raining glass, stone chips, and plaster down on them. "Olnnn
Rydddlin has given us no other viable choice," Riane said
urgently. "If you do not get Rekkk out of here now, he will
surely die." "What
about you, Dar Sala-at?" "For
the past nine weeks we have been hounded night and day by Khagggun.
For the past nine weeks we have done nothing but hole up and lick our
wounds." Riane said this with no little intensity, and Thigpen,
who had been about to argue, shut her snout. "With Olnnn
Rydddlin here, I believe we have an opportunity to strike back hard,
to throw our V'ornn enemies off-balance, at least temporarily." Thigpen
eyed her with undisguised suspicion. "I cannot imagine what you
have in mind, Dar Sala-at, but I know it carries with it too much
risk." "More
than anything else we need breathing room," Riane said. "You
must agree that we cannot remain cloistered in the Abbey of Warm
Current indefinitely." "Even
so," Thigpen said grudgingly, "I cannot abandon you, you
know that. I am bound to you." "Which
is why you will do as I say, when I say it," Riane said. Another
explosion collapsed part of the building's roof. Groaning
load-bearing timbers made it all too clear that they had little time
left in their temporary sanctuary. "Now is not a time for
stubbornness. Eleana and I are best suited to handle what must be
done here. Without Rekkk holding us back we're mobile. I have Osoru,
and since Eleana has fought him before, she knows Olnnn Rydddlin's
tactical mind. It is an ideal opportunity, one which may not be
repeated anytime soon. Take Rekkk and go. Now." Thigpen
gazed down into Rekkk's bloody face, carefully lifted first one
eyelid then the other. "The Thripping will kill him for sure." Riane
threw her head back, reached down her throat with two fingers. In her
mind, she sang a song she had learned in Realms of Thrip-pingf
one of the books in the Library, ancient as
Time. Alarmed,
Thigpen said, "What on Kundala do you think you're doing?" "Giving
Rekkk my mononculus." Riane drew the wormlike symbiont out of
her mouth. "Dar
Sala-at, I told you that each mononculus is meant for a single
individual." "Wipe
that shocked look off your face," Riane said. She opened Rekkk's
mouth, dropped the mononculus into it, closed it with the heel of her
hand on his chin. "The mononculus will protect him from whatever
harmful emanations you may pass through, and his body will
temporarily keep it alive and well until I join you." "If
you join us," Thigpen said darkly. "Have a care, Dar
Sala-at. Youth is rash with its life—" Of
a sudden, the Rappa's stern admonition was drowned out by an ominous
thrumming. "N'Luuura take it! A hoverpod!" Riane cried.
."We're out of time. Go! Go!" She
turned away, feeling the telltale ripple in her psyche, the soft
internal breeze aimed at the back of her neck, that told of a Thrip. "What
are we going to do?" Eleana said breathlessly. "They have
both ends of the alley blocked and there's a hoverpod overhead, so
forget the rooftops." With
a terrible groan, the doorway in which they were crouched began to
splinter. "Follow
me and don't look back," Riane shouted. Between tracer rounds,
they zigzagged back across the rubble- and fire-strewn alley, banging
through Nimbus' copper-and-bronze door, dented and heavily discolored
by the ion fire. Riane took a moment to lock and bolt it behind them. "Do
you think this is such a smart idea?" Eleana asked, as they ran
through the Cloud Chamber. "Chances are high Olnnn Rydddlin will
trap us in here, and that's the good news. The bad news is we'll
encounter the Tzelos again. Either way it'll be carnage." "Khagggun
have a saying when they go into battle," Riane said, with a
tight grin. " 'Carnage is another name for victory.' " "Will
you at least tell me your plan?" "What
plan?" Eleana
registered shock. "You told Thigpen—" "I
had to convince her to get Rekkk to safety. I am making this up as I
go along." "Miina
preserve us!" They
were racing down the now deserted corridor. Everyone in the kashiggen
was either dead or had evacuated the premises. Behind them, they
could hear ion fire muffled by the door. It was only a matter of time
before it gave way and Olnnn Rydddlin's Khagggun charged in. "Tell
me about the Star-Admiral," Riane said. "He
is clever, ruthless, dogged. He will never give up. He does not think
in a straightforward tactical manner. If he can find a new stratagem,
he will try it without thought to the risk it might pose to his own
pack." "In
other words, he is impulsive and bloodthirsty." Eleana
nodded. "Rekkk was able to use this against him." Riane
found the narrow branch off the main corridor, took the hard left,
kicked open the door to the utility room. Mittelwin's corpse lay in
mummified paralysis where Riane had pushed it. "Over
here!" she called as she headed for the wash chute. She grabbed
the upper lip of the chute, swung her legs and lower body into it.
"Let's go!" Without
a word, Eleana followed her. It
was dark in the basement, but not in the least musty. Obviously,
Mittelwin had been as fastidious about the service areas of the
kashiggen as she had been about the public parts. Riane
conjured Flowering Wand, a cloaking spell. "Now
they won't be able to see the chute," she whispered to Eleana.
"It's only temporary, but it should hold long enough." "Long
enough for what?" Eleana whispered back. She
followed behind Riane, as Riane lit one fusion lamp after another.
They were in what amounted to a long tunnel-like chamber. One end was
solid bedrock, the other held an old iron door shut with a rusted
lock. Eleana severed the lock with one sweep of her shock-sword, but
the door's immense hinges were corroded, and it took all their
combined effort to move it. But what they found behind it made
Eleana's heart sink. The chamber beyond had suffered a cave-in. Tons
of rock had cascaded down, filling it completely. No escape there. As
they retraced their steps, Riane stopped suddenly. "Do
you smell it?" she asked, "What?" "The
dampness." Riane put the flat of her hand on the rock wall to
their left. "Odd. As you can see Mittelwin was a meticulous
Tusku-gggun. She would never allow her basement to be come dank.
Unless ..." She felt a sudden tingling in her mind, and was all
at once aware of the sound of the power bourns running deep beneath
the foundations. "Dar
Sala-at, what is it?" Now
she crouched, her palms feeling the minute vibrations. She moved them
slowly until she came to a specific spot. The power bourns seemed
quite strong, as if something was drawing them toward the surface.
When she put her ear to the wall she could hear a gurgling. There's
an underground spring just behind here." "I
don't understand." Eleana shook her head. "How will that
help us?" The
Tzelos, Riane thought. Where have I read about daemonology?
Not in Utmost Source, surely. But what about in its sister
volume The Book of Recantation? She closed her eyes, her eidetic
memory reviewing page after page until she came to a particular
passage. All
at once, her eyes snapped open. "Ah, yes, we have a chance,
after all." Grimly,
she signaled that Eleana should sit down just where the wall was the
dampest, then she paced off the steps from where they had landed at
the base of the laundry chute to where Eleana sat. "What
are you doing?" Eleana asked. "Trying
to judge how long it will take the Khagggun to get to us." "You're
joking, aren't you?" Eleana's eyes were big around. "You're
not joking." "I
am sorry," Riane said. "I should never have allowed Rekkk
to talk me into this. Now we have put you and your baby at risk." "Dar
Sala-at, in a time when we are held hostage on our own world, there
is always risk." "But
this—" She
put a hand on Riane's wrist. "If it means freeing Kundala from
the V'ornn, I believe any risk is acceptable." Riane
sighed. "How is the baby?" Eleana
put her hand on her lower belly. "I can feel it kicking.
Sometimes I sing to it." "Would
you like to know whether it's a male or a female?" "I
don't know. I—Can you really tell?" "With
Osoru, yes, I can." "The
sorcery won't hurt the baby, will it?" "Not
in the least." Riane smiled. "Promise." Eleana
nodded. "All right then." She scrutinized Riane's face.
"Dar Sala-at, why are you doing this? Why should you care?" Once
again, Riane felt the powerful urge to confess everything, to tell
Eleana who she really was. But a combination of Giyan's admonitions
and her own heightened sense of duty kept her silent. Still, it was
torturous. With her hand on the small swell of belly, she was filled
with Eleana's scent, the scent Annon remembered so well, the scent
that had followed him down into dreams, haunting him. The sensation
of Eleana's warmth pressed up against her was pure intoxication. She
imagined Eleana's tongue flicking out and— She shut her eyes
tight and wondered why she was torturing herself. Even if she
eventually did tell Eleana the truth, she had no real expectation
that Eleana would feel the same way. Annon was dead and gone. Why
should she love Riane as she had loved Annon? With an effort, Riane
pushed these thoughts aside. "It
is a male," she said. "Definitely male." She
felt Eleana's hair brush her cheek, felt her warm, fragrant breath as
she whispered in Riane's ear, "Thank you, Dar Sala-at, for not
judging me, for not wanting me to abort a baby who is part V'ornn. I
am so grate—" Eleana froze in midsentence. The
sudden creaking of floorboards above their heads signaled that the
Khagggun had forced their way into Nimbus. “—here
is something about the smell of orangesweet in the morning I that
turns my stomach," Nith Batoxxx said. "I drink it just the
same, every day without fail." "Why?"
said Nith Isstal. "Clearly you don't like it." "In
fact, I detest it." The
laboratory was almost obsessively neat. It was a windowless,
lozenge-shaped chamber deep within the heart of the Temple of
Mnemonics. The sprawling, organic-looking structure that, up until
the V'ornn occupation, had been the center of Kundalan religious and
cultural life, crouched upon the city's only hill, in the Western
Quarter of Axis Tyr. As such, it seemed a lonely place, never more so
since the Gyrgon had made it their home. Light
was provided by thirteen tear-shaped fusion lamps spinning in an oval
orbit, which emitted the cold purple-blue illumination of a walk-in
freezer. Centuries before, the stone walls had been carefully
plastered over by Kundalan artists, who then drew vast murals that
covered every square centimeter of the large chamber. The murals were
obscured now by vines, which for some reason grew in profusion
beneath the chill light. Nith
Isstal lay, naked, in the center of the laboratory, suspended by
countervailing ion fluxes directly below an enormous array of complex
instruments and armatures that depended like stalactites from the
concave ceiling. Holoscreens flickered readouts of every system in
his body, transmitted from the semiorganic sensor net draped over
him. His utterly smooth face was androgynous. He looked male or
female depending upon the angle from which he was seen. Nith
Batoxxx began to walk around his laboratory. "Do you see all
these green shoots and leaves, these woody vines that twine about my
laboratory." "I
admit I have been curious about them, yes." Throughout Nith
Isstal's utterly hairless body ran a neural network, fine as spider's
silk, connected up the back of his neck to the grids in his skull.
"Is it all right if I get up now?" "Oh,
yes." Nith Batoxxx drew an equation of blue ion fire in the air
and the sensor net vanished. Nith Isstal's physiognomy pulsed,
switching from male to female and back again. "I have finished
adjusting the last germanium and tertium latticework in your skull.
As soon as I activate the array ..." He touched a number of
holobuttons on the left side of one of the screens. "Ah,"
Nith Isstal sighed. "Yes, I see." By which he meant, I
see everything. Because he was now fully integrated into the
Comradeship. "I can feel the male and female parts aligning
themselves, balancing." "That
is in the nature of reaching maturity, a definition of our sexual
harmony—the stasis of life." Nith Batoxxx gazed down upon
the other. "Pity those V'ornn of other castes who must live
their lives as either male or female." He gave Nith Isstal a
hand, helping him to sit up. "Imagine that." "In
truth, I cannot. It is a fate too horrific to contemplate." Nith
Isstal looked again at the greenery. "Nith Batoxxx, if we may
return. The orangesweet that twines about your laboratory, the
orangesweet you drink every day though the odor turns your stomachs.
Would you explain?" Nith
Batoxxx plucked two leaves from the vines and, bringing them back to
Nith Isstal, placed them in the palm of his hand. "What
do you see?" Nith
Isstal suddenly looked worried. "I know this is a test I will
fail." "You
are justifiably nervous," Nith Batoxxx said. "Think of it
not as a test, but as a lesson." Nith
Isstal nodded and took a deep breath. "I see, well. . ." He
shrugged. "Two orangesweet leaves." "But
they are so much more." Nith Batoxxx went over to the vines.
"They are the very embodiment of K'yonnno." He was speaking
of the central Gyrgon theory of Chaos and Order. "Do you see
these leaves?" He plucked handfuls, dropping them into Nith
Isstal's lap. "A veritable blizzard of leaves, so many that you
and I together could spend months counting them. And look, look}
Every one has precisely five lobes. That is what is called Order. And
yet, look again, each leaf has a different reticulated pattern to its
veins, unique unto itself. The Chaos of individuality. Here, right
under our noses, we have the living proof of K'yonnno. That is why my
laboratory is filled with orangesweet; that is why I drink of its
juice every day. To remind me of the Tightness of our path, the
righteousness of our belief in the essential stasis of things. Stasis
and Harmony are synonymous, never forget the First Rule of K'yonnno." He
clapped his gloved hands together, sending tiny fountains of ion
fire into the air. "Now come, clothe yourself. I hear the
tolling. It is the time for the convocation." It
was almost time. She struggled to keep her mind clear for what she
had to do. The
creaking drew closer and, straining, she could hear the sounds of
clipped V'ornn conversation. Khagggun battle-speak. Riane summoned
Osoru. The atmosphere began to congeal. "What's
going on?" Eleana whispered hoarsely. "There
are Khagggun searching the utility room. I am countering the spell I
put on the chute. In a moment, they will see it." "You're
what?" Eleana shook her. "Are you crazy?" She
began to draw her shock-sword. "No!"
Riane said sharply. She could feel the telltale shift of jihe as part
of her moved into Otherwhere. "Whatever happens, keep your
weapon scabbarded. Just follow my lead, all right?" "No,
it's not all right. I don't intend to—" With
a shout, a Khagggun slid down the chute. "Got
them!" he cried in triumph. Another
and another followed him, until six of Olnnn Rydddlin's pack were in
the underground laundry. "Well,
well, well, what have we here?" one said, waving his shock-sword
in their direction. "Two
delicate prizes," said another with a big grin on his face. "An
added bonus. Rape and killing." A
third Khagggun leveled an ion cannon at them. "You two, get up,"
he growled. Eleana
did nothing, glaring defiantly at them. "Oh,
ho, look at this," said the first Khagggun. "I will doubly
enjoy bloodying her tenderest parts." The
third Khagggun took a step toward them. "I said, 'Get up!' Now!" "Do
as he says," Riane murmured. The architecture of Otherwhere was
all around her, and she turned, at once confused, because her Third
Eye had registered the difference, some subtle change, a soft
susurrus just at the threshold of awareness, a restless indefinable
quality that Disturbed the deep sacred silence of the Otherscape. She
had no time to
think of this now as she cast a sorcerous beacon into the pure white
sky as she had seen Giyan do. Would it be sufficient? It had to be! "But—" "Remember
what I told you,” Riane said, pulling Eleana to her feet. The
sorcerous beacon arced, streaking though Otherwhere. "Now
what?" Eleana was watching the leering grin on the Kha-gggun's
faces. "Just wait for them to rape us?" Her hands clenched.
"At least let me draw my shock-sword so I can take a few of
these animals with me." "No.
Do not give them any cause to fire their weapons." There
was a disturbance in Otherwhere, a Darkness stained the white
horizon. Riane took Eleana's hand. "As soon as I give you the
signal I want you to run toward the door." "Why?
We can't get out there. It's sealed tighter than a—" "Shut
up, you two!" barked the Khagggun with the ion cannon trained on
them. "No talking." The
Darkness irised open. Riane left just enough time to see six pairs of
ruby-red eyes before she popped fully back into the corporeal world.
She felt it coming, the dimness behind the six Khagggun deepening,
fulminating, coalescing into— "Miina
preserve us!" Eleana cried in fright. "The Tzelos has found
us again!" Either
the Khagggun didn't hear her or didn't believe her. "Run!"
Riane shouted. "Run!" As
they raced back down the chamber, the Khagggun leveling the ion
cannon at them took aim, but another forced his arm down. "Our
orders are to bring them to the Star-Admiral alive," he said.
"In any event, we have them trapped." Following his
reasoned lead, the Khagggun pack advanced methodically in pursuit. This
was what Riane was betting on. She counted off the seconds as she had
counted off the paces from the chute landing to the damp patch on the
wall. When she judged the Khagggun to be in the right position, she
sent a spell hurtling toward the Tzelos. The daemon reared up;
bellowing. The Khagggun turned, stunned and horrified at what their
disbelieving eyes saw. One of the Khagggun fired his ion cannon
without effect. The others drew theirs and fired in unison. For
a moment, the Tzelos was completely enveloped in pale blue ion fire.
Then, its hideous jaws swung open and it swallowed the energy whole.
An instant later, black fire spewed out. It slammed the six Khagggun
against the wall with such force that the ancient mortar literally
disintegrated. Instantly, a flood of water gushed into the chamber. "Let's
go!" Riane cried, dragging Eleana toward the flood. "What—?" "How
good is your swimming?" She shoved Eleana into the hole, then
leapt in after her. The
water hit her like a shanstone wall. It was freezing, its flow trying
to push her back into the underground laundry where the Tzelos still
lurked. Eleana,
having an even harder time with the torrent, slipped in the muck
oozing at the bottom of the spring. She fell back heavily against
Riane, and Riane felt a vicious tugging, saw first one, then another
hairy appendage wrap itself around her, dragging her inexorably back
to the underground lair where the Tzelos crouched.
7 Teyi
The
Comradeship of Gyrgon met in formal convocation once a day in the
great listening hall of the Temple of Mnemonics. Once, it had been
the central temple where the Ramahan prayed to their Goddess, Miina.
There, upon the scarred and stained porphyry altar, they had made
their barbaric sacrifices to that imagined divine being. Here, amid
the onyx seats of the shell-like amphitheater, the priests had
listened to their leader, Mother, blather to them the myths she made
up as she went along. At least, that is how Nith Batoxxx imagined it
had been before the time of the V'ornn. He
escorted Nith Isstal to his seat in the tiered half round before
drifting away to take his own place halfway around the great
listening hall. One thing you had to give the Kundalan—possibly
the only thing, He thought—they knew how to construct with
acoustics in mind. How their music could sound like the caterwauling
of a razor-raptor in its death throes was a complete mystery. As
other Gyrgon filed into the amphitheater he felt the stirring inside
him, an autumnal wind scurrying the death of summer before it,
scouring his interior landscape of superfluous thought. A beacon of
black light struck him from out of his interior, blinding him
momentarily, then, as he grew used to it, settling him in single
purpose. He felt a premonitory ruffling, then the cool energy surged
through him, making him tremble slightly until synapses and nerve
endings alike adjusted to the heightened load. Each time, he had
recovered more quickly. Each time, he felt himself longing more
deeply for the exquisite sensation. He felt different, renewed. Eternal. But
that had been the promise, hadn't it? Yes, it most assuredly was. And
now eternal life was his, and his alone. His
head swiveled and his ruby irises scanned the hall until he found
Nith Settt. Lifting a forefinger, he beckoned the other Gyrgon over. "What
news?" he whispered. Nith
Settt inclined his head. "Nothing good. These tribes with their
strict fundamentalist views!" "Their
very fundamentalism should make them that much more susceptible to
manipulation." "And
so it does," Nith Settt whispered. "But as for Perrnodt.
She is forcing our hand. In order to get to her, we will have to
destabilize the entire region." "No!" Several
Gyrgon around them turned their heads at Nith Batoxxx's raised voice.
He ignored their stares, leaned in, lowered his voice. "You are
under strict orders not to destabilize the region. You understand
this?" "I
most certainly do not." Nith Settt's voice was distorted by
frustration. "We are Gyrgon. We own Kundala and everything on
it. I simply do not see the problem. We want information from this
dzuoko, we should take her and break her bones one by one until she
tells us." "She
will never tell us," Nith Batoxxx hissed. "Not by
coercion, certainly. That has been tried once." "Not
by me." "You
really are a rather bestial thing," Nith Batoxxx said in an
echoey tone whose oddity was lost in the cavernous acoustics. He
studied the other for a moment before he went on slowly and carefully
as if explaining a complex lesson to a particularly thick student.
"We must be more clever than that." He smiled until all his
teeth showed. "We must give her a reason for wanting to find the
Maasra rather than protect it. Then she will lead us right to
it without even knowing she is doing so." Nith
Settt blinked. "And how do you propose we do that?" "Fortunately
for you the triggering mechanism has already been set in motion.
After the convocation return swiftly to Agachire. Keep a sharp eye on
Perrnodt and follow events as they transpire." "Yes,
Nith Batoxxx. It will be done." "As
I have outlined." "Precisely." He
smiled, touched Nith Settt on the gleaming veradium point on the
crown of his skull. When he took his seat, he saw across the
amphitheater the imperious Nith Nassam, who caught his eye for a
moment, before the other rose and descended to the center space that
held the Kundalan altar. It was Nith Nassam who had joined him in his
final, lethal assault on Nith Sahor. At
this signal, two other Gyrgon separated themselves from the crowd and
took their place flanking him. Bizarre to see them grouped around
such a primitive bloodstained artifact, he thought. Yet less so now
that the cool energy blew through him. With his new perspective, he
saw the Tightness in the juxtaposition, just as he was now able to
recognize the hidden power locked within that solid block of
porphyry. The
trio of Gyrgon were known as the facilitators. Representing Order,
Chaos, and K'yonnno, they changed with each convocation. They brought
the assembled to silence by beginning the Creation Chant, which
manifested a gigantic atom and the twenty subatomic particles from
which all matter in the Cosmos was composed. And
then the assembled spoke as one: "Deliver us from darkness, from
ignorance, from false theorem." A short pause while they stared
at the spinning atom their collective energies had created. "Deliver
us from the Centophennni, deliver us home." The
convocation was invoked. Came
the stillness, the deepening silence before the discussion began to
flow. Naturally enough, this took the form of equations, lit across
the firmament of the great listening hall, bursting like ion-cannon
fire, question equations, followed by answer equations, positive and
negative theorems batted back and forth among the assembled
Comradeship. It
was the job of the three Gyrgon standing by the altar to keep the
dialogue moving, to break up equation jams of those Gyrgon trying to
voice their opinions at the same time. Nith Batoxxx watched them as
it became more difficult to maintain a disciplined equation flow, as
arguments became more and more rancorous, as factions banded
together, further fracturing the already sundered whole. And as he
witnessed the growing pandemonium, an elation took hold of him, a
cold fire in his lowest belly, a conviction—as if he needed
any!—of the right-ness and righteousness of the path that had
chosen him. In
the old days, it was always Nith Sahor's theorems that quieted the
bickering, that soothed the antagonists, that formed the compromises.
But Nith Batoxxx, working in the shadows, saw to it that those
compromises were temporary, that the rifts re-formed, the old
antagonisms resurfaced. It was accurate to say that at night he undid
the good Nith Sahor did during the day. Stasis. And
yet, not really. Each convocation brought the Comradeship closer to
pitched battle. Each convocation took Nith Sahor further into the
retreat of his studies. Until fear, uncertainty, and consternation
strode through the dim passageways of the Temple of Mnemonics,
fracturing the Comradeship's once steadfast solidarity. Now there was
a lack of purpose, rooms filled to overflowing with doubt. The last
obstacle to the growing weakness about the Comradeship was Nith
Sahor. Nith Sahor, who had the will and the intelligence to unite
them again. Now he was dead, by Nith Batoxxx's hand. The black beacon
that had formed inside Nith Batoxxx had shown him that the rifts had
gone deep enough for him to come to the fore. For the others to
acknowledge his leadership without question. Enough! Nith
Batoxxx used an equation that stilled all the others just long enough
for him to rise from his seat and stride down the tiers to take his
place at the porphyry altar. He gestured and theorems ringed the
amphitheater. This
petty bickering has gone on long enough, he told the assembled
through equations. Days, weeks, months, years have dissolved in
enmity and squabbles. What have we become now—Bashkir?
He heard the stirring of the silence, a good sign. First we
fought over how to treat the Kun-dalan, for there were those of us
who believed them special of all the races we have conquered. Then we
fought over the continuation of the House of Ashera as regent. There
were those who were infected by Ashera Eleusis' belief that we had
come to Kundala now, at this moment in time, for a specific reason, a
higher purpose, that Kundala was an inextricable part of our future,
that we could learn from the Kundalan, What equation do I see
posited? Learn from an inferior species? How could this be so? How
could such anathema exist? And yet, as I look around me, I recognize
those who, at first, believed in this foolishness. Then
the dissension morphed again to the change in leadership among the
other castes. There were those of you who raised equations against
installing the House of Stogggul in the regent's chair. Even a theory
or two was mounted to that effect. And that dissension
continues now that the son Stogggul Kurgan, has succeeded his
father. Kurgan is young, some say. Kurgan is untested, others decry.
But not long, and certainly not loudly. Because the spark of
dissension is gone. Our brother, Nith Sahor, is dead. Without fear of
contradiction, I say that Nith Sahor was a great Gyrgon, a
brilliant theorist, yes. But he was terribly misguided. He believed,
as Ashera Eleusis did, that the Kundalan are our equals, that we must
resurrect Za Hara-at, the so-called City of One Million Jewels in
order that V'ornn and Kundalan live side by side. Za Hara-at is
important but not in the way the Asher heretic imagined. Beneath
the ragged tents and ku-omeshal dung lies a treasure trove of
Kundala's past. One we are now free to plunder without interference.
Or are we? The bickering remains, the seeds of doubt Nith Sahor
planted about the lightness of our path, the righteousness of our
belief in Stasis grow and grow. The heretical theorem he wrought
lives on after he himself is dead. I
will no longer sit here and listen to you fight like the brattish
children of the other castes. If that is your wish, be gone
from here, your use to the Comradeship has come to an end. From this
moment forward, we will tolerate only one vision, one theory, one
single note sounded over and over in Stasis. Nith
Isstal stood up. The convocation has always been about many
voices. Right on cue. Perhaps it is wiser to allow all voices
to be heard. You
are young, Nith Isstal. Nith Batoxxx wrote this equation large
upon the firmament above the amphitheater. This is your first
convocation, is it not? It
is, Nith Isstal wrote. But my family has a long history in the
convocation. All my life I have been steeped in its strict and sacred
protocol. He
looked around at the assembled. And after
all, isn't this protocol further proof of the Law of Stasis? His
logic is impeccable, wrote Nith Nassam, and
there came a chorus of like-minded equations. And
from elsewhere in the amphitheater, He may be young, but his
thesis has merit. Emboldened
by the courage of a Gyrgon so young voicing his opinion, those who
had but a moment ago held this same view in secrecy emerged
full-blown into the convocation. There
is another theory that must be resurrected. Nith
Recctor had risen, was writing ion fire in his typical elegant hand.
No one ignored his equations or his theories. Other equations died
away, awaiting the continuation of his theory. Nith
Batoxxx looked at him with a neutral expression on his face. Nith
Recctor was one of the silent ones, one of the elder ones. One of
Nith Sahor's suspected allies. Thus far definitive proof of this
treachery had eluded him. This carefully choreographed dance he had
devised using Nith Isstal as his stalking beast was working. Toxins
must be drawn slowly to the surface, where they can be burned off.
The most virulent toxins were the ones buried most deeply in the
corpus. We
know from our studies that Kundala's atmosphere once possessed a
strong electric charge. In fact, gravship records marked in detail
the intensity of this charge as we approached Kundala. And yet, when
we arrived the charge had vanished. Where once lightning ringed the
skies none now exists, even during the most violent of meteorological
disturbances. Yes,
yes, Nith Batoxxx wrote. The Comradeship is well aware of Nith
Sahor's theory that in some way our arrival dispersed Kundala's
electrical charge. Not
dispersed, Nith Recctor wrote in the lecturing style that set
Nith Batoxxx's teeth on edge. In one of his most elegant theories,
Nith Sahor postulated that our presence on Kundala caused its
electrical charge to retreat into stasis. As you are well aware,
electrical charges are in constant flux; they abhor stasis. There is
in known space no instance of a species affecting the electrical
charge of a planet's atmosphere simply by its presence. Thus, Nith
Sahor's conclusion that the V'ornn presence on Kundala was
significant—no, I miswrote. Not simply significant. It
is nothing short of revolutionary. He extrapolated a series of
theorems that projected a different course for us, that in coming to
Kundala we must recognize that our path has been irrevocably
diverted. That the secrets lying buried here have the power to change
us all. Dangerous,
heretical theorems that this very convocation repudiated, Nith
Batoxxx wrote with some asperity. If
memory serves, this body repudiated nothing. Nith Recctor went
on, relentless. To this day, Nith Sahor's theorems have yet to be
disproved. Or
proved. He
was never given the chance of proof. He was hounded from the
Comradeship in the most repugnant display of partisanship and
close-mindedness it has been my misfortune to have witnessed. At
that time, who stood up for him? Nith Batoxxx wrote. You, Nith
Recctor? Or you, Nith Hwelle? Or you, Nith Immmon? His
death is a tragedy for the Comradeship, for all V'ornn, Nith
Recctor wrote. Easy
to mourn a heretic after he is gone, Nith Nassam fired back. I
seek no expiation for my own shameful behavior, Nith Recctor
wrote. But the simple, inescapable fact remains. Since we arrived
here one hundred two years ago there has been no evidence whatsoever
of electrical activity in the atmosphere, and nothing we have tried
has been able to revive it. I take this as— Listen
to Nith Recctor wagging his finger at us, telling us that he is
smarter than we are, telling us that we should believe in unproved
heresy, that we should go on—what did Nith Sahor call it—faith?
Yes, faith. That we should have faith that heresy would someday prove
correct. We
have only your opinion as to what is heresy, Nith Batoxxx. Would
you have us repudiate K'yonnno, the very bedrock of our understanding
of the Cosmos? Look! Look at this! He writes that we have been on
Kundala for one hundred two years. Whose years, I ask you now? V'ornn
years? No. He speaks in Kundalan terminology. He has been corrupted
by this accursed place just as surely as Nith Sahor was. I
believe this body has heard enough from you, Nith Batoxxx. On
the contrary, it has not heard nearly enough! Nith Batoxxx felt
the black beacon turning its exhilarating energy in one direction.
His entire being vibrated as it concentrated its beam through his
raised arm, his pointing finger. We have had enough of secret
studies, clandestine experiments. We have had enough of the
corruption of our body of theorems, the corruption of our very
ideals. We
should hold a vote. Nith Recctor's equation hung in the air for a
moment. Just
a smattering minority of equations. From the rest of the convocation,
Nith Batoxxx noted only silence. On
this matter that
option is inadequate, he wrote. It
is hereby terminated. A
small disturbance in back quashed immediately by the baleful gaze or
Nith Nassam. Thenceforth, a pool of silence, spreading, without the
hint of a ripple. A
horrified expression appeared on Nith Recctor's face as he, at last,
understood the nature of the trap that had been set for him. Black
fire erupted from the end of Nith Batoxxx's finger. Ion-fire
contrails arcing into the firmament as the dark energy that infused
him long ago speared Nith Recctor, spun him full around, took him off
his feet, slammed him facefirst into the back wall of the great
listening hall. For a moment, he hung there, quivering. Then a second
fork of the energy beam took him quickly apart. Whether
the absolute silence that followed was approbation or fear Nith
Batoxxx did not know. Nor did he much care. Either was acceptable.
Both was preferred. The
water level was rising and with each minute that passed the heavy
spray was making it more difficult to breathe. Desperately, Riane
hacked with her dagger and heard the Tzelos scream with each cut she
made. This was significant since it had shown no evidence of pain
when she had hacked off the end of its appendage during its attack at
the abbey. Heartened that the passage she had summoned up from The
Book of Recantation was correct, she hacked some more, heard it
scream again. The end of the appendage hung by a thread, water
gushing over it, laced with the emanations of the power bourns for
beneath, and a deep shudder went through the Tzelos. "Riane!
Watch out!" She
twisted her head up at Eleana's shout, saw the evil triangular head
with its wicked mandibles coming toward her. The mouth was opening
and— "Throw
water in its mouth," Riane shouted. "Water?
But why?" "Do
as I say!" she commanded. The
daemon's head was so close a mandible brushed against her cheek as
she squirmed and fought to free herself. The stink of its foul breath
made her want to gag. Then Eleana had scooped up the water and was
flinging it into the Tzelos' open mouth. The
daemon gave a bellow. It began to shake as with an ague as the
ineluctable energy from the power bourns began to eat at it like
acid. Quickly, Riane cut her way out of its embrace. That was what
the passage had told her, that the energy from the power bourns could
burn through daemon flesh. The Tzelos appeared to be shrinking. In
fact, it was being eaten from the inside out. The daemon screamed,
took one ''last
lunge at them before its husk was washed away on the tide of
bourn-laced water. Riane
and Eleana plunged into the spring. Like fish wriggling upstream,
they fought against the current, holding their breaths as they lacked
upward with powerful strokes. After the first hundred meters, they
were swept up in the current. Utter blackness surrounded them, and
the cold was slowly seeping into their muscles, making them stiff,
tiring them prematurely. But there was another, more urgent problem.
Both of them had taken deep breaths, but the air in their lungs would
only go so far. With her Gift, she sought out the bourn-lines, sensed
them twisting and turning, and followed them as they rose from the
depths. But
already she could see Eleana taken out of the swift current stream,
slowing down. She swam up behind her, took her around the waist, and
pressed on, pushing her long, powerful legs to flutter faster.
Eleana's eyes were closing. Riane sensed that she was on the verge of
passing out. Once that happened, Riane knew, water would seep into
her nose and throat. She felt her own lungs begin to burn. A
sudden wave of dizziness sent her mind reeling, and at once she was
in the midst of a snowstorm. She saw, now and again, the dark
vertical ridges of the Djenn Marre. High up, she saw a cave.
Flickering firelight illuminated the mouth, and then a tall, slender
figure strode out into the storm. At first, she assumed this was
another memory shard of Riane's resurfacing, but then she saw that
the figure was a V'ornn male, judging by his size and hairless head.
This V'ornn went to the lip of the ledge into which the cave was
formed and spread wide his arms. Through the fierce snow gusts she
caught a clear glimpse of his face and recognized him. It
was Rekkkl. Where
was his armor? This
was a vision, no question about it. What was she seeing, the present
or the future? His
lips moved, but she could not hear his words. All at once, he seemed
to tilt his body forward, falling off the ledge into the heart of the
storm. Riane wanted to cry out, but, of course, she could not make a
sound. She wanted to catch him but, of course, she could not move. All
she could do was watch, horrified, as he plunged to his death . . . In
the blink of an eye, the vision vanished. Pushing the panic down, she
reestablished contact with the bourn-lines, and ran right into a
granite outcropping. The current swirled them away again, and Riane,
half-stunned, fought to regain her equilibrium. It was as they were
being whirled around that she saw a patch of light. Or at least she
thought she saw it. And then, yes, there it was—dim,
flickering, far off. She tried to orient herself, noted that the spot
was almost directly above the granite outcropping. Using
every last ounce of strength, she pulled them both out of the
current's grip. Once, Riane almost passed out, but the pain in her
shoulder where she had collided with the rock kept her focused on
what she had to do. At
last, she was able to reach out to the outcropping, launch them
upward toward the light. It seemed to take forever. She kept shaking
Eleana, keeping her conscious. She could feel every fiber of her
being straining to push them faster. Up they went, the patch of light
spreading out, rippling, becoming more detailed. Pockmarks
and pinpricks, tiny ripples spreading outward in a kind of
hallucinogenic pattern not unlike a vastly complex weaving. Maybe she
was going under . . . Maybe they wouldn't make it after all. . . .
Maybe there were already drowning, water filling her lungs, black
tide seeping the life out of them. Maybe . . . With
a gasp, she broke the surface of the water, splashing, pulling Eleana
up, as she took huge draughts of air into her. She coughed up some
water, turned her head, saw with terror Eleana's pale, bluish face.
Her eyes were closed, she wasn't breathing. Desperately, Riane looked
around. They had surfaced in the center of a huge stone cistern
somewhere in a run-down section of the city. She called out but heard
no response. Deserted. They were alone, Eleana was unconscious, and
she herself was near exhaustion. Olnnn
Rydddlin was standing knee deep in water, hands on hips, when Kurgan
slid down the chute into the underground laundry at Nimbus. The
Star-Admiral was directing a team of forensic Deirus who were poking
and prodding the pile of six Khagggun corpses. "They
have been cindered," Kurgan said, peering at the dead. "Burned
to a crisp." There
were echoes in the underground space, echoes upon echoes, technical
jargon droned into data-decagons, opinions and speculation being
batted back and forth, the ebb and flow of a team hard at work. Kurgan,
listening hard to the echoes, said at length, "What happened
here, Star-Admiral? One moment I get a report you have them trapped
down here, the next I hear six of my Khagggun are dead, and the
Rhynnnon Rekkk Hacilar and his Kundalan skcettta have vanished." "The
preliminary report from the Deirus is that ion-cannon fire was
employed against the pack." "Ion-cannon
fire?" Kurgan went over to the hole in the wall, peered at the
blackened perimeter where it was visible above the waterline. "It
looks to me like a fusion bomb went off down here." "A
stolen fusion bomb or a homemade Kundalan explosive such as the
Resistance uses leaves energy signatures," Olnnn said crisply.
"The Deirus assure me they have found none." Kurgan
turned to face his Star-Admiral. "This setback is troubling.
Neither of us can afford to allow this Rhynnnon to remain free and
unpunished." He took a step closer, lowered his voice. "N'Luuura
take it, Rekkk Hacilar was one of our own. He turned against us. Now
he flaunts his treachery in our faces. This cannot be tolerated." "We
will find him, regent. This I swear to you." Kurgan
stood very close to the Star-Admiral. "Find the Rhynnnon and his
skcettta and do it now. We are both just beginning to build our power
bases. I want a total news eclipse on this incident. All we need is
for knowledge of these deaths to ripple through the ranks. This . . .
massacre could be construed as a sign of weakness on our part; it
cannot be tolerated." "I
understand, regent." Olnnn Rydddlin nodded to the Deirus
swarming over the corpses. ."I have put our best team on it." "No,
you do not understand." Kurgan hissed. "I do not care an
ice-hare's ass about your pack; I do not care an ice-hare's ass about
your best team of Deirus. You take care of this mess
personally, Olnnn Rydddlin. I will not have this kind of humiliation
stand for long." His grip tightened. "And if it does, I
assure you there will be a scapegoat. Some V'ornn well-known so the
populace will recognize instantly his head on the end of the regent's
pike." Olnnn
Rydddlin's voice was icy calm. "I am Star-Admiral." "You
would do well to remember who named you to that post." Olnnn
Rydddlin regarded the regent from out of a face closed tight as any
fortress. "I have never for an instant forgotten it, regent." Kurgan
stood silent for a moment, then he smiled abruptly. "Of course,
you're right, my friend. It is only that this . . . setback so soon
after becoming regent has unsettled me somewhat. You understand." "Perfectly,
regent." The
smile widened. "Come, come, Olnnn. We have fought together,
schemed together, killed together. I am always Kurgan to you." Olnnn
Rydddlin nodded rather stiffly. "Good.
Time and power, Olnnn, are both of the essence." Olnnn
Rydddlin was about to make a reply when Kurgan's okum-mmon activated. "I
am being Summoned," Kurgan said. He stepped away a moment to
receive his mysterious communication from the Gyrgon Comradeship. A
moment later, he looked up. "Star-Admiral," he said in
clipped tones, "you and your contingent will vacate this space
now." "Regent?" "Do
as I order!" When
the basement was clear even of his Haaar-kyut, he spoke softly into
his okummmon. "All
right, Nith Batoxxx. I am alone." "I
want to get a closer look at the bodies," the Gyrgon said, his
voice emanating from Kurgan's okummmon. Kurgan
approached the pile of cindered corpses. "Hold
out your arm," Nith Batoxxx said. As
Kurgan did so, he felt a small tingling, and the okummmon emitted a
kind of mist. A moment later, a holographic image of the Gyrgon
appeared. It stooped down, peering closely at the bodies. It went so
absolutely still that for an instant Kurgan thought something had
gone amiss with the connection. Of a sudden, the image whirled and
with a frightening countenance stalked over to the hole in the wall. "Water,"
the image of Nith Batoxxx said as if reporting back to the Gyrgon
Comradeship. "So much water." It lifted a finger, beckoned
Kurgan over. "Regent, I want you to reach into this hole." "What
am I looking for?" The
hologram turned its lambent ruby-irised eyes on him. "Just do
it. Now." "Yes,
Nith Batoxxx." Kurgan walked through the hologram on his way to
the rent in the wall. Bending over slightly, he extended his arms up
to the shoulder into the breach, felt around. To his surprise,
he felt something hard, almost brittle floating up against the back
side of the wall, directed by the water's current. Straining a
little, he pulled it out. "Ahhhh!"
The image of Nith Batoxxx let out a sigh that was almost a wail. Kurgan
had no idea of what he was looking at, but it was clear the Gyrgon
did. It was as black and sere as the cindered Khagggun, about five
times their size but light as a sheaf of
glennan. It appeared to be curled into a kind of fetal ball. Its
head, if that is what it was, looked to
be about three times too big for the
sticklike body. "How
could this happen?" Nith Batoxxx asked himself. Another
thing Kurgan noticed. Whatever it was wasn't a biped. He knew better
than to ask the Gyrgon what it was. What was clear was that it was
neither V'ornn nor Kundalan. That left what? Beside
him, the image of Nith Batoxxx clenched its fists tightly. "There
is only one way," it whispered just as if Kurgan was not there.
"The Dar Sala-at!" The
cistern was set in the center of an octagon-shaped courtyard piled
with rubble. High shanstone walls rose all around, featureless, grim,
topped by scowling granite gargoyles that faced inward, crouched,
sculpted muscles bunched and corded as if about to leap upon any who
dared invade their territory. An arched, roofed walkway ran around
all sides. Not a tree, not a blade of wrygrass could be seen in the
packed-down dirt. All
this Riane absorbed in the split second before she began pumping
rhythmically on Eleana's sternum. Water gushed out of Eleana's mouth,
dribbling down each corner, but still she did not stir. Riane blinked
rain out of her eyes, tried to purge her mind of the horrible vision
of Rekkk's death. Uttering a prayer in Venca, she bent over Eleana,
pinched her nose, opened her mouth wide, and began to force breath
into her. She worked steadily, tirelessly, her mind half-frozen by
fear and despair. This
cistern, on whose broad slimy rim Eleana lay, was where they had
fetched up after their harrowing trek underwater. Riane
was listening carefully. The baby was still alive, she felt its aura,
the strength of it, and something more, a sliver of the future,
perhaps, or an imagined future in which the boy battled the personal
daemons of his heritage. The blood of the Stogggul beat powerfully
within him, singing its own imperative, but there was a singular
oddity about his physical form that Riane could not quite define—he
would be distinctly different from those Stogggul who had come before
him. More clearly, she saw through the lens of Osoru the potential in
the boy for great good and great evil. In any case, the sign under
which he would be born, the sign that would rule his entire life, was
Transformation. All this passed before her in the blink of an eye,
then it abruptly vanished as Eleana went into a quick series of
convulsions. Opening
her Third Eye, Riane could feel the thin and fragile membrane between
life and death against which the baby lay. The fetus was uncoupling
itself from its life-sustaining connections to its mother. The trauma
that Eleana had just endured had shocked her system enough for the
pregnancy to come undone. In an instant, Riane knew that if she did
nothing, the fetus would abort, it would be gone in a matter of brief
bloody seconds and all trace of Kurgan Stogggul would have vanished
from Eleana's body and from Riane's life. Annon's V'ornn anger at
what Kurgan had done to Eleana flared briefly like a white-hot coal,
burning away logic and reason. Then
Riane gathered herself, felt stirring in her depths essential
fragments of the original Riane personality, a logical, deeply
committed core, and she conjured up Earth Granary, the most potent
healing spell in her limited sorcerous vocabulary. She had no idea of
all of its properties or whether it was the correct spell for what
ailed Eleana, but she had to believe that it was better than nothing.
She instructed the spell to enfold Eleana, felt it take her up in its
cradling embrace. At
once, the convulsions subsided, the fetus quieted, its functions
returning to normal. Still,
Eleana had not recovered consciousness. Drawing a deep, shuddering
breath, Riane put her lips beside Eleana's ear. "Come on,"
she whispered fiercely. "Come on!" No
response. Eleana's breathing was shallow and rapid, her pulse was
erratic. Riane
honed the focus of the healing spell, drawing it tighter around
Eleana. Her own exhaustion fell away, her terror, as well, as she
concentrated her entire being on Eleana. "I
won't let you give up, Eleana. I love you too much to let you die. I
will follow you all the way to the gates of N'Luuura if—" Eleana
took a deep, shuddering breath. She coughed. Riane turned Eleana's
head to the side, and she expelled the last of the water. Her chest
rose and fell. "That's
it! That's it!" Riane
listened for the heartbeats, strong now and steady, the Kun-dalan
beat in concert with the V'ornn rhythm. She got up, ran through the
abandoned courtyard, scrabbling through piles of rubble and ancient
dustbins until she found a length of sailcloth. It was stiff and
stained, but it would do. Returning to the cistern, she wrapped
Eleana in the sailcloth and carried her beneath an archway where it
was dry. She set her down, kneeling beside her. She could feel Earth
Granary working its way deeper still, easing Eleana's respiratory
distress, slowly returning her breathing to normal. She brushed
Eleana's hair out of her eyes, wiped the rain off her face. Again,
Riane's training at high altitudes had proved crucial. This
sixteen-year-old Kundalan girl into whom Annon had been sorcerously
transferred had amnesia. She could not remember her parents or the
village where she had been born. But she was convinced that it must
have been somewhere high up in the Djenn Marre because of her skills
in mountain climbing and her acclimatization to extremely high
altitudes, as well as the occasional bursts of memory she had of
ice-encrusted mountainscapes. As
she watched Eleana breathing, Riane was once again caught up in the
strangeness and dislocation of being Kundalan and female. The odd
thing was that while she felt Riane's biological urges, Annon's love
for Eleana had neither changed nor diminished one iota. She did not
know what to make of that. She marveled at the deep and abiding power
of love that could transcend gender, species, and death. Not even the
Gyrgon technomancy was its equal. She
was so beautiful. Riane could not help herself. She felt a powerful
force drawing her down until she pressed her mouth against Eleana's
slightly parted lips. She felt her warmth, tasted her cinnamon and
chamomile breath, and for a moment she laid her head in the damp
crook of her neck. A scent drifted off Eleana's skin and hair,
indefinable, intoxicating. For
a long moment they lay that way, together, in what seemed to Riane to
be a perfect kind of symmetry. She thought she heard the Cosmos
humming all around them. At length, she sat up. She took Eleana's
hands, warmed them between her own. The
rain dripped dolefully off the slanted tiled roof of the walkway.
Birds fluttered in the eaves, peered solemnly down at them. She rose
and walked a little way under the eaves, wondering where they were.
It seemed likely that they were still within the Northern Quarter of
Axis Tyr, but, if so, it was a section Annon had never seen before. What
was this building? It was huge and forbidding. The grotesques atop
the crenellated walls were so exquisitely wrought they could only
have been made by the hands of Kundalan sculptors, but for sure the
creatures did not look Kundalan at all. They had the oddest faces, as
if animal features had been stretched over a Kundalan skull. "Unsettling,
aren't they?" Riane
started. A very short, very wide individual had emerged from a
doorway hidden behind a jumbled pile of crates. Even for a Kundalan,
he was exceptionally hairy. "I
called out before," Riane said. "Why didn't you answer? We
needed help." The
Kundalan squinted, which made him look not unlike one of the parapet
gargoyles. He had a high prominent forehead like the prow of a
Sarakkon ship, massive eyebrows, a small, veined, bulbous nose, and
lips as red as a winter sunset. He had a bushy forked beard shot
through with red. Thick hair stood up wildly from the top of his head
as if in response to hyperexcited ions. His moss-green robes seemed
too large for him; he was continually pushing up the sleeves, which
ended at his gnarled knuckles. "Need help now?" "No,
I managed on my own." "So
what is the problem?" He walked with a decided limp. One leg was
shorter than the other and as bandy as a bow. "What are you
doing here?" he asked suspiciously. "The museum is closed." "Museum?
Is that what this is?" The
bandy-legged Kundalan nodded. "It has been closed, more or less,
for years." "Then
what are you doing here?" "Why,
I am the curator," he said. "Not that it's any of your
business." "My
name's Riane. That's Eleana." "You
almost drowned in my cistern, you did." He squinted at them
through the rain. "How is it you ended up here?" Riane
bit her lip, not knowing whether to trust the curator with the truth.
"We had to get away fast. Khagggun were after us." "Ah-ha!"
A smile wreathed the curator's face, and it instantly transformed
him. He extended a pawlike hand. "Minnum's the name, tending to
the past is my game. Such as it is." The back of his hand, Riane
felt was furred. "No business, these days. As you can see."
He squinted again. "Not that there ever was much to begin with." "The
V'ornn shut you down." "The
V'ornn!" Laughter exploded out of Minnum's mouth. "Goddess
take me, the V'ornn are the reason the museum still exists. Well, two
V'ornn had a hand in it, really." "Who?"
Now Riane's curiosity had been pricked. "Well,
I shouldn't say, really. They are keeping it a secret, is what they
told me." Minnum's face fell. "Though one of them is dead
now. Tragic, really. Killed before his time, murdered most foully.
And the other—" He heaved another sigh. "Goddess take
me, I have not seen the other in over a month. Passing strange, that,
as I was used to seeing him almost every day." He squinted hard
at Riane. "How did you say you came to be in my cistern?" "We
were escaping a pack of Khagggun." Minnum
looked at her shrewdly. "You are no friend of the new regent, I
warrant." "He's
trying his best to capture us." Minnum
nodded. "I despise him, that Stogggul. A pretender is what he
is, just like his despicable father. It was the father, you know, who
ordered Eleusis Ashera killed. Yes, it was." He paused a moment
to see what effect this name might have on Riane. "You have
heard of Eleusis Ashera, haven't you? Was the true regent, once upon
a time." Riane
nodded, for the moment unable to speak. "Well,
Eleusis Ashera was one of the V'ornn who kept this place alive and
safe from the scavengers and toughs hereabouts. He loved to wander
through the exhibits. He was a very decent sort, for a V'ornn,
listened to every word of my commentary, too. It's my opinion he had
a distinct affinity for Kundalan history." Eleusis
had never told Annon anything about this place. "How could he
slip away from his duties so often?" Minnum
grinned. "I asked him that myself." He touched the side of
his nose while he rummaged around inside his robes. "You know,
he gave me a present. A memento, so to speak. After he was killed I
was doubly happy I had it." He finally produced a piece of
alloy, the size and shape of a teardrop. "It is just a trinket,
really. But." He
spun it in the palm of his hand and Riane gasped, for there standing
in front of her, was Annon's father Eleusis Ashera, tall and slender,
garbed as Annon remembered him best in white form-fitting trousers,
gold metallic-mesh blouse beneath his pure white waist-length jacket,
piped and braided in gold. In his piercing eyes Riane saw once again
the reflection of Annon's own face as it had been once upon a time.
She felt a little shiver run through her, and her heart ached to see
him again, standing so noble and proud, the icon of the Ashera
Consortium. "You
would swear it was him, wouldn't you?" Minnum said. He spun the
teardrop faster, and Eleusis began to walk. "It's as if he is
alive and breathing right beside you. It's a holoimage—Gyrgon
technomagic. It's anyone's guess how Eleusis got this, but he would
use this in the palace while he came here." He cocked his head
appraisingly. "Still, good as it is, it's not perfect. There's a
flaw, you see. Generic to these V'ornnish holoimages. I will not tell
you what it is. You have to find it yourself." Riane
forced herself to concentrate as she walked all around the holoimage. "Mayhap
I should have him walk some more." And
as the holoimage of Eleusis Ashera began again to move, Riane saw it.
"His feet don't quite reach the floor." "Yes.
That's it precisely." Minnum appeared pleased. "Asked him
about this, and he said it had something to do with the Kundalan
atmosphere interfering with the ion bursts. The Gyrgon had tinkered
with it, of course, but they could not solve the problem." Minnum
snapped off the holoimage, pocketed the alloy teardrop. "In any
event, Eleusis Ashera was not the only V'ornn who had an abiding
interest in Kundala, no indeed. There was a Gyrgon who came. Nith
Sahor. But I suppose a little snippet like you wouldn't know about—" "I've
met Nith Sahor," Riane said. "He died a month ago. That's
why—" "Nith
Sahor dead?" Minnum's eyebrows gathered like storm clouds. "Well,
that's the most scurrilous lie I have ever heard. I would know if
that Gyrgon was dead, I have the gift, and I'm telling you he is
alive." "You
have the Gift?" Riane asked excitedly. "Are you a
sorceress?" "There
are no more males of that nature, you should know that. Unless you
count the V'ornn technomages, which I certainly do not." He
squinted hard at Riane. "If there were, though, they would be
called sefiror." "Sefirum
is a Venca word," Riane said at once. "It means
'mystical community.' " Minnum
scratched his hairy cheek. "Now how would a little bitty thing
like you know that?" "She
wouldn't," Riane said. Minnum
looked hard and long at Riane, then chuckled under his breath. "Let's
forget all about fairy tales of sefiror and preternaturally gifted
girls, hmm? The fact is, I must prepare for Nith Sahor's next visit." "I
told you, Nith Sahor is dead." Minnum
scowled darkly. "Why do you keep saying that?" "My
friends were there when he was killed. They buried the body." "And
that is your evidence?" Minnum scoffed. "What is a body to
a Gyrgon, eh, tell me that? Bodies are meaningless to them. Do you
know I never saw Nith Sahor in the same one twice. Now how many
bodies do you think he used when he came here?" He held up his
stubby, stained fingers and began to count. "Ah, let me see—" "He
was already gravely injured when he came to us." Minnum
appeared unfazed. "All the same, he is not dead. I would know
it." "How?" "How
do you know it's daylight now?" "That's
a stupid question," Riane said. "So
is yours," Minnum retorted. He pointed up at the gargoyles. "So
tell me, what is your impression?" Riane
looked again. "They're . . . creepy." "That
they are," Minnum acknowledged. "Who
are they supposed to be?" "Nightmares?
A reminder of the evil that lurks inside all of us?" "I
don't believe that." "That's
because you're too young to believe it. But the fact is we all have
good and evil impulses inside us. It is simply a matter of which we
decide to act on." Minnum spat into the rain. "I will tell
you one thing, though, those statues are not made of any stone native
to Kundala." "It
looks like some kind of granite." "Except
that it is twice as hard and three times as heavy. There are veins of
undefined metal in it, as well as pockets of some kind of crystal
fused from very high heat." He squinted. "Meteorites, I
expect. Goddess knows what tools the crafters used." "They're
horrible, anyway." "Funny,
they were a particular favorite of Nith Sahor's." He chuckled.
"They used to scare the Goddess out of whoever wandered in here
in the old days before the V'ornn." "That
doesn't make sense," Riane said. "This is a museum, right?" "The
Museum of False Memory," Minnum said. "Over the years,
though, I have come to believe that it is better that most folk don't
see everything that is in here." "What
does that mean?" Riane asked, but just then she heard Eleana
calling her name. She turned, saw Eleana sitting up, and when she
turned back, Minnum had vanished. "I'm
here! I'm coming]" As
she hurried back to Eleana she could have sworn she heard Min-num's
voice drifting through the rain, "You will come back
sometime, won't you?" "Where
are we?" Eleana said. Her face was drawn and pale. "Are we
dead?" "No,
Eleana. We are alive." "This
place looks so awful. I thought—Perhaps it was a dream . . ."
She swallowed. "I was sure I had drowned." "You
nearly did. How do you feel?" "Exhausted
and cold—but safe." Eleana sighed. "You saved my
baby's life." She cupped her lower belly. "I can feel him.
Oh—I" She laughed, color flooding back into her cheeks.
Taking Riane's hand in her own, she placed it on her stomach. "Feel
him?" Riane
thought she might pass out with longing. "He's
swimming, kicking out as hard as he can. He must have known I was
swimming, too. He is still trying to help." She laced her
fingers with Riane's, kissed the back of her hand. "Thank you,
Dar Sala-at." Even
the dismal stormlight brought Eleana's cheeks into prominence. The
memory of Annon's first glimpse of her, as he and Kurgan spied on her
from a dense copse of sysal trees as she bathed in the creek near
Axis Tyr, remained undiminished in Riane's memory. The sight of her
thick, dark hair cascading down her shapely back remained a physical
presence, stirring Riane's depths. She looked quickly away, deeply
ashamed of the stolen kiss she had placed on Eleana's tender lips. "As
long as my baby's safe, as long as my baby's safe." Eleana's
whispered words were like a prayer. Rain
pelted the roof, sluiced over the eaves, blurring the view of the
courtyard, drove serpentine rivulets across the packed earth. The
wind had picked up, and now it whistled dissonantly across the
courtyard in angry gusts. All
at once, the shock of their brush with death set in. Riane shivered
so hard her teeth began to chatter. A strong gust of wind brought her
a renewed drenching. "Come
here," Eleana said. "Don't you know enough to come in out
of the rain?" She
opened the filthy sailcloth as she drew Riane close to her, then
wrapped it around both of them. "You're freezing," she
murmured. "Put your arms around me, you'll warm up faster."
Their bodies were now pressed tightly together. Eleana rested her
head against Riane's shoulder. "The oddest thing happened just
as I was coming to. I thought I heard Annon's voice. It was as if he
was standing right beside me. Isn't that strange? But maybe not. I
mean, I know he's dead, but part of me . . ." She stopped for a
minute as if groping for a way to proceed. "Maybe it's all down
to faith. I had faith in Annon—he proved to me more than once
what a good and kind heart he had, and we are taught, aren't we, that
when you put your faith in someone, you commit a part of your own
energy—your divine spark—to that someone. That's how it
was with Annon. Dar Sala-at, do not think me foolish, but sometimes I
am absolutely certain that he isn't dead at all, that he is stranded
somewhere on a distant shore, all alone, and that one day he will
return to me." Riane
was trembling. "I could not think you foolish, Eleana," she
managed to get out in a somewhat strangled voice. She could scarcely
breathe for the vise that clamped her chest. "Oh,
my love for him burns like fire!" Riane's
lips ached with desire. She could feel the words of her confession
assembling in her throat, clamoring to get out. Instead, she
untangled herself, backing away. With an enormous effort, she clamped
down on her treacherous emotions and squeezed the intimacy out of her
eyes. "What
is it?" Eleana asked. "Dar Sala-at, have I done something
to offend you?" "No,
of course not. I—" A
sudden stirring at the top of the wall made Eleana start, for at
first it appeared as if one of the more horrible gargoyles had come
to life. Then, she and Riane saw the blurring of wings, the dart of
brilliant color swooping toward them. "Look!"
Eleana cried. "A Teyj!" Indeed,
one of the four-winged multicolored birds bred and raised by Gyrgon
was coming their way. It seemed unlikely that the Teyj would have
taken much notice of them under the walkway, improbable that it would
want anything to do with them. Nevertheless, it swooped beneath the
eaves. Now
Riane could see that it carried something in its mouth. As it drew
abreast of them, it let go of a small, tightly wrapped packet, made a
little warbling song, and darted away over the courtyard wall. The
packet bounced once, then rolled to within a few centimeters of
Riane's boots. For a moment, she looked at it blankly, then she
picked it up. It weighed next to nothing. She turned it over. Its
surface was a uniform matte black, and there was a curious silver
cord, thin as a hair, holding it together. "What
do you think it is?" Eleana asked, instantly on the alert. "I
have no idea," Riane said. "What I want to know is what
this Teyj—?" "It
is a Gyrgon thing," Eleana warned. "Remember that Nith
Sahor had many enemies. Perhaps they have found us." Riane
shook her head. "If they knew where we were, doubtless we would
be prisoners in the Temple of Mnemonics now." She plucked at the
silver hair. "I'm going to open it." "Dar
Sala-at, I don't think that would be—" Too
late. Riane had pulled the hair. They heard nothing, but felt a
slight percussion as the packet rapidly unrolled. But it did far more
than unroll—it immediately began to expand exponentially. "Goddess!"
Eleana breathed. What
else was there to say? There, lying before them in all its mysterious
splendor, was Nith Sahor's voluminous greatcoat.
8 Ashes
Courion
had once shown Kurgan a seashell. It looked like nothing at all from
the outside, merely a hard, curved surface, whorled and warty, of an
indeterminate greyish hue. But when turned over, its inside was a
perfect corkscrew, pink as a delicate spring sunrise, silken and
opalescent, refracting the light into minuscule rainbows. This
is what greeted Kurgan now as he walked through the Portal of the
Temple of Mnemonics. Just a few steps ago he had been in an angulate
anteroom guarded by Khagggun in the distinctive black-and-chromium
uniforms of the packs serving the Gyrgon stronghold. Rain had been
falling outside; the long, narrow crystal windows were streaked with
it. Now he was somewhere else, inside that very same seashell, for
all he knew, but in any event wholly in the realm of the Gyrgon. For
this was the meaning of the Summoning. His
okummmon, a semisentient bionic implant, alerted him the moment the
Gyrgon required his presence. That was true of every regent on every
planet. The difference here was that Kurgan's original okummmon had
been replaced by one specially made by Nith Batoxxx. As
he proceeded down the corridor or whatever it was—this space
without specific shape or obvious light source—he had cause to
recall a conversation he had had with Annon Ashera, once his best
friend, the boy he had betrayed to Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha, who
had been returned to Axis Tyr with his head separated from his body
to be presented to Kurgan's own father, who was then regent. The
two boys had been out hunting gimnopedes. Annon had said he hated
wearing the okummmon because it tied him to another caste. Kurgan had
argued that Annon should be proud he had been implanted With the
symbol of the Great Caste, for the alternative—to toil in
lesser-class anonymity—was unthinkable. But ever since he had
discovered that Nith Batoxxx was the Old V'ornn, the trusted mentor
who had secretly trained him, ever since Nith Batoxxx had forced him
to pledge himself to the Gyrgon, ever since he had been implanted
with this special okummmon he realized that Annon was right - wearing
the Gyrgon neural net felt to him like slavery. Every
night he awoke into the utter darkness before dawn, the inside of his
left forearm afire with an itch he could not assuage. Many times he
would sit up, swing his legs over the edge of the bed, and, taking up
the triangular-bladed dagger given to him by the Old V'ornn, promise
himself that he would cut the vile thing out of him. But he never
did, though the tip of the blade had dimpled his skin more than once.
It was prudence, not cowardice, that stayed his hand. He wished to
give Nith Batoxxx no cause to become suspicious of him, for in his
heart he wished not only to destroy this particular Gyrgon who had
betrayed his trust, but to find some way to put the entire
Comradeship under his thumb as they had kept all of V'ornndom under
theirs. And
yet he knew he had to find some way to keep such thoughts out of his
conscious mind, for a Summoning was a serious matter. It was a time
of testing as well as of questions that would surely be difficult to
answer. For the Gyrgon were masters of fear. Somehow—Kurgan
would have given his left arm to know the secret—they were able
to dig down into the mind of the regent and extract that one thing he
feared the most. Then they would confront him with it, in order,
perhaps, to see how he would react and, therefore, discover of what
stout material he was made, how easy it would be to manipulate him,
how far he might be pushed. As
he continued down the featureless space he smiled to himself. Nith
Batoxxx was in for a surprise, because as far as Kurgan knew there
was nothing he was really afraid of, not even the Gyrgon themselves. He
heard a sound, no, a soft soughing as of the wind through the tops of
sysal trees, but, no, it was subtly different, more rhythmic, like
water slapping against the side of a ship. And the moment he had the
thought, he found himself on the rolling deck of a ship. He looked
around. He was at sea; there was not a speck of land to be seen in
any direction. The sky was a deep cerulean blue, the sun beating
down, turning the wavetops to brilliant scimitars. Above him, he
heard the creaking of wooden masts and spars, the soft, wet slap of
rigging, the sharp crack of sails full out. "Good
afternoon." He
turned to see the Sarakkon captain Courion grinning at him, his
shagreen-booted feet planted firmly on the deck. He had met Courion
at the Kalllistotos. Ever since Courion had forced Kurgan into
fighting in the Kalllistotos they had become wary friends. "Where
is the crew?" Kurgan asked. "There
is no crew. There is only the two of us," Courion said. "It
is good to see you, friend. We had meant to ask you why you did not
invite us to the Rescendance. Could it be that you are ashamed of
befriending a Sarakkon?" Kurgan
spent a moment taking this in. Then he said, "All right, Nith
Batoxxx, I will admit the simulation is impressive, but don't expect
me to play your game. I simply won't—" All
at once, a ferocious gust of wind caught the sail, the ship heeled
over, and Kurgan, taken completely off guard, lurched backward, lost
his footing and toppled over the rail. He plunged down four meters
into the ocean. It all happened so fast he had no time to react. And
then cold seawater struck him like a hundred fists. Stinging salt
water rushed into his nose and mouth, and he began to choke. He told
himself that this was an elaborate illusion, that nothing was real,
not even his sensation of drowning, but somehow his lung refused to
be convinced. He was drowning, there was no mistaking it.
Simulation it might be, but what if he could die here just as if it
was reality? He
forced himself to kick, pushing himself toward the surface far above.
As he looked up into the refracted and distorted disc of the sun, he
saw a splash. Something was being lowered down toward him. A rope! He
kicked more vigorously and soon reached out to grasp the end of it.
He gave it several hard tugs and was rewarded by its being hauled
upward, and him with it. "Like
a fish in a net," Courion said as Kurgan broke the surface,
gasping and coughing. "Just hold on." The
Sarakkon turned the winch, and Kurgan, soaked, bedraggled, and
panting, rose up the side of the ship. When he came abreast of the
toprail, Courion grabbed him around the waist and maneuvered him onto
the deck. Kurgan sat with his arms on his drawn-up knees, snorting
the last of the seawater out of his nose. He
wiped his face with the heels of his hands as Courion squatted down
in front of him. "Real enough for you?" "Tell
me one thing." Kurgan looked into his light eyes. "Would I
really have drowned?" "Eventually."
Courion shrugged. He fingered the lapis lazuli and jade runes in his
full beard. "We all drown eventually, don't we?" "Except,
apparently, you Gyrgon." Courion
frowned. "Surely you mistake us, friend." "Come
off it," Kurgan said shortly. In the back of his mind, he knew
this was all a stunningly conceived Gyrgon illusion, and yet it all
seemed so real. Fighting this, he said, "You are supposed to
show me the face of my own fear, Nith Batoxxx. I am unafraid of
drowning, so I have proved you wrong. I have beaten you at your own
game of illusions." Courion
wavered and vanished. In his place stood Nith Batoxxx. "While it
is true that this construct is caused by the manipulation of
hyperexcited ions, this isn't my world. It is yours. It is
pulled from inside your own mind." "What?
Another Gyrgon falsehood? I do not believe you can read my thoughts." "Not
your thoughts, precisely. But the okummmon is a link of our own
design. Through it you are Summoned at our pleasure. The particular
communication link allows us this access. All regents are Summoned
and, in the Summoning, are shown their deepest fear. Even those"—he
smiled frostily—"who believe themselves free of fear." "This
is what you call my fear? I told you. I am not afraid of drowning." "There
is another thing here for you to fear," Nith Batoxxx said. "I
find it interesting that you cannot yet identify it." "I
grow weary of this Gyrgon mind game." "Your
mind is a most curious realm, regent. Truly, I have never encountered
its like before." Nith Batoxxx held out his gloved hand, and
Kurgan's eyes watered. When they had cleared he was back in a simple
windowless sparely furnished chamber in the Temple of Mnemonics. "You
are ambitious, yes, very much so. It is part of your special
usefulness." He smiled, an unpleasant thing that unfurled like
the banner of a reaver. "It is why I supported your petition to
be made regent, why I disposed of all Gyrgon who opposed you." "What
do you mean?" Kurgan felt his hearts skip a beat. "You
killed other Gyrgon?" "I
am powerful beyond your imagination." Once again, the Gyrgon's
voice had taken on that eerie, disembodied timbre that made Kurgan
shudder despite himself. Kurgan
said nothing; he could think of nothing to say. He wondered whether
Nith Batoxxx was telling the truth or whether he was mad. It was
becoming clearer to him that Nith Batoxxx was acting as if he had two
different personalities. Nith
Batoxxx's teeth clacked together. "Understand this, regent,
my continued support is crucial to you remaining in office. And
that support very much depends upon your absolute understanding of
who calls and who answers." The smile was a cold, calculating
thing. "For a Sto-gggul that cannot be an easy thing, and I find
myself wondering whether it is even possible. But I have staked more
than you can know on you, Stogggul Kurgan, so it is something that
you will learn. Believe me when I tell you that I will see to
it." He lifted a finger. "Gyrgon are not in the habit of
giving advice, but I find I have developed a disease. Its symptom is
a curious affection for you. Therefore, heed well what next I tell
you. Ambition is a tricky trait. If it gets the better of you."
He reached out and snatched Kurgan's arm. Tapping the embedded
okummmon, he said, "Here is what you must consider. If you
exceed the authority granted you by the Comradeship, I will know. And
I will be waiting to devour you." Kurgan
stared at Nith Batoxxx. The Gyrgon was bluffing. He could not know
that Kurgan meant to control the Comradeship. He willed himself to
keep calm, to be the Gyrgon's obedient servant while in his presence. He
ducked his head. "I will be diligent, Nith Batoxxx, in keeping
my ambition in check." Not
many V'ornn could say they had heard a Gyrgon laugh. It was a sound
that affected Kurgan in a peculiar way, making him feel as if grit
were being rubbed into an open wound. He felt briefly sick to his
stomachs. "We
are bonded, you and I, in ways you cannot possibly imagine,"
Nith Batoxxx was saying. "This world we have come to know, this
Kundala, will come undone, but not in the way you think.
Because it will be you and I who accomplish its undoing." As
it had once brought them into the city, Nith Sahor's voluminous
greatcoat now whisked Riane and Eleana back to the Abbey of Warm
Current. Riane knew that the greatcoat was a semiorganic web of
neural nets, but how it actually functioned she could not say. Just
as she did not know how it knew where to transport them. She had not
spoken to it or in any way communicated with it. She had simply
wrapped it around the two of them as Nith Sahor had instructed on
that fateful night when she had made her desperate run to find the
Ring of Five Dragons in the Storehouse Door in the caverns beneath
the regent's palace. The instant the cloak closed completely over
them, Riane felt the slight sensation of dislocation, a touch of free
fall. And when she had unwound it, there they were in the infirmary
of the abbey. She
held Eleana in her arms and, immediately upon their arrival, set her
down upon one of the ancient cushioned shanstone cots. She was still
weak and occasionally dizzy. Riane fetched her water to drink. It
was not until Eleana had drunk her fill that both of them realized
that they were not alone. Across the infirmary, Rekkk Hacilar lay
upon another cushioned slab of shanstone. Thigpen crouched over him,
the upper set of her forepaws holding his head steady while a Teyj
hovered over the horrific wound in his chest where he had been
speared by the Tzelos’ mandible. Its four wings were beating so
fast they were a mere blur. "Is
Eleana—?" Thigpen began. "With
rest, she will be fine," Riane said wearily, and then, to
forestall more questions, she added: "It's a long story." "I
am gratified to see you both back in one piece," Thigpen said
shortly. "Dar Sala-at, I have something for you. It could no
longer tolerate being inside such a damaged body. Please take it." Riane
extracted the mononculus from Thigpen's throat, transferred it to her
own. The
beating of the Teyj's wings had set up a kind of harmonic in the
infirmary. Like the clearest of notes sent forth when a tuning fork
is struck, it kept doubling upon itself, strengthening until it had
created what Riane could only describe as a wave. She could not see
the wave, but she could hear it. And more than that, she could feel
it, sense it from inside her, as if it was causing her very bones to
vibrate at its perfect pitch. She experienced a sensation of extreme
well-being, knew as she glanced at Eleana's face that Eleana was
feeling the same thing. All
at once, she felt Eleana's fingers digging into her arm, and she saw
something blacker than black appear directly beneath the beating of
the Teyj's wings. It was a circle, then a lozenge, then an oval, then
a trapezoid. A soft percussion, and it expanded just as the greatcoat
had expanded at the Museum of False Memory, fitting itself like a
second skin over Rekkk's bloody wound. And like a second skin it
changed color, from deepest black to palest white before blushing to
the coppery hue of Rekkk's hairless flesh. "You
might as well get comfortable," Thigpen told them, looking
somewhat relieved. "I believe this may take some time." Riane
drew up a chair, insisted Eleana remain lying down. At first, Eleana
did not want to. She had a warrior's heart, and seeing how badly
Rekkk was wounded caused her considerable agitation. But in the end
her utter exhaustion and her fear for the baby's welfare kept her on
the shanstone cot. The
Teyj, abruptly ceasing its rapid wing beats, settled upon the "new
skin" and with its beak began to peck away, quickly, precisely,
drawing tiny bits of it up and redepositing it elsewhere. It was not
long before Riane realized what it was doing. It was realigning the
neural net it had spread over the wound to match Rekkk's energy
pattern. Annon's father, Eleusis, had told him tales of Gyrgon
healing. He had, of course, been fascinated. What boy wouldn't have
been? On the other hand, they had seemed so fantastic, so miraculous
that he had often wondered whether his father had been making them
up. Now Riane was seeing one of these astonishing tales unfold with
her own eyes, and she knew Eleusis had not been exaggerating. Now
the neural net began to pulse, just as if it was alive, a machine
inflating and collapsing Rekkk's lung. The Teyj twittered, singing a
neartrendingly beautiful song, and pockmarks began to appear in the
skin of the neural net. They extended downward into the wound. And
here was the most astonishing part, the Teyj itself appeared to be
manipulating the probes or instruments or whatever they were. On
their short journey back to the abbey, the greatcoat had somehow
managed to simultaneously warm them and dry their clothes. Riane
still felt grimy and uncomfortable, but she knew she would not leave
the infirmary until she was absolutely certain Rekkk was out of
danger. As
she sat beside Eleana, Riane could not help but steal a glance. There
now arose in her mind an air of awkwardness, a silence of unspoken
questions, an interrupted flux that felt distinctly uncomfortable.
Her thoughts ran in agonized circles. How to act with Eleana? How
could she hide her love and her desire which, like a living thing,
was growing stronger every day. "Do
you think it's the same?" "What?"
Riane blinked as Eleana's voice broke through the veil of her
anxiety. "The
Teyj." Eleana turned her head to look at Riane. "Do you
think it's the same one that brought us Nith Sahor's greatcoat?" "That
it is," Thigpen said. "But
how?" Eleana asked. "It's
a Teyj, my dear." Thigpen was following the ministrations most
carefully. The Teyj's song changed both in melody and in pitch.
Thigpen leaned over Rekkk, using her middle paws to keep his head
still, while placing her forepaws on his chest. With
a start, Riane realized that Thigpen was responding to the Teyj's
song. Somehow they were in communication. She came around to stand by
the Rappa's side. "Careful,"
Thigpen warned. Riane
could feel a pressure—a kind of flux ebbing and flowing
around Rekkk's body. "Since
when are Rappa experts on four-winged Gyrgon birds?" she asked. "You
see how it is with the Dar Sala-at, Eleana," Thigpen said. "She
will not allow me to get away with anything." "But
she's right," Eleana said softly. "How do you know anything
about Teyj?" "The
simple answer is I don't." There was a decidedly odd glint in
Thigpen's eyes. "But over the last month I have come to know a
great deal about this one." "Wait
a moment." Eleana rose on one elbow. "I remember seeing a
streak of bright color—red, green, blue, gold—in the
treetops during Nith Sahor's funeral." Abruptly dizzy, she lay
back down. "Was it a Teyj, Thigpen? Was it this Teyj?" Thigpen
nodded distractedly. "Then
am I correct in thinking it is a very special Teyj?" The
Rappa lifted her head, her eyes alight. "Powerful enemies
abound," she said softly, "making some knowledge for the
time being too dangerous to pass on." The
strange bird twittered urgently. "Yes,
yes, but we must be quiet now and concentrate absolutely,"
Thigpen admonished. "We are at the critical juncture. Rekkk's
life hangs in the balance." Eleana's
eyes were wide and staring. "Can it save him?" "Rest
now," the Rappa said quietly but firmly. "Let the Teyj—" "No!"
Eleana's voice was low but just as forceful. "I will not sleep
until I know he is out of danger." The
Teyj looked up. It pierced her with its cool, enigmatic gaze. She
could see the gold flecks in its black eyes. It twittered briefly. Tm
here, Rekkk," Eleana whispered. "I won't leave you."
Her eyes filled up with tears. "Promise you won't leave me, all
right? Promise me, Rekkk. Promise me." Riane
recalled standing in the moonslight, watching Eleana and Rekkk
practice with their shock-swords, and she was ashamed to admit a
feeling of jealousy had crept over her. Annon, the male V'ornn, had
longed to be the one Eleana looked at with such intensity, the one
she looked up to, the one she learned from. Odd to see a Kundalan
Resistance leader bonding so intimately with a Khagggun. Hurtful as
well. Riane might as well admit that, too. She knew that if Annon had
been alive everything would be different. It would be Annon who
received Eleana's undivided attention, she had told Riane so herself. Riane
gritted her teeth. She hated herself. How could she be jealous of
Rekkk Hacilar when he was lying there near death? Disgusted, she
turned away. She felt undeserving of being the Dar Sala-at. Maybe it
was all a mistake, maybe she was nothing more than a nomad, a
displaced V'ornn imprisoned in a female Kundalan body, atoning for
all the V'ornn's murderous sins. She felt tears welling in her eyes
and despised herself all the more. And
then, in the midst of her own private agony, there commenced a
clamoring in her head, the cacophony of voices so dense, so extreme
the tumbled words fell upon her like hail. She rose and staggered to
the door. "Riane,"
Eleana called after her, "where are you going?" Riane
could not reply. She was being hammered by an onslaught so painful,
so unexpected, that she cried out. In the deserted corridor, she fell
to her knees, got up, staggered drunkenly along, swinging blindly
through doorways, through rooms great and small, until she half
tumbled down the steps into the courtyard. The
rain had abated, but the mossy stones were slick, puddles everywhere,
and she fell into one and did not get up, but crawled to the cold,
damp foundation stones of the building, where she crouched, wretched
and shivering uncontrollably. And
then, through the awful pain in her mind, she heard a voice calling
as if from a great distance, a voice struggling to reach her as if
from twenty thousand fathoms beneath the Sea of Blood, a voice so
familiar it stirred her blood and made her weep. "Giyan!" She
was unaware that she spoke the name aloud, for she was instinctively
conjuring Osoru, opening the Portal into Otherwhere, beginning her
search for Giyan. Otherwhere
was filled to overflowing with shadowy presences. Riane had never
seen it so, and she grew afraid. She recalled the subtle shift she
had noted during her last visit to Ayame. So swiftly the susurrus had
become a roar. What had caused it and what did it portend? The
cacophony of voices was like a raging river against which she was
obliged to force herself. Wriggling like a sea-asp, she knifed her
way through the horde. It was easier than she had imagined, for they
were, in fact, merely shadows, their voices leaking into Otherwhere,
the massed sound manifesting shadows of these unknown spirits from
some unknown realm. By
what sorcery had their voices been raised in Otherwhere? Riane asked
herself as she searched for Giyan. And then, with a shock that sent a
heavy shiver down her spine, she saw the distinct outlines of
individuals moving within the shadow-mass and knew that these were
not Kundalan spirits. They were misshapen, some with broad flat
heads, others with hunched meaty shoulders, multiple limbs, and great
sprouting ears. They were freakish—at once horribly grotesque
and eerily familiar. And
then she uttered a little cry as she realized that these
shadow-creatures matched the shapes of the gargoyles that crouched on
the parapet of the Museum of False Memory. At first, she thought she
must be dreaming, but then her training took firmer hold, and she
knew that one did not dream of Otherwhere. So this was no nightmare.
This was real. But
as quickly as the questions flooded her mind she put them aside, for
she heard Giyan's voice, thin and quavery, calling her. She blotted
out everything, casting the Net of Cognition, a spell designed to
identify Caa, the energy auras thrown off by sorcerous Avatars. For
no sorceress appeared in Otherwhere as herself. She was searching for
the energy signature of Giyan's Avatar, the great and awesome bird,
Ras Shamra. Strange to say, she did not yet know what her own Avatar
looked like. Giyan had told her that would come in a ceremony inside
Otherwhere when she had become a true sorceress. In the meantime, her
presence took the form of a golden cube spinning widdershins on one
of its corners. Like
a fisher, she drew the Net of Cognition tighter, felt herself
traversing ever more swiftly the heaving mass of howling grotesques.
All at once, the shadows parted, and she found herself racing across
a flat, featureless plain. In
the far distance, she could see what appeared to be a mountain-scape
thrusting violently up toward the white, featureless sky. With
dismay, she saw through a gap in the mountains the sky stained the
color of blood. The presence of color was an indication of the use of
powerful Kyofu spells in Otherwhere. Her
stomach contracted painfully, for she saw something horrible rising
from the center of the plain—Ras Shamra, Giyan's sorcerous
Avatar, her presence in Otherwhere, pinioned upside down onto an
inverted equilateral triangle, black and scaly as the hide of a
razor-raptor, whose point had been buried in the plain. "Giyan!" Riane's
cry resounded, setting up a new geometry. She
hurried even more swiftly across the plain, lofted in the atmosphere
where sound traveled queerly, like muffled drumbeats, and never, it
seemed, in a straight line. "Giyan!" The
Ras Shamra's head turned slowly and, it seemed, painfully. "Ah,
Riane, at last. You have found me." "I
am here, Giyan. I will—" "No!"
The Ras Shamra twitched, its desperate shout bringing Riane to
an abrupt halt. And now she could see that an odd kind of web,
glowing and seething like strands of boiling lava, had grown over the
Avatar's left leg and wingtip. "You cannot free me. Not yet, at
least." "Let
me try. I know I can—" "Listen
to me, Riane! This is the archdaemon Horolaggia's doing, and you lack
the necessary skills to counteract it." Riane's
stomach congealed. Giyan was possessed by an archdaemon! "You
must have patience," the Rad Shamra was saying. "You must
gain the knowledge to defeat him." "But
how? Jonnqa is dead. I do not know where to turn." "I
cannot tell you." Riane
grew frantic. "But why not?" "You
see what happened the last time I tried that. Horolaggia found out—I
know not how—and sent his minion to destroy you and Rekkk."
The Ras Shamra shook its head. "You must find your way on your
own." "It
sounds an impossible task." "Have
faith. You are who you are." Riane
knew what Giyan was trying to tell her: she was the Dar Sala-at. "Now
listen," the Ras Shamra hurried on. "Because of the Ring of
Five Dragons the archdaemons know you exist, but they do not yet know
who you are. Horolaggia will do everything he can to change that. Be
extremely careful. If you act rashly, he will destroy you." "But
your life—" "I
am sworn to protect you, Dar Sala-at. That is my life, nothing more
or less." "I
know that for a lie, Giyan. Your life is so much more. I swear I will
not let you die!" "Oh,
please, swear no such vow, Riane, for it may prove your undoing—and
thus the undoing of us all. You are the once and future hope of
Kundala; nothing is more important than the resurrection of our race
from the abyss into which it has basely fallen." Riane
shook her head, her heart and her mind adamant. "You have
protected me in the past, Giyan. You have saved my life. Now I must
save yours." "Have
a care, Dar Sala-at! Do not let Annon's fierce warrior spirit
overwhelm you!" "How
can you expect me to stand here and do nothing?" "No
matter what you may think, you are not strong enough to stand against
this prince of archdaemons." The Ras Shamra's head whipped
around. "Miina protect us, no!" There was sheer terror in
her voice. "What
is it?" Riane said breathlessly. "What is happening?" The
stain upon the sorcerous mountains was widening, as if they
themselves were bleeding. "Horolaggia
comes! For the love of Miina, go, Dar Sala-at! Now!" "Not
until you tell me what is happening to you." "The
web binds me, transforming me slowly into Horolaggia or him into me,
I do not know which, nor does it matter. What matters is there is
still time before the winter solstice, before the web covers me
completely." Riane's
breath was unnaturally hot in her throat. "What happens then?" "Oh,
do not ask me that." "But
I am. You must tell me. I will not leave until—" "I
will cease to exist as you know me," she said in a gasp.
"Horolaggia will have my skills, my memories, everything that I
am. Even my Gift." The Ras Shamra was weeping, though it tried
valiantly not to. "It is part of the archdaemon's plan to escape
the Abyss, to invade our Realm and enslave us forever." "But
this is monstrous. How can I stop them, Giyan?" The
Ras Shamra spoke more quickly now, the words tumbling out, running
together. "But there is another part to their plan. They know
that you are a threat to them, and they are doing everything in their
power to delay your learning process while they plot and gather
strength." The
sky was abruptly overrun by billowing crimson clouds, the sound of
evil thunder was everywhere at once. "Ah,
great Miina—} The Maasra. Find it, Dar Sala-at.
It will help you, and it will free me! Now go! Quickly, before—" But
it was too late. Out of the billowing bloody clouds Riane saw
streaking an Avatar so shocking she felt paralyzed, for it was a
dragon— a dragon out of some terrifying nightmare. It was as
white as the ice atop the Djenn Marre, slender as a serpent with
enormous, ragged wings and filthy yellowed talons as long as Riane's
torso. Ash-white horns rose from its long, flat skull above evil red
eyes, and a double line of the same color spikes projected along its
spine and underbelly. As it dived toward her, Riane could see that
its scales were rough, irregular and curled, possibly sickly and
dying, for they flaked off in its wake, cracking open the plain of
Otherwhere as they fell. Riane
was stunned. The only existing dragons she had ever heard of were the
Five Dragons associated with Miina who, through The Pearl, had
created Kundala out of sorcery and cosmic dust. Because these Dragons
were sacred, it was impossible to choose one as a sorcerous Avatar. There
was no time to ponder this conundrum. The dragon's scream, when it
saw her, turned her bones to water. Still, ignoring Giyan's warnings,
she conjured the Star of Evermore, the most powerful spell she knew,
an Eye Window spell, a potent mixture of Osoru and Kyofu, and
projected it toward the beast. The
eerie ice-white dragon opened wide its jaws, emitting a gale of
sulphurous ash and grit that rent the Star of Evermore into ten
thousand dimming pinpoints. An instant later, it sucked all the
energy out of Riane. It was sorcery on a level she had never
experienced before. Caught
squarely in the vortex, her Avatar cube spun more and more slowly. It
lost its golden glow. Gasping and disoriented, Riane hung helpless,
watching the dragon rush toward her, talons extended. She tried to
summon another spell, but could not. Dimly,
she heard Giyan's voice in her head, orienting her. Somehow it
cleared a path behind her free of the debilitating sulphurous cloud.
Riane no longer hesitated, but stumbled backward until she was clear
of the horrific spell Horolaggia had cast. The
ice-white dragon roared, its red eyes filled with malicious intent.
It swiveled its head on its long, sinuous neck. Up came one foreleg,
and the huge talon arced, pointing at the Ras Shamra, which cried out
in agony. She
lunged forward, but heard Giyan's dreadful shout in her head: "No!
Go! Now!" Terrified
and heartbroken, Riane stifled her warrior impulse and forced herself
to conjure the spell that opened and closed the Portal. There was a
moment's familiar disconnect, then all at once, she was back on
Kundala, in her wet and shivering body, crouched against the
foundation stones of the abbey, sobbing inconsolably. What
is this place?" Marethyn asked. "You have never brought me
here before." "I
have never brought anyone here," Sornnn said. They
were in a wedge-shaped chamber lost amid a warren of corridors and
enormous somnolent spiritless spaces in one of the many warehouses
that hulked along the northern fringe of the Southern Quarter of Axis
Tyr known as Harborside. The air was faintly yellow, thick and
redolent with the commingled scents of a hundred spices. The
incessant throb of the twilit city beat a tattoo against the small,
square, smeary windowpanes, but here inside the warehouse all was
still save for the homey creak of a floorboard. The
chamber itself was altogether nondescript, unpainted, unplas-tered,
not a residence at all, it was clear, just a set of crude shelves
climbing one inner wall, some low chairs, and, in its center, a
carpet so magnificent that Marethyn was obliged to get down on her
hands and knees to run her fingers through its thick pile, to lay her
cheek lovingly against the hypnotic pattern of its glistering
harmonious colors. And
one other thing, poking up from a slender crystal vase atop a tiny
circular ash-grey table. A spray of fresh orangesweet, its colors
positively violent against the washed-out background. By which she
knew that her presence here was neither spontaneous nor
insignificant. He
set down the long, dully gleaming alloy box he had been carrying on
his shoulder and placed it in a corner on top of an identical one.
Then he poured them tumblers of a jade-green liquid while Marethyn
sat, cross-legged, delighted as a child. Downstairs, as they had
passed through the main warehouse, she had idly run a forefinger
through the dust on a container. He had taken her hand, rubbed off
the dust with the pad of this thumb, and kissed each fingertip in a
way that had sent shivers down her spine. "Here
it is only us," he said now, sitting down beside her. "In
this place we are sorcerers and conjurers, we are artists and poets,
warriors and thieves. It is possible to make of our lives whatever we
wish." They
drank in silent and solemn approval of that sentiment. "Naeffita,"
he said, "from the Korrush. It means, 'to breathe.' " It
was rich and tasted of clove, cinnamon, and burnt orange. "I
love it," she said, her voice smoky with the aftertaste. He
watched her looking around the chamber. "The tribes weave—" "Magnificent." "Yes,
magnificent magical carpets." He refilled their tumblers, and
they drank again, more slowly this time. Surrounded
by the deep silence, they gazed into each other's eyes. She put aside
her tumbler, slipped off her cloak. He rose and went to the shelves
on which were placed souvenirs, things fashioned from glass, painted
ceramic, striped stone, beaten bronze, perhaps, old and darkly
reflective that he had bought, bartered for, or had been given by
tribesmen, heads of tribes, all prized in their own way, and all most
beautiful. Arrayed carefully, lovingly, almost religiously to remind
him of the Korrush, to keep its intense flame burning inside him when
he was here in dull seething political Axis Tyr. He told Marethyn
about each one in turn, in a soft, introspective voice he reserved
for their time alone together. Marethyn marveled at this voice, a
singer's voice, really, rich, well modulated, a voice that was
careful to pronounce every syllable completely, possessing the
ability to catch you unawares and take you out of yourself. And then,
thrillingly, he did sing, softly, almost shyly, a touching thing in
itself, a folksong from the steppes, and though she did not
understand a word, the gorgeous melancholy melody nevertheless held
her rapt. Then
he had returned to the center of the chamber and was holding out his
hand. Marethyn took it, and he pulled her to her feet. She
sipped the naeffita slowly, her eyes on him as he unfastened her
robes and slowly unwound the fabric. As if she were a disembodied
observer, she saw her own body revealed in stages, diagonal arcs that
produced long swaths of luminous flesh, and she saw herself reflected
in his eyes, the involuntary reaction of his own body, and a tingling
heat stole through her, sunlight on bare flesh. She
smelled the curious spices of the Korrush, and through her artist's
eye and her love for him imagined herself there, inside the unknown,
far away from beetling oppressive strangulating Axis Tyr. She felt as
real the fantasy of him gathering her up in his strong sun-browned
arms and whisking her off to the Korrush, never to return to the
responsibilities she bore—for her work, her art, her poor
brother, her convictions, which might one day bring her glory or
bring her death. Conjuring up another life without connections,
cares, or worries, with only him to fill her eyes and hearts. An
evanescent moment, for though she could enjoy the grand and ecstatic
sweep of fantasy, she was nevertheless firmly grounded in her
reality. Naked,
she raised her arms. "Yes.
Just that way," he whispered. He
reached for her, and she came into his embrace. Her empty tumbler
fell to the carpet, rolling back and forth. Sornnn's untouched
tumbler sat on a shelf with the decanter of naeffita. Instead,
he was touching her, he was feeling her fingertips plucking off his
clothes with mysterious ease, he was sinking into her moist, luscious
lips on him, all over him, her throat humming, until he could no
longer bear the waiting. They lay for a moment upon the lush,
dazzling carpet, but he was far too excited to lie down for long. So,
he saw with quickening pulses, was she. Dusty
light seeped through the windows. It was the deep deceptive enclosing
light of dusk when, as a child, she had become briefly free of her
hingatta obligations to pursue her passion for painting. It quickly
became her private world, firing her rich imagination. And so she
worked in twilight, and her early paintings were born out of this
numinous matrix of animistic shadows. High in the wedge-shaped
warehouse chamber, the soft dying autumnal glow, a small flame,
red-yellow-red, passed like a conjurer's hand across the old bare
wall, painting upon it their shadows in movement. He
backed her up until she was pressed between him and the cool,
irregular stone. He took her like that with his eyes wide open,
stared into hers, watching her pupils dilate and contract with every
thrust and release. He heard her moaning, heard his own panting. His
blood surged like the Korrush wind over the rolling sea of grasses,
boiled like water over a crackling fire. When
she cried out, clutching him frantically to her, her thighs squeezing
and relaxing, he reversed their positions. Now his back was pressed
against the rough wall. He was still deep inside her. Her eyes were
closed, her forehead pressed against the muscled ridge of his
shoulder. She licked the sweat off him. Then her head came up, her
eyes once again locked with his, and now it was she who began to
thrust, to hurl him back against the stone as he had done to her. And
he filled up with fluids, his tender parts heavy and swollen beyond
anything he had ever known before. He felt her power, felt her power
strong upon him, and he was startled and a little bit afraid. Afraid
for her and of what he was getting her into. Then
all his thoughts dissolved in a heady rush of pleasure. He
surrendered to it and to her because he had no other choice, because
this had become his universe, and he wanted it, just like he wanted
everything else. Everything
. . . He
brought his tumbler back to the center of the carpet, where he and
Marethyn took turns drinking from it. For a time, they listened to
the floorboards creak, small, expressive sounds that defined their
isolation from the city, from the normal screech-and-hum of their
lives. "I
want to go with you," she said when the tumbler had been
drained. "To the Korrush." She was reclining in the crook
of his shoulder. "I want to experience that beauty you see, that
resides in you like this." She turned his hand over, scored a
thin line of red dust from beneath the scimitar of his nail. She took
the dust onto the tip of her tongue. "There. Now the Korrush is
inside me, too." "It
is dangerous there, Marethyn." "I
do not care." She had the distinct sense that he was speaking of
something else. A secret long hidden that had burst open inside him.
"You know that." In
fact, he did, and his hearts quickened at the thought. Still, his
guilt impelled him to add: "I would not willingly place you in
any danger." He
said this so gravely that she was forced to laugh. "Nor I you.
But it seems to me that there is a danger inherent in our seeing one
another. And, in any case, there is a certain danger you live with
every day, that you need, that you hold dear and sacred. That you
cannot live without. That is your calling." She did not say this
critically or with blame, only with the knowing intimacy that is an
alchemical product of love. "I
chose this danger. But you—" "Shall
I put it in the bluntest terms, Sornnn? I welcome whatever it is you
have in mind for me." "Without
knowing." She
ran a finger around the inside of the tumbler, put the wet spiced tip
between his lips. "Like you, I am certain of my calling." So
she said. But Sornnn wondered whether he could believe her. What it
boiled down to was a matter of trust. Could he trust her? With
everything he was. He wanted to, he knew that much, but was that
enough? There was so much danger, so much at risk. And hadn't his
father died because of . . . ? But he had to start somewhere. He had
to know and, in knowing, continue or end it. But slowly, ever so
slowly, for trust was a delicate and often bloody thing, his father
had taught him. Trust
can be a means to a bitter end, isn't that right, Father? He
rose, went to the shelf, and plucked an item. As he returned to her,
she admired anew his sleek, hard-muscled body. He opened his palm and
displayed to her an old, worn, dun-colored stone carving of a bird.
"This is a fulkaan," he said. "It is the mythical bird
that sat upon the shoulder of Jiharre, the Prophet of the Gazi Qhan,
one of the five tribes that dominate the Korrush. The fulkaan was
Jiharre's companion, his protector and his messenger." "It's
strangely powerful," she said, running the tip of her forefinger
over its rough surface. "It
is very old. It was given to my father by Makktuub, the kapu-daan—the
head—of the Gazi Qhan. My father believed that this bird, this
fulkaan actually exists. He caught the notion from Makktuub, who
swore it was true." Sornnn sat back on his haunches. "It
seems to me that my father's life was one great search for hidden
myths. He had that in common with Eleusis Ashera. That is how they
became friends." He hesitated, staring down at the fulkaan as if
willing it into life. "Eleusis Ashera had a deep and abiding
interest in the Korrush." "Za
Hara-at," Marethyn said in a hushed voice. Her hearts were
beating fast in her breast. He
nodded. "Earth Five Meetings, as it's known in the Kundalan Old
Tongue." "The
building of Za Hara-at was Eleusis Ashera's dream, a city where
V'ornn and Kundalan could live side by side." "Za
Hara-at is far more. It was my father who first took Eleusis Ashera
into the Korrush and showed him the archaeological dig where the
ruins of an ancient city had been discovered. My father was convinced
that it was the legendary city of Za Hara-at, that it is a sacred
place. And he convinced Eleusis Ashera of it." "And
you?" The edge of the ancient fulkaan's wing dug into her palm.
"What is it you believe?" "This
carving is from the dig." He stroked the fulkaan's head just as
if it were alive. Then he looked at her. "Like my father, I
believe the ruins are the original Za Hara-at. I believe we have
discovered a sacred place, a place of lasting power and influence." "I
believe you." Marethyn looked at him with shining eyes, and she
smiled a secret smile that was for him alone, and as she smiled, she
whispered, "Sorcerers and conjurers, artists and poets, warriors
and thieves. I wonder which of these you and I will turn out to be." Four
furry, small yet powerful legs wrapped her in Nith Sahor's greatcoat,
and at once Riane felt warmed inside and out. "Dar
Sala-at, what has happened?" Thigpen asked. "One minute
you're in the infirmary, the next minute you're gone." Riane
closed her eyes for a moment, but the afterimage of what she had just
witnessed made her shiver again, and her eyes flew open. "I
heard Giyan calling me from Otherwhere." Her voice was a reedy
whisper; she began to speak faster and faster. "I saw her; she
is partially covered in a sorcerous web. She—" "Calm
yourself, Dar Sala-at." Thigpen licked her face free of tears.
"Leave this communication for when you can recall it all without
so much fear." "But
Giyan—" "Listen
to what I am saying, little dumpling." Riane
sighed. It had been a long time since Thigpen had called her that; it
brought back a time before she had been revealed as the Dar Sala-at. Riane
nodded at last. "How is Rekkk?" "There
seems to be a problem. The Teyj needs you." The
wound made by the Tzelos apparently left a toxic residue,"
Thigpen said, as they returned to the infirmary. "The Teyj has
had no luck in counteracting it." "What
does it think—?" "I
told it you might be able to help." Thigpen jumped onto the
shan-stone slab upon which Rekkk was lying. "Please approach,
Dar Sala-at." Riane
could see Eleana sitting up, watching her for some sign as to why she
had fled the infirmary so suddenly. She turned her mind away,
focusing fully on Rekkk. "Forget
Osoru," Thigpen was saying, "and concentrate on what you
know of Kyofu." "I
don't know much," Riane admitted. "Even though I've read
The Book of
Recantation, I have precious little
experience with Black Dreaming sorcery spells." "Right
now anything will be of help." Thigpen
was adept at keeping her emotions hidden, but Riane thought she
detected the smallest amount of desperation creep into the Rappa's
voice. Were things so dire? Riane wondered. Was Rekkk at the brink of
death? She
closed her eyes, using her eidetic memory to go through the Sacred
Book of Kyofu page by page. The trouble was she had no idea how to
translate the passages into spells. In the case of sorcery, academic
knowledge was all but useless without training in practical
application. Still, she plowed through her prodigious memory, and
where she thought she detected spells, she tried to conjure them up.
Once or twice, she was more or less successful, but nothing she
conjured was of use. "Dar
Sala-at," Thigpen whispered, "Rekkk is running out of
time." "I'm
doing the best I can," she said. "You
must do better." And
with just those few words the Rappa managed to convey her dismay and
fury at Riane taking Rekkk into the jaws of a trap Thigpen had
clearly warned them about. Riane's thoughts became scattered and
cloudy, just as they had when Malistra had tangled her in Fly's Eye.
Rekkk is dying because
of me, Riane thought. Miina
help me. "Thigpen,
I don't know what to do." All
at once, Eleana rose and came to stand behind her. She put her hands
on Riane's shoulders, spreading warmth through them. "I have
faith in you. My heart tells me the Dar Sala-at will find a way to
save him." And
just like that, Riane's thoughts cleared. Perhaps,
she thought, I'm
approaching the heating from the wrong direction. "Thigpen,"
she said, "ask the Teyj to collapse the ion field around Rekkk." The
Teyj began to twitter nervously. "The
Teyj says that if it does that, Rekkk will surely die." "I
need access to what is killing him," Riane said tensely. It all
seemed so clear now. "I cannot do that with V'ornn technology in
place." "It
will not allow you to—" "How
long will he last?" Riane said. Her mind was afire now. "Five
minutes, perhaps ten. No more. The venom is exceptionally virulent." Was
it enough time? Riane had no idea. "Tell
the Teyj I cannot help him with the field in place." "It
knows that." A terrible sadness informed Thigpen's voice. "It
has collapsed the field." Riane
could sense that it was so, and she began work immediately. "The
Teyj will monitor Rekkk's life signs," Thigpen said. "If he
starts to fail, it will reinstate the ion field." Riane
barely heard her. She was casting Penetrating Inside, a simple but
effective spell to begin gaining knowledge of the chemical makeup of
the venom the Tzelos had left behind. Because the daemon had a
propensity for transmogrification, the venom was a dark, complex
skein, difficult to parse into its individual components. She had to
work out what the constituents had been before they had been deformed
by the daemon's system. "Three
minutes gone, Dar Sala-at," Thigpen informed her. Riane
redoubled her concentration. Sweat formed on her brow, her upper lip,
rolled tingling down her spine. There was no room for error, no room
to fail. Forget about all that, she told herself. Concentrate
on defining the toxin. "Nearly
five minutes." Thigpen's voice seemed to be coming from a great
distance. Halfway
through decoding the toxin and already she was running out of time.
She began to recite the Venca alphabet. Her knowledge of this
sorcerous language was a memory of the original Riane. Where or how
she had learned was still a mystery she would very much like to
solve, because nowadays Venca was used only by the Druuge, the
enigmatic nomads said to be the first Ramahan. They had left before
the evil had invaded the abbeys, migrating to the Great Voorg, the
vast trackless desert to the east of the Korrush, where they now
lived in almost total isolation. On her way to find the Ring of Five
Dragons Riane had come across the Druuge and had, firsthand, seen
them chant it. She had used it once before, in desperation, to
conjure the Star of Evermore. Now she knew she needed to use it
again. The problem was that the process was a complete enigma to her. "Dar
Sala-at." Thigpen's voice broke ominously into her thoughts.
"Rekkk's life signs are fluctuating radically." She
continued reciting the alphabet. The sorcery of Venca lay not in the
individual letters, but in how those letters were used. It was all in
the combining, the sorcery of language. Three-quarters finished
decoding the venom. "The
Teyj is becoming agitated. A moment more, and it will reactivate the
field." Riane
could not spare the time to answer. The decoding was not yet
complete, but she had run out of time. She chanted the Venca alphabet
into the warp and weft of the toxin's known constituents. "Rekkk
is failing, Dar Sala-at." Just
a moment more. She could see it forming and, as happened before when
she conjured the Star of Forever, Riane felt the intuitive tug in her
mind, and she used this intuition to choose the Venca letters she
chanted. Words formed in the air like clouds chased by a following
wind, like vapor steaming on a dewy morning, like smoke from a brush
fire. Either she or the spell that was forming reconstituted the
entire structure of the toxin, inserting itself between it and Rekkk,
creating first a protective sheath and then a morphed antitoxin that
spread through the wound like surf. "He's
stabilizing," Thigpen said, excitement tingeing her voice. Dimly,
Riane could hear the Teyj singing a beautiful song, a new melody. "The
wound is healing." Riane
finished the chanted spell, feeling the weariness seeping through
her. She staggered, and Eleana caught her, hugged her tightly. "You
did it! I knew you would!" Eleana said excitedly. Thigpen
jumped down, letting the twittering Teyj tend to Rekkk. Silently, she
padded over to Riane, jumped into her lap, curling up there. "Dar
Sala-at," she whispered. "What spell did you use?" Riane
did not know, but then, unbidden came into her mind the name. "Well
of Unknowing," she said. "It is ancient." "It
is an Eye Window spell, is it not?" Thigpen said cannily. Perhaps
it was, Riane thought. Eye Window was the sorcery of the original
Ramahan. A potent fusion of Osoru and Kyofu, it had been banned many,
many centuries ago as being far too dangerous, too ripe for misuse.
Even Mother had not been an Eye Window adept. Thigpen
twisted her head, staring up at Riane. "You may pet me if you
like." Riane
regarded the Rappa. Her large triangular ears were flat to her furry,
ruddy-and-black head, and her whiskers twitched spasmodically. Could
it be that she was nervous? "I
didn't think you would want me to," Riane said softly. Now
the worry had invaded Thigpen's eyes. "I like it when you stroke
my fur." "I
should not have disobeyed you, Thigpen," The
whiskers twitched more convulsively. "It isn't so much the
disobeying that matters. It's the disbelieving," Her
striped bottlebrush tail curled upward to touch Riane on the back of
her hand. "It is natural for Rekkk to disbelieve in matters
Kundalan, but you allowed his skepticism to infect you." "That
was a mistake. I'm sorry." Thigpen's
dark, liquid eyes searched Riane's face. "Dear Dar Sala-at,
there is no need for you to be sorry. I merely want to be certain you
have learned from your mistake." "But
when you spoke to me, you were so angry—" Riane,
guided by the bottlebrush tail, allowed her hand to be brought to the
thickly furred back, Thigpen's voice was gentle. "I feared for
your life. Dar Sala-at, you still have no conception of who you are
or what you will become, nor should you yet. But I do." Riane
stroked the soft thick fur, and Thigpen started to purr. The
Teyj twittered, and Thigpen sat up. "Yes, that's right."
She jumped down and said to both Riane and Eleana, "Rekkk needs
time to heal, as do you both. Let us repair to the kitchen, where I
will prepare you a meal you will not soon forget." She led the
way down the stone corridor. "You must be famished after your
activities, and you must tell me everything." Sometime
later, they were sitting at the small utility table in the scullery,
sated and calmer. Riane and Eleana had recounted the events of the
day after Thigpen had Thripped back to the abbey with Rekkk. "That
was a close call all around," Thigpen said. "A bold
strategy, Dar Sala-at, but a dangerous one. Luring the Tzelos—" "But
Riane discovered that the power bourns that run beneath the surface
can destroy a daemon," Eleana said, trying to catch Riane's eyes
with her own, trying, doubtless, to make sense of Riane's sudden
coolness. "How
valuable this will prove to be is anyone's guess. Bourn energy cannot
be easily harnessed. You were fortunate the water provided the proper
medium." Thigpen's expression told that she knew what Eleana was
up to. "Nevertheless, an interesting piece of intelligence." "Intelligence,"
Eleana said. "You sound as if we are in a war." "Indeed
we are," Thigpen said gravely. "A Portal to the
thrice-damned Abyss has been opened. There are daemons in this realm
now. The Tzelos is far from the most deadly." "I
know." Riane nodded. "I saw Giyan in Otherwhere. She is
being held captive by the archdaemon Horolaggia." "I
beg your pardon?" Thigpen blinked repeatedly. Riane
told them why she had left the infirmary so abruptly, how Otherwhere
had been invaded by an army of eerie shadows with raised voices. She
was shaking as she told them how she had come upon Giyan's Avatar
nailed to the inverted triangle, and of Giyan's warning about the
archdaemon. "So,"
she finished, "what can you tell me about Horolaggia?" "Oh,
this is bad. Far worse than I had imagined. Far, far worse."
Thigpen had hopped down off the table and, in her intense agitation,
was turning in a circle, biting the end of her tail. "For
Miina's sake, Thigpen," Riane said, exasperated. "Will you
answer my question?" "What?
Oh yes. Yes, of course." Thigpen stopped her pacing, but her
whiskers twitched incessantly. "Pyphoros, it is written, had
three children. The two males, Horolaggia and Myggorra, are bastards.
The female, Sepseriis, is a half sister." By this time, her
expression was way past bleak. "If the archdaemon Horolaggia has
taken possession of Giyan, well, then ..." Her voice drifted off
with her expression, and she began again to pace in a circle, chewing
on her tail. "Then
what?" Riane and Eleana said almost at the same time. Thigpen
wiped her cheeks with her tail. "Then, my dear, we must consider
her already dead. Worse than dead." "No!"
Riane shouted. "I will do nothing of the kind." "But
you must. She will become our most implacable enemy." "She
told me I must find the Maasra. What is that?" Thigpen
blinked again. "Why, I have no idea." "Great,"
Riane fumed. "Just great." "There
must be someone who knows," Eleana said, looking directly at
Riane and again attempting to engage her attention. "Two
or three centuries ago we would doubtless have had our pick of
tutors," Thigpen said. "But in these dark days . . ."
Again her voice trailed off. "All
right, let's backtrack," Riane said, her mind working furiously.
She knew there had to be a solution, it was simply a matter of
finding it. Then, in her mind's eye, appeared the piteous vision of
Giyan nailed to that inverted triangle, and the terror that strangled
her at Horolag-gia's coming. There may be no solution at all.
Riane thought in horror. In which case, we are all lost. She
shook her head violently to rid it of these despairing thoughts.
Despair, she had learned, was a self-defeating spiral into inaction
and surrender, two things that were anathema to her. Think, Riane,
think! "The
one clue we have is the word I found in The Origins of Darkness.
This word, Maasra, is associated with the Malasocca. It
may be the way to effect a reversal. The problem is we have no idea
of the word's meaning. It is neither Old Tongue nor Venca."
Riane snapped her fingers. "Thigpen, didn't you say that what we
needed was a first-class dialectician?" The
Rappa nodded. "I also said I knew one, the only trouble was he
was dead." "Then
let's resurrect him." Thigpen
fairly jumped. "I beg your pardon?" "I
read about such a thing in Unbinding the Forms. The rite is
called Ephemeral Reconstitution." "Oh
yes, that." Thigpen waved a forepaw. "You can forget that
particular avenue. Only sefiror were taught that rite, and there are
no more male sorcerers left on Kundala." "There
you're wrong," Riane said, a spark of hope igniting in her
breast. "I believe I met one this afternoon." Ready,"
Nith Isstal said. "Nervous?" Nith Batoxxx asked. "Not
at all. I know it is a controlled experiment. I trust you." That
was the problem with youth, Nith Batoxxx thought as he began his
last-minute preparations. They had altogether too much trust that the
Cosmos was essentially benign. He
stood at the far west end of his laboratory. Before him was the wave
chamber, a device he had been constructing for five V'ornn years. It
disgusted him that most V'ornn—even his fellow Gyrgon—had
begun to think in terms of the Kundalan calendar, where thirty hours
made up a day and seven hundred seventy-seven days made up a year,
rather than the eighteen hundred ninety that made up a V'ornn year. A
certain corruption had set in, a jungle rot he sometimes saw on
particularly virulent off-world colonies where V'ornn had overstayed
their welcome. The
wave chamber looked like nothing more than a giant-sized egg. It was
pale with a cloud sheen of ephemeral colors, utterly seamless save
for the round hatch that screwed in and out. It was very thick,
however, more than three meters, and the composite material out of
which Nith Batoxxx had constructed it was incredibly dense. Inside
was a faint purple-blue glow from three ion tubes, just enough to
allow Nith Isstal to see his way into the seat, set at a gentle
recline, and strap himself in. This he was doing now. Nith
Batoxxx nodded to him and began the complicated procedure that
screwed the hatch into place. There were one hundred thirty-seven
separate procedures to ensure the hatch was properly sealed, because
if it wasn't properly sealed . . . What
he was dealing with scared the equations out of him, and very
properly so. The
goron wave. A
goron was the largest atomic particle, the rogue particle, the
untamable particle, the death particle. It was astonishingly
difficult to understand and, therefore, to control. So far, the
particles had resisted every effort the Comradeship had made in
trying to cluster them into a wave that could deflect a goron
particle beam. The
Centophennni had used a goron-particle weapon to decimate the V'ornn
at Hellespennn. A moment burned into Nith Batoxxx's memory, the
implacable empire catching up with them, punishing them for what had
happened three centuries before. The defeat had been devastating
enough, but coupled with that was the withering realization that the
Centophennni possessed a technology beyond even the Gyrgon's
capability. The humiliation of it gnawed at Nith Batoxxx like
a razor-raptor. That had been two hundred fifty V'ornn years ago. Two
hundred fifty years spent fearful and fleeing; two hundred fifty
years spent fruitlessly trying to perfect a defense. And for the last
forty-odd years, they had been holed up on this grimy backwater world
while the rest of the V'ornn fleet passed on, to continue exploring
or fleeing, depending on which version of reality you subscribed to. He
and Nith Sahor had volunteered to head up the mission to explore
Kundala because long-range sensors showed a remarkable goron flux at
its core. In fact, the reason the V'ornn technology could not
penetrate the ferocious perpetual storms over the Unknown Territories
was because of a dense goron layer. This was why V'ornn telemetry had
failed to pierce the opaque barrier to map the three hundred thousand
square kilometers on the northern side of the Djenn Marre mountains.
None of the off-world Khagggun teams that had been sent into the
Unknown Territories had ever returned. Their sophisticated
photonic-wave communications systems had failed the moment they had
vanished into the ice and snowstorms, and that, as far as any V'ornn
knew, was the end of them. Despite countless experiments, the Gyrgon
still lacked the ability to manipulate gorons. It was widely believed
among the Comradeship that only gorons could defend against a
goron-beam attack. Though
he had vehemently argued against Nith Sahor's involvement, he had
been overruled. The results had been predictable. While he had
spearheaded the work on the first several generations of goron wave
chambers, Nith Sahor had betrayed him and the entire Comradeship by
distancing himself from the goron-wave experiments. Instead, he
became obsessed with chasing Kundalan myth, with befriending the
slaves. The other Gyrgon had proved too slow to grasp Nith Batoxxx's
radical principles, and he had left them to bicker and orate
themselves into a standstill while he threw himself into conceiving
the new generation of wave chambers. Now,
on the verge of his greatest triumph, he felt conflicted, knowing
that the blackness inside him had guided him to this point. Where
would he be without it? It was impossible to say; he had been living
with it for so long he no longer remembered what the old Nith Batoxxx
was like. He
reached out, touched the curved, gleaming side. This was the fifth
one. Its predecessors had failed. The chamber was so thick for good
reason. It was divided into two layers. The outer layer generated
random instances of goron exhibitions, the inner layer deployed the
latest version of the device Nith Batoxxx had engineered, which would
hopefully generate the goron wave. Of
course, Nith Isstal had no idea what he was volunteering for. That
was because Nith Batoxxx hadn't told him the truth. Why bother? Nith
Isstal only wanted to please him. Nith
Batoxxx double-checked all one hundred thirty-seven safety
procedures. Then, and only then, did he begin the exhibition
protocol. He was concentrated wholly on his task. When he did this,
he accessed the world through his cranial neural nets. The world
around him became particulate. He was aware of ions, photons,
gravitons—particles, waves, fields, all overlapping, all
impacting one another. His fingers, enclosed in his gloves, were
plugged into the semiorganic chip-matrix from which all Gyrgon
clothing was constructed. In this phase, he was part machine or,
perhaps you could say that the machine was part sentient. It all
depended on which layer of reality you subscribed to. The
goron wave was activated. All the readings looked as he had
calculated when he had composed the equations. His hearts leapt in
elation. Perhaps it would happen this time. The
goron bursts began, a random attack he could not control. This part
was the worst, seeing a form of energy with immense power manifest
itself without having the key to controlling it. Even after he damped
the goron excitation, the bursts continued at a low level for several
moments. He
waited. When
he was certain the chamber was clear, he began the protocol that
would spiral open the hatch. Inside, the ion tubes had fused. Nith
Isstal lay back in his chair. The air sizzled and sparked with
residual radiation. There was a curious smell, as of the sweet-salt
scent of Kundalan blood. Nith
Batoxxx played a fusion light over the body. Nith Isstal's eyes were
open. The lids had been burned off, his eyeballs were completely
white. No pupil, no iris. His mouth was half-open. His teeth had
disintegrated into a nasty yellowish powder that filled his throat.
Half of his flesh had become transparent, so that Nith Batoxxx could
see his bones, which appeared to be in the process of disintegrating
in the same manner as his teeth. Nith
Batoxxx uttered a guttural curse. According to his instrumentation,
Nith Isstal was far too toxic to handle, and it was clear that within
minutes he would be nothing more than a pile of waterless waste. It
was like watching the aftermath of Hellespennn all over again.
9 That
Which Remains
So
you have returned," Minnum said. "And brought the Rappa
with you." The curator crouched to Thigpen's level. "It is
marvelous to see one of your kind again. Deeply and truly marvelous." Thigpen
sniffed the air suspiciously, and Riane could not help but laugh.
They were standing under the eaves in the museum courtyard. Torches
flared all around, illuminating the cistern and its dark, fulminating
water. No ion-fusion lamps were anywhere in evidence, no V'ornn
technology whatsoever. "Minnum,
meet Thigpen," Riane said. The
curator smiled. "Welcome to the Museum of False Memory." Thigpen
cocked her head. "What did you do to give Riane the notion that
you were sefiror?" "Why,
nothing," Minnum said as he stood up. "Nothing I can think
of." "I
suppose you are aware that it is a major transgression to impersonate
a sefiror," Thigpen said shortly. "Let
me assure you I leave the impersonations to Gyrgon." Minnum
grinned at Thigpen and spread his hands wide. "Anyway, who is
left to prosecute me?" "There
are konara," Thigpen said, speaking of the high priestesses of
Ramahan. "Oh,
I daresay. Power-hungry fiends like Bartta." "Bartta
is dead," Riane broke in. "Is
she now?" Minnum raised a bushy eyebrow. "I would be
careful, if I were you, about jumping to conclusions concerning
Bartta." "First
you tell me Nith Sahor is alive," Riane said hotly, "now
you tell me that Bartta is, too." "That's
enough, the two of you!" Startled
to silence, Riane and Minnum both looked at Thigpen. She was up on
her hind legs, her teeth bared. Riane had seen her react this way
only once before, when she was about to attack a huge perwillon, a
sorcerous cave predator. "I
will hear no more about the Gyrgon; that's a warning you had best
take to heart," Thigpen growled. "Sensitive
little thing," Minnum said. Then he shrugged. "No matter.
This is a museum. We aim to please around here." "Hold
on," Riane said. "You told me it was best if most didn't
see your exhibits." "Oh,
well, that." Minnum waved a hand. "Perhaps I should have
said we aim to please you here, Dar Sala-at." Thigpen
came down on all sixes. "She didn't—?" Minnum
squinted. "No, she didn't tell me." "Then
how did you—?" "Same
as you, I expect." The curator hitched up his sleeves. "I
think it best if we go inside now." He glanced at the sky filled
with V'ornn light. "It is getting a mite cold for me." He
began to walk off with his heavy limp. "You can catch your death
with a chill like this, and that's the truth of it." He
led them around a dustbin piled high with debris, and Riane could see
that there were several doors cleverly hidden, accessed by
pressure-sensitive panels, one of which Minnum touched. The
interior of the museum was warm and cozy. Fires flared in mammoth
basalt fireplaces. Seeing the black rock gave Riane a momentary
start; it brought back the image of the inverted triangle, Giyan's
prison in Ayame. "This
is the Great Hall," Minnum said, walking them to the center of
the domed pentagonal space. "All exhibits can be accessed from
this central location." Shadow-grids
lay across the sea-green jasper floor. Odd, eerie-looking
furniture—seemingly composed of carved runes—crouched
against the shanstone walls. Cream-and-black onyx columns spiraled up
into the dimness of heavy beams, encrusted with soot. Copper censers
emitted tiny drifts of a musky incense, which mingled with the scent
of aromatic oil burning in the squat, filigreed, bronze lamps. There
was a sense of deep silence, of isolation from the frenetic noise and
hustle of the city. Minnum
turned abruptly and stared hard at Riane. "I said you would come
back, didn't I?" He nodded. "I expect you did because you
saw them." "What
is he babbling about?" Thigpen snapped. She was clearly still
upset. "Tell
her, Dar Sala-at," Minnum said. It seemed a kind of dare. "The
carved gargoyles on the parapet are daemons," Riane said to
Thigpen. "I saw their shadow-outlines in Otherwhere." "At
least one of them has figured out how to get out of his prison,"
Minnum said. "No longer any doubt about it." "What
do you know about it?" Thigpen snapped. With
that, Minnum made a complex figure in the air with the tips of his
thumb and forefinger touching. There came the sound of a marc-beetle
being put to a flame, and where Thigpen had crouched was now a very
horrible-looking lizardlike creature. It had eight short but powerful
legs, oily blue-black scales, a long, flat head with a flicking,
purple tongue, and a thin, ridged tail studded with hooked barbs. Its
lambent yellow eyes were alight with a malevolent intelligence. It
hissed and emitted caustic orange fumes from its eight slitted
nostrils. "N'Luuura!"
Riane cried, coughing. "A razor-raptor!" "Ah,
I see your knowledge extends to V'ornn xenobiology." Minnum
nodded. "Impressive, I must say." He made another figure in
the air, this time touching the tips of his thumb and pinky together,
and Thigpen reappeared. She looked around, for a moment bewildered. "Feeling
all right after your little, er, sojourn?" Minnum asked. "That
was ... I must say it was by jar the most disgusting
experience I have ever . . ." Thigpen drew herself up. "My
apologies. I could not have imagined." "That
one of my kind could still exist?" Minnum smiled. "Thankfully
you are not alone. I have survived this long by, uhm, how would you
say it, keeping a flat outline." "A
low profile," Riane said. "Precisely." "But
why do you have to hide?" she asked. "We
have no time for history lessons," Thigpen said briskly. She had
recovered her aplomb with admirable alacrity. "Now that you have
proved your credentials, Minnum, what can you tell us about the
Ma-lasocca?" "No
easy questions from you folk, I see. Well, I expected that. The
Malasocca, eh? Now let me see." Minnum squinched up his eyes,
staring at the smoke-dark ceiling high overhead. "A very
nasty spell, that. It used to be invoked before Miina consigned
the daemons to the Abyss. Power is their game. Power at any cost. The
lust for it is built in them, really. Part of their essential makeup.
But we could not have daemons transmogrifying themselves into
sorceresses now could we? Very dangerous, that. It was one of the
reasons they needed to be locked away. You cannot trust a daemon, not
for an instant." "Then
why weren't they locked away from the beginning?" "An
excellent question. We thought we could change them. Well, that's
part of our nature, ever optimistic, always seeking to make
things better, that's our game." He squinted at Riane.
"It is our greatest strength, Dar Sala-at." "But
it's also what caused needless suffering and death." "Well,
it surely caused that, suffering and death," Minnum said
thoughtfully. "But I don't agree about the needless part. You
see, we judge all creatures as good and worthy of life until proved
otherwise. If we abandoned that philosophy, well, think of it, we
would be as arrogant as, well, as V'ornn, wouldn't we? We have a lot
of power, and with that goes responsibility. We cannot set ourselves
above others, judging them before we give them a chance to show their
true nature. Even if they prove to be evil, even then, we give them a
chance to change. How can we do less?" Thigpen
shook her head. "We appreciate the history lesson, Minnum, but
could we get back to the Malasocca?" Minnum
clucked his tongue against the roof of his mouth. "Malasocca is
a difficult and complex spell. Why do you ask about it?" "A
sorceress has been attacked," Riane said. "By
the daemon that has managed to escape. Well, it would have to be an
archdaemon to get through, wouldn't it?" Minnum shook his head.
"But I wonder how?" Riane
could not tell him that in breaking the sorcerous circle of the
Nanthera Giyan had violated Miina's law and inadvertently opened a
Portal. Too many questions would be raised about why she had invoked
the Nanthera in the first place, and that could jeopardize Annon's
secret. The
curator eyed them both. "Which archdaemon has her?" "Horolaggia." Minnum
frowned. "Sorry, my hearing must be going. I thought you said
Horolaggia." "I
did." "Ah,
no!" Minnum sat down abruptly on a burnished heartwood chair.
"Miina protect us ally.” A
cold, clammy terror gripped Riane's heart as she saw the stricken
expression on the sorcerer's face. "What
is it?" She was almost afraid to ask. "I
have no counter to this . . . abomination, a Malasocca invoked by one
of Pyphoros' bastard get." "How
long can she last?" Minnum
squinted. "When was she taken?" "Just
days ago." "Depends
on how powerful she is, but I would say at the outside the dead of
winter." "Dear
Miinal That is only six weeks away." "Minnum,
you must help us," Thigpen said. "Does the word Maasra
mean anything to you?" Minnum
shook his head mutely. His eyes seemed far away. "It
is somehow associated with the Malasocca," Riane said urgently. "Can't
be," Minnum said bleakly. "Would know it or, anyway, have
heard of it." Thigpen
put her forepaws on Minnum's knees. "Maasra is not Old
Tongue, nor is it Venca. Our best guess is it's an obscure dialect of
some sort. I know someone who might be able to help us. A
dialectician. The problem is he's dead." As Minnum's eyes rose
to lock with hers, she said, "We need you to conjure the
Ephemeral Reconstitution." Spice
Jaxx's was an octagon-shaped cafe in the center of Axis Tyr's vast
and seething spice market, which never closed. Neither did Spice
Jaxx's. Line-General Lokck Werrrent had arrived for his appointment
with Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin with fifteen minutes to spare. This
was deliberate. He wanted to sit alone with a flute of fire-grade
nu-maaadis and gather his thoughts before Olnnn delivered whatever
bad news he had. Line-General
Werrrent had for many years been close to Olnnn Rydddlin. They had
what Werrrent privately thought of as a father-son relationship.
Werrrent was proud of Olnnn's accomplishments, especially considering
his background, and of how tough the younger Kha-gggun had proved
himself to be. Still, there remained a thorn in the blood-rose of
Werrrent's affection—the fact that Olnnn, so young and
relatively inexperienced, had jumped over him and every other
Line-General to be named the new Star-Admiral. Not
that Werrrent envied Olnnn's daily encounters with Kurgan Stogggul.
The father, erratic and paranoid, had been difficult enough to deal
with, but the son—well, in Werrrent's considered opinion Kurgan
Stogggul was a dangerous egomaniac. Worse, Werrrent agreed with a
number of the other Line-Generals that Kurgan Stogggul had a secret
agenda that would benefit just one V'ornn: Kurgan Stogggul. Why
was it, he asked himself, that just when things looked as if they
could not get worse, they did? Before
he could think of an answer, Olnnn Rydddlin appeared and sat down
opposite him. He
waited until Olnnn was served his drink. "So. What news?" When
Olnnn had told him of the Gyrgon's decision to suspend the
implantation of the okummmon among the Khagggun ranks, Lokck Werrrent
sat still and silent. At
length, Olnnn said, "Don't you have any comment?" The
Line-General shrugged his shoulders. "What is there to say? It
is a Gyrgon decision. We obey Gyrgon decisions. I, for one, am
grateful that they have the best interests of my Khagggun in mind." "In
other words, you believe them." Lokck
Werrrent's dark eyes scanned the younger Khagggun. "I have no
reason not to. I cannot claim to understand the decisions of the
Comradeship, and neither can you." He took a swig of his
numaaadis. "You have always harbored a dark and gloomy bent. I
myself see nothing dire in this news. On the contrary—" "They
will never resume the program," Olnnn said softly, "I do
not care what the regent claims." "This
is treasonous talk!" the Line-General said in great agitation.
"We Khagggun were promised Great Caste status. To renege would
be an intolerable dishonor." "This
is what I am saying." Lokck
Werrrent heaved a great sigh. "You are like a son to me,
Star-Admiral. You know this well. And now you are my superior. But I
am not so much a fool not to advise you to keep such radical thoughts
to yourself. Any other general hearing these words—" "Which
is precisely why I have come to you. I trust you with my life. You do
not know the current regent as I do." And then he did something
he had sworn to himself he would not do. He told Lokck Werrrent how
he and Kurgan had murdered the former Star-Admiral's concubine and
had blamed Wennn Stogggul for it. "It was all part of Kurgan
Stogggul's plan to pit his father against the Star-Admiral. As he had
foreseen, they caused each other's death. Kurgan ascended to regent,
and I became Star-Admiral." Lokck
Werrrent grasped Olnnn's wrists. "Your hands are covered in
blood. You have already committed treason once." "That
is not the way I see it. I helped rid us all of Wennn Stogggul. That
skcettta was born a razor-raptor. And as for his son—" "Keep
your voice down, Star-Admiral," Lokck Werrrent said with a
pained expression. "Lokck,
I am uncomfortable with you addressing me by my rank when we are
alone together. After all—" "But
you are my Star-Admiral. It is impossible to address you any other
way." Olnnn
gave a wan smile. "This is you through and through,
Line-General." "Protocol
must be observed. Without this discipline we would soon descend into
a pack of wild animals." "Perhaps
you are right," Olnnn mused. Lokck
Werrrent studied him for some time. "But there are moments—brief
and infrequent—when extraordinary circumstances allow a ...
bending . . . of protocol." He inclined his square head. "So
tell me, Olnnn. What black thoughts have invaded that dour mind of
yours?" Olnnn
rubbed his forehead. "The truth is, being so close to the new
regent I grow ever more suspicious. This elevation to Great Caste
status was his father's idea. It was how Wennn Stogggul was able to
forge his alliance with the former Star-Admiral. But that alliance
proved false. Why should this elevation to Great Caste status be
anything else?" "The
Gyrgon gave it their blessing. The okummmon is a Gyrgon
bioinstrument." Olnnn
Rydddlin's hand gripping his silenced him. Olnnn slowly turned his
arm over, revealing the newly implanted okummmon. "I
have little use for this bioinstrument. And I am wondering
whether the high command was implanted simply so that the regent
could keep closer tabs on us." "The
regent?" "Think
about it. For centuries the castes have remained the same. Until
Wennn Stogggul. How could he possibly convince the Comradeship—" "Again,
I would point out that none of us can claim to know a Gyr-gon's
mind." "Gyrgon
abhor change. That is indisputable." "Yes,
but you know as well as I do that the okummmon can only be implanted
on Gyrgon orders." "Perhaps
the regent is in league with that Gyrgon, Nith Batoxxx, who skulks
around the regent's palace as if it is his own. I do not claim to
have all the answers, Line-General. But like it or not change is in
the air and I grow fearful for us—for all Khagggun. I believe
the son is building on the father's lie." "Why
would he do that?" "To
keep us under control; to deprive us of power." "You
are describing a decidedly paranoid individual." "That
is just my point," Olnnn said grimly. "He is a V'ornn who
plotted his own father's assassination." "You
yourself pointed out that getting rid of Wennn Stogggul should be
viewed as a virtuous act. You cannot have it both ways." "You
are blind, Lokck." "Because
of our long friendship I choose to ignore the insult. Kurgan Stogggul
is my regent. You would do well to remember that." "I
believe he poses a grave danger to us." "You
enjoy the loyalty of every Khagggun. So long as this is true there is
no danger." Lokck Werrrent shook his head. "Olnnn, when was
the last time you had any fun?" This
was not a question to which Olnnn could respond. "Even
before your . . ." Lokck Werrrent could not stop himself from
glancing at the bare bones of Olnnn's sorcerous leg. "Even
before your misfortune you were a dour sort. How many times have I
tried to spice up your life? Remember that time—" "The
four females you brought." "Two
were for you." Olnnn
crossed his arms over his chest, looked away. "All
death and no fun is no way to live your life." Olnnn
swung his head around. His eyes were baleful. "We are Khagggun." Lokck
Werrrent sighed deeply, "Even Khagggun must take their pleasure.
But there is no pleasure for you, is there, Olnnn?" He shrugged.
"I thought perhaps coming back from the dead might have had a
salubrious effect on you." "I
no longer sleep at night. I dream without the benefit of sleep. I
have nightmares whose meaning I do not understand." "Perhaps
a Genomatekk—" "No
Genomatekk can cure me." "Then
be kind to yourself. Come with me to Dobbro Mannx's dinner party. Do
you know him? He is a well-respected solicitor-Bashkir. A very
amusing fellow." "Thank
you. No." Olnnn placed some coins on the table. "I see this
has been a waste of time." "I
never forget a conversation." Lokck Werrrent held him in his
steady gaze. "Olnnn, you know me better than any other V'ornn.
You know that given just cause I will defend my Khagggun to the
death." Olnnn
returned the look. "Then I will bring you your just cause,
Line-General." He inclined his head stiffly. "Enjoy
yourself tonight." "I
wish you the same, Star-Admiral," Lokck Werrrent said as he
rose. "But I very much fear my words fall on deaf ears." The
operative word here is 'ephemeral’, " Minnum said as he
gathered oddments into a rough circle. He
had taken them into a smallish gallery in the north wing of the
museum. Here were displayed a surprisingly small number of exhibits.
These were all in superbly wrought cases of carved heartwood or
etched bronze. Unlike the mess of the courtyard, everything here was
neat and sparkling clean. "Once
this dialectician is cantated—that's what it's called, by the
way—into this realm you will have three minutes, no more, is
that understood? Humph!" He seemed to be muttering to himself.
"Three minutes! Hardly a successful incantation at all. What
were they thinking?" With
the sefiror bustling about, Riane peered into one case after another,
able to make sense of nothing she saw. The interiors seemed filled
with a swirling mist. She might have thought the cases were unused
save for the fact that they had been lovingly hand-rubbed to a deep
luster. There were no printed captions anywhere in evidence. And, in
any case, what could a caption tell you about something you could not
see? No wonder this museum attracted so few visitors. "All
right, then." Minnum stood in the center of the gallery, his
strange and exotic paraphernalia piled around him. "Please stand
there, Dar Sala-at. Yes, right. And you, Thigpen, just there across
from—right, then, what is the name of this dialectician of your
acquaintance?" "Cushsneil,"
Thigpen said at once. Minnum
nodded, pushed up his sleeves, and conjured what looked like a stick
of ice-blue chalk. On the stone floor of the gallery he drew an
equilateral triangle. This
was the most ancient symbol of original Ramahan power, Riane knew.
Which was, she supposed, what made Giyan's Otherwhere prison so
terrifying on an elemental level. It was the inversion of the symbol,
the sigil of Evil made manifest. But now what Minnum was drawing
caught her attention fully. It was the inverted triangle superimposed
upon the first, creating a kind of six-pointed star. "Pheregonnen,"
the senior said, beginning the rite. "Behold the Design whose
Center is everywhere, whose Points are nowhere." Into a small
fire-blackened brazier he sifted a succession of powders taken from
uncapped phials, then grated a bit of odd-looking horn, along with
what looked like shanin and latua. At length, he conjured a fire-red
substance. It drooled thick as gelatin into the brazier, producing a
dense, billowing cloud of yellowish smoke, which swirled around the
gallery in similar fashion to the mist inside the exhibit cases. Riane
tried to hold her breath, but finally even her hardened lungs gave
out. She inhaled the smoke and staggered, feeling light-headed and
dizzy. The air seemed to sizzle and dance with little sparks
that twinkled at the edges of her vision. But every time she tried to
look at them directly they disappeared. Then
her attention was redirected to the center of the Pheregonnen, for
the twinkling sparks were coalescing into a sphere, which elongated,
slowly changing shape into that of a Kundalan male. From his robes it
was clear that he was a konara, a high priest of Ramahan. "Cushsneill"
Thigpen cried happily. "I thought I would never see you again!" "Nor
I you," the Ramahan said gravely. He had long grey hair that
rose from a pronounced widow's peak in winglike waves, a blade-thin
nose, and dark, hooded eyes. His was an ascetic's face, the face of a
scholar, a Ramahan of unwavering dedication and service. "What
has caused you to rouse me in this manner?" "Mind
the time," Minnum warned them. "There won't be a second
chance." "Right."
Thigpen nodded. "Cushsneil, this is Riane, the Dar Sala-at." "The
Dar Sala-at?" The wise eyes opened wide, blinking several times
as Cushsneil looked around. "If you are the Dar Sala-at, then
where is your Nawatir?" "I
do not know," Riane said. "I have no Nawatir." "Oh,
dear. Oh, dear." The deceased dialectician clucked his tongue.
"You are most vulnerable without your Nawatirl" "We
don't have time for this," Minnum muttered darkly. "For
Miina's sake, get on with it." "We
need your help," Riane said urgently. "Can you tell us the
meaning of the word Maasra?" Cushsneil
frowned. "If you ask about the Maasra then the Portal
must have come unsealed. Horolaggia has been sighted?" "Yes,"
Riane said. "A beloved sorceress has been taken by this
arch-daemon and is being transmogrified through the Malasocca. We
have until winter solstice before the possession becomes
irreversible." "Evil
times, indeed," the dialectician rumbled. "You must
exercise extreme caution. I cannot emphasize this enough. Intensive
training in the sorcerous arts is essential before you seek to engage
Horolaggia, and even then, there is no assurance ..." He
shuddered. "Oh, dear, oh, dear." "What
about the Maasra?" Riane asked. "Ah,
that." Cushsneil rocked from his heels to his toes. "It is
a colloquial word—a holy word, the Gazi Qhan would doubtless
say, for it is of their dialect. The Maasra is another name
for the Veil—the Veil of a Thousand Tears." Riane
almost jumped out of her skin in excitement. "The Veil of a
Thousand Tears is what Giyan told me I had to find. Why? What is it?" "It
is written that when the Five Sacred Dragons of Miina used The Pearl
to create Kundala the resulting cataclysm shattered The Pearl's outer
layer. The largest piece of this survived the creation. It was used
to catch the tears the Five Dragons shed at the birth of Kundala, and
their tears turned the hard shell into flowing fabric of fantastic
colors and incomparable sheen." "Why
did they weep?" "Because
they foresaw the death and destruction that would accompany the
decline of the Kundalan race." "So
we were doomed even before any of us were born." "Nothing
is set in stone, least of all the subject of a sacred Dragon's second
sight." "Dear
Cushsneil," Thigpen broke in, "can you tell us where to
find the Veil of a Thousand Tears?" "I
cannot even tell you whether it exists. Though many warring factions
have made obsessive lifelong searches for it, have murdered for its
secret, have died in exile and madness, the Veil remains hidden, a
legend only." "But
it does exist! Giyan told me I must find it. It is the only way to
free her. If I do not, she will die." "The
Malasocca is worse than death—far worse. If the web is
completed, she will be trapped, subservient to the archdaemon's will
for all time." The dialectician's image began to sparkle, and
they could see the far wall through his body. "He
is going," Minnum said. "I warned you." "Please,"
Riane said desperately. "You must be able to tell us something
more." "I
have already told you what I can." Cushsneil's voice was growing
faint, indistinct. "The rest you must discover on your own." "Wait,"
Riane cried. "If
you are truly the Dar Sala-at, it is written." "Explain
yourself!" It
was too late. The dialectician had vanished altogether. Cursing
mightily, Riane turned to the sefiror. "Who are the Gazi Qhan?
Where are they?" "Ah,
at last an easy question." Minnum rubbed his hands together as
he led the way out of the gallery. The yellow smoke had vanished
along with the chalk-mark Pheregonnen. "The Gazi Qhan are one of
the Five Tribes of the Korrush. If you are determined to find the
Veil of a Thousand Tears I suggest you start there." "Doubtless
we should begin our journey north as soon as possible," Thigpen
said with a curious glance at Riane. What
was she playing at? Riane wondered. She would have expected Thigpen
to raise another caution flag, especially in light of... Then she got
it. She pulled at Minnum's sleeve so forcefully that the sefiror
stopped in midstep. "Cushsneil was looking right at me when he
warned of taking on Horolaggia without the proper training. I may be
the Dar Sala-at, but I am not even an ordained sorceress. Giyan was
right. I must be patient. I must spend the time allotted to me in
learning." "And?"
Minnum inquired. "Well,
I was thinking that I could apprentice with you, that I could . . ."
Her voice trailed off when she saw the dark look Minnum shot Thigpen.
"What is it?" "Will
you tell her, dear Rappa, or shall I?" "It
is your right," Thigpen said. "And your duty." Minnum
nodded, sighing. "Much as I am pleased by your request, Dar
Sala-at, I cannot honor it." "But
why not?" Riane asked. "You are sefiror, maybe the last of
your kind. Like Mother, you are a connection with the time before the
V'ornn. Who better to teach me sorcery?" Minnum's
expression softened. "Dear Dar Sala-at, it is precisely because
of all this that I am forbidden to teach you or anyone the sor-cerous
arts." He lifted an arm. "But come, let us not speak of
this in cold corridors." He
took them back through the glittering Great Hall into a narrow
gallery filled with the sculpture of serpents. Riane, who
automatically took in details, noted the similarity between these
serpents and the citrine image of Miina's sacred snake that she had
come across in the Kells below the Abbey of Floating White. Minnum
poured them flagons of a warm, crisp, highly spiced wine that Riane
had never tasted before. They sat on upholstered chairs whose
elongated backs reclined at odd angles, before a crackling fire in a
stone hearth. Minnum
drained his flagon, then wiped his red lips. He sat forward, elbows
on knees, and when he spoke his voice was scarcely above a whisper.
"I suppose you have some knowledge of the uprising that usurped
power from Mother." Riane
nodded. "It happened on the day the V'ornn arrived, the day The
Pearl was lost." "Ah,
not lost, no." Minnum shook his shaggy head. "The Pearl was
cast out from Kundala by the Great Goddess Herself. After the cabal
of sefiror Ramahan took Mother's power and gained control of The
Pearl, after they peered into its depths and saw not Truth but what
they wanted to see, Miina in Her fury took up The Pearl and carried
it far, far away. She had made The Pearl for Kundala—it was our
birthright. But when we abused its power, we abrogated that right and
She abandoned us. "The
consequences of this were many. We lost what power The Pearl might
have given us to resist the V'ornn invasion. Miina stood by, mute,
Her heart hardened against Her people while the sefiror cabal used
the Rappa as scapegoats and had them slaughtered. She stood by, mute,
Her heart hardened when the priestesses took back their power. The
konara could have driven the sefiror out of the abbeys, but they
could not strip them of their sorcery. So what did they do?"
Minnum sighed. "They killed the sefiror. Every last one of
them—save me. I survived by fleeing to a place where they would
never think to look for a sefiror—the Korrush. For two decades
I lived there among the Jeni Cerii, the fierce warlords of the
steppes, in complete anonymity, learning the many ways in which to
kill an enemy. That was where I got this." He slapped his bandy
leg. "Chasing raiders, I fell from a kuomeshal going full
gallop, took one nasty fall. We were a hundred fifty kilometers from
nowhere, and they slung me across my mount and took me back to
Bandichire, and I never made a sound. They set my leg as best they
could, but the damage was already done." Thinking
of how Giyan had reset Annon's leg, Riane said, "Why didn't you
use sorcery?" "I
was in hiding, wasn't I? I was among the Jeni Cerii; everything had
to appear normal." He grinned. " 'Sides, they told stories
about my bravery for months afterward." He resettled himself.
"Now where was I? Oh, yes. Capsule history. I became an apt
pupil because I had no other choice, then I became an adept. When I
realized I was admired and feared I left straightaway. Returning to
Axis Tyr, I discovered this place, abandoned and falling into
disrepair, and decided I would become its curator. Then, on one of
his long walks, Eleusis Ashera wandered in and stayed to view all the
exhibits." "But
none of this explains why you can't teach me," Riane said. "I
must save Giyan from Horolaggia. I will not allow her to be
transmogrified. You must help me." Minnum
shook his head, and his eyes were suddenly sunken and sad. "However
much I want to, Dar Sala-at, I cannot. This is my punishment, you
see. Miina's punishment." "What
do you mean?" "For
allowing The Pearl to stray into evil hands, the Great Goddess
stripped Mother of much of her power." This
was true, Riane knew, for Mother had told her as much when she,
Riane, had freed her from her imprisonment. "For
being the only sefiror clever enough to survive our genocide, Miina
meted out another form of punishment. I have knowledge, Dar Sala-at,
so much knowledge. And yet I am unable to convey it in any form." Riane's
heart broke for Minnum. "But you did nothing wrong. In fact, you
alone survived. Why should you be punished? How could Miina be so
cruel?" "Is
it cruelty, Dar Sala-at? Do not be so quick to judge the Great
Goddess. Through greed, envy, arrogance we lost the greatest gift.
Could it have been because we had become complacent, because we no
longer put much value on an object that is beyond value? Because we
had become corrupted by the power we wielded? If that be so—
and I, for one, fervently believe that it is—then what remains
for us after the ruin we have been brought to? Another day, and
another, all of which must be fought for with the blood and the death
of loved ones. Suffering burns away arrogance, greed, envy. Only
through this crucible of fire can we learn what we have forgotten.
Only then will we come to know who we really are and where we belong
in the Cosmos." Riane
hung her head. "You say you are enjoined from teaching, Minnum,
but truly you have taught me something vital this night." He
smiled. "Then mayhap I have proved my worth to Miina, for I do
not think that you arrived at my doorstep by simple chance." "Then
help me further," Riane pleaded. "I did not need Cushsneil
to tell me I am unprepared to face Horolaggia. There is no use in
trying to save Giyan only to die in the process." Out
of the corner of her eye she could see Thigpen beaming at her. She
had learned this last lesson well. Minnum
was scratching his hairy cheek. "Mayhap you can learn what you
need in the Korrush. Look here." He gestured with his right
hand, and a map appeared on the floor. Riane and Thigpen hunkered
around it. "Behold
the Korrush," he said. "The Five Tribes inhabit the wild
steppe in a kind of uneasy truce, but there are always squabbles
among the kapudaan—the chieftains—and skirmishes along
the borders. Each tribe is centered around its own area, which is
known as a chire. There is a central village in each chire with the
same name." His stubby finger stabbed out. "The warlord
Jeni Cerii are here in Bandichire." And again, moving southwest.
"The Rasan Sul are the spice merchants the SaTrryn trade with;
they are located here, in Okkamchire." His finger moved west.
"The Han Jod are artisans here in Shelachire. Because the Bey
Das are historians and archaeologists they have special dispensation
to cross chire borders safely. They are essentially nomads, spread
out all across the Korrush. Their main site is here in the barely
visible village of Im-Thera. There lies Za Hara-at, the fabled and
ancient Earth Five Meetings." Firelight
played across Minnum's face, highlighting the reddish hairs in his
forked beard. A log gave way, crashing softly into the pillowy white
bed of ash. Minnum rose, limped over to the hearth to put another log
on. When he came back, he pointed again to the sorcerous map he had
conjured. "Here
in Agachire, on the eastern section of the Korrush, near the border
to the northwestern corner of the Great Voorg, dwell the Gazi Qhan,
the tribe Cushsneil mentioned from whose dialect Maasra comes.
They are the mystics of the Korrush, the Gazi Qhan, and I confess I
know little about them save this. There is a district in the village
of Agachire known as Giyossun. Here is a kashiggen called Mrashruth,
which means, i believe, Tender Willow. It is run by a dzuoko named
Perrnodt, who I think may be able to assist you." Riane
was shocked. "What does a Tuskugggun know of Osoru or Kyofu?" Minnum
cocked an eyebrow. "Who said she was V'ornn?" "She
must be. Every Kundalan dzuoko was replaced by a Tuskugggun when the
V'ornn took possession of the kashiggen." "Apparently
not every dzuoko," Minnum said dryly, then he addressed
Thigpen. "Is she always so sure of herself?" "I
would venture to say it works to her advantage as well as to her
disadvantage," Thigpen said just as dryly. Minnum
grunted, turning back to Riane. "Be that as it may, Perrnodt is
not V'ornn." "She
is Gazi Qhan then," Riane said, determined to listen more
closely. "Of
that I have no knowledge," Minnum said softly, his eyes afire.
"What is of interest to all of us, however, is that she is
Ramahan." "It
is settled then," Thigpen said. "The Dar Sala-at and I will
journey to the Korrush there to find this Perrnodt." Minnum
shook his head. "Where the Dar Sala-at now ventures she must do
so alone." "Impossible!
This Korrush is far too alien and dangerous for me to allow—" "You
will not go, Thigpen." Minnum's voice was soft but commanding.
"It is written in the Prophesies of the Druuge." He planted
his feet firmly on the floor. "Moreover, she cannot go with her
sorcery intact." Thigpen's
chest expanded, and she stood up warningly on her four hind legs.
"Now you go too far. Without her spells, she will be
vulnerable—" "As
you have doubtless discovered of late, she is vulnerable with the
pitifully small bits of knowledge she has. Moreover, without proper
training I warrant she could do more harm than good with what she
does know." "How
dare you talk about the Dar Sala-at in that way!" "I
speak only the truth, Thigpen. Riane must be properly trained,
and for that she must travel to the Korrush." "There
has to be another way. She—" "I've
heard enough out of the two of you!" Riane cried. "Stop
talking about me as if I wasn't in the chamber." She took a
breath. "Now, Minnum, tell me why I cannot use my sorcery in the
Korrush." "I
said that you cannot go with it intact, Dar Sala-at. The two are not
the same." "How
do they differ?" Riane said. "I
need to extract all your sorcerous knowledge. You will not remember
one iota of it." "Then
how will I introduce myself to Perrnodt?" Riane said. "How
will she teach me?" "Excellent
questions," Minnum replied. He went to a desk, pulled open one
drawer after another. "Now where did I stash that blasted
thing?" he mumbled as he rummaged through the jumbled contents
of the desk. "Ah, here it is." He brought back a highly
polished heartwood box entirely graven with unfamiliar runes, and
opened it in front of them. It appeared filled with the same
opalescent mist Riane had noticed in some of the museum's exhibit
cases. But the mist did not dissipate with the box's opening; in
fact, if anything it seemed to thicken. A certain chill had entered
the chamber. It took Riane but a moment to realize that it came from
the box, or rather its mysterious contents. Minnum dipped his hand
into the mist and pulled it out. His hand appeared empty. He
seemed to be enjoying their consternation. "Look at the tip of
my forefinger." "I
see only a black speck," Riane said. "Quite
so," Minnum replied. "And properly placed in plain sight
such an item will go unnoticed by even the most discerning eye."
He reached out, planted the speck beneath Riane's right ear. "Nothing
more than a mole, eh?" He wagged a finger. "In actuality,
what is it? The repository of all your sorcerous knowledge." "What?" "That's
right." He was grinning. "You will carry your knowledge
with you in a safe place, in a receptacle only Perrnodt will be able
to recognize and access." "But
why all this secrecy?" Thigpen was frowning deeply, her whiskers
twitching so violently Riane knew that she was highly agitated. "Perhaps
it will never be needed. But just in case ... in the event of. . ."
Minnum sighed. "I may be the only sefiror left alive, but there
are forces in the Korrush, corrupting forces, dark forces that are
lacking only sufficient knowledge to extend their power." He
folded his arms over his chest. "They are known as sauromicians.
They are necromancers. They study the dead, dismembering them in
order to foretell the future." Riane
glanced over at Thigpen. The Rappa's whiskers were twitching in
anxiety. "They
are that which remains," Minnum continued. "The end result
of the sorcerers whose memories were burned beyond recognition." "I
thought you said the Ramahan killed all the sefiror save yourself,"
Riane said. "True
enough." Minnum nodded. "But before that happened, Miina,
in Her rage, took Nedhu as well as several of his intimates in the
cabal that rose up to appropriate The Pearl, and did this to them." "She
left them to wander the Korrush, and now they are a danger?"
Riane shook her head. "Truly the Great Goddess moves in
mysterious ways." "So
it is written," Minnum said. "So it has come to pass."
He touched the black speck beneath Riane's right ear. "The
chances of your encountering a sauromician are slim, but should the
worst occur they will be unable to steal your knowledge." Riane
nodded. "I understand." "But
Dar Sala-at," Thigpen protested. "You cannot—" "She
must," Minnum said. "If
the worst should happen, she will be helpless to defend herself
without her sorcery." "I
think you underestimate her resourcefulness," Minnum said.
"However, I have no intention of allowing her to travel to the
Korrush unprotected." He returned to the desk, pressed a hidden
button, and a door popped open. "In the unlikely event you come
across a sauromician, you will know him by two things: first, he will
be dressed in black, hooded robes. Second, he will have the stigma
the Great Goddess in Her wisdom has given him: on his left hand is a
sixth finger, black and ugly as death." Unlocking
the lowest of four drawers, he produced a hexagonal box made of a
dull grey metal alloy. It was protected by a lock, which he unsealed
with a series of rhythmic darting motions of his forefinger. The top
spiraled open, and he drew out a cylinder a bit over ten centimeters
long of a milk-white color, smooth as silk. "You will hide this,
Dar Sala-at," he said, as he pressed it into her palm. "And
you will activate it just here, near this end, by pressing the gold
disc that lies flush with the surface. Press it again to deactivate
it." Thigpen
sniffed at it suspiciously. "What is that? It's not of Kundalan
manufacture." "And
I warrant it's not V'ornnish either." Riane
turned it over and over. "Then where does it come from?" Minnum
shrugged. "I found it here, in the Museum of False Memory." "What
will it do?" Riane asked. "This
is an infinity-blade wand. Using a highly compressed beam of goron
particles, it will repel the enemy—any enemy." He took it
from her, lifted her thick hair, and placed it flat against her scalp
just above the nape of her neck, where he affixed it. "But use
it sparingly. You will only be able to activate it twice." "But
you must be able to tell me more." "Would
that I could." He laid a finger alongside his bulbous nose.
"Remember what Miina has done to me. I have told you all I can." Thigpen
looked up. "So much danger, little dumpling." Crystalline
tears stood in the corners of her eyes. "Of a sudden, I feel
inadequate to protecting you." "Dear
Thigpen," Riane said as she stroked the soft, luxuriant fur, "I
have come to realize that no one—not Giyan, not you—can
long protect me from my enemies. This I must do myself, and I will
fail unless my schooling continues. I know full well that the time
when the Dar Sala-at may safely reveal herself is not yet here." "And
yet." "I
know what you wish for me." She kissed the Rappa. "Giyan
once told me the Dar Sala-at's path was long and arduous and fraught
with peril. I have been called, Thigpen. I can do ought but follow my
path. It directs me into the heart of the Korrush." It
was almost midnight by the time Nith Batoxxx had recovered
sufficiently from the failure. He had taken his daily salamuuun
flight, using a dose a touch higher than usual. Still, afterward, he
could not bear the sight of himself, and so he transformed his body
into the one Kurgan knew as the Old V'ornn—skull copper-dark,
aged as morte-wood, hands crinkled like tissue. Thus cloaked, he
ventured into the throbbing heart of Axis Tyr via a secret
underground exit he had discovered in the Kundalan structure the
Comradeship had renamed the Temple of Mnemonics. He had told no other
Gyrgon of his discovery. There
were many reasons for this, not the least being that he was a hoarder
of secrets. It was his opinion that the weight of the secrets he kept
would crush most V'ornn like a qwawd-egg shell. It
was an invigorating walk of perhaps fifty minutes to the villa in
which the Old V'ornn was known to live. He could have taken a
hov-erpod, of course, but in the guise of the Old V'ornn he preferred
to go on foot. The succession of salamuuun flights made everything
look crystal clear, hard-edged, filled with wonder. The
recent storm had scrubbed the city clean. Freshets of rainwater still
swirled down storm drains, and the packed streets were pockmarked
with puddles. He passed vast striped-canopied markets selling
everything from produce to dry goods to useless gewgaws to off-world
gemstones to artless clothing to precious spices, bright-colored
Bashkir auction houses where deals were struck every hour of the day
and night, light-drenched Tuskugggun ateliers filled with crafts and
artwork of every description. He passed the vast market where fish,
fresh-caught from the turbid depths of the Sea of Blood, were laid
out in precise ranks, their opaque eyes looking like those of the
Kundalan who endured interrogation in the chambers below the regent's
palace. A one-armed Kundalan merchant tried to sell him fresh
clemetts still on the branch from the back of his buttren-driven
dray. Another with a hideously scarred face watched him
expressionlessly as he passed up his pathetic display of metalware.
The aftermath of decades of interrogation were everywhere in Axis
Tyr, sown at his direction like seedpods to sprout their bitter
fruit, living proof of the futility of resistance. Still,
despite everything he had done, the Resistance abided. He
came upon his favorite shop, which sold one-of-a-kind artifacts
plundered from the many civilizations the V'ornn had conquered. On
impulse he went in, bought an Argggedian prayer wheel. The
shopkeeper, who was knowledgeable about such matters, explained that
the prayer wheel spun in three dimensions when exposed to moonlight
because the Argggedians worshiped their cephalopod god at the time of
the full moon. Or they had, until the coming of the V'ornn. Nith
Batoxxx, who was hearing more about Argggedian religion than he
wanted to know, cut the shopkeeper short by paying for the prayer
wheel and exiting the shop. From
the outset of his walk, he had noticed that the streets were filled
with Khagggun, much more so under this young regime than there had
been even under the paranoid regent, Wennn Stogggul. The city seemed
to be on war footing, an especially intimidating state of affairs for
the Kundalan. Which was just the way Kurgan wanted it. And, Nith
Batoxxx knew, Kurgan wanted it because he himself had told Kurgan to
want it. Nith
Batoxxx considered his altogether intimate relationship with Kurgan
Stogggul. Which had thrived ever since he, in the guise of the Old
V'ornn, had years ago seduced the child away from his family in order
to train him both in physical prowess and mental toughness. It had
been an experiment, like many of Nith Batoxxx's endeavors. He was,
after all, a technomage. He sought the answers to questions beyond
the ken of the other castes. As the designated Ascensor, he had
presided over Kurgan's Channeling in the Sanctuary of Ascension.
Once, the ocular-lighted chamber had been a shrine to the Kundalan
Goddess, Miina. Now it was used to remove the birth caul from Great
Caste males, to implant them with the quasi-organic okummmon,
welcoming them into adulthood. The okummmon was then attuned—or
channeled—to the Gyrgon frequencies. Nith Batoxxx still had
Kurgan's birth caul, having palmed it during the ceremony, replacing
it with the birth caul of a Bashkir boy who had died during his own
coming of age ceremony. Employing the proper theorem, the birth caul
could be made to provide all sorts of interesting data about not only
the individual from which it had come, but also about the bloodlines
of his family. Nith Batoxxx had been studying Kurgan's birth caul
since the evening of his Channeling. It was the main reason why he
was so certain of Kurgan's fate. But,
again, what was fate, really? As a Gyrgon, he was used to
manipulating the lives of those beneath him, of treating them as if
they were experiments in his lab, exposing them to different reagents
to see how quickly they were pulled apart. He was, in a very real
sense, Old Man Fate himself. In Kurgan's case, he had stepped in,
reshaping his very reality. He had turned Kurgan against his family,
against his father, in particular. He had taught him how to hate, and
had stood back, pleased and, yes, a little proud, as he watched his
pupil plot with his particular cold-blooded single-mindedness the
elder Stogggul's death. Kurgan's likes, dislikes, the choices he
made, the very demons that drove him were solely of Nith Batoxxx's
creation. It was like painting a perfect portrait of death. He had
given Destruction a V'ornn name and a face, had given it false
memories and, therefore, a manufactured purpose. He had set it in
motion and was watching in a kind of vertiginous fascination the
havoc it was wreaking. Gimnopede
Boulevard was ablaze with light, sound, noise, and jostling bodies.
Three Tuskugggun artisans at an outdoor cafe were discussing their
metalwork trade, exchanging samples of new alloys they had created. A
young Bashkir boy ran through the crowd, cleverly swiping a trinket
as he passed a shop. His exasperated mother ran after him, unaware,
as was the shopkeeper, of what her son had done. Nith Batoxxx in the
guise of the Old V'ornn smiled a secret smile, thinking of the child
Kurgan, the cunning mind he had helped shape. When
he contemplated Kurgan's Channeling, he was struck by the knowledge
that he had been an outsider in Stogggul family affairs who
nevertheless knew more about Kurgan than anyone in Kurgan's own
family. Save for the boy's best friend, Annon Ashera. Annon had been
possessed of an intuition that was positively uncanny. For this
reason, Nith Batoxxx had hated Annon as much as he had hated his
traitor of a father. In a way, he wished Annon was not dead, so that
he could have the exquisite pleasure of having him killed all over
again. Now
Kurgan was bound to Nith Batoxxx in an even more intimate way. Nith
Batoxxx had coerced him into service, the better to keep an eye on
him. But there was something else. The boy was young, yes, but Nith
Batoxxx had not chosen him randomly so many years ago. He had run his
equations and recognized in Kurgan the seeds of greatness. If they
were correct, Kurgan was destined to wield more power than any
Bashkir before him. That being the case, he had wanted to ensure that
Kurgan would have the proper philosophy because as Nith Batoxxx knew
only too well having the power was a wild ride, one that could all
too easily lead to ruin. He
turned off Gimnopede Boulevard, onto narrow, quiet Cinnabar Street. The
villa he had procured for himself had once belonged to a Kundalan
artist of some repute, who had died owing to the repeated
interrogations to which Nith Batoxxx had ordered him subjected. The
artist's family, who had tried to claim ownership of the villa, were
soon silenced in much the same manner as the artist. In any event,
the villa became vacant, which was the whole point of the exercise.
It was evident from the outset that the artist and his family never
knew anything of strategic value. The
villa was pleasant enough, filled with light and space, but it was of
only minimal interest to him. The courtyard in back was what had
drawn him here, what had caused him to murder the villa's former
owner and his family, and to spend long hours painstakingly
constructing the courtyard garden. He had done it even though he had
exhibited no former interest in gardening; he did it almost
unconsciously, as if guided by a voice or a presence. Which was, of
course, precisely what happened. As
Nith Batoxxx walked through the villa now, past the living room, into
the huge atelier he had converted into a gymnasium for his lessons
with Kurgan, he could feel the dark beacon rising both inside him and
all around him. It inhabited this villa more wholly than he ever
would. At
the far end of the gymnasium he touched a padded panel and it
swiveled open. Before him stretched the courtyard. Using equations of
fire and water, he had filled it with rocks, stones, boulders of
every conceivable size and shape. The sound of water gurgling drifted
to him, but its source, the pool he and Kurgan had built together,
remained invisible unless you stood right next to it in the center of
the garden. This was where the pool had to be placed, on the site of
the ancient spring he knew would be there even before it had been dug
up. To stand at the center, the presence said in his mind, is
to see everything. He had taught this to Kurgan, as well. He
carefully placed the Argggedian prayer wheel on a flat black stone
beside the pool, an offering, the kind of primitive act, full of
ritual and respect, required of such a solemn and, yes, holy
occasion. In this somewhat altered state, he gazed into the pool like
a priest looking into the face of his god. The
water was pitch-black, unimaginably deep. He lifted his gaze, spun
very slowly in a complete circle, taking in every detail of the
courtyard garden, remembering as he did so the placement and planting
of every rock, boulder, plant, and tree. It seemed to him in that
last moment before he slipped into the pool that this garden was a
living calendar of his days on Kundala. He had been elated to have
the chance to become a hero—the Gyrgon who finally harnessed
the death particle, the Gyrgon responsible for defending his race
from the Divine Horde of Destruction, as the Centophennni called
themselves. That
was before the presence made itself felt, before the dark beacon
rose, before the voice manifested itself, bypassing his neural nets
to take possession of the cortex of his brain, periodically taking up
residence there. At first, it had been able to come only infrequently
and, at times, as he proceeded with his normal life, he had managed
to convince himself that it was just a dream. But then, inevitably,
he would be drawn back to the villa and would feel the presence
rising again. It was patient, ever so patient, and over the decades
it grew its black light like the gardener he himself would become. The
water was cold, but he did not mind. The sides of the pool were slimy
with moss and algae, but he did not mind. Why should he? This was
home, the darkness, the cold calling him, a prison whose lock must be
broken no matter the cost. He
hung upside down in the darkness, waiting. It
was quiet, so quiet the beating of his hearts, the pulse of the blood
in his veins was all that existed. It
was coming, rising up to merge with him fully, or as fully as it was
able considering the awful chains that bound it. How long had it been
imprisoned? Even his Gyrgon mind quailed at the intimation of the
length of time. It was impossible. His supremely logical brain calmly
informed him that it simply could not be. And
yet it was. Here
came the living proof, entering him with the familiar words, Tremble
all before me, for I am that which remains.
You
said it was to be a small thing. It is a small thing, and it
is done. The two huge Dragons crouched in the dense sorcerous
mist atop Heavenly Rushing, Miina's sacred waterfall. You
said no one would know—no one but us. And
who knows but us? The
Portal locks Miina had us fashion out of fire, earth, air, water and
wood— —We
five contributed to the Portal locks before Miina ensorceled them— The
point is they have been breached— —as
foretold— The
point is that now they have been breached there are daemons
abroad. There
have always been daemons abroad. These
are archdaemons. We have not seen their faces for aeons. One
of the Dragons, ruddy as a sunset, stirred. If they bring the
lightning back— My
dear—this Dragon was slightly smaller, black as pitch,
black as ebonwood—you cannot mean to give these archdaemons
your blessing? I
have no blessing to bestow upon them. Have you forgotten? None of us
have. Not for eons. Not since the lightning ringed the sky, not since
the narbuck vanished into the ice mists atop the Djenn Marre, not
since the fire burned like molten magma in my veins. Now
the Dar Sala-at comes with our hope of redemption. You see, the Wheel
is turning, one by one the Holy Prophesies are coming true. Patience
is not a virtue for fire. The
daemons—My point is, have a care how you transgress, for
if our enemies should become aware of— They
will not. The red Dragon grinned, showing luminous fangs the size
of a cthauros' foreleg. The
black Dragon's great tufted head swung around. Whatever have you
done? I
am clever, I am. My
dear, do not boast. It ill becomes you. A
sound arose through the constant roaring of the waterfall that shook
the ground and raked the sky. Clouds of terrified birds rose from
their limbed sanctuary, wheeling in all directions at once. Is
laughter necessary? The black Dragon shook her head, annoyed.
What is so funny? When
you told me that you did not want to know, I made a wager with
myself, and now I have won that wager. All
right then. Tell me. As
you wish. The red Dragon looked smug. I have brought Minnum
into play. You
haven't! Oh,
but I have! This
is what you call a little thing? Well,
you must admit, Minnum is not big. You
are insufferable, you know that, don't you? The
red Dragon sidled over to rub up against his mate. Are
you angry? Tell me you are not angry with me. I
am not one to bend the Laws. Nor
am I, but I had to do something. You see what Horolaggia has done,
usurped the Malasocca. I
agree that was quite wicked of him, slaying the Cerrn and taking its
place. And
Pyphoros. I have had enough of them flouting the Laws in our faces. Minnum
is, in himself, dangerous because he is so unpredictable. A
survivor, above all else. Yes.
And surviving inevitably means sacrificing others. You
are too dour. But
he will lie to them. Of
course he will lie. Miina saw to that. But that does not make him any
less trustworthy. And
then there are the others. Surely they will be stirred out of their
century's slumber by Minnum's machinations . . . You
heard him. Minnum believes they are already awake. Yes,
and if they are . . . Have
you no faith in the Dar Sala-at? She
is too young and raw yet. But
you, Miina knows, are not. Put your faith in her as I have done. The
black Dragon shook her craggy head. Too much stands in her way. Then
here she will be tried, as it is foretold in Prophesy. Here she will
begin to earn your faith. The
black Dragon grew even more pensive. Her eyes were both beautiful and
expressive, the color and luminosity of moonstones. There is
something else. Have you considered that Horolaggia's preemptive
strike might have had another, more sinister motive? The
red Dragon's crystal claws extruded as he stamped in anger. More
sinister than transmogrifying into Lady Giyan? What could be? It
is possible that he sought the very response you have given, that he
wants to draw us into the battle before our time, as was done to our
sister, now imprisoned by the enemy. Oh,
yes, I forgot. There was a sneer on the red Dragon's face and
fire danced in his nostrils. We all have our time. Exactly.
It is not like the old days, my dear. But
we are eternal. Our responsibility is to see the return of the old
ways. The
black Dragon sighed. True enough. But we must be mindful of our
enemies and where we all are on Asa'ara. The
Great Wheel of Fate. There
was a strange bitter tang to the red Dragon's tone that tugged
mightily at his mate's heart. Yes. If we move precipitously, we
are vulnerable. She let her spiked tail twine with his. Let us
pray to Miina that your little intervention does not cause the Dar
Sala-at's undoing.
Book Two:
GATE OF FORBEARANCE
Of all the mistakes a
sorceress may commit, impatience is, perhaps, the most egregious.
With power comes the ability to act, and with the ability to act
comes the gnawing desire to do so, even when inaction is clearly the
most prudent course. Be now forewarned, o you eager disciples of
Osoru! Learn forbearance, learn it well, else suffer for your
imprudence all the rest of your days."
—Utmost Source,
The Five Books of Miina
10 Egg
The lymmnal crouched in the shadows,
waiting. The world around it was reflected in the curve of its three
smoke-blue eyes. There was about the steppe, in the scoured pleats
and folds, the gnarled islets of trees, beaches of pale lichen, and
oceans of lavender grass, the sheer rumbling wrinkled breadth of it,
a staggering sense of age, but also, something beyond age, a kind of
unspeakable aloneness that arose, spectral and shivering, from
its rigorous beauty. Newcomers found its vastness vertiginous, but by
the time they had become coated by its fine ruddy dust, they were
already intoxicated. The
night was moonsless, chill, the air above the flat grasslands of the
great steppe utterly without weight, magnifying the ghostly
crenellated ice-pale peaks of the Djenn Marre. The grass, thigh high,
had been thickened by the darkness into a mass with heft and
presence, a world unto itself. Within that world, the lymmnal sensed
something just below the threshold of movement, the small heat,
perhaps, generated by a body similarly crouched, or again, possibly,
the shallow anxious breathing, the accelerated pulse of someone
coiled, someone about to spring into sudden action. The
lymmnal, lying low at the perimeter of the Gazi Qhan camp, had been
trained to sense these ephemera. Its nostrils dilated, quivering, and
its three eyes scanned the darkness for the trace of an outline that
was out of place. A marmalon poked its head above ground for a
moment, but the lymmnal, hungry as it was, ignored the rodent. The
marmalon vanished at the soft swish of the finbats' flight. A
formation of them dived and swooped toward the tops of the wild
grass, skimming for supper. Then, they, too, were gone. High clouds
scudded, a presence, darker than dark, and these, too, the lymmnal
noted. The
scent came a split second before the movement, for it had learned
that under extreme tension these biped interlopers exuded a scent.
And so, it was already in midleap when the body began its run inside
the perimeter. Utterly
silent, the lymmnal buried its triple set of teeth into the
interloper's shoulder. Then its full weight struck the interloper,
knocking him off his feet. The lymmnal dodged the one swipe of the
interloper's blade, then snapped its powerful jaws, crushing his
shoulder socket. The interloper passed out, and the lymmnal, well
satisfied, dragged the body back into the circle of firelight that
surrounded the tree. The
sixteen Gazi Qhan sat or stood around the tree, which rose, winged
and proud, from the red soil. A fire cracked and sparked, a stewpot,
crusty with soot, sat on ashes nearby. On the far side of the tree,
but very close to it, a female lay on her back. Her belly was a
mountain stroked by a male as he said the Ber-Bnadem, the birth
prayer cycle. Another female knelt between the pregnant female's
legs, speaking slowly and softly as if to the newborn about to
arrive. Othnam
made a sign to the lymmnal, and it obediently released the
interloper. Mehmmer, Othnam's younger sister, joined him in dragging
the interloper to the tree. "Jeni
Cerii," Othnam said as he scruffled the thick fur behind the
lymmnal's muscle-ridged neck. Using
the heel of his hand, he brought the Jeni Cerii back to
consciousness. For a half hour they interrogated him without
receiving a single answer. Mehmmer
spat onto the spy's face. Someone
threw a hunk of raw meat to the lymmnal, who immediately gulped it
down with a brief snuffling sound. Lymmnals made little or no noise
unless they were in extreme distress. Othnam
looked up at the thornbeam tree, gnarled, gray-black, old as Time
itself, and utterly magnificent. He and his sister had tended this
tree from the moment they were old enough to walk; their parents and
grandparents were buried here, protected by its roots. It belonged to
Othnam and Mehmmer now, a legacy of hope and transcendence. It would
be their children's long after they themselves were turned to dust.
When they returned from their long treks into the wilds, this tree
was their anchor, their succor, the sight of which informed them that
they were home. Using
the killing limb, the strongest branch of the tree, Othnam and
Mehmmer strung the Jeni Cerii up by his neck, letting him strangle
slowly and painfully as was the custom. His kicking brought down a
shower of small, hard fruit. No prayers were said at his death. This,
too, was the custom. Mehmmer's
dark glittering eyes watched the death throes with a good measure of
satisfaction. She was tall, as broad-shouldered as her brother. Her
hair was blue-black, a mane of intricate braids strewn with tiny,
spotted ghryea shell, discs of dark-striped amber, teardrops of
emperor carnelian. She wore tight leather breeches that came to just
below the knee, a loose-sleeved wraparound shirt of undyed muslin and
yellow, thin-soled shoes with curled-up silver tips. A simple belt
cinched her waist, from which hung a narrow-bladed sword, a scimitar,
and a jewel-hilted dirk she had made herself. In
fact, she had forged her brother's push-dagger, which was most useful
both in stealth and in hand-to-hand combat. The beautifully weighted
ball hilt was held in the fist, the slender ovoid blade protruding
from between the index and middle fingers. It was a stabbing weapon,
rather than a slashing one, and so ideal in cramped quarters. It had
saved Othnam's life more than once. "Less
than a day's trek from Agachire, and we are shadowed by the Jeni
Cerii," Mehmmer said. "What should we do?" "We
shall bring this proof of Jeni Cerii perfidy to Makktuub,"
Othnam said. "What
if Makktuub asks." A look of alarm crossed Mehmmer's face. "What
if he wants to know what we were doing?" "We
are simple merchants, pious and peaceful." Mehmmer
looked uneasily at the dead spy swinging from the noose they had
fashioned. "It is the pious part that concerns me." "The
Ghorvish prayer sites are secret from both Jeni Cerii and Makktuub."
Othnam looked away. "Rest assured, sister, that they shall
remain that way." "But
going to Makktuub." "I
am well acquainted with the dangers," he said, more sharply,
perhaps, than he had intended. "Yes,
of course, we both are. Our parents." "Let
us not speak now of their suffering," Othnam said softly. "We
have spent the last three days singing the whole Khendren prayer
cycle on the anniversary of their death in order to honor their
lives." "Yes,
brother." "We
will not make the same mistake they did," he whispered. "We
will be Makktuub's friends; we will do his will. And in return he
will leave us to our beliefs and our faith." While
Mehmmer was dark, Othnam was not. He had golden hair, which he wore,
as all the males did, in a thick, twisted knot, shiny with oils, on
top of his head. His face, creased by sun, wind and, once only, an
enemy's blade, was strong and finely sculpted. He possessed the eyes
of the true mystic, seeing what others could not. These eyes, blue as
the sky, were shot through with vivid emerald flecks—Ghorvish
whorls, as they were called, proof that he was among the chosen of
the Ghor, the wise men of ancient times who had received the
Mokakaddir, the ecstatic prayer cycle the Gazi Qhan chanted,
from Jiharre himself. The
lymmnal broke from Othnam's side, trotting over to the newborn and
began to lick off its amniotic fluids. The mother beamed, touching
with her fingertips the baby's tiny moist toes. Brother
and sister followed the lymmnal, firelight and the webbed shadows
cast by the twisted thornbeam branches playing over them. Mehmmer
took the female baby into the crook of her strong, sun-bronzed arm,
wiping it down as custom dictated with her soft woven sinschal, the
long scarf wound around the head and neck, protection from sun, wind,
rain, and dust. Then she kissed the child in the center of her
forehead. Othnam stood beside her, his curved dirk held before him.
While Mehmmer chanted, he made the three small ritual cuts over the
sternum with the tip of the blade. The child screamed, the blood
flowed from her tender flesh, dripping onto the mother's bare belly.
Then Mehmmer stanched the flow, using an ointment. The baby ceased to
cry. Her unfocused eyes stared into infinity, and she took a firm
grip on Mehmmer's finger. Smiling, Mehmmer passed her over to Othnam,
who lifted the babe up to the night sky and recited the ritual
prayer: "Life's first wound has been given and received. The
tribe has received blood as proof of lifelong allegiance and
devotion. The first blessing is now given and received. Little one,
may you grow large, powerful of limb and mind. May all the Korrush be
your pasture and your battlefield. May you live one hundred years,
long enough to see unity and the face of the Prophet." When
the rite was over, Othnam returned the newborn, whose name was Jeene,
to her parents, and he and Mehmmer set about cutting down the Jeni
Cerii. They stripped off the clothes, took the weapons as booty,
which they gave to the newborn's parents since the Jeni Cerii was
killed on the night of their daughter's birth. While
the red dust of the Korrush skittered through the campsite, they
squatted over the corpse, slowly and methodically stripping the skull
of skin and flesh. They knew little of the Jeni Cerii—or of any
of the other tribes, for that matter—save to fear them. The
grisly work they did now served as a kind of balm to soothe this
primitive fear. Not far away, the loyal lymmnal lay curled
contentedly by the fire, watching them incuriously out of the eye
that was set between its ears in the back of its head. The
lymmnal rose out of a shallow sleep, for lymmnal did not sleep as it
is commonly understood. Opening its eyes one by one, it rose
soundlessly, trotting away from the sleeping figures ranged around
the thornbeam tree, crowned now by a new white skull, drying in the
first ruddy rays of sunlight slanting across the Korrush. The
lymmnal kept its nose to the ground, its haunches semicon-tracted.
The scent was wholly unfamiliar. Its long furred head wagged back and
forth like the point of a compass. Though it crept forward in its
standard attack stance, it was curious as well as wary. The
scent at length led it to an unfamiliar female creature who sat, a
voluminous greatcoat swept tight around her. She was hunched over,
possibly asleep, but at the lymmnal's approach her head came up very
slowly. Her eyes opened and gazed upon the lymmnal. The
tension went out of the animal's frame, and it crouched, its forepaws
stretched out in front of it. It gave a little sound and, after a
short silence, the creature responded in kind. A murmured
conversation ensued as the other creature crept a little closer,
until finally their snouts touched, their noses twitched as they
scented each other, then licked each other. The
lymmnal was thus surprised at the expressions on its masters' faces
when it brought the new creature into camp. It could not understand
why Othnam drew his sword and Mehmmer glowered at the hooded figure. "What
is this trick, stranger, that you have used to gull our lymmnal?"
Mehmmer growled as the rest of the camp began to stir. Other weapons
were unsheathed, lifted pointfirst toward the intruder. "If the
Jeni Cerii sent you to plead for their spy's life, it is too late."
She gestured to the skull whitening in the early sunlight. Riane
pushed the hood of Nith Sahor's greatcoat off her head with one hand
while she stroked the ridged back of the docile lymmnal with the
other. "As you can see, I am not Jeni Cerii nor a member of any
of the Five Tribes. I come from the southern city of Axis Tyr. My
name is Riane." Mehmmer
said, "That cannot be your real name." "To
that, I can only say that Riane is the only name known to me. I have
no memory of my early years high in the Djenn Marre; I can recall
neither parents nor whether I have any siblings." An
unreadable expression flickered briefly across Mehmmer's face before
Othnam introduced himself and his sister. "If
you are Gazi Qhan, then I have not lost my way." Riane smiled.
"To answer your question, I seem to have a way with animals.
Also, I believe this creature knew I was no threat to you." She
looked around at every face, marked Othnam and Mehmmer most closely. "Assuming
you speak truthfully, why have you journeyed so far from Axis Tyr?"
Mehmmer said shortly. "I
wish only safe passage to Agachire. I seek an audience with the
dzuoko of—" "We
know you not. You are mad if you think we will give safe passage into
the heart of our territory." Mehmmer took a menacing step toward
Riane, lifting the edge of her sword, but Othnam stayed her. "My
sister is still unsettled by the discovery of the Jeni Cerii spy,"
he said. "My apologies." "I
thank you," Riane replied, "but none are needed. I do not
blame you for your suspicions. It seems you live in a precarious
balance." "Yes.
There is continual war between the tribes, raid and counterraid,
death and vengeance, which begets more vengeance and more death."
Othnam pointed with his chin. "I see you carrying a dagger of an
unusual manufacture. Would you allow me to see it?" "Certainly."
Riane handed over the dagger Eleana had given Annon. It was her most
prized possession. Othnam
took it and, in one swift motion, put the edge of its blade to her
throat. "Are you not afraid that I will cut you open from ear to
ear?" "I
am afraid, yes, that your hand will slip and inadvertently draw
blood," Riane said. "But as to your meaning, if I were
afraid of you, I never would have given you my dagger." Othnam
grunted, reversed the dagger, holding it out to Riane. Mehmmer
again grew agitated. "Othnam, don't—" "Hold
it, if you wish," Riane said to Othnam. "While I am under
your protection I can't think why I would need it." Othnam
nodded, seemingly pleased. "We will give you safe passage to
Agachire." Mehmmer
rounded on him, her eyes blazing. "Brother, are you mad? You
cannot mean what you say, this one came from the same direction as
the Jeni Cerii spy we hung scant hours ago." "I
walked all night," Riane said. "I saw no one." Othnam
was about to answer her when a cry from the other side of the camp
caught their attention. Paddii, the newborn's father was running
toward them, gesticulating. "It is Jeene," he said. His
face was a mask of anxiety. "She has stopped breathing. We have
tried everything—We don't know—" "Let
me look at her," Riane said at once. "Take
one step ..." Mehmmer warned. "Please,"
Paddii said. "Someone do something. My daughter is dying." Riane
said, "Your guardian has saved your lives many times. It knows I
mean you no harm. Why do you doubt its judgment now?" "What
if you have bewitched it with sorcery?" Mehmmer said. "We
have heard of sorcerers, evil beings known as sauromicians,"
Othnam said. "They blaspheme against the Prophet Jiharre." "I
am no sauromician," Riane said truthfully. "I have given
you my weapon. Please let me help." Othnam
hesitated, then nodded. With Paddii jogging at their side, he led
Riane to where Paddii's tiny daughter lay blue and unmoving atop her
mother's belly. The mother was weeping, chanting prayers through her
sobbing. Riane
knelt. She opened the newborn's mouth, stuck her finger down the tiny
throat. "The baby has something in her windpipe. If you do not
attend to her immediately, she will be dead within minutes." The
mother moaned, and Paddii rolled his eyes. Mehmmer
brushed Riane aside, stuck her own finger into the infant's mouth.
"There is an impediment," she said. She hunched over, her
face filling with blood an she concentrated. "I cannot... It
will not come out." "I
can save the child." "You
will not touch her," Mehmmer said shortly. "Will
you deprive the newest member of your tribe the chance to live simply
out of anger and suspicion?" "Mehmmer,"
Othnam said gently, "as Riane said, our loyal Haqqa trusts her.
We will watch her closely. Let her help." Mehmmer
scowled, then she rose, nodded curtly, and stepped aside to make room
for Riane. "If the baby dies . . ." She waggled the tip of
her sword. Riane
ignored her as best she could. On her knees, she took the little girl
up in her arms, pried open her mouth. The cause of the obstruction,
she soon discovered, was a tiny undeveloped fruit from the tree that
had blown into her open mouth while she slept. It was lodged in the
tiny throat. "It
must be true," Mehmmer said fretfully. "The fruit fall at
the beginning of winter." Riane
tried to gauge the grave expressions on the others' faces. She was
worrying that winter had already begun, and she seemed no closer to
finding the Veil of a Thousand Tears. Clearly, these folk did not
trust her. What if she could not get to Perrnodt? What if Perrnodt
did not know where it was? Calming her mind, she put all her doubts
aside and concentrated on the task at hand. "Do either of you
have a narrow-bladed weapon?" Mehmmer
reacted as if Riane had struck her. "What would you—?" Othnam
handed over his push-dagger, and his sister glowered at him. "I
pray to Jiharre you know what you are doing, stranger." Riane
kept the thumb and forefinger of her left hand at the hinges of the
baby's mouth, while she lowered the narrow blade down the infant's
throat. The
mother gave a stifled scream, and Mehmmer's prayers rose all the
louder. The
point reached the level of the fruit. Riane knew she had only one
shot at this. If she missed spearing the thorn, or even overshot the
mark by a fraction, the blade had every possibility of piercing the
infant's neck right at the spot where the main artery pulsed. But if
she did nothing, the newborn was dead anyway. Saying
a silent prayer to Miina to guide her hand, she struck downward with
the slight angle she had calculated in her mind. The tip pierced the
fruit cleanly, and Riane drew it up and out of the infant's mouth. Riane
handed the push-dagger back to Othnam while she forced air into the
baby's starving lungs. When the baby was breathing on her own again,
she handed her back to her mother, who was weeping openly with relief
and gratitude. "Thank
you," Othnam said. Riane
nodded and stood. "May I have something to drink?" Someone
started to comply, but with a gesture Mehmmer stopped them. She went
herself and poured water from a crescent bladder hanging on a wooden
peg into a copper cup, gave it to Riane. Briefly, their hands
touched, they looked into each other's eyes. "It
would be an honor to give you safe passage to Agachire," Mehmmer
said. She took the drained cup from Riane's hand, and said very
softly, "Perhaps my anger and suspicion comes from stripping the
flesh from too many of our enemy's skulls." Riane
said, "It would, I think, be wise to suggest to the mother that
she move from beneath the tree. It was one of its thorns that almost
killed the babe." Mehmmer
hesitated a moment. "You could have told her that yourself." Riane
smiled. "Mehmmer, would it not be better if it came from you?" Mehmmer's
dark eyes searched Riane's face. Then she nodded briefly and went to
talk to the father about moving the family. While
she did so, Othnam gave Riane a look, and she followed him a little
way from the campsite. Haqqa trotted after them, sat panting, leaning
against their calves. "You
said something before about needing to find the dzuoko Perrnodt." "I
did not mention her name." He
laughed softly. "You did not have to. There is only one
kashiggen in the Korrush: therefore, only one dzuoko." "Could
you make the introduction?" His
odd intense eyes seemed to scour the flesh from her. "Why are
you seeking her?" "I
wish to be her student." Mehmmer
returned from her errand, and grunted. "You do not look like
imari material." Of
course, she wasn't imari material. She had come to the Korrush to be
taught by Perrnodt and to beg her to show her where the Maasra was
hidden. It would be foolhardy to confess that to tribesmen she barely
knew and who were already suspicious of her. "Nevertheless,"
she said as forthrightly as she could, "this is what I desire
above all else." Othnam
nodded gravely. "Then I shall see to it myself. But first, of
course, you will have to meet Makktuub." Makktuub
lived in a palace of silence. It was actually three structures in
one, like three concentric circles. In the outermost part, the public
part, all the quotidian official business of the tribe was
transacted. There was a certain bustle, everyone moving at double
time across carpet-strewn floors, the hubbub diffused only slightly
by the latticework of fragrant lyssomwood screens. Beneath the tent
fabric, wood, and stone the palace was composed of a formalism and
geometry that spoke of the kapudaan's absolute power. Beyond,
in the middle section, was a smaller space, more comfortable perhaps,
but rather less grand than the one surrounding it. Here, Makktuub met
once a day to confer with the Djura, his inner council, composed of
seven venerable religious judges. With voices no louder than the
burble of water in a pond, soothing and controlled, the Djura
hammered out laws, interpreted intelligence from the far-flung edges
of the chire, sought remedies for problems both fiscal and military.
The Djura sometimes met without Makktuub. The judges, long beards
shot with grey, reclined on gold-appliqued pillows, drawing
sustenance from low, lacquered tables piled with dried fruits, boiled
grains, and spiced sweetmeats. There
was an exquisite screen behind them, incised by the finest hands in
Agachire, a lattice of the most fragrant lysommwood that had taken
three artisans a year to carve into the shapes of branches, leaves,
birds, animals, and fish. From behind this pierced barrier, Makktuub
often sat in dappled shadow, listening in complete silence to the
earnest arguments and bright ideas when the Djura thought he was away
on other business. In this way he not only kept his finger on the
pulse of his tribe, but also gained invaluable knowledge of his
advisors, for, often enough, they were more apt to reveal their true
feelings out of his presence. They, like every member of the Gazi
Qhan, feared the ferocious acts that had brought him to power, and
kept him firmly in place. But
it was in the center of the palace, a dizzying labyrinth of
corridors, garden-courtyards, high-ceilinged chambers, light-strewn
baths, and cushion-festooned salons where the kapudaan shed all his
many public personas. Here, silence reigned supreme. No one spoke
unless expressly directed to by Makktuub himself. The staff that
served him by day, the females from his haanjhala who attended him at
night, communicated through a form of sign language Makktuub himself
had devised. In
the presence of this profound silence many small, subtle pleasures
could be identified, isolated, and savored: the breeze rustling the
leaves of the perfumed limoniq and lyssomwood trees, the sunlight on
the blooms of the magnificent blood-rose bushes, the complex melodies
of the golden laerq, hopping from bar to bar within their ornate
copper cages, the pattern of clouds as they passed across the
kapudaan's field of vision. It was Makktuub's firm and abiding belief
that such moments of bliss allowed him to return refreshed and
restored to the frantic swirl of motion, opinion, argument, intrigue
and, ultimately, decision that was his life. For it was never easy
commanding one of the Five Tribes, and most often it was profoundly
difficult. And
so, it was to this trifurcated place that Othnam and Mehmmer brought
Riane once the party had returned to Agachire. By blazing daylight,
the setting was magnificent, so vast it made Riane's eyes water—a
low-lying tree-strewn quadrant abutting a somnolent river that wound
more or less northwest all the way into the jagged Djenn Marre, whose
magnificent purplish silver massifs fulminated like storm clouds
against the northern horizon. The peaks here seemed even taller and
more forbidding than they were farther west—all save the Great
Rift, that mysterious and deadly fissured rent in the mountain range
that had swallowed whole the ill-fated V'ornn expeditions to the
Unknown Territories. Though Annon had heard many stories about it,
Riane had never actually
seen the Great Rift before. That massive black slash, tempest-struck
and impassable, seemed to draw her like a lodestone. For a moment,
the longing to know what was on the other side was like a pain in her
chest. Then, her more immediate surroundings seized all her
attention. To
begin with, she was taken aback by Agachire itself for, truth be
known, it was more of a city than the village of common Axis Tyr
gossip. Her first impression was of a violent swirl of colors, a
veritable rainbow of finely woven fabrics, all in a pattern of wide
diagonal stripes. When she commented upon this, Othnam told her the
fineness of the cloth was strictly a matter of utility—the more
finely a fabric was woven, the better it would keep out the
omnipresent dust of the Korrush, borne upon the incessant, sweeping
winds endemic to the steppe. That proved a key piece of information,
for, as she looked more closely, she noticed that the city was made
up of highly imaginative and elaborate tents. To be sure, there were
walls of some kiln-dried material, whitewashed to a sheen that blazed
beneath the sun, but the majority were of the gaily striped fabrics. She
passed numerous caravans of beasts of burden known as ku-omeshals,
which she had first noticed in Mehmmer and Othnam's camp. They were
six-legged, short-haired beasts of an orangey dun color about
one-third again as large as a male cthauros. Everything about them
save for their stunted ears seemed unnaturally elongated: their
bulbous snouts, buck-toothed jaws, massive, muscled necks, and
ungainly-looking legs. But their oddest feature, as far as Riane was
concerned, was their ridged backs. Between these natural separators
were crates, barrels, and iron-banded boxes lashed inside thick
netting. "They
may have a comical appearance," Othnam had told her, "but
they are able to carry at least three times the load of even the most
powerful cthauros. Also, they require almost no water and a minimum
of food, storing nutrients in their humps, making them ideal for long
treks over even the most daunting terrain." A
vast panoply of smells and voices assaulted her. From behind rolling
carts, street vendors were hawking everything from freshly baked flat
bread to sweet paste candies made of what appeared to be ground seeds
and amber honey. Naturally enough, the mingled aromas of spices rose
everywhere from open stalls, enormous sacks, and groaning barrels.
Cubes of skewered meats and vegetables sizzled on open flames,
mounds of perfumed grains
studded with nuts and sweetmeats were being ladled into bowls. Voices
rose in singsong melodies as the merchants sought to entice passersby
with their wares. A
vendor behind a black-and-white stand gestured to them and raised his
oddly high voice, "You have the unmistakable look of weary
travelers." He
was pouring a thick brown liquid with a most tantalizing aroma from a
squat, swoop-necked copper pot into tiny cups without handles. "Come
dust off your clothes and slake your thirst with a cup of my ba'du,
made from the finest beans." His features were all but lost
within the wild beard that climbed his cheeks like dense vines. His
thick-fingered hands gestured almost as if he were dancing. "Come,
come, now step this way. I go to the far ends of Agachire to gather
my beans; I know how travels can take their toll. What better
restorative than a cup of strong ba'du?" He placed a cup in
Othnam's hand, then one in Mehmmer's. He cocked an eye at Riane and,
nodding and grinning, gave her one, as well. "Drink up, my
friends. Enjoy the best ba'du in all Agachirer He snorted and shook
his head. "What am I saying? The best in all the Korrush!"
His eyes sparked and his hands danced. "If you do not agree,
why, then you pay nothing. What could be fairer than that?" Othnam
and Mehmmer sipped at their cups. Riane tried to follow their lead,
but she was unused to the small cup, and she swallowed too much. The
sweet, strong liquid burned her throat, and she immediately coughed
it up. "Drink
more," the vendor urged. "Drink more." Riane
cleared her throat and tried again, this time more circumspectly.
After only a couple of sips her head began to buzz. "Is
this alcoholic?" she asked. The
vendor roared. "Oh, no, no. Ba'du has its own tonic—enzymes
and such—brought out by exquisitely slow and careful roasting."
He gestured toward the skull of the Jeni Cerii Othnam was carrying.
"Feed it to that one, and I swear he has a chance to rise and
live again!" He laughed and laughed, refilling their cups. "No
charge for the refill," he said. As
Othnam was paying him, the merchant said, "Is that skull a
trophy of victorious combat?" As Othnam transferred the skull
from one arm to the other, the merchant continued. "Come, come,
you cannot be ashamed of your prowess." His
eyebrows raised. "Unless, of course, this is no trophy at all
but the blessed remains of one of your kin." Othnam
shook his head. "It is the skull of a Jeni Cerii who came upon
us not a full day's trek from Agachire." "So
close to the city. A deeply disturbing incident, to be sure,"
the vendor said. "Should this not be reported to the
authorities?" "As
it happens we are on our way to see the kapudaan," Mehmmer said.
"Your piteous importuning has delayed us." "Only
temporarily, I assure you," the ba'du vendor said. Then he fixed
his black eyes upon Riane. "This is your first time in the
Korrush, yes?" Riane
nodded. "And
what is your impression?" "I
am struck," she said, "by how complex and alive everything
is." "Indeed?"
The vendor raised his eyebrows. "The
majority of the population of Axis Tyr is convinced that you are a
primitive lot with nothing of interest to offer." "And
why have you come all the way from Axis Tyr?" the vendor asked.
"For centuries the Kundalan have ignored us. As you yourself
admit, you consider us savages." "I
have come to see for myself," Riane said. "And to find the
dzuoko Perrnodt." The
ba'du vendor scratched his beard ruminatively. "Have you a vital
message for her?" "I
seek to become her student," Riane said. "You
are to become an imari, then. Who was your dzuoko in your homeland?" "I
have no training as an imari." "No
one sent you, then?" "I
came entirely on my own. Since I have come all this way I hope I will
find her at her kashiggen." "Oh,
there is no doubt of that," the vendor said. "Perrnodt
never leaves Mrashruth, not even for a moment." "Now
that seems passing strange." But
the vendor apparently had lost interest in this topic, for he raised
the copper pot, and said, "May I inquire, how do you like your
first taste of ba'du?" "I
think it needs some getting used to." "There
will be no charge, then." He accepted the empty cup, smiling,
his red lips just visible through the thicket of his beard. "I
wish you luck on your mission, youngling." "Thank
you," Riane said, as they took their leave. As
she passed through the crowded, market-lined boulevard, flanked by
Othnam and Mehmmer, she was given only cursory glances from the
passersby. They wore a variety of clothing. Some were clad in the
tight leather breeches Mehmmer favored, others in striped robes with
sinschals over their head. All, however, wore the curious slipperlike
shoes with the curling tips. "They're
exceedingly comfortable and well suited for the terrain," Othnam
said with a glance at Riane's high boots when she asked about them. Riane
took time to study the faces of the Gazi Qhan, which were stained and
deeply etched by the harsh elements of the steppe. These were fierce,
proud faces with clear, intelligent eyes. If they appeared worn as
desert stones, there was at least no fat around their necks, no
slackness about their jaws. The
kapudaan's palace lay at the heart of Agachire, at the confluence of
all the major boulevards, even though those thoroughfares were
composed of little more than the tightly packed reddish soil of the
Korrush itself. As they came within sight of it, Othnam delivered a
warning to Riane to hold her tongue unless directly asked a question.
Mehmmer gave her several hand signals to use if she wished to
communicate with either of them. There
were no doors within the palace, rather a multitude of gates. These
gates were made of fragrant wood, striated stone, cunningly worked
copper, even, in one instance, tightly woven vines dotted with a
profusion of tiny blushing flowers. Beyond this last gate, Riane
glimpsed a bevy of giggling females before she and her group were
swept onward, conveyed with the breathless alacrity of palace life by
Sawakaq, one of the kapudaan's advisors. Each gate was flanked by a
pair of burly armed guards, who regarded her with a scrutiny so
absolute it was almost frightening. And
so they passed from the cacophonous outer section where rough justice
was meted out by a member of the Djura, to the murmurous middle court
where the Djura met. Riane was led past highly polished wooden
latticework screens through which she glimpsed a small group of
males—she went by too quickly to be certain of their number—who
lounged on what looked like pillows of gold. They ate and spoke with
a languor that was at odds with the speed with which everyone raced
through the palace. With
a sweep of his arm, Sawakaq gestured them onward, into a large tented
chamber where they were bade to wait. Sawakaq vanished without so
much as offering them a swallow of water. There was no furniture
whatsoever, no place to sit or take one's leisure. They
stood alone and silent in the center of this strange and eerie tented
hall. Strange and eerie because the striped-fabric walls were lined
with row upon row of bare-chested guards, who stood shoulder to
shoulder, absolutely immobile, seemingly oblivious to the guests. For
over an hour Riane stood thus with Othnam and Mehmmer who, by their
expressions, appeared to think nothing of this odd state of affairs.
At no time did Riane notice one of the guards move so much as a
muscle. Save for their steady, shallow breathing, they might have
been statues most cleverly sculpted into simulacra of the real thing. Thus
Riane was witness to Makktuub's adamantine will long before she
arrived at the heart of the palace. At
last, Sawakaq reappeared, looking shining and refreshed. Without a
word, he signed for them to follow him out of the hall of guards,
through a corridor, and into a tiny entry. He gestured at the
plainest of wooden gates through which he himself appeared forbidden
to go. Again,
the guards flanking the gates scrutinized Riane, but this time she
gazed back at them with a kuomeshal-like placidity. Through
the gates, they found themselves in a formal garden dominated by a
tiled hexagonal pond. Amber-and-black fish of several varieties, none
of which were familiar to Riane, swam serenely among the floating
blue-green pedda-pads. Birds trilled from their perches in thorny
fire bushes. Riane
hurried after Othnam and Mehmmer, who were striding through this
fantasy land as if it were a hectare of barren featureless steppe.
Down a corridor with billowing diagonal-striped walls they went,
their thin-soled slipper-shoes making no sound whatsoever on the
wooden floor. Riane was instantly aware of the noise, however small,
her boots were making. She became more and more self-conscious until,
with a sign to Othnam and Mehmmer, she stopped, pulled off her
boots, and thenceforth carried them under her arm. The
short corridor gave out onto a chamber strewn with so many cushions
Riane could not see the floor. All were studded with gold circles,
incised with a curious birdlike sigil. Low graven copper tables were
here and there scattered about, and filigreed oil lamps gave off a
warm and comforting light. But it was the walls that took her
attention. They were made of a matte black fabric, densely woven and
completely covered in a blizzard of arcane silver lacquer lettering,
all shallow arcs, bright dots, quick slashes, scimitared streaks. Riane
opened her mouth to ask about the writing, but Mehmmer quickly put a
finger to her lips, cautioning her to remain silent. The
chamber was deserted, but apparently Mehmmer and Othnam were
expecting this, for they stood just inside the doorway, still and
waiting. When dealing with the kapudaan, they had informed her on
their journey here, strict form, custom, and courtesies were of
paramount importance. Riane
felt as if the world had been steeped in silence. She felt waves of
it rolling across the chamber, felt the coolness of it against her
cheeks, and when, at last, her ears were filled to overflowing with
it, Makktuub made his appearance. He
was not tall as Gazi Qhan went, but he was unquestionably imposing.
He had a rather large head, and it was squarish, as if he had come
into the world unfinished. This lent him the appearance of someone
feral, unpredictable, and, therefore, dangerous. His cheeks were very
red, as if scrubbed raw by the wind, and he was dressed in indigo
from curly-haired head to curly-tipped slipper-shoe. He wore loose
trousers and blouse under a floor-length sleeveless outer garment
worked in an intricate geometric pattern of jeweled beads and
iridescent thread. Around his waist was a wide belt of suede, dyed
indigo. A matched pair of ceremonial dirks rode at his hips, the
sapphires embedded in the butts flashing like winking eyes. Each of
his thick fingers was banded by a jeweled ring. He
smiled when he saw Othnam and Mehmmer, and held out his hands, took
one of theirs in each of his. "Othnam.
Mehmmer," he said in a booming voice. "You have not been in
my house for many years." They
did not say a word because he had not yet asked them to speak. His
canny black eyes swept across Riane for a moment before returning to
the brother and sister. "I understand that you have brought me a
gift of the enemy." Again,
not a word in reply was uttered. Makktuub
lifted his left hand and as if from out of nowhere a bare-chested
servant appeared with an enormous ceramic jar on his shoulder. As the
servant came up, Othnam held out the bleached skull of the Jeni
Cerii. As the servant took the jar off his shoulder, Othnam turned
the skull upside down. The servant slowly poured the clear liquid
into the receptacle of the skull. First, Makktuub drank from the
skull, then Othnam and Mehmmer. Riane had the distinct impression
that she was witnessing a solemn and important ritual. "All
guests drink from the hadaqq." Makktuub nodded, and
Othnam turned to Riane, tilting the skull toward her mouth. Riane's
eyes watered as the fiery spiced liquid coursed down her throat. Makktuub
threw his head back and laughed from deep in the pit of his belly.
"At least it did not come back up." He slapped Riane hard
between her shoulder blades. "That shows me fortitude. I am well
pleased." He said this last in the odd high voice of the ba'du
vendor. As
Riane stared at him, he produced a thick black mat of hair, which he
placed over the lower half of his face. "My cheeks get so
chapped from the glue," he said, throwing his head back and
laughing again. His voice had returned to its normal booming pitch.
"Do not be shocked. I gain immeasurable pleasure and knowledge
from my periodic incognito forays into the city." He threw the
fake beard to the side, where it was deftly caught by one of his
servants. He
made another discreet sign, and another servant took the skull from
Othnam, washed and dried it, wiped it down with a fragrant oil, and
set it carefully on one of the copper tables. "Now
that the formalities have been dealt with, we will take our leisure."
Makktuub gestured to the cushions, but they did not sit until he did. By
lifting a hand, he caused yet another servant to hurry in with a
beaten brass tray holding a large bottle and blue glassware laced
with gold. As
the servant filled the glasses and served them, Makktuub pointed a
ringed finger at the gleaming skull. "I am most eager to learn
the details of the circumstances by which this came into your
possession." He looked expectantly at them. Othnam
and Mehmmer took turns describing how the Jeni Cerii had been taken
by one of their lymmnals as he tried to creep into their encampment. "And
this not a day's march from here?" "Yes,
kapudaan," Mehmmer, told him. His
face darkened, and he jumped up with such fury he almost overturned
the brass tray, which the servant whisked away from him without,
astonishingly, overturning a cup or spilling a drop. "Did you
interrogate the spy?" Othnam
nodded. "We did our best, kapudaan." Mehmmer
spread her hands. "But we are not ourselves spies and so—" "He
remained mute," Othnam said. "No
matter." Makktuub whirled, the skirts of his floor-length coat
rising upward in a spiral. "His presence in such close proximity
to Aga-chire confirms the warning I have been given of renewed
aggression by our neighbors," he said in a lowered, almost
guarded, tone. "Is
there in truth no hope, kapudaan?" Mehmmer said. "Is there
never to be peace among the Five Tribes? Are we to be continually at
one another's throats?" "This
time, one way or another, there will be an end," Makktuub said
"There is total war brewing, so my spies inform me, and my bones
reverberate with the voices of my ancestors, who cry out as one for
us to defend our land from those who wish to take it from us." Of
a sudden, he paused and, as if another thought possessed him
entirely, he swung back around, plunked himself upon a mound of
cushions close to Riane. He stared deep into her eyes. "And now,
at this very moment, a stranger appears amongst us. Tell me how this
came to be." Riane
opened her mouth, Makktuub's face broke into a thin smile, and she
saw out of the corner of her eye Mehmmer put a finger across her
lips. Othnam
then told a precise and accurate account of Riane's appearance, the
curious connection between her and the lymmnal Haqqa - how their
initial suspicion was melted by her offer to help the newborn
girlchild. "It is a surety that Jeene would have died without
Riane's intervention," he concluded. Makktuub's
tongue pushed out one cheek, then the other, working overtime, as it
seemed to do when he was lost in thought. At length, he said, "The
ba'du vendor asked you about your impressions of Aga-chire. Now I ask
you about your impressions of my court." Riane
thought but a moment before speaking, for she had already discerned
that Makktuub admired forthright answers above all others. "My
impression is this, kapudaan. Your court is like an egg. First comes
the shell, which is hard and seamless and protects the whole. Inside
the shell is the protein, deceptively clear because it is also
viscous enough to entrap anything that might somehow penetrate the
shell. At the center, protected by all that lies around it, is the
yolk, richest in nutrients, the source of both sustenance and
perpetuation." There
was a small silence, by which Riane was able to deduce that she had
surprised Makktuub, though nothing of this appeared in his face. He
looked for a moment, not at her, but at Mehmmer and Othnam,
addressing them when he spoke. "Mayhap you have brought me a
prize beyond your knowing." They
did not answer because they intuited that Makktuub required none. His
eyes lowered, taking in, as if for the first time, Riane's feet. His
red lips pursed. "What is this? We cannot have you go barefoot
in Agachire." Seeing Riane hold up her boots, he shook his head.
"Those simply will not do, not in my court." He raised a
hand and a servant miraculously appeared with a pair of maroon
shoe-slippers in his hand. The
servant knelt on one knee, took Riane's right foot behind the heel,
and slipped on the thin-soled shoe, then did the same with the left
one. Riane all but gasped. Othnam had been telling the truth: the
shoes were exceptionally comfortable. Makktuub
cocked his head. "Do your new shoes please you?" "Yes,
kapudaan, most assuredly they do." "Good.
Then I, too, am pleased." A
clear tone of finality caused Othnam and Mehmmer to stop drinking. A
servant took their empty glasses, then they rose and Riane with them. Makktuub
watched his obedient followers beneath hooded eyes. "You did
well," he said languidly, "by bringing me evidence of the
Jeni Cerii treachery that I can parade before our people. You will be
amply rewarded for your loyalty before your feet cross the outer
threshold to my court." As
they turned to go, he raised his hand. "Hold. Riane will stay
here." "As
you wish, kapudaan," Mehmmer said, bowing. "You have only
to tell us when we may return for her." "As
I said, Riane will stay here." The
briefest glance passed between brother and sister. "A thousand
pardons, kapudaan," Othnam said, "I have promised to myself
convey her to the kashiggen Mrashruth. It is her desire to be
introduced to Perrnodt." The
dark expression on Makktuub's face was terrible to behold. "Would
you repeat the misstep of your mother and father?" "No,
kapudaan," Othnam said hastily. "They
may obey you," Riane said, "but I will not." Her eyes
flashed. "I did not come to the Korrush to become your
prisoner." Makktuub
gestured and, at once, the chamber was ringed by armed guards. Two of
them stepped behind Othnam and Mehmmer, the sound of metal rang out,
and scimitars were placed against their throats. "If
you attempt to defy me, youngling, I will have their throats slit.
Here. At once." Marking the defiance in her eyes, he continued:
"Heed me well. On the day my father died, I murdered my three
brothers so that I would become kapudaan. I have absolutely no
abhorrence of blood or killing." Riane,
looking deep into Makktuub's eyes, knew he was telling the truth. She
could not allow Othnam and Mehmmer to be killed on her account. She
came and stood beside him. He laughed raucously as he cuffed her on
the side of her head. Riane felt a sharp, swift pain that took her
breath away. Makktuub's face, those of Othnam and Mehmmer began to
swim, doubling, tripling. Then
she pitched forward, plunged into the bottomless abyss of
unconsciousness.
11 Haan
Jhala
You
were going to leave, once again vanish into thin air, and this time
for who knows how long." Eleana stands accusingly before her.
"Without a word said to me about what has or has not passed
between us." "You
were sleeping," Riane says calmly, though not calmly enough to
keep her heart from fluttering into her throat. "You need your
rest. I did not want to disturb you." "Liar!
Coward!" There are tears in Eleana's eyes. "You simply
didn't want to answer any questions." "Questions?"
Riane says as they stand just outside the Abbey of Warm Current on a
cool starless night just moments before she will wrap herself in Nith
Sahor's neural-net greatcoat and imagine herself into the Korrush.
"What questions?" "About
why you're suddenly acting like I am contagious." "You
are imagining that." "Like
I have thoroughly disappointed you. What have I done that you should
push me away?" "You've
done nothing—" Riane says. "You see the impossibility
of this." "I
see only an enigma." A
sadness weighing Eleana down that Riane finds unbearable, even though
she knows she must accept it. "I
thought I knew you, but you have shut me out." For
an instant, Riane, torn by the madness of her love, feels the truth
bubbling in her mouth. But she knows Eleana would be horrified if she
ever discovered the truth, and that is something Riane knows she
cannot live with. So she says, "Nothing has changed. We are
still friends." "Friends
do not leave in the dead of night without so much as a good-bye." "If
a good-bye is what you want, then you have it." Eleana
slaps Riane hard. Then, her face abruptly pale, she turns and flees
down the cracked stone path. "N'Luuura
take it," Riane says under her breath. She catches up with
Eleana on the far side of the western temple and, taking her by the
elbow, whirls her around. Tears are streaming down Eleana's face. "Now
you do hate me," Eleana cries. "How could I have struck the
Dar Sala-at? I beg you, please forgive me." Her
heart breaking, Riane says kindly, "There is no need." "But
I should be punished." "For
what?" Eleana
shakes her head, the tears streaming down her face. She breaks free
and walks some distance away. "Go,"
Eleana says. "It's what you have to do, I understand that." "Eleana—" "No,
really. I do." Riane
opens her mouth to reply, shakes her head mutely, begins to turn
away. "Why
is this happening?" she hears Eleana say, and turns back. "Rekkk
is lying near death. Lady Giyan promised to take care of me through
the birth of my child. She was helping me through—Miina forgive
me for my selfishness, but she is gone now, and in a moment, you will
be, too." So
that is it, Riane realizes. Eleana believes she has been abandoned by
everyone. For the first time, she experiences Eleana's inner fear at
bearing and rearing a child alone, a child who is half-V'ornn. And
then, through the attenuated lens of her dream, she hears Eleana
saying, "That dagger you wear, I know it well. I gave it to
Annon months ago. How did you acquire it?" And
Riane had to think fast, angered that she had forgotten all about
hiding it from Eleana. "Giyan gave it to me on the afternoon
when we first met. She said she wanted me to have it. Does that go
against your wishes?" "No,
I ..." Eleana shakes her head wildly as the tears begin to
stream from her eyes. "Oh,
do not cry, beloved," Riane says as her heart breaks, "for
it is your own Annon who stands before you. Can you not see him
inside my eyes?" But
Eleana has already vanished. . . . Arising
from her dream, a heady mix of wish fulfillment and the recent past,
Riane found herself facing an intricately worked lattice screen. As
she focused, she saw that the highly detailed central carving was of
a male and female locked in an intimate and vividly sexual embrace.
It was so lifelike, she started. "Exquisite,
isn't it?" She
turned at the soft, melodious voice. A beautiful young woman lounged
on the same huge bejeweled cushions upon which she herself lay. Riane
licked her lips; her tongue felt swollen and her mouth was
unnaturally dry. All at once, she remembered her interview with
Makk-tuub and the way he had drugged her. As
she put a hand to her temple, the beautiful young woman said, "Oh,
don't fret, the needle hasn't left a mark." She smiled oddly,
almost coldly. "It never does." Making
a quick inventory, Riane saw that Nith Sahor's greatcoat was gone. "You
had better get used to it," the beautiful young woman said with
a smirk. "You own nothing now, and you never will again." Her
name, she said, was Tezziq, and she was small, dusky-skinned and
dark-haired like Mehmmer, with long, pale, almond-shaped eyes that
curled like slipper-tips at their outer corners. With her flat
cheekbones and pouty lips she resembled the female on the latticework
screen. Her hair, unlike Mehmmer's, fell in a waterfall down her
back, the high gloss of oil on it. Near the very end it was gathered
in a gold oval fillet incised with the same sigil carved into the
stud that pierced her left nostril. She
saw where Riane was looking, and said, "That is the sign of the
fulkaan. It is Makktuub's mark." She cocked her head. "Do
you even know what a fulkaan is, outlander? No?" There it was
again, that odd, cold smile. "It is the mighty bird of legend
that sat atop Jiharre's shoulder and served as his personal
messenger." She made a moue. "But, oh, I forget, an
outlander like you does not know who Jiharre is." "Jiharre
is the Prophet of the Gazi Qhan," Riane said, "is he not?" "He
came to the Korrush from the Djenn Marre, an orphan seeking asylum,"
Tezziq said. "And
initially met with distrust, just as I have." Tezziq's
lip curled in contempt. "Comparing yourself to the Great Prophet
is an efficient method of getting yourself killed in some quarters." "I
will keep that in mind," Riane said. A
small unpleasant smile played across Tezziq's mouth. "If you
would know, he lived in the small town of Im-Thera, where he employed
his remarkable skills at negotiation first to settle disputes between
individuals, then, as his reputation grew, between families and,
eventually between Tribes." "It
was Jiharre who united the Five Tribes, was it not?" "Through
him they were bound by faith rather than by blood." "But
now the Tribes are in a perpetual state of war." "When
Jiharre died, the faith holding us together factionalized. Disputes
arose among the holy ones as to the meaning of Jiharre's words."
Tezziq's eyes narrowed and became canny again. "But you are not
here for a lesson in religious history. Do you have any idea where
you are, outlander? No? You are in the kapudaan's haanjhala, the
silken womb of his palace, the very organ of his pleasure and
desire." Her upper lip curled into her serpent of a smile. "Do
you know why you are here? No?" She slowly spread her shapely
legs. "Do you see these diaphanous clothes I wear? Through them
you can see my flesh and yet you cannot. One moment I appear all but
naked, the other it seems I am as demurely clothed as a crone whose
once-potent sex has been shriveled by time." Her
long, slender fingers danced in the air. "There are many
beautiful females in the haanjhala, and all—all, that is, save
you, outlander— have been trained to give Makktuub nights of
optimum pleasure." "You
are nothing more than Looorm—whores." Tezziq's
dark eyes flashed. "We are ajjan!" she said proudly. "We
live to serve the kapudaan. What he asks of us we accomplish in the
most artful ways imaginable. In this we are no different than those
who fight for him, scheme for him, plow and sow for him." "It
is shameful what you do." A
baleful expression momentarily disfigured Tezziq's beautiful face.
"Another reason to despise you, outlander, you who drags your
own shame like stinking offal into our sanctuary." "If
you hate me so much," Riane said, "why are you bothering to
talk to me?" "I
have no other choice," Tezziq spat. "As Makktuub's first
ajjan I am ordered to train you in the nocturnal arts of most
interest to him." Riane
felt her stomach double-clutch. "You don't mean that the
kapudaan . . . that Makktuub means to . . ." "In
every orifice he can find." There
was no mistaking the pleasure Tezziq gained from Riane's discomfort
and consternation. "Whatever
he has in mind," Riane said softly, "I will not comply." "Of
course you will." Tezziq, thoroughly enjoying herself now,
grasped a hand mirror that lay beside her. "In fact, you have
already begun to do so." She
held up the hand mirror in front of Riane's face, and Riane gasped. "Exactly,"
Tezziq said acidly. Riane
gingerly touched the gold sigil-stamped stud that now pierced her
left nostril. Tezziq's
grinning face appeared around the side of the hand mirror as she
leaned forward. "Is the truth beginning to penetrate that thick
skull of yours, outlander? Oh, yes. Yes, I think it has." Her
long, green-tipped fingernail rimmed the mirror, then tap-tap-tapped
its center. "In here is the truth. What do you see reflected,
hmm? I will tell you then, outlander. It is your own future." Divination
Street ran on a more or less east-west line through Axis Tyr, and it
was as wide as any of the city's boulevards, so that those buildings
on its north side were blessed with abundant light even during autumn
and winter. This was, primarily, why Marethyn had chosen the location
for her atelier. She was an artist, and light was the one commodity
she could not do without. Early
in the morning, when the light was thin and crisp as a wafer, Sornnn
watched Marethyn at her easel. The easel was set up in the center of
the atelier's light-flooded atrium, a huge and complicated
contraption, pigment-spattered and oil-stained, that looked, to him,
like the beginning of the construction of a suspension bridge. The
notion of a bridge did not come idly to his mind, for it seemed to
him that it was the easel, rather than the canvas or the paints, that
was the midwife to giving life to Marethyn's ideas. Judging by her
expression, it was her home, the place where she dwelled most deeply
and completely. It was both a passionate and a compassionate world. As
he watched, Marethyn turned her head a little, the better to assess
how the light fell upon her subject. For her part, the old Tuskugggun
standing proudly in her crookedness seemed well at ease, despite the
carved heartwood cane on which she was obliged to lean. By her right
elbow was a small paint-smeared table on which were sitting a cup and
pot, both filled with star-rose tea. "You're
certain you're all right?" Marethyn said without breaking her
rhythm. "You're sure you're not tired, Tettsie." Tettsie is
what she called her grandmother Neyyore. It was a loving name,
speaking of giggling fun, damp kisses, and tiny treats, a survivor
from Marethyn's childhood. "I
am perfectly wonderful, darling," Tettsie said, trying for a
moment to crane her neck to get a look at the painting. "Glowing
like a mother with her first child." This
made Marethyn laugh, a sound so pure and rich and full that it
pierced Sornnn's hearts clear through. That night they had made love
at the warehouse, he had been on the verge of telling her everything.
He had felt it rising up inside him, a pithy warmth, not at all an
urge to confess, but a desire to share. But, in the end, something
had made him pause, an innate caution at the lack of a clear and
uncompromised sign that would make him certain he was right about
her. Divulging anything of a personal nature did not come easy to
him; in this, he was like his father. "Do
you remember," Marethyn said, talking to Tettsie, "when you
would take me down to the deep pools in the woods?" "On
the hottest days of summer," Tettsie said, taking a brief sip of
her beloved tea, careful to return to her pose. "Your father
would have been very cross had he ever found out I had exposed you to
the world outside the city walls." "That
didn't stop you." "No,
it certainly didn't," Tettsie said. "In fact, I kept
pushing the boundaries." Her
eyes had sunk inward, recalling that moment in glowing detail, the
past on occasion more vivid to her than the present. She had a regal
head with tissue-thin skin. She had lived long, though it was clear
she had not emerged unscathed from time's assault. She seemed to
cherish her age, a precious commodity that made her special. And,
indeed, she was special, and not only in Marethyn's eyes. Marethyn
switched brushes and laid on the new pigment thickly with the side of
the brush, a brief deft stroke, learned technique refined by
instinct. "No one could ever make you flinch, Tettsie. You were
not like Mother." "Do
you remember the cthauros holding pen I used to take you to?"
Tettsie was not comfortable talking about her daughter. Marethyn
smiled. "Of course. We went practically every week. You taught
me how to ride. I felt so wickedly delicious, and I thought you
looked so amazing sitting with your back straight, your head held
high, galloping across the countryside." "Form
is most important in riding, yes, darling? That is why it is a
metaphor for life." Tettsie took a another sip, quick and
dainty, of her star-rose tea, and this time Marethyn noted the
increased tremor in her hand. "But I am thinking of one time. It
was late in the year, just around this time, I believe, yes."
The past was so close she could feel it brush up against her
shoulder. "The scent of baled glennan and fertilizer, the
cthauros' slow wheezy exhalations." She took a deep breath, let
it slowly out. "The weather was so filthy we turned around and
went back." "I
remember." "That
was the first time you held an ion pistol." "I
felt really wicked. I felt as if when I was with you I was
leading another life." Tettsie
laughed, a little girl's laugh, much as Marethyn's, lovely and
musical. "Oh, my dear, you made such a fuss that day!" "I
hit the qwawd's-eye." Marethyn stopped painting for a moment.
"Three times." "That
was me. You didn't hit it until your third lesson." "Oh
yes. But after that I never missed." "You
were a natural sharpshooter. It was your artist's eye for nuance and
detail." Tettsie pursed her lips. "Do you remember that
Khagggun who used to come to the stables now and again? It was his
ion pistol. Our little secret." "Good
thing, too." Marethyn washed her brush free of green, dipped it
into a pool of indigo. "Mother would have confined me to the
hingatta forever." "I
made sure she knew nothing about it!" "That
is just the way she still likes things, isn't it? When I complained
to her about Kurgan keeping Terrettt away from the Rescendance she
professed perfect ignorance." At
the mention of Terrettt's name, Tettsie's face darkened. "Sadly
your mother is content in her ignorance," she said in an
uncharacteristic bout of candor. "Well, she is in all ways a
conventional Tuskugggun." "My
father saw to that." Tettsie's
eyes rose briefly to meet Sornnn's, flashing him an enigmatic look.
"He did what all V'ornn males do." Marethyn's
brush shot across the canvas. Tettsie
said mildly, "When can I see the painting?" "We're
almost finished for today. Don't you want to sit down?" "No.
I do not. This is a standing portrait, not a sitting one. This was my
wish." The
many lines radiating out to the corners of her face, furrowed now by
the freshet of anger the conversation had caused made her seem like a
temple to the dead god Enlil, crumbling and empty but still potent
enough to disturb long-forgotten childhood memories. Sornnn
had no good memories of his own mother. Like all V'ornn families, his
was dominated by the males, the more so because his mother was often
missing from the hingatta where she was supposed to have raised him.
Wives of Great Caste V'ornn lived their lives in hingatta after they
had given birth. The hingatta were communal residences, where groups
of Tuskugggun fulfilled their duties raising their children and, if
they were lucky and did not need much sleep, plied their
arts—weaving, painting, sculpting, composing music, forging
armor, and the like—in the small hours after their children
were safely tucked in bed. With his mother gone so often he would
content himself with playing with the Phareseian colorsphere she had
given him for his sixth birthday. It was a small, hard, cool ball, he
remembered, containing three gases found on Phareseius Prime. The
gases were incompatible and therefore shifted constantly inside the
sphere in an effort to get away from each other. The resulting
chemical reaction caused endlessly varied displays of violent color.
And, if you held it long enough, you felt a rhythmic pulsing not
unlike the beating of V'ornn hearts. He hadn't thought about the
colorsphere in many years. What had become of it? he wondered. Gone,
doubtless, along with all his other childhood toys. But
he had loved that toy until, one day, something quite inexplicable
happened. His mother returned to the hingatta, as abruptly as she had
left, and she had changed. She exhibited a distinct aloofness toward
him, and he was sure he had disappointed her in some way that she
could never forgive. And no matter what he did that coldness just
grew worse, until he gave up and she became a stranger in his eyes.
In direct consequence, he cleaved ever more closely to his father,
eager to absorb everything that Hadinnn SaTrryn taught him. When
Hadinnn had died some months ago, his mother came to see him. She
should not have. She was not wearing indigo, the color of mourning,
and she did not stay long. Outside, Sornnn had spied a stylish
two-seat hoverpod with a tall, slim, handsome Bashkir behind the
controls. This individual sat slouched slightly down, his bootheels
on the polished titanium trim, arms crossed easily over his chest. Sornnn
should have been calm, but he was not. The lessons he had learned in
the Korrush momentarily deserted him. His father, the one V'ornn he
idolized, was suddenly, shockingly, tragically dead, and here came
his mother, without an ounce of respect, in the company of another
V'ornn. He couldn't even remember what she said to him because he had
exploded, hitting her so hard across the face that she had cried out. "Just
like him," she had said with her hand to her stinging cheek.
"Well. I suppose I should not be surprised." There was no
anger in her eyes, only a distant sadness just beyond her reach. The
tall, slim, handsome Bashkir had come running in response to her cry,
at once advancing on Sornnn but, surprisingly, Sornnn's mother had
gripped him hard before he could utter the irrevocable challenge,
spinning him around, guiding him out of the residence without a
backward glance. The ion hum of their hoverpod had slashed through
the thick mourning silence. "What
would I have done without you?" Marethyn was saying now to her
grandmother. "You
would have found a way to survive," Tettsie said
matter-of-factly. "Just as I did." Marethyn
washed the wide fan-head brush she had been using. The smell of the
paints was very strong. "How did you survive, Tettsie?
How is it Grandfather never treated you like my father did my
mother?" "It
wasn't for lack of trying, my darling. No, indeed. But I fought back
in the only manner he would understand. I became a font of knowledge
about his rivals. I became an invaluable ally." Marethyn looked
up, startled. "So there was no love—?" "Love is
not possible without respect." Tettsie shrugged. "You, of
all people, should know that." Marethyn
could not help but steal a glance at Sornnn, who stood still and
silent and grave. "But you said you became his ally." From
the first, he had been at ease with Tettsie, and this had made
Marethyn very happy. "True
enough. But I think your grandfather soon came to despise what I did
because when I came to him . . . what I proposed ... To him it was a
kind of coercion that Tuskugggun ought not to know anything about. I
not only knew about it, I was singularly proficient in it. I gained
in power, yes, but I became anathema to him." "Why
didn't you stop?" "It
was already too late. For me. I could not go back to the way I had
been, the way all the Tuskugggun around me lived. Ground down by
their mates. I found that reduced form of life unacceptable." "But
you loved Grandfather!" Marethyn cried. "You told me so
yourself." "Well,
yes." A rueful smile played around Tettsie's mouth. "But
the loss of that love ... It was the price I paid for living life the
way it should be lived." Marethyn
came around the side of the painting. "What about Grandfather?" "What
about him?" "Didn't
he love you?" "Once.
So he said. But male V'ornn—" Tettsie broke off, and with
another quick glance at Sornnn, smiled. "Let us now speak of
other, less weighty matters." "No,"
Marethyn said stubbornly. "I want to know what you meant to
say." "All
right, if you wish it." Tettsie's fingers gripped her cane more
tightly. "I am of the opinion that V'ornn males are incapable of
romantic love. Most have no conception of what it is. The ones, like
your grandfather, who claim they do"—she shrugged—"are
simply deluding themselves." Marethyn
turned to Sornnn. "And what is your opinion?" He
held up his hands. "This is strictly a family matter." Tettsie
said very calmly, "A family into which you intend to enter, if
my intuition is right." "Grandmother!"
Marethyn cried in shock. Tettsie's
eyes were riveted on him. "Tell me if I am wrong, Sornnn
SaTrryn." "I
see that I am going to be dragged into this whether I like it or
not," he said in an attempt to make a joke of it. Her
eyes never left his. "For me this is a matter of the utmost
import." "Very
well, then." Marethyn
liked that he respected Tettsie's wishes as she herself did. He
nodded. "It seems to me that Tuskugggun are just as incapable of
love as males." "I
do hope you have a specific example in mind," Tettsie said
dryly. "As
it happens, I do. My own mother. She shirked her duty at the
hingatta; she was cold and unfeeling. I think she despised me,
possibly because I was a male and not a female with whom she could
share her feelings." "As
it happens." Tettsie repeated the phrase. "As it
happens, I know your mother, Sornnn SaTrryn. We have been friends
for many years now." "What?" "Oh
yes, it's true. It was to me she came when your father beat her." "Why
did you—What are you saying?" Sornnn's head was spinning.
"My father would never—" "Why
do you think she was absent from the hingatta so often?" Tettsie
limped toward him. "She was in hospital, and then, when she was
released, she stayed with me because she did not want you to see the
bruises, did not want you asking questions, did not want you to know
the truth about how your father was with her." Sornnn
was reeling. "My father was a good V'ornn." His throat was
so tight he could scarcely force the words out. "We
both know he was a good V'ornn in many ways," Tettsie
said with a kind of gentle pity. "But he was many things. My
intent is not to denounce or demean him, it is simply to show you the
entire individual." "I
do not understand any of this," he said almost wildly. Tettsie
put a surprisingly strong hand on him. "Whatever you thought of
your father, however he was with you, it wasn't how he was with her." And
then he remembered what his mother had said to him that horrible day
of his father's death just after he had struck her. Just like him.
Well. I suppose I should not be surprised- Sornnn
felt sick to his stomachs. "But he couldn't possibly ... I mean,
how could he?" "Because
he was paranoid and fearful and jealous." She looked deep into
his eyes. "Do you understand me, Sornnn SaTrryn?" And
then, at last, he remembered what it was his mother had said to him
the moment before he had struck her: I'm not here because of him.
I came to see you. So many fragments of memories swirling around
his mind. He shook his head, confused and unnerved. "Let
me then ask you a simple question." Tettsie smelled faintly of
flowers and powder, a confluence of scents he recalled from his
childhood, from the hingatta when his mother was at his side. "This
life— the life you have chosen for yourself—is it
possible that it could make you paranoid and fearful and jealous?" "I
am not that sort of V'ornn." "And
yet you do not live your life entirely in the open. I am speaking now
of your relationship with Marethyn." She paused a moment. "I
say this because I am protective of my granddaughter. Extremely
protective." He
nodded, swallowing hard. He knew this, of course, knew this must be
coming. "If
you continue in your pursuit of her, be mindful of her, not simply of
yourself. Be mindful of what you will be taking her away from. Be
most especially mindful of what she will be left with if you forsake
her." "I
would never—" "I
charge you with this, Sornnn SaTrryn!" She
said this so fiercely that he nodded like a little boy, and said,
"Yes, of course, I—" Then
something outside his ken came into her eyes, and she said, most
softly, "I believe I would like to sit down now." Of
a sudden, her eyes rolled up and she staggered. Her cane skidded,
then cracked in two and she fell away from him, fell heavily and
awkwardly against the easel, capsizing it so that she and it crashed
to the floor together. The painting spun on its corner like a mobile,
muted colors and masterly brushstrokes blurred, then slowly came to
rest in a thick stripe of shadow. Sornnn knelt beside her, the tips
of his fingers cool against her pale, dry, crepey skin. He was
mindful of Marethyn screaming her grandmother's name, he was mindful
of searching for Tettsie's nonexistent pulse, he was mindful of his
hearts swelling as he held grandmother and granddaughter both while
Marethyn, a little girl once more, wailed in shock and grief. Riane
had slept through the night and the whole of the following day. When
she awoke, the first thing Tezziq taught her was how to eat properly
in the Gazi Qhan fashion. Of course, she waited until the platters of
food were set down before them. Gauging the extreme hunger in Riane's
expression, Tezziq invited her to dig in. "There
are no utensils," Riane pointed out. "We
do not use utensils." Riane
shrugged. She was so famished her stomach had turned painful.
Eagerly, she reached toward the platters, only to receive a stinging
slap on her hands. She started. One eye on the guards lining the
walls, she restrained herself. "Start
again," Tezziq said coldly, without so much as a word of
explanation. When
Riane again reached for the food, Tezziq slapped her, harder this
time. Despite herself, Riane cocked her arm in retaliation, but in
the blink of an eye two guards had scimitar-shaped dirks at her
throat. Riane
lowered her hand, and Tezziq nodded silently to the guards, who
reluctantly retreated to their former positions. They seemed
disappointed not to have been able to draw blood. "Now,"
Tezziq ordered. "Again." The
third time Riane picked up the food, Tezziq slapped her so hard
across the face it flew out of her hands. Riane's
eyes blazed. "You command me to eat, then punish me for it,"
she cried. "What do you want from me?" "Will
you weep now, outlander, at the injustice of it all?" Tezziq
sneered. "Forget justice. You are in the Korrush now. You will
learn to be civilized or be struck down like a rabid slingbok."
Her chin jutted out. "Now eat." Riane
sat with her hands folded in her lap. "Are
you deaf?" Tezziq shouted, her face flushing. "Eat when I
tell you to eat!" Riane
sat immobile in the ringing silence. Tezziq
nodded. "Good. It appears that you may be trainable after all."
She lifted an arm. "Even when we are in the wild we wash the
dust from our hands before we eat." Riane
saw a large woven basket in which were two wet towels. She took one,
washing her hands with it. "You
may eat," Tezziq said. Riane
reached for the food and had her hands slapped so hard it turned
their backs ruddy. She wiped the defiance off her face, silently
commanded herself to sit placidly. "What am I doing wrong?"
she asked. "Impudent
outlander." Tezziq slapped her across the face. Riane
took a breath. "Please, Tezziq, teach me the proper way to eat." The
serpent smile crawled across Tezziq's lips, but it did not reach her
eyes which continued to regard Riane with their implacable stare. "We
eat with first two fingers and thumb of one hand, those fingers only.
Do you understand, outlander?" "Yes." Tezziq
slapped her across the face. "Yes,
Tezziq." "Now
eat, as a Gazi Qhan eats." Keeping
one hand in her lap, Riane reached out with two fingers and her thumb
for a morsel of food, put it in her mouth. No punishment was
forthcoming. She
reached for another and promptly got her hand slapped. She said
nothing, but sat unmoving, both hands in her lap, staring at Tezziq,
careful to keep her expression neutral. "Chew
your food and swallow completely before reaching for more,"
Tezziq said. "It is both polite and allows you to savor
completely the flavor of each dish. This behavior honors your host
and yourself." Riane
chewed her food and tried not to enjoy it. But by the time she had
taken her third mouthful she knew that Tezziq was right. By sitting
quietly and chewing each tender morsel she was able to concentrate
fully on its flavor, texture, and aroma. It made for an uncommonly
serene and enjoyable meal. When
she had eaten her fill, Tezziq pointed her chin toward the large
woven basket. This time Riane needed no explanation. She wiped her
right hand clean with the remaining towel. "Well,
outlander," Tezziq said, rising, "perhaps there is hope for
you yet." It
did not take Riane long to feel lost in the maze of the innermost
palace as she followed Tezziq from one tented chamber to another. At
length, they came to a small antechamber, unadorned save for the
ubiquitous guards. "Stand
just there," Tezziq ordered. She walked around Riane, sniffing.
"These robes are ripe besides being ugly. Remove them." As
Riane glanced uncertainly at the guards, Tezziq's laughter trilled
through the tent. "Pay them no heed," she said. "Look!
She went over to one and bared her breasts. Holding them in her
hands, she rubbed them against his massive chest. The guard's
expression did not change. Tezziq reached between his legs, massaging
him. "You
see? Nothing." She turned to regard Riane over her shoulder.
"All the guards of the inner court are saddda; they have
been altered. They are without a sex organ." Mistaking the look
on Riane's face, she added, "Do you think Makktuub would
otherwise trust them among us? The temptation would be too great." The
sight of Tezziq's naked breasts, her lascivious behavior had had
their predictable effect on Annon's powerful male psyche. Riane's
heartbeat quickened, and she could feel all the telltale signs of
arousal on her flesh. Tezziq
returned to Riane and flicked her hand. "Enough talk. Disrobe." Riane
stood immobile for a moment. She was terrified that Tezziq would
recognize her erotic excitement and become suspicious. "Do
as you are told, or I will do it for you}" Tezziq barked. Riane
took off her clothes. She did not even look at the guards, so acutely
aware of Tezziq's scrutiny was she. "Well,
well," Tezziq said thoughtfully, "what a beauty you are."
She circled around and around. "Your legs are powerful, as are
your shoulders. Your buttocks are strong. And your
breasts—magnificent! The nipples so hard!" Riane
swallowed hard, her face on fire. "Luck
is with you. You have the kind of body Makktuub covets." Something
in her voice caused Riane to forget her extreme discomfort. Was it
envy she heard, curling like a bile-worm inside an overripe clemett? "Yes,
he will be all too eager to welcome you to his bedchamber." No,
Riane thought. It was sadness. And then, looking into Tezziq's eyes,
she thought she understood why. For the first time, she felt
something other than hostility toward this beautiful young female.
Wasn't she as much a prisoner of the haanjhala as Riane was? Riane
felt her defiance tempered, her rage dissolved. "I
would not go," she said softly, "had I the choice." "Then
you are a fool," Tezziq said shortly. "For sex is a kind of
power." She came and stood close to Riane. "The only kind
you and I have." "And
what has this power availed you?" "I
am Makktuub's first ajjan, his favorite. I am most blessed he has
chosen me to pleasure him above all other ajjan." "And
when his fancy is taken by another?" Tezziq
averted her eyes. "That is none of your concern." "You—your
entire being is defined by him. If this is so, when he finds another,
you are annihilated." Tezziq
whirled, slapping Riane across the face. "Striking
me will not make it less so." Now
she struck Riane with her balled fists until Riane grabbed her
wrists, held her immobile. The guards at once advanced, but with a
sharp command, Tezziq froze them in their tracks. They watched the
two girls with jaundiced eyes, thinking their unknowable saddda
thoughts. Riane
and Tezziq, locked together, strength against strength, will against
will, stared nakedly at each other until one lone tear emerged from
Tezziq's eye and began to roll down her cheek. With a stifled cry,
she wrenched herself free and turned her back on Riane and the guards
alike. Riane
took a step toward her. "Despite what you may think, I do not
covet him nor the kind of power you believe his pleasure brings,"
she whispered to Tezziq's back. "For males like him are never
truly sated no matter how drunk they become on your wiles. Their
sights are always set on what lies unknown just beyond their
fingertips." She took another step closer. "You know this
well, Tezziq. You know this is why he wants me. And, in truth, what
power could possibly lie in that?" From
the fastness of the Abbey of Warm Current, Eleana leaned against cool
stone blocks, looking out at columns of smoke rising from the
foothills of the Djenn Marre. So absorbed was she in her own thoughts
that she did not stir when the tall armored figure came up behind
her. "You
should be resting," Rekkk Hacilar said. "How
can I rest?" She pointed to the smoke, rich and dark, which
seemed to hang motionless, blotting out the mountains behind it. "You
see what is happening? The Khagggun have found Resistance cells and
are burning our warriors to ash." Rekkk
still moved gingerly. His wound, though all but fully healed
outwardly, still pained him now and again, deep inside. And yet, it
was healing at an astonishing rate. He put this down to the changes
Nith Sahor had made in him when he had implanted the special okummmon
on the inside of his left wrist. Eleana
looked so melancholy, his heart ached for her. "Where is
Thig-pen?" he asked, looking around. "Gone,"
she said. "She was called back to the Ice Caves on urgent
business, she told me." "That
sounds mysterious." "Ominous,
more like." He
sighed as he sat beside her. "I cannot believe I am saying this,
but I miss her." Eleana
nodded. "I do, too." But he could see her eyes were fixed
on the lazy columns of smoke hovering balefully over the
mountainside. She shook her head. "When Wennn Stogggul had
Eleusis Ashera murdered and became regent, I thought it could not get
worse for us." She cupped a hand beneath her distended belly. "I
was wrong. Under Kurgan Stogggul and Olnnn Rydddlin, the Khagggun
have stepped up their patrols, their killing sorties. It is like the
first days of the invasion. They are brutal, relentless. I should be
there with my compatriots." "To
meet your death?" "I'd
like to think I'd make a difference," she said bitterly.
"Instead, I hide away here in this sanctuary." "Have
you so quickly forgotten that the Star-Admiral himself searches high
and low for us?" "I
forget nothing," she said shortly. The columns of smoke were
lightening now as a slight wind broke across the forested hilltops.
"But I feel so utterly useless." "Come
away from this." He touched her shoulder. "It does no good
to rend your heart so." She
allowed him to turn her around. "What shall we do, then, Rekkk?" "You
will do nothing at all. You must think of the baby now. You cannot
put him in jeopardy." "That
is no answer, at least not for me." She shook her head. "If
I sit idle much longer, I shall go out of my mind." She took his
hand, squeezed it. "Lady Giyan has been captured, the Dar
Sala-at is in the Korrush, perhaps already in danger, Thigpen is on
her mysterious mission, and here we are, sitting around mourning lost
friends." The smile she offered was bleak and despairing. "I
am already fighting the nesting instinct inside me." He
regarded her levelly. "That nesting instinct, perhaps it
shouldn't be trifled with." "I
would die of shame if I could no longer contribute." Then,
without warning, she burst into tears. He took her by the elbow and
led her down the abbey paths into the central atrium of the largest
of the temples. Clemett trees rose at the four corners, and
blood-rose bushes, their leaves still green and glossy, massed along
the perimeter, in desperate need of pruning. The garwood maze in the
center was barely distinguishable, a tangled mass with the odd gap
here and there. "A
sad end, isn't it?" Eleana wiped her eyes. And then she turned
to him, "I fought with Riane just before she left." "About
what?" "Now
that you ask, I do not know exactly." She drew a stray lock of
hair off her forehead. "You see, I was angry that she going
away, that she was abandoning me." "Don't
be so hard on yourself. With the baby coming—" She
looked up into his face. "But now, I think maybe I was angry
about something else entirely." "What,
exactly?" "Maybe
it's ... I mean, when I'm near her, there's something that goes right
through me ... an electric ... a premonition ..." "That's
hardly surprising. She is the Dar Sala-at, after all." Eleana
nodded her head. "Of course. She is. But she is also Riane and
she's carrying the dagger I gave to Annon and when I am with her he
seems so close . . . Oh, it's suddenly all so confusing!" Rekkk
sighed. "Clearly you're overwrought. You need to rest." He
led her over to a bench, where they sat for a time, Eleana idly
scraping moss off the clawed stone feet with the heel of her boot.
The wind scouring the bare-branched trees sounded to her like a death
rattle. In her mind's eye, she saw Riane's face just after she had
struck her, a sudden explosion of emotion and then, almost
immediately, a door slamming shut. She closed her eyes against the
image, saw instead the charred and twisted bodies of her former
compatriots with only the columns of black oily smoke to mark their
passing. Her eyes burned with sudden tears, and she began again to
sob. Rekkk
put an arm around her, and said, "How beautiful this time of
day. How the low sunlight streaks the grey stone with gold." He
sighed. "It isn't hopeless, you know. You can't allow yourself
to think that." "But
that's exactly what I do think!" she cried. "The
Resistance is being methodically wiped out. You only have to look to
the north to see the evidence." Then
she raised her head at the sound of beating wings, and she saw the
Teyj with its magnificent red-blue-green plumage arise from the dense
thicket of garwood with something in its beak. It alighted on the
bench and cocked its head, its glossy eyes regarding them both. Then
it ducked its head and dropped into her lap a small oval object. "It
looks like a seedpod," she said, turning it over. "But it's
metallic." "Tertium
and germanium," Rekkk said. She
blinked away her tears. "V'ornnish." He
nodded. "It's called a duscaant. It's a Khagggun recording
device. A sophisticated instrument of espionage." She
glanced at the Teyj, but Rekkk shook his head. He
plucked it from her hand. "Thigpen and Riane found it in the
Library." "But
that's impossible," Eleana said. "The Library was sealed
with an Osoru spell before the V'ornn entered the abbey complex." "So
it only could have been placed in there before the V'ornn
arrived." Her
mouth opened. "A Kundalan spy?" "Ramahan.
This is what Thigpen related to me just before she left." "A
Ramahan working with the V'ornn." Eleana shuddered. "But
what would make a priestess of Miina betray her own kind?" "Here
is a better question to ask. How is it that the Khagggun are having
so much success searching out and destroying Resistance cells in this
quadrant of the northern continent?" "What
do you mean?" "There
was a time when I was assigned to the western quadrant, beyond the
Borobodur forest. When I linked in with the other Pack-Commanders
there I discovered that they were far less successful at rooting out
Resistance cells than were the packs here, along the Land of Sudden
Lakes corridor." "The
Ramahan spy?" He
nodded. "It is a logical assumption. The intelligence has to
come from somewhere." All
Eleana's formidable faculties were fully engaged now, her lethargy
and despair forgotten. "When you were a Khagggun Pack-Commander
where did your information come from?" "From
the office of Line-General Lokck Werrrent." He cocked his head.
"What are you thinking?" "I
was wondering who inside Werrrent's office is the control for the
Ramahan spy." Rekkk
held up the duscaant. "Perhaps this will give us a clue." "Do
you know how to activate it?" The
Teyj fluttered its top wings and began to sing. "No,"
Rekkk said, "but I believe the Teyj does." Steam
rose almost straight up, a column as ephemeral as the city of tents
that surrounded it. And yet it possessed an unmistakable strength.
The steam was pungent with dried limoniq leaves, and this powerful
scent gave the column a weight like alabaster. It
was raining a little when Tezziq led Riane into the bathtent; the
center of the steaming pool, where the tent was open to the elements,
was puckered with it. It beat upon Riane's head as, naked, she
luxuriated in the melting heat. "Look,
look here," Tezziq said, taking one of Riane's hands in her own.
"Already the dust is under your nails. That is one reason we
paint them." Tezziq
had a beautiful body, small, sleek, gently muscled, virtually
flawless. Her dusky skin shone with natural oils. Her breasts hung
like limoniq ready to be plucked. The patch between her legs was
tiny, dark as shadowed twilight. Riane was all at once reminded of
the baths at the Abbey of Floating White, of the long months it took
her to become accustomed to her new female body, of having it
scrutinized by other females, of the confusion of continuing to feel
Annon's powerful male pleasure in the naked female form, of dealing
with her reawakening desire. Unlike the Ramahan acolytes of the abbey
with whom Riane had bathed, Tezziq knew what she possessed and used
it accordingly. Every movement, every gesture no matter how small or
trivial was in the service of her body. Either she had been born a
sexual creature or in the haanjhala had been trained to be one. Her
stiff nipples scraped against Riane's back as she ran a soft-bristled
brush down Riane's spine. Riane could not help but shiver. Doubtless,
Tezziq marked this, for she pressed her breasts hard against Riane's
back as she leaned in and whispered in her ear, "Wa tarabibi.
That is a special phrase used only among intimates. It means 'my
beloved.' " Her tongue flicked out, running the shell of Riane's
ear. "I may spread my thighs for the kapudaan whenever it
pleases him, but as for myself my taste runs to somewhat more . . .
delicate flesh." Her small white teeth captured Riane's earlobe
for just an instant, taking the merest nip before she resumed her
scouring. Steam
continued to rise about them, and the gentle rain obscured all behind
an hallucinatory wall. The heat, the pungent aroma of the limoniq
leaves, the cleansing with its distinctly erotic overtones made Riane
drowsy and excited all at once. She used her fright and her intense
desire to be free to combat these feelings. Except it wasn't as
simple as that. Much to her chagrin, she found herself mired in the
frustration and guilt that was a direct result of her oblique
relationship with Eleana. Nothing she felt or yearned for could ever
be shared with the female she loved best and most deeply. Had she
been asked, she would have denied most vociferously having any
intention of straying from that love. And yet, a love as wild and
strong as hers, cruelly thwarted, will inevitably seek an outlet
elsewhere, making her vulnerable to temptation. Her longing for
Eleana had only become more acute with distance. Eleana she could not
have, but the longing remained, festering like a wound that resists
conventional treatment. A temporary balm might be just that, might
even be perceived to contain an element of danger, and yet in certain
circumstances it seemed preferable to continuing the pain unabated. She
leaned her head back onto Tezziq's bare shoulder. "Tell me about
Makktuub," she said. "What does he whisper to you after a
night of lovemaking?" The
slightest ripple of tension informed Tezziq's body. "A spy would
wish to know these things, would she not?" Riane
took Tezziq's free hand and placed it just beneath her breast. "So
would a novice ajjan who must be aware of all the things that will
please her new lover." "Which
are you?" Tezziq trembled a little. "Spy or novice ajjan?"
Riane's hand covered Tezziq's, moved it slightly so that it cupped
the lower half of her breast. She heard Tezziq's tiny indrawn breath
in her ear and thought she had her. Slowly,
Tezziq's hand squeezed inward until it was Riane who gasped. "Do
not mistake me for a fool, outlander," Tezziq hissed. "I am
not so easily seduced. You have shown me your defiance and your
contempt." She had dropped the brush, and she reached roughly
between Riane's thighs. "I could take you with the brutal
finality of a male taking a female. I could—" But
Riane had whipped around, surprising her, pulling her tight, stroking
her as gently as if Tezziq was being fanned by a gimnopede's wings,
for she sensed in this girl a burning need to be gentled as her
master, the kapudaan, would never think to do. Did she, as well,
acknowledge her own need to be held, gentled, wanted? "If
I showed defiance," she whispered, "it was because I was
frightened. If I showed contempt, it was in defense of your clear
hatred of me." Light lay along the water, glimmering, reflecting
their intermingled bodies so that it was impossible to tell where one
left off and the other began. Tezziq's flesh rose in a field of tiny
bumps as Riane continued to stroke her in long, sinuous passes. "But
as you see, that can change in the single beat of a heart."
Across the sheened hills, the shadowed valleys, her fingertips traced
every curve and quivering nuance of Tezziq's body. "In truth, I
have no taste at all for males. The savagery they take to bed sickens
me wholly." Tezziq's
eyes fluttered closed, and when she opened them the irises had
darkened somewhat. "Whatever you may be," she said huskily,
"you are surpassingly clever." She
took Riane's head between her hands and hungrily kissed her. When
she was finished, her eyes locked with Riane's. "Whatever you
are, it may be I have been waiting for you." Her tongue came out
in a brief flick as Riane's fingers passed between her thighs. She
grabbed Riane's wrist and held it tight. "But mark me,
outlander. If you lie to me, if you play me false even once, I swear
on the holy words of the Prophet I will carve out your heart and feed
it to you." Kurgan
began to notice that when Nith Batoxxx was at the regent's palace he
went out of his way to avoid mirrors. He
was in his private quarters, affixing his hold-signature to a
stultifying pile of official documents when he heard the whisper of a
voice. His first thought was to summon his Haaarkyut guard. But some
deep-seated instinct made him hesitate. He sat very still for a
moment. From the balcony outside came the shrill cry of a blackcrow.
After a moment's silence the voice began again. He put aside his
dreary work and cocked an ear, listening more closely. The voice was
familiar and yet it was not. Its tone danced on the periphery of his
memory, tantalizing him. He silently pushed back his chair and rose. He
walked this way and that about the chamber until he had located the
direction of the voice. Without making a sound, he moved to an open
doorway. There he waited a moment, listening intently. The voice was
so low he still could not make out individual words. He moved
slightly, insinuating himself into the open doorway. Luckily, it was
late in the day. The windows in his chamber faced east, and, thus, he
cast no shadow into the chamber from which the voice was emanating.
He moved again, and now he could hear more clearly. Unfortunately, he
was listening to a language wholly unfamiliar to him. Filled
now with an unbearable curiosity, he craned his neck. Peering around
the doorframe, he spied Nith Batoxxx. The Gyrgon was standing in
front of a small mirror—one of the very few in the residence. Improbable
as it might seem, it appeared as if he was speaking into the mirror.
In a language other than V'ornn. An unknown language, in fact. Kurgan
stared. Judging by the periodic pauses, it appeared to him as if Nith
Batoxxx were having a conversation with the mirror. So he was mad,
after all! Or
was there another explanation? He
remembered when he himself had been in this room. Nith Batoxxx had
come to the side doorway, the one directly opposite where he was now
standing, and instead of coming into the chamber, had beckoned for
Kurgan to come to him in the adjacent room. Kurgan still felt the
quick flush of anger he had felt at the time. Then there was the time
that he and the Gyrgon had been walking into the Great Hall. Kurgan
had ordered an octagonal mirror for the chamber in which he housed
his small-arms collection, and some V'ornn had left it propped
against the hallway wall. Instead of walking past it, the Gyrgon had
abruptly excused himself, appearing in the Great Hall, through a
different door, sometime later. At the time, Kurgan had not connected
Nith Batoxxx's behavior with the mirror, but now he had to wonder. He
had to wonder whom the Gyrgon was talking to in that mirror. Perhaps
these mirrors were a new form of Gyrgon spying device. But then why
would Nith Batoxxx seek to avoid them? Determined
to get an answer to his questions, he pulled himself back from the
doorway, went through the chamber he had been in and out into the
hallway. There was a doorway to the adjacent room that faced the
mirror. When he came upon it, it was closed. He grasped the knob and,
taking a deep breath, carefully opened it a crack. He
saw a thin wedge of the room, the Gyrgon's shoulder. He opened the
door wider until the edge of the mirror came into view. He moved his
head so that he could see Nith Batoxxx's reflection in the mirror,
and it was all he could do not to scream. It
was Tezziq who dismissed the serving girls; she had decided to plait
Riane's hair herself. It was a long, slow, languorous dance, even, in
a way, a loving one the way Tezziq choreographed it. Unseen, clasped
in Riane's fist, was the infinity-blade wand that Minnum had affixed
to the nape of her neck. They
reclined on silken cushions, while she told Riane all about the
kapudaan. "Makktuub is an exceedingly proud male," she said
softly. "He
comes from a long line of kapudaan. He was born to lead. This means
he is ruthless, brutal, pious, relentless. He is a great kapudaan,
perhaps the greatest in a century." Riane
could tell that Tezziq believed this wholeheartedly. "Is he also
fair?" "Fair?"
Tezziq paused in her plaiting. "Piety precludes fairness. But
then fairness is a weakness, isn't it? And Makktuub has no
weaknesses." Everyone
has a weakness, Riane thought. Perhaps Makktuub's piety is
his. But these musings she kept to herself. This much, at least,
he had already taught her. All she said was, "Tell me everything
I need to know about him." Tezziq
recommenced her plaiting, her fingers working deftly on the complex
pattern. "Makktuub has plucked one saying from the Mokak-addir,
which he faithfully adheres to," she continued. " 'One
sin leads to all others.' " His
piety again, Riane thought. "Does Makktuub come from a pious
family?" "Not
at all. But every day Makktuub is in residence at the palace a
certain religious scholar comes precisely at midnight and for the
next two hours instructs the kapudaan in the Mokakaddir." "How
do you know this?" "This
scholar comes by the provisions gate, on the west side of the palace.
It is near the haanjhala baths. I saw him, once. An ancient, bearded
Ghor." "A
Ghor?" "The
Ghor are a fanatical, ultrareligious sect. They claim to be direct
blood descendants of Jiharre's disciples, the guardians of the
Mokakaddir. Being a Ghor is strictly hereditary; the
privileges and responsibilities are handed down from one generation
to the next. They take these responsibilities—the Burdens of
Jiharre, as they call them—most seriously. Even the kapudaan is
wary of gainsaying their will—az-miirha—the Path
of the Righteous," "Is
this your belief also?" Riane asked. Tezziq
hesitated, but that instant spoke volumes to one listening as
intently as Riane was. "I
have no beliefs," Tezziq said softly. "I have only my
desire to serve." "You
have more than that, don't you? You have your will to survive." "Yes.
I have that." Riane
turned slowly in the embrace of Tezziq's arms, until Tezziq released
her plaits. "The will cannot long survive malnourished,"
she whispered. "This I know from bitter experience, for I am an
orphan without even a memory of home and hearth to sustain me."
Her hands alighted on Tezziq's shoulders like the kiss of a
thrice-banded flutterfly. "If I know anything, it is this: if
your will survives, it is only because of belief." Tezziq's
eyes, darkening still, stared into Riane's. "Belief in what?" "Are
you asking for me, or for yourself?" "For
you. What do you believe in, outlander?" "A
better world." There
was a moment's hesitation before Tezziq burst into laughter. It was
far from a happy sound, possessing as it did a decidedly caustic edge
to its bitterness. "For a moment you had me going. But I know
you cannot be serious." "I
am perfectly serious," Riane told her. Tezziq
shook her head, her waterfall hair swaying against her shoulder
blades. "But how could you be? Look around you. You are a
prisoner in a strange world, with no hope of escape." "All
the more reason to believe in something better," Riane said
simply. Tezziq
drew back. "Now surely you mock me." Riane
took her head in her hands and kissed her, as Tezziq had before
kissed her. "Riane
. . ." It
was the first time Tezziq had used her name, and Riane was a little
surprised it had meaning for her. It was because she heard Eleana's
voice. She closed her eyes and thought of Eleana, wished Tezziq was
Eleana, but was afraid of that, too, as if even imagining herself and
Eleana together was dangerous. Without her sorcerous Third Eye she
felt blind, crippled, cut off from the auras of those she loved. She
existed now in a featureless chamber without even the hint of an echo
to remind her that she was not altogether alone. Tezziq had somehow
slipped into this prison, and the exile in which both girls found
themselves made each irresistible to the other. "It
is my unwavering belief that keeps me strong." Riane ran a
finger down the side of the girl's face. "What belief keeps you
strong, Tezziq?" Tezziq
shook her head. Her eyes were liquid; she seemed on the verge of
tears. "In truth, I do not know." "Then
we shall strike a deal," Riane said. "You will teach me
about the secrets of love, and I will teach you to unearth the belief
inside you." Tezziq
searched her face. "Is that all you want?" Riane
recognized that look. Tezziq needed the truth, so she gave it to her.
"No," she whispered. "If I am to escape, I will need
help." Tezziq
bit her lip. "What you ask is strictly forbidden." "I
believe in a better world." What
better reasoning could Riane give her? Olnnn
Rydddlin led sixteen handpicked Khagggun officers through the densely
wooded hillsides at the foot of the Djenn Marre. The recruits were
made up of the most promising First-Captains and First-Majors. Olnnn
had them put through a grueling test that he himself had devised. To
accrue their long-term loyalty, he had taken the test with them,
cutting no corners, giving himself no slack. He had pushed his
sorcerous leg to its limit, ignoring the fiery pain flickering in the
marrow of his exposed bones. They had spent two weeks in the high
Djenn Marre wilderness without alloy armor or photon communications.
He force-marched them fourteen hours a day, most of that on steep
upgrades. They were blinded by sun, drenched by freezing rain,
scoured by knife-edged winds. They carried no rations with them, were
required to feed themselves with what they were able to catch. In the
beginning, the recruits used ion fire, but that obliterated their
prey, so they took to building snares out of bark-stripped wood and
short lengths of vine. Hunger sparked their ingenuity. Similarly,
they carried no portable sonic showers. They grew used to the smell
of each other between bouts of bathing in the deep, crystal-clear
pools that dotted the Land of Hidden Lakes corridor along which they
roamed. They
grew used to the cold, and then, inured to it, took to trekking
stripped to the waist. They grew to like their armorless torsos. The
sun and the wind deepened the color of their skin. On
this moonsless night, Olnnn took them along a perilously narrow path
that snaked down a steep ridge into a narrow gorge. Far below them, a
black river faintly glittered in starlight. This
was the site of their final exam. Those who survived would attain the
rank of Attack-Commandant, a new officer rank that Olnnn had decided
on. After his fateful meeting with Line-General Lokck Werrrent at
Spice Jaxx's he had decided to interpret the regent's orders in his
own way. Olnnn
led his unit, silent within the small sounds of a wilderness night,
down into the gorge. He could feel the heightened tension of his
recruits. They knew what was about to ensue. They knew it was
possible that some of them would not survive. He
had decided to construct a unit of commanders, as ruthless as they
were absolutely loyal to him, insurance against the day he felt
certain was coming, when Kurgan Stogggul would try to usurp his power
base. You enjoy the
loyalty of every Khagggun. So long as this is true there is no
danger, Lokck Werrrent had told him. Not
knowing Kurgan Stogggul as Olnnn did, he had missed the point
entirely. It was this very loyalty that threatened the regent's
power. Just
before entering the gorge, the path widened somewhat, and the way
became less steep. Olnnn held them up. They crouched there in the
night, listening. He heard the insects buzzing, the wind soughing
through the kuello-firs. He smelled the thick carpet of needles
beneath their feet, the rich dampness of newly turned silt mounded at
the edge of the riverbank. He wrapped a photon lens around his skull.
Now, able to see in the dark, he could clearly make out the
encampment on the other side of the river. There was no movement, but
he saw the sentry posted at the perimeter. His back was to the river,
believing that to be an impregnable barrier to attack. Olnnn
made a hand sign, and one of his unit ran in a crouch to the
riverbank and slithered in. Through the oculus of the photon lens
Olnnn followed his progress. Just the top of his head showed above
the waterline. Within moments, he had emerged from the water and,
making an utterly silent run, had efficiently slit the sentry's
throat with his ion blade. Now the rest of the Resistance cell was
theirs to take at will. Final
exam. Olnnn
ordered them forward. They hit the water as a unit, swam as a unit.
They did not like the water. Like all V'ornn they were uncomfortable
without solid terrain under their feet. But their training was
holding; they moved grimly forward. Through
his oculus, Olnnn saw the point Khagggun crouched and ready, waiting
for them. Behind him, the Resistance encampment slept on, oblivious.
This was not the first Resistance cell they had taken on. Over the
course of the past two weeks, they had slain many Kundalan as they
learned the lessons Olnnn was teaching them. The
unit had just passed the midway point. Olnnn, swimming hard, had
momentarily lost track of the point Khagggun. When he swung his
oculus back around, the saw the Khagggun slumped over, an arrow
sticking out of his side. He was crawling, his mouth opened to utter
a warning shout, and an arrow filled it. He spasmed like a fish
caught on a hook. Olnnn whirled. Tracing the arrow's trajectory, he
saw three bark canoes bearing silently down on them. The canoes were
filled with Kundalan Resistance. That is when he knew that the
encampment was empty. The
unit responded with admirable discipline to his cry of "Am-bushr
But by then the attack had already commenced. The black water ran
with blood, and he saw his recruits flailing around him. The water
churned, familiar heads sank from view. He redoubled his efforts, but
even he was growing tired. Prudently, he ordered a retreat back
across the river. In the water, they were no match for the
weapons-laden war canoes. Melting
back into the high stands of kuello-firs, he assessed the damage.
Three recruits killed, double that severely wounded. How much damage
they had done in return was impossible to say. Still, a number of
valuable lessons had been learned, the most important of which was
that Resistance fighters were clever and not without their own
resources. But
what was of most interest to him was that the attack had its positive
side, for it cemented the determination of the survivors to remain
together, to give their lives for one another, to gain revenge for
their fallen comrades. For
the first time, they plotted together—one unit, one mind—and
just before dawn they reengaged the Resistance cell. One of Olnnn's
group was mortally wounded in the assault, but all twenty of the
Resistance cell members were slaughtered. Olnnn watched with
glittering eyes the feral savagery with which his group fell upon the
enemy. It seemed to him that in finding this connection to each other
their appetite for destruction had been unleashed. There
was one in the unit—soon to become Attack-Commandant Accton
Blled—whose appetite for destruction outstripped the others.
His sleek dark-skinned head was shaped like a finned ion missile. His
slablike cheeks and slash of a mouth seemed fashioned by some
demented sculptor, his jutting chin was the butt end of a
particularly lethal-looking weapon. Utterly fearless, he reveled in
bloodletting, and claimed he felt a kinship with death that would be
the envy of any Deirus. It
did not take long for Blled to become something of a legend in the
unit. During their first encounter with the Resistance, he killed two
before ripping the throat out of a third with a horrific snap of his
jaws. In the aftermath, he decapitated his victims, stuffed their own
tender parts into their mouths, and mounted the bloody heads on
stakes as an example, so he said, as well as a warning that he was
here and would take more life whenever and wherever he chose. Olnnn
had observed these grisly antics with a mixture of amusement and
approval. Bloodletting was something he could respect. He knew
instinctively that Accton Blled would make Attack-Commandant. Unless
the final exam killed him. Therefore, he marked Blled, making plans
for him following his inevitable field promotion. Following
the slaughter, the unit took a vote on Blled's suggestion not to burn
the Kundalan bodies, but to tumble them into a mass grave, an open
pit that would serve as a warning to the Resistance. By this time the
bloody sun had risen above the eastern mountain peaks. A rime of
hoarfrost lay upon the dead like a shroud. They roasted ice-hare,
rending the beasts as they stared at the results of their final exam.
Their faces grew shiny with grease, and they laughed at coarse jokes.
Occasionally, one of them would kick a carcass or spit into a glazed
Kundalan eye. It seemed clear they wanted more Resistance to kill.
Like predators, they had scented blood, and their hearts pounded for
the rush of battle to the death. After
the meal, they turned the encampment into the mass grave. They
thought that fitting. Flies were collecting, and large black birds
circled overhead, calling plaintively. They dragged the bodies to the
edge of the pit they had dug and kicked them in. In
a short ceremony, witnessed only by the dead Kundalan, Olnnn promoted
them to the rank of Attack-Commandant. Each one, he told them, would
get his own pack to lead. They would leapfrog the chain of command.
They would be answerable only to him. They were silent, and in their
silence, content. Olnnn
walked a little away from the unit and motioned to Accton Blled. The
two of them walked beside the river. It had been much on his mind
lately as to why Kurgan should be so insistent that he track down the
traitors himself. Unconsciously, he reached down and stroked the
sorcerous bones of his leg. Yes, he still burned for revenge. But he
was also acutely aware of how his search was taking him far from
Kurgan and Axis Tyr, and he had begun to ask himself whether his
absence from the center of power was wise. On that score, he had come
to a decision. He
said, "Attack-Commandant, during these past two weeks you have
acquitted yourself with the highest honors. Therefore, you will be
first to gain your own command." "I
appreciate your confidence in me, Star-Admiral." "You
are also the first to get an assignment." "Rest
assured, Star-Admiral, whatever you ask of me it will be done." "I
am pleased to hear it," Olnnn nodded, "because I am
entrusting you with a most important mission. You are to find the
Rhynnnon, Rekkk Hacilar, and his skcettta, Giyan." "I
am honored, Star-Admiral. I consider it my personal mission to find
them and bring them to you." "Alive
or dead," Olnnn added. "It matters not to me." "Ah,
death." A slow smile wreathed Attack-Commandant Blled's face.
"All the better for me." His sharp teeth shone in the
morning sun. The
following night Riane saw someone come for Tezziq, a tall slim-hipped
male with a huge black animal's tooth through his topknot. His hair
was lighter than Othnam's, so light, in fact, it seemed altogether
without color. She got but a glimpse of him as he silently entered
the haanjhala. He had only to glance in Tezziq's direction and she
rose, following him out with not even a glance behind her. After
Tezziq had gone, Riane rolled over and closed her eyes, but sleep
seemed nowhere near, and she rolled again, staring up at the high,
tented ceiling, wishing she could see the stars and the moonslight.
She thought of Eleana, and her heart contracted; she thought of Giyan
in the grip of the Malasocca, the dark night of the soul, and her
blood ran cold. It was
winter already. Time was ticking away, time during which the daemon
Horolaggia was spinning its web around her, transmogrifying her. Time
when the solstice was coming ever closer. She
must have fallen into an uneasy slumber, for she dreamed of odd
waitings and rhythmic thumpings that shook the very cushions on which
she tossed and turned. How
many hours passed she could not have said, but at length a shadow
passed over her and, opening her eyes, she saw that Tezziq was
returning to the haanjhala. Riane rose on one elbow but, to her
surprise, Tezziq did not lie down on her cushions, but instead went
immediately to the bathtent. Riane rose and silently followed her. Standing
in the shadows of the polished limoniq-wood gateway, she watched as
Tezziq ripped off her gauzy garments with breathless grunting sounds.
Naked, she slid into the water, which reflected the moons-light in
tiny shimmering crescents. Tezziq
waded into the center of the pool, lifted her head, and made an eerie
keening sound. All at once, her shoulders heaved, and she gave a deep
sob. She ground the heels of her hands against her eyes as if to
scrub away an horrific sight. Without
thinking, Riane disrobed and entered the pool. She moved slowly
toward the center, but she was brought up short when Tezziq's eyes
snapped open. "What
are you doing here?" Tezziq whispered fiercely. "You should
be asleep." "I
saw you come in," Riane said. "Why are you weeping?" "I'm
not weeping." Tezziq wiped her eyes. "What made you think
that?" She tossed her head. "Go back to sleep." "I
had a nightmare," Riane said. "I heard an odd wailing, and
the cushions shook as if with an earth tremor. Do you have tremors
here?" The
serpent smile reappeared on Tezziq's face, sending an unpleasant
chill through Riane. "Oh, we have tremors," Tezziq said
softly, "but hardly the kind you mean." "I
don't understand." "As
long as you're here ..." Tezziq turned and handed her the soft
bristled brush. "I feel dirty." "But
you bathed just before—" "Do
as I say," Tezziq snapped. Riane
lifted Tezziq's long hair out of the way. "What
is this?" Her fingertips ran over the reddish rune tattooed at
the base of her spine. "Brush
me hard," Tezziq commanded. Riane
did as she was bade. "The
tew is a family crest," Tezziq said softly. "I
have not seen it on the other girls." "That
is because they are all Gazi Qhan." Riane
paused in her brushing. "And you are not?" "Continue,"
Tezziq snapped. She shivered a little as Riane resumed scrubbing her
down. "I am Jeni Cerii." Her voice was a whisper. "I
was brought here as part of a peace initiative between kapudaan. It
was Makktuub's idea for the two kapudaan to exchange first ajjan. As
a sign of good faith. Jasim, my kapudaan, cheerfully lopped off the
head of Makktuub's gift. Knowing him as I do, I am sure he laughed
while doing it. He sent the head back to Makktuub in a common
wine sack." "He
did not care what happened to you?" "I
rather think he entertained himself imagining the possible
consequences to me." "And
yet Makktuub did not retaliate in kind." Tezziq
shivered. "What
did he do?" Riane asked. "For
an entire year, nothing. Then, early on the anniversary morning of
his first ajjan's murder, he sent a raiding party into Jeni Cerii
territory. They butchered one hundred children." "Miina
protect us." Riane felt her throat constrict. "But you are
alive. And you have become his favorite." "Harder,"
Tezziq whispered in an odd, strangled voice. "Harder." Riane
applied more pressure than she knew was necessary. Tezziq's flesh
began to redden. "Did
you not hear me? I said harder!" And
then, in the soft moonslight, Riane saw something that made her gasp.
The water around Tezziq was stained dark. She dropped the brush, took
Tezziq by the shoulders, and turned her around. "I've hurt you,"
she said. "No,
it is coming from between my thighs." Tezziq's eyelids fluttered
closed, and she let out a long-held breath. "That was no
nightmare you had," she whispered. "What
do you mean?" "The
truth is . . ." Tezziq's pale eyes regarded her levelly. "Here
lies the other part of Makktuub's revenge. He makes me call him wa
tar-abibi, and then his prodigious rutting makes me bleed each
time I lie with him."
12 Very
Black Things
She
is a monster." "Worse even than Konara Bartta, if that is
possible." "It is, and she is." Two
konara, best friends and compatriots, sat in a small, slightly
creepy, barely furnished chamber in a disused part of the Abbey of
Floating White. They sat on dusty uncomfortable chairs with stiff
backs and unforgiving seats. Save for cobwebs, in the entire chamber
there was nothing to look at but each other. An old oil lamp threw
rickety light over them. "It
took but an instant for Konara Urdma to don Konara Bartta's mantle of
power," Konara Inggres said. "She
snuffed out our investigation into Konara Bartta's death the moment
she got wind of it," Konara Lyystra said. Konara
Inggres was prompted to nod. "The anger rolled off her in
waves." She was brown-eyed and red-cheeked, with square
shoulders and a bow of a mouth, a healthy-looking specimen who,
thanks to her athletic bent, was in charge of making sure the
acolytes got their thrice-weekly exercise. "Well, what can you
expect? She's never liked me; she thinks I spend far too much time in
the back rooms of the Library researching my History of Sorcery
class. She's always telling me what to keep in the curriculum and
what to omit without the slightest regard for historical accuracy." "Doubtless
that is because there are many dangers in the Osoru sorcery of
decades ago. Isn't that why those books were relegated to the back
rooms, where only konara have access to them?" "So
she claims." "Besides,
of what possible use is research on Osoru? All those Ramahan with the
Gift were expelled from the abbeys years ago." "True
enough. But there is value in knowing the gnarled pathways of our
roots." Not for the first time, Konara Inggres contemplated
confiding in her friend the fact that she had discovered a latent
talent inside herself—the Gift for Osoru. But the idea that she
was using a good portion of her time in the Library to teach herself
Osoru was such anathema she could not yet bring herself to tell
anyone, even Konara Lyystra. "After all, those who are ignorant
of history are doomed to repeat its follies." "This
word history," Konara Lyystra said. "I sometimes
find myself wondering. Does it pertain to us Ramahan?" She was
dough-faced, slightly round-shouldered owing to her height. A large
mole marinated like a piece of dried fruit in the crevasse between
her lower lip and her chin. "What I mean is this. We continue to
worship Miina without having the slightest notion of whether She
existed at all." "Is
that not the definition of faith?" "I
am speaking of fact, of history." Konara Lyystra shrugged
off this argument. "Once upon a time Miina was as real as you or
I, so the sacred texts tell us. But what if that isn't true? What if
Miina never existed, what if She was a figment of the imagination of
the Druuge?" "Surely
you are not saying that you believe our religion is built on a lie?" "Not
exactly." The most womanly parts of Konara Lyystra had atrophied
from lack of use, or possibly they had never fully developed. In any
event, this gave her the aspect of a child who would never know the
full flower of womanhood. "But we know that Venca was both the
Druuge's language and their sorcery. If this is true. If all the
power in the Cosmos lies within the seven hundred seventy-seven
letters of Venca, is there not justification for claiming that the
language is the Goddess, that Miina is created every time it is
spoken?" "This
is science—possibly an aberrant form of semantics—not
religion." Konara Inggres may have looked shocked, but she
wasn't. The very best part of having a close friend was disagreeing
with her and learning something important from it. "Tell
me the difference." "Religion
brings comfort to those who have none. Science—what does
science do? It asks questions that cannot—and probably should
not—be answered. It says that the Goddess is dead. It says that
She never, in fact, existed. You have only to observe the V'ornn to
see the truth of this. And then the storm comes, as it must to every
life, and science provides no shelter, no comfort whatsoever." "The
day you cease to ask questions," Konara Lyystra said, "is
the day you die. In any event, look at what our religion has done for
us. It codified language, advanced agrarian techniques, stimulated
social intercourse through the many festivals, provided a
governmental structure under which we thrived. Strictly speaking, is
that religion?" "What
you fail to take into consideration is that all of this civilization
you speak of would not have been possible without our faith in Miina.
What would happen, do you think, if you in fact were able to prove
that the Great Goddess was a figment of the Druuge? Faith is all we
have left holding us together in the face of annihilation from the
V'ornn." "Possibly
you are right," Konara Lyystra acknowledged. "But I am
saying that what the Druuge did was good, irrespective of Miina's
existence. Our belief in Her brought us out of the darkness of
anarchy; it delivered us into the hands of civilization. Even more,
it gave us a foundation for an understanding that the Cosmos contains
more than what can be encompassed by our five normal senses. In the
face of that revelation don't you agree that what the Goddess says or
doesn't say is mostly irrelevant?" "I
most certainly do not," Konara Inggres said hotly. She was
enjoying this debate immensely. It kept her from dwelling on the
depressing state of the abbey. "It seems to me that the word of
Miina is more important than ever. You forget that the evil we sense
invaded the abbeys the moment we began straying from Her scripture.
And the more we stray the more of a stranglehold evil has on the Dea
Cretan." "You
see evil everywhere, and I wish to study Venca," Konara Lyystra
replied. "Well, one thing is for certain. Konara Urdma finds
novel ways to punish us for our rebelliousness, this unending night
duty being just the latest. And yet I do not for an instant regret
questioning the official explanation for Konara Bartta's death." "Neither
do I," Konara Inggres said. "I still would like to know
what happened to Konara Bartta." "Good
riddance to her, I say. Konara Urdma is simply aping her mentor. She
lacks Bartta's evil imagination. In time, I believe we can find a way
to handle her." Periodically,
the priestesses fell silent and cocked their heads, listening to the
tiny nighttime sounds the abbey gave off like perfume. The wind
whistling as it worked its way through cracks, the soft grinding of
the foundation stones as the abbey continued to settle into the
mountainside, the small insistent scurry of rodents that nightly
scavenged for food, soft footfalls now and again, the sound of water
running briefly, then the silence once more coming down like a heavy
curtain at the end of a show. They were familiar with the full gamut
of noises. They had been here so long that the sounds gave them a
small comfort they took to bed, a companion of sorts, a sleeping
draught to ease their troubled minds. "It
was as if Konara Urdma knew what was going to happen to Konara
Bartta," Konara Inggres nodded. "Waiting for her chance to
grab power." "Hush
now." Tension lent Konara Lyystra's body a certain dissonance.
"Konara Urdma is our leader." Konara
Inggres leaned forward. "Every day the scripture changes more
and more radically." She was somewhat younger than her friend,
but no less shrewd. She daily wetted her finger, metaphorically
speaking, the better to gauge the direction of the political wind.
Konara Lyystra had taught her to faithfully follow the flow so as not
to be blown off her feet, but it was difficult stifling her opinions.
"You see it yourself. Miina's teachings—the teachings I
learned as a child—have been twisted and deformed. The result
serves one end: the agglomeration of power for the ruling konara." Konara
Lyystra shook her head in sharp warning. "I
must spill my heart to someone, for it is breaking. We are no longer
doing Miina's sacred work. We do not serve Her as we were meant to
do. We are no longer in grace. We have become willing political
pawns, reduced to base marionettes dancing at the end of a string. We
are helpless, living in fear, perpetuating a lie greater than we can
imagine." "Keep
still, I tell you!" "It
is well past midnight. Who can overhear us? No one comes to this part
of the abbey." "Konara
Bartta came," Konara Lyystra said, her eyes darting this way and
that as if expecting Konara Bartta's ghost to materialize, "though
we know not why." "Konara
Bartta is dead. Vaporized in the conflagration that incinerated the
interior of the chamber not ten meters distant from where we now
sit." "The
very same chamber Konara Urdma barred us from entering." "The
likelihood of a dangerous residue, she claimed." Abruptly Konara
Inggres rose, her eyes alight. "Come on," she whispered.
"Let's do it." "Do
what?" Konara Lyystra said, though she knew very well what her
friend had in mind. Without
another word, Konara Inggres leaned over, pulled Konara Lyystra to
her feet, shoved the oil lamp into her hand. At
the door, Konara Lyystra said, rather weakly, "This is
foolhardy." Her
friend gave her a silent laugh. "You sound just like Konara
Urdma." They
crept down the cramped, dank, cobwebbed corridor, listening
breathlessly with each step for even the smallest sound that might
seem out of the ordinary. They heard none, and so advanced to the
door of the chamber in which the mysterious fire had arisen. "The
curious thing," Konara Inggres said, "is that for all its
ferocity, the fire remained completely inside the chamber." She
pointed. "Look here. Not a mark or bit of soot in the corridor.
Is that the way fire acts?" "Fire
is the other side of water," Konara Lyystra replied. "Water
runs, seeking its own level. Fire spreads through air drafts made by
cracks and imperfections." "It
should have whooshed out here into the corridor or spread to adjacent
chambers is what you're saying." Konara Inggres knelt before the
door, pointing out the space between the bottom of the door and the
sill. A span of two fingerwidths. "Why didn't it do that?" Konara
Lyystra squinted at the door and sighed. "There is a blocking
spell. Konara Urdma, in a typical fit of paranoia, has sealed it
tight." Konara
Inggres rose, her arms spread out, her hands slightly cupped. Konara
Lyystra's face blanched. "What are you doing?" "We
want to see what's inside, don't we?" "But
if we—" "Don't
worry. I'll put the blocking spell back in place after we're done.
Konara Urdma will never know the difference." "But
how—" Konara Lyystra shut her mouth because she could
sense that the spell was gone. How did she do that? she
wondered. What spell did she use? Konara
Inggres gripped the handle and the door creaked inward. It was black
as death inside, and a sharp pungent aroma of burned pitch arose and
something else, less well denned, like the slightly sweet air around
a grave. Konara
Lyystra held the oil lamp high as they crossed the threshold.
Something about the chamber made her stomach tighten, and she heard
herself emit a tiny whimper. Part of her wanted to turn around and
run out. A shiver ran through her, rattling her teeth. "What
is that smell? Fear?" "Fear,
yes," Konara Inggres whispered. "But what else?" The
stone walls, ceiling, underfloor were black and gritty with the
fire's aftermath. Whole lines of the rock walls had been deeply
scored, where veins of metallic ore had been liquefied by the
inferno, making it appear as if they had entered a cage that had
recently held a raging monster. They
gingerly approached the center of the chamber, where a small pile of
ash lay heaped. Lifting the hem of her robes, Konara Inggres hunkered
down as Konara Lyystra lowered the lamp. "Someone
has been in here," Konara Inggres said. "You can see the
finger marks combing through the center of the ashes." "Looking
for something," Konara Lyystra affirmed. "But what?" "I
will bet you Konara Urdma knows." Konara Inggres rose. "It
was she who sealed this chamber. It's a surety she performed her own
private investigation." "You
were right. She must have suspected Konara Bartta was coming here."
Konara Lyystra licked her lips nervously. "Could we think about
leaving now? There's something in here that makes my stomach crawl." "Pray
to Miina." "I
have. The Goddess seems to be absent from this chamber." Konara
Inggres was too engrossed to respond. She was studying the underlying
pattern of the pile of ash. Her eyes followed the longest finger of
ash into a shadowed corner of the blasted chamber. "Let me have
that." She took the lantern from her friend, advancing into the
corner, Konara Lyystra just behind her. The shadows reluctantly
retreated before the lamp's flame. "Ah,
what have we here?" Konara Inggres bent and retrieved something
small that had been thrown into the very deepest corner. Using the
hem of her robe, she rubbed the brittle charcoal crust off it. A
small bit of etched bronze was revealed, gleaming dully in the
lamplight. She cleaned it completely and held it up, turning it
slowly between her fingertips. "What do you make of this?" With
a deep and abiding trepidation, Konara Lyystra took it from her,
examined it closely. "It is old, hand-forged. It looks ... If I
didn't know better . . ." She bit her lip. "What?
What do you think it is?" "I
have seen pictures. In a book. Diagrams." Konara Lyystra's eyes
met her friend's and held them. "It's a trigger for a had-atta." "What?
The Flute is illegal." The had-atta was an ancient
instrument, used, it was said, to test for infiltration of heretics.
A slender crystal cylinder was slowly lowered down the suspect's
throat, hence the name. It was used to discover if a Ramahan was a
heretic, had become unbound in her ties to Miina. "They were
destroyed more than a century ago." "Obviously
not all of them." Now
they understood the rank smell of fear infesting the place. Konara
Inggres nodded. "Konara Bartta came here regularly—" "Leyna
Astar, Konara Laudenum, the acolyte Riane. Those missing Ramahan—" "Died
of accidents." "So
it was reported." "Tortured
instead. Dear sweet Miina." The
visitor's bell sounded deep, muffled, faraway, but it made them start
all the same. "At
this time of night?" Konara Inggres said, annoyed. "It
is my turn." Konara Lyystra, who seemed relieved to get away
from this chamber of horrors, gave her back the trigger. "Guard
this well." As she hurried through the charred door, she added,
"Don't stay here alone. Seal it back up as quickly as you can." Konara
Inggres, who was staring intently at the trigger, nodded absently. The
Lady Giyan stood by the leaded-glass window of Konara Urdma's office
in the Abbey of Floating White, drinking in the black night. Below
her, balanced on its many-tiered mountain ledge, Stone Border lay
dark and brooding. She stared down at the place of her birth with
otherworldly eyes as if with that one baleful look she could
incinerate every inhabitant, as if she could wipe the entire
excrescence from the mountainside. That
would come, she knew, in time. Wrapped
in her long black cloak, she had arrived at the front entrance to
Floating White, and had rung the bellchain, announcing her arrival.
Beneath closed lids, her eyeballs had commenced a furious movement.
By the time the mammoth door creaked inward, her eyes, which had been
transformed by the beginnings of the Malasocca, had resumed their
perfectly normal appearance. She
had smiled into the acolyte's face. Riane would not have recognized
that smile, for it bore no resemblance to Giyan's natural expression.
With good reason. Beneath the shell of Giyan's Kundalan self lurked
the very black thing, the seepage from the Abyss, the archdae-mon
Horolaggia. He was not completely inside her. But he gained enough
control to manipulate her. What she did and said came from him. In
truth, that smile was a horrifying thing, but the acolyte saw only
what she was meant to see, and she returned the smile, standing back,
allowing Giyan and the very black thing entrance to the abbey and all
that dwelled there in evil and in ignorance. It
had been Bartta who had continued and expanded upon the alterations
of the teachings of the Great Goddess Miina, begun by Konara Mossa
during her iron-willed reign in the abbey. Now it was Konara Urdma's
turn. The evil that had begun to infiltrate the abbey in the form of
Konara Mossa had continued to thrive under Bartta, and Konara Urdma,
who was nothing if not an apt pupil and a quick study, was in the
process of taking it to full flower. Giyan
had followed the acolyte through the gardens, the atria, into the
interior of the abbey, where she asked another acolyte to ring for
the konara on duty. The acolyte was small, fine-featured, slender as
a reed. Too young to remember Giyan or even to have heard her name
mentioned. In blissful ignorance, then, she had delivered Giyan here,
where, after asking if she could bring the visitor food or drink, she
had departed. Giyan
turned away from the window and her grim contemplation. Bronze
filigreed lamps burned oil laced with incense. Small spirals of smoke
curled from the tip of the lamplights, disappearing into the heavy
wood beams of the ceiling. In the five minutes or so while she was
alone, Giyan conjured a black serpentskin satchel from beneath her
cloak. This she placed on one corner of the desk, arranging it just
so. Then she turned, stared at her reflection in the mirror that hung
on the wall. The thorned crown atop her head was plainly visible, as
were the spikes corkscrewed through the palms of her hands. They were
the physical manifestations of the psychic war being waged inside her
for the prize of her spirit. In this realm, they were only visible in
mirrors. Horolaggia now suspected that it had been a mistake to have
moved against Giyan while the girl was with her, because the thorns
were visible to a sorceress's penetrating gaze at the moment the
Malasocca was initiated. The girl had doubtless seen them, and though
he had discerned that she was but a novice, and therefore would not
understand what she had seen, nevertheless she might someday come to
use this knowledge against him. Giyan
raised her left arm, her fingers moved in a rhythm and pattern
familiar to Horolaggia and the silvered glass of the mirror melted
into a puddle on the floor, leaving a deaf, dumb, and blind space
within the frame. She extracted from the serpentskin satchel a length
of tightly rolled film that shimmered and glistered. This she
unfurled on the spot where the mirror had been. A new thornless
reflection appeared, answerable only to her own command. She turned
from admiring her handiwork as she heard someone enter the office. "Good
evening, Konara Lyystra, or should I say good morning," she said
in her most winning voice. "I do apologize for the inconvenient
hour of my arrival, but I was late enough that no inn in Stone Border
was open to take me in." "The
Abbey of Floating White is always open to—" All the blood
drained from Konara Lyystra's doughy face, "Merciful Miina}
Giyan? Is that you?" "It
is, indeed." "Are
you passing through—?" "I
have returned to the abbey, I have come home," Giyan said, and
held out her arms just in time for Konara Lyystra to hurl herself
into them. "Oh,
it has been so long, Giyan!" Konara Lyystra felt herself fairly
overcome with emotion. "We had never dared hope." "I
know, I know. And yet I am here." Giyan stroked the back of her
head. "And you have been elevated from shima to konara."
She held the other at arm's length, beaming. "No less than you
deserve, I am sure. Konara
Lyystra ducked her head in mute delight. "Now
pour me a drink of sweet icewine, konara, that I may offer a toast to
suit this occasion." "Konara,
indeed. We were always more intimate than that." Konara
Lyystra went to the sideboard, where a decanter and the slim, stemmed
glasses that had once belonged to Konara Mossa clustered on a
chased-copper tray. "You must call me as you always did. I
insist." Giyan
laughed gently and sweetly. "In that event." She accepted
the filled glass. The icewine had a slight reddish tinge, a sure sign
that it was of the highest quality. Poorer grades were yellowish or
greenish. She lifted her glass. "To you, Lyystra, and your
spiritual elevation." The
rims came together and the crystal sang. But there was no joy in
Konara Lyystra's face. "Konara I may be, but alas, as to my
spiritual elevation . . ." She let her words gutter in the
lamplight of the office. Giyan
frowned. "I do not mark your meaning." "This
is Konara Urdma's domain, and before her it was your sister's." "This
office." "No,"
Konara Lyystra said. "The abbey itself." Giyan's
frown deepened. "But the Dea Cretan." "Exists
in name only." Konara Lyystra sighed. "It pains me to be
the bearer of heavy tidings, but Konara Bartta lost her spiritual
way." "She—" "And
now she is dead, incinerated in curious and mysterious circumstances,
and we forbidden to investigate." Giyan
put her icewine down on the desk almost untouched. "Who forbids
it?" she said darkly. "Konara
Urdma, who has set herself up in your sister's place, moved into
Bartta's quarters on the very day of her demise. Tell me. In your
opinion is this seemly?" Giyan
shook her head. "Worse
still, Miina's teachings have been lost. Worse than lost. Perverted.
You were exiled because you possessed the Gift of Osoru. All those
similarly gifted have been purged. Only Kyofu is taught here now, and
daily the lists of taboo words grow. We are forbidden, for instance,
to speak of the Ja-Gaar, Miina's sacred beasts, and their likeness
has been struck down or defaced wherever they are found." "This
is outrageous behavior. Unthinkable!" Giyan was opening the
serpentskin satchel. With her back to Konara Lyystra, she daubed
something onto the tip of her tongue. When she turned back, she
lifted a forefinger. "You did well to forewarn me. And though my
heart mourns for my twin sister, so long absent from my side, from
what you tell me there is a great deal of work to be done." A
look of relief flooded Konara Lyystra's face. "I could not agree
more. You are the one we have been waiting for to lift us out of the
comfortable bed evil has made in our beloved abbey." "Then
come, brave Lyystra," Giyan said, putting her arm around the
other. "Together we will right the wrongs that have been visited
upon Miina's children." As
they neared the door, she swung Konara Lyystra around, grabbed her by
the shoulders and kissed her. Before the startled Ramahan could
react, Giyan's mouth opened and her tongue pushed through the other
set of lips. Konara
Lyystra gasped and tried to wrest herself from Giyan's grip. She was
strong, but not nearly strong enough. And
she abruptly lost strength. Something black and squirmy had taken up
residence in her mouth. She bent over, gagging, trying to vomit up
the thing. But it was tenacious and would not budge. Then she felt a
searing pain in the roof of her mouth, as if a sword of fire was
slicing through her, and she went down on her knees. Giyan
cradled Konara Lyystra's sweaty head, crooning a daemon-song, while
she shuddered and shook and moaned every now and again. And
then it was done. Konara Lyystra gave a little gasp and Giyan took
her under her arms, lifted her up, looked into her eyes, which were
completely white now, white as Giyan's. Giyan passed a hand over her
face, the lids fluttered closed, and the eyeballs commenced to roll
this way and that. When they were still again, Giyan removed her
hand. Konara Lyystra's eyes were the same as they ever had been. "I
am charging you with the removal of the mirrors," Giyan said.
"All mirrors in the abbey must be destroyed. Completely." Konara
Lyystra nodded her head obediently. "Yes, Mother." "If
someone should inquire, you are to tell her that the evil that has
infested the abbey sleeps within the mirrors. Is that clear?" "Yes,
Mother." Konara
Lyystra began to leave, but Giyan stopped her momentarily. "It's
all right now," she said softly. "Everything will be fine."
And Konara Lyystra smiled, a dead, wooden, soulless thing. "Yes,"
she said. "It is perfect." Ever
since he had seen the face—or whatever it was—in the
mirror, Kurgan was prone to a particular nightmare. Not that he ever
saw that face—or whatever it was—in this nightmare. Not
that he would ever wish to again. He had thought himself fearless,
but this thing he had seen in the mirror had brought a
metallic taste to his mouth. He hadn't been able to eat for the rest
of the day, and he had avoided Nith Batoxxx for as long as he was
able. Now, when he was obliged to speak with the Gyrgon he could feel
his blood run cold. What
he had seen in that mirror defied description. Each time he tried to
recall it a shiver raced down his spine. That night, after the palace
was asleep, he had stolen into that chamber and smashed the mirror to
smithereens. So now, whether it be a communication device or, as he
most feared, the repository of the Gyrgon's true reflection, it was
gone. The
nightmare plagued him, but it had its positive side for it served to
remind him of how much he did not know. That was something his
father, Wennn Stogggul, never came to realize. Eventually, it caused
his downfall. He had cut himself off from events around him both by
his office and by his arrogance. An ignorant V'ornn—and an
arrogant one, to boot—is ripe to be sucked into a snare. This
Kurgan had cleverly done. This he vowed would never happen to him. He
would never repeat the mistakes of his father. To
this end, he had determined that he required a trustworthy pipeline
to the quotidian events of the city. Some V'ornn who heard and could
report on both rumors and facts secreted away in hurried whispers and
furtive conversations. His knowledge of the constantly shifting tide
of crosscurrents would keep him one step ahead. He needed just the
right individual. And at last he determined who that individual
should be, and that night he gave orders for her to be brought to his
private quarters at the palace. By
the time she arrived, night was in full flower. The Promenade would
be jumping with the effusive eruption from the nearby Kalllis-totos,
whose raucous discourse would surely drown out the voices of the
fishers who would soon be taken away on the rising tide. Blood Tide
would be packed, hot with steaming bodies and volatile conversations.
Secrets folded into every shadowed cornice and corner. "Regent,
it is good to see you again," Rada said when she was escorted
into his presence by a pair of Haaar-kyut. "But may I ask the
occasion for this summons?" He
had been lounging by the fireplace, keenly anticipating her arrival.
The fire was behind him, a kind of imperial corona. He could see that
she was not happy. This hour was the height of her business, and she
was here in the regent's palace instead of tending to her customers.
He was
pleased. It was the proper reaction. He had established his power
over her. "Sit
down," he said. "We shall share a drink together." Her
sifeyn was pulled over her fragrantly oiled skull, but he could see
gleaming the tips of her diadem. The firelight threw her beauty into
stark prominence, not that it mattered to him. For he was seeing not
Rada but the Kundalan female whom he and Annon had come upon in the
woods. She had been bathing in the creek; she had pulled a filigreed
pin from her hair and it had cascaded down her back. The sight had
filled his eyes, his mind, his loins, and he could do ought but act. "You
have something of import to say to me, regent?" Her
voice snapped him back to the present. But the afterimage of that
Kundalan female caused the breath to catch in his throat. "I
wish to avail myself of your talents." "This
is surprising to me. I think you know nothing of them, regent." "In
that you are wrong." He came away from the blaze and sprawled on
a sofa. "Please do sit down." When she had complied,
perching herself on the edge of a chair facing him, he poured them
both fire-grade numaaadis from a decanter sitting on a Khagggun
beaten-bronze camp table. He handed her a goblet, took up the other.
"Many times I have seen you at work in Blood Tide. I have seen
you handle Mesagggun and Sarakkon three times your size. There isn't
a patron who comes through your door who does not respect you. I want
to tap into that." "This
bluntness comes, I suppose, from the rapid elevation of your status,"
she said. "In
truth, I have spent more time taking orders than giving them." She
pursed her lips. "Am I meant to feel sorry for you, regent?" "This
was no order." "Better
for both of us, I warrant." She
sipped her drink. "What's
the matter?" he asked. "Is the numaaadis not to your
liking?" "It's
quite good," she said. "But this palace ... it strikes me
as a melancholy place." "Personally,
I like it. Dark, empty, serene. I have time to sort through my
thoughts." "What
thoughts might those be, regent?" "Lately,
I am plagued by a nightmare." "I
am distressed to hear it." "You
do not know me well enough to mean that." He
looked into the fire. Often, he found those flames hypnotic, and he
would fall into a brief reverie, a kind of waking dreamscape where
his overweening ambition ran rampant. Since seeing that face in the
mirror though . . . "It
is always the same, this nightmare. I am submerged in black water.
The odd thing is that I have no trouble breathing. Odder still, is
the face before me. It is female, and beautiful, but it is pale as
death—ash-white with a bluish tinge—and eyes that seem to
see right through me." "A
V'ornn goddess, a concubine of the dead god Enlil, perhaps." "Not
V'ornn. Kundalan," he said softly. "She has hair, thick as
a copse of trees, long as a sea-snake. It, too, is white as ash." Rada
seemed amused. "Does she talk to you, this Kundalan female?" "That
is the oddest part. She is begging me for help." Rada
put down her goblet. "Regent, if I may ask. Why are you telling
me this?" "I
suppose because there is no one else to tell." "That
seems terribly sad." He
rose and held out his hand, she took it wordlessly and he pulled her
to her feet. She was standing very close to him. "I do not want
you to leave," he said softly. "Not just yet." He
led her into his bedchamber and disrobed her. He could not wait, and
took her against the wall. At the end, he thought she cried out,
though there was an echo in his mind, sunlight off the skin of the
creek, the thick hair entangling him, the lush Kundalan body, the
thrusting. He wished Rada had hair, long dark thick. Entwining him. But,
after all, she was only a Tuskugggun. While
she dressed, he sat on the edge of the unrumpled bed, and said, "What
if you no longer needed your business to live?" She
looked at him. He could read nothing in her expression. It was as if
nothing had happened between them. For him, it seemed, nothing had. "Running
Blood Tide is all I can do," she said. "When my mother died
. . ." She shrugged. "She was a gambler. There is a
mountain of debt." "A
mountain to you. Not to me, I warrant." "Dear
regent." She cocked her head. "What do you have in mind?" "You
are proprietress of a casteless tavern. As such, it is a nexus point
for a broad cross section of the city's populace. This is of great
interest to me." He
produced a laaga stick, lighted it. After inhaling deeply, he passed
it over to her. While she smoked, he said, "What I propose is a
simple exchange. I pay off your debt." He watched her moist
lips, half-parted, the dregs of the smoke drifting between them. "In
return, you provide me with all the news, gossip, rumors, and secrets
that nightly float through Blood Tide." "A
simple exchange. Regent, nothing about you is simple." She
handed the laaga stick back to him. "Tell me. What am I
missing?" There
came at that moment a discreet knock on the door. A look of
annoyance, though fleeting, passed across Kurgan's face. When the
knock came again he pushed himself off the bed, wrapped himself in a
robe, and went to the door. Nith
Batoxxx stood just outside. "I
did not mean to intrude upon your privacy," the Gyrgon said. Kurgan
knew that was just what he had meant to do, and he despised him all
the more for the pettiness of his action. But he showed none of this
as he stepped across the threshold, pulled the door to behind him.
Being so near the Gyrgon, he tried not to shudder. "You
have ordered the Khagggun to discontinue their ascendance to Great
Caste status," Nith Batoxxx said. "This is as it should be.
But the change in the status quo never should have begun in the first
place." "That
was my father's doing," Kurgan said. "It had nothing to do
with me." "On
the contrary." Nith Batoxxx's ruby-irised eyes blazed. "You
are Stogggul. You are responsible. If there is any unrest among the
Khagggun, you must deal with it decisively. I will not tolerate one
breath of rebellion among any of the castes. Is that clear?" "Eminently,"
Kurgan said. Nith
Batoxxx stood absolutely still for a moment. "And I will not
tolerate insolence from you." He took a step closer to Kurgan.
"You think you are invincible." There was a crackle of
hyperexcited ions sparking. "I am here to tell you that you are
wrong." With
that, the Gyrgon turned and walked away. It was not until he
disappeared around a corner that Kurgan realized he was trembling. He
spent a moment restoring himself to a semblance of equanimity before
returning to his bedroom. Rada,
fully clothed, was out on the balcony. She had thrown the
window-doors wide open, and the room was cold. He stood looking at
her for a moment. Then he crossed the room and joined her. She
turned when she heard him. The end of the laaga stick was between her
fingers. "You will pay off my debt?" "First
thing in the morning. If. . Now
she smiled. "Courage and fortitude, as the Sarakkon say. If
what, regent?" "If
you will tell me what connection the Sarakkonian captain Courion has
with Nith Batoxxx." He saw her expression, and now it was his
turn to smile. "I have seen Courion and the Gyrgon together in
your office." That was how, a little more than six weeks ago, he
had discovered that the Old V'ornn was Nith Batoxxx. "They could
not possibly have been in there without your knowledge and consent." "The
transactions between Courion and Nith Batoxxx take place regularly.
The Gyrgon has taken a liking to my tavern. It is rough and raucous,
and my clientele are only too happy to keep themselves to
themselves." She put her hands together, laced her fingers. "A
lot of coins cross my palms. For my own protection, I had a neural
memory net installed." "Neural
memory nets are illegal." "Really?
I had no idea." She chuckled deep in her throat. "Well,
then, I really must get around to ripping mine out one of these
days." "I
should report you." "Go
ahead. I have friends in high places." He
laughed. "The
illegal memory net recorded some discussions between Nith
Batoxxx and Courion of a highly illegal nature." "And
the gist of those discussions?" "Nith
Batoxxx has a particular interest in salamuuun." "So
do I. The drug is the sole province of the Ashera Consortium. Only
they know where it is manufactured. My father believed that the
Ashera murdered my grandfather to keep that secret safe. But why
would Nith Batoxxx hold secret meetings with a Sarakkonian captain
about salamuuun?" "Courion
is a smuggler like all captains, is he not?" "True
enough. He does a healthy business in laaga. But not salamuuun. It is
simply not possible. The Ashera who took control of the Consortium
here on Kundala after Eleusis and his family were killed are even
more hard-nosed about salamuuun distribution than their predecessor." "Nevertheless,
the memory net makes it clear that salamuuun is the basis of their
relationship." Kurgan
stared into the enigmatic eyes. He was pleased with her. She had
provided the first tangible lead to a Gyrgon secret. If he could
discover the basis of Nith Batoxxx's clandestine activity with the
Sarakkon, he would have some badly needed leverage over the Gyrgon.
For that, he would have to spend some time with Courion. "You
have done well," he told her. "But from now on I want us to
have no direct contact. I do not wish to arouse the suspicions of
anyone who frequents Blood Tide. But I will require periodic
intelligence. Is this understood?" "Yes,
regent." "Use
data-decagons." He directed her with his raised arm. "Come.
On the way out I will introduce you to one of my most trusted
Haaar-Kyut. He will be at Blood Tide once a week. You will serve him.
You will place the data-decagon at the bottom of his goblet. This
will ensure your intelligence reaches me undetected." She
nodded. As she turned to go, he held her back a moment. "Rada,
tell me what you know of the seven Portals." "I
know nothing of them. What are they?" Kurgan
shrugged, betraying nothing of the extreme import of his question.
Nith Batoxxx was desperate to find the location of those Portals, he
had said that he would reward handsomely whoever provided the
information. "Keep
your ears open. Ask around. Let me know what you come up with." He
closed the door softly after her. Terrettt
had begun to remember his dreams—or at least one, in
particular. This dream recurred often, night or day, he no longer
knew which, leaving a scar upon whatever part of his brain functioned
normally. So he remembered, whether he chose to or not. He'd had the
dream now for some time—so long, in fact, that when he entered
his dream it almost seemed like coming home. Except this home was a
scary place—an exceptionally scary place. It
was dark, for one thing; and for another, it was cold. So cold that
he began to shiver the moment he felt the icy black water envelop
him. Then, he did nothing, it seemed, but hang upside down in this
water that was cold and clear and oddly slippery. It was this
slippery quality that scared Terrettt most, scared him more than the
cold, more even than the darkness, which he did not like at all. He
didn't like the darkness because he was convinced that the voices he
heard, the relentless clamor, the chaos of sound and fury that
inhabited his head like a rabid horde, emerged from this darkness. It
was a very special darkness, you see, not the indigo darkness of
twilight—as he recalled it in his memory and resurrected in his
frantically drawn paintings—not the velvet darkness of a
moonslit evening, or even the bitter blackness of a storm-tossed
midnight. No, it was something more, something deeper, darker, its
absoluteness born of sinister mutterings and evil incantations,
mid-wifed by envy, hatred, vengeance, and a perverse desire to take
life and snuff it out like a pitiable candleflame. And
in his dream, he was immersed in this darkness, in this water that
tasted of bitterroot and bile. He was peculiarly aware of someone
else, hanging as he hung, and he was aware that this other was . . .
well, waiting. A sizzle of anticipation, edged by elation and, yes,
fear made ripples, so the water slipped and slithered over his bare
flesh like cruel-eyed serpents, making his flesh shrink and crawl. He
abhorred serpents with their legless movement, their silent spying,
their black unknowable thoughts. And that is why he hated the
slippery water so. But he could not move. As much as he wanted to
climb out of the water, as much as the fear flooded through him,
making tears stream from his eyes, he remained paralyzed. Utterly
helpless. Feeling
it rise up from the depths below him. What was it? He never knew; he
always woke up just as it approached. But he knew things about it
just the same, oh, yes he did. The evil of it was so strong, so
intense that it came to him as a burnt smell as of ravaged homes and
spent dreams, a taste that made him want to gag and scream all at
once. More
than once he grew terrified that he would choke on his own vomit, but
his mouth never opened, and so nothing ever came out. That did not
stop his stomachs from feeling as if they wanted to rise up into his
throat and turn themselves inside out. It did not stop his hearts
from pounding so hard he felt they must surely burst through the wall
of his chest to flood his entire being with their rapid-fire pulse.
It did not stop his nerves from screeching until he longed only for
the sweet oblivion of unconsciousness. And
so, he sensed this thing of depthless evil—whatever it was—
rising toward him, and he sensed, too, the opened maw of its
horrifying embrace, implacable as the poisonous, taloned gates of
N'Luuura. It
came. It came. Just
before it was about to devour him whole, he opened his eyes, sobbing.
. . And
here came Kirlll Qandda at the run, responding to the guttural howls,
the ghastly caterwauling he set up, to the thrashing of his body, to
the heavy rhythmic thumps as he threw himself against the wall,
screaming inside his head get it out, get it out, getitout! He
knew Kirlll Qandda's touch, knew the Deirus would not hurt him, and
yet the part of his brain that was melted, that dreamed the
nightmarish dreams, quailed and shivered, shuddered and shook at the
touch. He tried to bite Kirlll Qandda, and he could not say why save
that the liquid part of his brain, soaked in the black water of the
well inside his head, made it an imperative. Because—and when
he tried to think about it, it was not clear—what if this
wasn't Kirlll Qandda at all, this thing with arms and long tapering
fingers and breath like rotting clemetts, what if this room in
Receiving Spirit was the dream, the illusion, the nightmare, what if
he was hanging upside down in the well, waiting, and this was—He
screamed and thrashed, and he lashed out, drawing blood—his Or
someone else's, he could not be sure. The terror was like a living
thing squirming inside him, the implications of the well and where it
went, what lurked at its deep bottom, made his brain want to explode,
made him want to rend his skin with his nails, made him want to hurl
himself from the window across the room, plummeting through the soft
air, to smash to the stone pavement far below, free at last. And
then his eyes were being pulled open and he arched back, knowing what
was coming, hating it, fearing it, tasting it, somehow, as the spray
coated his eyes, the potent chemicals absorbed into his system in the
space of one ragged breath. Like air being let out of an overfilled
balloon, Terrettt gave one long shuddering exhale, and the terror
left him, life fled him—at least life as he could define it—and
he felt a thick mask forming over his face, a mask of lassitude if
not serenity. All at once, he forgot the well, the awful cold empty
blackness, and what he had glimpsed swimming up toward him. All at
once, he could not connect one thought with another, and did not
really want to. Dimly,
he was aware of Kirlll Qandda carrying him back to bed, of his sister
Marethyn, her face pale and drawn with worry, pulling the linens up
around his chin, wishing him pleasant dreams. Which he had in great
multitudes. What he regretted most was the concern he caused her. He
loved Marethyn with both his hearts. He would gladly have sacrificed
himself to make her happy. In fact, he would welcome such a
circumstance, for it would prove to him that he had a purpose, that
his own life had been worth something after all. Much
later, he arose and peed heavily into the sink where he dutifully and
lovingly washed his brushes. Using his extreme hunger and parched
mouth as goads, he grabbed his paints. He cut the pigments with his
own sweat, in which he was drenched, and set to slashing and
swirling, trying to express in an altogether different manner his
horror and fear, everything he had seen and felt, everything the
dream meant to him or might ever mean. But no matter how hard he
tried it wasn't what he had seen or what he wanted to express. As
usual, his memory was shot, the drugs in the spray altering the
chemical makeup of the memories so that what he conjured up were
copies of the originals, reflections, ghosts, softened, edited,
riddled with gaps that always defeated him. He grunted as he worked,
hunched over his palette, looking more like an animal than a V'ornn,
and a Stogggul at that. No
wonder his family never came to see him. Save Marethyn, who could
look beyond his nonresponsiveness, his violent outbursts. She
listened when he spoke or, more accurately, listened when he tried to
speak. But it was as if he was still trapped in his dream. He could
hear the words in his head, even form them into phrases and sentences
before he ever opened his mouth. But, then, what would come out?
Madness. The cusp of madness, all his well-thought-out sentences
drowned in the line of spittle spurting between his bared teeth. For
the thousandth time, he glanced up, working for want of a clearer
memory with the topographical map Marethyn had put up on the wall. He
returned to his painting and, almost instantly, his brush flashed
across the paper. Nothing was more important than exorcising the
terror that gripped him out of sleep, that ravaged his brain day and
night with its bedlam of voices, its multitude of hands grabbing
greedily for a piece of his mind. But he would not let them, oh no.
He turned violent, hit out at them, screaming at them, and, for a
time, they faded away. Then the dream would recur, he would be under
the black water, hanging by his heels, staring down into the depths,
waiting for him to appear . . . He
shook his head, grunting, drooling, painfully and painstakingly
making himself put the end of one thought against the beginning of
another, until he had a stream that he could render in color and
texture on canvas. These were his paintings, his precious paintings,
and as long as Marethyn had them he was confident that one day she
would see them for what they were, she would understand that they
were messages meant for her. Because she was the only one who came,
who spent time with him, who did not believe him mad. And he was sure
that sooner or later she would catch on, she would see what it was he
was painting, and know it for what it really was. Then
he forgot what it was he had been thinking, forgot that he could
think at all. He was screaming and screaming and screaming and
eventually his screams were punctuated by the rhythm of pounding
feet. He
is all right," Kirlll Qandda said, "for now." Marethyn
smoothed her hand over Terrettt's damp forehead. "How long will
he sleep?" "Long
enough," Kirlll Qandda said, "to get his strength back."
Marethyn sat down by Terrettt's bedside. She was close to tears. She
had been here ever since Kirlll Qandda had contacted her, all night,
it seemed, and into this dreary, enervating morning. She missed
Sornnn desperately, wished he was here beside her, but for a couple
of hours at least she had stopped thinking about Tettsie's death.
"And still there is no improvement." Kirlll
Qandda clasped his hands in front of him. "I wish I could be
more encouraging, but nothing I have tried has had the slightest
effect on his condition, which continues to defy diagnosis. Without
the proper diagnosis, as you must know, there is virtually no hope of
finding a cure." All
at once, Marethyn burst into tears. "Ah,
my dear, please ignore me," the Deirus said, wringing his hands.
"I always say the wrong thing." "It
is all too much, you see," she sobbed. "But,
oh, how could I be so thickheaded?" he said. "I was honored
you asked me to preside over your grandmother's remains." Tettsie's
final arrangements had been brief and without fanfare.
Tus-kugggun—even Great Caste Tuskugggun like Tettsie—were
not entitled to the Rescendance. After Kirlll Qandda had examined
her, she had been summarily cremated. "It
was clear that you and she were very close." He clucked his
tongue against the roof of his mouth. "But as far as Terrettt is
concerned you must not give up hope. I haven't." She
looked up at him. "No?" "Absolutely
not. Even now I have a number of radically new approaches I am
devising." He raised a slender, bony finger. "You just stay
here a moment and take deep, even breaths." He
went out of Terrettt's room for a moment. When he returned, he was
carrying a small goblet. He knelt beside her, put her fingers around
the stem. "You must restore yourself, Marethyn Stogggul." She
drank the fire-grade numaaadis gratefully. "I thought liquor was
forbidden here." The
Deirus gave her a small smile. "Every V'ornn needs a bit of
restoration, now and then." "Thank
you," she said, handing him back the empty goblet. "You
were very kind and understanding with Tettsie, and now you are
again." "It
is nothing." "No.
It is most assuredly not 'nothing. ' You are the first one in here to
show the slightest kindness toward my brother." He
spread his hands. "How could I do any less?" "That
sounds very Kundalan." Kirlll
Qandda looked at her for what seemed a long time. "Are you a
sympathizer?" "I
beg your pardon?" "No,
no." He waved his hands. "It is nothing." "I
heard what you said. I will not forget it." He
blanched. "No,
you misunderstand. I would never betray your trust. In fact, I myself
have been thinking ..." "There
are quite a few of us, you know." "No,"
she said, her hearts suddenly beating faster. "I did not." "Well,
it's true," he whispered, and giggled a little, possibly from an
excess of nerves. She
lowered her voice as well. "It's odd you should say that. I was
recently in a space within a warehouse, filled with artifacts from
the Korrush and other Kundalan lands." "What
is odd about that?" "It
is owned by a Bashkir." "Indeed?" "And
there were some boxes, Khagggun-looking because of the sigils, and I
got the feeling . . . you know, it was just a feeling." "Was
it Sornnn SaTrryn's warehouse?" When she looked at him, he
hastened to add, "I could not help noticing him with you while I
examined your grandmother." "Tettsie
was his mother's best friend." "The
boxes were Khagggun, you say?" As
if suddenly becoming aware of the perilous turn the conversation had
taken, she rose abruptly, and there ensued a small but thoroughly
awkward silence, which had the effect of making the skin at the back
of her neck crawl. "Thank
you again, Kirlll Qandda," she said at last. "For
everything." "I
wish I had better news." The Deirus escorted her to the door.
"Have faith. Perhaps next time I will." Does
it have to be so dark in here?" Eleana asked. "The Teyj
says yes," Rekkk told her. "It's pitch-black." She
could feel his presence, but she could not see him. And where was the
Gyrgon-bred bird? "Not even one oil lamp?" "Not even
one photon of light, the Teyj says." They
had descended a precipitous staircase, a black-timbered upper portion
followed by a stone flight, smooth and hollowed by wear. At its
bottom was a warren of narrow cellar passageways and low-ceilinged
chambers underneath the abbey. There was about the place a dank and
decidedly forbidding air, as if they were approaching the repository
for the bones of disgraced Ramahan. The sense of abandonment and
regret was everywhere evident in the piles of icons, dusty and
diademed, animal carvings, cracked and cobwebbed, altars and fonts,
chipped and timeworn, in which vermin had made their nests. The dregs
of a once-limber civilization in decline, lost now, mysterious even
to itself. "How
do you know what the Teyj says?" she asked him as she stood in
the dark. "Something
happened when he worked on me." "It slipped a Gyrgon device
into you, you mean." "I don't think so," Rekkk said.
"I'm already part Gyrgon. Nith Sahor altered me when he
implanted this prototype okummmon in my arm. It's of his own
manufacture." "That doesn't explain why—" "When
the Teyj was repairing me he established a connection, possibly
through the okummmon. It is a communication device." "Yours
is much more," she said. "I've seen how you can
transmogrify matter from one state to another by feeding it into the
okummmon's slot." The
Teyj gave a brief, fluted call, and Rekkk said, "Hush now, he's
about to activate the duscaant." "Why
do you insist on calling the bird a 'he' when it's just an animal?" The
Teyj's shrill warning cry silenced her. A
brilliant cone of light pierced the darkness. It seemed to emanate
from everywhere at once. Then, abruptly, it coalesced into a sphere
that bubbled and pulsed with milky life. The milkiness turned
transparent, revealing the inside of the abbey's Library where the
duscaant had been secreted. And then, as if a set of doors had been
thrown open, Eleana and Rekkk found themselves inside the Library,
observing history, random moments from the past that the duscaant had
recorded for its Gyrgon masters. Ramahan
passed to and fro, oblivious to its existence. There was talk of
spells and lessons, there was small gossip and inconsequential
asides, there was a somber airiness. A Ramahan wondered if she was
getting too fat, another sitting at the long refectory table they had
come to know so well confided to her neighbor that she had taken a
book from the Library to study from overnight and had forgotten to
return it. Bells chimed deeply and melodiously, and there was
silence, and then the prayers began. And it was these quotidian
stitches dropped out of the warp and weft of a history so recently
written that made Eleana particularly uneasy, for she felt keenly the
particular damage inflicted by the voyeur, the invasion of something
that was meant to be inviolate. And she put her hands across her
ballooning belly in an instinctual effort to protect her baby because
this seemed to her to be an act of violence more heinous, even, than
the slaughter that had sent the plumes of black smoke into the dying
light of a foreshortened autumn afternoon. Because it crept in the
shadows, gobbling up lives, hidden from view. As
a former leader of a Resistance cell she knew better than most
Kundalan the value of clandestine intelligence gathering, and of
course part of her would have given an arm for a single duscaant to
plant in the headquarters of Line-General Lokck Werrrent. But with
the baby growing inside her that life seemed distant and dim. She put
a hand to her head. What was happening to her? She had been raised a
child of the war against the V'ornn. Her parents had been murdered by
Kha-gggun, her friends and compatriots, as well. She had always been
defined in terms of her warrior's heart. And now here she was
harboring these feelings, pulling back from violence. She could feel
herself refo-cusing her energies from rage to protection. The baby
inside her living, swimming, kicking, breathing when she breathed,
his twin V'ornn hearts double-beating in counterpoint to her own. He
was so unknowing, helpless, vulnerable, just like these long-dead
Ramahan walking and speaking and praying all around her in the
dusklight of the duscaant's irradiated theater. She would do anything
to protect him from the savage beast ravaging the world. The
light changed abruptly, the Library, surrounded by the citadel |;
of the night, lit with deeply incised bronze oil lamps, their orange |;
flames reflected in the huge windowpanes. A whorl of violet V'ornnish
letters and numbers was briefly superimposed in a corner of shadows
and then vanished. A new entry in another time period. Two
Ramahan sat side by side in the otherwise deserted Library, their
persimmon-colored robes marking them as highest-ranking konara. There
was a thick book open between them on the refectory table, but
neither was consulting it. Their upper bodies were curled slightly,
bent forward as if responding to a powerful magnetic force flowing
between them. "—all
you need or will ever need to know," said the konara with a nose
keen as a knife blade. "You
cannot expect me to agree," the other konara said. She had
wide-apart eyes that made her look surprised even when she was not.
"What are you thinking?" "I
am offering you a way—the only way—to save yourself and
your Ramahan." The knife-nosed konara had a very high, domed
forehead that shone in the lamplight. "Konara
Mossa, no. It is out of the question." "Listen,
listen." Konara Mossa took the other's hand in hers. "This
is the third time in three months I have come to see you. I speak to
you now out of the depths of our long-standing friendship. I have
traveled far, as you know. And why? In the hopes that you will see
reason." "But
the bargain you must have made. What you are proposing I must do." "For
the sake of every Ramahan here." "There
must be another way." "There
is not, Konara Yasttur. I would have found it, otherwise." "I
wonder whether this is so," Konara Yasttur said. "Haven't
you taken the expedient path, acquiesced to the only alternative they
have presented?" "Your
acolytes are how young?" Konara Mossa asked sharply. "They
are my charges, my precious children." "Yes.
For them, Konara Yasttur. For the sake of their lives. For the sake
of our order." She leaned in farther. "If not, there will
be genocide. This the V'ornn have promised." "I
cannot believe that you have sealed the bargain," Konara Yasttur
hissed between bared teeth. "With the enemy." "Better
the enemy you know," Konara Mossa said softly. "You
are deluded," Konara Yasttur said shortly. "Our culture,
our daily lives, our history, all that we are, all that makes us
unique is being systematically stripped from us by these evil—"
She broke off, buried her face in handfuls of her persimmon robes. "My
dear, I come to you tonight as I have always come." "Carrying
a dread secret." "As
a friend." Konara
Yasttur looked up quickly. "Ah, Miina protect us from our
enemies and our friends." A
window seemed to close in Konara Mossa's face as she slapped her
thighs and rose. Looking down at Konara Yasttur, she said, "Then
I cannot make you see reason." Konara
Yasttur said, "The reasoning of the damned." "They
will come, then, and they will destroy you all." Konara Mossa
looked abruptly sad. "I haven't the power to stop them." "Would
you, if you could?" "But,
of course. What do you think—?" "You
have sunk to their level, you have accepted their violence, the
inevitability of their victory. You have been infected by their evil,
and you are cut off from the divine light of the Goddess. That is
what I know." Konara
Mossa frowned. "It is you who are deluded, my old friend. I will
be remembered as a hero of the order, I am doing what needs to be
done so that the Ramahan may survive this final onslaught." Konara
Yasttur rose and faced her friend. "And have you considered that
your decision, the very act of betraying your kind, will be the very
instrument of our order's destruction." She held out a hand.
"You are a servant of Miina, you are holy as the Great Goddess
is holy. If goodness does not illuminate the abbeys, then this is,
truly, the fall of everlasting night." Konara Mossa turned her
face away, and Konara Yasttur's harsh, almost hysterical laugh ended
in a sob. "Ah, don't you see? What need the V'ornn of direct
atrocities when they have bent such as you to do their evil bidding?" Light
flared, a morning sun spilling white gold through the high windows.
In the same shadowy corner, the whorl of V'ornish letters marking a
new time and new scene spiraled and vanished. The Library was utterly
deserted, in the way that comes only at the very end of things.
Through the windows a pack of Khagggun in full battle armor could be
seen, their shock-swords out and swinging in a silent harvest as they
slaughtered the Ramahan on the spot. Just
before the entry—the last one—ended, Konara Yasttur
appeared, yanked by her hair. The last of her tattered robes was
stripped off her, and the pack fell upon her, the ranking officers
first, unhinging their bloody armor, then the lower-echelon warriors,
licking their lips, their callused hands clawing and pulling at bare
flesh. Her mouth was open. She must have been screaming, but in the
sunny glow of the duscaant's photonic recording all was silence.
13
Kirlll
Qandda was reading the latest holoscan of Terrettt's brain activity
he had made when Jesst Vebbn poked his head into the cubicle, and
said, "You are needed." Though
he had been engrossed in the anomalous readings, Kirlll rose without
protest. He had no choice. Jesst Vebbn was the Genomatekk to whom he
was assigned, whose orders he must fulfill without question or
protest. "What
is it?" he said as he strode side by side with the Genomatekk. "A
new shipment has arrived," Jesst Vebbn said shortly. "One
of them is dying." Jesst
Vebbn was walking so quickly that Kirlll had to hurry to keep up, but
then Jesst did everything in triple time, including talking. He was a
tall, clemett-shaped individual with shortish arms and legs that were
almost comical. He possessed the clinician's typical face, closed and
calculating. If he possessed any emotion, Kirlll had yet to see it. Up
ahead, Kirlll could see the knot of Khagggun sentinels. He despised
Khagggun with all his being, just as he despised the ongoing program
of which Jesst Vebbn was in charge. The Khagggun parted when they saw
Jesst, but of course they eyed Kirlll with distaste bordering on
loathing. And why shouldn't they? His presence was a harbinger of
imminent death. Jesst
led him through the anteroom where the children were being processed.
A single line had formed and, though Jesst appeared entirely
oblivious, Kirlll registered like a blow to his body the fear and
anguish on each and every face he passed. He could never get used to
the so-called "recombinant experiments" the Gyrgon had
ordered. These children, the sad consequence of Kundalan females
being raped by battle-blooded Khagggun, were in any case mistakes. "Poor
things," Kirlll could not help but say. "They are born into
misery." "Typical
Deirus. You have inverted the sentiment," Jesst said as they
hurried on. "This program they are entering gives the miserable
purpose. Look at them snivel and weep. Well, what can you expect from
animals. Had they sufficient intelligence, they would stand proud and
tall, knowing that they give their lives to further the higher
science of the Gyrgon." Kirlll
bit his lip, contenting himself at staring murderously at the back of
the Genomatekk's neck. At length, they passed through the large
anteroom and into a narrow corridor lined on either side by tiny
examination cubicles. These were slowly being filled by the hybrid
children as they passed through processing. They were fairly easy to
spot. Most of their V'ornn genes were expressed, overwhelming the
Kun-dalan traits. But inside there were differences, though these
differences varied widely. These were, of course, what interested the
Gyrgon most. Halfway down, Jesst stopped and parted a curtain. "In
here," he said. He hung back in the doorway as Kirlll entered,
unable to bring himself any closer to the dying child. Every
twenty meters or so a Khagggun stood guard, as if these wretched
children might prove a threat to the Genomatekks crisscrossing from
cubicle to cubicle. "What
is the defect?" he asked in his clipped, clinical voice. Kirlll
stood over the child, a male of no more than four years, he judged.
The child was very pale, his skin clammy, his breath shallow and
irregular. His eyes, wide and staring, fixed on Kirlll, and terror
coalesced in them, turning them dark and old beyond his years. "Be
calm," Kirlll told him. "I am here to help." All the
while, his expert hands were probing and palpating. He drew out a
portable holoscanner and thumbed it on. "Look
at this," he told the child as he played it over his torso.
"Hear that humming? That means it is making you better." "Stop
babbling," Jesst said impatiently, "and talk to me." "He
was born with two sets of hearts," Kirlll said as he studied the
holoimage. Now
Jesst seemed interested, "Wouldn't that make him stronger?"
"One heart is Kundalan, the other is a V'ornn twinned heart.
Apparently they are incompatible." "That
is a great pity," Jesst said. He crossed his arms over his chest
and leaned against the doorframe. "Is there anything you can do
for him?" In response to Kirlll's glance, he added, "I am
not quite the ogre you believe me to be." "The
ogre spoke quite eloquently of animal pride." "That
was in the anteroom, in public. That is how I am expected to speak,"
Jesst said. "You
do not believe me." When
Kirlll did not reply, Jesst said, "It comes straight from the
holotext. That much I am certain you know." "I
have read it," Kirlll said. Jesst
waited several moments before he said, "I know you do not
approve of our program." "I
do not approve of causing or prolonging suffering, even in the name
of Gyrgon high science." Kirlll watched as the child played with
the holoscanner. "But what matter? The opinion of a Deirus
carries no weight." Jesst
glanced over at the child. "You will have to perform an
autopsy," he said softly. Kirlll
nodded, a jerk of his head. "Would that I could save him." "I
wish it too." "Oh,
I do not doubt it." Kirlll smiled benignly down at the child.
"An enrollee with double hearts. Imagine the experiments." "What
is it," Jesst said, "that rankles you so?" Kirlll
turned and, with one hand still on the child, said, "He is an
innocent, just as all of them here are innocents. They did not ask to
be born, the circumstances of their life, their genetic composition,
are not of their making. They were caused by bestial acts perpetrated
by our own kind." "Khagggun
are not our own kind," Jesst said unexpectedly. "Neither
are Gyrgon, but we bow to their bidding all the same." Jesst
spread his hands. "Have we a choice?" "You
have a choice. You could ask to be reassigned." "And
risk having a Genomatekk with blood in his hearts take my place?" Kirlll
took a deep breath, let it slowly out. He shook his head then,
turning back to the child, said, "I could use some help here." The
child was going into convulsions. There was no help for him, nothing
in the vast Genomatekk arsenal could save him from the savage Mistake
of his conception. Somehow, sadly, that seemed appropriate, Kirlll
thought, as he directed Jesst to hold the child's arms and legs. He
produced one of the small canisters he used on Terrettt and, holding
open the child's fluttering eyelids, sprayed each eye in turn. Almost
immediately, the convulsions subsided. "What
will happen now?" Jesst asked. "He
will sleep." Kirlll put away the canister, "and that sleep
will become deeper and deeper until he is gone." He felt a
curious sensation in his chest, a fizzing like a severed ion beam. "I
will not leave him while he yet lives." "We
both will stay," Jesst said, surprising Kirlll once again. "But
let us not keep vigil in silence." "What
would you speak of?" "An
inquiry has been raised about you." Kirlll
looked at him blankly. "An
internal inquiry, nothing dire, I am quite certain. These things crop
up among Deirus from time to time." He shrugged. "I myself
do not put much store in them, but nevertheless they must be dealt
with in a timely manner or I am the one who will answer for the
delay." "What
is the nature of this inquiry?" Jesst,
glancing at the dying child, said, "Or perhaps this is not the
right time." "I
could use the distraction." Jesst
nodded. "The inquiry concerns the lovers you keep." "What
about them?" "You
know what about them. They are male." "I
am a law-abiding Deirus." "Actually—"
Jesst scratched the back of his neck—"the law, as it was
drawn up by the Gyrgon Comradeship, states that same-sex fornication
is forbidden." He smiled a porcelain smile. "But you
already know this." There was the briefest pause. "Oh, I
have no doubt of your usefulness to the Modality, Kirlll Qandda. No,
indeed. But there are others . . ." Jesst broke off, seemingly
at a loss as to how to proceed. "This is awkward for me." "Imagine
how I feel." Jesst
cleared his throat. "I want to make it clear that in my opinion
the inquiry is off base, a total waste of time. And you are one of my
most valued Deirus. Still, I must ask." "Proceed." "There
seems in some quarters to be a certain suspicion concerning the
SaTrryn Consortium." "What
is the nature of such suspicion?" "And
seeing as how you have been their Deirus—I mean, did you not
preside over Hadinnn SaTrryn's death?" "Sornnn
SaTrryn asked me to do so, yes," Kirlll said. "And
that was not the first. Your involvement with them goes back, what,
twenty years?" "Twenty-seven." Jesst
nodded. "It's just that, well, officials are looking." "For
what?" "An
involvement with the, ah, the Kundalan Resistance." Kirlll
frowned. "What are you getting at?" Jesst
leaned in and lowered his voice. "Just this. If, let us say, the
SaTrryn are involved with helping the enemy and if, let us say, you
yourself are somehow involved." Kirlll
snorted. "This is quite a web you're weaving." "Oh,
not me. No, not at all." Jesst put a forefinger beside his nose.
"But in certain quarters." For
the first time, Kirlll appeared shaken. "What quarters?" "Very
high up. More than that I am not at liberty to reveal." Jesst
drew a little away. "Either way, it would not go well for you,
do you see?" "That
is preposterous." "Well,
you and I perhaps know that. But as for the others." "I
am not saying . . . But if. . ." Kirlll seemed unable to meet
the Genomatekk's eye. "What if I knew something? Information
that could lead to the arrest of the traitor." "That
would absolve you of... well, of everything," Jesst said softly. "Even
my private life?" "Even
that." "The
child is crossing over," Kirlll said. He placed his finger on
the side of the child's neck. The pulse was weak and erratic. It
barely impacted his nerve endings. And then, in the wink of an eye,
it was gone. "He
never had a chance," Jesst pointed out. "That
makes it worse, not better." The fizzing in Kirlll's chest had
reached a crescendo. Jesst
cleared his throat. "Not
that I am saying I have direct knowledge of who the traitor is."
Kirlll Qandda still had hold of the child, and now he disengaged
himself, a small but telling act of acceptance. "But it is
possible that I have recently heard something that would be of
special interest to these 'others’. " "You
must tell me what you know," Jesst said urgently. "I
must think." "I
urge you not to take too long. The offer may be withdrawn at any
moment. And then." "And
then, what?" Jesst
looked into Kirlll's eyes. "I would be forced to continue the
inquiry into your private activities whether I wanted to or not." "You
are giving me no choice then." "That
is, regrettably for you, the case." Kirlll
felt that curious sensation in his chest slowly dissipating as he
took up his ion scalpel. He said a brief prayer for the child's
departed soul, a death song he had composed years ago more for his
own benefit than for the newly dead. Then he made the first incision,
precisely aligned and meaningful, like everything he did. All
the next day Tezziq put Riane through her paces, and so exacting a
taskmaster was she that Riane was exhausted by dinnertime.
Immediately following, she took her bath and collapsed on her
cushions. She was summarily roused out of a dreamless slumber. Tezziq
was shaking her by the shoulder. "He's
coming," Tezziq whispered in her ear. "Baliiq is coming."
"Who?" Riane said drowsily. But she came fully awake when
she saw the figure in the doorway. He was standing with his powerful
legs spread, his brawny arms crossed over his chest. Riane sat up.
"Don't worry," she whispered. "I won't let him take
you." "It
is not for me that he is here," Tezziq said breathlessly. "It
is for you." "What?"
Fear gripped Riane by the throat. "But I told you—"
"Yes." Tezziq held her close, felt her shiver. "I
know." "It must be some mistake. You have had but a few
days to train me." She looked into Tezziq's eyes. The thought of
being subject to Makk-tuub's outsized lusts made her ill. "Surely
that's not enough time." "Baliiq is here. You must go."
Tezziq pushed her gently off the cushions and onto the carpeted
floor. "There is simply no alternative." There
is always an alternative, Mother had once told her, but her mind
was so paralyzed she could think of nothing. She slid into the
slipper-shoes the kapudaan had given her. Dread
was Riane's constant companion as she walked beside Baliiq. A feeling
of unreality had invaded her, anesthetizing her, sapping her will. An
image of what the kapudaan had done to Tezziq ran through her head,
and she quailed. With an effort, she concentrated on Baliiq instead,
trying to calm herself by studying him closely. He
was well muscled but, unlike the other guards Riane had seen, there
was nothing thick or heavy about him. His hair was drawn back from
his face, but instead of being wound on the top of his head, it hung
in a long queue held at its end by a fillet of carved emperor
carnelian. He moved with the same kind of liquid grace she had seen
in the kuomeshals, as if he were simply an animated part of the
landscape. He
said not a word to her as he led her down one tented corridor and up
another, but often she felt the hot scrutiny of his gaze. Mostly, one
passageway was indistinguishable from another until they came to one
where the walls were strung with magnificent silk carpets, meant to
be seen rather than walked upon. Their patterns, though varied, were
united in their strict geometric nature. They all featured a central
core of some sort, round or square, oblong or hexagonal, depending on
the whim or the imagination of the artist-weaver, surrounded by bands
that more or less spiraled outward in ever-increasing complexity
until they reached the border. The
carpets became more ornate until she and Baliiq turned a corner and
entered a corridor with plain whitewashed walls. At its far end was a
spiral staircase fashioned from a deep lustrous bronze, worked into a
filigree of vine stems and tiny starlike flowers. They ascended this,
and soon found themselves outside on a vast terrace that overlooked
the city. A walkway of carpets lay directly ahead of them. Stars
already throbbed in the vastness of the early-evening sky, scarred as
it was by a pair of crescent moons so slender their green was almost
white. A softly soughing wind carried the ubiquitous red dust and the
rich, heady scents of roasting meat and brewing ba'du. Riane
saw Makktuub lounging on a densely patterned divan in the midst of a
small, artfully arranged oasis of limoniq trees, potted and pruned
into dwarves. The divan was covered in watered silk. To one side was
a table laden with steamed and stuffed fruits, to the other was an
ornately filigreed lyssomwood panel, the better, doubtless, to screen
him from the ululating din of the streets and boulevards below. The
kapudaan stirred slightly as Baliiq brought her into his presence.
With a flick of his fingers, he dismissed the albino. Riane was
actually sorry to see Baliiq go. He had been a powerful presence but
not a particularly forbidding one. He was not like the dull-eyed
guards who lined the tents like cement bricks. There seemed something
inside him waiting to emerge, a sense of tension, yes, but also a
watchfulness, as if he were searching for the right time, the right
place to reveal himself. But now that did not matter because he was
gone and she was all alone on the terrace with Makktuub. "So."
Makktuub smiled from behind his dark, hooded eyes, but the smile, she
felt, was thin and, for some reason, strained. "How have you
fared with the oh-so-lovely Tezziq?" "She
is quite skilled in the ways of pleasure," Riane replied. "And
she is treating you well?" He was using one hand to lend
emphasis to what he was saying. "She is keeping her jealousy in
check? Is there anything for which you lack?" "My
freedom." He
sat up abruptly, and Riane tensed, sensing his strain breaking the
surface. His eyes were deeply angry, and for a moment she was certain
he was going to strike her as he rose off the divan. But instead, he
stood watching her. She
tried to read his expression. There was a certain unease. It had been
there a long time, like a ruin, something in the wilderness of the
steppes, lost and almost forgotten. A pulse beat in his right temple,
betraying a deeper anger. He wanted to say something, she could tell
that, but he felt constrained. She could hear a sudden burst of
shouts from the street below, the ululating prayers briefly
interrupted, the altercation discordant after the unwinding music of
the chants. Then it was over, and the prayer-songs began again as if
the voices had never been interrupted. "If
you plan on taking me to bed," Riane said, "I will not
comply. I want my freedom." "Jiharre
may heed your plea," he murmured, seeming now truly ill at ease,
"but heaven itself knows when." Astonished,
she watched him hurry across the carpeted expanse and disappear down
the spiral staircase into the palace. For a moment, she did not know
what to do. The wind ruffled her hair, sounds arose from below,
reciting tales of the city and its inhabitants. Inexorably, she was
drawn to the near edge of the terrace. Beyond a waist-high parapet,
she saw the nighttime sprawl of Agachire. Across the street, narrower
than the avenue the palace fronted, she could see the parapet of
another terrace, and across its expanse, the dim outline of another.
Below, the street itself was clogged with foot traffic as well as
slow-moving kuomeshal caravans. Females squatted, stirring
fine-grained stews or stacking flat bread. Old men chanted, their
heads together, their arms around each other's waists as they moved
rhythmically back and forth. Lovers gazed into each other's eyes but
did not touch. Instead, they fed each other dried fruits and
sweetmeats from paper cones they had purchased from street vendors.
Merchants argued with customers while children wove a wild and
unpredictable pattern through it all. She was trying to calculate the
odds of surviving a leap from the terrace when a figure emerged from
behind the filigreed screen. She
felt her breath driven from her lungs. The figure was so startling,
so out of place that she was rooted to the spot. Glittering in the
spangled starlight, a Gyrgon stood, buried within his armor. The helm
was high and angular, eared and horned and unvented, with a menacing
ridged brow into which a row of alloy talons had been sunk. It
projected a formidable appearance, this particular ion exomatrix. As
it ought; it was a battle suit. "I
believe it is high time we got acquainted, Riane," the Gyrgon
said, coming toward her. "My name is Nith Settt." He
held out a black-gloved hand, in the center of which sat something
darkly familiar, and Riane's heart skipped a beat. Dear Miina, no,
she thought. "Please
tell me," Nith Settt said softly and sibilantly as he glided
toward her, "how you came to be in possession of this." And
it began to expand exponentially, Nith Settt holding it aloft for her
to see, Nith Sahor's neural-net greatcoat. Tettsie
looked out at them, regal and commanding, and it seemed surely that
the entirety of what she was, of what she had stood for existed
in the muted colors and masterly brushstrokes that Marethyn had
labored over for weeks. "It's
her completely," Sornnn said. "It's a marvelous
accomplishment." "I
can't believe it," Marethyn said. "The painting was the
point, and she never got to see it." It
might seem like a trivial, even a self-centered thing to say at the
ending of a life as long as Tettsie's had been, but it was not. It
was merely, finally, a way to make death—so deep a
mystery—understandable. It also brought Tettsie's death down to
a manageable size. It allowed Marethyn to go on with her daily life,
it allowed her to sleep at night, though that slumber was often
restless, interrupted by dreams she would rather not remember or
interpret. They
stood in her closed and shuttered atelier, an embroidered indigo
remembrance-cloth draped over the spot where Tettsie had died.
According to custom, it would remain undisturbed for one month, after
which it would be carefully wound into a tertium tube. While
Marethyn had gone about seeing to her grandmother's final
arrangements, Sornnn, in his official capacity as Prime Factor, had
been at Finial Hall, a cavernous, brooding space in a former Kundalan
warehouse that had undergone a typically unlovely V'ornn
transformation. He was adjudicating a protracted and acrimonious
dispute he had inherited from the time when Wennn Stogggul had been
the Prime Factor that concerned two Consortia, the Nwerrrn and the
Fellanngg, over mineral rights on the western edge of the Borobodur
forest. It was the sort of case, complicated and petty, that
reaffirmed Sornnn's yearning for the brilliant uncluttered endless
landscape of the Korrush. "She
was my mentor, my compass," Marethyn said. "What am I going
to do without her?" Sornnn
took hold of her, turned her around to face him because he did not
know what else to do. He felt helpless at the sight of her grief and
vulnerability. "You have taken what she taught you," he
said. "You are already your own mentor and compass." "Do
you really think so?" He
turned her around so she faced the painting again. "Look at her,
Marethyn. This is your grandmother, but it is also your creation.
What I see in there, the strength and pride and stubbornness and
anger and loving kindness, comes from you." And
Marethyn was crying and laughing at the same time and whispering
something Sornnn could not quite catch, which was all right because
whatever was said was between her and Tettsie, as it should be,
between granddaughter and grandmother who were mirror images, who had
meant so much to each other. Tettsie,
who even in death knew what she wanted, had dictated instructions
into a data-decagon she had long since given to Marethyn. Upon
playing it back, they discovered these things: Tettsie wanted her
ashes scattered over the deep pools outside the city walls where she
and Marethyn had swum on hot summer afternoons. She asked that her
house and its contents be sold, the proceeds delivered to a
solicitor-Bashkir named Dobbro Mannx who had previously been
instructed to hold the funds in a trust. Two items, alone, were to be
retrieved and distributed thusly: To Marethyn, she bequeathed a
red-jade box. To Petrre Aurrr, Sornnn SaTrryn's mother, she
bequeathed a simple vera-dium necklace—her favorite—that
held in its center a small but breath-takingly perfect Nieobian
starwen. Cleverly, she also asked Marethyn to personally deliver the
necklace to Petrre Aurrr. "Sornnn,
if I ask you to deliver the necklace, will you do it?" "You
could do it just as easily," he said. "She was your
grandmother." Marethyn
held out the flat black case. "Yes. I am thinking of what
Tettsie would want," she said, though he knew very well she was
thinking of something else altogether. Presently,
he went, the case tucked underneath his arm, to his mother's
residence. Petrre
Aurrr lived in a Kundalan confection, elaborate and airy, deep in the
Eastern Quarter with a large atrium filled with dwarf clemett trees,
bare and pale now, and delicately fringed evergreens that clattered
softly in the knife-edged gusts of autumnal wind. It was just past
sunset, the sky overhead streaked with orange and vermilion clouds,
but at its very apex the heavens were a lustrous cobalt. Sornnn's
mother was a handsome woman, tall and stately. She wore robes the
color of dried cor blood, a rich shade that suited her light eyes.
She had the fine-boned hands of a sculptor, and a face that bore
without apology the history of her life. She
looked at him, dumbfounded for an instant, when he appeared on her
doorstep. "May
I come in?" "Yes.
Yes, of course." The
exchange, though brief, managed to reiterate the odd formality and
awkwardness of their relationship. The
residence was decorated in a surprising and inventive admixture of
cultures. Cool and crisply lined V'ornn furniture was covered with
tactile and ornate Kundalan fabrics. Sornnn was rather surprised to
see how well the meshing of the severe and the febrile worked, but as
he drank it all in—the furniture, the carpets, chests,
sideboards, shelves filled with mementos and curios, there was not
one thing from his memory, from her previous life, from his family.
And this was his mother's house. He
produced the flat black case. "I have—" "May
I get you a drink?" she said at the very same instant. The
brief silence somehow echoed Sornnn's anger and grief. His
mother stared into his eyes, ignoring the case. "Forgive me,"
she said, all at once. "An old friend has just died." "I
know, I—" He cleared his throat, which had turned dry as
the Great Voorg. "Her granddaughter is an acquaintance."
Those flat words, so devoid of emotion, seemed to him more stupid and
spiteful than a mere falsehood. He patted the top of the case. "This
is from your old friend." With
a bewildered look, his mother took the case and slowly, almost
reverently, opened it. "Ah,"
was all she could manage, and the tears began to flow down her
cheeks. She went and sat down on a chair upholstered in the ornate
Kundalan style, the open case on her lap. She stared out the sliding
doors into the tree-filled atrium, idly fondling the necklace. "She
loved that clemett tree. In Lonon, with the gimnopedes swarming, she
would stand on her tiptoes to pick the ripest of the fruit. Then she
would go into the kitchen and make the most delicious dessert. We
would eat it for days, laughing over the dining room table. What fun
we would have eating and talking! And now it's all ... like grains of
sand flowing through my fingers." She wiped her eyes. "No
matter how hard I try, I can't seem to hold on to any of it." "And
not a single happy memory of your real family," he said with a
bitter taste of the old familiar anger. He
was already at the front door, his hand on the ornate Kundalan latch,
when his mother turned. "Must
you go? Already? I haven't given you anything to eat." "It's
better this way," he said with a strangled voice. She
stood, facing him. "I have many happy memories of you, Sornnn." And
that one line, so obviously a lie, loosed the cold rage he had vowed
to keep at bay. "That seems odd," he said through gritted
teeth, "considering how cold you became toward me." She
studied him for a long time. "Yes." "Is
that all you have to say." To his horror, he found that he was
trembling. "It
couldn't be helped." His
anger flared full force. "What the N'Luuura do you mean, it
couldn't be helped?" She
turned away. "What
did I do to disappoint you so?" "Oh,
Sornnn." Her voice held a desperate note of anguish. When she
turned back her eyes glittered with tears. "If you believe
nothing else, then I beg you to believe this: it had nothing to do
with you." "Then
what was it?" She
shook her head. "Leave matters where they are. Believe me,
you're better off—" "That's
right. Lies and silence. Why should I expect more from you?" Her
eyes went opaque, and for a moment he thought she hadn't heard or
wouldn't respond. He felt like a child again, his chest tight with
anger and longing and confusion. And he remembered the time he threw
the Phareseian colorsphere across the chamber, turning his back on
it, and on her. He wrenched the door open and went through it. "All
right, then," she said at last in a clear penetrating voice. He
paused, looked back because he could not help himself, because
despite his anger she was his mother, and there was a part of him
that had always loved her and needed her. "Come
back inside, Sornnn," she said softly. He
saw her in profile, her face suddenly weary but still achingly
beautiful. "Please." He
returned inside, closed the door behind him. His hearts were wrung
out with emotion, and all at once he experienced a surge of panic
and almost asked her to keep her secrets hidden. But, in the end, he
kept silent. "I
was directed—ordered, actually—to act detached." "I
do not believe you," he said suspiciously. "Sornnn,
I cannot make you believe me, but if you continue to think that I am
lying to you, we will never get anywhere." He
took a deep breath, and in a cold voice said, "So you were
ordered to act coldly to me. By whom?" She
sighed. "By your father." "Liar!"
His scalp tingling, he strode back to the door, opening it. "He
was jealous, you see." She crossed the room after him, hurried
on. "He didn't want to share you, with me or anyone else. At
first I said no. He threatened me. I didn't care. I told him it was a
hideous thing to do to you. I told him I wouldn't. Then he hit me,
and hit me again, and kept on hitting me until..." She
turned away to stare out into the atrium again. "That clemett
tree, now that all the leaves are gone, I can see I don't like its
shape at all. It is in serious need of pruning." "Is
this ... is it the truth—" "I
never wanted you to know. I prayed to Enlil." "Now
I need to hear all of it." Her
voice was no more than a strangled whisper. "He would have
beaten me to death, you see. He had a need to control me, to put his
boot on my neck and keep it there, pressing harder and harder."
She was weeping again, soft silent tears rolling down her cheeks. "He
needed to see what it would take to break me, I suppose. To strip me
of my strength, my willfulness, my dreams of independence." She
folded her hands over the necklace. "Well, clever thing, be
found it." She turned her beautiful tormented tear-streaked face
to him. "It was you." Sornnn's
brain buzzed, and his face burned. He thought of his mother and
father together and apart, of the peculiar dynamics of their
relationship, of the forces, intimate, exhilarating, crushing, that
come to bear when male and female are linked in this way. In his own
mind, his father had been a great and generous man, rare and unusual
in his desire to embrace other cultures. That was how Sornnn saw
himself, and he had simply assumed it had been the same with his
father. But who knew what drove V'ornn to do what they did? Could he
have misunderstood or missed completely his father's need to do what
he did? He went, when he was able, and knelt beside her. All these
years spent hating her. All that time wasted, how had she put it,
like grains of sand running through her fingers. He
watched her as she went to a carved heartwood chest and opened it.
When she came back to him, she had an object cradled between her
hands. He knew what it was even before she gave it to him, lovingly
preserved, her memories of him intact and glowing fiercely inside the
Phareseian colorsphere. "If
you ever doubted that I loved you." "Mother—" "It's
been a long time since you called me that." She
gazed into his face as he held his old toy, smiling sadly and
joyfully, knowing as only a mother can that he was feeling again the
heartsbeat of his childhood. Night
had stolen over the atrium, and all the trees were enameled in
indigo. He sat in the brightly lit, high-ceilinged kitchen while his
mother prepared a dessert from the last of the clemetts she had
frozen at the end of Lonon. Together they ate it, talking of Tettsie
first, then of even more intimate things, memories and
misunderstandings Sornnn had thought untouchable even a week ago. By
the time they had finished the delicious dessert, they had laughed
not once but several times, Sornnn feeling an echo of Tettsie's hand
on his arm and Petrre Aurrr touching the Nieobian starwen that
nestled in the hollow of her throat. Gossamer
moonslight settled across the flat expanse of the terrace, turning
the carpets night-blue and cream. The ululations of the faithful rose
and fell with the wind. Nith Settt folded his arms across his horned
and armored chest. "I will crush you like a tewrat unless you
answer my questions." Riane
looked at him and tried to keep Annon's innate fear of Gyrgon in
check. "You cannot get inside my mind as you can with your own
kind." "Not
so easily, anyway." Nith Settt grinned evilly. "The more
painful for you." "Is
there, in truth, no other thing you employ but coercion?" "Fear
is my middle name," Nith Settt said. "It was ever thus."
He made an almost imperceptible motion, and Nith Sahor's greatcoat
folded up upon itself. "Perhaps we need to start with an easier
question," he continued briskly. "Why have you come all
this distance to see Perrnodt?" "I
told Makktuub the truth. I wish to study under her." "To
become imari." "Yes." "I
do not believe you. For one thing, you do not have an imari's
subservient demeanor." "Perrnodt
will teach me." "For
another, how did you even know there was a dzuoko in the Korrush and
where to find her?" They
had entered dangerous territory. "I heard about her from one of
her former imari." "Liar!" He
came closer, and she could scent him, through the spiced wind of
Agachire, the odd commingling of clove oil and burnt musk. "And
I have the proof of it." Nith Settt began to circle her, the
moonslight sliced and wafered by the polished surfaces of his alloy
armor. It was the glow and spark of a living thing, a secret breath
taken, a silent voice raised. "Here it is." He rattled the
little package the greatcoat had become. "You arrive in the
Korrush wearing a Gyrgon neural net—you, a Kundalan female."
He shook the package in front of Riane's face. "Where did you
steal this from, Resistance?" "I
am not Resistance," Riane said. Nith
Settt stood stock-still. "Do you know what happens when you lie
to a Gyrgon?" He reached out with a gloved hand. "I will
extract the truth from you." Lambent green arcs shot from
fingertip to fingertip as hyperexcited ions were ramped up. "Even
if I have to do it synapse by synapse, neuron by neuron." Lethal
fingertips very close to Riane's face, A Gyrgon's touch is deadly,
how many times had Annon heard that when he was a child? "I
don't mind the process in the least. In fact, as a scientist I find
it rather elucidating. But you, Resistance, you will never be the
same again. Your brain will be fused and fried. You will become a
drooling, shambling cipher with no will of your own. But you will
remember everything. How does this future sound to you?" Out
of sight, children ran through the streets, shouting in mock battles.
The prayer-chants wove like fishers' fine seines, waxing and waning
on the whims of the wind. The moons' double scimitars, honed sharp by
the clarity of the atmosphere, peeled back the darkness. "What
are Gyrgon doing in the Korrush?" Riane said at length. "It
is my understanding that the V'ornn have no use for sea, steppe, or
desert." "Kundalan
do not query V'ornn!" "Why
not indulge me in this? According to you, in a little while I won't
be able to tell anyone anything." Nith
Settt grunted. "We conquer all races, each in its own way and in
its own time. We are here in small numbers to serve as advisors to
the Five Tribes in their internecine war with each other." "To
hear Makktuub tell it, the war will never end." "Oh,
it will end," Nith Settt said, "when all the Five Tribes
are dead." A
cold trickle crawled down Riane's spine. "So that's how you're
advising the kapudaan, by sowing continual seeds of dissension." "They
are religious fanatics. We are only giving them what they desire
most. They are bloodthirsty, these Korrush denizens." "Not
nearly so bloodthirsty as you, I warrant." "And
I can almost taste your blood, Resistance." Nith Settt grinned
evilly. "We are conducting an experiment in the power of
religious belief. It is strong, indeed, among the tribes of this
forsaken steppe. Their religion makes them stupid—stupid and
blind. They believe that we have left them alone because they harvest
spices, a commodity precious to us. They believe, because their
religion makes them self-deluded, that we could not coerce them into
harvesting the spices for us. So they happily trade with us and take
our advice when we dispense it and do not realize that they are
tewrats in a cage of our own devising." "They
will one day wake from this dream you have woven around them, and
they will rise against you." "Like
the Kundalan have risen against us? Like the followers of the •
dead god Enlil have risen against us? We are Gyrgon! We are
all-powerfulr Nith Settt raised his arms wide. "Look around you.
These are a primitive, pathetic lot." "Only
by your warped standards." The
Gyrgon glowered. "Enough idle chatter. You will now tell me what
I want to know." "You
will not believe me." "If
you lie, you will be punished. Proceed." Riane
took a deep breath. "I did not steal the greatcoat," she
said. "I found it." "You
are correct. I do not believe you." "The
Gyrgon was dead." "He
was wrapped in his cloak." "No,
he was not." Nith
Settt cocked his head. "Did you know that each neural net
carries the signature of its owner?" Riane
kept silent, but her mind was racing. The greatcoat had transported
her and Eleana back from the Museum of False Memory, and it had
transported her here into the Korrush. That could only mean one
thing. Somehow, some way, through what numinous alchemy she could not
imagine, Nith Sahor was still alive. And, to be sure, this needed to
remain an absolute secret. It occurred to her, not without a good
deal of irony, that Nith Sahor was now in the same position Annon had
found himself in, alive but desperately trying to keep it secret from
his legion of enemies, not the least being Nith Settt. "This
one belonged to a Gyrgon by the name of Nith Sahor," Nith Settt
said. "I
noticed you used the past tense. So you know he's dead. This much you
believe." "Yes." "He
died in a ring of sysal trees just north of Axis Tyr. When I came
upon him, he was surrounded by a pack of snow-lynx. Doubtless they
had unwound the cloak the better to get at him." "A
sad and solitary death." "In
any event, I drove them off. I buried him and took the greatcoat. I
thought it only fair to be recompensed for my labor." "Not
that the greatcoat is now of any use. Each neural net is genetically
linked to its owner. When Nith Sahor died, it became inoperative."
Nith Settt shook his head. "But there is something. You, a
Kundalan female, buried a Gyrgon? Why didn't you simply let the
snow-lynx rend him?" "In
our own particular way" Riane said, "we have come, to the
difference between Kundalan and V'ornn." Nith
Settt grunted again. "We are strong. You are weak." "If
having reverence for life—all life—means we're weak—" "It
does." "What,
then, is left to say?" "Much."
The Gyrgon brandished his glowing glove in Riane's face. "You
have not yet answered all my questions. I will know why you are
seeking the dzuoko Perrnodt." Riane
could feel, like a scalpel slicing through her skin, the
electromagnetic pulse from the ion arcs. It fizzed and buzzed and
made her teeth ache. The
glove hovered briefly. "Last chance, Resistance." Nith
Settt said. "Your world is about to be reduced to the size of
your body, and believe me when I tell you that it will contain
nothing but infinite pain." Riane
looked beyond the glove's obvious threat to the Gyrgon's menacing
helm. "Has the ability to compromise fled you altogether?" "Among
us V'ornn there is a saying, 'Keep compromise at bay, and victory
will be yours.' " "Not
here," Riane said, "and not tonight." She lifted her
right hand to the nape of her neck, as if scratching an itch. "What
are you doing?" Ion fire erupted from Nith Settt's fingertips,
blinding and deadly. Riane
pointed the cylinder Minnum had given her at Nith Settt and pressed
the tiny gold firing disc. She was wholly unprepared for the result
and, in her shock, nearly dropped the wand. The goron beam, a narrow
opalescent column, rippled out from the tip of the wand. It was a
tight-weave band, curling back on itself to make an endless loop, a
stairway to everywhere and nowhere, an infinity-blade. When
the infinity-blade intercepted the Gyrgon's ion fire, there was
neither a flash nor a thunderclap, nor anything else, for that
matter, that the laws of physics dictated should occur when two
opposing types of energy meet. Instead, it was like watching a raging
fire being abruptly banked; the goron beam simply absorbed the
hyperexcited ions. Nith
Settt reared back in shock. Using
her momentary advantage, Riane darted away from the Gyrgon, heading
toward the near parapet. She knew she would have only one chance at
this. She could hear the crackle and pop of the ion fire behind her
and veered sharply to her right in the instant before the lambent
energy reached her. She could feel an eerie coldness as it raced,
flaming, by her. It struck the parapet, smashing a meterwide hole in
it. There
was no time to consider consequences. Running at full tilt, Riane
leapt, her legs, powerful and springy, propelling her forward. Her
right foot came down
squarely on the top of the parapet, and she pushed off it, launching
herself into the air. At the very apex of her arc she tucked herself
into a tight ball, the better to keep her momentum going. Then, with
a bone-jarring lurch, she struck the floor of the neighboring
terrace, rolling, sucking in air as she regained her feet. And
resumed running. All
around her the torches and oil lamps of Agachire flickered and
burned, sending a dim orange glow into the cool, crisp night, fingers
of a great veined hand stretching into the vastness of the steppe. She
glanced back over her shoulder, saw Nith Settt spread his arms wide.
Enveloped in cold blue ion fire, he levitated until he was about two
meters in the air. Abruptly, the ion fire altered to a deeper hue,
and he shot forward like a missile, spanning the space between
terraces in no more than a heartsbeat or four. He
came on without settling to the terrace floor, moving faster than
Riane could on her two legs. She picked up her pace, reached the far
side of the terrace full out, and launched herself over the parapet
at almost the same instant Nith Settt loosed another ion stream,
which passed just above her head. Possibly this affected her
concentration because she came up short, slamming into the front of
the far terrace wall, hanging on to the leading edge of the parapet
with her left hand while she transferred the infinity-blade to her
teeth and reached up with her right hand. Using
both arms, she began to pull herself up, but at that instant another
ion stream struck the parapet full on. Baked brickwork exploded,
blinding her, and she felt her handhold disintegrate in a shower of
shards. Cloaked by a welter of debris, she fell onto the back of a
kuomeshal more or less in the middle of a passing caravan. All the
breath went out of her, but she had the presence of mind to switch
off the infinity-blade. The
entire caravan, panicked by the explosion and the stinging rain of
shattered brickwork, kicked up their hooves and commenced a shambling
gallop, ungainly but swift for all that. Everyone on the street was
scattering, darting this way and that, overturning carts and small
fires, rounds of bread rolling like wheels, screams and hoarse shouts
replacing the music of the prayer-chants. Using
fingers and knees, Riane clung precariously to the small mountain
of barrels lashed tightly between the animal's humps. Through the
haze that hung in the night air she caught a brief glimpse of Nith
Settt bent almost double over the parapet, looking this way and that,
pulverizing brickwork in his fists, searching for her. Choked
in dust, her teeth rattling together, her nostrils filled with the
strange pungent odor of the kuomeshals, Riane prayed to Miina that
Nith Settt could not somehow use his technomancy to find her. She
heard the breathy singsong chiding of the caravan handlers running
beside the animals, using their beat-sticks to keep them in a
semblance of order as they attempted to calm them down. And, indeed,
the entire caravan was slowing from its initial breakneck gallop down
to a trot. From her makeshift perch, she could see the handlers'
sweat-streaked faces as they continued to ply their beat-sticks to
guide the kuomeshals, use their voices to soothe them. They
had entered another quarter of Agachire. The tents here were smaller,
less ornate, though just as colorful. The torch-lined street wound
this way and that, just barely avoiding the massed jumble of tents
that arose helter-skelter on either side. The discordant clash of
scimitars, the rhythmic beating of shields rose like a cruel winter
wind, along with the rough-voiced bawdy songs endemic to warriors and
thieves. All
at once, Riane became aware of a presence near her. One of the
kuomeshal drivers was running alongside her. He was hooded and
cloaked, like all the drivers, to keep the dust at bay. She drew the
infinity-blade but did not activate it. "Do
not be afraid," the figure whispered hoarsely. "Come with
me. I will take you to a safe place." He had not turned his head
or altered his pace. Riane
said nothing, clinging tightly to the barrels. "You
must come now," he said, more urgently. "The kapudaan's
guards are even now fanning out through the city to find you."
He turned to her. "There is a group of them just ahead." Now,
by flickering torchlight, she could see a crescent of his face. "Paddii!"
The father of the baby whose life she had saved. "Yes,
yes," he said, reaching a powerful arm around her. "Come
quickly^ Come now!" She
let go of the barrels as he tugged her off. She swung her legs down,
and he took off, holding her hand, dragging her along. Behind them,
the caravan had been halted, and they could hear the harsh queries of
the kapudaan's guards, the drivers' responses. As
she ran, Riane flexed her stiff fingers. Her legs were already
getting a workout. Paddii led her down curving streets and crooked
lanes, heading in a northerly direction, as best she could tell. "How
did you know?" she asked, when they had put sufficient distance
between them and the guards. "My
cousin informed me. Baliiq, you know." He gave her a quick
glance. "Are you all right? You were not mistreated?" "Except
for the Gyrgon—" "Who?" Riane
shook her head. "Never mind." Was Nith Settt's presence
here secret? If so, what did the Gazi Qhan make of the levitating
figure on the terrace throwing cold firebolts? She had little time to
contemplate this, for Paddii had ducked into a tent flap. Following
him, Riane found herself inside a small space that might once have
been used as a storehouse, but now seemed all but abandoned. A slight
wind billowed the tent walls, and distant torchlight caused a ghostly
aura to appear, bleaching the striped fabric. "Here,"
Paddii said, thrusting a ball of clothes at her. "Best to change
so you don't look like a daughter of the haanjhala." Without
another word, he went out of the tent. She could see him standing
guard, his back to her. Quickly,
she stripped off her filmy, filthy outfit and stepped into a pair of
old, worn breeches, an oft-washed shirt, clean and smelling of
strange herbs, a tanned-hide belt, wide and sturdy. There was also a
pair of homely slipper-shoes, much scuffed and scarred, the color
indeterminate, which she placed on her feet. She held in her hand the
beautiful palace slippers Makktuub had given her. "Leave
them behind." Paddii gave her an appraising look as he
re-entered. "Your nose stud will be a bit of a problem, but for
now it can't be helped." As
he led the way out of the tent, Riane said, "Where are we
going?" "To
the place where Othnam and Mehmmer await you." "This
was all carefully planned, wasn't it?" "From
the moment they left the kapudaan's palace. We were only awaiting the
signal from Baliiq. If Makktuub had not summoned you to the terrace,
my cousin would have found some excuse to bring you there himself."
He grinned hugely as he returned her dagger, which she had left in
Othnam's safekeeping on the way into Agachire, and kissed her warmly
on each cheek. "What, did you think Othnam would renege? He
promised to deliver you to the dzuoko Perrnodt, and I swear by the
Prophet Jiharre that is precisely what he will do." 14 Resurrection
Neither
dead nor alive, the Ramahan sorceress Bartta, Giyan's twin sister,
hung in the stasis-web of the sorcerous spell she had half conjured
before the explosive fire had engulfed the had-atta and the
small underground chamber in the Abbey of Floating White in which she
had long ago secreted it. That she had been caught in the
conflagration, completely unawares, was stuck in her mind like a
pebble in a shoe. Each laborious thought brought to bear the pain of
that failing. In
truth, Bartta could not think at all—at least, not in the way
one customarily defines thinking. She hung in the stasis-web of her
own incomplete manufacture without any sense of time or space. To
the extent that she thought, she existed. But that was all. Until
Giyan returned to Floating White and found her, where all the other
Ramahan priestesses had failed. But then Giyan had an advantage. While
Konara Lyystra and Konara Inggres could feel only subtle unsettling
hints, Giyan possessed the power to discover Bartta in her sorcerous
stasis. So did Horolaggia. Giyan, for all her goodness and generosity
of spirit, might have thought twice about freeing Bartta, for Bartta
had spent the better part of the year now nearing its end torturing
Riane both physically and psychologically. Once Bartta had discovered
the existence of the Dar Sala-at, she had tried to brainwash her, in
an attempt to use Riane to solidify and magnify her own power. This
Giyan would never have tolerated, had she known of it, and though
Bartta was her sister, she would never forgive her. But
Horolaggia had plans for the twins. And so, Giyan's first major order
of business upon returning to the abbey after an almost eighteen-year
absence was to direct her energies toward dismantling the stasis-web.
This had to be done carefully for, though it was true that Bartta Was
trapped inside, it was the stasis-web itself that had saved her from
death, wrapping its
protective wings about her while the deadly fire that had raged
through the chamber in which she had been torturing Riane destroyed
the had-atta. Toward
this end, she took advantage of Konara Urdma's opportunistic but
rather stupid nature. There was no point in introducing Cerrn-spore
into Konara Urdma the way she had done with Konara Lyystra. "Konara
Bartta is still alive, you say?" Konara Urdma said uneasily. The
two of them stood now in the fire-blackened chamber. Konara Urdma
had, of course, recognized Giyan, though it had been many years since
Giyan had been summarily banished from the abbey with all the other
Ramahan who possessed the Gift of Osoru. That Konara Urdma viewed
Giyan with a mixture of awe and trepidation was of no consequence to
Giyan. That Konara Urdma was assisting her, even though it was clear
from how she held herself a little apart and ramrod stiff that the
very thought of Bartta's return was a threat to her newfound power,
gave Giyan a little thrill of pleasure. The very black thing inside
her fed off fear, and as soon as it was practicable she meant to
commence a course in the fine art of instilling fear in others. She
would teach it, of course. Imagine, a daemon instructing Ramahan! The
irony was positively exhilarating! Giyan
spread her arms, and the atmosphere inside the small close charred
chamber turned gelid. Slowly, as if being coaxed out of dank shadows
into the light of the flickering oil lamp, the stasis-web began to
appear. At
first, it was nothing more than a Crosshatch pattern trembling
briefly in the corner of Konara Urdma's eye. She had seen it, or
thought she'd seen it, but when she shifted her gaze to look, it
wasn't there at all. "I
am not familiar with what you are doing. Is this an Osoru spell?"
she asked Giyan. "I am firmly of the belief that Osoru is a
dangerous form of sorcery." "This
is not Osoru," Giyan assured her. "I will not be bringing
that back to the abbey." Giyan was not lying, for Horolaggia,
like all daemons, had no natural access to Osoru. That was one reason
he why he was expending so much energy in weaving the Malasocca.
Giyan was fighting him every inch of the way with her impressive
arsenal of Osoru spells. Also like all daemons, Horolaggia coveted
those enchantments. Often,
he would grind his fangs with rage at the injustice of not being able
to understand or hold in his head even a single Osoru spell. The
Malasocca would change all that. Now
the pattern of the stasis-web here and there began to flicker, like
the flame in the oil lamp. The shards turned into patches, which
spread until the entirety of the cocoon had returned to light. Konara
Urdma gasped. "Is that truly Konara Bartta?" Horolaggia,
inside Giyan's mind, laughed silently. How satisfying this risk he
had taken had become, and in such a short time! Oh, yes, he had been
right to have seized the initiative, to move lightning quick while
all the others hesitated, paralyzed by the promise of dire
consequences. Miina was long vanished from this realm, and the
Dragons were made powerless. As he predicted. "Now
come," Horolaggia commanded with Giyan's voice. "This is
where I require your assistance." As
she strode forward, the scheming Konara Urdma at her side, she said,
"As I have told you, because the stasis-web did not have time to
fully form, undoing it is a delicate and complicated process. That is
why two of us are needed. Now you must be careful and cleave to my
instructions precisely. If you do not, if you deviate by even the
slightest degree, Konara Bartta will not successfully emerge from
it." "You
mean she could die?" Giyan
laughed silently at Konara Urdma's stupidity. "Very easily,
yes." She
lifted her left hand, and a tiny spark spiraled out from her
fingertips, arcing toward the point in the sorcerous cocoon where the
outermost piece of the web was attached. The spark struck the point
and, with an eerie creaky sigh, that small section of the web lifted. "Ah,
good, the web is come undone," Giyan said. "Now for the
really difficult part." At her silent command a large oval
basket appeared out of the gelid air. It was a color that made Konara
Urdma's eyeballs ache when she looked at it for too long. Giyan
handed it to her. "Now as I unwrap the web you will hold the
basket beneath to catch the folds. You must not—and this is
vital—you must not touch the folds, even inadvertently." "What
will happen if I touch the web?" Konara Urdma asked, accepting
the basket. "The
web will be instantaneously poisoned and Konara Bartta will die
stillborn inside it." Giyan pointed. "Now stand just
there." And she nodded, raising both her hands again. Something
cracked inside Konara Urdma's inner ears, making her wince. "Keep
your position," Giyan admonished. "Steady your hands; they
are trembling. Here comes the first layer." Once,
long ago, when her parents had taken her to the coast to see her
long-lost uncle, Konara Urdma had seen fisherfolk hauling a sea-weedy
net from the Sea of Blood. It was filled with flopping silvery fish.
But in its center had been a dark squirmy thing with many tentacles
that undulated and flicked, searching for something, it seemed, to
wrap themselves around and crush. The
layer, as Giyan peeled it back from the rest of the cocoon, reminded
her of the squirmy tentacled thing that had haunted her dreams for as
long as she remained on the coast. She had never been so happy to
return to Stone Border. The thing oozed into the sorcerous basket she
held with hands that still trembled despite Giyan's warning. And it
did not lie there in the basket's shallow black bottom, but pulsed
rhythmically like a living thing. "Easy
now," Giyan was saying. "Here comes the second layer." Konara
Urdma could see her concentrating mightily. Giyan had not exaggerated
the complexity of her task. Konara Urdma's thoughts now turned to
what she herself needed to do. She had despised Bartta even while she
learned from her, despised her because Bartta had laughed at her
dreams of ambition. Bartta had thought her weak, contemptible even.
She had allowed Konara Urdma a modicum of power, then took enormous
pleasure in periodically denying her that power, the better to
illustrate their respective positions in the abbey hierarchy. I
don't even need to threaten you, Bartta had once told her
gloatingly. You haven't the imagination or ability to form an
alliance against me. You're nothing more than a joke. Here
came another layer, slithering with a cloacal glisten into the
basket, and she adjusted her position slightly. And
now here she was as head of the Dea Cretan, and enjoying every moment
of her triumph over Bartta, and what happens? Bartta's twin sister,
once exiled, pops up out of nowhere, and already some of the younger
konara are calling her Mother. A
third layer rippled downward into the basket. Something
had to be done, Konara Urdma knew that right away, but it wasn't
until a moment ago that she could figure out what. How ironic that
Giyan herself should provide the answer. She would dispose of Bartta
by infecting the stasis-web, then she would throw the thing over
Giyan and get rid of her, as well. But she had to be patient. Acting
precipitously might arouse Giyan's suspicions. It had to look like an
accident, a momentary slip on her part when the basket was heavy with
the stasis-web, but while it was still attached to Bartta. She
waited until almost all the web was pulsing between her arms before
she stumbled a little. Her right shoulder dipped down, the basket
tipping with it, and the topmost layer of web slid against her
forearm. "Oh,"
she said as the thing slipped around her wrist. It seemed to her as
if the web fairly bolted from the basket, whipping itself around her
so quickly and completely that she had no chance to react or even to
cry out. The last of it came off Bartta and wrapped itself around
her. Not that she was aware of it; her consciousness was completely
absorbed in the pain of her skin being dissolved layer by layer. Giyan
held the insensate, deformed body of her twin in her arms securely,
if not lovingly. A brownish slime, interspersed with clots of a
gelatinous whitish substance, covered Bartta from head to toe. That
would pass now as Bartta began again to breathe the air around her. Konara
Urdma, locked inside her sorcerous cocoon, writhed and thrashed with
increasing intensity. That, too, would pass. Giyan
smiled down and spoke softly, almost crooningly. "How does it
feel to be eaten alive? Please, Konara Urdma, be so kind as to
describe each sensation." She chuckled, a low evil sound.
Horolaggia's sound. "I warned you, didn't I? I told you not to
touch the web. But I knew you could not help yourself. Your desire to
see Bartta dead was written all over your face. So I lied. But do not
despair. You fulfilled your purpose. You see, the stasis-web is a
very dangerous thing, especially when it is interrupted as this one
was. The only way to get Bartta safely out was to give it a
substitute. So I gave it you. The web is a living creature, as
doubtless you can now attest. The fire wounded it because Bartta did
not have enough time to complete it before the conflagration engulfed
her. It has been in pain all this time, such terrible pain as you
cannot imagine." She cocked her head at the thrashing cocoon.
"But then again perhaps you very well can imagine."
The brown goo was drying up, the white stuff shriveling into the
tiniest beads, which then popped like air bubbles. Bartta's skin was
reappearing, reddened as it tried to adjust to being out of the
fluids in which she had been soaking, and scarred as was inevitable
when the spell was not completed. This scar appeared on her right
side. It slashed more or less diagonally from the dragged-down corner
of her mouth, over her jaw, creasing the side of her neck. It was a
coarse, ugly thing that no spell could reverse. Well, she was
already deformed, Giyan thought. What difference can another
disfigurement make? Giyan
shifted her sister to a more comfortable position. Horolaggia thought
he'd have to do something about increasing this host's strength as
soon as the Malasocca allowed. Giyan pressed her lips against
Bartta's, pushed her tongue into her sister's mouth while the
daemon-spore rolled off her furrowed tongue, attaching itself to the
roof of Bartta's mouth and sinking in. From
a long way off, Horolaggia heard Myggorra's shout of triumph, and he
said with Giyan's voice, "It is our time now, sister—mine
and yours." Every
time Kurgan saw the Old V'ornn now, he was stitched with the thread
of wariness. Knowing that the Old V'ornn was really Nith Batoxxx in
disguise, knowing that Nith Batoxxx was either mad or ... well,
Kurgan did not know what. That was the problem, or part of it anyway.
But when the Old V'ornn wished to see him he could not say no without
his becoming suspicious. Arousing the Gyrgon's suspicions was the one
thing Kurgan sought to avoid. Kurgan
could not believe how much he used to like the small artist's
residence the Old V'ornn now owned, had liked in particular how the
main rooms could be opened onto the lush garden he had as a boy
helped the Old V'ornn to create. Now the place simply gave him the
creeps. Much as he hated to admit it, he knew that when it came to
Nith Batoxxx, to the horror he had seen reflected in the mirror, he
needed help. This
particular evening, despite the chill, the villa's doors had been
thrown wide. Red and blue leaves lay crinkled on the ground, swirled
upward in occasional eddies by the wind. The gurgling of the pool in
the hidden center of the garden could clearly be heard. A lone
black-crow, perched on a bare branch, appeared to watch Kurgan as he
crossed the threshold of the house and entered the garden. "Over
here." Despite the evidence of his age, the Old V'ornn's voice,
strong and vibrant and somehow sinister, rose amid the foliage like
the caw of another blackcrow. Kurgan
found the Old V'ornn on his knees, digging in the damp soil beside
the pool with a crusty Kundalan spade. "Do you know anything
about Indole al'Hul?" He held up a small mushroom with a flaring
cap whose pinkish top was as pale as its gilled underside was dark. Kurgan
shrugged. "Indole
al'Hul means 'Mother of Terror' in one of the indigenous
languages, I forget which." He rolled the slender stalk between
his knobbed thumb and forefinger. "A rather fascinating little
item." His coppery skin, pulled thin over veins and bones,
glowed dully in the lozenges of light thrown by filigreed bronze oil
lanterns he had lighted during the lees of the silvery autumnal
afternoon. "When you consider what ingesting even a tiny amount
does to the autonomous nervous system." Kurgan
hunkered down next to the Old V'ornn, who, he had discovered many
years ago, was fond of his arcane lessons. "What will it do?"
he said, returning with little effort to the role of dedicated
student. "It
all depends. If you take it straight from the plant, it will shut the
system down completely and finally," the Old V'ornn said. "Take
it distilled and refined, and it causes a whole panoply of
psychotropic effects." "In
other words, the victim loses his mind," Kurgan said, entering
into the spirit of the lesson. "In
a manner of speaking." The Old V'ornn broke the delicate stem in
two, watched the slow ooze of a pale yellow liquid. "That can be
good, you know. This substance opens the mind up to the worlds around
us, layers upon layers, unseen and unheard, but nonetheless quite
real." His mischievous smile momentarily transformed him into a
truant child. "Kundala, it seems, is a treasure trove of such
chemical wonders. And the Ramahan know them all. Or at least they
did." He stood up, dropped the mushroom, and brushed the dirt
off his knees and hands. "The Ramahan were privy to many
secrets, once upon a time." Together,
they wandered the garden's path until they came to the center. The
Old V'ornn lifted a hand, indicating that they should sit on
a bench beside the pool of purling black water that bubbled up from
the bowels of the planet. Kurgan wrapped his cloak more tightly
around him to keep out the increasing chill, but curiously the Old
V'ornn appeared oblivious to the falling temperature. When
they had settled themselves, the Old V'ornn reached over and produced
a dark bottle and two crystal goblets. "I have been waiting for
the right moment," he said as he filled the goblets with
fire-grade numaaadis. "A private moment." He handed Kurgan
a goblet. "To toast your swift and unerring ascendancy to the
post of regent of Kundala." The goblets rang as their rims
touched. "Stogggul Kurgan, I salute you!" Kurgan
drank and waited for the other boot to fall. He knew the Old V'ornn
well enough to suspect that he had not been asked here simply to be
honored. They had not yet come to the heart of the matter. For there
was always a heart to these interviews, as hidden as the pool at the
center of this garden. This was the Old V'ornn's way. If Kurgan had
been more self-aware, he would have known that it had become his way,
as well. "Do
you find the fire-grade numaaadis to your liking?" the Old
V'ornn asked. "It
is first tier," Kurgan said. "A
good year, no doubt. Go ahead. Drain your goblet. There is more to be
drunk this night." That mischievous smile had reappeared. But
the moment Kurgan did so, the goblet slipped through his fingers,
crashed to the stone path at his feet. The
Old V'ornn peered into Kurgan's face. "Regent, are you all
right?" Kurgan
was already incapable of replying. The chill that had before crept
through his flesh had now been dispelled by a powerful and not
unpleasant heat that suffused him from his toes to the top of his
skull. His head was expanding. Colors seemed to pulse to the soughing
of the wind through the bare tree branches. The blackcrow appeared to
be laughing at him. He tasted his own pulse as if it were food and
drink he had just ingested. "Even
among the Ramadan, Indole al'Hul is a special mushroom." The Old
V'ornn's voice boomed through the garden like thunder. "It was
never particularly well-known or used. Hardly surprising, given its
name. But, believe me, it does have its uses." The
Old V'ornn pulled Kurgan off the bench, but Kurgan's legs felt like
liquid, and his knees refused to work. He half collapsed onto the
path. "And
I was ever so careful refining and distilling it." Kurgan
felt nothing. He was too busy trying to keep all the colors of the
garden from running together. This seemed to take more effort than he
was able to give, and so with the able assistance of the Indole
al'Hul elixir, he passed from a troubled state of consciousness into
a deep and untroubled trance, where the drone of the Old V'ornn's
voice was nothing more than the hiss and suck of an ocean's tide, a
kind of static hanging in the background of his pulsing mind, a
photonic communication just beyond hearing. Beside
him, the Old V'ornn, noting that Kurgan's eyes had rolled up into his
head, metamorphosed into Nith Batoxxx. And yet, anyone familiar with
Nith Batoxxx would say with utter certainty that this was not
precisely Nith Batoxxx, for a dark and uncertain rim hovered about
him, obliterating what the Ramahan would term the emanations of his
essence. This penumbra, had anyone who knew him been present, would
have hurt their eyes and made their throats close up, leaving them
gasping. It was akin to a negative current, a darkness that flickered
like cold flame, changing its shape from heartsbeat to heartsbeat. "And
so we have come, at last, to the heart of our current lesson."
This voice, too, was different, subtly unlike that of either Nith
Batoxxx or the Old V'ornn. He
put his long-fingered hand upon the crown of Kurgan's gleaming skull
and his countenance briefly clouded over. "Is the Indole al'Hul
doing its work? Even I, who have taken possession of you, Gyrgon,
cannot know for certain." Leaning
over, he stared for a moment into the pool which, like the now
shattered mirror in the regent's palace, reflected back at him that
which Kurgan had clandestinely seen. "One
can learn so much about an individual through his birth-caul. But
apparently not enough. It pains me now to admit that I was wrong
about you." He
whistled an odd little tune, and the bright-eyed blackcrow spread its
wings and swooped across the garden to perch upon his shoulder, where
it commenced to hop, lunging its long yellow beak toward Kurgan's
ear. "No,
no," the creature that had taken possession of Nith Batoxxx
admonished. "Mustn't, mustn't." After
uttering a single shrill cry, the blackcrow settled down. "Ah,
Stogggul Kurgan, you already believe yourself different from other
V'ornn." The creature inside Nith Batoxxx paused to observe the
silently crackling penumbra that encircled him, and instantly
suppressed it, knowing that he must not allow anyone to see his true
self leaking out of his Gyrgon host body. "If you only knew how
different!" He sighed as he stroked the blackcrow's glossy
feathers. "But, given your volatile nature, it would be unwise
to give you this knowledge." He
reached for a lantern. "And now it is time to see what the
Indole al'Hul reveals about you." Lifting
the lantern, he examined the back of Kurgan's neck as if he were a
primitive soothsayer. He fingered the skin between the two knobs at
the top of Kurgan's spine. "Nothing]"
His head snapped up, his eyes blazing. "Is it possible that I am
wrong again? And yet. . ." His
voice trailed off into the soughing of the wind. The blackcrow,
sensing the gathering storm, was now in the highest branch of the
tree, its wings folded tight against its sides. For a time, the thing
inside Nith Batoxxx remained absolutely still. Then he gripped the
edge of the pool, staring at it until its black water began to foam.
In an instant, he plunged his head and shoulders into the roiling
blackness of the water, opened his mouth—a mouth no V'ornn
would ever recognize—and emitted a bellow of rage that was
heard all the way to the sorcerous Portal of the Abyss. When
Jesst Vebbn entered the spice district it was nearing sunset, and the
market was alive with a spray of shoppers dropping by on their way
home to prepare the evening meal. As a consequence, the narrow aisles
between the mounded displays were choked with Kun-dalan, house
servants to wealthy Bashkir families. Jesst
was uncomfortable outside Harborside, uncomfortable, if truth be
told, outside the thick-walled precincts of Receiving Spirit. Being
so long in the service of Gyrgon, he supposed that he had acquired
their aversion to the outdoors. But at Bronnn Pallln's insistence,
their periodic rendezvous took place where they could pass for chance
encounters or brief conversations between strangers. Jesst
had been treating the Bashkir's wife for years. Not that there was
anything wrong with her. After her second visit he had realized that
it was the attention she craved, attention Bronnn Pallln would not
give her. Bronnn Pallln knew that she was healthy as a cor, knew
further that she was doing no more than wasting Jesst's valuable
time. Other Genomatekks had apparently not been so patient and
forgiving. To show his appreciation, he paid Jesst an exorbitant
amount of coins for each visit. Coins that Jesst would otherwise be
unable to earn. And so, when Bronnn Pallln had come to Jesst, asking
a favor, Jesst was not inclined to refuse him. Bronnn
Pallln adored cinnamon, and with fifteen different varieties being
imported weekly from the Korrush, the cinnamon stalls were where
Jesst found the Bashkir. Bronnn Pallln could have sent a servant, of
course, but such was his fanaticism that he insisted on tasting and
purchasing the cinnamon himself. "Try
this gowit," he said as Jesst came up. He held out his hand in
the center of which was a small pinch of finely ground dark rose
grains. "Go on," he insisted. "It is first-rate." As
Bronnn Pallln had taught him to do, Jesst took some between thumb and
forefinger and placed it on the back of his tongue. Even this tiny
amount was so strong it made his eyes water. "Was
I wrong?" Bronnn Pallln said. Jesst
had to admit that he was not wrong. Bronnn
Pallln nodded to the cinnamon vendor, held up three fingers, and the
vendor began to fill a bag. "How goes our fishing expedition?"
Bronnn Pallln said. Jesst
handed over a data-decagon. "This contains a transcript of the
conversation I had with the SaTrryn Deirus, Kirlll Qandda. It has
what you want." Bronnn
Pallln pocketed it with ill-disguised glee. "Excellent." "There
is something." Bronnn
Pallln raised his eyes heavenward and heaved a theatrical sigh.
"There always is." "You
will have to deal with the regent's sister." "Oratttony?" "The
other one. The pariah." "Marethyn.
Good N'Luuura, why?" "It
is all in the data-decagon." "Kindly
enlighten me now," Bronnn Pallln said in a tone that left no
room for debate. "According
to the Deirus, Marethyn Stogggul knows the location of the Bashkir
traitor's headquarters." "Indeed."
Bronnn Pallln thought a moment. "O, fortunate son that I am, it
is the pariah." He laughed. "Considering how Kurgan
Stogggul feels about her, I very much doubt he will mind the harsh
treatment I have in store for her." He nodded. "You have
done well." As
he prepared to move on, Jesst said, "I would like my payment." Bronnn
Pallln was counting his packages. "Patience is a virtue." "It
is a virtue of the poor. I have already pledged a down payment on a
new residence." Bronnn
Pallln shrugged. "As it happens, that was unwise." He took
possession of the bag of gowit cinnamon. Jesst's
face flushed with anger. "Our original agreement." "The
gimnopede is not yet caught." "You
have no intention of paying me anything, do you?" Bronnn
Pallln thought of Wennn Stogggul treating him with contempt; he
thought about what it felt like to have power over others, and he
discovered that he liked what he felt. "Do
not blame me for squandering away what you never had," he said. "But
we had a deal. You promised me payment if I delivered, and now I
have. Is not a Bashkir's word sacred?" "Only
with other Bashkir," Bronnn Pallln pointed out as he took his
leave.
15 Plots
Most Sinister
Line-General
Lokck Werrrent, the commander of the Khagggun forces for the Sudden
Lakes quadrant, had set up his command center in Glistening Drum, a
mountain town northeast of Joining the Valleys. Once, Glistening Drum
had been a small village wholly in the service of the Abbey of
Glistening Drum, the ruins of which could still be seen on a
rubble-strewn promontory overlooking the town square. In the years
after the Khagggun had razed the abbey, the village itself had oddly
thrived, growing into a moderate-sized town, an agricultural hub that
helped feed the burgeoning V'ornn population of Axis Tyr. It was here
that most of the cor-milk cheese was crafted, owing to the verdant
fields of first-quality ggley that covered the slopes of the
mountainsides. Ggley was used in the fermentation process. It was a
delicate herblike plant that thrived only in the local mountain
terrain and was not suitable for export or long shipments. Line-General
Werrrent's decision to base his command center in Glistening Drum was
quite deliberate. The town enjoyed a near-perfect central location he
found both appealing and appropriate for his operations. Nevertheless,
he found that he needed to spend much of his time in Axis Tyr,
especially since Kurgan Stogggul had succeeded his father as regent. While
he was in Axis Tyr on business, it fell to Wing-Adjutant Iin Wiiin to
run the command center. Wiiin managed with a detached efficiency
bordering on the pathological. No matter. Wing-Adjutant Wiiin had
made himself indispensable, allowing the Line-General the latitude to
take care of the ever more complex politics of war in the capital. It
was fortunate that Wing-Adjutant Wiiin enjoyed the confidence of his
superior, for he was a thin, ropey-muscled individual who had been
cursed with eyes placed too close together, a lipless mouth, and a
complexion permanently scarred by a serious bout of Kraelian
fire-worm fever that somehow resisted all known genomic reconfiguring
therapy. Even the lowest of Looorm found him repulsive. Though, so it
was said, he loved nothing at all, it was clear to those he commanded
that he liked overseeing a smoothly functioning hive of Khagggun. And
while he did harbor other interests—for instance, he enjoyed
hunting perwillon in the mountain caves—he seemed to those
around him to live the dullest of lives. In fact, nothing could have
been further from the truth, for Wiiin dearly loved the periodic
clandestine meetings with the Line-General's Ramahan contact who
provided the tactical information on current Resistance personnel and
plans. On
this particular night, he was working late—for it could never
be said, even by his bitterest enemies, that he was a shirker—when
one of his Khagggun appeared with a message for the Line-General that
had been left outside the command center. Werrrent had, a week
before, gone south to Axis Tyr where, so far as Wiiin knew, he would
remain for some time. After
dismissing the Khagggun, Wiiin opened the message. Almost
immediately, he frowned. It was a curious thing, this message,
handwritten in Kundalan, but containing in its upper right-hand
corner the whorl of Line-General Lokck Werrrent's name in V'ornnish
script. He read the message twice through, memorizing it. Then he
held it to a flame until it charred into ash, which he ground to
powder between his spatulate thumb and forefinger. He
rose, checked the time as he swung on the chest plate of his battle
armor. Downstairs, he hurried across the open courtyard to the
stables, where he signed out a cthauros and, mounting it, dug his
heels into its flanks. He
rode due east for precisely three-quarters of a kilometer, whereupon
he turned south and, as per the instructions in the message, rode
until he had come to the northern edge of a lozenge-shaped copse of
sysal trees. There, he reined in and waited. The
night was quite chill. A strong wind careened out of the northeast,
bringing with it the bitter tang of Djenn Marre ice. He shivered a
little inside his armor, thinking that it was going to be a long,
cold winter. Two moons, pale green crescents, lent a ghostly light to
the copse of thorned trees and the mountainous terrain all around. "You
are not Line-General Lokck Werrrent." His
saddle creaked as he turned, peering into the copse. "Who are
you?" he said, half-drawing his shock-sword. "Show yourself
or risk the consequences." A
young Kundalan female emerged from the shadows. She was garbed in the
persimmon-colored robes of a Ramahan konara. She walked slowly,
almost, Wiiin thought, painfully, with her arms folded across her
ample belly. He
scabbarded his weapon. "Are you injured?" he inquired. "I
sent a message to Line-General Lokck Werrrent," the konara said.
"Where is he?" "I
am Wing-Adjutant Iin Wiiin." He dismounted. "I speak for
the Line-General in all matters, great and small." "Are
you privy to all the Line-General's secrets, Wing-Adjutant Iin
Wiiin?" "I
do not understand your meaning." "I
know about the duscaant." Wiiin
stiffened. "What duscaant?" The
konara smiled a secret smile. "Come, come, Wing-Adjutant. Either
you speak for the Line-General, or you do not." "The
duscaant the Line-General had secreted in the Abbey of Glistening
Drum." "No,"
the konara said slowly and distinctly. "The duscaant the
Line-General had secreted in the Abbey of Warm Current." "Ah,
yes. I remember now. It was put there by Konara Yesttur." "No.
Konara Mossa hid it." Wiiin
nodded, obviously satisfied. "And you are?" "Konara
Eleana." "Where
is my regular contact?" "Konara
Bartta has met with an unfortunate accident." "She
is dead, yes. I meant her replacement, Konara Urdma." "Ill."
Eleana almost choked on the word. She had no idea who he was talking
about. He
frowned. "This is unexpected." You
can say that again, Eleana thought. What is going on at the
abbey? "Since Konara Bartta's death the abbey has been in
turmoil." "You
have taken over Konara Urdma's, ah, duties." "Only
until she is recovered." Wiiin
frowned deeply. "She should never have been given this duty. She
is often ill and does not meet her deadline." "She
was Konara Bartta's choice." Wiiin
took a breath. He disliked dealing with Ramahan; he could never quite
allow himself to trust them fully. Still, these particular Ramahan,
starting with Konara Mossa, had kept to their bargain, providing
accurate intelligence they inveigled from Resistance members who were
antagonistic to Kara, the new religion that had sprung up. "All
right then. Let's get down to it. What do you have for me?" "There
is a Resistance cell camped fifty kilometers west of here." It
was a blatant lie, but what else could she say? "That's
it? Surely Konara Urdma explained the parameters. We require
substantial updates on Resistance movements in order to keep
your abbey safe." "Wing-Adjutant,
I have for days now traveled far—" "Yes,
yes, all the way from Stone Border," he said impatiently. "What
of it?" She
regarded him levelly out of dark eyes. "I am new at this. I am
doing the best I can." "Not
good enough," Wing-Adjutant Wiiin said as he regained his
saddle. "You have two weeks to gather the requisite
intelligence. After that . . ." He shrugged. Wheeling his
cthauros, he galloped back the way he had come. Eleana
stood still and silent, watching him as he passed over a
moonslight-dappled rise and disappeared from view. "Well
done," Rekkk Hacilar said as he appeared from out of the depths
of the sysal grove. The Teyj was on his shoulder. They
had been led here by the signature whorl of V'ornnish letters that
appeared at the beginning of each scene the duscaant had recorded,
for it had contained not only the date and time but the name of the
Khagggun officer who had commissioned the espionage device:
Line-General Lokck Werrrent. Rekkk had used his okummmon to fashion
the raw-silk robes of a Ramahan konara for Eleana to use. Together,
they had written, in Kundalan and V'ornn, the urgent message that had
brought Wiiin here. "Konara
Urdma," Rekkk said. "Now we know the name of our traitor." "Except
that she hasn't shown up. I am getting an unpleasant feeling about
the abbey." Eleana sighed and held her belly. "Stone Border
is a long and arduous climb from here. I honestly do not know whether
I can make it." He
put his arm around her and led her into the trees, where he sat her
down with her back against a thick bole. As he gave her water from a
skin, he said, "I cannot infiltrate the abbey on my own." "If
only Thigpen were here. Dear Thigpen! She would find a way to
transport us." He
looked into the moons-struck darkness. "Don't worry. I will get
us both there." And
I say there is a way to settle the dispute between the Nwerrrn and
the Fellanngg Consortia," Bronnn Pallln said. "I
can just imagine," Dobbro Mannx chortled. "Have the regent
declare both their claims null and void so your own Consortium can
plunder the mineral-rich territory west of the Borobodur forest."
Then the solicitor-Bashkir guffawed and lifted a fat forefinger. "No,
wait, you would have to be Prime Factor to do that." "But,
if memory serves, the Pallln Consortium has a history of having the
Stogggul ear." Line-General Lokck Werrrent glanced over at
Bronnn Pallln. "Isn't that so?" Pallln's
expression was sour, despite the festivities of the dinner party at
Mannx's opulent Eastern Quarter residence. These were fashionable
affairs, held weekly with more or less the same personages, who would
be treated to the marvelous cooking of the rotund Mannx's chef, after
which, sated and half-drunk, they would retire to the library—or
the garden, in warmer weather—for a small-wager game of
warrnixx. The
Line-General was obliged to remind Bronnn Pallln several times before
Pallln mumbled, "True enough." "Then
perhaps you would have no objection to a new member of the Great
Caste making a small investment in—" "Oho!"
Mannx cried, "I do believe the Line-General has aspirations.
Will you hang up your command to become a Bashkir?" "I
wish nothing of the sort," the Line-General said. "A taste
is all I am looking for." "Have
a care, Line-General," said Gill Fullom, the patriarch, aged and
revered, of his First Rank Consortium. "Your status as Great
Caste is still covered with birth fluid. It would be prudent to
wait." Lokck
Werrrent brooded in silence for a time, his thoughts like storm
clouds boiling on the horizon. Since his fateful conversation with
Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin regarding the true purpose behind the
promise to elevate Khagggun to Great Caste status he had his ear
attuned for any signs that would prove Olnnn's suspicions justified. "Just
what is your meaning?" he said, perhaps a bit too testily. "That
we Khagggun are not up to elevation?" "Not
at all." Gill Fullom seemed somewhat taken aback by the
vehemence of the Line-General's reply. "I was simply delivering
what I considered prudent advice." A
short, though slightly awkward silence ensued. "Bronnn
Pallln, in the matter of you and the regent," Mannx said
brightly. He had a knack for keeping a party going. "I
distinctly heard a 'but' hanging in the air like a rotten quilllon." "No
buts," Pallln said rather too defensively. "If
you will excuse an inquiring mind," Mannx said, "I must say
I was rather surprised when Wennn Stogggul named Sornnn SaTrryn Prime
Factor instead of you." "What's
the matter, don't you like Sornnn SaTrryn?" the Line-General
said, still with a touch of peevishness. Sometimes the loose tongues
of non-Khagggun got to him. "I have heard nothing but praise for
the Prime Factor's abilities at mediation." "There
are some," Fullom said fruitily, "who believe the SaTrryn
are already powerful enough without their scion being Prime Factor."
He clipped his finger into a bit of stew left on his plate, stirred
it around. "And there are others who believe that Sornnn
SaTrryn's apparent love affair with the Korrush is a decadent and
corrupting influence." "Are
you one of them?" the Line-General asked. Fullom
smiled and indelicately sucked stew off his fingertip. Mannx
spread his hands. "I mean to say, Bronnn Pallln, you deserved
the office, didn't you? You have the seniority. You'd earned the
right, hadn't you?" "In
fact," Pallln said, trying to shut out Mannx's words, which
echoed his own thoughts, "I have a far better relationship with
Kurgan Stogggul than I had with his father. In fact, Line-General, I
have reached a certain understanding with the Star-Admiral himself." "Is
that so?" Werrrent said. He eyed Bronnn Pallln with his
chron-osteel gaze. "Pray tell us more." At
once, Pallln regretted having opened his mouth. How could he have
forgotten that Khagggun were insanely jealous of alliances? "There
is nothing to tell," he said. "Oh,
come now." Mannx looked around the table. "No one here
believes that, especially not I." Bronnn
Pallln felt a murderous rage toward them for backing him into this
damnable corner. "My conversations with the Star-Admiral are
strictly private," he said curtly. "Oho!"
Mannx clapped his small, pudgy hands like a boy on his Ascension day.
"So there is something afoot." "What
if there is?" Bronnn Pallln wondered what he was doing getting
in deeper and deeper. But he was truly angry now, and he did not
care. In fact, there was a terrifying elation in this kind of
reckless behavior. "We
are all friends here." Mannx spread his hands over his portly
belly. "If you are privy to the Star-Admiral's intent, I think
you should tell us. In the strictest of confidence, of course."
He laughed his infectious laugh. "My goodness, why else do we
meet every week?" "Of
course]" the rest of them echoed in unison. Bronnn
Pallln waved them to silence. He looked around the table. He had
their rapt attention, and that felt so good there was only one thing
to do. "The Star-Admiral has been suspicious of Sornnn SaTrryn
for some time," he said. "Now I have discovered that the
SaTrryn scion is unfit to hold the post of Prime Factor." His
hearts were racing; he had plunged all the way in. The
Line-General cracked his knuckles ominously. "What is this you
say?" "I
have evidence that he is the traitor who is providing aid and
Khagggun materiel to the Kundalan Resistance." There
ensued, not surprisingly, a stunned silence. "The
SaTrryn own the highest of reputations, and Sornnn SaTrryn is no
exception," Line-General Werrrent declared. "This is the
gravest of allegations. With the gravest of consequences." Didn't
Bronnn Pallln know that! But now the warrnixx-bones were cast, and he
wondered briefly whether he had set his mind on this course before
the evening had even begun. It would not surprise him in the least.
He had been planning to petition the regent for an audience as early
as the following morning. After all, he now had what Star-Admiral
Olnnn Rydddlin had asked him to obtain—Sornnn SaTrryn's head on
a platter. Which grisly trophy would ensure his long-delayed
ascension to the office of Prime Factor. But for tonight, at least,
he could not help but boast among his friends and compatriots. And
why shouldn't he boast about his accomplishment? He wanted to be
Prime Factor more than anything in life. Wennn Stogggul had slammed
that particular door in his face, but the new regent, through Olnnn
Rydddlin, had opened it again. "Please,
Bronnn Pallln, do not let the Line-General's gruffness deter you,"
Fullom said. He was almost humming in delight. "It so happens
that many Bashkir share the Star-Admiral's suspicions." "I
care nothing for the opinions of Bashkir." Line-General Werrrent
shrugged his shoulders. "But if you have the evidence, this is
something else again." Bronnn
Pallln was light-headed with triumph. All of a sudden Gill Fullom was
defending him. Gill Fullom, who had never had a good word to say to
him. A nexus of power had formed around him, a new and decidedly
delirious experience that he was determined to prolong. Feeling as if
his nerves were going to shatter at any moment, he produced the
data-decagon Jesst had given him, which contained Kirlll Qandda's
revelations concerning Sornnn SaTrryn. He placed it on the table. The
Line-General stared at it for a moment, then took out his data-reader
and inserted the crystal. "What
is it?" Mannx cried. "What is the evidence?" Line-General
Werrrent passed the reader over and Mannx grabbed it avidly, scanned
it quickly, then turned it over to Gill Fullom. "It
would be unwise to jump to conclusions," Werrrent said darkly,
eyeing the transcript. "I
agree," Bronnn Pallln heard himself saying. "My first
thought was to show it to the regent right away and let him proceed." "I
would advise caution in that matter," Fullom said softly. "This
is, after all, Kurgan Stogggul we are speaking of. We all know what
happened to his father." "What
is your meaning?" Line-General Werrrent said anxiously. Fullom
turned to him, addressing him directly. "I have it on good
authority that Wennn Stogggul reneged on his solemn word to
Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha. Surely, Line-General, you already know
that he ordered Kinnnus Morcha's assassination." "You
are speaking treason," Werrrent muttered. "Not
if it is the truth." "But
you have no proof," Werrrent said doggedly. The
old Bashkir shook his head. "You and I go back a long way,
Line-General. We may disagree on this matter or that, but I know that
you are a true patriot. So I trust that you will forgive me when I
tell you that true patriots should not be blind." "The
Stogggul certainly have a history of being headstrong," Mannx
said. "Considering
these allegations," Pallln said, "I think we would all be
better served if I was the Prime Factor." He looked to Fullom,
concerned that the old patriarch would have a negative reaction. But
it was the Line-General who gave Pallln a significant look. "As
reprehensible as it looks," the Line-General said, "this
evidence against Sornnn SaTrryn requires substantiation. Such as
finding SaTrryn's headquarters." "The
trouble with a raid," Fullom said, "is that the SaTrryn own
a number of warehouses. Which one is it in?" "There
I have the answer," Bronnn Pallln said. "Marethyn Stogggul
has been there." "But
she is the regent's sister!" Mannx cried. "We
all know the family's contempt for her," the Line-General said,
"and that includes the regent himself." "Why
should she tell you anything?" Fullom said. After
a moment's uncomfortable silence, Bronnn Pallln said, "Perhaps
she wouldn't voluntarily." They
were all looking at Pallln again, and he felt a small shiver work its
way down his spine. Addressing Line-General Werrrent, he said, "We
will have to go after Marethyn Stogggul directly." "The
Stogggul Consortium is not one to trifle with," Werrrent
offered. "It has many powerful friends and allies. If this
intelligence proves incorrect or cannot be corroborated ..." He
stopped there, the implications of his words hanging ominously in the
air. "Timing
is everything," Fullom mused. "The Line-General is right.
We will get one chance—one only. We must make the most of it.
He could order his Khagggun to pick Marethyn Stogggul up." "To
involve Khagggun at this stage would be imprudent," Werrrent
cautioned. Fullom
crossed speckled hands over his bony chest. "Well then, Bronnn
Pallln, it is up to you." All
his life, it seemed, Bronnn Pallln had been waiting for this moment.
Now that it had come he felt no trepidation, no fear. His destiny had
arrived, and he was going to seize it with both hands. "I
will take care of her myself," he said without hesitation.
"Believe me when I tell you it will be a pleasure." Not
long after he attained the rank of Attack-Commandant, a rumor began
to circulate concerning Accton Blled. The rumor, whose bones, like
all things Khagggun, were picked clean by endless speculation,
concerned the skull of a Corpius Segundian razor-raptor, and not just
any razor-raptor, as those whispering the story were quick to point
out, but a korrrai, the deadliest of the thirteen species. No
one had ever seen this skull, mind you, but no matter. It was alleged
to be in the possession of Accton Blled, having been severed from the
powerful torso after the titanic struggle in which he finally slew
it. Now, it was further whispered, he kept the eerily glowing memento
by his cot and spoke to it each night before he slept, imparting to
it secrets too terrible to relate to the living. That
this seemingly outlandish tale was passed around and taken with
absolute gravity was a testament to the awe in which he was held by
his compatriots. Olnnn
Rydddlin had, of course, heard this rumor. In point of fact, he had
heard every variation of it, including the one that held that Blled
had feasted on the korrrai's raw and bloody flesh even as it
convulsed in its death struggle. To him, the truth of such rumors was
of no import. What was interesting was the fact that they existed at
all. He
was still mulling this thought as he stepped off the Khagggun
hoverpod onto one of the crumbling shanstone pathways that
crisscrossed the inner courtyard of the Abbey of Warm Current.
Several kilometers to the west was the somnolent, dust-blown village
of Middle Seat. "This
is where they have been hiding out?" "So
the informant told us," Attack-Commander Blled said, "just
before he, er, expired." The
two officers began to stride down the path. "How
long did it take him to die?" Olnnn inquired in the same tone of
voice a Bashkir would ask about the price of a metric ton of
vanadium. "The
process was altogether efficient," Blled assured him. "No
time for fun?" "I
assumed the Star-Admiral wanted results quickly." "You
assumed correctly." Armed
and armored Khagggun, members of Blled's pack, stood at varying
intervals. The Attack-Commandant himself looked resplendent in his
armor. He had chosen burnt umber for his pack color, the light
burnished it with a rich glow. "They
were here, all right," Blled said, leading the way into the
kitchens and the sleep chambers. "And for quite some time." He
brought Olnnn into the Library. The Star-Admiral went over to the
shattered window. "What
happened here?" "No
idea. We found no traces of ion fire. In any case, the fugitives are
not here now." Olnnn
picked up a shard of colored glass, saw that it was actually two or
three that had been fused together by the high energy of whatever had
been aimed at the window. He thought of the hole in the laundry
underneath the kashiggen Nimbus and wondered if there was a
connection in the source of the energy. Pocketing the glass, he
walked along the refectory table until he came to the books lying
open on the tabletop. "Can
you read this, Attack-Commandant?" "No,
sir." "Any
V'ornn in your pack read Kundalan?" "Yes,
sir." Olnnn
turned to glance at him. "Excellent. And what is his analysis?" "He
could not read these books, Star-Admiral. They are not written in the
common present-day Kundalan he knows." "Was
he of any help at all?" "He
said he thought these were books of spellcraft" "Sorcery."
Olnnn nodded. "All things considered, what do these books, open
on the table, mean to you?" "I
would say the fugitives were looking for something," Blled
answered without hesitation. It
was clear to Olnnn that Blled had been thinking about the question
before Olnnn had even shown up. "Something
important, I warrant." He ran his finger down one page and up
another. "I wonder what it was." It
was at that moment that he felt a tremor in his leg. His sorcerous
leg, the one without skin and muscle and tendon. In the bones that
Malistra had ensorceled when she had saved him from Giyan's
spellcraft there began a motion not unlike bubbles rising to the
surface of a pond. Olnnn, alarmed, clamped his fingers around his
bare gleaming femur, and said nothing.
16 Crackle,
Pop, Snap
Pierced
by the fulkaan, Othnam, look at her." Othnam nodded at his
sister then, grinning, embraced Riane fully. "Out of the
kapudaan's den." He nodded. "Truly, you are one of us now." They
were in among a small cluster of tents on the northern fringes of
Agachire, and a little apart, so that the massed lights of the town
seemed like a fire on the steppe. Unlike the section of Agachire the
caravan had entered, there were no soldiers here, no rough talk or
bawdy song. The night was alive with hymnal chanting and rhymed
prayer. Just outside the tent was a ring of males, singing the prayer
cycle, their heads together, their arms around each other's waists,
moving rhythmically back and forth. She remembered just such a
religious group on the street below the terrace and wondered briefly
if it could be the same one. For
Riane was now among the Ghor, of whom, it seemed, Othnam and Mehmmer
were a part. They were black-robed and swarthy-skinned, partially
concealed behind white sinschals, embroidered with black runes. Now,
close-up, she could see that the ring was made up of males and
females. As they moved back and forth in the prayer-cycle chant Riane
could see a thin tanned-hide strap wound around each member's left
arm midway between elbow and shoulder. These ga'ajarra, like
the close-weave scarves around their heads, contained the words of
the Prophet Jiharre. First,
I must ask you to help me return to the palace and save Tezziq from
her fate. I swore to help her. Whatever Makktuub may order her to do,
I know that she is a good person, deserving of a life outside the
accursed haanjhala." Brother
and sister exchanged glances. Then Othnam swore under his breath as
he shook his head. Nevertheless, he spoke softly to Paddii,
dispatching him to report their delay to the Ghor guarding Perrnodt.
Paddii nodded and, with a quick prayer for their safety, left the
tent. "Expect
our help," Mehmmer told Riane, "but not our empathy." "The
ajjan is your responsibility," Othnam warned. "We want
nothing to do with her. Is this understood?" "Perfectly,"
Riane said. "I would expect nothing more from you." Mehmmer
took a menacing step toward Riane. "We save her from the
kapudaan's den, and this is how she rewards us." She
gripped her scimitar but before she could draw it her brother took
her wrist and stayed her. "We have agreed to disagree on the
subject of the ajjan," he said darkly. "But know this,
Riane. Our beliefs are our beliefs. Do not expect us to change." Riane
was about to formulate another sharp retort when the image of Thigpen
came to her. Not for the first time she wished the Rappa were with
her. She missed Thigpen terribly. Right now her advice and wisdom
would have been greatly appreciated. She tried to imagine what
Thigpen would say to her. Who are you, little dumpling, to judge
these tribesfolk when they have just saved your life? Besides,
she was still withholding secrets from them. She had not told them
that she had another compelling reason to infiltrate the kapudaan's
palace as quickly as possible. It was imperative she regain
possession of Nith Sahor's greatcoat before Nith Settt opened it
again and discovered that it was not inactive. Then he would know
that Nith Sahor had not died, after all. "Thank
you, Othnam, for your patience and your wisdom," Riane said in
what she hoped was a conciliatory tone. "Thank you also for
returning my dagger to me," Othnam
inclined his upper body slightly. "When you gave it to me for
safekeeping I could tell how much it meant to you. I thank you for
honoring me in that fashion." "Though
we do not agree on every issue, we still have more in common than
not." Mehmmer
jerked her head. "We had better go, if we are to help your ajjan
friend." They
draped Riane in black Ghorvish robes and white sinschal, then took
her out of the tent. The group of Ghor ceased their praying, turning
to watch them, silent, wise-eyed. There was not a smile among them,
but there was no animosity in their careful scrutiny of Riane. One of
them, a bearded male with sunken cheeks and skin the color of Korrush
dust, made a sign to Othnam, who halted them. Up close, Riane could
see that he had eyes like Othnam's, a startling blue, flecked with
emerald. Those eyes peered into hers now. He said his name was
Mu-Awwul. "So.
You have come. Finally." "I
do not understand," Riane said. "Were you expecting me?" "Othnam
and Mehmmer explained to me how you killed the disguised sauromician.
We have long suspected their infiltration to gain power in our region
but until now we lacked concrete proof of their perfidy."
Mu-Awwul's beard was long and curling, shot through with white, fine
as gossamer. "There is something you must tell me, isn't there?" "I
came to the Korrush to find the dzuoko Perrnodt." "This
we already know." "It
is my hope that she will aid me in my search for the Maasra." "Ahr
He rocked back and forth on his heels. "And why would you want
the Maasia?" His extraordinary eyes held steady on
Riane's face. It was as if he were seeing all of her at once. "Someone
important to me, someone I love, is being held prisoner. Only the
Veil of a Thousand Tears can save her." "Many
Ghor have died because of the Maasra" Mu-Awwul said.
"Many Jeni Cerii, for they also covet it greatly. Outlanders, as
well, have ventured deep into the Korrush, expending their lives in
their futile quest." Riane
felt her heart sink. "Are you saying that it doesn't exist?" "It
exists." Mu-Awwul nodded. "It has been handed down through
time from one guardian to another." "Where
is this guardian? Where can I find the Veil?" Mu-Awwul
studied Riane. "What is it? You have not yet told me what you
wish me to know." Mu-Awwul stroked his beard. "It is a
secret. It is hidden but I know. Tell me, now." Riane
swallowed, glanced briefly at Mehmmer and Othnam. "Is
it that you do not trust them?" Mu-Awwul asked. "I
owe them my life." The
old Ghor lifted his sun-browned hands. They had the texture of the
red soil of the Korrush itself. They were hands made capable by ropey
veins and strong bones and a keen mind. He took Riane's face in his
hands and bent her head toward him. "As I have foreseen, our
prayers have been answered." He kissed the crown of Riane's head
seven times. "The Prophet has sent us his greatest gift."
He released Riane and addressed Othnam and Mehmmer. "It is just
as I speculated when you told me that a Kundalan female appeared in
your camp accompanied by your own docile lymmnal." He
said to Riane, "You are the messenger of Jiharre, Riane. The
knowledge you have brought us has the potential to change the entire
Korrush." "If
only we all have the courage to act on it," Othnam said. "Enmity
is the most difficult mind-set to break," Mehmmer said. "The
Prophet's tasks were difficult," Mu-Awwul said. "Why should
he ask any less of his children?" "Are
you speaking only of the Ghor?" There
was a kind of collective gasp from the assembled, but the Mu-Awwul
held up his hand for silence. "You are from Axis Tyr and are
forgiven your ignorance." He pierced Riane with his penetrating
gaze. "Jiharre worshiped Miina. The Sarakkon, too, worship Her
through their own prophetess, Yahe. Every race on Kundala is related,
Riane. No matter our differences we are united in this one thing." He
took her hands in his. The palms felt like sandpaper. "Your
heart is pure, that much was never a secret. As I have said, many
have died in the pursuit of the Maasra. The Maasra is
like a living thing. It makes judgments, forms conclusions, takes
action. If you are meant to find it, then you will. If you are not,
then like all before you who were proved unworthy, you will die." "If
this dire warning was meant to dissuade me, it will not." Riane
knew she was taking a chance by interrupting him. "Ten thousand
pardons, wise one, but I am desperate. I must find the Veil before my
beloved Giyan is lost to me forever. I beg you to help me." "My
advice is to continue with your search." "I
have been seeking Perrnodt. Nith Settt seeks her, as well." Mu-Awwul
nodded. "Perrnodt knows the sanctuary wherein the Maasra
currently rests. Nith Settt seeks the Maasra. He wishes to
resurrect Za Hara-at. Without the Maasra he will fail. How he
knows this is a mystery to us." Riane
said gravely, "Mu-Awwul, I regret to tell you that this is not
all the Gyrgon seek. Nith Settt told me that they have been in the
Korrush for some time advising the kapudaan of the Five Tribes on how
to wage war against one another. They have poisoned you each against
the other. Even now, it seems clear to me, Agachire is preparing
itself for all-out war against the Jeni Cerii. This is the Gyrgon's
base mischief. They seek nothing less than your annihilation,
observing with pleasure only a Gyrgon could know the mounting
attrition as the killing escalates." There
was complete silence when Riane had finished, it was as if time had
ground to a halt. Riane observed a number of emotions pass across the
elder's lined and leathery face. No one moved; no one spoke. The air
between them seemed to spark with the enormity of the revelation. "Yes.
Truly Jiharre's messenger." Mu-Awwul cupped the back of Riane's
right hand in his, placed his other hand in the palm. Riane felt
something pressed into her hand. Then he intoned several lines in a
language Riane did not know. She
looked to Othnam who translated: "In
the Time before Time," he began, in the same odd singsong
intonation Mu-Awwul had used, "the Prophet Jiharre strode the
mountains, searching for the hand of the Maker, and at length, he
came upon this confluence of light and shadow, and he knew its worth,
for it did not change come sunset, as moonrise lit it just as the sun
had when it hung directly over his head. And in this way, Jiharre
recognized the hand of the Maker and, gathering the confluence in the
cupped palms of his hands, heard the prayer for unity forming in his
head, and this most sacred of chants he passed on to the fruit of his
bins, and they to theirs in the manner of all things sacred." Mu-Awwul
waited until Othnam had finished translating before withdrawing his
hand. Riane saw lying in the center of her palm a small polished
stone of an irregular shape. It was dark green, veined with deep
orange. In its center had been carved a bird, its wings spread wide. "The
fulkaan," Mehmmer said in tone of awe. "The companion of
Jiharre." "Also
his messenger," Mu-Awwul said. "Power and jjhani flow
from the image of the fulkaan." Riane
turned briefly to Othnam. "Jjhani?" "It
means . . ." Othnam screwed up his face. "A
kind of ... spiritual harvest," Mehmmer broke in. Riane
nodded. "Thank you," she said to Mu-Awwul, and bowed her
head. "I will treasure Jiharre's talisman." "Treasure
it, yes," Mu-Awwul said. "But use it, also." "Use
it? How?" "When
the time comes, you will know." He reached out, laid his thickly
veined hands on Riane's a last time. "I thank you for the great
gift you have given us. May you be guided by azmiirha always."
Then he returned to the circle. The holy ones put their heads
together, wrapped their arms around each other's waists, and resumed
the prayer cycle. Riane
followed Othnam and Mehmmer as they hurried from the Ghor encampment,
threading their way carefully through the jumble of narrow streets.
On all sides of them, tents rose up, small and large. Twice, they
spotted the kapudaan's guards and were forced to make anxious
detours. Nevertheless, they covered the remaining half kilometer to
the palace in good time and without incident. As
they crouched in the shadows across the street from the huge cluster
of striped tents, Mehmmer said, "Now what?" "We
spent a lot of time figuring a way to get you out," Othnam said.
"Getting you back in may prove even more difficult." "Not
necessarily," Riane told them. "Each midnight a holy man
secretly comes to the provisions gate in the palace's west wall and
is given entrance so that he may teach Makktuub the Mokakaddir."
She looked at them. "But of course you already know this
since this holy man is a Ghor." Othnam
and Mehmmer exchanged worried glances. "You are mistaken, Riane.
No Ghor teaches the kapudaan the sacred text." "Are
you certain?" "Yes."
Mehmmer nodded. "And, furthermore, no Ghor would enter the
palace in secret and at night." "Then
he is someone dressed like a Ghor," Riane said. "Tezziq
told me he was Ghor." "The
ajjan!" "She
would have no reason to lie to me," Riane pointed out. Mehmmer
grunted. "Since when does an ajjan need a reason to lie?" Squinting
up at the moons' positions in the sky, Othnam said, "We have
only minutes to find this impostor and waylay him." "This
is nonsense," Mehmmer said sourly. "What
if it isn't?" Riane said. Mehmmer
nodded somewhat reluctantly. "If someone is, indeed,
impersonating a Ghor I very much want to discover who in Agachire
would blaspheme against Jiharre and the Mokakaddir, and why." "It
is obvious," Othnam said darkly. "To gain the ear of
Makktuub." "The
accursed Gyrgon again? But a Gyrgon could not masquerade as a Ghor." "He
most certainly could," Riane said. "Gyrgon are
shapeshifters." Mehmmer
screwed up her face. "What blasphemy is being whispered to our
kapudaan in secret?" They
began to circle around to the western side of the palace. This
obliged them to negotiate the edge of the bazaar, a warren of narrow,
twisting alleyways and aisles between rolling carts and makeshift
stands selling everything from dried fruits to cheap slipper-shoes to
magnificent bejeweled necklaces to sober black ga'afarra. Oddly,
at this time of the night, the bazaar was jam-packed with buyers and
sellers, barterers and thieves. Mehmmer explained that the market
opened at sundown so that the deleterious effects of the burning day
would not degrade the delicate spices. The air was as thick with
heated bargaining as it was with the heavy scents of spices and
roasting ba'du. Flickering torchlight reflected off the striped tent
walls that rimmed the bazaar. In the constant crowd motion, shadows
streaked the alleyways, moving as if by an unseen hand, writing
profound and unfamiliar runes across glossy pyramids of spices, down
sloping sides of rickety carts. There was, on the surface, an
overriding sense of controlled chaos. But underneath, Riane could
feel a tug of something darker, the keen sense of expectation that
comes in the deeply anxious moments before war is declared. The
three of them made their way single file, slowly and carefully, as if
negotiating a garden tangled with fishhook brambles. Othnam was
leading, with Riane next and Mehmmer bringing up the rear. They were
perhaps a third of the way across the perimeter of the bazaar when
Othnam was brought up short. A hand sign from him made them duck back
into the shadows of the tent walls. Up ahead, Riane could see a knot
of four bare-chested palace guards standing watch, their beady eyes
roaming the crowd, doubtless searching for Riane. "This
way," Othnam whispered as he led them down a side alley. They
soon turned off it, twisting their way this way and that until Riane
lost all sense of direction. And then all at once they turned a
corner and by the light of flaring torches saw the west wall of the
palace. Keeping to the shadows flung across the striped tent walls,
they soon spied the provision gate. The sounds of the city drifted to
them—the laughter of children at play, the soft chanting of
prayer cycles, the crisp bargaining of merchants, the heated rumor
mongering of a tribe on war footing. "What
if he doesn't come?" Mehmmer whispered. "He
will come," Riane said, though she had only Tezziq's word that
he would. Othnam
was squinting at the western sky above the palace. "It is after
midnight. We may have missed him." "No,"
Mehmmer said. "We haven't." They
pressed deeper into the lengthening shadows as a small, bearded male
dressed in black Ghorvish robes, his head swathed in the traditional
white sinschal, turned a corner and headed toward them. Riane
slid down into deepest shadow, crouched and still, her head down, her
face obscured. The false Ghor passed her and when she heard him being
stopped by Mehmmer, she lifted her head. "The
way to the Giyossun district?" The false Ghor's voice was
brittle and querulous with impatience. "You are on the wrong
side of the city." Mehmmer
stood squarely in front of him, blocking his way. "Yes, but how
do I—" "I
have no time for such foolishness, female," he said shortly. "A
thousand pardons," Mehmmer replied. "But I, also, am Ghor.
I am new to Agachire and I ask only—" "I
have an appointment with the kapudaan himself." The
false Ghor tried to sidestep her, but she would not let him pass. "Can
you not spare a moment to help one of your kin?" Riane
rose and silently moved out into the street. "You
are trying my patience." "But
surely I do not need to remind you of the Prophet Jiharre's words—" "Out
of my way!" The
false Ghor was about to push Mehmmer, but some sense made him whirl.
In that instant, Riane struck him a blow to the temple with the hilt
of her dagger. His eyes rolled up, and he slumped to the ground, his
arms outstretched. "A
disgusting creature," Othnam said as he stepped out of the
shadows. "It was all I could do not to run him through with my
push-dagger." He bent down and was reaching out toward the false
Ghor when Riane gasped and pulled him back. "Miina
protect us all," she murmured. Concern
overran Mehmmer's face. "What is it?" "Look
there," Riane said, "at his left hand." "He
has six fingers!" Othnam exclaimed. Mehmmer
looked more closely. "And the sixth is pure black." Black
and ugly as death, Minnum had said of the sauromician's extra
digit. "It
is a mark of Miina," Riane said. "He is a sauromician, long
ago cast out of the Ramahan abbeys for his evil ways." "And
he has been whispering in Makktuub's ear, no doubt poisoning the
kapudaan's mind." Mehmmer drew her slender-bladed scimitar. "We
must kill him." She
sliced through the sauromician's throat. Blood fountained, then
immediately congealed, turned black as his sixth finger. The wound to
his throat closed, shrinking until it was no more than a pucker, a
scar, before disappearing altogether. Mehmmer
stepped back, gasping as Othnam knelt, used his push-dagger to
puncture the sauromician's heart. Again, blood spurted up, and again
immediately congealed, the wound healing spontaneously. "The
sauromician is protected by a powerful spell of some sort,"
Riane said. "Keep away from him." But
Othnam would not listen. He reached out, touched the beard, which was
as false as the sauromician's Ghorvish claim. He stripped it off,
noting the sticky underside and, loosening Riane's sinschal, fastened
it around her jaw. "There," he said. "At least this
evil creature has provided us with something of value." Mehmmer
looked at them both. "We cannot simply leave him. He has seen my
face and yours." Riane
knew Mehmmer was correct. If they simply walked away, the sauromician
would surely come after them as soon as he regained consciousness.
But without her own sorcery Riane had no chance to counteract the
spell he had cast upon himself. She rubbed the side of her head.
What was it Minnum had said about the sauromician? You will know
him by the stigmata the Great Goddess in Her wisdom has given him: on
his left hand is a sixth finger, black and ugly as death. As she
thought about it, two phrases stood out, in Her wisdom and
black and ugly as death. Why had Minnum chosen those
particular words? He had told Riane that he was enjoined from
teaching, but what if he been trying to give her clues as to how to
handle a sauromician should she come upon one? She
stared down at the wrinkled, dark-skinned face, curved and
deadly-looking as a knife blade. She looked at the left hand with its
sixth digit, black as death. .
. . the Great Goddess in Her wisdom . . . Unsheathing
her dagger, Riane knelt beside the sauromician. The blade hovered
over the hand then, remembering the spell, she put the dagger away.
Taking hold of the sauromician's left wrist with one hand, she
grasped the black digit in her other hand, snapped it quickly back.
The bone snapped like a dry twig, the skin crackled like paper in a
fire. With a pop! there emanated from the finger a foul stench
like an open grave, making her gag. The
sauromician arched up and began to spasm, slamming his body again and
again into the packed red dirt of the street. An eerie keening arose
from somewhere deep inside him, setting Riane's teeth on edge. The
body was suddenly, sickeningly flooded with a milky liquid oozing out
of every orifice, every pore. Almost immediately, this liquid
evanesced into a darkening steam, spawning an intense wave of heat
that caused Riane to stumble backward into Othnam's arms. "What
in the name of Jiharre—!" Mehmmer
was mesmerized by the unholy disintegration as, in truth, they all
were. The
body gave one final, terrifying thrash, the keening abruptly ceased,
and the steam vanished, leaving, for only a moment, a skeleton, whose
bones softened like clay oozing, liquefying and running into the
dirt. Bronnn
Pallln had thought about the many ways he could approach Marethyn
Stogggul. In fact, in the time since the fateful dinner party at
Dobbro Mannx's residence, he had thought about nothing else. At
night, he dreamed about her. In
the end, he decided to visit her when she was at her most vulnerable.
And so it was that in the hour after she closed her atelier on
Divination Street he found himself setting his private hoverpod down
in a small clearing beside a series of deep pools several kilometers
northeast of Axis Tyr. Marethyn, who had been kneeling beside one of
the pools, looked up, and he immediately warmed to the fright in her
eyes. "Bronnn
Pallln," she said, a catch in her voice, "what are you
doing here?" "Hunting."
He took the sport ion pistol out of its holster and frowned. "You
know, Kundala is famed for its large predators." He came toward
her. "It is quite dangerous for a defenseless Tuskugggun like
you to be out here on your own." "Your
concern is misplaced. I have been coming here without incident since
I was a little girl." She
began to get to her feet, but a heavy hand on her shoulder kept her
in place. "Then
you have been remarkably lucky." He brandished the ion pistol.
"But you never know. There are reports of perwillon in the
area." "Perwillon
inhabit caves," she said. "Is
that so?" His lips pursed. "And where did a Tuskugggun gain
such knowledge?" He smirked down at her. "It wouldn't be
from Sornnn SaTrryn, would it?" "I
... I do not know what you are talking about." Bronnn
Pallln gave her the same indulgent look she had seen the Genomatekks
give Terrettt from time to time. "You
are an artist, are you not? I myself have no interest whatsoever in
art; I cannot fathom the rationale for its existence, really. Why is
it, I wonder, that you dedicate yourself to utter nonsense when you
could be doing something useful like raising children." "Why
are you doing this? What do you want?" He
could feel her muscles bunching under the hand that kept her on her
knees. "I am an exceedingly busy V'ornn, you know. And what am I
busy at? you might ask. Tracking down the traitorous trail your
Sornnn SaTrryn has made." "He
is not my—" She cried out as his finger dug into
her shoulder. "Do
not interrupt or contradict me, Marethyn. This is the first lesson
you must learn." She
did not answer, but he could see by the rapid rise and fall of her
breasts how terrified he had made her. Thus confident, he continued. "I
came here today as a courtesy to warn you. Out of the loyal
relationship I enjoy with your family and the high respect in which I
hold your brother. Your involvement with Sornnn SaTrryn—and
please do not bother to deny it—is a tragic mistake. You have
put yourself in grave peril." "What?
How do you mean?" "Firstly,
Sornnn SaTrryn is not qualified to be Prime Factor. Quite apart from
the obvious fact that he spends too much time in the Kor-rush and too
little time at his duties here in Axis Tyr, he has a highhanded
manner with the other Bashkir that is causing friction rather than
reconciliation between the Consortia." "What
you are saying is absurd, poisoned. You hate him because you covet
his position." "Secondly,"
Bronnn Pallln went on relentlessly, "as I said, he is a
traitor." Marethyn
laughed harshly. "You must think me an utter fool." "If
I thought that I would not be here now. I would let you be beheaded
with your lover. But I will not." He tipped his head slightly.
"Now listen to me carefully, Marethyn. I have evidence that he
is the Bashkir who has been selling Khagggun weapons to the Kundalan
Resistance. This is not so absurd now, is it, what with his deviant
love affair with the Korrush." His fingers ground into muscle
and bone, making her wince. "Now I say to you in all good faith
that you must give him up before your brother is told of his perfidy.
If you do not, well, you know Kurgan Stogggul better than I do. I
will leave it up to your own imagination what he will do to you." "I
don't want to hear this." "But
you must. It is for your own good." Tears
came to Marethyn's eyes, and a sob seemed torn from her breast. "You
know what this means." "Yes.
You love Sornnn SaTrryn, I can see, but he has played you false. The
only possible explanation is that he has been planning to involve you
as a cover for his traitorous actions." "He
never loved me," she wailed. "He was using me." "Truly,
I am sorry for this seeming harsh treatment, but given your history
of being headstrong and stubborn what other course could I take?"
Bronnn Pallln released her, took her tear-streaked face under her
chin, and lifted it so that her eyes met his. "There is,
however, a way out for you, if not for him." "There
is?" Now
he smiled, hearing the clear note of servility in her voice. Up until
now, no one had succeeded in breaking Marethyn Stogggul. Studying
her, he saw what her monstrous personality had for so long obscured.
She was a beautiful, highly desirable Tuskugggun. Perhaps, when this
was all over, he reflected, he would take her to bed, even marry her,
get her with child, make a true Tuskugggun out of her. In fact, the
more he thought about it, the better he liked the idea. What better
way to cement his relationship with the Stogggul Consortium. Kurgan
would have no choice but to respect the V'ornn who tamed his wayward
sister, Marethyn. He
drew her up to stand beside him. "I have knowledge that Sornnn
SaTrryn has taken you to his warehouse. The place of his Resistance
activities." "Is
that what that chamber was? I was wondering why he had so many
Kundalan artifacts." She began to cry again. Foolish
Tuskugggun, Bronnn Pallln thought. Full
of untenable emotion, therefore so easy to use and abuse. He
put his face close to hers. "You will take Line-General Lokck
Werrrent there, Marethyn, and when Sornnn SaTrryn is arrested and
charged with crimes against V'ornndom you will be safe from harm." She
looked deep into his eyes, her lips half-parted. "Do you swear
this, Bronnn Pallln? I will not betray him otherwise." Bronnn
Pallln kissed her on one cheek, then the other. "Marethyn
Stogggul, I swear on all that matters to me to protect you and keep
you safe." It's
as obvious as that ugly scar on your face. The war will begin with he
Jeni Cerii." "Too
obvious. It will come from another quarter. I say the Rasan Sul ,
will be first to strike. They have been seeking ways to expand their
spice explorations for years." The
two palace guards at the provisions gate were in the middle of this
debate when Riane appeared before them. They were expecting the false
Ghor, so waved her through. She had pulled her sinschal out over her
forehead and had lowered her face, staring down at the tops of her
stained and dusty slipper-shoes, but so engrossed were they in their
feverish speculation she needn't have bothered. Once
inside, she kept her head down and quickly and silently made her way
to the haanjhala, where she told one of the saddda guards that
the kapudaan had asked for the first ajjan. When Tezziq was brought
to her, Riane took her by the arm and hurried her away down the
hallway. By
means of the special hand signs devised by Makktuub, Tezziq kept
asking what she wanted. Riane, searching for a deserted chamber,
ignored her. But as soon as she found what she was looking for, she
pulled Tezziq into the tented chamber and half stripped off her false
beard. "Riane!"
Tezziq's eyes opened wide. "You're alive!." Riane
embraced her. "Of course I'm alive." "But
I thought. . . well, Baliiq said that you had jumped from the terrace
to your death. I did not believe him, but then the same story began
to circulate through the palace. And now here you are." "I
made a promise," Riane said, holding her at arm's length. She
pushed hair back from Tezziq's face. "And now I will take you
with me out of here, but first I must retrieve something that was
stolen from me." "What?" "Tell
me, when you have been with Makktuub have you caught a glimpse of a
tall figure in metallic armor?" "The
Gyrgon? Yes, I know of him. Makktuub speaks of him sometimes in the
aftermath." "Does
he have quarters here in the palace?" Tezziq
nodded. "A chamber, small and spare as a beggar's, adjacent to
the kapudaan's quarters." "Take
me there." "No,
I cannot]" Fear contorted Tezziq's beautiful face. "Please.
Ask me anything else." Riane
gripped Tezziq's arm. "It is imperative that I retrieve what the
Gyrgon stole from me." "I
have seen the cold fire come off him. I have seen the cruelty he is
capable of" Tezziq shuddered, but she nodded and, taking Riane's
hand in her own, began to lead them down a series of intersecting
corridors. Each time they neared a guard, they shifted positions to
give the impression that Tezziq was being guided by the Kapudaan's
Ghorv-ish spiritual advisor. In this way, they traversed the distance
between the haanjhala and Makktuub's quarters. "Here
it is," Tezziq said, shivering, as she brought them up short
across from the tent flap. "Let me go in alone to see whether
the creature is there." Riane
watched her uneasily as she crept across the corridor, then, drawing
herself up, swept into the tent. Riane heard only silence. A moment
later, Tezziq stuck her head out and gave the all-clear sign. The
chamber smelled strongly of clove oil and burnt musk. It was at odds
with virtually every other chamber in the palace—doubtless in
all Agachire, for that matter. There were no cushions or carpets, no
low chased-bronze tables, no decorations of any kind. In fact, the
chamber was quite bare, save for one item, an alloy-clad container
perhaps three meters long shaped like a compressed oval. There was a
word etched into it in spiraled V'ornnish letters. They
stood still and silent, staring at the huge object. "What
does it say?" Tezziq whispered. "
'K'yonnno’, " Riane said in a similar hushed tone. "It
is the Gyrgon theory of Law and Chaos." Tezziq
wrinkled her brow. "I do not understand." "The
first rule of K'yonnno is Stasis and Harmony are synonymous. It is
rumored that the Gyrgon mission is to find the key to immortality,
which, if you think about it, is the ultimate stasis and, in their
minds, at least, blissful harmony." "But
Jiharre teaches that for everything there is a time and a place and a
purpose. Without the first two, the third cannot exist." She
shuddered. "I cannot imagine anything more horrible than life
without purpose." "I
agree," Riane said, "which makes us so very different than
the Gyrgon." "So
what is this?" "I'm
not sure," Riane said, approaching the huge object, "but if
I had to guess, I'd say that it is where the Gyrgon sleeps." She
put her hands on the thick convex lid. It was smooth as crystal, so
shiny she could see the rather startling reflection of the false Ghor
she had become. She briefly touched the fulkaan stud in her nostril.
Then, she found the catch and, depressing it, stood back. With a soft
sigh, the lid lifted and
she peered into the emptiness within. The interior appeared to be
composed entirely of neural-net circuitry. A clutch of cables and
flexible links attached to the net at different places lay curled,
waiting for the Gyrgon to plug their free ends into his armored
biosuit. Riane
peered more closely, for there, amid the serpentine clutter, was a
small square black package. Nith Sahor's greatcoat. She
reached for it, but just as she did so, Tezziq clutched at her and
mouthed the words, Someone is coming!. Riane
clambered into the sleep casket, pulled a terrified Tezziq in with
her and lowered the lid. Just in time, for voices burst into the
chamber. The moment the lid had clicked into place, the neural net
awoke, doubtless expecting to take Nith Settt into slumber. But there
was plenty of room; the sleep casket was twice as deep as it had at
first seemed. Listening
to the voices, Riane recognized Makktuub. By the neural net's banks
of lights she could see Tezziq mouthing the name of the other
speaker, Sawakaq, the minister who had originally brought her and
Othnam and Mehmmer to the kapudaan. "—should
have begun twenty minutes ago," Makktuub was saying. Riane
scrambled to the foot of the sleep casket in order to better hear
what was being said. "The
Ghor came through the provision gate on time. I checked with the
guards," Sawakaq replied. "Then he disappeared." "Inside
the palace?" Makktuub's voice grew dark. "Another
strange and unexplained incident to add to the rest that have
occurred of late." "Unsettling,
to say the least," Sawakaq admitted. "I advise doubling the
number of guards inside the palace." "An
excellent precaution, unless it is precisely what the Jeni Cerii are
hoping we will do. No, instead, send a message to double our patrols
along the Jeni Cerii border. If they seek to confuse us here in
Agachire they will be sorely mistaken." "And
what of the Gyrgon?" Sawakaq said. "He was quite explicit
about informing him about any changes in either our defensive or
offensive battle plans." "As
you can see, minister, we are in his quarters. We came in good faith
to keep him updated, but his movements are of his own design."
Makktuub's voice became slightly more muffled, making it clear that
he had moved back to the tent flap. "Find the Ghor, Sawakaq. Use
whatever means at your disposal, but I want him brought to me
forthwith." "Yes,
kapudaan." Footsteps
gliding away, then silence. Riane held her breath. She was very close
to Tezziq, could feel her warmth, could see the inside of the sleep
casket refracted in her glossy eyes. Tezziq's mouth was half-open as
if she wanted to say something. "Just
a minute," Riane whispered and, raising her hands over her head,
pushed the lid up. At first, she thought it was either locked or
stuck, and she felt the sweat pop out along her hairline and under
her arms. But possibly it was simply heavier pushing it from a
crouched position than it had seemed lifting it when she was
standing, because as she strained it began to move. Slowly, she rose
from her squat, the lid swinging up, letting light into the interior. Tezziq's
eyes were half-closed, the pupils dark and dilated. Riane put an ear
to her chest, could detect a shallow, ragged breath. "N'Luuura,
no!" she breathed. The
cables, alive as any creature, had inserted themselves into Tezziq at
the insides of her elbows, the backs of her thighs, her navel. Konara
Inggres lit the prayer candle and the familiar scents of orange-sweet
and mugwort wafted up to her. She studied the flame-bent wick,
braided by the leyna, charred black at the tip. She studied the squat
candle itself, the tallow mottled and beautifully translucent as
ancient skin. She could recall fashioning candles similar to this one
when she herself had been a novitiate, and found herself clinging to
the sense of continuity the memory provided. On the scarred wooden
table beside the candle was a well-used pewter dish with a wide
flared lip in which were strewn the remnants of thick-sliced
wrybread, the crusts yellow and glistening with half-melted cor
butter. This homely sight was also of comfort to her, which was why
she had come down to the refectory tonight. As a child, she had often
sneaked into the refectory for this selfsame snack. Tonight a deep
sense of panic gnawed at her. Her hermetic world—the one she
had been born into, the one in which she had lived all her life—had
suddenly been invaded, and the worst part was she did not know by
whom or to what purpose. "I thought I would find you here." She
started even though she knew the voice. Konara Lyystra came striding
in, smiling widely. "Now that Mother has taken over and we are
released from our punishment duties it seems I see you less and
less." "Other
duties interfere," Konara Inggres said neutrally. She held
herself still and steady as Konara Lyystra sat down across the long
refectory table from her. The panic, held in temporary suspension by
her will, burst like a blister, left her shaking. "There have
been so many changes of late." "I
imagine you are referring to Konara Urdma's sudden death." "Partially." The
wide smile never left Konara Lyystra's face. "An artery burst in
her head, a congenital defect, no one could have known or suspected." "There
are other things." Konara Inggres said this warily. "Could
you be referring to Konara Bartta? We knew something was amiss when
we entered the chamber in which she had secreted the had-atta. You
yourself said—" "I
know what I said," Konara Inggres replied rather too sharply. Konara
Lyystra cocked her head. "It took someone of Mother's vast
sorcerous skill to extract Konara Bartta from the stasis-web. But you
knew. Your instinct was unerring." Konara
Inggres wrapped her arms around herself. It chilled her to the bone
that Konara Lyystra's expression never changed. Nor had the slightly
glazed look left her eyes. Ever since that night Giyan had arrived.
What had happened in Konara Urdma's office when Konara Lyystra had
gone to greet her? Konara Lyystra had not spoken of it, and as the
days progressed, Konara Inggres became afraid to ask. "You
do not seem particularly pleased that she has returned," Konara
Lyystra said, jolting Konara Inggres out of her brief reverie. "I
know very little about Giyan," Konara Inggres replied. "I
meant Konara Bartta." That
wide smile was unnerving, Konara Inggres thought, as if she knew a
secret jest. "I
know how you feel about Konara Bartta. But I assure you that now that
Mother is here everything will be all right." It
was positively sinister, that smile, Konara Inggres decided. And here
was another thing that frightened her, her friend saying, I
know how you feel about Konara Bartta, just as if they had
never shared this antipathy. Which was why she had tried to avoid
her, and when, like now, she could not, she was circumspect and wary. "I
am certain I will come to share your opinion," she lied. Konara
Lyystra took a crust of wrybread and popped it into her mouth without
her smile narrowing one millimeter. "Excellent," she said.
"We are all counting on it."
17 Chimaera
Just
hours to midnight on this dank moonsless night in the ides of autumn,
and the last dying leaf of summer had been ground to mulch beneath
winter's oncoming heel. Out on the Sea of Blood, the lanterns on
Courion's ship swung to and fro as the vessel passed through lashing
wave crests and deep troughs. There were four such lanterns, ornately
runed as a Sarakkon's head, one each on the high, arching prow and
slender aft, two more midship, at port and starboard. Courion
had a striking and formidable appearance. He was, like most Sarakkon,
tall and slender, well muscled and fit, his skin the deep color of
pomegranates. He had a sleek, compelling face, with high cheekbones,
dark intelligent eyes, and gently bowed lips that made him appear as
if he were always slightly amused. Over his shaved, elongated skull
was tattooed a bewildering array of runes that reappeared on bare
arms that bulged from his sharkskin vest. He had a thick sable beard,
curling and oiled, in which were threaded runes made of carved lapis
lazuli and jade. His fingers were encircled with massive rings of
star sapphire and ruby and lynx-eye. With each pitch and roll of the
ship the ends of his wide, knotted belt, woven of cured sea grape,
traversed a short arc. The pattern of knots was different for every
Sarakkon Kurgan had seen. They bore great significance, but what they
meant no V'ornn knew. "Until
tonight, we have not seen you since you attained the office of
regent," Courion said. "Not even at the Kalllistotos." Courion
laughed, watching the line playing out from the tip of his fishing
rod, fashioned from a searay's tail, which he had cured himself in a
combination of mercury and sea salt in order to increase its strength
while maintaining its flexibility. "How uninteresting is our
free time without the magnificent entertainment of wagering against
you." "Knowing
you, you only want to coerce me back into the ring." "You
fought well, acquitted yourself with a warrior's courage." Kurgan
had once made an imprudent wager with the Sarakkonian captain that he
had promptly lost. In lieu of the payment he could not make, Courion
had required him to fight in the Kalllistotos, garnering him a
measure of respect from the Sarakkon no other V'ornn had attained.
Save perhaps Nith Batoxxx, "But
I am regent now, and the regent of all Kundala has more to occupy him
than the Kalllistotos." "That
is a very great pity." "I
still find time for combat practice." Kurgan felt the urgent
need to keep talking in order to make certain his diaphragm kept all
his three stomachs from rebelling. V'ornn did not take naturally to
the sea. "Good,"
Courion said. "A fit body is a virtue." He
could, of course, have met with Courion anywhere he chose, but he saw
this fishing trip as a test of his own inner strength. Truth be told,
he had been born without the desire to be like other V'ornn, and Nith
Batoxxx, opportunistic as he was subversive, had nurtured this
fortuitous aberration. "I
have an entire planet to oversee. Tedious work, for the most part,
which surprises me somewhat." "Why?
Cogs and flywheels, the mechanics of anything is nothing but
humdrum." "You
are right, of course," Kurgan acknowledged. "But I find
compensation by being more closely in touch with the Gyrgon
Comradeship." "From
what we have gleaned of you V'ornn, this is true of all regents."
Courion gave several whiplike upward swipes with the tip of his
searay rod. Kurgan
spread his legs a little more in order not to be tossed against the
gleaming wooden taffrail. "Nith Batoxxx, in particular. You
remember him. I met him on this very ship." "We
could hardly forget a Gyrgon." Courion pulled up hard on his
rod; the tip had bent almost double. "Any Gyrgon." Kurgan
adopted a light, almost bantering tone. "Believe it or not, he
is interested in something Kundalan. Seven Portals to a land of
riches, so he claims." "Oho!
That is for us!" Courion cried. "We are all for riches!" "I
doubt he is telling me the whole truth- Do you know anything about
these Portals?" Courion
shook his head. "Alas, no." He shrugged. "The only
portals we know are on our ship." "By
the way, I never asked you. What was Nith Batoxxx doing on your
ship?" "Help
us now," Courion said tersely as he hauled hard on his rod and
began to reel in the line. "We seem to have hooked the monster
of all Chimaera." Of
a sudden, as if to punctuate that remark, not three meters from the
stern the sea began to boil. Kurgan saw something that turned his
blood to ice. Something huge had leapt out of the water. Its
first breach gave him only a flash of a dark and sinuously glistening
body that was almost all monstrous head. Then it was under again in a
geyser of creamy foam, and Courion, braced against the taffrail, was
reeling for all he was worth. "Mother
of Yahe, it's a black one!" Courion cried. Members
of his crew, who had been going about the business of keeping the
ship on course, and others who had been off duty or be-lowdecks, came
running and Kurgan heard them shouting excitedly to each other.
Apparently a Chimaera of this size was rare enough, but a pitch-black
one, to boot! They were agog. Just at that instant, the Chimaera
leapt upward again and all of them—Kurgan included—got a
good look at it. It was huge—perhaps half as long as the ship
itself— with a long, tapering, forked tail, sharp as knife
blades, and three wicked-looking cartilaginous dorsal fins rising off
its back. In the flickering lanternlight, its absolute blackness was
positively eerie, making it seem even larger and fiercer than it
actually was. But by far its most hideous feature was its mouth,
which, impossibly, appeared to take up the entire front third of the
creature's muscular body. In midleap, it twisted itself, a
hearts-stopping maneuver that slammed Courion into the rail. A cold
red eye seemed to fix Courion in its mad gaze. Then, with a great
fountaining that drenched Courion, Kurgan, and much of the crew, it
plunged once again beneath the waves. They
all peered over the side. The wake the thing made in its frantic
thrashing to free itself from the tormenting hook glowed
phosphorescent. And still Courion lifted the rod, reeled in more of
the line, only to peel
the line back out when the Chimaera made another dash away from the
ship. Over the course of the next several hours it tried everything,
including running under the ship, an attempt, Courion said, to get
the keel to saw the line in two. "That
presupposes a will," Kurgan said. He was tired by this time; he
could only imagine the exhaustion that Courion felt. "And a will
presupposes a consciousness." "You
do not know this fish," Courion said tersely as he twisted the
rod. "Mother of Yahe, he's running again." "Why
don't you let one of your crew spell you, at least for a little
while?" Courion
shook his head. "Landing him will mean nothing, then. Until the
hunt is played out and he is beside the ship, we must do this on our
own." Kurgan,
watching Courion's bunched muscles, the sweat running off him, had to
admire the Sarakkonian captain's courage and fortitude. Even a
Khagggun would gain a measure of satisfaction observing his
chronosteel-like tenacity. It
was after midnight by the time Courion at last got the best of the
great Chimaera. It took one last, rather halfhearted run out to sea,
then seemed to roll over, and Courion began his frantic reel-in,
drawing it closer and closer to the stern of the ship where they
stood, their muscles jumping with a surfeit of tension and fatigue.
For almost an hour now, one of Courion's crew had stood by his side,
a long pole with a bronze hook on one end held in a gnarled and
swollen fist. "Close,"
Courion said softly. "Very close now." He held his rod
almost at the vertical as the spent Chimaera lolled nearer them. Kurgan
was watching it closely, feeling a stone lodged in one of his hearts
at the size of its gargantuan maw, bristling with multiple sets of
triangular, needle-sharp teeth, which occasionally snapped
ineffectually at the air as it rolled this way and that. "All
right," Courion said to him. "When it is against the side
of the ship we are going to give you the rod. Hold it in exactly the
angle we designate and keep one hand on the reel so the line will not
go slack." He glanced briefly at Kurgan. "This is most
important because the line is the only thing keeping it in place."
He grinned through his exhaustion. "Don't worry. You need hold
it only long enough for me to gaff him." A
moment later, the beast banged against the hull and Courion's ship
shuddered down to its keel. This close up, the Chimaera was so
mammoth Kurgan had trouble processing the image. His mind kept
wanting to shrink it down by half or more. "This
is the angle," Courion said, handing over the rod. "Yes,
just like that." He made a small adjustment. "Brace your
thighs against the rail, and for Yahe's sake keep your hand tight on
the reel or we'll likely lose it." Kurgan
nodded and Courion took his guiding hand away. Kurgan could feel the
tremorings of the creature as if they were seismic shocks transmitted
up the taut line and down the searay rod. The Chimaera looked
quiescent, more dead than alive to judge by the one red eye, clouded
and still, that stared up into the night from the side of its long,
tapering head. Translucent waves washed over it as the current
bounced its body repeatedly against the hull, and still the eye
remained fixed. Next
to him, Courion accepted the long gaff and, bending over the top
rail, swung it down toward the Chimaera. With an expert motion, he
fixed the hook in the upper corner of the beast's mouth, so that he
could better maneuver it. Members of the crew had meanwhile been
lowering a block and tackle on a heavy chain wrapped around a large
hand-wound windlass, with which to winch the Chimaera out of the
water. All that was left was for Courion to guide the beast onto the
massive hook sunk into the block and tackle as it was lowered all the
way to the foamy wave tops. Kurgan
took his assignment seriously. Knowing that he was out of his element
he consigned himself to the expertise of the Sarakkonian captain,
trusting that with each order obeyed he would learn something no
V'ornn before him knew. In this vein he concentrated on keeping the
angle of the rod just right, making sure the line stayed taut. His
right hand was white as it tightly gripped the reel just as Courion
had instructed. He was trembling a little, not out of fear but out of
the sheer exhilaration at being in on the kill of this extraordinary
hunt. His eyes burned a little in the biting salt wind, his nostrils
flared at first scent of the Chimaera's blood, which leaked out of
the side of its mouth where the barbed hook dug deep and where the
barbed end of Courion's gaff further exacerbated the wound. Courion
had brought the Chimaera's head partway out of the water as the block
and tackle was lowered the last several meters. He was now
bent almost completely in half over the top rail. It was a delicate
procedure considering the bulk of both fish and hook, and it had to
be done just right. He hauled a little more on the gaff, straining to
his limit as he pulled the Chimaera the few last centimeters above
the waves. At
that instant, something quite extraordinary happened. Kurgan, who was
concentrating on the beast, reeling in the line as Courion lifted it
farther, saw it, but N'Luuura only knew whether anyone else had. That
great red eye, half-occluded and fixed, abruptly blinked and cleared.
Kurgan's brain did not perhaps understand the significance of this
but his body, already in full self-preservation mode, certainly did. In
a stupefying and cataclysmic display of canniness and strength, the
Chimaera leapt clear out of the frothing water. As it did so, it
torqued its body away from the ship, taking the gaff and Courion with
it. Courion was lifted clean off his feet. His knees banged against
the top rail and then, as the Chimaera started to fall back again
into the water, he began to go over the side. Though
the beast's wicked move was accomplished in no more than a
heartsbeat, Kurgan saw it as if in slow motion. He saw its great red
eye glaring as if in ferocious outrage. Was it looking at Courion or
at him? Even later, in the besotted calmness of the aftermath, it was
impossible to say, but he could not shake the disquieting conclusion
that he had glimpsed a malign intelligence where he had least
expected to find one. At the moment, however, he reacted without
thinking. Letting go of the spinning rod, he grabbed Courion around
the waist, pulling him back on board, anchoring him to the ship's
deck as the gaff's hook tore free of the Chimaera's bloody mouth. With
little grunting sounds, Riane tried to pull Tezziq free of the Gyrgon
umbilicals, but as soon as she did she was thrown back against the
side of the casket by a painful shock wave. Riane shook her head to
clear it. Tezziq looked glazed-eyed at her, tried to say something,
failed. "Stay
calm," Riane said. "I will get you out of here." Her
gaze swept over the banks of readouts positioned strategically around
the casket's neural net. Here, Annon's fluency in V'ornn was
invaluable. She forced herself to read slowly and carefully,
switching off the anxiety that urged her to get out of here before
anyone else chanced by. Decoding
the Gyrgon sigils, she determined that each umbilical had a different
purpose. In addition, each was attached to a different energy pod, so
that even in an emergency situation they would continue to function.
The cable snaking into Tezziq's navel provided nutrients, the ones
inserted in the crook of her elbows contained a complex formula of
electrolytes that restored the Gyrgon's often overtaxed neural grids,
the umbilicals that had attached themselves behind her knees were
pumping a powerful chemical cocktail that induced delta-level brain
activity, in other words, deepest sleep. Beside each power node was a
scale to calibrate accurately the amount of fluids being conducted
through the cables. She could see that the normal dosage for a Gyrgon
was more or less one-fifth of maximum. She
soon discovered that the only way to detach the umbilicals without
trauma to Tezziq was to disengage their power sources from the neural
net; as she had already learned, safeguard circuitry engaged the
moment someone tried to remove them incorrectly or by force. She
could hear Tezziq sobbing a little, and she stopped what she was
doing. "Are they hurting you?" Tezziq's
eyes moved wildly, their pupils dilated, and Riane began to worry
about the effects the Gyrgon-manufactured chemicals might have on her
system. She appeared to be dreaming with her eyes open, but was she
dreaming Gyrgon dreams? Riane
kissed Tezziq's damp brow. "Hold on a little longer," she
whispered. "I'll have you out of here in no time." Returning
to the power supplies, she saw that they were some kind of gel paks
that pulsed with light. The first time she tried to disengage the
first gel pak, a bolt of pain ran up her arm. She shook her hand to
get the numbness out of it and tried again with the same result. This
time it took longer to get the numbness out. She stared hard at the
power supply, thinking. The pulse, of light ran through it every
thirty seconds. She tried touching the circuitry between the pulses
and received no shock. So she began work, keeping counting silently
to herself, lifting her fingers a second before the pulse appeared.
In this way, she was able to disengage the first gel pak. Now she
turned back to Tezziq, pulled the umbilicals from her elbows without
incident. They left no entry at all, merely a welt of raw and
reddened flesh. Tezziq
moaned a little, twitching, and Riane put a hand to her cheek before
returning to the neural net. In the same manner she had handled the
first power pak, she disengaged the second one. Out came the
urn-bilicals from behind Tezziq's knees. Two
down, one to go, Riane thought. But
when she commenced to study the third power pak, she could see that
it was different. The photon pulses rippled through it every five
seconds. Not enough time for her to get the job done. She tried it
anyway and lasted twenty seconds before the pain became too much and
she had to take her hands away. She held them under her armpits,
waiting for the numbness in her fingers to subside. While she waited
she considered the photonic pulses, and when she felt the circulation
returning she took out the infinity blade and, on a hunch, jammed it
directly into the center of the gel pak. The unknown alloy pierced
the skin of the power supply and the weapon absorbed the photonic
pulses, drawing the energy out of the gel pak. Behind
her, Tezziq gave a little sigh and, as Riane removed the umbilical
from her navel, she cried out as if in great pain. Her fingers
gripped Riane's shoulders, her long nails digging into Riane's flesh. A
flash of anger caused Riane to stab the infinity blade into the nexus
of the neural net. A welter of hyperexcited ions bubbled up, but as
quickly as they exploded the infinity blade absorbed them, until
there was no power left within the sleep casket. Riane felt a measure
of satisfaction in the destruction. She
grabbed a gel pak, jamming it into her robes, gathered Tezziq into
her arms, and lifted her out of the sleep casket. Tezziq moaned a
little, and her eyes were rolling beneath her half-closed lids.
Steadying herself, Riane unfurled Nith Sahor's greatcoat. Minnum had
told her not to use sorcery in the Korrush save under Perrnodt's
direction because it would likely draw the attention of the
sauromicians. She did not know whether this warning might also apply
to V'ornn techno-mancy, but she had no other choice. There was no way
she could leave the palace the same way she entered it. Throwing
the greatcoat across her shoulders, she lifted its edge with her free
hand, closing it over both her and Tezziq. She felt its sheltering
embrace, the comfortable cavelike gloom that seemed to stretch on
into infinity. Then, clutching Tezziq tightly to her, she thought of
Othnam and Mehmmer and the powerful Gyrgon neural-net circuitry
engaged, sweeping them away. In
the small hours, with the ship buoyed by a following wind, sailing
peacefully back toward the port of Axis Tyr, Kurgan and Courion were
belowdecks, comfortably ensconced in the captain's fan-shaped cabin.
Runes were carved into every wooden surface, embossed on every metal
surface, etched into every pane of glass along the bowed rear
bulkhead. An embalmed searay, its stippled skin pale, shiny with
lacquer, hung upon the concave wall over the bed. Its beautiful wings
were stiff as shock-swords. Courion
had broken open a bottle of Sarakkonian brandy, a thick bitterish
liquor Kurgan had never tasted before, for which he felt certain he
could develop a strong and abiding liking. For a time they merely
drank in a kind of companionable silence that was new for them both.
Gradually, they began to speak of everything save Courion's brush
with death. Kurgan
smelled the curious Sarakkonian spices that arose from their oils and
unguents, their leathers and cloths, the deep orange wax with which
they formed the molds of their indecipherable runes. He felt the
gentle rolling of the deck beneath his feet and tried to attune his
motions to that rhythm, to let it take him up in its arms, a V'ornn
upon the ocean, an odd and disquieting thought because the V'ornn
traditionally shunned oceans and deserts as being barren, empty of
natural resources to plunder. And yet here he was, his hips moving as
he had seen Sarakkon hips moving, timing his center of balance to the
whims of the tide. He found that he very much liked the feeling of
power it gave him, a kind of mastery over the sea no other V'ornn
possessed. At
length, Courion said, "You acquitted yourself well. You saved us
from the sea." "Ironic,
isn't it?" Kurgan took some brandy in his mouth, left it there
until the soft tissue began to burn. "The
Chimaera is the subject of many legends. Therefore, it is both
revered and feared by all Sarakkonian captains," Courion said.
"Few would dare to fish for it; fewer still have landed one. As
for the black variety, no captain has returned home to parade its
carcass. To trifle with a Chimaera, many say, is to court disaster. A
black one, especially, because they are exceedingly rare and,
according to legend, intelligent." Kurgan
thought of that daemonic red eye staring at him with its malevolent
intent clear and present. "You speak of the black Chimaera as if
you had seen it before." "Most
Sarakkon have never seen one. Now we have encountered one twice. The
first time, we were aboard the first ship we served on out of
Celiocco on the southern continent." "You
were not a captain then." "No.
And not for years afterward." Courion stared into his drink as
if searching for an answer to a long-held question. "We were
just a raw mate. As such, we paid scant heed to the shoreside stories
about the captain. As it happened, they were more or less right. He
was a maniac. He would share nothing of our course even with his
First. Two weeks out, we spied a mountainous black Chimaera just like
this one and were ordered to give pursuit. The captain insisted on
torturing it before going in for the kill. The sea was dark as
midnight with its blood. He laughed at the Chimaera's pain, and at
the last minute it turned and rammed the ship, stove in the hull
below the waterline. The ship sank like a stone with all hands. We,
alone, survived." "How
did you—?" Courion
shrugged. "We were extraordinarily fortunate." "Now
you and the black Chimaera." "Linked
as one? Our crew thinks so." Courion finished off his brandy in
one swallow. "And
you?" "We
think it makes a fine midnight's tale." There
was a small silence. Kurgan looked at Courion, slightly tense now
though he was stretched out in the lamplight. He thought of his
Summoning when Nith Batoxxx had purportedly shown him his own
fear—drowning off Courion's ship. Or was it drowning? There
is another thing here for you to fear, Nith
Batoxxx had said. I find
it interesting that you cannot yet identify it. The
black Chimaera? But Kurgan had not yet known about it when the
Summoning had occurred. Nith Batoxxx had said the construct had been
created from Kurgan's own mind. "You
never answered my question about why Nith Batoxxx was on your ship." "We
think you should ask him." Kurgan
grunted. "Have you ever tried to ask a Gyrgon anything?" Courion
threw his head back, and his laughter bounced off the bulkheads. Kurgan
leaned forward, and said softly but distinctly, "I know." Courion
swung his legs around as he sat up. "What is it you know,
regent?" Kurgan
came and sat down next to him. His nostrils flared at the spicy
Sarakkonian scent. "Let us talk business for a moment. How can I
obtain some salamuuun?" "You
know as well as we do. Take your leisure at a kashiggen." "Yes,
of course. But then there is the high price to pay and the artificial
quota the Ashera set on it. Just between friends there must be
another way." Courion
shrugged. "Why ask us? We are Sarakkon." "Precisely!"
Kurgan slapped his thigh. "And what would a Sarakkon know of
this when no V'ornn save an Ashera has even an inkling?" Courion
sat silent and very still. "Nith
Batoxxx has an inordinate interest in salamuuun. Do not continue to
deny it. I know it for a fact." Of course he did. Rada's illegal
memory net had revealed as much. Courion
looked away. "It is not possible to discuss this." "If
Nith Batoxxx is planning on wresting control of the salamuuun trade
from the Ashera, I would be most interested." Kurgan refilled
his goblet. "But I will tell you this. If he is involving you in
his dangerous scheme, I would be exceedingly wary." "And
why would that be?" Courion's voice was tightly throttled. "To
tell you the truth, I am beginning to suspect that he is mad." Courion
began to laugh. "He
exhibits manifestations of harboring two distinct personalities. You
do not believe me? Sometimes his voice darkens and seems to be
floating out of him. And his posture changes, one shoulder rising
higher than the other. Have you not noticed this?" The
Sarakkonian captain drained his goblet. His expression had changed
subtly. "These odd, quicksilver changes, we admit that we have
wondered over them." "They
are getting worse, aren't they?" Kurgan put down his goblet.
"Several days ago I caught him talking into a mirror, in a
language I could not identify. That would be cause for alarm on its
own. Then I got a look at what was reflected in the mirror." The
ship rocked a little in a freshening breeze, and then, its sails
filled, it shot toward Harborside. "What
has five faces, two of them animal?" he asked. Courion
shook his head. "Were you drunk, regent?" "I
know what I saw. Five horrific faces, all vying to gain ascendancy at
once. The deeply disturbing effect was of looking at living,
breathing Chaos." "We
have heard that Gyrgon can take the form of many beings." Kurgan
shook his head. "No. This is another matter entirely." He
ran his hands along his hairless skull. "This V'ornn. There is
something different about him. More dangerous." Courion
shrugged. "Look,
what you do not seem to grasp is that it is a Gyrgon's perverse
pleasure to give his word in trust in order to break it. They
love playing with us as if we were toys." "When
it comes to other races, is that not an altogether V'ornnish trait?"
A watch-change chime sounded, and Courion rose. "Time to go
topside." They
clambered up the steep companionway at the end of the narrow
corridor. At their backs a small squall had thrown itself over the
stars. The night was thick and utterly black. Ahead of them, Axis Tyr
lay in slumber, its sentinel lights glittering in a weblike tangle.
Courion made his way to the high prow, and Kurgan followed him. The
captain grasped the seaweed-encrusted hawser, adroitly balancing
himself as he put one foot onto the butt end of the bowsprit. Above
them, the great sails arched and cracked. Courion
shouted a series of clipped commands. Activity picked up immediately,
the crew climbing into the rigging, preparing as they neared land, to
furl the sails in stages. "Gyrgon
are dangerous enough," Kurgan said with some urgency, "without
them being mad. I do not know what this one is capable of." "Here
is what we do not fathom," Courion said. "All this talk
about the Gyrgon. And yet you belong to him." "I
belong to no one." "You
swore an oath of fealty to him on this very ship. You wear his
okummmon." "I
will carve it out of my own flesh. When the time comes." "Youthful
folly!" Yet there was no derision in Courion's voice. There
is another thing here for you to fear. What
could there be here to fear? "I
am deadly serious," Kurgan said. Several
nights ago, when he had gone to the Old V'ornn's villa something had
happened. He
did not know what, except there seemed to be a small hole bored into
his head, a void of memory toward the end of the evening that would
not return no matter how hard he tried. This concerned him deeply.
His hatred for Nith Batoxxx was now at a fever pitch. The thought
that he was in some way being manipulated infuriated him. Courion
stirred. "For you, trust is such a fragile thing. Are we not
correct, regent?" "You
are," Kurgan admitted. "We V'ornn find trust a disturbing
and difficult concept to adhere to." "We
would give the world to be free of our bondage to the Gyrgon." "Would
you tell me why he is talking to you about salamuuun?" The
two of them were the still eye of the storm of activity that raged on
all around them. No one came near them or even looked their way. A
Sarakkonian crew was as completely disciplined as any Khagggun pack. Courion
said, "What is there but to trust you?" Leaning toward
Kurgan, he said, "This salamuuun. Its chemical makeup has defied
even the Gyrgon. Is that not correct?" "Yes.
Something in the compound destabilizes the basic complex molecule the
moment anyone tries to analyze it." "It
happens that we have been refining a natural compound that achieves
many of the same psychotropic effects as salamuuun." He pulled
open an inner pocket of his leather vest and produced a yellow-white
object that looked like a flower with severely erose petals. "This
is oqeyya." He dropped it into Kurgan's hand. "It is
a fungus that grows only in the caldera of Oppamonifex, the largest
volcano in the Great Southern Arryx. Nith Batoxxx heard of it purely
by accident sometime ago. He was in disguise in Blood Tide." Kurgan
knew the disguise—the Old V'ornn. But he said nothing of this
to Courion as he gave him back the fungus. "The
oqeyya is dried for three weeks at high altitude. Then it is
soaked in a thick mixture of herbs and carna oil. It is dried again,
washed in seawater, and burnt. The green ash that remains has
powerful psychotropic attributes." "Is
this oqeyya a viable substitute for salamuuun?" Kurgan's
pulse was pounding as he imagined undercutting the Ashera Consortium.
This new compound would ruin them. "Not
yet. There are one or two toxic side effects," Courion conceded.
"But the Gyrgon has promised us that with his help it soon will
be." "Here
is my advice. Never trust a Gyrgon. Especially not this one." "What
choice has he given us?" Kurgan
sat back, well pleased by the progress he had made this night. "Well,
now, that is something for us both to determine." A
scattering of red dust bloomed along the road north as the
ku-omeshals lumbered into the soft violet crush of twilight. "It
is time," Othnam said. "That you learn something of the
Prophet Jiharre." "Koura,"
Mehmmer intoned. It is written. Ahead,
the Djenn Marre rose sharp as a serrated blade, seeming in the light
peculiar to the steppe close enough to reach within a day's leisurely
ride. Their snowcapped peaks, blindingly aglitter in the afternoon's
silent fall into night, seemed for the moment immune even to
Kundala's inexorable spin. There
was nothing leisurely in the kuomeshals' pace. Othnam and Mehmmer
struck the hairy flanks of their mounts with short flexible sticks,
and Riane did the same with hers in order to keep up with them. She
had Tezziq's limp form draped over her thighs. Tezziq's head and feet
jounced against the kuomeshal in time to its long loping stride.
Riane had stripped off her ajjan's dress, clothing her in a spare
Ghor robe and sinschal from Mehmmer's saddlebags. They were heading
north to the rendezvous point, the place where the Ghor had taken
Perrnodt. Nith Sahor's greatcoat was folded away beneath her robes.
It would not have accommodated the four of them. Othnam
said, "Jiharre lived at the very top of the world, along the
highest peaks of the Djenn Marre, where, we believe, Kundala meets
heaven. His prophetic utterances frightened his family and the
townsfolk, who were highly superstitious. They thought him a
sorcerer, and shunned him. But their antipathy did not silence him.
He was a prophet, and if his voice went against the grain, so be it.
He did what he was called to do, what he fervently believed in,
because without that you are nothing, life is nothing, might as well
curl up, close your eyes, and wait for death to claim you." Slowly,
ice-blue shadows crept up from the mountain flanks, extinguishing the
heart of the day's fire. "Jiharre
was exiled, cut off from his family and his friends, who turned their
backs on him. They burned his clothes and his personal effects,
grinding the ashes between the clawed roots of the mossarche tree,
and poured boiling water on them so that they would forget him, so
that his name might never again pass their lips. His people turned
their backs on him because he dared to challenge their beliefs and
biases, because he believed in something greater, a unifying force
that ruled the Cosmos, and it was this force that spoke to him in
holy visions, and these holy visions told him of the threat of a
great evil to come, and what he was required to do. And so Jiharre
went alone and unafraid into the wildness of the Korrush and founded
Za Hara-at, Earth Five Meetings, a city of such power it stood guard
against the ancient threat." Behind
them hunkered the striped jumble of lamplit Agachire, glittering on
the steppe like a faceted jewel, packed zaggy streets smelling of
spices and ba'du, dinners charring over crackling flames, chant-songs
rising like perfumed offering smoke, the city preparing for the onset
of darkness and war. The
three rode close together, hunched over to better protect themselves
from the wind. Already Riane's legs ached from the unnatural position
sitting between the humps, for the kuomeshal was larger and wider
than any cthauros. She smacked the kuomeshal rhythmically with one
hand while holding on to Tezziq with the other. Tezziq had not moved,
had not regained consciousness, and this gnawed at Riane. The longer
the ajjan remained unconscious, the more Riane worried about her. "That's
far enough," Riane said at length. "We have to look after
Tezziq." They
heard her voice even over the wind, but failed to put up their
beat-sticks. She dug her heels into her kuomeshal's sides so that it
galloped ahead of them. Then she wheeled it abruptly around so that
it stood in the path of their beasts. They
reined in. "It
is a mistake to stop," Othnam said. "For any reason." "Especially
for an ajjan," Mehmmer sneered. "Go
on without me, then." Riane
used the beat-stick to tap the crown of her kuomeshal's head, as
Mehmmer had taught her to do, and it knelt, first on its forelegs,
then on its two pairs of hind legs. "You
know we cannot do that." Othnam gazed down at her. "I fail
to see the point." "Why
are you doing this?" Mehmmer snapped. "Because
she helped me." Riane poured some water from her skin over
Tezziq's lips and cheeks. "Because she is my friend." "She
is menne, unclean, without faith," Mehmmer said. "She
is no better than a kuorneshal." "That
is precisely how the V'ornn think of us," Riane said. "A
lower form of life, fit only for drudge work and death." "You
should not be touching her," Othnam warned. "It is
sacrilege." "Why?
I am not Ghor." "You
are the messenger of Jiharre," Mehmmer said. "In
your lore the Prophet Jiharre challenged the beliefs and biases of
his own people. This you told me yourself. You said it yourself. If
you cannot rid yourself of the enmity, then you are doomed to die in
the Gyrgon's game." "Perrnodt
is your priority," Othnam said. "We will wait fifteen
minutes, no more." Hunched
over the body, Riane whispered, "Tezziq, Tezziq. You must wake
up now." She slapped the ajjan on both cheeks, and Tezziq's eyes
fluttered open. "Ah, there, that's better," Riane said,
smiling. "Here. More water." As
Tezziq drank, Riane said, "I am sorry. I should have protected
you better than I did. I do not know what I would have done without
your friendship." She gestured at the shadows that crept
eastward across the undulating Korrush. "But here you are,
outside the palace, free from your prison." Looking
slowly around her. Tezziq began to silently weep. "Ah, Riane, wa
tarabibi, I have no words to thank you adequately." Then,
abruptly, her head came up and she startled. "Who are those?
Ghor?" Her
voice was thin and trembling. "They will kill me the first
chance they get." "They
are Mehmmer and Othnam, brother and sister, and yes, they are Ghor,
but they have pledged that you are safe with them." Tezziq
pressed herself into Riane's arms and shook her head. "No, no.
You do not know the Ghor. They are fanatics. They will lie and cheat
if it serves their purpose. This I have heard often from members of
my own family before I was brought here." Riane
stroked the top of the ajjan's head. "They will not harm you,
Tezziq. This I swear." "I
believe you, wa tarabibi," Tezziq whispered in her ear.
"All the same, you would do well to keep a close eye on them." "I
will," Riane promised. She drew Tezziq up beside her, gave her a
handful of dried fruit. "Eat this slowly while we ride. Do you
think you are strong enough?" "Strong
enough to do whatever you ask of me," Tezziq said with a wan
smile. Then, giving Othnam and Mehmmer a baleful glare, she climbed
aboard the kuomeshal.
18 Trap
You
are certain this is the place," Line-General Lokck Werrrent
said. "So many of these Bashkir strongholds look alike."
Marethyn, standing in front of the looming facade of the warenouse,
said, "This is the one." Across
the darkling scrim of the sky a Khagggun hoverpod hummed. There came
the muted green flash of expelled ions as it banked south. Lights
along Harborside were already on, the acid-bright aurora given off by
the Kalllistotos floodlights hovered overhead, a vast bloodletting
scar. "Can
you show me where?" the Line-General asked her. "Inside, I
mean." Marethyn
nodded. Her hearts beat fast, and she conjured up images of Tettsie,
of riding cthauros, of the red-and-gold woods in autumn. She was
terrified and exhilarated. It was an effort to keep herself from
trembling. The
Line-General used his ion cannon to defeat the lock. Then he
gestured, and together they went into the interior. He was careful
not to touch her or even to approach her too closely. "I
want to reiterate that you are not under suspicion," he said in
his gruff but not unpleasant manner. "All that is required of
you is the truth." "You
made that perfectly clear at the outset," Marethyn said, her
face a perfect mask. "But I thank you for your kindness." He
grunted, switched on a portable photon torch. Echoes of their
footfalls accompanied their progress down cramped aisles bordered on
either side by neat stacks of crates, barrels, and boxes. The air was
dense with dust and packing particles, which tickled the back of
Marethyn's throat. She coughed into her hand, relieving some of the
almost unbearable tension. Line-General
Werrrent's photon torch picked out the Consortium crest stamped onto
each box, barrel, and crate and he paused for a moment. "Again I
will ask. You are certain this is the place?" he said sternly,
as if to a small child whose grasp on the language was perhaps
incomplete. "Positive,"
she said in her most authoritative tone, and led him through the
darkened interior up to the small, spare chamber in which she and
Sornnn had made love. The door was closed and locked. It took
Line-General Werrrent some moments to defeat this lock. With a
contemptuous gesture, he kicked the door open. He
stared into the darkness for a moment, his hand in front of
Mar-ethyn's waist to keep her from going inside until he had a chance
to look around. Using his photon torch, he quickly found the fusion
lamps and powered them on. The chamber looked much the way she
remembered it, the magnificent carpet, the shelves filled with
Kundalan artifacts, the long boxes perched in one corner. There were
no flowers in the vase, in fact, no vase at all on the small table. "If
I might ask," he said, "what were you doing here?"
Seeing the blood rush to her cheeks, he added, "Come, come, my
dear, I am a V'ornn of the Cosmos. I have heard it all." "I
am thinking of my brother," Marethyn said. "If he should
find out that Sornnn SaTrryn and I—" "You
have my word that he shall remain ignorant of your private life. Are
you saying—" "It
was late at night. We were both slightly drunk, I suppose. In any
event, he swung me around and kissed me so hard I felt it all the way
down to my toes. We . . . there wasn't anyplace else around. We
happened to be standing right out front, and we were giggling a
little, like children, and I guess we thought, well, why not?" Line-General
Werrrent nodded. "A little added piquancy, eh?" By
imagining the Line-General catching a sight of her naked, she made
herself blush. "I really wouldn't want to say." "I
understand perfectly. You come here often, do you?" "Oh,
no. Just that once. I think we were embarrassed afterward. We are
adults, after all." "A
wise decision." The Line-General began his reconnoiter. "Stay
right here," he warned, "and be sure you touch nothing." Crossing
to the desk, he rummaged around, pulled open the drawers and emptied
them, rummaged some more, all without finding anything. He took
another look around, noticed the two long boxes, standing on end.
Approaching them carefully, he stared at them for a long time. "Khagggun
alloy," he muttered. "What
does that mean?" He
ignored her, put one hand on the top box, set it carefully down on
the dusty floor. Taking out his ion dagger, he pried open the lid.
Marethyn took a couple of steps into the chamber to take a look over
his shoulder. She saw, packed in a neat row, six new ion cannons. Line-General
Werrrent took one up, turned it over, peered at the serial number
imprinted to the underside of the lower barrel. He did the same with
each of them in turn. Then he opened the second box. He donned a
communicator that wrapped around the back of his head. It had a thin
armature that ended in a crystal ocellus four centimeters from his
left eye. He opened a photonic channel and spoke a lot of gibberish,
identifying himself by code, Marethyn surmised. "I
am in the sixth warehouse on—" He turned to Marethyn. "Aquasius
Street," she said weakly. "Right.
Aquasius Street." He turned back to the ion cannons. "Give
me a readout on the war materiel stolen in the last six months.
Serial numbers. Give me only ion cannons, handheld." He
waited a moment, then the readout appeared on the ocellus in front of
his eye, magnified by the lens of the ocellus. "Right.
Get a pack in full battle armor over here right away." He rose,
unwound the communicator from his skull. "This is Khagggun
property, stolen two weeks ago," he said, apparently to
Marethyn. Returning to the desk, he took out his shock-sword and
sliced through it. He did this over and over until the desk lay in
ruins. "What.
. . what are you looking for?" Marethyn asked. It was easy to
sound frightened. "A
ledger of some kind, of transactions with the Resistance." He
took a deep breath, looked around again. Then he swung his
shock-sword in a horizontal arc and a line of the Korrush artifacts
leapt off the lowest shelf and shattered on the floor, He used the
toe of his boot to push aside the shards. Then he went to the next
shelf up. He repeated the process again and again. Marethyn
saw the stone carving of the fulkaan fly into the air and smash open.
She saw something bounce once, only to be hidden under the carving's
powdery ruin, then the toe of Line-General Werrrent's boot flicked
out and there it lay, an accusatory finger gleaming in the cool
fusion lamplight, the incriminating data-decagon. Are
you certain this is necessary?" Konara Inggres tried to keep the
apprehension out of her voice as Konara Lyystra led her to the door
to what had been Konara Urdma's office. "Mother
wishes to see you," Konara Lyystra said with a firm hand on her
elbow. "You aren't thinking of disobeying her, are you?" "Of
course not." Konara Inggres turned around, playing for time.
"But can't you tell me why she wishes to see me? I mean, I have
so much to do and so little time—" "There
is always time for Mother." Konara
Lyystra's lacquered smile was like a knife thrust in her belly. Where
was her friend? she wondered for the thousandth time. What had been
done to her? "Lyystra,
listen to me." "Yes?" Konara
Inggres bit her tongue. Even her urgent tone could not wipe the
placid expression off her friend's face. She could do ought but to
give in to Konara Lyystra's gentle push. She opened the office door
and, with an escalating sense of dread, walked into the office. Giyan
looked up as she came in. Konara Inggres could feel Konara Lyystra as
close behind her as if she were a V'ornn Khagggun guarding a
prisoner. "Ah,
Konara Inggres." With the warmest of smiles lighting her face,
Giyan rose from behind the desk and hurried to greet her visitor. "So
good of you to come." She took Konara Inggres' hand between her
own. It was curiously cold and dry, like a marsh lizard's skin. "Sit
down and we shall share icewine." Konara
Inggres perched on the edge of a chair while Konara Lyystra poured
two goblets of icewine. When she had delivered them, Giyan dismissed
her just as if she had been a rank acolyte. Giyan
handed Konara Inggres a goblet, then drew up another chair opposite
her. She sat so close their knees fairly touched. "So,"
Giyan said, "how are we coping with the recent changes at the
abbey?" She
had the disconcerting habit of asking a question without the proper
inflection, so that it was often difficult to know whether she was
soliciting an answer or simply making a comment. "All right ...
I guess." "There
is no shame in admitting the difficulties." Giyan leaned briefly
forward, patted her knee reassuringly. "My return. Konara
Bartta's resurrection. Konara Urdma's untimely death. Any one of
these changes would be disconcerting. But all three taken at once."
She clucked her tongue against the roof of her mouth, an unfortunate
sound like insects rubbing their hind legs together. "It
has all been a little hard to fathom." "Of
course it has." Giyan patted her knee again. "I am glad you
can admit it. It is evidence that we are all Kundalan." Was
there a sarcastic gleam in Giyan's eyes, Konara Inggres wondered, or
was she being paranoid? "Konara
Lyystra tells me that you have been a trifle, oh, how did she put it
again, cool, yes, that was it, cool." "I don't
think—" "Oh,
my dear, she is merely protective of you. And worried."
"Worried?" "Certainly.
The strain of the changes." Now Giyan's voice changed a shade.
"And of keeping your secrets." "Secrets?"
A thin coating of ice seemed to have formed in Konara Inggres' belly. "Konara
Lyystra was candid enough to confide in me your dislike of Konara
Bartta, of the changes at work in the abbey curriculum." Staring
into those cold whistleflower-blue eyes, Konara Inggres could do
nothing but bite her lip in an agony of terror. "Never
you fear." Giyan winked at her. "The curriculum is about to
get a complete overhaul. I could not agree with you more. Disgraceful
what Konara Mossa and Bartta took it into their heads to do. I am
about to have a talk with my sister. I warrant it will not be a
pleasant conversation, but she will soon see the error of her ways."
Giyan's smile seemed a meter wide. "I can be very persuasive
when I set my mind to it, let me tell you." She sighed. "And
between you and me it was a blessing that the Great Goddess Miina
took Konara Urdma so precipitously. I would have had to strip her of
her office, you see, and that would have been more demoralizing to
the abbey than the quick and merciful death accorded her. "So."
She put Tier hands together. "Are there any questions you need
answered?" Konara
Inggres shook her head. She was now in the grip of the fiercest
terror she had ever known. It was all she could do to keep her teeth
from chattering. She mumbled her good-byes as they rose. Her legs
were stiff as tree trunks as she walked haltingly to the door, and
when she passed beyond the threshold she broke out into a cold sweat. That
night Rada saw the regent's assigned Haaar-kyut saunter into Blood
Tide. Though he was a First-Captain, he was dressed in a
Third-Marshal's uniform. He pushed his way through the noisy throng
and sat alone at a table. Rada waved away a waitress, went and took
his order herself, When she returned with his goblet of mead, there
was a data-decagon at the bottom. He
was very good, he did not make any sign that he knew her. His eyes
did not follow her while she moved about the smoky room. And when she
set the goblet of her best sweet mead in front of him he smiled up
into her face. She
had heard some interesting gossip, and she had spent considerable
time deciding what to put on the data-decagon and how exactly to
phrase it. One item concerned the proliferation of laaga, the
Sar-akkon drug, among the youth of the city. Another the unrest
building among the Khagggun who had not yet attained Great Caste
status. There had even been an incident involving one of the
Genomatekks who worked at Receiving Spirit who was attacked by a
number of unidentified assailants. The hot rumor was they were
Khagggun. Kurgan had asked her to find out what she could regarding
the Portals, but there had been nothing to report. She had even asked
a number of acquaintances and contacts without any success. At the
last minute, she decided not to include her lack of success in this
area. This was an interesting role for her to be playing, and, much
to her surprise, she had warmed to it quickly. Besides the relief she
felt at no longer having a debt to pay off, she experienced a little
thrill of excitement at the level of clandestine service. She
watched from across the tavern as the Haaar-kyut drained his goblet
and retrieved the data-decagon from his mouth. Then he paid his bill
and left. She
went into the kitchen to make sure the orders were being filled
properly. Steam rose from a multitude of black pots on the gigantic
stove. A waft of pungent aromas tickled her nose. Passing behind her
cooks, she took a sample from each bubbling pot, nodding approvingly
after each taste. She paused behind one of her cooks and tapped him
once on the back. He finished adding pepper to a stewpot, barked an
order at his assistant, and, untying his apron, disappeared out the
rear door. Satisfied
with her night's work, she returned to the riotous bedlam of the
tavern proper just in time to watch a fight develop between a huge
Mesagggun and a hulking Sarakkon with a skull full of hideous
tattoos. She waited a moment before wading in to break it up. It was
a pity, really. The V'ornn was bigger, but her money would have been
on the Sarakkon.
19 Koura
High
clouds streaked the vast sky, endless gossamer streamers caught up in
the thermal currents. Others, thicker darker lower, crouched on the
rim of the southern horizon, perhaps already ridding themselves of
their turbulent moisture. And
so they continued their journey northward. Othnam had said that the
Ghor were guarding Perrnodt at a sacred site of prayer and vigil some
twenty kilometers north of Agachire. By Riane's estimation they were
almost there, though the peculiar optical properties of the Korrush
made such judgments notoriously inaccurate. Up
ahead, she could see a ring of thornbeam trees, gnarled and greyish
black, their branches tasseled with fruit, their looping roots dug
down deep in the barren soil to find water and nourishment. And she
was reminded of the ring of thorned sysal trees within which, she had
been told, Nith Sahor had lost his life. But if that were so, then
where had he regained it? Another in an endless parade of Gyrgon
enigmas. Othnam
raised his arm, slowing them as they approached the natural circle of
thornbeams. And then he stopped altogether and the four of them sat
side by side, silent, breathless. At
length, Riane said very softly, "What is it?" "I
do not know," Othnam said. "There
is no lymmnal," Mehmmer said, and her nostrils flared. "No
lookout. No Ghorvish brethren come to meet us." Riane's
stomach turned over as she saw brother and sister draw their
scimitars and spur their kuomeshals on with their beat-sticks. She
followed suit, and soon enough they were moving through the stand of
trees. Mehmmer
gasped and Othnam muttered, "Ah, good Jiharre, no." There,
arrayed on the north side of the circle, four Ghor bodies had been
strung up, hanging by their necks from the highest branches. At their
feet, two lymmnal lay slaughtered and disemboweled. "Paddii!"
Riane cried. The
kuomeshals snorted and shook their great ugly heads, and it proved
difficult to get them near the dangling bodies. Othnam started on the
left, Mehmmer went to the center. Riane, for her part, urged her
mount to the rightmost body and, swinging her dagger, cut Paddii
down. "All
dead," Othnam said. "Except
Perrnodt." Mehmmer wheeled her kuomeshal around. "She has
vanished." Othnam
had come up beside them. "Who perpetrated this outrage,
Makktuub's guards?" "No."
Mehmmer shook her head. "Think, my brother. Think of the spy we
executed not far from here." "The
Jeni Cerii have revenged themselves upon us. They murdered our
brethren and have kidnapped Perrnodt." "But
where have they taken her?" Riane said, turning this way and
that in the saddle. Silence.
Sun burning low in the sky, a copse of clouds, high and distant and
still, baring the blank, uncaring face of the world. Somewhere it was
raining, but here black carrion birds circled, effortlessly switching
from thermal to thermal, patient as the Korrush itself. While
Tezziq watched with a closed face, Riane helped Othnam and Mehmmer
dig a three-meter-wide depression in the reddish dirt. Then she and
Othnam piled the bodies—Ghor and faithful lymmnal alike—in
the center of the roughly circular depression while Mehmmer sang the
death prayer in her clear strong voice. They would not have allowed
Tezziq to help them even had she been inclined to, which clearly she
wasn't. They did not allow her anywhere near the burial circle, but
ordered her to stay with the kuomeshals. This she did without
protest, turning her back, staring at the dark and brooding Djenn
Marre, thinking perhaps of home, a place she had believed she would
never see again. Mehmmer
continued singing the death chant, and Riane watched numbly as Othnam
spread a line of a clear viscous substance on each of the bodies.
Then, using a flint-box, he struck a spark and, at once, flames
licked upward. He stepped back, joining Mehmmer in mid-stanza. Riane
listened to the words rolling off their tongues and thought of Paddii
joyfully holding his newborn, Paddii running beside the kuomeshal on
which she had found temporary shelter, Paddii giving her back her
dagger, Paddii coming out here from Agachire to tell the Ghor
guarding Perrnodt that she and Othnam and Mehmmer would be detained.
Paddii had been killed because of her. Because of her desire to
rescue Tezziq and Nith Sahor's secret. She knew she had done the
right thing, but this could be no solace for Paddii or his family,
and so she said a prayer of her own, a small thing, begging the
forgiveness of the Goddess Miina. And she made herself believe that
the flames heard the prayers for the spirits so recently departed
even as they cleansed and consumed the husks of the chosen. While
the smoke wound its way toward the heavens, they spoke quickly and
carefully, as if the very air they breathed was alive with malignant
force. "The
situation has now changed," Othnam said. "We must return to
get reinforcements." "What
about Perrnodt?" Riane said. No
one uttered a word. Riane
went over to the thornbeams under which the Ghor had been strung up.
Pointing due west, she said, "What lies that way?" Mehmmer
shrugged. "Nothing but the wild." "Unless
you count the in 'adim, a series of low-lying washes." "Dangerous,
too," Mehmmer said. "The bottom looks dry, but often it's
only a crust covering deep quicksand pits. No one goes there." "What
of Perrnodt?" Riane said. "Will they kill her? Take her
back to their territory and imprison her? Hold her for ransom?
Torture and rape her?" "Who
can know?" Mehmmer shook her head sadly. "We are not Jeni
Cerii." Riane
looked directly at Tezziq, who still had her back to them. "Tezziq,"
she said softly. Tezziq
turned around to face them. "What
will they do to her?" "Why
are you asking her?" Mehmmer said, alarmed. "All
she is intimate with," Othnam said, "is Makktuub's member." "Tezziq,"
Riane said, ignoring them both, "do you know?" "Even
if I did"—Tezziq's eyes blazed at Mehmmer and Othnam—
"Why should I tell you?" "Because
I am asking." "This
is nonsense," Othnam said. "We
are wasting precious time," Mehmmer said. Riane
walked slowly toward Tezziq. "Would you knowingly cause the
death of another?" At
last, Tezziq's gaze fell upon Riane. "You know I would not." "Perrnodt
is not Ghor. But even if she were, it makes no difference." "It
makes a great deal of difference!" "Why?" "Because
the Ghor—" Tezziq gave the brother and sister a quick
glance as she lowered her voice. "They are evil, I have told
you. The stories I have heard—" "Are
just that," Riane said. "It was Mehmmer and Othnam who
helped me escape from Makktuub's palace." "In
exchange for what?" "Nothing.
They have asked me for nothing." She
turned to them, and said, "Is this true? Your motives were
absolutely pure in helping Riane to escape from the haanjhala?" Brother
and sister exchanged a quick telling glance. "Of
course," Mehmmer said. "No."
Othnam took a step forward. "It is not, strictly speaking, the
truth." "Brother!" "There!"
Tezziq said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?" "Let
him speak," Riane said. To Othnam she said, "I once asked
you why you were helping me. Was your answer a lie?" "No.
Neither was it the entire truth." Othnam sighed. "The whole
truth is we wanted—" "Makktuub
had our parents executed," Mehmmer said quickly and angrily.
"Because they stayed true to our faith, they would not
compromise themselves, they would not comply with his order." "Makktuub
called it a misstep," Riane said. "It
is always thus. The executioner is free to couch the awful truth in
euphemisms, while the poor victims are silenced." Othnam nodded.
"In any event, it was a fatal decision." "While
we have pledged ourselves to be more pragmatic in order to keep the
peace between Ghor and the kapudaan," Mehmmer said, "still
we felt a desire to take our measure of revenge against him." "To
take you back from him," Mehmmer said, "simply because he
desired you." "In
fact, I do not believe that it was Makktuub who wanted to imprison
me," Riane said, thinking of how uncomfortable the kapudaan had
been on the terrace. "It was the Gyrgon, Nith Settt. He had
begun to question me about Perrnodt before I managed to escape. She
seems to be the reason he was so interested in me." "What
about her?" Othnam began. "We
shall have to ask her," Riane said, "when we find her." "If
you find her," Tezziq said. "As
Othnam has said, we must make all haste back to the Ghor encampment
to recruit reinforcements," Mehmmer said. "If
you do that, Perrnodt will surely die." They
all turned to their attention to Tezziq. Riane
found her tongue first. "What do you mean?" "If
we do not find her soon, they will kill her," Tezziq said. Mehmmer
snorted. "How could you possibly know such a thing?" "I
am Jeni Cerii," Tezziq said. Mehmmer
fell silent. Riane could see that Othnam was a little bit in shock. "Tell
us what you know, Tezziq," Riane said gently. "Please." "The
ir'adim, that is where they will have taken her," she
said. "Why
there particularly?" Tezziq
let out a slow controlled breath. "The Jeni Cerii use the
ir'adim as a place to hide, to stage raids against your tribe.
If Perrnodt is still alive, that is where we will find her." Toward
sundown, Olnnn returned to the spice market. He was without armor. He
had a small backpack strapped to his back. Ever since his meeting at
Spice Jaxx's with Lokck Werrrent he had been haunted by something the
Line-General had said. You cannot imagine how many Resistance we
have lost in this warren. They come here to disappear; it is a
repository of the rotten, the subversive, and the disaffected. With
furtive glances, a trio of Kundalan servants hurried by. A hunchback
in tattered robes hovered near a cornice, watching the mounds of
spices for his chance to cut and run, A Kundalan female with an evil
and withered face eyed him warily as she took her purchases. A fat
merchant, momentarily idle, did the same, wondering doubtless why the
Star-Admiral was taking his leisure here. Which one of these vermin
he needed to speak with—the rotten, the subversive, or the
disaffected—was at the moment unclear to him. All he was
certain of was that if he was ever going to find the fugitives, he
needed to know where they were going. To do that he needed to know
what they were looking for. He needed, therefore, to plumb the depths
of the sewer running beneath Axis Tyr. He
could think of no better place to start than here. Choosing
an outside table at Spice Jaxx's, he ordered two tankards of warm
ten-spice mead. He watched as sacks of fragrant gowit cinnamon were
delivered to the merchant in the stall next door. The
trouble was he lacked the skills to talk to those outside the
Khagggun Caste. To his credit he knew that. What was required was a
guide. He wished he could ask Malistra for advice, or maybe a
spell-casting to set him on the right path. But she was dead, and not
even her Kundalan sorcery could bring her back. But thinking of her
had put him in mind of another female. She was not Kundalan, but she
was acquainted with many. And
here she came, bareheaded, diademed, glowering between her escort of
two of Olnnn's own Khagggun. "I
trust you like ten-spice mead," he said when they had brought
her to a halt before his table. "I
like it well enough," Rada said, sitting down at his invitation.
She watched him dismiss the escorts. "Are you certain that you
can trust me to be alone with you, Star-Admiral?" "Let
us not get off on the wrong foot," he said as amiably as he was
able. "Too
late for that," she said shortly. "You had me marched out
of Blood Tide like a common criminal." "With
your head bared you look like a common criminal. Or a Looorm." "This
is how I choose to look." "Not
when you are with me. Pretend you are a decent Tuskugggun. Raise your
sifeyn." She
put her hands to her shoulders, slipped the gauzy cowl over her
gleaming oiled skull. He
smiled. "Much better." He spoke to her as if she were a
wayward child. "Now go ahead. Drink. I wish you to partake of my
hospitality." Rada
engaged him with her eyes. He
shrugged. "As you wish." "Nothing
today is as I wish." She wore robes dark as a two-day bruise.
Her beauty burst from this unlovely color like a cornflower rises
from black dirt. "You have a harsh sense of hospitality,
Star-Admiral." "I
am Khagggun. Everything about me is harsh." He shrugged. "What
I know is war." "And
killing." "War
is killing." "You
might as well be speaking an alien language." He
smiled again. "Then we will not speak of war." Rada
took a sip of her mead. "That would please me." Out
in the market, the hunchback found his opening, swiped a handful of
gowit cinnamon, and dashed off. Olnnn raised his hand and one of his
Khagggun appeared from out of the teeming throng, caught the
hunchback by the scruff of his filthy robes, dragging him back to the
spice stall. Rada,
seeing what had happened, said, "Nothing is too insignificant
for your attention." "The
law was broken. The criminal must be punished." "Such
a petty infraction. Such a poor criminal." "Tell
me," he said, "of what use is the law if it is not enforced
absolutely?" "Of
what use is a Star-Admiral," she replied, "who applies the
law blindly?" He
pushed his own tankard aside. "I require your assistance." "So
much for small talk." He
was doing his best to ignore her sarcasm, but he wondered whether he
put up with it because of how beautiful she was. It was instructive
seeing her away from the grim and grimy lamplight of her nighttime
tavern. If not for her thorny mouth, he might admit that he was moved
by her comeliness. "I
am in need of a guide," he persevered. "Indeed.
And what exactly do you need a guide for, Star-Admiral?" "I
am looking for a Kundalan sorceress." She laughed. He
regarded her with an unhealthy mixture of lust and contempt. "As
a Khagggun, I know I will never find one on my own. I know there are
very few left on Kundala." She
pursed her lips as if deep in thought. "I believe we had
something to do with that." "We
are blamed for all the Kundalan's ills," Olnnn said
dismissively. "Who
else is to blame?" "Why,
the Kundalan themselves. They were well along on the slippery slope
of corruption long before we arrived." Rada
finished her mead. "Why should I agree to be your guide?" "I
am ordering it." "And
if I should refuse?" "Don't." This
was all he said, but his reply sent a chill down her spine. She well
knew the stories about this new Star-Admiral, and was inclined to
believe most of them. Her tough, bantering replies masked her
stone-cold fear of him. It angered her that he could elicit such a
shameful response in her. She felt the heel of his boot at the back
of her neck, she tasted the dirt at her feet, and she nearly wept
with the injustice of it. She
sought to cover her weakness with a straightforward question. "Tell
me, Star-Admiral, what is it you wish to ask a sorceress?" "I
need her to read some passages in a couple of books." She
stared at him as a way of screwing up her courage. "The
fugitives are searching for something," he added. "I
believe the only way to trap them is to find out what they are
looking for." "If
we can find one." "Don't
tell me a sorceress has never walked into Blood Tide. You will find
her." His
eyes were fever-bright, and again she felt herself grow frightened.
She clasped her hands between her legs to stop them from trembling. "What
makes you think a sorceress will answer you truthfully?" "You
will tell me that, Rada." They
came quartering out of the northeast, Khagggun mounted on cthauros.
There were five of them, not so many, Sornnn thought, but more than
enough. The three First-Marshals had their ion cannons drawn. Sornnn
turned to the rather rotund figure of Bronnn Pallln. He had accepted
Tallin's invitation to go night-hunting for claiwen, large,
six-legged predators that could live as easily underwater as on land,
whose natural habitat was the Great Phosphorus Swamp. "Line-General
Lokck Werrrent himself," Sornnn said. "What is this all
about, Bronnn Pallln, do you know?" Bronnn
Pallln shrugged, acting stupider than he looked. "Hold
there!" Line-General Lokck Werrrent called. "Prepare to be
questioned." "Is
this how you speak to the Prime Factor?" Sornnn called. "What
mean you, Line-General, to intercept us in the dead of night?" Line-General
Lokck Werrrent reined in his cthauros as he came within six meters of
Sornnn and Pallln. "I
might ask you what you are about in this wilderness at this late
hour." "Your
concern for our safety is admirable, Line-General," Bronnn
Pallln said rather jovially. "If you must know, we are hunting
claiwen, though N'Luuura knows with all this clatter I doubt there's
a beast within ten kilometers of here." Line-General
Lokck Werrrent did not respond. Instead, he held out his hand. In it
was the data-decagon he had discovered in the secret warehouse
chamber. "Here is evidence, hard and irrefutable." The
Line-General held up the crystal so that its facets caught the
moonslight. "A careful accounting of every theft of Khagggun war
materiel for the past year and the subsequent sale of said war
materiel to the Kundalan Resistance. These are the gravest offenses
against V'ornndom, which demand the ultimate punishment. What say you
in your defense, Bronnn Pallln?" "Me?"
Bronnn Pallln laughed, a high eerie sound with a note of disbelief.
"But surely you mean Sornnn SaTrryn, Line-General." "I
mean you, sir." "But
the warehouse—" "The
stolen weaponry was found in a secret chamber in your warehouse,
Bronnn Pallln, as was this ledger of your traitorous transactions." "This
. . . this must be ... it has to be a mistake." Bronnn Pallln's
eyes were as big around as plates. "Which warehouse, if you
please?" "The
sixth one on Aquasius Street," the Line-General said. "These
days, save for temporary storage overruns, the warehouse is rarely
visited by my Consortium," "Which
makes it a perfect venue for your traitorous activities,"
Line-General Werrrent said cannily. "But.
. . but Sornnn SaTrryn is the one with obvious leanings to the
Korrush, while I have no such—" "Do
you take me for a fool, Bronnn Pallln? It would be sheer folly for a
traitor to publicly announce his bias. Pending the regent's tribunal,
you are now considered an enemy of the state." At his gesture,
two of the Khagggun drew up, one on either side of Bronnn Pallln's
cthauros. One leaned over, took the reins from his shaking hands. "I
gave you information." An increasing note of desperation had
entered Bronnn Pallln's voice. "Marethyn Stogggul and Sornnn
SaTrryn—" He turned suddenly. "You did this to me,
Sornnn SaTrryn. You set me up." "Come
now," the Line-General said without a trace of sympathy. "Sornnn
SaTrryn, will you please enlighten the traitor?" "This
is embarrassing, but Marethyn and I went a little crazy. We were
drunk and—" "Liar!"
The blood rushed to Bronnn Pallln's face, and he became so agitated
his cthauros began to snort and stamp, obliging the Khagggun on
either side to hold on to him tightly. The
Line-General put his hand on the neck of Bronnn Pallln's mount, with
one gesture calming the beast and silencing Bronnn Pallln. "Please
proceed," he said to Sornnn. "We
were in an exceedingly amorous mood," Sornnn said to Bronnn
Pallln. "I apologize for breaking into your warehouse, but it
was deserted and close at hand, and we did not think there would be
any harm in—" "This
is the most outrageous lie." "Marethyn
Stogggul corroborates his story," Line-General Werrrent said
blandly. "Who corroborates yours?" "Talk
to the Genomatekk, Jesst Vebbn. He will tell you that it was I who
hired him to find out who the traitor was." "We
have already spoken to Genomatekk Vebbn," the Line-General said,
"He came forward voluntarily and told us that you had asked him
to fabricate false evidence against the Prime Factor." "Why
that slimy little—V Bronnn Pallln roared even as he
recalled how he had so cavalierly screwed Vebbn. "It is all a
pack of lies! By N'Luuura's spiked gates, don't you see, they are
plotting against me!" "Oh,
yes, of course," the Line-General said sardonically. "Sornnn
SaTrryn, the regent's sister, Genomatekk Jesst Vebbn, they all bear
you ill will and, to boot, are plotting with the Resistance." He
shook his head. "Do you not hear how foolish you sound?" He
gestured to his complement of Khagggun. "Take him away. I will
catch up with you shortly. And if the prisoner continues his
invective, do wire his mouth shut." When
they had gone, Line-General Werrrent said, "I apologize for his
slander, Prime Factor." "Not
necessary," Sornnn said. "Professional
jealousy is a bitter tonic, eh, Prime Factor?" "Truly
poisonous," Sornnn agreed. Line-General
Werrrent shifted on his saddle. "I would ask you something." Sornnn
pulled his cthauros around. "It
is of a somewhat sensitive nature." Sornnn
was now greatly interested. "As you wish, Line-General." "We
are two patriots talking together in the fastness of the night." "I
understand completely, Line-General." "Yes.
I thought you would." Lokck Werrrent kept a tight rein on his
mount. It had scented something crawling through the swamp and
apparently wanted no part of it. "I am interested in your
opinion concerning a matter of grave importance to ... to the state."
He lowered his voice. "Do you believe the regent, Kurgan
Stogggul, wishes to continue with the program his father began to
raise Khagggun to Great Caste status?" Sornnn
studied the other's blunt and brutal face. "You want me to be
honest." "Absolutely.
Otherwise, I never would have asked." "Wennn
Stogggul felt no compunction in turning on his Star-Admiral,"
Sornnn said. "He was mad for power. From what I can see, his son
Kurgan is no different. Except I believe Kurgan Stogggul to be far
more intelligent." The
Line-General revealed none of his inner turmoil in his expression.
"Please be so kind as to continue." "Frankly,
Line-General, I never could understand why the regent would add to
the Khagggun's power. It made me wonder what he has planned for you." Lokck
Werrrent nodded formally. "I appreciate your candor." "I
fear for us." Sornnn turned his cthauros in the direction of
Axis Tyr. "I fear for us all." It
was a mean place, the walls dark with scrawled epithets, the floor I
of packed dirt. The air was rancid with refuse and urine and
indigence. Vermin crawled everywhere. Olnnn wrinkled his nose in
distaste and shook Rada by her elbow. "What
joke is this?" he rumbled. "No sorceress would live here." "If
you touch me again," she said with a slight tremor, "I
shall walk out of here, and you will not get what you want." "You
have no idea what I want." She
eyed him carefully. "If I were you, I would not make that wager,
Star-Admiral." They
stood toe to toe for a moment in a kind of mental stalemate, fear and
need weighing in equal measure while the scales tipped this way and
that, buffeted by fierce emotion. At length, Olnnn chuckled. "In
truth, I have never met a Tuskugggun like you. I don't know whether
to swat you or grab you by the waist and ..." He stopped,
recognizing that glare in her eyes. He put up his hands. "Yes,
yes. I know you that well, at least." As
they recommenced their walk through the execrable warren of hovels
deep beneath Devotion Street, he said, "Pity you were born
female. I warrant you would have made a notable warrior." "Pity
I am V'ornn." This
response brought him up short. "What do you mean?" She
turned to him. "Had I been born Kundalan, I would be a warrior." "Were
you Kundalan," he replied dryly, "chances are you would be
dead." He
heard the soft mewling of a small animal, the pad of tiny paws, but
he did not turn around. From out of an open doorway arose a sudden
gust of coughing and the sickly-sweet stench of disease. "Remind
me to have this festering sore razed." "Yes,
Star-Admiral," she said, matching his dry tone, "that is
the answer." "That
is my answer, yes. I am Khagggun." "And you are so proud of
that!" "Listen,
you." He put his face in front of hers. "Many of my
comrades have died to keep you and all you hold dear safe. How many?
So many I have lost count. But when I sleep I see them. They come to
me in my dreams and whisper their pride. It is their pride and their
heroism that have kept us from being overrun by the Centophennni." Their
eyes locked. Something beyond hatred passed between them. So
surprised was Olnnn that he drew back a pace. "This
way," Rada said, her voice slightly thickened in displaced
emotion. She
took him into a chamber almost at the end of the corridor. Though
bleak, it was less dank and noisome than the rest he had passed.
Streetlight dribbled down a shaft and through a small window high up
in a half-rotted wall. One lamp was lit, low and long-necked, of
faithfully rubbed bronze. It was apparently filled with fragrant oil
because the space was infused with a complex and spicy scent. By its
glow Olnnn could see that the chamber was free of filth and litter. A
single carpet was laid upon the floor of oversize stone squares, In
the center of this carpet sat a figure, small, spare to the point of
emaciation. It was also definitely male. Olnnn
regarded the figure with an ill-disguised disgust. "I am in need
of a sorceress," he said. "Can you tell me where—" "Rada,"
the figure said. "Why have you brought this killing engine
here?" "Forgive
me, Sagiira. I had no choice." "There
is always choice, my child." "Enough
of this." Olnnn stepped forward. "There will be serious
consequences if you do not produce the sorceress, old one." "There
are already serious consequences." Sagiira lifted an arm that
seemed so utterly devoid of flesh it might have been mummified. "You
have touched one of the sacred books of Miina." He held his head
at such an angle Olnnn could not see the eyes in his skull-like face.
"Tell me, killing engine, how does your leg feel?" Olnnn
automatically touched his ensorceled femur. "What do you mean?"
But he knew. The fizzing sensation in his bare bones had not left
him. And hadn't it begun just after he ran his finger down the page
of one of the books that lay open on the refectory table in the Abbey
of Warm Current? "Why
ask me?" Sagiira said. "When you already know?" Olnnn
glanced at Rada. "I
have done what you asked!" she said softly. "Here is the
only sorcerer I know." "But
he is male," he protested. "There are no male sorcerers." Sagiira
wagged his head. "What you do not know, killing engine." "Do
not call me that]" Olnnn snapped. "You
are what you are." Olnnn
scrabbled in his backpack, took out the book. As Sagiira shifted
slightly to take it, lamplight played briefly over his face, and
Olnnn saw that he was blind. It was as if his eyeballs had been
plucked from his head. "Were
you born blind?" he could not help himself from asking. "I
had sight once." Sagiira ran his hands over the book. "That
sense was taken away from me a long time ago." The open book lay
in his meager lap. "Do you have any idea, killing engine, what
it is like to lose your sight? No, of course you do not. You have no
conception of what sight is or can be." "Of
course I understand." "No.
You are V'ornn." Sagiira's sticklike fingers paused on a page,
tapped out a kind of rhythm. "In the time of long ago I could
see the future. That was the major portion of my sorcery. Now I am
blind in every way it means to be blind. Do you see?" He
laughed, exposing brown teeth and inflamed gums. "I saw you
coming, killing engine. I saw what you would do to us. I tried to
stop them, but they would not listen. They threatened me, and
foolishly I joined them, and for that great sin I was blinded."
He cocked his head. "You do not understand a word I am saying,
do you?" He shook his head. "The title of this book is The
Gathering of Signs. But you knew that already, didn't you? Your
bones told you. They are speaking to you, killing engine." Olnnn
stared at the sorcerer, wide-eyed. "How do you know that?"
"The spell lying in them came alive the moment you touched this
book. Did I mention that it is sacred to Miina?" "Yes you
did, Sagiira," Rada said softly. "Ah,
ah!" He wagged his head. "Age creeps through me with the
raking claws of a perwillon." He closed the book, hugged it to
his sunken chest. "Once I could read this. I had it memorized.
Now I am damaged—damaged beyond repair." "There
are fugitives I must find," Olnnn said, desperate to change the
subject. "They were looking through this book, searching for
something. What was it?" "You
must follow them north to find out," Sagiira said. "But
these fugitives should not be your concern." "One
of them almost killed me. And because of her my leg—" "Your
leg is what should concern you," Sagiira said. "Or rather
what lies beneath. The spell." His nose wrinkled. "I can
smell it." "What
spell? The skcettta left a spell?" "Not
Giyan," Sagiira said softly. "The other sorceress." "Malistra?" The
sorcerer nodded. "I
do not believe you," Olnnn said shortly. "But
you will." Oddly, Sagiira had turned his head toward Rada.
"Because you cannot stop what Malistra has planned for you." And,
indeed, Olnnn could feel the fizzing in his bones building to a
crescendo. All at once he cried out. Pain flooded the ensorceled leg,
and he collapsed onto the stone floor. "Here
it comes, killing engine. Are you ready? No, I don't suppose you
are." Olnnn
writhed in agony, rucking up the edge of the sorcerer's carpet. His
eyes bulged in their sockets, and he gasped to breathe. "No.
Even a killing engine such as you is not prepared for this." Olnnn
felt something on his leg, or in it. Yes, that was it. Inside his
femur a bulge was appearing. He watched in a kind of fascinated
horror as a copper-colored serpent squeezed through the porous layers
of his bare femur, its flat, wedge-shaped head coalescing as its body
wound itself into a tight coil. "Malistra!"
he said in a hoarse whisper. "She
was powerful, all right," Sagiira said. "I think she fooled
us all. Even her master." Olnnn
was in too much pain to try and make sense of the sorcerer's
rambling. He had more pressing problems. The
serpent, coiling and uncoiling, glittered in the lamplight. All at
once it began to hiss. Its obsidian eyes impaled Olnnn, and its
forked tongue nicked out. "Lisssten
closssley, Olnnn. If you hear my voiccce, it meansss the ssspell I
buried in the bonesss of your leg hasss been activated. You are
doubtlesss with a female. Do you care for her? And ssshe for you? I
hope so. Because now you are forever tied to her asss ssshe isss tied
to you." Out
of the corner of his eye, Olnnn saw a look of horror etched clearly
on Rada's face. "You
have never needed a female before. You do now," the serpent
continued. "Only ssshe can eassse your pain. Eventually, you may
forgo her company for asss much asss twelve Kundalan hoursss at a
time. But that isss your limit." "Why?"
Olnnn cried. "Why are you doing this to me?" "To
protect you. You have a nemesssisss. A powerful nemesssisss who
masssqueradesss asss your friend." "Kurgan
Stogggul," Olnnn said. The
serpent's forked tongue flicked out. "Given the opportunity, he
will kill you. Sssooner rather than later. I sssaw thisss in my
mind'sss eye while I wasss healing you, and I took thessse
measssures." The serpent slithered along his bones. "There
isss a very specccial power inss-side Kurgan." The serpent
reared its head, its forked tongue flicking past its lipless mouth.
"I have given you the ability to kill him, but only if you can
find it within yourssself to change." "What
are you talking about?" "All
power corruptsss, Olnnn. If I learned anything in my lifetime it isss
thisss. The bessst of intentttionsss are asss nothing to the
corruptt-tion of the ssspirit power caussses. If you kill Kurgan,
your power and pressstige will multiply a hundredfold. Asss you are
now, it will corrupt you wholly. It will consssume you. The female
will sssee that corruptt-tion doesss not dessstroy you." "How
can you know that I will not be corrupted along with him?" Rada
cried. The
serpent's flat, triangular head turned in her direction, the eyes
burning like cold flame. "What would you do with sssuch power,
female?" "Me?
I—I have no idea." The
serpent's head shot forward. "Sssurely there are grudgesss to
sssettle, enemiesss to be beheaded. You could have your pick of
meth-odsss, sssavor the momentsss of—" "What?
Mol" Rada recoiled. "You're evil. Pure evil." "You
sssee?" The serpent smiled, an unnatural expression for a
reptile. "You do not covet sssuch power, you do not wisssh it.
You will sssave him from himssself." "What?
I don't want any part of—" Having
delivered its message, the serpent was already coming apart at the
seams. Copper scales pattered to the stone floor as the thing turned
inside out. Immediately, it began to shrivel, darkening, breaking
apart and curling like ashes in high heat. Within moments, it had
vanished. "This
cannot be happening," Rada said, slightly stupefied. She turned
to the sorcerer. "It must have been an hallucination." Olnnn
gripped his leg bones. "The pain is real enough." He was
breathing hard. "You
would do well to listen to Malistra's words," Sagiira said.
"Both of you." "I
want no part of this," Olnnn said. "Nor
I," said Rada. "Foolish
talk," Sagiira said. "You are caught in the spell. There is
no alternative, no way out."
20 Twins
This
is an inferior host you have provided for me," Bartta said. Her
hands, their backs still reddened from the aftermath of her ordeal,
played over her own twisted, humped body, and her eyes blazed. "You
have done this to me on purpose!" Myggorra, the arch-daemon
inside her cried. And gestured, rather theatrically. "Look at
you—tall, golden-skinned, beautiful. Tell me you haven't given
yourself the best of it." "On
the surface it may look that way," Giyan said with a small
grimace, "but you cannot imagine how hard this host is fighting
me: In this modern age it is difficult to believe that the Kundalan
could have produced such a potent sorceress as this one." Bartta
sniffed. "You're just saying that." Giyan's
face was briefly distorted. "Would that I were, brother. It is
taking almost all my energies just to keep her pinned in Otherwhere." For
Konara Inggres, tucked rather uncomfortably into a hidden niche
behind the stone wall that housed the hearth, this curious
conversation was freighted with strange cargo. When Giyan had said,
it was a blessing that the Great Goddess Miina took Konara Urdma,
all of Konara Inggres’ fears
had crystallized, because every Ramahan knew that Miina did not take
the priestesses. When they died, one of the Five Sacred Dragons—
which one it would be depended on the individual Ramahan—took
them up in its mouth and deposited them into new bodies to be born
again. From that instant onward, Konara Inggres had known that her
suspicions had been correct. Giyan was not who she appeared to be,
and neither was Bartta. But who were they? They spoke of hosts. What
did that mean? And what did they want, why were they here? When
she had seen Bartta heading toward what had been Konara Urdma's
office, she had been seized by a terrible premonition and, abandoning
all thought of attending to her duties on the other side of the
abbey, she had whipped around the corner. The service corridor,
narrow and dingy, had thankfully been deserted, and she slipped into
the small storage area, groped in utter darkness to the far wall,
where she had depressed a camouflaged stud. A hidden door slid aside,
and she had climbed in. Curled up in the cramped space, with her
heart beating so hard she could feel it in her throat, she had put
her eyes to the peepholes. A
brief but ferocious commotion snapped Konara Inggres out of her
reverie. She put her eyes back to the peepholes in time to see
Bartta's fingers around Giyan's throat. "With you so preoccupied
I should have no trouble taking what should have been mine from the
beginning." Giyan
bellowed from deep inside her, a horrifying, blood-congealing sound,
and backhanded Bartta so hard she flew back across Konara Urdma's
office, fetching up against a stone wall. "Watch your tongue,"
she cried. "Do not forget that it was I who decided to break the
Law." She strode across the small chamber, catching the slightly
stunned Bartta up by the front of her robes, shaking her like a leaf
in a storm. "Mine was the risk and mine the reward." She
spat into Bartta's face. "Besides, you were never a match for
me, so do not entertain any vainglorious ideas." "What
about the unholy war? When will it begin?" With Bartta's servile
voice, Myggorra sought to deflect Horolaggia's towering rage. "Ah,
yes, the long-awaited war." Giyan, thus distracted, dropped her
twin, walked slowly back to Konara Urdma's desk. "One Portal
only is open, and that one just enough for us archdaemons to squeeze
through with a few chosen others in altered form. All the Portals
must be opened simultaneously for the invasion to begin in earnest." "For
that we need the Gatekeeper." Bartta rearranged the disarray of
her robes. "And his identity is still another of Miina's
mysteries." Giyan's
whistleflower-blue eyes glittered. "This is not a question for
you to either ask or answer." Bartta
bristled. "Am I not deemed worthy?" "All
of us have a role to play," Giyan said simply. "This is the
strength of the grand plan." Bartta
stamped her foot. "It is a way to keep me in line." Giyan
regarded her for a moment, then she rose and, laughing, clapped her
sister on her round back. "It is always about you, isn't it?" The
laughter vanished without a trace. "That is why you obey me and
not the other way around." Konara
Inggres tried to adjust her contorted body into a position marginally
less painful. This clever little spy niche had been built by Konara
Mossa in the days when she had reigned supreme at the Abbey of
Floating White. To Konara Inggres' knowledge no one knew of it save
herself and Konara Lyystra. They had stumbled upon it quite by
accident and, climbing into its interior, it had been clear by signs
of disuse that even Konara Bartta had not known of its existence. Konara
Inggres' attention was drawn back into the office by the sound of a
knock on the door. When Giyan said, "Enter," Konara Lyystra
appeared. She was glassy-eyed, and she moved with that peculiar
stiffness Konara Inggres had noted with a mixture of dismay and
apprehension. "The
mirrors," Konara Lyystra said, "have all been destroyed." "Well,
that is a relief," Giyan said. "Did you bring the recruit?" "Yes,
Mother." In
her tiny niche, Konara Inggres stiffened, her heart pounding
painfully in her breast. "I
have brought Konara Tyyr." Giyan
nodded, but as Konara Lyystra turned to go, she said, "Konara
Inggres may not be a candidate. If this proves true, she will, like
Konara Urdma, have to be eliminated." Konara
Inggres jammed her fist into her mouth in order to stifle a scream. "I
believe I can bring her around," Konara Lyystra said. "Do
not allow your host's friendship with her to influence your
judgment," Konara Bartta said. "All the konara must—" Giyan
held up a hand, and Bartta fell into a sullen silence. "You
have one week. No more," Giyan said to Konara Lyystra. "Is
that understood?" "Yes,
Mother." "Now.
Bring in the recruit." Konara
Lyystra disappeared from view and Giyan drew forth from behind the
desk a black serpentskin satchel, from which she took a small
egg-shaped object. Then she did a very odd thing. She placed the
object onto the center of her tongue. Just before it disappeared into
her mouth Konara Inggres was certain she saw the egg-shaped object
sprout ten short legs. A
moment later, the two konara appeared in the doorway. Konara Tyyr was
white-faced and trembling, but she allowed Konara Lyystra to steer
her in front of Giyan. "Good
evening, Konara Tyyr," Giyan said, smiling. "Good
evening, Mother." "Has
Konara Lyystra told you why you are here?" "Yes,
Mother." "Then
tell me." "You
must test me to see whether I am able to reach a higher state of
consciousness." "So
that you may be closer to the Great Goddess Miina." Konara
Tyyr stared into Giyan's eyes. "You
do this of your own free will?" "Yes,
Mother." Giyan
nodded and briefly took Konara Tyyr's hands in her own. "You are
ice-cold, my dear. We must warm you up." So saying, she grasped
Konara Tyyr by the shoulders and kissed her hard on the lips. Konara
Inggres twisted around so she could see more clearly, so she could
see Giyan's lips open, so she could see the passage of the ten-legged
egg-shaped thing from Giyan's tongue to the other's mouth. Immediately
thereafter, Konara Tyyr's body began to thrash and convulse, obliging
Giyan to hold on to her so tightly the marks of her ringers became
weals. It was over so suddenly that for a moment Konara Inggres began
to doubt what she had seen. Then the glassy-eyed expression she saw
in Konara Lyystra reproduced itself on Konara Tyyr. "You
are arrived," Giyan said curiously. And
Konara Tyyr nodded. "I am free." "Not
quite yet," Giyan said softly, as Konara Lyystra guided Konara
Tyyr to the door. "Have a care. Avoid excessive talk with the
other Ramahan, and if you should see a mirror, destroy it rather than
pass before it. Is this clear?" "It
is." "Konara
Lyystra will see to your full orientation." Curled
inside the spy niche, Konara Inggres was drenched in cold sweat. What
profane ritual had she been witness to? she wondered. Who
was this Giyan? Clearly she was not simply the young Ramahan
priestess who had been banished from the abbey over twenty years ago.
In the interim, she had been the consort of the former regent of Axis
Tyr before his death. Now she was a fugitive of the new V'ornn
regime. But none of this explained her bizarre behavior. "Now
to work," Giyan was saying. "We must map out our changes
for the Ramahan syllabus. Until we have trained our cadre of konara,
you and I, dear Bartta, shall teach all classes, which we will hold
in the main chapel under the eyes of the image of the Goddess Miina." She
chortled, a sound that all but froze Konara Inggres' blood. For it
was a sound so harsh and evil it was difficult to believe that any
Kundalan could ever utter it. "And
what shall we teach, do you think, Bartta? In Healing Arts we shall
teach the power to instill fear. In Herbology, we shall instruct our
charges to concoct poisons, tasteless, odorless, utterly
undetectable. In Oracular History, we shall preach the wisdom of our
father who art in hiding." Konara
Inggres was weeping. She could not make sense of any of this, but one
thing she did know was that she was witnessing the beginning of the
end of the Ramahan as Miina had conceived them. A despair such as she
had never known now swept through her. She felt alone, terrified,
witless. The presence of such evil here in Miina's sacred sanctum all
but paralyzed her. Her sheer proximity to Giyan and Bartta seemed to
be draining her ability to think clearly. She shivered, abruptly
cold. It was as if the very life force was being drained out of her,
and she grew even more terrified. Her
bloodless hands, pressed so hard against the intervening stone, began
to tremble and she clamped her jaw shut lest the sound of her teeth
rattling should alert Giyan and Bartta to her presence. She closed
her eyes and recited to herself the seventh prayer. O
Great Goddess of the Five Moons Who
dwells in night's divine mystery Hear
me now, Your humble servant, Who
abides by Your Laws, who is guided by Your Word. In
death, let me be taken up by Your fierce Children. Let
me feel, O Goddess, their gentle kiss. That
I may live in hope And
do Your holy bidding to the end of days. Her
face was wet with tears. She felt like a lost, motherless child. As
they headed north, the waving grasslands gave grudging way to
occasional outcroppings of rocks of an odd greenish grey hue. The
terrain began a modest rise, and quite soon the rocks, which appeared
more frequently, became boulders, then boulders that stood upon
larger boulders, the Shoulders of Jiharre, as Othnam had called them.
Thus were they forewarned that they were approaching the ir'adim. Othnam,
who was in the lead, slowed his kuomeshal's pace from a brisk trot to
a measured walk. "We
should dismount here," Tezziq said. "The kuomeshals do not
like the ir'adim and, in any event, on foot we will be able to
approach with more flexibility and stealth." Othnam
and Mehmmer exchanged a quick glance. "What
if this is just a way for her to return to her people?" Mehmmer
said pointedly. "My
sister is right," Othnam said. "Who knows what secrets of
the kapudaan and the palace she might pass on to the Jeni Cerii." "I
am not a spy," Tezziq said. "I hold no love in my heart for
Jasim, and I have no desire to return to his clutches." "She
wants to be free, nothing more," Riane said. "Freedom is
surely a goal you as Ghor must understand." Tezziq
was shaking her head. "They do not believe me. I can see it on
their faces." Riane
tapped her kuomeshal, who laboriously lowered itself to its knees.
She and Tezziq dismounted. "At some point, I think you must take
the leap of faith and accept that not all Jeni Cerii are your
enemies." "Surely
you have family you long to see again," Mehmmer said, addressing
Tezziq. "I
have lived almost my whole life in haanjhala, first Jasim's, then
Makktuub's," Tezziq replied. "I had a sister and three
brothers, but I cannot remember them. As for my parents—"
She shrugged. "It was they who sold me to Jasim when I was
eight. On the cusp of sleep, he poured into my ear many secrets. The
haanjhala became my life. Why should I remember my parents or wish to
see them again?" "Tezziq
and I are continuing on," Riane said to Othnam and Mehmmer's
closed faces. "If you decide to return to your compound now, I
will only be grateful for the help you have given me." Sister
and brother exchanged another of their charged glances. "She
is ajjan, and Jeni Cerii, to boot," Mehmmer said. "We
warned you," Othnam said. "She is your responsibility now." "May
Jiharre and the sacred fulkaan be ever with you, Riane," Mehmmer
said by way of farewell. Without
another word, they wheeled their kuomeshals around and headed back
toward Agachire. The
sky was white overhead, without perspective or limit. The ominous
massif of the Djenn Marre appeared closer than ever, the mysterious
font of the Great Rift dark with fulminating clouds. A sand-laced
wind reached them, scouring from out of the Great Voorg to the
southeast, obliging them to wrap their sinschals tighter around their
faces. "I
will miss them," Riane said. "Why?
They are Ghor." "And
so should I hate and fear you as they do because you are ajjan and
Jeni Cerii?" Tezziq
shook her head. "We are better off without them. They would
never have willingly followed my lead." Riane
tied her kuomeshal's reins around an upright rock, took a wa-terskin
and several other items out of the saddlebags, and they headed north
up the steady incline toward the ir'adim. It was not easy
going, for the usually reliable footing of the Korrush had turned to
sandy dune. Tezziq showed Riane how to walk with knees deeply bent,
leaning into the slope, then leaning slightly backward on the
downslope so as to maintain one's balance. In
this fashion, they proceeded for perhaps an hour. As they neared the
crest of the highest dune they had so far encountered, Tezziq pressed
the flat of her hand downward and, at the signal, they both dropped
to their bellies, continuing their ascent in a crablike squirm. They
paused just beneath the undulating crest of the dune, lifting their
heads cautiously until they gained a view down into the in'adim
itself. Riane
saw a series of large crescent-shaped gullies with slightly concave
crusty bottoms across which expanse the wind from out of the Great
Voorg sent skittering small snaking trails of sand. Of a
semipermanent Jeni Cerii encampment there was no evidence. They
crossed over the crest and, keeping to the dune's inner slope,
continued heading northeast,
following the sinuous spread of the in'adim. "How
far would they have taken Perrnodt?" Riane whispered. "That
depends on what they mean to do to her," Tezziq said over her
shoulder. "But I would not think very far. Certainly they would
keep her where they felt the safest, which would be here in the
in'adim." So
far as Riane could see, the in'adim was nothing but sand. No
rock, tree, blade of grass, not even a humble patch of lichen existed
on the Shoulders of Jiharre. The sand itself, when she scooped up a
handful, was coarse and rough as a rasp's crosshatched teeth, and was
a brownish grey color not unlike that of dried Kundalan blood.
Between slippage in the treacherous dune and the fact that visibility
was limited by the extreme curves of the in'adim, their
progress seemed painfully slow. They
came upon the first Jeni Cerii so quickly that Tezziq was obliged to
push Riane onto her stomach. The two of them lay half-buried in the
sand, their hearts thundering as they watched the Jeni Cerii warrior
walking up from the basinlike bottom of the in'adim. He was
heading directly toward them. Only a fortuitous hump in the side of
the dune kept them out of his sight. But that would not last long. Tezziq
was thinking the same thing, for she put her lips to Riane's ear. "We
must kill him quickly and silently. If he announces our presence to
the others, all is lost." Riane
nodded. Tezziq was right, they had no choice. She withdrew her dagger
and moved slightly in order to get herself into a more advantageous
position. The Jeni Cerii was very close, and she steeled herself for
what she had to do. She knew she would only have one chance, that she
must kill him with the first swipe before he could raise his voice in
alarm. Here he came. Her muscles tensed. She had decided to slit his
throat; that way, even if her aim was off slightly, his throat would
be so congested with blood he would not be able to make a sound. Still,
she wanted every advantage, so she waited until he was almost upon
her before she sprang. Right now, the element of surprise was a
weapon even more potent than her dagger. She drew her arm back, ready
to spring, but at the last moment something froze her. A pulse beat
in her temples, and her blood sang in her ears. She twisted backward,
out of the Jeni Cerii's path and signed for Tezziq to do the same. The
ajjan, though curious, did as Riane ordered. The Jeni Cerii went past
them, disappearing over the crest of the in'adim. Riane
scrambled back to where Tezziq lay. "What
happened?" Tezziq asked. "Why did you not kill him? He
could have found us out. It was only the sheerest good fortune that
he did not see us." "Think
so?" Riane turned and looked back down into the in'adim,
pointing. Tezziq
tensed as she saw another Jeni Cerii heading up the dune. "Do
you see?" Riane whispered. "This one is coming from the
same direction as the first one." She moved her arm, tracking
the figure. "As he comes close, pay special attention to his
feet." "His
feet? What—?" Then Tezziq saw it. "They are not
touching the sand." Sure
enough, she had discovered the oddity that had at the last moment
stayed Riane's hand. "That
is impossible." "It
would be," Riane said, "if this and the other one were
really Jeni Cerii warriors." Tezziq
shook her head. "But they are Jeni Cerii warriors." "No,"
Riane said, "they are holoimages." When she saw the
bewildered look on Tezziq's face, she added, "They are a kind of
projection, part of a Gyrgon's technomancy." "Do
you mean these things are not alive? But they look so real." "That
is the point," Riane said. "But
why are they here? What are they doing?" "For
one thing, they are meant to make us believe that Perrnodt was
abducted by the Jeni Cerii." Riane was thinking furiously, one
theory superseding another as she began to work out the trajectory of
recent events. "She
wasn't?" "No.
I have been thinking about it. I have been wondering why Perrnodt
never leaves her kashiggen. Why, if the Gyrgon Nith Settt wanted
something from her, wouldn't he go to the kashiggen himself and get
it from her? I think the only explanation is that for reasons I am
not yet able to explain he could not get to her while she was inside
the kashiggen." "So
he manufactured a situation where she would be forced out." Riane
nodded. "I believe Nith Settt realized that my escape meant the
Ghor would hurry her from her sanctuary before it was surrounded." "So
the Gyrgon followed them, killed the Ghor and abducted her." "That
is what the holoimages mean." Another
was heading toward them, and Tezziq reached out her arm as if to make
it pass through the image, but at the last moment Riane pulled her
back. "These
holoimages cannot see, of course, but they are sentinels nonetheless.
They can sense us if we come within about thirty centimeters of them.
Khagggun—the V'ornn. military caste—uses them as
off-world scouts or in extremely hostile environments." She
glanced at Tezziq as they hunkered in the lee of the dune. "Where
is the Jeni Cerii staging area?" "Approximately
five kilometers northeast of here. But you no longer believe they
were involved in abducting Perrnodt." "Exactly,"
Riane said. "That's why I think the Gyrgon will keep his
distance from the staging area." She pointed. "All the
holoimages came from the northwest. I think we should head in that
direction." "We
will have to cross the in'adim basin," Tezziq pointed
out. "No
problem," Riane said, unfurling Nith Sahor's greatcoat. But when
she wrapped it around them, nothing happened. "That's very odd."
She frowned, examining the inside of the flexible neural net. "It
won't activate." She wondered what this failure meant and at
once felt a chill in her belly. Was Nith Sahor dead? Is that why his
greatcoat was inoperative? She prayed to Miina there was another
explanation. Folding
the greatcoat away, she stared out over the innocent-looking basin.
"Can you get us across?" "I
think so," Tezziq said. Half-bent-over,
they scrambled down the steep dune, sheets of sand cascading away
from them. When they reached the edge of the basin floor, Tezziq
grabbed a handful of sand and threw it out ahead of them. The sand
sank into the basin. "What
is the quicksand like?" Riane asked. "That
depends on the currents," Tezziq replied. "It can be
viscous, like honey, or watery, like gruel." She
scooped up another handful and threw it to the left. It, too, sank.
But when she threw sand to the right, it remained. "Fill
your pockets," she instructed Riane. They heaped sand into every
pocket in their robes. "We
must be careful, but we must not tarry," Tezziq warned, "for
the in'adim is notorious for its sudden shifts, like currents
in an ocean. What may feel solid one moment can liquefy the next. So,
above all, we must keep going." So
saying, she stepped out onto the floor of the in'adim, placing
her foot alongside the tiny mound of sand. Sprinkling more sand, she
made her way forward. As Riane followed her, careful to place her
feet in the imprints Tezziq made, she saw that they were not heading
in a straight line. Rather, the solid ground took them on a
circuitous route that often seemed to backtrack on itself. It was
like being in a maze where the choice of routes had been rendered
invisible. At
least, she thought, Tezziq kept them moving, though how much real
progress they were making across the basin floor was difficult to
determine. Each time they seemed to be pressing forward they would be
stymied by a floating pond of quicksand they knew would pull them
under if they stepped into it. What made Riane triply nervous was
their obvious vulnerability out here in the flats of the in'adim.
Not only was the barren waste without shelter, but there was
nowhere to dodge a direct assault by a determined Gyrgon. The
light was changing as the afternoon waned. The flat, featureless sky
had opened up into a bowl of beautiful blue porcelain banded by
delicate ribbons of high cloud. Protected as they were by dunes on
all sides, the air was still and limp, and a curious kind of
enervating lassitude gripped Riane. Once or twice, she discovered to
her horror that her eyelids had closed, and, following blindly, she
had nearly stepped off the proscribed path made by Tezziq's
footprints. High above, several birds, large, black, featureless at
this extreme distance, effortlessly rode the thermal currents. Instantly,
like a bubble rising to the surface of a pond, another memory
appeared out of Riane's enigmatic past. She was climbing a sheer
cliff face, her clawed fingertips dug deep through snow and ice to
the frozen rock face beneath. Above, a cloudless sky of purple-blue.
Below, a dizzying vista of craggy rock, hard-packed snow veined with
glittering ice. The wind rushing through the Djenn Marre moaned in
conversation, and she spoke to it as if it were a living entity, as
if it were an old friend. And still she climbed, the thin air sawing
in and out of her lungs. Her
hands were numb as were her feet, but still she continued at a slow
but inexorable pace. The sun with its purple spot hung in the sky,
burning her skin. Ice and fire, all at once. She
heard it then, from somewhere far away, echoing through the crags,
the song of songs, and her heart leapt with elation. She had found
him, at long last. She stopped climbing, then, and waiting, hanging
in space, kilometers from everywhere. It was just her and the Djenn
Marre and the song of songs, coming closer and closer until, at last,
she heard the steady beat of its enormous wings. She turned into the
sun, squinting, and she saw its shadow approaching, and she opened
her mouth to speak the words she had spent so many years learning to
enunciate just right. . . Riane,
in the bowl of the in'adim, blinked and shook her head. What
had triggered the memory? What did it mean? What had she been
searching for amid the highest peaks of the Djenn Marre? What had she
studied so long and arduously? She shook her head again. Like all the
surfacing memories, this posed more questions than it answered. She
had the sense of looking at a vast puzzle for which she only had a
few tiles. Turning her mind away from this new mystery, she
concentrated on helping Tezziq scatter sand, on putting one foot in
front of another. But, somehow, she could not rid her mind of the
Gyrgon, who had murdered the Ghor and made off with Perrnodt. As
if he had been conjured up by her thoughts, Nith Settt appeared on
the far dune. Riane recognized the familiar high, angular helm with
its finbat ears and evil-looking horns, the menacing row of alloy
talons arching from the thick-ridged brow. "I
knew you would come, Riane," he said. "What I didn't expect
was that you would drag this Jeni Cerii skcettta with you." Riane
pulled at Tezziq's robes. "We have to move. Now." Nith
Settt raised his arm, his black-gloved hand pointing toward them.
Green ion fire sparked and stuttered. In
that instant, the patch of solid sand they were standing on
disintegrated. Tezziq screamed, pitching forward. Riane leapt back,
made a vain attempt to grab on to the ajjan. She landed on solid sand
and stretched herself prone, reaching out for Tezziq. In the
periphery of her vision, she saw Nith Settt crouched on his haunches,
wrists resting easily on his knees, observing the drama. "You
stole something from me, Riane." His voice echoed over the flat
expanse of the in'adim. "Now I will have it back." Riane,
wholly absorbed in trying to save Tezziq, could not even risk a
glance in his direction let alone distract herself in useless
conversation. Stretched out over the quicksand, she had managed to
grasp a handful of Tezziq's robes. "Let
go of me," Tezziq cried. "The sand you're on may give way
at any moment. Save yourself while you still can." "Sound
advice, Riane," Nith Settt called out. "Best to heed it
quick as you can." Riane
ignored them both. She was busy hauling Tezziq toward her so that she
could get a two-handed grip on her. This was not as easy as it
sounded. The quicksand in this area seemed to have a viscous
consistency that grabbed at any body in it, holding it fast. Riane
felt her muscles bunch and strain. Tezziq was almost in range of her
other hand when the basin floor shifted again, and Tezziq was pulled
under. "Give
it up, Riane," Nith Settt said. "The ajjan is a lost
cause." Shut
up, Riane thought. Shut up. Wriggling
herself farther out over the quicksand, she reached into the viscous
muck. It was dark and oddly warm, and she thought of the legend that
the in'adim had been made with the blood of the Prophet
Jiharre. She was obliged to lean over so far that her cheek lay
against the slowly shifting surface of the quicksand. Was it her
imagination or could she smell the sweet-salt scent of blood? She
renewed her grip on Tezziq and, using both hands now, hauled her back
up. Tezziq's head and shoulders popped up above the surface, and the
ajjan gasped and choked and spat up dark viscous fluid, almost as if
she were vomiting blood. "Can
you move?" Riane asked her. "Just a little bit." "A
fool's effort," Nith Settt said. "Why do you even try?" Tezziq
was struggling forward with the greatest difficulty, and Riane could
see the fear in her eyes. "Just
a little more, Tezziq. Please." She
squirmed forward herself, but as she did so, she felt a finger of
sand give way beneath her. "It's
happening." Tezziq screamed. "There's no more time. Get
back, Riane." It
appeared that the sand Riane was lying on was bifurcating, and it was
anyone's guess whether either of the remaining tongues would be of
sufficient mass to support her. The sand continued to crumble beneath
her, and Tezziq twisted, trying to get away, but this only fired
Riane's determination to hold on more firmly. She hauled with all her
might. "Impressive,"
Nith Settt said as he stood up. Riane
had forgotten all about him. The
Gyrgon gestured with his gloved hand. "Too bad it was all for
nothing." An arrow of livid ion fire snaked out, catching Tezziq
as she rose up on her knees. She arched back, her nails raking the
air. "No!"
Riane cried, and lunged for her. But it was too late. Tezziq spun off
the spit of sand, landing heavily in the quicksand. Her eyes were
fixed and staring as she slowly spun, disappearing beneath the
surface. "Wa
tarabibi," Riane whispered. "Now
that I have you to myself." Nith Settt's fingers curled upward,
and another jet of ion fire spurted toward Riane. "I
applaud both your strength and your ingenuity, Riane," he said.
"But the contest is done. I will not kill you as I did the
ajjan. Not for some time, anyway. It seems to me that you are an
altogether extraordinary Kundalan. Only when you have told me
everything there is to know about you will I allow you the peace of
death." "You
don't really believe that I will tell you anything, do you?" "Oh,
I know you will. Not that you will want to, no. But even an
extraordinary Kundalan is only, after all, a Kundalan." The ball
of ion fire was on the move, heading directly at Riane. "I know
how to deal with your kind." Riane
ran. The ball of ion fire followed her. She changed directions; so
did the ball. It was gaining on her. As she ran this way and that she
could hear the Gyrgon laughing. Each desperate moment brought it
closer to her. Its cold fire filled the sky. She could hear the evil
sound of its energy-crackle as it split apart the very air around it. "You
cannot escape," Nith Settt shouted. "No matter what you
do." Riane
changed tactics. Clearly, she could not outrun the ion fire. The only
other alternative was to meet it head-on. From out of her sopping
robes, she grabbed the gel pak she had disengaged from Nith Settt's
sleep casket. Would it work? She had no way of knowing, but she had
run out of alternatives. She turned and hurled it at the ball of ion
fire. They met in midair. A white flash ensued, followed by a
percussive burst that threw her onto her back. Gasping, she rolled
over, digging in her robes for the infinity-blade. Gripping the wand
tight in her hand, she rose, her heart thudding painfully in her
breast. Her ears were ringing, and there were bright spots in front
of her eyes. The ball of ion fire was gone, consumed in the midair
ignition. Dimly,
she was aware of the Gyrgon with one arm thrown across his face. The
blast had shaken even him, and that gave her heart as she launched
herself at him. She held the wand in front of her, thumbing the gold
disc as she crashed into him. Riane grimaced with the pain that
branched up her arms and into her shoulders from the ion energy
generated by Nith Settt's armored exomatrix. Frantically, she thumbed
the wand's disc again. Nothing happened. The infinity-blade had not
appeared. The
wand had only one charge remaining. There must be a way to activate— Nith
Settt's hands arced in toward her neck. Buried deep inside her, Annon
recalled that their touch was supposed to kill, but she also retained
a memory of something Eleusis Ashera had told Annon, that he had, in
fact, survived a Gyrgon's touch. As Nith Settt's fingers closed
around her throat she felt the pain of the ion surge overloading her
nerve synapses. Bright colors sparked behind her eyes, and a curtain
of blackness rippled through her as she passed in and out of
consciousness. And
then she had the thought, and she thumbed the gold disc twice
rhythmically in quick succession. The goron beam erupted, the
helix-shaped infinity-blade unfurled, slicing through the ion fire,
absorbing the hyperexcited ions, sucking them into itself. With
her last milliliter of strength, she swung the infinity-blade hard
and fast, breathless at its power, and it turned the V'ornn-made
alloy battle armor white as ice as it sliced through it. Nith Settt
trembled and spasmed, an eerie sound emanating from him that echoed
across the in'adim. The infinity-blade was devouring the
Gyrgon-based energy with electrifying efficiency. "Who
are you?" Nith Settt whispered even as his helm cracked apart. "I
am she who is your death," Riane said through teeth clenched
tight in pain and rage. "I am Revenge." She stared
pitilessly down at his drawn and whitened skull, the embedded
circuitry blackening, steaming even as she spoke. "I am the Dar
Sala-at."
And now see what has happened. The Gyrgon has been
dispatched to whatever hellish clime he came from. Watch
your tongue, my dear. You know that clime, and it wasn't in the least
hellish. The black Dragon, her scales opalescent in the sorcerous
mist atop Heavenly Rushing, shook her beautiful head. I was not,
however, referring to the Gyrgon, who even I admit are better off
dead. And
look who sent him on his eternal journey. The great ruddy Dragon
cried in his thunderous voice. Yes,
yes, the Dar Sala-at. She
has learned that they can be killed. An
important lesson, I admit. But at what cost, I wonder. What was
Minnum thinking, giving her an infinity-blade? I told you sauromidans
cannot be trusted. You
said they lie, and that is so, the red Dragon pointed out. But
trust is another matter entirely, isn't it? It
sometimes astonishes me, Yig, the fascination you have with
semantics. He
let out a blast of belching fire. I am pleased, my dear, that
after all these eons I still have the capacity to astonish you. I
daresay, on occasion, you would astonish anyone. Even Miina Herself.
But before you start your endless preening, please explain to me how
the Dar Sala-at is to deal with the stirring of the sauromidans? Evil
luck, that, Yig admitted. Evil,
indeed. These sauromidans are a scourge. They have renounced Miina. And
the Ramahan have not? The
Ramahan will not turn on the Dar Sala-at. Do
not be so certain of that, Paow, now that Pyphoros and Horolaggia
have gained a hoofhold. The
abbeys—what is left of them—have been
rotten with evil for years, the black Dragon said. This is
simply the culmination. This is Ambat, the time of the Dar-Sala-at,
the moment of Transformation. Either they will be destroyed utterly
or there will be a complete reversal and they will be restored to
their former sacred glory. Yig
switched his great flame-studded tail. Truly, how can this be
Am-bat? The Prophesy is not yet complete. All the players are
not yet in place. But
they soon will be, Paow. With Pyphoros' meddling the last is
slouching toward consciousness, just as it was foretold. Pyphoros.
It is supremely troubling that he has been abroad, working his
devious evil for more than a century. Interesting
the host he chose. Interesting,
yes. But hardly surprising, Yig said. Pyphoros always flowed
toward the power center. That was part and parcel of the Schism,
wasn't it? Speak
not of the Schism, Paow said shortly. It is forbidden. Yig
stamped his enormous taloned feet. Too much these days is
forbidden. I feel like Seelin, in chains of red jade— He
broke off as Paow frowned or, more accurately, produced what was, in
a Dragon, its approximate analog. Her arrow-point ears flattened
against her glossy scales, and her nostrils flared. Who comes? There
could be heard, above the thunderous roar of the waterfall, the
unmistakable sound of the beating of great wings. This was followed
by a burst of living cobalt, as Eshir, the Dragon of air, descended
through the thick, sorcerous mist to land beside her compatriots. What
news of our sister? The black Dragon asked nervously. Seelin
remains twenty thousand fathoms deep, Eshir said in her sweetly
lilting voice. The Keeper is so well protected he remains
inviolate. Without
Seelin, Yig said angrily, the Transformation inherent in Ambat
cannot take place. All
this means, dearest, Paow said, is that all the elements are
not yet in place. I have told you, it is still early in the game. And
all the circumstances are stacked against us, Yig muttered with
ill-concealed impatience. Paow
put a black paw on his powerful foreleg. Please, my dear, promise
me that you will not interfere again. What?
Eshir said. What has happened? Go
on, tell her, Yig grumbled. She will find out sooner or later. Paow
sighed. Learning of
Horolaggia's incursion into this realm, my darling mate took it into
his scaly head to put Minnum into play. The
sauromician? The
very one. And
because of him, Yig said, the Dar Sala-at has slain the
Gyrgon, Nith Sent. Now
that is news! Eshir cried. Pyphoros was getting too close to
the Veil of a Thousand Tears. But
the potential repercussions, Paow said. In these dark days— These
days have been made dark by the archdaemons, Yig said. I am
accused of being impetuous, but look at them! Horolaggia has basely
broken the Primal Laws laid down before the beginning of Time, before
the coming of Kundalan. Laws they know nothing about; Laws we Dragons
must, in the absence of Miina, enforce. His transgression demands
punishment, swift and certain. Oh,
my dear, no! What do you propose? I will not allow you to expose
yourself to more danger. Am
I not as brave as Seelin? Even while imprisoned, she managed to
project herself into Kundala in order to help the Dar Sala-at. This
is her fate. She and the Dar Sala-at are joined. As
if she and I are not? Yig tossed his horned head, sending a
geyser of flames arcing into the mist. Dearest, do not worry so.
Though circumstances grow darker with every day that passes, we shall
yet prevail. From
your mouth, Eshir said prayerfully, to
Miina's ear. Wherever
in the Cosmos She may be, Paow whispered, twining her tail with
her mate's. And as one, the three Dragons craned their serpentine
necks up, looking past the curling opalescent plumes of mist to the
vastness of other Realms, which remained a mystery even to them.
Book Three: RED-JADE
GATE
Red jade is unique among
all minerals for its capacity to conduct heat. Red-Jade Gate is a
regulator, composed of a series of what might be termed canal locks
to keep the hot emotions of anger, lust, and Jove in the proper
balance ...
—Utmost
Source,
The Five Books of Miina
. . . O-Rhen Ka is the
casting meant to open Red-Jade Gate. Keep the enemy in your line of
sight; meant with extreme caution.
—The Book
of Recantation 21 Crash
When
she heard the signature hum of the Khagggun hov-erpod, Eleana broke
cover and began to run. She was carrying high and a sprint was no
problem as long as she did not have to cover a great distance. The
baby, pressing a little against her lungs, was tending to make her
short of breath. The
lookout in the hoverpod saw her right away, and the craft changed
course, dipping down to skim low over the terrain. The three Khagggun
in the hoverpod were headed directly into the setting sun. Eleana
felt her breath hot in her throat, and she had to steel her nerves to
continue to run when her instinct was to turn and face them. Still,
this was Rekkk's plan and she had agreed to it and the moment she had
revealed herself she was committed. She
hewed to the prescribed path, heading between two outcrop-pings of
boulders. Beyond, there was a steep dropoff to a hedge-filled
riverbank. She was more than fifteen kilometers from the Abbey of
Warm Current and in no danger of leading the Khagggun back there. Passing
between the boulders, she felt a peculiar tingling in her spine, a
rustle of fear, which she quickly brought under control. She trusted
Rekkk; he had assured her that with so many boulders around to
refract their ion beams they would not risk trying to shoot her from
the fast-running hoverpod. She could hear the hoverpod's hum, louder
now, as it drew nearer. As it rose a little to clear the tops of the
boulders, she could hear the lookout communicating with the pilot. She
was past the rocks now and so was the hoverpod. The ground dropped
away under her running feet so abruptly that her teeth clacked
together. It was at this moment that Rekkk rose from his hiding spot
on the far side of the easternmost boulder. He had fitted a stone, no
larger, really, than a pebble, into the slot of the special okummmon
that Nith Sahor had manufactured for him. Rekkk,
concentrating on what he wanted the pebble to become aimed at a
certain spot on the undercarriage of the hoverpod. The pebble—powered
by Gyrgon technomancy—exploded out of the okummmon as if
propelled by an ion launcher, tore through the air and, with a loud
ping!, jammed itself into the hoverpod's left-hand spent-ion
vent. The
craft immediately dipped to the left, and Eleana, on the alert for
the noise, dropped as Rekkk had instructed her to do and rolled to
her right. In this way, she was out of harm's way when the hoverpod's
blunt left wing plowed into the ground. The bank was so steep that
the hoverpod slewed violently, throwing its occupants off-balance. As
they stumbled against the cockpit bulkhead, Rekkk was up and running,
shock-sword out and humming as the hyperexcited ions arced between
the twin blades. The
leading edges of his blades tore through the armor of the first
Khagggun, severing an arm, plowing through several ribs. The
Kha-gggun collapsed in a welter of blood, and Rekkk engaged the
second Khagggun, flicking his weapon away and plunging his own
through the Khagggun's hearts. This
aggressive attack proved a mistake, for Rekkk was fully extended, his
shock-sword inside the dying Khagggun when the third slammed his
thick-booted foot into the side of Rekkk's head. Rekkk grunted,
staggered back, slipping on the slick bank and losing his grip on his
shock-sword. The
third Khagggun pressed his advantage, vaulting over the side of the
hoverpod, swinging a deadly ion mace over his head. Rekkk rolled, but
the initial attack caught him a glancing blow on his shoulder. Inside
the armor, his muscles went numb, and his fingers could not grip his
own ion mace. He rolled back the other way, narrowly missing a
massive second blow. The head of the ion mace bounced along the
spongy bank, then whistled in the air as the Khagggun whirled it
around for the death blow. Rekkk
desperately flexed his fingers, clumsily pulling his ion mace out of
its sheath. But, in his prone position, it was the wrong weapon
because he could not swing it with any force. He managed to struggle
to his knees, but the blow from the Khagggun standing over him was
already past its apex. The spiked sphere whistled through the air,
blurred with the speed of its passage. And then the Khagggun reared
back, his arms flying up, the ion mace whirling end over end out of
his grip. Rekkk saw the point of a shock-sword—Eleana's
shock-sword— protruding from his chest. She had struck him a
fierce and mighty blow between the shoulder blades that had
penetrated clear through him. He went to his knees, his arms
flailing, and she pulled the blade free, sideswiping in a slow and
deliberate fashion that took his head clean off his shoulders. "N'Luuura
take it," Rekkk gasped, "I taught you well." Eleana
grinned, fetched his shock-sword, and handed it to him as he regained
his feet. "You
also taught me that a warrior must never lose hold of his weapon." "I
was concerned about you. And the baby." He grinned back at her.
N'Luuura, it felt good to be on the move again. His bones had been
getting soft with worry at the abbey. Together,
they wiped their blades on the thick mat of glossy green moss and
hurled the two corpses from the hoverpod. Then they rolled all three
down to the rushing water and pushed them in, where they spun away
downriver. They
waited until the corpses had vanished around a bend, then they
clambered back up the steep slope. Halfway up, Rekkk heard a tiny
exclamation and turned in time to see Eleana sitting on the ground,
her legs wide apart, her head between her knees. "Eleana!"
he cried, putting his arm around her. "I'm
all right," she said thinly. "I'm—" Then she
coughed thickly and vomited. Rekkk
held her forehead while she retched miserably. "I
am so stupid," he murmured. "I should never have allowed
you to run. The strain—" "Oh,
shut up and stop treating me like an invalid!" she snapped. He
handed her a water bladder, and she rinsed her mouth, then swallowed
some water as best she could. She laid her head back in the crook of
his shoulder. "Ah,
Rekkk, this baby thing is harder than I ever could have imagined." "It's
just new, that's all." "No,
no. You know it's more than that." He
smoothed the hair back from her face. "Eleana, what do you
expect from yourself? You were born and raised into war—killing
in order to survive, that's what you took in like mother's milk. But
what you're beginning to learn now. Life isn't all mayhem and murder.
It isn't all intrigue and betrayal. There are other moments." He
put his hand gently on the curve of her belly. "Magnificent
moments that will endure long after this war is over and done with." She
closed her eyes. "What if the baby comes . . . and Giyan is not
here?" "She
will be." "But
what if?" He
kissed the top of her head. "Then we will deal with that, too." "And
Riane?" "She
is the Dar Sala-at," he said. "She will return from the
Korrush stronger and more powerful." He put his knuckle beneath
her chin and lifted her head. "It is written in your Prophesies,
is it not?" "So
the Ramahan claim. But I have never seen these Prophesies, nor do I
know anyone who has." "Not
even Giyan?" "I
do not know about Giyan." "Then
you must take it on faith that she has," he said softly. "You
must take it on faith that the Prophesies exist and that they are
true." He smiled down at her. "Even Nith Sahor believes in
them." She
was far too distraught to pick up on his choice of tenses. And
then he laughed. "Imagine! A V'ornn trying to convince a member
of the Resistance that the Kundalan Prophesies really exist! You see
the absurdity of it." She
nodded. "But you are not like other V'ornn." He
squeezed her shoulders and she made a sign and he helped her to her
feet. "I'm
all right now. Really." She pushed his hand away. "I want
my baby to know his mother's strength." And she climbed the bank
in swift sure strides, and they gained the lower wing of the hoverpod
together. Rekkk
shook his head as he watched her, then he ducked down and removed the
pebble from the left spent-ion vent and fired up the hoverpod. It was
a little unnerving for Eleana to be in a Khagggun hover-pod—the
Resistance had never captured one. Rekkk whistled and soon enough
they spotted the red-blue-green blur of the Teyj. It sang a song when
it saw them and landed on the edge of the cockpit, singing still- "Hang
on," Rekkk said, and Eleana gathered the Teyj to her, holding it
against her just above the swell of her belly. The Teyj carefully
folded its four wings and sang a soft unfamiliar song. "Listen,"
she said, laughing. "I think it's singing to the baby." Slowly,
Rekkk manipulated the hoverpod, which shuddered and moaned as it
disengaged its wing from the bank. Gaining the sky, Rekkk aimed it
due north so as to avoid any major cities. The land fell swiftly away
from them as they shot forward, the toylike trees becoming a long
smear of green. They crossed a trailing spear of reddish light, saw
the last shred of the sun sinking behind the western horizon, and
then above them was the calm cobalt vault of the heavens. A
cloudbank, curled low in the south like a dragon, hung motionless,
its underside glowing pink and pristine for a moment before slowly
fading to a smudgy grey. Overhead,
night rolled in. The wind had died, but the sky had turned frosty,
stars aglitter, and Eleana pulled her cloak tighter about her
shoulders and throat. She reached in a side pack she had provisioned
before they left Warm Current and offered Rekkk some dried meat. He
shook his head, and she gnawed on it without really tasting it. Her
eyes watering and her cheeks grown numb, she hunkered down against an
alloy bulkhead, took a handful of dried leeesta, and crumbled it in
her palm. The Teyj ruffled its underwings and sat on the pillowy part
of her thumb. It cocked an eye at her. "Go
on," she said. "You must be hungry even if Rekkk is not." The
Teyj ducked its scarlet-and-green-plumaged head and, using the tips
of its sharp curved beak, devoured the small pieces of dried leeesta.
Eleana hummed a little, comforted by its hunger. A small common
normal act in her abnormal life. She reached out and stroked its
tail. The Teyj ceased eating long enough to eye her again, the glossy
black ball seeming to take all of her in. Then it went back to
eating. Eleana, abruptly exhausted, put her head back against the
bulkhead, closed her eyes, and drifted off to sleep. She
was roused by an insistent electronic sound, an arrhythmic beeping. They
were still going full out. Rekkk was using the photonic V'ornn
navigational instruments to keep them on course in the darkness. "What
is it?" she asked as she gained her feet. The Teyj fluttered
close by. "It's
a Khagggun pack code," Rekkk said. "Headquarters is trying
to raise the crew of this hoverpod because they haven't checked in." Eleana
came fully awake, rubbed sleep out of her eyes. "I thought pack
elements were only required to do so every fifty hours." He
grunted. "Apparently, the new Star-Admiral has increased the
frequency for the pack elements looking for us." The
beeping continued unabated. "Can't
you disable it?" she asked. "No.
But, in any event, very soon now it will not matter." "What
do you mean?" He
glanced at her, his dark eyes grave. "If I were the watch
commander and could not raise one of my pack elements, I would
immediately dispatch a fully armed hoverpod to find out what
happened." "But
they won't be able to find us. You'll see to that." "Unfortunately,
the device through which the codes are sent and received is an
integral part of the craft, and I cannot disable it. It will pinpoint
our precise location. They know where we are." Eleana
felt a cold dread creep through her. "Did you know this was
going to happen?" "Eventually,
yes. I just thought we'd have more time." She
felt a shiver run down her spine. "How much time do we have?" "Depends
on how close the nearest hoverpod is." He shrugged. "An
hour at most, I'd estimate." She
drew near him, and the Teyj fluttered into the crook of her arm.
"What are we going to do?" Rekkk
was silent. He stared into the navigational interfaces. Eleana
glanced behind them as if she could already sense their pursuers. The
hoverpod flew on, fast as it could go. In
typical response, Olnnn wanted to kill Rada. In fact, he tried. Not
once, but twice. The
first time, they were on their way back from the foul warren of
hovels beneath Divination Street. They did not speak. There was
nothing left to say. A
rumbling overtook them briefly as a hoverpod passed overhead, one of
Olnnn's own newly instituted patrols. He heard a pair of Bashkir
arguing stupidly over a business deal, another Bashkir, fat and soft
and pampered by the tradition of his caste, laughing drunkenly with
his Looorm. A young Mesagggun walked hand in hand with a Tuskugggun,
murmuring to one another. He looked darkly at a Kundalan servant
scurrying along like a rodent eager to return to its hidey-hole. And
like a wyr-moth to a flame he hurried to meet his rage. The
alleyway in which they eventually found themselves was narrow and
desolate. Sulphurous light spilled from the streetlamps. Dead leaves
lay in thick drifts. All around them rose the nighttime roar of the
city, the insistent susurrus of a million insects ceaselessly
foraging. There
was the reek of violence in the air. He
watched Rada darkly as she walked in front of him. Tied to a
Tuskugggun. The sheer unfairness of it made his blood boil. Without
warning, he grabbed her around the wrist and whirled her to him so
that he felt her hard breasts. He jammed his mouth down upon hers. "Don't,"
she said. "I'll kill you," or something close to that. Not
that he heard or cared. He backed her against the damp and seeping
wall and ground into her, and when she commenced to wriggle away, he
slapped the side of her head so that it snapped back, then he tripped
her, falling on her even as she fell, exulting in her hot and panting
body beneath him. She
continued to squirm, and this exhibition of resistance, quite
formidable for a Tuskugggun, made him even more determined. He
would have her and kill her and be done with it. All of it. Over in a
few vicious moments. An eternity of violence encapsulated in the
pulsing hearts of Axis Tyr. He
considered this just punishment, righteous retribution for her
undisciplined mouth, for her effect on him. He used his thighs to
spread her legs, used his clawed fingers to bare her breasts, burying
his face between them until she bit his ear and drew blood, and he
hit her again, this time with his balled fist. She
cried out in pain and the fire in his ensorceled bones rose up and
gripped him. He faltered and slipped to his knees in front of her. Her
eyes found his, and she said, "Your violence will kill you. This
is the lesson of that spell. How long will it take you to learn?" He
panted out his agony. "What I want," he rasped between
gritted teeth, "is to be free of this accursed spell." "Then
let me kill you," she hissed. "It is the only way." They
lay like that, bitter enemies, locked in an intimate embrace they
could neither tolerate nor avoid. After
a time, he began to laugh, and fell away from her. He watched her
from glittering eyes as she rearranged her robes. The fire was slowly
ebbing from his bones. "Keep
laughing," she said darkly. "You are an evil beast and one
day I will kill you. You can make sure wager on it." He
marked her words, even though he had not meant to; somehow they
heartened him. The
second time he tried to kill her was in broad daylight. Not that
Olnnn cared a whit. He was Star-Admiral. Who was to gainsay his
actions save the regent? She
was in his tent, and she said something, it did not matter what. It
was her manner, her mocking tone, her flashing eyes that underscored
her fearlessness. How could she not be afraid of him? He, whose
ferocious temper gave even the most battle-hardened Admiral pause.
Who was she? Only a Tuskugggun from whom he was used to eliciting
fear and abject obedience. With
a guttural cry, Olnnn rose and, drawing a shock-sword from its alloy
scabbard, thumbed it on. The tent filled with the humming of the
hyperexcited ion flow arcing between the parallel blades. He came at
her. "Go
on, kill me," she said. "Kill me now." He
meant to. He had murder in his hearts. But he could not. Already, the
fire in his ensorceled bones was streaking through him, and he felt
all the strength vanish from his sword arm. He dropped the
shock-sword, stood with his shoulders slightly bowed. "I
cannot go on like this." His fists were clenched so hard his
nails dug into his palms, drawing blood. "I have to murder
something, or I will go mad." She
came up to him, then, and looked him in the eye. "It is hard for
me to decide whether I hate or pity you more." His
bloody hand gripped her throat. In response, both her hands wrapped
around his throat. Her thumbs sought the soft spot between the ridges
of translucent cartilage. "Let's
make a pact," he growled. "We'll kill each other and murder
this accursed spell together." "I
can smell you," she said. "To
march into battle is one thing," he rasped. "Even to be
outnumbered, to face certain death at the hands of the Centophennni.
But this is different." His eyes blazed. "My life has been
warped by Kundalan sorcery until I can no longer recognize it." "I
can smell your cowardice." He
spat at her, and this made her smile. "At
least now I have an effect on you," she told him softly. "I
am no longer a Tuskugggun nonentity, a wyr-maggot beneath your notice
except to rape at will. I have engaged all your emotions, limited
though they may be." "I
do not understand you." His head shook slowly from side to side.
"I cannot live like this." "Now
you're getting it, Star-Admiral. That, apparently, was Malis-tra's
point. You have to find another way." "I
am V'ornn. I am Khagggun. I know only one way to live." "Then,
as Sagiira told us, you will die. And if you die, so will I, because
this spell has ensnared us both. But I will tell you this,
Star-Admiral. I will make no double-suicide pact with you. I have no
intention of dying anytime soon. If that means I have to keep you
alive, by guile or by force, then that is precisely what I will do. I
will change you, whether you like it or not." I've
picked them up on the scanner," Rekkk said. "Quartering in
from the southeast." There
was no anxiety in his voice, no emotion at all. Eleana noted this
with one part of her brain while with the other part she was
preparing for war. She put one hand on her belly and wept inside that
her baby should be caught in the same quagmire of violence that had
ensnared her. This emotion did not stop her from rechecking her
shock-sword. "Are
they gaining on us?" "Just
slightly," he said. "Then
we cannot outrun them." "They
are blessed with a following wind." "Turn
into it," she offered. "We can use it ourselves." "I
could do that. But it would take us kilometers to the west." He
glanced at her. "The ion cannons should be in the locker just
where you are standing." She
reached down, thumbed the electromagnetic latch as he directed, and
drew out one of the blunt ugly weapons. "You'll
need to keep us very steady." "When
they get that close that could be a problem." "Then
the thing is useless." "Prepare
to use it, anyway." She
knew an order when she heard one, and since they had been on a
heightened war footing ever since they had taken down the crew of
this hoverpod, she obeyed. Crouched against the aft starboard
bulkhead, she rested the triple barrel of the ion cannon on the top
lip. She felt the deep vibration of the ion-fusion engines and knew
right away how fruitless an exercise this would be. Still, she put
her eye to the sighting mechanism. She could see nothing in the
darkness, but quite soon, she knew, she would. Even
as she had that thought she felt the pitch of the engines alter. They
were heading lower, and slowing. Well, that was something, she
supposed. When the pursuing crew blew them out of the sky they would
have a shorter distance to fall. "I
hope you know what you're doing," she said, as they continued
their descent and deceleration. "I
want them to think I'm looking for a spot to land." "What
are you really doing?" she asked. "Looking
for a spot to land." "Are
you trying to make me laugh?" "I
don't know. Is it working?" "I'll
tell you when we get out of this." She
had turned the scope on the ion cannon up to its highest
magnification, and now she thought she saw something, flickering like
a low-magnitude star in a hazy sky. She had set the scope to detect
spent-ion flux, and as soon as she got a computer lock in the scope's
viewfinder she squeezed off her first round. At this extreme range,
she did not expect to score a hit, and she didn't, but the salvo
served notice that they were prepared to fight. Behind
her, Rekkk ducked as he banked the hoverpod, taking it between two
rows of trees. Grey-brown branches whipped by, and the hoverpod began
to buck. The trees were making it difficult for Eleana to regain a
lock on the pursuing craft. The crew had not returned her fire,
knowing the distance between them was still too great. Besides, from
their point of view, there was no rush. They had sighted the renegade
hoverpod; it was only a matter of time until they brought it down and
killed or captured its occupants. Rekkk
took them low over a hill, through a shallow dell and across a small
patch of open cor pastureland that stood between two tall stands of
kuello-fir. Eleana recognized the hilly terrain. They were north of
her birth territory and west across the Chuun River. She knew this
area well, having hunted and been hunted by Khagggun across this
thickly forested and rocky expanse. They
were skimming low now, meters from the rising terrain. Directly ahead
of them rose the ragged mist-shrouded foothills of the Djenn Marre
and Eleana's eyes grew wet at the sight of home. Rekkk
called for her to pilot the hoverpod, and she took over the controls,
guided by his competent hands and his whispered voice. "Keep
us low as you can," he said and, behind her, began to remove the
purple Haaar-kyut armor that had served him so faithfully since he
had purloined it from the Khagggun barracks in Axis Tyr weeks ago. Eleana
was fighting a fierce downdraft that threatened to plow them into the
steep side of a highland rock formation when Rekkk took over,
swinging them briefly over to lift the left wing above a jagged
outcropping, then leveling them off again. A
dull booming off to their right and rock and trees exploded in blue
fire. "They're
within ion-cannon range," Rekkk said. Eleana
returned to her position against the aft starboard bulkhead, picked
up her ion cannon. The pursuing hoverpod popped into her scope like a
starburst, and she squeezed off a round, a near miss that
nevertheless made the other craft veer sharply to the right. Meanwhile,
Rekkk was powering ion thrusters, so that they crested the near ridge
with centimeters to spare. The hoverpod jounced as the undercarriage
scraped an admonishing finger of the rock face. Above them, treetops
exploded, raining down in a welter of shards burning with pale
lambent fire. The
Teyj screamed shrilly, and Eleana dropped the ion cannon, spent the
next couple of minutes flicking the burning debris out of the
cockpit. It wasn't easy as the constant rolls Rekkk was putting them
through tossed her from bulkhead to bulkhead. All
around them, the terrain was being ripped asunder, and even skimming
as low as they were it was becoming increasingly difficult to
outmaneuver the pursuing hoverpod. "We're
not going to make it," Eleana shouted. "Have
faith!" Rekkk shouted back. At
that moment, weapons fire struck the back edge of the right wing,
searing through it. Eleana grabbed the fluttering Teyj with one hand,
but was flung backward so violently she lost control of the ion
cannon, which pitched over the side. She was scrambling for the
weapons locker when the next blast struck them. The hoverpod seemed
to scream, its nose rising almost to the vertical as Rekkk struggled
to control it. The trailing edge of the left wing plowed a deep
narrow into a small section of open field, then they struck the
leading edge of a rock outcropping, and the alloy hull began to
crumple. Blinding
waves of blue fire lit up the night, and Rekkk lifted Eleana, threw
her over the steeply canted side of the hoverpod, jumped over
himself. They sprinted into the burning trees, tucked low, one hand
over their noses and mouths as they ran. Behind them, the hoverpod
exploded in a blue-green fireball, the shock wave so great it spun
them around, took them off their feet, tumbled them over roots,
flattening fields of ferns. Then they were up and running again, the
Teyj making for the swaying treetops. The pursuing hoverpod, ion
cannons bristling, descended upon the flaming ridge, a full pack of
Khagggun in armor the color of burnt umber disembarking at the
double, led by Attack-Commandant Accton Blled. The
moment he hit the ground, Attack-Commandant Blled ordered three
quarters of his pack to search for survivors. Under his exacting eye
they paired up and fanned out, carving the immediate vicinity into
segments. As
his Khagggun melted into the flaming woods that stretched upward
along the high ridge, Blled directed the remainder of the pack to
pick through the smoldering wreckage of the downed hoverpod. He held
one Third-Captain back. Drawing
his shock-sword, he laid the double blade across the Kha-gggun's
throat. "Third-Captain, did you not hear me say that I wanted
these traitors alive?" "I
did, Attack-Commandant." His
pack was only weeks old. He had chosen them himself, but he had been
given little time to gather his forces. He needed to be absolutely
certain of every Khagggun. "And
yet," Blled said, "you fired the direct hit." The
Third-Captain licked his lips. "I was returning fire, sir, as I
had been all along. I was aiming for the wing. It was not until I
fired that I realized the hoverpod had already struck the ground." "Is
that an excuse?" "No
excuse is acceptable, sir," the Third-Captain barked. "Just
so," Blled said. "Sir!" His
attention was diverted by a Second-Marshal, high-stepping through the
cindered debris. "The heat was too intense to find mortal
remains, but—" He was holding something in his right hand,
blackened, still smoking. Blled
removed his shock-sword from the Khagggun's throat, took the item for
a closer look. "A piece of battle armor." He ran a
fingertip over the blistered surface. "Unmistakably." "Purple."
The Second-Marshal nodded. "The Rhynnnon Rekkk Ha-cilar was
wearing a suit of stolen Haaar-kyut armor." "No
doubt," Blled said. "This is his." He handed it back.
"If there are other pieces, find them and place them in the
hoverpod." "Yes,
sir!" The Second-Marshal saluted and double-timed it back to the
wreck. Blled
turned to the Khagggun, "It would seem as if the Rhynnnon is
dead. But what of his Kundalan skcettta?" "This
was a very bad crash. It happened very quickly," the Khagggun
said, knowing that boldness was now his only option. "The
probabilities are they both burned to cinders. But if the skcettta
somehow managed to survive, we will hunt her down." "I
do not deal in probabilities, Third-Cap tain. I am interested only in
what is. But you are right about one thing: if the fugitives survived
this crash, we will find them."
22 Dreams
and Revelations
Wa
tarabibi, do not weep so." Tezziq put her hand against
Riane's feverish brow. "You are injured, wa tarabibi,"
Tezziq whispered. "Lie back and rest. I will take care of
you." "But
I cannot rest," Riane protested, though her head felt as if it
were splitting asunder. "I must protect you." "Against
what?" Tezziq smiled and kissed Riane with lips cool as marble.
"Nothing can harm me. Not while I am with you, wa tarabibi.
You took me out of my silk-lined prison and set me free. What
more could I ask of you?" And
then, to Riane's horror, the skin began to peel off Tezziq's face,
dripping like candle wax onto Riane's chest, and Riane shivered
deeply at the chill coursing through her, and she screamed, "Tezziq!
Tezziq!" A skull grinning down at her. "Ah, Miina, no}" And
she started awake, the dream like awful tendrils snaking through her
mind. "Tezziq,"
she whispered, through dry lips. "Wa tarabibi." "Sister!"
Othnam called. "She is at last awake." And he bent down and
gently guided Riane's lips to the waterskin. When
she had drunk her fill, Riane said, "You came back to help us. I
knew you would." "We
could not leave you to your fate," he said with his typical
quick grin. His teeth were very white against his darkly bronzed
skin. "The
ajjan?" Mehmmer said as she squeezed in beside her. "Dead,"
she whispered. "Sunk beneath the in'adim." "The
blood of Jiharre brooks no infidels." "Jiharre's
blood did not harm me," Riane said reasonably. "In any
case, it wasn't the in'adim; Nith Settt killed her. She gave
her life so that I might survive." "Riane,
you must eat," Mehmmer said sternly. "The battle with the
technomage has depleted you badly." "I
have lost a good friend," Riane mourned. "I have no
appetite." "Forget
your friend. She is beyond your help." "I
will replenish myself," she said softly, "if you will
recite the prayer cycle for the dead." All
at once, her head was filled with Mehmmer's beautiful contralto,
ululating the prayer for Tezziq's spirit. "Where
is the food?" she asked. Othnam
looked at her out of sad eyes. "There is Perrnodt to think of,"
he whispered. Mehmmer's ululations reverberated in her skull. Riane
sat up, groaned, and put her head in her hands. When she opened her
eyes, Othnam and Mehmmer were gone. Had they ever been there? Riane
could not stop the pounding in her head. She fell over sideways. Was
it possible to have a dream within a dream? Had she been
hallucinating Othnam and Mehmmer as well as Tezziq? Had the two Ghor
tried to come to her rescue? Or had they never returned at all? But
she was certain that they had come back. There
is Perrnodt to think of. Perrnodt!
She put the heels of both hands against the red sand, digging
them in to keep herself from pitching over. She turned her head and
saw the twisted remains of Nith Settt. Crawling
to the dead Gyrgon made her so dizzy she almost passed out. She sat
very still and concentrated on breathing as deeply as she was able.
Then she went on. Dead,
without his helm, he looked like a skeleton that had been badly
burned in a fire of unknown origin. His armor was shredded, twisted
into the shape of flower petals. The kind of flowers you conjure up
in a dream. The veradium point in the crown of his skull shone dully
in the morning sunlight. There was a rotten smell that began to make
her sick. She
sorted through the remains. His flask had burst open in the
conflagration, the water instantaneously evaporated, but she
discovered in a rent alloy cylinder some food, warm and still
smoking, that seemed edible enough. As she swallowed, she seemed to
gain sustenance swiftly as if she were ingesting the flesh of her
enemy, which infused her with supernal strength. Her
head was rapidly clearing. She rose and walked some distance away
into the lee of a high dune. Part of it had been scooped out, no
doubt by Nith Settt, to make a kind of cavelike shelter. "Who
are you?" she heard a female voice say from inside the cave.
"Where is the Gyrgon?" The voice sounded oddly distant. "I
am Riane," she said. Crouching,
she cupped her hands to filter out the sun's glare and caught her
first look at Perrnodt. She sat propped against the curved back wall
of the cave. She looked to be more or less the same age as Giyan,
with night-black hair, long and curling and wildly massed in a corona
about her head. Though tall, she was whip-thin, and this, along with
her very pale, very thin skin had the effect of making her appear
fragile. Even with her pale eyes, her face was too severe to be
beautiful, but this austerity lent her a kind of inner strength even
in repose. "The
Gyrgon is dead," Riane said. "I have come a long way to
find you." Perrnodt
scrambled forward. "I am imprisoned here. The Gyrgon erected
some kind of ion field." Riane
tried to order her head to stop its throbbing. The low-angled morning
sun only made matters worse. Right up against the barrier of the ion
field, she looked it over carefully. She could see that it was
composed of filaments of what appeared to be light particles that
moved horizontally in sine waves across the mouth of the artificial
cave. Returning
to the dead Gyrgon, she began to peel off his exomatrix in an attempt
to discover whether, as in the case of the sleep chamber, there was
any kind of energy source she could salvage. The pieces of the
cracked exomatrix came away like the carapace of an armored beast.
She carefully checked the concave inside of each one, but could find
no evidence of a gel pak. What
then powered the exomatrix? Was it the energy field of the Gyrgon
himself? If that was the case, she was out of luck. Or was she? She
stared at Nith Settt for a long time, thinking. Then she placed her
hands around the veradium point at the crown of his skull. Shielded
from sunlight, it continued to emit a dim glow. With
a grunt, she took out her dagger and slammed it hiltfirst against the
skull. The thing shattered like an eggshell and she extracted the
veradium point. It was faceted like a crystal, and, like a crystal,
it was translucent.
Holding it close to her face, she could see photonic filaments,
similar to the ones embedded in the ion field, running through it
from top to bottom. With
it in her hand, she returned to the artificial cave entrance. The end
of the veradium point that had been embedded in Nith Settt's skull
was sharp as a quill point. She took this end and ran it down the ion
field, describing a vertical line. In its wake, the ion field
wavered, and she tentatively put her hand against it and folded it
back. Quickly, she ran the veradium point farther down the ion field.
Then she stepped through the rent sideways. She
heard a pop, felt a sudden, sharp pressure in her inner ears. But she
was through. She reached for Perrnodt, pulled her to safety. They
staggered into the deep shade in the lee of a dune and, almost
immediately, Perrnodt passed out. The headache Riane had awoken with
had returned with a vengeance. She knew that they both needed food
and drink. The Gyrgon's food was gone. Her kuomeshal, and its
supplies, was out of reach on the other side of the in'adim. Wrapping
herself once more in Nith Sahor's greatcoat, she closed her eyes and
pictured the spot where she had left the beast. Nothing happened. She
tried again. Still nothing. This was the second time it had failed to
work in and around the in'adim. Why? She shook her head and
immediately regretted it as the headache flared anew. She could not
worry about that now. She had the more pressing problem of survival
to consider. She
would have to brave the Jeni Cerii encampment. She
wondered if she dared leave Perrnodt here, alone and unprotected. But
what choice did she have? They would soon both be dead without
nourishment. If only Mehmmer and Othnam had come back. But they
hadn't. She had to resign herself to the fact that they had abandoned
her at the last. They had helped her so much, and at such a high
cost, she could not bring herself to think ill of them. She
stood, walking into full sunlight so that she could judge the sun's
angle and the length of the shadow in the dune's lee. She judged that
she had about two hours to find the Jeni Cerii, steal the supplies
they needed, and get back here before Perrnodt was thrown into
broiling afternoon sunlight. Brushing
off the last of the sand from Perrnodt's halo of black hair, she took
her leave. Recalling her conversation with Tezziq, she headed due
north, closely paralleling the near side of the in'adim. She
kept a wary eye out for Jeni Cerii patrols. She
passed across sandy scrubland, flat, featureless, ugly. Her Ghorv-ish
robes had finally dried, but they were stiff with dirt, sweat, and
silty muck from her nearly fatal swim in the in'adim. They
felt as heavy as a velvet curtain and twice as hot. She began to
sweat, and the more she sweated, the thirstier she became. She tried,
as much as possible, to keep to shaded areas, but as the sun climbed
toward its zenith, these cool spots evaporated to virtually nothing. The
sun burned her eyes, and she staggered. Her breath rasped in her
throat. She sat down abruptly, her arms flailing, as the vision came
upon her . . . The
Djenn Marre rises up all around her, the sharp purple ridges rimed
with ice. Clear, crisp air, thin as a gossamer streamer of cloud,
fills her lungs. The familiar chill even in full sunlight. She is
skelling up a rock chimney, using precarious hand- and footholds. Far
below, the chimney remakes itself in a new rockfall that has
partially filled a tremendous crevasse. If she should fall. . . But
that thought has never crossed her mind. She is a climber, as
fearless as she is accomplished. This
is the first Riane, the one who existed before the spirit of Annon
was put into her dying body. The Riane before the fall that had
presumably caused her to lose her memory, before the duur fever that
had racked her. Riane
the pure-blood Kundalan. Now,
as she looks up, she can see something perched on the very pinnacle
of the rock chimney. From her current acute angle she cannot tell
what it is. It looks, however, very big. She
continues her climb, the breath sawing through her half-open mouth.
Disciplined, she pauses every few moments so as to conserve her
energy. She sips water from a flask of some soft but durable
substance she cannot name. The sky is utterly clear, an astonishing
violet. Sunlight like a razor against her skin. She hangs in the deep
shadow of an overhang and launches her head back, staring at whatever
might be perched atop the chimney. She has watched it for weeks, this
mysterious thing, wondering at that distance what it might be. Today
she has decided to assuage her curiosity. She
is now almost three-quarters of the way up. Unlike other chimneys in
her experience this one tapers very little or not at all. The rock is
hard and clean. When she does not find adequate handholds, she uses a
small, efficient metal implement—again, the name escapes her—to
chip them into the rock face. The implement dangles from a braided
cord around her right wrist. She made the cord herself, from the hide
of a large animal she killed. She can see the animal, trace its
outline with the delicate brush of memory, but its name dangles in
the black abyss of forgetfulness. The
implement has a long, curved head, pointed at one end, wide-bladed at
the other. She once buried the point of it in an attacker's eye. She
can recall the feel of his callused hands on her shoulders, pushing
her roughly down, his powerful knees spreading her legs. The matted
hair of him, the smell of him, like the shining pelt, the stench of
that animal she had killed. She had needed no one to come to her
rescue. She had swung the implement in a short, powerful arc. Her
attacker was too busy grunting to notice it until it pierced his eye.
By then it was too late. It went right through into his brain. She
had thrown him off even while he was still thrashing. She
is looking up now, into the violet sky, at the top of the chimney.
Whatever is perched there seems at this distance to be floating. She
is very close, but the shadows are so deep and sharp she still cannot
make sense of the shape. All
at once, it detaches itself from the rock chimney and, soaring,
spirals down toward her. It is so huge it blots out the sun. Chilled,
she shivers. And
in fascination watches it come . . . Riane,
in the burning sand beside the in'adim, rolled over and
moaned. Sand had attached itself to her lips, and she spat it out of
her mouth. She immediately regretted the action because it cost her
some vital fluid. She
stared up into the sky bleached white by the blaze of sun, and
blinked. Another vision. Another shard of Riane's lost past. What did
this one mean? What had been atop the rock chimney? What had she
seen? Riane was left with the impression that this vision, above the
others, was vastly important. She
was rolling this enigma around in her mind when she heard voices. She
froze. The voices came from just beyond the low rise in front of her.
She slithered on her belly up to the top of the rise. There in front
of her were a pair of Jeni Cerii wrapped in blue-and-white-striped
robes. They were armed with long, curved scimitars. Their heavily
bearded faces were dark and shiny as oil-rubbed wood. Grained as well
with the beat of the sun and the scouring of the wind. At their hips
were waterskins and by the look of them they are full or almost so.
Doubtless, they had food, as well. Riane
took her dagger in one hand, the dead infinity-blade in the other.
Rising up into a squat, she made a sound. Instantly, the Jeni Cerii
looked in her direction. They moved with astonishing speed. As they
came they drew their scimitars. They did not seek to query her. And
why should they? She had encroached on their territory. Their secret
encampment was but a kilometer or two away. They did not care who she
was; they wanted her silent and dead. Riane
threw the infinity-blade. It whirled, end over end, striking the lead
Jeni Cerii square on his left knee. He went down, clutching his leg,
and Riane feinted right, drawing the first swing of the second Jeni
Cerii's scimitar. The air whistled at the wide blade's swift passage.
Riane came in under the arc, jabbed out with the point of her dagger,
piercing her assailant's side. He grunted, swiveled on his pivot foot
and, ignoring the flow of blood, delivered a backhand swipe. The
flat of the scimitar struck the back of Riane's head, and she pitched
forward. Immediately the Jeni Cerii was on top of her; she could feel
his sticky blood. The blade of the scimitar came down, aimed for her
neck, and she buried her dagger into the meat of his right forearm.
He grimaced but made no sound, only leaned forward, keeping the
scimitar on its downward trajectory. She
twisted the point inside him, dragged the blade through his muscle
until she severed an artery. Blood fountained, and the Jeni Cerii's
eyes rolled up into his skull. Using her hip, she flung him off her. She
was up and turning toward the Jeni Cerii she had immobilized when her
right arm went numb and her dagger dropped from her nerveless
fingers. It instantly sank into the sand. She saw the Jeni Cerii and
the wound in her shoulder at the same moment. Limping forward, he
head-butted her. She fell, half-stunned, and he grabbed the cowl of
her Ghorvish robes, tossed her down the low rise. She landed in
almost the same spot where the infinity-blade had fractured his
kneecap. When she tried to regain her feet, he kicked her hard just
below the ribs. Grinning, he limped over and delivered a lazy punch
to the same spot. Riane
groaned, curling up into a ball. He struck the wound in her shoulder,
and while she writhed in agony, he hefted his scimitar and studied
the back of her neck, calculating the vectors of the killing blow. Satisfied,
he placed the slipper of his damaged leg on her side. Anchored by his
good leg, he drew back the scimitar. Riane found that she could only
move her top arm. She whipped it forward, her forearm smashing into
his fractured knee. The
Jeni Cerii howled and collapsed on her. His weight bound her, hurting
her hip. She was altogether numb between her legs. The blade of the
scimitar lay between them, and she reached for it. He slapped her
away and took possession of it, bearing down. The
pain in her hip was excruciating. It was at that moment that she
realized she had fallen on the infinity-blade. Without thinking, she
pulled it free, thumbed it on. The scimitar whistled at her, a blur
of deadly motion. Then,
without warning, the infinity-blade awoke to life. Cutting through
the oncoming scimitar it continued its relentless arc, slicing the
Jeni Cerii in two. Riane,
lying half-insensate in a pool of blood, stared at the softly humming
infinity-blade and wondered what had happened. Giyan
had a close and unique relationship with death. It seemed improbable
that she should remember the feel of her own umbilical cord being
wrapped around her neck at birth, that she could recall the murderous
look on her mother's face as she prepared to kill her evil-omened
twins. But she could. Only
the swift and timely intervention of her father had saved the
infants' lives. Another
strand of the sorcerous web crept across her, and she screamed a
silent scream. The strand was alive, as if it was made up of millions
of tiny insects armed with barbed stingers. Since
childhood she had had a premonition that death, angry at being denied
what was rightfully his, was never far from her side. Often, in dark
corridors or lying in bed late at night, she would hear a whisper of
the wind, the creak of an unseen door or floorboard, see the
shadow-web of tree branches on the wall and know them for what they
really were. Death stalked her in her dreams, as well, a handsome
face, a compelling one not unlike that of Eleusis. It was as if in
death Eleusis had melted into her in some elemental way. As if having
been driven beyond the boundary of mortal flesh he had slipped easily
into the role of death's-head. The
strand advanced millimeter by agonizing millimeter. She had sometime
earlier come to the conclusion that it was going so slowly in order
to maximize the pain it was causing her. Even so, she submitted
without a struggle. And she had done so from the beginning. She had
read enough about the Malasocca to know that the harder she
struggled, the more agonizing the wrapping would become. Now,
trapped in her Osoru Avatar, enmeshed in the archdaemonic web of
Horolaggia's design, she felt a welling of the slow assault of death.
It was like a ringing in her ears, a knocking on the door to her
soul, the swift clip-clop of approaching hooves. She could
feel death's presence like the silent fall of ashes onto a
gravestone. The
filament had begun at her right shin and ended at her left hip. A new
one began, causing her to scream again into the anxious nothingness
of Otherwhere. She
was not frightened of death, only frightened for her child. Bitter
irony that the very sorcerous act that had saved Annon from his
enemies had opened the Portal enough for Horolaggia to escape. If
only her desperate love for her son had not caused her to cross the
circle of the Nanthera. At the last moment, she had changed her mind.
She could not bear the thought of losing him, of seeing his essence
migrated into another body. She had wanted her Annon back. In a vain
and foolish gesture, she had violated the circle of the Nanthera, had
inadvertently broken the sorcerous lock on the Portal long enough for
the archdaemon to slip through. The
sky had turned a sulphurous yellow, deep red above the darkling
mountains closest to the Abyss. There, daemonic sigils rained down in
a torrent from fulminating clouds. All
around her, hidden but heard, a vast and depthless lake in the mist,
arose the moaning of the host of daemons incarcerated for eons in the
Abyss. The
second filament completed its run, and a third appeared. There was no
surcease. The
Ras-Shamra that was Giyan wept with the pain of integration with the
archdaemon. He controlled her body, was inside it, working it like a
puppet. But part of him was always here, spinning this agonizing web
that slowly but surely was surrounding her in a cocoon. When
the spinning was done, when she was completely encased, she would
die, and Horolaggia would claim her body as his permanent home. Was
there in truth nothing she could do? Stories she had read of the
Malasocca hinted that this was so. Another
filament seared across her consciousness and it was all she could do
not to cry out. The ground was wet with her blood. She felt the life
force draining out of her. The
daemonic sigils continued their assault on the fabric of Otherwhere.
An eruption began somewhere within the mountains. Lava and ash
darkened the sky further. The stench of burning was everywhere. The
scar of chromium light struck the circular sea-green shanstone floor,
the music picked up the beat, and the dancers responded
instinctively. By day, the shanstone was dutifully polished to a
reflective gloss, and each night lovingly scuffed to dullness. The
dancers were moving in a kind of concentrated, frenzied,
semireligious mass, a dervish of energy, an accident about to happen. Three
stories down, beneath desolate, starry Devotion Street, the music
boomed. The quintet was V'ornn—Tuskugggun, of course, since
they were the artists and musicians—but the music was an
amalgam of gorgeous minor-key Kundalan melodies and tripartite
dissonant V'ornnish harmonies. The trip-hammer tempos that gave it
bones and brawn were strictly a product of youth, from one culture,
the other, or both, it mattered not to either the quintet or the
dancers. Cthonne
was jam-packed, youths not yet in their teens sandwiched together,
sweaty, bug-eyed, grinning, put to the endurance test by the barrage
of music, light, the intensity of the mass. Marethyn saw V'ornn, both
Great Caste and Lesser Caste, and Kundalan, each with their own area
of dancefloor, each with their own style of dancing, or possibly not
because the longer she looked the more it seemed they had learned—
or at least absorbed—from one another. For the serpentine line
of demarcation was as fluid as the sands of the Great Voorg and, here
and there, the two races danced side by side, or even for an instant
mingled. Marethyn
was dismayed and delighted. When had this underground life sprung up,
children climbing frantically into adulthood, breaking rules and
regulations, flying in the face of V'ornn stratification, Gyrgon law?
Rebels, just as she was. "They
look so blissful," Marethyn shouted in Sornnn's ear. "You
would never believe they were enemies." "They're
not," he replied. The
chromium scar of light was joined by a cadmium oval so cool it risked
sizzling like dry ice. A second drummer had joined the quintet,
hooded and robed, playing not with traditional V'ornn titanium-alloy
whisks but with thick-callused fingertips. The music took on a more
sinuous beat, less industrial, more sonorous, with a texture like
softly breaking waves. The hand-drummer began to sing, sinking into
the syllables with the vigor of an ecstatic. The lyrics spoke of the
pain of loss, the despair and the fierce joy of not belonging. Sornnn,
leaning in toward her, said, "Marethyn, tell me. How frightened
were you with Bronnn Pallln and Line-General Lokck Werrrent?" "Very
frightened," she said. The
ghost of a smile on his face. "Only frightened?" She
looked at him. "No. Exhilarated, too." "I
am unsurprised. You played your part to perfection. You fooled them
all—the Deirus, Pallln, Werrrent." "I
hope it was worth it." "You
know it was. We have neutralized a ruthless conniver in Bronnn Pallln
and a dangerous enemy in Olnnn Rydddlin who, like many Bashkir, hates
and fears me for my involvement in the Korrush." He looked at
her. "Tell me about your fright." She
thought of the moment when she had run her finger along the dust in
the warehouse and he had very gently and very romantically made
certain that she would not do that again. Because it was not a
SaTrryn warehouse, and he did not want anyone to know they had been
there until the trap had been sprung. "Tell me how you managed
to get those weapons inside Bronnn Pallln's warehouse." He
considered for a moment. "It was not difficult. Bronnn Pallln
does not adequately compensate many in his employ, including the
warehouse lading overseer. He was pleased to take the generous coin
my representative offered him in exchange for an hour of his
absence." He cocked his head. "Now, about your fright." "What
is this all about, Sornnn?" "I
want to know whether you would be too frightened ever to play out
another such scenario." "If
the cause was just." "Because
you have a well-honed sense of self-preservation." He leaned in
a little closer. "Your fear will protect you. It will keep your
mind sharp in all situations." Marethyn
watched the ecstatic dancers because she was suddenly afraid not to.
There was something both primitive and powerful in the strobing
lights and the pulsing backbeat which seemed somehow synchronized
with the rushing of the blood in her veins, pulling her away from
everything, from the secret she now carried between her hearts. His
secret. Because she knew this was about more than just Bronnn Pallln
and Kurgan Stogggul, more than just about his life, important to her
as it was. But she would not say anything about that now. Not unless
he broached the subject first. He
had procured drinks from somewhere, had led them up to a balcony
overlooking the cavernous space. The furious furnace heat of hundreds
of moving bodies slapped them in the face. Incense was pearling, the
air thick as stew. The oval of light accompanying the chromium scar
had lowered to a liquid candied bronze. They
stood, leaning against the turned railing, looking down into the
vast, writhing space so that Marethyn felt slightly giddy. Possibly
it was the writhing beat, the primordial excitement of being here, a
secret dance club where V'ornn and Kundalan existed side by side
without enmity. She did not want to be afraid, so she put her head
against his. "My
only regret," she said, "was that I abused my friendship
with Kirlll Qandda. He is so kind to Terrettt, the only one in
Receiving Spirit who is. Yes, I felt exhilaration, but I also am
ashamed." The
youths seemed like one shining multilegged beast, a single-celled
creature, amorphous and anonymous. Marethyn was aware of the
slipstream of energy ripping through the club, aware, too, that she
and Sornnn were observers, apart and, therefore, alone. And there
arose in her breast a curious longing like a pain. "Kirlll
Qandda was bound to be squeezed. Think of it this way. The
information you gave him may have saved his life." Watching
them like this, moving mindlessly, ecstatically, hypnotized by the
backbeat, it suddenly dawned on her the risk they were all taking in
congregating here. The complicity, the signature act of rebellion
they shared, that had brought V'ornn and Kundalan together. Just as
Eleusis Ashera had predicted when he had proposed the reconstruction
of Za Hara-at, the city in the Korrush where V'ornn and Kundalan
might live as equals. The project that had sown the seeds of his
murder at the instigation of her own father. "Still,"
he said, "if you are concerned about him, then by all means
speak with him." "What
would I say?" A
youth in black and silver, coppery skull shiny with sweat, drifted
across the balcony, moving somnolently into the reeflike shadows
close to the wall. Marethyn's gaze was momentarily diverted from the
dancers. The youth wedged his shoulder against the stone wall and lit
a laaga stick. He sucked the pungent smoke deep into his lungs. "If
you speak with him, you cannot give anything away." She
nodded. "Anyway."
He took her hand. "Your actions had a greater effect. It is
called liberation." The
lights had gone low, the music morphing into something looping and
dreamy, a gentle respite, an oasis before the next sandstorm of music
tore through the cavern. Sornnn was looking around as if he was
expecting to locate someone in this controlled frenzy. "There
is something I want to tell you," he said in her ear. He was
still looking about. "It's about my father." They
had not spoken about Sornnn's father since Tettsie's death, but under
cover of night he had taken her to meet his mother, whom she adored
within minutes. The two of them—Marethyn and Petrre Aurrr—had
gone to the deep pools together, scattering Tettsie's ashes into the
dark, chill water. Marethyn had yet to summon the strength to open
the red-jade box her grandmother had left her. She simply could not
bear to touch it; the wound was too raw yet. She needed time to
settle into the notion that Tettsie was truly gone. His
lips fluttered against her ear as he spoke. "This is what I
thought and held to be true. My father was a superb businessman, but
he was removed from the V'ornn thusly: when he met the Korrush
tribes, he fell in love with them, their customs, their culture,
their view of life. Through them, he learned to love Kundala, and
from that moment on he dedicated his life to trying to save it and
its inhabitants. He was both a benefactor and a conduit for the
Resistance. Now I am beginning to see him from a different
perspective." "Because
of your mother." "Yes,
but there's something else," he said. "Tettsie helped me to
stop looking at him with a child's adoring eyes. I see him now as he
really was. And while I have little doubt that he harbored genuine
feeling for the Korrush and its inhabitants, it seems to me that he
was primarily motivated by the element of risk. Speaking to my
mother, hearing her side of their relationship, many small
unexplained quirks and incidents have come into focus." He
leaned in, his lips up against the shell of her ear. "You see
the logic of it, don't you, a V'ornn addicted to risk beats the
independence out of his own wife because, in his own home, the place
he comes to sleep at night, he has no tolerance for risk, the seeds
of independence she will inevitably sow in his children." He
pressed his forehead against the side of her skull and she put her
hand to the back of his neck. He
said, "The greater the risk, the harder my father played for it.
He simply could not stop himself. And it poisoned his relationship
with my mother, in a very real sense destroyed his family, for
without her we were surely the poorer." He
drew away for a moment and looked around, not nervous, and yet on a
kind of alert, part of him roving the cavernous club in case there
was a change, no matter how subtle, in the tenor of the night. The
music beat urgently on. "I
think Tettsie knew this," he said. "I think it was what she
was trying to tell me—what she wanted to warn me of. She did
not want me pursuing you, drawing you into my secret world unless I
was absolutely certain of how I felt about you. She did not want what
happened to my mother to happen to you." All
at once, she felt the sudden return of her fear. "Sornnn—" "Let
me finish before I lose my nerve altogether." He took her hand.
"I have loved you since the moment I first saw you, but if I
could not trust you, there was no point in continuing. Do you see?
Because of who and what you are. Because you are not like other
Tuskugggun, because you are strong and want something more for
yourself." "You
see me as strong, and so you imagine me fearless." "You
already know, or I think you do, why Olnnn Rydddlin has kept me in
his sights. Shall I not go on?" "Thank
you. For loving me and for trusting me this much." She took hold
of his hand. Gazed into his face, already feeling far away from here.
"But I don't know. I want you to tell me everything. And yet
this very thing makes me short of breath." He
leaned over and kissed her cheek. "You are an artist, Marethyn.
Perhaps you should stay an artist." She
put her arms around his neck. "Take me home, Sornnn." He
kissed her then, long and hard with the music's throbbing pulse
transmitted from his teeth to hers, and it seemed to last all the way
back to her atelier. In
the rear, there was a loft, and above the loft arose a huge skylight.
Years ago, when she had bought the atelier, Marethyn had installed a
bed and some few furnishings she deemed essential, for she often
worked long hours or was struck by inspiration at odd moments. So she
often slept here, under the stars. She had always found this space
private and romantic but never more so as when she shared it with
Sornnn. In fact, on the occasions now when she slept here alone she
felt bereft, and longed for him close and warm by her side, breathing
soft and evenly, lulling her to sleep. When,
as now, returning from Cthonne, they made love, the space was
transformed into a kind of temple, resplendent with glittering stars
that appeared to belong just to them. Their passion seemed infinite,
their capacity for pleasure expanding exponentially, and when they
were finished and lay, drunk with lust and with each other, entangled
and moist, Marethyn wept with a joy she could never have imagined. And
their whispered conversation. "Sornnn." "Yes." "Beloved." "Wa
tarabibi." "Yes.
Wa tarabibi." He
laughed to hear her utter the Korrush phrase that was so resonant
with meaning. "Sornnn.
I have never been so happy." He
raised himself on one elbow. "And I, wa tarabibi." They
had not spoken again of that other thing, the thought of which made
her lose her breath. He respected what she said, the only male ever
to do so. And this made her love him all the more. She
held his face between her hands and gazed into his eyes. "And
now I cannot sleep." Reluctantly, she let go of him. "I
need to paint." As she lit the atelier's lamps, she said, "I
will understand if you want to—" "I
will watch you," he said softly. "From here. Until dawn.
Until you are finished." Marethyn
kissed him and, without bothering to put on a robe, went naked down
to her easel and set out a fresh canvas. She found that she was in
the kind of tightly controlled frenzy that presaged hours of intense
work. Her hearts beat fast; her mind was on fire. She still felt him
in her loins, still heard the insistent music of Cthonne in her inner
ear as if it had lodged there. The
instant she touched pigment to canvas she was engulfed again in
Cthonne's sound, vibration, strobing light, a massed energy all
attuned to the music's relentless beat, and she knew what it was she
needed to re-create with bold strokes and nuances of color. She
listened to the beat remembered in her inner ear, letting it crash
over her, become part of her, guide her brushstrokes, so that she was
inside the energy stream, the great single-celled creature that
pulsed and throbbed to the bone-jarring beat. All the while, she used
her special artist's eye to decode the minutiae of detail into
intent. She recalled a Kundalan female with her head thrown back, her
long hair flying, a V'ornn male with metal eyes and a permanent
sneer, dipping and swaying, a Kundalan couple dancing so close they
could have been a single entity, a V'ornn couple with their backs to
each other, mirroring each other's steps as if by telepathy, a host
of others brought into clear and precise focus. And she sensed the
strangeness of the palette laid out before her, the essential unease
of it, detected these things like fugitive colors hidden beneath a
topcoat of pigment. She
did not yet know everything that lay hidden here—this was the
genesis, after all, for her seizure of controlled frenzy, the desire
to parse out her memory of Cthonne, to depict it and in depicting it
deconstruct it into discrete understandable segments—but one
sentiment she was certain wasn't anywhere in Cthonne's packed space
was a sense of certain defeat. Neither were the unending
disappointment, nor betrayals, small and grand, failed hopes that
appeared, to a greater or lesser degree, in almost every Kundalan she
had met. There was a sense of serenity generated by the music and the
energy that beat back the bleakness and despair that was everywhere
else on Kundala. She saw it now. It was the promise of oneness, a
surcease from the pain the Cosmos inflicted. She
thought of the youth in black and silver getting high on laaga and
painted him, crammed in a corner, gaunt and bent as an old V'ornn.
Here was the fright and the danger she herself felt so close to now.
Living alongside the hope generated inside Cthonne was the sweaty
hearts-palpitating pallor of desperation. These youths were on the
edge, pushed to their limits by constant dread, a noxious and
corrosive byproduct of the century of enmity, hatred, brutal acts of
war, bitter retaliations, racial slurs, unthinking violence. And
she thought of her original assessment. They were an accident waiting
to happen. Possibly. But in the re-created scar of chromium light,
she was painting a white-hot spotlight that pierced through flesh and
bone to the very core of them, that would illuminate the deep vein of
potential power that rippled beneath their brittle, honed,
semisui-cidal surface. At
firstlight, she broke off painting to make them some star-rose tea
and breakfast. She could feel Sornnn's dark intense eyes following
her and felt a delicious tingling all through her body. In the
cupboard on a shelf by itself, she saw the still-unopened red-jade
box Tettsie had left her. She held still, staring at it, her
pigment-smeared fingers at her throat, clutching a carved crystal key
held on a thin tertium chain. She could hear her own breath soughing
in her inner ears. From the time that Tettsie's legacy was made
known, she had never taken off this chain, had felt the small weight
of the key burning in the valley between her breasts. Sornnn had
never once commented upon it, but he liked to kiss it as he kissed
and caressed the tops of her breasts. In this way, she realized that
it had become part of her. She
felt abruptly, as if she had fallen into a dreamlike stupor. As if
with someone else's hands, she reached up and brought the red-jade
box down onto the shanstone counter. It seemed to burn her fingers
with a cool steady fire. Dimly,
she heard Sornnn calling her name, asking if she was all right. She
did not answer. Her fingers trembled as she took the key from around
her neck and inserted it into the lock. She turned it and gasped as
the box sprang open. The
interior was empty save for a small crystal, snugged into a satin
cradle. It took her a moment to recognize it as a data-decagon. She
held it in her hand, and before she could think about it inserted it
into a data-port. At
once, Tettsie's face sprang to life on the small crystal screen. She
was smiling her beautiful crinkled smile.
Marethyn's eyes welled up with tears. "Dearest
Marethyn," Tettsie said. "I know you are grieving my death.
I cannot stop that, nor would I even if I could. It is part of the
natural process of letting go. But, while you grieve you must also
celebrate my life." This
statement surprised Marethyn. "Doubtless,
it will surprise you to hear this, since you have been privy to
all—well, mostly all—the hardships in my life. And they
were grave, I grant you that. But believe me when I tell you that in
time I was amply compensated. Now that I am dead I can admit how much
it pained me to keep much of my life secret from you. This was not of
my own volition; it was an absolute necessity. Ask Sornnn. He knows
about such things. Intimately." There
was a brief pause, as if Tettsie had stopped the recording for a
moment to gather her thoughts. Marethyn turned, saw that Sornnn had
come silently down from the loft. He stood beside Tettsie's
remembrance-cloth, watching her. "You
know," she said to him, the idea dawning on her. And she held
out her hand. "Come here." He
stood beside her as Tettsie's legacy unspooled. "I
imagine he is there," her grandmother was saying. "Beside
you. Holding your hand. He is a good V'ornn, and you possess the
intelligence to decide whether or not he is for you. You may wonder
how I know so much about him. This, also, is part of my secret life.
Do you wish to hear this, darling? Think hard. If you wish me to
continue, do nothing. Otherwise, pull the data-decagon now and see
that it is completely and utterly destroyed." A
small silence ensued. Acutely slanting sunlight was flooding the
atelier. Marethyn imagined she could hear the sun moving, a slow and
deliberate creak as of aged bones, as it commenced its foreshortened
arc across the sky. She gripped Sornnn's hand. "So.
You have decided," Tettsie said. "Good! Now you will hear
everything." Tettsie's
face became more intent, and Marethyn realized that her grandmother
was leaning forward. "During
most of my life with your grandfather I was desperately unhappy. For
a time, I could only see myself in his image. Much to my horror, I
found that I, like all Tuskugggun, had been brainwashed into
believing a certain set of basic principles about myself as a female.
Then as I told you, I rebelled. But eventually I discovered to my
horror that my rebellion was only skin deep. Think how shocked I was,
darling! And wounded. And in despair! "And
then, ten years ago, just after your grandfather died, I met someone.
It was pure happenstance. We came across each other in the spice
market, though we were there for totally different reasons. I had
arrived at that place because I was lost and wanted to become more
so. She was there on business. "We
began to talk. I suppose in those days I was wearing my despair like
a sifeyn. She took me to Spice Jaxx's, where we had a drink. Well,
the drink became two, then a meal, then tea. We spent all afternoon
talking! What did we talk about? Everything, I suppose. But what was
important was her vision of how a Tuskugggun could make the most of
her life. How we, as Tuskugggun, could make a difference and in
making a difference come to know—really know—who we were. "It
was she who told me how we Tuskugggun are defined by the males. How,
through centuries of societal custom, we are taught to be and do and
say what the males want us to be and do and say without even being
conscious of it! "And
so, darling, my secret life began. And through this Tuskugggun I met
Hadinnn SaTrryn, and then Sornnn. Well now, doubtless you are
surprised again. I cannot say I blame you. I am certain that you
thought you knew me through and through. We all believe that about
our loved ones. But it simply isn't true. You never know it all, nor
should you. "I
had planned to share this secret with you, my most beloved, when you
and Sornnn were wed. If you are listening to this I am already gone.
My health was fragile. I knew that. Please forgive me for not telling
you. What would have been the point? There was nothing you could do,
and you would only have worried." Tettsie
clucked her tongue against the roof of her mouth. "
'How mysterious my Tettsie is!' I can hear you saying this to
yourself. So now I will reveal the mystery. The way I broke free of
my chains, the way I learned to live a full and rich life on my own
terms was in joining this Tuskugggun and Hadinnn and Sornnn in aiding
the Kundalan Resistance. They gave their skill and their cunning. I
gave coins, which, thanks to your grandfather, I had in great
abundance. I cannot tell you how deeply it pleased me to use his
coins to aid the cause of freedom. It may sound simplistic, darling,
but the slavery of the Kundalan is our slavery. Their freedom is our
freedom. Once you see this, everything becomes so clear and
well-defined. "I
realized quite belatedly that I was ashamed of being V'ornn. But
better late than never! I found that I could neither condone nor
forgive my own race's treatment of other species. I did not agree
with its racial policy of world-rape. You see how deeply ingrained
the brainwashing is. One does not even consider questioning what has
over the millennia become the V'ornn way of life. I came to realize
that my own personal despair was masking a greater truth: that I
despised myself and my entire race. I did something about that. So
can you. But only if you wish it. "The
bulk of my coins remain, as you know, in trust with Dobbro Mannx. Why
did I do that, you might ask, instead of willing them to you? There
are several reasons. The first is that I want them to go to the
Resistance. The second is that having heard my secret, having come
this far, you have a decision to make. I want you to continue my
work. But it really doesn't matter what I want. Don't let an old
Tuskugggun— and a dead one at that—influence your life.
You are a highly gifted artist. You hardly need me to tell you that.
And art can be enormously fulfilling, no question about it. But is it
enough for you, Marethyn? I think I know you. Though I have already
gone on record as saying no V'ornn really knows another completely I
am old enough—and dead enough!—to indulge myself one last
time in this manner. "Sornnn
is there with you now, isn't he? Yes, of course he is. But do not ask
him his opinion, darling! When it comes to you, he has his own bias,
as you are well aware! And he is a male. A most unusual male,
admittedly, but still a male. This must be your decision. Yours
alone. If you decide to go ahead, you will take this data-decagon to
Dobbro Mannx. I have encrypted it for his data-port. It will give you
access to the coins for the purpose already outlined. And Sornnn,
well, Sornnn, you will introduce my beloved granddaughter to our
mutual friend. "Marethyn,
if you decide to remain an artist, please be so kind as to give the
data-decagon to Sornnn. He will decide how and when and by what
clandestine means it will assist the Resistance." Tettsie
smiled, looking so much like the Tuskugggun who had taken the girl
Marethyn to the deep pools in summer that Marethyn's hearts thudded
with joy. "Marethyn, listen to me, I know this is an emotional
moment for you. I also know that you tend to overthink
decisions—especially ones you deem important. I beg you not to
overthink this one. Listen to your hearts, your spirit, and do not be
influenced by any V'ornn, including me. There are many ways to
remember me. The painting you were doing of me is one such way. If
this is your way, all the better for you. I beg you: do not do this
for me, for any V'ornn but yourself. You cannot think your way to
fulfillment; you must feel it. Come to think of it, it's instinctual,
just like painting, so, really, for you it should not be difficult.
Either way, I love you. You cannot know in how many ways you have
brought me deep and abiding delight! "Good-bye,
my dearest child. I trust that your great and generous spirit will
guide you onto the right path. Trust it as I do and you will not go
wrong." Tettsie's
smiling image flickered and died. Tears
were streaming down Marethyn's face, and Sornnn put his arm around
her, hugging her close. She felt his hearts beating in concert with
hers. She heard her grandmother's voice like a prayer in her head.
Over Sornnn's sun-warmed shoulder she saw the painting she had been
creating. She studied it not with a critical eye for technique or
color but to spark her memory of Cthonne. Something—some
critical thing— kept drawing her back there. Don't
overthink your decision, Tettsie had warned her. Use your
artist's intuition. What was the intuition telling her? She loved
being an artist. It gave her a freedom and independence few
Tuskugggun enjoyed. And yet, she had begun to recognize in herself a
certain restlessness, an undeniable feeling that there must be more
to life than what she had. And then Sornnn had come into her life,
and she had love. But with him there was more than love. Together
they had begun a secret life. Yes, it was true. In the clear light of
Tettsie's legacy she could see that the moment she agreed to help
Sornnn she had begun to be the V'ornn her grandmother hoped she would
become. This decision had excited her, yes, but it had also
frightened her deeply, which was why she had pushed it away. Because
somewhere in the depths of her artist's spirit she had known there
was more. She had known that he wanted to share this secret with her.
At Cthonne, in the center of the frenzy, her fear had gotten the
better of her, and she had pulled back. Now
the revelation had come from the mouth of her dead grand-mother. She
should have been shocked, stunned, upset. But she was none of those
things. Instead, for the first time since she had become uneasy with
her life, everything was clear, everything made sense. Tettsie
had been right. It had taken no thought at all. No decision she had
ever made seemed so right. It was pure instinct. She
turned in Sornnn's arms and looked up into his face, and said, "Yes.
I choose. I, Marethyn Stogggul. I choose yes." "There
can be no going back now, Marethyn." "I
do not want to go back. I do not know what I would do if I did." She
was frightened and exhilarated and very sure of what she was doing.
These emotions produced from deep inside her a fleeting tremor in her
hands, and she thought of Tettsie and growing old, and she knew that,
like her grandmother, when her own time came she wanted to be proud
of the life she had lived. At
last she understood why Sornnn had taken her to Cthonne the night
before. Here existed a small but functioning model of Eleusis
Ashera's dream where V'ornn and Kundalan lived side by side in peace
and harmony. Through
her brushstrokes they were born again, all of them, and she saw them
as Sornnn saw them, and knew that they, these youths, were also a
bomb waiting to be detonated. 23 Take
No Prisoners
Kurgan
had reluctantly returned to his unutterably boring duties as regent.
He found that as time went on he had lost all patience for the
niceties of diplomacy and the arcane formalities of protocol. He
barked at every V'ornn who crossed his path. He ground his teeth in
frustration as he was slowly and inexorably buried beneath a mountain
of minutiae. Small
wonder that he took as many breaks as he thought he could get away
with, hanging over the balustrade of this balcony or that, sucking
thick laaga smoke deep into his lungs. He liked the way it made him
expand until he filled the entire palace. He opened his mouth and
swallowed the structure whole. This brought a chuckle to his lips. Often,
he felt like killing something and, descending into the interrogation
cells the Gyrgon had built beneath the palace, chose a prisoner at
random and went to work on him with a lighthearted determination,
whistling the hunting song the Old V'ornn had taught him when he was
much younger. The
inevitable death, which would come suddenly and too soon, left him
feeling emptier than before, and he would take his ire out on the
first Haaar-kyut unfortunate enough to cross his path. Possibly
that was why, on this particular day, having grown weary of the
drivel collecting around him, he did not visit the interrogation
chambers. Instead, he smoked alone on one of the outer balconies that
overlooked the crowded street. He
was thinking of Courion, wondering when he would hear from him, when
he saw the young Kundalan female. He was certain it was the one he
had seen before—from this very balcony, if he was not mistaken.
The one he had forcibly taken that long-ago golden afternoon by the
stream when Annon was still alive. Their last hunt. He
threw aside the butt of his laaga stick and called for a Haaar-kyut.
The young Khagggun appeared instantly, and Kurgan pointed out the
female before she could again vanish into the throng. While
the Haaar-kyut gave orders to have her fetched, Kurgan went in and
read the latest data-decagon from Rada. He was beginning to wonder at
the wisdom of his enlisting her. So far, the intelligence she had
sent had been minor. On the other hand, he thought he should be happy
at that. Then he came across the item about the Khagggun unrest. This
was the second time she had mentioned it. Hadn't he ordered Olnnn
Rydddlin to deal with any dissatisfaction among the lower-echelon
Khagggun over the suspension of their Great Caste rights? What was
the Star-Admiral up to? Certainly he hadn't yet captured Rekkk
Hacilar and the Kundalan sorceress Giyan. He
banged a fist on the table so hard a pair of Haaar-kyut sprinted into
the chamber, shock-swords drawn. He dismissed them with a backhand
wave. Damn
him to N'Luuura! He
turned at the sound of a voice. Expecting the Haaar-kyut guard with
the Kundalan female, he turned, smiling, only to see the Star-Admiral
striding out onto the terrace. The full force of his black mood blew
like wind in a sail. He
took several strides around Olnnn Rydddlin and sniffed loudly. "What
is this I smell? The stench of failure follows you like cor feces." The
Star-Admiral contrived to laugh, but Kurgan could tell that he had
inserted a nettle, if only a small one, between the plates of Olnnn's
gleaming blue-and-gold armor. "I
am pleased to see you in such a good mood, regent," Olnnn said.
"I have, in fact, good news to report." "You
have brought the Rhynnnon's bloody head." "No,
regent." "The
sorceress skcettta Giyan, then?" "No,
regent." "What,
then, would please me?" Kurgan exploded. "We
have in custody the traitor who has been supplying the Resistance." Kurgan
paused, for a moment taken aback. "Really? And who might this
traitor be?" "The
Bashkir Bronnn Pallln." "Now
that is interesting." Kurgan tapped his lips with a ringer. "I
wouldn't have thought. . . but then, why not? My father screwed him
royally when he passed him over for Prime Factor. Of course he would
have made a mess of the office; surprising he didn't make a mess of
this as well." "In
the end, he did, regent." Kurgan
nodded. "And where is the traitor now? Down in one of my
interrogation cells, no doubt?" "No,
regent. According to protocol, traitors against the V'ornn Modality
are confined in Khagggun prison until they are bound over for the
tribunal." "I
do not give a rotten clemett for protocol. I want Bronnn Pallln
brought here. I want to interrogate the skcettta myself." "But,
regent. You can't—" "I
can't?" Kurgan shouted. "Since when does my Star-Admiral
tell me what I can and cannot do?" "Regent,
I only mean ... I am thinking of the high command. They will be
displeased by this breach of—" "Stop
prattling, Star-Admiral." Kurgan's hand swept in an imperious
arc. "Just do as I order." "Yes, sir!" "Now
off with you. You have your duties to perform." He grinned as
Olnnn turned on his heel. He rubbed his hands together. At last some
delicious action! "I cannot wait to begin." Moments
after the Star-Admiral left, the young Haaar-kyut returned with the
Kundalan female. That should have pleased Kurgan, but it did not. On
closer scrutiny, he saw that she was not the one he had taken down by
the stream. He cursed. Annon
was dead, and the female was lost to him. He took her anyway, bent
over like an animal, in a white-hot fury of motion and emotion. He
used his fingernails to draw blood. She made no sound beneath him,
not even a whimper, and this infuriated him all the more. His fingers
were wound in her thick hair. Images of Courion and Nith Batoxxx
danced in his head. He closed his eyes in an attempt to bring back
that sun-dappled afternoon, the sight of the female that had so
quickened his pulse. He
pretended with this imitation, bucking against her and grunting out
his fantasy. She
was better than nothing. But still, when it was over, he had her
thrown away like a loaf of stale wrybread because if it wasn't the
real thing, he never wanted to see that face again. The
stench of death rose to bring the blackcrows in anxious flocks. Like
all carrion birds, they were, despite their size, exceedingly
skittish, bright gold eyes trying to look everywhere at once. With
each small sound they rose in a blood-flecked cloud, only to settle
again upon ridges of bleached bone and rotting flesh. The
leading edge of Attack-Commandant Blled's scouting party appeared,
first one and then another, breaking cover, advancing in a
sem-icrouch, covering the distance between the tree line and the
perimeter of the mass grave silently and efficiently. Then
Attack-Commandant Blled himself appeared, flanked by two more
Khagggun. "This
is as far as they could have come," Attack-Commandant Blled
said, checking a wrist readout. "If one or both of them are
still alive." At his hand signal three Khagggun fanned out,
beating the underbrush. His communications officer began to receive a
narrow-band photon burst. "There is still not one shred of
evidence that anyone escaped the blast," he informed his
superior. "And they have found more pieces of the Rhynnnon's
armor at the wreck site, enough so they have more or less
reconstructed the entire suit." As
his Khagggun had done, Attack-Commandant Blled walked all around the
perimeter of the reeking pit. His Khagggun returned from their recon
with negative results. Another hand signal and two Khagggun descended
into the nauseating quagmire of the death pit. One of them began
almost immediately to retch. His eyes tearing up, he fumbled his way
back to the edge and began to climb out. Attack-Commandant
Blled said, "Get back in there, Third-Captain, and do your
duty." "With
all due respect, sir," the Third-Captain said, "why are we
wasting time looking for ghosts?" At
once, Attack-Commandant Blled went over and, with an almost
nonchalant swipe of his shock-sword, severed the Third-Captain's head
from his shoulders. The corpse danced a little jig before
Attack-Commandant Blled kicked it on the shoulder, sending it
toppling onto the oozing mound of Kundalan corpses. "Any
other questions need answering?" Not
one Khagggun said a word, but when Attack-Commandant Blled gave a
hand sign another Third-Captain at once jumped into the pit. The
blackcrows screamed and lifted, so disturbing the Khagggun that they
fired off several rounds from their handheld ion cannons before
Attack-Commandant Blled ordered them to stand down. They ignored the
unbelievable stench, the watering of their eyes, as they used their
shock-swords to spear downward randomly into the morass. They held
their breath as they picked their way through the pit. When they met
at the far side they were gasping, and they scrambled up the slippery
side of the grave, silently cursing N'Luuura as they at last regained
firm ground. Their comrades gave them a wide berth, and there was a
bit of good-natured ribbing at their expense. Attack-Commandant
Blled frowned, then nodded. "All right then." And
with a last look around he gestured, and they crept backward,
reinfiltrating the forest whence they had emerged. Silence
returned to the pit of death, and the blackcrows once more settled,
tearing ravenously at their own felled comrades along with the
outsize, two-legged creatures on which they had been feasting for
weeks. One
of the blackcrows, larger and more aggressive than the others,
unearthed yet another layer of rotting dead. As others of its kind
flocked to its discovery, it shrieked, slashing with its cruel beak
until fear overwhelmed gluttony and they gave way, returning sullenly
to the picked-over mounds, where they contented themselves with
worrying the tough remnants of tendons off the ends of bones. The
blackcrow dug deeper, gorging itself on half-rotted flesh, all the
while keeping its suspicious golden eyes upon its brethren to ensure
that they maintained their distance. Doubtless it was this
inattention that caused it to miss the sudden movement beneath it.
The ion-dagger point pierced its breast, spitting the bird entirely
in the instant before it could take flight. Its wings spread,
trembling and quivering in spastic response, but the gold had fled
its eyes; it was already dead. Its
brethren paused in their meal and fell upon it wholeheartedly when
its huge black carcass came hurtling down among them. Rekkk
raised his head out of the center of the stinking quagmire, said,
"N'Luuura take these blackcrows." He took a quick but
thorough reconnaissance, then, reaching down, pulled Eleana,
slithering, through the gelatinous muck. She was still clutching the
hollow communicator sheath, used by Khagggun for photonic
transmissions, that Rekkk had fashioned into breathing tubes for
them. "It
worked," he said with some satisfaction. "They're gone."
Eleana led them to a small rill some three hundred meters northeast
running swiftly through a gap in moss-covered rocks. There, they
squatted and, as best they could, washed off the stench of death.
Where the Teyj had gone they could not say. They were too exhausted
to keep going. While Eleana foraged for edible mushrooms and ferns
Rekkk searched out a suitable spot to spend what was left of the
night. He found a cave, shallow but dry, in the shank of the massif
that continued its rough, dizzying ascent all the way, it appeared,
to Stone Border. Its only drawback was that it overlooked the death
pit, which glowed eerily in the incandescent moonslight. They
dared not light a fire, so they ate the food Eleana brought back cold
and raw. The taste was only marginally palatable, but at least the
gnawing in their stomachs was somewhat assuaged. Rekkk volunteered to
take the first watch, but as Eleana curled up against his back she
felt wide awake. "We
are close to Stone Border," she said, "but the last few
kilometers are the steepest." Rekkk
looked up into the heart of the massif. "There lies the Abbey of
Floating White. And within it Konara Urdma, the traitor who is
responsible for all those lost Resistance lives. We are the only ones
who know her identity. We have to get to the abbey and neutralize
her." "Have you thought about how well gain entrance?"
He touched her swollen belly. "They will not refuse you,
Eleana." "You know, that just might work," she said.
"Just as long as you don't frighten them to death."
24 The
Collapse of Memory
Perrnodt's
legs were already in sunlight when Riane returned to the dune. She
took the dzuoko over her shoulder and carried her to the other side,
where the shadows were already beginning to pool. She stretched her
parallel to the dune so all of her was within the narrow band of
shadow. As soon as she did so, Perrnodt's eyes fluttered open. Riane
collapsed to her knees, slowly gave Perrnodt some water, then drank
some herself. "Are
you all right?" she asked. "You passed out almost as soon
as I got you through the Gyrgon's ion field." Perrnodt
nodded and asked for more water. Riane
watched her drink. She was clothed in the blue-and-white-striped
robes of one of the dead Jeni Cerii. It was blood stained and ripped
where her dagger had punctured it on the side, but wearable. The same
could not be said for the other robe, which had been shredded by the
infinity-blade. The
weapon's abrupt resurgence had been much on her mind when she
retrieved her dagger from its sandy grave, and all during the long
and lonely walk back. When she had shed her filthy Ghorvish robes she
had discovered the stone Mu-Awwul had given her engraved with the
sign of the fulkaan. It had lain, forgotten, in the same pocket where
she had placed the infinity-blade, and that had set her to wondering.
She had placed the stone next to the infinity-blade. As it had drawn
near she felt a kind of magnetic pull. When the stone touched the
edge of the infinity-blade it began to pulse. What
was it that Mu-Awwul had told her when he had given her the stone?
Power and jjhani flow from the image of the fulkaan. At
the time, she had imagined his words to be figurative. After all, he
had given her a talisman of Jiharre, a symbol of good luck, of—in
his word, jjhani—spiritual harvest. But now she saw that
he had meant it quite literally. There was a power in the stone,
strong enough to reactivate the infinity-blade. How this power could
be compatible with the weapon was a complete mystery, one she meant
to clear up with him as soon as she was able. "I
am feeling better," Perrnodt said, sighing. "But I am
starving. I do not suppose you have food, as well?" When
Riane produced some dried meat from the satchel she had taken off the
dead Jeni Cerii, Perrnodt said, "Judging by how you are dressed,
you must have come across a Jeni Cerii raiding party." As
they ate, Riane told her of the Jeni Cerii camp. Then she recounted
the recent history. "I
know you are Ramahan," Riane said. "I was told you know the
location of the sanctuary where the Maasra is hidden." Perrnodt
eyed her suspiciously. "So much dangerous knowledge for one so
young. And you have killed a sauromician and a Gyrgon, you say?" "The
remains of Nith Settt lie over there," Riane said, pointing.
"The sauromician died near the kapudaan's palace in Agachire." Perrnodt
turned in that direction and sat very still. For a moment, nothing
happened. Then Riane felt a kind of tremor as of the earth moving,
but the earth was not moving. She saw Perrnodt's eyes roll up in her
head and she knew what this tremor was. Perrnodt had parted the air.
She was moving—or, rather, part of her was. She was not
Thrip-ping. This was something else altogether. In
a moment, the tremor had subsided, Perrnodt's eyes had returned to
normal. "Yes," she said. "Nith Settt is, indeed,
dead." By
the way she said this, Riane understood. "You believe I may be
an agent of the Gyrgon." "This
Gyrgon—the one who was sent here—it is strange with him."
She had a curious lilt to her voice, almost as if she were singing
her words. "He knew of the Maasra's existence. How? He
wanted to get his hands on it. Why? Before this, the Gyrgon have
never exhibited the slightest interest in the Prophesies or the lore
of the Ramahan." Riane,
thinking of Nith Sahor, knew that to be not quite true. But then Nith
Sahor was an anomaly among Gyrgon. All at once something struck her.
She said, "The Veil of a Thousand Tears appears in Prophesy?" "More
than once," Perrnodt said. "It is written that the Dar
Sala-at will claim the Maasra. It will be lost and rewon in
bloody battle. In the process, the Dar Sala-at will be betrayed." Riane
felt her heart thudding in her breast. It was eerie hearing her own
future spoken aloud as if it were already history. Did this mean that
she no longer had free will? Which of her choices—because life,
hers above all others, perhaps, was composed of crucial choices—would
lead to this particular fate? Could she not find a way to keep the
Maasra from being lost? Could she not maneuver so as to avoid
this bloody war? What was the point of power, of being the Dar
Sala-at, if her path was already set in stone? And
then another, more immediate, consequence hit her. It is written
in Prophesy that of the Dar Sala-at's allies one will love her, one
will betray her, one will try to destroy her, Giyan had warned
her. Now Perrnodt had echoed that warning. "What
precisely are these Prophesies I keep hearing about? Is there a book,
or a series of books that have been translated or interpreted by the
Ramahan?" Perrnodt
produced a wan smile. "You have told me that you were trained at
the Abbey of Floating White. But you are young yet, a novice. The
Prophesies are for—" "I
am not simply a Ramahan novice," Riane said. "I am the Dar
Sala-at." Perrnodt
neither exclaimed in wonder nor burst out laughing. She seemed to
absorb this revelation with a degree of skepticism. Riane recalled
Giyan telling her that even among the Ramahan there would be a fair
amount of doubt because she was female, that there would be
naysayers. She fervently hoped Perrnodt would not be among them. "I
must admit, that is quite a claim," Perrnodt said at last. "It
would explain how I was able to kill the sauromician and the Gyrgon,
would it not?" Riane said cannily. "Yes,
that is a possible explanation," Perrnodt acknowledged. "On
the other hand, you could simply be clever." "In
your time at the abbey did you ever know a novice clever enough to
defeat such enemies?" Perrnodt
said nothing. "One
who could Thripp?" "Actually,
no." She smiled. "But I very much doubt you can, either." "At
the moment, you're right." Riane touched the mole beneath her
right ear. "But take a look at this." Perrnodt
hesitated for an instant before leaning over. Riane turned her head
to give her a better look. Perrnodt gave a tiny indrawn breath. "You
know what this is," Riane said. "My Gift was hidden for
safekeeping while I was in the Korrush." "A
wise decision." Two of Perrnodt's fingers were pressed against
Riane's neck. "Who made it for you?" "A
sefiror named Minnum," Perrnodt
drew back as if stung. "Is that what that imp told you, that he
was a sefiror?" Riane
nodded. "He's not?" "He
has taken a Venca word and—" "I
know what it means," Riane said. "Sefiror is one of a
mystical community." "Well.
The novice knows a Venca word." "I
know more than a word," Riane said. "It
is impossible for a novice to have learned the Root Tongue,"
Perrnodt said in Venca. "And
yet I can speak Venca fluently," Riane replied in the same
language. Now
Perrnodt did react. "Dear Miina?" she cried. "Everything
you have told me is the truth. But the Dar Sala-at a female . . ."
She shook her head. Still not quite believing it was so. "You
must tell me about Minnum," Riane said. "I believed him. I
trusted him to lock away my Gift." "First
things first." Perrnodt beckoned. "Come just a bit closer." When
Riane had rearranged herself, Permodt put both hands on Riane. Riane
felt a coolness seep through her. Perrnodt touched the false mole,
and at once all her Osoru knowledge exploded in her mind like
fireworks. She gasped, trembling a little with the delicate force of
it. "The
power inside you—" Perrnodt sat back, shook her head. "One
thing about Minnum, he does meticulous work." "If
he is not a sefiror—" "Minnum
is not a sefiror." "What
is he then? He said he was the last of his kind left alive." Perrnodt
laughed. "Would that it were so] But, alas, no. There are
others of his kind secreted about. You yourself told me about one." "I
did?" Perrnodt
nodded. "Minnum is a sauromician." "He
is a male sorcerer," Riane said. "He was able to
encapsulate my Gift, so I know he wasn't lying about that." "But
he was lying about almost everything else. Oh, do not blame him, my
dear. He cannot help himself. His lying is a curse, part of his
punishment." "He
told me Miina was punishing him for his sins." "He
did?" Perrnodt was clearly surprised. "Now that is
interesting. I imagine it cost him a great deal to tell you that
truth." "And
he told me to seek you out." "Minnum
did that?" "He
must have known that you would tell me the truth about him." "That
means he believes you are who you say you are." "But
he is not sefiror?" "No.
In every way imaginable sauromicians and sefiror are separate. For
one thing, sauromicians are male while sefiror are both male and
female. For another, the two employ an entirely different mode of
sorcery. Sauromicians use a sorcery that is an offshoot—a
corruption, really—of Kyofu. I say corruption because it is
necromancy. This is impure. It involves killing and using the dead
bodies as the basis for sorcery. They allowed other influences to
create a kind of amalgam that they believe is more powerful than
either Osoru or Kyofu." "Is
it more powerful?" "I
do not know. What I do know is that it is unholy. And being unholy,
they cannot cleave to the power bourns that crisscross beneath the
surface of Kundala. In fact, contact with the bourns will kill a
sauromician. The sefiror, on the other hand, practice a sorcery that
is based in part on the bourns. It is as pure as it is ancient. It is
the twining of Osoru and Kyofu." "It
is called Qadi'ir." "Yes.
It is Eye Window. But there is another, more fundamental difference
between sauromicians and sefiror," Perrnodt said. "Sefiror
are Druuge." She looked hard at Riane. "Do you know of the
Druuge, child?" "Oh,
yes. I have encountered them." And Riane told her how she had
come upon a trio of the holy nomads in Middle Seat, how they had
saved her from three aggressive Khagggun by chanting, by using her
Third Eye to pull her into the Channel, as a lens to focus their
sorcery—the magic of words. "Great
Goddess Miina!" Perrnodt breathed as she kissed the back of
Riane's hand. "Now I see why Minnum believes. You truly are the
Dar Sala-at." Now
Riane recognized the singsong lilt, she knew why Perrnodt was fluent
in Venca. "You
are Druuge, Perrnodt!" she whispered fiercely. "You are
Dru-uge!" Pack-Commander
Cooolm was in charge of the traitor Bronnn Pallln. The prisoner sat
in two sets of ion chains, in the Khagggun thick-walled prison on
Grey Vapor Street. It was not an assignment he found in the least
palatable, but he could not work himself up into the requisite peak
of ire. He knew his compatriots were off hunting down Kundalan
Resistance cells while he was stuck herding a fat and traitorous
Bashkir. He found he did not care. He
was no longer a young V'ornn in the full flower of his youth. He was
battle-scarred; his once-vaunted viciousness melted into a weary
indifference that only sporadically disgusted him. Lately, he had
taken to frequenting a succession of Looorm in a bleak ggley-chain of
nights whose sole purpose lay in the obliteration of memory. There
were those comrades who believed Kundala was the end of the line,
that the Gyr-gon, having sunk into a haze of inaction and rueful
reverie, would never give the order to leave. Pack-Commander Cooolm,
having himself fallen into a similar stupor, provided no opinion on
the hotly debated topic. However, he was aware enough to mark the
increasing ferocity and repetition of this debate among the packs.
One could almost call it an obsession. Better by far to keep these
ruminations to himself, for if the rumors proved to be the case, he
suspected that they had all fallen very far indeed from the moment,
just over a hundred years ago, when they had first set their
colonizing boots on Kundala. He
tuned out the prisoner's constant yabbering, looked upon him with
contempt. Yet he received little pleasure in contemplating the
excruciating pain of the forthcoming interrogation because he would
have no hand in it. He was a mere guard, a lowly job a Third-Marshal
could have handled. Not that he minded; he was tired from a lengthy
evening excursion. Besides, he was Khagggun; his duty was to obey.
His orders had come from Line-General Lokck Werrrent himself, and
Cooolm was resigned to completing this wretched task without a hitch. Doubtless,
this was why he felt a sense of foreboding when he saw the fearsome
Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin approaching with his escort.
Pack-Commander Cooolm ordered his Khagggun to attention. He barked at
one of his pack to shut the prisoner up once and for all. He had had
enough of his mewling protestations of innocence to last him a
lifetime. Besides, he had no intention of allowing the Star-Admiral
to be subjected to the foul cacophony. Cooolm
licked his lips. Why was the Star-Admiral here? Had he, Cooolm, done
something wrong? He noticed that the Star-Admiral carried with him no
bodyguard. Rather, and even more shockingly, he was accompanied by a
Tuskugggun clad in a uniform sporting the Star-Admiral's own
blue-and-gold colors. "Pack-Commander,
good day," the Star-Admiral said. "I am here to interrogate
the prisoner myself." Pack-Commander
Cooolm, still staring openly at the Tuskugggun, was so taken aback
that he was quite literally at a loss for words. "You
will allow me access at once," the Star-Admiral ordered, with a
distinct edge to his voice. "And then you and your Khagggun will
clear the area." "Sir?" "This
interrogation is strictly classified." "Yes,
sir." Pack-Commander Cooolm snapped to attention. "At once,
sir." At his hand signal, a member of his pack opened the door
to Bronnn Tallin's cell. The Khagggun who had been in with the
prisoner stepped out. "Pack-Commander,
your jaw is hanging open," the Star-Admiral said shortly. "Is
there a problem? Do you require a Genomatekk?" "No,
sir. Not a bit," he yelped, deeply consternated. "But, sir.
There is a Tuskugggun ... I mean to say, she will be with you when
you—" "This
is my staff-adjutant." "I
am not. . ." Cooolm gulped, but some perverse emotion caused him
to persevere. "I am not familiar with that position,
Star-Admiral." "From
now on see that you are better informed," Olnnn snapped,
stepping smartly into the cell. "What is your name?" he
added darkly. "Pack-Commander
Dorrt Cooolm, sir. Yes, sir. I will." "Until
further notice you are relieved of your command, Pack-Commander Dorrt
Cooolm. Report to the western supply adjutant for immediate
reassignment. Since you seem overly stressed, perhaps you will find
transferring materiel more suited to your temperament." "Yes,
sir. Thank you, sir." Cooolm was now on the Star-Admiral's
N'Luuura list. And in front of his entire pack. What must they think
of him? He cursed his stupid mouth. Well, at least he hadn't been
demoted. He bit his tongue so he would not further add to his misery.
But, really, a Tuskugggun in Khagggun uniform. The sight made him
want to vomit. Or murder the first Kundalan who crossed his path. And
he could see from the look on every one of his pack that they were
feeling precisely the same thing. I
know that look," Rada said to Olnnn as Cooolm and his pack of
Khagggun moved out. "They have murder in their hearts." "You
had best get used to it. You will be seeing a lot of it in the days
and weeks to come," he said. "Why worry about it? We
Khagggun always have murder in our hearts; sometimes it seems to me
we were all born that way. We are warriors. Think of it as an
indispensable trait." She
laughed harshly. He
eyed her. "Come to think of it, though, we should get you armed
and dangerous. I would not care to see you hurt in a brawl." "I
have broken up my share of brawls, Star-Admiral." "Still.
You are at my side. You require more appropriate garb." She
glanced over at the cowering Bronnn Pallln. "I had better take
the gag out of his mouth." "Why
would you want to do that?" She
regarded him with some curiosity. "You did tell the
Pack-Commander that you wanted to interrogate him." "If
you take the gag out of his mouth," Olnnn said, "he will
only scream." At
this comment, Bronnn Tallin's already pale face turned ashen and,
indeed, he began to scream behind his gag. "That
smell!" Rada pushed herself away from him. "Star-Admiral,
he has soiled himself." Without
a word, Olnnn took Bronnn Pallln by the scruff of the neck and
hustled him to the far end of the cell. When he saw Rada coming after
him, he told her to stay at the door and make certain they remained
undisturbed. "What
are you going to do?" she asked with no little suspicion. "Just
do as you are told," he barked at her. Then
he whirled and, with his back to her, hissed at Bronnn Pallln, "You
bumbled everything, you Bashkir skcettta." He
hit Bronnn Pallln full in the face. The Bashkir stumbled back against
the wall, his eyes fairly bugged out in abject terror. The Bashkir's
knees abruptly buckled, and Olnnn was obliged to hold him on his
feet. "If
becoming Great Caste means I have to be anything like you, then here
and now I renounce it all." The
silent scream that clogged Bronnn Pallln's throat was cut short as
Olnnn slammed the back of his head repeatedly against the wall. As
blood spurted, he stepped briskly away, turning just in time to see
Rada hustling toward him. "I
think the prisoner failed his first interrogation." "You
. . . you killed him. Murdered. Just like that." She was almost
apoplectic. "How could you?" He
held her back from trying to help Bronnn Pallln, who with every
progressively more labored beat of his hearts slid farther down the
wall until all that was left was a wide smear of turquoise blood that
dripped onto the top of his sweat-sheened head. She
made to strike him, and he stopped her. "First," he said,
"in these matters you must learn not to gainsay me. Second, this
Bashkir was a traitor to the V'ornn Modality. Evidence came to light
that he was the leader of a conspiracy to sell arms to the Kundalan
Resistance." Seeing the look of unrelieved hatred in her eyes,
he began to shake her a little. "Third, and most importantly, he
was in possession of knowledge that could compromise me with the
regent." "So
you murdered him." "I
could not have him talking to the regent," he said at a low and
savage pitch. "I induced this skcettta to find a way to ruin
Sornnn SaTrryn, who is currently in the regent's favor. Somehow, he
ended up implicating himself. Do you understand now? If the regent
got his hands on him everything would have been put in jeopardy.
Everything." The
stench of death hung heavy in the cell, enveloping them. Bronnn
Pallln seemed to stare at her out of bloodshot eyes with a mixture of
accusation and shock. She
closed her eyes and, seeing him still, trembled a little. And Olnnn
said in a gentle, almost tender tone, "You see, it is not so
easy being a warrior."
25 How
the NarBuck Is Born
The
wind soughed fitfully through the Marre pines. All around them there
were small stirrings. A trio of marc-beetles, large and black and
glossy, marched across the needles no more than a meter from where
they sat. "Lying
there still as death in that grave I was put in mind of my
grandfather," she said. "Funny. I haven't thought of him in
many years. It has been so long since I saw him, I can no longer
remember what he looked like." Wrapped
tightly in her cloak, she settled more comfortably against him. "He
used to take me for walks. I was very little. He'd put me on his
shoulders. My legs dangled on his chest. His strong hands held me in
place. He used to tickle the soles of my bare feet. Oh, Miina, help
me to remember his face!" "Tell
me more about him," Rekkk said gently. "I
haven't forgotten his big square hands, ropey with veins," she
said. "I can feel their strength now, as he grasped my ankles.
He would take me to the deepest heart of the forest, where everyone
else was afraid to go. Leaf-green and misty golden sunlight. Birds
calling. Insects whirring by my face. And I was never frightened.
Isn't that strange? But then, perhaps not. My grandfather, he made me
feel safe." She sighed, overtaken by memory. "When we were
deep inside the forest he would turn me in a slow circle, and say, 'I
feel the world around me and this is good because then I remember the
past fully and completely and I can see in my mind's eye how it was
before.' " Rekkk
stirred. "Before we V'ornn came." "Yes,"
she said very softly. "He always began the same way, used
exactly the same words, as if it was a kind of ritual. As if it was
his job to pass history on to me so that future generations who—" Silence. Rekkk
looked out over the pitiless place of the dead. "Go on. It's all
right." Eleana
could feel the baby breathing and Rekkk breathing as if they were all
part of the same organism. "That future generations born and
bred under V'ornn rule would remember what Kundala once was. And
could be again." He
put his arms around her, and whispered, "Will you do something
for me? I want to pretend that your grandfather is still alive, that
just this once he has taken me into the depths of the forest with
you, that he will tell me what it was like here once upon a time." Eleana
closed her eyes and willed herself to conjure up her grandfather, a
big, sun-browned Kundalan who had lived his whole life out of doors.
He had a large hooked nose, she recalled that clearly enough, and a
generous mouth and laughing eyes, but somehow she could not put these
parts together into a whole, and her heart ached. "He told me
many tales of the Great Goddess Miina and the sorcerous creatures
that once roamed the flanks of the Djenn Marre. But of all of Miina's
creatures my favorite was the narbuck." "What
is a narbuck?" "Ah,
well." Her voice had turned dreamy. "Imagine a pure black
cthauros, imagine him three times a cthauros' normal size, imagine he
has six legs, white hooves, a long, curving neck, a proud head with
expressive liquid eyes. Now imagine further that on the thick
helmlike ridge of bone between those eyes rises a tapering spiral
horn, straight as an arrow, white and glistening as moonslight, fully
two meters long." "Did
these narbuck really exist?" "Once
upon a time," she whispered. "So my grandfather told me,
and he never lied or even exaggerated. It would have gone against his
idea of history, which was to him a holy thing." "What
did he tell you about them?" Wind
eddied in the cave mouth, stirred the long-branched kuello-firs. The
shadows of the dancing boughs made it seem as if the dead, skeletal,
half-eaten, were stirring. "You
don't want to tell a V'ornn?" "No,
Rekkk. You of all V'ornn should hear this." She shook her head.
"It's just that, well, I'm realizing that I've never told anyone
before." He
reached around her. "And now you will have your baby to tell. So
his past—the history of his world—will be as alive for
him as his present will be." She
gazed out onto the stinking pit, a raw scar of the bitter present she
fervently wished to keep from her son. "As
a V'ornn, I know the power and importance of the past only by its
absence," Rekkk said. "The V'ornn have no past that is
chronicled or fully remembered, no history of our homeworld survived.
Radiation from the cataclysm that compelled our great leap into the
Cosmos seeped into our core matrix. It took us some time to realize
that our history was eroding, that every day we were losing more of
it. Desperately, we tried to retrieve what was lost. To no avail.
What remained were fragments which, we discovered, cannot be trusted.
Once inside our data-matrix, the radiation evolved into a kind of
virus, altering the matrix-code. Ever since that time we have been
orphans, wanderers." "Conquerors,
despoilers. You take away from others what you yourselves have lost." "I
don't believe I ever thought of it quite that way," he said.
"But I have no defense." "The
warrior lives within me still, I see." "What
did you imagine?" "That
motherhood would take . . . That having the baby would change me
forever." "Why
worry about nothing? You are already changed from the Resistance
leader Giyan and I contacted months ago." She
looked at him. "And you, Rekkk, you are changed most of all." "V'ornn
are not supposed to change." "That
is what I am saying." He
smiled a faraway smile and kissed her on the cheek. "Will you
grant my request? I do so want to hear about the narbuck." Turning,
she grooved her back against his chest, returning to her
contemplation of the moonslit night. Safe against his beating hearts,
she marveled at this present which, even a few short months ago, she
could never have imagined. "My grandfather loved the forests of
the highlands where he was born and lived his whole life. Even as a
boy no older than I am he preferred them to the company of other
Kundalan. He would take the bow and arrows he'd fashioned himself and
spend days alone in the forest, teaching himself the lore of the
land. He
never thought about survival; the forest was his temple. He often
told me he imagined that it had been made especially for him. "Anyway,
on the morning of his fifteenth birthday he was far to the north,
hiking along a treacherous and enthralling ridge when he saw the
narbuck. Not that he knew what it was. How could he? It had no horn.
But it was big and so white as to seem colorless. It walked along the
ridge on its six legs as delicately as if it were a dancer. And there
was something about the animal, some aura or magnetism or
what-have-you that he could not define but which, later on in life,
when he told me the story, he knew was sacred. "And
of course he was right, for the narbuck is one of Miina's creatures,
the original pair cast from The Pearl during the creation of Kun-dala
itself." "This
narbuck he saw," Rekkk said thoughtfully. "Why did it have
no horn?" "I'm
getting to that." Rekkk
looked over her head to the tops of the kuello-firs, where a crowned
owl, its long brindled wings tucked tight around it, perched on the
end of a swaying branch, staring at him, at the death pit, at
everything at once, in that vaguely unsettling way owls have. "So
whatever this thing was—this holiness—took my grandfather
by the heart and compelled him to follow the narbuck. That was not as
easy as it sounds, for the ridge was partially composed of friable
rock. Time and again my grandfather's boots went out from under him
as small sheets of rock sheared off. But each time it happened, he
learned something more about the nature of the ridge, which was a
living thing, he would tell me. "And
my grandfather, he had no thought to stop or to turn back but only to
go on, because it seemed very important to see where it was the
narbuck would end up. He did not know where this conviction came
from; he merely acquiesced to it, as a boy, floating in summertime,
allows the current of a river to carry him where it will." The
crowned owl swiveled its head; something had caught its attention.
Its huge pale eyes reflected the moonslight for just a moment,
turning them eerily translucent. "So
now morning had melted into afternoon and afternoon had merged into
twilight, and still he followed the narbuck over the monstrous
snaking ridge. They had been climbing, mostly gradually, but even so,
after all those hours, my grandfather was higher up in the Djenn
Marre than he had ever been before. The weather had turned, and he
could see dark clouds that earlier had lain sleeping far to the
north, snugged behind the towering massif of the Djenn Marre, closer
then, roiling in the newly gusting wind. And for the first time a
spark of fear crossed my grandfather's mind at the thought of being
caught out on this ridge in the coming storm. "It
was too late to turn back. All he could do is to follow the narbuck
and pray to Miina that it would lead him to safety. That was the
moment when he heard the first crack of thunder, booming across the
plunging ravines on either side of the ridge. He felt the pressure
plummeting, and he knew that the storm would be severe." In
an instant, the crowned owl's mighty wings unfurled, and it leapt off
the branch, sailing silently through the night. Rekkk lost it for a
moment as it dipped down, banking. Nothing but the wind soughing
through the kuello-firs. Then it reappeared in a wholly different
place, something struggling in its beak. "Light
was getting to be a problem, then the first of the rain hit him full
in the face. The force of it, borne by the brunt of the swirling
wind, nearly unseated him from his precarious perch, and he struggled
a little, arms flailing. As he regained his balance, he noticed that
the narbuck had stopped. It stood still, its head turned a little. It
looked to my grandfather as if it was waiting. "Clinging
to the wet, slippery rock with boot soles and hands, he made his way
toward the narbuck. Thunder boomed, louder this time, the sound
displacing the air, making his eardrums hurt. As soon as he was a
handbreadth away from the narbuck's flank it started up, its hooves
clip-clopping across the friable rock without disturbing so
much as a tiny shard. My grandfather saw this and decided to walk in
the places the narbuck had trodden. "The
rain had picked up, and the wind as well. Thunder ripped through the
clouds, which seemed no more than a meter or two above his head. And
just when it appeared as if the storm would blow them both off the
ridge, the narbuck led him off to the left, down a steep and narrow
path, impossible to find, my grandfather would later swear to me,
even in daylight. "For
twenty minutes or more they descended at a harrowing angle. My
grandfather was like one blinded. In the pitch-darkness he put one
hand on the narbuck's flank, allowing it to guide
him. And then, all at once, they were off the ridge. My grandfather
felt level ground beneath his boot soles, and he smelled wet rock, a
ton of it rising steeply on both sides, and wind ripping down a
narrow space, ruffling his hair, tingling his scalp. He felt the
weight of the rock towers pressing in on both sides and he knew that
they were passing through a gargantuan defile in the rock face." The
crowned owl, back in moonslight, had folded its wings, alighting on a
branch significantly closer to the cave mouth. It seemed to stare
right at Rekkk as it quickly broke the back of its dinner. Then,
efficiently and fastidiously, it devoured the small mammal, bones,
fur, and all. "Just
past the defile, my grandfather sensed the rock retreating. The rain
pelted down and by the way the raging wind swirled, he believed they
were in a large open bowl-like clearing. The narbuck had stopped, and
this time there was a finality to the lack of movement that told my
grandfather that the sacred animal had reached its destination.
Thunder crashed, the boom hollowing out the bowl, defining the shape
and size more clearly. It was vast, far bigger than my grandfather
had imagined, and he found himself for a moment wondering how so
large an open space could exist within the bosom of the mountain
range. "Then
the narbuck snorted and raised its head, and my grandfather had the
sense to back away. Not far but not so near, anyway. The thunder had
become a constant thing, so deafening the ground trembled, and my
grandfather clapped his hands over his ears, which did no good at
all. "And
then, the clouds directly above them were lit up as if from the
inside and for an instant the natural arena into which the narbuck
had led him was revealed to him and all the breath went out of him
for the size was beyond comprehension and my grandfather knew there
could be but one explanation. He had been led into a holy place
carved by Miina Herself into the Djenn Marre. "And
then there was no more time for thought because the blinding light,
the arterial energy of the storm, lanced down and struck the narbuck
between the eyes. The animal bellowed, louder than the thunder
itself, as it was driven to its knees. It crouched there, quivering,
altogether silent. It was no longer white, but black as deepest
night, as if in that instant it had been cindered. My grandfather
wondered if it was dead, and his heart began to shrivel at the
thought so that he was compelled to run to its side, to stroke its
wet and heated flank. And at his touch, its head came around on its
long curving beautiful neck and he saw the horn, driven there by the
lightning or possibly it was the bolt of lightning itself, made solid
and manifest by the unseen hand of the Great Goddess. "And
for a moment my grandfather did not know whether he himself was alive
or dead, whether he was really inside this numinous bowl or whether
he was back on the ridge, mortally wounded by the storm, dreaming
this fever dream as life slipped away. And then the most
extraordinary thing on this most extraordinary of nights happened.
The narbuck lowered its head so that the horn was tipped toward him.
Rain curled down its tight-spiraled side; the edges appeared sharp as
knife blades, they glittered as if embedded with faceted jewels.
Nevertheless, because it was what the narbuck wanted, because he
knows that it was why he was brought here, my grandfather reached out
a trembling hand and grasped the horn. And in that instant he saw the
shining magnificent face of Miina." The
crowned owl was gone, vanished into the night sometime while Rekkk's
mind was reliving the creation of the narbuck. He watched the tips of
the kuello-firs nodding in a kind of metronomic rhythm. His mind was
alight with the story Eleana had just related, but it was also filled
with the afterimage of the owl. He knew, because Giyan had told him,
that the crowned owl was Miina's messenger. Often, it brought answers
to difficult questions, but just as often it was the harbinger of
violent death. Rekkk
said, "There has been no lightning on Kundala in all the time we
have been here." "And
so the narbuck stopped being born." "Why?" "V'ornn
destroy. It is in your blood. Miina would not allow you to kill the
sacred narbuck." "And
yet this Great Goddess of yours allows us to murder Her children." "You
know why," Eleana said. "We were disobedient. The Ramahan
usurped power, tried to gain control of The Pearl for their own
selfish ends. For this blasphemy She has cast us into the pit, where
we cannot get the stench of our own death out of our nostrils." "What
will end this cycle?" Rekkk asked. "How will the Kundalan
find Her favor again?" "You
know that too," Eleana said. Her soft breath misted from between
her lips. "Prophesy says the coming of the Dar Sala-at is the
beginning of the Great Transformation." Vapor
hung off the trees branches, rose like smoke from the death pit.
Rekkk wondered where the crowned owl had gone. Was it hunting in the
shadows or had it returned to Miina's side? "And
what about me?" he said. "What will happen to the V'ornn if
your Prophesy proves correct?" "Who
can say?" Eleana shrugged. "I doubt if even Lady Giyan
knows." Shadows
lengthened, deepened in the waning of the afternoon. Riane was
impatient to begin the next phase of her journey, but so near to the
Jeni Cerii encampment she knew they dare not travel in daylight.
Besides, their ordeals had left them depleted. So they sat at the
base of the dune, ate and drank, regaining their strength. "Giyan,"
Perrnodt said. "I have not heard her name in so long, but I
think of her often. We knew each other briefly at the Abbey of
Floating White, where you began your own training." "Why
were you living so far from the Great Voorg?" "Not
all Druuge spend their lives in the Great Voorg. But it is better if
those who know of our existence believe that." Perrnodt sighed.
"Our paths are written in Prophesy. Mine began by finding out
the current state of the abbey's spiritual disrepair." "I
imagine you found it extensive." "Frighteningly
so." "It
has become worse." Riane gave her a look. "How did you end
up here in the Korrush?" Perrnodt
smiled. "I did not end up here, as you put it. I was called. By
the Great Goddess." Riane
drew her knees up to her breast. "Miina spoke to you?" "Ah,
no, child, not in so many words. But I felt Her here—" She
pointed to the center of her forehead. "And here—"
She placed her hand over her heart. "There was no question of
not going." "It
was written. I know." Perrnodt
smiled. "So
you left the abbey and journeyed here." "No.
First I stayed in Axis Tyr for some time. Unexpectedly, I met
someone. I broke my vows and bore him children." Her
green-flecked eyes seemed to take in every iota of Riane's being.
"The younger would be about your age now." "You
have not seen them?" "That
was the punishment for my transgressions. I abandoned them to come
here. I had a vision. I was shown my path. I went unquestion-ingly." Riane
thought this very sad. "Are you a ... do you have the Sight?" "Why
do you ask, child?" "Because
I have visions, too. And I want to know if I will eventually . . ."
She broke off abruptly, bit her lip. "You
have heard that those with the Sight go mad." "In
the end, yes. That is what I have been told." "That
is not the entire truth. There are instances . . ." Perrnodt
closed her eyes. "What I would not give to see Giyan again." "Then
you must take me to the sanctuary of the Maasra." "Not
yet, Dar Sala-at. You are not yet ready." "But
Giyan . . . Each moment the archdaemon's web spins more tightly
around her. I have seen her. You cannot imagine how she suffers!" "Ah,
Dar Sala-at. Your great compassion is part of your makeup. But you
cannot allow that great compassion to lead you to make foolish
decisions. If I say that you are not yet ready to defeat Horolaggia,
then you must trust that it is so." Riane
jumped up. "All I ever have is elders telling me what I cannot
do!" "Come,
impatient youth, sit down next to me," Perrnodt said, smiling.
"I will think of you as my own child. The child I have never
seen and never will see. I understand at last why Miina called me
here. Come, now. I will teach you all the things that you must know."
26 Higher
Consciousness
Bronn
Pallln's head, stuck on a Khagggun pike, crowned on the grounds of
the regent's palace like the standard of a defeated race. Every time
Kurgan saw it his teeth ground in fury. How had the traitor died so
precipitously? How could Olnnn Rydddlin have been so careless? And
there was another thing he did not even consciously acknowledge. The
sight of that severed head reminded him of his dream, recurring more
frequently now, of what he thought of as the drowned female, white as
ice, her long pale hair curling around her face like platinum and
veradium serpents. Help me! she cried silently. Please help
me! Why
had Olnnn Rydddlin been interrogating the prisoner himself instead of
transporting him to the palace as Kurgan had ordered him to do? Kurgan
was so angry he had called for Line-General Lokck Werrrent. Though he
was very much aware of the Line-General's relationship with Olnnn
Rydddlin, Kurgan was absolutely certain of Werrrent's loyalty to the
regent's office and the V'ornn Modality. That was not, however, how
he began the conversation, for he had no intention of letting the
Line-General know this was why he wanted to speak with him. "We
need an immediate redeployment," Kurgan said when Werrrent
appeared before him. "Please send two packs to Za Hara-at. The
Mes-agggun and Bashkir architects require more security than they
already have." Werrrent
was taken aback. "I beg your pardon, regent, but against what? A
filthy backward tribe?" "I
do not know," Kurgan said as he tossed a data-crystal to the
Line-General. But he recalled his sense of something stalking through
the ruins when he and Sornnn SaTrryn had journeyed there some weeks
ago. "Read the dispatch yourself, if you must. Someone or
something is killing the V'ornn who venture too deep into the dig.
This we must do if our architects are to get an idea of the city's
layout." He paused a moment. "I know the Za Hara-at project
is a private business arrangement between my Consortium and the
SaTrryn. Nevertheless, I would consider it a personal favor if you
would extend me the courtesy ..." "I understand." The
Line-General nodded crisply. "I will do as you ask, regent." "Excellent."
Kurgan rubbed his hands together. "A suitable compensation
will—" "No
compensation is necessary, regent, I assure you." "Very
well then. You have my thanks, Line-General." As
Werrrent turned to leave, Kurgan asked him to wait a moment. Werrrent
turned back, waiting expectantly. "As
long as you are here," Kurgan said in a casual tone of voice,
"please be good enough to enlighten me as to how Bronnn Palllin
died in Khagggun custody." It
was a morning of fitful weather. Cold, damp, dreary. The sky, a dull,
leaden color, seemed oppressively low. Occasionally, a fistful of
rain clattered against the rooftops. "I
am afraid, regent, that I can add very little to the official
incident report." "Which
I have already read," Kurgan said shortly. "Bronnn Pallln
was overweight. He had a hearts condition." "Then
there is the matter of excessive fear." "Excessive
fear?" "Yes,
regent. I have seen it before in prisoners. It is true that your own
fear can kill you." "The
back of Bronnn Pallln's head was caved in!" Werrrent
glanced out the window. "The Deirus did a remarkable restoration
job, don't you agree?" "I
wanted to interrogate the traitor myself!" Kurgan thundered. "I
understand, regent." "Do
you? I wonder." Kurgan, hands clasped behind his back, stalked
around the room, obliging the Line-General to keep turning in order
to face him. "In hindsight, it seemed logical that Bronnn Pallln
would be a traitor, passed over as he was for Prime Factor. But then
I got to thinking. My father played Bronnn Pallln and his father for
dupes; he skimmed a mountain of coin from the Pallln coffers and what
did they do? They thanked him profusely for his sage advice and
help." Kurgan snorted. "Does this seem the sort of Bashkir
to be clever enough to engineer thefts from Khagggun warehouses?" "He
did not have to be clever, simply connected," Werrrent pointed
out. "We have discovered during our time here that there is no
dearth of clever Resistance members. They are fierce and courageous
fighters even in the face of their desperate position. What they lack
are resources, V'ornn connections." He shook his head. "N'Luuura
take it if they ever evolve a charismatic leader." "So
then, from this discourse I take it you think Bronnn Pallln was
guilty." "We
recovered a mountain of materiel from his warehouse—shock-swords,
ion cannons—virtually everything that was missing. He was our
traitor, all right." "Then
we come back to the mystery of what the Star-Admiral thought he was
doing." "Perhaps
only his job, regent. You have put him under severe pressure—" "He
told you that?" "He
may have, yes." Kurgan
came and stood very close to Lokck Werrrent. "These are perilous
times. I hear things." "What
things, regent?" "The
Khagggun are unhappy with the suspension of the okummmon implants." "I
cannot deny that, regent. Their unrest grows every day." Kurgan
nodded. This confirmed Rada's reports. He knew Werrrent would not lie
to him. "I gave the Star-Admiral explicit orders to keep the
unrest under control." "I
believe it is under control, regent." "But
for how long? I told the Star-Admiral to deal with any unrest in no
uncertain terms. We cannot afford a Khagggun riot. Has he done so?" "I
really cannot say. But speaking for the Khagggun under my own
command—" "Oh,
I have no doubts about you, Line-General. None whatsoever. You have
years of battle-hardened experience under your belt. Whereas the
Star-Admiral, well, I don't think I have to tell you. He is young and
fiery and oh so impetuous, yes?" "There
is nothing to fear from any Khagggun," Lokck Werrrent said, "so
long as we are told the truth." Kurgan
nodded. "Then I am satisfied." The
Line-General knew a dismissal better than most V'ornn. He was halfway
to the door when Kurgan said, "By the way." Werrrent
turned back. "Yes, regent." "As
a personal favor to me." He
bowed stiffly. "I serve the regent." Kurgan
came and said in a lowered tone of voice, "Keep an eye on him,
would you? Nothing official, of course. Just between the two of us."
He manufactured his warmest smile. "It is not that I distrust
him, you understand. But the Star-Admiral's responsibilities are
legion. I do not want him overwhelmed or forgetful of what he
considers minor matters." He put his arm around Werrrent's broad
shoulders. "I know I can trust you, Line-General. You two have a
long history. I can be assured that you, of all the high command,
will not hold his age against him. After all, you do not hold my
youth against me." He nodded. "You see where I am heading,
don't you? This is for the Star-Admiral's own benefit." "As
you wish, regent." "As
we both wish." Kurgan walked Lokck Werrrent to the door. "And
if all goes well, I see a promotion at hand for you, Line-General.
Yes, I most certainly do." The
V'ornn brain," Kirlll Qandda said to Marethyn, "is divided
into nine main lobes." As he spoke, he pointed to the holoscan
glowing with lambent light. "To wit, the dual forebrains, four
transverse lobes, two in each side, here and here, and beneath these
six, the sylviat, where the senses are decoded, the sinerea, the
central lobe where cor-tasyne and other chemicals are manufactured,
and the ativar, that is, the primitive brain." Marethyn,
having been summoned by Kirlll Qandda, stood beside him in his small
cramped office-cubicle in Receiving Spirit. It was overstuffed with
diagnostic and research implements, holoscreens, photon projectors
and ion simulators of all kinds, and row upon row of data-decagons.
She saw none of those things, however. Her mind was filled with the
guilt she felt at having used him. Her guilt was all the greater with
the realization that to save Sornnn she would do it all over again. Kirlll's
forefinger moved. "The ativar is partially embedded within the
sylviat. As such, it is almost impossible to get at. It is the most
convolute of all the lobes, and it is the least understood." "Oh,
Kirlll." Marethyn shook her head. "I feel like a first-year
anatomy student." The
Deirus' face went pale. "My apologies, Marethyn Stogggul. My
enthusiasm has overwhelmed my good sense." "No,
no. I am sure it's just. . . well, I am an artist not a scientist." "The
fault is entirely mine," he said abjectly. "I am most
terribly sorry." For
the first time since she had walked into his office she realized that
she had been avoiding his eyes. Now she looked into them and saw his
own guilt, his belief that he had betrayed her secret tryst with
Sornnn. "I
never cared for Bronnn Pallln, you know," she said softly. "I
never trusted him at all." He
ducked his head. "When you are a Deirus . . . The pressure from
all sides is unimaginable. Coercion is a way of life." He
stood there, staring at her like a whipped wyr-hound. She suppressed
an urge to put her arm around him. "Still.
I should have resisted." He shook his head vehemently. "You
are a good V'ornn. I understand that." "Kirlll,
I—" But no matter how bad she felt, she would not betray
Sornnn's confidence. "Tell me about Terrettt, please." He
licked his lips and nodded, pointing to a photon-illuminated panel.
"These are scans of Terrettt's brain." He switched to
another holoscan, and then another and another. "As you can see,
the ativar lobe is also most difficult even to map fully." He
put up a final scan. "Until now. I have developed a method that
isolates the ativar and allows a three-dimensional image to be taken
of it." His forefinger described an arc that paralleled a dark
grey shallow wedge. "We are looking now at that part of
Terrettt's ativar never before seen. It is, in every way, anomalous." "How
would you know?" Marethyn asked. "You said before this
there was no way to scan it fully." "But
we have seen many, many ativar lobes during countless autopsies."
He reached for a data-decagon. "Would you care to see the
documentation? I have crystals of—" "Perhaps
some other time," Marethyn said. "Right now I want to know
what this discovery means for Terrettt." "Why,
it means everything!" Kirlll Qandda said with more
animation than she had ever seen in him. "I believe that I have
discovered the cause of your brother's mental aberration." She
peered more closely at the dark-grey shape. "It is a congenital
defect then." "Well,
that is possibly the most fascinating thing. I do not believe he was
born with this abnormally developed ativar." Marethyn
started, drawing away from the holoscan as if it had just come alive.
"But what other explanation is there?" "I
have done some preliminary tests. I wanted to complete them before I
summoned you." He slid a data-decagon into a communication port,
and a spiral of words and what appeared to be incomprehensible
mathematical equations bloomed on the holoscreen closest to her face.
"I cannot yet say with absolute certainty, but it is my
hypothesis that at a very early age a chemical cocktail was injected
directly into Ter-rettt's ativar." "What
accusation is this?" Marethyn felt cold shock wash over her.
"What Genomatekk would do such a hideous thing?" "None."
Kirlll Qandda laced his long-fingered hands together. "No
Genomatekk would have had this knowledge so many years ago." "Then
who?" Marethyn
stared wide-eyed at him. All of a sudden, she felt the urge to sit
down and, as if divining her thoughts, he slid a chair behind her. "Gyrgon."
She whispered the word. "But why?" "Why
do Gyrgon do anything?" He shrugged. "It could only have
been an experiment." "On
a Stogggul?" She shook her head vehemently. "Impossible^" "Nothing
is impossible for Gyrgon," he said gently. "You know that
as well as I do." Her
hand curled into a fist. There were tears in her eyes. Poor
Terrett! "But
what did they want with him? Have you any idea?" "I
have not yet completed analyzing the chemicals." She
jumped up. "But surely you must have, what did you call it?" "An
hypothesis. As it happens, I do." He wagged a bony forefinger.
"But I doubt whether it will make you happy." "I
am thoroughly unhappy now," she said shortly. "What could
possibly make me feel worse?" He
nodded. "As I said, the ativar is the least understood of all
the lobes of the V'ornn brain. But, as it happens, it is a private
study of mine. No V'ornn knows the precise function of the ativar.
Some Genomatekk researchers have gone so far as to claim that it is
vestigial, serving no modern-day function at all. I could not
disagree more. My studies have shown that, among other things, the
ativar once linked the V'ornn to, uh, how shall I say it, to a state
of higher consciousness. But it is active and thus far from
vestigial." Marethyn's
brow furrowed. "Higher consciousness?" "Precisely.
Think of it as a bridge from consciousness—the state you and I
are in now—to something, well, 'other.' " She
shook her head. "I still do not understand." "Higher
consciousness," Kirlll Qandda said softly, "might be a
dream state, something you and I experience as we arise from a deep
sleep. Or again it might be an empathic state, or a telepathic one,
or an ability to see the future. The Ramahan claim to achieve a
higher state when they practice their sorcery. The point is, all
these examples have one thing in common. They involve a
disassociation from time and place, as well as a mysterious and
ephemeral connection to another plane of existence." Marethyn's
hearts beat fast. "Madness." "Well,
yes. A lack of understanding of nonmainstream medical theory would of
course lead Genomatekks to label these deeply disassociative states
as madness." She
gripped the Kirlll's arms. "I want to see him. Now." "I
need to warn you—" She
felt a clutch in her throat. "He is not mad, then!" Kirlll
Qandda's expressive eyes caught hers. "Please listen carefully.
This was a Gyrgon experiment and, unfortunately, not all of their
experiments are successful." She
was shaking. "What are you saying?" "The
chemical cocktail appears to have been meant to alter the makeup of
his ativar. But that is not the end of it. Because it was
administered at such an early age I can only conclude that one of the
goals was to increase the ativar's mass. In this, the Gyrgon were
successful. Terrettt's ativar is larger and more highly developed
than any we have in our database. Unhappily for him, something then
seems to have gone wrong." "What,
exactly?" Her voice was harsh whisper. "That
is what we must find out," he said. "And we must do it
without any outside interference." He paused to allow the full
import of his words to sink in. "Do you understand me, Marethyn
Stogggul?" She
nodded, already half in a daze. "I will tell no one." "That's
the spirit." Kirlll Qandda steered her toward the door. "I
will take you now to see him." Terrettt
sat in his room, his chair facing the window, staring blindly at the
Sea of Blood that lapped, dark and grey-green, at the pilings along
the Promenade. All around him was a carpet of his latest paintings,
sprouting like mushrooms from a forest floor. The stillness was
palpable, rippling out from him to reach even into the darkest
corners of his chamber. It seemed even to etch itself into the
topographical map of Kundala's northern continent she had bought him
months ago. Other than his paintings it was the only patch of color
in the glaring white room. The
paintings rustled like kuello-firs as Marethyn moved them carefully
out of the way, creating a narrow path for her and for Kirlll Qandda.
It took her some time; often she stopped to study the paintings she
held in her hands. "They
are becoming erratic," she said with a deep and abiding ache in
her hearts. "He
is more and more fixated on these seven spots," the Deirus
pointed out. "Once he embroidered them at the edges of his work,
then they became more central, filling the sky or the sea. Now they
are the dominant element." "I
have noticed the same thing," Marethyn said, scrutinizing the
painting she held. "Ever since, I have been making a list of
everything I can think of that is seven in number." Kirlll
Qandda chose two more at random and held them up. "It may mean
nothing at all. That is to say, nothing that would have any meaning
for us. He is often fixated on things." "But
it could be meaningful," Marethyn said. "And that is what I
choose to believe." Clutching
her brother's paintings to her breast, she made her way to where he
sat. He had given no indication that he had heard them or, indeed,
that he was aware that he was no longer alone in the room. Marethyn
bent down and kissed him on his pale and damp forehead. "Terrettt,
Terrettt!" she said softly but urgently. "It's your sister,
Marethyn." He
said nothing; he did not move. In fact, he seemed scarcely to be
breathing. "Terrettt,
how are you?" Kneeling,
she put one arm across his thin and bony shoulders. She could smell
him, and though she had become somewhat inured to it, suddenly the
mental state it bespoke made her weep. He
turned, his pale eyes studying her. It was as if the small,
inconsolable sounds she made had woken him from his unnatural
open-eyed slumber. "Terrettt,
I know what they did to you, the Gyrgon. I know you are not mad!" "This
cannot be wise—" Kirlll Qandda began, but stopped when she
held up a hand. "You
are not mad, Terrettt." She delivered the sheaf of his most
recent paintings, each covered by the seven colored whorls, into his
lap. "Do you hear me?" He
nodded. At least she believed it to be a nod. She had to believe it,
because what else was there for her when it came to him? She had
never believed that he was mad, even when first the Genomatekks, then
the Deirus had confronted her with all their so-called irrefutable
evidence. Their mouths had said one thing, but her hearts had told
her something altogether different. If anything, she had thought of
him as a kind of prisoner, locked in a mysteriously malfunctioning
brain. But she knew that deep inside him was a core that saw color
and light, shape and composition, perspective and spatial
relationships in the most extraordinary ways and was able to
amalgamate them all into a fiercely imagined whole. Who, then, had
the right to call him mad? No one! Sucking
back the drool from the corner of his mouth, he ran his fingertips
over the rough surface of the top painting, but Marethyn scarcely
noticed. "Ah,
Kirlll Qandda!" she cried, turning to the Deirus. "Thank
you! You have given me back my brother!" The
Prophesies are written in no book," Perrnodt said between
dae-monically difficult lessons in Osoru and Kyofu, the two different
forms of sorcery. "You have encountered my kind before, so you
know our traditional form of dress. You have seen that we cover the
bottom half of our faces with the saabaya—a veil of
purest undyed white muslin. The saabaya is covered with Venca
script. These are the Prophesies, once handed down orally from one
generation to another that are now lovingly and painstakingly
inscribed on each new saabaya as it is made. We carry them
with us wherever we go." "But
what are the origins of the Prophesies? Who made them?" "The
Dragons, Dar Sala-at. Miina's Five Sacred Dragons. They have second
sight. The Prophesies are theirs." Riane
nodded. "I thought they might have come from Ramahan who became
oracles." "No.
Those who have given in to that part of their Gift have all gone
mad," Perrnodt said darkly. Riane
felt a sudden swift shudder pass through her. "What
is it, Dar Sala-at?" "I
think Giyan has oracular powers." Riane
rocked a little, and Perrnodt put an arm around her. The
seemingly endless Korrush day had swiftly, breathlessly fallen into
the cavern of night, bringing with it an indigo chill. Stars burned
in the velvet sky. Somewhere, far away, a lymmnal howled, and they
were reminded of how dangerously close to the Jeni Cerii they were. "All
Kundala has fallen on evil times," Riane said. The V'ornn—" "The
V'ornn! They are only a symptom," Perrnodt spat. "It is our
disease, Dar Sala-at. You have suffered in the Abbey of Floating
White as I have. You know the pernicious nature of this disease. I
believe absolutely that the V'ornn—this vicious pestilence,
this accursed plague—was visited upon us by Miina. The Great
Goddess in Her wisdom knows that it takes extreme measures for the
cure to be enacted. The evil must approach its zenith, the situation
must become intolerable for the Kundalan to cry out as one, for the
Great Wheel to finally make its turn. For what else will save us but
the wretchedness of our own despair? Only when we are faced with our
own annihilation will we recognize the true evil of the path we have
mistakenly taken. The trouble is the Kundalan capacity for
self-delusion." "What
are you saying? That the cure is worse than the disease?" "I
am saying that they are two sides of the same coin. One cannot exist
without the other. This is the Great Balance, the nature of the
Cosmos. This pattern is repeated endlessly everywhere and everywhen.
However, we need the Gift and the proper training to see it. This is
what you must have if you are to prevail against your enemies. And
believe me when I tell you that they are legion. "The
changes you must wring from us are of the most painful nature. Most
will resist. Their faith will be sorely tested, and many will balk,
even revolt against these changes because they are unknown and,
therefore, too frightening. They will turn against you, join with
your natural enemies, line up to eagerly slay you so that the life
they know will not be shattered." "I
do not understand," Riane said. "The life they are living
now is in bondage to the V'ornn. They are terrorized, tortured,
killed at random and without warning." "Everything
you say, Dar Sala-at, is true. And yet, many will choose their
current situation because it is all they know. They have grown used
to the suffering. It is illogical; it does not make sense, and yet I
can vouch for the truth of it because in my lifetime it has happened
before. Do not make the mistake of believing that the V'ornn are the
first threat to Kundala. There are histories here. Layer upon layer,
buried in the red dust of the Korrush in Earth Five Meetings." "Za
Hara-at." "Yes."
Perrnodt's ripe eyes were shining. "Za Hara-at." "I
wish I had been alive when it was in full flower." "Perhaps
you were, in another lifetime." Perrnodt rubbed her palms
together. "Now show me how you Thripp." Riane
closed her eyes, summoning the whorled mists of Otherwhere. She
willed herself to spin and, spinning, project herself from the many
layers of the Cosmos. Nothing
happened. Her
eyes popped open. "You
cannot Thripp, can you?" Riane
looked at the Druuge curiously. "How did you know?" "Dar
Sala-at, as I have been telling you, you have immense power within
you. However, without the proper knowledge of how, where, and when to
unleash it you will not long survive among your enemies." She
opened her hands, palms up. "When Thripping was discovered among
the Druuge eons ago it was used as a means of ethereal exploration.
It was done in the abbeys and nowhere else. Even with the Gift, even
with the mononculus to protect you from the radiation tides between
Realms, you can only begin your Thrip in and around holy places. The
location of abbeys is no haphazard. Each one was built above a nexus
node of the power bourns that run deep in the mantle of Kundala.
There are, of course, more nexus nodes than there are abbeys of
sacred sites, but without being within a radius of thirty meters of
one of these power nodes you cannot Thripp. Therefore, it becomes
extremely important for you to be able to use your Third Eye to
detect the bourns." "But
here where we are in the in'adim is a holy place. According to
the Ghor, this is where the Prophet Jiharre was killed." "That
is an excellent point," Perrnodt said. "The explanation
will not please you. You are correct. Beneath the in'adim lies
a powerful bourn nexus. However, it is tangled and, therefore,
inactive. This is one of the later examples of the slow creep of evil
that infests Kundala. The planet is a living entity. The bourns are
its arteries. If more tangles occur, the entire network of bourn will
be in jeopardy of atrophying." "What
will happen then?" Riane asked with her heart in her throat. "That
is speculation," Perrnodt said. "But it seems likely that
all sorcery will vanish with the bourns." "We
cannot allow that to occur." "We
trust in you, Dar Sala-at." Perrnodt arranged herself. "Shall
we continue our lessons?" Riane
nodded. "When I was in the Abbey of Floating White, there were
times when I felt the bourns humming." "I
daresay you did." Perrnodt took Riane's hands in her own. "Now
I will teach you how to feel them all the time."
27 Mirror,
Mirror
Konara
Inggres could not sleep. Since she no longer felt safe roaming the
backwaters of the abbey, she lay rigid on her cot, staring at the
damp stone ceiling of her chamber. Every once in a while she emitted
a small moan. Her mind was a seething labyrinth of dread. A litany of
dire consequences crowded out coherent thought. Ever since she had
painfully crawled out of the spy niche behind Konara Urdma's office
she had been trying to make sense of everything she had seen and
heard. In vain. Within every shadow she now saw the grinning face of
evil. The stench of pure terror was upon her. What
had Giyan and Bartta become? What had Giyan done to Konara Lyystra
and Konara Tyyr and why were mirrors so important to these evil
infidels who had insidiously invaded the abbey? At
last, despite her attempts at prayer and meditation, the agitation
that consumed her mind spilled over into her body, compelling her to
sit up. She found herself drenched in cold sweat and, unable to find
a calm place within herself, decided to take a shower. The smell of
her own terror was making her sick to her stomach. Besides, while no
mirrors were allowed in the Ramahan sleeping quarters—even
those of the konara—there was a mirror in the baths. When
she arrived, the bath was lit only by the fitful glow of the lamps in
the corridor. She went in and located the mirror. Standing before it,
she looked at her reflection which, at first glance, appeared
perfectly normal. But then as she had been able to do when she had
entered the chamber where Bartta had secreted the had-atta, she
began to discern something that wavered at the very corners of her
consciousness, and she brought to bear that special sorcerous
knowledge she had secretly acquired during her endless hours of
research in the back rooms of the Library, the same knowledge that
had allowed her to break Bartta's Spell of Binding on the had-atta
chamber and to replace it without anyone being the wiser. Drawing
upon certain texts, she had trained her Third Eye to pick up the
ephemeral residue of sorcerous spells. Now
as she stared at her reflection she became aware of a flickering
blackness, like dark flames fomenting in the edges of the mirror.
Curious, she took hold of the mirror's frame and pulled it free. But
there was nothing in it. The "mirror" remained on the wall. She
set the frame down and walked from side to side, looking at the
reflective rectangle in order to get a better idea of what it was,
for it was like no mirror she had ever seen or heard of. She conjured
Transverse Guest, an Osoru spell meant to uncover the source of
unknown castings. Extending a forefinger, she pressed it against the
surface. The tip disappeared up to the first knuckle, and even though
she pulled it out almost immediately, it retained the eerie sensation
of having been dipped into ice water. She
peered more closely at the rectangle. Transverse Guest told her some
things. For instance, she knew this was not an Osoru spell, but then
again nor was it Kyofu. What, then, was it, and who had cast it?
Konara Inggres was willing to bet that Giyan—or whatever had
taken hold of Giyan's body—was responsible. The trouble was,
these conclusions brought her no closer to an answer, She had only a
rudimentary knowledge of corporeal possession, and whatever she did
know was a by-product of her Osoru snooping in the Library's back
rooms, an agglomeration of moments, brief and stolen so as not to
arouse the suspicion of the other konara. She determined that she
would have to return there with the express intent of finding out all
she could on this little-known topic. But
first, she had to find herself a real mirror. All thoughts of a
shower had vanished in the full bloom of purpose. Carefully,
she returned the frame to its place on the wall and was about to exit
the baths when she heard furtive footfalls in the corridor heading
her way. Just in time, she shrank furtively back into the shadows.
Her heart was in her throat as she observed a group of young acolytes
whisper by. At their head was a black-robed figure whose face was
obscured by the edges of an enveloping cowl. She felt, as the cowled
one passed, a certain chill run down her spine. Then she noticed
something that paralyzed her with fear. One of the cowled figure's
hands had a sixth finger. A black sixth finger, as if it had
been seared in a furnace. From her studies of banned texts, she knew
the cowled one must be a sauromician. She had thought them all long
dead, scoured from life by Miina's vengeful hand, but now, evil upon
evil, one was here skulking clandestinely around the bowels of the
abbey. The
sauromician led the acolytes down the corridor and into a spare
storeroom. There, he began to address them and Konara Inggres, her
heart pounding in her chest, crept out to listen. Terrifyingly,
he spoke of Giyan as Mother, as the one who would reinvigorate the
abbey, return the Ramahan to their rightful place as rulers of
Kundala. The fact that the Ramahan had historically never served such
a role seemed lost on these poor souls. But they did ask, timidly, to
be sure, how Mother would save them from the tyranny of the V'ornn.
The clever sauromician appeared prepared for just this question for,
without skipping a beat, he answered in his dark and ominously furred
voice that he would soon take them to see the Dar Sala-at. And when
he did, they would swear to give their lives for the savior who was
written in Prophesy. Of
course, these were basest of lies, Konara Inggres knew that. But the
acolytes shared neither her experience nor her Gift, and so they were
completely taken in. She backed away, her heart sick but knowing that
for the moment at least she was powerless to stop the evil threading
its way through the abbey. First things first. Alone
in the corridor, she wiped the sweat off her face with her sleeve,
and on silent feet went in search of a mirror. This task, so simple
on the face of it, proved quite impossible to achieve. The mirrors
she knew of were either gone or had been replaced by the same
sorcerous thing that she had discovered in the bath. Her
search at length led her deeper and deeper into the entrails of the
abbey, until at length she came upon the excavation that Riane had
worked on with the late Shima Vedda. It now lay deserted, ever since
Bartta had thrown Shima Vedda down a cistern and killed her. The
refectory that she and her crew had been in the process of restoring
had been abandoned in favor of a newer one high up enough in the
abbey to be lit by windows as well as lanterns. In truth, most
Ramahan preferred the newer quarters, but Konara Inggres had wondered
at the sudden change in design. Now
she came upon the old refectory just as Riane and Shima Vedda had
left it that fateful evening when they had discovered the rent in the
underfloor that opened up to the historic Kells below. Like every
Ramahan, Konara Inggres was familiar with the legend of the Kells.
When the Great Goddess Miina created the abbey, She placed at its
heart a series of three sacred chambers known as the Kells from which
She could observe unseen the holy work of Her disciples. The
rope ladder Riane had deployed in order to descend had been disposed
of and the rent sealed over with a simple casting, the emanation from
which drew Konara Inggres' attention even though it was beneath
several heavy pieces of Shima Vedda's dusty and cobwebbed equipment.
Leaning her shoulder into the effort, she moved the equipment away,
stood panting a little, hands on hips, staring down at the spell,
parsing it into its incantatory parts. With a whispered incantation
and a wave of her hand, she dismissed the casting. Rummaging around,
she discovered a small pile of wood and pitch-soaked reed torches.
She lit one, tucked two more into the belt of her robe, and knelt
over the rent in the floor, which was now quite a bit larger than it
had been when Riane and Shima Vedda first come upon it, owing to the
severe seismic activity of a month before. Thrusting
the flicking torch head down into the triangular chamber below, she
discovered what seemed to be a citrine table just below her. By
lowering herself with some care she was able to stand on this item,
balance herself, then, with a shower of flaming sparks, jump the rest
of the way to the black-basalt floor of the Kell. As
soon as she did so, she discovered that what she had been balancing
on was no table at all, but a magnificent sculpture of the citrine
serpent sacred to Miina. At least, she knew from her research that it
had once been sacred to Miina. Nowadays, the acolytes were taught
that the serpent was the Avatar of Pyphoros, that it was a symbol of
lies and deceit and was thus anathema to the Great Goddess. She
crouched beside the sinuous sculpture, ran her hand over the incised
scales. Then, turning, she held the torch up and saw the niche in the
wall where the citrine had been set Miina only knew how many
centuries before. She was mystified. How it had moved from the wall
to the floor she could not say, since upon a detailed examination of
the niche she discovered neither a crowbar's mark nor the remnant of
a sorcerous spell. In any event, there was no doubt in her mind that
she had entered a holy place and, before she continued her search,
she got down upon her knees in front of the citrine serpent, whose
name was Ghosh, and prayed for forgiveness and for the Goddess's
blessed return. She
remained in this pose for some minutes after ending her prayer,
immersed in silent meditation in order to gather her scattered wits
and to try to banish the terror from her heart. Then she rose and
continued downward, as Riane had done, pressing the bare mechanism
she had discovered in the stone niche where Ghosh had resided. She
rode the two-square-meter section of the stone floor downward into
the Kell beneath. This one was a perfect square, enameled black.
Besides the color, there were two notable items. One was a cenote,
its heavy basalt cover lying to one side. The other consisted of a
trio of carved animals, huge and lithe, with terrifying cats's heads
and rippling pelts of gold strewn with jet-black spots. They had
sleekly muscled bodies, powerful-looking jaws. Long, slender tails
arched over their backs. Their mouths gaped open to show three rows
of sharp teeth. Like the Ghosh in the Kell above, Konara Inggres
could see where they had once been inset into the wall. Now they were
arrayed around the well at the cardinal points of an equilateral
triangle, as if waiting for something to emerge from the still, black
water. The
cenote, in fact, gave Konara Inggres an idea. She searched her memory
for the complete incantation, then, holding her hands out over the
surface of the water, she cast First-Gate Correspondence. At first,
nothing seemed to happen, and, seeing as how she had never before
cast the Osoru spell, she did not quite know what to expect. As
she inclined her upper body over the well, she saw a whitish mist
forming across the surface. At first, it was like the delicate skeins
water spiders made as they skimmed over a pond, but soon enough, the
mist coalesced into an opaque coating. She moved her hand in a
counterclockwise motion over the mist, and it began to be drawn up,
vanishing just before it reached her open palm. What remained,
floating on the surface of the water, was a small copper-rimmed disc
that shone in the torchlight. She plucked it off the water and turned
it over, smiling into the image of her face reflected in the mirror. Auraed
in concentrated pools of bronze light, the creatures appeared to be
moving in a slow formal ominous dance around the perimeter of a large
oval. Headless and armless, they displayed every facet of their
gleaming armor. And this armor of shimmering deeply colored alloy,
browed, taloned, winged, and spiked, was wicked-looking. "So,"
Olnnn said. "What do you think?" "What
can I think?" Rada replied. "I have never imagined myself
in armor." "If
you are to be with me, then you must be armored, and you must learn
how to wield a shock-sword." "Have
you come to a decision, Star-Admiral?" They turned as the
armorer appeared. Like all V'ornn armorers she was a Tuskugggun, this
one a small, unremarkable female named Leyytey, with dark eyes and an
overserious demeanor. She pointed with a long, pale hand. The tips of
her fingers were stained copper by her work. "This model is
among my latest and would be perfect for your physique." "The
armor is not for me," Olnnn said. "It is for my new
staff-adjutant." "I
am sorry, Star-Admiral, but he will have to come in. I cannot do a
proper fitting otherwise." "This
is my staff-adjutant," Olnnn said, gesturing to Rada. "Of
course, Star-Admiral," Leyytey answered without missing a beat.
She led them around the display. "In that event, may I suggest
this one?" She indicated a suit of a dull bronze color. "I
can easily modify it for a ... smaller somatotype." "See
that it is done at once," Olnnn commanded. "And a
shock-sword with your keenest killing blades." As
Leyytey passed behind Olnnn, Rada thought she saw a smirk briefly
pass across the armorer's face, and she felt her cheeks flush with
humiliation and anger at the knowledge that Leyytey must think her
the Star-Admiral's latest conquest. Rada
spent some time watching Olnnn conduct business, delivered and
dispatched by a fleet of hoverpods. It was the hoverpods that
interested her. They were sleek and small. She wondered what their
top speed might be. She ate a quick light breakfast from a leeesta
stand next door to the armory. Across the teeming boulevard was the
looming white facade of Receiving Spirit. Every once in a while just
outside the entrance she saw a Gyrgon appear as if from a sorcerous
mist and vanish just as mysteriously. They came and went with
funereal gravity, and if it happened that some V'ornn was unfortunate
enough to be within arms' length of one of them, they would stand
very still until the Gyrgon was gone. She
heard Olnnn talking heatedly with one of his First-Captains. They
were discussing the regent. She was astonished by how much of the
Star-Admiral's time was taken up with carrying out the orders—
many of them petty—of the regent. She could see how much this
angered Olnnn, and her conviction was borne out when she heard him
curse mightily as the First-Captain turned smartly away. From what
she had overheard it seemed possible to her that a rift had occurred
between Kurgan Stogggul and Olnnn Rydddlin, and that interested her
even more than the hoverpods. When,
an hour later, her equipage was ready, Olnnn instructed her in the
method of putting on the armor. Then he took her directly to the
Kalllistotos. The ring was deserted, as the slate of bouts was only
at night. "How
does it feel?" he asked, as they climbed between the wires. "A
bit awkward," Rada told him, "but only when I try to change
directions too quickly." "You
have good posture and muscle tone. And you are strong." Leyytey
had refashioned the armor in a glimmery blue-green, the
Star-Admiral's color, and it sported the Star-Admiral's gold crest on
shoulders and chest. At her side hung a shock-sword. Leyytey had
asked her to hold many models in the two-handed grip Olnnn had shown
her until the armorer was satisfied that she had one that was
balanced just right for her height and weight. In the atelier,
looking at herself in the armor, she had been overcome by a strange
and slightly giddy feeling. She had always hated this armor as a
symbol of male dominance and Khagggun arrogance. But now that she
found herself inside it she felt infused with its power, and she had
to fight against seeing herself as a leaf being borne aloft in a
rising storm. "Draw
your shock-sword and hold it as I instructed you," Olnnn
ordered, as they faced each other in the center of the ring. The
morning was cold and crisp, with none of the damp rawness of the
previous few days. Everything sparkled as if it had been newly
polished overnight. Heavily canted sunlight had just barely begun to
creep across the Kalllistotos plaza. Rada felt dwarfed by the plaza's
vast and chilly emptiness. She felt the maleness of the
place—everything outsized and hulking and angular—and she
imagined she could smell all the blood and pain that had been spilled
in the ring. "Defend
yourself," Olnnn announced suddenly, sweeping his shock-sword
toward her. The
first clang of alloy against alloy staggered her, and she almost
dropped the weapon. Ribbons of pain veined her hands, and her
forearms tingled unpleasantly. "I
do not know the first thing about this," she lied. "Then
you will have incentive to learn all the faster." Olnnn struck
her blades again, not hard, not as if she were the enemy, but not a
friendly tap, either. "As you can see, a shock-sword has two
blades, parallel and in close proximity to one another. When you
throw the safety off, an arc of hyperexcited ions flow back and
forth, causing the blades to vibrate a thousand times a second. They
can cut through anything. If you pierce an enemy just right, it will
quite literally tear him to pieces. But the ion flow has its own
rules and can be almost as dangerous to the one who wields it
inexpertly." He droned on in this vein, telling her what she had
already discovered. She
took her first swing at him, making sure she showed him her
clumsiness. In the course of her life she had had cause now and again
to take up a shock-sword and wield it. In fact, she had one stripped
from a dead Khagggun in the Djenn Marre foothills that she had kept
in a case beneath the floorboards of her office in Blood Tide. She
had recently taken it home, secreting it where no one but she would
find it. She had practiced with it daily, learning the hard way the
trickiness of using it. As
Olnnn worked her around the ring, she allowed her clumsiness to
vanish by stages, until by the third sweaty hour they engaged one
another in a series of rapid-stroke attack-and-defense maneuvers. "You
are a quick study," Olnnn said, "for a Tuskugggun." Despite
the jibe, Rada could tell that he was as impressed as he was
startled. For her own part, she could not despise him more. She was
convinced that the creep on her flesh that had kept her awake ever
since he had attacked her would never dissipate. Because of him she
would never be the same. She had always been contemptuous of those
weak-minded Tuskugggun who were dependent on males. Now it was she
who was bound to one; and not simply a male, but a Khagggun, to boot!
She wanted only to humiliate him as he had humiliated her. It felt to
her now that the only way she could find sustenance was to feed on
his abasement. And
it was this powerful prod that in the end drove her to abandon her
caution and duel with him as an equal. Perhaps not physically as an
equal, but she was possessed of a tenacious spirit and she had the
element of surprise on her side. The
reddish oblate disc of the sun had risen high enough to seem as if it
was spilling its blood into the ring as they came together this last
time. She crossed his shock-sword at the base of the blades, then
quickly disengaged and interlaced the tips with his, twisting sharply
as she did so, then as his expression froze, sliced swiftly and
decisively so that her blades ran down the entire length of his,
interfering with the ion flow between his twinned blades. It was a
dangerous maneuver, one that she had never tried before. If it was
not performed correctly, the feedback from the dammed ion flow could
severely damage her neural pathways. With
a deep-felt grunt she slammed her shock-sword home, the bases of
their blades crossed, the guards clanging. She could feel the heat of
his breath against her cheek, could see the surprise morph into
humiliation in his expression. They were toe to toe, teeth gritted,
the sparks from the dammed-up ion flow arcing in a kind of penumbra
around them. He
grimaced with the pain she was causing him and did something with his
wrists—it was too deft and quick for her to see what it was—
and she was disarmed without being aware that she had let go of the
hilt. Her shock-sword lay at her feet between them. He was wide-eyed
and panting, and she willed herself not to look down, not to bend,
not to go to one knee to retrieve her weapon. "Had
we been enemies, you would be dead now," he said, his voice
hoarser than it ought to have been. "But
we are enemies." He
did not pull away, did not lay the edge of his blades against her
throat, but stood with his legs wide apart, his knees slightly bent,
staring at her as if she were the only object left in the world. She
felt taken up by that gaze, as if she were held in a great hand, and
she was terrified and immensely resentful. Terrified that she had
suddenly, perilously exposed her secret self to him; resentful that
he still seemed to have a mysterious power over her. So
when he reached out and touched her armored shoulder with his mailed
hand she shrugged it off and turned away, baring her teeth at the few
Mesagggun who had stopped on their way to their shift to observe the
curious display. To her relief they started and hurried on their
way, fearful of incurring an armored Khagggun's wrath. "Rada." She
heard his voice from behind her. He spoke her name softly;
nevertheless, it seemed to reverberate around the plaza as if mocking
her. Yet it wasn't until he repeated her name that she turned and
faced him. He
had retrieved her shock-sword. His own weapon was sheathed at his
left hip. "Where did you—?" She
winced at the dreaded question. "I told you I was born a
warrior." "I
did not believe you." "Of
course. I am Tuskugggun." She shrugged. "Well, perhaps
after all it was luck." He
studied her, silent and inscrutable. At length, he held her
shock-sword out to her hiltfirst. "This morning you earned the
right to keep this," he said. She
wanted to spit in his face as he had spat in hers. But that would
have made her just like him. Besides, she found to her dismay that
her mouth was as dry as the Great Voorg. There was nothing for her to
do but to hold out her hand. She felt the weight and the exquisite
balance of the shock-sword as she took hold of it. She had waited a
long time for this moment—all her life, it seemed. But never
could she have imagined these circumstances. "Star-Admiral,"
she said impulsively, "there is something that I—" He
waited, silently watching her. She
did not want to tell him all at once, did not want him to think this
was an easy thing for her. "Recently, perhaps a week or so ago,
the regent summoned me. He offered to make a deal. He was concerned
that as regent he would lose touch with day-to-day life in Axis Tyr." Olnnn's
cruel mouth curled with the ghost of a smile. "What really
concerns him are plots—plots he might not know about. After
all, it was just such a plot that led to his father's demise." Rada
nodded. "In exchange for my being his eyes and ears in Axis Tyr,
he agreed to repay the debt my mother ran up on Blood Tide." Olnnn
crossed his arms over his chest. "And did you accept Kurgan
Stogggul's kind and generous offer?" "What
do you think? He is the regent." His
eyes narrowed warningly. "Why have you confessed this?" "He
took me by force that night. There was nothing I could do. Then." "But
now you are with me, and it is another story." "It
seems to me that the regent is no longer your friend." "You
have an inquisitive nature," he said shortly. "I
run a tavern." She shrugged. "It goes with the territory." "You
are in altogether different territory now," he said. "That
nature may be an asset. Or it may get you killed." He cocked his
head. "But I know you well enough to understand that such
admonitions will not deter you. Say what you will." "That
night," she said, "the regent and I were interrupted by an
urgent knocking on the door. I could see in the brief glimpse
afforded me that the Gyrgon Nith Batoxxx was standing in the hallway
just outside the bedchamber. The regent closed the door behind him
but with my ear to it I could hear their conversation." This
made Olnnn laugh. It was a free and easy sound, and Rada recognized
in it a kind of respect. "By all means, continue," he said. "The
conversation concerned the program to elevate Khagggun to Great Caste
status." Olnnn
immediately looked around. As the hour had grown later, the
Kalllistotos plaza had become infiltrated with the usual mob endemic
to such areas of the city. Some were hurrying about their business,
but others lounged against walls and pillars idly chatting and
looking on. He nodded silently to her, and they climbed down and went
swiftly to the nearby Promenade, where, she presumed, they would be
mobile and he could keep them away from potential eavesdroppers. Seabirds
called through the morning chill. In the east, the morning's blush of
rose could still be seen, flat and knifelike, just above the low grey
cloud bank. An onshore breeze brought them the clean, bracing saline
scent of the sea. As
they passed the ships at harbor, he said, "It is safe now to
continue." She
told him what she had overheard, about how the Gyrgon were against
the ascension, that they feared it would set a dangerous precedent
for the other castes, that it was Kurgan Stogggul's idea to halt the
process but that Nith Batoxxx wholeheartedly agreed. "Nith
Batoxxx said that he would not tolerate any unrest among the other
castes. He said that it was up to the regent to
deal decisively with any sense of rebellion among the Khagggun." "I
knew it!" Olnnn smacked his fist into his hand. "That was
my suspicion for weeks now. All I lacked was proof, and now I have
it!" It
is assumed by many Ramahan—even some of the most senior
kon-ara—that the power bourns running through the core of
Kundala are all the same. This is not so." Light
winked out as another Korrush night arose from its dusty bed and the
temperature began at once to cool. Perrnodt was sitting behind Riane,
braiding her hair in the mistefan, the Druuge style. As she
worked at this intricate task she continued with her lessons. She
never stopped. While they walked northward, skirting the large Jeni
Cerii encampment, while they ate, even during infrequent rest breaks
while they occasionally relieved themselves, she continued. And there
was no question of sleep. They kept walking and reviewing hard-won
lessons. She showed Riane how to catch naps during the days as short
as three minutes that were more refreshing than eight hours of the
most tranquil slumber. In this way they were making good time,
despite the cold that crept into the winter mornings, the intense
chill that gripped them after the sun went down. Each shiver reminded
Riane of the passing time. It was midwinter. Once the solstice
arrived it would be too late to save Giyan from being permanently
possessed by Horolaggia. If that happened, she would cease to exist.
Horolaggia would have her skills, her memories, everything that she
was, including her Gift. "Are
you listening to me?" Perrnodt said sharply. "There is no
time for daydreaming. Every lesson I teach you is a vital one." Riane
nodded, apologizing. "The
bourns were laid down at Miina's direction by the Five Sacred
Dragons," Perrnodt went on. "Since each Dragon represents
one of the five elements—earth, air, fire, water, wood—the
bourns exhibit the trait of whichever Dragon created it. For
instance, the bourns deep beneath the Abbey of Floating White were
laid by Paow, black Dragon of wood. She is the Dragon of Vision. By
contrast, the bourns beneath Middle Palace in Axis Tyr were laid by
Seelin, the green Dragon of water and of Transformation." At
once, Riane understood why it was Seelin whom Annon had seen when,
briefly, the Door to the Storehouse had opened. "What about
under the Abbey of Listening Bone," she said, "which is now
the Gyr-gon Temple of Mnemonics?" "Those
bourns are unusual, even among Kundala's bourns. They were created
together by the paired Dragons, Paow and Yig. Yig is the red Dragon
of fire and of Power. Dragons may mate often but they pair only
rarely, and then it is forever. Woe betide the fool who presumes to
sunder a pair of Dragons." "Why
would anyone want to do that?" Riane asked. "To
break their power." Perrnodt sat back and cocked her head,
surveying her handiwork. "Let me see. It has been some time
since I tied the mistefan. Not a bad job of it." She
had divided Riane's hair into three thick streams of gold,
intertwining them tightly, the result being a wide braid that hung
down Riane's back like a V'ornn shock-sword. With
night hard upon them, they rose and broke their meager camp. "Now
where we are going," Perrnodt said, as they continued their
journey northward, "where the Maasra is hidden, is the
most sacred place on Kundala." She pointed due north. "We
go to Im-Thera. Or, more accurately, deep within the ruins of Za
Hara-at." As
they walked, she made a tiny adjustment to Riane's mistefan. "The
site was chosen for many reasons, chief among them being that the
nexus beneath it is unique inasmuch as it is made up of bourns laid
by all the Dragons. Which means that the five elements are interwoven
in one spot. This being so, the power is immense. It is also
exceedingly dangerous." "Give
me an example," Riane said. "If
mishandled, it has the potential to rip open the very fabric between
Realms. The chaos that would ensue from discrete Realms invading one
another is incalculable. There are, for instance, forces within
Realms which are inimical to others. The result of their meeting
would be instantaneous annihilation for all the Realms involved in
the rift, including ours." Riane
gave a little whistle of awe. Immense power. Perrnodt wasn't
exaggerating. "The
Maasra, being semisentient, is able to tap into a small
portion of this power," Perrnodt continued. "That is how,
ultimately, it protects itself from those who covet it, those who
would use it for their own gain or to further their ends." "Then
we need not fear others who would—" She
broke off at the telltale whisper of wind. A small furry ball came
whizzing into view, and a familiar voice said, "Killing a Gyrgon
and a sauromician! This is some mess you've managed to get yourself
into, little dumpling." "Thigpen!"
Riane cried, stopping in her tracks. "How did you find me?" "I
cast the opals, how else?" "I
thought you weren't going to call me little dumpling anymore." "I
changed my mind," Thigpen said a little huffily. She shook
something unseen off her orange-and-black-striped fur. "So long
as you insist on being mischievous, I shall continue to call you
little dumpling." Riane
grinned. "By Miina's grace, it's good to see you, old friend." "Likewise,
I'm sure." Thigpen
was up on her four hind legs, squinting hard. "And why, may I
ask, have you disfigured your nose?" Riane
touched the ajjan stud. "The kapudaan of the Gazi Qhan had it
done to me." Thigpen
sniffed. "Hardly a friendly gesture, if you ask me." "It's
a long story." "A
Rappa!" Perrnodt said, standing stock-still. "This is
something of a surprise." For
an instant, they both fell silent. Riane was ashamed and quickly
introduced the two of them. "The
Dar Sala-at's teacher," the Rappa said with palpable relief. "I
have now gotten the best possible news!" "Speaking
of news," Riane said with no little apprehension, "what of
Eleana and Rekkk?" Though she had locked away her vision of
Rekkk's death fall, she had not forgotten it. "There
I am unfortunately in the dark," Thigpen confessed. "I had
to leave them quite suddenly, and since that time I have been
otherwise occupied." "Well,
that needs a bit of explaining." "There
was a disturbance." Thigpen's whiskers had begun to twitch, a
sure sign of anxiety. "What
kind of a disturbance?" Thigpen
glanced at Perrnodt with a wary eye. "It's
all right. You can trust her, Thigpen. She is a Druuge." "Really?"
The Rappa's eyes opened wide. "She is not dressed like a
Druuge." "Why
do you prevaricate?" Perrnodt said. "Your kind have been in
the Great Voorg for centuries. They are Druuge companions." Riane
turned to Thigpen. "Why didn't you tell me?" "I
do not tell you everything," Thigpen said shortly. "My
goodness, why would I want to overstuff your head with trivia when
you already have so much to learn?" "I
would hardly call this trivial" "You
will learn of the Druuge in your own time, little dumpling. It is not
my place to speak of them." "In
this she is right," Perrnodt broke in. "But come. Let us
return to the subject at hand. I have an unpleasant feeling it is
urgent." "In
a moment," Riane said. "I have another question. It occurs
to me that you must have known that Minnum could not be, as he
claimed, a sefiror. Minnum is not Druuge. He is a sauromician." "I
see the teacher has been busy instructing her pupil," Thigpen
said dryly. "Never
mind that. Why did you lie to me?" Thigpen
sighed. "We needed to find out what Maasra meant. For
that, we had to find a dialectician, and to do that we had to—" "Find
someone who could cast Ephemeral Reconstitution," Riane said. "Precisely."
Thigpen nodded. "A sauromician. When you told me that you had
stumbled across a sefiror I was delighted but dubious. It turned out
that my suspicions were confirmed." "But
you did not give him away." "If
I had, would you have trusted him?" Riane
shook her head. "No." Thigpen
spread her forepaws. "Well, then." "But
you trusted him. A sauromician." "I
have seen Ephemeral Reconstitution cast before. In this, I knew he
could not play us false without my knowing. And he did not." "He
lied about other things." "That
is self-evident. My only concern at the time was the conjuring of the
spell." She bared her teeth. "If he had attempted to lie to
us about that, I was prepared to deal with him." She stroked her
whiskers with her forepaws. "Are you angry with me, little
dumpling?" "I
am considering it," Riane said, only half-serious. "In the
meantime, tell us about this disturbance." Thigpen
came down off her fours. "Before I do, I suggest we take a look
at what is just up ahead." Riane
and Perrnodt turned. Long-winged carrion birds circled the sky just
ahead of them. They hurried forward. "I
smell death," Perrnodt whispered. A
dark mound lay in their path not three hundred meters ahead. Riane
could just make out the stiff-legged forms of a pair of kuomeshals,
and her heart skipped a beat. "Little
dumpling, no!" Thigpen cried. But
Riane was already running toward the kuomeshals. They lay in a
tangle, looking as if they had been felled with one titanic blow.
Riane was brought up short at the sight of their heads. They looked
as if they had exploded from the inside out. "Sauromicians,"
Perrnodt said, coming up on one side of Riane. "I
knew it." The Rappa's whiskers twitched spastically.
"Sauromicians are a vengeful lot. They always were." She
put a forepaw on Riane's arm. "I am very much afraid you set
this in motion when you killed one of them." "We
had no choice, Othnam, Mehmmer, and I." "I
am sure you didn't," Thigpen said gently. "However, no
action is without its consequences." They
watched Riane as she pushed heavy legs away so she could get to the
saddlebags. "Dar
Sala-at, Thigpen is right. If there are sauromicians around, it would
be best if we steered clear of them." "I
know these bags," Riane said, becoming more frantic in her
searching. "I know these kuomeshals." She leapt over the
dead beasts. "They belong to my friends Othnam and Mehmmer." "The
Ghor brother and sister who befriended the Dar Sala-at during her
time in Agachire," Perrnodt explained to Thigpen. Then they
heard her cry out and ran after her. They
found her kneeling beside two bodies. One was male, the other female.
Both were dressed in the black robes of the Ghor, though these robes
looked as if they had been torn open by wild beasts. Ragged ribbons
fluttered in the breeze. The bare torsos were black with blood. The
intestines had been removed. They curled about the corpses, slit
open, pored over. Riane
remembered Minnum saying that sauromicians were necromancers. They
divined things by killing and reading the entrails of the dead.
"Othnam and Mehmmer," she whispered. "The
sauromicians have worked their black sorcery," Perrnodt said
darkly. "Killed
very recently." Thigpen eyed the carrion birds overhead. "Else
these two would be bare bones by now." Perrnodt
nodded, turned to Riane. "Did you ever tell these friends of
yours that you are the Dar Sala-at?" "Yes,"
Riane whispered. They had been with her when she had told Mu-Awwul
who she was. "Bad."
Thigpen looked around worriedly. "Very bad, indeed, little
dumpling." "Now
the sauromicians know, too," Perrnodt said. Riane,
horrified and deeply saddened, nevertheless drew on Annon's
inflexible warrior's resolve. It was no time to be overwhelmed by
emotion. The full force of the grief she carried would have to wait.
She whispered through gritted teeth, "Perrnodt, do you know the
Ghorvish prayer for the dead?" "Dar
Sala-at, I sympathize. But there is no time. It is more imperative
than ever that we make haste out of this accursed wilderness. We are
obviously deep inside sauromician territory." Gently,
Perrnodt and Thigpen raised Riane up, and they set off. They were
careful not to let her look back. Overhead, the carrion birds circled
lower. Despite
her resolve, Riane felt tears streaming down her face, now three of
her Korrush friends were dead. Because of me. If I had never come
here. . . . "The
disturbance, little dumpling," Thigpen said, unable to bear
Riane's silent grief any longer. "It was in my birthplace."
She meant deep inside the Ice Caves, where she and Riane had first
encountered one another high up above Heavenly Rushing in the Djenn
Marre. Riane
swallowed. Focusing on the friends here with her helped take her mind
off those she had lost. And there was another thing. Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching like crazy. "There
was a disturbance in First Cenote, the sacred pool near our birthing
place," Thigpen said. "That is why I had to leave our
friends so precipitously." "How
could you know about it?" Riane interrupted. "You were
hundreds of kilometers away." "I
received a message. We are telepathic." "Kind
of you to finally mention it." "Rappa
telepathy extends only among our own kind," Thigpen said
hastily. Riane
nodded. "All right. Continue." "You
remember First Cenote." "Of
course. There is a Prophesy among the Rappa that the Dar Sala-at will
gaze into First Cenote and see the power of the Cosmos made
manifest." Thigpen
nodded, amplifying for Perrnodt's benefit. "The Dar Sala-at told
me she felt ill at ease when she neared it. At the time, I could not
understand that because we always supposed that, like the pool at the
base of Heavenly Rushing, First Cenote was a place sacred to Miina.
However, when I asked her to look into it, she saw the image of
Py-phoros, an occurrence that deeply disturbed her and puzzled me. At
the time I said that something evil was at work." "That's
right." Riane nodded. "I
had no idea what it was, then subsequent events drove the mystery out
of my mind. But when I was summoned back to First Cenote I knew
immediately." The
Rappa's eyes were dark and hooded, and Riane realized with a start
that they looked haunted. "The
reason there was a disturbance, the reason you saw what you saw,"
Thigpen whispered, "is that my brethren discovered that somehow
Pyphoros has used First Cenote to escape from the Abyss." Riane's
heart was in her throat. She did not dare tell them that the Portal
seal had been broken when Giyan had violated the sorcerous circle of
the Nanthera in a futile attempt to get Annon back. To do so would
have revealed that the essence of Annon lived on inside of her. And
yet, in the next instant, Thigpen give her another shock. "The
truly frightening thing is that we have discovered that the rift in
the seal of First Cenote is old," the Rappa said. "Perhaps
a hundred years or more." Riane's
mind was racing. That meant there were rifts in two Portals. Giyan
had performed the Nanthera less than a year ago. "Ah,
Great Goddess." Perrnodt's face was lined with worry. "Listen
to me, Dar Sala-at. You said there was nothing to fear regarding the
Maasra falling into evil hands. In fact, there is much to
fear. You see, in the days when Za Hara-at was at its zenith,
Pyphoros and his daemon army were locked away in the Abyss. There are
secrets even now honeycombed within the bones of the ancient citadel
that Pyphoros would give anything to possess. The Veil of a Thousand
Tears is the key to all of them. Now that we know he has returned to
this realm we can be absolutely certain he is scheming to get the
Veil." Riane
thought about this for some time. At last, she said, "We shall
simply have to make certain this never happens." Perrnodt
sighed. "I can guarantee there will be nothing simple about it." "Do
you mean to give up even before we have begun?" Permodt
called a halt to their trek. She ran her fingers through her hair
seven times. With each pass, the wild mass became less curly. When,
at length, her long hair streamed down her back instead of being a
wispy halo around her head, she said calmly, "Sit behind me now,
as I sat behind you. Now take my hair and divide it into thirds. I am
going to teach you how to braid the mistefan." As
Thigpen looked on, as she felt Riane's hands grasping her hair, she
said, "The mistefan is a powerful symbol among us, Dar
Sala-at. It lets others know that we are prepared for battle." Thigpen
kept an eye out for sauromicians while Perrnodt instructed Riane.
When they were done, the Druuge rose and pointed north. "Let
us now make all speed," she said. "Not three hundred meters
ahead is the end of the dead space. We will be over a bourn nexus
point, and we can Thrip to Za Hara-at."
28 Spinner
of Webs
Kurgan
watched the Tuskugggun crone at her spinning wheel. There was a
concentration about her, an aura. She worked with thread
painstakingly unraveled from a pile of stinking rags. This was her
entire world. This
wreck of a building knelt atop the highest hill in Axis Tyr, the
entire city laid out before it. Not three hundred meters away stood
the soaring, fluted arabesques of the Temple of Mnemonics. The native
Kundalan shanstone had been augmented by sheets of Gyrgon neural nets
hung from the ramparts of the high walls. They fluttered like
gargantuan banners in the early-morning haze, lending the structure a
quasi-organic facade the original architects could never have
imagined. "What
is she making?" he asked Courion in a hushed voice. "We
do not know. We sometimes wonder if she does." A
nasty looking wyr-hound lay by the hearth, watching them with
distrustful eyes. Curved yellow fangs protruded upward from its lower
jaw. "Of
course she is quite mad," Courion continued. "Who else
would live in such close proximity to the Gyrgon?" Kurgan
glanced out the window. The empty street was guarded by small animals
with fever-bright eyes and hollow rib cages. They cowered in the
shadows of old Kundalan buildings ransacked at the beginning of the
occupation. The cracked and stubbled faces stood deserted and
forlorn, an archaeological site waiting to be discovered. There was
about the area a massive, hollowed-out numbness that pressed down
like deadweight. Some said this was a deliberate effect of the
bannered neural nets. Courion
led the way past the crone. He
had contacted Kurgan at last. "After careful consideration of
your warning regarding this Gyrgon, we believe we have come up with
an answer to our mutual problem," he had said. "It is
simply a question of how much risk you are willing to take." "To
get Nith Batoxxx off my back forever," Kurgan had replied, "I
am willing to take any risk you propose." Their
shadows fell across the spinning wheel, but the Tuskugggun scarcely
noticed. She was humming a plaintive tune in a clear, bright alto
that belied her advanced age. The
rear of the cracked and half-razed residence consisted of two small
rooms. One was clearly the Tuskugggun's bedroom, just a simple pallet
and a couple of piles of clothes with not even a fusion lamp to be
seen. It was as if her madness had driven her back into a dim
prehistoric age. The other chamber was even smaller, a storeroom
cluttered with useless junk. Webs clung in the corners. A ragged hole
in the roof had been plugged with bits of scavenged wood and wool. A
coating of dust thick as the crescent of his fingernail muffled their
footsteps. As
he looked on, Courion slid aside a pile of rubbish. Beneath was a
trapdoor flush with the filthy floorboards. Courion opened it and,
beckoning the regent forward, disappeared from view. Something
made Kurgan look back into the main room. The spinning wheel was
going, tapped rhythmically by the crone's long, veined fingers. She
was looking at him without expression. "What?"
He jerked his chin. "Is there something you have to say to me?" The
crone continued her silent spinning. Kurgan
shrugged, stepped onto the topmost rung of a vertical wooden ladder,
and climbed down into a confined space. Mold, borne on an insistent
breath of air, tickled his nostrils. He turned into the breeze.
Courion was lighting a torch. By its light, he saw that they were in
a narrow tunnel. Its arched ceiling merged with the walls on either
side. He put his hand out. The shanstone tiles were perfectly seamed
one against the other. "This
will take us directly into the base of the temple's central core,"
Courion said. Kurgan
followed wordlessly. He was apprehensive, but he would be exiled to
N'Luuura before he would admit it. "How
can you get us into the Temple of Mnemonics?" he had queried
Courion when the Sarakkonian captain had outlined his plan. "The
oqeyya," Courion had replied. "Nith Batoxxx does not
want to run the risk of carrying it himself. Accordingly, he provided
us with a way to bring it to him in his laboratory. This way the risk
is all ours." Gyrgon
were unpredictable enough, but Nith Batoxxx held deeper secrets that
Kurgan was burning to know. He thought of the Old V'ornn's patient
tutelage, of Nith Batoxxx's unnatural interest in him, especially now
that he had become regent. What was the Gyrgon's ultimate purpose? He
discounted anything Nith Batoxxx had told him or promised him.
Obviously, these were all lies. He had no doubt that the truth lay
hidden somewhere in the Gyrgon's laboratory. Courion knew that, too,
which was why he had proposed this perilous raid. The
smell of damp stone. Somewhere water dripped, and there was a
creaking, as of leather, old and stiff. The draft of air, gusting,
whistled through a crevice and then, as if surprised by the sound,
subsided. They
turned left, then right and, perhaps a hundred meters farther on,
left again. Unlike most Kundalan structures the tunnel was
featureless, and somehow this increased Kurgan's apprehension. He
felt as if he were walking into a trap. He looked darkly at the back
of Cou-rion's head. What did he know of this Sarakkon, anyway?
N'Luuura only knew where his real loyalties lay. Kurgan grasped the
hilt of his triangular-bladed dagger and considered plunging it
between the Sar-akkon's shoulder blades. Trust was a difficult thing
for most V'ornn; for him it was virtually impossible. Each
individual had his or her best interests at hearts. Once it became
clear that one's own interests collided with theirs trust became
illusory. As the Old V'ornn had beaten into him, trust no one, most
especially those who would befriend you. Wennn
Stogggul had been paranoid. Kurgan had played upon his fears and
caused his demise. He had promised himself that he would never become
like his father. And yet he was affected by powerful genetic tides.
Try as he might to blot it out, he heard his father's voice, a
maniacal warning. And
yet the facts were these: this particular Sarakkon was as adventurous
as Annon once had been. Brave as well, there was no denying that.
And, perhaps most important of all, he was bound by the Sar-akkon's
strict code of honor. Kurgan had saved his life; he now owed Kurgan
his loyalty. Without
warning, Courion turned to him and Kurgan drew his dagger partway out
of its scabbard. "Are
you planning to cut us into ribbons, regent?" Courion said
quietly. "Are we relying too much on our friendship? Should we
never turn our back on you?" They
stood before a gigantic door made of a matte black metal he could not
immediately identify. It was banded and studded with gold jade. "You
are not my friend," Kurgan said. "I have had but one
friend, and he is dead." "Pity." "Dead
at my conniving." "You
do not worry us, regent, if that is your meaning." Kurgan
came and stood very close to the Sarakkon. "We have shared some
things, you and I, extraordinary things. But do not think for a
moment—" "And
we shall share more, regent, even more extraordinary." Kurgan
stood looking into those depthless eyes, and the vision from his own
mind Nith Batoxxx had shown him arose like a leviathan from the deep. There
is another thing here for you to fear. What
was it? What was here that he wasn't seeing? Courion
said, "Once we enter, do not talk or otherwise make a noise that
could be overheard. This includes drawing your dagger. And remember.
Step only where we step. The path that Nith Batoxxx has provided will
take us safely through, but deviate from it only slightly, and we
guarantee we will draw a cluster of Gyrgon, furious at our trespass." Kurgan
watched the Sarakkon turn a lever. A small door opened within the
huge one, and they stepped through. The
tinkling of bells, the tick-tock of hyperexcited ions, the
vibration of massive engines rumbling deep within the labyrinthine
foundation. Courion had left the torch in the tunnel. They stood in
pitch-blackness. Kurgan's fist was tight on the butt of his dagger.
He fought the urge to draw it. The air was bristling with the sizzle
of unknown experiments. He imagined a potent energy beam being pulsed
from the maw of some newly imagined weapon. Just
ahead of him, Courion snapped on a handheld lumane that Nith Batoxxx
must have given him. A narrow beam of highly concentrated light arose
in front of them. Just enough collected at their feet for Kurgan to
see by. They
set off. Quite
soon, Kurgan realized that the Temple of Mnemonics did not contain
corridors like any normal structure. Whether this was a Kun-dalan
design or a restructuring by the Gyrgon was impossible to say. They
had walked only several paces before they dropped down a kind of
shaft. All around them lights twinkled and stuttered. There appeared
to be nothing solid beneath them, yet they descended at a steady rate
of speed. Kurgan, somewhat startled, saw his reflection speeding past
him, replicated again and again. With
a warning tilt of his head, Courion stepped out of the transparent
shaft. Kurgan shadowed him, careful to step only where the
Sarakkonian captain placed his high shagreen boots. This procedure
was repeated three times. Once, they ascended, but for the most part
they kept going down. At
last, the lumane beam revealed them to be in a large chamber. It was
something of a relief after the enclosed spaces they had passed
through. Kurgan was just thinking this when he saw that they had come
to the edge. The floor simply dropped away at a ninety-degree angle.
Courion briefly directed the lumane down, but even the powerful
photon beam could not reach the bottom. Then,
before Kurgan's startled eyes, Courion stepped out into what surely
must be naked space. He did not fall. He paused, beckoned to Kurgan.
He placed one foot directly in front of the other, by which Kurgan
deduced that he was walking along an exceeding narrow gangway. Kurgan
followed him. There was no point in looking down, so he stared at the
Sarakkon's intricate tattoos and made sure he was directly behind
him. In
short order, they reached the other side. Ahead of them was a huge
sphere. Courion walked to their right, around the curving side. At
length, he came to a small circular hatch, which he fiddled open. He
stepped through, and Kurgan followed. Thirteen
tear-shaped globes spinning in an oval orbit leaked cold purple-blue
light onto a windowless lozenge-shaped chamber that, by its looks,
could only be a Gyrgon laboratory. Oddly, the Kundalan murals on the
walls had been left intact. Odder still, they were covered by a
webwork of orangesweet vines. "Nith
Batoxxx's laboratory," Courion said. His voice sounded a little
eerie inside the chamber. "How
did you know Nith Batoxxx would not be here?" "This
is the hour of salamuuun, a sacred time for him," Courion said.
"He is scanning the Realms or whatever it is he does on his
flights." He shook his head. "If we leave here within fifty
minutes, we will not encounter him," Kurgan
took a look around. He could not believe it. He was in the center of
the Gyrgon inner sanctum, the dark heart of the V'ornn Modality's
dreams, and of its secrets. He was confronted by a multitude of
holoscreens, massive databanks, tier upon tier of incomprehensible
equipment. He
tried to take it all in. "Everything," he whispered.
"Everything I ever wanted or aspired to is in this laboratory."
He reached out, turning over one mysterious implement after another.
"It is simply a matter of finding out where it is all hidden." Courion
was looking around the large egg-shaped chamber, whose virtually
seamless skin crawled with rainbow colors. Kurgan
paused as he came upon a red veradium box. Opening it, he saw five
birth cauls neatly arrayed. What need would Nith Batoxxx have for
these? he wondered. He turned them over. On the inner surface of
each one was etched the name of the V'ornn to whom the birth caul
belonged. He went through three before the fourth caught him up
short. STOGGGUL
TERRETTT, he read. Breathless,
he turned over the last birth-caul and his hearts skipped a
double-beat. STOGGGUL
KURGAN. He
was holding his own birth caul. "Look!
An opening of some kind." At
the sound of Courion's voice, Kurgan hastily put his birth caul back
in the red veradium box and closed the lid. He turned. Courion was
running his hand over the egg's pale skin. He hadn't seen what Kurgan
had discovered. The
Sarakkon said, "Always when we came here Nith Batoxxx made
certain it was sealed. He never went near it or even glanced at it.
What do you think?" Kurgan
came over and stood beside him. He was still trying to work out why
Nith Batoxxx would have his birth caul and that of his mad V'ornn
brother. "A vault of some sort?" Courion
grinned. "What does one put in a vault?" And
Kurgan said, "Secrets." Together,
they peered at the round port. It had three shallow depressions in
it. "This
V'ornn technology defeats us," Courion admitted. He
made way for Kurgan, who saw that the depressions were actually
whorls. Kurgan searched through the Gyrgon's paraphernalia until he
found what he wanted. Bringing the scanner back to the hatch, he ran
it over the three depressions. Its photonic screen soon lit up with
an enlargement of the whorls. "There
we go," Kurgan said in triumph. Courion
peered closer. "V'ornnish writing." "Instructions." Putting
aside the scanner, he shook his head. "I do not trust this. Why
put the correct sequence for opening the lock on the lock itself?" Courion
nodded. "Unless depressing the sequence as shown will backfire
on the intruder." "Killing
him." Kurgan returned his gaze to the sequence. "Gyrgon
possess a perverse sense of humor. What if we were to reverse the
sequence?" Courion
licked his lips. "Are you willing to try?" Without
a word, Kurgan worked the depression in reverse order. A moment
later, the hatch swung open, and a low illumination came on inside. He
laughed and, pushing the Sarakkon out of the way, ducked his head and
stepped into the vault which, as it happened, was not a vault at all.
Inside it held only a padded chair. Someone was strapped into it with
his back to Kurgan. "What
is it?" he heard Courion say. "What treasure trove have you
found?" He
reached out, spun the chair toward him. "Oh,
N'Luuura take it!" he cried, jumping back so hard he hit the
back of his head on the edge of the chamber. "What
is it, regent?" Courion said from the laboratory. He
stared at the figure slumped in the chair. It was a Sarakkon. He
studied the faintly curling lips, the pattern of tattoos across the
Sarakkon's head, the runed cubes and balls of
jade and lapis lazuli in his thick curling beard, the huge rings of
star sapphire and ruby and lynx-eye on his fingers. It
was Courion, dead as a slaughtered water buttren. Kurgan,
uttering another curse, drew his dagger and emerged from the chamber. There
was Courion, alive as he had ever been. Except now he was laughing. "Too
late to be alarmed, Stogggul Kurgan." Kurgan
hurled the dagger at the Sarakkon captain, whose image was now
rippling like a mirage. Nith Batoxxx caught the dagger in midnight
with his mailed glove. "Courion
is dead," the Gyrgon said. "Pity, really. He was a rare
specimen of his kind." He leered at Kurgan. "Still, you
must admit he served his purpose admirably." It
so happened that Spice Jaxx's was open all the time. This suited its
varied clientele, a fascinating mix found nowhere else in Axis Tyr,
not even at Blood Tide. The merchants were, like their conical stacks
of spices, night-blooming. Spice Jaxx's was their home away from
home, a hushed, low-lit jewel box in the center of the spice market
vibrating with the heady scents of cinnamon, pepper, and wer-mace
that so moved them. Looorm took their leisure here in slow-paced
languor, radiating like stars their artful, crystalline beauty. They
drank as fashionably as they dressed, lifting tiny handleless cups of
thick, rich ba'du imported by the SaTrryn as they gossiped among
themselves. Even between bouts of energetic sex their gestures were
small rituals of pleasure, artifice raised to a higher power called
mystery. And then there were their high-paying customers, who came to
fuel up on the good food and potent drink before and after their
sweaty trysts. They also talked business, these wealthy Bashkir, with
nothing more on their minds than the next great deal they had heard
about or hoped to get wind of. Every
once in a while Kundalan drifters fell by for a hurried bite to eat,
skittish as blackcrows, keeping a wary eye out for Khagggun patrols
that never appeared. No V'ornn paid them much heed, certainly not the
Deirus with whom they invariably shared space. No V'ornn, not even
the Looorm, cared to be anywhere near the Deirus. But the Kundalan
who arrived and departed like ghostly shadows had no such bias. There
was even, on occasion, brief conversations between the two groups. The
Deirus were a naturally curious lot and, doubtless because of their
own pariah status, they exhibited little of the xenophobia so
prevalent in other V'ornn castes. Secrets were common currency to the
Deirus. What they did, when they did it, and with whom remained
sealed in granite vaults they carried within their hearts. The love
they knew so intimately was evil. And yet they looked like every
other V'ornn; they felt love as any V'ornn felt it. These were
possibly the real reasons they were reviled. Because
they had learned to turn a blind face upon the world that feared and
despised them, they could find it within themselves to have pity for
the Kundalan. It
was to the shadowed space in the rear of Spice Jaxx's where the
Deirus clustered that Sornnn now took Marethyn. They had spent an
hour or so at Cthonne dancing with the ecstatic youths to the curious
hybrid music the band played. The drummer, hooded and robed, had sat
in again, his powerful hands beating a complex tattoo on the skins,
driving the backbeat into every corner of the dancers' skulls. They
stood amid the Deirus and drank steaming ba'du, for which Marethyn
was developing a serious love. Every so often as they spoke or gazed
into each other's eyes they touched one another in the manner lovers
know well. She was telling him about Kirlll Qandda's shocking
revelations regarding Terrettt's condition, that tests had shown that
Ter-rettt had been the subject of secret Gyrgon experiments on his
ativar almost from birth. "How
could they have done such a thing?" she asked between sips of
ba'du. "What would they have wanted from him? And why,
particularly, Terrettt?" "Wa
tarabibi, this is the Gyrgon we're talking of," he said
gently. "You may have to resign yourself to the fact that you
will never know." "I
can never resign myself to such a thing," she said fiercely.
"The Gyrgon destroyed my brother's life. Do you think I can just
forget about what they have done?" He
signaled for another round of ba'du. "All right. What do you
propose? March into the Temple of Mnemonics and demand an
explanation?" It
was such an absurd notion that, despite the keen edge of her anger,
she laughed. "No, of course not. I ... well, I don't know yet.
But give me some time. I will think of something." Their
ba'du was brought by a young Tuskugggun waitress of dark good looks
whose skull gleamed with spiced oil. She placed the tiny cups in
front of them without taking the empty ones away. "Is
everything to your satisfaction?" the waitress asked Sornnn in
such an intimate tone that Marethyn felt herself bristle. "A
perfect drink in a perfect world," Sornnn replied. Marethyn
had no idea what he was talking about. He
downed his ba'du in one swallow, bade her do the same. When she had
thrown the dark liquid down her throat she saw the beautiful waitress
give Sornnn a brief nod. He took Marethyn's arm and, together with
the waitress, they moved deeper into the shadows at the rear of Spice
Jaxx's. Marethyn glanced back at the Deirus. They were talking with
one another, oblivious. No one else was looking in their direction. The
waitress turned and disappeared through a door that lay hidden deep
in the shadows. Sornnn and Marethyn followed her through. She
was waiting for them in a small chamber built of rough stone. Behind
her was an equally rough staircase blasted out of bedrock. She had
pushed her sifeyn off her skull, revealing a lovely diadem of tertium
and veradium no waitress could afford. "Marethyn,"
Sornnn said, lifting a hand toward the diademed Tuskugggun, "this
is Rada TurPlyen. Rada, this is Marethyn Stogggul. She has agreed to
take her grandmother's place in our organization." Rada
took Marethyn's soft artist's hand in her callused one. "This is
such welcome news!" And
then it clicked into place. "You are the one Tettsie met here.
The Tuskugggun who changed her life." "A
chance meeting so many years ago." Rada nodded. "And such a
fateful one! But I rather think that your grandmother changed her own
life. I was only a facilitator." She inclined her head toward
Sornnn. "As were the SaTrryn." "Rada
is my connection to the Resistance," Sornnn said. "She has
owned the Promenade tavern Blood Tide for some years. It was there
she recorded the conversation between Olnnn Rydddlin and Bronnn
Pallln that warned me of their plot against me. This was how, with
your very capable help, I was able to defuse it." "The
ruse turned out to be an exceedingly clever one," Rada
acknowledged. "Not only did it remove a cloud of suspicion from
you, but the death of that snake Bronnn Pallln has put Olnnn Rydddlin
in an increasingly untenable position with the regent." She
shook her head. "But all this largesse has come at a heavy
price. Almost everything we were able to steal from the Khagggun is
now back in their hands." Sornnn
shrugged. "It could not be helped." Then he grinned at her.
"On the other hand, I pity the Khagggun who uses any one of the
ion cannons I spiked." Rada
laughed, clapping him on the back. "Well done, Sornnn!" Marethyn
felt another little stab of jealousy at the familiar manner in which
Rada addressed him. "How
goes your balancing act?" Sornnn said. Rada
shrugged. "Too soon to tell." "This
is dangerous territory you have chosen to play in." "I?
I hardly had a choice in this. The regent made me an offer. If I had
refused, I very much think I would never have walked out of the
palace that night. And as for Olnnn Rydddlin, I had even less of a
say. What strange luck has bound me in sorcery to him and to his
sorcerous mistress, Malistra, I have yet to understand." "In
any event," Sornnn said, "we will miss your keen eyes and
ears in Blood Tide." She
shrugged again. "I have left the running of the tavern to my
sister Nestta, at least for the time being. She is smart and loyal.
As for the data-decagons I weekly send the regent, they still contain
a combination of truth we deem harmless and the disinformation you
and my other contacts concoct. I make certain I am back at Blood Tide
each week to place it in the regent's messenger's goblet." Sornnn
nodded, adding brief explanations here and there to bring Marethyn up
to speed on Rada's triple role as spy for the regent, companion for
the Star-Admiral, and continuing conduit for intelligence to the
Resistance. Rada told them of the difficulties Olnnn was facing in
keeping her new status from the regent's Haaar-kyut. "Have
you heard anything at all about these so-called Portals?" Rada
asked. Sornnn had been one of the first contacts she had asked about
them. "The regent's replies are becoming increasingly more
filled with urgent questions about them." "What
Portals?" Marethyn asked. Rada
took out a laaga stick, lighted it. "It seems a particular
Gyrgon, Nith Batoxxx, believes there are seven Kundalan Portals."
She blew the aromatic smoke out through her nostrils. "What they
lead to I have no idea. But the regent has informed me that he is
most desirous to know their locations." She shrugged. "Anyway,
who cares what the Gyrgon wants? I am pressing you, Sornnn, because I
need to keep real intelligence flowing to the regent to mix in with
the disinformation." Sornnn
shook his head. "Nothing so far. But it is hardly surprising.
This sounds like something a Ramahan might know something about." Rada
nodded, took another hit off the laaga stick, and beckoned silently
to them. She led them down the rough-hewn staircase. It was dark, but
she did not once falter, proof that she was familiar with the route. The
staircase led to a subbasement in which a hole had been punched. A
steep spiral of steps had been roughly hacked out of the bedrock.
Without hesitation, Rada continued the descent, Sornnn after her.
Marethyn brought up the rear. It
became increasingly cold and dank. Marethyn heard strange sounds
echoing, deep and atonal. Then a brief drift of voices, as ephemeral
as the smoke from Rada's half-open lips. Light flared below her, and
she saw Rada and Sornnn standing on a floor of gleaming polished
porphyry. Wrought-bronze
lanterns, filigree blackened with carbon and age, were set at
intervals in triangular wall niches. They trailed off on either side
for as far as she could see. Two youths were facing Sornnn and Rada,
both more or less the same size. They watched her, silent and
brooding, as she descended the last few treads. A Kundalan male and a
female, armed with ion pistols and the haggard faces born of
desperation. Rada took the laaga stick from between her lips and held
it out. The female accepted it, inhaled deep into her lungs, and held
it while she passed it to the male. He, also, took a big hit. They
expelled the smoke together, slowly and luxuriously. He handed the
laaga stick back to Rada. The
two of them continued to regard Marethyn as if deciding how they were
going to kill her. The echoing sounds continued, and Marethyn had an
intuition they were being watched from the shadows. "This
is Marethyn, Neyyore's granddaughter," Rada said, using
Tett-sie's real name. "She is taking her place." She
introduced Majja, the female, and Basse, the male. The
two youths watched her sullenly, hip-sprung. They were all muscle and
hard edges, hormones and attitude. "In
the mountains they have honored Neyyore," Rada said to Marethyn
as if translating the youths' silence, "with fire and prayer.
Miina has heard her name." "Thank
you." Marethyn ducked her head. "Have
you killed?" Basse's
question hung in the air like invective. "Basse,"
Rada said quietly. "No."
He shook his head. One hand was on the grip of his ion pistol. "I
want to know." Majja
said, "She doesn't look like she could kill a blood-flea." "Have
you killed?" It was a foolish question for Marethyn to
have asked. In
a flash, Majja had drawn her ion pistol and jammed the muzzle into
the side of Marethyn's neck. Rada and Sornnn each took a step away. "Don't
do that," Basse said, standing back so he could keep all of them
in his field of vision. His ion pistol was half out of its holster. "We
are both female," Marethyn said to Majja. "Surely we both
feel—" "This
isn't a game," Majja whispered fiercely. "She
thinks it's a game," Basse nodded. "If
you think it's a game," Majja said, "you are going to get
yourself killed and possibly some of us with you." "We
won't have that," Basse said. "Do you understand?" Marethyn
nodded. She licked her lips. To think her life was in the volatile
hands of these youths. How much laaga had they smoked? she wondered. "Let's
all lower our temperatures," Sornnn said. "Rada and I have
brought you good news." "We
need good news." Majja put away her ion pistol and stepped back.
"Three hours ago we found another mass grave." "How
big?" Rada asked. "The
biggest yet." Basse folded his arms across his chest. "More
than three hundred." "We
are no longer able to stand our ground," Majja said. Basse
said, "We need more powerful weapons. Now." "You
know what happened," Sornnn said. "Our hoard had to be
sacrificed for the greater good." "There
will be no greater good," Majja said heatedly, "unless we
are better armed." Sornnn
shook his head. "These things take time." Basse
said, "The new Star-Admiral is relentless. Each day more of us
die. Each day it is more and more difficult getting new recruits." "These
things take time," Majja sneered. Basse
said. "You V'ornn have the Cosmos, we have only Kundala. Can you
understand that?" "Please,"
Marethyn said. "We are here to help you." The
two youths exchanged a glance. Majja
put her hands on her hips and looked her square in the eye. "Let
us see if you mean that, granddaughter of Neyyore." "We
know of a stash containing new-model ion cannons, proximity mines,
ion-pulse projectors," Basse said. "The weapons are being
convoyed in three armed grav-carriages from here in Avis Tyr to
Line-General Lokck Werrrent's headquarters in Glistening Drum. It is
scheduled to leave the Khagggun armory in three days' time. If we
could lay an ambush—" Sornnn
was shaking his head. "It will be too well guarded." Majja
cocked her head. "But we have you, Rada. You are at the
Star-Admiral's side. If you could give us the exact route . . ." "I
could never get it to you," Rada said. "Not with the
Star-Admiral keeping such close track of my movements. I almost
missed the rendezvous tonight." "Find
out what you can." Majja ran her hand down Marethyn's arm. "And
give it to Neyyore's granddaughter. She will come with us." "No,"
Sornnn said at once. Marethyn,
her hearts beating fast, said, "Sornnn, I promised to help." "Not
this way." He shook his head. "You will help the way
Tettsie helped. You will provide us with the funding we need to—" "We
need the weapons!" Majja cried. "Now!" "Otherwise,"
Basse said, "all the coins on Kundala will not avail us." Marethyn
nodded. "I will—" "I
forbid it!" Sornnn roared. "You
forbid it?" She turned to him. "You are the one who brought
me into this." "Not
to go into battle. Not to be on the front lines." "This
is not for you to say," she said quietly. "These children
are in battle every day. They are on the front lines. Why am I
different? Why should I be protected?" He
took her in his arms. "Because I love you." "And
is there no one to love them? Or are their loved ones all dead by our
hand?" She looked up into his face, placed her palm against his
cheek. "Dearest Sornnn, I entered this of my own free will
because this is what I wanted." "Marethyn
..." It was a kind of strangled cry. She
kissed him tenderly. "Now you must let me do what must be done."
29 The
Dispossessed
Konara
Inggres sat in one of the small chambers, windowless and airless, at
the back of the Library and stared at the mirror she had conjured up.
It was really quite beautiful, perfectly round, its frame of beaten
copper incised with sigils that ran in a kind of sinuous dance all
the way around its circumference. The reflection the mirror itself
provided was extraordinarily clear and sharp, bright as a gimnopede's
eye without even a hint of the wavering that was endemic to all
Kundalan mirrors. In other circumstances, Konara Inggres would have
been pleased with her accomplishment. As it was, however, the
mirror's presence only seemed to increase her feeling of dread. She
had written a brief note to Konara Lyystra asking her to come to the
Library, entrusting it to one of the acolytes for a sure and speedy
delivery. Now, bathed in cold sweat, she had become terrified by the
boldness of her design. She had never thought of herself as capable
of being calculating and devious although, she supposed, learning to
be politic might conceivably be cast in that mold. After overhearing
the conversation between Giyan and Bartta she had no illusions
concerning the risk to her body and spirit. But Konara Lyystra was
her best friend. An evil daemon had invaded her, and if Konara
Inggres could do something—anything!—to free her from its
influence, she knew she had to try it. The
cubicle was at the very rear of the vast, two-story Library. Three of
the four walls were covered from floor to ceiling with shelves. The
seamless flow of books was interrupted only by the doorway and, above
it, a decorative fanlight panel, now dark with dust and grime. It was
into this shadowed recess that Konara Inggres had wedged her
sorcerous mirror, having climbed up the rolling ammonwood ladder with
which each of these cubicles was equipped. She sat at the rear of the
compartment, facing the doorway, her eyes flicking upward now and
again to find her own face staring back at her with a combination of
shocked anticipation and acute anxiety. She
saw her friend striding confidently toward her across the polished
agate floor of the Library and, all of a sudden, felt the need to
urinate. Too late for that. Under the table, she crossed her legs.
She had been here for hours, preparing herself for this very moment,
but now that it was here she quailed inside. She concentrated on
controlling her breathing and what she needed to say. Konara
Lyystra entered the cubicle. Difficult though it was, Konara Inggres
stitched a natural-looking smile to her face, got up, and embraced
her friend. As she did so, she looked up at the mirror and saw, to
her horror, what was inhabiting Konara Lyystra's corpus. It
had the greasy-looking triangular head of a serpent and the body of a
gigantic millipede. It was a Cerrn, the sorcerous mirror had revealed
to her, a warrior-daemon one step up from a Tzelos. Even as her mind
coldly registered this fact she could not have been more revolted. It
was all she could do not to thrust the abomination away from her and
run screaming from the cubicle. In fact, she wanted to turn away from
the image, but she could not. Gripped by a horrific fascination, she
continued to stare at the hideous thing, unsure of whether she was
losing her mind. Inside, she wept, and prayed to Miina without
understanding or insight as to how the Great Goddess could have
abandoned her and all the Ramahan to this abysmal fate. She
ticked off the litany of crimes and heresies the abbey's ruling
konara had been perpetrating against Miina for more than a century,
and she knew the answer to her own question. Since the time of Mother
there had been no strong and pious konara to wrest control from her
power-mad successors. And with each one, the abbey had crawled
further away from the sacred teachings of Miina. Into
her head slithered the doubts remembered from her recent debate with
her best friend. What if Miina did not exist? What if she, Konara
Inggres, and all Kundalan were alone in the darkness of this long
night? She felt a wave of despair lap at her. "You
wished to see me," the creature posing as Konara Lyystra said to
Konara Inggres, as they broke their embrace. "You said it was
urgent." "Urgent.
Yes." Konara
Inggres gestured to a chair in which her friend seated herself while
Konara Inggres returned to her accustomed seat behind the desk. She
put her elbows on the tabletop and laced her fingers together. "I
am eager to be able to spend more time with Konara Giyan." "Mother." "Yes."
Konara Inggres nodded. "Mother." With each flick of her
eyes, she saw reflected in the mirror the Cerrn squirming
uncomfortably inside Konara Lyystra's body. Konara Inggres smiled to
keep herself from screaming. "In her talk with me, Ko—Mother
expressed a desire to see a modification in the curriculum. After
careful consideration, I believe that she is right. As far as History
of Sorcery is concerned, I was wondering whether you could advise me
on how to redesign the syllabus." Konara
Lyystra smiled. "I would be delighted to help you all I can. But
I think Mother will be the one to—" "Of
course she will approve the changes." The
Cerrn, dark and squirmy and repulsive, moved behind Konara Lyystra's
eyes. "I believe she will be wanting to make the
changes." Konara
Inggres sat back. "I see." "Is
that a problem in any way?" "Not
at all." Konara Inggres pursed her lips meditatively. "It's
just that—" "What?" "Well,
I hesitate even to bring this up." "But
why not?" Konara Lyystra's smiled broadened. "Are we not
the best of friends? Do not the best of friends trust each other and
share everything?" "That's
the way it has always been with us." "Well,
then. Nothing's changed, has it?" Was
that a dyspeptic note of paranoia Konara Inggres detected in her
friend's voice or was it simply that she herself was balanced on a
knife edge of suspense? She could not tell, but there was no point in
dismissing the possibility. She
laughed softly, marveling at the naturalness of it. "Of course
nothing has changed between us. Why should it?" "I
have become very close to Mother in such a short time. It occurred to
me that you might have become a bit ... well, you know . . ." "Jealous?" "Yes,
that's the word," Konara Lyystra said a little too forthrightly.
"Jealous." "My
goodness, no. It is a great honor for you, and it makes me proud that
you are my friend." Konara
Lyystra beamed. "Yes, yes. That is as it should be." In
this way, Konara Inggres determined that there was a strict limit to
the intelligence of the creature who had possessed her best friend.
This knowledge added to a fundamental base. While she had been
waiting for Konara Lyystra to arrive she had not been idle. Rather,
she had been busy consulting the ancient ill-used books here,
assiduously researching the subject of possession. For instance, she
had discovered that possession of a Ramahan was possible only by a
daemon, and possession by a daemon was only possible if one or more
of the sorcerous Portals to the Abyss had been broken open. There
were several ways to go about a dispossession, as the ancient texts
called the casting out of the daemon. This was not a simple
procedure. The first step was to separate the daemon from the host
body-mind network. The second, equally difficult feat, was then to
kill or immobilize the daemon itself. There was, she had read, only a
very short amount of time—perhaps as little as ten seconds—when
the daemon, wrenched from its temporary home, was disoriented and
thus assailable. The third step was perhaps the hardest, because when
the daemon was inside its host it opened White Bone Gate. This was
one of the fifteen Spirit Gates inside each individual. The opened
gates allowed the body's natural energy to flow in a pattern unique
to that individual. If there was a disruption in even one gate, an
illness of the soul would result. White Bone Gate was the main
bulwark against the infiltration of evil. If it was open or damaged,
evil would inevitably enter to deform the spirit, and until that
spiritual Gate was closed the host remained vulnerable to the
incursion of evil. Konara Inggres had no doubt that this is what had
happened to Bartta. The
Cerrn, the texts had revealed, made up in power for what it lacked in
intelligence. It was a dangerous, even a formidable adversary for a
konara trained in dispossession, let alone one like her who was
struggling to absorb so much knowledge in a short amount of time. She
could not afford to make a mistake, yet in the back of her mind was
the thoroughly disquieting notion that her haste would almost ensure
some kind of slip-up. She found that her palms were wet, and she
rubbed them together underneath the table where Konara Lyystra could
not observe her extreme anxiety. She
felt little filaments of terror shooting through her like painful
sparks as she drew from a low shelf just behind and to one side of
her a tray she had prepared some hours ago in the still-dark
refectory. As
Konara Lyystra was about to stand up, she said, "Don't go. I
took the liberty of preparing refreshments." She slid the tray
onto the desktop and distributed the service. "A pot of cool
sanguineaberry infusion and individual qwawd-blood puddings." "Mmmm."
Konara Lyystra's avid eyes were riveted on the array of puddings.
"Looks absolutely scrumptious. You don't see those every day." When
she had read that many daemons loved qwawd blood, she had recalled a
brace of the large birds hanging by their long necks in the
refectory's cold room, waiting on the cooks to season and roast. She
poured the infusion into small ceramic cups and pushed a pudding in
front of Konara Lyystra. Neither of these things would her friend
have eaten on her own, but like many daemons the Cerrn suffered from
an excess of greed, and she could see by the avid look on Konara
Lyystra's face that she had, as it were, hit the peg square on its
crown. Without
a word of thanks, Konara Lyystra popped an entire pudding into her
mouth and nearly swallowed it whole. She washed the pudding down with
her cupful of sanguineaberry infusion. While Konara Inggres was
refilling her cup, Konara Lyystra reached for another qwawd-blood
pudding. As she did so, her mouth fell open. Though she had steeled
herself for the sight, Konara Inggres almost gagged as she saw the
Cerrn's cilia rippling in its extreme greed across the top of the
tongue. Immediately, she cast White-Bone Rushing Out, the
dispossession spell she had learned earlier that morning but had, of
course, never practiced. For
a moment, Konara Lyystra's body froze in midreach. Her eyes opened
wide, and she began to blink very rapidly. So softly that at first
Konara Inggres had to strain to hear, there emerged from her breast a
sound not unlike the beating of insect wings. The
rest happened so quickly that Konara Inggres leapt back off her
chair. First, Konara Lyystra's eyes began to bleed. Blood ran from
her nose, drooled out of her mouth. Then, her head snapped back so
that she was staring straight up at the vaulted ceiling, her jaws
hinged open and, with a nauseating sound, the Cerrn was summarily
ejected from its host. For
an instant, it lay stunned in a puddle of slimy gastric juices. It
was smaller than Konara Inggres had imagined, and somehow mesmerizing
in its altogether ghastly countenance. This last the text had covered
but possibly not well enough, for Konara Inggres felt herself captive
of her own morbid fascination and it was only when it began to stir,
flopping and thrashing, that she reached for the shard of heart-wood
she had secreted on the shelf behind her. But
by this time the Cerrn had regained much of its senses and,
recognizing its antagonist, rippled its multilegged body and shot
through the intervening space toward Konara Inggres' face. Konara
Inggres had barely time enough to impale it on the heartwood shard.
Then she slammed it down onto the tabletop, sending teapot, cups, and
disgusting qwawd-blood puddings flying in all directions. Using both
her hands, she ground the stake all the way through the Cerrn while
it twisted and beat itself in its death agonies. At
last it was still, and Konara Inggres, taking a deep breath, rushed
around from behind the desk and knelt beside her friend where she had
collapsed to the floor. Using the edge of her robes, Konara Inggres
wiped the blood from Konara Lyystra's face and, for her efforts, was
rewarded with her friend's eyes opening. They looked placid and calm
with no trace of the squirmy darkness that had so recently haunted
them. Konara
Inggres let out a laugh and, taking her friend's head in her lap,
kissed her on the cheeks and forehead. "Ah, thank Miina!" "Inggres,"
Konara Lyystra whispered in a thin, sere voice, "where am I?
What has happened?" Before
Konara Inggres could reply, a shadow fell over them and they both
looked to the figure looming in the doorway. "Yes,"
Giyan said with a great deal of concern in her voice, "that is
precisely what I want to know." I
told you to be careful, didn't I? I warned you there was something to
fear in your relationship with the Sarakkon. I really must say I gave
you every opportunity to prove your loyalty to me." Nith Batoxxx
circled Kurgan, the triangular blade of the dagger slapping into his
mailed palm. "And what happens?" "How
long?" Kurgan said tightly. "You
betray me the first chance you get." "How
long have you been Courion?" All
at once Nith Batoxxx strode toward him. "I am through playing
games with you." Kurgan
neither cowered nor ran. He thought of the Tuskugggun crone, spinning
her stupid wheel. Had she known? Is that why she had looked at him
just before he had gone down the ladder? Or was she just, as Courion
had said, mad? But, then, that hadn't really been Courion who had
said that. It had been Nith Batoxxx. "What
has five faces," Kurgan said, "two of them animal?" He
grimaced in pain as the Gyrgon gripped him. The hyperexcited ions
danced along his flesh, making him feel as if he were being dipped in
fire. Slowly,
Nith Batoxxx turned him around until he was facing the egg-shaped
chamber. "This
is a goron-wave chamber. Let me show you what happens to anyone who
is put inside." He raised his free hand, and the circular hatch
slammed closed. Another gesture brought down several holoscreens. He
turned on the goron wave and when it had passed through the interior
of the chamber, she opened the hatch and shoved Kurgan inside. There,
Kurgan was witness to the horrifying results. Courion's eyes were
completely white, his teeth had turned to dust in his mouth and his
tattoos had been burned all the way through his skull. "And
he was already dead," Nith Batoxxx said as he took Kurgan by the
scruff of his neck and shoved him, stumbling, from the chamber.
"Imagine what it will do to you." Kurgan
kept his mouth shut, knowing full well anything he said would
infuriate the Gyrgon all the more. "I
am going to place you in there," Nith Batoxxx said, "and I
am going to loose the goron wave a little at a time. I understand it
is like having a million tiny mouths feed off you at the same time." "Is
this meant to frighten me?" Kurgan stood his ground. "I
have been too well trained. I have no fear. Even you were unable to
find any fear inside me. So you created your little fantasy with
Courion." "A
test," Nith Batoxxx said. "Let us call it by its proper
name. A test you failed." "If
failure means not having to be yoked to you, then it is well I
failed." Nith
Batoxxx seized him so hard he rose into the air. "You swore an
oath of fealty to me. Your word—" "My
word means nothing to the likes of you." Kurgan was spasming
with the pain the Gyrgon was causing him. He could not imagine the
goron-wave chamber being any worse than this. "You coerced that
oath out of me. Did you really think I would abide by it?" With
a roar, Nith Batoxxx grabbed him by both hands. He almost passed out
with the agony. There was no part of him that did not pulsate
painfully with needles of hyperexcited ions. He could feel his hearts
racing too fast; imagining his blood beginning to boil, he began to
retch, but was quickly too weak even for that. "I
will not break," he whispered. "I will not bow down to
you." "Oh,
yes, you will." "I
will die first." "Then
by all means." Nith Batoxxx grinned evilly at him. "You are
Stogggul. I know your family rather well. You are all deceitful,
lying skcettta." "I
owe all my deceit to the Old V'ornn." Kurgan tried to keep his
voice steady. "I believe you know him rather well." "What
means this?" "I
think it is time we both stopped playing games," Kurgan said
through chattering teeth. The Gyrgon's face, the goron-wave chamber,
the entire laboratory was going in and out of focus. "I know who
you are, who you become when you leave this temple and wander the
streets of Axis Tyr. Show me the Old V'ornn." He knew, finally,
that he was going to sob, so he laughed raggedly to cover it. "Show
yourself! Come on, there's a good Gyrgon." "You
want me to reveal myself?" Nith Batoxxx thundered. "This is
what you desire? So be it then!" Kurgan
gave a sharp yelp as the bronze skin and pulsing neural-net circuits
at the crown of the Gyrgon's head peeled back in a surf of yellowish
foam. This almost immediately evaporated into a mist, exuding the
foul must of the grave. Instead of revealing bare skull, there
appeared a black hole, from which snaked a scaled appendage, whiter
than death. Then another appendage came questing and another until
there were five in all. These
appendages shot straight up in concert. As they did so, they began to
twine with one another. The rotten stench had by this time fully
permeated the laboratory, and Kurgan felt once again the need to
retch. He
was wrenched from his incipient illness by the next phase of what was
taking place in front of him. The twining appendages seemed to have
reproduced. Now they were melding together, forming the trunk of a
huge and powerful-looking body. It appeared to be at once bipedal and
animal in that its stance was a semicrouch, one shoulder higher than
the other. Then,
from the core of this eerie headless trunk a halo of light emerged.
It rapidly coalesced into a spinning orb. As the orb settled upon the
massive shoulders it spun more and more slowly, and Kurgan caught now
and again the hint of a face. But it was never the same face. The
orb, coming to rest, resolved itself into a head unlike any Kurgan
had ever seen, save once. Here before him was the thing with five
faces, three Kundalan, two animal. His glimpse of it in the mirror
had been too brief or perhaps too shocking for him to have kept a
clear memory of all the faces. But now he could see them clearly, and
it seemed to him that each one was defined by a specific emotion. A
long, saturnine face with black flashing eyes was animated by anger,
another, beautifully sculpted, was lit by lust, a third, at once
bloated and dissipated, was the epitome of envy, a predator bird's
imperious countenance radiated pride, while a sleek catlike face
watched him greedily. Kurgan,
for once in his life overwhelmed, struggled despite his pain to
scramble away. "The
real me seems not much to your liking, regent, is that safe to say?" The
voice, deep and echoey, was the one he had heard snatches of coming
at times from Nith Batoxxx's mouth. It filled the entire laboratory
like the bursting of a thunderstorm. "What
are you doing?" he cried. "What illusion are you casting
now?" The
thing before him laughed. "Illusion? This world you live in is
the illusion. You V'ornn! You pass through space, you conquer worlds
and races and think you are the emperors of the Cosmos. But you have
not the slightest conception of the multiplicity of the Cosmos. You
inhabit one tiny island in an ocean so vast it is beyond your limited
comprehension. "Illusion?"
The thing shook Kurgan like a rag doll. "You V'ornn are more the
illusion than I am. I am Pyphoros, Lord of archdaemons. And I have at
last returned to this realm from the prison accursed Miina confined
me to eons ago." With
the most serene of smiles on her face, Giyan made a vicious lunge for
Konara Inggres, but Konara Inggres was prepared for this. She was
already chanting, and in chanting, spinning, and spinning, Thripped
out of the Library at the Abbey of Floating White into Otherwhere. For
a moment her mind was filled with the guilt of leaving her friend
behind. But she knew that Giyan had given her no choice, and she
shook her head to clear it. She was not yet such an accomplished
Osoru sorceress, having trained herself in secret, that she
understood the changes Horolaggia had wrought in this sorcerous
realm. Nevertheless, the cacophony of wailing voices made her aware
that all was not well here. And, unlike Riane, she had the advantage
of years of book study, and therefore knew that somehow the veil
between Realms had grown so thin it was in danger of rupturing. What
damage daemons running amok in Otherwhere could perpetrate she could
not imagine. She only knew that she could not allow it to occur. She
found herself on a vast plain running with blood. In the far distance
she could make out the looming jagged length of the mountains within
which, she could already sense, lay ominously beating the evil hearts
of daemonic Avatars. Instinctively, she knew that she was no match
for them, for she felt their power pulsing in waves that produced
storm clouds, ruddy and fulminating, above the rock spires. And
so she kept her profile low, slouching in shadows, picking her way
carefully across the newly blasted landscape. She had absolutely no
experience with Thripping, and therefore felt dizzy and nauseous, not
knowing that she needed a mononculus inside her to absorb the noxious
radiation that existed in the netherspace between Realms. She simply
put her feeling of weakness down to inexperience, assuming she would
grow stronger with each Thrip. Despite
her temporary infirmity, she kept moving, wanting as soon as possible
to find Giyan. It was not easy to think clearly, what with the
growing din of the babbling voices and the fear of pursuit. She knew
from her readings that the daemon in possession of Giyan could not
Thrip; daemons could not employ Osoru sorcery. Similarly, it could
not use Giyan's Osoru Avatar, for in order to possess a Ramahan it
was required to bind the sorceress's Avatar in Otherwhere. But she
did know that the archdaemons like Pyphoros had power over Avatars of
their own, and this was her fear now, that Giyan was possessed by an
archdae-mon who would send its Avatar after her, even though it could
only exist for a short time in this realm that had been created by
Osoru sorcery. She
knew that she had a small window within which to operate. When she
had conceived of the plan to dispossess Konara Lyystra of the daemon
infesting her she knew there was a possibility of Giyan discovering
what she was up to. Accordingly, she devised an escape route into
Otherwhere—daring and dangerous inasmuch as she had never
attempted to Thrip before. But she could think of no other way out of
the dire straits unfolding in the abbey. She understood that she was
not powerful enough to defeat the daemons already in residence. It
was difficult enough to keep her Osoru abilities a secret from them
and from the possessed Konara Lyystra. She knew she had to take
action quickly or surely she would be found out and eliminated, as
Giyan's possessor had so succinctly put it. In short, when she
thought it through, she needed help. Sorcerous help on a powerful
scale. And who better to provide that help than Giyan herself? Now
here she was slouching through Otherwhere, searching for Giyan's
pinioned Avatar, with precious little time to consider her next move.
She kept one eye ahead of her, the other on the fulminating clouds
above the jagged peaks, knowing that it was there that she would
first spot movement from the slumbering daemonic Avatars. From
what she had gathered from her clandestine reading of the forbidden
Osoru texts, Otherwhere was a realm constructed on the bedrock of
symbology, and as a sailor scans the horizon for a sail or a raised
fist of land, so she looked for symbols. And, at length, she saw
something, and headed for it as quickly as she dared. As
she approached, she saw that it was a gigantic inverted triangle,
black as night, onto which was pinioned, head down, a great bird. And
without being told, she recognized this bird from her readings as an
Avatar known as Ras Shamra. "Shima
Giyan," she called softly, for shima was the level Giyan had
attained before she had been banished from the abbey. "Who
calls me by my old title?" And
Konara Inggres gasped, for she was near enough now to see that the
Avatar's eyes were blinded by blood that seeped from a thousand small
cuts on her body. "It
is I, Shima Giyan, Leyna Inggres. Now Konara." "Ah,
ah, dear Inggres. I recall you as a little girl. I marked you as one
with the Gift. Of course, I told no one." Konara
nodded her thanks. "Since you left, it seems that with each
passing year the abbey is beset with more evil." She was
grateful that Giyan was not wasting time asking her how she had
managed to nurture her Gift in the hostile environment of the abbey. "How
much damage?" Giyan asked. "You
don't know?" "I
am cut off here. But quickly, tell me. Horolaggia cannot overhear us
unless his Avatar appears." Konara
Inggres nodded. Her mouth was dry. "The daemon possessing you
has taken over Floating White, and has brought Bartta back from her
sorcerous limbo, only to be possessed by another daemon." "This
news is more evil than you know," Giyan said. "We are
dealing with archdaemons. This means that Horolaggia is not the only
one to have escaped the Abyss. He has somehow freed his brother
Myggorra." Konara
Inggres gasped. "You are speaking of the offspring of
Pypho-ros]" "Indeed.
And in doing so they have violated the Primal Laws set down for
mortals, creatures, sorcerers, goddesses, archdaemons, and daemons." "Ah,
Shima Giyan!" Konara Inggres cried all at once. "How can we
be talking like this when you are held captive and in such agony? You
have only to tell me how I can help you." "You
cannot," Giyan said. "At least not in the direct fashion
you mean." "How
then? I know my power is no match for an archdaemon." "That
is true enough," Giyan said, "but we have yet to test your
ingenuity against them. You must return to the abbey. In the most
ancient section, below the commissary, are Miina's sacred chambers." "The
Kells, yes. I have seen them, Shima Giyan. It is there that I
conjured the mirror in which I saw the Cerrn that had possessed my
best friend, Konara Lyystra. I dispossessed it using White-Bone
Rushing Out and killed it by impaling it on a heartwood stake." "I
congratulate you," Giyan said, "but know that White-Bone
Rushing Out will work only with the low-level daemons like a Tzelos
or a Cerrn. For those who have possessed me and my sister other
measures must be taken." "Tell
me, Shima Giyan." "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears is being sought even now by ... someone
trusted by me. Her name is Riane. You must wait for her, for besides
the death of the host, the Veil is the only thing that will
dispossess an archdaemon. But I know that if you are here they must
be aware of your Osoru Gift. You must wage a war of stealth against
them. You must hide and keep yourself hidden even from those whom you
have in the past trusted. I cannot stress this enough, no one inside
the abbey can be trusted. You must assume that they are all
compromised. All of them, do you understand?" "Yes,
Shima Giyan." "This
friend of yours." "Konara
Lyystra." "For
the time being you must forget her." "But
Shima Giyan." The
Ras Shamra shook its head. "No exceptions, Konara Inggres, none
whatsoever. I understand your desire to help your friend. But you see
the result. In casting White-Bone Rushing Out you gathered to you
unwanted scrutiny. Now that you have identified yourself as their
enemy they will not rest until they have destroyed you." Konara
Inggres forced down a rising panic. "But how will I wage this
war of stealth you speak of in these dire circumstances?" "By
judiciously employing a weapon they cannot know is in your
possession. Tell me, when you were in the Kells did you see Ghosh,
the citrine serpent?" "Yes,
Shima Giyan. It was in the exact center of the Kell." "It
was not in its niche on the wall?" Giyan said sharply. "Are
you certain?" "Absolutely,
Shima Giyan. I prostrated myself before it and prayed to Miina for
guidance." "And
did guidance come?" Konara
Inggres thought a moment. "I suppose it did. Not long after, in
the Kell just beneath, I discovered the cenote. Around it were
arrayed in a perfect triangle three terrifying beasts carved of some
stone I could not identify. They had pelts of gold leaf strewn with
black spots. This cenote was where I cast the spell that conjured up
the mirror." Seeing the Ras Shamra tremble, she hesitated a
moment. "Is there something odd about what I have told you?" "That
Ghosh and the three Ja-Gaar are no longer where they have remained
for centuries means there is sorcery more ancient even than the
Ramahan at work. There is much to consider." Shaking the blood
from its eyes, the Ras Shamra cast its glance as best it could toward
the fulminating mountain range. "We have very little time left.
Listen carefully to what I tell you. Return at once to the Kells.
Pluck the right eye from Ghosh." "But,
Shina Giyan," Konara Inggres said, horrified. "The citrine
serpent is sacred of Miina. I cannot deface—" "You
will do as I say!" the Ras-Shamra thundered with such utter
authority that Konara Inggres could only bow her head. "Yes,
First Mother!" "Why
do you call me that?" "The
Prophesies, First Mother. They tell of the Ramahan sorceress who will
be imprisoned in Otherwhere by the archdaemon. It is she who is
destined to guide the Dar Sala-at. She is the First Mother." "Be
that as it may," the Ras Shamra said, "you will pluck the
right eye from the citrine serpent. Do this by turning it three times
left in its socket. You will then take it to the cenote where you
conjured up the mirror and immerse it for thirty seconds, no more, no
less. Do you understand?" "Yes,
First Mother." "When
you remove it—" The
sky seemed to be crying crimson tears, and the ground beneath Konara
Inggres' feet trembled with ominous thunder. The
Ras Shamra did not have to tell Konara Inggres what this portended.
"When you remove it," she hurried on, "place it wet
upon the center of your forehead, in that spot between your eyes and
above the bridge of your nose. Once you have immersed it, you must
not allow it to dry. If you do, it will crack apart and fall to
useless dust." "Then
what, First Mother?" Konara Inggres glanced nervously at the
soot-black clouds rising swiftly from the mountain peaks. "What
will happen when I place the eye against my forehead?" "Go!"
the Ras Shamra ordered. "Before he catches a glimpse of you!" Konara
Inggres closed her eyes. As she did so, she began to spin and,
spinning, Thripped out of Otherwhere just as the clouds were rent
asunder.
30 Za
Hara-at
And
there it crouched, waiting on the edge of eternity. Darkling,
windswept, subterranean. Half-devoured by time. Twilight at the rim
of the Djenn Marre, in sight of the Great Rift. Repository of ancient
secrets, a labyrinth of blood-dark streets winding out of light and
time, entering another place. An almost forgotten city, musty,
deserted, guarded. Za Hara-at. Two
kuomeshal stood side by side, heads down, drowsing. Coveys of finbats
fluttered in ragged streamers. A young Bey Das, skin dark as
pomegranate stew, long hair flying, dragged a kite behind him. He ran
in a straight line from the edge of the dig toward the ragged,
flyblown tents of Im-Thera. Tiny clouds of red dust floated in his
wake. The kite took flight in twilight's gusty arrival and the
finbats veered away to continue feeding. The kite dipped once, then
soared heavenward, and the boy made a brief ululating sound of
triumph, only to be cut short by his mother's angry cry of anxiety as
she pulled him back to Im-Thera. In
twilight, Za Hara-at was deserted. Though there was still plenty of
reflected light in the overwhelming sky, no Bey Das worked at the dig
after the sun slid behind the Djenn Marre. Light blazed from the
smallish encampment made up of Mesagggun and Bashkir architects hired
by the Stogggul and SaTrryn Consortia to begin the reconstruction of
Za Hara-at. The encampment was now completely surrounded by a
bristling of Khagggun armament. In the glare of artificial light, an
ion shield was being erected around the perimeter to keep out the
unknown predator who stalked the crumbled avenues of Za Hara-at and
to keep in the terrified Bashkir who longed for Axis Tyr. Into
this unsettling twilight Thripped the three travelers. They arrived
at the top of the main ramp that led down into the archaeological
remains of Za Hara-at. It was, Riane thought, like entering the
skeleton of a great and fantastic beast, for she felt with her
extraordinary Gift the life that pulsed in a place most believed had
been dead and buried for centuries. The city was sitting on a network
of bourn nexuses. She felt their separate vibrations like the
sections of an orchestra tuning up. "My
kind have told countless stories of Za Hara-at," Thigpen said,
her voice filled with awe. "But I am the first of my generation
to see it." "Once
this was a thriving citadel," Perrnodt said, as they continued
down the ramp. "And yet it was not the hub of ancient
civilization, for it was designed and constructed for one reason. As
a defense against an enemy so terrible that only such an engine of
unimaginable power could save us." "Too
bad you could not have resurrected it to stop the V'ornn invasion." "The
engine was designed to facilitate the destruction of the one terrible
enemy," Perrnodt said. "This is how such power is
safeguarded." They
had reached the beaten-brass streets of Za Hara-at itself. Embedded
in the streets were, here and there, runes carved from emperor
carnelian and lapis lazuli. Riane knelt, ran her fingertips over the
runes. They were Venca. GATHER
THE UNKOWING, she read. "Perrnodt,"
she said quietly, "who built Za Hara-at?" "We
did. The Druuge." Perrnodt stared down a broad boulevard into
the gathering darkness. "We needed help. The engine at the core
of the citadel was too complex even for us to manage on our own. So
we did something that was both necessary and foolish. We enlisted the
daemons to assist us." Riane
stood. "I thought you told me that the daemons were imprisoned
at that time." "No.
I said they were imprisoned at the height of Za Hara-at's power. They
helped us build the engine and then, of course, they wanted control
of it. That we could not allow. There was a fierce battle. Many on
both sides were killed. Then Miina stepped in and imprisoned them in
the Abyss. They never got to see the engine they had labored so hard
to build." "No
wonder Pyphoros wants to return." "He
covets the terrible secrets buried here," Perrnodt said. "He
will not rest until he gets them or is killed in the attempt." Thigpen
stirred uneasily as she glanced around. "Now that we know he has
found his way into this realm we must be on our guard. Since we know
that he cannot survive in his own form, we must look beneath the
surface of those we may come across here. Any one of them could be
possessed by the archdaemon." "This
way," Perrnodt said. She led them down the boulevard known as
Gather the Unknowing, past the shells of gabled houses and columned
temples. At length, it gave onto an octagonal plaza. Eight streets
radiated out from its periphery. "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears is in a formidable lair," Perrnodt
said. All around them rose double-storied structures whose purpose
was impossible to imagine. "It is sealed inside a box of fire,
which is surrounded by a coffin of water. In between is airless
dark." "How
do we find it?" Riane asked. "Not
we, Dar Sala-at. You must do this alone. The Veil is semisen-tient.
Go to the exact center of the plaza. Once you are there, it will
sense you and guide you to it." "Will
it also tell me how to retrieve it?" "No,
and neither can I. That you must discover for yourself. I can tell
you this much: keep track of the power bourns at all times." "And
when I do get it, what then? How do I use it to save Giyan?" "You
must find the way to free the Dragon's tears locked inside the Veil,"
Perrnodt said. "I regret that I do not have the requisite
knowledge to tell you how to do so. You must trust yourself and the
Veil. You must allow it to become a part of you. Once you merge with
it, you will know the way." Riane
nodded. She did not want to leave her friends, but she had no choice.
She looked Perrnodt in the eye, then she quickly knelt and ruffled
Thigpen between her triangular ears. "May
Miina be at your side this night and always, little dumpling,"
the Rappa whispered. Riane
rose and walked to the center of the plaza. At once, she felt the
bourn nexus point directly below her. The vibration slowly crept up
from her feet through her legs into her torso. When it reached her
brain, it spoke to her in the language of power bourns that Perrnodt
had taught her. She turned forty-five degrees to her left and found
herself facing one of the eight streets. As she headed toward it, she
heard Perrnodt's voice calling through the failing twilight. "Let
the bourns guide you where they will, Dar Sala-at. Keep to the
designated path and do not deviate." Riane
nodded. As she plunged into the thick gloom of the street, she lifted
her open palm and conjured a small globe that hovered in the air just
in front of her. It emitted a powerful beam of light that moved as
she moved, illuminating the way ahead of her. She
continued on, cleaving to the path along the bourns. The evening
collected around her like fragments of the past. Once, she looked up
at the enormous bowl of the Korrush sky, and it seemed so distant it
took her breath away. She reached a nexus and changed directions,
following another bourn-line. All around her the citadel was
breathing, churning the present into the past by the alchemy of its
unique origin. Designed by Druuge, built by daemons to be an engine
of unimaginable destruction. Lost now, dreaming of its lost zenith,
endless, depthless. Deserted. Except. Riane,
aware of a tiny tingle along her scalp, paused. Even though the power
bourne urged her on, she turned to her right. She heard something,
the creak of a board, the tiny discreet sound of a pebble dislodged,
bouncing on beaten brass. She
saw something stir in an alleyway and took a step toward it. A step
off the bourne. Her
sorcerous light illuminated a figure, impossibly tall, emaciated,
pale as a corpse. Fillets of knucklebones ran through his elongated
ear-lobes. He wore his hair long on the top, shaved on the sides. His
face appeared devoid of any flesh whatsoever. It was as if the skin,
yellow-white as tallow, had been pulled over bare bone, taut as a
drum. His eyes, sunk deep into his skull, blazed pale as moonslight,
the pupils tiny, black and pulsing. A runic scar, ruddy and livid,
rose from the center of his forehead. His ebon robes fluttered like
flags of death. Sauromician! Murmurous
mouth like the blade of a knife. He
stepped back into the shadows of the alley and Riane felt a sudden
compulsion to follow him. She took another step in his direction and
shook her head. She felt like she was under water. That murmurous
mouth. He had been casting a spell. Keep
to the designated path, Perrnodt had warned.
Do not deviate. Instinctively,
she conjured Mounting Irons, and she was freed from the sauromician's
spell. She peered into the alley, but he had vanished. She turned
back, searching for the power-bourne, but it, too, had vanished. She
had lost her way and Za Hara-at had swallowed her whole. Pyphoros
was shaking Kurgan to the point of unconsciousness. The archdaemon
had returned to Nith Batoxxx's body, but there was, at last, no
longer any trace of Nith Batoxxx's personality. It had been entirely
devoured. Pyphoros,
seeing Kurgan's eyes roll up, slapped his face hard to bring him back
to full consciousness. "For your insolence and your treachery I
should kill you on the spot. Part of me wants to, part of me would
gain great pleasure in your death. But I have lavished too much time
and energy on you. I have read the intestines of the dead and know
that you have a greater role to play, a higher destiny than you
know." He
brought Kurgan's face close to his own. "Know that I have come
to love you as a father loves his child. But you are contrary and
disobedient. You believe yourself able to outwit anyone, even me. So.
You must be shown how wrong you are." His face was so close to
Kurgan's that the regent was engulfed by the burnt sulphur of his
breath. "You once made a blood oath to me that you have
willfully violated. That cannot be tolerated. You are mine, Stogggul
Kurgan. I chose you, and I made you mine. Now you will wear the mark
that will always remind you of this truth." He
opened his mouth and a long thin black tongue emerged. It undulated
like a serpent, quivering as it neared Kurgan's face. The regent
tensed, tried to rear his head back, but Pyphoros held him in an
inexorable grip. "Is
that fear I sense, Stogggul Kurgan?" Pyphoros crooned. "Fear
at last?" Kurgan
glared at him. "Good.
I taught you better than that, didn't I? Yes. I taught you how to
turn your heart to stone." The black tongue hovered over
Kurgan's throat. "Now, once and for all, you will learn
obedience." The
tip of the archdaemon's tongue opened like a tiny eye and a drop of a
greenish liquid fell onto the hollow of his throat. Anyone else would
certainly have screamed. Kurgan, silent, gritted his teeth. The eye
opened again and another drop oozed out. Kurgan felt the pain reach
all the way into the marrow of his bones, and this time he moaned. "An
archdaemon's saliva is to be avoided at all costs, so the Ramahan
believe, because it causes pain beyond imagining." Pyphoros's
face twisted into a monstrous grin. "Just two drops, regent.
Imagine the damage a mouthful would do." Kurgan
lay trembling and sweating. At length, he touched the raw wound. The
pain made him gasp anew. "I
have marked your flesh with my talisman, Stogggul Kurgan. Every time
you see it you will know that our fates are entwined." The
archdaemon set him down none too gently. "While I have occupied
this animated prison I have been active." Having delivered his
punishment, he took on the pose of teacher, a role, Kurgan knew, he
particularly relished. "At my connivance, the Comradeship is
splintered beyond repair. Nith Sahor, the one Gyrgon able to heal the
wounds, is dead. At Gyrgon direction, the Khagggun have annihilated
your priests, outlawed the worship of your god, Enlil. Your Bashkir
quarrel among themselves, your once mighty Khagggun grow restive and
soft. And still you stay here, dreaming your salamuuun-induced
dreams, sinking slowly but surely into the muck of time. Why haven't
you gone?" "I
have as little respect for the Gyrgon as you do," Kurgan said.
"Maybe even less." Pyphoros
struck him so hard he crashed sideways to the cool laboratory floor. "If
you do not respect your enemy, what chance do you have of defeating
him?" He hauled Kurgan to his feet. "The same applies to an
ally." Kurgan
wiped blood from his face. He tasted it in his mouth. He touched the
slowly pulsing wound in the hollow of his throat. It had closed,
leaving a small mark, dark as a Sarakkonian tattoo. "What is it
you want from me?" "Secrets.
Information. Power. Ever since I returned to this realm I have been
searching for the Dar Sala-at, the chosen of Miina, the great hero of
Prophesy." "Why?" His
balled fists shook with his rage. "It is so unfair! Imprisoned,
all of us, by a Goddess who has lost Her mind?" "You
mean the Kundalan Goddess Miina? She exists?" Pyphoros
rounded on him, "If I wasn't in such a towering rage I would
find your expression amusing. Of course she exists." He
peered at Kurgan. "But you comprehend something of this, don't
you, Stogggul Kurgan? You are one of those special V'ornn who knows
the truth when he hears it." His eyes seemed to writhe in their
sockets. "To answer your question, I am searching for the
Portals to the Abyss. I told you about them. All seven need to be
opened before I can free the daemons from their eons-long prison.
There is one—and only one— who can do this." "The
Dar Sala-at?" "That
would be convenient, wouldn't it?" Pyphoros shook his head. "No.
It is foretold to be another. The Veil of a Thousand Tears will be
able to identify him. That is why I will have the Veil at all costs.
And it will be you, regent, who will help me obtain it." Terrettt
stared up into Marethyn's face and blinked away tears, "He's
crying," Marethyn whispered, bending over him. "I
have given him something new, something very different, formulated
especially for his enlarged ativar." Kirlll Qandda sat on a
small high stool in his patient's chamber at Receiving Spirit. "The
crying is a good sign." Outside
the window, the Promenade, invaded by the storm, lay darkling and
deserted. The turbulent Sea of Blood was stippled by silver rain.
Ships, their sails tightly furled, their hatches battened down,
rocked at anchor. The rain sluiced across their decks, gushed from
their scuppers. Gusts of wind hurled fistfuls of it clattering
against the thick shatterproof pane. The sound caused Terrettt to
turn his head. "It
is rain, dearest," Marethyn said softly as she touched his
cheek. "It is only the rain." The
walls were covered not only with the topographical map of the
northern continent Marethyn had bought him but also with his latest
paintings, which, more even than the earlier ones, were dominated by
the seven whorled circles that looked to her like tiny whirlpools.
She found them beautiful, hypnotic, almost haunting. "Marethyn,
there is something I have uncovered in my research into Terrettt's
case," Kirlll Qandda said. And when Marethyn glanced at him, he
went on. "I discovered that a Gyrgon was present when Terrettt
was brought in for his infant's physical. Furthermore, I believe this
same Gyrgon is the one who operated on Terrettt's ativar. His name is
Nith Batoxxx. Do you know him?" At
once, the conversation between Sornnn and Rada at Spice Jaxx's sprang
into her mind. The Gyrgon Nith Batoxxx desperately wanted to know the
location of the seven Portals. But what had this to do with poor
Terrettt? She shook her head. There was no use in involving the
Deirus in her speculation. Kirlll
Qandda nodded. "I want you to continue what you were doing. Talk
to your brother." "Terrettt."
She turned his face back until she was staring into his black eyes.
She was filled to overflowing with her love for him, and this made
her wonder if there was anyone to love Majja and Basse, the two
Resistance fighters she had met. She was waiting for Rada to contact
her so she could take them the route of the arms convoy. "Terrettt,
it is me, Marethyn. Do you recognize me?" For
a moment, nothing happened, then she felt his head give a spastic
nod. "Oh,
Terrettt!" Tears streamed down her face. She kissed his
forehead, his cheeks. She was just about to draw back when she felt
his hands on the back of her head, gentle as a spiderweb. "Terrettt?" Kirlll
Qandda had hitched himself forward, an intense expression on his face
as he silently urged her on. "Terrettt,
do you—?" He
opened his mouth and made a sound. She
cocked an ear. "What?" The
sound came again. "He
said 'Up'!" Marethyn breathed. "I'm sure. I heard it." With
the Deirus' help, she lifted him to a sitting position. He kept his
arms around her. He did not want to let go, and this made her laugh
again through her tears. When was the last time she had laughed in
this room? Never. Never, never, never before. His
mouth was working again, and she said, "What is it, dearest?
What do you want to say?" "Mar." Her
eyes were shining. "Mar-e-thyn." "Yes,
Terrettt! Marethyn!" she squealed. "Now can you say—" "Mar-e-thyn.
Can. You. See?" She
frowned. "See what, dearest?" His
face contorted. He was sweating with the effort to squeeze out the
words. "Can.
You. See. What. Is. In. My. Mmmind." Marethyn
cocked her head. "How could I do that?" "What.
I. Have. To. Paint." Now
she frowned. "Have to? Darling, why do you have to
paint anything?" Kirlll
Qandda had hopped off his stool and was now holding one of Terrettt's
paintings off the wall. Now he returned and held it up in front of
them. "Like this?" he said. "Look,"
Terrettt said in his semigarbled way. "Look." "What
are we looking at, Terrettt?" Kirlll Qandda said. Impatiently,
his finger tapped each whirl. "Look," he said. "Look.
Look. Look." It
happened by accident, really. Marethyn was sitting facing him.
Directly behind him was the huge topographical map. Looking so
intently at the painting, she was struck by how the colors conformed
to those of the map. Then, with a start, she realized that the shapes
more or less conformed also. "Wait
a minute!" She took the painting and went with it to the topo
map. Terrettt swiveled around and started to make excited grunting
sounds. Kirlll
Qandda came and stood beside her. "What is it?" "Look,"
she said. "Look!"
Terrettt echoed with great enthusiasm. "Look, look, look!" "The
painting is a representation of the northern continent." She
glanced quickly around. "All the recent paintings are!" Handing
off the painting to the Deirus, she took up one of Terrettt's
brushes, dipped it in crimson pigment. Studying the painting, she
made her first swirl on the map that corresponded to the first swirl
Terrettt had drawn. "It
is in Axis Tyr," Marethyn said. "The Eastern Quarter." "Yes!"
Terrettt said in a kind of ecstasy. "Yes, yes, yes!" "And
here is another one in Stone Border." She made another swirl,
and another. "And here, just north of the waterfall Heavenly
Rushing." She
made four more swirls, following her brother's blueprint. These were
in the heart of the Great Voorg, in the Great Rift in the Djenn Marre
mountain range, and at the southern island of Suspended Skull, just
off the coast in the Illuminated Sea. The last swirl she painted just
outside the tiny, flyblown village of Im-Thera in the Korrush. Red
brush in her hand, she turned and stared at her brother. "What
is so important about these places?" she asked. "Terrettt,
what is in your mind? What do you want me to know?" Terrettt
tried to work his mouth, but only drool emerged. Marethyn
swung her gaze to the seven crimson swirls she had placed on the map
and everything clicked in her mind. Looking at the map, Marethyn
believed Terrettt, channeling some unknown force with his
Gyrgon-heightened ativar, had located the locations of the seven
Portals Nith Batoxxx was so desperate to find. But how was this
possible? Had the Gyrgon engineered Terrettt to become some sort of
homing beacon? She felt a profound chill at the thought of how Nith
Batoxxx had manipulated him. She
felt him reaching out, and she took his hand. It was cold, and she
saw the bloom of fear in his eyes. Terrettt
clutched her all the tighter. "There. Is. Something," he
said. "Slow. In. The. Dark. Hanging. Feeding. Plotting." "What?"
she said, her hearts beating fast. "What is in the darkness?" "Slow.
In. The. Dark. Patient. Waiting." "Waiting
for what?" she asked. "Slow.
In. The. Dark. Waiting. For. The. Seven. To. Be. Opened. For. The.
End. To. Come." Riane,
alone in the dark of Za Hara-at, wondered where the saurom-ician was
and when he would try to attack her again. She had walked in every
direction without being able to find a trace of the power bourn. Now
she felt a certain heat on her thigh. Digging into her robes, she
discovered a warmth and drew out the stone given to her by Mu-Awwul,
the chieftain of the Ghor. She saw that the image of the ful-kaan,
the great bird of the Prophet Jiharre, was glowing orange. Power
and spiritual harvest flow from the image of the fulkaan, he had
told her. Use it wisely. She put the pad of her thumb over it
and felt the quick deep throb of the power bourn. She
returned to it, grateful once more for Mu-Awwul's gift. It had
somehow repowered the infinity-blade, and now it had served as a
beacon, guiding her back on her path. She hurried now, eager to get
to her destination and to leave the sauromician behind. Her
route took her ever deeper into the labyrinth of the dead city. Often
now she spotted breaks in the street, collapsed areas, either natural
or made by the Bey Das. Wooden ladders with rungs wrapped in rags led
down to the underlayer. Everywhere torporous silence lay like a
fogbank. A cold wind soughed around corners, fled down the deserted
avenues. There was no sign of the sauromician. Gradually,
signs of the Bey Das archaeological team disappeared until, at
length, she followed the bourn-line into a small and unprepossessing
plaza. Buildings seemed to crowd in on her from all sides. She knelt,
running her fingertips over the emperor carnelian and lapis runes set
into the cobbles. This was the Plaza of Virtuous Risk. In
the center was a triangular black-basalt plinth. This was interesting
because the dense stone, common enough around Axis Tyr, was unknown
in the Korrush. She could not imagine what it would have taken to
bring it all the way here. As she approached, she saw that a huge
copper basin, verdigrised by time, had been set atop the plinth.
Then, as she walked around the plinth, her sorcerous lamp picked out
the runes that had been carved on each of the three sides. SEAT OF
TRUTH, SEAT OF DREAMS, seat OF deepest KNOWLEDGE. These were the
three medial points around which the Kells in the Abbey of Floating
White were built. They corresponded to the crown of the head, the
heart, and the center of the forehead. She
moved closer, recalling what she had learned from Shima Vedda. The
first law of archaeology was the more time put into a structure, an
artifact, or a carving, the more important it is likely to be. Standing
upon the plinth, she peered down into the copper basin and discovered
that it was not a basin at all. It was a cenote like the one in the
abbey, filled with pitch-black water. The
Veil of a Thousand Tears is in a formidable lair, Perrnodt had
told her. It is sealed inside a box of fire, which is
surrounded by a coffin of water. In between is airless dark. Riane
was certain that she had come to the coffin of water.
31 Along
Came a Ja-Gaar
Minnum
stared bleakly at the sleety rain bouncing off the stone cistern in
the center of the courtyard of the Museum of False Memory. He was
sitting on a backless stone seat beneath the overhang of the loggia.
The weather beat on the roof like a drum. He was wreathed in thought.
Like a one-legged Kundalan, he had fallen into a reverie of how his
life used to be, and he felt again that phantom tingle his power had
brought him when he had been whole. He put his head in his hands. The
sound of the sleet skittering across the courtyard was a malevolent
whisper, mocking him. He held black thoughts in his head like a
farrier holds a fistful of iron nails. He
could go on like this, lying to everyone including himself. Or he
could screw up his courage and do what he should have done a long
time ago. He
watched the sleety rain build up in the corners of his courtyard
until it looked like cobwebs shining in the dusk. Interesting that he
should think of this as his courtyard. That told him something. The
question was whether or not he wanted to hear it. At
length, he rose and went inside and stood by the fire that blazed in
the huge blackstone hearth. He held his palms out to the flames to
warm them. Smoke curled up, and the fire snapped and sparked with an
anticipatory energy. He sighed, shook his shaggy head from side to
side. Curling a forefinger, he turned a long, sharp nail into the
flesh of the inside of his arm. As the droplets of blood oozed out he
took them on his fingertip and flicked them into the fire, which
blazed up with a soft Whoomp! Briefly, the fire flickered, as
if from a sudden draft, and for the blink of an eye turned
blue-green. When it had returned to its natural hue, a figure stood
in front of it. The
figure was cloaked from head to toe in a striped, beaded robe. Only
eyes as pale as a winter sky showed. The bottom half of the face was
covered in white muslin embroidered with script. Minnum squinted but
could not tell whether the figure was male or female. Perhaps it did
not matter. This was a Druuge, a member of the mysterious nomadic
tribe that wandered the sandy wastes of the Great Voorg. Minnum
believed that the Druuge were the original Ramahan, who broke away,
deserting the abbeys before the corruption of power made its first
insidious inroads. They were mystics and magicians of a level that
terrified even him. "Why
have you summoned me?" The
Druuge spoke—no, Minnum thought, it was more of a singing. "There
are archdaemons about." "Yes.
Two Portals have suffered damage. Pyphoros—" "Pyphoros
has escaped?" Minnum could not help gaping. "I thought it
was just Horolaggia who had managed to squeeze through." The
Druuge began to walk slowly around the exhibition space. "We
knew the moment it happened." Their
extraordinary magic lay in their language. Yet another fact Minnum
knew that he would not share with others. So many secrets, he
thought. Such terrible danger. "One
should never underestimate an archdaemon," Minnum said, in an
attempt to enhance his standing with the Druuge. "One
should never misunderstand an archdaemon," the Druuge
corrected him. The beads on the robe swayed rhythmically. Those
pale eyes frightened Minnum. Unlike the old days, many things
frightened him. "If
Pyphoros has returned to this realm," he said to the Druuge,
"then he will want the Veil of a Thousand Tears." "He
wants more than that," the Druuge sang. "He wants all the
secrets that lie hidden in Za Hara-at." "But
surely the Veil is—" "The
Maasra. What a sorry pass you have come to. You could not even
remember its proper name." The Druuge was peering into a crystal
case at the artifacts within. "Once you were fluent. Once you
held the Power on the flat of your tongue. But now. Look how you have
been brought low." The Druuge turned abruptly and took Minnum's
hand in his. "When we gave you the job of curator, when we
dispensed with the black finger Miina had given you as a stigma of
your collective sin, we had a glimmer of hope for you." The
Druuge released Minnum's hand, went to another crystal case, beads
clacking softly. "But what use is a curator with half a memory?
Miina has taken from you all that made you what you once were. And
now you know, sauromician-that-was, that power is sand sliding
through your hands. You clasp your fingers together, make them into
tight fists. Still the sand drains out." "Do
not remind me," Minnum said glumly. "I have toiled here in
almost absolute isolation for many years. I have killed no one; I
have refrained from divining through the dead. I have not practiced
the dark arts of necromancy since I set foot in the museum." "Is
this an attempt to make me feel sorry for you, or are you simply
feeling sorry for yourself?" the Druuge sang so that every stone
vibrated to the sorcerous pitch. "I
gave the Dar Sala-at the infinity-blade. I did exactly what the red
Dragon told me to do." Minnum tried not to look around him, in
case the Druuge was reconstructing reality. "I have atoned, and
still, as you say, the sand runs out." The
Druuge's silence seemed accusatory. "I
had the infinity-blade, and I chose not to use it." The
Druuge's pale eyes froze Minnum in his tracks. "Atoned, think
you? And yet from your responses it seems clear you still covet
power. The infinity-blade was meant for the Dar Sala-at. If you had
tried to use it, you would have been struck lower than you are now." "There
is nothing lower than what I am now." He was shaking with
repressed emotion. "You, holier than holy, cannot know what it
is like to be among the damned." He threw his head back. "I
want my old life back! It was a howl of rage and pain. "What
you had can never be again." The Druuge paused before yet
another case and peered within. "But should you desire it
sufficiently, you can have a new life." Minnum
stared at the Druuge. Tears trembled in the corners of his eyes. The
Druuge fixed him in a truly terrifying gaze. "Once you were
wise. You could be again. Miina in Her infinite wisdom has not
deprived you of that possibility. But you must find your wisdom again
in the very depths of your own spirit, where the wound Miina dealt
you is deepest." The
Druuge said, "This is why you summoned me,
sauromician-that-was." Minnum's
shoulders sagged. "I find that I ... Over the years ... It has
been so long . . . I—" "Tell
me, are you happy here?" "I
do not want—" "No."
The Druuge's sun-browned hand came up. "Do not say what you do
not want until you know for certain that it is not for you. You found
this hallowed ground for a reason. In this museum of mysteries your
new life begins. If you want it." The Druuge had returned to
stand again before the fire. "Whether you think so or not, you
are a born curator." "What
good is a curator who does not know the meaning of his exhibits?"
he cried. "Knowledge
is benign until it is coveted by you or someone like you. When you or
someone like you sees it as a means to an end it becomes a weapon." The
Druuge's song had turned abruptly dissonant, and Minnum clapped his
hairy hands to his ears, fearing that the Druuge would bring the
building down on him. "You
were witness to just such an act. You were there when The Pearl was
taken." "Yes." "You
stood by and did nothing." "Yes." "You
joined the wicked. You became the wicked." Minnum
was shaking. His teeth chattered uncontrollably and he prayed he
would not wet his robes. He could not remember ever being so
frightened. "Think
hard!" the Druuge sang. "Try to remember where your wisdom
resides. It waits for you. In pain. In the future." "What
more can I do than I have already done?" Minnum shouted in his
fear. "Miina has chained me." "It
is not for you to say what the Great Goddess has done. In fact, She
has given you the greatest gift. A chance to start over. What you do
with this chance is entirely up to you." Minnum
took a step toward the Druuge. "I want—" "What?
Power? Revenge? Recompense for the injustices visited upon you?" "You
are baiting me." "You
want to ask me how long your punishment is going to last." Minnum
clamped his mouth shut in abject terror. That was exactly what he was
going to ask. "What
do you want, sauromician-that-was? With me, you must tell the truth.
If you do not, I will know, and it will be the end for you." Minnum
did not doubt the Druuge for an instant. His heart was beating fast.
There was a blackcrow on a tree branch. He saw it with absolute
clarity. His decision made, everything dropped away from him. There
was a kind of relief in opening his heart. He
said, "I want not to be afraid." The
pale, terrifying eyes crinkled at their corners, and Minnum knew the
Druuge was smiling. "Well,"
the Druuge sang, "that is a start." What
is it he said to me? Oh yes, because you are an impetuous youth, he
has ordered me to keep an eye on you." Line-General Lokck
Werrrent grunted in disgust. "It is in your best interest for me
to spy on you, Star-Admiral, as well as in the best interest of the
Modality. The regent is certainly not lacking in nerve." "He
means to split us in two," Olnnn said. "He wants us to have
at each other. That is is how he brought down his father and
Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha. Egged on, they did his dirty work for
him." Werrrent
and Olnnn stood beneath the striped awning of a noisy and jam-packed
cafe. A stone's throw away sleety rain fell with a metallic clang and
rattle in the enormous plaza. A burly Mesagggun engaged a Khagggun
inside the brilliantly lit Kalllistotos ring. The upturned faces of
the rapt crowd, jostling, shouting, unruly, glistened, ran with
moisture. No one appeared to notice the foul weather, though
occasionally one or the other of the combatants slipped on the
increasingly slick surface of the ring. They
had already exchanged intelligence regarding Kurgan's desire to halt
the implantation of okummmon in Khagggun. "I
will be blunt, Star-Admiral," Line-General Lokck Werrrent said
under the noise. A
small smile played at the corners of Olnnn's cruel mouth. "As
always, my good friend." "I
am not entirely comfortable." Olnnn
looked over his shoulder at Rada, clad in her blue-green armor, the
Star-Admiral's golden crest on shoulders and chest. He was going to
have trouble with this turn of events, that was clear enough. Well,
there was no help for it but to take a hard line. That was the only
way he was going to impose his will on others. "Rada
is my staff-adjutant. Where I go, she goes." "But
a Tuskugggun. This makes no sense, Star-Admiral. And if I may offer
an opinion, it can only undermine your position of respect." Olnnn
clasped his hands behind his back, stared out at the match. The tide
had turned. The burly Mesagggun was under an increasingly ferocious
attack from the Khagggun. Blood was flowing freely, and the chants of
the seething throng rose in volume. Werrrent
said, "I trust I need not remind you that when it comes to
loyalty Khagggun have short memories. 'What have you done for me
lately?' is the internal motto they live by. And why not? Each day
they are asked to lay down their lives. It is not surprising that
they need constant reminders of whom they owe allegiance to." In
the Kalllistotos ring, the Mesagggun's eyes were rolling up in his
skull. The crowd howled, sensing the finish. "They
are like children, Star-Admiral. And like children their adoration
can overnight turn to disgust." Werrrent was standing with his
back ramrod straight. He was staring at the victorious Khagggun, arm
thrust triumphantly up into the foul night. "It is hard being an
idol. So difficult to live up to heightened expectations. And then
there is this: at the first misstep, the idolaters turn murderous.
Why? They despise you for having made fools of them." "Do
you consider Rada a misstep?" Olnnn asked. "Come
now, Star-Admiral, you know it is irrelevant what I think." Olnnn
smiled. "On the contrary, Lokck, as you think so do the others,
high command, midechelons and lower ranks alike." He raised a
hand. "Denying it would be a waste of both our time. And you
will agree that neither of us has time to spare." "The
regent spoke of promoting me," Werrrent said. Olnnn
watched the silvery rain come down. "Is this your wish?" "Not
from him." Olnnn
smiled; he knew exactly what Werrrent meant. "There is currently
a Deck-Admiral's position open." "I
was thinking more along the lines of Fleet-Admiral." "A
two-rank promotion. That would stir some talk." There were
currently only two Fleet-Admirals on Kundala. "Not
as much as this new staff-adjutant of yours," Werrrent said
dryly. "She
is here because I have ordered it," Olnnn snapped. "If that
is insufficient—" "It
is entirely sufficient for me, Star-Admiral." He shrugged.
"Still, talk centers on why she carries a shock-sword. Surely it
is simply for show, and that has never been the Khagggun way." Olnnn
understood now what had to happen. If he could not count on Lokck
Werrrent to accept Rada, then no Khagggun would, and he would indeed
have made a fatal misstep. He
beckoned silently to her, and when she arrived at his side he said to
Werrrent, "I will make you a wager, my staff-adjutant against a
Khagggun of your choosing in the Kalllistotos ring with shock-swords.
If she loses, she goes by the wayside and you gain the rank of
Fleet-Admiral. But if she wins, she stays, you remain at your present
rank, and your champion gets demoted." He grinned. "What do
you say?" "You
are bluffing," Lokck Werrrent said. "Pick
your champion, then, Line-General." Werrrent
stood stock-still. Rada could see that he was debating the pros and
cons of the wager. With so much at stake—a promotion that was
obviously of great significance to him and a potential loss of
face—she could tell that he did not want to take the wager. On
the other hand, backing down would absolutely cause him humiliation.
It seemed to her that Olnnn had overplayed his hand. He had backed
the Line-General into a corner. In her years running Blood Tide she
had always sought to find a reasonable way out for the antagonists
who went at it inside her tavern, knowing that this was all they
needed to settle their differences. "Star-Admiral,"
she said before the Line-General could speak, "if I might—" "Keep
still, Staff-Adjutant," Olnnn said with a cutting glance at her.
Didn't she know what was at stake here? "Speak only when you are
spoken to." "Now,
hold on. Star-Admiral," Werrrent said. Anything to forestall the
unpalatable choice he was being forced to make. "I would like to
hear what she has to say." Olnnn
was glaring at her, but Werrrent, addressing her as if she were a
child, said, "Go on, Staff-Adjutant with-no-name. Do not be
afraid. I have known the Star-Admiral all his life. In these matters
his growl is worse than his sword thrust." "My
name is Rada, Line-General. Staff-Adjutant Rada TurPlyen." She
slowly drew her shock-sword from its scabbard. The two Khagggun
watched her closely. Neither knew what she was about to say or do,
which was her aim. Without saying a word, she had gotten them back on
the same side. Now it was them versus her, far more familiar and
comfortable ground for them. "Line-General,
the Star-Admiral trained me himself. Since you have known him all his
life, you know what that means. I am good. I have excellent
instincts, and I am fast. But I do not delude myself. I would be no
match for any champion whose skills have been honed in battle."
She reversed the shock-sword, laid the blades across her palm so that
the hilt was toward him. "I surrender myself to you,
Line-General." But
Olnnn had already stepped between them. "Rada, this is not
possible. This wager is between the Line-General and myself. It is
not for you to—" Werrrent's
hand on his shoulder stopped him in midsentence. "Star-Admiral,
she is in armor, she is armed. She has the right." Olnnn
turned. "But Lokck." "Either
she is one of us, or she isn't." Olnnn
hesitated for just a moment, before he stood aside. "Take her
blade, then," he said. But
Werrrent did not move. Instead, he said to Olnnn, "Thumb it on." Olnnn
looked at him. "I beg your pardon?" "If
she is Khagggun, she will hold the shock-sword with the blades
active." "She
is not prepared. She has no idea." Werrrent's
steady gaze moved to Rada. "She has surrendered to me. It is my
right to ask this of any warrior." Rada
thought Olnnn looked like he was in a daze. He nodded. She did not
have to look at his face to know that he had been caught off guard. Acutely
aware of the Line-General's scrutiny, she held his gaze. Out of the
periphery of her vision she saw Olnnn step up beside her. Once before
she had held a shock-sword like this. She knew what was coming.
Still, the jolt of agony as Olnnn thumbed on the ion flow took her
breath away. She sucked in air. But she did not wince or cry out. The
two Khagggun were watching her. She concentrated on breathing as the
pain reached her hearts. The fire was so bad she thought it must shut
down all her major organs. Her hands began to tremble. "Line-General,"
Olnnn said softly. Werrrent
stood still and silent. The
tremor reached her forearms. Now she concentrated on breathing and
not dropping the shock-sword. The pain raced up her spine, branched
into the back of her neck, exploded in her brain. Her whole body was
shaking. From
what seemed like far away, she heard Olnnn say, "N'Luuura take
it, Lokck!" The
Line-General said, "Turn it off." But
when Olnnn moved to comply, he held up a hand. "No. She must do
it herself." "Lokck—" "If
she does," Werrrent went on inexorably, "I will not accept
her surrender. She will remain your staff-adjutant." His eyes
swung to Olnnn, "And you, Star-Admiral, will give me what I
want." Olnnn's
gaze swung in her direction, he called her name, but she did not
respond. Already,
she had twice fought off the blackness of unconsciousness. Her knees
had turned to jelly; it was as if she had a tertium band around her
chest squeezing all the breath out of her. Olnnn
called her name again. She
tightened her grip on the blades with one hand and almost passed out
again. With her other hand, she fumbled with the button that would
turn off the current of hyperexcited ions. Her fingers felt bloated
to three times their size. She could feel nothing. In a moment she
would begin to weep in pain and frustration, and everything would be
for nought. At last, she maneuvered a knuckle into the button and the
ion flow ceased. Tears
stood in the corners of her eyes. Olnnn was about to take her weapon
from her when Lokck Werrrent intervened. He lifted the shock-sword
from her numbed hand and slid it back into her scabbard. He
turned to Olnnn. "Star-Admiral, it seems to me Staff-Adjutant
TurPlyen could use a stiff drink." A
waiter at the cafe cleared a table for them, and they sat, Rada
between Olnnn Rydddlin and Lokck Werrrent. The entire staff was
staring at her. She did not care. Werrrent ordered N'Luuura-Hounds—a
shot of fire-grade numaaadis followed immediately by a goblet of
mead. After
the potent drinks were downed, Rada felt her system coming slowly
back to normal. She flexed her hands under the table out of sight of
the males. Lokck
Werrrent wiped his lips. "Star-Admiral, let me say now that
wagers between friends can only lead to discord. It was well that we
found this one unnecessary." He did not mention Rada; he did not
look at her. He had bought her a drink—a Khagggun drink—and
this was enough. Olnnn
laughed. "I agree, Fleet-Admiral." "Until
the official ceremony I am still Line-General." "In
any case, now you can be a degree less jealous." "I
was never jealous." "My
father would have been if he had lived to see me be Star-Admiral at
this age." Lokck
Werrrent cleared his throat. He knew what they were really talking
about. Khagggun almost never spoke about such intimate matters as
filial attachments. They were trained to think of their unit as their
family. Loyalty, not sentiment, drove them. Which was why such
moments were rare indeed. "I
am of the opinion that it is now the time of two armies." Olnnn
spread his hands. "It
is a fable." Werrrent's eyes cut to Rada for a moment.
"Something tells me you should hear this too, Staff-Adjutant."
He clasped both hands in front of him. "There were two brothers,
as close as brothers could possibly be. Until the elder became regent
and, locked inside his power, drew away from his younger brother. As
the years went on, they spoke less and quarreled more. Over what?
Petty matters, which before they would simply have laughed over. But
now these petty matters vexed them most fiercely because they
represented deeper irritations they could not express. They differed
over matters of policy and protocol, the abuse of power, and,
finally, the abandonment of law. And so the younger brother,
estranged and full of righteous ardor, set about gathering an army of
like-minded V'ornn. Hearing of his brother's treachery, the regent
mobilized his own army and set a price on his brother's head." "Is
this true?" Olnnn said. Werrrent
pursed his lips. "Does it matter?" Sheets
of hard rain swept across the plaza, which had quickly emptied
following the bloody conclusion of the last match. "In
the gloom just before dawn, the two armies came together,"
Werrrent continued. "They were evenly matched. Death was dealt
by both sides, and decimation was the result. Worse. By day's end
only a handful from each army remained, dazed, maimed, and bleeding,
no longer remembering why they fought or who the enemy was. "But
the brothers knew. All that long day they had watched from their high
outposts as V'ornn loyal to them had been slain, and now, at last,
they approached one another, striding through the grisly mire of the
battlefield. Their hearts were hardened, their minds were set. Power
and the envy it gives rise to were the engines that propelled them
both to strike. All through the night they did battle until the
breath sawed through their open mouths, until their blood ran from a
hundred wounds, until their legs trembled and they could no longer
stand. "And
still they fought, until at last fatigue caused a misstep, and the
younger brother dealt the regent a fatal blow." The
wind had picked up, the sleety rain coming in under the awning, which
slapped noisily now like a blackcrow descending upon a corpse. "A
fine fable," Olnnn said. "The abuse of power was avenged." "But
we have not yet reached the end." Werrrent sat back. "The
younger brother was so weakened by his wounds that he could not
prevent one of his own V'ornn from stabbing him through the hearts.
This V'ornn, a First-Captain, driven half-insane by the killing,
rallied about him what was left of both armies and promptly installed
himself as regent. The abuses of the slain regent were as nothing
compared to what this V'ornn would perpetrate." Olnnn
took a breath. "Where were the Gyrgon?" Werrrent
blinked. "What?" "How
would the Gyrgon allow such a thing to happen?" "It
is a fable," Werrrent said. "Of
course it is." "But
it is also a warning." Olnnn
folded his arms across his chest. Werrrent rolled his empty glass
around the tabletop. The two of them looked at each other, then away.
A waiter passed by, a tray of food held high. Another began to clear
a table. A V'ornn laughed at the back of the cafe, slamming the flat
of his hand against his thigh. Two huge Mesagggun shouldered their
way in, shook themselves like wyr-hounds, and sat down, stinking of
oil and tar. In the plaza the rain speared down, drowning everything. Olnnn
fingered his okummmon. "N'Luuura take it," he growled, "we
are like cor to the slaughter." And
Rada said, "Not if we slaughter the regent first." When
Konara Inggres returned to the Abbey of Floating White it was with a
high degree of trepidation, not to say fear. She had no intention of
running into the archdaemons in possession of Giyan's and Bartta's
bodies, so she Thripped directly into the triangular Kell. Since they
were sacred chambers, she felt safe, as if a small piece of the Great
Goddess was still enshrined there. She
bent over, retching, and wondered if her sudden illness was a
manifestation of her intense fear. The nausea soon passed, however. Recalling
the First Mother's instructions, she lit a reed torch. By its light,
she saw that Ghosh, the carved citrine serpent, was not in the place
she had last seen it. It had been moved back against the wall, as if
someone had tried to return it to its original niche. She looked
around, as if someone was waiting for her and would jump out of the
dense shadows. Her heart beating fast, she thrust the flaming torch
into every nook and cranny to assure herself that she was, in fact,
alone in the Kell. She
found that she was sweating. Wiping her forehead with the sleeve of
her robe, she placed the torch on a worked-bronze wall bracket and
knelt before the beautiful and frightening countenance of the sacred
serpent. As she studied the face she saw that the eyes were
separate—whole cabochon citrines set into the cavities. Each
eye was incised with iris and vertical pupil. With her hand nearly
touching the right eye, she hesitated. The thing was so cleverly
wrought it looked positively alive. Part of her was afraid the
serpent would bite her. Then she remembered the First Mother's
admonition for urgency, and she steeled herself. Her
fingertips transmitted the coolness of the semi-precious stone.
Grasping the orb, she turned it left three times, and it plopped
right into her hand. It was very heavy. It made her hand cold, and
she began to tremble. But
she did not falter. Continuing to follow the First Mother's
instructions, she took the torch and descended into the third and
lowest Kell, the perfectly square chamber. The black-lacquered walls
were reflected eerily by the nickering torchlight. She saw the three
Ja-Gaar. They at least, along with the basalt cover to the cenote,
were where she had last seen them. Breathing
a sigh of relief, she knelt beside the stone cenote and dipped the
citrine eye into the still black water. She counted off the seconds
to thirty. The cabochon lay in the palm of her hand. As she had not
immersed it deeply, she could see it clearly. She blinked, at first
uncertain of what she was seeing. The incised iris and pupil were
gaining form and color. It was as if the black water was transforming
the cabochon into Ghosh's eye. She
could see the iris turning a glimmering silver color and the vertical
pupil inside a deep violet. The thirty seconds expired, and she
pulled the orb out of the water. What had the First Mother instructed
her to do next? Ah, yes, put the still-wet eye in the center of her
forehead, precisely where she accessed her Third Eye. She
was about to do so when she became aware of a stirring of the water
in the cenote. At first it was just the whisper of a ripple. She
leaned over, peering into the cenote and saw, amid the utter
blackness, a movement. All
at once, the water fountained up in a great froth, and Bartta leapt
out, wide-eyed, ashen-faced, and grinning from ear to ear. Konara
Inggres screamed and toppled backward. As she did so, the citrine eye
rolled across the black floor of the Kell. She moaned, scrabbling
after it on all fours, but Bartta seized her from behind, pulled her
down hard onto her stomach. The
breath went out of her as Bartta landed atop her. Bartta's mouth
opened and a long, thin blue-black tongue flicked out, wrapping
itself around Konara Inggres' hair. It lashed itself tight and
pulled, jerking Konara Inggres' head back. "You
have disobeyed Mother," Bartta hissed in a voice clearly not her
own. "You have lied. You have the Gift. You have Thripped."
The tongue pulled back farther, and Konara Inggres arced like a bow
and cried out. Pain lanced through her shoulders and neck. She saw
spots before her eyes. "Having
been to Otherwhere you know the truth. You cannot be allowed to live.
Nor is possession any longer a viable option. You are too much of a
threat to us." Bartta
was making a sound. It was like the agitated susurrus of ten thousand
famished stydil descending on a field of wrygrass. With a sickening
start, Konara Inggres realized that the archdaemon inside Bartta was
laughing. "You
sickening, weak-willed worm," Bartta croaked. "What right
do you have to live your life in freedom when we have been trapped in
loathsome misery for eons?" Bartta
gouged her painfully in the ribs with a long-nailed finger. "You
Ramahan are too stupid for your own good. My father should have wiped
you out wholesale instead of slowly eroding the nature of your
religion. He is patient; I am not. Now that I am free of that hideous
prison I want only to destroy that which put me there." Konara
Inggres said nothing. For one thing, stark terror had caused her to
lose her tongue. For another, the pain was so intense that every
nerve ending vibrated to the archdaemon's gouging. For still another,
she was too busy keeping track of the skittering citrine eyeball as
it caromed off the enamel-black walls of the Kell. Bartta
bent over her. "You assume I am going to kill you, but death is
too easy an end for you. I am going to keep you alive. You will be my
plaything. Torture will be your fate. Endless torture. Day after day,
month after month, year after year I will return to you again and
again and you will hang on the knife edge of agony. Pain will be your
constant companion, an intimate that will become a part of you, until
it takes you over wholly and you are defined by it." Her
fingers dug in deeper, making Konara Inggres cry out. Eyes
watering, Konara Inggres spotted Ghosh's eye, which had settled
against one of the Ja-Gaar's forelegs. Blinking back tears of pain,
she saw that it was still gleaming, still slick with the water from
the cenote, and she remembered the First Mother's warning. Once the
eye was immersed she could not allow it to dry out; otherwise, it
would lose all its power. "What
are you doing? Trying to Thrip? I have fixed it so you cannot."
Bartta jerked back on her hair with the archdaemon's powerful
blue-black tongue. 'You will pay attention to me!" Konara
Inggres tried to crawl toward the Ja-Gaar's foreleg. Bartta was a
small female. Curiously, the possession had caused her to become even
lighter. It had also made her far stronger. Konara Inggres made some
headway before Bartta pulled her arm behind her back and began to
twist it. "I
knew there would be fight in you!" Bartta hissed. "Well and
good! I have thought of a way to subdue you." She lifted her
head with its twisted expression. "Where are you? Show
yourself!" And
obeying that command, Konara Lyystra descended into the Kell from the
one directly above. Her gaze was steady, her expression fixed. As
Konara Inggres gasped, Bartta laughed, the archdaemon's mirth making
her throat pulse like a wer-frog's. "As
you are about to discover, torture can take many forms," Bartta
said with undisguised glee. "Here is your first taste." She
fixed Konara Lyystra in her gaze, and said, "Take the needle I
gave you and plunge it into the side of her neck." "What
have you done to her?" Konara Inggres cried. "I
dispossessed her." "That
you did," Bartta cackled as Konara Lyystra moved toward them in
an odd, jerky rhythm. "But Horolaggia and I captured her before
she could escape us. We were stricken at what you had managed to do.
You killed one of us. Murdered him in cold blood. But you left your
friend behind, and we made her ours. Not in the same way. After what
you did, we could not possess her again. So we did the next best
thing. We exorcised her essence, stuffed it into a tiny black bottle
inside her where she can never find it. Now she obeys us and only
us." "Lyystra,"
Konara Inggres called. "Lyystra, you must resist them. You must
find yourself again." Konara
Lyystra kept coming on stiff legs, and Bartta—or the unholy
thing inside her—was shaking with laughter. "Go
on, talk to her if you must," the archdaemon taunted. "For
all the good it will do you." "Lyystra,
listen to me," Konara Inggres said. "Remember what I said
about faith." "Faith,
faith, faith," Bartta scoffed, turning the word over as if it
were a curiosity. Konara
Inggres contrived to ignore her. "If you doubt, then you are
without shelter and comfort in the face of the storm. Without faith
the storm will take you over, Lyystra. You must not let that happen." "Poor
thing, she has no choice," Bartta hissed. It
was the archdaemon's imprudent words that galvanized Konara Inggres.
It was clear that she could not gain the upper hand by sheer brute
force. But sorcery was another matter altogether. She knew from her
studies that daemons were cut off from Osoru. But could she overcome
one with it, and an archdaemon to boot? She
shut out the pain, Bartta's mocking words, the fact that her best
friend was advancing on her, grasping a needle loaded with Miina knew
what noxious herbal concoction. She erased everything from her mind
and opened her Third Eye. "What
are you doing?" Bartta croaked from seemingly far away. "I
told you, you cannot Thrip your way out of this." Konara
Inggres conjured Net of Cognition. With it, she identified Lyystra's
essence, even though the archdaemons had locked it away inside a
sorcerous bottle. At once, she cast White Well, gathering the bottle
to her. "I
said, what are you doing, stupid thing?" Bartta cried with a
mighty jerk of her tongue on Konara Inggres' hair. When no answer was
forthcoming, Bartta slammed her pointed chin into the back of Konara
Inggres' head. Konara
Inggres' face hit the black-basalt floor, and, with a pain that
reverberated through her, she felt her cheekbone crack. Still, she
would not allow herself to be deterred. Conjuring Transverse Guest,
she determined the sorcerous structure of the bottle and began to
dismantle it. Possibly
it would not matter, though, for Konara Lyystra had reached her and,
on Bartta's barked command, was kneeling beside her. "The
side of her neck!" Bartta cried. "Bury the needle deep
where the banart can do its work quickly." Despite
herself, Konara Inggres began to thrash about. Her concentration
slipped, and the archdaemon-made bottle began to remake itself. She
stopped it, redoubling her efforts, and was rewarded with a thin
streamer of warmth. Lyystra's essence was leaching back into her
body. Then
she felt the first prick of the needle. "Lyystra,
have faith," she gasped. "Fight the evil inside you." "I
have no strength," Konara Lyystra said dully. "Believe
in Miina, and you will find the strength." Konara
Lyystra's eyes turned inward, an inner struggle that had already
begun, working itself to the fore. "Inggres?
Is that you?" she said in a raspy whisper. The needle withdrew.
"What has happened? My mind is ... I cannot remember." "Fetch
the citrine ball that lies there by the creature's leg. Bring it to
me." At
once the archdaemon's intense curiosity was piqued. "Why? What
is it? What does it mean to you?" "Shut
up," Konara Inggres said through her haze of pain and was
rewarded with another agonizing gouge. Konara
Lyystra had turned away. She was staring at the citrine ball. "Lyystra,
fetch it," Konara Inggres urged her. "Bring it here." "Yes,"
Bartta hissed. "By all means fetch it. But bring it to me. I am
your superior, girl. You will do as I say, or I will see to it that
you are immediately expelled from the abbey." "Lyystra,
don't listen to her. She is possessed by an archdaemon. Everything
she tells you is a lie!" Konara
Lyystra was on all fours, staring at both of them. Then she reached
for Ghosh's eye, grabbed it, and turned back. "I
want it!" Bartta howled. "Give it to me!" Konara
Lyystra looked at it, saw that it was still wet, and began to wipe it
on her robes. "No!"
Konara Inggres cried in terror. "Keep it wet. Lyystra, do you
understand?" Konara
Lyystra looked at her out of bloodshot eyes. She nodded. "Why?"
Bartta screamed. "Why, why, why?" "Inggres."
Konara Lyystra's face was a mask of terror. "Ignore
the archdaemon," Konara Inggres said, "and bring it to me." Konara
Lyystra hesitated, just an arm's length away. "What if she is
Bartta? If I disobey her, I will be exiled." "Yes,
you surely will, child." Bartta's cupped fingers beckoned. "All
you need do to get back in my good graces is hand me the citrine
ball." "But
she is not Bartta," Konara Inggres said. "The archdaemon
has possessed her. You must believe that. Have faith." Konara
Lyystra nodded and gave her best friend Ghosh's water-slicked eye. As
she did so, Bartta gave an impassioned scream. The long blue-black
tongue erupted into view. With
a bloody hand, Konara Inggres pressed Ghosh's eye to the center of
her forehead. The
blue-black tongue stabbed out and, like a sword, impaled Konara
Lyystra through the throat. She screamed, blood fountained, and she
began to gasp and gurgle. Underneath
Bartta, Ghosh's eye, bathed in the black, still water of the holy
cenote, sank into Konara Inggres' forehead, pushing aside flesh,
sinking into the bone of her skull. When it reached the outer sac of
her brain a sorcerous light flared, falling upon the three carved
Ja-Gaar, awakening them to life. In
this sorcerous light, Konara Inggres could see the chain-link leashes
that bound the Ja-Gaar to her, against which they were now straining.
She reached out, let go of the leashes, releasing the Ja-Gaar. They
were freed blinking into the smoking semidarkness. Their incandescent
eyes fixed upon Bartta or—more accurately—that which lay
like a canker inside her. Snarling, they launched themselves toward
her like living missiles. The
archdaemon had just enough time to withdraw its wicked tongue before
they were upon Bartta. The ferocity of their attack threw her
completely off Konara Inggres. She rolled to the wall, her arms
covering her face, her knees drawn up. This meant nothing to the
Ja-Gaar, who began to maul Bartta savagely, ripping into her with
fangs and claws as if in this primitive way they could extract the
archdaemon wound like a great viper around her spinal column. And
perhaps they could, for there arose from Bartta's wide-open mouth a
sound no Kundalan was ever meant to utter. It was a noise of such
fearsome rage and pain as Konara Inggres had never before heard or
could have imagined even in her worst nightmares. But
at that moment the archdaemon's bloodcurdling bellow was of only
marginal interest to her. Ignoring her pain and the blood from her
fractured cheek, she had crawled to where her best friend lay
sprawled on the black-basalt floor. "Lyystra,"
she whispered as she put her friend's head in her lap. In vain, she
tried to stop the blood pulsing from the ragged wound in her throat.
Holding her tight, she bent over and kissed her forehead. "I am
here, as is the Great Goddess. We are both with you." Konara
Lyystra's face was appallingly ashen. Her body shivered and shook,
and a raling came from her fatally congested chest. But at the sound
of her friend's voice, her eyes opened, and she smiled. "You
were right. About everything." Her voice was so thick it emerged
from her parted lips amid a welter of gurgling bubbles. "If I
believe in Miina, will She save me from death?" Konara
Inggres forced a smile to her face. "You are not going to die." "The
archdaemon has done me grievous injury. There is no hope." "Have
hope. Have faith." She held her friend more closely. "I
do." Konara Lyystra looked up at her. All at once, her
expression changed, and she gasped, a larger bubble forming between
her lips. "I can see Her, Inggres. Oh, look! I can see the Great
Goddess. She exists]" In
a corner of the Kell, the three Ja-Gaar were noisily and deliriously
rending Bartta's body limb from limb. Konara
Inggres closed her eyes and began to pray. The
sacred Ja-Gaar had set up a howling. Miina only knew what it meant. She
looked upon Konara Lyystra, saw those bloodshot eyes staring past
her, past the ceiling of the Kell. They were fixed on Miina or
whatever it was she thought she had seen. A distant Realm. Darkness.
Nothing. Death. She
threw her head back and added her own long, mournful cry to the
Ja-Gaar's bestial howls.
32 Light
Floating on Water
The
odd thing about where the cenote was located, Riane thought as she
slipped into the pitch-black water, was that it had not been built
directly on the bourn nexus that lay beneath this small plaza. In the
chill, her mind worried at this oddity. For
a moment, she hung in the water. Finbats raced through the deserted
plaza. Then, as if an invisible hand had reached up, she was pulled
beneath the surface. The water was viscous and had a mind of its own.
It wanted to pull her deeper. She fought against the pull. The utter
blackness was oppressive. She kicked out, trying to regain the
surface, but she could not even maintain her position. She was being
sucked deeper. She pushed down a flash of panic and felt for the
pulse of the power bourns, but there was not even the faintest trace
of them. The
absence of light became overwhelming, and she reached out with her
mind, repositioning the sorcerous lamp over the center of the cenote.
She looked up and saw ten thousand tiny points of light dancing in
the blackness. They were not random, she saw, but resolved themselves
into spirals that descended into the cenote. She put her hand through
a spiral, and it was as if the power bourn had speared her. That was
why the cenote had been built slightly off the nexus. It held a rogue
branch that was broken into spirals instead of running straight
beneath Kundala's crust. Linked
now with the spiral bourn, she let it take her deeper, to the place
where the water ended and she could breathe again. The
only problem was that she emerged into a vacuum. It
was hot inside the Khagggun enclosure, and staring at the tiers of
data-decagons made Rada hotter. Sweat ran down the back of her neck,
collected inside her armor. All around her, Khagggun moved at their
precise, clipped pace, crisscrossing the enclosure with tight lips
and beady eyes. Behind her, Olnnn stood talking
with two of his officers. The war against the Resistance was going
well. Many were dead, many more would be soon enough. Majja and Basse
were right. The time to be patient was over. Without
looking to the right or left, she walked to the tiers of
data-decagons. She knew where the one she wanted was because only the
previous day she had watched the Pack-Commander in charge of the
convoy put it there. She had been waiting for him, and had contrived
to walk by just behind him as the data-screen came on. It was
fortunate she did so because she had seen that the date the convoy
was to leave Axis Tyr had been pushed up a day. She
risked a glance over her shoulder. Olnnn was engrossed in discussion
with his officers. The convoy was scheduled to leave in the morning.
It was now or never. Reaching out, she plucked the data-decagon and
slipped it into the reader slot. The screen bloomed to life, and she
concentrated fully. It took her a very short time to memorize the
route, but it seemed like an eternity. She
heard Olnnn call her name, and she felt a spasm between her shoulder
blades. Whipping the data-decagon out of the slot, she returned it to
its tier. Then she turned on her heel and went to where he was
waiting. The conversation had broken up. "What
were you doing?" he asked. "Reconfirming
your schedule for the rest of the day." He
nodded. "I need you to run an errand for me." He walked
with her to an area of the enclosure where they had some privacy, and
placed a data-decagon in her palm. "Take this to Fleet-Admiral
Lokck Wer-rrent. He is at the Western arsenal. Make certain you
deliver this to him and to no one else. Remain for his reply and
bring it back to me here. Is that clear?" She
nodded and went on her way, relieved to be out of there. The
data-decagon lay heavy and hot in the heart of her palm. If Werrrent
was currently at the Western arsenal, that must mean he was
overseeing the final preparations for the convoy. On her way to
requisition a hoverpod she contacted Marethyn, who was at Receiving
Spirit with her brother, Terrettt. Sornnn was with her. From the tone
of Marethyn's voice it sounded as if she had interrupted a serious
conversation. She
signed out a hoverpod and as soon as she was aloft she put the
data-decagon in the cockpit reader. She was anxious to know if Olnnn
had any last-minute instructions for the convoy. In this she was to
be disappointed. The data was encrypted. The
Veil is sealed inside a box of fire, which is surrounded by a coffin
of water. In between is airless dark. Riane
hung in the vacuum. Her lungs were about to burst. She cast Earth
Granary, the most potent healing spell, to create a bubble of air
around her. But each time it began to form the vacuum collapsed it. She
was growing dizzy and dislocated. She could no longer distinguish up
from down, the nothingness was endless, and her panic returned,
splintering cohesive thought into a flock of birds that flew in every
direction. A
throbbing commenced in her temples as her brain was deprived of air.
There was a way out of the vacuum; she had only to find it. She knew
she had to think the problem through, and she shackled the intense
fear. What did she know? She had solved the first level by bringing
light into pitch-darkness. But it was dark here, too. And airless.
But her first instinct to create a bubble of air for herself had
failed. She
started. Something had happened. What? Cold sweat broke out on her
anew as she realized she had passed out for several seconds. She
could not allow that to happen again, and she dug her fingernails
into the palms of her hands, drawing blood. And pain. That was
better. The pain would keep her awake and alert. What had she been
thinking about before she passed out? Laboriously,
she went through the process again. She could sense her body
straining for life. She so wanted to take a breath. A moment more and
she would suck in the nothingness and die. No
air, no air. Only
one other chance and she took it. She conjured First-Gate
Correspondence, transmogrifying the entire vacuum. Air flooded in
and, with it, a kind of pale phosphorescence. She gasped, sucked in
the air, felt her galloping pulse slowly subside. She
saw that she was floating in a donut-shaped space. Above her was the
purling water. And directly ahead was a clear cube of fire. Within
that, she knew, lay the Veil of a Thousand Tears. Pyphoros
began to arrange Courion's corpse, stretching it out fully on its
back. They were still in Nith Batoxxx's laboratory deep in the heart
of the Temple of Mnemonics. Kurgan was starting to feel the weight of
the structure, the boundaries of the lab. He was certain the
archdaemon had that in mind. He was sure the creature wanted him to
feel as much a prisoner as Pyphoros himself felt. Kurgan had a dull
headache, which had come on sometime after the sorcerous stone had
been implanted in his skull. There must be some way to remove it, he
was thinking. Not in your world, the archdaemon had said. What
had he meant by that? He
watched as Pyphoros pulled the ion glove off his host body's right
hand, leaning forward expectantly. This was the first time he had
seen a Gyrgon's bare hand. The palm was an intricate mass of
biocir-cuitry, as were the backs of the fingers. The characteristic
ion sizzle was gone. "Regent,"
Pyphoros said, "I believe it is time that you become acquainted
with the high art of necromancy." As
Pyphoros extended the hand over the corpse a line of palest blue
emerged from the tip of the middle finger. Despite the paleness of
the color the light it emitted was so glaring that Kurgan
instinctively put his hand up to shield his eyes. "We
open a fresh corpse and use our special skills to read the entrails." The
palest blue line descended toward Courion's abdomen and quickly slit
it open from breastbone to pelvis. A gust of noxious gases issued
forth. Courion's intestines bulged, gleaming evilly. The stench was
overpowering. Not that Pyphoros seemed to mind. Kurgan's eyes were
riveted on the intestines, which, guided by the blue rune, were
spreading themselves out into what appeared to be a complex pattern. "The
dead hold secrets they never had in life." The
blue rune now became a fine line. He followed its slow and ominous
movement as it described a serpentine path above the gleaming
entrails. Here and there, the blue line opened the intestines,
revealing dark and mysterious contents to the furiously intent
Pyphoros. A kind of singsong humming was coming from him, not
strictly speaking from his mouth, but from all of him at once. "Here
is the secret," Pyphoros said. "Running in stinking
rivulets, in the blazing language of the dead." Abruptly, the
palest blue line vanished, and the archdaemon looked at Kurgan. "Ah.
This secret, regent, it is about you." "Really?" "You
seem skeptical." "Not
at all." Pyphoros
laughed. "You really must learn how to be grateful, Sto-gggul
Kurgan. This secret, if I decide not to tell you what it is, I
guarantee that within hours you will be dead." She's
coming," Marethyn said. "The convoy date has been moved up.
It is leaving tomorrow at sunrise." Sornnn
looked bleakly at her. He felt enmeshed in the revelatory information
she had just given him. The genetic manipulation the Gyr-gon had
subjected Terrett to had somehow allowed him to locate the seven
Portals Rada had told him Nith Batoxxx wanted. They had been arguing
when the communication from Rada had come in. Sornnn had wanted her
to go to Kurgan and tell him about the seven Portals. It seemed to
him the perfect way for her to reconcile with him. Pride and,
doubtless, the spectre of failure had made her balk. Not that he
blamed her. He had had enough face-to-face experience with the new
regent to know that Kurgan was both volatile and unforgiving. Still,
he had pressed her. Not that Marethyn would ever admit it, but he
suspected that her estrangement from Kurgan had had a serious and
long-lasting effect on her. "Our
argument is moot," she said now. "I will be leaving the
city before nightfall." He
took her elbow, steered her away from the sleeping Terrettt. They
were alone in the room at Receiving Spirit. In the hallway,
Genoma-tekks and Deirus could be seen hurrying past, silent and
grim-faced. Once, the ion crackle heralded the presence of a Gyrgon,
but they did not see him. "Marethyn,
this is crazy," he said. "I should be the one to go." "You
are Prime Factor," she pointed out with perfect logic. "You
cannot risk being seen." He
had no answer for that. "We
have only a few minutes before Rada gets here." She slipped her
hand into his, led him to the window. The sky was grey and
angry-looking. Far out to sea, where the heavy clouds seemed to touch
the horizon, it was teeming. The grip of midwinter had finally taken
hold. The solstice was only days away. "I know you want to
protect me, Sornnn. But try to see things from my point of view. That
protection you're feeling is just another form of subjugation." "I
don't think it is." "But
the point is, darling, I do." "Marethyn—" "I
want my life to count for something." Her eyes searched his.
"This is how I will find out who I really am." She squeezed
his hand and smiled. "I have no intention of being a martyr. I
will come back to you, Sornnn. I swear it." A shadow passed
across her, and she looked out the window. "Rada is here. I have
to go." She
disengaged her fingers and kissed him hard on the lips. On her way
out, she did not trust herself to look back. When she passed
Ter-rettt's bed his eyes opened and he looked at her and spoke her
name.
33 Sacrifice
I
can feel him," Eleana said. "He's kicking?" Rekkk
asked. "I don't know what the baby is doing," she said with
a grimace, "but it hurts." Rekkk
put his arm around her and looked to the Teyj, who had gone on to
reconnoiter. "We had better stop here and rest." Eleana
looked around at the rock-strewn mountain field they were crossing,
its once lush summer grasses sere and shorn in brittle winter. "It
is too exposed here." She heard the Teyj calling as it weaved
and dipped in the air currents, and pointed toward the looming rock
face. "The teyj has found a cave. We'll have plenty of shelter
there against the heavy weather." "You'll
never make the climb." "You
should know never to say never to me, Rekkk." She grinned
through her obvious pain. "You have as good as dared me." And
before he could stop her, she had set off, crossing the remainder of
the field and starting up the slope that led to the first
outcroppings of the mountainside. They were high in the Djenn Marre,
at most a day from the Abbey of Floating White. Rekkk hurried after
her, grabbing hold of the rock. The Teyj fluttered excitedly just
over his shoulder. If they were going to get to the cave, he knew,
they would have to do it before the wet weather settled in and made
the rock face too treacherous to negotiate. Already, the following
wind out of the south had picked up, turning the air leaden with
incipient moisture. These
dark thoughts were abruptly terminated by Eleana's cry. He looked up
so fast his neck cracked, and he scrambled quickly upward to find her
clinging precariously with one hand while clutching her belly with
the other. "Eleana,
what is it?" But
she only shook her head, her face scrunched up, and she put her head
in the hollow of his shoulder as he took her in one strong arm and
headed up the scree. The loose rock made it more difficult to make
headway, but Rekkk persevered, using whatever was available to him —
cracks, crevasses, the limbs of stunted trees, battered and twisted
by the harsh weather—to continue their ascent. The breath came
hotly to his lungs and his muscles felt as if they were on fire. Pain
he had thought gone, associated with his wounds, returned to haunt
him like a daemon. But he kept going though the way became steeper as
he began to climb the true rock face, for he knew without question
that their greatest danger was being caught on the vertical when the
rain came. He
suppressed the urge to hurry, taking each step with care, testing
hand- and footholds, while the wind gusted at his back and whistled
in his ears. Once, he thought he heard something, and turned his head
to look. But that action caused him to pause, and pausing was out of
the question, so he saw nothing, and the moment the first slash of
rain pattered against his legs he forgot all about the sound. He
looked directly above his head and tried to blot out Eleana's moans.
He was terrified that she was going to have the baby right there
without protection, and that he would be helpless to save it. He
judged that they were perhaps two-thirds of the way to the top. He
kept moving, the afternoon darkening radically, another spray of rain
striking him like a blow. The temperature must have already dropped
by a good ten degrees. He
kept moving, one leg, one arm at a time and his world came down to
this crucial routine: search out a handhold, test it, haul them up,
fight for a toehold, balance, then start all over again. They
were almost to the ledge where Eleana had spied the cave, but a great
outcropping of rock intervened, overhanging his head. The way
directly above was completely blocked. The rain had begun a more
steady tattoo against the rock face. His entire back was drenched,
and Eleana had commenced to shiver as well as spasm. In despair, he
looked left and right, contemplating a lateral move, but no crack or
crevasse immediately presented itself, and they had passed the last
of the trees sometime ago. "N'Luuura
take it!" he cursed. He
heard the Teyj calling to him. It was banking and swooping, its four
wings helping it to maintain its balance and altitude in the gusts.
Rekkk saw where he was headed, a featureless block of rock just to
his right. With the temperature dropping, the sleety rain was
beginning to turn to snow. He squinted but could discern no handhold
through the sharply reduced visibility. What was the Teyj thinking? A
blast of wind almost dislodged him, and a host of flakes battered his
face. His foot slipped on the wet rock, and Eleana groaned and he
cursed. His fingers were rapidly growing numb. The
Teyj called to him once more, and he muttered, "To N'Luuura with
it!" through gritted teeth as he reached over to his right. His
fingertips felt along the rock and, at the very back of it, where it
became part of the mountainside, he found the crevasse the Teyj with
its keen eyesight and optimum vantage point had discovered. He curled
his fingers into the crevasse, pulled, felt no give, and swung over.
For a moment, he hung in space, feeling giddy with the height, then
the toes of his boots caught a crack, and they were safe. He
allowed the Teyj to guide him the rest of the way, a surprisingly
easy last hundred meters. Gaining the ledge, Rekkk gathered Eleana
into both arms, ignoring the spasming of his overtaxed muscles, and
ran for the mouth of the cave. The Teyj was already present as Rekkk
laid Eleana gently onto the dry dirt floor. He
went into the cavern's interior, but this high up could find no dried
branches or even twigs. He settled for a handful of desiccated bone
shards, which he dropped beside Eleana. Placing one of the smallest
shards in his okummmon, he conjured up fire in his mind and out of
the okummmon's slot roared a jet of fire that lit the pile of bones. The
gale hammered full force at the mountainside, turning the night
opaque, filling the cave mouth with a drifting of snow. The wind
howled and moaned deep in the bowels of the cavern, and the Teyj
violently ruffled its feathers in order to remain dry. Eleana
shivered, moaning, bringing Rekkk's thoughts back to their present
predicament. "What
is the matter with her?" Rekkk asked the Teyj. "Is the baby
coming?" The
Teyj sang and Rekkk heard its voice in the serene center of his mind.
It was the voice of Nith Sahor. The
baby will come when it comes. Eleana is ill. "Why
has it taken you so long to speak to me?" My
enemies have keenest ears. Rekkk. I am weak and vulnerable in this
body. I could not take the risk of them overhearing. Rekkk
put the back of his hand against Eleana's forehead. "She is very
hot." Duur
fever, Nith Sahor said in his mind. It mill get worse. It may
not get better. Rekkk
glanced up at the bird, hopping back and forth nervously on one foot
then the other. "How do you know that?" Because
the disease is manufactured. By us. The Gyrgon. "What?
Why?" It
was an early attempt to subdue the Kundalan Resistance. All
at once Rekkk was full of rage. "Did you have anything to do__?" Not
personally. It was the brainchild of Nith Settt. I argued against it.
All the same I am culpable. "You
must know its genetic makeup then," Rekkk cried. "Do
something." Would
that I could. I have told you, in this guise I am severely limited. "I
can make almost anything with this okummmon you designed. Tell me
what will cure her." There
is no cure I know of. We made certain of that. "Ah,
N'Luuura, if she dies . . ." Rekkk found that he was trembling. Perhaps
there is a way. "Then
N'Luuura take it, tell me what it is?" Rekkk shouted. "N'Luuura
take it, why are you Gyrgon so enigmatic?" We
may seem so only because you have yet to learn our locutions. On the
other hand, Rekkk, you know more than you think. You know that
Eleusis Ashera learned to believe in Kundala, in the importance of
Kundalan, and in their faith in Miina. You know that I, Nith Sahor,
learned the same things. Now, Rekkk, you have a Kundalan lover,
Kundalan friends to whom you are fiercely loyal. Rekkk,
holding Eleana in his arms, grazed her cheek with his lips. "How
will any of this save Eleana and her baby?" Tell
me, Rekkk, would you die in order to save them? "Of
course. Yes." Then
perhaps that is the only way. The legend of the ultimate sacrifice
runs at the very bedrock of Kundalan faith. It is the one weapon
non-Ramahan have in invoking enchantment. This much is certain:
Gyrgon technomancy cannot save them. What is left save Kundalan
sorcery? As
Attack-Commandant filled crouched in the dense shadow of a rock
outcropping, he could feel death at his shoulder, breathing softly
and evenly. Not his death; the death of those he pursued. With
darkness, the rain had changed to snow, heavy and wet and clinging,
silencing the birds, bending the branches far below to its will. Attack-Commandant
Blled scooped a handful of snow and stuffed it into his mouth, he had
not eaten since he had left his Khagggun in the dense forest near the
death pit two days before. He gloried in the pain his stomachs were
in; the sensation assured him that he was alive. From his vantage
point, he could now and again make out through the swirls of snow the
fitful glow of the fire emanating from the cave mouth on the ledge
above him. The tingling sensation he had felt upon walking the
perimeter of that pit had once again proved correct. He had picked up
the fugitives' trail by being vigilant and patient. He had sent his
Khagggun back to the crash site because he had too much respect for
Rekkk Hacilar's almost uncanny ability to discern and thwart pursuit.
Truth be told, there was another reason he had decided to continue on
alone; he wanted the glory of their deaths all to himself. As
the storm howled around him he was immune to both the cold and the
intense isolation it engendered. His inner eye gazed at the havoc and
destruction it had been his pleasure to take part in on a dozen
far-flung worlds. Like holographs lining a bookshelf he gazed
lovingly on these scenes, milestones of his life, trophies of which
he was inordinately proud. Nowhere present was any trace whatsoever
of the Tus-kugggun whom he had bedded or their offspring, unseen and
unacknowledged. It could be said without fear of contradiction or
exaggeration that his children, wherever they might be, were more
dead than the corpses explored over and over again by his eidetic
inner eye. It was not that he had forgotten them; for him they simply
did not exist. And
as for the skull of the korrrai, it did not matter whether or
not it was in his possession, whether or not he spoke to it. What
mattered was that his compatriots believed these things completely
with their hearts and with their spirits, for it was their conviction
that conveyed upon him this almost supernatural power which nourished
him in the cold and the dark of the raging storm. Rekkk
could hear the blood rushing through his veins even over the howling
of the storm. "What
am I, Nith Sahor? Certainly I am no longer V'ornn." Whatever
you are, Rekkk, is for you and you alone to discover. "One
day, even if it is in another lifetime, I swear I will come to fully
understand you." When he held out his arm the Teyj flew up and
settled upon it. "Dear Teyj, take care of her." He put his
hand on the crown of the bird's head. "I wish for you—" I
know what you wish for me, Rekkk. The song was like a caress
in the center of his mind. I wish the same for you. Rekkk
lifted his arm, and the Teyj fluttered up. It settled between Eleana
and the fire. "This
moment," Rekkk said. "You knew it would come, didn't you?" I
prayed that it could happen another way. This is a hard lesson to
learn: even champions must die. "I
thought Gyrgon did not pray." This
Gyrgon does. Rekkk
nodded silently. Taking one last look at Eleana's pale and
sweat-drenched face, he turned on his heel and went to the very lip
of the cave mouth, and the snowstorm struck him a physical blow. "Is
this right?" he shouted. "Is this what I should be doing?
Tell me! Give me a sign!" The
wind gusted and howled. His cloak was ripped from around his neck,
spun off into the turbulent night. The snow engulfed him. He thought
of all the wrongs he had committed, all the lives needlessly taken,
all the cruelty and injustice he had meted out. He thought of the
forgiveness with which his Kundalan lover and friends had blessed
him. And
then he let go of everything: his guilt, prejudices, anger,
impatience, frustration, uncertainty. His mind filled only with
Eleana and her unborn baby, he spread his arms wide. "Here I am!
I am Yours! Take me as You will! All I ask in return is that You
spare Eleana and her child!" And,
tipped out over the ledge, he felt the storm's force gathering, the
wind whirling like a vortex. Was that Miina's voice he heard,
calling? All
at once he was taken off his feet. Sucked up into the maelstrom's
bosom, he fell through the fusillade of snow.
34 Eleana's
Choice
This close to the Veil Riane
could hear it calling to her, although in point of fact she heard
nothing at all. Rather, she felt the fluidic shifts in the place
where she hovered suspended between water and fire. They radiated
outward from the center of the cube of fire. She could feel the
magnetic pull of the Veil, a kind of siren song, urging her to enter
the fire and pluck out the Veil. Still,
she hung back. There
were lessons to be learned in every step she took here. Nothing was
simple or as it appeared on the surface. This cube of fire, she was
certain, was no different. Staring at the flickering flames, she
reviewed what she had learned. She had survived the darkness of the
water by bringing light into it, she had survived the vacuum by
filling it with air. In retrospect, the pattern was clear. Both
times, the solution involved the opposites. Did
that mean she needed to inject water into the fire in order to make
the cube safe for her to retrieve the Veil? She reminded herself that
in neither case had the application of opposites been straightforward
or obvious. Otherwise, the bubble of air would have worked. Something
was bothering her. She moved closer to the fire, but still she did
not feel any heat. She tried to peer more deeply at the flames, but
it seemed impossible. Their centers were so bright they hurt her
eyes, and she was forced to turn away. There
were any number of spells she could use in order to conjure
water—Returning Current, Greater Mountain Stream—but she
did not believe they were the answer. These flames were different;
they would not respond to water. All at once, she had a clear and
acute sense of danger. She did not think she would be given a second
chance as she had here in the vacuum. If she guessed wrong, she was
finished. What
was she to do? And
then she thought of Kunlung Mountain. It was an enchantment of sorts,
though not a spell as either Ramahan or sauromician defined the term.
The Druuge used it to reach a kind of equilibrium in the mind, the
body, and the spirit. It was a high place, a consciousness of vista,
hence all such enchantments have mountain in their names. As
she cast the spell, she felt herself rising through time and space
until from the height of Kunlung Mountain she saw the entire view of
the complex strongbox holding the Veil of a Thousand Tears. She
peered down at the cenote filled with pitch-black water, the
donut-shaped space in which she sat, cross-legged, dreaming the
enchantment, and beyond, the cube of fire. And
that was how she saw it. The connection of all three vessels and the
solution. She rose and, walking around the cube, discovered the pulse
of the filament of bourn that passed through all three sections.
Using it as a pathway, she used White Well to gather a rivulet of the
pitch-black water above her and send it directly into the cube of
fire. Entering
the cube, the rivulet of water circled the flames again and again,
weaving a sphere of water to contain and then bank the fire. Only
rose-colored embers remained. And
in their center, the Veil of a Thousand Tears. It
ran like a river, coiled like a serpent, rippled like a standard in
the wind. It was a meter wide and perhaps three meters in length,
although that was difficult to judge as its shape kept changing. Riane
reached in and took it. It
was translucent and felt like liquid, as if the tears of the Five
Sacred Dragons had been sealed between gossamer-thin layers. She
could feel each and every one of them pulsing as if with its own
heart. And she thought she could hear the distant voices of the
Dragons calling to her. She
also sensed the Veil as a living entity, just as Perrnodt had said.
In her head flitted like fish about a reef not so much thoughts as
emotions. The Veil knew who she was. It had almost immediately sent
an unseen tendril into her heart and, embroidering its unique pattern
there, had made its intentions known. It
knew of Giyan's plight, and in its unique language it began to paint
pictures in Riane's mind, communicating to her just what she must do. From
his vantage point as he climbed the steep rock face,
Attack-Commandant Blled saw Rekkk at the verge of the ledge that led
to the cave in which his prey had taken shelter. And then the storm
intensified, and the Rhynnnon vanished into a blizzard of snow. He
never saw or even sensed Rekkk hurtle past him. Blled
held his position, at the ready. He waited for the storm to subside,
for Rekkk to appear again. This close to his prey, he disliked losing
sight of him. But when, after some time the storm did not abate, he
continued his climb, knowing he could not last long out in it. He was
thinking of the pleasure he would derive from dispatching the
Rhynnnon himself, of watching the light go out of the traitor's eyes.
He felt anticipation also at taking the measure of the Rhynnnon's
companion, the Kundalan sorceress who had maimed Star-Admiral Olnnn
Rydddlin. Other Khagggun would have coveted the acclaim that would
accrue to the one who brought back the pair's heads. Blled, however,
was solely fixated on the pleasure he would derive from holding their
still-pulsing hearts in his bare hand. With
these thoughts to warm him, he completed the almost vertical ascent
in the most inclement weather. He had wanted to attain this before
dawn and, hopefully, at the height of the storm, when he would be
least expected and could therefore maximize the element of surprise. Gaining
the ledge, he lay on his side half-hidden in a snowdrift and cast his
gaze about for the Rhynnnon. As far as he could tell, the ledge was
clear; Rekkk Hacilar must have returned to the cave when the ferocity
of the storm interfered with his reconnoiter. He
rolled through the drift. He could make out the cave mouth and, in a
small lull in the tempest, a dark patch above and to the left. He
made for that spot at a crouching run. It was perhaps a hundred
meters from the cave mouth. Blowing on his fingers to keep them from
stiffening, he made the climb up to the dark patch. It was a far
easier ascent than the one he had just made. As
he grew closer, the dark patch resolved itself into an ear canal, one
of those auxiliary tubes often found radiating from mountain caves.
These invariably fed into the main cavern itself. He crawled into it
and soon enough could make out the indistinct, fluttering sound of a
voice. Drawing his ion mace, he headed down the canal, the voice
growing more distinct with every moment. Wake
up. Eleana, wake up!
The Teyj flew around her. Eleana!
Eleana! The
Teyj fluttered its upper wings against her cheek before settling onto
her lap. Eleana's
fever dream was all at once filled with magnificent song, and she
opened her eyes. The duur fever that had racked her had vanished as
quickly as it had overtaken her. She gave a little gasp and clutched
her belly. "My
baby!" Fear
not. He is fine, the Teyj sang. He is blessedly untouched by
the fever. Eleana
blinked and looked around. "Someone
called me. It was like a symphony," she said, as if to herself.
She said, "I'm thirsty." She
watched as the Teyj flew through the mouth of the cave into the
snowstorm. Moments later, he had returned, fluttering in front of her
face. Open
your mouth. "What?" You
said you were thirsty. Open your mouth, Eleana. Obediently,
uncomprehendingly, she opened her mouth. To her utter astonishment,
the Teyj poked its beak into her mouth. She gulped at the melted
snow. The
Teyj drew back. More? "Come
here," She lifted her hand, and the Teyj settled on it. "Thank
you." You're
welcome. "I
can't . . ." She shook her head. "You are speaking to me?" Yes. "Who
are you?" I
think you know, Eleana, the Teyj sang. I did not die in the
ring of sysal trees. "Nith
Sahor!" she cried in utter delight. The
Teyj ducked his head. I instructed Thigpen to put me into the
Teyj's body. For safekeeping from my enemies. She
remembered that horrible night when they had been waiting for Riane
to get to the Storehouse Door in time. The night Nith Sahor's enemies
had come for him. The night they had all thought he had been killed.
In her mind's eye, she saw Nith Sahor, mortally wounded, nodding to
Thigpen, saw Thigpen's paw touch the center of a small black object,
saw it balloon like a sail, expanding outward until it hid them both.
Now she knew what had happened. She
stroked the Teyj and kissed the fluffy crown of its head. "Does
Rekkk know?" she cried. "You must tell him, Nith Sahor. He
will be so—" Rekkk
knew. A
chill ran through her, and she shook her head at the sorrowful tone
of the Teyj's song. "What do you mean, Rekkk knew." The
Teyj, growing agitated, fluffed its feathers. There is no easy way
to tell you this— "No!"
Her hands flew to her mouth. "Oh, no!" Tears sprang to her
eyes. "Please, please, please!" He
sacrificed himself to save you. There was no other way. "Why?"
she screamed. She was clawing her way to her feet. "Why was
there no other way?" Because
you were dying. You— "How
could he make that choice? What made him think he had that kind of
power?" You
would not have survived, Eleana. The baby would have died with you. She
stopped, trembling. "Tell
me this is a dream. Tell me I will wake up in a moment in the real
cave, and Rekkk will be kneeling beside me." The
Teyj folded his four wings. "Ah,
Miina!" Eleana covered her face with her hands and began to sob.
She dropped to her knees. "Cruel Goddess. Why have You done this
to him? Punish those who torture and murder Your children. Kill all
the V'ornn, Miina! But not him!" Eleana,
grieve for him, as I do. But do not despair. He prayed to Miina and,
in the end, the Goddess heard him. She
lifted her head, stared at the Teyj. He
sacrificed himself so that you and your baby would live. This is his
legacy, and it is meant for you. "But
I want him back!" Her
cry reverberated through the cavern and reached Attack-Commandant
Accton Blled, crouched still as a dormant perwillon at the end of the
canal. Slithering feetfirst into the cavern proper, he whirled his
ion mace over his head. The
Teyj gave a warning screech and flew at him. Blled swung the ion mace
with deadly accuracy, catching the bird on the wing. It went down in
a heap of feathers. That
gave Eleana the time she needed to reach for her shock-sword and
withdraw it. "What
have we here? The sorceress skcettta? You are younger than I had been
led to believe. And pregnant at that!" Blled laughed at her. The
ion mace made an ominous whirring as it spun faster and faster in a
tight circle above his head. "Where is the Rhynnnon Rekkk
Hacilar?" Eleana
rose, bracing her aching back against the wall. She clamped down hard
on all the muscles in her abdomen. "You will have to go through
me to get to him." Blled
laughed all the harder. "I see. This is what happens when
Kha-gggun forsake their caste. They hide behind female robes."
He shook his head, advancing on her. "By the look of you, you
are in no condition to give me pause with either shock-sword or
spell." He
swung the ion mace and she countered successfully, but the effort
cost her. She quickly realized that the bout with duur fever had
sapped a lot of her stamina. And because of the baby she had less
than usual. But she was determined that he would not be born in a
pool of his own blood; she vowed that Rekkk's sacrifice would not be
in vain. Blled
came in low, the ion mace blurred in a wicked sideswipe. This time
she barely got her blades in front of it. They rang like chimes. She
felt awkward and sluggish. The parry staggered her more than it
should have, and he swung a lazy, overhand blow. She flicked it away
easily, but it was a setup. The ion mace whirred and swung out in an
arc too wide to get inside her guard. Instead, the thick chain
wrapped itself around her shock-sword's twin blades. At once he
jerked the ion mace—and the shock-sword—toward him. But
Rekkk had trained her too well, and she would not allow herself to be
disarmed. His move brought her up against him, and he drove her to
her knees with his fist. She uttered a little moan. Blled,
cursing mightily, rammed her, so that she struck the cavern wall with
sickening force. Her head lolled, and she almost lost consciousness.
Seeing this, he tried to wrench the shock-sword out of her fist. He
almost succeeded, but she felt a painful spasm in her loins, a quick
gush of fluids running down her thighs, and all her senses awoke to
razor sharpness. The baby! It was coming! With
a strength born at the edge of survival she fought him. He cursed,
and his concentration narrowed. Consequently, he did not see the Teyj
flying toward him until it was too late. Its sharp bill punctured his
cheek just at the edge of the lower occipital ridge. Blood spurted,
and he lost vision in his left eye. Roaring, he lashed out. The Teyj
tried to dip out of the way, but he grabbed two of its wings and
ripped them from their sockets. The Teyj screamed. Blled, intent now
on the creature, loosened his hold on his ion mace. Eleana,
breathing hard, slipped the blades from the chain and drove them
tipsfirst clear through Blled's hearts. His eyes rolled over to fix
on her before he toppled backward, drowned in his own blood. She
cast her eyes about for the Teyj, gathered it into her lap, and gave
a little cry. She laced her fingers below her belly. "I feel
him," she whispered as fluid gushed down her thighs. "Nith
Sahor, the baby has dropped. He is coming." Sweat
rolled freely down her. Her thighs spread with a renewed spasm of
pain. Pulling aside her robes, she could feel the slippery crown of
his head. "Nith
Sahor," she called. "Can you believe it? He wants to come
now!" She was laughing and crying at the same time. "Now?
What is the matter with him? Oh, oh, it hurts!" Laughing and
crying. Cradling the head. "I am going to have to give him some
lessons in timing, don't you think?" She looked down at the
broken-winged Teyj. "Oh, Nith Sahor, I am so afraid. Rekkk—I
can't bear to think about him now. But if you die . . . N'Luuura take
it, if you die I shall never forgive you!" Eleana.
I am here. A song whispered in the center of her mind. She
closed her eyes, tears dripping onto her breast. Thank you, Miina,
she prayed. I
am dying. . . "No,
no, no, no!" It was a rising wail of despair. I
am sorry to disappoint you. I wanted to see your baby as much as
Rekkk did, but I can remain in this state only so long. Still, it is
. . . interesting to realize that I will be so missed. "You
can't die!" Eleana said fiercely. She moaned louder, widening
her squat. The fire in her loins and low back felt like a terrible
peristalsis. She gasped, trying as best she could to breathe between
the contractions. "You have to help me. I cannot have the baby
alone." Now she cradled his head and shoulders in her hands.
There was fluid all over. The contractions were building to a
crescendo. A moment more, and she held his head, shoulders, and
torso. Weeping and laughing, the cavern echoing with her cries. The
awful explosive pain that filled her belly made her desperate for it
to be over as quickly as possible. "He's
coming," she gasped. "Oh, Nith Sahor, he's here." And
she pulled the baby out and up into the light, slimy and dripping,
indistinguishable from an animal. Cradling him against her shoulder
she cut the umbilical and tied it off. She
turned the baby toward her. His face was pale. A quick clutch at her
heart nearly unnerved her. Save for a tuft of black hair on the slick
crown of his head, he looked almost entirely V'ornn. "Nith
Sahor," she cried, "he is so still and quiet!" Eleana,
bring him closer. With
a terrible fear driving her, she put the baby in her lap, next to the
Teyj. "Do
you feel him?" He
breathes. But just barely. "Ah,
Miinal" she wailed. "No!" He
has both Kundalan and V'ornn hearts. "Two
sets of hearts," Eleana whispered. "That should be good." In
theory it is. But practically we have found that the V'ornn hearts
often begin to overwhelm the Kundalan heart. "In
the body as on Kundala." She held the baby tighter. "Nith
Sahor, make him breathe. Make him live." Eleana,
even if I weren't mortally wounded, in this guise I have access to
very little technomancy. "You
must save my baby, Nith Sahor. You must!" There
is a way, Eleana, the Teyj sang. But it is not without danger.
It is not without drawbacks. "Anything!"
she cried, nearly beside herself with grief. "Whatever it takes
you must save him." The
Teyj scrambled painfully over the pale and nearly lifeless infant.
Eleana, you should know something— "Just
do it!" she screamed. The
Teyj dipped its head, so that the tip of its bill touched a black
object strapped to its leg. It was so small she had never noticed it
before. At
once, the blackness inflated like a sail, engulfing the three of
them. In an instant, they were sealed off from the world around them. "I
saw this before," Eleana breathed. "When Thigpen saved you
from dying." This
is what I am telling you, Eleana. "You
mean you—" It
is the only way to save your baby. This is how both of us will live. She
gasped. "Oh, Miina! No, you can't—!" Then
your baby is doomed. As for me, I have had a long life. It does not
matter if I die. "But
it does matter!" She was half-blinded by tears. "All life
matters!" Your
baby's breath is giving out. Tell me what to do, Eleana. This is your
choice. "I
cannot. You are asking me to play Goddess. It is not my place to
decide who should live or die." Didn't
that decision come into play when you killed this Khagggun? "That
was different." I
assure you that for him it wasn't. He is dead. You killed him,
Eleana. You made that choice instinctively. You must use your
instinct again. Life or death, which will it be? "But
my baby? What will become of him with you inside him?" Eleana,
at this moment he has no brain function. "Then
he is dead already!" she screamed. Not
yet. Not quite yet. But the moment is passing. And then it will be
too late. Choose now. She
threw her head back, clutched the infant and the Teyj to her breast.
"I want my baby to live!" All
at once she could not breathe. It was as if the black sail had
collapsed in on her, molding itself to her, to the contours of the
baby. She tried to breathe but could not. She called out for Nith
Sahor but she had no voice. She was in a dream. She looked down. Her
last sight before she lost consciousness was of the Teyj. It was
using its beak to pluck out its feathers. One by one it laid them
across the dying infant until it was completely bald. Its skin was as
black as the sail, as rectangular as the box that had been strapped
to its leg. It no longer looked like a Teyj at all...
35 Nawatir
Rekkk
fell through the fusillade of snow and wind, but he did not reach the
ground. Instead, the whiteness thickened, deepened, and became
opaque. The howling of the wind faded into a background wash, the
snow whirled in concentric circles all around him, but he felt
neither wind nor cold. As he watched, the snow seemed to congeal,
grow solid, take form and shape. And within the form and shape a
ruddy glow began to circulate, like a cyclone; the glow grew in size,
the ruddy hue becoming more pronounced until it took on the vibrancy
of rubies. And
then, out of this red, red mist, he saw the face—enormous,
glowering, terrifying. He saw the teeth first, gigantic and sharp as
knives, then the ruby-scaled snout with pulsing nostrils, the eyes
with their vertical-crescent irises. "N'Luuura
take me!" he breathed. "What are you?" I
am Yig. Sacred Dragon of Fire. "The
Dar Sala-at has spoken of you. You are one of Miina's Five Sacred
Dragons." It
is good that you know of me. "What
is this? I must already be dead." "I
assure you not." "Then
why have you saved me from dying? I have made a pledge." It
is you who have summoned me. Your warrior-prayer has brought down the
fire from the skies. "I
was praying to Miina." We
are Avatars of the Great Goddess. The
face, initially so terrifying, now seemed so beautiful it brought
tears to his eyes. "You heard my prayer." You
are Miina's child. Her priest. Her warrior. He
felt a shock wave arrow through him. "I thought that honor was
reserved for the Dar Sala-at." Yes. What
did that mean? he wondered. "But I am V'ornn." You
are Miina's child, Her priest, Her warrior. "I
do not understand." The
advent of the Nawatir is written in Prophesy. He
felt his insides began to congeal. "But you must take me. I have
made my sacrifice. My faith. ... I demonstrated ... I pledged to give
my life so that Eleana and her child might live." Your
faith is absolute, your pledge unshakable. These are attributes of a
true priest and a true warrior. This is who you are. "I
wish Miina to hear me. I would not have them die. They are too
precious to me." Even
though you have no conception of what that child could become? "Without
question." Your
faith is absolute, your pledge unshakable. Here is the proof of it. "I
am ready now to die." The
face of the Great Dragon showed many huge teeth. Have my words
fallen on deaf ears? It is not your moment to die, Nawatir. It is
your moment to serve Miina. And to serve both Kundalan and V'ornn.
There is a war coming. My brethren have tried to avoid it, but now
even they see that it is inevitable. You are Nawatir. The protector
of the Dar Sala-at. I charge you now with this office and bless you
with Miina's grace." "If
I am in truth this Nawatir you speak of, then I beg you guide me to
Lady Giyan, your most devoted servant, that I may free her from her
torment by the archdaemon Horolaggia." Giyan
is beloved of Miina, as is the Dar Sala-at, but her fate is her fate. "She
is also my beloved. I would not see her harmed." You
are the protector of the Dar Sala-at. It is not for you to question. "If
she dies—" War
breeds changes, Nawatir, and never a war so much as this one. Be
forewarned. Everything—everything
you know or have ever believed true—
will change. "My
love for Giyan will never change. It will never die." Without
warning, Rekkk found himself being sucked into the gigantic image.
Closer and closer he went. At the last instant, it opened its fiery
mouth, and he entered a great and fathomless darkness. He felt an
overpowering warmth suffuse him, ribbons of fire burned where blood
had pumped through his veins. His mind buzzed with ten million voices
all speaking at once. And then, abruptly, there was the utter
stillness of death, or the state beyond death, and for just an
instant Rekkk fretted that this was all a dream he was having on the
point of death. Then
he felt his faith reignite the fire in his blood, and he was lifted
up, transfixed and exalted in the very bosom of the Cosmos, and he
felt the torrent of unimaginable life pulsing all around him. It was
as if, for one moment, he had become a gravship falling though the
star-studded rnultiverse, seeing and feeling everything. It was as
if, for a moment in eternity, the Cosmos existed inside him. Eleana
cradled her baby, a beautiful boy. He was her baby, but he was also
something more. She knew that, and yet she did not want to think
about it. Not yet, anyway. The baby glistened and shone with viscous
birth fluids as it howled its passage into a new life. She crooned to
her child, and was about to wipe him down when a webwork of violet
energy strands appeared as if from the underside of the black Gyrgon
sphere that still enclosed them. She
started, her heart pounding hard in her breast, and sought to shield
her baby. Then she realized that the energy lines were emanating from
her baby, expanding upward into the black sphere. The baby quieted,
and she watched, fascinated, as the birth fluids evaporated, and his
skin took on a healthy pinkish glow. She watched the movement of his
eyes, still blind to the outside world, and all at once she gave a
startled cry. His pupils expanded and contracted, his head turned
slightly as his eyes alit on her. His bow lips curled into a smile.
He gurgled happily, and she held out her forefinger for him to grip. Now
the energy lines were multiplying, and she felt his heat, an oven in
her arms, a fire. Did he have a fever? Was he ill? But, no. She saw
him shimmer, his outline growing hazy and she shook her head, passed
a hand across her eyes. Perhaps it was she who was ill, or more
likely exhausted unto hallucination from her ordeal. But
when she looked again, her baby was no longer a newborn, but a child
of six months. The web of energy lines had multiplied several times
over. His mouth opened and closed, and she knew with a mother's
intuition that he was trying to speak. Dear
Miina, she thought. What is happening? But,
of course, she knew. Nith Sahor, buried deep inside her son, had
taken control. As the child shimmered again, his outline wavering,
she wondered whether this was how Gyrgon passed through childhood.
She hoped not. She could think of nothing sadder. She
was weeping now, for the years her son was losing, for all the
experiences he was missing, and her tears made him blur before her
eyes. Then, she felt him moving, touching her face, and in a
beautiful, melodious voice, he said, "Oh, do not cry, Eleana.
You who gave me life should feel only joy." And
she hugged him to her, a child of three years, or so she estimated,
the minutes of his life speeding by so fast she could not keep track
of them. And he threw his arms around her and kissed her, shimmering
again, growing, maturing, spurred on by his Gyrgon techno-mancy. And
he whispered in her ear the word she longed to hear. "Mother." Much
to his surprise, Rekkk Hacilar, the Nawatir, found himself returned
to the cave where he had left Eleana dying of duur fever. He had
assumed that the red Dragon would take him to the Dar Sala-at,
wherever she was in the wastes of the Korrush. Passing
a patch of ice, he saw himself clothed in deepest red, a
cross-hatched tunic and trousers of an unknown, lustrous fabric,
high, sueded boots, a thick belt from which hung two swords, their
scabbards incised with Miina's sacred runes. Across his broad, square
shoulders rode a hooded cloak that writhed and whipped as if of its
own volition. Then, he peered closer into the impromptu mirror and,
reaching out, pushed aside a crust of snowflakes. The face he saw
reflected there made his V'ornn hearts pound in his chest. While he
had retained his size and height, he no longer looked like a V'ornn.
Rather, he had the coloring, the features of a Kundalan. Blond hair
crowned his head, cheeks, and chin. He put his hand up, and
wonderingly stroked his close-cropped beard. How odd, how luxuriant
it felt to be growing these filaments called hair—and in such
profusion! How pale his eyes, like the ice crowning the tops of the
Djenn Marred And his skull—it was no longer long and tapering,
but as globular as any Kundalan's. Again and again, he traced with
his fingertips the new contours of his face with its high cheekbones
and generous lips. And, of course, he wondered what Giyan would think
of him, and whether he would ever see her again. Rekkk
turned, hearing the sound of two voices talking. The female voice he
recognized as Eleana's and he said a prayer of thanks to Miina. But
the other voice, that of a young male, was unfamiliar to him. He was
about to go and find out who was with Eleana when he sensed another
presence. It
was then that he saw the huge, fearsome-looking animal coming out of
the mist along the ledge. It was six-legged, black as pitch, with a
tapering muzzle. Tufts of silken hair sprouted from the backs of its
long legs, its elegant neck was a perfect arc, and its mane was
thick, stiff as the bristles on a brush. Its huge golden eyes
regarded him with uncanny intelligence. A long spiral horn, bluish
white, coruscating, rose from its forehead. "A
narbuck," Rekkk whispered. "I thought you were a legend." The
narbuck stopped a pace in front of him. Then it lowered its muzzle
into his hand. "Stay,"
he said. "Will you stay?" The
narbuck snorted and shook its magnificent mane. He patted its flank,
then he turned and went into the cavern. Rekkk Hacilar did not know
what to do next, but it seemed that the Nawatir did. Eleana
saw him first and she put her arm protectively around her son. He was
already a youth, and in many respects he resembled Kurgan, with his
long, angular face with its cruel slash of a mouth. But instead of
his father's night-black eyes, watchful as a snow-lynx's, he had
Eleana's grey-green eyes, open and curious, and he had her rosy skin
coloring, as well. He was holding a poultice against her lower belly.
She was sitting with her back against the cavern wall. Her legs were
drawn up by the fire. Her robes were blood-spattered. "Who
are you, stranger," Eleana said warily, "to come upon this
cave?" "Eleana,
it is me. Rekkk." "Rekkk
is dead," she said dully. Her hand closed around the hilt of her
shock-sword. "The Teyj told me. And, in any event, Rekkk was a
V'ornn. Clearly, you are not." "But
it is me. I have been transformed." Eleana
thumbed on the shock-sword, but the youth beside her bade her put it
down. "Hear
him out," he said in a melodious, golden voice. "Do not be
in such a rush to judge." "Who
is this youth—?" "If
you are Rekkk Hacilar, which I very much doubt," Eleana said
with an edge to her voice, "now is the moment to prove it."
She had dropped the point of her weapon but she had not turned it
off. The twin blades hummed ominously, the ion field between them
resonating. "We
hid in that pit of death," he said, "buried in rotting
corpses, breathing through reeds, in order to escape the Khagggun who
were pursuing us." Eleana's
eyes opened wide, but still she did not relent. "And then, when
we climbed out, what did we speak of?" "You
told me how your grandfather witnessed the birth of the nar-buck. How
it was turned from white to black by the lightning bolt that came
from the sky and buried itself in its forehead and remained there." "Dear
Miina! Rekkk!" "There
is a narbuck outside, Eleana. Whenever you want, I will take you out
to meet it. It is a most magnificent creature." "Rekkk,
who are you? What have you become?" "He
has given himself into the arms of Miina," the strange Kundalan
youth said, "and She has transformed him into the Nawatir, the
holy protector of the Dar Sala-at." Rekkk
gave the youth a curious glance, then knelt in front of Eleana, took
her pale hands in his. "Eleana! I thank Miina you survived." "Ah,
Rekkk!" She kissed his cheeks. "I thought you were dead." "I
would have been." He stroked her hair and hugged her to him. "I
should have been." He shook his head. "It is a mystery. I
would not let you and the baby die. I prayed to Miina to take me
instead. I went to the ledge and stepped off, I fell into the storm
but then I was taken up into the mouth of Yig, the red Dragon. He
spoke to me, Eleana. He told me that it was not my time to die. He
told me that Miina had heard my prayers, that She had chosen me to be
the Nawatir." "Rekkk."
Her eyes were shining. "You were born for this. First, Nith
Sahor's champion." "Where
is the Teyj?" For the first time, he glanced at the youth. "And
you. I do not understand. You look so like Kurgan Stogggul and yet
you have eyes just like—" He broke off, staring at Eleana. She
said, "You are not the only one to have experienced a miracle."
She nodded. "That's right. My son." "What?
Had he lived your baby would have just been born." He gestured.
"This male must be fifteen years." "Thirteen,
actually!" the youth said. "Tomorrow I will be fifteen." She
told him how she and the Teyj had been attacked by the Khagggun who
had been following them. How he had mortally wounded the Teyj and had
brought on the baby's birth before she had managed to kill him. She
pointed to where Sahor had dragged the corpse. "My baby was
dying along with Nith Sahor," she said. "He used the same
technomancy that had migrated him into the body of the Teyj to keep
the baby alive." She
tapped Sahor's hearts and head. "He is in here." Rekkk
peered at him carefully. "But there are no neural implants, no
circuitry whatsoever. And then there is this." He ruffled
the tuft of black hair that arced in a wave from the top of Sahor's
head. "I
am Sahor and something beyond," the youth said. "Though no
longer Nith, I exist in here, in this body. I have altered it and it
has altered me. I am neither V'ornn nor Kundalan. I am Other, and I
am here for the rest of my life. This is only right, do you not
agree, Nawatir." He produced a small black object, which he held
in the palm of his hand. Tiny violet emanations crisscrossed its
surface. "This taps into my Gyrgon DNA that had embedded itself
into the Kundalan strand. It has greatly speeded up the aging
mechanism. In seven days, when I reach the age of twenty, it will
again tap into my DNA and my aging will return to that of a V'ornn."
He put the black object away. "I have neither tertium circuits
nor okummmon. Though I retain the Gyrgon neural-net strand in my DNA,
I am forever cut off from the Comradeship. On the other hand, I sense
that I have abilities I have not yet begun to explore. And I have a
Kundalan mother. I believe I have gotten the better of the exchange."
He grinned and gripped Rekkk's forearm. "It is good to see you
back, Nawatir." Rekkk
regarded him gravely. "You knew. When you convinced me to seek
Miina, you knew." "Let
us rather say I suspected." Sahor said. "My studies of
Kundalan lore have served me in good stead. I have been thorough in
my research. In
any event, I convinced you of nothing, Nawatir. I recognized the
priestly devotion in you sometime ago. It was your faith and your
faith alone that allowed you to be transformed." The
Veil of a Thousand Tears rippled around Riane, its fluid form fitting
to the contours of her body. It painted for her a portrait of Za
Hara-at. The ancient city was a gigantic engine, a complex instrument
that had been used for fantastic feats of sorcery. This site had been
chosen because every power bourn on Kundala intersected here. Each
section of the city was built around a plaza, beneath which was at
least one power-bourn intersection. Each section of the city was
constructed for a different sorcerous purpose, each interlocked with
its neighbors to create the whole, a grid that, when activated, was a
source of almost incalculable sorcerous energy. The
Veil could be used for many things, depending on which Plaza of Za
Hara-at it was in. In order to save Giyan, she must release the
Dragon's thousand tears in the center of the Plaza of Perplexities. She
emerged from the cenote in the Plaza of Virtuous Risk into a biting
wind. The finbats had vanished, but the sauromician she had glimpsed
had returned. He
stepped from the shadows, chanting, and before she could defend
herself he had impaled her on a forked spear of pale blue sorcerous
energy. She saw that she was only an arm's length away from the bourn
nexus that lay deep beneath the plaza. If she could maneuver herself
over it she could draw from its power. But she could feel the spear
shredding inside her, winding around her spinal column, and all at
once she was paralyzed. The
sauromician, his black pupils throbbing, walked toward her. She could
see that he was careful to avoid the power bourns. "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears," he said. "The ultimate prize."
He thrust up his arm. "I will have it now!" Pain
began to crawl up Riane's spine as he tightened the spell upon her,
and a terrible cold began to drain her of energy. At his murmured
command, another forked spear streaked out toward the Veil. "It
is useless," Riane said. The paralysis was making talking
difficult. "The Veil is semisentient. It will kill you if you
try to take it from me." "Oh,
I am not an archdaemon. I have no intention of taking it from you,
Dar Sala-at." He saw her reaction and laughed. The knucklebones
through his ears shook. "Yes, I know who you are. Who else could
have come into the Korrush and caused such havoc? Who but the Dar
Sala-at could free the Veil from its hiding place?" He smiled,
revealing abnormally long incisors. "I have been planning long
and hard for this day. I know how to defeat the safeguards. I will
take you and the Veil along with me." He cocked his head. "After
a time, you will do as I tell you, and the Veil will do as you say.
It is as simple as that." "No,
Talaasa," came another voice ringing across the plaza, "as
it turns out it is not so simple at all." Talaasa
whirled, and Riane felt a slight lessening of the terrible cold that
had flooded through her. She could turn her head enough to see the
diminutive figure of Minnum approaching them. The
sauromician started to laugh. "What? You're not cowering in some
ragged doorway? I thought the carrion birds had already feasted on
your flesh." "Mock
me at your peril," Minnum said, coming on. "Oh,
do not concern yourself, Minnum. You are beneath my notice. You
little pipsqueak. Where have you been hiding yourself? While I and my
brethren toiled in onerous exile here in this wasteland you slipped
away, turned tail, and ran into some hole in the ground. You hid from
everything. Even your punishment." "On
the contrary. I found that there is no escape from Miina. No escape
from the sins we committed." "Sins!"
Talaasa scoffed. "What word is that? We did what had to be
done." "Then
you are still arrogant, still blind to the truth." Talaasa
spat. "Our 'sin,' if you could call it that, was that we failed
in our mission. I intend to see that does not happen again." "You
are sadly mistaken." "Our
way is the only way." Talaasa shook with rage. "Idiot! You
have only to look at what is left of the abbeys to see that they are
dying without us. What the Ramahan need, what we and only we can
provide them, is strong leadership. Don't you see how we were deluded
by Mother? This sharing of power between males and females could
never work, not for long, anyway. And why should it? Males are
clearly superior in both strength and brainpower. The females were
like a weight around our necks. They brought us down to their level.
They emasculated us." "You've
had your say Now back away," Minnum said. "Don't make me
kill you." "You
know, Minnum, you were always laughable. But this newfound
righteousness makes you pathetic." Minnum
gritted his teeth and cast a spell. Riane could feel it humming
through the air. She could also feel Talaasa countering it. "Is
that the best you can do, little one?" He cast a cold-fire bolt,
making Minnum jump back. "If you do not fear me yet, come
closer. I will teach you." He cast a second bolt, which singed
Minnum's hair. Minnum yelped and threw his arms wide. A thin orange
spiral formed in the space between his hands, then abruptly fizzled
out like a fire in a rainstorm. "Oh,
I think I am going to like this," Talaasa said, his eyes alight.
He cast yet another bolt, this one straight at Minnum's chest. Minnum
countered with a more potent spiral, which met the bolt halfway. The
bolt was momentarily halted. The two concentrated on their duel.
Talaasa gave a guttural cry. Sweat formed on Minnum's beetling brow
and began to roll into his eyes. Gradually, the bolt crept toward
Minnum as the spiral began to sag in its center. Talaasa,
sensing victory was near, redoubled his concentration. As he did so,
Riane felt his grip on her relaxing a bit more. Now she was able to
move slightly, and she wriggled, fighting against the bolt and the
pain and numbing cold it was inflicting. Centimeter
by centimeter she contrived to twist herself toward the bourn nexus.
But Minnum was sweating freely by then, and the bolt had almost
cleaved the spiral in two. It was seconds away from piercing him
through the heart. With one last surge, Riane crossed the nexus
boundary and felt its vast power flood through her. Warmth broke the
cold-fire bolt's grip, and Talaasa turned and screamed at her. In
that moment, Minnum gathered all his courage and sent his own
cold-fire bolt hurtling at Talaasa. Seeing this, Riane began to
conjure Reweaving the Veins, and Talaasa knew he had to counter it.
She had distracted his attention long enough for the cold-fire bolt
to smite him down. As
Talaasa went to his knees, the spell that had been holding her in the
air vanished, and she was pitched along the cobbles of the plaza. "Look
out!" Minnum called, running toward her. "Roll the other
way!" Too
late. She felt Talaasa's grip as he gathered her inside his long,
spidery arms. She was still half-paralyzed and, out of the grip of
the bourn nexus, shivering mightily. "You're
too close," Minnum shouted. "I cannot cast a spell without
hurting you." Out
of the corner of her eye, she saw the black sixth digit on Talaasa's
hand and lunged for it. He had been waiting for that. He slammed the
side of her head against the cobbles. Stars
exploded behind her eyes and, above her, she could feel an itching
along her flesh as the sauromician gathered another spell around
them. She could feel it sliding over her skin like a birthing
serpent, and she hauled on him, rolling him over, kicking him,
rolling again, until she felt it. He
felt it too, the proximity to the bourn nexus, and he struggled
against her, frantic to get away. But she had him, had the leverage,
and she rolled him one last time through the boundary and into the
bourn nexus. Talaasa
opened his mouth wide to scream, but he had already burst into flame,
low and dense, a core without heat or light. Just a shimmer like
fireflies on a lake at night, a smear of color that vanished all
within the blink of an eye. Then
Minnum was at her side, hauling her up and brushing her off. "Dear
Miina," he said, breathless, "that was a close one!"
He shook his head, his eyes alight. "The Veil of a Thousand
Tears. It truly exists!" "What
are you doing here?" Riane waved her hand at him. "Never
mind. There would be no reason to believe you, anyway." "Have
I lied to you? I don't recall—" "Minnum,"
she said firmly, "I know you are a sauromician." "Oh,
dear, oh, dear!" he cried. "This will go ill with me, what
with the sauromicians being deadly enemies of the Dar Sala-at." "I
already got a taste of that." She clapped him on the back.
"Thank you for intervening. That was brave of you." Minnum
blushed and stammered his thanks. He seemed genuinely bewildered by
his own bravery. "Come
on," Riane said breathlessly. "We need to get to the Plaza
of Perplexities for the Veil to save Giyan."
36 Firefight
The
leader of Majja and Basse's Resistance cell was a youth named
Kasstna. He was no more than a year or two older than Basse, Marethyn
guessed. He had the face of an animal, broad and flat, with
diamond-shaped eyes. His shoulders and arms were massive, giving him
a hulking, brooding appearance. In truth, she realized that he had no
reason either to like her or to trust her. She was V'ornn; she was
the enemy. And yet she had brought him and his cell vital
information, intelligence that would go a long way to stemming the
tide of death among them. Possibly he hated her for that. Though he
readily took the intelligence she had passed on from Rada, it was
clear that he did not trust her. He denigrated her every chance he
got. The
cell had decamped in the middle of the night, in a metallic rain that
sounded as if it was intent on shattering the trees. Marethyn, Majja,
and Basse had, hours before, crept out of Axis Tyr using one of many
Resistance tunnels that circumvented the city's well-guarded gates
and rendezvoused with the cell. Marethyn was wearing a dark-colored
tunic and trousers, high boots, a heavy traveling cloak to keep out
the chill and damp. On her left hip was an ion pistol Sornnn had
given her, riding low in its holster. Every once in a while, as she
moved hunch-shouldered with the Kundalan freedom fighters, she
touched the cold butt of the weapon both to assure herself of its
power and keep him close to her. The
cell numbered twenty in all, riding powerful cthauros. No one spoke
to her. But, then, no one spoke at all. During one of the short
breaks, while they washed down cold tasteless concentrate with water,
Majja showed her how to draw her ion pistol, aim it to track her
prey, and fire. Basse, watching this demonstration, laughed silently,
but afterward, he offered to share his laaga stick with her as well
as with Majja. Her first instinct was to refuse, but then she thought
better of it. She knew Basse was impressed by how expertly she rode.
She did not have the hearts to tell Majja that she could shoot the
tips off a gimnopede's tail feathers at fifty meters. The
three of them squatted under the canopy of a kuello-fir and listened
to the sleet come down like an artillery barrage. They smoked
silently. She looked into their eyes and wondered if they could
possibly be as frightened as she was. Then she wondered if there was
any fear left in them. They seemed like hollow shells, automatons
mechanically putting one foot in front of the other, doing what had
to be done. But in the silence of their own minds what were they
thinking? She felt an urge to put her arms around them, to tell them
that it was going to be all right. She wondered if they had ever been
rocked to sleep. She sensed the cell around her, their collective
breath a murmurous grace note. A scent arose from the bed of kuello
needles, cutting sharply across the wind, and she realized the laaga
had heightened her senses. She
saw Kasstna's outline appear. He made a curt gesture, and they were
on their way again, riding swiftly upland. They had already left the
city far behind. Roughly paralleling the convoy route, they
nevertheless kept their lateral distance so as not to give away signs
of their passage. Not surprisingly, the route's vulnerable points
were few and far between. None was without disadvantages and dangers.
Marethyn was impressed by how quickly Kasstna assessed them and
decided on the one that would give their ambush the best chance of
success. The
place he chose was a dry wash just west of Prosperous Reserve and
south of Joining the Valleys. The Khagggun, true to their nature,
were taking a route that skirted the villages and avoided entirely
the most densely populated areas that lay between Avis Tyr and
Glistening Drum. To do so, they had to pass through the dry wash. It
had the advantage of giving the cell high ground from which they
could attack the convoy on an equal level. There were two main
drawbacks. It was only spottily forested, and there was a blind spot
directly behind it, where the cliff face rose to a plateau higher
than the one the Resistance fighters would be commanding. A
thorough reconnoiter of that plateau, however, convinced Kasstna that
they had nothing to fear from the higher ground, and in the last hour
before first light they set about preparing themselves to take
control of the convoy. They were in possession of three medium-range
ion cannons which, along with their sidearms and their ingenuity,
would have to suffice. He
set two of the cell to watch their backs. The rest he deployed within
the Marre pines. Marethyn did not get to see much of the
preparations, which might have been the point because she was the
first one he assigned to rearguard duty. She was sharing that
responsibility with a swaggering, hollow-eyed male who, after coming
over to sniff her like a wyr-hound, contrived to stay as far away
from her as possible. She saw him through the predawn mist, smoking a
laaga stick behind a cupped hand. The
sleet had stopped several hours earlier, which was just as well
because the temperature had continued to plummet through the night.
Now everything was layered with a thin, treacherous slick of black
ice. Firstlight broke. The convoy had left the Western arsenal. It
would arrive in just over an hour. Marethyn found a stunted Marre
pine, its canopy heavy with ice and, crouching, put her back against
the rough-barked bole. Now and again, she caught a glimpse of Majja
or Basse as they went about their assigned tasks. Once, she caught
Kasstna glaring at her, and she returned his gaze unflinchingly. At
last, he turned away, and she allowed the ghost of a smile to play
around her mouth. Though her head had cleared, she could still taste
the laaga. And she was thirsty. She turned, cocking an ear. Away to
the south, she thought she heard the telltale thrum of grav-carriage
engines. The freedom fighters were readying themselves. The convoy
was coming. Though
her fellow sentry appeared content to stay in one position, she was
not. The cortasyne her body had been releasing ever since she had
followed Majja and Basse out of Axis Tyr at last got the best of her.
She jumped up and began a patrol. Her eyes scanned the higher plateau
that ran behind the one the cell was on. Even though they had already
checked it, this gave her something tangible to do. She
could hear the grav-carriages clearly now; they were less than a
kilometer away and coming fast. The Khagggun would not want to spend
more time than was necessary going through the dry wash. In
the hour or so since she had been assigned rearguard duty she had
more or less memorized the terrain of the higher plateau. Now, as she
scanned it once again, her eyes were caught by an anomaly. It wasn't
very large. In fact, she had to stare at it for several minutes
before she had satisfied herself it was really there. She
drew her ion pistol, and turned, briefly glancing over her shoulder,
trying to locate Kasstna in the grey mist. But every member of the
cell crouched hidden among the Marre pines, and, with the convoy
almost upon them, she dared not approach their position. She decided,
instead, to tell her companion. The
convoy's thrumming now filled the dry wash, echoing off the cliff
faces. With one last look at the anomaly, she darted from tree to
tree. Her companion hadn't moved. At least he had stopped smoking.
The first of the ion cannons erupted behind her as she reached him.
He stood against the trunk of a Marre pine, staring at nothing.
Mare-thyn tried to whisper to him, but the explosions swallowed her
words. She touched him, and he fell over sideways. As he rolled over,
she saw that the back of his neck had been severed by an ion dagger. She
did not stop to think how that might have happened. She grabbed the
corpse's ion pistol and, sprinting from tree to tree, contrived to
move nearer the anomaly. At the edge of the dry wash, the firefight
had commenced in earnest. She could not spare the time to determine
how the battle was going, but she now harbored the terrible suspicion
that their ambush was known to the enemy. She
was now within range. From her crouching position she peered up to
get a closer look at the anomaly when something struck her hard on
the side of the head. She pitched over, her shoulder, then her head,
hitting the ground. She sensed movement and saw the Khagggun who must
have killed the other rear guard. Without thinking, she turned just
in time to see a shock-sword cocked and ready to strike at her head.
The Khagggun took one step toward her, slid on the black ice, and his
shock-sword sank into the ground not three centimeters from her
rib-cage. For
an instant all was silence around her. She stared up into the
Khagggun's fierce, armored face. Reflected in it she saw her own
death. Terror welled up inside her, and she raised her right arm
without thinking and squeezed off a shot and blew his head off. She
rolled through a rain of blood, her hearts hammering in her chest.
Her vision blurred. She was crying and vomiting and shaking
uncontrollably. This was nothing like target practice. She had killed
another being. Part of her wondered how that could be. How could she
have taken a life? And she heard again Basse asking if she had
killed, heard again Majja's mocking comment, She
doesn't look like she could kill a blood-flea. She
got to her feet, forced herself to stop shaking. She could smell the
Khagggun's death mingled with her own vomit. She wanted to run away
and never look back. But she knew she could not. Then a premonitory
shiver ran through her, and her blood ran cold. Looking back up the
cliff side, she saw movement, and knew they were doomed. She
ran as fast as she dared into the midst of the firefight. The convoy
hung in the air, its complement of Khagggun returning the Resistance
fire. The Khagggun had already established a grav-bridge from the
convoy to the cliff, and more were on the way. She found Kasstna,
bloodied and on one knee, barking orders. She tried to tell him about
the Khagggun creeping up on their rear, but he took one look at her
disheveled state and assumed that she had lost her nerve. With a
guttural growl, he shoved her away, and she ran, slipping and sliding
on the black ice, dodging incoming ion-cannon fire, until she found
Basse. Dead Resistance fighters lay in a tangle of limbs all around
him. He
nodded grimly when he heard her news, and they went and got Majja. As
they ran they saw Khagggun swarming along the grav-bridges, leaping
onto the cliff, firing as they came on. Majja was using a couple of
her dead compatriots as a kind of redoubt, and they had to pull her
out of the fortification. The morning was ablaze with ion-cannon
fire. More and more Khagggun were forcing their way over the
grav-bridges. Together, they ran back to where Marethyn had last seen
Kasstna, but when they arrived they found him and the rest of the
cell dying or dead. They were the last ones left. The
ridge was teeming with Khagggun-—those who had swung over from
the convoy and the others who had been lying in wait. There seemed
nowhere to go. The moment to retreat had passed, and surrender seemed
the only viable option. i
remember my first kill," Olnnn said. "I was on Argggedus
Three." I "I remember Argggedus Three well." Lokck
Werrrent nodded. He looked resplendent in his new Fleet-Admiral's
armor, emblazoned with the four-pointed star insignia of his new
rank. "The place was a cesspit." "I
saw him, down through a stand of linm trees." "I
remember those trees. Nasty thorns that could shoot through a
Khagggun's flesh." Olnnn
and Werrrent sat side by side in the Star-Admiral's hoverpod
bristling with weaponry. Rada sat across from them. The lights of
Axis Tyr raced by. The blur of a thousand faces. Sounds of the city
broken off prematurely and trampled in the wake of their flight. "He
was crouched, this Argggedian, in a kind of natural arbor,"
Olnnn said. "He had been picking off our Khagggun all day. It
took me three and a half hours to find him. And when I did I sighted
him through the ion-cannon scope, pulled the trigger, and his head
exploded. Just like that. One minute he was in the scope, glowing
like a moon, the next, he was bloody meat. I didn't feel anything." "You
often don't," Werrrent nodded. "Not the first time,
anyway." Up front, in the cockpit, the pilot and First-Captain
guard kept their eyes on the changing cityscape directly ahead. Olnnn
hunched forward. "Later that day, I engaged the enemy with the
rest of my pack. Hand to hand. I looked the enemy in the eye and
watched the life go out of him. It felt him quiver and jerk. Then it
all made sense." Rada
listened to this conversation in silence. She could feel the tension
coming off the two Khagggun in waves that made her skin itch beneath
her armor. Olnnn had come up with a plan to murder the regent, or he
and Lokck Werrrent had, she did not know which. Possibly it did not
matter. She only knew that they were at the point of no return. That
was why they spoke so earnestly about death, trying to parse it, to
understand what was, essentially unknowable. They were males, and
they were Khagggun. They had to try or risk allowing the tension to
get the better of them. She
was aware that Olnnn was speaking more rapidly than normal, as if he
could not get the words out of his mouth fast enough. He sat with his
left wrist on his knee. She saw that his fingers trembled just
slightly, and by that alone she knew that he was afraid. He was a
male and a warrior, and he was afraid. She had felt his courage, and
now he was afraid, and this made her look at him in a different
light. She thought that if she could not understand his anger, she
could at last accept it. The
hoverpod was slowing. As it descended in a graceful arc Lokck
Werrrent stood up. She saw that they were in a dark and
deserted-looking part of the city. The nearest fusion lamp was out. A
pair of wyr-hounds loped across the street. Werrrent gave Olnnn a
significant look before stepping over the side. She turned, watching
him walk in his stolid, methodical manner down the street. The
wyr-hounds cringed, backing away with their teeth bared. As the
hoverpod took off, she saw light glinting off Khagggun armor and
weaponry. They
headed for the regent's palace. Olnnn
sat looking at her for some time. "When
are you going to tell me what you are planning?" she asked. He
came and sat next to her. She could feel his heat. It was almost as
strong as the vibration of the hoverpod beneath her. He turned to
her, and he kissed her hard on the lips. With
his hand at the back of her head, he whispered, "I know." She
looked at him quizzically, her hearts pounding. "I
know you memorized the route of the convoy. Lokck Werrrent and I
created that route with special care. You see, there is only one
place for a Resistance ambush, and we already have Khagggun hiding
there." "I
have no idea what you are talking about." He
pressed her hand between his. "Your friends are walking into a
trap, and there is nothing you can do about it." She
felt her hearts sink. She thought of Marethyn and wanted to weep. "What
I do not understand is why. Why would you betray your own kind to
help them?" "You
who talk about the enemy like trophies would never understand." "You
are right." He nodded. "I will never understand treason." "And
what is it you and the Fleet-Admiral plan to perpetrate tonight?" "It
is not treason." "Keep
telling yourselves that." "We
are patriots. The regent must die. For the good of the Modality." "Here
is why I did what I did," she said. "It is because the
V'ornn male has an infinite capacity for self-delusion. Any death can
be rationalized. Many deaths discounted. The mechanism—" He
hit her hard across the face, and her head snapped back. "Yes.
Well." She would not put her hand to the rising welt. "That
was to be expected." He
glared at her. "I thought you were different. I was even coming
to grant you a modicum of respect." "Here."
She moved. "Let me spread my legs for you." "And then
you betray me." "How
typical of a male," she said. "This isn't about you."
"Why do you hate me so?" Despite
her predicament she felt a laugh escape her lips. "You really
are a fool," she said. He
grabbed her then. "I know what I saw in your eyes in the
Kal-llistotos ring." "You
saw nausea. My stomachs were upset." With
a grunt of disgust he released her. They were almost at the palace
grounds. He lifted a finger. "No matter. It will all change in a
heartsbeat. We are scheduled to meet with the regent out in the
gardens. There, I will give him proof of your treachery, and he will
love me for it." "What
use is that? If he incarcerates me or kills me, you will die."
"He will do neither," Olnnn said craftily. "Because as
he is congratulating me for my success Werrrent's Khagggun will storm
the gardens. They will kill his Haaar-kyut, and I will slit his
throat." The
hoverpod was slowing again. Just below them, the grounds were
brightly lit with fusion lamps, which cast the stands of close-cut
sysal trees and hard-edged ornamental hedges in a harsh and feral
light. A gimnopede nest, long abandoned and come undone, caught in
the web-work of branches. The unexploded stumps of ancient sawn-down
trees. They were the bare bones of what had once been the largest
garden in Axis Tyr. What had been wild and magnificent was now
diminished and rule-bound as Khagggun security procedures established
clear-cut lines of sight from the palace outward. A rueful wind
ruffled the shorn, browned wrygrass. The bow-backed stillness of
defeat was everywhere. It was as if every mutilation and death
perpetrated in the interrogation cells below the palace had its
apotheosis there. She
could see a dozen armed Haaar-kyut stationed at strategic intervals
throughout the garden. Kurgan Stogggul, arms crossed over his chest,
was watching them descend. A Haaar-kyut stood next to him, whispering
in his ear. "As
usual, one bodyguard," Olnnn said. "First target for
Werrrent's best sharpshooter." The
hoverpod settled on the wrygrass, and Olnnn disarmed her, slipped a
photon collar around her neck. "You
are my prisoner," he said in her ear. "Act like one." "Who
needs to act?" she said. Then, as they were about to alight.
"Don't do this, Olnnn. Not yet. Remember the enchantment. Unless
you are changed, you will not be able to kill Kurgan. You are still
as duplicitous, as susceptible to corruption—" He
struck her a heavy blow on her cheek. "Shut up, skcettta,"
he said, pushing her out of the hoverpod. "I am not interested
in a traitor's opinions." Kurgan
stood glaring at her as they approached. "You
made a fool of me," he said, and struck her with his balled
fist. "What was it you were feeding me? Disinformation cooked up
by the Resistance?" He struck her again so hard he drove her to
her knees. Her head hung, lolling, and she wished for the plan to
begin, wished for action. She vowed she would never be on her knees
again. Kurgan
smiled at Olnnn. "Excellent work, Star-Admiral. My Haaar-kyut
had begun to hear rumors about you and a Tuskugggun in armor. They
had begun to doubt you, but I did not." "Your
faith in me is appreciated, regent," Olnnn said. "Many
Khagggun—members of the high command included—are
habitues of Blood Tide. Fire-grade numaaadis greases many wheels." Kurgan
nodded. "And mouths." Without
warning, the entire garden exploded into movement. Werrrent's
sharpshooter took the regent's bodyguard down. The rest of the
Haaar-kyut came under fire from Werrrent and his rapidly advancing
pack. Olnnn drew his shock-sword and swung it at Kurgan. Kurgan
stepped back, and Rada leapt for him from her kneeling position. "Rada,
no!" Olnnn shouted. Her
attack was so ferocious it forced Kurgan onto his back. She lunged
for his dagger but he grabbed her forefinger, bent it back. She
leaned forward with a forearm jammed against his throat. For a
moment, they stared into one another's eyes. Then her finger snapped
and a ripple of shock went through her. Kurgan pried her hand off the
hilt of his dagger, drew it, and plunged it into her throat. She
arched up, her arms flailing for him, and he plunged it into her
again and again. Olnnn,
his teeth bared in a rictus of rage, hurled himself at Kurgan. "I
am meant to kill you," he cried. "It is my destiny!" But
then, to his stupefaction, the Haaar-kyut bodyguard Werrrent's
sharpshooter had hit rose as if from the dead. As he did so, his
outline wavered and rippled like water, revealing the form of the
Gyrgon, Nith Batoxxx. The
Gyrgon pointed his left hand at Olnnn, but Olnnn kept coming on. He
could feel the full force of Malistra's spell echoing through him
like a howl. She had prepared him for this moment. He was a sorcerous
assassin who could be stopped neither by ion fire nor by Gyrgon
tech-nomancy. He was invincible. With
his shock-sword centimeters from the regent's throat he was blasted
back, taken off his feet. The sorcerous bones of his leg splintered
and flew apart, and a cold such as he had never known fell upon him. Pyphoros,
in his Gyrgon host body, stood over him, his left hand outstretched. "How
does it feel," the archdaemon asked, "to have all the life
force sucked out of you?" Olnnn
tried to reply, but he was mute. He could not understand what had
happened. He had been bound for glory; Malistra had told him so. He
was Star-Admiral. He had struck an alliance with the cleverest member
of the high command. The power and the opportunity had been his, and
he had seized it. Or had he? It all seemed an illusion now, the
opportunity a trap, the glory leaking out of him with his blood. In
an instant his life was over, and he had not even been granted an
honorable death. He managed to turn himself slightly. He was lying
beside Rada. Her eyes were staring and fixed. Her blood was still
warm. His mind was filled with a vision of her in the Kalllistotos,
her biceps tensed, her small breasts rising and falling, that look of
absolute determination on her face. He thought that he had seen her
then for the first time. Now, in a breath, she, too, was gone. He
felt inside him a kind of melting, as if his body, congealed in life,
was now melting as death's furnace drew near. He rolled his bloodshot
eyes and, looking down, saw, to his horror that the bones of his
ensor-celed leg were soft and yellow and sinuous. A head appeared at
one end, a tail at the other, the serpent Malistra was glaring at him
with tiny outraged eyes. Then the serpent broke apart, falling to
ash, and he was flooded with a pain beyond all imagining. A
rhythmic rumble along the ground, the tromp of massed Khagggun boots.
Harsh barked orders crisply carried out. Not his orders.
Consciousness was fading and, with it, his life. His
arm felt as if it weighed a kiloton. He wanted desperately to touch
her one last time, but her armor was in the way. The warmth of her
flesh would have been such a comfort to him but all he could find was
molded veradium, colored and polished to a high shine. With
his death and the dissipation of Malistra's spell, Pyphoros lost
interest in him. All around them the chaos was slowly returning to
order. After drawing the attacking force by initially falling back
beneath their fire, the Haaar-kyut were reinforced by two packs that
had been in hiding. They caught Werrrent's forces in a murderous
cross fire. "A
massacre," Pyphoros said. "How exhilarating." By
this time, Kurgan had regained his feet. "It was well that the
okummmon you created for the Khagggun high command allows you to
secretly eavesdrop on their conversations." "Their
price for Great Caste status," Pyphoros said. "Nith Batoxxx
believed that you cannot be too careful with V'ornn bred for war, and
in this he was correct." Kurgan
noted the past tense. How long had the Nith Batoxxx personality been
all but dead, he wondered. First-Captain
Kwenn trotted over and gave a concise report of the mopping-up
action. All of the rogue Khagggun had been killed but their leader,
Lokck Werrrent, was nowhere to be found. Kurgan ordered a wider
search and put First-Captain Kwenn in charge. There was no point in
alerting Kwenn—and by extension the rest of the Khagggun—
that Werrrent could be tracked using his okummmon; that was sure to
create a furor he did not want. He turned back to Pyphoros. "Look
at me, drenched in blood." "But
not your blood, regent," Pyphoros observed. He gestured, and the
bloodstains vanished. Kurgan
went and kicked the Star-Admiral's corpse. "You certainly took
your time." Pyphoros
shrugged. "I did not anticipate the female's attack." "I
hope you will do better next time," Kurgan said. The
archdaemon laughed and cuffed him on the back of the head. "I
have already done so. I can hear my beloved city singing. Za Hara-at
has returned to life. At last, I know where the Veil of a Thousand
Tears is. Ready yourself, regent. Within moments we will be on our
way." He spread his greatcoat around them. "First we must
enlist SaTrryn Sornnn." "The
Prime Factor?" Kurgan frowned. He did not like the idea of any
other V'ornn being informed of the Veil's existence. "Why do we
need him?" "He
knows more about the buried city than anyone save the Bey Das who
have been excavating there. In this accursed Gyrgon host body I
cannot take the time to force information out of the Bey Das. SaTrryn
Sornnn will readily do as you or I ask." With
her artist's eyes, Marethyn saw the last stages of the firefight as
if it were a painting. Composition, textures, colors, and perspective
resolved out of the clusters of sprinting Khagggun, firelight
flickering, reflecting off their armor, bursts of green ion fire
caught in the visors of their glittering helms, the lines of them
advancing down off the cliff above them. From
their position hidden beneath a burning Marre pine, Basse aimed an
ion cannon at the Khagggun busy slitting the throats of his mortally
wounded compatriots. "At
least we'll take some of them with us," he said through gritted
teeth. Marethyn
put a hand on the ion-cannon barrel. "Wait," she said. "I
have a better way." They
dragged a dead First-Captain into the shelter of the Marre pine and
Basse and Majja helped her strip the corpse of its armor. She put the
helm on first and turned to them. "What
do you think?" Basse
nodded. Handed her the ion cannon while Majja helped her don the
armor. A
few moments later, they emerged from the burning corona of the tree
and hustled to the grav-bridge connected to the lead grav-carriage.
Marethyn held the ion cannon at the backs of Basse and Majja, who
appeared disarmed. The
Third-Marshal hanging back, guarding the grav-bridge, did not
question his superior when Marethyn told him through the helm's comm
system that she was bringing prisoners on board for interrogation. In
fact, he leered at Majja, and said, "Yes, sir. Requesting my
fair share of time with her, sir." Marethyn
contrived to ignore him, pushed the two Kundalan roughly onto the
grav-bridge, her hearts fairly pounding out of her breast. They were
halfway across when shouts broke out behind them. She turned to see
the Pack-Commander breaking out of the firelight, gesturing at them. "What
is this?" he cried. "First-Captain, who authorized you to
take Kundalan aboard the convoy?" "Run!"
Marethyn shouted as she tossed the ion cannon to Basse. The
three of them raced across the remaining span of the grav-bridge as
ion fire broke out, whistling past them. Luckily, there was no
blanket fire. The Khagggun had to be careful not to hit the
grav-carriages themselves. Basse and Majja were on board when a
well-aimed blast severed the grav-bridge and Marethyn felt herself
falling. She held on as the section of the bridge she was on swung
down, and she banged against the side of the grav-carriage. She
looked up. Basse was busy using the ion cannon on the three Khagggun
who had remained on board, then he began to fire on the Khagggun
crowding the ridge. Majja peered down at her and for a moment
Marethyn, her hearts in her mouth, was terrified that Majja would
choose not to see past her reflective visor. On the surface they were
Kundalan Resistance and V'ornn Khagggun, bound in eternal enmity. Then
Majja reached down and grabbed her hand, hauled her up into the
grav-carriage. As Basse continued to pepper fire into the Khagggun on
board, they raced to the controls. Marethyn had driven enough
hov-erpods to figure out how to pilot the grav-carriage. She fired up
the engines and pushed the throttle forward. With a deep and booming
rumble, the convoy began to move. But, almost immediately, it began
to heel over as they took a direct hit from the Khagggun on the
ridge. She screamed to Basse as she struggled with the controls, and
he returned the fire, his accurate shots killing some, making others
scatter. By
that time, she had righted the grav-carriage. Basse continued his
ferocious attack so that the return fire was sporadic and largely
inaccurate. She had a little trouble maneuvering a convoy of three
grav-carriages, but soon they had gained speed and altitude, leaving
the carnage behind. Basse,
putting his ion cannon up at last, joined them in the cockpit. "Where
to?" Marethyn said. She had taken off her high, hard helm, and
the wind and the sunlight had evaporated the sweat on her skull. She
could not remember a landscape so sharply delineated or colors so
vibrant. The world was singing to her. He
put a hand on her shoulder and pointed northwest. Marethyn, now
firmly in control, banked them into the shadows of the looming Djenn
Marre.
37 Night
of a Thousand Tears
When
the visitor's bell sounded in the Abbey of Floating White, it was
Konara Inggres who answered its insistent call. The hour was deep in
the night, but Konara Inggres was wide awake. She opened the door to
three strangers riding on what appeared to be an enormous black
cthauros. The gusty midwinter winds had snuffed out the gate
lanterns. The strangers were backlit against a brilliant spangle of
stars whose dancing light glittered off the silver-leaf domes
crowning the nine slender minarets that rose from inside the
bone-white stone walls. Down below, a wyr-hound started barking in
the many-tiered village of Stone Border. "How
can I help you?" Konara Inggres asked, holding her lantern high. "We
are looking for Konara Urdma," said the beautiful young female
with the grey-green eyes. She leaned to one side so she had a better
view; she was sitting between her two companions. "You would not
be Konara Urdma, would you?" "No."
Konara Inggres shook her head. "Konara Urdma is dead." The
three strangers exchanged a glance. "What happened?" the
young female asked. "Well,
now, that depends on whom you ask. And the answer you get will depend
on who you are." She took a step forward. "My name is
Konara Inggres, will you tell me yours?" Before
they could answer, a gust of wind rattled the gates and the huge
beast stamped one of its hooves. It turned its head, and she saw that
it was not a cthauros at all but a narbuck. "Merciful
Goddess!" She went down on one knee. "My prayers have been
answered." She rose and reverently touched the narbuck's damp
muzzle, soft as velvet. Her hand briefly gripped its horn, and she
sighed deeply. "We are delivered! Here is the Nawatir, riding a
narbuck, one of Miina's sacred creatures not seen on Kundala in more
than a hundred years." Konara Inggres was visibly shaking. "Then
. . . which one of you is the Dar Sala-at?" "Konara,
the Dar Sala-at is elsewhere at the moment," the Nawatir said in
a gentle and harmonious voice that stunned her as much as his
appearance. "We three are her companions." Konara
Inggres' eyes were shining. "You have seen Miina, then. The
Great Goddess has returned." "Alas,
no," he said. He was as terrifyingly tall, as broad-shouldered
as any V'ornn she had glimpsed, but his face was that of a striking
Kundalan with its ice-pale eyes, curling blond hair, and
close-cropped beard. She especially liked his mouth, which was
generously drawn and seemed somehow kind. "I am pledged to Her
emissary, Yig." "Merciful
Goddess, you saw the red Dragon?" Despite the chill of night,
Konara Inggres was sweating. Her world seemed to have completed the
somersault that had begun when she had discovered that Giyan was
possessed. "It
was Yig," Rekkk said, patting the narbuck's elegantly arched
neck, "who provided me with my narbuck." Konara
Inggres made the sign of Miina. "One by one the Prophesies are
coming true." She frowned. "But, Nawatir, your place is at
the Dar Sala-at's side. Where, then, is she?" "That
is a long story," Rekkk said. "In the meanwhile, may we
come in? Eleana has just given birth, and she is in need of rest and
sustenance." "Of
course." As Konara Inggres ushered them through the gates her
gaze lingered on the decidedly odd countenance of Sahor. Another
strange Kundalan, she thought. He had the huge, watchful
blue-green eyes and the guarded countenance of a sorcerer that was
wholly at odds with the angular, almost cruel face. And she had never
before encountered a Kundalan with only a tuft of hair at the crown
of his skull. "But where is the newborn?" "That
is an even longer story," Eleana said. She was worried that the
Ramahan would be suspicious of them. She tried not to look at Sahor
as she said, "Do not be alarmed, my son is alive and in good
health." "Then
all is as it should be," Konara Inggres said. "You could
not have arrived at a more auspicious moment. I am in desperate need
of allies." "And
why is that?" Rekkk asked as he dismounted from the narbuck. "Come
inside and you will see for yourselves." They
left the narbuck to wander the abbey's vast garden forecourt. Konara
Inggres led them into an unlovely section of the abbey into which
Ramahan were crowded. The chambers were in a state of total disarray,
especially in the innermost one, where all the furniture had been
shoved against the double doors leading deeper into the abbey.
Sitting beside this barricade were three huge catlike creatures,
their magnificent coats, golden with black spots, rippled. Their
heads swiv-eled, and their small, triangular ears flattened back
against their sleek heads. But they did not growl or bare their
teeth. "Ja-Gaar!"
Sahor spoke for the first time. "This
is Sahor," Eleana said. "I
could not help noticing," Konara Inggres said as she took Eleana
to lie down on a curved sofa she had not yet jammed against the
doors. "A V'ornn with hair." "He
is special," Eleana said. Flames
leapt in well-stocked fireplaces. In one, a black-iron pot was
suspended above the fire. After examining Eleana, Konara Inggres went
to the hearth, ladling soup into a rough-hewn bowl. Then she ground
up a combination of herbs, roots, and dried mushrooms and added them
to the broth, which she brought over to Eleana and bade her sip
slowly. Eleana did, watching the Ramahan behind her. They had a dazed
and vacant look about them, as if a close family member had died
suddenly and shockingly a handbreadth away. As in a firefight, time
had telescoped for them. They youngest ones had tears on their
cheeks. They kept their distance, slowing as they glided past. From
the corners of their eyes they watched the newcomers as they did
everything now, with a mixture of disbelief and apprehension. "The
abbey is at a crisis point," Konara Inggres said. She gestured.
"Please, help yourselves. There is plenty." As an acolyte
handed bowls to Rekkk and Sahor, she put her hands on her hips and
told them in clear, concise terms how the possessed Giyan had shown
up at the abbey. At
this startling piece of news, Rekkk and Eleana exchanged glances.
Eleana saw the relief flood through him. Simply knowing where Giyan
was, and that he was near to her again, gave him a renewed sense of
purpose. "This
is good to hear," Rekkk said to Konara Inggres, confirming
Eleana's thoughts. "We had lost track of her when she was
possessed by the Malasocca." "I
am afraid I cannot share your opinion," Konara Inggres answered.
"Giyan freed her twin sister, so that she could be possessed by
Horo-laggia's brother. Since then, the two of them have been
infecting the Ramahan with daemons whose essence they have somehow
smuggled through from the Abyss." The
Nawatir said, "Does the archdaemon inside her have the run of
the place?" "Not
quite. Giyan—the real Giyan imprisoned in Otherwhere—told
me how to bring the Ja-Gaar to life. They killed Konara Bartta,
sending Horolaggia's brother back to the Abyss. They are keeping
Horolaggia at bay, but only just. He seems to know that I will not
let them loose on his host body as I did with Konara Bartta. Now the
abbey has split into two factions," she concluded. "I lead
one of them. The other—a far larger faction, I am
afraid—follows the possessed Giyan. They claim that she has
taken them to the Dar Sala-at." "But
that is absurd," Eleana said vehemently. "There is only one
true Dar Sala-at." Konara
Inggres had begun to make a poultice for Eleana. "I have caught
a glimpse of him and believe him to be a sauromician. I have done my
reading. He has the black sixth finger." The
Nawatir wiped his lips. "In any event, the Dar Sala-at is
female." "That
will make her work all the harder." Konara Inggres knelt,
positioned the poultice beneath Eleana's robes. The Ramahan had begun
to murmur among themselves. Possibly they were praying. Or weeping
again. She rose. "There are those fixated on the
well-established notion that the Dar Sala-at is a warrior and
therefore must be male. Horolaggia is very cleverly playing upon
that." "All
the more reason why we must help her all we can," Rekkk said. He
told her how the Dar Sala-at was even now searching for the Veil of a
Thousand Tears, which would dispossess the archdaemon Horolaggia and
send him back to the Abyss without harming Giyan. "But our time
has run out," he said. "The solstice comes at midnight, and
there is still no sign that the Dar Sala-at has been successful. If
we do not act immediately, it will be too late. Giyan will be doomed,
and the archdaemon who possesses her will have access to all her
memories and knowledge, including her Gift." Konara
Inggres gasped. "But that would mean that the archdaemon would
be able to use Osoru." "Precisely,"
the Nawatir said. "Giyan is my beloved. I will not let her die.
If the Dar Sala-at cannot fight Horolaggia, then I must. Please. You
must tell me where in the abbey he is." "No!” They
all turned to look at Sahor, who had put his bowl aside. "Nawatir,
as you said, it is almost solstice, and we have no margin for error.
You love her too much; you will not be able to bluff him." The
Ramahan were silent, their heads turned to stare at him. "I
can." "Impossible,"
Rekkk said. "I won't hear of it." Sensing
an impasse they could ill afford, Konara Inggres came and stood in
front of Sahor. "You will have to gain the trust of the Ja-Gaar;
you cannot go near the archdaemon without one." She stared him
up and down. "Something tells me—what is it, I wonder, I
see in those huge eyes? Are you the callow youth everyone sees, or
are you far older and far more capable than any of us." It
was not a question she posed, and everyone in the little group around
her knew it. Nith
Batoxxx is outside. Waiting." Kurgan pursed his lips. "Sornnn
SaTrryn, you do not look well. Are you ill?" "No,
I—" "Good.
Because I need you at Za Hara-at. You know that dig better than any
other V'ornn, even, I warrant, the Bashkir architects we have hired." Sornnn's
residence had about it the distracted air of transience. It was like
a station that was now and again filled with the possessions of
travelers but had nothing of its own. The soaring ceiling seemed
therefore immense, the bare-walled rooms cavernous as a Nieobian
cathedral. The two V'ornn looked lost within its reaches. "Tell
me again why we need to go to Za Hara-at in such a rush?" Sornnn
said. "Nith
Batoxxx wishes it." The regent spread his hands. "And,
after all, he has backed our project in the Comradeship. It is the
least we can do." "Yes,
yes. Quite." Sornnn turned away, his thoughts turbulent with
recent events. He was gathering maps and hastily jotted notes,
paraphernalia he thought he might need. It was a good thing he made
frequent trips to the Korrush and so had his things more or less
permanently packed because at that moment his mind was far away from
Axis Tyr. How could he have let Marethyn go off with a Resistance
cell? How could he have stopped her? He shook his head. Would he even
begin to understand the female of the species? Probably not, he
admitted, but if anything happened to her . . . He could not afford
to dwell on that black thought; otherwise he would be in despair. "All
right," he said. "I am ready." Kurgan
nodded and turned to the door. Just before he opened it, Sornnn said,
"Regent, a moment." Kurgan
glanced back over his shoulder, a smile plastered to his face. He was
in no mood for the SaTrryn's philosophical maunderings. "Some
other time perhaps, Prime Factor. At the moment—" Sornnn
stood his ground. "You are going to want to hear this, regent,
trust me." "But
Nith Batoxxx—" "Especially
before we go off on some mysterious mission with a Gyr-gon." Kurgan
sighed and, nodding, came back to where Sornnn stood. "This had
better be good." Sornnn
took a deep breath. "It's about your brother Terrettt." "Oh,
N'Luuura take it, nothing you could say about that mad V'ornn could
possibly interest me. You are sorely trying my patience. Now come
on." "This
thing is," Sornnn said patiently, "Terrettt isn't mad." "Of
course he is mad. Every Genomatekk who has scoped him—" "The
Genomatekks take their orders from the Gyrgon." "We
all do," Kurgan said shortly. "What is your point?" "Marethyn
found this out, through her own initiative and determination,"
Sornnn said. "That is my point." "Why
didn't she tell me herself?" "I
think you know why, regent." Sornnn remembered the glossary of
key Bey Das phrases his father had complied, stuffed that, too, into
his satchel. "Kindly
enlighten me." "She
is afraid." "Please.
I know my sister far better than you. She is afraid of nothing." Was
that a touch of pride in his voice, or was that wishful thinking on
Sornnn's part? He said, "She is afraid that you will despise her
no matter what she does." Kurgan
watched Sornnn carefully for a moment out of his night-black eyes.
"She means something to you." "So
what? This discussion is about Terrettt." "Not
according to you." Sornnn
held up his hands. "You are right. The fact that you treat her
with contempt is difficult for her to handle. I thought if she
brought you this information herself it might effect a
reconciliation." "You
are meddling in Stogggul affairs, Prime Factor." "It
will be the last time." "That
is reassuring." Sornnn
snapped his satchel closed. "Perhaps you would rather—" "Let
me hear what my sister discovered," Kurgan said firmly.
"Initiative and determination are attributes I appreciate." Sornnn
glanced at the front door, then nodded. "Your brother Terrettt
was the subject of a Gyrgon experiment," he said. In the silence
that ensued he watched many emotions pass across the regent's
countenance. "Still uninterested. Or shall I go on?" Kurgan
nodded numbly for him to continue. "It
seems that Terrettt has an overdeveloped ativar. That is the most
primitive area of the V'ornn brain. It was deliberately enlarged. He
was experimented upon since birth. Only the Gyrgon could do that." The
master of deceit knew the truth when he heard it. Kurgan's mouth felt
dry and, thinking of Terrettt's birth-caul and his own secreted in
Nith Batoxxx's laboratory, his skin began to crawl. "What. . .
Does she know what the Gyrgon want with him?" Sornnn
had been set to tell the regent that Terrettt had somehow located the
seven Portals Nith Batoxxx desperately wanted, but his well-honed
instinct for survival stopped him. With V'ornn like Kurgan it was
always best to hold the final card. "Not yet." Kurgan
ground his teeth in fury even as his mind raced back through time. He
had been trained by a Gyrgon ever since he was very young, though
Nith Batoxxx had chosen to hide that fact from him. Nith Batoxxx had
dosed him in the garden of the Old V'ornn's villa. He and his brother
had been manipulated since birth, possibly—how could he
know?—even before. And yet, it had not been the Gyrgon at all
under whose spell he had fallen, but an alien creature's—the
Kundalan arch-daemon Pyphoros. Oh, that was ten thousand times more
humiliating! He cared nothing for Nith Batoxxx's fate; the Gyrgon
deserved his living death. But as for Pyphoros ... He touched the
dark mark on his throat, and he found bubbling within him the burning
desire to murder the perpetrator of this insidious web. I
do not like it here." Minnum shivered. "I do not like it at
all." "Swallow your fears," Riane said. "The
solstice approaches. There is but an hour until midnight. In order to
save Giyan we must get to Perrnodt as quickly as possible." Just
before, she had tried Thripping. But as in Axis Tyr, it was
impossible to Thrip within the boundaries of Za Hara-at. Instead,
they were obliged to retrace the power bourns back to where Perrnodt
and Thigpen waited. A
deathly glaze of darkness lay over the entire excavation site. All
the buildings seemed connected, the city organic in some way that
defied comprehension. Za Hara-at breathed, a soft rhythmic soughing
of the wind. After so many eons buried it had not yet expelled its
death rattle. Minnum
kept glancing back over his shoulder. "There is something here.
I can feel it." "More
sauromicians?" "I
do not know. No. I would not be able to feel them. They can mask
themselves like spectres in the dead places between the power bourns.
Something else. Something that frightens even them." He looked
around wildly. "What if it's . . ." He wet his lips. "What
if it is the archdaemon Pyphoros?" "Whatever
it is you will protect me from it," Riane said, as they switched
bourns. "Just as you protected me from Talaasa." She cocked
an eye toward him. "I am told that I will have a protector sent
from Miina. Perhaps you are my Nawatir." "Me?"
Minnum laughed uneasily. "Please don't even think that, Dar
Sala-at." "Tell
me, Minnum, you are a sauromician and yet you speak of them as being
separate from you." He
sighed. "I regret to say that you are correct. I wasn't entirely
candid with you when we met at the museum. While I did, indeed, live
here in the Korrush for some time, I left because of them, because I
knew that after all this time of lying low they were beginning to
talk of forming again." "So
you ran away." "A
shameful act. But what else could I have done?" Riane,
concentrating on tracing the bourns, said nothing. They were now in a
plaza she could not remember crossing on her way to the cenote. Minnum
ran a paw through his tangle of hair. "Their dream, as Ta-laasa
said, is to take over the abbeys and the spiritual direction of the
Ramahan." He turned to her. "Dar Sala-at, hear me now. The
saurom-icians will fight you every centimeter of the way. You are
anathema to them." "But
I am in Prophesy." "That
is precisely my point." Minnum paused. "They have become
Prophesy deniers. Their contention is that the Prophesies are
heretical, that they are nothing but lies meant to confuse the
Ramahan and throw the abbeys into disarray. This, they say, has
happened. That it has happened is a powerful argument on their
side, and they know it. They have begun to gather followers, and more
will join them, of that you can be sure. "But
there is another reason why I had to leave here. Once they made their
decision, the sauromicians cut all ties with the Druuge and declared
themselves enemies. I did not; I never cut my ties." "Then
why didn't you join the Druuge in the Great Voorg instead of fleeing
to Axis Tyr?" "Would
that I had been able to. The Great Voorg is a sacred place. I am
enjoined from going there." All
at once, Riane put a forefinger across her lips. The wind had died,
but along the streets and avenues of Za Hara-at there came another
sound. Minnum shivered. It was a howl, low and deep and agonized. "What
is it?" he whispered, despite Riane's admonishment to silence.
"There is something here, I tell you." He looked around.
"Something evil." Was
it Pyphoros? Riane's eyes were fixed dead ahead. "Whatever it
is, it is between here and where we need to go." "Is
there time to make a detour?" Minnum asked. "Right
now I do not see that we have much of an alternative." With
the help of her Third Eye, Riane identified another route that began
with a bourn-line that branched to the left. But as she ran toward
it, she sensed the creature moving with her. Just to make sure, she
went farther. The creature mirrored her, coming closer. They were out
of options. Go
that way," Riane whispered to Minnum, pointing left to a
perpendicular street. "But
you already—" "Just
do as I say!" Riane commanded. She
watched Minnum, shivering, walk hesitantly away. Her heart leapt. The
thing in front of them did not move. "Listen,"
she said. "We need help. For some reason, this thing is keyed to
my movements, so you must get to Perrnodt and Thigpen and tell them
what is happening. Tell them to meet me at the Plaza of
Perplexities." She
described where the plaza was, and Minnum nodded. "Now
go on," she said. "Fast as you can!" "Dar
Sala-at—" "Not
now, Minnum." But she stopped. His eyes were magnified by tears. "I
am sorry that I cannot help you more—" He struck his
forehead repeatedly with his balled fists. "All my sins, it
seems, have come back to haunt me." "Possibly
that is why you are here now." Riane smiled. "Have faith." He
swallowed hard. Then he nodded and stood a little straighten "I
will find my way, Dar Sala-at. You can rely on me." He
loped down the street in his awkward manner. A moment later, he had
vanished into the shifting shadows of Za Hara-at. Riane
returned her attention to the thing that crouched in wait for her
somewhere along the bourn-lines ahead. Then she headed off toward the
Plaza of Perplexities. She could feel the thing mirroring her
movements, but for the moment it came no closer, for which she sighed
in relief. The Veil guided her unerringly. But almost as soon as she
came upon the plaza she felt the paving tremble beneath her feet and,
turning, she saw that another cenote had appeared. Approaching it
hesitantly, she saw that the cobbles around the plinth were seamless.
It was as if the cenote had always been there. Mounting the plinth,
she peered into the cenote. It was empty. Now
came a rising wind, localized and powerful, a brief funnel that set
off her interior alarm. She had been in the center of such a wind
funnel a number of times when she had used Nith Sahor's greatcoat. At
the last instant, she leapt into the cenote, hanging against the
inner wall with her hands gripping the edge of the flat Up. In
the plaza appeared a Gyrgon. He raised his hands and a host of fusion
lamps ringed the plaza to light his way. Riane was astonished to see
that he had with him Kurgan and another V'ornn. The sight of Annon's
old childhood friend after so long stirred unpleasant memories of a
fine mild day when they had together spied Eleana, and Kurgan had
taken her by force, taken her despite Annon's attempts to dislodge
him from—With a barely audible growl, Riane wrenched her mind
away from the hateful moment. She peered hard at the third figure,
trying to place him. It took her a moment of searching through
Annon's memory, and then she had it. He was Sornnn SaTrryn. What
is a Gyrgon doing in Za Hara-at? she asked herself. And then she
remembered what Perrnodt had told her, that until all seven Portals
were open the archdaemons required a host body to remain in this
realm for any length of time. She looked more closely at this Gyrgon.
He was helmless and a kind of eerie inner flicker passed beneath the
hairless skin of his skull, illuminating pulsing veins filled with a
pale, yellow, bloodless substance. The pupils of his eyes pulsed, as
well, expanding and contracting, and his mouth was working
soundlessly like that of a puppet. And Riane, thinking, What more
perfect place to secret yourself if you were Pyphoros? knew that
she was at last confronting the archdaemon. It
was almost midnight. All she needed to do was hang, unseen, until
they moved off to another section of Za Hara-at. It no longer
mattered where Pyphoros looked; he would not find the Veil of a
Thousand Tears. Sornnn
SaTrryn was consulting what appeared to be a map. "Where is it
you want to go in Za Hara-at, Nith Batoxxx?" "We
need a cenote," the Gyrgon said, his voice thick and guttural
with Pyphoros' daemonic energy. He pointed. "Just like that
one." Riane's
heart skipped a beat. If they discovered her, she would never have
time to save Giyan. Her intense anxiety and fear caused her to make
her first mistake. She conjured Flowering Wand, a cloaking spell. "What
is that?" she heard the archdaemon possessing Nith Batoxxx
scream. "I smell the whiff of sorcery!" She
heard the sound of boot soles slapping against the cobbles and knew
they were headed her way. Cursing her own stupidity, she vaulted up
over the lip of the cenote and crouched, using the cenote itself for
cover. "Who
is that?" Pyphoros' angst-ridden voice rang through the dreaming
plaza. "What foul sorceress goes there?" Riane
took out the infinity-blade wand. All she needed was one more charge
and she could slice through the Gyrgon's armor. If she could kill the
host body, Pyphoros would be sent back to the Abyss. There
was no shadow to warn her, and she had failed to conjure Net of
Cognition to warn her of the archdaemon's proximity. Pyphoros stood
atop the cenote, Nith Batoxxx's greatcoat swirling about him. As
Riane looked up, he loosed a potent ion blast from the tips of his
neural-net gloves, and Riane was sent head over heels backward. The
wand went flying. Another
ion blast struck her and she sprawled on the cobbles,
half-unconscious. The Gyrgon stalked after her. It was then that he
saw what was wrapped around her. "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears'!" he shrieked, eyes alight. "You
are the Dar Sala-at? A female?" He began to laugh. "I
am now just beginning to appreciate how mad Miina has become." Riane
shook her head, trying to clear it. Where was the infinity-blade
wand? She saw the Gyrgon raise his arms and tried to move. But she
could not even crawl. She braced herself for another ion blast, but
instead she felt the tingle along her skin of a sorcerous spell, and
all at once, she was lifted into the air and a cage of black and
glittering strands formed around her. Each strand was growing what
looked like needle-sharp thorns. "I
am sincerely in your debt, Dar Sala-at," Pyphoros said in a
mocking tone. "I could not have found the Veil on my own, let
alone retrieve it." He
wriggled his fingers, and the thorns began to grow inward toward
Riane. "I
will have it now. That which is by rights mine." Pyphoros
worked the Gyrgon's mouth into the hideous rictus of a grin. "I
know you are stubborn, Dar Sala-at. I know you will not willingly
give it up. I do not care." He cocked his head. "Have you
any idea how agonizing it is to be burned alive? No, how could you?
But you will. Now." The
thorns began to drip an acrid, caustic fluid. Riane turned this way
and that inside her sorcerous cage. Even so, a drop struck her bare
arm, making her cry out. Her skin began to crisp in a neat circle the
exact diameter of the drop of acid. "What
is this?" Sornnn said, as he and Kurgan came across the plaza.
"What do you think you are doing?" He
started to lunge toward the Gyrgon, but Kurgan restrained him. "Keep
quiet," he hissed. "I
cannot keep quiet. He is torturing—" "You
will only get yourself killed," Kurgan said. "What is the
point of that?" More
thorns popped out of the strands, growing, so many that Riane could
not evade them. Wherever their oozing, viscous liquid struck, her
skin began to burn. The pain was so intense that she was soon on the
verge of passing out. "It
won't be long now, Dar Sala-at, before you are dead and the Veil is
mine!" Pyphoros called. Sahor
held the Ja-Gaar on a short leash. It was not one he could see, but
he felt it all the same. At first, Konara Inggres had balked. But
then Sahor had said, "Fear is what I know best. Horolaggia is
afraid of the Ja-Gaar. It is ingrained in all daemons. Trust me in
this." "Trust
a V'ornn?" Konara Inggres shook her head. "Well, why not,
when he knows more about daemonology than I do." Sahor
went down the dimly lighted corridor, moving slowly toward the heart
of the abbey, where Horolaggia, controlling Giyan, had positioned
himself. He was aware of a rustling around him and directed the
Ja-Gaar to prowl this way and that. The beast was like a lantern held
in the dark to keep nocturnal predators at bay. Wherever the Ja-Gaar
turned, the rustling fell back, momentarily stilled. Konara
Inggres had wanted to accompany him. She had argued that no one knew
the layout of the abbey the way she did. But Sahor was adamant. He
said that he did not want to have to worry about her safety while he
was confronting the archdaemon. In the end, she had settled for
providing him with a detailed map, which he instantly memorized. He
grimaced as his bones and muscles pulled apart and lengthened. He
turned a corner and, despite the constant pain of his hyperkinetic
growth, kept going. It was important to keep to a steady pace. The
first lesson you learned about fear was that it was insidious. The
second lesson was never to show it yourself. That was accomplished by
never admitting to it. Once you did so it seeped into your face and
betrayed you. Once your enemy could see your fear he could use it
against you. You had no defense against your own fear. An
ocean of hormones raged through him. The
last thing he had seen before he left Konara Inggres’ chambers
was Eleana's face. She had struggled off the sofa, and he knew that
if he left it a moment longer she would gather him into her embrace.
So he turned and left. Nevertheless,
the image of her face stayed with him during the first nerve-racking
moments of his journey into the hostile territory of the abbey. He
knew he could not afford to have her arms around him because then he
would fear for her, and he did not think that he could keep that fear
under control. This wild emotion filled him with wonder. The
transference into Eleana's baby had been unlike the transference into
the Teyj. For one thing, the Teyj had been of his own design and
manufacture; he had known precisely what to expect. With the
exception of his diminished ability for technomancy, he had been who
he always had been: Nith Sahor. For another, Eleana's baby was
half-Kundalan. He had felt the differences right away, the
heightening of emotions, the relaxing of Gyrgon's tertium-bound
rules. And then there was Eleana herself. He had grown fond of her.
Now he felt her woven into every strand of his DNA. He was no longer
Nith; he never would be again. If he was still part Gyrgon, he was
also now an equal part Kundalan. And he was all male rather than, as
all Gyrgon were, male and female. Eleana
was his mother, and this was how he experienced her. To say that this
was novel for him was an understatement. Gyrgon had no mothers—at
least none they could remember. They were taken from the Breeders'
wombs while still embryos because the attachments to the machinery of
the Comradeship were so complex they had to commence before birth. He
had been trained as a scientist—all Gyrgon were, since science
was at the root of their technomagic. But as his father had pointed
out to him there had once been Gyrgon who had been artists, writers,
painters, dreamers. Nith Sahor's own father had been among them. His
father believed that all the great leaps of technomancy had come from
the Gyrgon's artistic side, lost generations earlier. He had seen
glimmers of these artistic traits in his own son. Sahor
had understood none of this until now. Now
he saw that there were things that ran deeper than science, that
contrary to what he had grown up believing the Cosmos was an
infinitely mysterious place for the simple reason that it was not
ruled by science. Science was created by V'ornn in an attempt to
explain the Cosmic mysteries. To be sure, some of them could be
answered; otherwise, Gyrgon would never have created gravships and
ion cannons. But those deeper mysteries for which they searched,
questions that still confounded them, would remain forever beyond the
realm of technomancy. Miina
knew the answers to those mysteries, he was convinced of that.
Possibly the archdaemons did as well. The
corridor he had been following debouched onto a grassy courtyard. On
the other side rose the temple facade behind which, Konara Inggres
had said, Horolaggia was carefully plotting the demise of the
Ramahan. He could sense all around him tiers of spectral faces, drawn
in righteous anger. He could feel their enmity. An enmity the Ramahan
Mother had toiled for centuries to keep from her charges. All her
work had gone for nought. This was the lesson Nith Sahor had gleaned
from his extensive readings of Kundalan lore. Even the most
conscientious of mothers cannot protect her child from the
vicissitudes of life. The best she can do is prepare her child to
make his or her own decisions. And the only way to do that is to
teach her child right from wrong. It was only now as Sahor that he
understood that Gyrgon never had parents to teach them the
difference. The
Ja-Gaar growled low in its throat, and it pulled him forward across
the dark, sere grasses of solstice night toward the lair of the
archdaemon. Sahor had no fear for himself, but his hearts beat fast
in his chest for his mother. He longed to see her again. He realized
that from the time of his birth until this moment he had never been
apart from her. There was a hollow place inside him into which only
she would fit. He blinked back tears without any understanding of
what they were. He
was almost pulled off his feet as the Ja-Gaar strained against its
leash. He went up the temple steps in its wake and passed through its
mammoth portals. Clusters of low bronze oil lamps shed a ruddy
illumination too fitful to penetrate the shadowed corners. A red-jade
altar lay broken in two as if by a single rageful blow. The ceiling
was swaddled in stifling darkness. The sense of desolation was
palpable. The archdaemon Horolaggia had desecrated the temple. The
Ja-Gaar began to move in a circle, Sahor turning at its fulcrum. If
I die now it will be all right, he thought. I have
penetrated to the very heart of the Kundalan mythos. I have ceased to
be a member of the Comradeship. I have entered history, and all the
mysteries that lie before me have become moot. "Who
comes now into Mother's sanctum?" Horolaggia
appeared robed in Giyan's body. Sahor thought it astonishing how the
possession had altered her. Possibly it was only now in the end
stages that her exquisite face had been twisted by the arch-daemon
inside. She bore only a passing resemblance to the Ramahan priestess
he had known, and he mourned for her. "Who
dares risk Mother's terrible wrath?" Horolaggia in Giyan's body
stalked around the raised and shadowy periphery of the temple.
"Surely not another Konara. Surely not a Ramahan at all."
It was horrifying to see the grin he put on Giyan's face. "A
boy? A V'ornn boy?" Sahor
ignored the archdaemon's words. He was concerned with his movement
because Giyan now came down the marble stairs, her arms wide. Sahor
loosed the leash a half meter, and at once the Ja-Gaar sprang
forward. Their
movement caused the archdaemon to stop in his tracks. Giyan's
whistleflower-blue eyes had turned whitish, as if she were very old
or going blind. "I
am not Bartta," Horolaggia said. "I am beloved of many. You
would not loose your Ja-Gaar on this flesh." "I
am V'ornn," Sahor said. "I care nothing for Kundalan, Giyan
or otherwise. But you archdaemons are a threat to us. I will send
you back to the Abyss by having the Ja-Gaar rend your host's flesh." "What
cruel injustice is my fate!" Horolaggia cried. "To be
imprisoned for eons is terrible in itself, but to be misunderstood
is, it seems to me, far worse." "How
many Ramahan have you killed since your escape? It is impossible to
misunderstand murder." "This
from a representative of a race of murderers!" Horolaggia
thundered. "How dare you seek to confine me to prison when it is
you and your kind who should be locked away for all eternity!" "I
have no time to debate ethics with you," Sahor said. "It is
minutes before the solstice, minutes before you take possession of
Giyan forever. That I cannot allow." For this had been his plan
all along. It was why he had convinced them to allow him and not the
Nawatir to confront the archdaemon. For, in the end, he knew that
Rekkk's undying love for Giyan would prevent him from saving them all
by setting loose the Ja-Gaar. And
yet at the crucial moment of decision, he hesitated. He saw Eleana
rising before him. What if this were she instead of Giyan? Could he
allow the Ja-Gaar to rend her flesh into gobbets? His
indecision was his undoing. He had taken his keen eye off Giyan and
now, from behind him, came the false Dar Sala-at, the sauromician
Konara Inggres had glimpsed, to bind him and the Ja-Gaar in his
venomous spell. His legs were paralyzed and the Ja-Gaar collapsed
onto its side in a deep slumber from which no amount of tugging on
its invisible chain could rouse it. "Ah,
yes, I can feel it!" Horolaggia cried in exultation. He jerked
Giyan's head to the roiling darkness shrouding the ceiling. "Now
approaches solstice! Now comes the end!" The
stench of her own burning flesh kept Riane from total
unconsciousness. She was curled up in a ball, but still she was
burning alive. She tried to reach out, but, imprisoned, she could not
move. And then she remembered how she had freed Mother from her
sorcerous prison, and she began to put the Venca letters into words,
the words into phrases, the phrases into the Star of Evermore. It was
very difficult. The pain caused her concentration to waver. She
forgot words, forgot what
she was doing. Her burning self revived her somewhat, and she forged
on. And then she saw the Star of Evermore forming just above her
head. Slowly it began to rotate. As it rotated, its points cut the
strands of Riane's prison. As the strands were cut, the thorns shrank
and vanished with small pops. Faster and faster the Star of Evermore
spun, the air around her alive with its energy, and at last it cut
through the first strand, and she fell to the cobbles, groaning in
pain. But
already Pyphoros was striding toward her, his fingertips crackling
with lambent blue ion energy. "You
cannot escape me, Dar Sala-at," he said. "Not now, not when
I am so close to my goal." He was only two strides away, leaning
forward. "The Veil belongs to me. I will have it." Behind
him, Sornnn had broken into a sprint. He had spied the wand, and now
he scooped it up and cast it along the cobbles toward Riane. Riane,
half-blind from the sorcerous acid, heard it skittering, and she
rolled and reached for it. The wand hit the corner of a cobble raised
slightly above the others. It came to an abrupt halt just out of her
reach. "What
treachery is this?" Pyphoros turned and pointed and a bolt of
ion fire struck Sornnn in the chest, taking him off his feet. Pyphoros
turned back. Was
Sornnn SaTrryn dead? She did not know. But his heroic act had given
her a chance. She heaved herself over the cobbles. Her hand grasped
the wand, she thumbed the gold button in the required rhythmic
pattern, and the infinity-blade opened. It was pale and flickering,
and her heart sank. Still, it was the only weapon she had, and she
whirled with it. She aimed for his bare skull but he thwarted her,
and she twisted the blade in midnight. Its edge bit into the Gyrgon's
exo-matrix. His glaring red-pupiled eyes looked half-mad, and she
could see the archdaemon squirming behind them. He lifted his arm,
protecting himself, and she swung again, penetrating to neural-net
enhanced flesh. Thick yellow matter oozed, and Pyphoros bellowed. Riane
felt no triumph in this small victory, for the agony was cresting in
every centimeter of her burned skin. Her bones felt as if they had
turned to jelly. She
tried to concentrate on pushing the infinity-blade deeper, but the
pain was overwhelming all her senses. Her eyes fluttered up, and
Pyphoros redoubled his efforts. She staggered and almost lost her
grip on the infinity-blade. She saw it flickering, or maybe it was
her vision going in and out of focus, she no longer knew. Gritting
her teeth, she put all her weight behind the infinity-blade, felt it
sink another several centimeters into the Gyrgon. Pyphoros
screamed again. He was close enough to touch the Veil, but something
was preventing him from getting near it. She thought she knew what it
was. Her own life force. She
slid to her knees and heard laughter. It was Pyphoros, laughing at
her because she was dying, because the Veil of a Thousand Tears would
be his. She
could not allow that. The
infinity-blade was pale as death. A moment more and it would flicker
out and Pyphoros would have his victory. She dug in her robe with a
trembling, half-numb hand and drew out the fulkaan stone. It had
reinvigorated the infinity-blade before, it should again. But
before she could bring it against the wand, Pyphoros grabbed hold of
her hand. "What
is that?" he shrieked. "Give it to me!" She
felt a tremor from the stone, and a heat commenced where it lay in
the center of her curled palm. And then she heard it again, that same
howl, low and deep, that had so terrified Minnum. Kurgan
whirled. "What in the name of N'Luuura is that?" The
thing was on the move. It was coming. At
that moment, the infinity-blade flickered and died, and Riane felt
the full crushing weight of the archdaemon's spell. Her consciousness
followed the path of the infinity-blade, and she knew she was dying. In
the slow spiral downward, she returned again to the high tor of the
Djenn Marre. The sun shone brilliant and white out of a sky so
vividly blue it made her eyes ache. One cloud only wreathed the very
top of the peak she was climbing. And then the cloud moved, coming
toward her. Its outline resolved itself, and she saw that it was not
a cloud at all but a great bird, black and white, as clouds often
are. This giant avian opened its beak and uttered a howl, low and
deep. With a great fluttering of its wings it turned itself, and with
one taloned foot snatched her into the air, swinging her up onto its
back . . . The
howl, deep and low, shattering the utter stillness of Za Hara-at,
brought her back to consciousness. The bird came in low, sweeping
over the ruins of the buildings surrounding the plaza. It headed
straight for her, its startling violet eyes instantly assessing the
scene. Now
she realized what it was, this bird. It was the fulkaan, the
messenger and companion of the Prophet Jiharre. Riane—the
original Riane who had lost her memory just before the essence of
Annon had been migrated into her—had known Jiharre. She felt
the burning of the stone in her palm. Now she knew why the fulkaan
was keyed to her movements. It had been drawn by the stone into which
its image had been graven. Pyphoros
ignored the fulkaan. He had his hands on the Veil. With Riane so
close to death her life force was no longer strong enough to keep him
from it. He was tugging at it, trying desperately to unwind it from
her. The
fulkaan was swooping down very fast, its talons extended. At the last
instant, Pyphoros threw back his head, opened his mouth. A jet of
sorcerous flame struck the fulkaan. It screamed but still came on,
and Pyphoros reached up, grabbed at it. Its wings beat frantically,
and it began to veer away. Pyphoros lunged, ripping out one of its
talons, which he flung away in disgust. Though
the fulkaan had failed to harm him, the brief respite gave Riane a
chance to gather her strength. But
Pyphoros had drawn Nith Batoxxx's ringers into petrified claws, which
renewed their pulling on the Veil with the archdaemon's own unnatural
power. Riane had regained some strength, but not nearly enough.
Slowly but surely the Veil began to unwind. Riane
brought her hands up, but they had no feeling. Pyphoros was going to
get his heart's desire. His relentless tugging was unwinding it
further. There was nothing more she could do. And
then she saw Kurgan coming up from behind Pyphoros. She saw the
enmity in his eyes. At first, she mistook it for a hatred of her. His
arm came up, and she saw the fulkaan's bloody talon. As he clutched
it in his fist, she could appreciate just how huge it was. With an
inarticulate cry, Kurgan plunged the talon into the Gyrgon's right
eye. Pyphoros roared. Blood spurted out and, Riane saw, something
else, squirming and dark, a glimpse of Pyphoros' real form. Riane
felt the release of the archdaemon's sorcerous grip on her, and she
at once cast Earth Granary, feeling the strength flowing back into
her life force, the barrier between the Veil and those who wished to
misappropriate it. Pyphoros
was whirling this way and that in his pain, but she could already
sense him, searching for her, wanting to return his ion grip on her.
She saw the bloody eye, the essence of him squirming deep in the
socket, and she cast Fly's-Eye, a Kyofu spell that caused a chaos of
thoughts. It was a rather simple enchantment that Pyphoros would
counter quickly, but she needed time now, as with each passing second
her life force was returning. She
concentrated on his wounded eye, the one weakness in his sorcerous
armor—the Gyrgon host body. She had been running through the
passages of the two sacred books, Utmost Source and The
Book of Recantation, the sources for Eye Window, the most potent
form of sorcery. There was a spell called O-Rhen Ka. It opened
Red-Jade Gate. It was an exceptionally dangerous spell because it
unbalanced the emotional trine of anger, lust, and love. Madness,
destruction, chaos were often the result. Riane
began the incantation, hesitated. She felt the grip of Pyphoros'
spell returning and, fixing his wounded eye in her sight, she
completed the incantation. For
a moment, nothing happened. The night seemed suspended on the back of
an unnatural hush. Then, all at once, Pyphoros reared back. His hands
clutched at his face, but it was too late. The eye socket sundered,
his skull cracked open. As Riane ripped it away, Pyphoros came
pouring out. The Gyrgon was dancing a kind of death jig. As the blood
drained from him, so was Pyphoros' grip on life in this realm
loosened. At that moment, the Gyrgon's life thread winked out.
Pyphoros screamed as his essence poured out of the top of the
shattered Gyrgon skull. He shot up into the darkness of the night in
a knot of ebon mist. The fulkaan howled, his great beak snapping at
it before he swerved away. For
a moment, Riane knelt dazed. Her stomach threatened to rise up into
her throat, and felt an intense dizziness, the aftermath of casting
O-Rhen Ka. It was then that she realized that she no longer had the
Veil. At
first, she thought it was a dream. Then she looked up, blinking, and
saw Kurgan, a vulpine grin on his face, the Veil in his arms. "How
sweet is fate, Dar Sala-at," he said, "that you have
delivered to me my weapon against the Gyrgon." For
a moment, the two of them, old friends, baleful enemies, love and
hate, loyalty and betrayal, were joined in an eerie symmetry neither
understood. "Give
it to me," Riane said. "You have no idea—" "Perhaps
not," Kurgan said craftily. "But I mean to find out." As
Riane rose to confront him, he whipped out his dagger. "Come
on," he hissed. "Killing you would be a bonus." Riane
lunged forward, but her dizziness put her off-balance. She saw the
dagger rushing toward her. And then Kurgan's knees buckled, and he
pitched forward onto the plaza paving, insensate. Riane saw Min-num
standing just behind where the regent had been, his fist white where
he had struck the regent a mighty blow to his side. "I
told you I wouldn't fail you," he said. "Thank
you," she whispered. Riane
gathered the Veil into her arms and sighed, as each and every one of
the thousand tears seemed to speak to her at once. She made her way
to the center of the plaza and, as it directed her, lifted the Veil
above her head, wove it into the same knotlike pattern as that of the
power-bourn intersection deep beneath her feet. The
Veil opened like the petals of the flower and out burst the thousand
tears of the Sacred Dragons, fountaining up into the night, piercing
time and space, becoming one with them. The tears were everywhere and
nowhere. Silvery fish, they jumped and danced, slipping between
worlds, dimensions, forming the complex skein of tiny incremental
moments unseen and therefore unknown, moments that nevertheless
exist, that become the real weight and force and power of history. There
was almost nothing left of the Ras Shamra. Horolaggia had bled her to
the point of death. He had sewn her up tight in the Mala-socca's
sorcerous cocoon. Each filament pierced her flesh, bringing her
renewed agony. The hour of winter solstice was arriving. Moment by
precious moment, Giyan felt her life force leaching into the bloody
ground of Otherwhere. Her
death was upon her and she wept, but not for herself. Death had no
meaning for her. She wept for her child, Annon, removed from his life
by her own hand. She wept for Riane, the unknown and untried vessel
into which she had been forced to put him. For solstice was upon her,
and that meant Riane had failed and, failing, was doubtless dead. It
was the cruelest fate that kept a mother from protecting her child. She
turned her reddened eyes, all but swollen shut, into the heavens of
Otherwhere and waited for the white dragon avatar to swallow her
whole, to rend her with its sorcerous teeth, to turn her into
nourishment for its archdaemon. But
the white dragon did not appear, and then she noticed that the red
fulminations behind the mountain range had vanished, as had the
ceaseless cries of the multitude of daemons pressing at the barrier
between Realms, for it was a fact that Otherwhere existed in that
mysterious place between Realms. Instead,
a single tear appeared, shining silver. Then others joined it, and
they all burst apart, again and again in a rainstorm that drenched
her in blessed moisture. Wherever the tears struck—and they
struck everywhere—the archdaemon's filaments were
transmogrified into healing balm, until the Ras Shamra was restored. The
inverted triangle crumbled to dust, and with it Giyan's long
imprisonment. Opening its long beak, the Avatar gave a shout of
ecstasy that shook the very ground of Otherwhere. It soared high up
into the tumultuous sky and, seeing that all was as it had ever been,
it vanished.
38 Band
of Outsiders
The
oil lamps had lost their ruddy hue, and the suffocating darkness
rushed out of the temple interior as if propelled by sunlight. The
sauromician was burning. There was no fire, as such, and certainly no
flames. Nevertheless, he burned, blackening where he stood, his face
twisted in a rictus of death shock. Suddenly,
miraculously, Horolaggia was gone, vanished. The
Ja-Gaar, held at the very end of its leash, sprang forward as soon as
it arose from the sauromician's spell. Sahor could not have stopped
it even had he wanted to. The
Ja-Gaar leapt through the air, its muscles bunched, and bounded to
where Giyan stood. There, it rubbed its sleek flank against her
thigh. She reached down and put her hand into its open mouth and it
growled, a soft, gurgly sound not unlike that of an infant feeding. "You
are back," Sahor said. Giyan,
as beautiful and radiant as she had ever been, came slowly toward
him, the Ja-Gaar padding obediently at her side. Her eyes were their
luminous whistleflower-blue. She
stood regarding Sahor for some time. "You look like your father.
Almost. I know those eyes," she said. "Those are Eleana's
eyes." "I
am her child," Sahor said. "But you know who I am." She
held out her hand, and he took it. "You
are no longer Nith," she said. "I
am neither V'ornn nor Kundalan. I am Other." Her
eyes were shining. "Yes." She turned, then, a certain
tension coming into her frame. Sahor looked over his shoulder. The
temple contained sixteen columns. She was staring at one as if it was
alive. "Come
out," she said softly. Rekkk
stayed behind the column. "Have
you so soon lost your nerve, Nawatir?" Sahor called, not
unkindly. "I
followed Sahor here," Rekkk said. His pulse was racing so fast
that he could scarcely draw breath. Surely her powers as a great
sorceress would enable her to recognize his spirit. But what if not?
Worse, what if she could not love his altered countenance? His legs
grew weak at the thought. "Something deprived me of the pleasure
of killing the sauromician." "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears," she said, craning her neck for a
glimpse of him. "Thank Miina." "Then
the Dar Sala-at was successful." "She
was." Giyan took a step toward him. "Nawatir, I need to see
you." "I
am not—" All at once, gathering his courage, he appeared,
blond, bearded his dark red cape swirling around him. His ice-blue
eyes locked onto hers. "You
see, Giyan," Sahor said, "like me, he is not as he once
was." "Giyan—"
Rekkk's hoarse voice was almost a heartrending cry. "I
see that Miina has taken you up in Her arms." "The
arms of Yig," he said. She
moved toward him. "To think," she whispered, trembling,
"that you have encountered one of Her Sacred Dragons." "I
hardly know—" He stroked his beard, which still seemed odd
to him. "The changes—" She
stopped in front of him. She could feel his tension, his uncertainty,
his terror, and she reached out, her fingertips tracing with the
delicacy and precision of the sightless the new ridges and rills,
until she had absorbed every minute detail of his face. "Inside
still beat Rekkk's hearts. Inside still flowers Rekkk's love. This I
know in the very depths of my spirit." He
held out his hand, and she took it. "Take
me in your arms, Nawatir. You are my beloved forever." She
had begun to weep, and Rekkk embraced her with great emotion. He held
her tight and kissed her tenderly on her forehead, cheeks, and lips.
Her hands traced the new contours of his face. "Yes,"
she whispered. "Yes, yes, yes." Rekkk
felt as if at last his world was whole. "I thought I might never
see you again." "Did
you lose faith, dearest?" "On
the contrary." He drew her scent into the very essence of his
being. He was in an agony of longing for her, and he held her tight
for a very long time. "I found it." Riane
opened her eyes. An intense warmth suffused her body, washing away
all pain, even the memory of pain. She turned her head, saw Thigpen
crouched tensely a short distance away from her. The Rappa was
staring at her. Her whiskers were twitching incessantly. "Little
dumpling, are you all right?" "Of
course I am," Riane said. She rubbed her forehead, stared down
at her arms and legs, which bore not the slightest trace of burns.
She looked up. "Why are you crouched so far away?" "It's
that damned bird," Thigpen snorted. "He won't let me near
you." Riane
turned to look. The fulkaan had placed himself near her as if he was
her guardian. His predator's head was turned toward the Rappa. Riane
laughed and rose on one elbow. "Come on now. He won't bite you." Thigpen
came hesitantly forward, and the fulkaan glanced at Riane, who
nodded. A little ways away, she could see Perrnodt and Minnum tending
to Sornnn SaTrryn while Kurgan looked on. Noting
the direction of her glance, Thigpen said, "The V'ornn Sornnn
SaTrryn will be fine. The tears are healing him as they have healed
you." "And
what of Giyan?" Riane said, sitting up suddenly as anxiety
gripped her. "Is she alive or dead?" "Have
faith." Thigpen curled up against Riane's side. "The tears
came before the stroke of solstice." Riane
could see Kurgan looking at her, and it gave her an eerie feeling. He
could not know that the essence of his childhood friend and his
family's enemy lurked inside Riane's body. And yet he recognized
something in her, something he had not seen when they had encountered
each other months earlier in the caverns below the regent's palace in
Axis Tyr. She thought she saw in his eyes the desire to come over, to
talk to her, but he did not. In any event, Perrnodt said something to
him, and he turned his attention to her. Thigpen's
tail beat a brief tattoo. "At least we won't have daemons to
worry about anymore." Riane
sighed. "I wish I could believe that." "What
do you mean?" "They
helped build this city. I think there is more to their story than we
yet know." The
fulkaan stirred, his head swinging around, his piercing violet eyes
taking in the two of them. He made a sound low in his throat, and
Riane touched his wing tip. Sensing
the Rappa's unease, she stroked Thigpen's soft, thick fur. "This
bird is a fulkaan. It seems I knew him in another time, another
place." She
rose to her feet at the fulkaan's cry. Glancing around, she noted
that Kurgan had suddenly vanished. In all the commotion, Thigpen had
no idea what had happened to him and neither, it seemed, did anyone
else. Shrugging, she trotted over to the cenote, Thigpen at her
heels. The cenote, she noted, was now filled with water. The tears of
the Dragons had collected there. She heard a distant calling, and she
leaned in, immersing her hands. Immediately, the Veil began to
reconstitute, weaving around her in the complex pattern of its own
design. But
the cenote remained empty for only a matter of moments. All at once,
water could be seen, glistening as it rose from some mysterious
source far underground. Now the water was beginning to churn, and she
steeled herself, alarmed that Pyphoros had somehow found a way back
to this realm. Her
concern was misplaced, for now rising out of the cenote she saw
Giyan, who was quickly followed by Eleana, a Kundalan warrior tall as
a V'ornn, and another. The
Dar Sala-at ran into Giyan's arms, and they swung each other around. "Thank
you, Teyjattt," she whispered so only Riane could hear. "I
owe you my life." "No
more than I owe you mine," Riane said. "How did you get
here?" "The
cenotes form a sorcerous connecting network if you know how to
navigate through them." She told Riane how they had been in the
Abbey of Floating White, what had transpired there, and how, using
the cenote in the black Kell, they had arrived at Za Hara-at. "Konara
Inggres is now firmly in charge of the abbey," she concluded. "We
have nothing more to fear," Giyan told her. "When the tears
of the Dragons sent Pyphoros and Horolaggia back to the Abyss, they
destroyed the lesser daemons who had possessed the Ramahan and
re-sealed the Portal I inadvertently cracked when I violated the
Nanthera." "The
seal on the Portal at the bottom of First Cenote is also broken,"
Riane told her. "Pyphoros came through there long before you
performed the Nanthera." Giyan's
expression clouded with concern for a moment. "As soon as we are
fully recovered, we shall have to journey there to discover what
created the rift in the first place." With
her arm around her child, she took Riane to meet the new Nawatir and
Eleana's son. It took some time for Riane to grow accustomed to Rekkk
Hacilar's new image. Though she thanked Rekkk and Sahor for their
courage, she spoke to them a little distractedly. At the periphery of
her vision was Eleana, her body strong and hard, her warrior's eyes
watching shyly, angrily, warily. There hung between them the
unpleasantness of their last parting, and something more that Riane
could not bear to examine. How many times over the past weeks had she
run their reunion dialogue in her mind? Always, it ended awkwardly
and badly. Only
Minnum and Sornnn hung back. Neither felt they quite belonged in the
company of the others. They had quickly gotten to know one another,
and each was impressed with the other's knowledge of the Korrush and
of Za Hara-at in particular. Sornnn said that he was considering
staying on in Za Hara-at and wondered if Minnum would be interested
in a job helping him explore the ancient citadel. When Minnum readily
agreed to this excellent proposal, he felt this clinched his decision
to remain at the dig. In
the morning, he would send a message to the Resistance asking for
news of Marethyn. While it was true that he was anxious over her
well-being, he also admired her ardor to perform on her own merits.
And so his fear for her became a precious thing. A measure of the
gravity of his love. He found that he liked to look at it from time
to time to remind himself how radically his life had changed. He
experienced it as a stillness inside him, as if she had placed her
trust there, a gift, for him to discover after she was gone. When
Riane had introduced Giyan to Perrnodt there was an immediate spark
that would have been of particular interest to her had she not had
Eleana on her mind. She left them deeply engaged in sorcerous matters
and approached Eleana, who was talking quietly with Sahor. Eleana had
her arm circling his narrow waist. Sahor, intuitive almost to the
point of telepathy, nodded to Riane, kissed his mother on the cheek,
and sauntered off to try and communicate with the ful-kaan. He had
already become a lover of strange Kundalan creatures, seeing in them
another key to Kundala's secrets that Nith Sahor had been searching
for ever since he had landed on the planet. For
some time Riane and Eleana stood facing one another in silence. "I
am sorry for the way I left you," Riane began. "I never
should have done that." Eleana
said, "I see the way you look at Sahor. I know you see Kurgan in
his face. I beg you not to hate him." "He
has your eyes." "He
is not Kurgan. He never will be." They
walked a little farther away from the rest of the band of outsiders,
as they now thought of themselves. In the east, the sky was
lightening. There was a glow, faint but distinct in the intensely
clear air of the Korrush, and it was possible to look at the Great
Rift in the Djenn Marre and believe it was only kilometers away. "I
thought you hated me, that I had offended you." "No,"
Riane said at once. "Never." "Then
why were you suddenly so cold?" "I
was . . . afraid." Eleana
looked at her. "Afraid of what?" Riane
could not say what she knew had to be said. "We
are not friends," Eleana said softly. "We were never just
friends." Riane
felt her throat close up. "Looking
death in the face changes you. It changes who you are; it changes the
entire tenor of life. What we have been through during the last weeks
makes this absolutely clear to me." Eleana came closer. "No
matter the consequences, we must not be afraid to say what is in our
hearts." Her face had never been more beautiful nor more grave.
"When we are apart I dream about you. When I see you I cannot
cool my body down. I have never felt this way about anyone." She
stopped, only a few paces away. "Say something. Please." What
could she say? Riane asked herself. I love you was so
inadequate. Not to mention frightening in all its implications. She
felt An-non's dagger—the one Eleana had given him—heavy
on her hip. Unconsciously, she gripped its butt. She was not Annon
anymore, and yet when she was with Eleana, when she saw that look in
her eyes, she knew that Annon was still vibrantly alive. Her
obdurate silence was a mistake, however, because it caused Eleana to
ask the question she most dreaded. "Why
did Lady Giyan give you Annon's dagger?" "Because
. . ." The words stuck in Riane's throat. All around them, it
seemed that Za Hara-at was coming to life. A stirring, a sighing
filled the air. It might have been the fluttery swoosh of finbat
wings or the sweep of a gentle dawn breeze. But it also might be
something ancient, sleeping for eons, coming, at last, awake.
"Because you are right. Because we are not friends. Because we
never were just friends."
APPENDIX
I Major
Characters
Giyan—Bartta's
twin sister, Ramahan mistress of Eleusis Ashera, mother
of Annon Ashera Bartta—Giyan's
twin sister; Ramahan konara, head of the Dea Cretan Riane—female
orphan; the Dar Sala-at Eleana—female from upcountry Ramahan
at the Abbey of Floating White: Konara Urdma—head of the
abbey Konara Lyystra Konara Inggres Malistra—Kyofu
sorceress Thigpen—a
Rappa, one of Miina's sorcerous
creatures Mother—high
priestess of Miina Courion—Sarakkon
captain, friend of Kurgan Stogggul Jerrlyn—head
of the Fourth Agrarian Commune District (largest of seven) Minnum—curator
of Museum of False Memory
Cushsneil—Kundalan
dialectician (deceased)
Majja—female
Resistance fighter
Basse—male
Resistance fighter
Kasstna—leader
of Majja and Basse's Resistance cell
V'ORNN Annon
Ashera—eldest son of Eleusis Ashera
Kurgan
Stogggul—eldest son of Wennn Stogggul
Marethyn
Stogggul—Kurgan's younger sister
Terrettt—Kurgan's
brother Tettsie—Marethyn's
maternal grandmother Sornnn
SaTrryn—prime factor, scion to Bashkir spice-trader family Bronnn
Pallln—Bashkir ally of Stogggul family, passed over for Prime
Factor Nith
Sahor—a Gyrgon Nith
Batoxxx—a Gyrgon, see the Old V'ornn
Rekkk
Hacilar—once Khagggun pack-commander, now
Rhynnnon
Olnnn Rydddlin—once Rekkk Hacilar's first-captain, now
star-admiral
The
Old V'ornn—Kurgan's mentor; Nith Batoxxx's alter ego
Line-General
Lokck Werrrent—Khagggun commander of the Land of Sudden Lakes
corridor
Wing-Adjutant
Muko Wiiin—his adjutant
Gill
Fullom—venerable Bashkir
Attack-Commandant
Accton Blled
First-Captain
Kwenn—Kurgan's Haaar-kyut
Dobbro
Mannx—a solicitor-Bashkir of Tettsie's acquaintance
Petrre
Aurrr—Sornnn SaTrryn's mother
Rada—Tuskugggun
owner of Blood Tide tavern Jesst
Vebbn—Genomatekk in charge of the 'recombinant experiments'
Kirlll
Qandda—Deirus, Sornnn SaTrryn's friend Nith Isstal, Nith
Batoxxx's protege
Nith
Recctor—ally of Nith Sahor
Nith
Settt—ally of Nith Batoxxx
Nith
Nassam—ally of Nith Batoxxx
IN
THE KORRUSH The
Five Tribes: Jeni
Cerii—warlords—territorial capital: Bandichire Gazi
Qhan—mystics—territorial capital: Agachire Rasan
Sul—spice merchants—territorial capital: Okkamchire Bey
Das—historians/archaeologists—many at Im-Thera, abutting
main dig of Za Hara-at Han Jad—artisans—territorial
capital: Shelachire Othnam—member
of Ghor sect of Gazi Qhan Mehmmer—Othnam's sister Paddii—ally
of Othnam's and Mehmmer's Makktuub—kapudaan of Gazi Qhan Jiharre—Prophet
of the Gazi Qhan Tezziq—Makktuub's first concubine
Mu-Awwul—Ghor elder Perrnodt—Ramahan priestess
APPENDIX
II V'ornn
Societal Makeup
The
V'ornn are a strict caste society. Their castes are broken down
thusly: GREAT
CASTE: Gyrgon—technomages
Bashkir—merchant-traders Genomatekk—physicians LESSER
CASTE: Khagggun—military Masagggun—engineers Tuskugggun—females Deirus—physicians
relegated to taking care of the dead and the insane
APPENDIX
III Pronunciation
Guide
In
the V'ornn language, triple consonants have a distinct sound. With
the exceptions noted below, the first two letters are always
pronounced as a W, thus;
Khagggun—Kow-gun
Tuskugggun—Tus—kew-gun
Mesagggun—Mes—ow—gun
Rekkk—Rawk Wennn
Stogggul—Woon Stow-gul
Kinnnus—Kew—nus
okummmon—ah-kow-mon
okuuut—ah-kowt
K'yonnno—Ka-yow-no
salamuuun—sala-moown
Olnnn—Owl-lin
Sornnn—Sore-win
Hadinnn—Had-ewn
Bronnn
Pallln—Brown Pawln
Teyjattt—Tey-jawt
seigggon—sew-gon
s kcettta—shew-tah
Looorm—Loo-orm
bannntor—bown-tor
Kannna—Kaw-na
Kefffir
Gutttin—Kew-fear Gew-tin
Ourrros—Ow-ros
Jusssar—Jew-sar
Julll—Jew-el
Nefff—
Newf
Batoxxx—Bat-owx Boulllas—Bow-las
(as in, to tie a bow)
Hellespennn—Helle-spawn
Argggedus—Ar-weeg-us
When
a Y directly precedes the triple consonant, it is pronounced ew, as
in shrewd, thus: Rydddlin—Rcwd-lin Rhynnnon—Rew-non Tynnn—Tewn
but: K'yonnno—Ka-yow-no
Because
the following word is not of the V'ornn language, the triple
consonant does not follow the above rules, thus:
Centophennni—Chento-fenny
Triple
vowels are pronounced twice, creating another syllable, thus:
Haaar-kyut—Ha-ar-key-ut
leeesta—lay-
aysta
numaaadis—mu-ma-ah-dis
liiina—lee-eena
N'
Luuura—Nu-Loo-oora
Normally,
in V'ornn they is pronounced ea, as in tear, thus:
Gyrgon—Gear-gon
Sa
is pronounced Say, thus:
Sa
Trryn—Say-Trean
Kha
is pronounced Ko, while Ka is pronounced Ka,
thus:
Khagggun—-Kow-gun
Kannna—Kaw-na
Ch
is always hard, thus:
Morcha—
More-ka
Bach—Bahk
Skc
is always soft, thus:
skcetta—shew-tah
Eric
Van Lustbader THE
VEIL OF A THOUSAND TEARS Book
Two of The Pearl
Tor
Books by Eric Van Lustbader The
Ring of Five Dragons
The
Veil of a Thousand Tears This
is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this
novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously. THE
VEIL OF A THOUSAND TEARS Copyright © 2002 Eric Van Lustbader All
rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or
portions thereof, in any form. This
book is printed on acid-free paper Map
by Ellisa Mitchell Edited by David G. Hartwell A
Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC 175
Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010 www.tor.com Tor*
is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. Library of
Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Lustbader,
Eric. Veil
of a thousand tears / Eric Van Lustbader.—1st ed. p.
cm.—(The pearl; v. 2) "A Tom Doherty Associates book."
ISBN 0-312-87236-4 (alk. paper) I. Title. PS3562.U752
V45 2002 813'.54—dc21 2002019002 First
Edition: July 2002 Printed
in the United States of America 0987654321 For
David, Linda, and Tom
Book One:
Of the fifteen Spirit Gates, Sunken Gate is the one
in which the spirit lies, turning over leaves of fortune and the
future; it is here that promise begins, and dreaming ends,
—Utmost Source,
The Five Sacred Books of Miina 1
Riane and Giyan were alone in the Library of the Abbey of Warm
Current. It was midnight. A cold wind sighed through thorned sysal
trees, and rhythmic pulses rippled through the dense bedrock beneath
the abbey, where the power bourns wove themselves like strands of the
Great Goddess Miina's ruddy hair. The
Library, columned, marble-clad, lay dreaming like a castle keep in
the fastness of the fortresslike complex. The Ramahan abbey had been
abandoned for many years before Riane and her friends—the
Kun-dalan sorceress Giyan, the V'ornn Rhynnnon Rekkk Hacilar, the
Kun-dalan Resistance leader Eleana, the Rappa named Thigpen—had
made it their sanctuary some weeks before. Khagggun packs roamed the
countryside searching for them. Once, they had swept through the
abbey, and it was only Giyan's sorcery that had saved them. She had
roused them from sleep and, gathering up all evidence of their stay,
they had fled into the nearby forest, there to wait in stony silence
for the enemy to depart. The
abbey itself, sacked decades before by the V'ornn invaders, was
half-burned and crumbling when they had first come upon it.
Gimnopedes nested in untidy eaves. Spiders turned shadowy corners
into delicately veined cities. A beautiful sysal tree had, for
decades, grown up through thick plaza paving to split the lintel of
the east-facing temple. The hoary knuckles of its basal roots
displaced the artful pattern of the stone, an ironic comment on how
life reclaims the void and transforms it. The Library, alone,
remained intact, having been protected by a powerful spell that Giyan
had counteracted in order to gain entry. Riane
looked at Giyan, tall, slim, beautiful, golden, radiant, save for the
blackened crusts of the sorcerous chrysalides that covered her hands
and forearms. Even now, she could scarcely believe that they had been
reunited. Giyan's presence gave her a sense of profound dislocation.
She was not simply Riane, a sixteen-year-old orphaned Kundalan girl
who could not remember her parents or where she came from. She was
also the V'ornn Annon Ashera, eldest son of Eleusis Ashera. Eleusis
had been regent of Kundala until a ruthless coup by his archenemy,
Prime Factor Wennn Stogggul, and the head of Eleusis' own elite
bodyguard, Kinnnus Morcha. Riane's
searching gaze caught Giyan's whistleflower-blue eyes. "Every
time you look at me I see surprise on your face." Giyan's
heart ached, for she heard the sentiment behind the formal words, the
fragile sentence Riane could not bear to speak: Do you still love me?
"It is a marvelous moment, to be here with you, alone, in
private. To be able to call you Teyjattt." Teyj were the
beautiful multicolored four-winged birds the Gyrgon—the V'ornn
technomage caste—bred and took with them wherever they went. "Little
Teyj. You loved calling me that when Annon was a child." A
sudden fear, a stab in Giyan's heart. "And Annon did not?" A
moment's pause. "Annon did not, I think, appreciate your love.
He did not know what to do with it." "It
is odd the way you phrase it." "I
am no longer Annon." Riane spread her hands. "Annon is
dead. All Kundala knows it." "And
we? What do we know?" Riane
looked up at the magnificent dome of the Library, encrusted with a
mosaic of Kundala and the sinuous star constellations surrounding it.
Composed of millions of tiny colored glass tiles, fitted cunningly
together as only the Kundalan artisans could, the dome produced an
ethereal glow like a perpetual sunrise or sunset. Beneath this
sheltering sky she felt safe from both Annon's enemies and those of
the Dar Sala-at. For Annon was not simply the heir to the Ashera
Consortium. He and the former Riane together—this unique fused
entity—were the Dar Sala-at, the chosen one of Miina,
prophesied to find The Pearl, the most powerful, mysterious, and
ancient artifact of Kundala, to lead the Kundalan out of their
one-hundred-and-one-year enslavement to the technologically superior
V'ornn. "Here,
alone, together," she said at length, "we can share a dead
past. Like ghosts conjuring the root stew of life." "Stirring
the cauldron." "Yes."
Riane smiled a painful smile. "Making something special of it." She
saw movement out of the corner of her eye. The vigilant figure of
Rekkk Hacilar passed before the high, leaded window to the east. His
long, tapering, hairless skull was cloaked in a battle helm
fashioned, it was said, from the skull of a fallen Krael, and he held
his shock-sword at the ready. His purple armor glittered darkly. Once
a Khagggun—the V'ornn military caste—he had declared
himself Rhynnnon, turning his back on his caste, turning his efforts
to a greater cause. In this case, he had dedicated himself to the
service of the now dead Gyrgon, Nith Sahor. Because Nith Sahor wanted
the Dar Sala-at found and kept safe, Rekkk had sworn himself to
protect Riane. Now he was also Giyan's lover. "We
have been given a unique gift, haven't we?" Giyan said. "A
second chance." Rekkk,
in the ruins of the courtyard outside, began a ritualistic set of
thrusts and parries with Eleana. She was the same age as Riane. Her
V'ornn shock-sword looked massive in her delicate white hands, but
she swung the twin blades deftly through the night air. Under Rekkk's
tutelage she was quickly becoming an expert in its use. They
practiced endlessly. He said it took his mind off his wounds,
physical and emotional. Riane
watched her for a moment, her heart in her throat. Annon and Eleana
had fallen in love. Now, like everyone else, Eleana believed Annon
was dead. As for Riane—this new Riane—she loved Eleana
still, and did not know what to make of this love or what to do with
it. Giyan,
attendant to Riane's gaze, said, "You long to tell her, I know." "I
love her so. I will always love her." "And
your love makes you want to confess everything." Riane's silence
was as good as an answer. "But you cannot. If you tell her who
you really are, you put her life—and yours—in grave
jeopardy." "She
is Resistance. She is used to secrets." "Not
this kind. It will be too much. Like a mountain on her shoulders." "Perhaps
you underestimate her." They
all heard the sound at once and froze. Their eyes rose skyward as the
drone of the Khagggun hoverpods, bristling with ion cannons,
flattened the soughing of the wind, silenced the twitter of night
birds. There ensued a period of heart-pounding terror, as if the
breathable elements were being sucked from the atmosphere. They could
see the pale ion trails, ephemeral as smoke, lighted by moonslight,
making baleful runes beneath the tremulous clouds. Tense moments
later, the drone drifted away, fading from an echo into a stillness
that made their ears ache. Riane
and Giyan exchanged a look of relief, and Riane returned her gaze to
Eleana, her eyes filled with the girl's lithe movements. Dark lashes.
Moonslight on her cheekbones. Soft swell of her belly. "Or is it
something else? You do not trust her." "It
isn't simply a matter of trust," Giyan said carefully. "Isn't
it?" Riane said this rather more sharply than she had intended. "I
have told you. It is written in Prophesy that of the Dar Sala-at's
allies one will love her, one will betray her, one will try to
destroy her." "It
could not mean Eleana. Not her." "No."
Giyan's voice was soft, gentling. "You would not think so, I
know." "She
is carrying Kurgan's child." Kurgan was Wennn StoggguTs eldest
son; he had once been Annon's best friend. "She will need our
help and support in the days ahead." "You
are the Dar Sala-at. You have larger issues to contend with." "She
is still haunted by her rape at Kurgan's hands. What is larger than
an individual's anguish?" "The
destiny of our people." "The
destiny of our people is built on anguish. You of all Kundalan would
be the first to acknowledge that." Giyan
gazed in astonishment at Riane, golden-haired, sun-bronzed,
firm-muscled from her beloved mountain climbing, and thought that
this strong, beautiful girl might easily have sprung from her loins
had she taken a Kundalan between her thighs. "You must forgive
me, Tey-jattt," she said. "I have lived my entire life with
secrets. First, keeping hidden my Gift for Osoru sorcery, which has
been daemonized by the Ramahan- Then, concealing my status as Lady
from the V'ornn, who would have killed me had they known. Finally,
keeping your true identity a secret, which, had it become known,
would have gotten you killed. These have been the boundaries of my
life." Through
the five arched windows set into the Library's thick walls, light
from two of Kundala's five moons fired the glass tiles, lending them
the depth of three dimensions. Giyan, caught in the moonsglow, seemed
to throb with sorcerous energy. Her white robes were pale as the snow
cloaking the jagged crests of the massive Djenn Marre mountain chain
to the north. Her hands and forearms, dead black from the chrysalides
covering them, were the only parts of her that did not shine like
beacons. The chrysalides had formed after she had violated the sacred
circle of the Nanthera, in a futile attempt to keep Annon alive. Well
she might have, since he was her son. She had borne the son of the
regent, Eleusis Ashera. This was a potentially dangerous fact she had
told no one, not Rekkk, not Annon himself. From the beginning,
Eleusis had impressed upon her the need for absolute secrecy.
Periodically, the Gyrgon sent Khagggun packs to round up the children
born to Kundalan females as a result of V'ornn rapes. These
half-breeds, though outwardly looking like any other V'ornn, were
taken by V'ornn Genomatekks to Receiving Spirit, the vast medical
facility in Axis Tyr that had once been a Kundalan hospice. What
experiments were perpetrated upon them there even Eleusis had not
been able to discover. Giyan
shook her head. "Still, I will not tell you what to do, This
must be your decision." "Whatever
decision I make," Riane said, "I promise you that it will
not be a rash one." "I
cannot ask for more, Dar Sala-at." She
returned her attention to the book Giyan had given her to study.
Giyan, like her twin, was a Ramahan priestess. But, unlike Bartta who
had practiced Kyofu, the Black Dreaming sorcery, before her death in
a sorcerous conflagration, she was a practitioner of Osoru, Five Moon
sorcery. Riane, too, had the Gift; Giyan had passed it on to Annon.
She was just beginning her Osoru studies, but she was impatient to
become a sorceress-adept like Giyan. Though Stogggul and Morcha were
dead, though she had defeated the powerful Kyofu sorceress Malistra,
the Dar Sala-at's enemies were legion. And far more powerful than
Malistra. They had worked their dark schemes and plots through her;
when she had died, Riane was certain, they had moved on, enlisting
others to battle for them. But there was another matter, more
immediate, that needed explaining. She
set down the book full of complex Old Tongue runes, and approached
Giyan. Dust motes hung suspended in the air, flaring as they hit the
lamplight. One full moon, the palest green of new grass, hung
suspended in a pane of glass, an insect caught in a spider's web. "Have
you so quickly finished your lesson, Teyjattt?" Thick hair of
spun copper cascaded around Giyan's long neck, settled on her square
shoulders like liquid light. "In
truth, my mind is too filled with questions to absorb any more."
Riane put her hands on the long ammonwood refectory table that ran
the length of the Library. "You must tell me if you know why I
wasn't able to open the Storehouse Door." For
the longest time Giyan said nothing. Doubtless she was thinking, as
Riane was, of the Storehouse Door set eons ago by Miina into the
caverns beneath Middle Palace. The
Storehouse was where Miina had secreted The Pearl for the time when
Prophesy said it would be needed. Kundalan lore held that it could
only be reopened by the Dar Sala-at, using the Ring of Five Dragons.
But the Door could only be opened by the Dar Sala-at. Defeating the
Dark sorceress Malistra, Riane had tried to open the Door with the
Ring, but it had stayed firmly shut. Why? Giyan
was about to speak when sudden pain clouded her features. She gasped,
grabbed at the chrysalid on her right forearm. "Giyan—" "It
is all right," she whispered. "Already the pain is
passing." Beads of perspiration hung in her hairline. "I
want to help." "Alas,
wanting will not make it so." Tears trembled in the corners of
her eyes. She was white-faced, and took a moment to compose herself
before she went on. "There is only one reason the Ring of Five
Dragons would not open the Door for you. Miina put one last safeguard
in place when She built the Storehouse. Impossible as it sounds, the
Portal between this realm and the Abyss has somehow been breached.
There are daemons here where they have been banished for eons. As
long as they are in this realm, the Door cannot be opened even by
you." Riane
felt her heart turn over painfully in her chest. "The Tzelos—" "Yes.
You have seen the Tzelos twice, once as part of a spell cast on you,
once as a sorcerous Avatar of Kyofu. But I must conclude that the
Tzelos has manifested itself here. It is a daemon from the Abyss. It
has crossed over into our world." "But
how?" Giyan's
eyes grew dark. "I fear it is my doing." "Yours?
I do not understand." "Conjuring
the Nanthera posed grave risks," Giyan said. "Not the least
of which was opening the Portal to the Abyss." In a last-ditch
effort to save Annon from his enemies, Giyan and Bartta had conjured
the Nanthera, temporarily opening a forbidden Portal to the Abyss.
Thus, Annon's essence, all that made him unique, had been
transmigrated into the body of Riane, a Kundalan girl dying of duur
fever. He was saved while his V'ornn body was delivered up to his
enemies. Thus had he joined with Riane to become the Dar Sala-at, the
chosen of Miina. Upon this new Riane rested the future of Kundala. "But
you told me that the Nanthera does so under a number of careful and
powerful safeguards." "True.
But I violated one of them. I reached back through the sorcerous
circle to try to get you. I couldn't help myself. I ..." She put
a hand to her head. Riane
encircled her with her arm. "Even if you are right, even if that
is what has happened, what's done is done. It doesn't matter how the
Portal seal was violated. What matters is sealing it again." Giyan
shook her head. "It is more complicated than that, Dar Sala-at.
When Miina created the Abyss to imprison the daemons and
arch-daemons, She seeded it with seven Portals, each of which She
provided with a different sorcerous lock. This was a safeguard. Even
if an arch-daemon—Pyphoros or one of his three
offspring—somehow managed to slip through one Portal, the other
locks should protect us. For only when all seven Portals are opened
simultaneously can all the daemons escape into our realm." Giyan
walked back and forth in a tight anxious orbit. "The real
problem is not the Tzelos but the archdaemon who brought it through." Riane
stared at her. "An archdaemon in this realm?" "The
consequences will be catastrophic," Giyan said. "Unless we
can find the archdaemon and somehow neutralize him, the damage he can
do is incalculable." "But
surely if he is here someone would have seen this . . . archdaemon by
now." "On
the contrary. Archdaemons cannot appear for long in their own form
until all the seven Portals are open. They must take hosts—possess
them, work through them. Their infiltration is more difficult to
detect and therefore more insidious. Legend tells us that their
control of their hosts is imprecise. The hosts'
actions may, from time to time, appear out of character because the
archdaemon does not have immediate access to all their knowledge.
However, that can change over time." "We
must either destroy them both or return them to the Abyss,"
Riane said. "Otherwise, I will never be able to open the
Storehouse Door. I will never find The Pearl." Giyan,
flexing her fingers inside their eerie shells, smiled grimly. "We
must speed up your sorcerous training. Thigpen and I can only do so
much. Miina's Sacred Texts, Utmost
Source and The
Book of Recantation, both of which you have
read, require interpretation so that you may understand the inner
workings of language as science, science as sorcery. The
interpretations require the precise mixtures, constructs of phrases,
incantations, theories, ideas, whispers, shadows, and light. Once you
have absorbed these lessons, you must practice those interpretations
over and over until they are ingrained in you, until they become part
of you." A
shadow passed across Riane's face. "Mother could have taught
me," she whispered. "But Mother is dead." She was
wearing turquoise silk robes made from Mother's garments after a
terrible Kyofu spell had caused Riane mistakenly to kill her. The
murder had been foretold in Prophesy, but that did not make it any
easier to live with. Giyan
stirred. When she gazed at her child, transformed, she saw great
promise, but never without the pain of regret. Regret that she could
never tell Annon that he was her son, regret that she had been forced
to hide him inside Riane, to leave Riane with Bartta, who had abused
Riane terribly. Claws in the lining of her stomach. "Mother
would have been the first to tell you that no one teacher will
suffice." She vibrated with her child's sorrow, wished she could
take it all upon herself. "Your journey is long, Dar Sala-at,
arduous and complex. There is someone who I must get you to as
quickly as possible. She will commence your studies. Her name is
Jonnqa. She is an imari at Nimbus, a kashiggen in the Northern
Quarter of Axis Tyr." "What
could a mistress of pleasure at a salamuuun palace have to teach me?" A
small smile played across Giyan's lips. "Again you sound like a
V'ornn. I know you are impatient, Teyjattt, but you must get it
through your head that you have much to learn. There are no
shortcuts, sorcerous or otherwise. As I said, the Dar Sala-at's path
is a most difficult one. Up to now your life has been as a male
V'ornn of high privilege or as a Ramahan cloistered in the Abbey of
Floating White. In both instances you were protected from the
everyday world. Both these lives are now at an end." "I
do not understand." Giyan
turned around the book she had been reading so Riane could see the
Old Tongue text. "You see here, in the days before the V'ornn,
when lightning played across the sky, when all of Miina's magical
beasts—the Rappa, the narbuck, the perwillon, even the Ja-Gaar
and the Five Sacred Dragons—roamed the land and the skies, all
Kundalan were in harmony." She turned the page. "Females
and males alike shared everything, including power. The Ramahan, too,
included priests and priestesses." "But
then a cabal of male Ramahan wrested control from Mother," Riane
said. "They held her captive for more than a century." "Until
you found her and freed her." Giyan, sensing Riane's disquiet,
continued. "But here is the important thing. Nowadays, male
Kundalan treat our females as inferiors, just as the male V'ornn do
their own females. This is what you will be up against when you
venture out into the world." She closed the book with a snap.
"It makes my blood run cold. It is a manifestation of the worst
thing the V'ornn have done to us. Do you know what that is, Riane?" "That
they have taken away our freedom." "That
is evil, but it is not the worst." "That
they have killed and tortured tens of thousands of us." "Terrible,
yes." She shook her head. "But the worst is being done now,
systematically. The V'ornn use time, ideas, the masses against us.
Why do you think the youngest Kundalan males treat their female
counterparts with contempt? Because it is all they know. Each day
brings new converts to the new Goddessless religion of Kara. Where
did Kara begin, do you think? With the V'ornn, of course." Riane
was startled. "Are you certain? Annon did not know this." "I
daresay most V'ornn do not. It is a device of Gyrgon origin. And yet
it continues to win converts. With every generation the great
Kundalan narrative that Miina labored so hard and long to teach Her
children is being eaten away by V'ornn acid. You saw as much when you
were at the Abbey of Floating White. Osoru is no longer taught,
Sacred Scripture has been distorted beyond recognition. And the worst
part is that those
distortions are being accepted by the acolytes. They cannot see the
truth because the morality inside the abbey has been murdered, and
without morality truth has no dominion." Tears
stood in the corners of Giyan's eyes. Riane felt her pain as if it
were her own. The V'ornn-ness inside her recoiled at the words, at
the emotions, at the implication of what the V'ornn had perpetrated.
This disconnect made her feel weak and dizzy, so that she was obliged
to grab the table edge lest she pitch over onto the gleaming floor. "Understand
this, Riane," Giyan whispered. "Time is the great ally of
the liar because when lies are repeated long enough, the truth fades
and is forgotten. Then the lies become the truth. History is remade,
and all is lost." Riane
thought of how Bartta, who had run the abbey, had murdered her friend
Asta and pretended it was an accident. She recalled how Bartta had
tortured her and almost killed her. Bartta was wicked, but Bartta had
come to believe the distortions and lies she herself had made up. She
was perpetrator and victim rolled into one. "And
yet..." Giyan's
whistleflower-blue eyes regarded her levelly, and a kind of current
passed between them, a language of their own design begun with
Annon's first memory. What a powerful thing such a language can be,
for it flows in the blood, informs the bone with unshakable
knowledge. "And
yet, what mystery beats within the V'ornn heart," Giyan
whispered. "There was Eleusis, brave, compassionate Eleusis;
there is Rekkk, brave, compassionate Rekkk. And most mysterious of
all, perhaps, there was the Gyrgon Nith Sahor, who gave his life for
us." "And
yet, what mystery beats within the Kundalan heart," Riane
answered her, "for you to raise Annon and not hate him as a
mortal enemy, for you to love him as if he were your own flesh and
blood, for you to save him from the enemies of the Ashera at risk to
your own life." "The
enemies of the Ashera are my enemies," Giyan said simply. When
she spoke thus her power was undeniable, defeating even that last
bastion of V'ornn maleness that still beat within Riane's soul. "I
love you, Giyan," Riane said. "I find it miraculous that
you of all Kundalan are the Lady destined to guide the Dar Sala-at." "I
love you more than life itself, Teyjattt." A tear slid down
Giyan's cheeks. She reached out for her child, but could feel nothing
through the inconstant electrical jolts delivered by the chrysalides. "Together
we will labor to bring back Miina's sacred narrative in all its
glory," Riane said with a resolved heart. "I
fear we will labor greatly." Riane
felt something inside her quail. She knew from experience that there
was something oracular about Giyan. Then Annon's V'ornn-ness took
over, and she said: "If this is our destiny, then so be it." Giyan
smiled through her tears. "When you speak thus I am reminded of
Nith Sahor. I miss him. His death was a terrible loss to our
cause." "I
only met the Gyrgon once." Riane said. "But without his
help I would not have reached the Storehouse Door in time to stop the
Tym-nos device from destroying Kundala." "You
would have appreciated his wisdom, might very well have come to like
him. It is a great pity he was an anomaly among Gyrgon." For
the first time, Riane saw the title of the book Giyan had been
reading: Darkness and Its Constituents. She gestured with a
sun-bronzed hand. "Is the Tzelos described in there?" Giyan
smiled grimly and reopened the book. Riane saw a line drawing,
filling up an entire page, precise as an architectural blueprint, of
the horrific beast she had seen in Otherwhere. The drawing was
fascinating and repellent at the same time. "A
profane experiment of Pyphoros' gone terribly wrong," Giyan
said. "Like all his experiments." "What
was he trying to do?" "Create
life, something only the Maker can do." "The
Great Goddess Miina?" "Can
give life, so it is written. But that is not the same. Even Miina is
not the Maker. She cannot create a new life out of the elemental
components of the Cosmos." "But
She created Kundala." "Ah,
no. She bade the Sacred Dragons to create Kundala, and they did so
with the help of The Pearl. They caused matter to cleave to matter.
They brought fire and air, water and earth. Metal from dark distant
stars. When Kundala was born, in the Time before the Imagining, the
hand of the Maker moved and the Kundalan appeared." Riane
stood for a time absorbing her words. The weight of history lay
upon the shelves ringing the Library, voices of Kundalan ancestors
disturbed from their long slumber by the discussion of Creation. The
faintest stirring seemed to play against her cheek, a liquification
of the light reflected off the mosaic sky, the exhalations of
generations past. Hopes, fears, dreams alive here in the twinkling
mosaic stars, the burnished continents, the rakkis-dark seas. She
felt all over again her deep and abiding love for this woman who had
raised Annon, who had saved him from certain death, who had been
willing to sacrifice everything, including her life, to save the
V'ornn child she had raised. Part of her would never understand that
miracle; another part felt only gratitude. Typical.
The V'ornn searched for answers to everything—this is,
doubtless, what led the species to continue its long lonely quest
through the Cosmos. This is doubtless what drove the Gyrgon to
continue their mysterious experiments. Looking for the answers: who
are we, where did we come from, where are we going. It was said that
the Gyrgon lusted after immortality, that they wished for nothing
less grand than to be like the god, Enlil, they had rejected. Was it
the truth? No one knew. The Gyrgon were masters of secrecy,
subterfuge, misdirection. They were already demigods in their way,
powerful, manipulative, remote. Except for Nith Sahor. "And
where was Miina?" Riane asked with a teenager's directness. "Did
She see the Maker?" "She
slept," Giyan said with the simple power of faith. "And
when She woke, we were here, Her name already on our lips." She
would have continued. Her mouth was partly open, the next words about
to be released, when she felt a dreadful hammerblow of pain. With a
moan, she slid to her knees, hugging her arms close to her slender
waist. Riane knelt beside her, held her as tenderly as once Giyan had
held Annon when his young body had trembled with ague. At
that moment, a shadow fell between them, and they looked out the
window to see a crowned owl crossing before the full moon on huge
silent brindled wings. An omen, Giyan thought, her heart
constricting. Miina has sent us a sign. And
then it seemed as if the crowned owl had crashed through the window,
or perhaps it was the moonslight itself that had been transmogrified
to a solid column of energy. The books flew off the table, their
pages ruffling like the feathers of angry birds. Others exploded off
the shelves, great ranks rising in unison in response to the
disturbance. Riane
herself was flung backward, skidding across the floor, trying to
right herself, being shoved sideways by the unknown force. She
fetched up against a heavy ammonwood chair, which had crashed over
onto its side. A leg struck her rib cage painfully. She
saw Giyan, her back arched, her arms stretched upward, pulled as if
by invisible cords. Drafts of air, cold as death, circled the
Library, howling, so that when Riane tried to call out to Giyan her
voice was swept away. Riane's heart turned over. As she watched with
mounting horror, Giyan rose into the air. An
eerie glow was emanating from the chrysalides that covered Giyan's
hands and forearms. They were black no longer, but had begun to turn
an ash grey. As their color lightened, thin layers peeled off and,
like plates of armor, whirled around and around in the vortex. Upon
reaching the periphery, they were hurled like ice-white missiles,
slicing through books, furniture. They lodged in the fluted columns,
in the carved lintels above the doors, in the walls themselves. Riane
ducked as one passed centimeters from her head. It made a sinister
whistling sound as it spun away like the beveled blades of a fan. She
tried to stand and fell back in a heap. All the heat was being sucked
out of the Library. A chill entered her bones, sheathing them in
pearly frost, making of their marrow a dry white ash. Breath caught
in her lungs, painful as a sandstorm, as if the air itself were being
torn asunder, remade into something dark, dense with menace, wicked
as sin. At
last, the chrysalides had let go of Giyan, the sheaths had come off,
and her hands and forearms stood revealed, thick with sinuous red
veins and ropey yellow arteries, standing out in convolute profusion. Her
eyes were wide and staring, their blue turned an eerie opalescent
white, and in their center pinprick black pupils. Her mouth was drawn
back in the rictus normally associated with death. Through her long,
thickly flowing hair was now wound shards of a dark metallic
substance that at once cradled the back of her head, curling up into
corkscrewed points, a kind of thorned crown, living things that
shifted and shimmered in the lamplight, glimmered and glistened as
they wove themselves into a pattern of hideous design. The
moonlight, flooding through the rent window, was pale, insubstantial.
The dust motes held in its columns shivered. Riane felt herself
caught as if in a deep dream, her limbs felt like deadweights, her
thoughts slow as frozen sap. As in a nightmare, she felt both
terrified and helpless. She had the presence of mind to understand
that her very helplessness compounded the terror, and yet that
knowledge was of little use to her. Her mind was filled with an awful
martial drumbeat that foretold her losing Giyan once again. She did
not think that she could bear it. But
now there was no more time for thought. Giyan fixed her with her
bizarre and frightening white eyes and her left arm came down,
describing a shallow arc that brought her hand to point directly at
Riane. Riane could see in the center of each palm a corkscrewed spike
similar to the elements of the thorned crown piercing her flesh right
through, though there was no blood or even any semblance of a wound.
Rather, the spike seemed part of her, as, indeed, the crown seemed to
have grown from the bones of her skull. She
saw the vein-wrapped forefinger unfurl, the black nail, long and
gleaming, extending from it. Riane felt displaced, separated from the
world around her. Her Third Eye opened in response to the horror and
saw blood all around her, buckets of blood, cauldronsful, a veritable
ocean of blood, life draining away down an ancient stone drain
clogged with eons of blackened moss and decay, the slimy debris of
time. Here was a moment she would remember all her life, a moment
that would haunt her waking hours and stalk her dreams, Giyan is
dead, long live . . . What? What foul beast had the Lady become? As
best she could, she cast about for a counterspell to the sorcerous
transformation the chrysalides had worked on Giyan, but she knew so
few spells, and none of them seemed right. You are untrained. Even
with a power as great as yours you are at a grave disadvantage
against your enemies without the knowledge of the ancients, Mother
had told her. This is why you must exercise extreme caution. This
is why you must keep your identity hidden as much as you can until
your schooling in the sorcerous arts is compete. Oh,
yes, Mother was right. And so was Giyan. Her enemies had wasted no
time in mounting another attack. In desperation, she spoke the words
of the Old Tongue, conjuring Earth Granary, the most potent of Osoru
healing spells. At
almost the same instant, she heard the quick sizzle, as of frying
flesh. It made her skin crawl, her heart beat fast. And then all the
breath was knocked out of her as the sorcerous spell hit her dead on.
It was well that she had cast Earth Granary, for it afforded her a
measure of protection, the difference between life and death. She
flickered between consciousness and unconsciousness as she crawled
painfully across the Library floor, and she set all her reserves of
energy into redoubling the spell, holding it close around her, so
that it would
not fly apart in a thousands shreds, exposing her entirely to the
ferocious attack. And,
then, there it was, leaking from the suppurating ends of Giyan's
fingertips: the Tzelos, writhing in its noncorporeal state as the
thing that had been Giyan gave birth to the daemon from the Abyss. The
rotting cor-meat stink of the Tzelos assaulted her. It was black as
steaming pitch, its twelve-legged body segmented like an insect's,
its bloated thorax protected by a hard carapace. Its long flat ugly
head, brown-black, shiny as obsidian, was guarded by monstrous
serrated mandibles. Twelve faceted eyes, burning like garnets, fixed
on her. Riane
struggled to rise as the spell dissipated, drew her dagger, preparing
to defend herself. Giyan was moving, but Riane's attention was wholly
taken up with the advancing Tzelos. And then she saw something out of
the corner of her eye, a furry, six-limbed creature with triangular
ears, a long, striped, puffy tail, and dark, intelligent eyes.
Thigpen was Rappa. "Thigpen,
get back!" Riane cried. The
creature ignored her. Shaking off her dizziness, she grabbed an
upended lamp, hurled it in a sidearm motion. It struck the Tzelos and
passed right through it. An illusion, just like the one that had
appeared when she had mistakenly killed Mother. The Tzelos rushed at
her, and she instinctively steeled herself. "Ignore
it," Thigpen said. "Use your Third Eye to distinguish what
is real and what is not." Riane
felt a brief chill, like ice sliding down the back of her neck. Giyan
began to rise off the ground. Her arms were spread wide, her head
thrust slightly back, her jaw clenched and set. Employing the
sorcerous sight from her Third Eye, Riane detected another presence
inside Giyan. It coiled inside her like a gigantic serpent, spiraling
up her spine. With a sickening shock, Riane realized that it had
entered her brain. The presence was levitating her. Riane
watched, stunned, as Giyan, her long hair writhing like a nest of
bloodworms, flew toward the broken window and passed through it. "We
must not allow her to escape," Thigpen cried. "Something
has taken possession of her! I can feel it!" Riane said. "What
is happening?" "It
is Malasocca," Thigpen whispered. "It means 'Dark Night of
the Soul'. I do not know the way of it; I'm not sure anyone alive
does. But I understand this much: piece by piece, her spirit is being
replaced by that of a daemon. If we cannot stop her, if she heeds the
call, if she vanishes, she will be lost to us, Riane. Lost for all
time." Thigpen was scampering across the floor, ignoring the
shards of glass that stuck to the pads of her slender handlike paws.
"Worse, she will be replaced by our most implacable enemy." "How
do we stop that from happening?" "If
the host body is destroyed, the daemon is returned to the Abyss,"
Thigpen said. "I
will not kill her." "It
is the way of the Malasocca," Thigpen replied. "There
must be another way." "I
do not know of any. The daemon is still vulnerable now, but not for
much longer." "Still.
I will not harm her." Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching, a sure sign of her acute distress. "I
love Giyan as much as you do, Dar Sala-at, but terrible forces have
been unleashed. Before this is over, you may very well wish you had
killed her while you had the chance." Riane,
gaining the windowsill, balanced precariously for a moment, gathering
equilibrium and momentum before launching herself upward with
outstretched arms, grabbing Giyan around the ankles. Thigpen, just
behind her, shrieked a warning as she leapt to the ground. Giyan
glared down, her unholy eyes alight, and cold fire sprang from her
fingertips. Riane cried out and released her grip, falling two meters
into the sere grass just outside the shattered window. Above, the
pale fire traveled across her back until it reached the image of the
Tzelos. There, it seemed to be sucked up into the daemon's outline,
filling it out, causing it to pulse and glow. A nasty rustling arose,
as of an army of insects ominously on the march. The
Tzelos swiveled its flat triangular head. A kind of crusty substance
bubbled out of a series of palpitating apertures behind its faceted
eyes. Its wicked-looking mandibles clicked together. Riane could see
Rekkk and Eleana, weapons raised, approaching the daemon. But surely
it was the sight of Giyan so hideously transformed that caused the
look of consternation on their faces. "Lady—"
Eleana began before she choked on her words. "Giyan,
what the N'Luuura has befallen you?" Rekkk's face was white and
strained. "The
chrysalides have broken open," Riane said. "We
must help her." Thigpen regarded them each in turn with her dark
intelligent eyes. "Mercy, yes, we must help her now or all is
lost." Rekkk
leapt over the wreckage of the broken window. Fearless, Eleana was
just behind him. The Tzelos reared up on three sets of hind legs. Its
upper appendages lashed out, trailing glistening cilia behind them. A
wedge of mouth opened just as Rekkk swung his shock-sword and the
Tzelos vomited up a gout of a yellow sticky substance that clung to
the blades. The pitch of their vibration altered, causing a blow-back
pulse that sent a wave of agonizing pain up Rekkk's arm. Eleana
was following in his wake, her shock-sword drawn back. Riane could
see the tension in her arm, saw her concentrated completely on the
daemon, saw what she failed to see, Giyan's right arm sweeping
downward and, with it, a shower of crystalline sparks. A terrified
gimnopede, frightened out of its nest, launched upward. Caught in the
spiral band of the sparks, it turned black and rigid, plummeting like
a rock to the ground. The
spirals were almost at Eleana's height when Riane threw herself
forward. Eleana skittered, her booted foot slipping, and, as she
toppled over, the scythes of crystalline sparks passed centimeters
above her. Riane caught her, cradled her, aware in one
all-encompassing instant that Eleana's heat and warmth, her scent,
wound around her, binding her. Just
above where they lay, the air was sizzling, momentarily drained of
heat. Then Eleana, the entire world, dropped away down a well. Riane
felt the dislocation that came when she shed her corporeal body,
crossed over into Ayame, the deep trance-state of Osoru. In
Otherwhere, she confronted a horrible sight: the great bird Ras
Shamra, Giyan's sorcerous Avatar, was caged, its powerful wings
pinioned at its side. The image of the real Giyan was imprisoned by
some unknown wicked force. Ras Shamra saw her, uttered a
soul-shattering cry that shook the very foundations of the sorcerous
realm. When Riane tried to approach the cage, Ras Shamra became
frantic, shrieking over and over, throwing its body against the bars
until it bled in many places. "Stop!
Stop!" Riane cried. "I
only want to help you!" But
Ras Shamra would not stop. If anything, as Riane approached, the
Avatar become even more frantic. Riane
began the ritual for the Star of Evermore, the spell she had used to
free Mother, to try to break the bars of the sorcerous cage. But as
she did so, a shadow fell over Otherwhere. She looked up, the
incantation frozen in her throat. A great Eye was opening, the Eye of
Ajbal, and now she knew why Ras Shamra was shrieking. It was trying
to warn her. She knew she was no match for this powerful spell.
Indeed, it had once almost undone Giyan herself. "Don't
give up," she said to the image of Giyan. "I will
come back for you, no matter how long it takes," Giving
Ras Shamra one last look of longing, she abandoned Otherwhere, only
to hear Thigpen's sorrowful cry: "Gone." Eleana
and Rekkk turned at the hollow sound emanating from deep inside
Thigpen. The
Rappa was weeping, crystalline tears rolling freely down her furred
cheeks, dripping off her muzzle. "She's gone." And
they saw she was right. The daemon Tzelos had vanished into the night
sky and, with her, their beloved Giyan. 2 Rescendance
The
V'ornn regent's palace in Axis Tyr, once the Ramahan Middle Palace,
was a seething hive of activity. Lines of functionaries, ministers,
petitioners from all castes snaked through the long, columned,
light-strewn antechambers, overflowed the vast and magnificent public
rooms like surf at high tide. All were clamoring for a fragment of
the new regent's attention. Kurgan,
ignoring them, ignoring the duties of his office, went up a staircase
where he was sure to avoid being seen and walked quickly and silently
through his quarters. These private chambers were much changed. In
the days when Eleusis Ashera had ruled the space they exhibited the
sober orderliness of the career diplomat. Intimate groupings of
chairs where Eleusis met with ministers and brokered deals were
surrounded by mementos of a career built upon judicious compromise.
It was, at bedrock, a working residence. After Kurgan's father, Wennn
Stogggul, had Eleusis Ashera assassinated and briefly attained the
office of regent, he had employed a host of Mesagggun and Tuskugggun
to transform the residence. The result was a kind of opulence rarely
seen save among an elite cadre of Bashkir lords. Over his family's
protestations, Kurgan had immediately auctioned off his father's vast
collection of artwork, a deliberate act of cruelty and disrespect
that had pleased him immensely. Nowadays, the chambers had about them
the spare, masculine functionality of a Khagggun Line-General's
quarters. Racks of war trophies—weapons stripped from the alien
dead on far-flung battlefields light-years distant—hung upon
the walls in precisely aligned rows, gleaming with oil and wax,
cataloged, arrayed in alphabetical order. But
he often felt stifled here. Worse, bored and disgusted, surrounded as
he was by ministers, court Bashkir, aides, flunkies, and the like.
Having mastered the art of appearing busy while doing nothing at all,
they were worse than contemptible; they were deadly dull. He
discovered that they expended astonishing effort defending their tiny
slice of the fiefdom, to the ruination of those around them. They
were like wyr-hounds, sun-dazed by the dazzle of the regent's court.
They barked and bit each other mercilessly. These efforts had with an
alarming swiftness begun to emit the foul odor of inertia. And yet,
as Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin had pointed out, he was powerless to
dismiss them because of their intimate knowledge of the day-to-day
functioning of the regent's office, whose complexities were
staggering. As far as he could see, the weight of protocol kept the
functioning to the bare minimum. Quite un-V'ornnlike, in his opinion,
and it made him wonder whether this situation had been created by the
Gyrgon to keep the regent from making any changes at all. This stasis
he meant to crack wide open, whether or not the Gyrgon approved. Axis
Tyr was the center of life on Kundala. But in a way only he could
comprehend this was beside the point. Axis Tyr was a city tainted by
ignominious defeat, a place that in Kundalan lore had been holy and
now was desecrated by the V'ornn occupation. In fact, the V'ornn were
headquartered in the city's two most sacred structures. As regent, he
lived and worked here, the former Middle Palace, while the Gyrgon had
transformed the Abbey of Listening Bone into their Temple of
Mnemonics. Truth
to tell, what he liked best was to see for himself these
humiliations, to see these open wounds in the hollow-eyed stares of
the Kundalan who were allowed into the city. Their diminished status
enlarged him all the more. Due to V'ornn innovation and technology,
Axis Tyr was a humming metropolis beneath the sadness and despair.
Kundalan plots were everywhere—in fact, to Olnnn's dismay
Kurgan encouraged them. He could sense the desperation that
accompanied the formation of ragged cadres, misaligned alliances,
jury-rigged governments-in-exile. Snatches of seemingly innocent
conversations overheard down this alley or along the edge of that
plaza harbored secrets that made the air tremble like the rising of
heat currents. It was a game—ferreting out the collusion,
identifying the conspirators, apprehending them just when it appeared
to them that they were on the verge of success. Then he had the
pleasure of meting out the punishment for their transgressions. Beyond
the regent's quarters lay a vast labyrinth of rooms, corridors,
loggias largely unexplored since the time the Ramahan who had ruled
from this place were slaughtered. He walked through the chambers,
ornate in the fevered Kundalan style, whose purposes were long
forgotten. Now they were littered with goblets and plates, furry with
cobwebs and dust. Vestiges of unknown celebrations or rites. Through
skylights, oculi, open loggias were patinaed by the melancholy
autumnal light. Frescoes frowned down at him. Sculptures were
rendered irrelevant by the long occupation. Fueled by his hatred for
his father, he had spent a great deal of time and effort in the
meticulous planning of his ascension to the regency but none at all
in the contemplation of the office itself. How
hollow rang the silence in the aftermath of his victory! He had
burned to become regent. Aided by Olnnn Rydddlin, he had concocted an
intricate scheme whereby his father and his mentor, once allies, had
destroyed each other. But now that he had achieved his dream the
seemingly self-reproducing minutiae of running a planet were plowing
him under. How had Eleusis Ashera had the patience to deal with this
host of jabbering sycophants? No wonder his own father had been a
failure at it. He hated Eleusis all the more for excelling at
something for which he himself clearly lacked all aptitude. A
sickly-sweet odor was everywhere absorbed into the furniture, the
carpets, even, he was convinced, the marble-clad walls which, when he
came near, seemed to exude the must of death. Unable to bear the
weight of melancholy a moment longer, he stepped out onto an
unfamiliar balcony with braided porphyry columns and darkly gleaming
tile-work balustrade. Leaning over the edge, he looked out over the
city, the bright splashes of color, the insectlike droning from
crisscrossing hover-pods, the crunch of fallen leaves underfoot, the
skein of clogged streets rippling away in all directions, the bobbing
heads of passersby, the V'ornn gleaming bald and coppery, the
Kundalan with their hair, thick and loose, the babble of voices, the
smells of spices and oils and broiling meat and burning metal. A
young Kundalan female, laden with packages, passed below him. Her
long, lustrous hair hung down to her buttocks. She paused long enough
to switch her burden from one shoulder to the next. In the process,
her hip canted out, her hair swung from one shoulder blade to the
other and back. He felt a stirring in his tender parts. He had a
definite thing for Kundalan females of a certain type, the single
trait he had inherited from his father. V'ornn, who were utterly
hairless, often found the luxuriant growth on Kundalan females an
exotic and powerful aphrodisiac. Her face moved from shadow to light
and unbidden a memory surfaced of spying on just such a female when
he and Annon had been out hunting, the female he had taken by force,
the female he and Annon had almost come to blows over. He
and Annon had been best friends, sharing everything despite the
rivalry between their families. Or perhaps they had bonded so closely
because of that rivalry, because defiance ran strong in both
their bloodstreams. Up until that moment, he had considered Annon to
be more or less mild-mannered. The wild look in his eye that day was
something to behold. If was as if he had let his guard down and
showed a side of himself that Kurgan had never seen before. He
sighed, leaning on the balustrade, watching the Kundalan female
vanish in the current of the thronged street. Thinking of the female
and of Annon he was reminded of the life he had left behind and,
again, the melancholy welled up inside him. Times like these he
missed Annon with a fierceness he could not have imagined when Annon
had been alive. To be best friends with an Ashera was ironic in the
extreme. That friendship had vexed his father no end. He began to
smile, his melancholy lifting somewhat. Only he of all the Stogggul
siblings had provoked in his father that certain choleric look. And
Marethyn, of course, but that was different. She was Tuskugggun, a
female. He
heard his name being called, but he neither moved nor responded. He
waited for the Gyrgon Nith Batoxxx to approach him through the dimly
lighted rooms. Even with his back turned, he could feel the Gyrgon's
presence, the slow atomic crawl along the skin of his arms that would
have stirred his hair had he any to stir. He could see what the two
of them had in common. Besides their ambition and the agendas they
kept hidden from one another, they were conquerors in the center of
things living off the fruit of their conquest. All about them were
the remains of the Kundalan beasts who had fallen beneath the ion
sizzle of their shock-swords, and with the merest flick of their
hands they could cause this wounded mass to move this way or that, to
do or say anything that on a whim they might think of. Having
a Gyrgon around the palace had its benefits. For one thing, it made
those around him anxious; he fed off the slow shredding of their
nerves. For another, Gyrgon had about them the distinct aroma of
power, of secrets being carried just beneath the glittering alloy
skin of their exomatrices. It
was a great pity that he could not abide this particular Gyrgon, who,
in his disguise as the Old V'ornn, had been his teacher and mentor.
He had been forced to pledge himself to Nith Batoxxx, a noxious state
of affairs he detested and would not long tolerate. Now that he had
become regent his goal was to find the weakness in the Gyrgon
Comradeship and exploit it to gain access to the treasure trove of
new technology they created and zealously kept under lock and key.
They were all—V'ornn and Kundalan alike—under the
Gyrgon's ion-mailed thumb, and this hegemony he fervently wished to
overthrow. Not
that it would be easy. Not with this particular Gyrgon riding such
close herd on him. Nith Batoxxx in his guise as the Old V'ornn had
trained Kurgan to become regent. Why? And what else did this Gyrgon
want from him? It irked him to think that without the Gyrgon's help
and guidance he would be just another sixteen-year-old Bashkir scion,
learning how to run his family's Consortium. "You
cannot hide from me," Nith Batoxxx said from the edge of the
shadowed interior. "You know this very well." Light spun
off the black alloy of his exomatrix. Protected within it, he looked
vaguely insectoid. "And yet here you are, alone." His
mailed hand moved along the wall, a constant threat. "Shirking
your office." He
was unlike any other Gyrgon in the Comradeship, Kurgan at least knew
that much. Though what precisely made him different was a perplexing
mystery. His
long gaunt face was a pale amber. A complex spiderweb of ter-tium and
germanium circuitry ran across the taut skin starting from the crown
of his skull down the back and along the sides of his neck. Ruby
pupils studded obsidian-black eyes. At the point of each cheekbone
was implanted a tertium neural-net stud that pulsed to the beating of
his hearts. "What
is it you want of me?" Kurgan said curtly. In
two long strides, the Gyrgon closed the space between them. With a
lazy, almost contemptuous gesture, the tip of his mailed forefinger
touched Kurgan on his breastbone. Kurgan fell to his knees, his legs
turned to water. But even in his pain he would not cry out; the Old
V'ornn had trained him better than that. "It
is not for you, not for any V'ornn, to ask questions of me, Stogggul
Kurgan." Nith
Batoxxx towered over him. Kurgan had the good sense not to move,
not even to look up. A crackling of hyperexcited ions had commenced,
bringing with it the unmistakable whiff of death. Nith Batoxxx held
his hand just above Kurgan's bent head. "You
believe you can get the better of me. A bitter misapprehension, you
will find." The Gyrgon said this softly, his voice drifting, it
seemed, on the burnished late-afternoon sunshine. "You have the
arrogance of youth. You are fearless. You can outwit a Gyrgon. This
is what you believe." Staring
down, Kurgan could only see the Gyrgon's tertiurn-studded boots. A
vertical row of glittering black metallic talons marched up the
center of each boot. He felt his hearts beating fast. As always, he
paid very close attention not only to what Nith Batoxxx was saying
but also how he said it. "Fear
is my currency, Stogggul Kurgan. Never forget that. I can sniff out
the fear in even the staunchest spirit." Of a sudden, Nith
Batoxxx knelt and, with his forefinger beneath Kurgan's chin, lifted
his head. There was no pain this time at the contact. The ion fire
sizzled, quiescent for the moment. "The truth is you hold your
fear close inside you where no one can see. But I will get it out of
you." No
one knows me, Kurgan thought. But Annon had, reluctant though he
was to admit this.
"Your
only danger, Stogggul Kurgan, will come from forgetting that I know
you." He
put his long, lupine face so close to Kurgan's that Kurgan could
smell the mingled scent of clove oil and burnt musk corning off him
in waves. It was so strong it made him momentarily dizzy. "That
night in the caverns, the night of the Ring of Five Dragons, did you
come across the Dar Sala-at? This is what I need to know." Nith
Batoxxx's voice had changed slightly, darkening in timbre and seeming
disconnected from his body. "No,"
Kurgan replied, carefully monitoring this change. "That
is a very great pity. I know the Dar Sala-at exists," Nith
Batoxxx continued in this same eerie voice. "He was there that
night, lured by the promise of the Ring. I could feel his power; he
engaged Malistra in sorcerous battle. But you tell me you never saw
him." "That's
right." "Even
though I sent you to find him." "It
was chaos down there. Rekkk Hacilar was hiding in Haaar-kyut armor.
He was causing havoc everywhere. I was diverted." "It
is imperative that I know the Dar Sala-at's identity, do you
understand me?" "Not
in the least." The lies in among the truth had sprung
surprisingly easily to his lips. He had, indeed, met the Dar Sala-at
that night in the caverns below the regent's palace. To his
consternation the Dar Sala-at was a young female. He did not know her
name, but he was absolutely certain that he could pick her out of a
crowd at fifty meters. This was his secret, hoarded for a time when
its use would be of most value to him. He would never tell Nith
Batoxxx, nor anyone else until it served his purpose. "The
Dar Sala-at is one of the few who is destined to know the location of
the seven Portals." "What
are they?" "You
simply cannot manage not to ask questions, can you?" Nith
Batoxxx looked at him out of glittering eyes. "The Portals are
important because they lead to ... a land of riches." Why
had the Gyrgon hesitated? Kurgan asked himself. Was he lying? And, if
so, why? "I
know the location of three of them, but not the other four." "Why
do you need to know the location of all seven?" Nith
Batoxxx threw him an evil smile. "None can be fully opened
unless all are opened simultaneously. This is a fiendishly difficult
process. The first step is to locate all seven Portals. Then we will
move on to the next stage of our assault." "I
noticed you said our." The
Gyrgon abruptly rose and strode to the balustrade. The silence
stretched to a kind of breaking point, forcing Kurgan to turn and
look. It seemed to him—and not for the first time—that
Nith Batoxxx's posture had altered subtly from his normal very erect
carriage. Was it his imagination, or were the Gyrgon's shoulders
twisted slightly, one higher than the other? He rose and obediently
followed Nith Batoxxx outside. "This
is why I have named you regent, Stogggul Kurgan. You are of such
tender years to rule Kundala, but if I am any judge, you are the
right one to rule." "These
Portals—" "All
you need know is that whoever brings me their location will be
handsomely rewarded. Pray that it is you, Stogggul Kurgan." Kurgan
said nothing. He felt somehow as if he and the Gyrgon were doing a
balancing act on a high wire in the dark. One false step, one word
spoken out of place and he would fall into utter blackness. Nith
Batoxxx's gloved hand gripped the balustrade. "Hear me now,
Stogggul Kurgan. I wish the construction of Za Hara-at to resume.
This you will order posthaste. You will resurrect from its tomb the
ancient city of the Korrush." The
voice sent a small shiver down Kurgan's spine. "Yes,
Nith Batoxxx." He knew when to acquiesce. Was there something
here for him, a long-buried secret, a glimmer of the lever by which
he would unlock the mysteries of the technomages' power? "Cement
your business relationship with SaTrryn Sornnn." "I
know he is the other major partner in the proposed construction,"
Kurgan said. "I know that my father agreed to move Bronnn Pallln
aside, the leading candidate for Prime Factor, in order to name this
young scion of the SaTrryn Consortium to this important office."
He liked the initiative Sornnn SaTrryn had taken, liked that he
hadn't been intimidated by the powerful Pallln Consortium. But what
he liked best of all about Sornnn SaTrryn was ambition, a trait he
could relate to without reservation. His own ambition was, after all,
what had impelled him into an alliance with Olnnn Rydddlin. "Other
than that I know very little about him." "He
is on familiar terms with the Korrush," Nith Batoxxx went on in
his eerily disembodied voice. "He has been to Za Hara-at many
times. These are vital assets." To
me or to you? Kurgan wondered. To the Gyrgon, he said, "May
I ask why you have changed your mind? Up until now you have been the
most vehement opponent of Za Hara-at being rebuilt." "That
was because of Ashera Eleusis." Nith Batoxxx's voice abruptly
snapped back to normal. He turned to impale Kurgan's with his lambent
crimson stare. "Ashera Eleusis was a dangerous heretic. He
wished for an equality between V'ornn and Kundalan. That is why he is
dead." Why
was Eleusis Ashera dangerous? Kurgan asked himself. How could
any V'ornn be dangerous to a Gyrgon? Then something clicked
inside his head. "It was not my father who engineered the coup
that felled Eleusis Ashera. You did." "I
manipulated your father," Nith Batoxxx said. "Does that
come as a surprise to you?" "Not
really, no. My father was weak-willed." "Unlike
you." Was
he being ironic? Kurgan wondered. Behind his back, his fist clenched
white and trembling. "Go
now," Nith Batoxxx said with a dismissive gesture. "There
is much for you to accomplish before darkness falls and the
Rescendance begins." What
would you have me say, regent?" "First," Kurgan said,
"get down on your knees." He
saw the brief flare in Jerrlyn's eyes before he acquiesced. He looked
over the top of the bowed back of the Kundalan to scan the crowds
lining the great hall. They were packed in between the immense
gold-jade and green-porphyry columns. The columns were fluted. Their
capitals were carved into the faces of fantastic creatures. Jerrlyn
was the head of the Fourth Agrarian Commune District. As such, he was
a highly respected Kundalan among his race. This, of course, meant
little to Kurgan other than arousing his curiosity as to just how
deeply involved Jerrlyn was in the Resistance. "Now,"
he nodded, "you may continue." "What
would you have me tell you?" Jerrlyn began again. "There
have been thirteen deaths among my Commune this month alone. Last
month there were only five. Have we displeased you in some way,
regent?" Kurgan
sat forward. "Are you implying that I am in any way responsible
for these deaths?" "Not
at all," Jerrlyn said hastily. "But the deaths are all
unexplained, all from unnatural causes. It does seem likely that they
were perpetrated by the Khagggun." "What
proof have you of this allegation?" "My
Commune is in terror." "You
have no proof. Just as likely the individuals were killed by your own
Resistance forces. These extremists view you as collaborators." "We
have discovered ion-fire wounds on many of the dead." "All
the more reason to suspect your own Resistance. There has been over
the past year an escalation in the theft of Khagggun weaponry from
secured depots in and around the city." He smiled. "To
date, we have not apprehended the perpetrators, but your pleas give
me an idea. If
you would be so cooperative as to supply the names of those involved
in the thievery, I would speak to my Star-Admiral. I am certain that
I could convince him to guarantee the safety of your Commune." "Then
we would be collaborators." Kurgan
sighed as he sat back. "Jerrlyn, I grow weary of your whining. I
have given you a solution to your problem." "An
unacceptable solution! I am the leader of the largest Commune on the
north continent. We supply you with seventy percent of your
foodstuffs." "I
know full well the percentages harvested from each of the seven
Communes, Jerrlyn. After all, it is we V'ornn who carved up the
territories and created the Commune system. It is so much more
efficient than the helter-skelter structure you had in place. Each
Commune has now tripled its output since inception. An impressive
advance, even you must admit." "Yes,
but the bulk of the increase goes to feed the V'ornn populace,
leaving us less than we had before. And then there is the matter of
our tithes—" "Ah,
the tithes you pay us. Now we come to the heart of the matter." "Your
father increased the tithes just before he died. They are killing
us." "No,"
Kurgan corrected. "As I have pointed out, your own Resistance is
killing you. Do what I ask and in addition to keeping your Commune
safe I will consider rolling back the tithes." Jerrlyn
shook his head. "Even if I did know, I would not betray—" Kurgan
jumped up. "Then the tithes are doubled." "What?"
Jerrlyn was aghast. "Regent, I beg you—!" "This
outcome is a direct result of your own truculence. Do you think you
are playing with an ill-informed dolt? I am nothing like my father.
We shall now see what breaks your back. Do not return here with your
piteous plaints until you are prepared to meet my terms." At
the imperious wave of his hand, a pair of Haaar-kyut detached
themselves from their positions and took Jerrlyn away. As
soon as the Kundalan had been hauled from his sight, he gestured to
the Star-Admiral to come to his side. Olnnn Rydddlin was tall and
thin to the point of emaciation, with an unnaturally pale, pinched
face, whose occasional baleful smile turned his eyes into fusion
lamps. His formidable countenance was embraced by those who served
under him, but there were many Bashkir who distrusted a V'ornn marked
by Kundalan sorcery. Never mind that he was a brave warrior, had
sacrificed his leg in single-minded pursuit of their enemies, Rekkk
Hacilar and his Kundalan skcettta, Giyan. It was Giyan whose
loathsome spell had stripped the skin, flesh, and sinew from that
leg, leaving only bare bones. It was another Kundalan sorceress,
Malistra, who had saved him. Now the Star-Admiral kept that leg
unarmored. Through sheer force of will he had transformed the
ensorceled bones from a source of embarrassment into his hallmark, a
symbol of his bravery. And so the rank-and-file Khagggun loved him,
this strange, ambitious, deeply bitter Khagggun not many years
Kurgan's elder. But what of the high command, those upper-echelon
generals and admirals far older and more experienced than he? How
could they not hate him and envy him at least a little for his
breathtakingly swift advancement over them? Kurgan had determined to
keep a close eye on the Star-Admiral. Olnnn Rydddlin was the only
other V'ornn who knew that he had plotted his own father's demise. To
ensure that remained a secret he would kill even an ally because he
knew better than most V'ornn the bitter choices ambition forced upon
you. To
win is everything, the Old V'ornn had taught him. To win at
everything is to be alone. For
the moment, then, he would treat Olnnn Rydddlin as a trusted
compatriot, so that when the time came, before his power could become
a threat, he could slip a knife between his ribs. Toward that end, he
had already formulated a plan that fit in with his overall scheme to
find some form of leverage he could use against the Gyrgon. What did
the Gyrgon prize most? Stasis. It followed, then, that what they
feared most was change, change from within. If that happened and if
he could present them with a solution, he would have his leverage
with them. "It
seems that you have been quite effective in terrorizing this
Commune," he said with just the right amount of praise in his
voice. "Those
were your orders, regent," Olnnn Rydddlin replied. "I
am simply following one of the basic precepts of armed occupation,
Star-Admiral. One that I have no doubt is familiar to you. Namely,
keeping the populace in a constant state of terror ensures that they
cannot think, plan, or organize competently. Perpetual disorientation
is the order of the day for these Kundalan." "Absolutely,
regent. This is one of the reasons their Resistance is virtually
ineffective. You cannot have a properly functioning military without
support from a viable political system. The adults are too busy
wondering who the next victim will be to produce a leader with real
vision, and because we have ensured that their children are
systematically losing touch with their religion and their past,
because we have left them with nothing, they have lost the ability to
fight for what is theirs." Kurgan,
seeing the self-satisfied expression on Olnnn Rydddlin's face,
immediately felt an urge to wipe it off. "What
good is all that when these thefts continue?" he said shortly.
"Disturbing enough that you are losing ion cannons to the
Kundalan Resistance but your inability to apprehend the criminals is
undermining our air of invincibility." Olnnn
Rydddlin stiffened at the rebuke. "Regent, I have studied the
reports of these thefts at length and have come to the inescapable
conclusion that the Kundalan Resistance is being aided by a V'ornn
traitor. There is simply no other plausible explanation for the
continued success of these thefts. On their own, the Kundalan are
incapable of circumventing the increasing levels of security
Line-General Lokck Werrrent and I have put in place." "We
are both but newly placed in high office," Kurgan said. "We
need to show the Gyrgon that he was correct in putting his faith in
us. We need results, not excuses." "Yes,
regent." Kurgan
rose from the regent's chair, beckoned Olnnn to come closer still.
"There is a matter about which you must be informed," he
said softly. He knew he had to word this in just the right way. "The
Gyrgon Comradeship has been closely monitoring the embedding of
okum-mmon in Khagggun, due them on their ascendance to Great Caste
status and, to be honest, they are troubled." "What
by, regent?" "There
appears to be a greater degree of difficulty among your caste in
adjusting to the implant." This was an outright lie, part of his
plan to keep the Khagggun—and especially Olnnn Rydddlin
himself—from gaming too much power. "I
confess that I had not heard this, regent." "Of
course not. It is Comradeship business." "But
it directly affects us!" Olnnn said. "That
is why you must trust in the wisdom of the Comradeship,
Star-Admiral," he went on soothingly. "Of course they have
your best interests at hearts. All officers of the rank of General
and higher have already received the okummmon. That being the case,
the Comradeship has decided to suspend further implantation. But the
Gyrgon assure me that will be only until they can assess the
ramifications of the period of adjustment." "This
sounds suspiciously like discrimination to me." "Keep
your voice down." The conversation was not going the way Kurgan
had planned it. He had meant for Olnnn Rydddlin to believe he was
being taken into the regent's confidence. Instead, he had become
defensive. "Star-Admiral, there is Nith Batoxxx not ten paces
away," Kurgan said with what he felt was just the right amount
of persuasion. "If he even suspected that I had confided this to
you, I guarantee you he would be thoroughly displeased." "You
do not subscribe to this point of view, regent, do you?" Olnnn
said, somewhat alarmed. "Certainly
not," Kurgan lied. "Have you forgotten that it was I who
sponsored you as my Star-Admiral? Rest assured that at the
Summon-ings I am your greatest advocate. But even I cannot gainsay
the Comradeship. And besides, according to the Genomatekks at
Receiving Spirit, there is cause for concern. You would not want to
put your Khagggun in any precipitate danger, would you?" "I
will be candid, regent. I do not like this sudden turn of events." "Nor
do I, my friend. I counsel you to be patient. Their concern will
pass; I myself will see to it. In any event, one thing you must
learn. It never pays to second-guess the Gyrgon." The
Ancestor Tent was huge, covering one square hectare in the center of
Axis Tyr. It was made of a neural-net monofilament the color of dried
V'ornn blood, indigo, the color of mourning. Inside, at its center,
on a draped tertium podium, floating in a stasis field of
hyper-excited ions, were the two hearts—one large, one small—of
the dead regent, Wennn Stogggul. Before that, the body had been
prepared by a sect of Genomatekks known as Deirus. By Gyrgon decree,
the dead regent lay in state in the forecourt of the regent's palace
so that all V'ornn could pay their respect. The mourning period
lasted six weeks, after which the preparations for the Rescendance
could begin. Tonight, nine weeks after his death, the hearts of Wennn
Stogggul would be transmuted in the rite of Rescendance. All
around the perimeter of the tent—in the light of many fusion
lamps—the new regent's Haaar-kyut, his personal bodyguards clad
in horned battle armor, ranged at regular intervals. They scrutinized
the somber crowds with a restless energy, an inbred contempt, as if
wishing for some unexplained or unruly behavior so they could tear
someone limb from limb. As Sornnn SaTrryn watched, he was reminded of
the lymmnals, the furred, six-legged animals used as guards by the
tribes of the Korrush, the Great Northern Plain of Kundala's north
continent. The lymmnals were pulled prematurely from their mother's
teats, fed warm blood until their lust for it was all-consuming, and
then were half-starved. They were trained as attack animals. As such,
they were fiercely loyal, and when they were loosed their aggression
was complete, terrible to behold. Like the lymmnals, these
Haaar-kyut, in their distinctive purple armor, were edgy, itching for
combat. "Ten
days I have been at this," one Haaar-Kyut whispered to another. "Bashkir
custom," said the other out of the side of his mouth. "We
performed the rite of Rescendance on Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha
within an hour of his death." "We
Khagggun have no time to waste on prolonged mourning rituals,"
the first one rejoined. "We
live for battle," acknowledged the second. "But all we are
given is this." Sornnn
SaTrryn, smiling, continued past more Khagggun arrogantly shouldering
their way through the throng. Their sudden proliferation, like
poisonous mushrooms after a prolonged rain, was an evil sign, one of
many he had observed as he had made his way into the capital city. He
entered the tent now, wearing his wariness like a mantle of subdued
sorrow and respect, and made his way toward the new regent. Kurgan
was standing near the baein, the hearts receptacle. Sornnn was
somewhat taken aback to see a particularly sinister-looking Gyrgon
standing not too far away. There was a zone of emptiness around the
Gyrgon. He was being given a wide berth even by the Haaar-kyut, who
averted their gazes, glaring even more darkly at the assembled
mourners the better to cover their fear. Every V'ornn, it seemed,
whether Great Caste or Lesser Caste, was frightened of the Gyrgon. They
were V'ornn of another hue—reclusive technomages who spent
their time in their vast laboratories trying to unlock the mysteries
of the Cosmos. All V'ornn technology flowed from them. They guarded
their discoveries with a zeal that bordered on obsession, and they
were the sole pipeline, feeding the new technologies to the others
only when and where they saw fit. Though the regent ruled Kundala, he
served at the pleasure of the Gyrgon. He, like every other Great
Caste V'ornn, had an okummmon, a quasi-organic neural net designed by
the Gyrgon, implanted into the inside of his left forearm. Using the
okummmon, the Gyrgon would periodically Summon the regent to their
presence, there to feed him his own worst fears, the better to bend
him to their will, there to order him to carry out their edicts,
continuing their rule by proxy. Sornnn
lifted a slender goblet of fire-grade numaaadis from the tray of a
passing Mesagggun and slowly sipped it, using the gesture to cover
his scrutiny of the new players with whom he was sharing this fresh
playing field. Kurgan Stogggul, scion of the powerful but troubled
Stogggul Consortium, took up most of his attention. He was no more
than a child, and yet he had with breathtaking swiftness ascended to
a heady office. There were among the ranks of Bashkir those who were
prone to dismiss the new regent as a temporary aberration who would
sooner rather than later be swept away on the tide of history. Seeing
him now, Sornnn disagreed. There were arrogance and ambition in
abundance here, no doubt of that, but in the sharp, angular features
Sornnn recognized a keen intelligence. Besides, he could not have
been named regent without the consent of the Gyrgon. Obviously, they
saw in him something the Bashkir naysayers did not. As
he continued to approach the new regent, he observed that the
Gyrgon's black eyes had pupils the color of rubies. They met his for
a moment, then passed on. He felt a chill sweep through him, as if he
had been stripped not only of his robes but his skin and flesh as
well. With an inward shudder, he turned his attention back to the
young regent. In truth, he had been preparing himself for this
encounter for some time, hoping, on the one hand, that this day would
not come for many years, suspecting, on the other hand, that it would
come sooner than anyone imagined. As a direct consequence of his
foresight, he had spent weeks analyzing the intelligence his
Consortium had compiled on Kurgan. He had known almost instantly that
he would have a far more difficult time with the son than he had with
the father. It could not be helped. Koura, as they said in the
Korrush. It is written. Kurgan
saw Sornnn SaTrryn when he was still a few meters away. Sornnn
SaTrryn was tall, lean, with a vaguely dangerous air. He had pale
blue eyes that, like all the SaTrryn, were almost almond in shape,
and the agile, long-fingered hands of a professional conjurer. Kurgan
saw with ill-concealed distaste that he was wearing a wide-striped
robe of the kind worn by the tribes of the Korrush. The bright colors
were dull with the dust of hard travel. "Forgive
my appearance on the night of your father's Rescendance, Kurgan
Stogggul," Sornnn said in his deep, commanding voice. "As
you can plainly see, I hastened here directly from the Korrush so
that I could pay my respects." He appeared to have absorbed the
absolute stillness of the wild and primitive Korrush tribes from whom
his Consortium bought the spices they sold. Kurgan
inclined his head, his night-black eyes ever avid, ever watchful, a
pair of midnight pillagers. He was dressed in a formal robe of
deepest indigo. He disliked the color, was uncomfortable wearing it
now. He burned to don the regent's royal purple. "At a time like
this, it is good to have my Prime Factor close at hand once more." "I
have heard that Wennn Stogggul's death was sudden and tragic,"
Sornnn SaTrryn said, breaking into Kurgan's thoughts. "You and I
have something in common, regent." "Indeed.
Your own father died some months ago, yes?" Sornnn
inclined his head in sad assent. Kurgan
glanced fleetingly to his left, saw Star-Admiral Olnnn Ry-dddlin
sizing up the young Prime Factor, compiling a mental list as one does
with an enemy, trying to divine his strengths and his weaknesses. He
turned back and to cover his brief inattention signed to one of the
nearby servants to bring them drinks. They were delivered a moment
later on a chased-copper tray. Sornnn SaTrryn exchanged his empty
goblet for a full one. When the Soul Departure Toast had been gravely
made, the fire-grade numaaadis consumed, Kurgan asked, "Where in
the Korrush have your travels taken you?" "I
was for the past weeks in the area of Okkamchire." "Those
names sound alike to me," he said. "By all reports the
Korrush is a primitive place, so I hear. Dust, kuomeshal dung. An
altogether unpleasant way, it seems to me, to make a living." "Exquisitely
woven rugs, a drink that makes even fire-grade numaaadis taste like
water." Sornnn SaTrryn's smile was gentle, disarming. "An
enchanting village of tents that moves about at the will of the
chieftain, or on a whim of the weather." He paused. "Then,
again, the spice trade has proved enormously lucrative." Kurgan
grinned, on firm ground again. "Well worth the buzz of
bloodflies and the stink of kuomeshal dung, I imagine." "Absolutely,
regent." "Well,
then, I daresay I won't admonish you for spending so much time there.
On the other hand . . ." He paused, having seen his sister
Marethyn making her way through the throng. She was certain to make a
scene as she had done on the day of his father's death; it remained
only to discover what sort of scene. "Yes,
regent," Sornnn SaTrryn said expectantly. "On the other
hand?" Kurgan
returned his attention to his Prime Factor. "On the other hand,
it is my wish to resurrect Eleusis Ashera's plan to rebuild Za
Hara-at." Sornnn's
smile was a kilometer wide. "Why this is magnificent news,
regent! Truly magnificent!" "The
ruins are currently being excavated, are they not?" "Yes.
For years now, the Beyy Das, one of the Five Tribes of the Korrush,
have been carefully unearthing the bones of the ancient city. But the
work is both difficult and dangerous. There have been a number of
cave-ins because of old silicate mines that were buried for centuries
as well as devastating raids by the Jeni Cerii, a rival tribe." "I
shall have to assign a detachment of Khagggun to stand guard over our
Mesagggun." "That
might be wise, regent," Sornnn SaTrryn said. "But I would
caution them to keep well away from the site itself, as it is a holy
place." "Only
for the primitives of the Korrush. But in these matters I understand
you are the expert, so I shall heed your advice." He nodded.
"Excellent, Sornnn SaTrryn. I am pleased that we have begun on
such a productive note." "It
is my hope that you will allow me to accompany you on your first trip
to the Korrush." "But
I have no such trek planned." "The
SaTrryn are partners with the Stogggul Consortium in the building of
Za Hara-at, the so-called City of One Million Jewels. I think it
would be wise for the regent to make a tour of the site." Kurgan
considered for a moment. "Well, one thing is clear, you were
taught well how to speak." He showed his teeth. "Very well.
I will leave it to you to make all the arrangements. But for now,
Prime Factor, I must excuse myself. The Rescendance will begin
shortly, and I must prepare myself." "Of
course. Thank you for this interview, regent. Again, my respects to
you and to your late father." "As
you have said, you came quickly and from a distance. I will not soon
forget your loyalty." With
a nod, Sornnn SaTrryn bade the regent a formal farewell, and was gone
in a swirl of Korrush-woven fabric. Kurgan
stood looking after him for a moment or two, lost in contemplation.
Olnnn Rydddlin, finished with the last-minute instructions to the
Haaar-kyut guards, crossed the tent to stand beside him. "What
news of the fugitives we seek?" "We
are closing in, regent." "Careful,
Star-Admiral. We have been down this road before" "This
time is different." Kurgan's
eyes cut to Olnnn Rydddlin's face, a book with so many hidden
passages, an ally and a danger. "Then shortly they shall be in
custody, is that correct, Star-Admiral?" Olnnn
inclined his head. Marethyn
Stogggul waited until she saw the Star-Admiral take his leave of her
brother before she attempted to approach him. She was a tall, willowy
Tuskugggun with a beautiful, regal face, intelligent, wide-apart
eyes, and sensual lips. Whether she was aware of it or not, she
possessed some of Kurgan's swagger, unusual in a V'ornn female. Hers
was the kind of body that V'ornn males dreamed of, yet in her dress
and her movements she was wholly unself-conscious about her
attractiveness. She
had been standing with all the other females, in a roped-off section
of the tent beyond whose periphery they were enjoined from roaming.
By now, she had had her fill of small talk and gossip, discussions of
the relative tensile strength of tertium versus tritanium, the warp
and weft of textiles. From across the rope barrier she caught
snippets of male conversations that had at their root the angling for
deals, the ferreting out of negotiating weaknesses, business
rivalries, grudges, envy, ambition. The stuff of life! She
put a smile on her face even though she was dreading this encounter.
As a Tuskugggun who believed, quite heretically, that her gender
should be the equal of males, she held no especial feeling for the
male members of her family who, because of her views, were prone to
give her even shorter shrift than her sister or her mother. She had
learned early in life how to be independent. Unlike her ambitious
brother, Kurgan, and her spoiled sister, Oratttony, she did not trade
on the reputation or power of the Stogggul Consortium, even after her
father had become regent. Wennn Stogggul had despised her, and she
had seen no reason not to return the emotion. In fact, it had given
her no small pleasure to be openly contemptuous of him, to berate him
for all but abandoning his firstborn son, Terrettt, to the suspect
therapies dispensed by cold and strange Deirus at Receiving Spirit.
She alone, of all the family, visited Terrettt in his awful sterile
quarters among the lunatics, and she went without fail three times a
week. How many times had she begged her mother, cajoled her, then
tongue-lashed her for cruelty. "He
is your son!" Marethyn had shouted at her mother. "I
have never thought of him that way," her mother had said in a
voice drained of emotion. "And I never will." Shaken,
Marethyn had said, "Then I am no longer your daughter." Somewhere
inside Terrettt's skewed brain, she knew, he was grateful for each
visit, even though he rarely expressed it. He acted differently when
she was with him, she didn't need Deirus to tell her that, though
they often did. As
Kurgan turned toward her, she was acutely aware of her mother, of
Oratttony and her brood, the other females of the family obediently
standing behind the indigo silken cord, removed from the place of
honor where only the Stogggul males were allowed. For all Oratttony's
sharp tongue she lacked the courage to emerge from the pen to which
tradition had unfairly consigned her, but her eyes grew dark and
turbulent at the sight of Marethyn doing just that. "Are
you mad?" Kurgan said into her face. Those
were the first words her brother had uttered to her since the day of
their father's death. "I
bring Terrettt's good wishes to you, as well as his regrets at not
being able to attend the Rescendance." A
twisted smile flared across Kurgan's face for a moment before dying
out. "You are mad, sister. My brother is capable
only of drooling out of the side of his mouth. Anything more
difficult would likely split his head asunder." "I
knew it." Though she had promised herself she would remain calm,
her rage overcame her. "You deliberately blocked my attempts to
bring him here." "Of
course I did. I could not have him embarrassing the entire family in
front of all of Axis Tyr." "He
is your brother, the firstborn son. Wennn Stogggul was his father,
too. He has a right—" "Let
me tell you something," Kurgan hissed. "My brother has
as much right to be here today as you do confronting me like
this. He is a dangerous mad V'ornn and nothing more. I am my father's
only true heir, never forget that." He glared at her as if
daring her to gainsay him. "If you do not leave this instant, I
will order my Haaar-kyut to escort you to your proper place behind
the—" "And
embarrass the Consortium in front of all of Axis Tyr? I think not."
She lifted her hands against the gathering darkness of his
expression. "Keep your animals to their tight leash. I have said
all that I came to say." He
stiffened his spine. "And had it fall on deaf ears." She
inclined her head. "As always, brother." Her eyes were cold
as the jagged tips of the Djenn Marre. "You do not disappoint
me." In
urgent need of flexing his sorcerous leg, Star-Admiral Olnnn
Ry-dddlin stalked in a scimitar-shaped arc through V'omn decked out
in their best finery. All castes showed their grief in the
appropriate manner: Khagggun had replaced the left arm of their
battle armor with one of an indigo color; the Bashkir wore wide
indigo sashes, Mesagggun had painted their faces indigo; Genomatekks
and Deirus wore indigo bands around their skulls; Tuskugggun,
cordoned off to their own sections to either side, wore indigo
sifeyn. Olnnn
ate little, slept even less. And when he did finally drift off, his
dreams were rife with eerie and disturbing images, harsh cries and
insistent murmurings that jolted him awake, sweating, his hearts
thundering in his chest. He was never without pain in his leg,
needles in his marrow, a shocking sensation to a V'ornn inured to
most pain. And when it didn't pain him it was stiff. Keeping still
is a liability. This Khagggun saying had become quite literal for
him. The
Haaar-kyut he passed bowed to him as they sought his approval. It was
more than they had done for Kinnnus Morcha, the previous
Star-Admiral. As he moved in his rather awkward gait, he kept the
regent as the fulcrum of his arc. He meant to give the impression of
wanting to get a better sense of those who had power, longed for
power, would never have the power and thus were envious of those who
did. But, in fact, he was searching for Line-General Lokck Werrrent. Olnnn
was a Khagggun born of parents he hardly knew, the youngest of four
brothers, all of whom, it often seemed, lived to humiliate him, a
self-made officer unlike so many of his acquaintance who had traded
on their family name. He had no family name; no family at all,
abandoned by brothers both alive and dead. Alone in the world, he had
grown strong of his own accord. As a child, his life had promised
nothing; now he had almost everything he had ever dreamed of,
everything others who had assumed themselves his better desired and,
now that he was here at the pinnacle, would never have. And
yet he was on edge. In the short time since Kurgan had become regent
Olnnn had noticed a certain tension arising between them. The regent
asked unreasonable things of him, and when he failed to achieve them,
blamed him. Then there was the matter of the baffling thefts from
Khagggun storehouses. Despite the regent's opinions, Olnnn was
convinced that the SaTrryn Consortium was behind the collaboration.
They had a history of alliances with the Korrush tribes.
Consequently, it was possible to suspect that Sornnn SaTrryn had
"gone native." On the other hand, the regent clearly liked
Sornnn SaTrryn, so Olnnn knew that he had to tread lightly or not at
all. That meant somehow discrediting Sornnn SaTrryn without
implicating himself in any way. He needed plausible deniability, and
for this he required a stalking-horse. "Star-Admiral." He
turned to see the face of Bronnn Pallln, round as a Kundalan moon,
glistening with a faint sheen of sweat. "I have been here four
hours, long before most Bashkir, and I still have not been able to
gain an audience with Kurgan Stogggul." "The
official mourning period is not yet over, Bronnn Pallln," Olnnn
said, craning his neck for a glimpse of Line-General Lokck Werrrent.
"And he is preoccupied with the vicissitudes of his office." "His
father and my father were—" "I
think it would be best to put off any audiences for the time being." "I
have been patient for nine long weeks, should that not count for
something?" Bronnn Pallln whined. "I was hoping that I
could at last show Kurgan Stogggul what a mistake his father made in
naming Sornnn SaTrryn as Prime Factor over me." All
at once, the conversation was of extreme interest to Olnnn. It was as
if his wish to find a stalking-horse had been heard and granted by
some mysterious force. One more reason to keep this Bashkir from
talking to the regent. "On the eve of Wennn Stogggul's
Rescendance I hardly think it prudent to tell the regent that his
father made a mistake, do you?" "Possibly
not. But by rights the office of Prime Factor should be mine. Wennn
Stogggul had all but promised it to me when Sornnn SaTrryn—" "Kurgan
Stogggul's temper is as legendary as it is volatile. But I imagine,
Bronnn Pallln, that I need hardly remind you of that." "Indeed,
no, Star-Admiral." Olnnn
put his forefinger to his lips, tapped lightly in a show of
contemplation that was entirely false. "However, your words have
moved me." "They
have?" Bronnn Pallln appeared stunned. "Indeed."
He put a hand on Bronnn Pallln's meaty shoulder and steered him away
from the regent. That was when he caught sight of the Line-General in
question. "Let us speak of this matter in a day or two when the
sorrow of the Rescendance has settled." "Certainly,
Star-Admiral." Bronnn Pallln appeared to be trembling slightly
as he allowed himself to be led back to his Consortium. "It
would be my greatest pleasure." Olnnn
left him quickly behind, striding over to the towering figure of
Line-General Lokck Werrrent. He was the commander of the Kha-gggun
forces for the Sudden Lakes quadrant and, as such, wielded the most
power among the general ranks. He was an intimidating-looking V'ornn,
even among Khagggun. His large, square head seemed almost all jutting
jaw and beetling brow. His eyes, sunk deeply beneath that brow,
smoldered with what he liked to call the passion of discipline. He
was old enough to be Olnnn's father yet he had no offspring of his
own. Because, he said, he was married to his service to the V'ornn. "Star-Admiral,
good to see you once again!" he said in a deep resonant voice
that could seemingly shake the rafters of the largest hall or
gallery. "And
you as well, Line-General." Olnnn gripped Lokck Werrrent's
wrist. "It seems to me that these days we do not see one another
often enough." "I
am at your disposal, Star-Admiral. I will arrive at your quarters
first thing tomorrow morning." "No,
you won't. And you will not make any sudden changes in your official
schedule." Lokck
Werrrent's mighty brows knit tightly together. They knew each other
so well that he did not ask questions that could not now be answered.
"I am off to Dobbro Mannx's for my weekly dinner and a spirited
round of hobbnixx tomorrow at the twenty-first hour. Shall we meet
for a drink beforehand?" "Do
you have a venue in mind?" Olnnn was not a social animal; save
for the raucous Blood Tide on the Promenade at Harborside, he was not
conversant with Axis Tyr's many taverns. "Judging
by the gravity of your mood we should meet someplace unfrequented by
Khagggun. Do you know Spice Jaxx's?" "I
am afraid I do not." "It
is in the center of the spice market. It is marked by a
red-and-orange awning. You cannot miss it." "Tomorrow
at twenty hours, then." Ah,
the scion of the SaTrryn Consortium. I see you have brought a little
of the Korrush back to Axis Tyr." Sornnn turned at the sound of
the female voice. "Marethyn Stogggul." His face was utterly
neutral as he turned to face her. "I have not seen you since,
hmm, when was it exactly?" "Two
days after your father's death," she said. "Do you not
remember?" "A
thousand pardons." There was a quizzical expression on his face.
"As a matter of fact I do not." "I
was there. Representing the Stogggul family. Members of the
Consortium attended as well." "Ah,
yes. Well, there were so many attendees during the two weeks of
mourning." "And
you in shock." "Yes." "I
trust you have recovered from the tragic loss." "One
never fully recovers from such a shock," Sornnn said. "How
can one ever replace one's father?" "How,
indeed." "Ah,
that was thoughtless of me. This is, after all, your father's
Res-cendance." "Save
your condolences for someone who needs them," she said shortly. "How
have you been?" he said, piercing the awkward silence. "My
own work goes well, though business at the atelier is somewhat
static." "But
your brother's work." "Ah,
yes. Terrettt's paintings always sell." "And
he is?" "The
same." "Such
a pity." "I
thank you for your concern, Sornnn SaTrryn." She turned her head
slightly, as if watching for a moment someone or something behind his
left shoulder. "Look there," she said softly. "A
Deirus comes." Sornnn
turned to see a solemn figure clad in the ash-grey tunic of the
Deirus. "Look
how those around him wrinkle their noses and step aside when he comes
near," Marethyn said. "It
is true enough," Sornnn said. "Deirus are not well liked." "Well,
that is an understatement. They are considered sexual deviants and,
as such, pariahs." "Another
of your causes, Marethyn? Don't you have enough already?" Sornnn
was acutely aware of Olnnn Rydddlin's movements. It seemed clear that
he was shadowing them. "Considering
the criminal experiments the Genomatekks at Receiving Spirit perform
on the unfortunate children of V'ornn-Kundalan origin, their contempt
for Deirus is hypocritical." Marethyn made a face. "And why
should any difference—the Deirus' especially—mean that
they are fit only to serve the dying and the insane?" "That
way no one of importance will catch their 'disease', as the Gyrgon
put it," Sornnn said dryly. "As
if it actually were a disease. As if there was anything wrong
in males loving males. I daresay they are more loving in their
relationships than you males are with us females." "What's
the matter, Marethyn," he said mockingly, "don't you
believe in true love?" . "Should I?" "I
thought all Tuskugggun did." "I
thought no males did." "The
Deirus included? Poor fools! Save for their aberration they could
take their place among the highly regarded Genomatekks instead of
toiling on their own among the dead, the dying, and the insane." "It
is disgusting how they are abused. The periodic raids—" "It
is the Gyrgon way of ensuring that the aberrant behavior does not
spread outside the Deirus caste," Sornnn said. "On
such barbarism turns the Modality!" Marethyn lifted a goblet of
numaaadis off the tray of a passing servant. "What news of the
Kor-rush?" "The
Korrush abides. It is almost entirely the same, despite the ravages
of our occupation." Marethyn
took a sip of the liquor. It burned her throat like fire. "The
Gyrgon feel the tribes are beneath their notice." "Like
blood-fleas on a hindemuth's backside. Apparently so." "But
you know better." "My
Consortium makes its living from their spices." "I
have wondered." She cocked her head. "Why do you bother
trading with them? Why not simply go in with a wing of Khagggun and
take the spices? We have taken everything of value from the
Kundalan." "Not
yet everything, I warrant. But that is another story." He pursed
his lips meditatively. Having all this time kept Olnnn Rydddlin in
the corner of his eye, he became convinced that the Star-Admiral was
subtly following him like the mysterious dark mote on the Kundalan
sun. "To answer your question, let me see, how best to put it?
There is no answer." "By
which you mean that the Gyrgon are planning something in the
Korrush." "Did
I say that?" "Not
in so many words." He
frowned. "I think it would be best not to put words in my
mouth." "How
could you accuse me of such a thing? I am but a lowly Tus-kugggun,
after all. I doubt I have the intelligence to put words in your
mouth." "You
are as barbed as a sysal tree." "And
twice as obdurate, so it is said." "Which
is no lie, I see." He could see Olnnn Rydddlin smiling slightly
as he passed close by. "The
only thing I can see is that you are as dull and stupid as every
other Bashkir." "Now
I am offended." "Try
not to take it personally," Marethyn said as she turned away.
"According to some, I have amassed quite a reputation for
offensive behavior." As
Nith Batoxxx watched Kurgan begin the rite of Rescendance, his mind
was elsewhere. How could it be otherwise? What Gyrgon would concern
himself with day-to-day V'ornn affairs? Death was of interest to Nith
Batoxxx only inasmuch as it was a path not to be taken. In truth, it
was deeply disturbing being here in a public spot, amid the swirl,
glitter, and constant movement of a gigantic throng, exposed to life
outside the Temple of Mnemonics, where he had his laboratory. The
cacophony of voices alone made him slightly uneasy, as if sunk within
the crowd's incessant rustling, its restless energy, he had
difficulty hearing himself think. Even filtered through the neural
nets of his biosuit the acuity of sensation made him feel as if he
was being rubbed raw. He gritted his teeth against it, the muscles at
the side of his jaw bunched and spasmed. Possibly,
however, his agitation had something to do with the bronze neural-net
serpent that had been his link to his pawn, the Kundalan sorceress
Malistra. Though Malistra had been killed by the Dar Sala-at, the
serpent that had been with her had escaped, returning back to its
master. But when Nith Batoxxx had fed it into his okummmon, returning
to its original ionic state, he had discovered that it had somehow
been damaged. While he could access the record of the battle, he
could not see the identity of the Dar Sala-at. This seemed impossible
to him, and thus the defeat was bitterer still, and had made him
grind his teeth in fury and frustration. As
these unpleasant thoughts whirled through him, he swiveled his head
this way and that. He saw a clutter of Bashkir drinking and talking
under their breath, Mesagggun ripe from the mines, the power plants,
the underground conduits, Tuskugggun, their heads covered in sifeyn,
the traditional cowls all decent females wore over their heads. He
could feel their fear of him, basked in it, allowed it to calm his
jittery nerves. V'ornn and Kundalan alike, they were of no
consequence to him save in all the ways he could conjure for them to
wipe his tender parts. They were nothing more than extra pairs of
hands and feet, there to do his bidding before being lopped off as
they outlived their usefulness. Which
line of thought led him straight back to Kurgan Stogggul. In exchange
for Nith Batoxxx's help in gaining swift ascendancy to the regent's
office, Kurgan had pledged himself into Nith Batoxxx's service.
Forever. He was an ambitious lad. And highly motivated. He was far
more clever than his father ever was. And just as ruthless. He was
not averse to getting his hands wet with another's blood. Perhaps he
even reveled in it. But was he up to the task in store for him? This
was a question Nith Batoxxx intended to answer without undue delay. But
not this day. This day he was required to stand quietly and observe
the world around him, feeling the constant ion fire of his neural
nets as they compiled detailed notes, a library of minutiae,
transmitted not to the main cluster of Gyrgon data crystals, but to a
lone crystal, throbbing blue-white in a secret compartment of his
laboratory, a place hidden even from the supposedly omniscient eyes
of the Comradeship. It was a task he loathed; it reduced him to the
role of messenger, data-processor, librarian. It was demeaning and
obnoxious, yet he performed these seemingly unending tasks flawlessly
and without a word of protest. Protest was impossible in these
circumstances. I
am in a foul and bitter mood, he silently cried. And why is
that? But he knew. He knew as surely as he knew that the blighted
sun of Kundala with its purple spot would rise in precisely three
hours, twenty-three minutes, 17.973 seconds. He felt the lack, the
lack of a worthy adversary. He had done battle with his nemesis, Nith
Sahor, wounded him grievously, wounding him unto death. And now that
Nith Sahor was gone, Nith Batoxxx felt the void in his world, felt,
in fact, the warp and weft of reality somehow flat and dulled.
Without Nith Sahor to oppose him, he was bored. And sad. Imagine
that! Mourning the death of one's bitterest enemy. At another time,
he might have laughed at the absurdity of the notion. He
had despised Nith Sahor and all he had stood for. Nith Sahor had
deserved his fate, had deserved the execution Nith Batoxxx had
delivered upon him. He had been seduced by Kundalan lore, Kundalan
history, Kundalan sorcery. He had seen merit where there was only
swill. He had confused a conjurer's trick with true insight, had
mistaken myth for knowledge. Worse still, he had wanted to rock the
very foundations of the Comradeship. He had begun to doubt the basic
Precepts that all Gyrgon know are true and right from the moment
their cortical nets are hardwired into their brains, the Precepts
from which the main data crystal bank had been programmed Precepts
that had been downloaded into the V'ornn databank just before their
homeworld was destroyed. Nith Sahor believed the Precepts were
suspect. It was his contention that noxious emissions from that
unimaginable conflagration had interfered with the data transfer, so
that what came through was either corrupted or highly fragmented. He
had blasphemed against the Comradeship—against the V'ornn race
itself. He was a traitor of the most virulent kind, for he sought not
only betrayal but subversion. In the end, his delusions had led him
to conspire with the enemy, first Eleusis Ashera, the former regent,
then the sorceress Giyan and her turncoat consort, the Rhynnnon Rekkk
Hacilar. Nith
Batoxxx's blood seethed when he thought of Nith Sahor and his vile
treachery, and this only made him feel the void all the more, for it
was true that his own power rose most keenly, most vividly against a
powerful enemy. And now that enemy was gone, consigned to the frozen
wastes of N'Luuura, if there was any justice in the world. Greenish
moonslight slanted through the open sides of the Ancestor Tent, the
combined energy of the throng sizzled, heating the tent like a photon
reactor. The air tasted musty to him, crowded as it was with
V'ornndom, the huge line of mourners snaking into the tent on one
side, out the other, an unending serpent. He wished only to be back
in his laboratory, to lose himself in his experiments. He watched
from slitted eyes the crowd eating and drinking and talking in hushed
tones, heaving like a mass of foolish cattle, and he hated them all.
What concerned them? The insignificant events of their petty lives,
the minute quotidian dance that he—that all Gyrgon save Nith
Sahor—had long ago foresworn. For the Gyrgon had looked into
the face of eternity, and after that sight nothing could ever be the
same again. It was a magnificent, towering, orgiastic feeling to hold
the stuff of the Cosmos in the neural net of one's gloved hand, to
manipulate it, to catch the shimmer of its remaining mysteries, to be
held spellbound by the microscopic orbits of the energy that composed
all life. Yes,
his experiments made his contempt for the inferior castes
universal—almost universal. There was one here who did interest
him somewhat. He let his ruby eyes alight for a moment upon Kurgan
Sto-gggul, who was looking imperious, proud, dangerous—all the
things that Nith Batoxxx, in his guise as the Old V'ornn, had taught
Kurgan from a very early age. Kurgan Stogggul was a conundrum worthy
of Nith Batoxxx's superior intellect and scientific curiosity. Some
special fate had touched Kurgan at the moment of his birth, some
destiny far beyond most V'ornn's imagining. And
in a very real sense Nith Batoxxx had brokered that special fate. Nith
Batoxxx moved to Kurgan's side, and a pinwheel of space and silence
formed around them. V'ornn and Kundalan alike averted their gaze.
Their fear was palpable, but it did nothing to dispel this discontent
that covered him like a mourner's veil. "It
is the appointed hour," he said softly, eerily. "The
Rescendance must commence." Kurgan
approached the baein. Nith Batoxxx watched as he turned a knob on the
baein. The hearts of the dead regent pulsed and, in the simulation of
the return to life, commenced to melt, dissolving into a thick
blue-black liquid that drained into the Soul Chalice. Silence
passed through the vast crowd like a photonic wave. Nith Batoxxx
could hear them quietly breathing, a beast at bay. Not a word was
spoken. All eyes were on Kurgan as he lifted the chalice, which was
made of crystal, so all could see the liquefied hearts within. Kurgan
faced the assembled throng, intoned the Prayer for Rescendance, which
ended with the familiar phrase, "Life is death, death is life."
Then Kurgan drained all the liquid from the chalice.
3 Conundrums
Whatever
are we to do," Eleana said, "now that Giyan is gone?"
They were all huddled together under the light of the three moons,
Riane, Rekkk, Eleana and the six-legged Rappa, Thigpen. "Rescue
her," Rekkk said with a warrior's straightforward logic. "That
will be anything but simple," Thigpen warned. Riane
told them of Giyan's suspicions about the origins of the chrysalides. "But
Giyan is such a powerful sorceress," Eleana said. "How
could she be imprisoned?" "This
is Malasocca, dread sorcery of the highest order." Riane
recognized the word as being Venca, the root language of the Ramahan
Old Tongue; the language of the Druuge, the nomadic tribes who
inhabited the trackless wastes of the Great Voorg, who were said to
be the descendants of the first Ramahan. Thigpen's
whiskers twitched in anxiety. "I warrant its like has not been
seen on Kundala for many centuries. It is ancient, from the Time
before the Imagining. Only the death of the host will counteract it."
The creature looked from face to face. "We may have to accept
that the Lady is lost to us." "There
must be a way," Riane said. "We
will go after her," Rekkk said firmly. "Surely all of us
together—" "That
is precisely what we will not do." Thigpen, her
triangular ears laid flat against the ruddy fur of her head, stood up
on her two sets of sturdy hind legs. "If we do, she will kill us
all, of that there can be no doubt. And even if by some miracle one
of us remains alive, what then? Which one of us will plunge a blade
through her heart to free her?" "Then
what do you propose?" Eleana put her hands on her hips. "I,
for one, am unwilling to sit idly by while some daemon from the Abyss
steals Lady Giyan's soul from her." Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching madly. "Your loyalty to Lady Giyan is
touching, dear. I am not questioning what is in your heart, merely
how the volatile emotion of love is played out." She steepled
her slender fingers, tapping the long nails together rhythmically.
"The plight of the Lady Giyan aside, I cannot impress upon you
the extreme danger the Malasocca poses for all of us, for it presages
the dread return of the daemons to our realm." "You
don't know—" Rekkk began. "Ah,
but I do know." Thigpen opened her jaws. Her slender yellow
tongue rolled from the back of her mouth a small spherical object.
She plucked it from between her teeth, held it aloft for them to see.
In its depths clouds seemed to form and dissipate in a never-ending
pattern. "This tells me there is a future—not the
future, mind—but certainly one possible future in
which you and Riane go after Giyan and die by her hand." "More
Kundalan mumbo jumbo!" said Rekkk. "I don't believe a word
of it!" He scabbarded his shock-sword. "I am going after
her and, somehow, I will find a way to free her." It was clear
that he wasn't really listening, wasn't thinking straight. "You're
not going anywhere yet," Riane said. Thigpen's words had chilled
her to the marrow. "For a start, you don't even know where Giyan
went," Riane pointed out. "She
is right, Rekkk." Eleana sighed. "I want to go after Lady
Giyan as much as you do. But for the moment, at least, it seems we
have little choice but to listen to what Thigpen has to say." The
night was growing cold, and they had already been chilled by the
horror they had all witnessed. Following Riane's suggestion, they
climbed through the shattered window, returning to the Library,
pulling up heavy ammonwood chairs in a rough circle beside the long
refectory table. "Before
I listen to any more of this," Rekkk growled, "I want an
explanation as to how you could possibly know the future." Thigpen,
curling her furry body in the chair seat, sighed. "As I said, it
is only one possible future out of many." "How
many?" Eleana asked. "A
great many, my dear. An infinite number." Rekkk
was far too agitated to sit still. He sprang up almost immediately
and, crossing the tiled floor, busied himself with piling split logs
into the huge blackened fireplace and starting a fire. "The
explanation," he said. "Patience,
warrior." He
turned from his work. "What little I possessed went with Giyan.
Proceed with all due haste." The
Rappa showed them the tiny sphere again. 'As Riane can attest, those
of us who can Thrip have residing within us a wormlike creature known
as a mononculus." Eleana
made a sound. Her face showed her disgust. "Is
this true, Riane?" Rekkk asked, brushing soot from his hands.
"Do you carry one of these creatures inside you?" "Yes.
It is essential in order to continue Thripping. As you move through
the Realms you pick up all sorts of energies, some of them quite
noxious. The mononculus acts as a kind of filter, metabolizing the
energies, purging our systems." "What
Riane does not yet know," Thigpen said, "is that the
mononculus absorbs all sorts of radiation as one Thrips. The Realms
are infinite. They exist side by side, as well as layered upon one
another. When one Thrips there is no time or space—at least not
as we understand it. All the Realms exist at once. Therefore, it is
not surprising that many oddments are inadvertently picked up along
the way." She rolled the sphere between her fingers. "Slivers
of the past, or the future become embedded in our beings. They are
harmful to us so the mononculus takes charge of them. Unlike the
radiation, it cannot metabolize these slivers so it does the next
best thing. It binds them together, around and around." Riane
took the sphere from Thigpen, peered at it intently. "Until it
makes this." "Precisely."
Thigpen appeared pleased. "Then it expels the object." Having
successfully started the fire, Rekkk came and stood beside Riane.
"But the future? The past?" "How
shall I say it?" Thigpen used a forefinger to scratch behind one
ear. "Think of sunlight glancing off water, or lamplight
reflecting off a pane of crystal. Think of these glimmers caught in
the corner of your eye, seen but not seen. This is what the sphere is
made up of." Eleana,
too, drew close, to better inspect the object of curiosity. "And
you saw the future—a future—in there." Thigpen
nodded solemnly. "Somewhere, someplace, sometime, it happened
just as I have said. Riane and Rekkk perish at the hands of the
daemon that Lady Giyan is becoming." "N'Luuura
take it!" Rekkk cursed. Eleana
looked shrewdly at the Rappa. "Then we must ensure that that
particular future never happens." Thigpen
sat up. "My dear, you have grasped the essential nature of the
matter." She looked at Rekkk. "Do you understand this,
impetuous warrior?" "She
is my true love, Rappa. Do you understand that?" She
gently laid a paw on his arm. "Better than you could ever
imagine, brave one." "Well,
then, give me an alternative to finding Giyan and battling the daemon
that possesses her. This talk of prophecy gives me a headache." "We
will find Giyan," Riane said. "But first we must find the
way to displace the daemon without killing her." She saw Thigpen
watching her with glittering eyes. "A strong arm and a brave
heart are not enough to defeat daemons. We must use knowledge." Scowling,
Rekkk said, "I do not understand, Dar Sala-at." "One
thing I have learned about daemons," Riane continued, "is
that they are made of fire. Battle them in a straightforward manner
with might and main and they simply grow stronger. Think of it this
way, they are like bloodthirsty reavers—the harder you push
them, the harder they push back. But like reavers they are
limited—clever in their own way—but with no deep
understanding." "The
Dar Sala-at is quite correct," Thigpen said. "Evil repeats
itself over and over in an unending pattern. Evil is powerful,
implacable, a deadly force, certainly so, but it has no free will. It
is programmed, shall we say, to achieve its goal. Therefore, its
actions are—what is the best way to put it? Its actions are
mechanical, predictable." "At
last we come to it," Rekkk cried. "The chink in the enemy's
armor!" "But
this is pure evil we are speaking of now; therefore, nothing is quite
what it appears to be." Eleana
frowned. "What do you mean?" "What
I tell you now is vital to our survival." Thigpen looked into
each of their faces in turn. 'The nature of evil, the very thing that
is the chink in its armor, as Rekkk so colorfully put it, is often
its greatest strength. For its mechanical, predictable methods can
prove all too hypnotic to the likes of us." "That's
preposterous!" Rekkk blurted out. "Surely all of us have
proved time and again that we know good from evil." "Of
course you have," Thigpen said. "But consider, Rekkk.
Malistra was able to crawl inside you, to take you over so completely
that you tried to kidnap the Dar Sala-at. And would have succeeded,
mind you, had Riane not been so resourceful and quick of wit." "That
will never happen again," Rekkk said darkly. It was clear he did
not care to remember that incident. "Rekkk,
I know you believe that. I am absolutely sure your intentions are
good." Thigpen tapped her nails together. "However, inside
all of us is a dark place. You know it, Rekkk, because you have been
there. The Ramahan call it White Bone Gate. There resides all the
rage, despair, envy, greed, all the negative emotions we harbor.
Unlike Rekkk, most of us are not even aware this place exists. In
fact, we'd likely deny it. The point is that daemons instinctively
know how to open White Bone Gate, how to manipulate us so that the
emotions pent up in that dark place inside us come swarming out. The
closer we get to evil, the more time spent in its company, the more
likely White Bone Gate will be breached, the more likely that dark
place will be opened and all the sewage will spill out, polluting us,
dazzling us, leading us astray. That is why Riane is correct when she
says that we must have knowledge. We must know precisely what we are
doing before we confront the daemon that is taking over Giyan." "Then
tell us!" Rekkk thundered. "Alas,
I cannot. I don't know enough about the Malasocca." "Who
does, then?" Eleana asked with a quick warning look at Rekkk's
strangled cry. "No
one I know of." Thigpen spread her arms. "But look around
you. We have the collected wisdom of the blessed Ramahan here at our
fingertips." "I
can't read Old Tongue Kundalan and neither can Rekkk," Eleana
pointed out. Thigpen
clucked her yellow tongue against the roof of her mouth. "But
Riane and I—" "I
have another idea," Riane broke in. "Giyan told me who I
needed to see for the next stage of my sorcerous training. Jonnqa, an
imari at the Nimbus kashiggen in Axis Tyr. I think we should go
there. I would wager she can help us." Thigpen
shook her head. "That is precisely what we will not do." "I
vote we go," Rekkk said shortly. "I have been to Nimbus. I
know where it is, and I am familiar with its interior layout. Right
now it's our best chance." Thigpen
thumped her thick, striped tail loudly against the chair back.
"Listen to me for a moment. We must assume the worst, that the
daemon already has possession of Giyan's most recent memories. That
being the case, it is a good bet that Giyan—and the Tzelos—will
be looking for Riane there." She held up the tiny sphere.
"Nimbus is the place where it happens, Rekkk, where you and
Riane die. You must avoid that future. You cannot go there." There
was a small silence into which the whistle of the wind intruded,
causing the branches of the trees to dip and wave. They scratched
against the side of the Library. An owl hooted mournfully. Rekkk
grunted, stalking out through the ruined window. "I
guess you and Riane had better start your research right away,"
Eleana said, before following Rekkk outside. For
some time, they stood together looking at the gathering sunrise. A
chill wind, the first taste of autumn, fluttered their garments,
crept up their arms and legs. "This
inaction is intolerable," Rekkk said at length. "Somewhere
out there she's imprisoned, in pain, fighting for her life." "You
can't think about that now," Eleana said softly. He
threw his head back, shouted into the dawn. "That's all I can
think about since it happened. It's all I will think about
until she is safe at my side." "Then
you are in serious danger of driving yourself mad." "Good.
I deserve nothing less." "What
are you talking about?" "I
should have protected her." "That's
absurd. Giyan herself, with all her powerful sorcery, couldn't
protect herself. You could not have helped her, Rekkk. You know
that." When
he did not reply, she reached up and tugged at him. "Rekkk, look
at me." Reluctantly, he turned. "This isn't about not being
able to protect Giyan, is it?" He
glared at her, then could not continue to meet her gaze. When he
tried to turn his head away, she guided it back with hands on his
cheeks. "Talk to me, Rekkk." He
broke away, went stumbling down along one of the abbey paths. Eleana
followed him, and when at length he stopped she came up to him. He
had his hand curled around the bole of the sysal tree that had grown
up through the lintel of the east-facing temple, splitting it
asunder. Eleana
put a hand gently on the small of his back. "Funny,"
he said in a hoarse whisper, "how something as innocuous as a
tree can break through stone and mortar." He shook his head. "I
mean, half the time you don't even notice trees, do you? They live at
the periphery of your vision, there but not there. You take them for
granted." "Rekkk,"
she whispered, "what is it?" He
looked up into the rustling branches. "This tree is like . . ."
He closed his eyes for a moment. "Like that place inside me—what
did Thigpen call it?" "White
Bone Gate." He
nodded. "The place Malistra touched inside of me, twining like a
serpent in the darkness. The place I never knew was there, the place
that lived at the periphery of my consciousness. She took possession
of it, made me into . . ." He snatched his hand from the sysal
tree as if it had caught fire. "Rekkk,
please—" "Don't
you see?" He turned to her. "The same thing is happening to
Giyan now—only it's worse for her, far worse. She's being taken
over body and soul, remade into something . . . horrific, unholy,
evil." "We'll
find her, Rekkk, we'll save her. Have faith." "Faith."
He laughed harshly. "You don't know what it's like to have
something of pure evil crawling around inside you, boring into your
brain, imprisoning you. The horror of it!" He took her hand in
his. Pray
it never happens to you, Eleana. Pray to your Great Goddess Miina to
spare you from that fate." Eleana
led him over to a stone bench. "You're exhausted, Rekkk. Let's
sit for a while and speak of other things. Or not speak at all."
She took his hand in hers. "Together, we will watch the sun come
up and marvel at its beauty. We will count the colors in the clouds
and free our minds. We will let our hearts rest from our pain." We
have set ourselves a difficult task," Thigpen said as she took
down a stack of books from the Library shelves. "Tell
me something I do not already know." Thigpen
took note of Riane's tone of voice as she watched her thumb through
The Origins of Darkness. "On the other hand, we have a
great advantage. You are able to read and absorb text at an
astonishing pace." Riane
was aware of the weakness of the thrumming beneath her feet, Each
abbey was built atop a major nexus point on the sorcerous grid of
power bourns that enmeshed Kundala. Each nexus was different. The
meaning of both these facts had been lost for more than a century.
All night, she had felt the bourns stuttering, like the belabored
breath of a patient. Riane
voiced a suspicion that had been forming. "You persuaded us not
to go after Giyan because you are trying to protect me." "That
is one reason, yes. But if you think I lied to you—" "The
time for protecting me is past, don't you think?" "Not
at all," Thigpen said sharply. "You know so little about
your fate. You are the Dar Sala-at and yet. . ." Riane
watched her carefully. "You
are young. Your Gift is raw, only partially trained. You are only in
the first flower of your ascendancy. Plus, you are female. You do not
yet fully appreciate the difficulty this will present. We have been
awaiting the advent of the Dar Sala-at, yes, because you will lead us
out of our time of bondage. But even the Ramahan who believe in you
most fervently have been expecting a male savior. This will come as a
great shock to them when you reveal yourself, and there will be the
inevitable cabal of naysayers. It is written that you will have a
holy protector at your side." "The
Prophesies again. How is it that I have not been told about this holy
protector before?" "The
Prophesies are written down now, but they came down to the Ramahan
orally, through numerous generations. There are thousands of them,
intertwining like tropical vines. Many intersect, others overlap or
even are contradictory. There is a Prophesy that has been interpreted
by some to indicate that the Dar Sala-at will be a male. But if, as
we believe, these Prophesies have their origins in Miina, the
complexities, the entanglements, even the paradoxes make sense. Miina
never viewed us as Her slaves. We have free will in most matters.
This is why the prophesies must be interpreted; this is why some of
them will be proved true and others false. Our lives are complex,
even at times seemingly paradoxical. In any case, the future is
unknown. What, otherwise, would be the point of living? Still, the
Prophesies exist and so the Seers interpret, but, as you know, the
Seers soon go mad, and die." "You
must be this holy protector, then." "I?"
Thigpen laughed. "He is known as the Nawatir, a fierce and
relentless warrior. He springs into being through sorcerous
transformation. His coming marks the next step in your evolution, Dar
Sala-at. As for me, I am and always will be a Rappa, a member of a
race close to Miina, once companions to the first Ramahan until we
were falsely accused of killing Mother and forced into hiding." Riane
looked down. Who would be her Nawatir? How could she know? She put
aside for the moment her questions and began to read. The pages of
the tome flip-flip-flipped past her eyes. After a time, she became
lost in the text, and then, suddenly the text began to dissolve. Her
head felt light, and she knew another memory of Riane's former life,
before the dying husk had been joined with Annon, had broken off from
the glacier buried deep in their mind . . . She
was walking along an ice-encrusted ridge. A blue wind scoured her
with frozen snow. At the top of the world high amid the ragged peaks
of the Djenn Marre she moved with slow deliberate strides. She kept
the air, so thin it barely existed, deep in her lungs. Her heart beat
fast as her breathing slowed. She was tired but, somehow, at the same
time exhilarated. A sudden cry caused her to turn, and she saw the
bird winging in on a thermal current, its snow-white wings and
black-and-white-speckled body hurtling toward her. It was huge,
larger than any bird Annon had ever seen or read about. It was three
times her size. She held her ground as it approached. It studied her
with piercing blue eyes, and feelings of comfort and of love
enveloped her. She spoke to it in a language— With
a start Riane sat up straight. She had spoken to the giant bird in
Vencal What had she said? But the memory stopped there, as if it were
a storybook whose pages had been maliciously ripped out. She massaged
her head, trying to will the memory to continue. She could never do
it. The memories surfaced, presented themselves, isolated fragments
of the original Riane's life, in their own time, in their own
mysterious way. There was simply no controlling them. It was like
working on a vast and unknowable puzzle. She had a number of pieces
now, but so far she could not see where they fit together. Riane
looked over at Thigpen, who had opened the first book on the stack.
She sat, reading, her tail curled around her, on the refectory table,
humming a little to herself. This sight served to jolt Riane back
into reality, and she grew angry. "Don't
you care?" she said. "What?"
Thigpen looked up, blinking. "Don't
you care at all that Giyan is being slowly destroyed?" Thigpen
sat up straight. "My dear Riane, of course I care. I care a
great deal. But panicking about it isn't going to do anyone any good,
least of all Giyan." "But
you seem so frightfully calm!" "A
state of being I have spent centuries cultivating." She padded
down the table toward Riane. "Rappa tend to have high blood
pressure, you know. Comes from eons of being the favorite food of the
Ja-Gaar. See one coming, we keel right over, like as not. Shocking
lapse in the survival instinct, let me tell you. Still, such a
deficiency makes the smart of the species smarter, eh? If you've got
a brain in your cranium, you're forced to figure out ways to keep the
old pressure under control, aren't you? Otherwise, you're dead meat.
So, yes, I am calm, and you should be, too. Promotes clarity of
thought, which is what is required of us now." "Of
course you're right, but, . ." All at once, a memory surfaced
and her heart contracted. "Thigpen, Giyan told me that in order
for the Tzelos to be in our Realm it had to be carried here by an
archdaemon." The
Rappa's eyes opened wide. "Then we have another enemy to deal
with. Oh, dear!" Riane's
eyes grew fierce. "I lost her once, Thigpen. By some miracle I
got her back. And now, now . . ." Her hands balled into fists.
"I swear to you that I will move the stars to save her."
Her voice shook and tears stood in the corners of her eyes. "But
how? How?" "Patience,
Dar-Sala-at, we have only just begun to—" "To
N'Luuura with patience!" Riane swept books off the table. The
two looked at each other for several trembling moments. "I need
a sign, Xhigpen." Riane was almost pleading. "Something to
tell us that we have a chance to get her back." Thigpen
leapt lightly onto the floor. "This is a time of great testing."
She began to gather the scattered books one by one. "You must
find that sign inside yourself, Dar Sala-at." She scrambled
under the table to get the last book. "This is a time—"
Silence. "Thigpen?" The
Rappa backed out from under the table. "Riane, look there!" Riane
got down on her hands and knees, ducked under the refectory table
overhang. And that is when she saw it, lying innocently deep in the
shadows. She glanced upward, saw where it had been affixed to the
underside of the table. Doubtless, the coming of the Malasocca had
dislodged it. Thigpen
sniffed at it, her snout quivering nervously. "V'ornn
technology. What is it?" It
was about the size and shape of a seedpod, but it was made of tertium
and germanium, dull as an overcast day. "It is a duscaant, a
Khagggun recording device." Thigpen
sat back. "That cannot be good. What on Kundala is it doing
here?" Riane
held it up to direct light and it vanished. "An object of
stealth, of clandestine watching. It is a stealer of secrets, a
repository of information." Thigpen
regarded it as if it were a packet of V'ornn explosives. "We
should destroy the dread thing. Now." "No." Thigpen
shuddered. "But—" "As
you know, no V'ornn can penetrate the Library now, not even a Gyrgon.
The logical conclusion is that the duscaant was secreted here before
the spell was cast." Riane turned the thing over, pressed a
hidden stud with her fingernail. "Here is the date on which it
was placed here and activated." Thigpen
bent closer, read with rising alarm the V'ornn numbers. "That is
five years before the abbey was invaded, its members dragged away to
V'ornn interrogation chambers some ninety years ago." Her eyes
flickered up to Riane's face like flames. "How? How could a
Gyrgon listening device be planted inside these walls? How could such
a thing be?" "You
know," Riane said slowly and deliberately, "because there
can be only one answer." Thigpen's
eyes were wide and staring. "A Ramahan collaborator." Riane
nodded. "Someone very powerful. Doubtless a sorceress." For
they both knew that the Gyrgon dealt only with individuals who, in
their own ways, wielded great power. "That is why we will not
destroy it. In here, perhaps, resides a clue to the identity of that
collaborator." "Or
fooling with a Gyrgon object will get us killed." Thigpen rubbed
her cheek with the back of a forepaw. "We will discuss this no
further, and certainly not mention it to the others. There is already
far too much anxiety floating around for my liking. Let us resume our
reading, and leave this conundrum for another day." A
while later, Eleana appeared, bearing plates of cold food and
tankards of water, which she placed before them, her eyes asking the
question she was afraid to voice. Neither of them said a word, and
she retreated, ashen-faced. Riane briefly rested her bleary eyes on
Eleana's form before returning to her reading. The books in this
Library were maddening. They assumed knowledge that she did not
possess even though she had memorized both of Miina's Sacred Volumes.
The result was somewhat akin to looking at the pictures in a book
while not being able to read the accompanying text. Some references
were simply incomprehensible. For others, she could extrapolate some
things, infer others, but without a clear understanding of the
overarching principles and theories under which everything operated
she could not be certain her conclusions were correct. Perhaps, she
surmised, the problem stemmed from the fact that the books predated
both Utmost Source and The Book of Recantation. What
came before these two holy pillars of Mima's rule? Riane did not know
and clearly Thigpen didn't either. She felt like an infant invading
an adult domain. There was so much she longed to know, so much
sitting right here at her fingertips. It was maddening. If only she
could understand what she was reading! Giyan was right. She needed
more training, that much was indisputable. Toward
evening, she said, "I may have found something. The Ma-lasocca
is transformational, it says here." "Now
we are getting somewhere." "Apparently,
daemons possess only knowledge of Kyofu sorcery, not Osoru. If they
knew both they would be able to conjure Eye Window spells, which are
much more powerful." "But
Giyan is an Osoru sorceress." "Yes,"
Riane said, "and that is the point of her possession. Once the
Malasocca is complete the daemon will have access to all her
knowledge, including Osoru." Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching fearfully. "And then it will
know—" Riane
nodded. "Everything. Yes." "But
in the distant past before Miina cast the daemons into the Abyss
there were incidents of Malasocca." "The
daemons gain possession of the knowledge only while they are in the
host body. Once they are cast out, they cannot retain it." "Well,
that is something, at least. But. . ." Thigpen's eyes were dark
with foreboding as she voiced the question they had both been afraid
to ask. "How long do we have before Lady Giyan is completely
taken over by the daemon?" "It
doesn't say; this is only a passing reference." Riane continued
to read. "It does say that after the halfway point it becomes
increasingly more difficult to reverse the transmogrification." "By
what means can we effect the reversal?" Riane
shook her head. "But there is a word here. Maasra." She
frowned. "It is neither Old Tongue nor, to my knowledge, Venca." "
Cross-references? " "None
that I can find." "Then
this mysterious word is the only clue we have." Thigpen
stretched and yawned, her yellow tongue curling up. "What we
need is a first-class dialectician." "Where
on Kundala are we going to find that?" Thigpen
took up a piece of meat, sniffed it. "As it happens I know one."
She wrinkled her nose as she popped the morsel into her mouth.
"Unfortunately, he's dead."
4 Madness
Is As Madness Docs
The
Sea of Blood was choppy in the following southwest wind, dark as
ludd-wine, dark as its namesake. Small fishing boats bobbed in the
slips at the wharf and, farther out, the tall-masted ships of the
Sarakkon, the wild seafaring race of Kundala's southern continent,
rode uneasily at anchor. The Sarakkon believed in many gods, female
and male. The great, arcing prows of their trading ships were carved
into their brooding visages—part Sarakkon, part fearsome beast. From
the south-facing window high up in Receiving Spirit, Marethyn
Stogggul had a splendid view of the Sarakkonian vessels currently
loading and unloading their cargo. The Kundalan especially prized
kingga, a decorative hardwood with magnificent striations, as well as
foodstuffs of an exotic nature that could not be grown in the harsher
climate here on the northern continent. In exchange, the Kundalan
sold their fanciful dry goods, bolts of handmade cloth and casks of
thick, sweet mead the Sarakkon coveted. But Marethyn also knew there
was other Sarakkon cargo, not openly spoken of—laaga, for
instance, the dried, ground leaf which, when smoked or chewed,
produced a pronounced narcotic effect that was highly addictive. It
was a crude and dangerous drug, especially when compared to
salamuuun. On the other hand, while salamuuun was not addictive,
laaga was far cheaper, and readily available in the city's back
alleys. The Ashera Consortium kept tight control on salamuuun,
allowing it to be sold only in licensed kashiggen. With
a sigh, Marethyn turned back into the stark white interior of the
madness ward and smiled into her brother's blank face. "I
saw your brother, Kurgan," she said without leaking a trace of
the anger she felt in her hearts. "I told him how aggrieved you
were not to be at the Rescendance. I gave him your respects, and he
asked me to give you his. You were greatly missed at the rite." Terrettt
did not respond or give any indication that he had heard her. He sat
in a chair, his torso bent forward and tense, his robes hanging
loosely on his too-thin frame. His black eyes, sunk deep in their
sockets, burned too brightly, as with a high fever. Before him was a
drawing table with an angled top. On it was a huge sheet of paper,
along with an array of precisely aligned drawing implements. He was
drawing with quick, jerky movements of his hand and forearm. His
artistic accomplishments were undeniable but also quite unfathomable.
No matter. Marethyn spent much of her time in her Divination Street
atelier selling the fruits of his labor alongside her own. He drew
constantly or he slept. This was his life. His
black eyes watched her briefly as she moved, then flicked downward to
his current work in progress. She wondered what he was thinking. On
the wall in front of him was a huge topographical map of the northern
continent, which she had put up after he had clawed down three
different paintings. He never had a reason for destroying the artwork
she had brought, at least none that she could determine, and it could
be said without fear of contradiction that she knew Terrettt better
than anyone, including his own mother. She
had come upon the map, rolled up and dusty, in a small curio shop on
the Street of Dreams and had seized upon it immediately as a
replacement for the ripped paintings. His room was just too
depressing without something on the walls. So far, he had not
marred it, though the only way she could be sure he was aware of it
was that its colors were slowly creeping into his newest paintings.
This seemed huge to her, an important victory for him as well as for
her. Terrettt
began to drool. She came away from the window at once to wipe his red
lips. Oblivious, he continued to draw. For a moment she studied his
face. While Kurgan was all harsh angles, cunning eyes, and an
avaricious nature, Terrettt possessed a certain serenity that was so
profound the frightening seizures that violated it were all the more
heartbreaking. Every time she looked at him she hated her family all
the more. They were too busy being embarrassed by him even to
acknowledge his existence. "What
are you working on today?" she asked as she came around to his
side of the table. "Is this the sea, the sky, the land?"
She pointed. "And what are these circles? Stars in the sky? A
constellation, perhaps?" These seven circles had begun to appear
in his work in one form or another starting several weeks ago.
That's when she had bought him the huge sheets of paper he obviously
needed. He had never before created a repeating motif—in fact,
that was one of the major elements that had separated him from other
artists who, like writers, tended to revisit the same themes,
tackling them from different angles and aspects. "Terrettt,"
she said, giving up on the drawing, "will you talk to me today?"
She sat on a chair beside him and tenderly wiped more drool off his
lips. "I would so like it if you would talk to me." She
took the brush from his fingers, engaged his eyes with the animation
of her lovely face. "Won't you try? For me?" Terrettt
sat frozen for some time. At last his mouth opened, the lower jaw
flapping up and down. "That's
right," she said excitedly. It was all she could do not to hug
him, but she had learned the hard way that he could not tolerate
physical contact. "Speak to me. I know you want to."
"Water," he enunciated slowly and painfully. "Blue."
Marethyn's hearts leapt. "Yes!" she cried. "The water
is blue. You can see it from the window." She pointed. "There!"
"Water," Terrettt said. "Black." Marethyn
frowned. "The water is black? Well, it's black at night, I
guess. Is that what you mean? Is this a drawing of the sea at night?" Terrettt's
eyes seemed to be trying to tell her more than his mouth could. An
agony of emotion contorted his face for a moment. His mouth worked
convulsively, but all that came out were unintelligible sounds,
followed by a fresh spurt of drool. "Water,"
he repeated, as Marethyn moved to clean his chin. "Black."
He pointed to the drawing he was making, his trembling forefinger
stabbing out at the circles he had drawn. "Terrettt, what are
you trying to tell me?" His
mouth worked spasmodically as he tried desperately to express
himself. All that emerged was a series of heavy grunts. Tears stood
out in his eyes, and he pounded his balled fists against his temples.
"No, Terrettt!" She tried to pull his hands away. "No!"
His face filled with blood, his eyes rolled up in his head. She
backed away just in time. He struck out at her, missed, tried again
and, instead, off-balance, fell to the floor, where he began to
thrash and foam. His eyes were as opaque as a corpse's. Marethyn
shouted, and a Deirus appeared in the doorway. "You will have to
leave now," he said as he glided up. He was tall,
stoop-shouldered, thin to the point of emaciation. His deep-set eyes
were pale and watery, as if he had been staring at the sun for too
long. The hollows beneath his cheekbones had an almost painful depth.
His hands were long and thin, their fingers stained mahogany by the
curious fluids he worked with daily. She had seen him several times
before. His name was Kirlll Qandda. Terrettt
was very quick, but he was no match for the Deirus, who was
surprisingly powerful. Unfortunately, the Deirus locked Terrettt's
wrists behind his back. The intolerable touch made him all the
wilder, his eyes rolling madly in his head, spittle flying from his
snarling lips. "It
is too dangerous for you when he is like this," Kirlll Qandda
said as he struggled to subdue Terrettt. "His
name is Terrettt. And do not talk as if he isn't here." If her
tone was sharp she felt she had just cause. Too often the Deirus'
suppressed rage at being separate from and unequal to the Genomatekks
of their caste took the form of small but galling discourtesies to
those who most depended on them. Perhaps their intensive five-year
training with the Gyrgon contributed to this superciliousness. But
though they irked Marethyn, it had never occurred to her to complain
to her father. Indeed, save for her monthly reports on Terrettt's
progress, or rather his lack of it, she had avoided him at all costs. "I
apologize," Kirlll Qandda said as he scrambled after Terrettt.
"But your brother—er, Terrettt—does not like to take
his medicine." The
Deirus had Terrettt in position, and he applied the transdermal spray
directly to her brother's eyes. Apparently, the retinas were the most
efficient pathway to the brain. Marethyn had heard stories of
desperate laaga addicts spraying their eyes with a mist distilled
from the dried and cured leaves. Slowly, the eerie, soulless look
faded from Terrettt's eyes, and his breathing returned to normal. "Why
does this happen to him?" Marethyn asked as she wiped the
spittle and flecks of blood off his face. In his frenzy, he had
bitten his lower lip. "You
must let him rest now," Kirlll Qandda said not unkindly. "We
can talk as I walk you out." She
looked up at him. Seeing her brother in such agony exhausted her.
"Tell me, Kirlll Qandda," she said,
"how long have you been on Terrettt's case?" "I
was recently transferred on, mistress." "Please
do not address me in that manner." Kirlll
Qandda appeared startled. "I do not understand. Mistress is a
term of respect." "Mistress
is a term created by males. It is demeaning. It is meant to keep
females in their place." She stood up. "I am ready to leave
now." The
hallway was bright, startling in its starkness, as starkness was not
the Kundalan way. The walls were sheets of pale featureless gypsum
fastened together with copper-headed pins. There was a beauty in
their smoothness, in the way they had been quarried and cut so that
the subtle sedimentary grain flowed in one direction. Marethyn saw
this with her practiced artist's eye. Overhead, oval skylights let in
the daylight. They passed doorways into wards similar to the one in
which Terrettt lived. In some she could see beautiful clouds of
sparkles in the air, sure indications of ion-force-field barriers.
Occupants shuffled about their quarters or stared fixedly at her as
she passed by. Their empty gazes seemed to suck the life out of her. Kirlll
Qandda smiled with his pale, watery eyes. "Terrettt's painting
gets better all the time, don't you think?" "I
would prefer you talk to me about my brother." He
sighed, as if they had come to a point in the conversation he had
been dreading. "I wish I had good news for you." There were
other Deirus in the hall now, along with several armed Khagggun. They
were passing the violent ward, and he kept her at a brisk pace. "I
wish I had any news at all." He spread his hands.
"Unfortunately, I do not. Your brother is as he was when he was
brought in here ten years ago. No therapy we have tried has had the
least effect on his condition. The seizures appear randomly. They
seem to have no apparent trigger, though stress and exhaustion are
certainly major factors." "I
understand," Marethyn said with heavy hearts. This was old news,
but at least it had been delivered by a Deirus unlike the others who
had spoken to her. "Is it really necessary to drug him so
often?" "I
am afraid that without the periodic transdermal sprays your brother's
seizures would become uncontrollable. He would injure himself, as he
did when your family first brought him here. Then there are the other
inmates to consider." "I
am grateful that he hasn't been transferred to the violent ward." "To
be perfectly honest it's been a constant struggle. Some in the
administration are ... uncomfortable with him in his current
surroundings." "And
where do you stand on this matter, Kirlll Qandda?" "I
have two of Terrettt's paintings hanging in my residence." They
had reached the staircase, a typically wide, florid Kundalan work of
art in honey-and-black onyx illuminated from above by a light-well in
the shape of an eye. Marethyn
glanced back down the hallway. It was always a jarring moment when
she left him, knowing she was free to go wherever she chose while he
was locked away in here. "Is there no hope for him at all?" The
Deirus was silent. "I
am well aware that the Gyrgon forbid you to give out any information
on your patients. But he is my brother, and I love him. Nobody else
does." Kirlll
Qandda shook his head. "I am Deirus. If I was found out, I would
be subject to—" "But,
dear, Kirlll Qandda, you are the only one who can help me."
Marethyn paused to lick her lips. "As you say, you are Deirus.
Perhaps one day you will need my help as I now need yours." She
reached out and touched him on the arm, and Kirlll Qandda's eyes
followed the movement of her hand. "You
are not afraid to touch me." "Why
should I be?" Kirlll
Qandda gave a little laugh. Quickly stifled. He nodded to her, led
her out of the crowded corridor and into a small, dimly lighted
cubicle lined with locked metal cabinets. It was deserted. He closed
the door softly behind them. "The
condition your brother has," Kirlll Qandda whispered, "well,
it defies all conventional gene therapy. Tests show that his DNA is
undamaged. His brain chemistry is, of course, abnormal, but each time
we try to rebalance him we fail." He looked at the door for a
moment, as if fearful a Khagggun or, worse, a Gyrgon would barge in.
"It is almost as if his condition continually mutates to
actively resist our best efforts." He tried to smile. "It
is something of a mystery, I am afraid, one that we have been unable
to solve. It is why Terrettt's Deirus keeps getting reassigned. The
case defeats them." "But
surely there must be—" Marethyn shook her head. "I
mean, he is a Stogggul, after all. A great artist." Just
then Kirlll Qandda's wrist-communicator buzzed and a Gen-omatekk
called his name in a sharp, imperious tone. He gave her a quick, sad
smile. "I am sorry, but now I really must be going. Good
afternoon to you, Marethyn Stogggul." He turned on his heel and
quickly went out of the cubicle. Marethyn,
gaining the door, craned her neck, briefly glimpsed a pack of
Khagggun. Some held babies roughly in their arms. Others herded a
group of small children—mixed breed, V'ornn and Kundalan. A
Gyrgon came into the hall, lifted a beckoning hand. Kirlll Qandda and
the imperious Genomatekk took charge of the group as they filed
through the doorway in which the Gyrgon stood. What are they doing
with those children? she wondered. Just then, a Khagggun noticed
her and came striding down the corridor toward her. "This
area is off-limits," he said sternly. She
took a quick step backward. It angered her that she was so easily
intimidated. "You
are ordered to leave, immediately." What
choice did she have? As she turned and descended the main staircase
she noticed a speck of Terrettt's blood like a tattoo on the back of
her hand. The
SaTrryn Consortium long-range grav-carriage, sleek and glimmering
with impeccably harnessed power, waited just outside the grounds of
the regent's palace. Kurgan could see Sornnn SaTrryn with two of his
orderlies making the last of the preparations for their overnight
trip to the Korrush. He stopped, and so did his heavily armed
Haaar-kyut escort. As he watched Sornnn go about his small routine
tasks Kurgan was once again reminded of how apart he remained from
the mainstream of V'ornn life. Oddly, deep inside he found a desire
to insert himself into the bits of overheard colloquy, but owing to
his office he could not. Ministers, Bashkir and Khagggun alike, fell
silent at his approach, their conversation cut off in midsentence.
The spell of fear he had so ruthlessly cast had worked too well, and
now here, in the very center of this glimmery web, he found himself
isolate, deprived of friends his own age, of the breath of life
essential to a still-young and growing V'ornn. By his own
machinations he had arrived prematurely at the stage of eminence
normally granted to those of advanced age who had had the advantage
of years to gain experience in how to cope. Then,
with a silent N'Luuura take it! he shrugged off his lingering
melancholy and strode to the side of the grav-carriage. It was a
gleaming copper color, perhaps ten meters long, with a smallish
cockpit up front for the pilot-captain and the navigator. Behind was
another cockpit, spacious and luxuriously appointed, for the
passengers. In the rear was space for provisions and supplies and the
like. Sornnn
SaTrryn greeted the regent as he clambered aboard. He said not a word
of protest as the pair of Haaar-kyut guards sat on either side of
him. Three hours later, deep in the Kundalan countryside, with bales
of dried wrygrass, glennan, and oatgrass neatly stacked in the yellow
fields on either side of them, Sornnn broke out the food, and they
had a midday meal. They saw folk gathering for one of the many
Kundalan festivals. At
first, they spoke of inconsequential matters, then, at Kurgan's
request, Sornnn talked at length about the Korrush. "I
cannot pretend that spending so much time among the Five Tribes has
not changed me," Sornnn said finally. "It
seems to me that Kundala had changed us all," Kurgan said,
wiping his lips. "In
what way has it changed you, regent?" The
farmers had erected a multicolored pole; they wore horned masks and
danced around a bonfire, their implements placed in a larger circle
around them. They stopped, however, as soon as they spied the
oncoming hoverpod. Quickly, they hurled their masks into the fire.
With a fearful look, they gathered up their tools and returned to
their labor. "I
think of us, of our long stay on Kundala, of being idle, of being in
one place too long, of being deprived of both home and of the forward
momentum impelling us to find another home." "Did
it ever occur to you, regent, that we may at last have found a home?" "What,
here? Kundala?" "That's
right." Sornnn nodded. "It seems to me that we V'ornn have
passed through the stage when we can continue to labor under the
delusion that there is a certain romanticism in being wanderers. I
look around me at my fellow V'ornn, and this is what I see. I see a
race that finds its wandering enervating. And being the eternal
outsider seems to be at the heart of our motivation for the
destruction we wreak on every civilization we encounter." Sornnn
said, "The one emotion, I think, that we cannot allow ourselves
is self-pity, and so we annihilate those who might harbor like the
plague that selfsame pity." "There
are those who would consider your words treasonous." "Why?
I have said nothing against the V'ornn Modality, only that I find our
creeping ennui disturbing. Surely, these are the words of a patriot."
He laughed easily. "Besides, I have little regard for the
opinions of others. I have found, regent, that even the cleverest
assault on a closed mind is a waste of time." Now
it was Kurgan's turn to laugh. "I take your meaning, Sornnn
SaTrryn, and mark it well. I suspect that there may already be
unexpected benefits to this sojourn to primitive lands." They
traveled on, north by northeast. The high haze of late summer had
been swiftly overtaken by the clear, crisp air of autumn, which was
with every day deepening into the profound cold of the Kundalan
winter. The smell of fallen leaves and kuello-fir needles, turned to
mulch by the autumnal rains, perfumed the air. Here and there a patch
of ice could be seen glistening, a harbinger of winter. The
neat geometric patterns of agriculture were rapidly replaced by long
bleak scars in the denuded hillsides, evidence of the extensive
V'ornn program of strip-mining for lortan. This lucrative operation
marched into the west like the tines of a mammoth rake, and with it
the temporary villages supporting the ragged Kundalan slaves who
worked the mines directed by their Mesagggun and Khagggun overseers.
Lortan was a dense substance that lay in thick arteries beneath the
topsoil of the hillsides. It was this homely black clay that the
V'ornn Mesagggun refined into veradium. The
oblate sun passed behind their left shoulders. Its cool, brittle
light flared against the ice-blue crags of the Djenn Marre. With the
changing of the seasons, the snow line had markedly advanced. They
could clearly mark the higher elevations, where the Abbey of Floating
White and its many-tiered
town of Stone Border were to be found farther to their northwest.
Ahead stretched the Great Northern Plain known by its inhabitants as
the Korrush. All
at once, they were engulfed in eerie twilight. Clouds massed on the
western horizon, lit up, utterly still. The sky was orange. The
entire world seemed to be on fire. Nearing the village of Im-Thera,
the vastness of the Korrush became overwhelming, the sheer immensity
of the space a kind of crushing weight. Kurgan could not explain it,
had not believed Sornnn SaTrryn when he had warned him of this
initial effect, and yet this crepuscular steppe engendered in him a
kind of existential dread. They
overflew Im-Thera, a tiny, mean-looking village of tents and not much
more. The place looked filthy to Kurgan. Probably insect-infested,
too, he thought. Nothing moved save the tent flaps, but in a small,
dusty, open space a cooking fire blazed unattended. Beside
him, Sornnn rose and, bent over, whispered something he could not
hear to the SaTrryn pilot-captain. The moment Sornnn regained his
seat the grav-carriage went into a long, swooping dive. "Regent,
I do not wish to alarm you, and I most certainly do not want your
Haaar-kyut to act precipitously," Sornnn said calmly but
authoritatively, "but I fear something is amiss." Kurgan
peered ahead of them. "No,
regent, look low the sky." Kurgan
saw a coven of large blue-black birds, circling on enormously long
wings. As he watched, one dipped down to earth, only to rise again
with something in its beak. "Cshey'in.
Carrion birds of the Korrush," Sornnn said. "They will eat
anything that is dead, but what they prefer is the flesh of
tribesmen." Kurgan
lowered his gaze to the spot above which the cshey'in were circling.
"I don't see anything." "When
we land," Sornnn continued, "it is imperative that you
remain inside the grav-carriage no matter what happens. Your guard
will keep you safe." "What
is it?" Kurgan said. "What has happened?" Far from
being frightened, he itched to feel the weight of an ion cannon in
his arms. Im-Thera,
the pathetic village of nomads, was just under a kilometer behind
them. "See
there?" Sornnn pointed. As they crested a low ridge, a warren of
earth mounds became immediately visible, below which could be
seen a subterranean gridwork of ancient walls, crumbled, clotted with
fibrous roots. To one side, a scattered rune of red, its edges
fluttering in the fitful gritty breeze. "Do you mark the
pale red robes? Those are bodies of Beyy Das, the tribe that oversees
the archaeological dig of Za Hara-at." The
SaTrryn navigator turned his hatchet face to them briefly. "Killed
only hours ago," he said in his laconic manner. "The
corpses are not yet picked clean." Sornnn
took out an ion cannon and, with admirable precision, knocked the
birds out of the sky. Their screams echoed through the emptiness. "I
take it you have a permit for that weapon," Kurgan said to cover
his admiration of Sornnn's accuracy from a swiftly moving vehicle. The
navigator reached into a forward compartment, offered an official
Khagggun yellow-red data-crystal for his inspection. He waved it
away. A
moment later, they had landed. Sornnn jumped out, his pilot-captain,
similarly armed, just behind him. The navigator took over the
grav-carriage's controls, the engine ready to lift off at the least
provocation. Kurgan's Haaar-kyut were standing on either side of him,
weapons at the ready. Warily,
Sornnn and the pilot-captain reconnoitered the site. At one end was a
long tamped-dirt ramp, which they eventually took down into the
remains of Za Hara-at itself. They were gone for some time. Kurgan
kept a keen eye out, but he saw nothing moving. The wind stuttered
and keened through the ruins, creating snatches of a mournful melody
that hinted at mysterious death and long-ago destruction. His guard
were at once vigilant and serene; they were used to off-world
missions. Kurgan had no doubt that they would give their lives in
order to save his. At
length, Sornnn and his companion reappeared. They had between 'diem a
Beyy Das tribesman. He was clearly injured. Blood streamed from a
gash in his skull, and halfway up the ramp they were obliged to half
support him back to the grav-carriage. As
they hoisted him aboard, the navigator broke out a first-aid kit. They
began to examine the Beyy Das as he slumped heavily against a
bulkhead. "A
raid, he tells us," Sornnn said, plunking himself down next to
Kurgan. "Jeni Cerii reavers. The Jeni Cerii are the most warlike
of the Five Tribes. The other tribes are subject to periodic raids.
Especially here." "Why
is that?" Kurgan asked, "Come
with me and I will show you." Sornnn stood up. "The Jeni
Cerii are long gone. It is perfectly safe now." Nevertheless,
his Haaar-kyut insisted on accompanying them down into the bowels of
Kundala. As they descended the earthen ramp, Kurgan was astonished at
how extensive the excavations were. When
he mentioned this, Sornnn replied, "Za Hara-at was a citadel of
enormous proportions. By many accounts, it was far larger than Axis
Tyr. And the excavations here are bearing that out. Already three
layers of the city have been uncovered, but only partially, even
though almost a square kilometer has been dug out. Not all of what
has been unburied has been explored." Where
the ramp ended the long-dead streets of Za Hara-at began. They
appeared to be constructed quite improbably of beaten bronze that
glowed in the gathering dusk. There were walls and windows, doors and
trestles, crossroads and corners, all unfinished or, more accurately,
frozen in the midst of their death throes, still standing, partially
decomposed. The inquisitive Korrush wind pushed through these dead
spaces with a vigor altogether lacking in the rest of the landscape. "This
is what I wanted to show you." Sornnn was kneeling in the dust.
As Kurgan watched, he ran his fingertips over runes carved from lapis
and emperor carnelian. "You see these ancient symbols? You see
how they have been desecrated with excrement? And here. This pile of
burnt bones. Bones of the ancestors of Za Hara-at, painstakingly and
reverently exhumed by the Beyy Das. The Jeni Cerii have no religion.
Za Hara-at was a Holy City, and yet they deny such a thing. But, you
see, it draws them like a magnet, though they do not know why and,
not knowing, they beat at it, defile it with an unreasoning hatred
that masks their own ignorance." Kurgan
recalled the conversation they had had over the midday meal.
"According to your unscientific theory," he said somewhat
sardonically, "they are not dissimilar to us V'ornn." "Admittedly,
philosophical theories are not provable by scientific methodology,"
Sornnn said as he regained his feet. "Nevertheless, they are
often useful in provoking spirited debate among thoughtful
individuals." He turned to Kurgan. "What do you think,
regent? Is there a similarity?" "I
will admit that rage is a major component of the V'ornn psyche,"
Kurgan said despite himself. "The
next question to ask is, why? I think you will agree that the answer
is a vital one." Kurgan's
attention was directed to a shard of a vessel clattering through the
dust devils on the bronze street. Like everything in the grave of Za
Hara-at, the shard was infused with unknown meaning. It reminded him
that there was an uneasiness here, a certain restiveness as if the
long sleep of death had never been fully accepted or had been
irrevocably disturbed by N'Luuura knew what numinous force. Kurgan,
not normally attuned to necromantic nuances, nevertheless had the
creeping sensation that something still abided here, ancient and
unknowable. He said as much to Sornnn. "I
must say that I am impressed, regent," Sornnn replied. "I
do not pretend to know the truth of it, but the Beyy Das believe that
such a thing as you speak of—whatever it may be—does
exist. They also claim that it periodically emerges from its ancient
home and kills one of their own." "Have
you seen the body of any of these so-called victims?" "As
a matter of fact, I have. It may be that he was murdered by a Jeni
Cerii raiding party, but if so they have rituals far stranger than
any of the other tribes. This corpse the Beyy Das showed me was
without either bones or blood." "That
seems impossible!" "I
certainly would have said so, regent, had I not seen the victim with
my own eyes. It was as if something had sucked the life right out of
him. All that was left was a sack of skin and desiccated flesh." Kurgan
looked around again, not with any degree of fear, but rather with
renewed interest. He wondered once again why Nith Batoxxx was now so
intent on rebuilding Za Hara-at. "Resurrecting" it, as he
had put it. What was lurking in these ancient ruins? What power did
Nith Batoxxx hope to unearth here? Kurgan was now doubly pleased that
Sornnn SaTrryn had suggested this journey, for standing in these vast
and eerie ruins, he felt
the spell of Za Hara-at enfolding him, and he knew he was one step
closer to unlocking the secrets of the Gyrgon's mind. It
was a busy night at Nimbus, and Mittelwin's attention was required in
many places at once. The old V'ornn seer who worked the plush entry
chamber, amusing clients on their way in and out of the kashig-gen,
was ill again. The local Genomatekk said it was chronic Kraelian
cytosis;
but Mittelwin knew better. She knew the signs of advanced salamuuun
addiction. No one spoke about this noxious aspect of the drug. In
fact, it was vehemently denied. Yet she knew salamuuun was addictive,
having seen the results of it too many times. One
of her imari had the night off because of a death in the family,
another had been beaten by a particularly aggressive Khagggun. By
Gyr-gon decree, there were strict laws against such behavior in the
kashig-gen. Which was not to say that it didn't happen. Mittelwin had
her own way of handling such disturbing matters. When she arrived at
the chamber, Jonnqa appeared as if she had been run down by a
hoverpod. She signed for Lace, the massive Mesagggun who worked for
her, to bind the offending client. It mattered not to her what caste
he was, when he was in her kashiggen he abided by the rules set down
by the Gyrgon or suffered the consequences. Every client was advised
of this upon entering for the first time. In
her time as dzuoko she had learned a thing or two about
punishment—and about the mechanisms of terror. She approached
the Khagggun, whom Lace had pushed down onto a chair. His arms were
bound behind his back, his ankles lashed together. Standing before
him, she spread her long legs. Slowly, she raised her floor-length
gown until it was clear to the Khagggun that she was naked
underneath. His eyes drank her in, his nostrils dilated slightly as
he scented her. She sat athwart his powerful thighs, took his head in
her hands, and kissed him hard. As she did so, she ground her hips
down on him. His tender parts began to swell, rising up to meet hers. Males
are so predictable, she thought. They think with their brains
only so long as their tender parts are dry. When
she felt him in full flower, she raised herself up, reached down with
her hand, and did something very nasty indeed. The Khagggun's eyes
opened wide. He made a sound of guttural pain that rose in pitch
and intensity. It gave
her a measure of satisfaction to be able to elicit pain from a caste
bred to be inured to it. It was an exquisite example of the
completeness of her training, a long, arduous process that broke many
of those who sought to be imari, sending them off to easier, more
appropriate careers. "
'Whosoever harms an imari shall suffer compensatory damages and
banishment from all kashiggen,' " she recited. " 'Whosoever
kills an imari shall himself be killed. Tears
stood out in the corners of the Khagggun's eyes, trembling as he
shook with agony. She had brought him not only great pain but
terrible humiliation. She saw as much in his eyes. "You
are henceforth banned from this kashiggen—from any
kashiggen," she said softly, almost gently. "You will
pay to repair the damage you have done to Jonnqa. If you cannot pay
or if you cannot pay fully, your family is liable. If you violate any
or all of these dictates, I will personally see your head on a pike." She
stood up and took Jonnqa's hand, brought her close, kissed the blood
off her face and shoulders and back. Then she took her out of there,
leaving Lace to see to the Khagggun's final disposition. Mittelwin
loved all her imari as if they were her daughters. This, too, had
been part of her training. She took Jonnqa down the dimly lighted
hallway. In the bath, she gently stripped Jonnqa, then stepped out of
her own clothes. They showered together, like two young girls.
Mittelwin used all her talents to minister to Jonnqa's contusions,
which were starting to puff up and discolor. The girl moaned a
little, and once she started to cry. Mittelwin held her tenderly
until her sobbing subsided. After
the shower she applied soothing unguents to her body and examined
more carefully the damage to her face. From her preliminary probing
she determined that nothing was broken, but Jonnqa suddenly started
to tremble as shock set in, and Mittelwin sat her down in a warm,
shadowed corner of the bath. She wrapped her tight with a thick
towel, stroked her hair, then went to the opposite end of the bath
where the fresh robes and gowns were kept in a low cupboard that ran
the entire length of the bath chamber. Kneeling, she opened the
doors, searching the neat stacks of folded clothes for just the right
outfit. She wanted something lively and gay that would help lift
Jonnqa's mood. Behind
her, Jonnqa sat very still as if afraid that any movement would
further fracture her
fragile equilibrium. Gradually, so subtly that she was not even aware
of it, the shadows around her deepened, stirring as if with an
ethereal life. A rippling commenced in the gathering darkness, out of
which appeared six pairs of ruby-red eyes, then a triangular head,
the segmented body of a gigantic insect. Thin, ciliated appendages
wrapped around Jonnqa's mouth, neck, chest, waist. There was for
Jo-nnqa a moment of terror, of searing pain, vanishing as quickly as
the corpus of the Tzelos, which had been absorbed into her body. The
struggle for control was intense but fearfully brief. By the time
Mittelwin had turned back, clothes for both of them in her arms,
Jonnqa's essence, bound and gagged inside her own mind, had
disappeared altogether.
5 Aura
Rekkk
waited until he was certain Thigpen was asleep, curled into a furry
ball on a chair in the Library before he shook Riane awake. Riane had
dropped off in the middle of a complex passage in a book called The
Gathering of Signs. She had fought sleep for as long as she
could, but the third time through the long, meandering paragraph of
dense Old Tongue prose had put her under. Morning
filled with metallic light streamed through the windows. Dull glints
of broken glass, the chirrupping of insects, the ominous drone of
hoverpods crisscrossing the countryside. "Walk
with me," Rekkk whispered, as soon as Riane's eyes opened. "I
have a proposition to discuss with you." "I'll
wake Thigpen. She ought to be—" Rekkk
was shaking his head. "Just you and me, Dar Sala-at. No one
eke." Riane
nodded and got up. Her eyes felt gritty, and her body was still sore
from her encounter with the daemons. She did not have long to wonder
what Rekkk wanted. As soon as they were outside, he began. "Of
all of us here I am the closest to Giyan." Riane
said nothing. Dew flecked their boots as they moved off the stone
path. Rekkk
went on, "I think I should have the last word when it comes to
how we're going to rescue her. I don't know about you, but I still
think our best and only option is to go to Nimbus and ask Jonnqa for
help." "You
heard about the future Thigpen saw if we do that." I
do not believe she saw anything worth talking about, but let us for a
moment set my skepticism aside. Let us assume she did, in fact, see
the future. By her own admission what she saw is one possible
future, one of an infinite number, she said. That being the case,
there must be many futures that result in us going to Nimbus, not
just the one she saw." Every
hour that passed, Riane was growing more impatient. She could see
Rekkk fraying at the edges, and Eleana was clearly terrified. The
toll on them from Giyan's transformation was enormous and would only
get worse. "What are you proposing?" But she already knew. "You
Thrip to Nimbus," Rekkk said. "You take me with you." "And
if it is a trap? If the Tzelos is already there waiting for us?" "Then
we deal with that when it happens." "That
is hardly a solution." "Perhaps
not. But the way I figure it we've got two extra things going for
us." Rekkk's face was set and grim. "First, remember that a
trap is only effective when it is a surprise. Second, that Tzelos
daemon sticks out like a Kraelian sundog in the regent's palace." Riane
kept trying to find another, less risky solution, but the fact was
there simply wasn't any. It was this or inaction. "When do you
want to go?" Rekkk
grinned. "How about right now?" Eleana
felt them go. In her dream, she had been walking side by side with
Riane, only Riane wasn't Riane at all but someone else, someone
hauntingly familiar. She felt completely at ease. In the peculiar
manner of dreams, she could see herself laughing in response to
something Riane said even while wondering how she could feel so at
ease with the Dar Sala-at, how she could be laughing knowing that
Lady Giyan was in pain. But Lady Giyan was not part of this dream,
and so the dream-Eleana banished her to another realm while she
walked with Riane or whoever Riane had become. As she took Riane's
hand, her face wreathed in a smile. Sunlight struck her in a dazzle.
They were walking in forests known to her, the haunts of her
childhood amid the foothills of the Djenn Marre. A kind of aura
emanating from the sun or from the forest itself bathed them, and
everything was perfect. For just a moment. And then it was gone, the
aura winked out, and she awoke with a start. Her heart was pounding,
and her breath was coming fast. She
scrambled up, running through the abbey, knowing Riane was not there.
Neither was Rekkk. She burst into the Library, breathed a sigh of
relief to see the Rappa safely asleep in her chair. "Thigpen!"
she called. "Wake up] Wake up! They're gone!" "Who's
gone?" Thigpen said as she stretched. "Riane
and Rekkk! I checked all over. They're not here." Thigpen
froze in midyawn. Her snout lifted, and her nostrils dilated. "I
smell a Thrip." She growled low in her throat. "By
Pyphoros' five heads!" She leapt off her chair, bounded across
the floor and out the broken window. She put her snout to the ground
and inhaled deeply. Her whiskers were twitching madly. "They
have gone to Axis Tyr, to Nimbus," she said in a disgusted
voice. "Those idiots!" "Idiots?"
Eleana echoed, taken aback. "Yes,
idiots! I told them clearly enough the likely consequences of such
foolhardy action! Which part of the warning did they not understand?"
She shook her head, her thick fur bristling, making her look twice
her normal size. "I swear I do not know what gets into these
normally thoughtful bipeds. Is it a fever of fools that suddenly
comes over them, a swoon of stupidity, an illness of illogic? What in
Miina's name is it?" "Oh,
that's simple enough," the girl said easily. "It's love." "Love?"
Thigpen's nose wrinkled up as if she had smelled something deeply
distasteful. "Well, in that case I am doubly glad I am not prone
to that pernicious affliction." "Why,
Thigpen, I do not believe you." Eleana crouched, wrists on her
knees. "You do not care what happens to Riane?" "Of
course I care! She is the Dar Sala-at, and I am duty-bound to—" "That's
not what I mean." Thigpen
snorted. "You are wasting my time." "Am
I?" Eleana reached out and stroked the Rappa's fur. "Even
you would not deny that you have established a bond with Riane." Thigpen
eyed her suspiciously. "Well, of course I have. But I fail to
see what—" "She
loves you. She counts on your advice. You are like a parent to her." "Then
why did she ignore my advice?" Thigpen said crossly. "Why
did she take Rekkk and Thrip into what is most certainly a trap?" "You
mean why did she put herself in danger." Eleana kissed Thigpen
on each furry cheek. "When we catch up with them you must ask
her that yourself." Olnn
Rydddlin leaned back, pulled his nondescript traveling cloak close
around him, and said, "I understand you used to bounce Kurgan
Stogggul on your knee." "That
was a long time ago," Bronnn Pallln said sourly. "A lot of
nu-maaadis has passed through the gullet since then." He craned
his thick, veiny neck, peering darkly at the reeking room in which
they sat. "This is the heart of surly Harborside, a place I make
it a strict point to avoid. Why are we meeting here in this noisome
Sarakkon tavern, what is it called?" "Blood
Tide." "Blood
Tide, indeed," Bronnn Pallln said with a trace of petulance.
"Had I been meeting with the regent, I daresay it would have
been in the opulence of the regent's palace." "Allow
me to say bluntly that you would not be meeting with the regent." To
which reply, Bronnn Pallln glowered glumly. "Indeed not. And
why? I am the head of a powerful and well-respected Consortium with a
long history of alliances with the Stogggul. All right, I will tell
you why not. Ever since that young interloper stuck his nose into
Wennn Stogggul's tender parts as far as the new regent is concerned I
have been relegated to second-Bashkir status." "Sornnn
SaTrryn was clever enough to make his deal with the Stogggul, and you
were not," Olnnn said, twisting the knife into the fresh wound
he had caught sight of. He leaned forward conspiratorially. "I
will tell you a secret, Bronnn Pallln. I dislike Sornnn SaTrryn as
much as you do." The
tavern was low-ceilinged, purposely dim. Filigreed lanterns hung from
the ceiling, but they were turned down low. The heartwood walls were
stained and grimy, hung with portraits of Kundalan harbormasters
dating back hundreds of years. There was a copper-topped bar along
one wall and a small raised platform along the other where the
occasional itinerant musician or comedian foolhardy enough to brave
this raucous crowd held forth. It was also the space where nightly
the Kal-llistotos champion was crowned to a serenade of bawdy songs
sung by a chorus of the challengers he had defeated. Olnnn
sat with his back against the wall at this rear corner table. From
this vantage point he could see everyone who came and went through
the front door. He also could clandestinely watch Rada, the owner of
Blood Tide, whom he often dreamed about at night. She was a
Tuskugggun of dark good looks possessed of a long tapering skull
gleaming with spiced oil, who dared wear her sifeyn folded at her
neck, leaving her head uncovered. But not bare. She had on a thin
tertium and veradhim diadem. Others had foolishly judged her to be a
Looorm on the side, for the whores were the only Tuskugggun brazen
enough to bare their skulls in public. Opposite
him, the air of defeat had left Bronnn Pallln's meaty shoulders and
he sat up a little. Distant glimmers danced behind his eyes. "Does
that mean I have an ally?" He
is so terribly anxious, Olnnn thought. He drank the sweet mead,
but what he was tasting was the other's desperation. He could see in
Bronnn Pallln's corlike eyes all his weaknesses, as if reading again
the list his staff had compiled for him. Yes, he thought now, Bronnn
Pallln was just the sort of V'ornn he needed for his
stalking-horse—weak, docile, malleable. He was interested only
in prestige and preening. Yes, indeed. He would do whatever Olnnn
told him to do. He had had the great good fortune to be the only son
of Koun Pallln, a very savvy Bashkir. When the old patriarch had
died, Bronnn Pallln found himself in charge of a first-rate
Consortium with not the slightest idea of how to run it successfully.
Perhaps that is what Wennn Stogggul recognized because, in allying
himself with Bronnn Pallln, Kurgan's father had reaped a host of
lucrative deals, raking in unconscionable profits off the top of
Pallln business in return for rendering advice on such projects as
building the spice market and renovating Receiving Spirit. Rich
percentages he was apparently willing to forgo for the Ring of Five
Dragons Sornnn SaTrryn traded in return for having Wennn Stogggul
name him Prime Factor. "Sornnn
SaTrryn was the regent's father's choice as Prime Factor," Olnnn
said. "The regent prefers you, but he cannot be seen to move
precipitately." He gained immense enjoyment from spinning this
fanciful tale. "The SaTrryn Consortium is very powerful, and the
regent has just attained his office. I think you understand." "Of
course, Star-Admiral. His power base is at a delicate juncture." "Precisely
so." 'But
these unfortunate circumstances, you see, are the problem." "Then
we must find a way to solve the problem." "Truly,
Star-Admiral? But how? Have you formulated a plan?" It
was all Olnnn could do not to laugh in the fool's face. Bronnn Pallln
was pathetically easy to manipulate. "Well, now, that all
depends." A
trio of Sarakkon burst through the door, trailed by a gust of the
chilly autumnal night. They stamped on the worn wooden floorboards
with their high shagreen boots, setting the copper and brass and jade
runes in their thick beards to jingling. Their boisterous voices
added to the general din of the place. Bronnn
Tallin's muddy eyes were alight with avarice. "On what would it
depend, Star-Admiral?" He noisily guzzled his sweet mead, a
solitary toast to his growing good fortune. "Please. I am all
ears." "That
is good, for you see my plan relies solely upon you." "Me,
Star-Admiral? I am not certain that I ..." Olnnn
stitched a smile to his face. "Ambition is a virtue in V'ornn
like us, don't you agree?" Bronnn
Pallln brightened a little. "Oh, yes, indeed, yes, Star-Admiral.
Ambition was my father's watchword. Therefore, I have made it mine." "That
is good. Ambition is what is required. Along with a healthy portion
of resourcefulness." "You
have but to ask," Bronnn Pallln said. Olnnn
signed for another round and, as he did so, absorbed the length of
Rada's legs as she bent over to gather a pair of empty goblets off
the floor where a couple of drunken Sarakkon had dropped them. Just
as the waitress was approaching their table, Olnnn hissed to Bronnn
Pallln, "Find the means to discredit Sornnn SaTrryn." "Star-Admiral?" Olnnn
waited while the fresh goblets of mead were placed onto the smeary
tabletop. Then he turned back to the waiting Bronnn Pallln and,
despite the rising din around them, lowered his voice even further.
"Listen to me, for I will say it but once." He kept his
face impassive, though Bronnn Pallln had all but crawled across the
tabletop in his gluttonous zeal. "As I have said, the regent
cannot be seen to touch Sornnn SaTrryn. If, however, it were to
become known that the SaTrryn scion was involved in some illegal
activity, well then ..." "But
the SaTrryn's reputation is unimpeachable." Olnnn
rubbed his temple where a vein beat beneath his skin. He considered
strangling Bronnn Pallln right then and there. Then he reined in his
temper, took several deep breaths, and smiled. "As Star-Admiral
of all the Khagggun I am privy to many things unknown to the general
populace. One in particular interests me greatly." Olnnn watched
Bronnn Pallln swallow the hook whole. "The Khagggun high command
suspects a high-ranking Bashkir is involved in supplying the Kundalan
Resistance with stolen ion cannons." "Star-Admiral?" "Oh,
do not look so shocked, Bronnn Pallln. As it was with Eleusis Ashera
there are V'ornn who have foolishly fallen under the malign spell of
Kundala. N'Luuura only knows why! In any event, we have been looking
for this traitor for years." Bronnn
Pallln rubbed his hands together. "Are you telling me it is the
SaTrryn, Star-Admiral?" Slowly
and carefully, Olnnn said, "That is precisely what I am saying." He
spread his damp, chubby hands. "But what would you need me for?" Strangling
would be too good a death for him, Olnnn decided. "Sornnn
SaTrryn is exceedingly clever. To date, he has eluded being
implicated in all official investigations." He waited for the
light to come on. "But you, Bronnn Pallln, are as unofficial as
it gets. When I ran into you at the Rescendance it occurred to me
that as the head of a first-tier Bashkir Consortium you would have
contacts unavailable even to me." "I
suppose that might be true enough." "All
that is required is for you to bring me the evidence." The
big Bashkir tapped his thick lips with a spatulate forefinger. "And
when Sornnn SaTrryn is removed from office . . . ?" "Pack
your bags," Olnnn lied smoothly. "I have it from the regent
himself, it will be moving day." Rekkk
Hacilar had returned to Nimbus and, to be honest, he liked it not. It
was here that he had encountered the Gyrgon Nith Sahor, first in his
guise as Mastress Kannna, later as the embodiment of Giyan herself.
While he was grateful for Nith Sahor's assistance, he could not quite
say that he missed him. Gyrgon had always made him uneasy, out it
wasn't until he had met one in person that his flesh had truly begun
to creep. There was something distinctly disconcerting about being
with a V'ornn who could change his shape at will. You never knew whom
you were talking to, what intimate knowledge you were inadvertently
giving away. No, he decided, they were better off now that Nith Sahor
was dead. He
stood in the opulent Cloud Chamber of the kashiggen and tried not to
recall the salamuuun flight he had taken with Nith Sahor. While under
the influence of the drug he had spoken with his dead mother and been
shaken to his core. As always, he was deeply uneasy with emotion of
any kind, and never more so than now. His Khagggun training had not
only submerged his emotions but had made it supremely difficult to
bring them back into the light. With good reason: emotion was the
last thing you wanted when you went into battle. It impaired
reasoning, clouded judgment. That salamuuun flight had opened the
door to the vault, so to speak. It had allowed him to express his
love for Giyan and, now, that love had brought him here to take the
first step in finding her, in saving her from the most powerful
forces of darkness. But he worried that his love for her would cause
him to make a fatal mistake that could end his life and Riane's. He
saw Mittelwin enter the Cloud Chamber, so-called because of its domed
ceiling, exquisitely enameled in the lush Kundalan style. "I
remember you," the dzuoko said. "You were here in a season
previous with Mastress Kannna." Rekkk
gave a little nod. "I
daresay you look a lot better than you did that afternoon." She
offered him her professional smile. "Bloody but not bowed,
wasn't that it?" "This
is Riane," he said, wanting desperately to change the subject. Mittelwin
eyed Riane appreciatively. "An exceptionally handsome girl—on
the cusp of becoming a young woman." Her smile widened. "In
what way may we please you?" she said in the formal kashiggen
greeting. "We
seek an hour's time with an imari." "But
of course. We have many—" "One
particular imari," Rekkk said. Now
he had caught Mittelwin's attention. "Ah, well, here at Nimbus
we are ready to satisfy all desires." She laced her long fingers
together. "Which imari do you require?" "Jonnqa." "Now
that will be something of a problem. Jonnqa is unwell at the moment."
She smiled her best professional smile. "I can offer any number
of other imari, all of the Third Rank." "It
is Jonnqa we must see," Rekkk said. Mittelwin
shook her head. "I'm afraid I cannot—" "Please,"
Riane said quietly. "It is a matter of the utmost urgency." Mittelwin
turned her attention to the Kundalan girl. There was a curious
intensity about her, an unusual strength of purpose. "We
will not tax her unduly," Riane continued. "I give you my
word." Mittelwin
stared straight into the girl's light eyes and liked what she saw.
"All right. But it may take some time to make her presentable.
You understand." "Yes,"
Riane said quickly. "Thank you, dzuoko." Mittelwin
nodded. "It is my pleasure." She indicated the ornately
carved settees. "Please make yourselves comfortable. I will have
food and drink brought to you while you wait." As
she walked down the narrow, circuitous hallway, Mittelwin wondered
what the Khagggun and the Kundalan girl could possibly want with
Jonnqa. How did they even know about her? Her clients were nothing if
not discreet. Mittelwin
frowned as she followed the corridor to her left. The beautiful old
filigreed lanterns washed the walls in long warm ellipses of light,
transforming her shadow into a tail. She made it a strict habit not
to speculate about her clients' motives, but in the case of this
Khagggun she could not help herself. For one thing, it had been made
known that he had turned Rhynnnon, that any sighting should without
delay be reported to the Khagggun or the regent's staff. Mittelwin
felt it was a sure bet that Kurgan Stogggul and Star-Admiral Olnnn
Rydddlin were bent on planting his skull atop a pike outside the
regent's palace. If that were so, she would doubtless be rewarded
handsomely for traducing them. Not that she would do anything of the
kind. She liked not the Stogggul scion, liked even less the thought
of a callow youth in such a position of power. Nothing good could
come of it. Either he would prove incompetent or exceedingly
dangerous. For
another thing, the Khagggun was now in the company of this Kundalan
girl with an uncanny strength and prescient eyes. He was treating her
not as a member of an inferior race but as an equal. This interested
her. In fact, as she thought about it she would have to say that
Rekkk Hacilar interested her greatly. She
came at length to the end of the corridor, knocked quickly on a door,
and went in. To her surprise, she found Jonnqa already awake, already
bathed, already coifed and clothed. Her face seemed astonishingly
free of bruises and puffiness. "You
have come to inform me that I have clients," Jonnqa said with
uncharacteristic bluntness. "How
did you know?" Mittelwin asked. Was there a preternatural glow
to her eyes or was it merely the lighting? The glow vanished. "I...
Why, I don't know," Jonnqa said. She seemed all at once
confused. "I was roused out of sleep by a feeling of urgency.
Thinking it a result of a full bladder I went to the bath and
relieved myself. The urgency remained. I came back here." "You
bathed." "I
do not remember." "Fixed
your hair and dressed in your finest robes." "I
did. I mean, I must have." Mittelwin
peered more closely at Jonnqa. "Your bruises looked healed. How
is that possible?" Jonnqa
said nothing. Now Mittelwin was certain something was amiss. A
muddiness had invaded the girl's eyes. Perhaps she was ill. "I
think it would be best if we put this off until another time." "No!"
Jonnqa grabbed Mittelwin's arm then, as if abruptly becoming aware of
the breach in strict protocol between imari and dzuoko, she released
her, dropped her gaze and her voice. "Please forgive me, dzuoko.
I meant no offense." Her voice had returned to its normal tone.
"But these clients asked for me by name, did they not?" Mittelwin
said nothing, stood contemplating the girl. An unnamed fear massed in
her belly. "The clients can come back another time." "But
I wish to see them now," Jonnqa said, in that other blunter
voice. "Why?" Jonnqa
looked startled. "What?" "Why
do you want to see them now? What difference could it make?" Something
moved across the imari's face, quick and sure, a powerful eddy of
emotion like the formation of a resolve. "No difference,"
she said stonily. "Tell them to return another time if that is
your decision." "It
is," Mittelwin said firmly, as confounded as she was angry at
Jonnqa's insolent, inexplicable behavior. What was wrong? Perhaps
internal injuries had occurred during the beating she had sustained.
If so, she vowed she would make that Khagggun pay compensatory
damages beyond anything he could imagine. "Wait here until I
return," she said shortly. "I want you examined by a
Genomatekk." She had turned, her hand already on the door when
she was whirled around, assaulted by something extruding itself
through Jonnqa's nostrils, ears, open mouth, the very pores of her
skin. Mittelwin's
mind was paralyzed with disbelief, frozen with shock, gripped by
terror. The huge insectlike creature inserted the ends of its
mandibles into the side of her neck. A burning commenced, as if she
had been set on fire. Blood began to spurt, and the last thing she
saw was a flat, triangular head shooting forward to catch every drop
in its lipless mouth. Olnnn
Rydddlin whistled while he slowly peeled back a strip of skin from
the Kundalan's side. This Kundalan was one of more than a hundred
rounded up by his Khagggun during the latest sweep in his stepped-up
efforts to find Rekkk Hacilar and Giyan. He did not hear the screams,
the entreaties, did not smell the stench of terror. "Have
you seen them?" he said to the Kundalan. "If you have, tell
me precisely where." He
paused, observing politely the time of reply. When none was
forthcoming, he recommenced his peeling. Another strip. More screams.
Blood dripping from the interrogation chamber bench in the caverns
beneath the regent's palace, like moments of time running backward,
memories he had tried unsuccessfully to bury . . . First
came the aura of opalescent light, then the image of Malistra bending
over him. She was crooning in a language Olnnn Rydddlin had never
heard before, or, perhaps he was so painracked from his leg he was
hallucinating. When the sorceress Giyan had turned Malistra's own
weapon against him, his world had dissolved in a web of agony so
excruciating he could scarcely recall it. To have the skin, muscle,
tendons, ligaments, nerves eaten away from a part of your body—well,
that was something for which even a Khagggun was unprepared . . . "Where
are they?" he said in a rather mechanical voice. "The
Rhynn-non traitor, Rekkk Hacilar, the Kundalan sorceress Giyan, they
have not vanished off the face of Kundala, they are not ghosts. They
must find food to eat, a place of shelter, at the very least. You
must have heard something of them or know someone who has. This is
the only possibility." A
small silence, the blood traversing the width of the bench, dripping
off the edge, setting up a rhythm not unlike a heartbeat. With some
difficulty, he worked another strip off the fatty layer of flesh.
This was the seventh Kundalan he had interrogated today. In the cells
all around him, his Khagggun were interrogating others. A warren of
pain and blood and fear . . . Still,
the aura of opalescent light lingered in his mind, sweeping him
inward, backward in time. He would have died without Malistra's
sor-cerous intervention, he knew that much. As she remade him, a bond
had grown between them, and when she was killed another piece of him
had been flayed off. He felt her absence with every breath he took, a
pain in his side he was glad would not go away. He cherished that
pain, deep and abiding, as assurance that Malistra had not abandoned
him totally. Nights, while his swollen eyes scanned the ceiling of
his bedroom in a vain search for sleep, he felt her moving in him,
sweeping through his viscera, turning his marrow into a river down
which she sluiced. Always, she pooled in the gleaming bones of his
stripped leg. He could feel them pulsing with knowledge of her,
imagined them a quick-breathing animal beneath the covers . . . Olnnn
turned the horizontal spit he had erected just above the Kun-dalan's
eyes. Even if the Kundalan turned his head to the left or to the
right he could not fail to see the strips of his own bloody skin
hanging there as if ready to be roasted. He had devised this
particular form of interrogation, the only one he would himself
perform, not long after he had become Star-Admiral. It had come to
him in a dream, even though his nights were largely sleepless, as
they had been since Malistra had brought him back from the dead. An
aura of opalescent light and the image of her bending over him,
crooning. Her hands were moving upon him or just above him, stirring
the dark viscous air as if it were a pot of stew. What was she doing? The
Kundalan gasped, and his red-rimmed eyes at last met Olnnn's. This
particular form of interrogation always worked, Olnnn had found. It
was only a matter of time. And now that time had come. "The
Northern Quarter," the Kundalan gasped through his swollen,
bloody mouth. He had bitten his tongue and lips many times. "The
Rhynnnon and a Kundalan female. I heard they were seen earlier on
Dayblossom Street."
There is a thing I do not understand," Riane said to Rekkk as
they waited for Mittelwin to return. "The kashiggen are
Kundalan—they are, essentially, pleasure palaces, are they
not?" "To
the best of my knowledge, yes." Rekkk was standing in the Cloud
Chamber so that he had a view of the corridor down which the dzuoko
had disappeared. Periodically, he glanced that way, his hand on the
hilt of his shock-sword. He seemed preoccupied, as if listening to
Riane with one ear while the other was calibrated for trouble. "When
the V'ornn took them over for salamuuun flights they installed V'ornn
dzuoko but kept the Kundalan imari." "Uh-huh." "Dzuoko
is derived from the Old Tongue dezeke, which means 'she
who provides.' "So
what?" Clearly Rekkk was in no mood for a lesson in comparative
linguistics. "It
is a Kundalan word." She waited for a reaction that did not
come. "Used by Tuskugggun." She waited again. "Rekkk,
are you listening to me?" He
turned, a scowl on his face. "What is your point?" "The
kashiggen seems to be a place where V'ornn and Kundalan peacefully
coexist." "It's
a female thing," Rekkk said. "Why don't you ask Mittelwin
when she returns." His head swiveled and he peered long and hard
down the corridor, "If she ever returns." "But
doesn't it seem odd to you that on all of Kundala, here is the only—" "What
seems odd is how long she is taking." "I
know, but will you answer my question?" "I
imagine it's the Gyrgon's doing," he said. "It's well-known
that they frequent the kashiggen, though what they do here is any
V'ornn's guess." "You
said you were here with a Gyrgon." "Ah,
that was Nith Sahor." Rekkk had taken several steps toward the
corridor. "That was different. He brought me here for a specific
purpose. I have no more idea than you do of how Gyrgon take their
pleasures." Hearing
soft footfalls, they turned. Someone was coming down the corridor.
Riane was aware of Rekkk's rising tension, and she found herself
gripping the hilt of her dagger. Rekkk
relaxed a little when he saw Mittelwin coming toward them. "Everything
is in readiness," the dzuoko said, beckoning them forward. They
went single file, Mittelwin leading, followed by Rekkk, with Riane
taking up the rear. The farther they went the more certain Riane was
that something serious was amiss. From the moment they had entered
Nimbus, she had been using her limited knowledge of Osoru to cast a
Net of Cognition. This spell was used to identify Caa, the energy
auras thrown off by sorcerous Avatars like the Tzelos and whatever
kind of daemon it was that had invaded Giyan. However, the Net of
Cognition was so finely tuned that it could also identify the
comparatively weak auras thrown off by nonsorcerous beings. The spell
had shown her, in passing, Mittelwin's aura, and now as she walked
more and more slowly she realized that it was coming from a spot
abreast of her, then just behind her. She
stopped, retracing her steps to a left-hand branch in the corridor.
She peered down its short length. It looked like a utility hall.
Mittelwin's aura was weakening, and she hurried into the dingy narrow
space, silently opened the second door on her right, and entered the
tiny darkened chamber. Something
dripped somberly, water from a broken tap. In that instant,
Mittelwin's already weakened aura winked out. Riane fumbled for a
fusion lamp, lighted it. She saw a utility chamber. Buckets, mops,
jars of enamel, slabs of marble were neatly stacked on the floor. To
their right was a cart piled with soiled linen and robes beside a
chute to the basement where the washing was done at an appropriate
remove from the kashiggen's clients. Floor-to-ceiling cupboards lined
the wall to her left. Something caught her eye, a dark stain pooling
beneath the crack between cupboard doors. With
a sense of foreboding, she yanked open the doors, and Mittelwin,
naked, waxy in death, hollow as a shell, mummified as if she had been
dead for decades, pitched out at her.
Riane ran down the utility hall, turned into the main corridor and
picked up her pace. Where had they gone, Rekkk and Mittelwin—
or more accurately, the thing that had taken Mittelwin's place? She
cursed herself for not saying something to Rekkk, but everything
happened too quickly, she had been going purely on sorcerous
instinct, and, anyway, what could she have possibly said that would
have not alerted the daemon? "Rekkk!"
she cried. "Rekkk, where are you?" The
sliding door at the end of the corridor burst outward off its tracks,
and there was the Tzelos. Tatters of Mittelwin's robes fluttered off
its segmented body. It held Rekkk aloft by two of its skeletal
forelegs. As it charged her, Riane was horrified to see that it had
skewered Rekkk with one of its wicked-looking mandibles. For
an instant, all she could think was that the future Thigpen saw was
coming true. That was all the time the daemon needed. It was
stupefyingly quick, scuttling down the corridor straight at her.
Knowing brute force was useless against it, she conjured spell after
spell in her limited repertory, but none seemed to affect the Tzelos
in the least. It
grabbed at her with a pair of waving appendages, and she ducked away,
twisting, reaching for Rekkk. She had no thought for herself now. She
had to get Rekkk away from the thing. Wrapping her arms around
Rekkk's midsection, she hauled on his weight. But the Tzelos, clever
daemon that it was, lifted its blunt, triangular head, raking its
mandible through Rekkk's flesh. He screamed, and Riane immediately
let go. The
Tzelos made a vicious lunge for her. She used the honed edge of her
dagger to hack off the end of the closest appendage. Immediately, it
grew back. The Tzelos began to shake its head, and Rekkk screamed
again in pain. This served to focus Riane on her immediate mission.
The Tzelos was attacking again, relentless. There was precious little
room to maneuver, and so far that was working to the daemon's favor.
Time to reverse that. As
the Tzelos darted at her again, Riane leapt upon it. Using the
segments of its body, she climbed upward. One appendage, then another
whipped around her. She reversed her grip on her dagger, plung-tog it
point first into one after another of the daemon's ruby-red eyes.
What damage she was inflicting she could not say, and she did not
wait around to find out, but turned and slid Rekkk off the mandible's
spear-points. As he fell to the floor, she tried to jump after him,
but she was held suspended by the appendages, the mandibles searching
to impale her. Then she twisted free and, as she gained her feet,
began to drag Rekkk backward down the corridor. The
daemon shook itself and, as it recovered from her attack, began to
pursue. Riane looked up from her efforts. She was out of ideas. In a
moment, the thing would be on them. At
that moment, she heard a commotion behind her. In a blur of motion,
she saw a burly Mesagggun, ion cannon drawn, pounding toward them.
She shouted, trying to warn him not to fire, but it was too late. A
thin, wavering stream of pale blue light shot from the blunt muzzle
of the weapon directly at the head of the Tzelos. For a moment, the
V'ornn energy blast wreathed the daemon's head. Then the Tzelos
opened its mouth, sucking it inside it. When it emerged it was black
as death. The Tzelos spewed it out so quickly the Mesagggun had no
time to react. The instant the black stream struck him he began to
sizzle. The Mesagggun shrieked. The nauseating stench of burning
flesh filled up the corridor, making Riane gag. Still, sweating like
a cor in heat, she managed to keep hauling on Rekkk, putting more
distance between them and the Tzelos. Then
the Mesagggun was gone. Only a pile of cinders and ash remained- The
Tzelos returned its attention to Riane and Rekkk. It rushed them
again, faster than before. Riane wondered how anything so ungainly in
appearance could move so fast. In
desperation, she conjured the Spell of Forever. It was one of only
two hybrid spells she had learned. Part Osoru, part Kyofu, it was Eye
Window, most ancient of sorceries, virtually unknown among
present-day Kundalan sorceresses. Instinct had come to the fore. She
did not consciously know why she had conjured that particular spell
until it showed her what she needed to know. The Spell of Forever was
a divination spell, and like all Eye Window spells it was
exceptionally potent. It opened secret doorways. It could find things
deeply hidden, people who were lost, it could re-create past events. But
because she was inexpert, she could not immediately focus the spell's
lens. Instead of the Tzelos, she saw a flash of dark light, saw
Giyan's face, a rictus of pain, saw behind her the ragged line of a
mountain chain which, though grown grim, was nevertheless oddly
familiar, saw her wrists and ankles pinioned, to what? The
vision faded as swiftly as it had appeared, and now the lens was
focusing on the Tzelos. Almost immediately, Riane saw its vulnerable
spot. But
now the daemon was upon her and it was too late. Then, as the Tzelos
grabbed her, she heard her name being called. Thigpen! Thigpen was
here! "Quickly,"
she cried. "There is a—" She gagged as something
putrid gushed out of the daemon's mouth, covering her in an
increasingly viscous and sticky web. "Look to the—"
The web had spread over her face. She could not take air into her
lungs. She struggled, then on instinct again fell back on her
mountain climbing training. She was used to high altitudes, where the
air was gossamer thin. She had learned how to store what she needed
in her lungs until she could take the next breath. The web was
thickening, tightening, hardening. She tore it away from her mouth
long enough to shout, "Thigpen, the bottom of the thorax, left
side! There is a pale spot!" "Hang
on, Dar Sala-at!" Thigpen cried as she shot past Riane's left
ear. Her
razor-sharp teeth were bared. They sank unerringly into the tiny pale
spot on the Tzelos' thorax. She raked it with her extruded talons.
The Tzelos reared back, an eerie sound emanating from it that made
Riane want to scream. At
the same time, she felt hands upon her, felt fingers pulling the
hardening goo off her. "Dar
Sala-at, are you all right?" It
was Eleana. "I
am fine," Riane gasped. She saw the outline of the Tzelos
wavering, the center of it growing blurred, insubstantial. Thigpen
leapt back as the daemon vanished. "Look to Rekkk!" Riane
said. "I fear he has been grievously injured!" "Miina
protect him!" Eleana crouched by Rekkk's side, put her hand on
his bloody neck. Her face was white as she looked at Riane and
Thigpen. Tears were streaming down her face. "He is dying."
6 Orange
Sweet When
Sornnn SaTrryn stopped beneath the gaily striped awning of the stand
on Momentum Boulevard he was being watched. When he bought a small
bag of orange-sweet he was being watched. When he ambled through the
crowd munching on the delicious fruit he was being watched. As he
stopped to let a trio of Khagggun strut by he was being watched. And
when he passed the intersection of Divination Street he was being
watched most carefully. A
darkness at noon as clouds gathered thickly overhead. At precisely
the striking of the fifteenth hour, Marethyn Stogggul had emerged
from her atelier, locking the door behind her. She allowed Sornnn
SaTrryn a twenty-pace lead before she began to follow him down
Divination Street. He walked neither quickly nor slowly so that it
was impossible for any interested observer to judge whether there was
a purpose to his direction. Perhaps
a half mile farther on he paused before the russet-and-black awning
of Gamut, an excellent but out-of-the-way cafe. As if making up his
mind on the spur of the moment, he turned and passed between the
shanstone columns into the dimly lighted interior. Wide beaten-bronze
braziers at each corner of the cafe held flickering flames. He chose
a table in the darkest corner and sat down. A server in crimson robes
arrived, and he ordered. Marethyn
observed this ritual as she stood in the surf of the crowd making its
way up and down Divination Street. She looked around, as if unsure
where to go or what to do next. She studied the faces of Bashkir
hurrying by, of Tuskugggun, arms laden with packages of spice, Dolts
of cloth, thin titanium and germanium sheeting rolled up and tucked
under their arms. She watched the practiced movements of ^"a8ggun
as they threaded the throng, searching for mischief-makers, black
marketeers, Kundalan Resistance. A hoverpod passed overhead, lifting
the hair on Kundalan heads, stirring robes and tunics, whipping up
tiny spirals of grit. She heard the raised voices from the nearby
meat market; she turned away from a Tuskugggun of her acquaintance
before she could be recognized. A fistful of children whirled by her
at a run, laughing, pelting Kundalan servants with stones as they
went. The river of life flowed on, the details blurring now as she
wended her way between the outdoor tables of the cafe and stepped
into Gamut's grot-tolike interior. She
walked straight back to the bath, stood inside the small closed
chamber for some time. She listened to the throb of the kitchen
seeping through the wall, the heavy clip-clop of water buttren
pulling a dray as they passed on a side street, the beating of her
own hearts. An older Tuskugggun entered, and Marethyn washed her
hands though they were clean enough. Then she went out, slipped into
the seat beside Sornnn SaTrryn. He had a drink waiting for her—a
marsh queen, her favorite. He had placed a segment of orangesweet in
it, which she plucked out with her fingertips and ate with enormous
pleasure, the pleasure she felt being here with him. She smiled and
looked into his rugged, sun- and windburned face, trying to memorize
every square centimeter of it as if she would never see him again. As
a waiter hovered expectantly, Sornnn said, "We should order. I
have much to accomplish today." "We
have, at least, a little time for ourselves." When
they had ordered, and the waiter had departed, Sornnn's eyes grew
dark and serious. "Marethyn, I need to be certain. You are not
growing tired of this?" "What,
of you?" He
laughed. "Now that would, indeed, be a tragedy. No, I was
speaking of the clandestine nature of our meetings, the coldness of
our exchanges where we by chance are thrown together in public." She
knew he was thinking of the Rescendance. "On the contrary. It
amuses me to playact." "You
are so good at it." "Growing
up in my family, I learned how to be devious." She drank him in
over the rim of her pale blue glass. "Besides, I adore watching
you move through a crowd. I love standing shielded, anonymous in
throngs while you sit alone. You are apart from everyone and
everything, and I know this because you are waiting for me. You are a
magnetic current pulling me while I hold back just long enough for
the anticipation to build toward the moment when I feel the brush of
your arm against my breast." "You
missed your calling." The skin around his eyes crinkled up when
he smiled. "You should have been an actor." "Except
there are no female actors allowed." He
took her hands in his. "That very much depends on the venue." Their
lunch came: roasted gimnopedes, stuffed with clemetts, along with
wrygrass salads. "This
is another thing I love about you," she said softly. "What
other male would say that to me? What other male would treat me as an
equal? My father did not; certainly my brother—" "It
is because of Kurgan that we have kept our liaison an absolute
secret. Have we failed?" "No.
I spoke to him at the Rescendance. He has no idea." "And
yet I know the regent's spies are everywhere." She
took his hand. "What is it then?" Sornnn
bit his lip, deep in thought. "I have told you about the finbat,
have I not, one of those nocturnal creatures of the Korrush. By what
means does it fly in total darkness?" He touched the tip of his
finger to the center of his forehead, pushed the finger outward.
"Like a finbat, I sense the wall before I see it." "Are
you speaking now of Kurgan?" "He
has gone out of his way to treat me as an ally, a friend, even. But I
do not trust him." "A
wise decision, I am certain. If he has marked you as clever as well
as powerful, all the worse. I know him, Sornnn. He will brook no
rivals." "I?
I have no wish to be his rival." "I
very much doubt that you could convince him of that. He is as
paranoid as our father was." "In
that case, I will have to vigorously defend myself." "Oh,
do not say that so lightly, my love!" She squeezed his hand
hard. "The worst thing you could do would be to underestimate
him. He may be sixteen, but he has the mind of a V'ornn decades
older. He is far smarter, far more clever and ambitious than my
father ever was. There is something different about him, something
dangerous. This has been so for as long as I can remember. My father
was obsessed with taking revenge on the Ashera. Kurgan is obsessed
with taking revenge on everyone." "There
is an ancient saying passed among the tribes of the Korrush. It is
said that the ambitious fall from a great height, and when they do
nothing is left of them but their sins." Marethyn
put her hand against his cheek. "Ah, Sornnn, please do take my
warning seriously." "I
assure you that I take it very seriously, indeed." "Being
a Stogggul embarrasses me more than you could know, Sornnn. The
entire family could use a lesson in manners." "You
know very well why they shun you, Marethyn. Tuskugggun are—" "Caged,
powerless, made impotent. We are treated as little better than the
Kundalan." "Now
you are being melodramatic." "Then
I am obliged to do so in order to make my point." She tossed her
head. "All my life I have been treated by males as if I am a
mental defective, as if my opinions are laughable or, worse,
subversive." "But
your opinions are
subversive," he said with a small smile.
"You are pushing for equal status for Tuskugggun. Ours is a
caste-bound system, Marethyn. Never forget that." "Your
mind is not caste-bound." Sornnn
settled himself more comfortably beside her. "From the time I
was young my father took me with him on his treks into the Korrush. I
quickly became used to the long, arduous travel, the dust, the
windstorms, the lack of V'ornn amenities that we take for granted. I
not only got used to living without them, I grew to love the rough
tribal life. I fell in love with the Korrush. I saw the majesty
there, the magic of the landscape, the enormous sky, the pleasure in
reading the weather, in training lymmnals, in riding between the
humps of a kuomeshal. I learned to weave rugs, to excavate through
the dry red soil, to cherish a lost past, to fall asleep beneath a
blanket of stars." He took her hand. "Now the Korrush is
inside me, it has changed me forever, and I would not have it any
other way." "Nor
would I," she said. "It has made you a better V'ornn." "Remember
when we met?" "At
the consortia congress last spring." she nodded. "My art
installation was being used as decoration." "I
saw you from across the hall, in the midst of a huge throng. You were
wearing that sky-blue—" "The
male-style robes, yes." "You
caused quite a sensation." "It
was a statement." "Of
course it was. That was why they told you to leave." "The
Stogggul name only goes so far when you are Tuskugggun." "I
saw you and said to myself that I must meet this singular Tuskugggun,
not having any idea who you were." "And
when you found out that I was a Stogggul. . . ?" "I
came after you, didn't I?" "That
you did." "The
truth is I never thought of you as a Stogggul." She
looked at him skeptically. "Now that seems unlikely." "I
was too taken with you to care what family you were from." She
let out an involuntary laugh. "You must be joking." "I
love you, Marethyn." She
stared into his beautiful eyes. "My
love sees a way for you to use the power you have inside you, a way
in which you can don your male-style robes again and not be so easily
cast from the arms of society." Marethyn
felt a clutch in her stomachs. There was something about him, some
secret that both fascinated and frightened her. The longer she knew
him, the more desperately she wanted to know this secret. And yet...
Her blood ran cold with the thought of it. "And
that is what happened to me that night," her beloved was saying.
"That is what drew me to you. That is why you have become wa
tarabibi." "What
does that mean?" she breathed, though her hearts already knew. "My
beloved." Ion-cannon
fire found them as soon as they exited Nimbus. The narrow alley in
the Northern Quarter of Axis Tyr was burning with phosphorescent
tracers. "Khagggun
pack!" Eleana cried. Riane,
who was helping Eleana carry Rekkk out of the kashiggen, was still
surrounded by the Spell of Forever. "It is Olnnn Rydddlin's
pack," she said. "I can sense him." "What
can we do?" Eleana said, as they ducked, scrambling for the
cover of an inset doorway. "Carrying Rekkk, we cannot outrun
them or even hide for very long." "No
problem. We will all Thrip back to the abbey." "Absolutely
not," Thigpen said. "Thripping is devised for moving
through Realms, not within a Realm. To do so is unsafe. The effects
are cumulative—very soon it begins to permanently impair your
ability to Thrip at all. As for those without mononculi, the effects
rapidly become lethal. Rekkk is near death, and Eleana is with child.
I cannot sanction Thripping. We all stay." An
ion-cannon burst exploded the window beside the doorway in which they
were huddled, raining glass, stone chips, and plaster down on them. "Olnnn
Rydddlin has given us no other viable choice," Riane said
urgently. "If you do not get Rekkk out of here now, he will
surely die." "What
about you, Dar Sala-at?" "For
the past nine weeks we have been hounded night and day by Khagggun.
For the past nine weeks we have done nothing but hole up and lick our
wounds." Riane said this with no little intensity, and Thigpen,
who had been about to argue, shut her snout. "With Olnnn
Rydddlin here, I believe we have an opportunity to strike back hard,
to throw our V'ornn enemies off-balance, at least temporarily." Thigpen
eyed her with undisguised suspicion. "I cannot imagine what you
have in mind, Dar Sala-at, but I know it carries with it too much
risk." "More
than anything else we need breathing room," Riane said. "You
must agree that we cannot remain cloistered in the Abbey of Warm
Current indefinitely." "Even
so," Thigpen said grudgingly, "I cannot abandon you, you
know that. I am bound to you." "Which
is why you will do as I say, when I say it," Riane said. Another
explosion collapsed part of the building's roof. Groaning
load-bearing timbers made it all too clear that they had little time
left in their temporary sanctuary. "Now is not a time for
stubbornness. Eleana and I are best suited to handle what must be
done here. Without Rekkk holding us back we're mobile. I have Osoru,
and since Eleana has fought him before, she knows Olnnn Rydddlin's
tactical mind. It is an ideal opportunity, one which may not be
repeated anytime soon. Take Rekkk and go. Now." Thigpen
gazed down into Rekkk's bloody face, carefully lifted first one
eyelid then the other. "The Thripping will kill him for sure." Riane
threw her head back, reached down her throat with two fingers. In her
mind, she sang a song she had learned in Realms of Thrip-pingf
one of the books in the Library, ancient as
Time. Alarmed,
Thigpen said, "What on Kundala do you think you're doing?" "Giving
Rekkk my mononculus." Riane drew the wormlike symbiont out of
her mouth. "Dar
Sala-at, I told you that each mononculus is meant for a single
individual." "Wipe
that shocked look off your face," Riane said. She opened Rekkk's
mouth, dropped the mononculus into it, closed it with the heel of her
hand on his chin. "The mononculus will protect him from whatever
harmful emanations you may pass through, and his body will
temporarily keep it alive and well until I join you." "If
you join us," Thigpen said darkly. "Have a care, Dar
Sala-at. Youth is rash with its life—" Of
a sudden, the Rappa's stern admonition was drowned out by an ominous
thrumming. "N'Luuura take it! A hoverpod!" Riane cried.
."We're out of time. Go! Go!" She
turned away, feeling the telltale ripple in her psyche, the soft
internal breeze aimed at the back of her neck, that told of a Thrip. "What
are we going to do?" Eleana said breathlessly. "They have
both ends of the alley blocked and there's a hoverpod overhead, so
forget the rooftops." With
a terrible groan, the doorway in which they were crouched began to
splinter. "Follow
me and don't look back," Riane shouted. Between tracer rounds,
they zigzagged back across the rubble- and fire-strewn alley, banging
through Nimbus' copper-and-bronze door, dented and heavily discolored
by the ion fire. Riane took a moment to lock and bolt it behind them. "Do
you think this is such a smart idea?" Eleana asked, as they ran
through the Cloud Chamber. "Chances are high Olnnn Rydddlin will
trap us in here, and that's the good news. The bad news is we'll
encounter the Tzelos again. Either way it'll be carnage." "Khagggun
have a saying when they go into battle," Riane said, with a
tight grin. " 'Carnage is another name for victory.' " "Will
you at least tell me your plan?" "What
plan?" Eleana
registered shock. "You told Thigpen—" "I
had to convince her to get Rekkk to safety. I am making this up as I
go along." "Miina
preserve us!" They
were racing down the now deserted corridor. Everyone in the kashiggen
was either dead or had evacuated the premises. Behind them, they
could hear ion fire muffled by the door. It was only a matter of time
before it gave way and Olnnn Rydddlin's Khagggun charged in. "Tell
me about the Star-Admiral," Riane said. "He
is clever, ruthless, dogged. He will never give up. He does not think
in a straightforward tactical manner. If he can find a new stratagem,
he will try it without thought to the risk it might pose to his own
pack." "In
other words, he is impulsive and bloodthirsty." Eleana
nodded. "Rekkk was able to use this against him." Riane
found the narrow branch off the main corridor, took the hard left,
kicked open the door to the utility room. Mittelwin's corpse lay in
mummified paralysis where Riane had pushed it. "Over
here!" she called as she headed for the wash chute. She grabbed
the upper lip of the chute, swung her legs and lower body into it.
"Let's go!" Without
a word, Eleana followed her. It
was dark in the basement, but not in the least musty. Obviously,
Mittelwin had been as fastidious about the service areas of the
kashiggen as she had been about the public parts. Riane
conjured Flowering Wand, a cloaking spell. "Now
they won't be able to see the chute," she whispered to Eleana.
"It's only temporary, but it should hold long enough." "Long
enough for what?" Eleana whispered back. She
followed behind Riane, as Riane lit one fusion lamp after another.
They were in what amounted to a long tunnel-like chamber. One end was
solid bedrock, the other held an old iron door shut with a rusted
lock. Eleana severed the lock with one sweep of her shock-sword, but
the door's immense hinges were corroded, and it took all their
combined effort to move it. But what they found behind it made
Eleana's heart sink. The chamber beyond had suffered a cave-in. Tons
of rock had cascaded down, filling it completely. No escape there. As
they retraced their steps, Riane stopped suddenly. "Do
you smell it?" she asked, "What?" "The
dampness." Riane put the flat of her hand on the rock wall to
their left. "Odd. As you can see Mittelwin was a meticulous
Tusku-gggun. She would never allow her basement to be come dank.
Unless ..." She felt a sudden tingling in her mind, and was all
at once aware of the sound of the power bourns running deep beneath
the foundations. "Dar
Sala-at, what is it?" Now
she crouched, her palms feeling the minute vibrations. She moved them
slowly until she came to a specific spot. The power bourns seemed
quite strong, as if something was drawing them toward the surface.
When she put her ear to the wall she could hear a gurgling. There's
an underground spring just behind here." "I
don't understand." Eleana shook her head. "How will that
help us?" The
Tzelos, Riane thought. Where have I read about daemonology?
Not in Utmost Source, surely. But what about in its sister
volume The Book of Recantation? She closed her eyes, her eidetic
memory reviewing page after page until she came to a particular
passage. All
at once, her eyes snapped open. "Ah, yes, we have a chance,
after all." Grimly,
she signaled that Eleana should sit down just where the wall was the
dampest, then she paced off the steps from where they had landed at
the base of the laundry chute to where Eleana sat. "What
are you doing?" Eleana asked. "Trying
to judge how long it will take the Khagggun to get to us." "You're
joking, aren't you?" Eleana's eyes were big around. "You're
not joking." "I
am sorry," Riane said. "I should never have allowed Rekkk
to talk me into this. Now we have put you and your baby at risk." "Dar
Sala-at, in a time when we are held hostage on our own world, there
is always risk." "But
this—" She
put a hand on Riane's wrist. "If it means freeing Kundala from
the V'ornn, I believe any risk is acceptable." Riane
sighed. "How is the baby?" Eleana
put her hand on her lower belly. "I can feel it kicking.
Sometimes I sing to it." "Would
you like to know whether it's a male or a female?" "I
don't know. I—Can you really tell?" "With
Osoru, yes, I can." "The
sorcery won't hurt the baby, will it?" "Not
in the least." Riane smiled. "Promise." Eleana
nodded. "All right then." She scrutinized Riane's face.
"Dar Sala-at, why are you doing this? Why should you care?" Once
again, Riane felt the powerful urge to confess everything, to tell
Eleana who she really was. But a combination of Giyan's admonitions
and her own heightened sense of duty kept her silent. Still, it was
torturous. With her hand on the small swell of belly, she was filled
with Eleana's scent, the scent Annon remembered so well, the scent
that had followed him down into dreams, haunting him. The sensation
of Eleana's warmth pressed up against her was pure intoxication. She
imagined Eleana's tongue flicking out and— She shut her eyes
tight and wondered why she was torturing herself. Even if she
eventually did tell Eleana the truth, she had no real expectation
that Eleana would feel the same way. Annon was dead and gone. Why
should she love Riane as she had loved Annon? With an effort, Riane
pushed these thoughts aside. "It
is a male," she said. "Definitely male." She
felt Eleana's hair brush her cheek, felt her warm, fragrant breath as
she whispered in Riane's ear, "Thank you, Dar Sala-at, for not
judging me, for not wanting me to abort a baby who is part V'ornn. I
am so grate—" Eleana froze in midsentence. The
sudden creaking of floorboards above their heads signaled that the
Khagggun had forced their way into Nimbus. “—here
is something about the smell of orangesweet in the morning I that
turns my stomach," Nith Batoxxx said. "I drink it just the
same, every day without fail." "Why?"
said Nith Isstal. "Clearly you don't like it." "In
fact, I detest it." The
laboratory was almost obsessively neat. It was a windowless,
lozenge-shaped chamber deep within the heart of the Temple of
Mnemonics. The sprawling, organic-looking structure that, up until
the V'ornn occupation, had been the center of Kundalan religious and
cultural life, crouched upon the city's only hill, in the Western
Quarter of Axis Tyr. As such, it seemed a lonely place, never more so
since the Gyrgon had made it their home. Light
was provided by thirteen tear-shaped fusion lamps spinning in an oval
orbit, which emitted the cold purple-blue illumination of a walk-in
freezer. Centuries before, the stone walls had been carefully
plastered over by Kundalan artists, who then drew vast murals that
covered every square centimeter of the large chamber. The murals were
obscured now by vines, which for some reason grew in profusion
beneath the chill light. Nith
Isstal lay, naked, in the center of the laboratory, suspended by
countervailing ion fluxes directly below an enormous array of complex
instruments and armatures that depended like stalactites from the
concave ceiling. Holoscreens flickered readouts of every system in
his body, transmitted from the semiorganic sensor net draped over
him. His utterly smooth face was androgynous. He looked male or
female depending upon the angle from which he was seen. Nith
Batoxxx began to walk around his laboratory. "Do you see all
these green shoots and leaves, these woody vines that twine about my
laboratory." "I
admit I have been curious about them, yes." Throughout Nith
Isstal's utterly hairless body ran a neural network, fine as spider's
silk, connected up the back of his neck to the grids in his skull.
"Is it all right if I get up now?" "Oh,
yes." Nith Batoxxx drew an equation of blue ion fire in the air
and the sensor net vanished. Nith Isstal's physiognomy pulsed,
switching from male to female and back again. "I have finished
adjusting the last germanium and tertium latticework in your skull.
As soon as I activate the array ..." He touched a number of
holobuttons on the left side of one of the screens. "Ah,"
Nith Isstal sighed. "Yes, I see." By which he meant, I
see everything. Because he was now fully integrated into the
Comradeship. "I can feel the male and female parts aligning
themselves, balancing." "That
is in the nature of reaching maturity, a definition of our sexual
harmony—the stasis of life." Nith Batoxxx gazed down upon
the other. "Pity those V'ornn of other castes who must live
their lives as either male or female." He gave Nith Isstal a
hand, helping him to sit up. "Imagine that." "In
truth, I cannot. It is a fate too horrific to contemplate." Nith
Isstal looked again at the greenery. "Nith Batoxxx, if we may
return. The orangesweet that twines about your laboratory, the
orangesweet you drink every day though the odor turns your stomachs.
Would you explain?" Nith
Batoxxx plucked two leaves from the vines and, bringing them back to
Nith Isstal, placed them in the palm of his hand. "What
do you see?" Nith
Isstal suddenly looked worried. "I know this is a test I will
fail." "You
are justifiably nervous," Nith Batoxxx said. "Think of it
not as a test, but as a lesson." Nith
Isstal nodded and took a deep breath. "I see, well. . ." He
shrugged. "Two orangesweet leaves." "But
they are so much more." Nith Batoxxx went over to the vines.
"They are the very embodiment of K'yonnno." He was speaking
of the central Gyrgon theory of Chaos and Order. "Do you see
these leaves?" He plucked handfuls, dropping them into Nith
Isstal's lap. "A veritable blizzard of leaves, so many that you
and I together could spend months counting them. And look, look}
Every one has precisely five lobes. That is what is called Order. And
yet, look again, each leaf has a different reticulated pattern to its
veins, unique unto itself. The Chaos of individuality. Here, right
under our noses, we have the living proof of K'yonnno. That is why my
laboratory is filled with orangesweet; that is why I drink of its
juice every day. To remind me of the Tightness of our path, the
righteousness of our belief in the essential stasis of things. Stasis
and Harmony are synonymous, never forget the First Rule of K'yonnno." He
clapped his gloved hands together, sending tiny fountains of ion
fire into the air. "Now come, clothe yourself. I hear the
tolling. It is the time for the convocation." It
was almost time. She struggled to keep her mind clear for what she
had to do. The
creaking drew closer and, straining, she could hear the sounds of
clipped V'ornn conversation. Khagggun battle-speak. Riane summoned
Osoru. The atmosphere began to congeal. "What's
going on?" Eleana whispered hoarsely. "There
are Khagggun searching the utility room. I am countering the spell I
put on the chute. In a moment, they will see it." "You're
what?" Eleana shook her. "Are you crazy?" She
began to draw her shock-sword. "No!"
Riane said sharply. She could feel the telltale shift of jihe as part
of her moved into Otherwhere. "Whatever happens, keep your
weapon scabbarded. Just follow my lead, all right?" "No,
it's not all right. I don't intend to—" With
a shout, a Khagggun slid down the chute. "Got
them!" he cried in triumph. Another
and another followed him, until six of Olnnn Rydddlin's pack were in
the underground laundry. "Well,
well, well, what have we here?" one said, waving his shock-sword
in their direction. "Two
delicate prizes," said another with a big grin on his face. "An
added bonus. Rape and killing." A
third Khagggun leveled an ion cannon at them. "You two, get up,"
he growled. Eleana
did nothing, glaring defiantly at them. "Oh,
ho, look at this," said the first Khagggun. "I will doubly
enjoy bloodying her tenderest parts." The
third Khagggun took a step toward them. "I said, 'Get up!' Now!" "Do
as he says," Riane murmured. The architecture of Otherwhere was
all around her, and she turned, at once confused, because her Third
Eye had registered the difference, some subtle change, a soft
susurrus just at the threshold of awareness, a restless indefinable
quality that Disturbed the deep sacred silence of the Otherscape. She
had no time to
think of this now as she cast a sorcerous beacon into the pure white
sky as she had seen Giyan do. Would it be sufficient? It had to be! "But—" "Remember
what I told you,” Riane said, pulling Eleana to her feet. The
sorcerous beacon arced, streaking though Otherwhere. "Now
what?" Eleana was watching the leering grin on the Kha-gggun's
faces. "Just wait for them to rape us?" Her hands clenched.
"At least let me draw my shock-sword so I can take a few of
these animals with me." "No.
Do not give them any cause to fire their weapons." There
was a disturbance in Otherwhere, a Darkness stained the white
horizon. Riane took Eleana's hand. "As soon as I give you the
signal I want you to run toward the door." "Why?
We can't get out there. It's sealed tighter than a—" "Shut
up, you two!" barked the Khagggun with the ion cannon trained on
them. "No talking." The
Darkness irised open. Riane left just enough time to see six pairs of
ruby-red eyes before she popped fully back into the corporeal world.
She felt it coming, the dimness behind the six Khagggun deepening,
fulminating, coalescing into— "Miina
preserve us!" Eleana cried in fright. "The Tzelos has found
us again!" Either
the Khagggun didn't hear her or didn't believe her. "Run!"
Riane shouted. "Run!" As
they raced back down the chamber, the Khagggun leveling the ion
cannon at them took aim, but another forced his arm down. "Our
orders are to bring them to the Star-Admiral alive," he said.
"In any event, we have them trapped." Following his
reasoned lead, the Khagggun pack advanced methodically in pursuit. This
was what Riane was betting on. She counted off the seconds as she had
counted off the paces from the chute landing to the damp patch on the
wall. When she judged the Khagggun to be in the right position, she
sent a spell hurtling toward the Tzelos. The daemon reared up;
bellowing. The Khagggun turned, stunned and horrified at what their
disbelieving eyes saw. One of the Khagggun fired his ion cannon
without effect. The others drew theirs and fired in unison. For
a moment, the Tzelos was completely enveloped in pale blue ion fire.
Then, its hideous jaws swung open and it swallowed the energy whole.
An instant later, black fire spewed out. It slammed the six Khagggun
against the wall with such force that the ancient mortar literally
disintegrated. Instantly, a flood of water gushed into the chamber. "Let's
go!" Riane cried, dragging Eleana toward the flood. "What—?" "How
good is your swimming?" She shoved Eleana into the hole, then
leapt in after her. The
water hit her like a shanstone wall. It was freezing, its flow trying
to push her back into the underground laundry where the Tzelos still
lurked. Eleana,
having an even harder time with the torrent, slipped in the muck
oozing at the bottom of the spring. She fell back heavily against
Riane, and Riane felt a vicious tugging, saw first one, then another
hairy appendage wrap itself around her, dragging her inexorably back
to the underground lair where the Tzelos crouched.
7 Teyi
The
Comradeship of Gyrgon met in formal convocation once a day in the
great listening hall of the Temple of Mnemonics. Once, it had been
the central temple where the Ramahan prayed to their Goddess, Miina.
There, upon the scarred and stained porphyry altar, they had made
their barbaric sacrifices to that imagined divine being. Here, amid
the onyx seats of the shell-like amphitheater, the priests had
listened to their leader, Mother, blather to them the myths she made
up as she went along. At least, that is how Nith Batoxxx imagined it
had been before the time of the V'ornn. He
escorted Nith Isstal to his seat in the tiered half round before
drifting away to take his own place halfway around the great
listening hall. One thing you had to give the Kundalan—possibly
the only thing, He thought—they knew how to construct with
acoustics in mind. How their music could sound like the caterwauling
of a razor-raptor in its death throes was a complete mystery. As
other Gyrgon filed into the amphitheater he felt the stirring inside
him, an autumnal wind scurrying the death of summer before it,
scouring his interior landscape of superfluous thought. A beacon of
black light struck him from out of his interior, blinding him
momentarily, then, as he grew used to it, settling him in single
purpose. He felt a premonitory ruffling, then the cool energy surged
through him, making him tremble slightly until synapses and nerve
endings alike adjusted to the heightened load. Each time, he had
recovered more quickly. Each time, he felt himself longing more
deeply for the exquisite sensation. He felt different, renewed. Eternal. But
that had been the promise, hadn't it? Yes, it most assuredly was. And
now eternal life was his, and his alone. His
head swiveled and his ruby irises scanned the hall until he found
Nith Settt. Lifting a forefinger, he beckoned the other Gyrgon over. "What
news?" he whispered. Nith
Settt inclined his head. "Nothing good. These tribes with their
strict fundamentalist views!" "Their
very fundamentalism should make them that much more susceptible to
manipulation." "And
so it does," Nith Settt whispered. "But as for Perrnodt.
She is forcing our hand. In order to get to her, we will have to
destabilize the entire region." "No!" Several
Gyrgon around them turned their heads at Nith Batoxxx's raised voice.
He ignored their stares, leaned in, lowered his voice. "You are
under strict orders not to destabilize the region. You understand
this?" "I
most certainly do not." Nith Settt's voice was distorted by
frustration. "We are Gyrgon. We own Kundala and everything on
it. I simply do not see the problem. We want information from this
dzuoko, we should take her and break her bones one by one until she
tells us." "She
will never tell us," Nith Batoxxx hissed. "Not by
coercion, certainly. That has been tried once." "Not
by me." "You
really are a rather bestial thing," Nith Batoxxx said in an
echoey tone whose oddity was lost in the cavernous acoustics. He
studied the other for a moment before he went on slowly and carefully
as if explaining a complex lesson to a particularly thick student.
"We must be more clever than that." He smiled until all his
teeth showed. "We must give her a reason for wanting to find the
Maasra rather than protect it. Then she will lead us right to
it without even knowing she is doing so." Nith
Settt blinked. "And how do you propose we do that?" "Fortunately
for you the triggering mechanism has already been set in motion.
After the convocation return swiftly to Agachire. Keep a sharp eye on
Perrnodt and follow events as they transpire." "Yes,
Nith Batoxxx. It will be done." "As
I have outlined." "Precisely." He
smiled, touched Nith Settt on the gleaming veradium point on the
crown of his skull. When he took his seat, he saw across the
amphitheater the imperious Nith Nassam, who caught his eye for a
moment, before the other rose and descended to the center space that
held the Kundalan altar. It was Nith Nassam who had joined him in his
final, lethal assault on Nith Sahor. At
this signal, two other Gyrgon separated themselves from the crowd and
took their place flanking him. Bizarre to see them grouped around
such a primitive bloodstained artifact, he thought. Yet less so now
that the cool energy blew through him. With his new perspective, he
saw the Tightness in the juxtaposition, just as he was now able to
recognize the hidden power locked within that solid block of
porphyry. The
trio of Gyrgon were known as the facilitators. Representing Order,
Chaos, and K'yonnno, they changed with each convocation. They brought
the assembled to silence by beginning the Creation Chant, which
manifested a gigantic atom and the twenty subatomic particles from
which all matter in the Cosmos was composed. And
then the assembled spoke as one: "Deliver us from darkness, from
ignorance, from false theorem." A short pause while they stared
at the spinning atom their collective energies had created. "Deliver
us from the Centophennni, deliver us home." The
convocation was invoked. Came
the stillness, the deepening silence before the discussion began to
flow. Naturally enough, this took the form of equations, lit across
the firmament of the great listening hall, bursting like ion-cannon
fire, question equations, followed by answer equations, positive and
negative theorems batted back and forth among the assembled
Comradeship. It
was the job of the three Gyrgon standing by the altar to keep the
dialogue moving, to break up equation jams of those Gyrgon trying to
voice their opinions at the same time. Nith Batoxxx watched them as
it became more difficult to maintain a disciplined equation flow, as
arguments became more and more rancorous, as factions banded
together, further fracturing the already sundered whole. And as he
witnessed the growing pandemonium, an elation took hold of him, a
cold fire in his lowest belly, a conviction—as if he needed
any!—of the right-ness and righteousness of the path that had
chosen him. In
the old days, it was always Nith Sahor's theorems that quieted the
bickering, that soothed the antagonists, that formed the compromises.
But Nith Batoxxx, working in the shadows, saw to it that those
compromises were temporary, that the rifts re-formed, the old
antagonisms resurfaced. It was accurate to say that at night he undid
the good Nith Sahor did during the day. Stasis. And
yet, not really. Each convocation brought the Comradeship closer to
pitched battle. Each convocation took Nith Sahor further into the
retreat of his studies. Until fear, uncertainty, and consternation
strode through the dim passageways of the Temple of Mnemonics,
fracturing the Comradeship's once steadfast solidarity. Now there was
a lack of purpose, rooms filled to overflowing with doubt. The last
obstacle to the growing weakness about the Comradeship was Nith
Sahor. Nith Sahor, who had the will and the intelligence to unite
them again. Now he was dead, by Nith Batoxxx's hand. The black beacon
that had formed inside Nith Batoxxx had shown him that the rifts had
gone deep enough for him to come to the fore. For the others to
acknowledge his leadership without question. Enough! Nith
Batoxxx used an equation that stilled all the others just long enough
for him to rise from his seat and stride down the tiers to take his
place at the porphyry altar. He gestured and theorems ringed the
amphitheater. This
petty bickering has gone on long enough, he told the assembled
through equations. Days, weeks, months, years have dissolved in
enmity and squabbles. What have we become now—Bashkir?
He heard the stirring of the silence, a good sign. First we
fought over how to treat the Kun-dalan, for there were those of us
who believed them special of all the races we have conquered. Then we
fought over the continuation of the House of Ashera as regent. There
were those who were infected by Ashera Eleusis' belief that we had
come to Kundala now, at this moment in time, for a specific reason, a
higher purpose, that Kundala was an inextricable part of our future,
that we could learn from the Kundalan, What equation do I see
posited? Learn from an inferior species? How could this be so? How
could such anathema exist? And yet, as I look around me, I recognize
those who, at first, believed in this foolishness. Then
the dissension morphed again to the change in leadership among the
other castes. There were those of you who raised equations against
installing the House of Stogggul in the regent's chair. Even a theory
or two was mounted to that effect. And that dissension
continues now that the son Stogggul Kurgan, has succeeded his
father. Kurgan is young, some say. Kurgan is untested, others decry.
But not long, and certainly not loudly. Because the spark of
dissension is gone. Our brother, Nith Sahor, is dead. Without fear of
contradiction, I say that Nith Sahor was a great Gyrgon, a
brilliant theorist, yes. But he was terribly misguided. He believed,
as Ashera Eleusis did, that the Kundalan are our equals, that we must
resurrect Za Hara-at, the so-called City of One Million Jewels in
order that V'ornn and Kundalan live side by side. Za Hara-at is
important but not in the way the Asher heretic imagined. Beneath
the ragged tents and ku-omeshal dung lies a treasure trove of
Kundala's past. One we are now free to plunder without interference.
Or are we? The bickering remains, the seeds of doubt Nith Sahor
planted about the lightness of our path, the righteousness of our
belief in Stasis grow and grow. The heretical theorem he wrought
lives on after he himself is dead. I
will no longer sit here and listen to you fight like the brattish
children of the other castes. If that is your wish, be gone
from here, your use to the Comradeship has come to an end. From this
moment forward, we will tolerate only one vision, one theory, one
single note sounded over and over in Stasis. Nith
Isstal stood up. The convocation has always been about many
voices. Right on cue. Perhaps it is wiser to allow all voices
to be heard. You
are young, Nith Isstal. Nith Batoxxx wrote this equation large
upon the firmament above the amphitheater. This is your first
convocation, is it not? It
is, Nith Isstal wrote. But my family has a long history in the
convocation. All my life I have been steeped in its strict and sacred
protocol. He
looked around at the assembled. And after
all, isn't this protocol further proof of the Law of Stasis? His
logic is impeccable, wrote Nith Nassam, and
there came a chorus of like-minded equations. And
from elsewhere in the amphitheater, He may be young, but his
thesis has merit. Emboldened
by the courage of a Gyrgon so young voicing his opinion, those who
had but a moment ago held this same view in secrecy emerged
full-blown into the convocation. There
is another theory that must be resurrected. Nith
Recctor had risen, was writing ion fire in his typical elegant hand.
No one ignored his equations or his theories. Other equations died
away, awaiting the continuation of his theory. Nith
Batoxxx looked at him with a neutral expression on his face. Nith
Recctor was one of the silent ones, one of the elder ones. One of
Nith Sahor's suspected allies. Thus far definitive proof of this
treachery had eluded him. This carefully choreographed dance he had
devised using Nith Isstal as his stalking beast was working. Toxins
must be drawn slowly to the surface, where they can be burned off.
The most virulent toxins were the ones buried most deeply in the
corpus. We
know from our studies that Kundala's atmosphere once possessed a
strong electric charge. In fact, gravship records marked in detail
the intensity of this charge as we approached Kundala. And yet, when
we arrived the charge had vanished. Where once lightning ringed the
skies none now exists, even during the most violent of meteorological
disturbances. Yes,
yes, Nith Batoxxx wrote. The Comradeship is well aware of Nith
Sahor's theory that in some way our arrival dispersed Kundala's
electrical charge. Not
dispersed, Nith Recctor wrote in the lecturing style that set
Nith Batoxxx's teeth on edge. In one of his most elegant theories,
Nith Sahor postulated that our presence on Kundala caused its
electrical charge to retreat into stasis. As you are well aware,
electrical charges are in constant flux; they abhor stasis. There is
in known space no instance of a species affecting the electrical
charge of a planet's atmosphere simply by its presence. Thus, Nith
Sahor's conclusion that the V'ornn presence on Kundala was
significant—no, I miswrote. Not simply significant. It
is nothing short of revolutionary. He extrapolated a series of
theorems that projected a different course for us, that in coming to
Kundala we must recognize that our path has been irrevocably
diverted. That the secrets lying buried here have the power to change
us all. Dangerous,
heretical theorems that this very convocation repudiated, Nith
Batoxxx wrote with some asperity. If
memory serves, this body repudiated nothing. Nith Recctor went
on, relentless. To this day, Nith Sahor's theorems have yet to be
disproved. Or
proved. He
was never given the chance of proof. He was hounded from the
Comradeship in the most repugnant display of partisanship and
close-mindedness it has been my misfortune to have witnessed. At
that time, who stood up for him? Nith Batoxxx wrote. You, Nith
Recctor? Or you, Nith Hwelle? Or you, Nith Immmon? His
death is a tragedy for the Comradeship, for all V'ornn, Nith
Recctor wrote. Easy
to mourn a heretic after he is gone, Nith Nassam fired back. I
seek no expiation for my own shameful behavior, Nith Recctor
wrote. But the simple, inescapable fact remains. Since we arrived
here one hundred two years ago there has been no evidence whatsoever
of electrical activity in the atmosphere, and nothing we have tried
has been able to revive it. I take this as— Listen
to Nith Recctor wagging his finger at us, telling us that he is
smarter than we are, telling us that we should believe in unproved
heresy, that we should go on—what did Nith Sahor call it—faith?
Yes, faith. That we should have faith that heresy would someday prove
correct. We
have only your opinion as to what is heresy, Nith Batoxxx. Would
you have us repudiate K'yonnno, the very bedrock of our understanding
of the Cosmos? Look! Look at this! He writes that we have been on
Kundala for one hundred two years. Whose years, I ask you now? V'ornn
years? No. He speaks in Kundalan terminology. He has been corrupted
by this accursed place just as surely as Nith Sahor was. I
believe this body has heard enough from you, Nith Batoxxx. On
the contrary, it has not heard nearly enough! Nith Batoxxx felt
the black beacon turning its exhilarating energy in one direction.
His entire being vibrated as it concentrated its beam through his
raised arm, his pointing finger. We have had enough of secret
studies, clandestine experiments. We have had enough of the
corruption of our body of theorems, the corruption of our very
ideals. We
should hold a vote. Nith Recctor's equation hung in the air for a
moment. Just
a smattering minority of equations. From the rest of the convocation,
Nith Batoxxx noted only silence. On
this matter that
option is inadequate, he wrote. It
is hereby terminated. A
small disturbance in back quashed immediately by the baleful gaze or
Nith Nassam. Thenceforth, a pool of silence, spreading, without the
hint of a ripple. A
horrified expression appeared on Nith Recctor's face as he, at last,
understood the nature of the trap that had been set for him. Black
fire erupted from the end of Nith Batoxxx's finger. Ion-fire
contrails arcing into the firmament as the dark energy that infused
him long ago speared Nith Recctor, spun him full around, took him off
his feet, slammed him facefirst into the back wall of the great
listening hall. For a moment, he hung there, quivering. Then a second
fork of the energy beam took him quickly apart. Whether
the absolute silence that followed was approbation or fear Nith
Batoxxx did not know. Nor did he much care. Either was acceptable.
Both was preferred. The
water level was rising and with each minute that passed the heavy
spray was making it more difficult to breathe. Desperately, Riane
hacked with her dagger and heard the Tzelos scream with each cut she
made. This was significant since it had shown no evidence of pain
when she had hacked off the end of its appendage during its attack at
the abbey. Heartened that the passage she had summoned up from The
Book of Recantation was correct, she hacked some more, heard it
scream again. The end of the appendage hung by a thread, water
gushing over it, laced with the emanations of the power bourns for
beneath, and a deep shudder went through the Tzelos. "Riane!
Watch out!" She
twisted her head up at Eleana's shout, saw the evil triangular head
with its wicked mandibles coming toward her. The mouth was opening
and— "Throw
water in its mouth," Riane shouted. "Water?
But why?" "Do
as I say!" she commanded. The
daemon's head was so close a mandible brushed against her cheek as
she squirmed and fought to free herself. The stink of its foul breath
made her want to gag. Then Eleana had scooped up the water and was
flinging it into the Tzelos' open mouth. The
daemon gave a bellow. It began to shake as with an ague as the
ineluctable energy from the power bourns began to eat at it like
acid. Quickly, Riane cut her way out of its embrace. That was what
the passage had told her, that the energy from the power bourns could
burn through daemon flesh. The Tzelos appeared to be shrinking. In
fact, it was being eaten from the inside out. The daemon screamed,
took one ''last
lunge at them before its husk was washed away on the tide of
bourn-laced water. Riane
and Eleana plunged into the spring. Like fish wriggling upstream,
they fought against the current, holding their breaths as they lacked
upward with powerful strokes. After the first hundred meters, they
were swept up in the current. Utter blackness surrounded them, and
the cold was slowly seeping into their muscles, making them stiff,
tiring them prematurely. But there was another, more urgent problem.
Both of them had taken deep breaths, but the air in their lungs would
only go so far. With her Gift, she sought out the bourn-lines, sensed
them twisting and turning, and followed them as they rose from the
depths. But
already she could see Eleana taken out of the swift current stream,
slowing down. She swam up behind her, took her around the waist, and
pressed on, pushing her long, powerful legs to flutter faster.
Eleana's eyes were closing. Riane sensed that she was on the verge of
passing out. Once that happened, Riane knew, water would seep into
her nose and throat. She felt her own lungs begin to burn. A
sudden wave of dizziness sent her mind reeling, and at once she was
in the midst of a snowstorm. She saw, now and again, the dark
vertical ridges of the Djenn Marre. High up, she saw a cave.
Flickering firelight illuminated the mouth, and then a tall, slender
figure strode out into the storm. At first, she assumed this was
another memory shard of Riane's resurfacing, but then she saw that
the figure was a V'ornn male, judging by his size and hairless head.
This V'ornn went to the lip of the ledge into which the cave was
formed and spread wide his arms. Through the fierce snow gusts she
caught a clear glimpse of his face and recognized him. It
was Rekkkl. Where
was his armor? This
was a vision, no question about it. What was she seeing, the present
or the future? His
lips moved, but she could not hear his words. All at once, he seemed
to tilt his body forward, falling off the ledge into the heart of the
storm. Riane wanted to cry out, but, of course, she could not make a
sound. She wanted to catch him but, of course, she could not move. All
she could do was watch, horrified, as he plunged to his death . . . In
the blink of an eye, the vision vanished. Pushing the panic down, she
reestablished contact with the bourn-lines, and ran right into a
granite outcropping. The current swirled them away again, and Riane,
half-stunned, fought to regain her equilibrium. It was as they were
being whirled around that she saw a patch of light. Or at least she
thought she saw it. And then, yes, there it was—dim,
flickering, far off. She tried to orient herself, noted that the spot
was almost directly above the granite outcropping. Using
every last ounce of strength, she pulled them both out of the
current's grip. Once, Riane almost passed out, but the pain in her
shoulder where she had collided with the rock kept her focused on
what she had to do. At
last, she was able to reach out to the outcropping, launch them
upward toward the light. It seemed to take forever. She kept shaking
Eleana, keeping her conscious. She could feel every fiber of her
being straining to push them faster. Up they went, the patch of light
spreading out, rippling, becoming more detailed. Pockmarks
and pinpricks, tiny ripples spreading outward in a kind of
hallucinogenic pattern not unlike a vastly complex weaving. Maybe she
was going under . . . Maybe they wouldn't make it after all. . . .
Maybe there were already drowning, water filling her lungs, black
tide seeping the life out of them. Maybe . . . With
a gasp, she broke the surface of the water, splashing, pulling Eleana
up, as she took huge draughts of air into her. She coughed up some
water, turned her head, saw with terror Eleana's pale, bluish face.
Her eyes were closed, she wasn't breathing. Desperately, Riane looked
around. They had surfaced in the center of a huge stone cistern
somewhere in a run-down section of the city. She called out but heard
no response. Deserted. They were alone, Eleana was unconscious, and
she herself was near exhaustion. Olnnn
Rydddlin was standing knee deep in water, hands on hips, when Kurgan
slid down the chute into the underground laundry at Nimbus. The
Star-Admiral was directing a team of forensic Deirus who were poking
and prodding the pile of six Khagggun corpses. "They
have been cindered," Kurgan said, peering at the dead. "Burned
to a crisp." There
were echoes in the underground space, echoes upon echoes, technical
jargon droned into data-decagons, opinions and speculation being
batted back and forth, the ebb and flow of a team hard at work. Kurgan,
listening hard to the echoes, said at length, "What happened
here, Star-Admiral? One moment I get a report you have them trapped
down here, the next I hear six of my Khagggun are dead, and the
Rhynnnon Rekkk Hacilar and his Kundalan skcettta have vanished." "The
preliminary report from the Deirus is that ion-cannon fire was
employed against the pack." "Ion-cannon
fire?" Kurgan went over to the hole in the wall, peered at the
blackened perimeter where it was visible above the waterline. "It
looks to me like a fusion bomb went off down here." "A
stolen fusion bomb or a homemade Kundalan explosive such as the
Resistance uses leaves energy signatures," Olnnn said crisply.
"The Deirus assure me they have found none." Kurgan
turned to face his Star-Admiral. "This setback is troubling.
Neither of us can afford to allow this Rhynnnon to remain free and
unpunished." He took a step closer, lowered his voice. "N'Luuura
take it, Rekkk Hacilar was one of our own. He turned against us. Now
he flaunts his treachery in our faces. This cannot be tolerated." "We
will find him, regent. This I swear to you." Kurgan
stood very close to the Star-Admiral. "Find the Rhynnnon and his
skcettta and do it now. We are both just beginning to build our power
bases. I want a total news eclipse on this incident. All we need is
for knowledge of these deaths to ripple through the ranks. This . . .
massacre could be construed as a sign of weakness on our part; it
cannot be tolerated." "I
understand, regent." Olnnn Rydddlin nodded to the Deirus
swarming over the corpses. ."I have put our best team on it." "No,
you do not understand." Kurgan hissed. "I do not care an
ice-hare's ass about your pack; I do not care an ice-hare's ass about
your best team of Deirus. You take care of this mess
personally, Olnnn Rydddlin. I will not have this kind of humiliation
stand for long." His grip tightened. "And if it does, I
assure you there will be a scapegoat. Some V'ornn well-known so the
populace will recognize instantly his head on the end of the regent's
pike." Olnnn
Rydddlin's voice was icy calm. "I am Star-Admiral." "You
would do well to remember who named you to that post." Olnnn
Rydddlin regarded the regent from out of a face closed tight as any
fortress. "I have never for an instant forgotten it, regent." Kurgan
stood silent for a moment, then he smiled abruptly. "Of course,
you're right, my friend. It is only that this . . . setback so soon
after becoming regent has unsettled me somewhat. You understand." "Perfectly,
regent." The
smile widened. "Come, come, Olnnn. We have fought together,
schemed together, killed together. I am always Kurgan to you." Olnnn
Rydddlin nodded rather stiffly. "Good.
Time and power, Olnnn, are both of the essence." Olnnn
Rydddlin was about to make a reply when Kurgan's okum-mmon activated. "I
am being Summoned," Kurgan said. He stepped away a moment to
receive his mysterious communication from the Gyrgon Comradeship. A
moment later, he looked up. "Star-Admiral," he said in
clipped tones, "you and your contingent will vacate this space
now." "Regent?" "Do
as I order!" When
the basement was clear even of his Haaar-kyut, he spoke softly into
his okummmon. "All
right, Nith Batoxxx. I am alone." "I
want to get a closer look at the bodies," the Gyrgon said, his
voice emanating from Kurgan's okummmon. Kurgan
approached the pile of cindered corpses. "Hold
out your arm," Nith Batoxxx said. As
Kurgan did so, he felt a small tingling, and the okummmon emitted a
kind of mist. A moment later, a holographic image of the Gyrgon
appeared. It stooped down, peering closely at the bodies. It went so
absolutely still that for an instant Kurgan thought something had
gone amiss with the connection. Of a sudden, the image whirled and
with a frightening countenance stalked over to the hole in the wall. "Water,"
the image of Nith Batoxxx said as if reporting back to the Gyrgon
Comradeship. "So much water." It lifted a finger, beckoned
Kurgan over. "Regent, I want you to reach into this hole." "What
am I looking for?" The
hologram turned its lambent ruby-irised eyes on him. "Just do
it. Now." "Yes,
Nith Batoxxx." Kurgan walked through the hologram on his way to
the rent in the wall. Bending over slightly, he extended his arms up
to the shoulder into the breach, felt around. To his surprise,
he felt something hard, almost brittle floating up against the back
side of the wall, directed by the water's current. Straining a
little, he pulled it out. "Ahhhh!"
The image of Nith Batoxxx let out a sigh that was almost a wail. Kurgan
had no idea of what he was looking at, but it was clear the Gyrgon
did. It was as black and sere as the cindered Khagggun, about five
times their size but light as a sheaf of
glennan. It appeared to be curled into a kind of fetal ball. Its
head, if that is what it was, looked to
be about three times too big for the
sticklike body. "How
could this happen?" Nith Batoxxx asked himself. Another
thing Kurgan noticed. Whatever it was wasn't a biped. He knew better
than to ask the Gyrgon what it was. What was clear was that it was
neither V'ornn nor Kundalan. That left what? Beside
him, the image of Nith Batoxxx clenched its fists tightly. "There
is only one way," it whispered just as if Kurgan was not there.
"The Dar Sala-at!" The
cistern was set in the center of an octagon-shaped courtyard piled
with rubble. High shanstone walls rose all around, featureless, grim,
topped by scowling granite gargoyles that faced inward, crouched,
sculpted muscles bunched and corded as if about to leap upon any who
dared invade their territory. An arched, roofed walkway ran around
all sides. Not a tree, not a blade of wrygrass could be seen in the
packed-down dirt. All
this Riane absorbed in the split second before she began pumping
rhythmically on Eleana's sternum. Water gushed out of Eleana's mouth,
dribbling down each corner, but still she did not stir. Riane blinked
rain out of her eyes, tried to purge her mind of the horrible vision
of Rekkk's death. Uttering a prayer in Venca, she bent over Eleana,
pinched her nose, opened her mouth wide, and began to force breath
into her. She worked steadily, tirelessly, her mind half-frozen by
fear and despair. This
cistern, on whose broad slimy rim Eleana lay, was where they had
fetched up after their harrowing trek underwater. Riane
was listening carefully. The baby was still alive, she felt its aura,
the strength of it, and something more, a sliver of the future,
perhaps, or an imagined future in which the boy battled the personal
daemons of his heritage. The blood of the Stogggul beat powerfully
within him, singing its own imperative, but there was a singular
oddity about his physical form that Riane could not quite define—he
would be distinctly different from those Stogggul who had come before
him. More clearly, she saw through the lens of Osoru the potential in
the boy for great good and great evil. In any case, the sign under
which he would be born, the sign that would rule his entire life, was
Transformation. All this passed before her in the blink of an eye,
then it abruptly vanished as Eleana went into a quick series of
convulsions. Opening
her Third Eye, Riane could feel the thin and fragile membrane between
life and death against which the baby lay. The fetus was uncoupling
itself from its life-sustaining connections to its mother. The trauma
that Eleana had just endured had shocked her system enough for the
pregnancy to come undone. In an instant, Riane knew that if she did
nothing, the fetus would abort, it would be gone in a matter of brief
bloody seconds and all trace of Kurgan Stogggul would have vanished
from Eleana's body and from Riane's life. Annon's V'ornn anger at
what Kurgan had done to Eleana flared briefly like a white-hot coal,
burning away logic and reason. Then
Riane gathered herself, felt stirring in her depths essential
fragments of the original Riane personality, a logical, deeply
committed core, and she conjured up Earth Granary, the most potent
healing spell in her limited sorcerous vocabulary. She had no idea of
all of its properties or whether it was the correct spell for what
ailed Eleana, but she had to believe that it was better than nothing.
She instructed the spell to enfold Eleana, felt it take her up in its
cradling embrace. At
once, the convulsions subsided, the fetus quieted, its functions
returning to normal. Still,
Eleana had not recovered consciousness. Drawing a deep, shuddering
breath, Riane put her lips beside Eleana's ear. "Come on,"
she whispered fiercely. "Come on!" No
response. Eleana's breathing was shallow and rapid, her pulse was
erratic. Riane
honed the focus of the healing spell, drawing it tighter around
Eleana. Her own exhaustion fell away, her terror, as well, as she
concentrated her entire being on Eleana. "I
won't let you give up, Eleana. I love you too much to let you die. I
will follow you all the way to the gates of N'Luuura if—" Eleana
took a deep, shuddering breath. She coughed. Riane turned Eleana's
head to the side, and she expelled the last of the water. Her chest
rose and fell. "That's
it! That's it!" Riane
listened for the heartbeats, strong now and steady, the Kun-dalan
beat in concert with the V'ornn rhythm. She got up, ran through the
abandoned courtyard, scrabbling through piles of rubble and ancient
dustbins until she found a length of sailcloth. It was stiff and
stained, but it would do. Returning to the cistern, she wrapped
Eleana in the sailcloth and carried her beneath an archway where it
was dry. She set her down, kneeling beside her. She could feel Earth
Granary working its way deeper still, easing Eleana's respiratory
distress, slowly returning her breathing to normal. She brushed
Eleana's hair out of her eyes, wiped the rain off her face. Again,
Riane's training at high altitudes had proved crucial. This
sixteen-year-old Kundalan girl into whom Annon had been sorcerously
transferred had amnesia. She could not remember her parents or the
village where she had been born. But she was convinced that it must
have been somewhere high up in the Djenn Marre because of her skills
in mountain climbing and her acclimatization to extremely high
altitudes, as well as the occasional bursts of memory she had of
ice-encrusted mountainscapes. As
she watched Eleana breathing, Riane was once again caught up in the
strangeness and dislocation of being Kundalan and female. The odd
thing was that while she felt Riane's biological urges, Annon's love
for Eleana had neither changed nor diminished one iota. She did not
know what to make of that. She marveled at the deep and abiding power
of love that could transcend gender, species, and death. Not even the
Gyrgon technomancy was its equal. She
was so beautiful. Riane could not help herself. She felt a powerful
force drawing her down until she pressed her mouth against Eleana's
slightly parted lips. She felt her warmth, tasted her cinnamon and
chamomile breath, and for a moment she laid her head in the damp
crook of her neck. A scent drifted off Eleana's skin and hair,
indefinable, intoxicating. For
a long moment they lay that way, together, in what seemed to Riane to
be a perfect kind of symmetry. She thought she heard the Cosmos
humming all around them. At length, she sat up. She took Eleana's
hands, warmed them between her own. The
rain dripped dolefully off the slanted tiled roof of the walkway.
Birds fluttered in the eaves, peered solemnly down at them. She rose
and walked a little way under the eaves, wondering where they were.
It seemed likely that they were still within the Northern Quarter of
Axis Tyr, but, if so, it was a section Annon had never seen before. What
was this building? It was huge and forbidding. The grotesques atop
the crenellated walls were so exquisitely wrought they could only
have been made by the hands of Kundalan sculptors, but for sure the
creatures did not look Kundalan at all. They had the oddest faces, as
if animal features had been stretched over a Kundalan skull. "Unsettling,
aren't they?" Riane
started. A very short, very wide individual had emerged from a
doorway hidden behind a jumbled pile of crates. Even for a Kundalan,
he was exceptionally hairy. "I
called out before," Riane said. "Why didn't you answer? We
needed help." The
Kundalan squinted, which made him look not unlike one of the parapet
gargoyles. He had a high prominent forehead like the prow of a
Sarakkon ship, massive eyebrows, a small, veined, bulbous nose, and
lips as red as a winter sunset. He had a bushy forked beard shot
through with red. Thick hair stood up wildly from the top of his head
as if in response to hyperexcited ions. His moss-green robes seemed
too large for him; he was continually pushing up the sleeves, which
ended at his gnarled knuckles. "Need help now?" "No,
I managed on my own." "So
what is the problem?" He walked with a decided limp. One leg was
shorter than the other and as bandy as a bow. "What are you
doing here?" he asked suspiciously. "The museum is closed." "Museum?
Is that what this is?" The
bandy-legged Kundalan nodded. "It has been closed, more or less,
for years." "Then
what are you doing here?" "Why,
I am the curator," he said. "Not that it's any of your
business." "My
name's Riane. That's Eleana." "You
almost drowned in my cistern, you did." He squinted at them
through the rain. "How is it you ended up here?" Riane
bit her lip, not knowing whether to trust the curator with the truth.
"We had to get away fast. Khagggun were after us." "Ah-ha!"
A smile wreathed the curator's face, and it instantly transformed
him. He extended a pawlike hand. "Minnum's the name, tending to
the past is my game. Such as it is." The back of his hand, Riane
felt was furred. "No business, these days. As you can see."
He squinted again. "Not that there ever was much to begin with." "The
V'ornn shut you down." "The
V'ornn!" Laughter exploded out of Minnum's mouth. "Goddess
take me, the V'ornn are the reason the museum still exists. Well, two
V'ornn had a hand in it, really." "Who?"
Now Riane's curiosity had been pricked. "Well,
I shouldn't say, really. They are keeping it a secret, is what they
told me." Minnum's face fell. "Though one of them is dead
now. Tragic, really. Killed before his time, murdered most foully.
And the other—" He heaved another sigh. "Goddess take
me, I have not seen the other in over a month. Passing strange, that,
as I was used to seeing him almost every day." He squinted hard
at Riane. "How did you say you came to be in my cistern?" "We
were escaping a pack of Khagggun." Minnum
looked at her shrewdly. "You are no friend of the new regent, I
warrant." "He's
trying his best to capture us." Minnum
nodded. "I despise him, that Stogggul. A pretender is what he
is, just like his despicable father. It was the father, you know, who
ordered Eleusis Ashera killed. Yes, it was." He paused a moment
to see what effect this name might have on Riane. "You have
heard of Eleusis Ashera, haven't you? Was the true regent, once upon
a time." Riane
nodded, for the moment unable to speak. "Well,
Eleusis Ashera was one of the V'ornn who kept this place alive and
safe from the scavengers and toughs hereabouts. He loved to wander
through the exhibits. He was a very decent sort, for a V'ornn,
listened to every word of my commentary, too. It's my opinion he had
a distinct affinity for Kundalan history." Eleusis
had never told Annon anything about this place. "How could he
slip away from his duties so often?" Minnum
grinned. "I asked him that myself." He touched the side of
his nose while he rummaged around inside his robes. "You know,
he gave me a present. A memento, so to speak. After he was killed I
was doubly happy I had it." He finally produced a piece of
alloy, the size and shape of a teardrop. "It is just a trinket,
really. But." He
spun it in the palm of his hand and Riane gasped, for there standing
in front of her, was Annon's father Eleusis Ashera, tall and slender,
garbed as Annon remembered him best in white form-fitting trousers,
gold metallic-mesh blouse beneath his pure white waist-length jacket,
piped and braided in gold. In his piercing eyes Riane saw once again
the reflection of Annon's own face as it had been once upon a time.
She felt a little shiver run through her, and her heart ached to see
him again, standing so noble and proud, the icon of the Ashera
Consortium. "You
would swear it was him, wouldn't you?" Minnum said. He spun the
teardrop faster, and Eleusis began to walk. "It's as if he is
alive and breathing right beside you. It's a holoimage—Gyrgon
technomagic. It's anyone's guess how Eleusis got this, but he would
use this in the palace while he came here." He cocked his head
appraisingly. "Still, good as it is, it's not perfect. There's a
flaw, you see. Generic to these V'ornnish holoimages. I will not tell
you what it is. You have to find it yourself." Riane
forced herself to concentrate as she walked all around the holoimage. "Mayhap
I should have him walk some more." And
as the holoimage of Eleusis Ashera began again to move, Riane saw it.
"His feet don't quite reach the floor." "Yes.
That's it precisely." Minnum appeared pleased. "Asked him
about this, and he said it had something to do with the Kundalan
atmosphere interfering with the ion bursts. The Gyrgon had tinkered
with it, of course, but they could not solve the problem." Minnum
snapped off the holoimage, pocketed the alloy teardrop. "In any
event, Eleusis Ashera was not the only V'ornn who had an abiding
interest in Kundala, no indeed. There was a Gyrgon who came. Nith
Sahor. But I suppose a little snippet like you wouldn't know about—" "I've
met Nith Sahor," Riane said. "He died a month ago. That's
why—" "Nith
Sahor dead?" Minnum's eyebrows gathered like storm clouds. "Well,
that's the most scurrilous lie I have ever heard. I would know if
that Gyrgon was dead, I have the gift, and I'm telling you he is
alive." "You
have the Gift?" Riane asked excitedly. "Are you a
sorceress?" "There
are no more males of that nature, you should know that. Unless you
count the V'ornn technomages, which I certainly do not." He
squinted hard at Riane. "If there were, though, they would be
called sefiror." "Sefirum
is a Venca word," Riane said at once. "It means
'mystical community.' " Minnum
scratched his hairy cheek. "Now how would a little bitty thing
like you know that?" "She
wouldn't," Riane said. Minnum
looked hard and long at Riane, then chuckled under his breath. "Let's
forget all about fairy tales of sefiror and preternaturally gifted
girls, hmm? The fact is, I must prepare for Nith Sahor's next visit." "I
told you, Nith Sahor is dead." Minnum
scowled darkly. "Why do you keep saying that?" "My
friends were there when he was killed. They buried the body." "And
that is your evidence?" Minnum scoffed. "What is a body to
a Gyrgon, eh, tell me that? Bodies are meaningless to them. Do you
know I never saw Nith Sahor in the same one twice. Now how many
bodies do you think he used when he came here?" He held up his
stubby, stained fingers and began to count. "Ah, let me see—" "He
was already gravely injured when he came to us." Minnum
appeared unfazed. "All the same, he is not dead. I would know
it." "How?" "How
do you know it's daylight now?" "That's
a stupid question," Riane said. "So
is yours," Minnum retorted. He pointed up at the gargoyles. "So
tell me, what is your impression?" Riane
looked again. "They're . . . creepy." "That
they are," Minnum acknowledged. "Who
are they supposed to be?" "Nightmares?
A reminder of the evil that lurks inside all of us?" "I
don't believe that." "That's
because you're too young to believe it. But the fact is we all have
good and evil impulses inside us. It is simply a matter of which we
decide to act on." Minnum spat into the rain. "I will tell
you one thing, though, those statues are not made of any stone native
to Kundala." "It
looks like some kind of granite." "Except
that it is twice as hard and three times as heavy. There are veins of
undefined metal in it, as well as pockets of some kind of crystal
fused from very high heat." He squinted. "Meteorites, I
expect. Goddess knows what tools the crafters used." "They're
horrible, anyway." "Funny,
they were a particular favorite of Nith Sahor's." He chuckled.
"They used to scare the Goddess out of whoever wandered in here
in the old days before the V'ornn." "That
doesn't make sense," Riane said. "This is a museum, right?" "The
Museum of False Memory," Minnum said. "Over the years,
though, I have come to believe that it is better that most folk don't
see everything that is in here." "What
does that mean?" Riane asked, but just then she heard Eleana
calling her name. She turned, saw Eleana sitting up, and when she
turned back, Minnum had vanished. "I'm
here! I'm coming]" As
she hurried back to Eleana she could have sworn she heard Min-num's
voice drifting through the rain, "You will come back
sometime, won't you?" "Where
are we?" Eleana said. Her face was drawn and pale. "Are we
dead?" "No,
Eleana. We are alive." "This
place looks so awful. I thought—Perhaps it was a dream . . ."
She swallowed. "I was sure I had drowned." "You
nearly did. How do you feel?" "Exhausted
and cold—but safe." Eleana sighed. "You saved my
baby's life." She cupped her lower belly. "I can feel him.
Oh—I" She laughed, color flooding back into her cheeks.
Taking Riane's hand in her own, she placed it on her stomach. "Feel
him?" Riane
thought she might pass out with longing. "He's
swimming, kicking out as hard as he can. He must have known I was
swimming, too. He is still trying to help." She laced her
fingers with Riane's, kissed the back of her hand. "Thank you,
Dar Sala-at." Even
the dismal stormlight brought Eleana's cheeks into prominence. The
memory of Annon's first glimpse of her, as he and Kurgan spied on her
from a dense copse of sysal trees as she bathed in the creek near
Axis Tyr, remained undiminished in Riane's memory. The sight of her
thick, dark hair cascading down her shapely back remained a physical
presence, stirring Riane's depths. She looked quickly away, deeply
ashamed of the stolen kiss she had placed on Eleana's tender lips. "As
long as my baby's safe, as long as my baby's safe." Eleana's
whispered words were like a prayer. Rain
pelted the roof, sluiced over the eaves, blurring the view of the
courtyard, drove serpentine rivulets across the packed earth. The
wind had picked up, and now it whistled dissonantly across the
courtyard in angry gusts. All
at once, the shock of their brush with death set in. Riane shivered
so hard her teeth began to chatter. A strong gust of wind brought her
a renewed drenching. "Come
here," Eleana said. "Don't you know enough to come in out
of the rain?" She
opened the filthy sailcloth as she drew Riane close to her, then
wrapped it around both of them. "You're freezing," she
murmured. "Put your arms around me, you'll warm up faster."
Their bodies were now pressed tightly together. Eleana rested her
head against Riane's shoulder. "The oddest thing happened just
as I was coming to. I thought I heard Annon's voice. It was as if he
was standing right beside me. Isn't that strange? But maybe not. I
mean, I know he's dead, but part of me . . ." She stopped for a
minute as if groping for a way to proceed. "Maybe it's all down
to faith. I had faith in Annon—he proved to me more than once
what a good and kind heart he had, and we are taught, aren't we, that
when you put your faith in someone, you commit a part of your own
energy—your divine spark—to that someone. That's how it
was with Annon. Dar Sala-at, do not think me foolish, but sometimes I
am absolutely certain that he isn't dead at all, that he is stranded
somewhere on a distant shore, all alone, and that one day he will
return to me." Riane
was trembling. "I could not think you foolish, Eleana," she
managed to get out in a somewhat strangled voice. She could scarcely
breathe for the vise that clamped her chest. "Oh,
my love for him burns like fire!" Riane's
lips ached with desire. She could feel the words of her confession
assembling in her throat, clamoring to get out. Instead, she
untangled herself, backing away. With an enormous effort, she clamped
down on her treacherous emotions and squeezed the intimacy out of her
eyes. "What
is it?" Eleana asked. "Dar Sala-at, have I done something
to offend you?" "No,
of course not. I—" A
sudden stirring at the top of the wall made Eleana start, for at
first it appeared as if one of the more horrible gargoyles had come
to life. Then, she and Riane saw the blurring of wings, the dart of
brilliant color swooping toward them. "Look!"
Eleana cried. "A Teyj!" Indeed,
one of the four-winged multicolored birds bred and raised by Gyrgon
was coming their way. It seemed unlikely that the Teyj would have
taken much notice of them under the walkway, improbable that it would
want anything to do with them. Nevertheless, it swooped beneath the
eaves. Now
Riane could see that it carried something in its mouth. As it drew
abreast of them, it let go of a small, tightly wrapped packet, made a
little warbling song, and darted away over the courtyard wall. The
packet bounced once, then rolled to within a few centimeters of
Riane's boots. For a moment, she looked at it blankly, then she
picked it up. It weighed next to nothing. She turned it over. Its
surface was a uniform matte black, and there was a curious silver
cord, thin as a hair, holding it together. "What
do you think it is?" Eleana asked, instantly on the alert. "I
have no idea," Riane said. "What I want to know is what
this Teyj—?" "It
is a Gyrgon thing," Eleana warned. "Remember that Nith
Sahor had many enemies. Perhaps they have found us." Riane
shook her head. "If they knew where we were, doubtless we would
be prisoners in the Temple of Mnemonics now." She plucked at the
silver hair. "I'm going to open it." "Dar
Sala-at, I don't think that would be—" Too
late. Riane had pulled the hair. They heard nothing, but felt a
slight percussion as the packet rapidly unrolled. But it did far more
than unroll—it immediately began to expand exponentially. "Goddess!"
Eleana breathed. What
else was there to say? There, lying before them in all its mysterious
splendor, was Nith Sahor's voluminous greatcoat.
8 Ashes
Courion
had once shown Kurgan a seashell. It looked like nothing at all from
the outside, merely a hard, curved surface, whorled and warty, of an
indeterminate greyish hue. But when turned over, its inside was a
perfect corkscrew, pink as a delicate spring sunrise, silken and
opalescent, refracting the light into minuscule rainbows. This
is what greeted Kurgan now as he walked through the Portal of the
Temple of Mnemonics. Just a few steps ago he had been in an angulate
anteroom guarded by Khagggun in the distinctive black-and-chromium
uniforms of the packs serving the Gyrgon stronghold. Rain had been
falling outside; the long, narrow crystal windows were streaked with
it. Now he was somewhere else, inside that very same seashell, for
all he knew, but in any event wholly in the realm of the Gyrgon. For
this was the meaning of the Summoning. His
okummmon, a semisentient bionic implant, alerted him the moment the
Gyrgon required his presence. That was true of every regent on every
planet. The difference here was that Kurgan's original okummmon had
been replaced by one specially made by Nith Batoxxx. As
he proceeded down the corridor or whatever it was—this space
without specific shape or obvious light source—he had cause to
recall a conversation he had had with Annon Ashera, once his best
friend, the boy he had betrayed to Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha, who
had been returned to Axis Tyr with his head separated from his body
to be presented to Kurgan's own father, who was then regent. The
two boys had been out hunting gimnopedes. Annon had said he hated
wearing the okummmon because it tied him to another caste. Kurgan had
argued that Annon should be proud he had been implanted With the
symbol of the Great Caste, for the alternative—to toil in
lesser-class anonymity—was unthinkable. But ever since he had
discovered that Nith Batoxxx was the Old V'ornn, the trusted mentor
who had secretly trained him, ever since Nith Batoxxx had forced him
to pledge himself to the Gyrgon, ever since he had been implanted
with this special okummmon he realized that Annon was right - wearing
the Gyrgon neural net felt to him like slavery. Every
night he awoke into the utter darkness before dawn, the inside of his
left forearm afire with an itch he could not assuage. Many times he
would sit up, swing his legs over the edge of the bed, and, taking up
the triangular-bladed dagger given to him by the Old V'ornn, promise
himself that he would cut the vile thing out of him. But he never
did, though the tip of the blade had dimpled his skin more than once.
It was prudence, not cowardice, that stayed his hand. He wished to
give Nith Batoxxx no cause to become suspicious of him, for in his
heart he wished not only to destroy this particular Gyrgon who had
betrayed his trust, but to find some way to put the entire
Comradeship under his thumb as they had kept all of V'ornndom under
theirs. And
yet he knew he had to find some way to keep such thoughts out of his
conscious mind, for a Summoning was a serious matter. It was a time
of testing as well as of questions that would surely be difficult to
answer. For the Gyrgon were masters of fear. Somehow—Kurgan
would have given his left arm to know the secret—they were able
to dig down into the mind of the regent and extract that one thing he
feared the most. Then they would confront him with it, in order,
perhaps, to see how he would react and, therefore, discover of what
stout material he was made, how easy it would be to manipulate him,
how far he might be pushed. As
he continued down the featureless space he smiled to himself. Nith
Batoxxx was in for a surprise, because as far as Kurgan knew there
was nothing he was really afraid of, not even the Gyrgon themselves. He
heard a sound, no, a soft soughing as of the wind through the tops of
sysal trees, but, no, it was subtly different, more rhythmic, like
water slapping against the side of a ship. And the moment he had the
thought, he found himself on the rolling deck of a ship. He looked
around. He was at sea; there was not a speck of land to be seen in
any direction. The sky was a deep cerulean blue, the sun beating
down, turning the wavetops to brilliant scimitars. Above him, he
heard the creaking of wooden masts and spars, the soft, wet slap of
rigging, the sharp crack of sails full out. "Good
afternoon." He
turned to see the Sarakkon captain Courion grinning at him, his
shagreen-booted feet planted firmly on the deck. He had met Courion
at the Kalllistotos. Ever since Courion had forced Kurgan into
fighting in the Kalllistotos they had become wary friends. "Where
is the crew?" Kurgan asked. "There
is no crew. There is only the two of us," Courion said. "It
is good to see you, friend. We had meant to ask you why you did not
invite us to the Rescendance. Could it be that you are ashamed of
befriending a Sarakkon?" Kurgan
spent a moment taking this in. Then he said, "All right, Nith
Batoxxx, I will admit the simulation is impressive, but don't expect
me to play your game. I simply won't—" All
at once, a ferocious gust of wind caught the sail, the ship heeled
over, and Kurgan, taken completely off guard, lurched backward, lost
his footing and toppled over the rail. He plunged down four meters
into the ocean. It all happened so fast he had no time to react. And
then cold seawater struck him like a hundred fists. Stinging salt
water rushed into his nose and mouth, and he began to choke. He told
himself that this was an elaborate illusion, that nothing was real,
not even his sensation of drowning, but somehow his lung refused to
be convinced. He was drowning, there was no mistaking it.
Simulation it might be, but what if he could die here just as if it
was reality? He
forced himself to kick, pushing himself toward the surface far above.
As he looked up into the refracted and distorted disc of the sun, he
saw a splash. Something was being lowered down toward him. A rope! He
kicked more vigorously and soon reached out to grasp the end of it.
He gave it several hard tugs and was rewarded by its being hauled
upward, and him with it. "Like
a fish in a net," Courion said as Kurgan broke the surface,
gasping and coughing. "Just hold on." The
Sarakkon turned the winch, and Kurgan, soaked, bedraggled, and
panting, rose up the side of the ship. When he came abreast of the
toprail, Courion grabbed him around the waist and maneuvered him onto
the deck. Kurgan sat with his arms on his drawn-up knees, snorting
the last of the seawater out of his nose. He
wiped his face with the heels of his hands as Courion squatted down
in front of him. "Real enough for you?" "Tell
me one thing." Kurgan looked into his light eyes. "Would I
really have drowned?" "Eventually."
Courion shrugged. He fingered the lapis lazuli and jade runes in his
full beard. "We all drown eventually, don't we?" "Except,
apparently, you Gyrgon." Courion
frowned. "Surely you mistake us, friend." "Come
off it," Kurgan said shortly. In the back of his mind, he knew
this was all a stunningly conceived Gyrgon illusion, and yet it all
seemed so real. Fighting this, he said, "You are supposed to
show me the face of my own fear, Nith Batoxxx. I am unafraid of
drowning, so I have proved you wrong. I have beaten you at your own
game of illusions." Courion
wavered and vanished. In his place stood Nith Batoxxx. "While it
is true that this construct is caused by the manipulation of
hyperexcited ions, this isn't my world. It is yours. It is
pulled from inside your own mind." "What?
Another Gyrgon falsehood? I do not believe you can read my thoughts." "Not
your thoughts, precisely. But the okummmon is a link of our own
design. Through it you are Summoned at our pleasure. The particular
communication link allows us this access. All regents are Summoned
and, in the Summoning, are shown their deepest fear. Even those"—he
smiled frostily—"who believe themselves free of fear." "This
is what you call my fear? I told you. I am not afraid of drowning." "There
is another thing here for you to fear," Nith Batoxxx said. "I
find it interesting that you cannot yet identify it." "I
grow weary of this Gyrgon mind game." "Your
mind is a most curious realm, regent. Truly, I have never encountered
its like before." Nith Batoxxx held out his gloved hand, and
Kurgan's eyes watered. When they had cleared he was back in a simple
windowless sparely furnished chamber in the Temple of Mnemonics. "You
are ambitious, yes, very much so. It is part of your special
usefulness." He smiled, an unpleasant thing that unfurled like
the banner of a reaver. "It is why I supported your petition to
be made regent, why I disposed of all Gyrgon who opposed you." "What
do you mean?" Kurgan felt his hearts skip a beat. "You
killed other Gyrgon?" "I
am powerful beyond your imagination." Once again, the Gyrgon's
voice had taken on that eerie, disembodied timbre that made Kurgan
shudder despite himself. Kurgan
said nothing; he could think of nothing to say. He wondered whether
Nith Batoxxx was telling the truth or whether he was mad. It was
becoming clearer to him that Nith Batoxxx was acting as if he had two
different personalities. Nith
Batoxxx's teeth clacked together. "Understand this, regent,
my continued support is crucial to you remaining in office. And
that support very much depends upon your absolute understanding of
who calls and who answers." The smile was a cold, calculating
thing. "For a Sto-gggul that cannot be an easy thing, and I find
myself wondering whether it is even possible. But I have staked more
than you can know on you, Stogggul Kurgan, so it is something that
you will learn. Believe me when I tell you that I will see to
it." He lifted a finger. "Gyrgon are not in the habit of
giving advice, but I find I have developed a disease. Its symptom is
a curious affection for you. Therefore, heed well what next I tell
you. Ambition is a tricky trait. If it gets the better of you."
He reached out and snatched Kurgan's arm. Tapping the embedded
okummmon, he said, "Here is what you must consider. If you
exceed the authority granted you by the Comradeship, I will know. And
I will be waiting to devour you." Kurgan
stared at Nith Batoxxx. The Gyrgon was bluffing. He could not know
that Kurgan meant to control the Comradeship. He willed himself to
keep calm, to be the Gyrgon's obedient servant while in his presence. He
ducked his head. "I will be diligent, Nith Batoxxx, in keeping
my ambition in check." Not
many V'ornn could say they had heard a Gyrgon laugh. It was a sound
that affected Kurgan in a peculiar way, making him feel as if grit
were being rubbed into an open wound. He felt briefly sick to his
stomachs. "We
are bonded, you and I, in ways you cannot possibly imagine,"
Nith Batoxxx was saying. "This world we have come to know, this
Kundala, will come undone, but not in the way you think.
Because it will be you and I who accomplish its undoing." As
it had once brought them into the city, Nith Sahor's voluminous
greatcoat now whisked Riane and Eleana back to the Abbey of Warm
Current. Riane knew that the greatcoat was a semiorganic web of
neural nets, but how it actually functioned she could not say. Just
as she did not know how it knew where to transport them. She had not
spoken to it or in any way communicated with it. She had simply
wrapped it around the two of them as Nith Sahor had instructed on
that fateful night when she had made her desperate run to find the
Ring of Five Dragons in the Storehouse Door in the caverns beneath
the regent's palace. The instant the cloak closed completely over
them, Riane felt the slight sensation of dislocation, a touch of free
fall. And when she had unwound it, there they were in the infirmary
of the abbey. She
held Eleana in her arms and, immediately upon their arrival, set her
down upon one of the ancient cushioned shanstone cots. She was still
weak and occasionally dizzy. Riane fetched her water to drink. It
was not until Eleana had drunk her fill that both of them realized
that they were not alone. Across the infirmary, Rekkk Hacilar lay
upon another cushioned slab of shanstone. Thigpen crouched over him,
the upper set of her forepaws holding his head steady while a Teyj
hovered over the horrific wound in his chest where he had been
speared by the Tzelos’ mandible. Its four wings were beating so
fast they were a mere blur. "Is
Eleana—?" Thigpen began. "With
rest, she will be fine," Riane said wearily, and then, to
forestall more questions, she added: "It's a long story." "I
am gratified to see you both back in one piece," Thigpen said
shortly. "Dar Sala-at, I have something for you. It could no
longer tolerate being inside such a damaged body. Please take it." Riane
extracted the mononculus from Thigpen's throat, transferred it to her
own. The
beating of the Teyj's wings had set up a kind of harmonic in the
infirmary. Like the clearest of notes sent forth when a tuning fork
is struck, it kept doubling upon itself, strengthening until it had
created what Riane could only describe as a wave. She could not see
the wave, but she could hear it. And more than that, she could feel
it, sense it from inside her, as if it was causing her very bones to
vibrate at its perfect pitch. She experienced a sensation of extreme
well-being, knew as she glanced at Eleana's face that Eleana was
feeling the same thing. All
at once, she felt Eleana's fingers digging into her arm, and she saw
something blacker than black appear directly beneath the beating of
the Teyj's wings. It was a circle, then a lozenge, then an oval, then
a trapezoid. A soft percussion, and it expanded just as the greatcoat
had expanded at the Museum of False Memory, fitting itself like a
second skin over Rekkk's bloody wound. And like a second skin it
changed color, from deepest black to palest white before blushing to
the coppery hue of Rekkk's hairless flesh. "You
might as well get comfortable," Thigpen told them, looking
somewhat relieved. "I believe this may take some time." Riane
drew up a chair, insisted Eleana remain lying down. At first, Eleana
did not want to. She had a warrior's heart, and seeing how badly
Rekkk was wounded caused her considerable agitation. But in the end
her utter exhaustion and her fear for the baby's welfare kept her on
the shanstone cot. The
Teyj, abruptly ceasing its rapid wing beats, settled upon the "new
skin" and with its beak began to peck away, quickly, precisely,
drawing tiny bits of it up and redepositing it elsewhere. It was not
long before Riane realized what it was doing. It was realigning the
neural net it had spread over the wound to match Rekkk's energy
pattern. Annon's father, Eleusis, had told him tales of Gyrgon
healing. He had, of course, been fascinated. What boy wouldn't have
been? On the other hand, they had seemed so fantastic, so miraculous
that he had often wondered whether his father had been making them
up. Now Riane was seeing one of these astonishing tales unfold with
her own eyes, and she knew Eleusis had not been exaggerating. Now
the neural net began to pulse, just as if it was alive, a machine
inflating and collapsing Rekkk's lung. The Teyj twittered, singing a
neartrendingly beautiful song, and pockmarks began to appear in the
skin of the neural net. They extended downward into the wound. And
here was the most astonishing part, the Teyj itself appeared to be
manipulating the probes or instruments or whatever they were. On
their short journey back to the abbey, the greatcoat had somehow
managed to simultaneously warm them and dry their clothes. Riane
still felt grimy and uncomfortable, but she knew she would not leave
the infirmary until she was absolutely certain Rekkk was out of
danger. As
she sat beside Eleana, Riane could not help but steal a glance. There
now arose in her mind an air of awkwardness, a silence of unspoken
questions, an interrupted flux that felt distinctly uncomfortable.
Her thoughts ran in agonized circles. How to act with Eleana? How
could she hide her love and her desire which, like a living thing,
was growing stronger every day. "Do
you think it's the same?" "What?"
Riane blinked as Eleana's voice broke through the veil of her
anxiety. "The
Teyj." Eleana turned her head to look at Riane. "Do you
think it's the same one that brought us Nith Sahor's greatcoat?" "That
it is," Thigpen said. "But
how?" Eleana asked. "It's
a Teyj, my dear." Thigpen was following the ministrations most
carefully. The Teyj's song changed both in melody and in pitch.
Thigpen leaned over Rekkk, using her middle paws to keep his head
still, while placing her forepaws on his chest. With
a start, Riane realized that Thigpen was responding to the Teyj's
song. Somehow they were in communication. She came around to stand by
the Rappa's side. "Careful,"
Thigpen warned. Riane
could feel a pressure—a kind of flux ebbing and flowing
around Rekkk's body. "Since
when are Rappa experts on four-winged Gyrgon birds?" she asked. "You
see how it is with the Dar Sala-at, Eleana," Thigpen said. "She
will not allow me to get away with anything." "But
she's right," Eleana said softly. "How do you know anything
about Teyj?" "The
simple answer is I don't." There was a decidedly odd glint in
Thigpen's eyes. "But over the last month I have come to know a
great deal about this one." "Wait
a moment." Eleana rose on one elbow. "I remember seeing a
streak of bright color—red, green, blue, gold—in the
treetops during Nith Sahor's funeral." Abruptly dizzy, she lay
back down. "Was it a Teyj, Thigpen? Was it this Teyj?" Thigpen
nodded distractedly. "Then
am I correct in thinking it is a very special Teyj?" The
Rappa lifted her head, her eyes alight. "Powerful enemies
abound," she said softly, "making some knowledge for the
time being too dangerous to pass on." The
strange bird twittered urgently. "Yes,
yes, but we must be quiet now and concentrate absolutely,"
Thigpen admonished. "We are at the critical juncture. Rekkk's
life hangs in the balance." Eleana's
eyes were wide and staring. "Can it save him?" "Rest
now," the Rappa said quietly but firmly. "Let the Teyj—" "No!"
Eleana's voice was low but just as forceful. "I will not sleep
until I know he is out of danger." The
Teyj looked up. It pierced her with its cool, enigmatic gaze. She
could see the gold flecks in its black eyes. It twittered briefly. Tm
here, Rekkk," Eleana whispered. "I won't leave you."
Her eyes filled up with tears. "Promise you won't leave me, all
right? Promise me, Rekkk. Promise me." Riane
recalled standing in the moonslight, watching Eleana and Rekkk
practice with their shock-swords, and she was ashamed to admit a
feeling of jealousy had crept over her. Annon, the male V'ornn, had
longed to be the one Eleana looked at with such intensity, the one
she looked up to, the one she learned from. Odd to see a Kundalan
Resistance leader bonding so intimately with a Khagggun. Hurtful as
well. Riane might as well admit that, too. She knew that if Annon had
been alive everything would be different. It would be Annon who
received Eleana's undivided attention, she had told Riane so herself. Riane
gritted her teeth. She hated herself. How could she be jealous of
Rekkk Hacilar when he was lying there near death? Disgusted, she
turned away. She felt undeserving of being the Dar Sala-at. Maybe it
was all a mistake, maybe she was nothing more than a nomad, a
displaced V'ornn imprisoned in a female Kundalan body, atoning for
all the V'ornn's murderous sins. She felt tears welling in her eyes
and despised herself all the more. And
then, in the midst of her own private agony, there commenced a
clamoring in her head, the cacophony of voices so dense, so extreme
the tumbled words fell upon her like hail. She rose and staggered to
the door. "Riane,"
Eleana called after her, "where are you going?" Riane
could not reply. She was being hammered by an onslaught so painful,
so unexpected, that she cried out. In the deserted corridor, she fell
to her knees, got up, staggered drunkenly along, swinging blindly
through doorways, through rooms great and small, until she half
tumbled down the steps into the courtyard. The
rain had abated, but the mossy stones were slick, puddles everywhere,
and she fell into one and did not get up, but crawled to the cold,
damp foundation stones of the building, where she crouched, wretched
and shivering uncontrollably. And
then, through the awful pain in her mind, she heard a voice calling
as if from a great distance, a voice struggling to reach her as if
from twenty thousand fathoms beneath the Sea of Blood, a voice so
familiar it stirred her blood and made her weep. "Giyan!" She
was unaware that she spoke the name aloud, for she was instinctively
conjuring Osoru, opening the Portal into Otherwhere, beginning her
search for Giyan. Otherwhere
was filled to overflowing with shadowy presences. Riane had never
seen it so, and she grew afraid. She recalled the subtle shift she
had noted during her last visit to Ayame. So swiftly the susurrus had
become a roar. What had caused it and what did it portend? The
cacophony of voices was like a raging river against which she was
obliged to force herself. Wriggling like a sea-asp, she knifed her
way through the horde. It was easier than she had imagined, for they
were, in fact, merely shadows, their voices leaking into Otherwhere,
the massed sound manifesting shadows of these unknown spirits from
some unknown realm. By
what sorcery had their voices been raised in Otherwhere? Riane asked
herself as she searched for Giyan. And then, with a shock that sent a
heavy shiver down her spine, she saw the distinct outlines of
individuals moving within the shadow-mass and knew that these were
not Kundalan spirits. They were misshapen, some with broad flat
heads, others with hunched meaty shoulders, multiple limbs, and great
sprouting ears. They were freakish—at once horribly grotesque
and eerily familiar. And
then she uttered a little cry as she realized that these
shadow-creatures matched the shapes of the gargoyles that crouched on
the parapet of the Museum of False Memory. At first, she thought she
must be dreaming, but then her training took firmer hold, and she
knew that one did not dream of Otherwhere. So this was no nightmare.
This was real. But
as quickly as the questions flooded her mind she put them aside, for
she heard Giyan's voice, thin and quavery, calling her. She blotted
out everything, casting the Net of Cognition, a spell designed to
identify Caa, the energy auras thrown off by sorcerous Avatars. For
no sorceress appeared in Otherwhere as herself. She was searching for
the energy signature of Giyan's Avatar, the great and awesome bird,
Ras Shamra. Strange to say, she did not yet know what her own Avatar
looked like. Giyan had told her that would come in a ceremony inside
Otherwhere when she had become a true sorceress. In the meantime, her
presence took the form of a golden cube spinning widdershins on one
of its corners. Like
a fisher, she drew the Net of Cognition tighter, felt herself
traversing ever more swiftly the heaving mass of howling grotesques.
All at once, the shadows parted, and she found herself racing across
a flat, featureless plain. In
the far distance, she could see what appeared to be a mountain-scape
thrusting violently up toward the white, featureless sky. With
dismay, she saw through a gap in the mountains the sky stained the
color of blood. The presence of color was an indication of the use of
powerful Kyofu spells in Otherwhere. Her
stomach contracted painfully, for she saw something horrible rising
from the center of the plain—Ras Shamra, Giyan's sorcerous
Avatar, her presence in Otherwhere, pinioned upside down onto an
inverted equilateral triangle, black and scaly as the hide of a
razor-raptor, whose point had been buried in the plain. "Giyan!" Riane's
cry resounded, setting up a new geometry. She
hurried even more swiftly across the plain, lofted in the atmosphere
where sound traveled queerly, like muffled drumbeats, and never, it
seemed, in a straight line. "Giyan!" The
Ras Shamra's head turned slowly and, it seemed, painfully. "Ah,
Riane, at last. You have found me." "I
am here, Giyan. I will—" "No!"
The Ras Shamra twitched, its desperate shout bringing Riane to
an abrupt halt. And now she could see that an odd kind of web,
glowing and seething like strands of boiling lava, had grown over the
Avatar's left leg and wingtip. "You cannot free me. Not yet, at
least." "Let
me try. I know I can—" "Listen
to me, Riane! This is the archdaemon Horolaggia's doing, and you lack
the necessary skills to counteract it." Riane's
stomach congealed. Giyan was possessed by an archdaemon! "You
must have patience," the Rad Shamra was saying. "You must
gain the knowledge to defeat him." "But
how? Jonnqa is dead. I do not know where to turn." "I
cannot tell you." Riane
grew frantic. "But why not?" "You
see what happened the last time I tried that. Horolaggia found out—I
know not how—and sent his minion to destroy you and Rekkk."
The Ras Shamra shook its head. "You must find your way on your
own." "It
sounds an impossible task." "Have
faith. You are who you are." Riane
knew what Giyan was trying to tell her: she was the Dar Sala-at. "Now
listen," the Ras Shamra hurried on. "Because of the Ring of
Five Dragons the archdaemons know you exist, but they do not yet know
who you are. Horolaggia will do everything he can to change that. Be
extremely careful. If you act rashly, he will destroy you." "But
your life—" "I
am sworn to protect you, Dar Sala-at. That is my life, nothing more
or less." "I
know that for a lie, Giyan. Your life is so much more. I swear I will
not let you die!" "Oh,
please, swear no such vow, Riane, for it may prove your undoing—and
thus the undoing of us all. You are the once and future hope of
Kundala; nothing is more important than the resurrection of our race
from the abyss into which it has basely fallen." Riane
shook her head, her heart and her mind adamant. "You have
protected me in the past, Giyan. You have saved my life. Now I must
save yours." "Have
a care, Dar Sala-at! Do not let Annon's fierce warrior spirit
overwhelm you!" "How
can you expect me to stand here and do nothing?" "No
matter what you may think, you are not strong enough to stand against
this prince of archdaemons." The Ras Shamra's head whipped
around. "Miina protect us, no!" There was sheer terror in
her voice. "What
is it?" Riane said breathlessly. "What is happening?" The
stain upon the sorcerous mountains was widening, as if they
themselves were bleeding. "Horolaggia
comes! For the love of Miina, go, Dar Sala-at! Now!" "Not
until you tell me what is happening to you." "The
web binds me, transforming me slowly into Horolaggia or him into me,
I do not know which, nor does it matter. What matters is there is
still time before the winter solstice, before the web covers me
completely." Riane's
breath was unnaturally hot in her throat. "What happens then?" "Oh,
do not ask me that." "But
I am. You must tell me. I will not leave until—" "I
will cease to exist as you know me," she said in a gasp.
"Horolaggia will have my skills, my memories, everything that I
am. Even my Gift." The Ras Shamra was weeping, though it tried
valiantly not to. "It is part of the archdaemon's plan to escape
the Abyss, to invade our Realm and enslave us forever." "But
this is monstrous. How can I stop them, Giyan?" The
Ras Shamra spoke more quickly now, the words tumbling out, running
together. "But there is another part to their plan. They know
that you are a threat to them, and they are doing everything in their
power to delay your learning process while they plot and gather
strength." The
sky was abruptly overrun by billowing crimson clouds, the sound of
evil thunder was everywhere at once. "Ah,
great Miina—} The Maasra. Find it, Dar Sala-at.
It will help you, and it will free me! Now go! Quickly, before—" But
it was too late. Out of the billowing bloody clouds Riane saw
streaking an Avatar so shocking she felt paralyzed, for it was a
dragon— a dragon out of some terrifying nightmare. It was as
white as the ice atop the Djenn Marre, slender as a serpent with
enormous, ragged wings and filthy yellowed talons as long as Riane's
torso. Ash-white horns rose from its long, flat skull above evil red
eyes, and a double line of the same color spikes projected along its
spine and underbelly. As it dived toward her, Riane could see that
its scales were rough, irregular and curled, possibly sickly and
dying, for they flaked off in its wake, cracking open the plain of
Otherwhere as they fell. Riane
was stunned. The only existing dragons she had ever heard of were the
Five Dragons associated with Miina who, through The Pearl, had
created Kundala out of sorcery and cosmic dust. Because these Dragons
were sacred, it was impossible to choose one as a sorcerous Avatar. There
was no time to ponder this conundrum. The dragon's scream, when it
saw her, turned her bones to water. Still, ignoring Giyan's warnings,
she conjured the Star of Evermore, the most powerful spell she knew,
an Eye Window spell, a potent mixture of Osoru and Kyofu, and
projected it toward the beast. The
eerie ice-white dragon opened wide its jaws, emitting a gale of
sulphurous ash and grit that rent the Star of Evermore into ten
thousand dimming pinpoints. An instant later, it sucked all the
energy out of Riane. It was sorcery on a level she had never
experienced before. Caught
squarely in the vortex, her Avatar cube spun more and more slowly. It
lost its golden glow. Gasping and disoriented, Riane hung helpless,
watching the dragon rush toward her, talons extended. She tried to
summon another spell, but could not. Dimly,
she heard Giyan's voice in her head, orienting her. Somehow it
cleared a path behind her free of the debilitating sulphurous cloud.
Riane no longer hesitated, but stumbled backward until she was clear
of the horrific spell Horolaggia had cast. The
ice-white dragon roared, its red eyes filled with malicious intent.
It swiveled its head on its long, sinuous neck. Up came one foreleg,
and the huge talon arced, pointing at the Ras Shamra, which cried out
in agony. She
lunged forward, but heard Giyan's dreadful shout in her head: "No!
Go! Now!" Terrified
and heartbroken, Riane stifled her warrior impulse and forced herself
to conjure the spell that opened and closed the Portal. There was a
moment's familiar disconnect, then all at once, she was back on
Kundala, in her wet and shivering body, crouched against the
foundation stones of the abbey, sobbing inconsolably. What
is this place?" Marethyn asked. "You have never brought me
here before." "I
have never brought anyone here," Sornnn said. They
were in a wedge-shaped chamber lost amid a warren of corridors and
enormous somnolent spiritless spaces in one of the many warehouses
that hulked along the northern fringe of the Southern Quarter of Axis
Tyr known as Harborside. The air was faintly yellow, thick and
redolent with the commingled scents of a hundred spices. The
incessant throb of the twilit city beat a tattoo against the small,
square, smeary windowpanes, but here inside the warehouse all was
still save for the homey creak of a floorboard. The
chamber itself was altogether nondescript, unpainted, unplas-tered,
not a residence at all, it was clear, just a set of crude shelves
climbing one inner wall, some low chairs, and, in its center, a
carpet so magnificent that Marethyn was obliged to get down on her
hands and knees to run her fingers through its thick pile, to lay her
cheek lovingly against the hypnotic pattern of its glistering
harmonious colors. And
one other thing, poking up from a slender crystal vase atop a tiny
circular ash-grey table. A spray of fresh orangesweet, its colors
positively violent against the washed-out background. By which she
knew that her presence here was neither spontaneous nor
insignificant. He
set down the long, dully gleaming alloy box he had been carrying on
his shoulder and placed it in a corner on top of an identical one.
Then he poured them tumblers of a jade-green liquid while Marethyn
sat, cross-legged, delighted as a child. Downstairs, as they had
passed through the main warehouse, she had idly run a forefinger
through the dust on a container. He had taken her hand, rubbed off
the dust with the pad of this thumb, and kissed each fingertip in a
way that had sent shivers down her spine. "Here
it is only us," he said now, sitting down beside her. "In
this place we are sorcerers and conjurers, we are artists and poets,
warriors and thieves. It is possible to make of our lives whatever we
wish." They
drank in silent and solemn approval of that sentiment. "Naeffita,"
he said, "from the Korrush. It means, 'to breathe.' " It
was rich and tasted of clove, cinnamon, and burnt orange. "I
love it," she said, her voice smoky with the aftertaste. He
watched her looking around the chamber. "The tribes weave—" "Magnificent." "Yes,
magnificent magical carpets." He refilled their tumblers, and
they drank again, more slowly this time. Surrounded
by the deep silence, they gazed into each other's eyes. She put aside
her tumbler, slipped off her cloak. He rose and went to the shelves
on which were placed souvenirs, things fashioned from glass, painted
ceramic, striped stone, beaten bronze, perhaps, old and darkly
reflective that he had bought, bartered for, or had been given by
tribesmen, heads of tribes, all prized in their own way, and all most
beautiful. Arrayed carefully, lovingly, almost religiously to remind
him of the Korrush, to keep its intense flame burning inside him when
he was here in dull seething political Axis Tyr. He told Marethyn
about each one in turn, in a soft, introspective voice he reserved
for their time alone together. Marethyn marveled at this voice, a
singer's voice, really, rich, well modulated, a voice that was
careful to pronounce every syllable completely, possessing the
ability to catch you unawares and take you out of yourself. And then,
thrillingly, he did sing, softly, almost shyly, a touching thing in
itself, a folksong from the steppes, and though she did not
understand a word, the gorgeous melancholy melody nevertheless held
her rapt. Then
he had returned to the center of the chamber and was holding out his
hand. Marethyn took it, and he pulled her to her feet. She
sipped the naeffita slowly, her eyes on him as he unfastened her
robes and slowly unwound the fabric. As if she were a disembodied
observer, she saw her own body revealed in stages, diagonal arcs that
produced long swaths of luminous flesh, and she saw herself reflected
in his eyes, the involuntary reaction of his own body, and a tingling
heat stole through her, sunlight on bare flesh. She
smelled the curious spices of the Korrush, and through her artist's
eye and her love for him imagined herself there, inside the unknown,
far away from beetling oppressive strangulating Axis Tyr. She felt as
real the fantasy of him gathering her up in his strong sun-browned
arms and whisking her off to the Korrush, never to return to the
responsibilities she bore—for her work, her art, her poor
brother, her convictions, which might one day bring her glory or
bring her death. Conjuring up another life without connections,
cares, or worries, with only him to fill her eyes and hearts. An
evanescent moment, for though she could enjoy the grand and ecstatic
sweep of fantasy, she was nevertheless firmly grounded in her
reality. Naked,
she raised her arms. "Yes.
Just that way," he whispered. He
reached for her, and she came into his embrace. Her empty tumbler
fell to the carpet, rolling back and forth. Sornnn's untouched
tumbler sat on a shelf with the decanter of naeffita. Instead,
he was touching her, he was feeling her fingertips plucking off his
clothes with mysterious ease, he was sinking into her moist, luscious
lips on him, all over him, her throat humming, until he could no
longer bear the waiting. They lay for a moment upon the lush,
dazzling carpet, but he was far too excited to lie down for long. So,
he saw with quickening pulses, was she. Dusty
light seeped through the windows. It was the deep deceptive enclosing
light of dusk when, as a child, she had become briefly free of her
hingatta obligations to pursue her passion for painting. It quickly
became her private world, firing her rich imagination. And so she
worked in twilight, and her early paintings were born out of this
numinous matrix of animistic shadows. High in the wedge-shaped
warehouse chamber, the soft dying autumnal glow, a small flame,
red-yellow-red, passed like a conjurer's hand across the old bare
wall, painting upon it their shadows in movement. He
backed her up until she was pressed between him and the cool,
irregular stone. He took her like that with his eyes wide open,
stared into hers, watching her pupils dilate and contract with every
thrust and release. He heard her moaning, heard his own panting. His
blood surged like the Korrush wind over the rolling sea of grasses,
boiled like water over a crackling fire. When
she cried out, clutching him frantically to her, her thighs squeezing
and relaxing, he reversed their positions. Now his back was pressed
against the rough wall. He was still deep inside her. Her eyes were
closed, her forehead pressed against the muscled ridge of his
shoulder. She licked the sweat off him. Then her head came up, her
eyes once again locked with his, and now it was she who began to
thrust, to hurl him back against the stone as he had done to her. And
he filled up with fluids, his tender parts heavy and swollen beyond
anything he had ever known before. He felt her power, felt her power
strong upon him, and he was startled and a little bit afraid. Afraid
for her and of what he was getting her into. Then
all his thoughts dissolved in a heady rush of pleasure. He
surrendered to it and to her because he had no other choice, because
this had become his universe, and he wanted it, just like he wanted
everything else. Everything
. . . He
brought his tumbler back to the center of the carpet, where he and
Marethyn took turns drinking from it. For a time, they listened to
the floorboards creak, small, expressive sounds that defined their
isolation from the city, from the normal screech-and-hum of their
lives. "I
want to go with you," she said when the tumbler had been
drained. "To the Korrush." She was reclining in the crook
of his shoulder. "I want to experience that beauty you see, that
resides in you like this." She turned his hand over, scored a
thin line of red dust from beneath the scimitar of his nail. She took
the dust onto the tip of her tongue. "There. Now the Korrush is
inside me, too." "It
is dangerous there, Marethyn." "I
do not care." She had the distinct sense that he was speaking of
something else. A secret long hidden that had burst open inside him.
"You know that." In
fact, he did, and his hearts quickened at the thought. Still, his
guilt impelled him to add: "I would not willingly place you in
any danger." He
said this so gravely that she was forced to laugh. "Nor I you.
But it seems to me that there is a danger inherent in our seeing one
another. And, in any case, there is a certain danger you live with
every day, that you need, that you hold dear and sacred. That you
cannot live without. That is your calling." She did not say this
critically or with blame, only with the knowing intimacy that is an
alchemical product of love. "I
chose this danger. But you—" "Shall
I put it in the bluntest terms, Sornnn? I welcome whatever it is you
have in mind for me." "Without
knowing." She
ran a finger around the inside of the tumbler, put the wet spiced tip
between his lips. "Like you, I am certain of my calling." So
she said. But Sornnn wondered whether he could believe her. What it
boiled down to was a matter of trust. Could he trust her? With
everything he was. He wanted to, he knew that much, but was that
enough? There was so much danger, so much at risk. And hadn't his
father died because of . . . ? But he had to start somewhere. He had
to know and, in knowing, continue or end it. But slowly, ever so
slowly, for trust was a delicate and often bloody thing, his father
had taught him. Trust
can be a means to a bitter end, isn't that right, Father? He
rose, went to the shelf, and plucked an item. As he returned to her,
she admired anew his sleek, hard-muscled body. He opened his palm and
displayed to her an old, worn, dun-colored stone carving of a bird.
"This is a fulkaan," he said. "It is the mythical bird
that sat upon the shoulder of Jiharre, the Prophet of the Gazi Qhan,
one of the five tribes that dominate the Korrush. The fulkaan was
Jiharre's companion, his protector and his messenger." "It's
strangely powerful," she said, running the tip of her forefinger
over its rough surface. "It
is very old. It was given to my father by Makktuub, the kapu-daan—the
head—of the Gazi Qhan. My father believed that this bird, this
fulkaan actually exists. He caught the notion from Makktuub, who
swore it was true." Sornnn sat back on his haunches. "It
seems to me that my father's life was one great search for hidden
myths. He had that in common with Eleusis Ashera. That is how they
became friends." He hesitated, staring down at the fulkaan as if
willing it into life. "Eleusis Ashera had a deep and abiding
interest in the Korrush." "Za
Hara-at," Marethyn said in a hushed voice. Her hearts were
beating fast in her breast. He
nodded. "Earth Five Meetings, as it's known in the Kundalan Old
Tongue." "The
building of Za Hara-at was Eleusis Ashera's dream, a city where
V'ornn and Kundalan could live side by side." "Za
Hara-at is far more. It was my father who first took Eleusis Ashera
into the Korrush and showed him the archaeological dig where the
ruins of an ancient city had been discovered. My father was convinced
that it was the legendary city of Za Hara-at, that it is a sacred
place. And he convinced Eleusis Ashera of it." "And
you?" The edge of the ancient fulkaan's wing dug into her palm.
"What is it you believe?" "This
carving is from the dig." He stroked the fulkaan's head just as
if it were alive. Then he looked at her. "Like my father, I
believe the ruins are the original Za Hara-at. I believe we have
discovered a sacred place, a place of lasting power and influence." "I
believe you." Marethyn looked at him with shining eyes, and she
smiled a secret smile that was for him alone, and as she smiled, she
whispered, "Sorcerers and conjurers, artists and poets, warriors
and thieves. I wonder which of these you and I will turn out to be." Four
furry, small yet powerful legs wrapped her in Nith Sahor's greatcoat,
and at once Riane felt warmed inside and out. "Dar
Sala-at, what has happened?" Thigpen asked. "One minute
you're in the infirmary, the next minute you're gone." Riane
closed her eyes for a moment, but the afterimage of what she had just
witnessed made her shiver again, and her eyes flew open. "I
heard Giyan calling me from Otherwhere." Her voice was a reedy
whisper; she began to speak faster and faster. "I saw her; she
is partially covered in a sorcerous web. She—" "Calm
yourself, Dar Sala-at." Thigpen licked her face free of tears.
"Leave this communication for when you can recall it all without
so much fear." "But
Giyan—" "Listen
to what I am saying, little dumpling." Riane
sighed. It had been a long time since Thigpen had called her that; it
brought back a time before she had been revealed as the Dar Sala-at. Riane
nodded at last. "How is Rekkk?" "There
seems to be a problem. The Teyj needs you." The
wound made by the Tzelos apparently left a toxic residue,"
Thigpen said, as they returned to the infirmary. "The Teyj has
had no luck in counteracting it." "What
does it think—?" "I
told it you might be able to help." Thigpen jumped onto the
shan-stone slab upon which Rekkk was lying. "Please approach,
Dar Sala-at." Riane
could see Eleana sitting up, watching her for some sign as to why she
had fled the infirmary so suddenly. She turned her mind away,
focusing fully on Rekkk. "Forget
Osoru," Thigpen was saying, "and concentrate on what you
know of Kyofu." "I
don't know much," Riane admitted. "Even though I've read
The Book of
Recantation, I have precious little
experience with Black Dreaming sorcery spells." "Right
now anything will be of help." Thigpen
was adept at keeping her emotions hidden, but Riane thought she
detected the smallest amount of desperation creep into the Rappa's
voice. Were things so dire? Riane wondered. Was Rekkk at the brink of
death? She
closed her eyes, using her eidetic memory to go through the Sacred
Book of Kyofu page by page. The trouble was she had no idea how to
translate the passages into spells. In the case of sorcery, academic
knowledge was all but useless without training in practical
application. Still, she plowed through her prodigious memory, and
where she thought she detected spells, she tried to conjure them up.
Once or twice, she was more or less successful, but nothing she
conjured was of use. "Dar
Sala-at," Thigpen whispered, "Rekkk is running out of
time." "I'm
doing the best I can," she said. "You
must do better." And
with just those few words the Rappa managed to convey her dismay and
fury at Riane taking Rekkk into the jaws of a trap Thigpen had
clearly warned them about. Riane's thoughts became scattered and
cloudy, just as they had when Malistra had tangled her in Fly's Eye.
Rekkk is dying because
of me, Riane thought. Miina
help me. "Thigpen,
I don't know what to do." All
at once, Eleana rose and came to stand behind her. She put her hands
on Riane's shoulders, spreading warmth through them. "I have
faith in you. My heart tells me the Dar Sala-at will find a way to
save him." And
just like that, Riane's thoughts cleared. Perhaps,
she thought, I'm
approaching the heating from the wrong direction. "Thigpen,"
she said, "ask the Teyj to collapse the ion field around Rekkk." The
Teyj began to twitter nervously. "The
Teyj says that if it does that, Rekkk will surely die." "I
need access to what is killing him," Riane said tensely. It all
seemed so clear now. "I cannot do that with V'ornn technology in
place." "It
will not allow you to—" "How
long will he last?" Riane said. Her mind was afire now. "Five
minutes, perhaps ten. No more. The venom is exceptionally virulent." Was
it enough time? Riane had no idea. "Tell
the Teyj I cannot help him with the field in place." "It
knows that." A terrible sadness informed Thigpen's voice. "It
has collapsed the field." Riane
could sense that it was so, and she began work immediately. "The
Teyj will monitor Rekkk's life signs," Thigpen said. "If he
starts to fail, it will reinstate the ion field." Riane
barely heard her. She was casting Penetrating Inside, a simple but
effective spell to begin gaining knowledge of the chemical makeup of
the venom the Tzelos had left behind. Because the daemon had a
propensity for transmogrification, the venom was a dark, complex
skein, difficult to parse into its individual components. She had to
work out what the constituents had been before they had been deformed
by the daemon's system. "Three
minutes gone, Dar Sala-at," Thigpen informed her. Riane
redoubled her concentration. Sweat formed on her brow, her upper lip,
rolled tingling down her spine. There was no room for error, no room
to fail. Forget about all that, she told herself. Concentrate
on defining the toxin. "Nearly
five minutes." Thigpen's voice seemed to be coming from a great
distance. Halfway
through decoding the toxin and already she was running out of time.
She began to recite the Venca alphabet. Her knowledge of this
sorcerous language was a memory of the original Riane. Where or how
she had learned was still a mystery she would very much like to
solve, because nowadays Venca was used only by the Druuge, the
enigmatic nomads said to be the first Ramahan. They had left before
the evil had invaded the abbeys, migrating to the Great Voorg, the
vast trackless desert to the east of the Korrush, where they now
lived in almost total isolation. On her way to find the Ring of Five
Dragons Riane had come across the Druuge and had, firsthand, seen
them chant it. She had used it once before, in desperation, to
conjure the Star of Evermore. Now she knew she needed to use it
again. The problem was that the process was a complete enigma to her. "Dar
Sala-at." Thigpen's voice broke ominously into her thoughts.
"Rekkk's life signs are fluctuating radically." She
continued reciting the alphabet. The sorcery of Venca lay not in the
individual letters, but in how those letters were used. It was all in
the combining, the sorcery of language. Three-quarters finished
decoding the venom. "The
Teyj is becoming agitated. A moment more, and it will reactivate the
field." Riane
could not spare the time to answer. The decoding was not yet
complete, but she had run out of time. She chanted the Venca alphabet
into the warp and weft of the toxin's known constituents. "Rekkk
is failing, Dar Sala-at." Just
a moment more. She could see it forming and, as happened before when
she conjured the Star of Forever, Riane felt the intuitive tug in her
mind, and she used this intuition to choose the Venca letters she
chanted. Words formed in the air like clouds chased by a following
wind, like vapor steaming on a dewy morning, like smoke from a brush
fire. Either she or the spell that was forming reconstituted the
entire structure of the toxin, inserting itself between it and Rekkk,
creating first a protective sheath and then a morphed antitoxin that
spread through the wound like surf. "He's
stabilizing," Thigpen said, excitement tingeing her voice. Dimly,
Riane could hear the Teyj singing a beautiful song, a new melody. "The
wound is healing." Riane
finished the chanted spell, feeling the weariness seeping through
her. She staggered, and Eleana caught her, hugged her tightly. "You
did it! I knew you would!" Eleana said excitedly. Thigpen
jumped down, letting the twittering Teyj tend to Rekkk. Silently, she
padded over to Riane, jumped into her lap, curling up there. "Dar
Sala-at," she whispered. "What spell did you use?" Riane
did not know, but then, unbidden came into her mind the name. "Well
of Unknowing," she said. "It is ancient." "It
is an Eye Window spell, is it not?" Thigpen said cannily. Perhaps
it was, Riane thought. Eye Window was the sorcery of the original
Ramahan. A potent fusion of Osoru and Kyofu, it had been banned many,
many centuries ago as being far too dangerous, too ripe for misuse.
Even Mother had not been an Eye Window adept. Thigpen
twisted her head, staring up at Riane. "You may pet me if you
like." Riane
regarded the Rappa. Her large triangular ears were flat to her furry,
ruddy-and-black head, and her whiskers twitched spasmodically. Could
it be that she was nervous? "I
didn't think you would want me to," Riane said softly. Now
the worry had invaded Thigpen's eyes. "I like it when you stroke
my fur." "I
should not have disobeyed you, Thigpen," The
whiskers twitched more convulsively. "It isn't so much the
disobeying that matters. It's the disbelieving," Her
striped bottlebrush tail curled upward to touch Riane on the back of
her hand. "It is natural for Rekkk to disbelieve in matters
Kundalan, but you allowed his skepticism to infect you." "That
was a mistake. I'm sorry." Thigpen's
dark, liquid eyes searched Riane's face. "Dear Dar Sala-at,
there is no need for you to be sorry. I merely want to be certain you
have learned from your mistake." "But
when you spoke to me, you were so angry—" Riane,
guided by the bottlebrush tail, allowed her hand to be brought to the
thickly furred back, Thigpen's voice was gentle. "I feared for
your life. Dar Sala-at, you still have no conception of who you are
or what you will become, nor should you yet. But I do." Riane
stroked the soft thick fur, and Thigpen started to purr. The
Teyj twittered, and Thigpen sat up. "Yes, that's right."
She jumped down and said to both Riane and Eleana, "Rekkk needs
time to heal, as do you both. Let us repair to the kitchen, where I
will prepare you a meal you will not soon forget." She led the
way down the stone corridor. "You must be famished after your
activities, and you must tell me everything." Sometime
later, they were sitting at the small utility table in the scullery,
sated and calmer. Riane and Eleana had recounted the events of the
day after Thigpen had Thripped back to the abbey with Rekkk. "That
was a close call all around," Thigpen said. "A bold
strategy, Dar Sala-at, but a dangerous one. Luring the Tzelos—" "But
Riane discovered that the power bourns that run beneath the surface
can destroy a daemon," Eleana said, trying to catch Riane's eyes
with her own, trying, doubtless, to make sense of Riane's sudden
coolness. "How
valuable this will prove to be is anyone's guess. Bourn energy cannot
be easily harnessed. You were fortunate the water provided the proper
medium." Thigpen's expression told that she knew what Eleana was
up to. "Nevertheless, an interesting piece of intelligence." "Intelligence,"
Eleana said. "You sound as if we are in a war." "Indeed
we are," Thigpen said gravely. "A Portal to the
thrice-damned Abyss has been opened. There are daemons in this realm
now. The Tzelos is far from the most deadly." "I
know." Riane nodded. "I saw Giyan in Otherwhere. She is
being held captive by the archdaemon Horolaggia." "I
beg your pardon?" Thigpen blinked repeatedly. Riane
told them why she had left the infirmary so abruptly, how Otherwhere
had been invaded by an army of eerie shadows with raised voices. She
was shaking as she told them how she had come upon Giyan's Avatar
nailed to the inverted triangle, and of Giyan's warning about the
archdaemon. "So,"
she finished, "what can you tell me about Horolaggia?" "Oh,
this is bad. Far worse than I had imagined. Far, far worse."
Thigpen had hopped down off the table and, in her intense agitation,
was turning in a circle, biting the end of her tail. "For
Miina's sake, Thigpen," Riane said, exasperated. "Will you
answer my question?" "What?
Oh yes. Yes, of course." Thigpen stopped her pacing, but her
whiskers twitched incessantly. "Pyphoros, it is written, had
three children. The two males, Horolaggia and Myggorra, are bastards.
The female, Sepseriis, is a half sister." By this time, her
expression was way past bleak. "If the archdaemon Horolaggia has
taken possession of Giyan, well, then ..." Her voice drifted off
with her expression, and she began again to pace in a circle, chewing
on her tail. "Then
what?" Riane and Eleana said almost at the same time. Thigpen
wiped her cheeks with her tail. "Then, my dear, we must consider
her already dead. Worse than dead." "No!"
Riane shouted. "I will do nothing of the kind." "But
you must. She will become our most implacable enemy." "She
told me I must find the Maasra. What is that?" Thigpen
blinked again. "Why, I have no idea." "Great,"
Riane fumed. "Just great." "There
must be someone who knows," Eleana said, looking directly at
Riane and again attempting to engage her attention. "Two
or three centuries ago we would doubtless have had our pick of
tutors," Thigpen said. "But in these dark days . . ."
Again her voice trailed off. "All
right, let's backtrack," Riane said, her mind working furiously.
She knew there had to be a solution, it was simply a matter of
finding it. Then, in her mind's eye, appeared the piteous vision of
Giyan nailed to that inverted triangle, and the terror that strangled
her at Horolag-gia's coming. There may be no solution at all.
Riane thought in horror. In which case, we are all lost. She
shook her head violently to rid it of these despairing thoughts.
Despair, she had learned, was a self-defeating spiral into inaction
and surrender, two things that were anathema to her. Think, Riane,
think! "The
one clue we have is the word I found in The Origins of Darkness.
This word, Maasra, is associated with the Malasocca. It
may be the way to effect a reversal. The problem is we have no idea
of the word's meaning. It is neither Old Tongue nor Venca."
Riane snapped her fingers. "Thigpen, didn't you say that what we
needed was a first-class dialectician?" The
Rappa nodded. "I also said I knew one, the only trouble was he
was dead." "Then
let's resurrect him." Thigpen
fairly jumped. "I beg your pardon?" "I
read about such a thing in Unbinding the Forms. The rite is
called Ephemeral Reconstitution." "Oh
yes, that." Thigpen waved a forepaw. "You can forget that
particular avenue. Only sefiror were taught that rite, and there are
no more male sorcerers left on Kundala." "There
you're wrong," Riane said, a spark of hope igniting in her
breast. "I believe I met one this afternoon." Ready,"
Nith Isstal said. "Nervous?" Nith Batoxxx asked. "Not
at all. I know it is a controlled experiment. I trust you." That
was the problem with youth, Nith Batoxxx thought as he began his
last-minute preparations. They had altogether too much trust that the
Cosmos was essentially benign. He
stood at the far west end of his laboratory. Before him was the wave
chamber, a device he had been constructing for five V'ornn years. It
disgusted him that most V'ornn—even his fellow Gyrgon—had
begun to think in terms of the Kundalan calendar, where thirty hours
made up a day and seven hundred seventy-seven days made up a year,
rather than the eighteen hundred ninety that made up a V'ornn year. A
certain corruption had set in, a jungle rot he sometimes saw on
particularly virulent off-world colonies where V'ornn had overstayed
their welcome. The
wave chamber looked like nothing more than a giant-sized egg. It was
pale with a cloud sheen of ephemeral colors, utterly seamless save
for the round hatch that screwed in and out. It was very thick,
however, more than three meters, and the composite material out of
which Nith Batoxxx had constructed it was incredibly dense. Inside
was a faint purple-blue glow from three ion tubes, just enough to
allow Nith Isstal to see his way into the seat, set at a gentle
recline, and strap himself in. This he was doing now. Nith
Batoxxx nodded to him and began the complicated procedure that
screwed the hatch into place. There were one hundred thirty-seven
separate procedures to ensure the hatch was properly sealed, because
if it wasn't properly sealed . . . What
he was dealing with scared the equations out of him, and very
properly so. The
goron wave. A
goron was the largest atomic particle, the rogue particle, the
untamable particle, the death particle. It was astonishingly
difficult to understand and, therefore, to control. So far, the
particles had resisted every effort the Comradeship had made in
trying to cluster them into a wave that could deflect a goron
particle beam. The
Centophennni had used a goron-particle weapon to decimate the V'ornn
at Hellespennn. A moment burned into Nith Batoxxx's memory, the
implacable empire catching up with them, punishing them for what had
happened three centuries before. The defeat had been devastating
enough, but coupled with that was the withering realization that the
Centophennni possessed a technology beyond even the Gyrgon's
capability. The humiliation of it gnawed at Nith Batoxxx like
a razor-raptor. That had been two hundred fifty V'ornn years ago. Two
hundred fifty years spent fearful and fleeing; two hundred fifty
years spent fruitlessly trying to perfect a defense. And for the last
forty-odd years, they had been holed up on this grimy backwater world
while the rest of the V'ornn fleet passed on, to continue exploring
or fleeing, depending on which version of reality you subscribed to. He
and Nith Sahor had volunteered to head up the mission to explore
Kundala because long-range sensors showed a remarkable goron flux at
its core. In fact, the reason the V'ornn technology could not
penetrate the ferocious perpetual storms over the Unknown Territories
was because of a dense goron layer. This was why V'ornn telemetry had
failed to pierce the opaque barrier to map the three hundred thousand
square kilometers on the northern side of the Djenn Marre mountains.
None of the off-world Khagggun teams that had been sent into the
Unknown Territories had ever returned. Their sophisticated
photonic-wave communications systems had failed the moment they had
vanished into the ice and snowstorms, and that, as far as any V'ornn
knew, was the end of them. Despite countless experiments, the Gyrgon
still lacked the ability to manipulate gorons. It was widely believed
among the Comradeship that only gorons could defend against a
goron-beam attack. Though
he had vehemently argued against Nith Sahor's involvement, he had
been overruled. The results had been predictable. While he had
spearheaded the work on the first several generations of goron wave
chambers, Nith Sahor had betrayed him and the entire Comradeship by
distancing himself from the goron-wave experiments. Instead, he
became obsessed with chasing Kundalan myth, with befriending the
slaves. The other Gyrgon had proved too slow to grasp Nith Batoxxx's
radical principles, and he had left them to bicker and orate
themselves into a standstill while he threw himself into conceiving
the new generation of wave chambers. Now,
on the verge of his greatest triumph, he felt conflicted, knowing
that the blackness inside him had guided him to this point. Where
would he be without it? It was impossible to say; he had been living
with it for so long he no longer remembered what the old Nith Batoxxx
was like. He
reached out, touched the curved, gleaming side. This was the fifth
one. Its predecessors had failed. The chamber was so thick for good
reason. It was divided into two layers. The outer layer generated
random instances of goron exhibitions, the inner layer deployed the
latest version of the device Nith Batoxxx had engineered, which would
hopefully generate the goron wave. Of
course, Nith Isstal had no idea what he was volunteering for. That
was because Nith Batoxxx hadn't told him the truth. Why bother? Nith
Isstal only wanted to please him. Nith
Batoxxx double-checked all one hundred thirty-seven safety
procedures. Then, and only then, did he begin the exhibition
protocol. He was concentrated wholly on his task. When he did this,
he accessed the world through his cranial neural nets. The world
around him became particulate. He was aware of ions, photons,
gravitons—particles, waves, fields, all overlapping, all
impacting one another. His fingers, enclosed in his gloves, were
plugged into the semiorganic chip-matrix from which all Gyrgon
clothing was constructed. In this phase, he was part machine or,
perhaps you could say that the machine was part sentient. It all
depended on which layer of reality you subscribed to. The
goron wave was activated. All the readings looked as he had
calculated when he had composed the equations. His hearts leapt in
elation. Perhaps it would happen this time. The
goron bursts began, a random attack he could not control. This part
was the worst, seeing a form of energy with immense power manifest
itself without having the key to controlling it. Even after he damped
the goron excitation, the bursts continued at a low level for several
moments. He
waited. When
he was certain the chamber was clear, he began the protocol that
would spiral open the hatch. Inside, the ion tubes had fused. Nith
Isstal lay back in his chair. The air sizzled and sparked with
residual radiation. There was a curious smell, as of the sweet-salt
scent of Kundalan blood. Nith
Batoxxx played a fusion light over the body. Nith Isstal's eyes were
open. The lids had been burned off, his eyeballs were completely
white. No pupil, no iris. His mouth was half-open. His teeth had
disintegrated into a nasty yellowish powder that filled his throat.
Half of his flesh had become transparent, so that Nith Batoxxx could
see his bones, which appeared to be in the process of disintegrating
in the same manner as his teeth. Nith
Batoxxx uttered a guttural curse. According to his instrumentation,
Nith Isstal was far too toxic to handle, and it was clear that within
minutes he would be nothing more than a pile of waterless waste. It
was like watching the aftermath of Hellespennn all over again.
9 That
Which Remains
So
you have returned," Minnum said. "And brought the Rappa
with you." The curator crouched to Thigpen's level. "It is
marvelous to see one of your kind again. Deeply and truly marvelous." Thigpen
sniffed the air suspiciously, and Riane could not help but laugh.
They were standing under the eaves in the museum courtyard. Torches
flared all around, illuminating the cistern and its dark, fulminating
water. No ion-fusion lamps were anywhere in evidence, no V'ornn
technology whatsoever. "Minnum,
meet Thigpen," Riane said. The
curator smiled. "Welcome to the Museum of False Memory." Thigpen
cocked her head. "What did you do to give Riane the notion that
you were sefiror?" "Why,
nothing," Minnum said as he stood up. "Nothing I can think
of." "I
suppose you are aware that it is a major transgression to impersonate
a sefiror," Thigpen said shortly. "Let
me assure you I leave the impersonations to Gyrgon." Minnum
grinned at Thigpen and spread his hands wide. "Anyway, who is
left to prosecute me?" "There
are konara," Thigpen said, speaking of the high priestesses of
Ramahan. "Oh,
I daresay. Power-hungry fiends like Bartta." "Bartta
is dead," Riane broke in. "Is
she now?" Minnum raised a bushy eyebrow. "I would be
careful, if I were you, about jumping to conclusions concerning
Bartta." "First
you tell me Nith Sahor is alive," Riane said hotly, "now
you tell me that Bartta is, too." "That's
enough, the two of you!" Startled
to silence, Riane and Minnum both looked at Thigpen. She was up on
her hind legs, her teeth bared. Riane had seen her react this way
only once before, when she was about to attack a huge perwillon, a
sorcerous cave predator. "I
will hear no more about the Gyrgon; that's a warning you had best
take to heart," Thigpen growled. "Sensitive
little thing," Minnum said. Then he shrugged. "No matter.
This is a museum. We aim to please around here." "Hold
on," Riane said. "You told me it was best if most didn't
see your exhibits." "Oh,
well, that." Minnum waved a hand. "Perhaps I should have
said we aim to please you here, Dar Sala-at." Thigpen
came down on all sixes. "She didn't—?" Minnum
squinted. "No, she didn't tell me." "Then
how did you—?" "Same
as you, I expect." The curator hitched up his sleeves. "I
think it best if we go inside now." He glanced at the sky filled
with V'ornn light. "It is getting a mite cold for me." He
began to walk off with his heavy limp. "You can catch your death
with a chill like this, and that's the truth of it." He
led them around a dustbin piled high with debris, and Riane could see
that there were several doors cleverly hidden, accessed by
pressure-sensitive panels, one of which Minnum touched. The
interior of the museum was warm and cozy. Fires flared in mammoth
basalt fireplaces. Seeing the black rock gave Riane a momentary
start; it brought back the image of the inverted triangle, Giyan's
prison in Ayame. "This
is the Great Hall," Minnum said, walking them to the center of
the domed pentagonal space. "All exhibits can be accessed from
this central location." Shadow-grids
lay across the sea-green jasper floor. Odd, eerie-looking
furniture—seemingly composed of carved runes—crouched
against the shanstone walls. Cream-and-black onyx columns spiraled up
into the dimness of heavy beams, encrusted with soot. Copper censers
emitted tiny drifts of a musky incense, which mingled with the scent
of aromatic oil burning in the squat, filigreed, bronze lamps. There
was a sense of deep silence, of isolation from the frenetic noise and
hustle of the city. Minnum
turned abruptly and stared hard at Riane. "I said you would come
back, didn't I?" He nodded. "I expect you did because you
saw them." "What
is he babbling about?" Thigpen snapped. She was clearly still
upset. "Tell
her, Dar Sala-at," Minnum said. It seemed a kind of dare. "The
carved gargoyles on the parapet are daemons," Riane said to
Thigpen. "I saw their shadow-outlines in Otherwhere." "At
least one of them has figured out how to get out of his prison,"
Minnum said. "No longer any doubt about it." "What
do you know about it?" Thigpen snapped. With
that, Minnum made a complex figure in the air with the tips of his
thumb and forefinger touching. There came the sound of a marc-beetle
being put to a flame, and where Thigpen had crouched was now a very
horrible-looking lizardlike creature. It had eight short but powerful
legs, oily blue-black scales, a long, flat head with a flicking,
purple tongue, and a thin, ridged tail studded with hooked barbs. Its
lambent yellow eyes were alight with a malevolent intelligence. It
hissed and emitted caustic orange fumes from its eight slitted
nostrils. "N'Luuura!"
Riane cried, coughing. "A razor-raptor!" "Ah,
I see your knowledge extends to V'ornn xenobiology." Minnum
nodded. "Impressive, I must say." He made another figure in
the air, this time touching the tips of his thumb and pinky together,
and Thigpen reappeared. She looked around, for a moment bewildered. "Feeling
all right after your little, er, sojourn?" Minnum asked. "That
was ... I must say it was by jar the most disgusting
experience I have ever . . ." Thigpen drew herself up. "My
apologies. I could not have imagined." "That
one of my kind could still exist?" Minnum smiled. "Thankfully
you are not alone. I have survived this long by, uhm, how would you
say it, keeping a flat outline." "A
low profile," Riane said. "Precisely." "But
why do you have to hide?" she asked. "We
have no time for history lessons," Thigpen said briskly. She had
recovered her aplomb with admirable alacrity. "Now that you have
proved your credentials, Minnum, what can you tell us about the
Ma-lasocca?" "No
easy questions from you folk, I see. Well, I expected that. The
Malasocca, eh? Now let me see." Minnum squinched up his eyes,
staring at the smoke-dark ceiling high overhead. "A very
nasty spell, that. It used to be invoked before Miina consigned
the daemons to the Abyss. Power is their game. Power at any cost. The
lust for it is built in them, really. Part of their essential makeup.
But we could not have daemons transmogrifying themselves into
sorceresses now could we? Very dangerous, that. It was one of the
reasons they needed to be locked away. You cannot trust a daemon, not
for an instant." "Then
why weren't they locked away from the beginning?" "An
excellent question. We thought we could change them. Well, that's
part of our nature, ever optimistic, always seeking to make
things better, that's our game." He squinted at Riane.
"It is our greatest strength, Dar Sala-at." "But
it's also what caused needless suffering and death." "Well,
it surely caused that, suffering and death," Minnum said
thoughtfully. "But I don't agree about the needless part. You
see, we judge all creatures as good and worthy of life until proved
otherwise. If we abandoned that philosophy, well, think of it, we
would be as arrogant as, well, as V'ornn, wouldn't we? We have a lot
of power, and with that goes responsibility. We cannot set ourselves
above others, judging them before we give them a chance to show their
true nature. Even if they prove to be evil, even then, we give them a
chance to change. How can we do less?" Thigpen
shook her head. "We appreciate the history lesson, Minnum, but
could we get back to the Malasocca?" Minnum
clucked his tongue against the roof of his mouth. "Malasocca is
a difficult and complex spell. Why do you ask about it?" "A
sorceress has been attacked," Riane said. "By
the daemon that has managed to escape. Well, it would have to be an
archdaemon to get through, wouldn't it?" Minnum shook his head.
"But I wonder how?" Riane
could not tell him that in breaking the sorcerous circle of the
Nanthera Giyan had violated Miina's law and inadvertently opened a
Portal. Too many questions would be raised about why she had invoked
the Nanthera in the first place, and that could jeopardize Annon's
secret. The
curator eyed them both. "Which archdaemon has her?" "Horolaggia." Minnum
frowned. "Sorry, my hearing must be going. I thought you said
Horolaggia." "I
did." "Ah,
no!" Minnum sat down abruptly on a burnished heartwood chair.
"Miina protect us ally.” A
cold, clammy terror gripped Riane's heart as she saw the stricken
expression on the sorcerer's face. "What
is it?" She was almost afraid to ask. "I
have no counter to this . . . abomination, a Malasocca invoked by one
of Pyphoros' bastard get." "How
long can she last?" Minnum
squinted. "When was she taken?" "Just
days ago." "Depends
on how powerful she is, but I would say at the outside the dead of
winter." "Dear
Miinal That is only six weeks away." "Minnum,
you must help us," Thigpen said. "Does the word Maasra
mean anything to you?" Minnum
shook his head mutely. His eyes seemed far away. "It
is somehow associated with the Malasocca," Riane said urgently. "Can't
be," Minnum said bleakly. "Would know it or, anyway, have
heard of it." Thigpen
put her forepaws on Minnum's knees. "Maasra is not Old
Tongue, nor is it Venca. Our best guess is it's an obscure dialect of
some sort. I know someone who might be able to help us. A
dialectician. The problem is he's dead." As Minnum's eyes rose
to lock with hers, she said, "We need you to conjure the
Ephemeral Reconstitution." Spice
Jaxx's was an octagon-shaped cafe in the center of Axis Tyr's vast
and seething spice market, which never closed. Neither did Spice
Jaxx's. Line-General Lokck Werrrent had arrived for his appointment
with Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin with fifteen minutes to spare. This
was deliberate. He wanted to sit alone with a flute of fire-grade
nu-maaadis and gather his thoughts before Olnnn delivered whatever
bad news he had. Line-General
Werrrent had for many years been close to Olnnn Rydddlin. They had
what Werrrent privately thought of as a father-son relationship.
Werrrent was proud of Olnnn's accomplishments, especially considering
his background, and of how tough the younger Kha-gggun had proved
himself to be. Still, there remained a thorn in the blood-rose of
Werrrent's affection—the fact that Olnnn, so young and
relatively inexperienced, had jumped over him and every other
Line-General to be named the new Star-Admiral. Not
that Werrrent envied Olnnn's daily encounters with Kurgan Stogggul.
The father, erratic and paranoid, had been difficult enough to deal
with, but the son—well, in Werrrent's considered opinion Kurgan
Stogggul was a dangerous egomaniac. Worse, Werrrent agreed with a
number of the other Line-Generals that Kurgan Stogggul had a secret
agenda that would benefit just one V'ornn: Kurgan Stogggul. Why
was it, he asked himself, that just when things looked as if they
could not get worse, they did? Before
he could think of an answer, Olnnn Rydddlin appeared and sat down
opposite him. He
waited until Olnnn was served his drink. "So. What news?" When
Olnnn had told him of the Gyrgon's decision to suspend the
implantation of the okummmon among the Khagggun ranks, Lokck Werrrent
sat still and silent. At
length, Olnnn said, "Don't you have any comment?" The
Line-General shrugged his shoulders. "What is there to say? It
is a Gyrgon decision. We obey Gyrgon decisions. I, for one, am
grateful that they have the best interests of my Khagggun in mind." "In
other words, you believe them." Lokck
Werrrent's dark eyes scanned the younger Khagggun. "I have no
reason not to. I cannot claim to understand the decisions of the
Comradeship, and neither can you." He took a swig of his
numaaadis. "You have always harbored a dark and gloomy bent. I
myself see nothing dire in this news. On the contrary—" "They
will never resume the program," Olnnn said softly, "I do
not care what the regent claims." "This
is treasonous talk!" the Line-General said in great agitation.
"We Khagggun were promised Great Caste status. To renege would
be an intolerable dishonor." "This
is what I am saying." Lokck
Werrrent heaved a great sigh. "You are like a son to me,
Star-Admiral. You know this well. And now you are my superior. But I
am not so much a fool not to advise you to keep such radical thoughts
to yourself. Any other general hearing these words—" "Which
is precisely why I have come to you. I trust you with my life. You do
not know the current regent as I do." And then he did something
he had sworn to himself he would not do. He told Lokck Werrrent how
he and Kurgan had murdered the former Star-Admiral's concubine and
had blamed Wennn Stogggul for it. "It was all part of Kurgan
Stogggul's plan to pit his father against the Star-Admiral. As he had
foreseen, they caused each other's death. Kurgan ascended to regent,
and I became Star-Admiral." Lokck
Werrrent grasped Olnnn's wrists. "Your hands are covered in
blood. You have already committed treason once." "That
is not the way I see it. I helped rid us all of Wennn Stogggul. That
skcettta was born a razor-raptor. And as for his son—" "Keep
your voice down, Star-Admiral," Lokck Werrrent said with a
pained expression. "Lokck,
I am uncomfortable with you addressing me by my rank when we are
alone together. After all—" "But
you are my Star-Admiral. It is impossible to address you any other
way." Olnnn
gave a wan smile. "This is you through and through,
Line-General." "Protocol
must be observed. Without this discipline we would soon descend into
a pack of wild animals." "Perhaps
you are right," Olnnn mused. Lokck
Werrrent studied him for some time. "But there are moments—brief
and infrequent—when extraordinary circumstances allow a ...
bending . . . of protocol." He inclined his square head. "So
tell me, Olnnn. What black thoughts have invaded that dour mind of
yours?" Olnnn
rubbed his forehead. "The truth is, being so close to the new
regent I grow ever more suspicious. This elevation to Great Caste
status was his father's idea. It was how Wennn Stogggul was able to
forge his alliance with the former Star-Admiral. But that alliance
proved false. Why should this elevation to Great Caste status be
anything else?" "The
Gyrgon gave it their blessing. The okummmon is a Gyrgon
bioinstrument." Olnnn
Rydddlin's hand gripping his silenced him. Olnnn slowly turned his
arm over, revealing the newly implanted okummmon. "I
have little use for this bioinstrument. And I am wondering
whether the high command was implanted simply so that the regent
could keep closer tabs on us." "The
regent?" "Think
about it. For centuries the castes have remained the same. Until
Wennn Stogggul. How could he possibly convince the Comradeship—" "Again,
I would point out that none of us can claim to know a Gyr-gon's
mind." "Gyrgon
abhor change. That is indisputable." "Yes,
but you know as well as I do that the okummmon can only be implanted
on Gyrgon orders." "Perhaps
the regent is in league with that Gyrgon, Nith Batoxxx, who skulks
around the regent's palace as if it is his own. I do not claim to
have all the answers, Line-General. But like it or not change is in
the air and I grow fearful for us—for all Khagggun. I believe
the son is building on the father's lie." "Why
would he do that?" "To
keep us under control; to deprive us of power." "You
are describing a decidedly paranoid individual." "That
is just my point," Olnnn said grimly. "He is a V'ornn who
plotted his own father's assassination." "You
yourself pointed out that getting rid of Wennn Stogggul should be
viewed as a virtuous act. You cannot have it both ways." "You
are blind, Lokck." "Because
of our long friendship I choose to ignore the insult. Kurgan Stogggul
is my regent. You would do well to remember that." "I
believe he poses a grave danger to us." "You
enjoy the loyalty of every Khagggun. So long as this is true there is
no danger." Lokck Werrrent shook his head. "Olnnn, when was
the last time you had any fun?" This
was not a question to which Olnnn could respond. "Even
before your . . ." Lokck Werrrent could not stop himself from
glancing at the bare bones of Olnnn's sorcerous leg. "Even
before your misfortune you were a dour sort. How many times have I
tried to spice up your life? Remember that time—" "The
four females you brought." "Two
were for you." Olnnn
crossed his arms over his chest, looked away. "All
death and no fun is no way to live your life." Olnnn
swung his head around. His eyes were baleful. "We are Khagggun." Lokck
Werrrent sighed deeply, "Even Khagggun must take their pleasure.
But there is no pleasure for you, is there, Olnnn?" He shrugged.
"I thought perhaps coming back from the dead might have had a
salubrious effect on you." "I
no longer sleep at night. I dream without the benefit of sleep. I
have nightmares whose meaning I do not understand." "Perhaps
a Genomatekk—" "No
Genomatekk can cure me." "Then
be kind to yourself. Come with me to Dobbro Mannx's dinner party. Do
you know him? He is a well-respected solicitor-Bashkir. A very
amusing fellow." "Thank
you. No." Olnnn placed some coins on the table. "I see this
has been a waste of time." "I
never forget a conversation." Lokck Werrrent held him in his
steady gaze. "Olnnn, you know me better than any other V'ornn.
You know that given just cause I will defend my Khagggun to the
death." Olnnn
returned the look. "Then I will bring you your just cause,
Line-General." He inclined his head stiffly. "Enjoy
yourself tonight." "I
wish you the same, Star-Admiral," Lokck Werrrent said as he
rose. "But I very much fear my words fall on deaf ears." The
operative word here is 'ephemeral’, " Minnum said as he
gathered oddments into a rough circle. He
had taken them into a smallish gallery in the north wing of the
museum. Here were displayed a surprisingly small number of exhibits.
These were all in superbly wrought cases of carved heartwood or
etched bronze. Unlike the mess of the courtyard, everything here was
neat and sparkling clean. "Once
this dialectician is cantated—that's what it's called, by the
way—into this realm you will have three minutes, no more, is
that understood? Humph!" He seemed to be muttering to himself.
"Three minutes! Hardly a successful incantation at all. What
were they thinking?" With
the sefiror bustling about, Riane peered into one case after another,
able to make sense of nothing she saw. The interiors seemed filled
with a swirling mist. She might have thought the cases were unused
save for the fact that they had been lovingly hand-rubbed to a deep
luster. There were no printed captions anywhere in evidence. And, in
any case, what could a caption tell you about something you could not
see? No wonder this museum attracted so few visitors. "All
right, then." Minnum stood in the center of the gallery, his
strange and exotic paraphernalia piled around him. "Please stand
there, Dar Sala-at. Yes, right. And you, Thigpen, just there across
from—right, then, what is the name of this dialectician of your
acquaintance?" "Cushsneil,"
Thigpen said at once. Minnum
nodded, pushed up his sleeves, and conjured what looked like a stick
of ice-blue chalk. On the stone floor of the gallery he drew an
equilateral triangle. This
was the most ancient symbol of original Ramahan power, Riane knew.
Which was, she supposed, what made Giyan's Otherwhere prison so
terrifying on an elemental level. It was the inversion of the symbol,
the sigil of Evil made manifest. But now what Minnum was drawing
caught her attention fully. It was the inverted triangle superimposed
upon the first, creating a kind of six-pointed star. "Pheregonnen,"
the senior said, beginning the rite. "Behold the Design whose
Center is everywhere, whose Points are nowhere." Into a small
fire-blackened brazier he sifted a succession of powders taken from
uncapped phials, then grated a bit of odd-looking horn, along with
what looked like shanin and latua. At length, he conjured a fire-red
substance. It drooled thick as gelatin into the brazier, producing a
dense, billowing cloud of yellowish smoke, which swirled around the
gallery in similar fashion to the mist inside the exhibit cases. Riane
tried to hold her breath, but finally even her hardened lungs gave
out. She inhaled the smoke and staggered, feeling light-headed and
dizzy. The air seemed to sizzle and dance with little sparks
that twinkled at the edges of her vision. But every time she tried to
look at them directly they disappeared. Then
her attention was redirected to the center of the Pheregonnen, for
the twinkling sparks were coalescing into a sphere, which elongated,
slowly changing shape into that of a Kundalan male. From his robes it
was clear that he was a konara, a high priest of Ramahan. "Cushsneill"
Thigpen cried happily. "I thought I would never see you again!" "Nor
I you," the Ramahan said gravely. He had long grey hair that
rose from a pronounced widow's peak in winglike waves, a blade-thin
nose, and dark, hooded eyes. His was an ascetic's face, the face of a
scholar, a Ramahan of unwavering dedication and service. "What
has caused you to rouse me in this manner?" "Mind
the time," Minnum warned them. "There won't be a second
chance." "Right."
Thigpen nodded. "Cushsneil, this is Riane, the Dar Sala-at." "The
Dar Sala-at?" The wise eyes opened wide, blinking several times
as Cushsneil looked around. "If you are the Dar Sala-at, then
where is your Nawatir?" "I
do not know," Riane said. "I have no Nawatir." "Oh,
dear. Oh, dear." The deceased dialectician clucked his tongue.
"You are most vulnerable without your Nawatirl" "We
don't have time for this," Minnum muttered darkly. "For
Miina's sake, get on with it." "We
need your help," Riane said urgently. "Can you tell us the
meaning of the word Maasra?" Cushsneil
frowned. "If you ask about the Maasra then the Portal
must have come unsealed. Horolaggia has been sighted?" "Yes,"
Riane said. "A beloved sorceress has been taken by this
arch-daemon and is being transmogrified through the Malasocca. We
have until winter solstice before the possession becomes
irreversible." "Evil
times, indeed," the dialectician rumbled. "You must
exercise extreme caution. I cannot emphasize this enough. Intensive
training in the sorcerous arts is essential before you seek to engage
Horolaggia, and even then, there is no assurance ..." He
shuddered. "Oh, dear, oh, dear." "What
about the Maasra?" Riane asked. "Ah,
that." Cushsneil rocked from his heels to his toes. "It is
a colloquial word—a holy word, the Gazi Qhan would doubtless
say, for it is of their dialect. The Maasra is another name
for the Veil—the Veil of a Thousand Tears." Riane
almost jumped out of her skin in excitement. "The Veil of a
Thousand Tears is what Giyan told me I had to find. Why? What is it?" "It
is written that when the Five Sacred Dragons of Miina used The Pearl
to create Kundala the resulting cataclysm shattered The Pearl's outer
layer. The largest piece of this survived the creation. It was used
to catch the tears the Five Dragons shed at the birth of Kundala, and
their tears turned the hard shell into flowing fabric of fantastic
colors and incomparable sheen." "Why
did they weep?" "Because
they foresaw the death and destruction that would accompany the
decline of the Kundalan race." "So
we were doomed even before any of us were born." "Nothing
is set in stone, least of all the subject of a sacred Dragon's second
sight." "Dear
Cushsneil," Thigpen broke in, "can you tell us where to
find the Veil of a Thousand Tears?" "I
cannot even tell you whether it exists. Though many warring factions
have made obsessive lifelong searches for it, have murdered for its
secret, have died in exile and madness, the Veil remains hidden, a
legend only." "But
it does exist! Giyan told me I must find it. It is the only way to
free her. If I do not, she will die." "The
Malasocca is worse than death—far worse. If the web is
completed, she will be trapped, subservient to the archdaemon's will
for all time." The dialectician's image began to sparkle, and
they could see the far wall through his body. "He
is going," Minnum said. "I warned you." "Please,"
Riane said desperately. "You must be able to tell us something
more." "I
have already told you what I can." Cushsneil's voice was growing
faint, indistinct. "The rest you must discover on your own." "Wait,"
Riane cried. "If
you are truly the Dar Sala-at, it is written." "Explain
yourself!" It
was too late. The dialectician had vanished altogether. Cursing
mightily, Riane turned to the sefiror. "Who are the Gazi Qhan?
Where are they?" "Ah,
at last an easy question." Minnum rubbed his hands together as
he led the way out of the gallery. The yellow smoke had vanished
along with the chalk-mark Pheregonnen. "The Gazi Qhan are one of
the Five Tribes of the Korrush. If you are determined to find the
Veil of a Thousand Tears I suggest you start there." "Doubtless
we should begin our journey north as soon as possible," Thigpen
said with a curious glance at Riane. What
was she playing at? Riane wondered. She would have expected Thigpen
to raise another caution flag, especially in light of... Then she got
it. She pulled at Minnum's sleeve so forcefully that the sefiror
stopped in midstep. "Cushsneil was looking right at me when he
warned of taking on Horolaggia without the proper training. I may be
the Dar Sala-at, but I am not even an ordained sorceress. Giyan was
right. I must be patient. I must spend the time allotted to me in
learning." "And?"
Minnum inquired. "Well,
I was thinking that I could apprentice with you, that I could . . ."
Her voice trailed off when she saw the dark look Minnum shot Thigpen.
"What is it?" "Will
you tell her, dear Rappa, or shall I?" "It
is your right," Thigpen said. "And your duty." Minnum
nodded, sighing. "Much as I am pleased by your request, Dar
Sala-at, I cannot honor it." "But
why not?" Riane asked. "You are sefiror, maybe the last of
your kind. Like Mother, you are a connection with the time before the
V'ornn. Who better to teach me sorcery?" Minnum's
expression softened. "Dear Dar Sala-at, it is precisely because
of all this that I am forbidden to teach you or anyone the sor-cerous
arts." He lifted an arm. "But come, let us not speak of
this in cold corridors." He
took them back through the glittering Great Hall into a narrow
gallery filled with the sculpture of serpents. Riane, who
automatically took in details, noted the similarity between these
serpents and the citrine image of Miina's sacred snake that she had
come across in the Kells below the Abbey of Floating White. Minnum
poured them flagons of a warm, crisp, highly spiced wine that Riane
had never tasted before. They sat on upholstered chairs whose
elongated backs reclined at odd angles, before a crackling fire in a
stone hearth. Minnum
drained his flagon, then wiped his red lips. He sat forward, elbows
on knees, and when he spoke his voice was scarcely above a whisper.
"I suppose you have some knowledge of the uprising that usurped
power from Mother." Riane
nodded. "It happened on the day the V'ornn arrived, the day The
Pearl was lost." "Ah,
not lost, no." Minnum shook his shaggy head. "The Pearl was
cast out from Kundala by the Great Goddess Herself. After the cabal
of sefiror Ramahan took Mother's power and gained control of The
Pearl, after they peered into its depths and saw not Truth but what
they wanted to see, Miina in Her fury took up The Pearl and carried
it far, far away. She had made The Pearl for Kundala—it was our
birthright. But when we abused its power, we abrogated that right and
She abandoned us. "The
consequences of this were many. We lost what power The Pearl might
have given us to resist the V'ornn invasion. Miina stood by, mute,
Her heart hardened against Her people while the sefiror cabal used
the Rappa as scapegoats and had them slaughtered. She stood by, mute,
Her heart hardened when the priestesses took back their power. The
konara could have driven the sefiror out of the abbeys, but they
could not strip them of their sorcery. So what did they do?"
Minnum sighed. "They killed the sefiror. Every last one of
them—save me. I survived by fleeing to a place where they would
never think to look for a sefiror—the Korrush. For two decades
I lived there among the Jeni Cerii, the fierce warlords of the
steppes, in complete anonymity, learning the many ways in which to
kill an enemy. That was where I got this." He slapped his bandy
leg. "Chasing raiders, I fell from a kuomeshal going full
gallop, took one nasty fall. We were a hundred fifty kilometers from
nowhere, and they slung me across my mount and took me back to
Bandichire, and I never made a sound. They set my leg as best they
could, but the damage was already done." Thinking
of how Giyan had reset Annon's leg, Riane said, "Why didn't you
use sorcery?" "I
was in hiding, wasn't I? I was among the Jeni Cerii; everything had
to appear normal." He grinned. " 'Sides, they told stories
about my bravery for months afterward." He resettled himself.
"Now where was I? Oh, yes. Capsule history. I became an apt
pupil because I had no other choice, then I became an adept. When I
realized I was admired and feared I left straightaway. Returning to
Axis Tyr, I discovered this place, abandoned and falling into
disrepair, and decided I would become its curator. Then, on one of
his long walks, Eleusis Ashera wandered in and stayed to view all the
exhibits." "But
none of this explains why you can't teach me," Riane said. "I
must save Giyan from Horolaggia. I will not allow her to be
transmogrified. You must help me." Minnum
shook his head, and his eyes were suddenly sunken and sad. "However
much I want to, Dar Sala-at, I cannot. This is my punishment, you
see. Miina's punishment." "What
do you mean?" "For
allowing The Pearl to stray into evil hands, the Great Goddess
stripped Mother of much of her power." This
was true, Riane knew, for Mother had told her as much when she,
Riane, had freed her from her imprisonment. "For
being the only sefiror clever enough to survive our genocide, Miina
meted out another form of punishment. I have knowledge, Dar Sala-at,
so much knowledge. And yet I am unable to convey it in any form." Riane's
heart broke for Minnum. "But you did nothing wrong. In fact, you
alone survived. Why should you be punished? How could Miina be so
cruel?" "Is
it cruelty, Dar Sala-at? Do not be so quick to judge the Great
Goddess. Through greed, envy, arrogance we lost the greatest gift.
Could it have been because we had become complacent, because we no
longer put much value on an object that is beyond value? Because we
had become corrupted by the power we wielded? If that be so—
and I, for one, fervently believe that it is—then what remains
for us after the ruin we have been brought to? Another day, and
another, all of which must be fought for with the blood and the death
of loved ones. Suffering burns away arrogance, greed, envy. Only
through this crucible of fire can we learn what we have forgotten.
Only then will we come to know who we really are and where we belong
in the Cosmos." Riane
hung her head. "You say you are enjoined from teaching, Minnum,
but truly you have taught me something vital this night." He
smiled. "Then mayhap I have proved my worth to Miina, for I do
not think that you arrived at my doorstep by simple chance." "Then
help me further," Riane pleaded. "I did not need Cushsneil
to tell me I am unprepared to face Horolaggia. There is no use in
trying to save Giyan only to die in the process." Out
of the corner of her eye she could see Thigpen beaming at her. She
had learned this last lesson well. Minnum
was scratching his hairy cheek. "Mayhap you can learn what you
need in the Korrush. Look here." He gestured with his right
hand, and a map appeared on the floor. Riane and Thigpen hunkered
around it. "Behold
the Korrush," he said. "The Five Tribes inhabit the wild
steppe in a kind of uneasy truce, but there are always squabbles
among the kapudaan—the chieftains—and skirmishes along
the borders. Each tribe is centered around its own area, which is
known as a chire. There is a central village in each chire with the
same name." His stubby finger stabbed out. "The warlord
Jeni Cerii are here in Bandichire." And again, moving southwest.
"The Rasan Sul are the spice merchants the SaTrryn trade with;
they are located here, in Okkamchire." His finger moved west.
"The Han Jod are artisans here in Shelachire. Because the Bey
Das are historians and archaeologists they have special dispensation
to cross chire borders safely. They are essentially nomads, spread
out all across the Korrush. Their main site is here in the barely
visible village of Im-Thera. There lies Za Hara-at, the fabled and
ancient Earth Five Meetings." Firelight
played across Minnum's face, highlighting the reddish hairs in his
forked beard. A log gave way, crashing softly into the pillowy white
bed of ash. Minnum rose, limped over to the hearth to put another log
on. When he came back, he pointed again to the sorcerous map he had
conjured. "Here
in Agachire, on the eastern section of the Korrush, near the border
to the northwestern corner of the Great Voorg, dwell the Gazi Qhan,
the tribe Cushsneil mentioned from whose dialect Maasra comes.
They are the mystics of the Korrush, the Gazi Qhan, and I confess I
know little about them save this. There is a district in the village
of Agachire known as Giyossun. Here is a kashiggen called Mrashruth,
which means, i believe, Tender Willow. It is run by a dzuoko named
Perrnodt, who I think may be able to assist you." Riane
was shocked. "What does a Tuskugggun know of Osoru or Kyofu?" Minnum
cocked an eyebrow. "Who said she was V'ornn?" "She
must be. Every Kundalan dzuoko was replaced by a Tuskugggun when the
V'ornn took possession of the kashiggen." "Apparently
not every dzuoko," Minnum said dryly, then he addressed
Thigpen. "Is she always so sure of herself?" "I
would venture to say it works to her advantage as well as to her
disadvantage," Thigpen said just as dryly. Minnum
grunted, turning back to Riane. "Be that as it may, Perrnodt is
not V'ornn." "She
is Gazi Qhan then," Riane said, determined to listen more
closely. "Of
that I have no knowledge," Minnum said softly, his eyes afire.
"What is of interest to all of us, however, is that she is
Ramahan." "It
is settled then," Thigpen said. "The Dar Sala-at and I will
journey to the Korrush there to find this Perrnodt." Minnum
shook his head. "Where the Dar Sala-at now ventures she must do
so alone." "Impossible!
This Korrush is far too alien and dangerous for me to allow—" "You
will not go, Thigpen." Minnum's voice was soft but commanding.
"It is written in the Prophesies of the Druuge." He planted
his feet firmly on the floor. "Moreover, she cannot go with her
sorcery intact." Thigpen's
chest expanded, and she stood up warningly on her four hind legs.
"Now you go too far. Without her spells, she will be
vulnerable—" "As
you have doubtless discovered of late, she is vulnerable with the
pitifully small bits of knowledge she has. Moreover, without proper
training I warrant she could do more harm than good with what she
does know." "How
dare you talk about the Dar Sala-at in that way!" "I
speak only the truth, Thigpen. Riane must be properly trained,
and for that she must travel to the Korrush." "There
has to be another way. She—" "I've
heard enough out of the two of you!" Riane cried. "Stop
talking about me as if I wasn't in the chamber." She took a
breath. "Now, Minnum, tell me why I cannot use my sorcery in the
Korrush." "I
said that you cannot go with it intact, Dar Sala-at. The two are not
the same." "How
do they differ?" Riane said. "I
need to extract all your sorcerous knowledge. You will not remember
one iota of it." "Then
how will I introduce myself to Perrnodt?" Riane said. "How
will she teach me?" "Excellent
questions," Minnum replied. He went to a desk, pulled open one
drawer after another. "Now where did I stash that blasted
thing?" he mumbled as he rummaged through the jumbled contents
of the desk. "Ah, here it is." He brought back a highly
polished heartwood box entirely graven with unfamiliar runes, and
opened it in front of them. It appeared filled with the same
opalescent mist Riane had noticed in some of the museum's exhibit
cases. But the mist did not dissipate with the box's opening; in
fact, if anything it seemed to thicken. A certain chill had entered
the chamber. It took Riane but a moment to realize that it came from
the box, or rather its mysterious contents. Minnum dipped his hand
into the mist and pulled it out. His hand appeared empty. He
seemed to be enjoying their consternation. "Look at the tip of
my forefinger." "I
see only a black speck," Riane said. "Quite
so," Minnum replied. "And properly placed in plain sight
such an item will go unnoticed by even the most discerning eye."
He reached out, planted the speck beneath Riane's right ear. "Nothing
more than a mole, eh?" He wagged a finger. "In actuality,
what is it? The repository of all your sorcerous knowledge." "What?" "That's
right." He was grinning. "You will carry your knowledge
with you in a safe place, in a receptacle only Perrnodt will be able
to recognize and access." "But
why all this secrecy?" Thigpen was frowning deeply, her whiskers
twitching so violently Riane knew that she was highly agitated. "Perhaps
it will never be needed. But just in case ... in the event of. . ."
Minnum sighed. "I may be the only sefiror left alive, but there
are forces in the Korrush, corrupting forces, dark forces that are
lacking only sufficient knowledge to extend their power." He
folded his arms over his chest. "They are known as sauromicians.
They are necromancers. They study the dead, dismembering them in
order to foretell the future." Riane
glanced over at Thigpen. The Rappa's whiskers were twitching in
anxiety. "They
are that which remains," Minnum continued. "The end result
of the sorcerers whose memories were burned beyond recognition." "I
thought you said the Ramahan killed all the sefiror save yourself,"
Riane said. "True
enough." Minnum nodded. "But before that happened, Miina,
in Her rage, took Nedhu as well as several of his intimates in the
cabal that rose up to appropriate The Pearl, and did this to them." "She
left them to wander the Korrush, and now they are a danger?"
Riane shook her head. "Truly the Great Goddess moves in
mysterious ways." "So
it is written," Minnum said. "So it has come to pass."
He touched the black speck beneath Riane's right ear. "The
chances of your encountering a sauromician are slim, but should the
worst occur they will be unable to steal your knowledge." Riane
nodded. "I understand." "But
Dar Sala-at," Thigpen protested. "You cannot—" "She
must," Minnum said. "If
the worst should happen, she will be helpless to defend herself
without her sorcery." "I
think you underestimate her resourcefulness," Minnum said.
"However, I have no intention of allowing her to travel to the
Korrush unprotected." He returned to the desk, pressed a hidden
button, and a door popped open. "In the unlikely event you come
across a sauromician, you will know him by two things: first, he will
be dressed in black, hooded robes. Second, he will have the stigma
the Great Goddess in Her wisdom has given him: on his left hand is a
sixth finger, black and ugly as death." Unlocking
the lowest of four drawers, he produced a hexagonal box made of a
dull grey metal alloy. It was protected by a lock, which he unsealed
with a series of rhythmic darting motions of his forefinger. The top
spiraled open, and he drew out a cylinder a bit over ten centimeters
long of a milk-white color, smooth as silk. "You will hide this,
Dar Sala-at," he said, as he pressed it into her palm. "And
you will activate it just here, near this end, by pressing the gold
disc that lies flush with the surface. Press it again to deactivate
it." Thigpen
sniffed at it suspiciously. "What is that? It's not of Kundalan
manufacture." "And
I warrant it's not V'ornnish either." Riane
turned it over and over. "Then where does it come from?" Minnum
shrugged. "I found it here, in the Museum of False Memory." "What
will it do?" Riane asked. "This
is an infinity-blade wand. Using a highly compressed beam of goron
particles, it will repel the enemy—any enemy." He took it
from her, lifted her thick hair, and placed it flat against her scalp
just above the nape of her neck, where he affixed it. "But use
it sparingly. You will only be able to activate it twice." "But
you must be able to tell me more." "Would
that I could." He laid a finger alongside his bulbous nose.
"Remember what Miina has done to me. I have told you all I can." Thigpen
looked up. "So much danger, little dumpling." Crystalline
tears stood in the corners of her eyes. "Of a sudden, I feel
inadequate to protecting you." "Dear
Thigpen," Riane said as she stroked the soft, luxuriant fur, "I
have come to realize that no one—not Giyan, not you—can
long protect me from my enemies. This I must do myself, and I will
fail unless my schooling continues. I know full well that the time
when the Dar Sala-at may safely reveal herself is not yet here." "And
yet." "I
know what you wish for me." She kissed the Rappa. "Giyan
once told me the Dar Sala-at's path was long and arduous and fraught
with peril. I have been called, Thigpen. I can do ought but follow my
path. It directs me into the heart of the Korrush." It
was almost midnight by the time Nith Batoxxx had recovered
sufficiently from the failure. He had taken his daily salamuuun
flight, using a dose a touch higher than usual. Still, afterward, he
could not bear the sight of himself, and so he transformed his body
into the one Kurgan knew as the Old V'ornn—skull copper-dark,
aged as morte-wood, hands crinkled like tissue. Thus cloaked, he
ventured into the throbbing heart of Axis Tyr via a secret
underground exit he had discovered in the Kundalan structure the
Comradeship had renamed the Temple of Mnemonics. He had told no other
Gyrgon of his discovery. There
were many reasons for this, not the least being that he was a hoarder
of secrets. It was his opinion that the weight of the secrets he kept
would crush most V'ornn like a qwawd-egg shell. It
was an invigorating walk of perhaps fifty minutes to the villa in
which the Old V'ornn was known to live. He could have taken a
hov-erpod, of course, but in the guise of the Old V'ornn he preferred
to go on foot. The succession of salamuuun flights made everything
look crystal clear, hard-edged, filled with wonder. The
recent storm had scrubbed the city clean. Freshets of rainwater still
swirled down storm drains, and the packed streets were pockmarked
with puddles. He passed vast striped-canopied markets selling
everything from produce to dry goods to useless gewgaws to off-world
gemstones to artless clothing to precious spices, bright-colored
Bashkir auction houses where deals were struck every hour of the day
and night, light-drenched Tuskugggun ateliers filled with crafts and
artwork of every description. He passed the vast market where fish,
fresh-caught from the turbid depths of the Sea of Blood, were laid
out in precise ranks, their opaque eyes looking like those of the
Kundalan who endured interrogation in the chambers below the regent's
palace. A one-armed Kundalan merchant tried to sell him fresh
clemetts still on the branch from the back of his buttren-driven
dray. Another with a hideously scarred face watched him
expressionlessly as he passed up his pathetic display of metalware.
The aftermath of decades of interrogation were everywhere in Axis
Tyr, sown at his direction like seedpods to sprout their bitter
fruit, living proof of the futility of resistance. Still,
despite everything he had done, the Resistance abided. He
came upon his favorite shop, which sold one-of-a-kind artifacts
plundered from the many civilizations the V'ornn had conquered. On
impulse he went in, bought an Argggedian prayer wheel. The
shopkeeper, who was knowledgeable about such matters, explained that
the prayer wheel spun in three dimensions when exposed to moonlight
because the Argggedians worshiped their cephalopod god at the time of
the full moon. Or they had, until the coming of the V'ornn. Nith
Batoxxx, who was hearing more about Argggedian religion than he
wanted to know, cut the shopkeeper short by paying for the prayer
wheel and exiting the shop. From
the outset of his walk, he had noticed that the streets were filled
with Khagggun, much more so under this young regime than there had
been even under the paranoid regent, Wennn Stogggul. The city seemed
to be on war footing, an especially intimidating state of affairs for
the Kundalan. Which was just the way Kurgan wanted it. And, Nith
Batoxxx knew, Kurgan wanted it because he himself had told Kurgan to
want it. Nith
Batoxxx considered his altogether intimate relationship with Kurgan
Stogggul. Which had thrived ever since he, in the guise of the Old
V'ornn, had years ago seduced the child away from his family in order
to train him both in physical prowess and mental toughness. It had
been an experiment, like many of Nith Batoxxx's endeavors. He was,
after all, a technomage. He sought the answers to questions beyond
the ken of the other castes. As the designated Ascensor, he had
presided over Kurgan's Channeling in the Sanctuary of Ascension.
Once, the ocular-lighted chamber had been a shrine to the Kundalan
Goddess, Miina. Now it was used to remove the birth caul from Great
Caste males, to implant them with the quasi-organic okummmon,
welcoming them into adulthood. The okummmon was then attuned—or
channeled—to the Gyrgon frequencies. Nith Batoxxx still had
Kurgan's birth caul, having palmed it during the ceremony, replacing
it with the birth caul of a Bashkir boy who had died during his own
coming of age ceremony. Employing the proper theorem, the birth caul
could be made to provide all sorts of interesting data about not only
the individual from which it had come, but also about the bloodlines
of his family. Nith Batoxxx had been studying Kurgan's birth caul
since the evening of his Channeling. It was the main reason why he
was so certain of Kurgan's fate. But,
again, what was fate, really? As a Gyrgon, he was used to
manipulating the lives of those beneath him, of treating them as if
they were experiments in his lab, exposing them to different reagents
to see how quickly they were pulled apart. He was, in a very real
sense, Old Man Fate himself. In Kurgan's case, he had stepped in,
reshaping his very reality. He had turned Kurgan against his family,
against his father, in particular. He had taught him how to hate, and
had stood back, pleased and, yes, a little proud, as he watched his
pupil plot with his particular cold-blooded single-mindedness the
elder Stogggul's death. Kurgan's likes, dislikes, the choices he
made, the very demons that drove him were solely of Nith Batoxxx's
creation. It was like painting a perfect portrait of death. He had
given Destruction a V'ornn name and a face, had given it false
memories and, therefore, a manufactured purpose. He had set it in
motion and was watching in a kind of vertiginous fascination the
havoc it was wreaking. Gimnopede
Boulevard was ablaze with light, sound, noise, and jostling bodies.
Three Tuskugggun artisans at an outdoor cafe were discussing their
metalwork trade, exchanging samples of new alloys they had created. A
young Bashkir boy ran through the crowd, cleverly swiping a trinket
as he passed a shop. His exasperated mother ran after him, unaware,
as was the shopkeeper, of what her son had done. Nith Batoxxx in the
guise of the Old V'ornn smiled a secret smile, thinking of the child
Kurgan, the cunning mind he had helped shape. When
he contemplated Kurgan's Channeling, he was struck by the knowledge
that he had been an outsider in Stogggul family affairs who
nevertheless knew more about Kurgan than anyone in Kurgan's own
family. Save for the boy's best friend, Annon Ashera. Annon had been
possessed of an intuition that was positively uncanny. For this
reason, Nith Batoxxx had hated Annon as much as he had hated his
traitor of a father. In a way, he wished Annon was not dead, so that
he could have the exquisite pleasure of having him killed all over
again. Now
Kurgan was bound to Nith Batoxxx in an even more intimate way. Nith
Batoxxx had coerced him into service, the better to keep an eye on
him. But there was something else. The boy was young, yes, but Nith
Batoxxx had not chosen him randomly so many years ago. He had run his
equations and recognized in Kurgan the seeds of greatness. If they
were correct, Kurgan was destined to wield more power than any
Bashkir before him. That being the case, he had wanted to ensure that
Kurgan would have the proper philosophy because as Nith Batoxxx knew
only too well having the power was a wild ride, one that could all
too easily lead to ruin. He
turned off Gimnopede Boulevard, onto narrow, quiet Cinnabar Street. The
villa he had procured for himself had once belonged to a Kundalan
artist of some repute, who had died owing to the repeated
interrogations to which Nith Batoxxx had ordered him subjected. The
artist's family, who had tried to claim ownership of the villa, were
soon silenced in much the same manner as the artist. In any event,
the villa became vacant, which was the whole point of the exercise.
It was evident from the outset that the artist and his family never
knew anything of strategic value. The
villa was pleasant enough, filled with light and space, but it was of
only minimal interest to him. The courtyard in back was what had
drawn him here, what had caused him to murder the villa's former
owner and his family, and to spend long hours painstakingly
constructing the courtyard garden. He had done it even though he had
exhibited no former interest in gardening; he did it almost
unconsciously, as if guided by a voice or a presence. Which was, of
course, precisely what happened. As
Nith Batoxxx walked through the villa now, past the living room, into
the huge atelier he had converted into a gymnasium for his lessons
with Kurgan, he could feel the dark beacon rising both inside him and
all around him. It inhabited this villa more wholly than he ever
would. At
the far end of the gymnasium he touched a padded panel and it
swiveled open. Before him stretched the courtyard. Using equations of
fire and water, he had filled it with rocks, stones, boulders of
every conceivable size and shape. The sound of water gurgling drifted
to him, but its source, the pool he and Kurgan had built together,
remained invisible unless you stood right next to it in the center of
the garden. This was where the pool had to be placed, on the site of
the ancient spring he knew would be there even before it had been dug
up. To stand at the center, the presence said in his mind, is
to see everything. He had taught this to Kurgan, as well. He
carefully placed the Argggedian prayer wheel on a flat black stone
beside the pool, an offering, the kind of primitive act, full of
ritual and respect, required of such a solemn and, yes, holy
occasion. In this somewhat altered state, he gazed into the pool like
a priest looking into the face of his god. The
water was pitch-black, unimaginably deep. He lifted his gaze, spun
very slowly in a complete circle, taking in every detail of the
courtyard garden, remembering as he did so the placement and planting
of every rock, boulder, plant, and tree. It seemed to him in that
last moment before he slipped into the pool that this garden was a
living calendar of his days on Kundala. He had been elated to have
the chance to become a hero—the Gyrgon who finally harnessed
the death particle, the Gyrgon responsible for defending his race
from the Divine Horde of Destruction, as the Centophennni called
themselves. That
was before the presence made itself felt, before the dark beacon
rose, before the voice manifested itself, bypassing his neural nets
to take possession of the cortex of his brain, periodically taking up
residence there. At first, it had been able to come only infrequently
and, at times, as he proceeded with his normal life, he had managed
to convince himself that it was just a dream. But then, inevitably,
he would be drawn back to the villa and would feel the presence
rising again. It was patient, ever so patient, and over the decades
it grew its black light like the gardener he himself would become. The
water was cold, but he did not mind. The sides of the pool were slimy
with moss and algae, but he did not mind. Why should he? This was
home, the darkness, the cold calling him, a prison whose lock must be
broken no matter the cost. He
hung upside down in the darkness, waiting. It
was quiet, so quiet the beating of his hearts, the pulse of the blood
in his veins was all that existed. It
was coming, rising up to merge with him fully, or as fully as it was
able considering the awful chains that bound it. How long had it been
imprisoned? Even his Gyrgon mind quailed at the intimation of the
length of time. It was impossible. His supremely logical brain calmly
informed him that it simply could not be. And
yet it was. Here
came the living proof, entering him with the familiar words, Tremble
all before me, for I am that which remains.
You
said it was to be a small thing. It is a small thing, and it
is done. The two huge Dragons crouched in the dense sorcerous
mist atop Heavenly Rushing, Miina's sacred waterfall. You
said no one would know—no one but us. And
who knows but us? The
Portal locks Miina had us fashion out of fire, earth, air, water and
wood— —We
five contributed to the Portal locks before Miina ensorceled them— The
point is they have been breached— —as
foretold— The
point is that now they have been breached there are daemons
abroad. There
have always been daemons abroad. These
are archdaemons. We have not seen their faces for aeons. One
of the Dragons, ruddy as a sunset, stirred. If they bring the
lightning back— My
dear—this Dragon was slightly smaller, black as pitch,
black as ebonwood—you cannot mean to give these archdaemons
your blessing? I
have no blessing to bestow upon them. Have you forgotten? None of us
have. Not for eons. Not since the lightning ringed the sky, not since
the narbuck vanished into the ice mists atop the Djenn Marre, not
since the fire burned like molten magma in my veins. Now
the Dar Sala-at comes with our hope of redemption. You see, the Wheel
is turning, one by one the Holy Prophesies are coming true. Patience
is not a virtue for fire. The
daemons—My point is, have a care how you transgress, for
if our enemies should become aware of— They
will not. The red Dragon grinned, showing luminous fangs the size
of a cthauros' foreleg. The
black Dragon's great tufted head swung around. Whatever have you
done? I
am clever, I am. My
dear, do not boast. It ill becomes you. A
sound arose through the constant roaring of the waterfall that shook
the ground and raked the sky. Clouds of terrified birds rose from
their limbed sanctuary, wheeling in all directions at once. Is
laughter necessary? The black Dragon shook her head, annoyed.
What is so funny? When
you told me that you did not want to know, I made a wager with
myself, and now I have won that wager. All
right then. Tell me. As
you wish. The red Dragon looked smug. I have brought Minnum
into play. You
haven't! Oh,
but I have! This
is what you call a little thing? Well,
you must admit, Minnum is not big. You
are insufferable, you know that, don't you? The
red Dragon sidled over to rub up against his mate. Are
you angry? Tell me you are not angry with me. I
am not one to bend the Laws. Nor
am I, but I had to do something. You see what Horolaggia has done,
usurped the Malasocca. I
agree that was quite wicked of him, slaying the Cerrn and taking its
place. And
Pyphoros. I have had enough of them flouting the Laws in our faces. Minnum
is, in himself, dangerous because he is so unpredictable. A
survivor, above all else. Yes.
And surviving inevitably means sacrificing others. You
are too dour. But
he will lie to them. Of
course he will lie. Miina saw to that. But that does not make him any
less trustworthy. And
then there are the others. Surely they will be stirred out of their
century's slumber by Minnum's machinations . . . You
heard him. Minnum believes they are already awake. Yes,
and if they are . . . Have
you no faith in the Dar Sala-at? She
is too young and raw yet. But
you, Miina knows, are not. Put your faith in her as I have done. The
black Dragon shook her craggy head. Too much stands in her way. Then
here she will be tried, as it is foretold in Prophesy. Here she will
begin to earn your faith. The
black Dragon grew even more pensive. Her eyes were both beautiful and
expressive, the color and luminosity of moonstones. There is
something else. Have you considered that Horolaggia's preemptive
strike might have had another, more sinister motive? The
red Dragon's crystal claws extruded as he stamped in anger. More
sinister than transmogrifying into Lady Giyan? What could be? It
is possible that he sought the very response you have given, that he
wants to draw us into the battle before our time, as was done to our
sister, now imprisoned by the enemy. Oh,
yes, I forgot. There was a sneer on the red Dragon's face and
fire danced in his nostrils. We all have our time. Exactly.
It is not like the old days, my dear. But
we are eternal. Our responsibility is to see the return of the old
ways. The
black Dragon sighed. True enough. But we must be mindful of our
enemies and where we all are on Asa'ara. The
Great Wheel of Fate. There
was a strange bitter tang to the red Dragon's tone that tugged
mightily at his mate's heart. Yes. If we move precipitously, we
are vulnerable. She let her spiked tail twine with his. Let us
pray to Miina that your little intervention does not cause the Dar
Sala-at's undoing.
Book Two:
GATE OF FORBEARANCE
Of all the mistakes a
sorceress may commit, impatience is, perhaps, the most egregious.
With power comes the ability to act, and with the ability to act
comes the gnawing desire to do so, even when inaction is clearly the
most prudent course. Be now forewarned, o you eager disciples of
Osoru! Learn forbearance, learn it well, else suffer for your
imprudence all the rest of your days."
—Utmost Source,
The Five Books of Miina
10 Egg
The lymmnal crouched in the shadows,
waiting. The world around it was reflected in the curve of its three
smoke-blue eyes. There was about the steppe, in the scoured pleats
and folds, the gnarled islets of trees, beaches of pale lichen, and
oceans of lavender grass, the sheer rumbling wrinkled breadth of it,
a staggering sense of age, but also, something beyond age, a kind of
unspeakable aloneness that arose, spectral and shivering, from
its rigorous beauty. Newcomers found its vastness vertiginous, but by
the time they had become coated by its fine ruddy dust, they were
already intoxicated. The
night was moonsless, chill, the air above the flat grasslands of the
great steppe utterly without weight, magnifying the ghostly
crenellated ice-pale peaks of the Djenn Marre. The grass, thigh high,
had been thickened by the darkness into a mass with heft and
presence, a world unto itself. Within that world, the lymmnal sensed
something just below the threshold of movement, the small heat,
perhaps, generated by a body similarly crouched, or again, possibly,
the shallow anxious breathing, the accelerated pulse of someone
coiled, someone about to spring into sudden action. The
lymmnal, lying low at the perimeter of the Gazi Qhan camp, had been
trained to sense these ephemera. Its nostrils dilated, quivering, and
its three eyes scanned the darkness for the trace of an outline that
was out of place. A marmalon poked its head above ground for a
moment, but the lymmnal, hungry as it was, ignored the rodent. The
marmalon vanished at the soft swish of the finbats' flight. A
formation of them dived and swooped toward the tops of the wild
grass, skimming for supper. Then, they, too, were gone. High clouds
scudded, a presence, darker than dark, and these, too, the lymmnal
noted. The
scent came a split second before the movement, for it had learned
that under extreme tension these biped interlopers exuded a scent.
And so, it was already in midleap when the body began its run inside
the perimeter. Utterly
silent, the lymmnal buried its triple set of teeth into the
interloper's shoulder. Then its full weight struck the interloper,
knocking him off his feet. The lymmnal dodged the one swipe of the
interloper's blade, then snapped its powerful jaws, crushing his
shoulder socket. The interloper passed out, and the lymmnal, well
satisfied, dragged the body back into the circle of firelight that
surrounded the tree. The
sixteen Gazi Qhan sat or stood around the tree, which rose, winged
and proud, from the red soil. A fire cracked and sparked, a stewpot,
crusty with soot, sat on ashes nearby. On the far side of the tree,
but very close to it, a female lay on her back. Her belly was a
mountain stroked by a male as he said the Ber-Bnadem, the birth
prayer cycle. Another female knelt between the pregnant female's
legs, speaking slowly and softly as if to the newborn about to
arrive. Othnam
made a sign to the lymmnal, and it obediently released the
interloper. Mehmmer, Othnam's younger sister, joined him in dragging
the interloper to the tree. "Jeni
Cerii," Othnam said as he scruffled the thick fur behind the
lymmnal's muscle-ridged neck. Using
the heel of his hand, he brought the Jeni Cerii back to
consciousness. For a half hour they interrogated him without
receiving a single answer. Mehmmer
spat onto the spy's face. Someone
threw a hunk of raw meat to the lymmnal, who immediately gulped it
down with a brief snuffling sound. Lymmnals made little or no noise
unless they were in extreme distress. Othnam
looked up at the thornbeam tree, gnarled, gray-black, old as Time
itself, and utterly magnificent. He and his sister had tended this
tree from the moment they were old enough to walk; their parents and
grandparents were buried here, protected by its roots. It belonged to
Othnam and Mehmmer now, a legacy of hope and transcendence. It would
be their children's long after they themselves were turned to dust.
When they returned from their long treks into the wilds, this tree
was their anchor, their succor, the sight of which informed them that
they were home. Using
the killing limb, the strongest branch of the tree, Othnam and
Mehmmer strung the Jeni Cerii up by his neck, letting him strangle
slowly and painfully as was the custom. His kicking brought down a
shower of small, hard fruit. No prayers were said at his death. This,
too, was the custom. Mehmmer's
dark glittering eyes watched the death throes with a good measure of
satisfaction. She was tall, as broad-shouldered as her brother. Her
hair was blue-black, a mane of intricate braids strewn with tiny,
spotted ghryea shell, discs of dark-striped amber, teardrops of
emperor carnelian. She wore tight leather breeches that came to just
below the knee, a loose-sleeved wraparound shirt of undyed muslin and
yellow, thin-soled shoes with curled-up silver tips. A simple belt
cinched her waist, from which hung a narrow-bladed sword, a scimitar,
and a jewel-hilted dirk she had made herself. In
fact, she had forged her brother's push-dagger, which was most useful
both in stealth and in hand-to-hand combat. The beautifully weighted
ball hilt was held in the fist, the slender ovoid blade protruding
from between the index and middle fingers. It was a stabbing weapon,
rather than a slashing one, and so ideal in cramped quarters. It had
saved Othnam's life more than once. "Less
than a day's trek from Agachire, and we are shadowed by the Jeni
Cerii," Mehmmer said. "What should we do?" "We
shall bring this proof of Jeni Cerii perfidy to Makktuub,"
Othnam said. "What
if Makktuub asks." A look of alarm crossed Mehmmer's face. "What
if he wants to know what we were doing?" "We
are simple merchants, pious and peaceful." Mehmmer
looked uneasily at the dead spy swinging from the noose they had
fashioned. "It is the pious part that concerns me." "The
Ghorvish prayer sites are secret from both Jeni Cerii and Makktuub."
Othnam looked away. "Rest assured, sister, that they shall
remain that way." "But
going to Makktuub." "I
am well acquainted with the dangers," he said, more sharply,
perhaps, than he had intended. "Yes,
of course, we both are. Our parents." "Let
us not speak now of their suffering," Othnam said softly. "We
have spent the last three days singing the whole Khendren prayer
cycle on the anniversary of their death in order to honor their
lives." "Yes,
brother." "We
will not make the same mistake they did," he whispered. "We
will be Makktuub's friends; we will do his will. And in return he
will leave us to our beliefs and our faith." While
Mehmmer was dark, Othnam was not. He had golden hair, which he wore,
as all the males did, in a thick, twisted knot, shiny with oils, on
top of his head. His face, creased by sun, wind and, once only, an
enemy's blade, was strong and finely sculpted. He possessed the eyes
of the true mystic, seeing what others could not. These eyes, blue as
the sky, were shot through with vivid emerald flecks—Ghorvish
whorls, as they were called, proof that he was among the chosen of
the Ghor, the wise men of ancient times who had received the
Mokakaddir, the ecstatic prayer cycle the Gazi Qhan chanted,
from Jiharre himself. The
lymmnal broke from Othnam's side, trotting over to the newborn and
began to lick off its amniotic fluids. The mother beamed, touching
with her fingertips the baby's tiny moist toes. Brother
and sister followed the lymmnal, firelight and the webbed shadows
cast by the twisted thornbeam branches playing over them. Mehmmer
took the female baby into the crook of her strong, sun-bronzed arm,
wiping it down as custom dictated with her soft woven sinschal, the
long scarf wound around the head and neck, protection from sun, wind,
rain, and dust. Then she kissed the child in the center of her
forehead. Othnam stood beside her, his curved dirk held before him.
While Mehmmer chanted, he made the three small ritual cuts over the
sternum with the tip of the blade. The child screamed, the blood
flowed from her tender flesh, dripping onto the mother's bare belly.
Then Mehmmer stanched the flow, using an ointment. The baby ceased to
cry. Her unfocused eyes stared into infinity, and she took a firm
grip on Mehmmer's finger. Smiling, Mehmmer passed her over to Othnam,
who lifted the babe up to the night sky and recited the ritual
prayer: "Life's first wound has been given and received. The
tribe has received blood as proof of lifelong allegiance and
devotion. The first blessing is now given and received. Little one,
may you grow large, powerful of limb and mind. May all the Korrush be
your pasture and your battlefield. May you live one hundred years,
long enough to see unity and the face of the Prophet." When
the rite was over, Othnam returned the newborn, whose name was Jeene,
to her parents, and he and Mehmmer set about cutting down the Jeni
Cerii. They stripped off the clothes, took the weapons as booty,
which they gave to the newborn's parents since the Jeni Cerii was
killed on the night of their daughter's birth. While
the red dust of the Korrush skittered through the campsite, they
squatted over the corpse, slowly and methodically stripping the skull
of skin and flesh. They knew little of the Jeni Cerii—or of any
of the other tribes, for that matter—save to fear them. The
grisly work they did now served as a kind of balm to soothe this
primitive fear. Not far away, the loyal lymmnal lay curled
contentedly by the fire, watching them incuriously out of the eye
that was set between its ears in the back of its head. The
lymmnal rose out of a shallow sleep, for lymmnal did not sleep as it
is commonly understood. Opening its eyes one by one, it rose
soundlessly, trotting away from the sleeping figures ranged around
the thornbeam tree, crowned now by a new white skull, drying in the
first ruddy rays of sunlight slanting across the Korrush. The
lymmnal kept its nose to the ground, its haunches semicon-tracted.
The scent was wholly unfamiliar. Its long furred head wagged back and
forth like the point of a compass. Though it crept forward in its
standard attack stance, it was curious as well as wary. The
scent at length led it to an unfamiliar female creature who sat, a
voluminous greatcoat swept tight around her. She was hunched over,
possibly asleep, but at the lymmnal's approach her head came up very
slowly. Her eyes opened and gazed upon the lymmnal. The
tension went out of the animal's frame, and it crouched, its forepaws
stretched out in front of it. It gave a little sound and, after a
short silence, the creature responded in kind. A murmured
conversation ensued as the other creature crept a little closer,
until finally their snouts touched, their noses twitched as they
scented each other, then licked each other. The
lymmnal was thus surprised at the expressions on its masters' faces
when it brought the new creature into camp. It could not understand
why Othnam drew his sword and Mehmmer glowered at the hooded figure. "What
is this trick, stranger, that you have used to gull our lymmnal?"
Mehmmer growled as the rest of the camp began to stir. Other weapons
were unsheathed, lifted pointfirst toward the intruder. "If the
Jeni Cerii sent you to plead for their spy's life, it is too late."
She gestured to the skull whitening in the early sunlight. Riane
pushed the hood of Nith Sahor's greatcoat off her head with one hand
while she stroked the ridged back of the docile lymmnal with the
other. "As you can see, I am not Jeni Cerii nor a member of any
of the Five Tribes. I come from the southern city of Axis Tyr. My
name is Riane." Mehmmer
said, "That cannot be your real name." "To
that, I can only say that Riane is the only name known to me. I have
no memory of my early years high in the Djenn Marre; I can recall
neither parents nor whether I have any siblings." An
unreadable expression flickered briefly across Mehmmer's face before
Othnam introduced himself and his sister. "If
you are Gazi Qhan, then I have not lost my way." Riane smiled.
"To answer your question, I seem to have a way with animals.
Also, I believe this creature knew I was no threat to you." She
looked around at every face, marked Othnam and Mehmmer most closely. "Assuming
you speak truthfully, why have you journeyed so far from Axis Tyr?"
Mehmmer said shortly. "I
wish only safe passage to Agachire. I seek an audience with the
dzuoko of—" "We
know you not. You are mad if you think we will give safe passage into
the heart of our territory." Mehmmer took a menacing step toward
Riane, lifting the edge of her sword, but Othnam stayed her. "My
sister is still unsettled by the discovery of the Jeni Cerii spy,"
he said. "My apologies." "I
thank you," Riane replied, "but none are needed. I do not
blame you for your suspicions. It seems you live in a precarious
balance." "Yes.
There is continual war between the tribes, raid and counterraid,
death and vengeance, which begets more vengeance and more death."
Othnam pointed with his chin. "I see you carrying a dagger of an
unusual manufacture. Would you allow me to see it?" "Certainly."
Riane handed over the dagger Eleana had given Annon. It was her most
prized possession. Othnam
took it and, in one swift motion, put the edge of its blade to her
throat. "Are you not afraid that I will cut you open from ear to
ear?" "I
am afraid, yes, that your hand will slip and inadvertently draw
blood," Riane said. "But as to your meaning, if I were
afraid of you, I never would have given you my dagger." Othnam
grunted, reversed the dagger, holding it out to Riane. Mehmmer
again grew agitated. "Othnam, don't—" "Hold
it, if you wish," Riane said to Othnam. "While I am under
your protection I can't think why I would need it." Othnam
nodded, seemingly pleased. "We will give you safe passage to
Agachire." Mehmmer
rounded on him, her eyes blazing. "Brother, are you mad? You
cannot mean what you say, this one came from the same direction as
the Jeni Cerii spy we hung scant hours ago." "I
walked all night," Riane said. "I saw no one." Othnam
was about to answer her when a cry from the other side of the camp
caught their attention. Paddii, the newborn's father was running
toward them, gesticulating. "It is Jeene," he said. His
face was a mask of anxiety. "She has stopped breathing. We have
tried everything—We don't know—" "Let
me look at her," Riane said at once. "Take
one step ..." Mehmmer warned. "Please,"
Paddii said. "Someone do something. My daughter is dying." Riane
said, "Your guardian has saved your lives many times. It knows I
mean you no harm. Why do you doubt its judgment now?" "What
if you have bewitched it with sorcery?" Mehmmer said. "We
have heard of sorcerers, evil beings known as sauromicians,"
Othnam said. "They blaspheme against the Prophet Jiharre." "I
am no sauromician," Riane said truthfully. "I have given
you my weapon. Please let me help." Othnam
hesitated, then nodded. With Paddii jogging at their side, he led
Riane to where Paddii's tiny daughter lay blue and unmoving atop her
mother's belly. The mother was weeping, chanting prayers through her
sobbing. Riane
knelt. She opened the newborn's mouth, stuck her finger down the tiny
throat. "The baby has something in her windpipe. If you do not
attend to her immediately, she will be dead within minutes." The
mother moaned, and Paddii rolled his eyes. Mehmmer
brushed Riane aside, stuck her own finger into the infant's mouth.
"There is an impediment," she said. She hunched over, her
face filling with blood an she concentrated. "I cannot... It
will not come out." "I
can save the child." "You
will not touch her," Mehmmer said shortly. "Will
you deprive the newest member of your tribe the chance to live simply
out of anger and suspicion?" "Mehmmer,"
Othnam said gently, "as Riane said, our loyal Haqqa trusts her.
We will watch her closely. Let her help." Mehmmer
scowled, then she rose, nodded curtly, and stepped aside to make room
for Riane. "If the baby dies . . ." She waggled the tip of
her sword. Riane
ignored her as best she could. On her knees, she took the little girl
up in her arms, pried open her mouth. The cause of the obstruction,
she soon discovered, was a tiny undeveloped fruit from the tree that
had blown into her open mouth while she slept. It was lodged in the
tiny throat. "It
must be true," Mehmmer said fretfully. "The fruit fall at
the beginning of winter." Riane
tried to gauge the grave expressions on the others' faces. She was
worrying that winter had already begun, and she seemed no closer to
finding the Veil of a Thousand Tears. Clearly, these folk did not
trust her. What if she could not get to Perrnodt? What if Perrnodt
did not know where it was? Calming her mind, she put all her doubts
aside and concentrated on the task at hand. "Do either of you
have a narrow-bladed weapon?" Mehmmer
reacted as if Riane had struck her. "What would you—?" Othnam
handed over his push-dagger, and his sister glowered at him. "I
pray to Jiharre you know what you are doing, stranger." Riane
kept the thumb and forefinger of her left hand at the hinges of the
baby's mouth, while she lowered the narrow blade down the infant's
throat. The
mother gave a stifled scream, and Mehmmer's prayers rose all the
louder. The
point reached the level of the fruit. Riane knew she had only one
shot at this. If she missed spearing the thorn, or even overshot the
mark by a fraction, the blade had every possibility of piercing the
infant's neck right at the spot where the main artery pulsed. But if
she did nothing, the newborn was dead anyway. Saying
a silent prayer to Miina to guide her hand, she struck downward with
the slight angle she had calculated in her mind. The tip pierced the
fruit cleanly, and Riane drew it up and out of the infant's mouth. Riane
handed the push-dagger back to Othnam while she forced air into the
baby's starving lungs. When the baby was breathing on her own again,
she handed her back to her mother, who was weeping openly with relief
and gratitude. "Thank
you," Othnam said. Riane
nodded and stood. "May I have something to drink?" Someone
started to comply, but with a gesture Mehmmer stopped them. She went
herself and poured water from a crescent bladder hanging on a wooden
peg into a copper cup, gave it to Riane. Briefly, their hands
touched, they looked into each other's eyes. "It
would be an honor to give you safe passage to Agachire," Mehmmer
said. She took the drained cup from Riane's hand, and said very
softly, "Perhaps my anger and suspicion comes from stripping the
flesh from too many of our enemy's skulls." Riane
said, "It would, I think, be wise to suggest to the mother that
she move from beneath the tree. It was one of its thorns that almost
killed the babe." Mehmmer
hesitated a moment. "You could have told her that yourself." Riane
smiled. "Mehmmer, would it not be better if it came from you?" Mehmmer's
dark eyes searched Riane's face. Then she nodded briefly and went to
talk to the father about moving the family. While
she did so, Othnam gave Riane a look, and she followed him a little
way from the campsite. Haqqa trotted after them, sat panting, leaning
against their calves. "You
said something before about needing to find the dzuoko Perrnodt." "I
did not mention her name." He
laughed softly. "You did not have to. There is only one
kashiggen in the Korrush: therefore, only one dzuoko." "Could
you make the introduction?" His
odd intense eyes seemed to scour the flesh from her. "Why are
you seeking her?" "I
wish to be her student." Mehmmer
returned from her errand, and grunted. "You do not look like
imari material." Of
course, she wasn't imari material. She had come to the Korrush to be
taught by Perrnodt and to beg her to show her where the Maasra was
hidden. It would be foolhardy to confess that to tribesmen she barely
knew and who were already suspicious of her. "Nevertheless,"
she said as forthrightly as she could, "this is what I desire
above all else." Othnam
nodded gravely. "Then I shall see to it myself. But first, of
course, you will have to meet Makktuub." Makktuub
lived in a palace of silence. It was actually three structures in
one, like three concentric circles. In the outermost part, the public
part, all the quotidian official business of the tribe was
transacted. There was a certain bustle, everyone moving at double
time across carpet-strewn floors, the hubbub diffused only slightly
by the latticework of fragrant lyssomwood screens. Beneath the tent
fabric, wood, and stone the palace was composed of a formalism and
geometry that spoke of the kapudaan's absolute power. Beyond,
in the middle section, was a smaller space, more comfortable perhaps,
but rather less grand than the one surrounding it. Here, Makktuub met
once a day to confer with the Djura, his inner council, composed of
seven venerable religious judges. With voices no louder than the
burble of water in a pond, soothing and controlled, the Djura
hammered out laws, interpreted intelligence from the far-flung edges
of the chire, sought remedies for problems both fiscal and military.
The Djura sometimes met without Makktuub. The judges, long beards
shot with grey, reclined on gold-appliqued pillows, drawing
sustenance from low, lacquered tables piled with dried fruits, boiled
grains, and spiced sweetmeats. There
was an exquisite screen behind them, incised by the finest hands in
Agachire, a lattice of the most fragrant lysommwood that had taken
three artisans a year to carve into the shapes of branches, leaves,
birds, animals, and fish. From behind this pierced barrier, Makktuub
often sat in dappled shadow, listening in complete silence to the
earnest arguments and bright ideas when the Djura thought he was away
on other business. In this way he not only kept his finger on the
pulse of his tribe, but also gained invaluable knowledge of his
advisors, for, often enough, they were more apt to reveal their true
feelings out of his presence. They, like every member of the Gazi
Qhan, feared the ferocious acts that had brought him to power, and
kept him firmly in place. But
it was in the center of the palace, a dizzying labyrinth of
corridors, garden-courtyards, high-ceilinged chambers, light-strewn
baths, and cushion-festooned salons where the kapudaan shed all his
many public personas. Here, silence reigned supreme. No one spoke
unless expressly directed to by Makktuub himself. The staff that
served him by day, the females from his haanjhala who attended him at
night, communicated through a form of sign language Makktuub himself
had devised. In
the presence of this profound silence many small, subtle pleasures
could be identified, isolated, and savored: the breeze rustling the
leaves of the perfumed limoniq and lyssomwood trees, the sunlight on
the blooms of the magnificent blood-rose bushes, the complex melodies
of the golden laerq, hopping from bar to bar within their ornate
copper cages, the pattern of clouds as they passed across the
kapudaan's field of vision. It was Makktuub's firm and abiding belief
that such moments of bliss allowed him to return refreshed and
restored to the frantic swirl of motion, opinion, argument, intrigue
and, ultimately, decision that was his life. For it was never easy
commanding one of the Five Tribes, and most often it was profoundly
difficult. And
so, it was to this trifurcated place that Othnam and Mehmmer brought
Riane once the party had returned to Agachire. By blazing daylight,
the setting was magnificent, so vast it made Riane's eyes water—a
low-lying tree-strewn quadrant abutting a somnolent river that wound
more or less northwest all the way into the jagged Djenn Marre, whose
magnificent purplish silver massifs fulminated like storm clouds
against the northern horizon. The peaks here seemed even taller and
more forbidding than they were farther west—all save the Great
Rift, that mysterious and deadly fissured rent in the mountain range
that had swallowed whole the ill-fated V'ornn expeditions to the
Unknown Territories. Though Annon had heard many stories about it,
Riane had never actually
seen the Great Rift before. That massive black slash, tempest-struck
and impassable, seemed to draw her like a lodestone. For a moment,
the longing to know what was on the other side was like a pain in her
chest. Then, her more immediate surroundings seized all her
attention. To
begin with, she was taken aback by Agachire itself for, truth be
known, it was more of a city than the village of common Axis Tyr
gossip. Her first impression was of a violent swirl of colors, a
veritable rainbow of finely woven fabrics, all in a pattern of wide
diagonal stripes. When she commented upon this, Othnam told her the
fineness of the cloth was strictly a matter of utility—the more
finely a fabric was woven, the better it would keep out the
omnipresent dust of the Korrush, borne upon the incessant, sweeping
winds endemic to the steppe. That proved a key piece of information,
for, as she looked more closely, she noticed that the city was made
up of highly imaginative and elaborate tents. To be sure, there were
walls of some kiln-dried material, whitewashed to a sheen that blazed
beneath the sun, but the majority were of the gaily striped fabrics. She
passed numerous caravans of beasts of burden known as ku-omeshals,
which she had first noticed in Mehmmer and Othnam's camp. They were
six-legged, short-haired beasts of an orangey dun color about
one-third again as large as a male cthauros. Everything about them
save for their stunted ears seemed unnaturally elongated: their
bulbous snouts, buck-toothed jaws, massive, muscled necks, and
ungainly-looking legs. But their oddest feature, as far as Riane was
concerned, was their ridged backs. Between these natural separators
were crates, barrels, and iron-banded boxes lashed inside thick
netting. "They
may have a comical appearance," Othnam had told her, "but
they are able to carry at least three times the load of even the most
powerful cthauros. Also, they require almost no water and a minimum
of food, storing nutrients in their humps, making them ideal for long
treks over even the most daunting terrain." A
vast panoply of smells and voices assaulted her. From behind rolling
carts, street vendors were hawking everything from freshly baked flat
bread to sweet paste candies made of what appeared to be ground seeds
and amber honey. Naturally enough, the mingled aromas of spices rose
everywhere from open stalls, enormous sacks, and groaning barrels.
Cubes of skewered meats and vegetables sizzled on open flames,
mounds of perfumed grains
studded with nuts and sweetmeats were being ladled into bowls. Voices
rose in singsong melodies as the merchants sought to entice passersby
with their wares. A
vendor behind a black-and-white stand gestured to them and raised his
oddly high voice, "You have the unmistakable look of weary
travelers." He
was pouring a thick brown liquid with a most tantalizing aroma from a
squat, swoop-necked copper pot into tiny cups without handles. "Come
dust off your clothes and slake your thirst with a cup of my ba'du,
made from the finest beans." His features were all but lost
within the wild beard that climbed his cheeks like dense vines. His
thick-fingered hands gestured almost as if he were dancing. "Come,
come, now step this way. I go to the far ends of Agachire to gather
my beans; I know how travels can take their toll. What better
restorative than a cup of strong ba'du?" He placed a cup in
Othnam's hand, then one in Mehmmer's. He cocked an eye at Riane and,
nodding and grinning, gave her one, as well. "Drink up, my
friends. Enjoy the best ba'du in all Agachirer He snorted and shook
his head. "What am I saying? The best in all the Korrush!"
His eyes sparked and his hands danced. "If you do not agree,
why, then you pay nothing. What could be fairer than that?" Othnam
and Mehmmer sipped at their cups. Riane tried to follow their lead,
but she was unused to the small cup, and she swallowed too much. The
sweet, strong liquid burned her throat, and she immediately coughed
it up. "Drink
more," the vendor urged. "Drink more." Riane
cleared her throat and tried again, this time more circumspectly.
After only a couple of sips her head began to buzz. "Is
this alcoholic?" she asked. The
vendor roared. "Oh, no, no. Ba'du has its own tonic—enzymes
and such—brought out by exquisitely slow and careful roasting."
He gestured toward the skull of the Jeni Cerii Othnam was carrying.
"Feed it to that one, and I swear he has a chance to rise and
live again!" He laughed and laughed, refilling their cups. "No
charge for the refill," he said. As
Othnam was paying him, the merchant said, "Is that skull a
trophy of victorious combat?" As Othnam transferred the skull
from one arm to the other, the merchant continued. "Come, come,
you cannot be ashamed of your prowess." His
eyebrows raised. "Unless, of course, this is no trophy at all
but the blessed remains of one of your kin." Othnam
shook his head. "It is the skull of a Jeni Cerii who came upon
us not a full day's trek from Agachire." "So
close to the city. A deeply disturbing incident, to be sure,"
the vendor said. "Should this not be reported to the
authorities?" "As
it happens we are on our way to see the kapudaan," Mehmmer said.
"Your piteous importuning has delayed us." "Only
temporarily, I assure you," the ba'du vendor said. Then he fixed
his black eyes upon Riane. "This is your first time in the
Korrush, yes?" Riane
nodded. "And
what is your impression?" "I
am struck," she said, "by how complex and alive everything
is." "Indeed?"
The vendor raised his eyebrows. "The
majority of the population of Axis Tyr is convinced that you are a
primitive lot with nothing of interest to offer." "And
why have you come all the way from Axis Tyr?" the vendor asked.
"For centuries the Kundalan have ignored us. As you yourself
admit, you consider us savages." "I
have come to see for myself," Riane said. "And to find the
dzuoko Perrnodt." The
ba'du vendor scratched his beard ruminatively. "Have you a vital
message for her?" "I
seek to become her student," Riane said. "You
are to become an imari, then. Who was your dzuoko in your homeland?" "I
have no training as an imari." "No
one sent you, then?" "I
came entirely on my own. Since I have come all this way I hope I will
find her at her kashiggen." "Oh,
there is no doubt of that," the vendor said. "Perrnodt
never leaves Mrashruth, not even for a moment." "Now
that seems passing strange." But
the vendor apparently had lost interest in this topic, for he raised
the copper pot, and said, "May I inquire, how do you like your
first taste of ba'du?" "I
think it needs some getting used to." "There
will be no charge, then." He accepted the empty cup, smiling,
his red lips just visible through the thicket of his beard. "I
wish you luck on your mission, youngling." "Thank
you," Riane said, as they took their leave. As
she passed through the crowded, market-lined boulevard, flanked by
Othnam and Mehmmer, she was given only cursory glances from the
passersby. They wore a variety of clothing. Some were clad in the
tight leather breeches Mehmmer favored, others in striped robes with
sinschals over their head. All, however, wore the curious slipperlike
shoes with the curling tips. "They're
exceedingly comfortable and well suited for the terrain," Othnam
said with a glance at Riane's high boots when she asked about them. Riane
took time to study the faces of the Gazi Qhan, which were stained and
deeply etched by the harsh elements of the steppe. These were fierce,
proud faces with clear, intelligent eyes. If they appeared worn as
desert stones, there was at least no fat around their necks, no
slackness about their jaws. The
kapudaan's palace lay at the heart of Agachire, at the confluence of
all the major boulevards, even though those thoroughfares were
composed of little more than the tightly packed reddish soil of the
Korrush itself. As they came within sight of it, Othnam delivered a
warning to Riane to hold her tongue unless directly asked a question.
Mehmmer gave her several hand signals to use if she wished to
communicate with either of them. There
were no doors within the palace, rather a multitude of gates. These
gates were made of fragrant wood, striated stone, cunningly worked
copper, even, in one instance, tightly woven vines dotted with a
profusion of tiny blushing flowers. Beyond this last gate, Riane
glimpsed a bevy of giggling females before she and her group were
swept onward, conveyed with the breathless alacrity of palace life by
Sawakaq, one of the kapudaan's advisors. Each gate was flanked by a
pair of burly armed guards, who regarded her with a scrutiny so
absolute it was almost frightening. And
so they passed from the cacophonous outer section where rough justice
was meted out by a member of the Djura, to the murmurous middle court
where the Djura met. Riane was led past highly polished wooden
latticework screens through which she glimpsed a small group of
males—she went by too quickly to be certain of their number—who
lounged on what looked like pillows of gold. They ate and spoke with
a languor that was at odds with the speed with which everyone raced
through the palace. With
a sweep of his arm, Sawakaq gestured them onward, into a large tented
chamber where they were bade to wait. Sawakaq vanished without so
much as offering them a swallow of water. There was no furniture
whatsoever, no place to sit or take one's leisure. They
stood alone and silent in the center of this strange and eerie tented
hall. Strange and eerie because the striped-fabric walls were lined
with row upon row of bare-chested guards, who stood shoulder to
shoulder, absolutely immobile, seemingly oblivious to the guests. For
over an hour Riane stood thus with Othnam and Mehmmer who, by their
expressions, appeared to think nothing of this odd state of affairs.
At no time did Riane notice one of the guards move so much as a
muscle. Save for their steady, shallow breathing, they might have
been statues most cleverly sculpted into simulacra of the real thing. Thus
Riane was witness to Makktuub's adamantine will long before she
arrived at the heart of the palace. At
last, Sawakaq reappeared, looking shining and refreshed. Without a
word, he signed for them to follow him out of the hall of guards,
through a corridor, and into a tiny entry. He gestured at the
plainest of wooden gates through which he himself appeared forbidden
to go. Again,
the guards flanking the gates scrutinized Riane, but this time she
gazed back at them with a kuomeshal-like placidity. Through
the gates, they found themselves in a formal garden dominated by a
tiled hexagonal pond. Amber-and-black fish of several varieties, none
of which were familiar to Riane, swam serenely among the floating
blue-green pedda-pads. Birds trilled from their perches in thorny
fire bushes. Riane
hurried after Othnam and Mehmmer, who were striding through this
fantasy land as if it were a hectare of barren featureless steppe.
Down a corridor with billowing diagonal-striped walls they went,
their thin-soled slipper-shoes making no sound whatsoever on the
wooden floor. Riane was instantly aware of the noise, however small,
her boots were making. She became more and more self-conscious until,
with a sign to Othnam and Mehmmer, she stopped, pulled off her
boots, and thenceforth carried them under her arm. The
short corridor gave out onto a chamber strewn with so many cushions
Riane could not see the floor. All were studded with gold circles,
incised with a curious birdlike sigil. Low graven copper tables were
here and there scattered about, and filigreed oil lamps gave off a
warm and comforting light. But it was the walls that took her
attention. They were made of a matte black fabric, densely woven and
completely covered in a blizzard of arcane silver lacquer lettering,
all shallow arcs, bright dots, quick slashes, scimitared streaks. Riane
opened her mouth to ask about the writing, but Mehmmer quickly put a
finger to her lips, cautioning her to remain silent. The
chamber was deserted, but apparently Mehmmer and Othnam were
expecting this, for they stood just inside the doorway, still and
waiting. When dealing with the kapudaan, they had informed her on
their journey here, strict form, custom, and courtesies were of
paramount importance. Riane
felt as if the world had been steeped in silence. She felt waves of
it rolling across the chamber, felt the coolness of it against her
cheeks, and when, at last, her ears were filled to overflowing with
it, Makktuub made his appearance. He
was not tall as Gazi Qhan went, but he was unquestionably imposing.
He had a rather large head, and it was squarish, as if he had come
into the world unfinished. This lent him the appearance of someone
feral, unpredictable, and, therefore, dangerous. His cheeks were very
red, as if scrubbed raw by the wind, and he was dressed in indigo
from curly-haired head to curly-tipped slipper-shoe. He wore loose
trousers and blouse under a floor-length sleeveless outer garment
worked in an intricate geometric pattern of jeweled beads and
iridescent thread. Around his waist was a wide belt of suede, dyed
indigo. A matched pair of ceremonial dirks rode at his hips, the
sapphires embedded in the butts flashing like winking eyes. Each of
his thick fingers was banded by a jeweled ring. He
smiled when he saw Othnam and Mehmmer, and held out his hands, took
one of theirs in each of his. "Othnam.
Mehmmer," he said in a booming voice. "You have not been in
my house for many years." They
did not say a word because he had not yet asked them to speak. His
canny black eyes swept across Riane for a moment before returning to
the brother and sister. "I understand that you have brought me a
gift of the enemy." Again,
not a word in reply was uttered. Makktuub
lifted his left hand and as if from out of nowhere a bare-chested
servant appeared with an enormous ceramic jar on his shoulder. As the
servant came up, Othnam held out the bleached skull of the Jeni
Cerii. As the servant took the jar off his shoulder, Othnam turned
the skull upside down. The servant slowly poured the clear liquid
into the receptacle of the skull. First, Makktuub drank from the
skull, then Othnam and Mehmmer. Riane had the distinct impression
that she was witnessing a solemn and important ritual. "All
guests drink from the hadaqq." Makktuub nodded, and
Othnam turned to Riane, tilting the skull toward her mouth. Riane's
eyes watered as the fiery spiced liquid coursed down her throat. Makktuub
threw his head back and laughed from deep in the pit of his belly.
"At least it did not come back up." He slapped Riane hard
between her shoulder blades. "That shows me fortitude. I am well
pleased." He said this last in the odd high voice of the ba'du
vendor. As
Riane stared at him, he produced a thick black mat of hair, which he
placed over the lower half of his face. "My cheeks get so
chapped from the glue," he said, throwing his head back and
laughing again. His voice had returned to its normal booming pitch.
"Do not be shocked. I gain immeasurable pleasure and knowledge
from my periodic incognito forays into the city." He threw the
fake beard to the side, where it was deftly caught by one of his
servants. He
made another discreet sign, and another servant took the skull from
Othnam, washed and dried it, wiped it down with a fragrant oil, and
set it carefully on one of the copper tables. "Now
that the formalities have been dealt with, we will take our leisure."
Makktuub gestured to the cushions, but they did not sit until he did. By
lifting a hand, he caused yet another servant to hurry in with a
beaten brass tray holding a large bottle and blue glassware laced
with gold. As
the servant filled the glasses and served them, Makktuub pointed a
ringed finger at the gleaming skull. "I am most eager to learn
the details of the circumstances by which this came into your
possession." He looked expectantly at them. Othnam
and Mehmmer took turns describing how the Jeni Cerii had been taken
by one of their lymmnals as he tried to creep into their encampment. "And
this not a day's march from here?" "Yes,
kapudaan," Mehmmer, told him. His
face darkened, and he jumped up with such fury he almost overturned
the brass tray, which the servant whisked away from him without,
astonishingly, overturning a cup or spilling a drop. "Did you
interrogate the spy?" Othnam
nodded. "We did our best, kapudaan." Mehmmer
spread her hands. "But we are not ourselves spies and so—" "He
remained mute," Othnam said. "No
matter." Makktuub whirled, the skirts of his floor-length coat
rising upward in a spiral. "His presence in such close proximity
to Aga-chire confirms the warning I have been given of renewed
aggression by our neighbors," he said in a lowered, almost
guarded, tone. "Is
there in truth no hope, kapudaan?" Mehmmer said. "Is there
never to be peace among the Five Tribes? Are we to be continually at
one another's throats?" "This
time, one way or another, there will be an end," Makktuub said
"There is total war brewing, so my spies inform me, and my bones
reverberate with the voices of my ancestors, who cry out as one for
us to defend our land from those who wish to take it from us." Of
a sudden, he paused and, as if another thought possessed him
entirely, he swung back around, plunked himself upon a mound of
cushions close to Riane. He stared deep into her eyes. "And now,
at this very moment, a stranger appears amongst us. Tell me how this
came to be." Riane
opened her mouth, Makktuub's face broke into a thin smile, and she
saw out of the corner of her eye Mehmmer put a finger across her
lips. Othnam
then told a precise and accurate account of Riane's appearance, the
curious connection between her and the lymmnal Haqqa - how their
initial suspicion was melted by her offer to help the newborn
girlchild. "It is a surety that Jeene would have died without
Riane's intervention," he concluded. Makktuub's
tongue pushed out one cheek, then the other, working overtime, as it
seemed to do when he was lost in thought. At length, he said, "The
ba'du vendor asked you about your impressions of Aga-chire. Now I ask
you about your impressions of my court." Riane
thought but a moment before speaking, for she had already discerned
that Makktuub admired forthright answers above all others. "My
impression is this, kapudaan. Your court is like an egg. First comes
the shell, which is hard and seamless and protects the whole. Inside
the shell is the protein, deceptively clear because it is also
viscous enough to entrap anything that might somehow penetrate the
shell. At the center, protected by all that lies around it, is the
yolk, richest in nutrients, the source of both sustenance and
perpetuation." There
was a small silence, by which Riane was able to deduce that she had
surprised Makktuub, though nothing of this appeared in his face. He
looked for a moment, not at her, but at Mehmmer and Othnam,
addressing them when he spoke. "Mayhap you have brought me a
prize beyond your knowing." They
did not answer because they intuited that Makktuub required none. His
eyes lowered, taking in, as if for the first time, Riane's feet. His
red lips pursed. "What is this? We cannot have you go barefoot
in Agachire." Seeing Riane hold up her boots, he shook his head.
"Those simply will not do, not in my court." He raised a
hand and a servant miraculously appeared with a pair of maroon
shoe-slippers in his hand. The
servant knelt on one knee, took Riane's right foot behind the heel,
and slipped on the thin-soled shoe, then did the same with the left
one. Riane all but gasped. Othnam had been telling the truth: the
shoes were exceptionally comfortable. Makktuub
cocked his head. "Do your new shoes please you?" "Yes,
kapudaan, most assuredly they do." "Good.
Then I, too, am pleased." A
clear tone of finality caused Othnam and Mehmmer to stop drinking. A
servant took their empty glasses, then they rose and Riane with them. Makktuub
watched his obedient followers beneath hooded eyes. "You did
well," he said languidly, "by bringing me evidence of the
Jeni Cerii treachery that I can parade before our people. You will be
amply rewarded for your loyalty before your feet cross the outer
threshold to my court." As
they turned to go, he raised his hand. "Hold. Riane will stay
here." "As
you wish, kapudaan," Mehmmer said, bowing. "You have only
to tell us when we may return for her." "As
I said, Riane will stay here." The
briefest glance passed between brother and sister. "A thousand
pardons, kapudaan," Othnam said, "I have promised to myself
convey her to the kashiggen Mrashruth. It is her desire to be
introduced to Perrnodt." The
dark expression on Makktuub's face was terrible to behold. "Would
you repeat the misstep of your mother and father?" "No,
kapudaan," Othnam said hastily. "They
may obey you," Riane said, "but I will not." Her eyes
flashed. "I did not come to the Korrush to become your
prisoner." Makktuub
gestured and, at once, the chamber was ringed by armed guards. Two of
them stepped behind Othnam and Mehmmer, the sound of metal rang out,
and scimitars were placed against their throats. "If
you attempt to defy me, youngling, I will have their throats slit.
Here. At once." Marking the defiance in her eyes, he continued:
"Heed me well. On the day my father died, I murdered my three
brothers so that I would become kapudaan. I have absolutely no
abhorrence of blood or killing." Riane,
looking deep into Makktuub's eyes, knew he was telling the truth. She
could not allow Othnam and Mehmmer to be killed on her account. She
came and stood beside him. He laughed raucously as he cuffed her on
the side of her head. Riane felt a sharp, swift pain that took her
breath away. Makktuub's face, those of Othnam and Mehmmer began to
swim, doubling, tripling. Then
she pitched forward, plunged into the bottomless abyss of
unconsciousness.
11 Haan
Jhala
You
were going to leave, once again vanish into thin air, and this time
for who knows how long." Eleana stands accusingly before her.
"Without a word said to me about what has or has not passed
between us." "You
were sleeping," Riane says calmly, though not calmly enough to
keep her heart from fluttering into her throat. "You need your
rest. I did not want to disturb you." "Liar!
Coward!" There are tears in Eleana's eyes. "You simply
didn't want to answer any questions." "Questions?"
Riane says as they stand just outside the Abbey of Warm Current on a
cool starless night just moments before she will wrap herself in Nith
Sahor's neural-net greatcoat and imagine herself into the Korrush.
"What questions?" "About
why you're suddenly acting like I am contagious." "You
are imagining that." "Like
I have thoroughly disappointed you. What have I done that you should
push me away?" "You've
done nothing—" Riane says. "You see the impossibility
of this." "I
see only an enigma." A
sadness weighing Eleana down that Riane finds unbearable, even though
she knows she must accept it. "I
thought I knew you, but you have shut me out." For
an instant, Riane, torn by the madness of her love, feels the truth
bubbling in her mouth. But she knows Eleana would be horrified if she
ever discovered the truth, and that is something Riane knows she
cannot live with. So she says, "Nothing has changed. We are
still friends." "Friends
do not leave in the dead of night without so much as a good-bye." "If
a good-bye is what you want, then you have it." Eleana
slaps Riane hard. Then, her face abruptly pale, she turns and flees
down the cracked stone path. "N'Luuura
take it," Riane says under her breath. She catches up with
Eleana on the far side of the western temple and, taking her by the
elbow, whirls her around. Tears are streaming down Eleana's face. "Now
you do hate me," Eleana cries. "How could I have struck the
Dar Sala-at? I beg you, please forgive me." Her
heart breaking, Riane says kindly, "There is no need." "But
I should be punished." "For
what?" Eleana
shakes her head, the tears streaming down her face. She breaks free
and walks some distance away. "Go,"
Eleana says. "It's what you have to do, I understand that." "Eleana—" "No,
really. I do." Riane
opens her mouth to reply, shakes her head mutely, begins to turn
away. "Why
is this happening?" she hears Eleana say, and turns back. "Rekkk
is lying near death. Lady Giyan promised to take care of me through
the birth of my child. She was helping me through—Miina forgive
me for my selfishness, but she is gone now, and in a moment, you will
be, too." So
that is it, Riane realizes. Eleana believes she has been abandoned by
everyone. For the first time, she experiences Eleana's inner fear at
bearing and rearing a child alone, a child who is half-V'ornn. And
then, through the attenuated lens of her dream, she hears Eleana
saying, "That dagger you wear, I know it well. I gave it to
Annon months ago. How did you acquire it?" And
Riane had to think fast, angered that she had forgotten all about
hiding it from Eleana. "Giyan gave it to me on the afternoon
when we first met. She said she wanted me to have it. Does that go
against your wishes?" "No,
I ..." Eleana shakes her head wildly as the tears begin to
stream from her eyes. "Oh,
do not cry, beloved," Riane says as her heart breaks, "for
it is your own Annon who stands before you. Can you not see him
inside my eyes?" But
Eleana has already vanished. . . . Arising
from her dream, a heady mix of wish fulfillment and the recent past,
Riane found herself facing an intricately worked lattice screen. As
she focused, she saw that the highly detailed central carving was of
a male and female locked in an intimate and vividly sexual embrace.
It was so lifelike, she started. "Exquisite,
isn't it?" She
turned at the soft, melodious voice. A beautiful young woman lounged
on the same huge bejeweled cushions upon which she herself lay. Riane
licked her lips; her tongue felt swollen and her mouth was
unnaturally dry. All at once, she remembered her interview with
Makk-tuub and the way he had drugged her. As
she put a hand to her temple, the beautiful young woman said, "Oh,
don't fret, the needle hasn't left a mark." She smiled oddly,
almost coldly. "It never does." Making
a quick inventory, Riane saw that Nith Sahor's greatcoat was gone. "You
had better get used to it," the beautiful young woman said with
a smirk. "You own nothing now, and you never will again." Her
name, she said, was Tezziq, and she was small, dusky-skinned and
dark-haired like Mehmmer, with long, pale, almond-shaped eyes that
curled like slipper-tips at their outer corners. With her flat
cheekbones and pouty lips she resembled the female on the latticework
screen. Her hair, unlike Mehmmer's, fell in a waterfall down her
back, the high gloss of oil on it. Near the very end it was gathered
in a gold oval fillet incised with the same sigil carved into the
stud that pierced her left nostril. She
saw where Riane was looking, and said, "That is the sign of the
fulkaan. It is Makktuub's mark." She cocked her head. "Do
you even know what a fulkaan is, outlander? No?" There it was
again, that odd, cold smile. "It is the mighty bird of legend
that sat atop Jiharre's shoulder and served as his personal
messenger." She made a moue. "But, oh, I forget, an
outlander like you does not know who Jiharre is." "Jiharre
is the Prophet of the Gazi Qhan," Riane said, "is he not?" "He
came to the Korrush from the Djenn Marre, an orphan seeking asylum,"
Tezziq said. "And
initially met with distrust, just as I have." Tezziq's
lip curled in contempt. "Comparing yourself to the Great Prophet
is an efficient method of getting yourself killed in some quarters." "I
will keep that in mind," Riane said. A
small unpleasant smile played across Tezziq's mouth. "If you
would know, he lived in the small town of Im-Thera, where he employed
his remarkable skills at negotiation first to settle disputes between
individuals, then, as his reputation grew, between families and,
eventually between Tribes." "It
was Jiharre who united the Five Tribes, was it not?" "Through
him they were bound by faith rather than by blood." "But
now the Tribes are in a perpetual state of war." "When
Jiharre died, the faith holding us together factionalized. Disputes
arose among the holy ones as to the meaning of Jiharre's words."
Tezziq's eyes narrowed and became canny again. "But you are not
here for a lesson in religious history. Do you have any idea where
you are, outlander? No? You are in the kapudaan's haanjhala, the
silken womb of his palace, the very organ of his pleasure and
desire." Her upper lip curled into her serpent of a smile. "Do
you know why you are here? No?" She slowly spread her shapely
legs. "Do you see these diaphanous clothes I wear? Through them
you can see my flesh and yet you cannot. One moment I appear all but
naked, the other it seems I am as demurely clothed as a crone whose
once-potent sex has been shriveled by time." Her
long, slender fingers danced in the air. "There are many
beautiful females in the haanjhala, and all—all, that is, save
you, outlander— have been trained to give Makktuub nights of
optimum pleasure." "You
are nothing more than Looorm—whores." Tezziq's
dark eyes flashed. "We are ajjan!" she said proudly. "We
live to serve the kapudaan. What he asks of us we accomplish in the
most artful ways imaginable. In this we are no different than those
who fight for him, scheme for him, plow and sow for him." "It
is shameful what you do." A
baleful expression momentarily disfigured Tezziq's beautiful face.
"Another reason to despise you, outlander, you who drags your
own shame like stinking offal into our sanctuary." "If
you hate me so much," Riane said, "why are you bothering to
talk to me?" "I
have no other choice," Tezziq spat. "As Makktuub's first
ajjan I am ordered to train you in the nocturnal arts of most
interest to him." Riane
felt her stomach double-clutch. "You don't mean that the
kapudaan . . . that Makktuub means to . . ." "In
every orifice he can find." There
was no mistaking the pleasure Tezziq gained from Riane's discomfort
and consternation. "Whatever
he has in mind," Riane said softly, "I will not comply." "Of
course you will." Tezziq, thoroughly enjoying herself now,
grasped a hand mirror that lay beside her. "In fact, you have
already begun to do so." She
held up the hand mirror in front of Riane's face, and Riane gasped. "Exactly,"
Tezziq said acidly. Riane
gingerly touched the gold sigil-stamped stud that now pierced her
left nostril. Tezziq's
grinning face appeared around the side of the hand mirror as she
leaned forward. "Is the truth beginning to penetrate that thick
skull of yours, outlander? Oh, yes. Yes, I think it has." Her
long, green-tipped fingernail rimmed the mirror, then tap-tap-tapped
its center. "In here is the truth. What do you see reflected,
hmm? I will tell you then, outlander. It is your own future." Divination
Street ran on a more or less east-west line through Axis Tyr, and it
was as wide as any of the city's boulevards, so that those buildings
on its north side were blessed with abundant light even during autumn
and winter. This was, primarily, why Marethyn had chosen the location
for her atelier. She was an artist, and light was the one commodity
she could not do without. Early
in the morning, when the light was thin and crisp as a wafer, Sornnn
watched Marethyn at her easel. The easel was set up in the center of
the atelier's light-flooded atrium, a huge and complicated
contraption, pigment-spattered and oil-stained, that looked, to him,
like the beginning of the construction of a suspension bridge. The
notion of a bridge did not come idly to his mind, for it seemed to
him that it was the easel, rather than the canvas or the paints, that
was the midwife to giving life to Marethyn's ideas. Judging by her
expression, it was her home, the place where she dwelled most deeply
and completely. It was both a passionate and a compassionate world. As
he watched, Marethyn turned her head a little, the better to assess
how the light fell upon her subject. For her part, the old Tuskugggun
standing proudly in her crookedness seemed well at ease, despite the
carved heartwood cane on which she was obliged to lean. By her right
elbow was a small paint-smeared table on which were sitting a cup and
pot, both filled with star-rose tea. "You're
certain you're all right?" Marethyn said without breaking her
rhythm. "You're sure you're not tired, Tettsie." Tettsie is
what she called her grandmother Neyyore. It was a loving name,
speaking of giggling fun, damp kisses, and tiny treats, a survivor
from Marethyn's childhood. "I
am perfectly wonderful, darling," Tettsie said, trying for a
moment to crane her neck to get a look at the painting. "Glowing
like a mother with her first child." This
made Marethyn laugh, a sound so pure and rich and full that it
pierced Sornnn's hearts clear through. That night they had made love
at the warehouse, he had been on the verge of telling her everything.
He had felt it rising up inside him, a pithy warmth, not at all an
urge to confess, but a desire to share. But, in the end, something
had made him pause, an innate caution at the lack of a clear and
uncompromised sign that would make him certain he was right about
her. Divulging anything of a personal nature did not come easy to
him; in this, he was like his father. "Do
you remember," Marethyn said, talking to Tettsie, "when you
would take me down to the deep pools in the woods?" "On
the hottest days of summer," Tettsie said, taking a brief sip of
her beloved tea, careful to return to her pose. "Your father
would have been very cross had he ever found out I had exposed you to
the world outside the city walls." "That
didn't stop you." "No,
it certainly didn't," Tettsie said. "In fact, I kept
pushing the boundaries." Her
eyes had sunk inward, recalling that moment in glowing detail, the
past on occasion more vivid to her than the present. She had a regal
head with tissue-thin skin. She had lived long, though it was clear
she had not emerged unscathed from time's assault. She seemed to
cherish her age, a precious commodity that made her special. And,
indeed, she was special, and not only in Marethyn's eyes. Marethyn
switched brushes and laid on the new pigment thickly with the side of
the brush, a brief deft stroke, learned technique refined by
instinct. "No one could ever make you flinch, Tettsie. You were
not like Mother." "Do
you remember the cthauros holding pen I used to take you to?"
Tettsie was not comfortable talking about her daughter. Marethyn
smiled. "Of course. We went practically every week. You taught
me how to ride. I felt so wickedly delicious, and I thought you
looked so amazing sitting with your back straight, your head held
high, galloping across the countryside." "Form
is most important in riding, yes, darling? That is why it is a
metaphor for life." Tettsie took a another sip, quick and
dainty, of her star-rose tea, and this time Marethyn noted the
increased tremor in her hand. "But I am thinking of one time. It
was late in the year, just around this time, I believe, yes."
The past was so close she could feel it brush up against her
shoulder. "The scent of baled glennan and fertilizer, the
cthauros' slow wheezy exhalations." She took a deep breath, let
it slowly out. "The weather was so filthy we turned around and
went back." "I
remember." "That
was the first time you held an ion pistol." "I
felt really wicked. I felt as if when I was with you I was
leading another life." Tettsie
laughed, a little girl's laugh, much as Marethyn's, lovely and
musical. "Oh, my dear, you made such a fuss that day!" "I
hit the qwawd's-eye." Marethyn stopped painting for a moment.
"Three times." "That
was me. You didn't hit it until your third lesson." "Oh
yes. But after that I never missed." "You
were a natural sharpshooter. It was your artist's eye for nuance and
detail." Tettsie pursed her lips. "Do you remember that
Khagggun who used to come to the stables now and again? It was his
ion pistol. Our little secret." "Good
thing, too." Marethyn washed her brush free of green, dipped it
into a pool of indigo. "Mother would have confined me to the
hingatta forever." "I
made sure she knew nothing about it!" "That
is just the way she still likes things, isn't it? When I complained
to her about Kurgan keeping Terrettt away from the Rescendance she
professed perfect ignorance." At
the mention of Terrettt's name, Tettsie's face darkened. "Sadly
your mother is content in her ignorance," she said in an
uncharacteristic bout of candor. "Well, she is in all ways a
conventional Tuskugggun." "My
father saw to that." Tettsie's
eyes rose briefly to meet Sornnn's, flashing him an enigmatic look.
"He did what all V'ornn males do." Marethyn's
brush shot across the canvas. Tettsie
said mildly, "When can I see the painting?" "We're
almost finished for today. Don't you want to sit down?" "No.
I do not. This is a standing portrait, not a sitting one. This was my
wish." The
many lines radiating out to the corners of her face, furrowed now by
the freshet of anger the conversation had caused made her seem like a
temple to the dead god Enlil, crumbling and empty but still potent
enough to disturb long-forgotten childhood memories. Sornnn
had no good memories of his own mother. Like all V'ornn families, his
was dominated by the males, the more so because his mother was often
missing from the hingatta where she was supposed to have raised him.
Wives of Great Caste V'ornn lived their lives in hingatta after they
had given birth. The hingatta were communal residences, where groups
of Tuskugggun fulfilled their duties raising their children and, if
they were lucky and did not need much sleep, plied their
arts—weaving, painting, sculpting, composing music, forging
armor, and the like—in the small hours after their children
were safely tucked in bed. With his mother gone so often he would
content himself with playing with the Phareseian colorsphere she had
given him for his sixth birthday. It was a small, hard, cool ball, he
remembered, containing three gases found on Phareseius Prime. The
gases were incompatible and therefore shifted constantly inside the
sphere in an effort to get away from each other. The resulting
chemical reaction caused endlessly varied displays of violent color.
And, if you held it long enough, you felt a rhythmic pulsing not
unlike the beating of V'ornn hearts. He hadn't thought about the
colorsphere in many years. What had become of it? he wondered. Gone,
doubtless, along with all his other childhood toys. But
he had loved that toy until, one day, something quite inexplicable
happened. His mother returned to the hingatta, as abruptly as she had
left, and she had changed. She exhibited a distinct aloofness toward
him, and he was sure he had disappointed her in some way that she
could never forgive. And no matter what he did that coldness just
grew worse, until he gave up and she became a stranger in his eyes.
In direct consequence, he cleaved ever more closely to his father,
eager to absorb everything that Hadinnn SaTrryn taught him. When
Hadinnn had died some months ago, his mother came to see him. She
should not have. She was not wearing indigo, the color of mourning,
and she did not stay long. Outside, Sornnn had spied a stylish
two-seat hoverpod with a tall, slim, handsome Bashkir behind the
controls. This individual sat slouched slightly down, his bootheels
on the polished titanium trim, arms crossed easily over his chest. Sornnn
should have been calm, but he was not. The lessons he had learned in
the Korrush momentarily deserted him. His father, the one V'ornn he
idolized, was suddenly, shockingly, tragically dead, and here came
his mother, without an ounce of respect, in the company of another
V'ornn. He couldn't even remember what she said to him because he had
exploded, hitting her so hard across the face that she had cried out. "Just
like him," she had said with her hand to her stinging cheek.
"Well. I suppose I should not be surprised." There was no
anger in her eyes, only a distant sadness just beyond her reach. The
tall, slim, handsome Bashkir had come running in response to her cry,
at once advancing on Sornnn but, surprisingly, Sornnn's mother had
gripped him hard before he could utter the irrevocable challenge,
spinning him around, guiding him out of the residence without a
backward glance. The ion hum of their hoverpod had slashed through
the thick mourning silence. "What
would I have done without you?" Marethyn was saying now to her
grandmother. "You
would have found a way to survive," Tettsie said
matter-of-factly. "Just as I did." Marethyn
washed the wide fan-head brush she had been using. The smell of the
paints was very strong. "How did you survive, Tettsie?
How is it Grandfather never treated you like my father did my
mother?" "It
wasn't for lack of trying, my darling. No, indeed. But I fought back
in the only manner he would understand. I became a font of knowledge
about his rivals. I became an invaluable ally." Marethyn looked
up, startled. "So there was no love—?" "Love is
not possible without respect." Tettsie shrugged. "You, of
all people, should know that." Marethyn
could not help but steal a glance at Sornnn, who stood still and
silent and grave. "But you said you became his ally." From
the first, he had been at ease with Tettsie, and this had made
Marethyn very happy. "True
enough. But I think your grandfather soon came to despise what I did
because when I came to him . . . what I proposed ... To him it was a
kind of coercion that Tuskugggun ought not to know anything about. I
not only knew about it, I was singularly proficient in it. I gained
in power, yes, but I became anathema to him." "Why
didn't you stop?" "It
was already too late. For me. I could not go back to the way I had
been, the way all the Tuskugggun around me lived. Ground down by
their mates. I found that reduced form of life unacceptable." "But
you loved Grandfather!" Marethyn cried. "You told me so
yourself." "Well,
yes." A rueful smile played around Tettsie's mouth. "But
the loss of that love ... It was the price I paid for living life the
way it should be lived." Marethyn
came around the side of the painting. "What about Grandfather?" "What
about him?" "Didn't
he love you?" "Once.
So he said. But male V'ornn—" Tettsie broke off, and with
another quick glance at Sornnn, smiled. "Let us now speak of
other, less weighty matters." "No,"
Marethyn said stubbornly. "I want to know what you meant to
say." "All
right, if you wish it." Tettsie's fingers gripped her cane more
tightly. "I am of the opinion that V'ornn males are incapable of
romantic love. Most have no conception of what it is. The ones, like
your grandfather, who claim they do"—she shrugged—"are
simply deluding themselves." Marethyn
turned to Sornnn. "And what is your opinion?" He
held up his hands. "This is strictly a family matter." Tettsie
said very calmly, "A family into which you intend to enter, if
my intuition is right." "Grandmother!"
Marethyn cried in shock. Tettsie's
eyes were riveted on him. "Tell me if I am wrong, Sornnn
SaTrryn." "I
see that I am going to be dragged into this whether I like it or
not," he said in an attempt to make a joke of it. Her
eyes never left his. "For me this is a matter of the utmost
import." "Very
well, then." Marethyn
liked that he respected Tettsie's wishes as she herself did. He
nodded. "It seems to me that Tuskugggun are just as incapable of
love as males." "I
do hope you have a specific example in mind," Tettsie said
dryly. "As
it happens, I do. My own mother. She shirked her duty at the
hingatta; she was cold and unfeeling. I think she despised me,
possibly because I was a male and not a female with whom she could
share her feelings." "As
it happens." Tettsie repeated the phrase. "As it
happens, I know your mother, Sornnn SaTrryn. We have been friends
for many years now." "What?" "Oh
yes, it's true. It was to me she came when your father beat her." "Why
did you—What are you saying?" Sornnn's head was spinning.
"My father would never—" "Why
do you think she was absent from the hingatta so often?" Tettsie
limped toward him. "She was in hospital, and then, when she was
released, she stayed with me because she did not want you to see the
bruises, did not want you asking questions, did not want you to know
the truth about how your father was with her." Sornnn
was reeling. "My father was a good V'ornn." His throat was
so tight he could scarcely force the words out. "We
both know he was a good V'ornn in many ways," Tettsie
said with a kind of gentle pity. "But he was many things. My
intent is not to denounce or demean him, it is simply to show you the
entire individual." "I
do not understand any of this," he said almost wildly. Tettsie
put a surprisingly strong hand on him. "Whatever you thought of
your father, however he was with you, it wasn't how he was with her." And
then he remembered what his mother had said to him that horrible day
of his father's death just after he had struck her. Just like him.
Well. I suppose I should not be surprised- Sornnn
felt sick to his stomachs. "But he couldn't possibly ... I mean,
how could he?" "Because
he was paranoid and fearful and jealous." She looked deep into
his eyes. "Do you understand me, Sornnn SaTrryn?" And
then, at last, he remembered what it was his mother had said to him
the moment before he had struck her: I'm not here because of him.
I came to see you. So many fragments of memories swirling around
his mind. He shook his head, confused and unnerved. "Let
me then ask you a simple question." Tettsie smelled faintly of
flowers and powder, a confluence of scents he recalled from his
childhood, from the hingatta when his mother was at his side. "This
life— the life you have chosen for yourself—is it
possible that it could make you paranoid and fearful and jealous?" "I
am not that sort of V'ornn." "And
yet you do not live your life entirely in the open. I am speaking now
of your relationship with Marethyn." She paused a moment. "I
say this because I am protective of my granddaughter. Extremely
protective." He
nodded, swallowing hard. He knew this, of course, knew this must be
coming. "If
you continue in your pursuit of her, be mindful of her, not simply of
yourself. Be mindful of what you will be taking her away from. Be
most especially mindful of what she will be left with if you forsake
her." "I
would never—" "I
charge you with this, Sornnn SaTrryn!" She
said this so fiercely that he nodded like a little boy, and said,
"Yes, of course, I—" Then
something outside his ken came into her eyes, and she said, most
softly, "I believe I would like to sit down now." Of
a sudden, her eyes rolled up and she staggered. Her cane skidded,
then cracked in two and she fell away from him, fell heavily and
awkwardly against the easel, capsizing it so that she and it crashed
to the floor together. The painting spun on its corner like a mobile,
muted colors and masterly brushstrokes blurred, then slowly came to
rest in a thick stripe of shadow. Sornnn knelt beside her, the tips
of his fingers cool against her pale, dry, crepey skin. He was
mindful of Marethyn screaming her grandmother's name, he was mindful
of searching for Tettsie's nonexistent pulse, he was mindful of his
hearts swelling as he held grandmother and granddaughter both while
Marethyn, a little girl once more, wailed in shock and grief. Riane
had slept through the night and the whole of the following day. When
she awoke, the first thing Tezziq taught her was how to eat properly
in the Gazi Qhan fashion. Of course, she waited until the platters of
food were set down before them. Gauging the extreme hunger in Riane's
expression, Tezziq invited her to dig in. "There
are no utensils," Riane pointed out. "We
do not use utensils." Riane
shrugged. She was so famished her stomach had turned painful.
Eagerly, she reached toward the platters, only to receive a stinging
slap on her hands. She started. One eye on the guards lining the
walls, she restrained herself. "Start
again," Tezziq said coldly, without so much as a word of
explanation. When
Riane again reached for the food, Tezziq slapped her, harder this
time. Despite herself, Riane cocked her arm in retaliation, but in
the blink of an eye two guards had scimitar-shaped dirks at her
throat. Riane
lowered her hand, and Tezziq nodded silently to the guards, who
reluctantly retreated to their former positions. They seemed
disappointed not to have been able to draw blood. "Now,"
Tezziq ordered. "Again." The
third time Riane picked up the food, Tezziq slapped her so hard
across the face it flew out of her hands. Riane's
eyes blazed. "You command me to eat, then punish me for it,"
she cried. "What do you want from me?" "Will
you weep now, outlander, at the injustice of it all?" Tezziq
sneered. "Forget justice. You are in the Korrush now. You will
learn to be civilized or be struck down like a rabid slingbok."
Her chin jutted out. "Now eat." Riane
sat with her hands folded in her lap. "Are
you deaf?" Tezziq shouted, her face flushing. "Eat when I
tell you to eat!" Riane
sat immobile in the ringing silence. Tezziq
nodded. "Good. It appears that you may be trainable after all."
She lifted an arm. "Even when we are in the wild we wash the
dust from our hands before we eat." Riane
saw a large woven basket in which were two wet towels. She took one,
washing her hands with it. "You
may eat," Tezziq said. Riane
reached for the food and had her hands slapped so hard it turned
their backs ruddy. She wiped the defiance off her face, silently
commanded herself to sit placidly. "What am I doing wrong?"
she asked. "Impudent
outlander." Tezziq slapped her across the face. Riane
took a breath. "Please, Tezziq, teach me the proper way to eat." The
serpent smile crawled across Tezziq's lips, but it did not reach her
eyes which continued to regard Riane with their implacable stare. "We
eat with first two fingers and thumb of one hand, those fingers only.
Do you understand, outlander?" "Yes." Tezziq
slapped her across the face. "Yes,
Tezziq." "Now
eat, as a Gazi Qhan eats." Keeping
one hand in her lap, Riane reached out with two fingers and her thumb
for a morsel of food, put it in her mouth. No punishment was
forthcoming. She
reached for another and promptly got her hand slapped. She said
nothing, but sat unmoving, both hands in her lap, staring at Tezziq,
careful to keep her expression neutral. "Chew
your food and swallow completely before reaching for more,"
Tezziq said. "It is both polite and allows you to savor
completely the flavor of each dish. This behavior honors your host
and yourself." Riane
chewed her food and tried not to enjoy it. But by the time she had
taken her third mouthful she knew that Tezziq was right. By sitting
quietly and chewing each tender morsel she was able to concentrate
fully on its flavor, texture, and aroma. It made for an uncommonly
serene and enjoyable meal. When
she had eaten her fill, Tezziq pointed her chin toward the large
woven basket. This time Riane needed no explanation. She wiped her
right hand clean with the remaining towel. "Well,
outlander," Tezziq said, rising, "perhaps there is hope for
you yet." It
did not take Riane long to feel lost in the maze of the innermost
palace as she followed Tezziq from one tented chamber to another. At
length, they came to a small antechamber, unadorned save for the
ubiquitous guards. "Stand
just there," Tezziq ordered. She walked around Riane, sniffing.
"These robes are ripe besides being ugly. Remove them." As
Riane glanced uncertainly at the guards, Tezziq's laughter trilled
through the tent. "Pay them no heed," she said. "Look!
She went over to one and bared her breasts. Holding them in her
hands, she rubbed them against his massive chest. The guard's
expression did not change. Tezziq reached between his legs, massaging
him. "You
see? Nothing." She turned to regard Riane over her shoulder.
"All the guards of the inner court are saddda; they have
been altered. They are without a sex organ." Mistaking the look
on Riane's face, she added, "Do you think Makktuub would
otherwise trust them among us? The temptation would be too great." The
sight of Tezziq's naked breasts, her lascivious behavior had had
their predictable effect on Annon's powerful male psyche. Riane's
heartbeat quickened, and she could feel all the telltale signs of
arousal on her flesh. Tezziq
returned to Riane and flicked her hand. "Enough talk. Disrobe." Riane
stood immobile for a moment. She was terrified that Tezziq would
recognize her erotic excitement and become suspicious. "Do
as you are told, or I will do it for you}" Tezziq barked. Riane
took off her clothes. She did not even look at the guards, so acutely
aware of Tezziq's scrutiny was she. "Well,
well," Tezziq said thoughtfully, "what a beauty you are."
She circled around and around. "Your legs are powerful, as are
your shoulders. Your buttocks are strong. And your
breasts—magnificent! The nipples so hard!" Riane
swallowed hard, her face on fire. "Luck
is with you. You have the kind of body Makktuub covets." Something
in her voice caused Riane to forget her extreme discomfort. Was it
envy she heard, curling like a bile-worm inside an overripe clemett? "Yes,
he will be all too eager to welcome you to his bedchamber." No,
Riane thought. It was sadness. And then, looking into Tezziq's eyes,
she thought she understood why. For the first time, she felt
something other than hostility toward this beautiful young female.
Wasn't she as much a prisoner of the haanjhala as Riane was? Riane
felt her defiance tempered, her rage dissolved. "I
would not go," she said softly, "had I the choice." "Then
you are a fool," Tezziq said shortly. "For sex is a kind of
power." She came and stood close to Riane. "The only kind
you and I have." "And
what has this power availed you?" "I
am Makktuub's first ajjan, his favorite. I am most blessed he has
chosen me to pleasure him above all other ajjan." "And
when his fancy is taken by another?" Tezziq
averted her eyes. "That is none of your concern." "You—your
entire being is defined by him. If this is so, when he finds another,
you are annihilated." Tezziq
whirled, slapping Riane across the face. "Striking
me will not make it less so." Now
she struck Riane with her balled fists until Riane grabbed her
wrists, held her immobile. The guards at once advanced, but with a
sharp command, Tezziq froze them in their tracks. They watched the
two girls with jaundiced eyes, thinking their unknowable saddda
thoughts. Riane
and Tezziq, locked together, strength against strength, will against
will, stared nakedly at each other until one lone tear emerged from
Tezziq's eye and began to roll down her cheek. With a stifled cry,
she wrenched herself free and turned her back on Riane and the guards
alike. Riane
took a step toward her. "Despite what you may think, I do not
covet him nor the kind of power you believe his pleasure brings,"
she whispered to Tezziq's back. "For males like him are never
truly sated no matter how drunk they become on your wiles. Their
sights are always set on what lies unknown just beyond their
fingertips." She took another step closer. "You know this
well, Tezziq. You know this is why he wants me. And, in truth, what
power could possibly lie in that?" From
the fastness of the Abbey of Warm Current, Eleana leaned against cool
stone blocks, looking out at columns of smoke rising from the
foothills of the Djenn Marre. So absorbed was she in her own thoughts
that she did not stir when the tall armored figure came up behind
her. "You
should be resting," Rekkk Hacilar said. "How
can I rest?" She pointed to the smoke, rich and dark, which
seemed to hang motionless, blotting out the mountains behind it. "You
see what is happening? The Khagggun have found Resistance cells and
are burning our warriors to ash." Rekkk
still moved gingerly. His wound, though all but fully healed
outwardly, still pained him now and again, deep inside. And yet, it
was healing at an astonishing rate. He put this down to the changes
Nith Sahor had made in him when he had implanted the special okummmon
on the inside of his left wrist. Eleana
looked so melancholy, his heart ached for her. "Where is
Thig-pen?" he asked, looking around. "Gone,"
she said. "She was called back to the Ice Caves on urgent
business, she told me." "That
sounds mysterious." "Ominous,
more like." He
sighed as he sat beside her. "I cannot believe I am saying this,
but I miss her." Eleana
nodded. "I do, too." But he could see her eyes were fixed
on the lazy columns of smoke hovering balefully over the
mountainside. She shook her head. "When Wennn Stogggul had
Eleusis Ashera murdered and became regent, I thought it could not get
worse for us." She cupped a hand beneath her distended belly. "I
was wrong. Under Kurgan Stogggul and Olnnn Rydddlin, the Khagggun
have stepped up their patrols, their killing sorties. It is like the
first days of the invasion. They are brutal, relentless. I should be
there with my compatriots." "To
meet your death?" "I'd
like to think I'd make a difference," she said bitterly.
"Instead, I hide away here in this sanctuary." "Have
you so quickly forgotten that the Star-Admiral himself searches high
and low for us?" "I
forget nothing," she said shortly. The columns of smoke were
lightening now as a slight wind broke across the forested hilltops.
"But I feel so utterly useless." "Come
away from this." He touched her shoulder. "It does no good
to rend your heart so." She
allowed him to turn her around. "What shall we do, then, Rekkk?" "You
will do nothing at all. You must think of the baby now. You cannot
put him in jeopardy." "That
is no answer, at least not for me." She shook her head. "If
I sit idle much longer, I shall go out of my mind." She took his
hand, squeezed it. "Lady Giyan has been captured, the Dar
Sala-at is in the Korrush, perhaps already in danger, Thigpen is on
her mysterious mission, and here we are, sitting around mourning lost
friends." The smile she offered was bleak and despairing. "I
am already fighting the nesting instinct inside me." He
regarded her levelly. "That nesting instinct, perhaps it
shouldn't be trifled with." "I
would die of shame if I could no longer contribute." Then,
without warning, she burst into tears. He took her by the elbow and
led her down the abbey paths into the central atrium of the largest
of the temples. Clemett trees rose at the four corners, and
blood-rose bushes, their leaves still green and glossy, massed along
the perimeter, in desperate need of pruning. The garwood maze in the
center was barely distinguishable, a tangled mass with the odd gap
here and there. "A
sad end, isn't it?" Eleana wiped her eyes. And then she turned
to him, "I fought with Riane just before she left." "About
what?" "Now
that you ask, I do not know exactly." She drew a stray lock of
hair off her forehead. "You see, I was angry that she going
away, that she was abandoning me." "Don't
be so hard on yourself. With the baby coming—" She
looked up into his face. "But now, I think maybe I was angry
about something else entirely." "What,
exactly?" "Maybe
it's ... I mean, when I'm near her, there's something that goes right
through me ... an electric ... a premonition ..." "That's
hardly surprising. She is the Dar Sala-at, after all." Eleana
nodded her head. "Of course. She is. But she is also Riane and
she's carrying the dagger I gave to Annon and when I am with her he
seems so close . . . Oh, it's suddenly all so confusing!" Rekkk
sighed. "Clearly you're overwrought. You need to rest." He
led her over to a bench, where they sat for a time, Eleana idly
scraping moss off the clawed stone feet with the heel of her boot.
The wind scouring the bare-branched trees sounded to her like a death
rattle. In her mind's eye, she saw Riane's face just after she had
struck her, a sudden explosion of emotion and then, almost
immediately, a door slamming shut. She closed her eyes against the
image, saw instead the charred and twisted bodies of her former
compatriots with only the columns of black oily smoke to mark their
passing. Her eyes burned with sudden tears, and she began again to
sob. Rekkk
put an arm around her, and said, "How beautiful this time of
day. How the low sunlight streaks the grey stone with gold." He
sighed. "It isn't hopeless, you know. You can't allow yourself
to think that." "But
that's exactly what I do think!" she cried. "The
Resistance is being methodically wiped out. You only have to look to
the north to see the evidence." Then
she raised her head at the sound of beating wings, and she saw the
Teyj with its magnificent red-blue-green plumage arise from the dense
thicket of garwood with something in its beak. It alighted on the
bench and cocked its head, its glossy eyes regarding them both. Then
it ducked its head and dropped into her lap a small oval object. "It
looks like a seedpod," she said, turning it over. "But it's
metallic." "Tertium
and germanium," Rekkk said. She
blinked away her tears. "V'ornnish." He
nodded. "It's called a duscaant. It's a Khagggun recording
device. A sophisticated instrument of espionage." She
glanced at the Teyj, but Rekkk shook his head. He
plucked it from her hand. "Thigpen and Riane found it in the
Library." "But
that's impossible," Eleana said. "The Library was sealed
with an Osoru spell before the V'ornn entered the abbey complex." "So
it only could have been placed in there before the V'ornn
arrived." Her
mouth opened. "A Kundalan spy?" "Ramahan.
This is what Thigpen related to me just before she left." "A
Ramahan working with the V'ornn." Eleana shuddered. "But
what would make a priestess of Miina betray her own kind?" "Here
is a better question to ask. How is it that the Khagggun are having
so much success searching out and destroying Resistance cells in this
quadrant of the northern continent?" "What
do you mean?" "There
was a time when I was assigned to the western quadrant, beyond the
Borobodur forest. When I linked in with the other Pack-Commanders
there I discovered that they were far less successful at rooting out
Resistance cells than were the packs here, along the Land of Sudden
Lakes corridor." "The
Ramahan spy?" He
nodded. "It is a logical assumption. The intelligence has to
come from somewhere." All
Eleana's formidable faculties were fully engaged now, her lethargy
and despair forgotten. "When you were a Khagggun Pack-Commander
where did your information come from?" "From
the office of Line-General Lokck Werrrent." He cocked his head.
"What are you thinking?" "I
was wondering who inside Werrrent's office is the control for the
Ramahan spy." Rekkk
held up the duscaant. "Perhaps this will give us a clue." "Do
you know how to activate it?" The
Teyj fluttered its top wings and began to sing. "No,"
Rekkk said, "but I believe the Teyj does." Steam
rose almost straight up, a column as ephemeral as the city of tents
that surrounded it. And yet it possessed an unmistakable strength.
The steam was pungent with dried limoniq leaves, and this powerful
scent gave the column a weight like alabaster. It
was raining a little when Tezziq led Riane into the bathtent; the
center of the steaming pool, where the tent was open to the elements,
was puckered with it. It beat upon Riane's head as, naked, she
luxuriated in the melting heat. "Look,
look here," Tezziq said, taking one of Riane's hands in her own.
"Already the dust is under your nails. That is one reason we
paint them." Tezziq
had a beautiful body, small, sleek, gently muscled, virtually
flawless. Her dusky skin shone with natural oils. Her breasts hung
like limoniq ready to be plucked. The patch between her legs was
tiny, dark as shadowed twilight. Riane was all at once reminded of
the baths at the Abbey of Floating White, of the long months it took
her to become accustomed to her new female body, of having it
scrutinized by other females, of the confusion of continuing to feel
Annon's powerful male pleasure in the naked female form, of dealing
with her reawakening desire. Unlike the Ramahan acolytes of the abbey
with whom Riane had bathed, Tezziq knew what she possessed and used
it accordingly. Every movement, every gesture no matter how small or
trivial was in the service of her body. Either she had been born a
sexual creature or in the haanjhala had been trained to be one. Her
stiff nipples scraped against Riane's back as she ran a soft-bristled
brush down Riane's spine. Riane could not help but shiver. Doubtless,
Tezziq marked this, for she pressed her breasts hard against Riane's
back as she leaned in and whispered in her ear, "Wa tarabibi.
That is a special phrase used only among intimates. It means 'my
beloved.' " Her tongue flicked out, running the shell of Riane's
ear. "I may spread my thighs for the kapudaan whenever it
pleases him, but as for myself my taste runs to somewhat more . . .
delicate flesh." Her small white teeth captured Riane's earlobe
for just an instant, taking the merest nip before she resumed her
scouring. Steam
continued to rise about them, and the gentle rain obscured all behind
an hallucinatory wall. The heat, the pungent aroma of the limoniq
leaves, the cleansing with its distinctly erotic overtones made Riane
drowsy and excited all at once. She used her fright and her intense
desire to be free to combat these feelings. Except it wasn't as
simple as that. Much to her chagrin, she found herself mired in the
frustration and guilt that was a direct result of her oblique
relationship with Eleana. Nothing she felt or yearned for could ever
be shared with the female she loved best and most deeply. Had she
been asked, she would have denied most vociferously having any
intention of straying from that love. And yet, a love as wild and
strong as hers, cruelly thwarted, will inevitably seek an outlet
elsewhere, making her vulnerable to temptation. Her longing for
Eleana had only become more acute with distance. Eleana she could not
have, but the longing remained, festering like a wound that resists
conventional treatment. A temporary balm might be just that, might
even be perceived to contain an element of danger, and yet in certain
circumstances it seemed preferable to continuing the pain unabated. She
leaned her head back onto Tezziq's bare shoulder. "Tell me about
Makktuub," she said. "What does he whisper to you after a
night of lovemaking?" The
slightest ripple of tension informed Tezziq's body. "A spy would
wish to know these things, would she not?" Riane
took Tezziq's free hand and placed it just beneath her breast. "So
would a novice ajjan who must be aware of all the things that will
please her new lover." "Which
are you?" Tezziq trembled a little. "Spy or novice ajjan?"
Riane's hand covered Tezziq's, moved it slightly so that it cupped
the lower half of her breast. She heard Tezziq's tiny indrawn breath
in her ear and thought she had her. Slowly,
Tezziq's hand squeezed inward until it was Riane who gasped. "Do
not mistake me for a fool, outlander," Tezziq hissed. "I am
not so easily seduced. You have shown me your defiance and your
contempt." She had dropped the brush, and she reached roughly
between Riane's thighs. "I could take you with the brutal
finality of a male taking a female. I could—" But
Riane had whipped around, surprising her, pulling her tight, stroking
her as gently as if Tezziq was being fanned by a gimnopede's wings,
for she sensed in this girl a burning need to be gentled as her
master, the kapudaan, would never think to do. Did she, as well,
acknowledge her own need to be held, gentled, wanted? "If
I showed defiance," she whispered, "it was because I was
frightened. If I showed contempt, it was in defense of your clear
hatred of me." Light lay along the water, glimmering, reflecting
their intermingled bodies so that it was impossible to tell where one
left off and the other began. Tezziq's flesh rose in a field of tiny
bumps as Riane continued to stroke her in long, sinuous passes. "But
as you see, that can change in the single beat of a heart."
Across the sheened hills, the shadowed valleys, her fingertips traced
every curve and quivering nuance of Tezziq's body. "In truth, I
have no taste at all for males. The savagery they take to bed sickens
me wholly." Tezziq's
eyes fluttered closed, and when she opened them the irises had
darkened somewhat. "Whatever you may be," she said huskily,
"you are surpassingly clever." She
took Riane's head between her hands and hungrily kissed her. When
she was finished, her eyes locked with Riane's. "Whatever you
are, it may be I have been waiting for you." Her tongue came out
in a brief flick as Riane's fingers passed between her thighs. She
grabbed Riane's wrist and held it tight. "But mark me,
outlander. If you lie to me, if you play me false even once, I swear
on the holy words of the Prophet I will carve out your heart and feed
it to you." Kurgan
began to notice that when Nith Batoxxx was at the regent's palace he
went out of his way to avoid mirrors. He
was in his private quarters, affixing his hold-signature to a
stultifying pile of official documents when he heard the whisper of a
voice. His first thought was to summon his Haaarkyut guard. But some
deep-seated instinct made him hesitate. He sat very still for a
moment. From the balcony outside came the shrill cry of a blackcrow.
After a moment's silence the voice began again. He put aside his
dreary work and cocked an ear, listening more closely. The voice was
familiar and yet it was not. Its tone danced on the periphery of his
memory, tantalizing him. He silently pushed back his chair and rose. He
walked this way and that about the chamber until he had located the
direction of the voice. Without making a sound, he moved to an open
doorway. There he waited a moment, listening intently. The voice was
so low he still could not make out individual words. He moved
slightly, insinuating himself into the open doorway. Luckily, it was
late in the day. The windows in his chamber faced east, and, thus, he
cast no shadow into the chamber from which the voice was emanating.
He moved again, and now he could hear more clearly. Unfortunately, he
was listening to a language wholly unfamiliar to him. Filled
now with an unbearable curiosity, he craned his neck. Peering around
the doorframe, he spied Nith Batoxxx. The Gyrgon was standing in
front of a small mirror—one of the very few in the residence. Improbable
as it might seem, it appeared as if he was speaking into the mirror.
In a language other than V'ornn. An unknown language, in fact. Kurgan
stared. Judging by the periodic pauses, it appeared to him as if Nith
Batoxxx were having a conversation with the mirror. So he was mad,
after all! Or
was there another explanation? He
remembered when he himself had been in this room. Nith Batoxxx had
come to the side doorway, the one directly opposite where he was now
standing, and instead of coming into the chamber, had beckoned for
Kurgan to come to him in the adjacent room. Kurgan still felt the
quick flush of anger he had felt at the time. Then there was the time
that he and the Gyrgon had been walking into the Great Hall. Kurgan
had ordered an octagonal mirror for the chamber in which he housed
his small-arms collection, and some V'ornn had left it propped
against the hallway wall. Instead of walking past it, the Gyrgon had
abruptly excused himself, appearing in the Great Hall, through a
different door, sometime later. At the time, Kurgan had not connected
Nith Batoxxx's behavior with the mirror, but now he had to wonder. He
had to wonder whom the Gyrgon was talking to in that mirror. Perhaps
these mirrors were a new form of Gyrgon spying device. But then why
would Nith Batoxxx seek to avoid them? Determined
to get an answer to his questions, he pulled himself back from the
doorway, went through the chamber he had been in and out into the
hallway. There was a doorway to the adjacent room that faced the
mirror. When he came upon it, it was closed. He grasped the knob and,
taking a deep breath, carefully opened it a crack. He
saw a thin wedge of the room, the Gyrgon's shoulder. He opened the
door wider until the edge of the mirror came into view. He moved his
head so that he could see Nith Batoxxx's reflection in the mirror,
and it was all he could do not to scream. It
was Tezziq who dismissed the serving girls; she had decided to plait
Riane's hair herself. It was a long, slow, languorous dance, even, in
a way, a loving one the way Tezziq choreographed it. Unseen, clasped
in Riane's fist, was the infinity-blade wand that Minnum had affixed
to the nape of her neck. They
reclined on silken cushions, while she told Riane all about the
kapudaan. "Makktuub is an exceedingly proud male," she said
softly. "He
comes from a long line of kapudaan. He was born to lead. This means
he is ruthless, brutal, pious, relentless. He is a great kapudaan,
perhaps the greatest in a century." Riane
could tell that Tezziq believed this wholeheartedly. "Is he also
fair?" "Fair?"
Tezziq paused in her plaiting. "Piety precludes fairness. But
then fairness is a weakness, isn't it? And Makktuub has no
weaknesses." Everyone
has a weakness, Riane thought. Perhaps Makktuub's piety is
his. But these musings she kept to herself. This much, at least,
he had already taught her. All she said was, "Tell me everything
I need to know about him." Tezziq
recommenced her plaiting, her fingers working deftly on the complex
pattern. "Makktuub has plucked one saying from the Mokak-addir,
which he faithfully adheres to," she continued. " 'One
sin leads to all others.' " His
piety again, Riane thought. "Does Makktuub come from a pious
family?" "Not
at all. But every day Makktuub is in residence at the palace a
certain religious scholar comes precisely at midnight and for the
next two hours instructs the kapudaan in the Mokakaddir." "How
do you know this?" "This
scholar comes by the provisions gate, on the west side of the palace.
It is near the haanjhala baths. I saw him, once. An ancient, bearded
Ghor." "A
Ghor?" "The
Ghor are a fanatical, ultrareligious sect. They claim to be direct
blood descendants of Jiharre's disciples, the guardians of the
Mokakaddir. Being a Ghor is strictly hereditary; the
privileges and responsibilities are handed down from one generation
to the next. They take these responsibilities—the Burdens of
Jiharre, as they call them—most seriously. Even the kapudaan is
wary of gainsaying their will—az-miirha—the Path
of the Righteous," "Is
this your belief also?" Riane asked. Tezziq
hesitated, but that instant spoke volumes to one listening as
intently as Riane was. "I
have no beliefs," Tezziq said softly. "I have only my
desire to serve." "You
have more than that, don't you? You have your will to survive." "Yes.
I have that." Riane
turned slowly in the embrace of Tezziq's arms, until Tezziq released
her plaits. "The will cannot long survive malnourished,"
she whispered. "This I know from bitter experience, for I am an
orphan without even a memory of home and hearth to sustain me."
Her hands alighted on Tezziq's shoulders like the kiss of a
thrice-banded flutterfly. "If I know anything, it is this: if
your will survives, it is only because of belief." Tezziq's
eyes, darkening still, stared into Riane's. "Belief in what?" "Are
you asking for me, or for yourself?" "For
you. What do you believe in, outlander?" "A
better world." There
was a moment's hesitation before Tezziq burst into laughter. It was
far from a happy sound, possessing as it did a decidedly caustic edge
to its bitterness. "For a moment you had me going. But I know
you cannot be serious." "I
am perfectly serious," Riane told her. Tezziq
shook her head, her waterfall hair swaying against her shoulder
blades. "But how could you be? Look around you. You are a
prisoner in a strange world, with no hope of escape." "All
the more reason to believe in something better," Riane said
simply. Tezziq
drew back. "Now surely you mock me." Riane
took her head in her hands and kissed her, as Tezziq had before
kissed her. "Riane
. . ." It
was the first time Tezziq had used her name, and Riane was a little
surprised it had meaning for her. It was because she heard Eleana's
voice. She closed her eyes and thought of Eleana, wished Tezziq was
Eleana, but was afraid of that, too, as if even imagining herself and
Eleana together was dangerous. Without her sorcerous Third Eye she
felt blind, crippled, cut off from the auras of those she loved. She
existed now in a featureless chamber without even the hint of an echo
to remind her that she was not altogether alone. Tezziq had somehow
slipped into this prison, and the exile in which both girls found
themselves made each irresistible to the other. "It
is my unwavering belief that keeps me strong." Riane ran a
finger down the side of the girl's face. "What belief keeps you
strong, Tezziq?" Tezziq
shook her head. Her eyes were liquid; she seemed on the verge of
tears. "In truth, I do not know." "Then
we shall strike a deal," Riane said. "You will teach me
about the secrets of love, and I will teach you to unearth the belief
inside you." Tezziq
searched her face. "Is that all you want?" Riane
recognized that look. Tezziq needed the truth, so she gave it to her.
"No," she whispered. "If I am to escape, I will need
help." Tezziq
bit her lip. "What you ask is strictly forbidden." "I
believe in a better world." What
better reasoning could Riane give her? Olnnn
Rydddlin led sixteen handpicked Khagggun officers through the densely
wooded hillsides at the foot of the Djenn Marre. The recruits were
made up of the most promising First-Captains and First-Majors. Olnnn
had them put through a grueling test that he himself had devised. To
accrue their long-term loyalty, he had taken the test with them,
cutting no corners, giving himself no slack. He had pushed his
sorcerous leg to its limit, ignoring the fiery pain flickering in the
marrow of his exposed bones. They had spent two weeks in the high
Djenn Marre wilderness without alloy armor or photon communications.
He force-marched them fourteen hours a day, most of that on steep
upgrades. They were blinded by sun, drenched by freezing rain,
scoured by knife-edged winds. They carried no rations with them, were
required to feed themselves with what they were able to catch. In the
beginning, the recruits used ion fire, but that obliterated their
prey, so they took to building snares out of bark-stripped wood and
short lengths of vine. Hunger sparked their ingenuity. Similarly,
they carried no portable sonic showers. They grew used to the smell
of each other between bouts of bathing in the deep, crystal-clear
pools that dotted the Land of Hidden Lakes corridor along which they
roamed. They
grew used to the cold, and then, inured to it, took to trekking
stripped to the waist. They grew to like their armorless torsos. The
sun and the wind deepened the color of their skin. On
this moonsless night, Olnnn took them along a perilously narrow path
that snaked down a steep ridge into a narrow gorge. Far below them, a
black river faintly glittered in starlight. This
was the site of their final exam. Those who survived would attain the
rank of Attack-Commandant, a new officer rank that Olnnn had decided
on. After his fateful meeting with Line-General Lokck Werrrent at
Spice Jaxx's he had decided to interpret the regent's orders in his
own way. Olnnn
led his unit, silent within the small sounds of a wilderness night,
down into the gorge. He could feel the heightened tension of his
recruits. They knew what was about to ensue. They knew it was
possible that some of them would not survive. He
had decided to construct a unit of commanders, as ruthless as they
were absolutely loyal to him, insurance against the day he felt
certain was coming, when Kurgan Stogggul would try to usurp his power
base. You enjoy the
loyalty of every Khagggun. So long as this is true there is no
danger, Lokck Werrrent had told him. Not
knowing Kurgan Stogggul as Olnnn did, he had missed the point
entirely. It was this very loyalty that threatened the regent's
power. Just
before entering the gorge, the path widened somewhat, and the way
became less steep. Olnnn held them up. They crouched there in the
night, listening. He heard the insects buzzing, the wind soughing
through the kuello-firs. He smelled the thick carpet of needles
beneath their feet, the rich dampness of newly turned silt mounded at
the edge of the riverbank. He wrapped a photon lens around his skull.
Now, able to see in the dark, he could clearly make out the
encampment on the other side of the river. There was no movement, but
he saw the sentry posted at the perimeter. His back was to the river,
believing that to be an impregnable barrier to attack. Olnnn
made a hand sign, and one of his unit ran in a crouch to the
riverbank and slithered in. Through the oculus of the photon lens
Olnnn followed his progress. Just the top of his head showed above
the waterline. Within moments, he had emerged from the water and,
making an utterly silent run, had efficiently slit the sentry's
throat with his ion blade. Now the rest of the Resistance cell was
theirs to take at will. Final
exam. Olnnn
ordered them forward. They hit the water as a unit, swam as a unit.
They did not like the water. Like all V'ornn they were uncomfortable
without solid terrain under their feet. But their training was
holding; they moved grimly forward. Through
his oculus, Olnnn saw the point Khagggun crouched and ready, waiting
for them. Behind him, the Resistance encampment slept on, oblivious.
This was not the first Resistance cell they had taken on. Over the
course of the past two weeks, they had slain many Kundalan as they
learned the lessons Olnnn was teaching them. The
unit had just passed the midway point. Olnnn, swimming hard, had
momentarily lost track of the point Khagggun. When he swung his
oculus back around, the saw the Khagggun slumped over, an arrow
sticking out of his side. He was crawling, his mouth opened to utter
a warning shout, and an arrow filled it. He spasmed like a fish
caught on a hook. Olnnn whirled. Tracing the arrow's trajectory, he
saw three bark canoes bearing silently down on them. The canoes were
filled with Kundalan Resistance. That is when he knew that the
encampment was empty. The
unit responded with admirable discipline to his cry of "Am-bushr
But by then the attack had already commenced. The black water ran
with blood, and he saw his recruits flailing around him. The water
churned, familiar heads sank from view. He redoubled his efforts, but
even he was growing tired. Prudently, he ordered a retreat back
across the river. In the water, they were no match for the
weapons-laden war canoes. Melting
back into the high stands of kuello-firs, he assessed the damage.
Three recruits killed, double that severely wounded. How much damage
they had done in return was impossible to say. Still, a number of
valuable lessons had been learned, the most important of which was
that Resistance fighters were clever and not without their own
resources. But
what was of most interest to him was that the attack had its positive
side, for it cemented the determination of the survivors to remain
together, to give their lives for one another, to gain revenge for
their fallen comrades. For
the first time, they plotted together—one unit, one mind—and
just before dawn they reengaged the Resistance cell. One of Olnnn's
group was mortally wounded in the assault, but all twenty of the
Resistance cell members were slaughtered. Olnnn watched with
glittering eyes the feral savagery with which his group fell upon the
enemy. It seemed to him that in finding this connection to each other
their appetite for destruction had been unleashed. There
was one in the unit—soon to become Attack-Commandant Accton
Blled—whose appetite for destruction outstripped the others.
His sleek dark-skinned head was shaped like a finned ion missile. His
slablike cheeks and slash of a mouth seemed fashioned by some
demented sculptor, his jutting chin was the butt end of a
particularly lethal-looking weapon. Utterly fearless, he reveled in
bloodletting, and claimed he felt a kinship with death that would be
the envy of any Deirus. It
did not take long for Blled to become something of a legend in the
unit. During their first encounter with the Resistance, he killed two
before ripping the throat out of a third with a horrific snap of his
jaws. In the aftermath, he decapitated his victims, stuffed their own
tender parts into their mouths, and mounted the bloody heads on
stakes as an example, so he said, as well as a warning that he was
here and would take more life whenever and wherever he chose. Olnnn
had observed these grisly antics with a mixture of amusement and
approval. Bloodletting was something he could respect. He knew
instinctively that Accton Blled would make Attack-Commandant. Unless
the final exam killed him. Therefore, he marked Blled, making plans
for him following his inevitable field promotion. Following
the slaughter, the unit took a vote on Blled's suggestion not to burn
the Kundalan bodies, but to tumble them into a mass grave, an open
pit that would serve as a warning to the Resistance. By this time the
bloody sun had risen above the eastern mountain peaks. A rime of
hoarfrost lay upon the dead like a shroud. They roasted ice-hare,
rending the beasts as they stared at the results of their final exam.
Their faces grew shiny with grease, and they laughed at coarse jokes.
Occasionally, one of them would kick a carcass or spit into a glazed
Kundalan eye. It seemed clear they wanted more Resistance to kill.
Like predators, they had scented blood, and their hearts pounded for
the rush of battle to the death. After
the meal, they turned the encampment into the mass grave. They
thought that fitting. Flies were collecting, and large black birds
circled overhead, calling plaintively. They dragged the bodies to the
edge of the pit they had dug and kicked them in. In
a short ceremony, witnessed only by the dead Kundalan, Olnnn promoted
them to the rank of Attack-Commandant. Each one, he told them, would
get his own pack to lead. They would leapfrog the chain of command.
They would be answerable only to him. They were silent, and in their
silence, content. Olnnn
walked a little away from the unit and motioned to Accton Blled. The
two of them walked beside the river. It had been much on his mind
lately as to why Kurgan should be so insistent that he track down the
traitors himself. Unconsciously, he reached down and stroked the
sorcerous bones of his leg. Yes, he still burned for revenge. But he
was also acutely aware of how his search was taking him far from
Kurgan and Axis Tyr, and he had begun to ask himself whether his
absence from the center of power was wise. On that score, he had come
to a decision. He
said, "Attack-Commandant, during these past two weeks you have
acquitted yourself with the highest honors. Therefore, you will be
first to gain your own command." "I
appreciate your confidence in me, Star-Admiral." "You
are also the first to get an assignment." "Rest
assured, Star-Admiral, whatever you ask of me it will be done." "I
am pleased to hear it," Olnnn nodded, "because I am
entrusting you with a most important mission. You are to find the
Rhynnnon, Rekkk Hacilar, and his skcettta, Giyan." "I
am honored, Star-Admiral. I consider it my personal mission to find
them and bring them to you." "Alive
or dead," Olnnn added. "It matters not to me." "Ah,
death." A slow smile wreathed Attack-Commandant Blled's face.
"All the better for me." His sharp teeth shone in the
morning sun. The
following night Riane saw someone come for Tezziq, a tall slim-hipped
male with a huge black animal's tooth through his topknot. His hair
was lighter than Othnam's, so light, in fact, it seemed altogether
without color. She got but a glimpse of him as he silently entered
the haanjhala. He had only to glance in Tezziq's direction and she
rose, following him out with not even a glance behind her. After
Tezziq had gone, Riane rolled over and closed her eyes, but sleep
seemed nowhere near, and she rolled again, staring up at the high,
tented ceiling, wishing she could see the stars and the moonslight.
She thought of Eleana, and her heart contracted; she thought of Giyan
in the grip of the Malasocca, the dark night of the soul, and her
blood ran cold. It was
winter already. Time was ticking away, time during which the daemon
Horolaggia was spinning its web around her, transmogrifying her. Time
when the solstice was coming ever closer. She
must have fallen into an uneasy slumber, for she dreamed of odd
waitings and rhythmic thumpings that shook the very cushions on which
she tossed and turned. How
many hours passed she could not have said, but at length a shadow
passed over her and, opening her eyes, she saw that Tezziq was
returning to the haanjhala. Riane rose on one elbow but, to her
surprise, Tezziq did not lie down on her cushions, but instead went
immediately to the bathtent. Riane rose and silently followed her. Standing
in the shadows of the polished limoniq-wood gateway, she watched as
Tezziq ripped off her gauzy garments with breathless grunting sounds.
Naked, she slid into the water, which reflected the moons-light in
tiny shimmering crescents. Tezziq
waded into the center of the pool, lifted her head, and made an eerie
keening sound. All at once, her shoulders heaved, and she gave a deep
sob. She ground the heels of her hands against her eyes as if to
scrub away an horrific sight. Without
thinking, Riane disrobed and entered the pool. She moved slowly
toward the center, but she was brought up short when Tezziq's eyes
snapped open. "What
are you doing here?" Tezziq whispered fiercely. "You should
be asleep." "I
saw you come in," Riane said. "Why are you weeping?" "I'm
not weeping." Tezziq wiped her eyes. "What made you think
that?" She tossed her head. "Go back to sleep." "I
had a nightmare," Riane said. "I heard an odd wailing, and
the cushions shook as if with an earth tremor. Do you have tremors
here?" The
serpent smile reappeared on Tezziq's face, sending an unpleasant
chill through Riane. "Oh, we have tremors," Tezziq said
softly, "but hardly the kind you mean." "I
don't understand." "As
long as you're here ..." Tezziq turned and handed her the soft
bristled brush. "I feel dirty." "But
you bathed just before—" "Do
as I say," Tezziq snapped. Riane
lifted Tezziq's long hair out of the way. "What
is this?" Her fingertips ran over the reddish rune tattooed at
the base of her spine. "Brush
me hard," Tezziq commanded. Riane
did as she was bade. "The
tew is a family crest," Tezziq said softly. "I
have not seen it on the other girls." "That
is because they are all Gazi Qhan." Riane
paused in her brushing. "And you are not?" "Continue,"
Tezziq snapped. She shivered a little as Riane resumed scrubbing her
down. "I am Jeni Cerii." Her voice was a whisper. "I
was brought here as part of a peace initiative between kapudaan. It
was Makktuub's idea for the two kapudaan to exchange first ajjan. As
a sign of good faith. Jasim, my kapudaan, cheerfully lopped off the
head of Makktuub's gift. Knowing him as I do, I am sure he laughed
while doing it. He sent the head back to Makktuub in a common
wine sack." "He
did not care what happened to you?" "I
rather think he entertained himself imagining the possible
consequences to me." "And
yet Makktuub did not retaliate in kind." Tezziq
shivered. "What
did he do?" Riane asked. "For
an entire year, nothing. Then, early on the anniversary morning of
his first ajjan's murder, he sent a raiding party into Jeni Cerii
territory. They butchered one hundred children." "Miina
protect us." Riane felt her throat constrict. "But you are
alive. And you have become his favorite." "Harder,"
Tezziq whispered in an odd, strangled voice. "Harder." Riane
applied more pressure than she knew was necessary. Tezziq's flesh
began to redden. "Did
you not hear me? I said harder!" And
then, in the soft moonslight, Riane saw something that made her gasp.
The water around Tezziq was stained dark. She dropped the brush, took
Tezziq by the shoulders, and turned her around. "I've hurt you,"
she said. "No,
it is coming from between my thighs." Tezziq's eyelids fluttered
closed, and she let out a long-held breath. "That was no
nightmare you had," she whispered. "What
do you mean?" "The
truth is . . ." Tezziq's pale eyes regarded her levelly. "Here
lies the other part of Makktuub's revenge. He makes me call him wa
tar-abibi, and then his prodigious rutting makes me bleed each
time I lie with him."
12 Very
Black Things
She
is a monster." "Worse even than Konara Bartta, if that is
possible." "It is, and she is." Two
konara, best friends and compatriots, sat in a small, slightly
creepy, barely furnished chamber in a disused part of the Abbey of
Floating White. They sat on dusty uncomfortable chairs with stiff
backs and unforgiving seats. Save for cobwebs, in the entire chamber
there was nothing to look at but each other. An old oil lamp threw
rickety light over them. "It
took but an instant for Konara Urdma to don Konara Bartta's mantle of
power," Konara Inggres said. "She
snuffed out our investigation into Konara Bartta's death the moment
she got wind of it," Konara Lyystra said. Konara
Inggres was prompted to nod. "The anger rolled off her in
waves." She was brown-eyed and red-cheeked, with square
shoulders and a bow of a mouth, a healthy-looking specimen who,
thanks to her athletic bent, was in charge of making sure the
acolytes got their thrice-weekly exercise. "Well, what can you
expect? She's never liked me; she thinks I spend far too much time in
the back rooms of the Library researching my History of Sorcery
class. She's always telling me what to keep in the curriculum and
what to omit without the slightest regard for historical accuracy." "Doubtless
that is because there are many dangers in the Osoru sorcery of
decades ago. Isn't that why those books were relegated to the back
rooms, where only konara have access to them?" "So
she claims." "Besides,
of what possible use is research on Osoru? All those Ramahan with the
Gift were expelled from the abbeys years ago." "True
enough. But there is value in knowing the gnarled pathways of our
roots." Not for the first time, Konara Inggres contemplated
confiding in her friend the fact that she had discovered a latent
talent inside herself—the Gift for Osoru. But the idea that she
was using a good portion of her time in the Library to teach herself
Osoru was such anathema she could not yet bring herself to tell
anyone, even Konara Lyystra. "After all, those who are ignorant
of history are doomed to repeat its follies." "This
word history," Konara Lyystra said. "I sometimes
find myself wondering. Does it pertain to us Ramahan?" She was
dough-faced, slightly round-shouldered owing to her height. A large
mole marinated like a piece of dried fruit in the crevasse between
her lower lip and her chin. "What I mean is this. We continue to
worship Miina without having the slightest notion of whether She
existed at all." "Is
that not the definition of faith?" "I
am speaking of fact, of history." Konara Lyystra shrugged
off this argument. "Once upon a time Miina was as real as you or
I, so the sacred texts tell us. But what if that isn't true? What if
Miina never existed, what if She was a figment of the imagination of
the Druuge?" "Surely
you are not saying that you believe our religion is built on a lie?" "Not
exactly." The most womanly parts of Konara Lyystra had atrophied
from lack of use, or possibly they had never fully developed. In any
event, this gave her the aspect of a child who would never know the
full flower of womanhood. "But we know that Venca was both the
Druuge's language and their sorcery. If this is true. If all the
power in the Cosmos lies within the seven hundred seventy-seven
letters of Venca, is there not justification for claiming that the
language is the Goddess, that Miina is created every time it is
spoken?" "This
is science—possibly an aberrant form of semantics—not
religion." Konara Inggres may have looked shocked, but she
wasn't. The very best part of having a close friend was disagreeing
with her and learning something important from it. "Tell
me the difference." "Religion
brings comfort to those who have none. Science—what does
science do? It asks questions that cannot—and probably should
not—be answered. It says that the Goddess is dead. It says that
She never, in fact, existed. You have only to observe the V'ornn to
see the truth of this. And then the storm comes, as it must to every
life, and science provides no shelter, no comfort whatsoever." "The
day you cease to ask questions," Konara Lyystra said, "is
the day you die. In any event, look at what our religion has done for
us. It codified language, advanced agrarian techniques, stimulated
social intercourse through the many festivals, provided a
governmental structure under which we thrived. Strictly speaking, is
that religion?" "What
you fail to take into consideration is that all of this civilization
you speak of would not have been possible without our faith in Miina.
What would happen, do you think, if you in fact were able to prove
that the Great Goddess was a figment of the Druuge? Faith is all we
have left holding us together in the face of annihilation from the
V'ornn." "Possibly
you are right," Konara Lyystra acknowledged. "But I am
saying that what the Druuge did was good, irrespective of Miina's
existence. Our belief in Her brought us out of the darkness of
anarchy; it delivered us into the hands of civilization. Even more,
it gave us a foundation for an understanding that the Cosmos contains
more than what can be encompassed by our five normal senses. In the
face of that revelation don't you agree that what the Goddess says or
doesn't say is mostly irrelevant?" "I
most certainly do not," Konara Inggres said hotly. She was
enjoying this debate immensely. It kept her from dwelling on the
depressing state of the abbey. "It seems to me that the word of
Miina is more important than ever. You forget that the evil we sense
invaded the abbeys the moment we began straying from Her scripture.
And the more we stray the more of a stranglehold evil has on the Dea
Cretan." "You
see evil everywhere, and I wish to study Venca," Konara Lyystra
replied. "Well, one thing is for certain. Konara Urdma finds
novel ways to punish us for our rebelliousness, this unending night
duty being just the latest. And yet I do not for an instant regret
questioning the official explanation for Konara Bartta's death." "Neither
do I," Konara Inggres said. "I still would like to know
what happened to Konara Bartta." "Good
riddance to her, I say. Konara Urdma is simply aping her mentor. She
lacks Bartta's evil imagination. In time, I believe we can find a way
to handle her." Periodically,
the priestesses fell silent and cocked their heads, listening to the
tiny nighttime sounds the abbey gave off like perfume. The wind
whistling as it worked its way through cracks, the soft grinding of
the foundation stones as the abbey continued to settle into the
mountainside, the small insistent scurry of rodents that nightly
scavenged for food, soft footfalls now and again, the sound of water
running briefly, then the silence once more coming down like a heavy
curtain at the end of a show. They were familiar with the full gamut
of noises. They had been here so long that the sounds gave them a
small comfort they took to bed, a companion of sorts, a sleeping
draught to ease their troubled minds. "It
was as if Konara Urdma knew what was going to happen to Konara
Bartta," Konara Inggres nodded. "Waiting for her chance to
grab power." "Hush
now." Tension lent Konara Lyystra's body a certain dissonance.
"Konara Urdma is our leader." Konara
Inggres leaned forward. "Every day the scripture changes more
and more radically." She was somewhat younger than her friend,
but no less shrewd. She daily wetted her finger, metaphorically
speaking, the better to gauge the direction of the political wind.
Konara Lyystra had taught her to faithfully follow the flow so as not
to be blown off her feet, but it was difficult stifling her opinions.
"You see it yourself. Miina's teachings—the teachings I
learned as a child—have been twisted and deformed. The result
serves one end: the agglomeration of power for the ruling konara." Konara
Lyystra shook her head in sharp warning. "I
must spill my heart to someone, for it is breaking. We are no longer
doing Miina's sacred work. We do not serve Her as we were meant to
do. We are no longer in grace. We have become willing political
pawns, reduced to base marionettes dancing at the end of a string. We
are helpless, living in fear, perpetuating a lie greater than we can
imagine." "Keep
still, I tell you!" "It
is well past midnight. Who can overhear us? No one comes to this part
of the abbey." "Konara
Bartta came," Konara Lyystra said, her eyes darting this way and
that as if expecting Konara Bartta's ghost to materialize, "though
we know not why." "Konara
Bartta is dead. Vaporized in the conflagration that incinerated the
interior of the chamber not ten meters distant from where we now
sit." "The
very same chamber Konara Urdma barred us from entering." "The
likelihood of a dangerous residue, she claimed." Abruptly Konara
Inggres rose, her eyes alight. "Come on," she whispered.
"Let's do it." "Do
what?" Konara Lyystra said, though she knew very well what her
friend had in mind. Without
another word, Konara Inggres leaned over, pulled Konara Lyystra to
her feet, shoved the oil lamp into her hand. At
the door, Konara Lyystra said, rather weakly, "This is
foolhardy." Her
friend gave her a silent laugh. "You sound just like Konara
Urdma." They
crept down the cramped, dank, cobwebbed corridor, listening
breathlessly with each step for even the smallest sound that might
seem out of the ordinary. They heard none, and so advanced to the
door of the chamber in which the mysterious fire had arisen. "The
curious thing," Konara Inggres said, "is that for all its
ferocity, the fire remained completely inside the chamber." She
pointed. "Look here. Not a mark or bit of soot in the corridor.
Is that the way fire acts?" "Fire
is the other side of water," Konara Lyystra replied. "Water
runs, seeking its own level. Fire spreads through air drafts made by
cracks and imperfections." "It
should have whooshed out here into the corridor or spread to adjacent
chambers is what you're saying." Konara Inggres knelt before the
door, pointing out the space between the bottom of the door and the
sill. A span of two fingerwidths. "Why didn't it do that?" Konara
Lyystra squinted at the door and sighed. "There is a blocking
spell. Konara Urdma, in a typical fit of paranoia, has sealed it
tight." Konara
Inggres rose, her arms spread out, her hands slightly cupped. Konara
Lyystra's face blanched. "What are you doing?" "We
want to see what's inside, don't we?" "But
if we—" "Don't
worry. I'll put the blocking spell back in place after we're done.
Konara Urdma will never know the difference." "But
how—" Konara Lyystra shut her mouth because she could
sense that the spell was gone. How did she do that? she
wondered. What spell did she use? Konara
Inggres gripped the handle and the door creaked inward. It was black
as death inside, and a sharp pungent aroma of burned pitch arose and
something else, less well denned, like the slightly sweet air around
a grave. Konara
Lyystra held the oil lamp high as they crossed the threshold.
Something about the chamber made her stomach tighten, and she heard
herself emit a tiny whimper. Part of her wanted to turn around and
run out. A shiver ran through her, rattling her teeth. "What
is that smell? Fear?" "Fear,
yes," Konara Inggres whispered. "But what else?" The
stone walls, ceiling, underfloor were black and gritty with the
fire's aftermath. Whole lines of the rock walls had been deeply
scored, where veins of metallic ore had been liquefied by the
inferno, making it appear as if they had entered a cage that had
recently held a raging monster. They
gingerly approached the center of the chamber, where a small pile of
ash lay heaped. Lifting the hem of her robes, Konara Inggres hunkered
down as Konara Lyystra lowered the lamp. "Someone
has been in here," Konara Inggres said. "You can see the
finger marks combing through the center of the ashes." "Looking
for something," Konara Lyystra affirmed. "But what?" "I
will bet you Konara Urdma knows." Konara Inggres rose. "It
was she who sealed this chamber. It's a surety she performed her own
private investigation." "You
were right. She must have suspected Konara Bartta was coming here."
Konara Lyystra licked her lips nervously. "Could we think about
leaving now? There's something in here that makes my stomach crawl." "Pray
to Miina." "I
have. The Goddess seems to be absent from this chamber." Konara
Inggres was too engrossed to respond. She was studying the underlying
pattern of the pile of ash. Her eyes followed the longest finger of
ash into a shadowed corner of the blasted chamber. "Let me have
that." She took the lantern from her friend, advancing into the
corner, Konara Lyystra just behind her. The shadows reluctantly
retreated before the lamp's flame. "Ah,
what have we here?" Konara Inggres bent and retrieved something
small that had been thrown into the very deepest corner. Using the
hem of her robe, she rubbed the brittle charcoal crust off it. A
small bit of etched bronze was revealed, gleaming dully in the
lamplight. She cleaned it completely and held it up, turning it
slowly between her fingertips. "What do you make of this?" With
a deep and abiding trepidation, Konara Lyystra took it from her,
examined it closely. "It is old, hand-forged. It looks ... If I
didn't know better . . ." She bit her lip. "What?
What do you think it is?" "I
have seen pictures. In a book. Diagrams." Konara Lyystra's eyes
met her friend's and held them. "It's a trigger for a had-atta." "What?
The Flute is illegal." The had-atta was an ancient
instrument, used, it was said, to test for infiltration of heretics.
A slender crystal cylinder was slowly lowered down the suspect's
throat, hence the name. It was used to discover if a Ramahan was a
heretic, had become unbound in her ties to Miina. "They were
destroyed more than a century ago." "Obviously
not all of them." Now
they understood the rank smell of fear infesting the place. Konara
Inggres nodded. "Konara Bartta came here regularly—" "Leyna
Astar, Konara Laudenum, the acolyte Riane. Those missing Ramahan—" "Died
of accidents." "So
it was reported." "Tortured
instead. Dear sweet Miina." The
visitor's bell sounded deep, muffled, faraway, but it made them start
all the same. "At
this time of night?" Konara Inggres said, annoyed. "It
is my turn." Konara Lyystra, who seemed relieved to get away
from this chamber of horrors, gave her back the trigger. "Guard
this well." As she hurried through the charred door, she added,
"Don't stay here alone. Seal it back up as quickly as you can." Konara
Inggres, who was staring intently at the trigger, nodded absently. The
Lady Giyan stood by the leaded-glass window of Konara Urdma's office
in the Abbey of Floating White, drinking in the black night. Below
her, balanced on its many-tiered mountain ledge, Stone Border lay
dark and brooding. She stared down at the place of her birth with
otherworldly eyes as if with that one baleful look she could
incinerate every inhabitant, as if she could wipe the entire
excrescence from the mountainside. That
would come, she knew, in time. Wrapped
in her long black cloak, she had arrived at the front entrance to
Floating White, and had rung the bellchain, announcing her arrival.
Beneath closed lids, her eyeballs had commenced a furious movement.
By the time the mammoth door creaked inward, her eyes, which had been
transformed by the beginnings of the Malasocca, had resumed their
perfectly normal appearance. She
had smiled into the acolyte's face. Riane would not have recognized
that smile, for it bore no resemblance to Giyan's natural expression.
With good reason. Beneath the shell of Giyan's Kundalan self lurked
the very black thing, the seepage from the Abyss, the archdae-mon
Horolaggia. He was not completely inside her. But he gained enough
control to manipulate her. What she did and said came from him. In
truth, that smile was a horrifying thing, but the acolyte saw only
what she was meant to see, and she returned the smile, standing back,
allowing Giyan and the very black thing entrance to the abbey and all
that dwelled there in evil and in ignorance. It
had been Bartta who had continued and expanded upon the alterations
of the teachings of the Great Goddess Miina, begun by Konara Mossa
during her iron-willed reign in the abbey. Now it was Konara Urdma's
turn. The evil that had begun to infiltrate the abbey in the form of
Konara Mossa had continued to thrive under Bartta, and Konara Urdma,
who was nothing if not an apt pupil and a quick study, was in the
process of taking it to full flower. Giyan
had followed the acolyte through the gardens, the atria, into the
interior of the abbey, where she asked another acolyte to ring for
the konara on duty. The acolyte was small, fine-featured, slender as
a reed. Too young to remember Giyan or even to have heard her name
mentioned. In blissful ignorance, then, she had delivered Giyan here,
where, after asking if she could bring the visitor food or drink, she
had departed. Giyan
turned away from the window and her grim contemplation. Bronze
filigreed lamps burned oil laced with incense. Small spirals of smoke
curled from the tip of the lamplights, disappearing into the heavy
wood beams of the ceiling. In the five minutes or so while she was
alone, Giyan conjured a black serpentskin satchel from beneath her
cloak. This she placed on one corner of the desk, arranging it just
so. Then she turned, stared at her reflection in the mirror that hung
on the wall. The thorned crown atop her head was plainly visible, as
were the spikes corkscrewed through the palms of her hands. They were
the physical manifestations of the psychic war being waged inside her
for the prize of her spirit. In this realm, they were only visible in
mirrors. Horolaggia now suspected that it had been a mistake to have
moved against Giyan while the girl was with her, because the thorns
were visible to a sorceress's penetrating gaze at the moment the
Malasocca was initiated. The girl had doubtless seen them, and though
he had discerned that she was but a novice, and therefore would not
understand what she had seen, nevertheless she might someday come to
use this knowledge against him. Giyan
raised her left arm, her fingers moved in a rhythm and pattern
familiar to Horolaggia and the silvered glass of the mirror melted
into a puddle on the floor, leaving a deaf, dumb, and blind space
within the frame. She extracted from the serpentskin satchel a length
of tightly rolled film that shimmered and glistered. This she
unfurled on the spot where the mirror had been. A new thornless
reflection appeared, answerable only to her own command. She turned
from admiring her handiwork as she heard someone enter the office. "Good
evening, Konara Lyystra, or should I say good morning," she said
in her most winning voice. "I do apologize for the inconvenient
hour of my arrival, but I was late enough that no inn in Stone Border
was open to take me in." "The
Abbey of Floating White is always open to—" All the blood
drained from Konara Lyystra's doughy face, "Merciful Miina}
Giyan? Is that you?" "It
is, indeed." "Are
you passing through—?" "I
have returned to the abbey, I have come home," Giyan said, and
held out her arms just in time for Konara Lyystra to hurl herself
into them. "Oh,
it has been so long, Giyan!" Konara Lyystra felt herself fairly
overcome with emotion. "We had never dared hope." "I
know, I know. And yet I am here." Giyan stroked the back of her
head. "And you have been elevated from shima to konara."
She held the other at arm's length, beaming. "No less than you
deserve, I am sure. Konara
Lyystra ducked her head in mute delight. "Now
pour me a drink of sweet icewine, konara, that I may offer a toast to
suit this occasion." "Konara,
indeed. We were always more intimate than that." Konara
Lyystra went to the sideboard, where a decanter and the slim, stemmed
glasses that had once belonged to Konara Mossa clustered on a
chased-copper tray. "You must call me as you always did. I
insist." Giyan
laughed gently and sweetly. "In that event." She accepted
the filled glass. The icewine had a slight reddish tinge, a sure sign
that it was of the highest quality. Poorer grades were yellowish or
greenish. She lifted her glass. "To you, Lyystra, and your
spiritual elevation." The
rims came together and the crystal sang. But there was no joy in
Konara Lyystra's face. "Konara I may be, but alas, as to my
spiritual elevation . . ." She let her words gutter in the
lamplight of the office. Giyan
frowned. "I do not mark your meaning." "This
is Konara Urdma's domain, and before her it was your sister's." "This
office." "No,"
Konara Lyystra said. "The abbey itself." Giyan's
frown deepened. "But the Dea Cretan." "Exists
in name only." Konara Lyystra sighed. "It pains me to be
the bearer of heavy tidings, but Konara Bartta lost her spiritual
way." "She—" "And
now she is dead, incinerated in curious and mysterious circumstances,
and we forbidden to investigate." Giyan
put her icewine down on the desk almost untouched. "Who forbids
it?" she said darkly. "Konara
Urdma, who has set herself up in your sister's place, moved into
Bartta's quarters on the very day of her demise. Tell me. In your
opinion is this seemly?" Giyan
shook her head. "Worse
still, Miina's teachings have been lost. Worse than lost. Perverted.
You were exiled because you possessed the Gift of Osoru. All those
similarly gifted have been purged. Only Kyofu is taught here now, and
daily the lists of taboo words grow. We are forbidden, for instance,
to speak of the Ja-Gaar, Miina's sacred beasts, and their likeness
has been struck down or defaced wherever they are found." "This
is outrageous behavior. Unthinkable!" Giyan was opening the
serpentskin satchel. With her back to Konara Lyystra, she daubed
something onto the tip of her tongue. When she turned back, she
lifted a forefinger. "You did well to forewarn me. And though my
heart mourns for my twin sister, so long absent from my side, from
what you tell me there is a great deal of work to be done." A
look of relief flooded Konara Lyystra's face. "I could not agree
more. You are the one we have been waiting for to lift us out of the
comfortable bed evil has made in our beloved abbey." "Then
come, brave Lyystra," Giyan said, putting her arm around the
other. "Together we will right the wrongs that have been visited
upon Miina's children." As
they neared the door, she swung Konara Lyystra around, grabbed her by
the shoulders and kissed her. Before the startled Ramahan could
react, Giyan's mouth opened and her tongue pushed through the other
set of lips. Konara
Lyystra gasped and tried to wrest herself from Giyan's grip. She was
strong, but not nearly strong enough. And
she abruptly lost strength. Something black and squirmy had taken up
residence in her mouth. She bent over, gagging, trying to vomit up
the thing. But it was tenacious and would not budge. Then she felt a
searing pain in the roof of her mouth, as if a sword of fire was
slicing through her, and she went down on her knees. Giyan
cradled Konara Lyystra's sweaty head, crooning a daemon-song, while
she shuddered and shook and moaned every now and again. And
then it was done. Konara Lyystra gave a little gasp and Giyan took
her under her arms, lifted her up, looked into her eyes, which were
completely white now, white as Giyan's. Giyan passed a hand over her
face, the lids fluttered closed, and the eyeballs commenced to roll
this way and that. When they were still again, Giyan removed her
hand. Konara Lyystra's eyes were the same as they ever had been. "I
am charging you with the removal of the mirrors," Giyan said.
"All mirrors in the abbey must be destroyed. Completely." Konara
Lyystra nodded her head obediently. "Yes, Mother." "If
someone should inquire, you are to tell her that the evil that has
infested the abbey sleeps within the mirrors. Is that clear?" "Yes,
Mother." Konara
Lyystra began to leave, but Giyan stopped her momentarily. "It's
all right now," she said softly. "Everything will be fine."
And Konara Lyystra smiled, a dead, wooden, soulless thing. "Yes,"
she said. "It is perfect." Ever
since he had seen the face—or whatever it was—in the
mirror, Kurgan was prone to a particular nightmare. Not that he ever
saw that face—or whatever it was—in this nightmare. Not
that he would ever wish to again. He had thought himself fearless,
but this thing he had seen in the mirror had brought a
metallic taste to his mouth. He hadn't been able to eat for the rest
of the day, and he had avoided Nith Batoxxx for as long as he was
able. Now, when he was obliged to speak with the Gyrgon he could feel
his blood run cold. What
he had seen in that mirror defied description. Each time he tried to
recall it a shiver raced down his spine. That night, after the palace
was asleep, he had stolen into that chamber and smashed the mirror to
smithereens. So now, whether it be a communication device or, as he
most feared, the repository of the Gyrgon's true reflection, it was
gone. The
nightmare plagued him, but it had its positive side for it served to
remind him of how much he did not know. That was something his
father, Wennn Stogggul, never came to realize. Eventually, it caused
his downfall. He had cut himself off from events around him both by
his office and by his arrogance. An ignorant V'ornn—and an
arrogant one, to boot—is ripe to be sucked into a snare. This
Kurgan had cleverly done. This he vowed would never happen to him. He
would never repeat the mistakes of his father. To
this end, he had determined that he required a trustworthy pipeline
to the quotidian events of the city. Some V'ornn who heard and could
report on both rumors and facts secreted away in hurried whispers and
furtive conversations. His knowledge of the constantly shifting tide
of crosscurrents would keep him one step ahead. He needed just the
right individual. And at last he determined who that individual
should be, and that night he gave orders for her to be brought to his
private quarters at the palace. By
the time she arrived, night was in full flower. The Promenade would
be jumping with the effusive eruption from the nearby Kalllis-totos,
whose raucous discourse would surely drown out the voices of the
fishers who would soon be taken away on the rising tide. Blood Tide
would be packed, hot with steaming bodies and volatile conversations.
Secrets folded into every shadowed cornice and corner. "Regent,
it is good to see you again," Rada said when she was escorted
into his presence by a pair of Haaar-kyut. "But may I ask the
occasion for this summons?" He
had been lounging by the fireplace, keenly anticipating her arrival.
The fire was behind him, a kind of imperial corona. He could see that
she was not happy. This hour was the height of her business, and she
was here in the regent's palace instead of tending to her customers.
He was
pleased. It was the proper reaction. He had established his power
over her. "Sit
down," he said. "We shall share a drink together." Her
sifeyn was pulled over her fragrantly oiled skull, but he could see
gleaming the tips of her diadem. The firelight threw her beauty into
stark prominence, not that it mattered to him. For he was seeing not
Rada but the Kundalan female whom he and Annon had come upon in the
woods. She had been bathing in the creek; she had pulled a filigreed
pin from her hair and it had cascaded down her back. The sight had
filled his eyes, his mind, his loins, and he could do ought but act. "You
have something of import to say to me, regent?" Her
voice snapped him back to the present. But the afterimage of that
Kundalan female caused the breath to catch in his throat. "I
wish to avail myself of your talents." "This
is surprising to me. I think you know nothing of them, regent." "In
that you are wrong." He came away from the blaze and sprawled on
a sofa. "Please do sit down." When she had complied,
perching herself on the edge of a chair facing him, he poured them
both fire-grade numaaadis from a decanter sitting on a Khagggun
beaten-bronze camp table. He handed her a goblet, took up the other.
"Many times I have seen you at work in Blood Tide. I have seen
you handle Mesagggun and Sarakkon three times your size. There isn't
a patron who comes through your door who does not respect you. I want
to tap into that." "This
bluntness comes, I suppose, from the rapid elevation of your status,"
she said. "In
truth, I have spent more time taking orders than giving them." She
pursed her lips. "Am I meant to feel sorry for you, regent?" "This
was no order." "Better
for both of us, I warrant." She
sipped her drink. "What's
the matter?" he asked. "Is the numaaadis not to your
liking?" "It's
quite good," she said. "But this palace ... it strikes me
as a melancholy place." "Personally,
I like it. Dark, empty, serene. I have time to sort through my
thoughts." "What
thoughts might those be, regent?" "Lately,
I am plagued by a nightmare." "I
am distressed to hear it." "You
do not know me well enough to mean that." He
looked into the fire. Often, he found those flames hypnotic, and he
would fall into a brief reverie, a kind of waking dreamscape where
his overweening ambition ran rampant. Since seeing that face in the
mirror though . . . "It
is always the same, this nightmare. I am submerged in black water.
The odd thing is that I have no trouble breathing. Odder still, is
the face before me. It is female, and beautiful, but it is pale as
death—ash-white with a bluish tinge—and eyes that seem to
see right through me." "A
V'ornn goddess, a concubine of the dead god Enlil, perhaps." "Not
V'ornn. Kundalan," he said softly. "She has hair, thick as
a copse of trees, long as a sea-snake. It, too, is white as ash." Rada
seemed amused. "Does she talk to you, this Kundalan female?" "That
is the oddest part. She is begging me for help." Rada
put down her goblet. "Regent, if I may ask. Why are you telling
me this?" "I
suppose because there is no one else to tell." "That
seems terribly sad." He
rose and held out his hand, she took it wordlessly and he pulled her
to her feet. She was standing very close to him. "I do not want
you to leave," he said softly. "Not just yet." He
led her into his bedchamber and disrobed her. He could not wait, and
took her against the wall. At the end, he thought she cried out,
though there was an echo in his mind, sunlight off the skin of the
creek, the thick hair entangling him, the lush Kundalan body, the
thrusting. He wished Rada had hair, long dark thick. Entwining him. But,
after all, she was only a Tuskugggun. While
she dressed, he sat on the edge of the unrumpled bed, and said, "What
if you no longer needed your business to live?" She
looked at him. He could read nothing in her expression. It was as if
nothing had happened between them. For him, it seemed, nothing had. "Running
Blood Tide is all I can do," she said. "When my mother died
. . ." She shrugged. "She was a gambler. There is a
mountain of debt." "A
mountain to you. Not to me, I warrant." "Dear
regent." She cocked her head. "What do you have in mind?" "You
are proprietress of a casteless tavern. As such, it is a nexus point
for a broad cross section of the city's populace. This is of great
interest to me." He
produced a laaga stick, lighted it. After inhaling deeply, he passed
it over to her. While she smoked, he said, "What I propose is a
simple exchange. I pay off your debt." He watched her moist
lips, half-parted, the dregs of the smoke drifting between them. "In
return, you provide me with all the news, gossip, rumors, and secrets
that nightly float through Blood Tide." "A
simple exchange. Regent, nothing about you is simple." She
handed the laaga stick back to him. "Tell me. What am I
missing?" There
came at that moment a discreet knock on the door. A look of
annoyance, though fleeting, passed across Kurgan's face. When the
knock came again he pushed himself off the bed, wrapped himself in a
robe, and went to the door. Nith
Batoxxx stood just outside. "I
did not mean to intrude upon your privacy," the Gyrgon said. Kurgan
knew that was just what he had meant to do, and he despised him all
the more for the pettiness of his action. But he showed none of this
as he stepped across the threshold, pulled the door to behind him.
Being so near the Gyrgon, he tried not to shudder. "You
have ordered the Khagggun to discontinue their ascendance to Great
Caste status," Nith Batoxxx said. "This is as it should be.
But the change in the status quo never should have begun in the first
place." "That
was my father's doing," Kurgan said. "It had nothing to do
with me." "On
the contrary." Nith Batoxxx's ruby-irised eyes blazed. "You
are Stogggul. You are responsible. If there is any unrest among the
Khagggun, you must deal with it decisively. I will not tolerate one
breath of rebellion among any of the castes. Is that clear?" "Eminently,"
Kurgan said. Nith
Batoxxx stood absolutely still for a moment. "And I will not
tolerate insolence from you." He took a step closer to Kurgan.
"You think you are invincible." There was a crackle of
hyperexcited ions sparking. "I am here to tell you that you are
wrong." With
that, the Gyrgon turned and walked away. It was not until he
disappeared around a corner that Kurgan realized he was trembling. He
spent a moment restoring himself to a semblance of equanimity before
returning to his bedroom. Rada,
fully clothed, was out on the balcony. She had thrown the
window-doors wide open, and the room was cold. He stood looking at
her for a moment. Then he crossed the room and joined her. She
turned when she heard him. The end of the laaga stick was between her
fingers. "You will pay off my debt?" "First
thing in the morning. If. . Now
she smiled. "Courage and fortitude, as the Sarakkon say. If
what, regent?" "If
you will tell me what connection the Sarakkonian captain Courion has
with Nith Batoxxx." He saw her expression, and now it was his
turn to smile. "I have seen Courion and the Gyrgon together in
your office." That was how, a little more than six weeks ago, he
had discovered that the Old V'ornn was Nith Batoxxx. "They could
not possibly have been in there without your knowledge and consent." "The
transactions between Courion and Nith Batoxxx take place regularly.
The Gyrgon has taken a liking to my tavern. It is rough and raucous,
and my clientele are only too happy to keep themselves to
themselves." She put her hands together, laced her fingers. "A
lot of coins cross my palms. For my own protection, I had a neural
memory net installed." "Neural
memory nets are illegal." "Really?
I had no idea." She chuckled deep in her throat. "Well,
then, I really must get around to ripping mine out one of these
days." "I
should report you." "Go
ahead. I have friends in high places." He
laughed. "The
illegal memory net recorded some discussions between Nith
Batoxxx and Courion of a highly illegal nature." "And
the gist of those discussions?" "Nith
Batoxxx has a particular interest in salamuuun." "So
do I. The drug is the sole province of the Ashera Consortium. Only
they know where it is manufactured. My father believed that the
Ashera murdered my grandfather to keep that secret safe. But why
would Nith Batoxxx hold secret meetings with a Sarakkonian captain
about salamuuun?" "Courion
is a smuggler like all captains, is he not?" "True
enough. He does a healthy business in laaga. But not salamuuun. It is
simply not possible. The Ashera who took control of the Consortium
here on Kundala after Eleusis and his family were killed are even
more hard-nosed about salamuuun distribution than their predecessor." "Nevertheless,
the memory net makes it clear that salamuuun is the basis of their
relationship." Kurgan
stared into the enigmatic eyes. He was pleased with her. She had
provided the first tangible lead to a Gyrgon secret. If he could
discover the basis of Nith Batoxxx's clandestine activity with the
Sarakkon, he would have some badly needed leverage over the Gyrgon.
For that, he would have to spend some time with Courion. "You
have done well," he told her. "But from now on I want us to
have no direct contact. I do not wish to arouse the suspicions of
anyone who frequents Blood Tide. But I will require periodic
intelligence. Is this understood?" "Yes,
regent." "Use
data-decagons." He directed her with his raised arm. "Come.
On the way out I will introduce you to one of my most trusted
Haaar-Kyut. He will be at Blood Tide once a week. You will serve him.
You will place the data-decagon at the bottom of his goblet. This
will ensure your intelligence reaches me undetected." She
nodded. As she turned to go, he held her back a moment. "Rada,
tell me what you know of the seven Portals." "I
know nothing of them. What are they?" Kurgan
shrugged, betraying nothing of the extreme import of his question.
Nith Batoxxx was desperate to find the location of those Portals, he
had said that he would reward handsomely whoever provided the
information. "Keep
your ears open. Ask around. Let me know what you come up with." He
closed the door softly after her. Terrettt
had begun to remember his dreams—or at least one, in
particular. This dream recurred often, night or day, he no longer
knew which, leaving a scar upon whatever part of his brain functioned
normally. So he remembered, whether he chose to or not. He'd had the
dream now for some time—so long, in fact, that when he entered
his dream it almost seemed like coming home. Except this home was a
scary place—an exceptionally scary place. It
was dark, for one thing; and for another, it was cold. So cold that
he began to shiver the moment he felt the icy black water envelop
him. Then, he did nothing, it seemed, but hang upside down in this
water that was cold and clear and oddly slippery. It was this
slippery quality that scared Terrettt most, scared him more than the
cold, more even than the darkness, which he did not like at all. He
didn't like the darkness because he was convinced that the voices he
heard, the relentless clamor, the chaos of sound and fury that
inhabited his head like a rabid horde, emerged from this darkness. It
was a very special darkness, you see, not the indigo darkness of
twilight—as he recalled it in his memory and resurrected in his
frantically drawn paintings—not the velvet darkness of a
moonslit evening, or even the bitter blackness of a storm-tossed
midnight. No, it was something more, something deeper, darker, its
absoluteness born of sinister mutterings and evil incantations,
mid-wifed by envy, hatred, vengeance, and a perverse desire to take
life and snuff it out like a pitiable candleflame. And
in his dream, he was immersed in this darkness, in this water that
tasted of bitterroot and bile. He was peculiarly aware of someone
else, hanging as he hung, and he was aware that this other was . . .
well, waiting. A sizzle of anticipation, edged by elation and, yes,
fear made ripples, so the water slipped and slithered over his bare
flesh like cruel-eyed serpents, making his flesh shrink and crawl. He
abhorred serpents with their legless movement, their silent spying,
their black unknowable thoughts. And that is why he hated the
slippery water so. But he could not move. As much as he wanted to
climb out of the water, as much as the fear flooded through him,
making tears stream from his eyes, he remained paralyzed. Utterly
helpless. Feeling
it rise up from the depths below him. What was it? He never knew; he
always woke up just as it approached. But he knew things about it
just the same, oh, yes he did. The evil of it was so strong, so
intense that it came to him as a burnt smell as of ravaged homes and
spent dreams, a taste that made him want to gag and scream all at
once. More
than once he grew terrified that he would choke on his own vomit, but
his mouth never opened, and so nothing ever came out. That did not
stop his stomachs from feeling as if they wanted to rise up into his
throat and turn themselves inside out. It did not stop his hearts
from pounding so hard he felt they must surely burst through the wall
of his chest to flood his entire being with their rapid-fire pulse.
It did not stop his nerves from screeching until he longed only for
the sweet oblivion of unconsciousness. And
so, he sensed this thing of depthless evil—whatever it was—
rising toward him, and he sensed, too, the opened maw of its
horrifying embrace, implacable as the poisonous, taloned gates of
N'Luuura. It
came. It came. Just
before it was about to devour him whole, he opened his eyes, sobbing.
. . And
here came Kirlll Qandda at the run, responding to the guttural howls,
the ghastly caterwauling he set up, to the thrashing of his body, to
the heavy rhythmic thumps as he threw himself against the wall,
screaming inside his head get it out, get it out, getitout! He
knew Kirlll Qandda's touch, knew the Deirus would not hurt him, and
yet the part of his brain that was melted, that dreamed the
nightmarish dreams, quailed and shivered, shuddered and shook at the
touch. He tried to bite Kirlll Qandda, and he could not say why save
that the liquid part of his brain, soaked in the black water of the
well inside his head, made it an imperative. Because—and when
he tried to think about it, it was not clear—what if this
wasn't Kirlll Qandda at all, this thing with arms and long tapering
fingers and breath like rotting clemetts, what if this room in
Receiving Spirit was the dream, the illusion, the nightmare, what if
he was hanging upside down in the well, waiting, and this was—He
screamed and thrashed, and he lashed out, drawing blood—his Or
someone else's, he could not be sure. The terror was like a living
thing squirming inside him, the implications of the well and where it
went, what lurked at its deep bottom, made his brain want to explode,
made him want to rend his skin with his nails, made him want to hurl
himself from the window across the room, plummeting through the soft
air, to smash to the stone pavement far below, free at last. And
then his eyes were being pulled open and he arched back, knowing what
was coming, hating it, fearing it, tasting it, somehow, as the spray
coated his eyes, the potent chemicals absorbed into his system in the
space of one ragged breath. Like air being let out of an overfilled
balloon, Terrettt gave one long shuddering exhale, and the terror
left him, life fled him—at least life as he could define it—and
he felt a thick mask forming over his face, a mask of lassitude if
not serenity. All at once, he forgot the well, the awful cold empty
blackness, and what he had glimpsed swimming up toward him. All at
once, he could not connect one thought with another, and did not
really want to. Dimly,
he was aware of Kirlll Qandda carrying him back to bed, of his sister
Marethyn, her face pale and drawn with worry, pulling the linens up
around his chin, wishing him pleasant dreams. Which he had in great
multitudes. What he regretted most was the concern he caused her. He
loved Marethyn with both his hearts. He would gladly have sacrificed
himself to make her happy. In fact, he would welcome such a
circumstance, for it would prove to him that he had a purpose, that
his own life had been worth something after all. Much
later, he arose and peed heavily into the sink where he dutifully and
lovingly washed his brushes. Using his extreme hunger and parched
mouth as goads, he grabbed his paints. He cut the pigments with his
own sweat, in which he was drenched, and set to slashing and
swirling, trying to express in an altogether different manner his
horror and fear, everything he had seen and felt, everything the
dream meant to him or might ever mean. But no matter how hard he
tried it wasn't what he had seen or what he wanted to express. As
usual, his memory was shot, the drugs in the spray altering the
chemical makeup of the memories so that what he conjured up were
copies of the originals, reflections, ghosts, softened, edited,
riddled with gaps that always defeated him. He grunted as he worked,
hunched over his palette, looking more like an animal than a V'ornn,
and a Stogggul at that. No
wonder his family never came to see him. Save Marethyn, who could
look beyond his nonresponsiveness, his violent outbursts. She
listened when he spoke or, more accurately, listened when he tried to
speak. But it was as if he was still trapped in his dream. He could
hear the words in his head, even form them into phrases and sentences
before he ever opened his mouth. But, then, what would come out?
Madness. The cusp of madness, all his well-thought-out sentences
drowned in the line of spittle spurting between his bared teeth. For
the thousandth time, he glanced up, working for want of a clearer
memory with the topographical map Marethyn had put up on the wall. He
returned to his painting and, almost instantly, his brush flashed
across the paper. Nothing was more important than exorcising the
terror that gripped him out of sleep, that ravaged his brain day and
night with its bedlam of voices, its multitude of hands grabbing
greedily for a piece of his mind. But he would not let them, oh no.
He turned violent, hit out at them, screaming at them, and, for a
time, they faded away. Then the dream would recur, he would be under
the black water, hanging by his heels, staring down into the depths,
waiting for him to appear . . . He
shook his head, grunting, drooling, painfully and painstakingly
making himself put the end of one thought against the beginning of
another, until he had a stream that he could render in color and
texture on canvas. These were his paintings, his precious paintings,
and as long as Marethyn had them he was confident that one day she
would see them for what they were, she would understand that they
were messages meant for her. Because she was the only one who came,
who spent time with him, who did not believe him mad. And he was sure
that sooner or later she would catch on, she would see what it was he
was painting, and know it for what it really was. Then
he forgot what it was he had been thinking, forgot that he could
think at all. He was screaming and screaming and screaming and
eventually his screams were punctuated by the rhythm of pounding
feet. He
is all right," Kirlll Qandda said, "for now." Marethyn
smoothed her hand over Terrettt's damp forehead. "How long will
he sleep?" "Long
enough," Kirlll Qandda said, "to get his strength back."
Marethyn sat down by Terrettt's bedside. She was close to tears. She
had been here ever since Kirlll Qandda had contacted her, all night,
it seemed, and into this dreary, enervating morning. She missed
Sornnn desperately, wished he was here beside her, but for a couple
of hours at least she had stopped thinking about Tettsie's death.
"And still there is no improvement." Kirlll
Qandda clasped his hands in front of him. "I wish I could be
more encouraging, but nothing I have tried has had the slightest
effect on his condition, which continues to defy diagnosis. Without
the proper diagnosis, as you must know, there is virtually no hope of
finding a cure." All
at once, Marethyn burst into tears. "Ah,
my dear, please ignore me," the Deirus said, wringing his hands.
"I always say the wrong thing." "It
is all too much, you see," she sobbed. "But,
oh, how could I be so thickheaded?" he said. "I was honored
you asked me to preside over your grandmother's remains." Tettsie's
final arrangements had been brief and without fanfare.
Tus-kugggun—even Great Caste Tuskugggun like Tettsie—were
not entitled to the Rescendance. After Kirlll Qandda had examined
her, she had been summarily cremated. "It
was clear that you and she were very close." He clucked his
tongue against the roof of his mouth. "But as far as Terrettt is
concerned you must not give up hope. I haven't." She
looked up at him. "No?" "Absolutely
not. Even now I have a number of radically new approaches I am
devising." He raised a slender, bony finger. "You just stay
here a moment and take deep, even breaths." He
went out of Terrettt's room for a moment. When he returned, he was
carrying a small goblet. He knelt beside her, put her fingers around
the stem. "You must restore yourself, Marethyn Stogggul." She
drank the fire-grade numaaadis gratefully. "I thought liquor was
forbidden here." The
Deirus gave her a small smile. "Every V'ornn needs a bit of
restoration, now and then." "Thank
you," she said, handing him back the empty goblet. "You
were very kind and understanding with Tettsie, and now you are
again." "It
is nothing." "No.
It is most assuredly not 'nothing. ' You are the first one in here to
show the slightest kindness toward my brother." He
spread his hands. "How could I do any less?" "That
sounds very Kundalan." Kirlll
Qandda looked at her for what seemed a long time. "Are you a
sympathizer?" "I
beg your pardon?" "No,
no." He waved his hands. "It is nothing." "I
heard what you said. I will not forget it." He
blanched. "No,
you misunderstand. I would never betray your trust. In fact, I myself
have been thinking ..." "There
are quite a few of us, you know." "No,"
she said, her hearts suddenly beating faster. "I did not." "Well,
it's true," he whispered, and giggled a little, possibly from an
excess of nerves. She
lowered her voice as well. "It's odd you should say that. I was
recently in a space within a warehouse, filled with artifacts from
the Korrush and other Kundalan lands." "What
is odd about that?" "It
is owned by a Bashkir." "Indeed?" "And
there were some boxes, Khagggun-looking because of the sigils, and I
got the feeling . . . you know, it was just a feeling." "Was
it Sornnn SaTrryn's warehouse?" When she looked at him, he
hastened to add, "I could not help noticing him with you while I
examined your grandmother." "Tettsie
was his mother's best friend." "The
boxes were Khagggun, you say?" As
if suddenly becoming aware of the perilous turn the conversation had
taken, she rose abruptly, and there ensued a small but thoroughly
awkward silence, which had the effect of making the skin at the back
of her neck crawl. "Thank
you again, Kirlll Qandda," she said at last. "For
everything." "I
wish I had better news." The Deirus escorted her to the door.
"Have faith. Perhaps next time I will." Does
it have to be so dark in here?" Eleana asked. "The Teyj
says yes," Rekkk told her. "It's pitch-black." She
could feel his presence, but she could not see him. And where was the
Gyrgon-bred bird? "Not even one oil lamp?" "Not even
one photon of light, the Teyj says." They
had descended a precipitous staircase, a black-timbered upper portion
followed by a stone flight, smooth and hollowed by wear. At its
bottom was a warren of narrow cellar passageways and low-ceilinged
chambers underneath the abbey. There was about the place a dank and
decidedly forbidding air, as if they were approaching the repository
for the bones of disgraced Ramahan. The sense of abandonment and
regret was everywhere evident in the piles of icons, dusty and
diademed, animal carvings, cracked and cobwebbed, altars and fonts,
chipped and timeworn, in which vermin had made their nests. The dregs
of a once-limber civilization in decline, lost now, mysterious even
to itself. "How
do you know what the Teyj says?" she asked him as she stood in
the dark. "Something
happened when he worked on me." "It slipped a Gyrgon device
into you, you mean." "I don't think so," Rekkk said.
"I'm already part Gyrgon. Nith Sahor altered me when he
implanted this prototype okummmon in my arm. It's of his own
manufacture." "That doesn't explain why—" "When
the Teyj was repairing me he established a connection, possibly
through the okummmon. It is a communication device." "Yours
is much more," she said. "I've seen how you can
transmogrify matter from one state to another by feeding it into the
okummmon's slot." The
Teyj gave a brief, fluted call, and Rekkk said, "Hush now, he's
about to activate the duscaant." "Why
do you insist on calling the bird a 'he' when it's just an animal?" The
Teyj's shrill warning cry silenced her. A
brilliant cone of light pierced the darkness. It seemed to emanate
from everywhere at once. Then, abruptly, it coalesced into a sphere
that bubbled and pulsed with milky life. The milkiness turned
transparent, revealing the inside of the abbey's Library where the
duscaant had been secreted. And then, as if a set of doors had been
thrown open, Eleana and Rekkk found themselves inside the Library,
observing history, random moments from the past that the duscaant had
recorded for its Gyrgon masters. Ramahan
passed to and fro, oblivious to its existence. There was talk of
spells and lessons, there was small gossip and inconsequential
asides, there was a somber airiness. A Ramahan wondered if she was
getting too fat, another sitting at the long refectory table they had
come to know so well confided to her neighbor that she had taken a
book from the Library to study from overnight and had forgotten to
return it. Bells chimed deeply and melodiously, and there was
silence, and then the prayers began. And it was these quotidian
stitches dropped out of the warp and weft of a history so recently
written that made Eleana particularly uneasy, for she felt keenly the
particular damage inflicted by the voyeur, the invasion of something
that was meant to be inviolate. And she put her hands across her
ballooning belly in an instinctual effort to protect her baby because
this seemed to her to be an act of violence more heinous, even, than
the slaughter that had sent the plumes of black smoke into the dying
light of a foreshortened autumn afternoon. Because it crept in the
shadows, gobbling up lives, hidden from view. As
a former leader of a Resistance cell she knew better than most
Kundalan the value of clandestine intelligence gathering, and of
course part of her would have given an arm for a single duscaant to
plant in the headquarters of Line-General Lokck Werrrent. But with
the baby growing inside her that life seemed distant and dim. She put
a hand to her head. What was happening to her? She had been raised a
child of the war against the V'ornn. Her parents had been murdered by
Kha-gggun, her friends and compatriots, as well. She had always been
defined in terms of her warrior's heart. And now here she was
harboring these feelings, pulling back from violence. She could feel
herself refo-cusing her energies from rage to protection. The baby
inside her living, swimming, kicking, breathing when she breathed,
his twin V'ornn hearts double-beating in counterpoint to her own. He
was so unknowing, helpless, vulnerable, just like these long-dead
Ramahan walking and speaking and praying all around her in the
dusklight of the duscaant's irradiated theater. She would do anything
to protect him from the savage beast ravaging the world. The
light changed abruptly, the Library, surrounded by the citadel |;
of the night, lit with deeply incised bronze oil lamps, their orange |;
flames reflected in the huge windowpanes. A whorl of violet V'ornnish
letters and numbers was briefly superimposed in a corner of shadows
and then vanished. A new entry in another time period. Two
Ramahan sat side by side in the otherwise deserted Library, their
persimmon-colored robes marking them as highest-ranking konara. There
was a thick book open between them on the refectory table, but
neither was consulting it. Their upper bodies were curled slightly,
bent forward as if responding to a powerful magnetic force flowing
between them. "—all
you need or will ever need to know," said the konara with a nose
keen as a knife blade. "You
cannot expect me to agree," the other konara said. She had
wide-apart eyes that made her look surprised even when she was not.
"What are you thinking?" "I
am offering you a way—the only way—to save yourself and
your Ramahan." The knife-nosed konara had a very high, domed
forehead that shone in the lamplight. "Konara
Mossa, no. It is out of the question." "Listen,
listen." Konara Mossa took the other's hand in hers. "This
is the third time in three months I have come to see you. I speak to
you now out of the depths of our long-standing friendship. I have
traveled far, as you know. And why? In the hopes that you will see
reason." "But
the bargain you must have made. What you are proposing I must do." "For
the sake of every Ramahan here." "There
must be another way." "There
is not, Konara Yasttur. I would have found it, otherwise." "I
wonder whether this is so," Konara Yasttur said. "Haven't
you taken the expedient path, acquiesced to the only alternative they
have presented?" "Your
acolytes are how young?" Konara Mossa asked sharply. "They
are my charges, my precious children." "Yes.
For them, Konara Yasttur. For the sake of their lives. For the sake
of our order." She leaned in farther. "If not, there will
be genocide. This the V'ornn have promised." "I
cannot believe that you have sealed the bargain," Konara Yasttur
hissed between bared teeth. "With the enemy." "Better
the enemy you know," Konara Mossa said softly. "You
are deluded," Konara Yasttur said shortly. "Our culture,
our daily lives, our history, all that we are, all that makes us
unique is being systematically stripped from us by these evil—"
She broke off, buried her face in handfuls of her persimmon robes. "My
dear, I come to you tonight as I have always come." "Carrying
a dread secret." "As
a friend." Konara
Yasttur looked up quickly. "Ah, Miina protect us from our
enemies and our friends." A
window seemed to close in Konara Mossa's face as she slapped her
thighs and rose. Looking down at Konara Yasttur, she said, "Then
I cannot make you see reason." Konara
Yasttur said, "The reasoning of the damned." "They
will come, then, and they will destroy you all." Konara Mossa
looked abruptly sad. "I haven't the power to stop them." "Would
you, if you could?" "But,
of course. What do you think—?" "You
have sunk to their level, you have accepted their violence, the
inevitability of their victory. You have been infected by their evil,
and you are cut off from the divine light of the Goddess. That is
what I know." Konara
Mossa frowned. "It is you who are deluded, my old friend. I will
be remembered as a hero of the order, I am doing what needs to be
done so that the Ramahan may survive this final onslaught." Konara
Yasttur rose and faced her friend. "And have you considered that
your decision, the very act of betraying your kind, will be the very
instrument of our order's destruction." She held out a hand.
"You are a servant of Miina, you are holy as the Great Goddess
is holy. If goodness does not illuminate the abbeys, then this is,
truly, the fall of everlasting night." Konara Mossa turned her
face away, and Konara Yasttur's harsh, almost hysterical laugh ended
in a sob. "Ah, don't you see? What need the V'ornn of direct
atrocities when they have bent such as you to do their evil bidding?" Light
flared, a morning sun spilling white gold through the high windows.
In the same shadowy corner, the whorl of V'ornish letters marking a
new time and new scene spiraled and vanished. The Library was utterly
deserted, in the way that comes only at the very end of things.
Through the windows a pack of Khagggun in full battle armor could be
seen, their shock-swords out and swinging in a silent harvest as they
slaughtered the Ramahan on the spot. Just
before the entry—the last one—ended, Konara Yasttur
appeared, yanked by her hair. The last of her tattered robes was
stripped off her, and the pack fell upon her, the ranking officers
first, unhinging their bloody armor, then the lower-echelon warriors,
licking their lips, their callused hands clawing and pulling at bare
flesh. Her mouth was open. She must have been screaming, but in the
sunny glow of the duscaant's photonic recording all was silence.
13
Kirlll
Qandda was reading the latest holoscan of Terrettt's brain activity
he had made when Jesst Vebbn poked his head into the cubicle, and
said, "You are needed." Though
he had been engrossed in the anomalous readings, Kirlll rose without
protest. He had no choice. Jesst Vebbn was the Genomatekk to whom he
was assigned, whose orders he must fulfill without question or
protest. "What
is it?" he said as he strode side by side with the Genomatekk. "A
new shipment has arrived," Jesst Vebbn said shortly. "One
of them is dying." Jesst
Vebbn was walking so quickly that Kirlll had to hurry to keep up, but
then Jesst did everything in triple time, including talking. He was a
tall, clemett-shaped individual with shortish arms and legs that were
almost comical. He possessed the clinician's typical face, closed and
calculating. If he possessed any emotion, Kirlll had yet to see it. Up
ahead, Kirlll could see the knot of Khagggun sentinels. He despised
Khagggun with all his being, just as he despised the ongoing program
of which Jesst Vebbn was in charge. The Khagggun parted when they saw
Jesst, but of course they eyed Kirlll with distaste bordering on
loathing. And why shouldn't they? His presence was a harbinger of
imminent death. Jesst
led him through the anteroom where the children were being processed.
A single line had formed and, though Jesst appeared entirely
oblivious, Kirlll registered like a blow to his body the fear and
anguish on each and every face he passed. He could never get used to
the so-called "recombinant experiments" the Gyrgon had
ordered. These children, the sad consequence of Kundalan females
being raped by battle-blooded Khagggun, were in any case mistakes. "Poor
things," Kirlll could not help but say. "They are born into
misery." "Typical
Deirus. You have inverted the sentiment," Jesst said as they
hurried on. "This program they are entering gives the miserable
purpose. Look at them snivel and weep. Well, what can you expect from
animals. Had they sufficient intelligence, they would stand proud and
tall, knowing that they give their lives to further the higher
science of the Gyrgon." Kirlll
bit his lip, contenting himself at staring murderously at the back of
the Genomatekk's neck. At length, they passed through the large
anteroom and into a narrow corridor lined on either side by tiny
examination cubicles. These were slowly being filled by the hybrid
children as they passed through processing. They were fairly easy to
spot. Most of their V'ornn genes were expressed, overwhelming the
Kun-dalan traits. But inside there were differences, though these
differences varied widely. These were, of course, what interested the
Gyrgon most. Halfway down, Jesst stopped and parted a curtain. "In
here," he said. He hung back in the doorway as Kirlll entered,
unable to bring himself any closer to the dying child. Every
twenty meters or so a Khagggun stood guard, as if these wretched
children might prove a threat to the Genomatekks crisscrossing from
cubicle to cubicle. "What
is the defect?" he asked in his clipped, clinical voice. Kirlll
stood over the child, a male of no more than four years, he judged.
The child was very pale, his skin clammy, his breath shallow and
irregular. His eyes, wide and staring, fixed on Kirlll, and terror
coalesced in them, turning them dark and old beyond his years. "Be
calm," Kirlll told him. "I am here to help." All the
while, his expert hands were probing and palpating. He drew out a
portable holoscanner and thumbed it on. "Look
at this," he told the child as he played it over his torso.
"Hear that humming? That means it is making you better." "Stop
babbling," Jesst said impatiently, "and talk to me." "He
was born with two sets of hearts," Kirlll said as he studied the
holoimage. Now
Jesst seemed interested, "Wouldn't that make him stronger?"
"One heart is Kundalan, the other is a V'ornn twinned heart.
Apparently they are incompatible." "That
is a great pity," Jesst said. He crossed his arms over his chest
and leaned against the doorframe. "Is there anything you can do
for him?" In response to Kirlll's glance, he added, "I am
not quite the ogre you believe me to be." "The
ogre spoke quite eloquently of animal pride." "That
was in the anteroom, in public. That is how I am expected to speak,"
Jesst said. "You
do not believe me." When
Kirlll did not reply, Jesst said, "It comes straight from the
holotext. That much I am certain you know." "I
have read it," Kirlll said. Jesst
waited several moments before he said, "I know you do not
approve of our program." "I
do not approve of causing or prolonging suffering, even in the name
of Gyrgon high science." Kirlll watched as the child played with
the holoscanner. "But what matter? The opinion of a Deirus
carries no weight." Jesst
glanced over at the child. "You will have to perform an
autopsy," he said softly. Kirlll
nodded, a jerk of his head. "Would that I could save him." "I
wish it too." "Oh,
I do not doubt it." Kirlll smiled benignly down at the child.
"An enrollee with double hearts. Imagine the experiments." "What
is it," Jesst said, "that rankles you so?" Kirlll
turned and, with one hand still on the child, said, "He is an
innocent, just as all of them here are innocents. They did not ask to
be born, the circumstances of their life, their genetic composition,
are not of their making. They were caused by bestial acts perpetrated
by our own kind." "Khagggun
are not our own kind," Jesst said unexpectedly. "Neither
are Gyrgon, but we bow to their bidding all the same." Jesst
spread his hands. "Have we a choice?" "You
have a choice. You could ask to be reassigned." "And
risk having a Genomatekk with blood in his hearts take my place?" Kirlll
took a deep breath, let it slowly out. He shook his head then,
turning back to the child, said, "I could use some help here." The
child was going into convulsions. There was no help for him, nothing
in the vast Genomatekk arsenal could save him from the savage Mistake
of his conception. Somehow, sadly, that seemed appropriate, Kirlll
thought, as he directed Jesst to hold the child's arms and legs. He
produced one of the small canisters he used on Terrettt and, holding
open the child's fluttering eyelids, sprayed each eye in turn. Almost
immediately, the convulsions subsided. "What
will happen now?" Jesst asked. "He
will sleep." Kirlll put away the canister, "and that sleep
will become deeper and deeper until he is gone." He felt a
curious sensation in his chest, a fizzing like a severed ion beam. "I
will not leave him while he yet lives." "We
both will stay," Jesst said, surprising Kirlll once again. "But
let us not keep vigil in silence." "What
would you speak of?" "An
inquiry has been raised about you." Kirlll
looked at him blankly. "An
internal inquiry, nothing dire, I am quite certain. These things crop
up among Deirus from time to time." He shrugged. "I myself
do not put much store in them, but nevertheless they must be dealt
with in a timely manner or I am the one who will answer for the
delay." "What
is the nature of this inquiry?" Jesst,
glancing at the dying child, said, "Or perhaps this is not the
right time." "I
could use the distraction." Jesst
nodded. "The inquiry concerns the lovers you keep." "What
about them?" "You
know what about them. They are male." "I
am a law-abiding Deirus." "Actually—"
Jesst scratched the back of his neck—"the law, as it was
drawn up by the Gyrgon Comradeship, states that same-sex fornication
is forbidden." He smiled a porcelain smile. "But you
already know this." There was the briefest pause. "Oh, I
have no doubt of your usefulness to the Modality, Kirlll Qandda. No,
indeed. But there are others . . ." Jesst broke off, seemingly
at a loss as to how to proceed. "This is awkward for me." "Imagine
how I feel." Jesst
cleared his throat. "I want to make it clear that in my opinion
the inquiry is off base, a total waste of time. And you are one of my
most valued Deirus. Still, I must ask." "Proceed." "There
seems in some quarters to be a certain suspicion concerning the
SaTrryn Consortium." "What
is the nature of such suspicion?" "And
seeing as how you have been their Deirus—I mean, did you not
preside over Hadinnn SaTrryn's death?" "Sornnn
SaTrryn asked me to do so, yes," Kirlll said. "And
that was not the first. Your involvement with them goes back, what,
twenty years?" "Twenty-seven." Jesst
nodded. "It's just that, well, officials are looking." "For
what?" "An
involvement with the, ah, the Kundalan Resistance." Kirlll
frowned. "What are you getting at?" Jesst
leaned in and lowered his voice. "Just this. If, let us say, the
SaTrryn are involved with helping the enemy and if, let us say, you
yourself are somehow involved." Kirlll
snorted. "This is quite a web you're weaving." "Oh,
not me. No, not at all." Jesst put a forefinger beside his nose.
"But in certain quarters." For
the first time, Kirlll appeared shaken. "What quarters?" "Very
high up. More than that I am not at liberty to reveal." Jesst
drew a little away. "Either way, it would not go well for you,
do you see?" "That
is preposterous." "Well,
you and I perhaps know that. But as for the others." "I
am not saying . . . But if. . ." Kirlll seemed unable to meet
the Genomatekk's eye. "What if I knew something? Information
that could lead to the arrest of the traitor." "That
would absolve you of... well, of everything," Jesst said softly. "Even
my private life?" "Even
that." "The
child is crossing over," Kirlll said. He placed his finger on
the side of the child's neck. The pulse was weak and erratic. It
barely impacted his nerve endings. And then, in the wink of an eye,
it was gone. "He
never had a chance," Jesst pointed out. "That
makes it worse, not better." The fizzing in Kirlll's chest had
reached a crescendo. Jesst
cleared his throat. "Not
that I am saying I have direct knowledge of who the traitor is."
Kirlll Qandda still had hold of the child, and now he disengaged
himself, a small but telling act of acceptance. "But it is
possible that I have recently heard something that would be of
special interest to these 'others’. " "You
must tell me what you know," Jesst said urgently. "I
must think." "I
urge you not to take too long. The offer may be withdrawn at any
moment. And then." "And
then, what?" Jesst
looked into Kirlll's eyes. "I would be forced to continue the
inquiry into your private activities whether I wanted to or not." "You
are giving me no choice then." "That
is, regrettably for you, the case." Kirlll
felt that curious sensation in his chest slowly dissipating as he
took up his ion scalpel. He said a brief prayer for the child's
departed soul, a death song he had composed years ago more for his
own benefit than for the newly dead. Then he made the first incision,
precisely aligned and meaningful, like everything he did. All
the next day Tezziq put Riane through her paces, and so exacting a
taskmaster was she that Riane was exhausted by dinnertime.
Immediately following, she took her bath and collapsed on her
cushions. She was summarily roused out of a dreamless slumber. Tezziq
was shaking her by the shoulder. "He's
coming," Tezziq whispered in her ear. "Baliiq is coming."
"Who?" Riane said drowsily. But she came fully awake when
she saw the figure in the doorway. He was standing with his powerful
legs spread, his brawny arms crossed over his chest. Riane sat up.
"Don't worry," she whispered. "I won't let him take
you." "It
is not for me that he is here," Tezziq said breathlessly. "It
is for you." "What?"
Fear gripped Riane by the throat. "But I told you—"
"Yes." Tezziq held her close, felt her shiver. "I
know." "It must be some mistake. You have had but a few
days to train me." She looked into Tezziq's eyes. The thought of
being subject to Makk-tuub's outsized lusts made her ill. "Surely
that's not enough time." "Baliiq is here. You must go."
Tezziq pushed her gently off the cushions and onto the carpeted
floor. "There is simply no alternative." There
is always an alternative, Mother had once told her, but her mind
was so paralyzed she could think of nothing. She slid into the
slipper-shoes the kapudaan had given her. Dread
was Riane's constant companion as she walked beside Baliiq. A feeling
of unreality had invaded her, anesthetizing her, sapping her will. An
image of what the kapudaan had done to Tezziq ran through her head,
and she quailed. With an effort, she concentrated on Baliiq instead,
trying to calm herself by studying him closely. He
was well muscled but, unlike the other guards Riane had seen, there
was nothing thick or heavy about him. His hair was drawn back from
his face, but instead of being wound on the top of his head, it hung
in a long queue held at its end by a fillet of carved emperor
carnelian. He moved with the same kind of liquid grace she had seen
in the kuomeshals, as if he were simply an animated part of the
landscape. He
said not a word to her as he led her down one tented corridor and up
another, but often she felt the hot scrutiny of his gaze. Mostly, one
passageway was indistinguishable from another until they came to one
where the walls were strung with magnificent silk carpets, meant to
be seen rather than walked upon. Their patterns, though varied, were
united in their strict geometric nature. They all featured a central
core of some sort, round or square, oblong or hexagonal, depending on
the whim or the imagination of the artist-weaver, surrounded by bands
that more or less spiraled outward in ever-increasing complexity
until they reached the border. The
carpets became more ornate until she and Baliiq turned a corner and
entered a corridor with plain whitewashed walls. At its far end was a
spiral staircase fashioned from a deep lustrous bronze, worked into a
filigree of vine stems and tiny starlike flowers. They ascended this,
and soon found themselves outside on a vast terrace that overlooked
the city. A walkway of carpets lay directly ahead of them. Stars
already throbbed in the vastness of the early-evening sky, scarred as
it was by a pair of crescent moons so slender their green was almost
white. A softly soughing wind carried the ubiquitous red dust and the
rich, heady scents of roasting meat and brewing ba'du. Riane
saw Makktuub lounging on a densely patterned divan in the midst of a
small, artfully arranged oasis of limoniq trees, potted and pruned
into dwarves. The divan was covered in watered silk. To one side was
a table laden with steamed and stuffed fruits, to the other was an
ornately filigreed lyssomwood panel, the better, doubtless, to screen
him from the ululating din of the streets and boulevards below. The
kapudaan stirred slightly as Baliiq brought her into his presence.
With a flick of his fingers, he dismissed the albino. Riane was
actually sorry to see Baliiq go. He had been a powerful presence but
not a particularly forbidding one. He was not like the dull-eyed
guards who lined the tents like cement bricks. There seemed something
inside him waiting to emerge, a sense of tension, yes, but also a
watchfulness, as if he were searching for the right time, the right
place to reveal himself. But now that did not matter because he was
gone and she was all alone on the terrace with Makktuub. "So."
Makktuub smiled from behind his dark, hooded eyes, but the smile, she
felt, was thin and, for some reason, strained. "How have you
fared with the oh-so-lovely Tezziq?" "She
is quite skilled in the ways of pleasure," Riane replied. "And
she is treating you well?" He was using one hand to lend
emphasis to what he was saying. "She is keeping her jealousy in
check? Is there anything for which you lack?" "My
freedom." He
sat up abruptly, and Riane tensed, sensing his strain breaking the
surface. His eyes were deeply angry, and for a moment she was certain
he was going to strike her as he rose off the divan. But instead, he
stood watching her. She
tried to read his expression. There was a certain unease. It had been
there a long time, like a ruin, something in the wilderness of the
steppes, lost and almost forgotten. A pulse beat in his right temple,
betraying a deeper anger. He wanted to say something, she could tell
that, but he felt constrained. She could hear a sudden burst of
shouts from the street below, the ululating prayers briefly
interrupted, the altercation discordant after the unwinding music of
the chants. Then it was over, and the prayer-songs began again as if
the voices had never been interrupted. "If
you plan on taking me to bed," Riane said, "I will not
comply. I want my freedom." "Jiharre
may heed your plea," he murmured, seeming now truly ill at ease,
"but heaven itself knows when." Astonished,
she watched him hurry across the carpeted expanse and disappear down
the spiral staircase into the palace. For a moment, she did not know
what to do. The wind ruffled her hair, sounds arose from below,
reciting tales of the city and its inhabitants. Inexorably, she was
drawn to the near edge of the terrace. Beyond a waist-high parapet,
she saw the nighttime sprawl of Agachire. Across the street, narrower
than the avenue the palace fronted, she could see the parapet of
another terrace, and across its expanse, the dim outline of another.
Below, the street itself was clogged with foot traffic as well as
slow-moving kuomeshal caravans. Females squatted, stirring
fine-grained stews or stacking flat bread. Old men chanted, their
heads together, their arms around each other's waists as they moved
rhythmically back and forth. Lovers gazed into each other's eyes but
did not touch. Instead, they fed each other dried fruits and
sweetmeats from paper cones they had purchased from street vendors.
Merchants argued with customers while children wove a wild and
unpredictable pattern through it all. She was trying to calculate the
odds of surviving a leap from the terrace when a figure emerged from
behind the filigreed screen. She
felt her breath driven from her lungs. The figure was so startling,
so out of place that she was rooted to the spot. Glittering in the
spangled starlight, a Gyrgon stood, buried within his armor. The helm
was high and angular, eared and horned and unvented, with a menacing
ridged brow into which a row of alloy talons had been sunk. It
projected a formidable appearance, this particular ion exomatrix. As
it ought; it was a battle suit. "I
believe it is high time we got acquainted, Riane," the Gyrgon
said, coming toward her. "My name is Nith Settt." He
held out a black-gloved hand, in the center of which sat something
darkly familiar, and Riane's heart skipped a beat. Dear Miina, no,
she thought. "Please
tell me," Nith Settt said softly and sibilantly as he glided
toward her, "how you came to be in possession of this." And
it began to expand exponentially, Nith Settt holding it aloft for her
to see, Nith Sahor's neural-net greatcoat. Tettsie
looked out at them, regal and commanding, and it seemed surely that
the entirety of what she was, of what she had stood for existed
in the muted colors and masterly brushstrokes that Marethyn had
labored over for weeks. "It's
her completely," Sornnn said. "It's a marvelous
accomplishment." "I
can't believe it," Marethyn said. "The painting was the
point, and she never got to see it." It
might seem like a trivial, even a self-centered thing to say at the
ending of a life as long as Tettsie's had been, but it was not. It
was merely, finally, a way to make death—so deep a
mystery—understandable. It also brought Tettsie's death down to
a manageable size. It allowed Marethyn to go on with her daily life,
it allowed her to sleep at night, though that slumber was often
restless, interrupted by dreams she would rather not remember or
interpret. They
stood in her closed and shuttered atelier, an embroidered indigo
remembrance-cloth draped over the spot where Tettsie had died.
According to custom, it would remain undisturbed for one month, after
which it would be carefully wound into a tertium tube. While
Marethyn had gone about seeing to her grandmother's final
arrangements, Sornnn, in his official capacity as Prime Factor, had
been at Finial Hall, a cavernous, brooding space in a former Kundalan
warehouse that had undergone a typically unlovely V'ornn
transformation. He was adjudicating a protracted and acrimonious
dispute he had inherited from the time when Wennn Stogggul had been
the Prime Factor that concerned two Consortia, the Nwerrrn and the
Fellanngg, over mineral rights on the western edge of the Borobodur
forest. It was the sort of case, complicated and petty, that
reaffirmed Sornnn's yearning for the brilliant uncluttered endless
landscape of the Korrush. "She
was my mentor, my compass," Marethyn said. "What am I going
to do without her?" Sornnn
took hold of her, turned her around to face him because he did not
know what else to do. He felt helpless at the sight of her grief and
vulnerability. "You have taken what she taught you," he
said. "You are already your own mentor and compass." "Do
you really think so?" He
turned her around so she faced the painting again. "Look at her,
Marethyn. This is your grandmother, but it is also your creation.
What I see in there, the strength and pride and stubbornness and
anger and loving kindness, comes from you." And
Marethyn was crying and laughing at the same time and whispering
something Sornnn could not quite catch, which was all right because
whatever was said was between her and Tettsie, as it should be,
between granddaughter and grandmother who were mirror images, who had
meant so much to each other. Tettsie,
who even in death knew what she wanted, had dictated instructions
into a data-decagon she had long since given to Marethyn. Upon
playing it back, they discovered these things: Tettsie wanted her
ashes scattered over the deep pools outside the city walls where she
and Marethyn had swum on hot summer afternoons. She asked that her
house and its contents be sold, the proceeds delivered to a
solicitor-Bashkir named Dobbro Mannx who had previously been
instructed to hold the funds in a trust. Two items, alone, were to be
retrieved and distributed thusly: To Marethyn, she bequeathed a
red-jade box. To Petrre Aurrr, Sornnn SaTrryn's mother, she
bequeathed a simple vera-dium necklace—her favorite—that
held in its center a small but breath-takingly perfect Nieobian
starwen. Cleverly, she also asked Marethyn to personally deliver the
necklace to Petrre Aurrr. "Sornnn,
if I ask you to deliver the necklace, will you do it?" "You
could do it just as easily," he said. "She was your
grandmother." Marethyn
held out the flat black case. "Yes. I am thinking of what
Tettsie would want," she said, though he knew very well she was
thinking of something else altogether. Presently,
he went, the case tucked underneath his arm, to his mother's
residence. Petrre
Aurrr lived in a Kundalan confection, elaborate and airy, deep in the
Eastern Quarter with a large atrium filled with dwarf clemett trees,
bare and pale now, and delicately fringed evergreens that clattered
softly in the knife-edged gusts of autumnal wind. It was just past
sunset, the sky overhead streaked with orange and vermilion clouds,
but at its very apex the heavens were a lustrous cobalt. Sornnn's
mother was a handsome woman, tall and stately. She wore robes the
color of dried cor blood, a rich shade that suited her light eyes.
She had the fine-boned hands of a sculptor, and a face that bore
without apology the history of her life. She
looked at him, dumbfounded for an instant, when he appeared on her
doorstep. "May
I come in?" "Yes.
Yes, of course." The
exchange, though brief, managed to reiterate the odd formality and
awkwardness of their relationship. The
residence was decorated in a surprising and inventive admixture of
cultures. Cool and crisply lined V'ornn furniture was covered with
tactile and ornate Kundalan fabrics. Sornnn was rather surprised to
see how well the meshing of the severe and the febrile worked, but as
he drank it all in—the furniture, the carpets, chests,
sideboards, shelves filled with mementos and curios, there was not
one thing from his memory, from her previous life, from his family.
And this was his mother's house. He
produced the flat black case. "I have—" "May
I get you a drink?" she said at the very same instant. The
brief silence somehow echoed Sornnn's anger and grief. His
mother stared into his eyes, ignoring the case. "Forgive me,"
she said, all at once. "An old friend has just died." "I
know, I—" He cleared his throat, which had turned dry as
the Great Voorg. "Her granddaughter is an acquaintance."
Those flat words, so devoid of emotion, seemed to him more stupid and
spiteful than a mere falsehood. He patted the top of the case. "This
is from your old friend." With
a bewildered look, his mother took the case and slowly, almost
reverently, opened it. "Ah,"
was all she could manage, and the tears began to flow down her
cheeks. She went and sat down on a chair upholstered in the ornate
Kundalan style, the open case on her lap. She stared out the sliding
doors into the tree-filled atrium, idly fondling the necklace. "She
loved that clemett tree. In Lonon, with the gimnopedes swarming, she
would stand on her tiptoes to pick the ripest of the fruit. Then she
would go into the kitchen and make the most delicious dessert. We
would eat it for days, laughing over the dining room table. What fun
we would have eating and talking! And now it's all ... like grains of
sand flowing through my fingers." She wiped her eyes. "No
matter how hard I try, I can't seem to hold on to any of it." "And
not a single happy memory of your real family," he said with a
bitter taste of the old familiar anger. He
was already at the front door, his hand on the ornate Kundalan latch,
when his mother turned. "Must
you go? Already? I haven't given you anything to eat." "It's
better this way," he said with a strangled voice. She
stood, facing him. "I have many happy memories of you, Sornnn." And
that one line, so obviously a lie, loosed the cold rage he had vowed
to keep at bay. "That seems odd," he said through gritted
teeth, "considering how cold you became toward me." She
studied him for a long time. "Yes." "Is
that all you have to say." To his horror, he found that he was
trembling. "It
couldn't be helped." His
anger flared full force. "What the N'Luuura do you mean, it
couldn't be helped?" She
turned away. "What
did I do to disappoint you so?" "Oh,
Sornnn." Her voice held a desperate note of anguish. When she
turned back her eyes glittered with tears. "If you believe
nothing else, then I beg you to believe this: it had nothing to do
with you." "Then
what was it?" She
shook her head. "Leave matters where they are. Believe me,
you're better off—" "That's
right. Lies and silence. Why should I expect more from you?" Her
eyes went opaque, and for a moment he thought she hadn't heard or
wouldn't respond. He felt like a child again, his chest tight with
anger and longing and confusion. And he remembered the time he threw
the Phareseian colorsphere across the chamber, turning his back on
it, and on her. He wrenched the door open and went through it. "All
right, then," she said at last in a clear penetrating voice. He
paused, looked back because he could not help himself, because
despite his anger she was his mother, and there was a part of him
that had always loved her and needed her. "Come
back inside, Sornnn," she said softly. He
saw her in profile, her face suddenly weary but still achingly
beautiful. "Please." He
returned inside, closed the door behind him. His hearts were wrung
out with emotion, and all at once he experienced a surge of panic
and almost asked her to keep her secrets hidden. But, in the end, he
kept silent. "I
was directed—ordered, actually—to act detached." "I
do not believe you," he said suspiciously. "Sornnn,
I cannot make you believe me, but if you continue to think that I am
lying to you, we will never get anywhere." He
took a deep breath, and in a cold voice said, "So you were
ordered to act coldly to me. By whom?" She
sighed. "By your father." "Liar!"
His scalp tingling, he strode back to the door, opening it. "He
was jealous, you see." She crossed the room after him, hurried
on. "He didn't want to share you, with me or anyone else. At
first I said no. He threatened me. I didn't care. I told him it was a
hideous thing to do to you. I told him I wouldn't. Then he hit me,
and hit me again, and kept on hitting me until..." She
turned away to stare out into the atrium again. "That clemett
tree, now that all the leaves are gone, I can see I don't like its
shape at all. It is in serious need of pruning." "Is
this ... is it the truth—" "I
never wanted you to know. I prayed to Enlil." "Now
I need to hear all of it." Her
voice was no more than a strangled whisper. "He would have
beaten me to death, you see. He had a need to control me, to put his
boot on my neck and keep it there, pressing harder and harder."
She was weeping again, soft silent tears rolling down her cheeks. "He
needed to see what it would take to break me, I suppose. To strip me
of my strength, my willfulness, my dreams of independence." She
folded her hands over the necklace. "Well, clever thing, be
found it." She turned her beautiful tormented tear-streaked face
to him. "It was you." Sornnn's
brain buzzed, and his face burned. He thought of his mother and
father together and apart, of the peculiar dynamics of their
relationship, of the forces, intimate, exhilarating, crushing, that
come to bear when male and female are linked in this way. In his own
mind, his father had been a great and generous man, rare and unusual
in his desire to embrace other cultures. That was how Sornnn saw
himself, and he had simply assumed it had been the same with his
father. But who knew what drove V'ornn to do what they did? Could he
have misunderstood or missed completely his father's need to do what
he did? He went, when he was able, and knelt beside her. All these
years spent hating her. All that time wasted, how had she put it,
like grains of sand running through her fingers. He
watched her as she went to a carved heartwood chest and opened it.
When she came back to him, she had an object cradled between her
hands. He knew what it was even before she gave it to him, lovingly
preserved, her memories of him intact and glowing fiercely inside the
Phareseian colorsphere. "If
you ever doubted that I loved you." "Mother—" "It's
been a long time since you called me that." She
gazed into his face as he held his old toy, smiling sadly and
joyfully, knowing as only a mother can that he was feeling again the
heartsbeat of his childhood. Night
had stolen over the atrium, and all the trees were enameled in
indigo. He sat in the brightly lit, high-ceilinged kitchen while his
mother prepared a dessert from the last of the clemetts she had
frozen at the end of Lonon. Together they ate it, talking of Tettsie
first, then of even more intimate things, memories and
misunderstandings Sornnn had thought untouchable even a week ago. By
the time they had finished the delicious dessert, they had laughed
not once but several times, Sornnn feeling an echo of Tettsie's hand
on his arm and Petrre Aurrr touching the Nieobian starwen that
nestled in the hollow of her throat. Gossamer
moonslight settled across the flat expanse of the terrace, turning
the carpets night-blue and cream. The ululations of the faithful rose
and fell with the wind. Nith Settt folded his arms across his horned
and armored chest. "I will crush you like a tewrat unless you
answer my questions." Riane
looked at him and tried to keep Annon's innate fear of Gyrgon in
check. "You cannot get inside my mind as you can with your own
kind." "Not
so easily, anyway." Nith Settt grinned evilly. "The more
painful for you." "Is
there, in truth, no other thing you employ but coercion?" "Fear
is my middle name," Nith Settt said. "It was ever thus."
He made an almost imperceptible motion, and Nith Sahor's greatcoat
folded up upon itself. "Perhaps we need to start with an easier
question," he continued briskly. "Why have you come all
this distance to see Perrnodt?" "I
told Makktuub the truth. I wish to study under her." "To
become imari." "Yes." "I
do not believe you. For one thing, you do not have an imari's
subservient demeanor." "Perrnodt
will teach me." "For
another, how did you even know there was a dzuoko in the Korrush and
where to find her?" They
had entered dangerous territory. "I heard about her from one of
her former imari." "Liar!" He
came closer, and she could scent him, through the spiced wind of
Agachire, the odd commingling of clove oil and burnt musk. "And
I have the proof of it." Nith Settt began to circle her, the
moonslight sliced and wafered by the polished surfaces of his alloy
armor. It was the glow and spark of a living thing, a secret breath
taken, a silent voice raised. "Here it is." He rattled the
little package the greatcoat had become. "You arrive in the
Korrush wearing a Gyrgon neural net—you, a Kundalan female."
He shook the package in front of Riane's face. "Where did you
steal this from, Resistance?" "I
am not Resistance," Riane said. Nith
Settt stood stock-still. "Do you know what happens when you lie
to a Gyrgon?" He reached out with a gloved hand. "I will
extract the truth from you." Lambent green arcs shot from
fingertip to fingertip as hyperexcited ions were ramped up. "Even
if I have to do it synapse by synapse, neuron by neuron." Lethal
fingertips very close to Riane's face, A Gyrgon's touch is deadly,
how many times had Annon heard that when he was a child? "I
don't mind the process in the least. In fact, as a scientist I find
it rather elucidating. But you, Resistance, you will never be the
same again. Your brain will be fused and fried. You will become a
drooling, shambling cipher with no will of your own. But you will
remember everything. How does this future sound to you?" Out
of sight, children ran through the streets, shouting in mock battles.
The prayer-chants wove like fishers' fine seines, waxing and waning
on the whims of the wind. The moons' double scimitars, honed sharp by
the clarity of the atmosphere, peeled back the darkness. "What
are Gyrgon doing in the Korrush?" Riane said at length. "It
is my understanding that the V'ornn have no use for sea, steppe, or
desert." "Kundalan
do not query V'ornn!" "Why
not indulge me in this? According to you, in a little while I won't
be able to tell anyone anything." Nith
Settt grunted. "We conquer all races, each in its own way and in
its own time. We are here in small numbers to serve as advisors to
the Five Tribes in their internecine war with each other." "To
hear Makktuub tell it, the war will never end." "Oh,
it will end," Nith Settt said, "when all the Five Tribes
are dead." A
cold trickle crawled down Riane's spine. "So that's how you're
advising the kapudaan, by sowing continual seeds of dissension." "They
are religious fanatics. We are only giving them what they desire
most. They are bloodthirsty, these Korrush denizens." "Not
nearly so bloodthirsty as you, I warrant." "And
I can almost taste your blood, Resistance." Nith Settt grinned
evilly. "We are conducting an experiment in the power of
religious belief. It is strong, indeed, among the tribes of this
forsaken steppe. Their religion makes them stupid—stupid and
blind. They believe that we have left them alone because they harvest
spices, a commodity precious to us. They believe, because their
religion makes them self-deluded, that we could not coerce them into
harvesting the spices for us. So they happily trade with us and take
our advice when we dispense it and do not realize that they are
tewrats in a cage of our own devising." "They
will one day wake from this dream you have woven around them, and
they will rise against you." "Like
the Kundalan have risen against us? Like the followers of the •
dead god Enlil have risen against us? We are Gyrgon! We are
all-powerfulr Nith Settt raised his arms wide. "Look around you.
These are a primitive, pathetic lot." "Only
by your warped standards." The
Gyrgon glowered. "Enough idle chatter. You will now tell me what
I want to know." "You
will not believe me." "If
you lie, you will be punished. Proceed." Riane
took a deep breath. "I did not steal the greatcoat," she
said. "I found it." "You
are correct. I do not believe you." "The
Gyrgon was dead." "He
was wrapped in his cloak." "No,
he was not." Nith
Settt cocked his head. "Did you know that each neural net
carries the signature of its owner?" Riane
kept silent, but her mind was racing. The greatcoat had transported
her and Eleana back from the Museum of False Memory, and it had
transported her here into the Korrush. That could only mean one
thing. Somehow, some way, through what numinous alchemy she could not
imagine, Nith Sahor was still alive. And, to be sure, this needed to
remain an absolute secret. It occurred to her, not without a good
deal of irony, that Nith Sahor was now in the same position Annon had
found himself in, alive but desperately trying to keep it secret from
his legion of enemies, not the least being Nith Settt. "This
one belonged to a Gyrgon by the name of Nith Sahor," Nith Settt
said. "I
noticed you used the past tense. So you know he's dead. This much you
believe." "Yes." "He
died in a ring of sysal trees just north of Axis Tyr. When I came
upon him, he was surrounded by a pack of snow-lynx. Doubtless they
had unwound the cloak the better to get at him." "A
sad and solitary death." "In
any event, I drove them off. I buried him and took the greatcoat. I
thought it only fair to be recompensed for my labor." "Not
that the greatcoat is now of any use. Each neural net is genetically
linked to its owner. When Nith Sahor died, it became inoperative."
Nith Settt shook his head. "But there is something. You, a
Kundalan female, buried a Gyrgon? Why didn't you simply let the
snow-lynx rend him?" "In
our own particular way" Riane said, "we have come, to the
difference between Kundalan and V'ornn." Nith
Settt grunted again. "We are strong. You are weak." "If
having reverence for life—all life—means we're weak—" "It
does." "What,
then, is left to say?" "Much."
The Gyrgon brandished his glowing glove in Riane's face. "You
have not yet answered all my questions. I will know why you are
seeking the dzuoko Perrnodt." Riane
could feel, like a scalpel slicing through her skin, the
electromagnetic pulse from the ion arcs. It fizzed and buzzed and
made her teeth ache. The
glove hovered briefly. "Last chance, Resistance." Nith
Settt said. "Your world is about to be reduced to the size of
your body, and believe me when I tell you that it will contain
nothing but infinite pain." Riane
looked beyond the glove's obvious threat to the Gyrgon's menacing
helm. "Has the ability to compromise fled you altogether?" "Among
us V'ornn there is a saying, 'Keep compromise at bay, and victory
will be yours.' " "Not
here," Riane said, "and not tonight." She lifted her
right hand to the nape of her neck, as if scratching an itch. "What
are you doing?" Ion fire erupted from Nith Settt's fingertips,
blinding and deadly. Riane
pointed the cylinder Minnum had given her at Nith Settt and pressed
the tiny gold firing disc. She was wholly unprepared for the result
and, in her shock, nearly dropped the wand. The goron beam, a narrow
opalescent column, rippled out from the tip of the wand. It was a
tight-weave band, curling back on itself to make an endless loop, a
stairway to everywhere and nowhere, an infinity-blade. When
the infinity-blade intercepted the Gyrgon's ion fire, there was
neither a flash nor a thunderclap, nor anything else, for that
matter, that the laws of physics dictated should occur when two
opposing types of energy meet. Instead, it was like watching a raging
fire being abruptly banked; the goron beam simply absorbed the
hyperexcited ions. Nith
Settt reared back in shock. Using
her momentary advantage, Riane darted away from the Gyrgon, heading
toward the near parapet. She knew she would have only one chance at
this. She could hear the crackle and pop of the ion fire behind her
and veered sharply to her right in the instant before the lambent
energy reached her. She could feel an eerie coldness as it raced,
flaming, by her. It struck the parapet, smashing a meterwide hole in
it. There
was no time to consider consequences. Running at full tilt, Riane
leapt, her legs, powerful and springy, propelling her forward. Her
right foot came down
squarely on the top of the parapet, and she pushed off it, launching
herself into the air. At the very apex of her arc she tucked herself
into a tight ball, the better to keep her momentum going. Then, with
a bone-jarring lurch, she struck the floor of the neighboring
terrace, rolling, sucking in air as she regained her feet. And
resumed running. All
around her the torches and oil lamps of Agachire flickered and
burned, sending a dim orange glow into the cool, crisp night, fingers
of a great veined hand stretching into the vastness of the steppe. She
glanced back over her shoulder, saw Nith Settt spread his arms wide.
Enveloped in cold blue ion fire, he levitated until he was about two
meters in the air. Abruptly, the ion fire altered to a deeper hue,
and he shot forward like a missile, spanning the space between
terraces in no more than a heartsbeat or four. He
came on without settling to the terrace floor, moving faster than
Riane could on her two legs. She picked up her pace, reached the far
side of the terrace full out, and launched herself over the parapet
at almost the same instant Nith Settt loosed another ion stream,
which passed just above her head. Possibly this affected her
concentration because she came up short, slamming into the front of
the far terrace wall, hanging on to the leading edge of the parapet
with her left hand while she transferred the infinity-blade to her
teeth and reached up with her right hand. Using
both arms, she began to pull herself up, but at that instant another
ion stream struck the parapet full on. Baked brickwork exploded,
blinding her, and she felt her handhold disintegrate in a shower of
shards. Cloaked by a welter of debris, she fell onto the back of a
kuomeshal more or less in the middle of a passing caravan. All the
breath went out of her, but she had the presence of mind to switch
off the infinity-blade. The
entire caravan, panicked by the explosion and the stinging rain of
shattered brickwork, kicked up their hooves and commenced a shambling
gallop, ungainly but swift for all that. Everyone on the street was
scattering, darting this way and that, overturning carts and small
fires, rounds of bread rolling like wheels, screams and hoarse shouts
replacing the music of the prayer-chants. Using
fingers and knees, Riane clung precariously to the small mountain
of barrels lashed tightly between the animal's humps. Through the
haze that hung in the night air she caught a brief glimpse of Nith
Settt bent almost double over the parapet, looking this way and that,
pulverizing brickwork in his fists, searching for her. Choked
in dust, her teeth rattling together, her nostrils filled with the
strange pungent odor of the kuomeshals, Riane prayed to Miina that
Nith Settt could not somehow use his technomancy to find her. She
heard the breathy singsong chiding of the caravan handlers running
beside the animals, using their beat-sticks to keep them in a
semblance of order as they attempted to calm them down. And, indeed,
the entire caravan was slowing from its initial breakneck gallop down
to a trot. From her makeshift perch, she could see the handlers'
sweat-streaked faces as they continued to ply their beat-sticks to
guide the kuomeshals, use their voices to soothe them. They
had entered another quarter of Agachire. The tents here were smaller,
less ornate, though just as colorful. The torch-lined street wound
this way and that, just barely avoiding the massed jumble of tents
that arose helter-skelter on either side. The discordant clash of
scimitars, the rhythmic beating of shields rose like a cruel winter
wind, along with the rough-voiced bawdy songs endemic to warriors and
thieves. All
at once, Riane became aware of a presence near her. One of the
kuomeshal drivers was running alongside her. He was hooded and
cloaked, like all the drivers, to keep the dust at bay. She drew the
infinity-blade but did not activate it. "Do
not be afraid," the figure whispered hoarsely. "Come with
me. I will take you to a safe place." He had not turned his head
or altered his pace. Riane
said nothing, clinging tightly to the barrels. "You
must come now," he said, more urgently. "The kapudaan's
guards are even now fanning out through the city to find you."
He turned to her. "There is a group of them just ahead." Now,
by flickering torchlight, she could see a crescent of his face. "Paddii!"
The father of the baby whose life she had saved. "Yes,
yes," he said, reaching a powerful arm around her. "Come
quickly^ Come now!" She
let go of the barrels as he tugged her off. She swung her legs down,
and he took off, holding her hand, dragging her along. Behind them,
the caravan had been halted, and they could hear the harsh queries of
the kapudaan's guards, the drivers' responses. As
she ran, Riane flexed her stiff fingers. Her legs were already
getting a workout. Paddii led her down curving streets and crooked
lanes, heading in a northerly direction, as best she could tell. "How
did you know?" she asked, when they had put sufficient distance
between them and the guards. "My
cousin informed me. Baliiq, you know." He gave her a quick
glance. "Are you all right? You were not mistreated?" "Except
for the Gyrgon—" "Who?" Riane
shook her head. "Never mind." Was Nith Settt's presence
here secret? If so, what did the Gazi Qhan make of the levitating
figure on the terrace throwing cold firebolts? She had little time to
contemplate this, for Paddii had ducked into a tent flap. Following
him, Riane found herself inside a small space that might once have
been used as a storehouse, but now seemed all but abandoned. A slight
wind billowed the tent walls, and distant torchlight caused a ghostly
aura to appear, bleaching the striped fabric. "Here,"
Paddii said, thrusting a ball of clothes at her. "Best to change
so you don't look like a daughter of the haanjhala." Without
another word, he went out of the tent. She could see him standing
guard, his back to her. Quickly,
she stripped off her filmy, filthy outfit and stepped into a pair of
old, worn breeches, an oft-washed shirt, clean and smelling of
strange herbs, a tanned-hide belt, wide and sturdy. There was also a
pair of homely slipper-shoes, much scuffed and scarred, the color
indeterminate, which she placed on her feet. She held in her hand the
beautiful palace slippers Makktuub had given her. "Leave
them behind." Paddii gave her an appraising look as he
re-entered. "Your nose stud will be a bit of a problem, but for
now it can't be helped." As
he led the way out of the tent, Riane said, "Where are we
going?" "To
the place where Othnam and Mehmmer await you." "This
was all carefully planned, wasn't it?" "From
the moment they left the kapudaan's palace. We were only awaiting the
signal from Baliiq. If Makktuub had not summoned you to the terrace,
my cousin would have found some excuse to bring you there himself."
He grinned hugely as he returned her dagger, which she had left in
Othnam's safekeeping on the way into Agachire, and kissed her warmly
on each cheek. "What, did you think Othnam would renege? He
promised to deliver you to the dzuoko Perrnodt, and I swear by the
Prophet Jiharre that is precisely what he will do." 14 Resurrection
Neither
dead nor alive, the Ramahan sorceress Bartta, Giyan's twin sister,
hung in the stasis-web of the sorcerous spell she had half conjured
before the explosive fire had engulfed the had-atta and the
small underground chamber in the Abbey of Floating White in which she
had long ago secreted it. That she had been caught in the
conflagration, completely unawares, was stuck in her mind like a
pebble in a shoe. Each laborious thought brought to bear the pain of
that failing. In
truth, Bartta could not think at all—at least, not in the way
one customarily defines thinking. She hung in the stasis-web of her
own incomplete manufacture without any sense of time or space. To
the extent that she thought, she existed. But that was all. Until
Giyan returned to Floating White and found her, where all the other
Ramahan priestesses had failed. But then Giyan had an advantage. While
Konara Lyystra and Konara Inggres could feel only subtle unsettling
hints, Giyan possessed the power to discover Bartta in her sorcerous
stasis. So did Horolaggia. Giyan, for all her goodness and generosity
of spirit, might have thought twice about freeing Bartta, for Bartta
had spent the better part of the year now nearing its end torturing
Riane both physically and psychologically. Once Bartta had discovered
the existence of the Dar Sala-at, she had tried to brainwash her, in
an attempt to use Riane to solidify and magnify her own power. This
Giyan would never have tolerated, had she known of it, and though
Bartta was her sister, she would never forgive her. But
Horolaggia had plans for the twins. And so, Giyan's first major order
of business upon returning to the abbey after an almost eighteen-year
absence was to direct her energies toward dismantling the stasis-web.
This had to be done carefully for, though it was true that Bartta Was
trapped inside, it was the stasis-web itself that had saved her from
death, wrapping its
protective wings about her while the deadly fire that had raged
through the chamber in which she had been torturing Riane destroyed
the had-atta. Toward
this end, she took advantage of Konara Urdma's opportunistic but
rather stupid nature. There was no point in introducing Cerrn-spore
into Konara Urdma the way she had done with Konara Lyystra. "Konara
Bartta is still alive, you say?" Konara Urdma said uneasily. The
two of them stood now in the fire-blackened chamber. Konara Urdma
had, of course, recognized Giyan, though it had been many years since
Giyan had been summarily banished from the abbey with all the other
Ramahan who possessed the Gift of Osoru. That Konara Urdma viewed
Giyan with a mixture of awe and trepidation was of no consequence to
Giyan. That Konara Urdma was assisting her, even though it was clear
from how she held herself a little apart and ramrod stiff that the
very thought of Bartta's return was a threat to her newfound power,
gave Giyan a little thrill of pleasure. The very black thing inside
her fed off fear, and as soon as it was practicable she meant to
commence a course in the fine art of instilling fear in others. She
would teach it, of course. Imagine, a daemon instructing Ramahan! The
irony was positively exhilarating! Giyan
spread her arms, and the atmosphere inside the small close charred
chamber turned gelid. Slowly, as if being coaxed out of dank shadows
into the light of the flickering oil lamp, the stasis-web began to
appear. At
first, it was nothing more than a Crosshatch pattern trembling
briefly in the corner of Konara Urdma's eye. She had seen it, or
thought she'd seen it, but when she shifted her gaze to look, it
wasn't there at all. "I
am not familiar with what you are doing. Is this an Osoru spell?"
she asked Giyan. "I am firmly of the belief that Osoru is a
dangerous form of sorcery." "This
is not Osoru," Giyan assured her. "I will not be bringing
that back to the abbey." Giyan was not lying, for Horolaggia,
like all daemons, had no natural access to Osoru. That was one reason
he why he was expending so much energy in weaving the Malasocca.
Giyan was fighting him every inch of the way with her impressive
arsenal of Osoru spells. Also like all daemons, Horolaggia coveted
those enchantments. Often,
he would grind his fangs with rage at the injustice of not being able
to understand or hold in his head even a single Osoru spell. The
Malasocca would change all that. Now
the pattern of the stasis-web here and there began to flicker, like
the flame in the oil lamp. The shards turned into patches, which
spread until the entirety of the cocoon had returned to light. Konara
Urdma gasped. "Is that truly Konara Bartta?" Horolaggia,
inside Giyan's mind, laughed silently. How satisfying this risk he
had taken had become, and in such a short time! Oh, yes, he had been
right to have seized the initiative, to move lightning quick while
all the others hesitated, paralyzed by the promise of dire
consequences. Miina was long vanished from this realm, and the
Dragons were made powerless. As he predicted. "Now
come," Horolaggia commanded with Giyan's voice. "This is
where I require your assistance." As
she strode forward, the scheming Konara Urdma at her side, she said,
"As I have told you, because the stasis-web did not have time to
fully form, undoing it is a delicate and complicated process. That is
why two of us are needed. Now you must be careful and cleave to my
instructions precisely. If you do not, if you deviate by even the
slightest degree, Konara Bartta will not successfully emerge from
it." "You
mean she could die?" Giyan
laughed silently at Konara Urdma's stupidity. "Very easily,
yes." She
lifted her left hand, and a tiny spark spiraled out from her
fingertips, arcing toward the point in the sorcerous cocoon where the
outermost piece of the web was attached. The spark struck the point
and, with an eerie creaky sigh, that small section of the web lifted. "Ah,
good, the web is come undone," Giyan said. "Now for the
really difficult part." At her silent command a large oval
basket appeared out of the gelid air. It was a color that made Konara
Urdma's eyeballs ache when she looked at it for too long. Giyan
handed it to her. "Now as I unwrap the web you will hold the
basket beneath to catch the folds. You must not—and this is
vital—you must not touch the folds, even inadvertently." "What
will happen if I touch the web?" Konara Urdma asked, accepting
the basket. "The
web will be instantaneously poisoned and Konara Bartta will die
stillborn inside it." Giyan pointed. "Now stand just
there." And she nodded, raising both her hands again. Something
cracked inside Konara Urdma's inner ears, making her wince. "Keep
your position," Giyan admonished. "Steady your hands; they
are trembling. Here comes the first layer." Once,
long ago, when her parents had taken her to the coast to see her
long-lost uncle, Konara Urdma had seen fisherfolk hauling a sea-weedy
net from the Sea of Blood. It was filled with flopping silvery fish.
But in its center had been a dark squirmy thing with many tentacles
that undulated and flicked, searching for something, it seemed, to
wrap themselves around and crush. The
layer, as Giyan peeled it back from the rest of the cocoon, reminded
her of the squirmy tentacled thing that had haunted her dreams for as
long as she remained on the coast. She had never been so happy to
return to Stone Border. The thing oozed into the sorcerous basket she
held with hands that still trembled despite Giyan's warning. And it
did not lie there in the basket's shallow black bottom, but pulsed
rhythmically like a living thing. "Easy
now," Giyan was saying. "Here comes the second layer." Konara
Urdma could see her concentrating mightily. Giyan had not exaggerated
the complexity of her task. Konara Urdma's thoughts now turned to
what she herself needed to do. She had despised Bartta even while she
learned from her, despised her because Bartta had laughed at her
dreams of ambition. Bartta had thought her weak, contemptible even.
She had allowed Konara Urdma a modicum of power, then took enormous
pleasure in periodically denying her that power, the better to
illustrate their respective positions in the abbey hierarchy. I
don't even need to threaten you, Bartta had once told her
gloatingly. You haven't the imagination or ability to form an
alliance against me. You're nothing more than a joke. Here
came another layer, slithering with a cloacal glisten into the
basket, and she adjusted her position slightly. And
now here she was as head of the Dea Cretan, and enjoying every moment
of her triumph over Bartta, and what happens? Bartta's twin sister,
once exiled, pops up out of nowhere, and already some of the younger
konara are calling her Mother. A
third layer rippled downward into the basket. Something
had to be done, Konara Urdma knew that right away, but it wasn't
until a moment ago that she could figure out what. How ironic that
Giyan herself should provide the answer. She would dispose of Bartta
by infecting the stasis-web, then she would throw the thing over
Giyan and get rid of her, as well. But she had to be patient. Acting
precipitously might arouse Giyan's suspicions. It had to look like an
accident, a momentary slip on her part when the basket was heavy with
the stasis-web, but while it was still attached to Bartta. She
waited until almost all the web was pulsing between her arms before
she stumbled a little. Her right shoulder dipped down, the basket
tipping with it, and the topmost layer of web slid against her
forearm. "Oh,"
she said as the thing slipped around her wrist. It seemed to her as
if the web fairly bolted from the basket, whipping itself around her
so quickly and completely that she had no chance to react or even to
cry out. The last of it came off Bartta and wrapped itself around
her. Not that she was aware of it; her consciousness was completely
absorbed in the pain of her skin being dissolved layer by layer. Giyan
held the insensate, deformed body of her twin in her arms securely,
if not lovingly. A brownish slime, interspersed with clots of a
gelatinous whitish substance, covered Bartta from head to toe. That
would pass now as Bartta began again to breathe the air around her. Konara
Urdma, locked inside her sorcerous cocoon, writhed and thrashed with
increasing intensity. That, too, would pass. Giyan
smiled down and spoke softly, almost crooningly. "How does it
feel to be eaten alive? Please, Konara Urdma, be so kind as to
describe each sensation." She chuckled, a low evil sound.
Horolaggia's sound. "I warned you, didn't I? I told you not to
touch the web. But I knew you could not help yourself. Your desire to
see Bartta dead was written all over your face. So I lied. But do not
despair. You fulfilled your purpose. You see, the stasis-web is a
very dangerous thing, especially when it is interrupted as this one
was. The only way to get Bartta safely out was to give it a
substitute. So I gave it you. The web is a living creature, as
doubtless you can now attest. The fire wounded it because Bartta did
not have enough time to complete it before the conflagration engulfed
her. It has been in pain all this time, such terrible pain as you
cannot imagine." She cocked her head at the thrashing cocoon.
"But then again perhaps you very well can imagine."
The brown goo was drying up, the white stuff shriveling into the
tiniest beads, which then popped like air bubbles. Bartta's skin was
reappearing, reddened as it tried to adjust to being out of the
fluids in which she had been soaking, and scarred as was inevitable
when the spell was not completed. This scar appeared on her right
side. It slashed more or less diagonally from the dragged-down corner
of her mouth, over her jaw, creasing the side of her neck. It was a
coarse, ugly thing that no spell could reverse. Well, she was
already deformed, Giyan thought. What difference can another
disfigurement make? Giyan
shifted her sister to a more comfortable position. Horolaggia thought
he'd have to do something about increasing this host's strength as
soon as the Malasocca allowed. Giyan pressed her lips against
Bartta's, pushed her tongue into her sister's mouth while the
daemon-spore rolled off her furrowed tongue, attaching itself to the
roof of Bartta's mouth and sinking in. From
a long way off, Horolaggia heard Myggorra's shout of triumph, and he
said with Giyan's voice, "It is our time now, sister—mine
and yours." Every
time Kurgan saw the Old V'ornn now, he was stitched with the thread
of wariness. Knowing that the Old V'ornn was really Nith Batoxxx in
disguise, knowing that Nith Batoxxx was either mad or ... well,
Kurgan did not know what. That was the problem, or part of it anyway.
But when the Old V'ornn wished to see him he could not say no without
his becoming suspicious. Arousing the Gyrgon's suspicions was the one
thing Kurgan sought to avoid. Kurgan
could not believe how much he used to like the small artist's
residence the Old V'ornn now owned, had liked in particular how the
main rooms could be opened onto the lush garden he had as a boy
helped the Old V'ornn to create. Now the place simply gave him the
creeps. Much as he hated to admit it, he knew that when it came to
Nith Batoxxx, to the horror he had seen reflected in the mirror, he
needed help. This
particular evening, despite the chill, the villa's doors had been
thrown wide. Red and blue leaves lay crinkled on the ground, swirled
upward in occasional eddies by the wind. The gurgling of the pool in
the hidden center of the garden could clearly be heard. A lone
black-crow, perched on a bare branch, appeared to watch Kurgan as he
crossed the threshold of the house and entered the garden. "Over
here." Despite the evidence of his age, the Old V'ornn's voice,
strong and vibrant and somehow sinister, rose amid the foliage like
the caw of another blackcrow. Kurgan
found the Old V'ornn on his knees, digging in the damp soil beside
the pool with a crusty Kundalan spade. "Do you know anything
about Indole al'Hul?" He held up a small mushroom with a flaring
cap whose pinkish top was as pale as its gilled underside was dark. Kurgan
shrugged. "Indole
al'Hul means 'Mother of Terror' in one of the indigenous
languages, I forget which." He rolled the slender stalk between
his knobbed thumb and forefinger. "A rather fascinating little
item." His coppery skin, pulled thin over veins and bones,
glowed dully in the lozenges of light thrown by filigreed bronze oil
lanterns he had lighted during the lees of the silvery autumnal
afternoon. "When you consider what ingesting even a tiny amount
does to the autonomous nervous system." Kurgan
hunkered down next to the Old V'ornn, who, he had discovered many
years ago, was fond of his arcane lessons. "What will it do?"
he said, returning with little effort to the role of dedicated
student. "It
all depends. If you take it straight from the plant, it will shut the
system down completely and finally," the Old V'ornn said. "Take
it distilled and refined, and it causes a whole panoply of
psychotropic effects." "In
other words, the victim loses his mind," Kurgan said, entering
into the spirit of the lesson. "In
a manner of speaking." The Old V'ornn broke the delicate stem in
two, watched the slow ooze of a pale yellow liquid. "That can be
good, you know. This substance opens the mind up to the worlds around
us, layers upon layers, unseen and unheard, but nonetheless quite
real." His mischievous smile momentarily transformed him into a
truant child. "Kundala, it seems, is a treasure trove of such
chemical wonders. And the Ramahan know them all. Or at least they
did." He stood up, dropped the mushroom, and brushed the dirt
off his knees and hands. "The Ramahan were privy to many
secrets, once upon a time." Together,
they wandered the garden's path until they came to the center. The
Old V'ornn lifted a hand, indicating that they should sit on
a bench beside the pool of purling black water that bubbled up from
the bowels of the planet. Kurgan wrapped his cloak more tightly
around him to keep out the increasing chill, but curiously the Old
V'ornn appeared oblivious to the falling temperature. When
they had settled themselves, the Old V'ornn reached over and produced
a dark bottle and two crystal goblets. "I have been waiting for
the right moment," he said as he filled the goblets with
fire-grade numaaadis. "A private moment." He handed Kurgan
a goblet. "To toast your swift and unerring ascendancy to the
post of regent of Kundala." The goblets rang as their rims
touched. "Stogggul Kurgan, I salute you!" Kurgan
drank and waited for the other boot to fall. He knew the Old V'ornn
well enough to suspect that he had not been asked here simply to be
honored. They had not yet come to the heart of the matter. For there
was always a heart to these interviews, as hidden as the pool at the
center of this garden. This was the Old V'ornn's way. If Kurgan had
been more self-aware, he would have known that it had become his way,
as well. "Do
you find the fire-grade numaaadis to your liking?" the Old
V'ornn asked. "It
is first tier," Kurgan said. "A
good year, no doubt. Go ahead. Drain your goblet. There is more to be
drunk this night." That mischievous smile had reappeared. But
the moment Kurgan did so, the goblet slipped through his fingers,
crashed to the stone path at his feet. The
Old V'ornn peered into Kurgan's face. "Regent, are you all
right?" Kurgan
was already incapable of replying. The chill that had before crept
through his flesh had now been dispelled by a powerful and not
unpleasant heat that suffused him from his toes to the top of his
skull. His head was expanding. Colors seemed to pulse to the soughing
of the wind through the bare tree branches. The blackcrow appeared to
be laughing at him. He tasted his own pulse as if it were food and
drink he had just ingested. "Even
among the Ramadan, Indole al'Hul is a special mushroom." The Old
V'ornn's voice boomed through the garden like thunder. "It was
never particularly well-known or used. Hardly surprising, given its
name. But, believe me, it does have its uses." The
Old V'ornn pulled Kurgan off the bench, but Kurgan's legs felt like
liquid, and his knees refused to work. He half collapsed onto the
path. "And
I was ever so careful refining and distilling it." Kurgan
felt nothing. He was too busy trying to keep all the colors of the
garden from running together. This seemed to take more effort than he
was able to give, and so with the able assistance of the Indole
al'Hul elixir, he passed from a troubled state of consciousness into
a deep and untroubled trance, where the drone of the Old V'ornn's
voice was nothing more than the hiss and suck of an ocean's tide, a
kind of static hanging in the background of his pulsing mind, a
photonic communication just beyond hearing. Beside
him, the Old V'ornn, noting that Kurgan's eyes had rolled up into his
head, metamorphosed into Nith Batoxxx. And yet, anyone familiar with
Nith Batoxxx would say with utter certainty that this was not
precisely Nith Batoxxx, for a dark and uncertain rim hovered about
him, obliterating what the Ramahan would term the emanations of his
essence. This penumbra, had anyone who knew him been present, would
have hurt their eyes and made their throats close up, leaving them
gasping. It was akin to a negative current, a darkness that flickered
like cold flame, changing its shape from heartsbeat to heartsbeat. "And
so we have come, at last, to the heart of our current lesson."
This voice, too, was different, subtly unlike that of either Nith
Batoxxx or the Old V'ornn. He
put his long-fingered hand upon the crown of Kurgan's gleaming skull
and his countenance briefly clouded over. "Is the Indole al'Hul
doing its work? Even I, who have taken possession of you, Gyrgon,
cannot know for certain." Leaning
over, he stared for a moment into the pool which, like the now
shattered mirror in the regent's palace, reflected back at him that
which Kurgan had clandestinely seen. "One
can learn so much about an individual through his birth-caul. But
apparently not enough. It pains me now to admit that I was wrong
about you." He
whistled an odd little tune, and the bright-eyed blackcrow spread its
wings and swooped across the garden to perch upon his shoulder, where
it commenced to hop, lunging its long yellow beak toward Kurgan's
ear. "No,
no," the creature that had taken possession of Nith Batoxxx
admonished. "Mustn't, mustn't." After
uttering a single shrill cry, the blackcrow settled down. "Ah,
Stogggul Kurgan, you already believe yourself different from other
V'ornn." The creature inside Nith Batoxxx paused to observe the
silently crackling penumbra that encircled him, and instantly
suppressed it, knowing that he must not allow anyone to see his true
self leaking out of his Gyrgon host body. "If you only knew how
different!" He sighed as he stroked the blackcrow's glossy
feathers. "But, given your volatile nature, it would be unwise
to give you this knowledge." He
reached for a lantern. "And now it is time to see what the
Indole al'Hul reveals about you." Lifting
the lantern, he examined the back of Kurgan's neck as if he were a
primitive soothsayer. He fingered the skin between the two knobs at
the top of Kurgan's spine. "Nothing]"
His head snapped up, his eyes blazing. "Is it possible that I am
wrong again? And yet. . ." His
voice trailed off into the soughing of the wind. The blackcrow,
sensing the gathering storm, was now in the highest branch of the
tree, its wings folded tight against its sides. For a time, the thing
inside Nith Batoxxx remained absolutely still. Then he gripped the
edge of the pool, staring at it until its black water began to foam.
In an instant, he plunged his head and shoulders into the roiling
blackness of the water, opened his mouth—a mouth no V'ornn
would ever recognize—and emitted a bellow of rage that was
heard all the way to the sorcerous Portal of the Abyss. When
Jesst Vebbn entered the spice district it was nearing sunset, and the
market was alive with a spray of shoppers dropping by on their way
home to prepare the evening meal. As a consequence, the narrow aisles
between the mounded displays were choked with Kun-dalan, house
servants to wealthy Bashkir families. Jesst
was uncomfortable outside Harborside, uncomfortable, if truth be
told, outside the thick-walled precincts of Receiving Spirit. Being
so long in the service of Gyrgon, he supposed that he had acquired
their aversion to the outdoors. But at Bronnn Pallln's insistence,
their periodic rendezvous took place where they could pass for chance
encounters or brief conversations between strangers. Jesst
had been treating the Bashkir's wife for years. Not that there was
anything wrong with her. After her second visit he had realized that
it was the attention she craved, attention Bronnn Pallln would not
give her. Bronnn Pallln knew that she was healthy as a cor, knew
further that she was doing no more than wasting Jesst's valuable
time. Other Genomatekks had apparently not been so patient and
forgiving. To show his appreciation, he paid Jesst an exorbitant
amount of coins for each visit. Coins that Jesst would otherwise be
unable to earn. And so, when Bronnn Pallln had come to Jesst, asking
a favor, Jesst was not inclined to refuse him. Bronnn
Pallln adored cinnamon, and with fifteen different varieties being
imported weekly from the Korrush, the cinnamon stalls were where
Jesst found the Bashkir. Bronnn Pallln could have sent a servant, of
course, but such was his fanaticism that he insisted on tasting and
purchasing the cinnamon himself. "Try
this gowit," he said as Jesst came up. He held out his hand in
the center of which was a small pinch of finely ground dark rose
grains. "Go on," he insisted. "It is first-rate." As
Bronnn Pallln had taught him to do, Jesst took some between thumb and
forefinger and placed it on the back of his tongue. Even this tiny
amount was so strong it made his eyes water. "Was
I wrong?" Bronnn Pallln said. Jesst
had to admit that he was not wrong. Bronnn
Pallln nodded to the cinnamon vendor, held up three fingers, and the
vendor began to fill a bag. "How goes our fishing expedition?"
Bronnn Pallln said. Jesst
handed over a data-decagon. "This contains a transcript of the
conversation I had with the SaTrryn Deirus, Kirlll Qandda. It has
what you want." Bronnn
Pallln pocketed it with ill-disguised glee. "Excellent." "There
is something." Bronnn
Pallln raised his eyes heavenward and heaved a theatrical sigh.
"There always is." "You
will have to deal with the regent's sister." "Oratttony?" "The
other one. The pariah." "Marethyn.
Good N'Luuura, why?" "It
is all in the data-decagon." "Kindly
enlighten me now," Bronnn Pallln said in a tone that left no
room for debate. "According
to the Deirus, Marethyn Stogggul knows the location of the Bashkir
traitor's headquarters." "Indeed."
Bronnn Pallln thought a moment. "O, fortunate son that I am, it
is the pariah." He laughed. "Considering how Kurgan
Stogggul feels about her, I very much doubt he will mind the harsh
treatment I have in store for her." He nodded. "You have
done well." As
he prepared to move on, Jesst said, "I would like my payment." Bronnn
Pallln was counting his packages. "Patience is a virtue." "It
is a virtue of the poor. I have already pledged a down payment on a
new residence." Bronnn
Pallln shrugged. "As it happens, that was unwise." He took
possession of the bag of gowit cinnamon. Jesst's
face flushed with anger. "Our original agreement." "The
gimnopede is not yet caught." "You
have no intention of paying me anything, do you?" Bronnn
Pallln thought of Wennn Stogggul treating him with contempt; he
thought about what it felt like to have power over others, and he
discovered that he liked what he felt. "Do
not blame me for squandering away what you never had," he said. "But
we had a deal. You promised me payment if I delivered, and now I
have. Is not a Bashkir's word sacred?" "Only
with other Bashkir," Bronnn Pallln pointed out as he took his
leave.
15 Plots
Most Sinister
Line-General
Lokck Werrrent, the commander of the Khagggun forces for the Sudden
Lakes quadrant, had set up his command center in Glistening Drum, a
mountain town northeast of Joining the Valleys. Once, Glistening Drum
had been a small village wholly in the service of the Abbey of
Glistening Drum, the ruins of which could still be seen on a
rubble-strewn promontory overlooking the town square. In the years
after the Khagggun had razed the abbey, the village itself had oddly
thrived, growing into a moderate-sized town, an agricultural hub that
helped feed the burgeoning V'ornn population of Axis Tyr. It was here
that most of the cor-milk cheese was crafted, owing to the verdant
fields of first-quality ggley that covered the slopes of the
mountainsides. Ggley was used in the fermentation process. It was a
delicate herblike plant that thrived only in the local mountain
terrain and was not suitable for export or long shipments. Line-General
Werrrent's decision to base his command center in Glistening Drum was
quite deliberate. The town enjoyed a near-perfect central location he
found both appealing and appropriate for his operations. Nevertheless,
he found that he needed to spend much of his time in Axis Tyr,
especially since Kurgan Stogggul had succeeded his father as regent. While
he was in Axis Tyr on business, it fell to Wing-Adjutant Iin Wiiin to
run the command center. Wiiin managed with a detached efficiency
bordering on the pathological. No matter. Wing-Adjutant Wiiin had
made himself indispensable, allowing the Line-General the latitude to
take care of the ever more complex politics of war in the capital. It
was fortunate that Wing-Adjutant Wiiin enjoyed the confidence of his
superior, for he was a thin, ropey-muscled individual who had been
cursed with eyes placed too close together, a lipless mouth, and a
complexion permanently scarred by a serious bout of Kraelian
fire-worm fever that somehow resisted all known genomic reconfiguring
therapy. Even the lowest of Looorm found him repulsive. Though, so it
was said, he loved nothing at all, it was clear to those he commanded
that he liked overseeing a smoothly functioning hive of Khagggun. And
while he did harbor other interests—for instance, he enjoyed
hunting perwillon in the mountain caves—he seemed to those
around him to live the dullest of lives. In fact, nothing could have
been further from the truth, for Wiiin dearly loved the periodic
clandestine meetings with the Line-General's Ramahan contact who
provided the tactical information on current Resistance personnel and
plans. On
this particular night, he was working late—for it could never
be said, even by his bitterest enemies, that he was a shirker—when
one of his Khagggun appeared with a message for the Line-General that
had been left outside the command center. Werrrent had, a week
before, gone south to Axis Tyr where, so far as Wiiin knew, he would
remain for some time. After
dismissing the Khagggun, Wiiin opened the message. Almost
immediately, he frowned. It was a curious thing, this message,
handwritten in Kundalan, but containing in its upper right-hand
corner the whorl of Line-General Lokck Werrrent's name in V'ornnish
script. He read the message twice through, memorizing it. Then he
held it to a flame until it charred into ash, which he ground to
powder between his spatulate thumb and forefinger. He
rose, checked the time as he swung on the chest plate of his battle
armor. Downstairs, he hurried across the open courtyard to the
stables, where he signed out a cthauros and, mounting it, dug his
heels into its flanks. He
rode due east for precisely three-quarters of a kilometer, whereupon
he turned south and, as per the instructions in the message, rode
until he had come to the northern edge of a lozenge-shaped copse of
sysal trees. There, he reined in and waited. The
night was quite chill. A strong wind careened out of the northeast,
bringing with it the bitter tang of Djenn Marre ice. He shivered a
little inside his armor, thinking that it was going to be a long,
cold winter. Two moons, pale green crescents, lent a ghostly light to
the copse of thorned trees and the mountainous terrain all around. "You
are not Line-General Lokck Werrrent." His
saddle creaked as he turned, peering into the copse. "Who are
you?" he said, half-drawing his shock-sword. "Show yourself
or risk the consequences." A
young Kundalan female emerged from the shadows. She was garbed in the
persimmon-colored robes of a Ramahan konara. She walked slowly,
almost, Wiiin thought, painfully, with her arms folded across her
ample belly. He
scabbarded his weapon. "Are you injured?" he inquired. "I
sent a message to Line-General Lokck Werrrent," the konara said.
"Where is he?" "I
am Wing-Adjutant Iin Wiiin." He dismounted. "I speak for
the Line-General in all matters, great and small." "Are
you privy to all the Line-General's secrets, Wing-Adjutant Iin
Wiiin?" "I
do not understand your meaning." "I
know about the duscaant." Wiiin
stiffened. "What duscaant?" The
konara smiled a secret smile. "Come, come, Wing-Adjutant. Either
you speak for the Line-General, or you do not." "The
duscaant the Line-General had secreted in the Abbey of Glistening
Drum." "No,"
the konara said slowly and distinctly. "The duscaant the
Line-General had secreted in the Abbey of Warm Current." "Ah,
yes. I remember now. It was put there by Konara Yesttur." "No.
Konara Mossa hid it." Wiiin
nodded, obviously satisfied. "And you are?" "Konara
Eleana." "Where
is my regular contact?" "Konara
Bartta has met with an unfortunate accident." "She
is dead, yes. I meant her replacement, Konara Urdma." "Ill."
Eleana almost choked on the word. She had no idea who he was talking
about. He
frowned. "This is unexpected." You
can say that again, Eleana thought. What is going on at the
abbey? "Since Konara Bartta's death the abbey has been in
turmoil." "You
have taken over Konara Urdma's, ah, duties." "Only
until she is recovered." Wiiin
frowned deeply. "She should never have been given this duty. She
is often ill and does not meet her deadline." "She
was Konara Bartta's choice." Wiiin
took a breath. He disliked dealing with Ramahan; he could never quite
allow himself to trust them fully. Still, these particular Ramahan,
starting with Konara Mossa, had kept to their bargain, providing
accurate intelligence they inveigled from Resistance members who were
antagonistic to Kara, the new religion that had sprung up. "All
right then. Let's get down to it. What do you have for me?" "There
is a Resistance cell camped fifty kilometers west of here." It
was a blatant lie, but what else could she say? "That's
it? Surely Konara Urdma explained the parameters. We require
substantial updates on Resistance movements in order to keep
your abbey safe." "Wing-Adjutant,
I have for days now traveled far—" "Yes,
yes, all the way from Stone Border," he said impatiently. "What
of it?" She
regarded him levelly out of dark eyes. "I am new at this. I am
doing the best I can." "Not
good enough," Wing-Adjutant Wiiin said as he regained his
saddle. "You have two weeks to gather the requisite
intelligence. After that . . ." He shrugged. Wheeling his
cthauros, he galloped back the way he had come. Eleana
stood still and silent, watching him as he passed over a
moonslight-dappled rise and disappeared from view. "Well
done," Rekkk Hacilar said as he appeared from out of the depths
of the sysal grove. The Teyj was on his shoulder. They
had been led here by the signature whorl of V'ornnish letters that
appeared at the beginning of each scene the duscaant had recorded,
for it had contained not only the date and time but the name of the
Khagggun officer who had commissioned the espionage device:
Line-General Lokck Werrrent. Rekkk had used his okummmon to fashion
the raw-silk robes of a Ramahan konara for Eleana to use. Together,
they had written, in Kundalan and V'ornn, the urgent message that had
brought Wiiin here. "Konara
Urdma," Rekkk said. "Now we know the name of our traitor." "Except
that she hasn't shown up. I am getting an unpleasant feeling about
the abbey." Eleana sighed and held her belly. "Stone Border
is a long and arduous climb from here. I honestly do not know whether
I can make it." He
put his arm around her and led her into the trees, where he sat her
down with her back against a thick bole. As he gave her water from a
skin, he said, "I cannot infiltrate the abbey on my own." "If
only Thigpen were here. Dear Thigpen! She would find a way to
transport us." He
looked into the moons-struck darkness. "Don't worry. I will get
us both there." And
I say there is a way to settle the dispute between the Nwerrrn and
the Fellanngg Consortia," Bronnn Pallln said. "I
can just imagine," Dobbro Mannx chortled. "Have the regent
declare both their claims null and void so your own Consortium can
plunder the mineral-rich territory west of the Borobodur forest."
Then the solicitor-Bashkir guffawed and lifted a fat forefinger. "No,
wait, you would have to be Prime Factor to do that." "But,
if memory serves, the Pallln Consortium has a history of having the
Stogggul ear." Line-General Lokck Werrrent glanced over at
Bronnn Pallln. "Isn't that so?" Pallln's
expression was sour, despite the festivities of the dinner party at
Mannx's opulent Eastern Quarter residence. These were fashionable
affairs, held weekly with more or less the same personages, who would
be treated to the marvelous cooking of the rotund Mannx's chef, after
which, sated and half-drunk, they would retire to the library—or
the garden, in warmer weather—for a small-wager game of
warrnixx. The
Line-General was obliged to remind Bronnn Pallln several times before
Pallln mumbled, "True enough." "Then
perhaps you would have no objection to a new member of the Great
Caste making a small investment in—" "Oho!"
Mannx cried, "I do believe the Line-General has aspirations.
Will you hang up your command to become a Bashkir?" "I
wish nothing of the sort," the Line-General said. "A taste
is all I am looking for." "Have
a care, Line-General," said Gill Fullom, the patriarch, aged and
revered, of his First Rank Consortium. "Your status as Great
Caste is still covered with birth fluid. It would be prudent to
wait." Lokck
Werrrent brooded in silence for a time, his thoughts like storm
clouds boiling on the horizon. Since his fateful conversation with
Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin regarding the true purpose behind the
promise to elevate Khagggun to Great Caste status he had his ear
attuned for any signs that would prove Olnnn's suspicions justified. "Just
what is your meaning?" he said, perhaps a bit too testily. "That
we Khagggun are not up to elevation?" "Not
at all." Gill Fullom seemed somewhat taken aback by the
vehemence of the Line-General's reply. "I was simply delivering
what I considered prudent advice." A
short, though slightly awkward silence ensued. "Bronnn
Pallln, in the matter of you and the regent," Mannx said
brightly. He had a knack for keeping a party going. "I
distinctly heard a 'but' hanging in the air like a rotten quilllon." "No
buts," Pallln said rather too defensively. "If
you will excuse an inquiring mind," Mannx said, "I must say
I was rather surprised when Wennn Stogggul named Sornnn SaTrryn Prime
Factor instead of you." "What's
the matter, don't you like Sornnn SaTrryn?" the Line-General
said, still with a touch of peevishness. Sometimes the loose tongues
of non-Khagggun got to him. "I have heard nothing but praise for
the Prime Factor's abilities at mediation." "There
are some," Fullom said fruitily, "who believe the SaTrryn
are already powerful enough without their scion being Prime Factor."
He clipped his finger into a bit of stew left on his plate, stirred
it around. "And there are others who believe that Sornnn
SaTrryn's apparent love affair with the Korrush is a decadent and
corrupting influence." "Are
you one of them?" the Line-General asked. Fullom
smiled and indelicately sucked stew off his fingertip. Mannx
spread his hands. "I mean to say, Bronnn Pallln, you deserved
the office, didn't you? You have the seniority. You'd earned the
right, hadn't you?" "In
fact," Pallln said, trying to shut out Mannx's words, which
echoed his own thoughts, "I have a far better relationship with
Kurgan Stogggul than I had with his father. In fact, Line-General, I
have reached a certain understanding with the Star-Admiral himself." "Is
that so?" Werrrent said. He eyed Bronnn Pallln with his
chron-osteel gaze. "Pray tell us more." At
once, Pallln regretted having opened his mouth. How could he have
forgotten that Khagggun were insanely jealous of alliances? "There
is nothing to tell," he said. "Oh,
come now." Mannx looked around the table. "No one here
believes that, especially not I." Bronnn
Pallln felt a murderous rage toward them for backing him into this
damnable corner. "My conversations with the Star-Admiral are
strictly private," he said curtly. "Oho!"
Mannx clapped his small, pudgy hands like a boy on his Ascension day.
"So there is something afoot." "What
if there is?" Bronnn Pallln wondered what he was doing getting
in deeper and deeper. But he was truly angry now, and he did not
care. In fact, there was a terrifying elation in this kind of
reckless behavior. "We
are all friends here." Mannx spread his hands over his portly
belly. "If you are privy to the Star-Admiral's intent, I think
you should tell us. In the strictest of confidence, of course."
He laughed his infectious laugh. "My goodness, why else do we
meet every week?" "Of
course]" the rest of them echoed in unison. Bronnn
Pallln waved them to silence. He looked around the table. He had
their rapt attention, and that felt so good there was only one thing
to do. "The Star-Admiral has been suspicious of Sornnn SaTrryn
for some time," he said. "Now I have discovered that the
SaTrryn scion is unfit to hold the post of Prime Factor." His
hearts were racing; he had plunged all the way in. The
Line-General cracked his knuckles ominously. "What is this you
say?" "I
have evidence that he is the traitor who is providing aid and
Khagggun materiel to the Kundalan Resistance." There
ensued, not surprisingly, a stunned silence. "The
SaTrryn own the highest of reputations, and Sornnn SaTrryn is no
exception," Line-General Werrrent declared. "This is the
gravest of allegations. With the gravest of consequences." Didn't
Bronnn Pallln know that! But now the warrnixx-bones were cast, and he
wondered briefly whether he had set his mind on this course before
the evening had even begun. It would not surprise him in the least.
He had been planning to petition the regent for an audience as early
as the following morning. After all, he now had what Star-Admiral
Olnnn Rydddlin had asked him to obtain—Sornnn SaTrryn's head on
a platter. Which grisly trophy would ensure his long-delayed
ascension to the office of Prime Factor. But for tonight, at least,
he could not help but boast among his friends and compatriots. And
why shouldn't he boast about his accomplishment? He wanted to be
Prime Factor more than anything in life. Wennn Stogggul had slammed
that particular door in his face, but the new regent, through Olnnn
Rydddlin, had opened it again. "Please,
Bronnn Pallln, do not let the Line-General's gruffness deter you,"
Fullom said. He was almost humming in delight. "It so happens
that many Bashkir share the Star-Admiral's suspicions." "I
care nothing for the opinions of Bashkir." Line-General Werrrent
shrugged his shoulders. "But if you have the evidence, this is
something else again." Bronnn
Pallln was light-headed with triumph. All of a sudden Gill Fullom was
defending him. Gill Fullom, who had never had a good word to say to
him. A nexus of power had formed around him, a new and decidedly
delirious experience that he was determined to prolong. Feeling as if
his nerves were going to shatter at any moment, he produced the
data-decagon Jesst had given him, which contained Kirlll Qandda's
revelations concerning Sornnn SaTrryn. He placed it on the table. The
Line-General stared at it for a moment, then took out his data-reader
and inserted the crystal. "What
is it?" Mannx cried. "What is the evidence?" Line-General
Werrrent passed the reader over and Mannx grabbed it avidly, scanned
it quickly, then turned it over to Gill Fullom. "It
would be unwise to jump to conclusions," Werrrent said darkly,
eyeing the transcript. "I
agree," Bronnn Pallln heard himself saying. "My first
thought was to show it to the regent right away and let him proceed." "I
would advise caution in that matter," Fullom said softly. "This
is, after all, Kurgan Stogggul we are speaking of. We all know what
happened to his father." "What
is your meaning?" Line-General Werrrent said anxiously. Fullom
turned to him, addressing him directly. "I have it on good
authority that Wennn Stogggul reneged on his solemn word to
Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha. Surely, Line-General, you already know
that he ordered Kinnnus Morcha's assassination." "You
are speaking treason," Werrrent muttered. "Not
if it is the truth." "But
you have no proof," Werrrent said doggedly. The
old Bashkir shook his head. "You and I go back a long way,
Line-General. We may disagree on this matter or that, but I know that
you are a true patriot. So I trust that you will forgive me when I
tell you that true patriots should not be blind." "The
Stogggul certainly have a history of being headstrong," Mannx
said. "Considering
these allegations," Pallln said, "I think we would all be
better served if I was the Prime Factor." He looked to Fullom,
concerned that the old patriarch would have a negative reaction. But
it was the Line-General who gave Pallln a significant look. "As
reprehensible as it looks," the Line-General said, "this
evidence against Sornnn SaTrryn requires substantiation. Such as
finding SaTrryn's headquarters." "The
trouble with a raid," Fullom said, "is that the SaTrryn own
a number of warehouses. Which one is it in?" "There
I have the answer," Bronnn Pallln said. "Marethyn Stogggul
has been there." "But
she is the regent's sister!" Mannx cried. "We
all know the family's contempt for her," the Line-General said,
"and that includes the regent himself." "Why
should she tell you anything?" Fullom said. After
a moment's uncomfortable silence, Bronnn Pallln said, "Perhaps
she wouldn't voluntarily." They
were all looking at Pallln again, and he felt a small shiver work its
way down his spine. Addressing Line-General Werrrent, he said, "We
will have to go after Marethyn Stogggul directly." "The
Stogggul Consortium is not one to trifle with," Werrrent
offered. "It has many powerful friends and allies. If this
intelligence proves incorrect or cannot be corroborated ..." He
stopped there, the implications of his words hanging ominously in the
air. "Timing
is everything," Fullom mused. "The Line-General is right.
We will get one chance—one only. We must make the most of it.
He could order his Khagggun to pick Marethyn Stogggul up." "To
involve Khagggun at this stage would be imprudent," Werrrent
cautioned. Fullom
crossed speckled hands over his bony chest. "Well then, Bronnn
Pallln, it is up to you." All
his life, it seemed, Bronnn Pallln had been waiting for this moment.
Now that it had come he felt no trepidation, no fear. His destiny had
arrived, and he was going to seize it with both hands. "I
will take care of her myself," he said without hesitation.
"Believe me when I tell you it will be a pleasure." Not
long after he attained the rank of Attack-Commandant, a rumor began
to circulate concerning Accton Blled. The rumor, whose bones, like
all things Khagggun, were picked clean by endless speculation,
concerned the skull of a Corpius Segundian razor-raptor, and not just
any razor-raptor, as those whispering the story were quick to point
out, but a korrrai, the deadliest of the thirteen species. No
one had ever seen this skull, mind you, but no matter. It was alleged
to be in the possession of Accton Blled, having been severed from the
powerful torso after the titanic struggle in which he finally slew
it. Now, it was further whispered, he kept the eerily glowing memento
by his cot and spoke to it each night before he slept, imparting to
it secrets too terrible to relate to the living. That
this seemingly outlandish tale was passed around and taken with
absolute gravity was a testament to the awe in which he was held by
his compatriots. Olnnn
Rydddlin had, of course, heard this rumor. In point of fact, he had
heard every variation of it, including the one that held that Blled
had feasted on the korrrai's raw and bloody flesh even as it
convulsed in its death struggle. To him, the truth of such rumors was
of no import. What was interesting was the fact that they existed at
all. He
was still mulling this thought as he stepped off the Khagggun
hoverpod onto one of the crumbling shanstone pathways that
crisscrossed the inner courtyard of the Abbey of Warm Current.
Several kilometers to the west was the somnolent, dust-blown village
of Middle Seat. "This
is where they have been hiding out?" "So
the informant told us," Attack-Commander Blled said, "just
before he, er, expired." The
two officers began to stride down the path. "How
long did it take him to die?" Olnnn inquired in the same tone of
voice a Bashkir would ask about the price of a metric ton of
vanadium. "The
process was altogether efficient," Blled assured him. "No
time for fun?" "I
assumed the Star-Admiral wanted results quickly." "You
assumed correctly." Armed
and armored Khagggun, members of Blled's pack, stood at varying
intervals. The Attack-Commandant himself looked resplendent in his
armor. He had chosen burnt umber for his pack color, the light
burnished it with a rich glow. "They
were here, all right," Blled said, leading the way into the
kitchens and the sleep chambers. "And for quite some time." He
brought Olnnn into the Library. The Star-Admiral went over to the
shattered window. "What
happened here?" "No
idea. We found no traces of ion fire. In any case, the fugitives are
not here now." Olnnn
picked up a shard of colored glass, saw that it was actually two or
three that had been fused together by the high energy of whatever had
been aimed at the window. He thought of the hole in the laundry
underneath the kashiggen Nimbus and wondered if there was a
connection in the source of the energy. Pocketing the glass, he
walked along the refectory table until he came to the books lying
open on the tabletop. "Can
you read this, Attack-Commandant?" "No,
sir." "Any
V'ornn in your pack read Kundalan?" "Yes,
sir." Olnnn
turned to glance at him. "Excellent. And what is his analysis?" "He
could not read these books, Star-Admiral. They are not written in the
common present-day Kundalan he knows." "Was
he of any help at all?" "He
said he thought these were books of spellcraft" "Sorcery."
Olnnn nodded. "All things considered, what do these books, open
on the table, mean to you?" "I
would say the fugitives were looking for something," Blled
answered without hesitation. It
was clear to Olnnn that Blled had been thinking about the question
before Olnnn had even shown up. "Something
important, I warrant." He ran his finger down one page and up
another. "I wonder what it was." It
was at that moment that he felt a tremor in his leg. His sorcerous
leg, the one without skin and muscle and tendon. In the bones that
Malistra had ensorceled when she had saved him from Giyan's
spellcraft there began a motion not unlike bubbles rising to the
surface of a pond. Olnnn, alarmed, clamped his fingers around his
bare gleaming femur, and said nothing.
16 Crackle,
Pop, Snap
Pierced
by the fulkaan, Othnam, look at her." Othnam nodded at his
sister then, grinning, embraced Riane fully. "Out of the
kapudaan's den." He nodded. "Truly, you are one of us now." They
were in among a small cluster of tents on the northern fringes of
Agachire, and a little apart, so that the massed lights of the town
seemed like a fire on the steppe. Unlike the section of Agachire the
caravan had entered, there were no soldiers here, no rough talk or
bawdy song. The night was alive with hymnal chanting and rhymed
prayer. Just outside the tent was a ring of males, singing the prayer
cycle, their heads together, their arms around each other's waists,
moving rhythmically back and forth. She remembered just such a
religious group on the street below the terrace and wondered briefly
if it could be the same one. For
Riane was now among the Ghor, of whom, it seemed, Othnam and Mehmmer
were a part. They were black-robed and swarthy-skinned, partially
concealed behind white sinschals, embroidered with black runes. Now,
close-up, she could see that the ring was made up of males and
females. As they moved back and forth in the prayer-cycle chant Riane
could see a thin tanned-hide strap wound around each member's left
arm midway between elbow and shoulder. These ga'ajarra, like
the close-weave scarves around their heads, contained the words of
the Prophet Jiharre. First,
I must ask you to help me return to the palace and save Tezziq from
her fate. I swore to help her. Whatever Makktuub may order her to do,
I know that she is a good person, deserving of a life outside the
accursed haanjhala." Brother
and sister exchanged glances. Then Othnam swore under his breath as
he shook his head. Nevertheless, he spoke softly to Paddii,
dispatching him to report their delay to the Ghor guarding Perrnodt.
Paddii nodded and, with a quick prayer for their safety, left the
tent. "Expect
our help," Mehmmer told Riane, "but not our empathy." "The
ajjan is your responsibility," Othnam warned. "We want
nothing to do with her. Is this understood?" "Perfectly,"
Riane said. "I would expect nothing more from you." Mehmmer
took a menacing step toward Riane. "We save her from the
kapudaan's den, and this is how she rewards us." She
gripped her scimitar but before she could draw it her brother took
her wrist and stayed her. "We have agreed to disagree on the
subject of the ajjan," he said darkly. "But know this,
Riane. Our beliefs are our beliefs. Do not expect us to change." Riane
was about to formulate another sharp retort when the image of Thigpen
came to her. Not for the first time she wished the Rappa were with
her. She missed Thigpen terribly. Right now her advice and wisdom
would have been greatly appreciated. She tried to imagine what
Thigpen would say to her. Who are you, little dumpling, to judge
these tribesfolk when they have just saved your life? Besides,
she was still withholding secrets from them. She had not told them
that she had another compelling reason to infiltrate the kapudaan's
palace as quickly as possible. It was imperative she regain
possession of Nith Sahor's greatcoat before Nith Settt opened it
again and discovered that it was not inactive. Then he would know
that Nith Sahor had not died, after all. "Thank
you, Othnam, for your patience and your wisdom," Riane said in
what she hoped was a conciliatory tone. "Thank you also for
returning my dagger to me," Othnam
inclined his upper body slightly. "When you gave it to me for
safekeeping I could tell how much it meant to you. I thank you for
honoring me in that fashion." "Though
we do not agree on every issue, we still have more in common than
not." Mehmmer
jerked her head. "We had better go, if we are to help your ajjan
friend." They
draped Riane in black Ghorvish robes and white sinschal, then took
her out of the tent. The group of Ghor ceased their praying, turning
to watch them, silent, wise-eyed. There was not a smile among them,
but there was no animosity in their careful scrutiny of Riane. One of
them, a bearded male with sunken cheeks and skin the color of Korrush
dust, made a sign to Othnam, who halted them. Up close, Riane could
see that he had eyes like Othnam's, a startling blue, flecked with
emerald. Those eyes peered into hers now. He said his name was
Mu-Awwul. "So.
You have come. Finally." "I
do not understand," Riane said. "Were you expecting me?" "Othnam
and Mehmmer explained to me how you killed the disguised sauromician.
We have long suspected their infiltration to gain power in our region
but until now we lacked concrete proof of their perfidy."
Mu-Awwul's beard was long and curling, shot through with white, fine
as gossamer. "There is something you must tell me, isn't there?" "I
came to the Korrush to find the dzuoko Perrnodt." "This
we already know." "It
is my hope that she will aid me in my search for the Maasra." "Ahr
He rocked back and forth on his heels. "And why would you want
the Maasia?" His extraordinary eyes held steady on
Riane's face. It was as if he were seeing all of her at once. "Someone
important to me, someone I love, is being held prisoner. Only the
Veil of a Thousand Tears can save her." "Many
Ghor have died because of the Maasra" Mu-Awwul said.
"Many Jeni Cerii, for they also covet it greatly. Outlanders, as
well, have ventured deep into the Korrush, expending their lives in
their futile quest." Riane
felt her heart sink. "Are you saying that it doesn't exist?" "It
exists." Mu-Awwul nodded. "It has been handed down through
time from one guardian to another." "Where
is this guardian? Where can I find the Veil?" Mu-Awwul
studied Riane. "What is it? You have not yet told me what you
wish me to know." Mu-Awwul stroked his beard. "It is a
secret. It is hidden but I know. Tell me, now." Riane
swallowed, glanced briefly at Mehmmer and Othnam. "Is
it that you do not trust them?" Mu-Awwul asked. "I
owe them my life." The
old Ghor lifted his sun-browned hands. They had the texture of the
red soil of the Korrush itself. They were hands made capable by ropey
veins and strong bones and a keen mind. He took Riane's face in his
hands and bent her head toward him. "As I have foreseen, our
prayers have been answered." He kissed the crown of Riane's head
seven times. "The Prophet has sent us his greatest gift."
He released Riane and addressed Othnam and Mehmmer. "It is just
as I speculated when you told me that a Kundalan female appeared in
your camp accompanied by your own docile lymmnal." He
said to Riane, "You are the messenger of Jiharre, Riane. The
knowledge you have brought us has the potential to change the entire
Korrush." "If
only we all have the courage to act on it," Othnam said. "Enmity
is the most difficult mind-set to break," Mehmmer said. "The
Prophet's tasks were difficult," Mu-Awwul said. "Why should
he ask any less of his children?" "Are
you speaking only of the Ghor?" There
was a kind of collective gasp from the assembled, but the Mu-Awwul
held up his hand for silence. "You are from Axis Tyr and are
forgiven your ignorance." He pierced Riane with his penetrating
gaze. "Jiharre worshiped Miina. The Sarakkon, too, worship Her
through their own prophetess, Yahe. Every race on Kundala is related,
Riane. No matter our differences we are united in this one thing." He
took her hands in his. The palms felt like sandpaper. "Your
heart is pure, that much was never a secret. As I have said, many
have died in the pursuit of the Maasra. The Maasra is
like a living thing. It makes judgments, forms conclusions, takes
action. If you are meant to find it, then you will. If you are not,
then like all before you who were proved unworthy, you will die." "If
this dire warning was meant to dissuade me, it will not." Riane
knew she was taking a chance by interrupting him. "Ten thousand
pardons, wise one, but I am desperate. I must find the Veil before my
beloved Giyan is lost to me forever. I beg you to help me." "My
advice is to continue with your search." "I
have been seeking Perrnodt. Nith Settt seeks her, as well." Mu-Awwul
nodded. "Perrnodt knows the sanctuary wherein the Maasra
currently rests. Nith Settt seeks the Maasra. He wishes to
resurrect Za Hara-at. Without the Maasra he will fail. How he
knows this is a mystery to us." Riane
said gravely, "Mu-Awwul, I regret to tell you that this is not
all the Gyrgon seek. Nith Settt told me that they have been in the
Korrush for some time advising the kapudaan of the Five Tribes on how
to wage war against one another. They have poisoned you each against
the other. Even now, it seems clear to me, Agachire is preparing
itself for all-out war against the Jeni Cerii. This is the Gyrgon's
base mischief. They seek nothing less than your annihilation,
observing with pleasure only a Gyrgon could know the mounting
attrition as the killing escalates." There
was complete silence when Riane had finished, it was as if time had
ground to a halt. Riane observed a number of emotions pass across the
elder's lined and leathery face. No one moved; no one spoke. The air
between them seemed to spark with the enormity of the revelation. "Yes.
Truly Jiharre's messenger." Mu-Awwul cupped the back of Riane's
right hand in his, placed his other hand in the palm. Riane felt
something pressed into her hand. Then he intoned several lines in a
language Riane did not know. She
looked to Othnam who translated: "In
the Time before Time," he began, in the same odd singsong
intonation Mu-Awwul had used, "the Prophet Jiharre strode the
mountains, searching for the hand of the Maker, and at length, he
came upon this confluence of light and shadow, and he knew its worth,
for it did not change come sunset, as moonrise lit it just as the sun
had when it hung directly over his head. And in this way, Jiharre
recognized the hand of the Maker and, gathering the confluence in the
cupped palms of his hands, heard the prayer for unity forming in his
head, and this most sacred of chants he passed on to the fruit of his
bins, and they to theirs in the manner of all things sacred." Mu-Awwul
waited until Othnam had finished translating before withdrawing his
hand. Riane saw lying in the center of her palm a small polished
stone of an irregular shape. It was dark green, veined with deep
orange. In its center had been carved a bird, its wings spread wide. "The
fulkaan," Mehmmer said in tone of awe. "The companion of
Jiharre." "Also
his messenger," Mu-Awwul said. "Power and jjhani flow
from the image of the fulkaan." Riane
turned briefly to Othnam. "Jjhani?" "It
means . . ." Othnam screwed up his face. "A
kind of ... spiritual harvest," Mehmmer broke in. Riane
nodded. "Thank you," she said to Mu-Awwul, and bowed her
head. "I will treasure Jiharre's talisman." "Treasure
it, yes," Mu-Awwul said. "But use it, also." "Use
it? How?" "When
the time comes, you will know." He reached out, laid his thickly
veined hands on Riane's a last time. "I thank you for the great
gift you have given us. May you be guided by azmiirha always."
Then he returned to the circle. The holy ones put their heads
together, wrapped their arms around each other's waists, and resumed
the prayer cycle. Riane
followed Othnam and Mehmmer as they hurried from the Ghor encampment,
threading their way carefully through the jumble of narrow streets.
On all sides of them, tents rose up, small and large. Twice, they
spotted the kapudaan's guards and were forced to make anxious
detours. Nevertheless, they covered the remaining half kilometer to
the palace in good time and without incident. As
they crouched in the shadows across the street from the huge cluster
of striped tents, Mehmmer said, "Now what?" "We
spent a lot of time figuring a way to get you out," Othnam said.
"Getting you back in may prove even more difficult." "Not
necessarily," Riane told them. "Each midnight a holy man
secretly comes to the provisions gate in the palace's west wall and
is given entrance so that he may teach Makktuub the Mokakaddir."
She looked at them. "But of course you already know this
since this holy man is a Ghor." Othnam
and Mehmmer exchanged worried glances. "You are mistaken, Riane.
No Ghor teaches the kapudaan the sacred text." "Are
you certain?" "Yes."
Mehmmer nodded. "And, furthermore, no Ghor would enter the
palace in secret and at night." "Then
he is someone dressed like a Ghor," Riane said. "Tezziq
told me he was Ghor." "The
ajjan!" "She
would have no reason to lie to me," Riane pointed out. Mehmmer
grunted. "Since when does an ajjan need a reason to lie?" Squinting
up at the moons' positions in the sky, Othnam said, "We have
only minutes to find this impostor and waylay him." "This
is nonsense," Mehmmer said sourly. "What
if it isn't?" Riane said. Mehmmer
nodded somewhat reluctantly. "If someone is, indeed,
impersonating a Ghor I very much want to discover who in Agachire
would blaspheme against Jiharre and the Mokakaddir, and why." "It
is obvious," Othnam said darkly. "To gain the ear of
Makktuub." "The
accursed Gyrgon again? But a Gyrgon could not masquerade as a Ghor." "He
most certainly could," Riane said. "Gyrgon are
shapeshifters." Mehmmer
screwed up her face. "What blasphemy is being whispered to our
kapudaan in secret?" They
began to circle around to the western side of the palace. This
obliged them to negotiate the edge of the bazaar, a warren of narrow,
twisting alleyways and aisles between rolling carts and makeshift
stands selling everything from dried fruits to cheap slipper-shoes to
magnificent bejeweled necklaces to sober black ga'afarra. Oddly,
at this time of the night, the bazaar was jam-packed with buyers and
sellers, barterers and thieves. Mehmmer explained that the market
opened at sundown so that the deleterious effects of the burning day
would not degrade the delicate spices. The air was as thick with
heated bargaining as it was with the heavy scents of spices and
roasting ba'du. Flickering torchlight reflected off the striped tent
walls that rimmed the bazaar. In the constant crowd motion, shadows
streaked the alleyways, moving as if by an unseen hand, writing
profound and unfamiliar runes across glossy pyramids of spices, down
sloping sides of rickety carts. There was, on the surface, an
overriding sense of controlled chaos. But underneath, Riane could
feel a tug of something darker, the keen sense of expectation that
comes in the deeply anxious moments before war is declared. The
three of them made their way single file, slowly and carefully, as if
negotiating a garden tangled with fishhook brambles. Othnam was
leading, with Riane next and Mehmmer bringing up the rear. They were
perhaps a third of the way across the perimeter of the bazaar when
Othnam was brought up short. A hand sign from him made them duck back
into the shadows of the tent walls. Up ahead, Riane could see a knot
of four bare-chested palace guards standing watch, their beady eyes
roaming the crowd, doubtless searching for Riane. "This
way," Othnam whispered as he led them down a side alley. They
soon turned off it, twisting their way this way and that until Riane
lost all sense of direction. And then all at once they turned a
corner and by the light of flaring torches saw the west wall of the
palace. Keeping to the shadows flung across the striped tent walls,
they soon spied the provision gate. The sounds of the city drifted to
them—the laughter of children at play, the soft chanting of
prayer cycles, the crisp bargaining of merchants, the heated rumor
mongering of a tribe on war footing. "What
if he doesn't come?" Mehmmer whispered. "He
will come," Riane said, though she had only Tezziq's word that
he would. Othnam
was squinting at the western sky above the palace. "It is after
midnight. We may have missed him." "No,"
Mehmmer said. "We haven't." They
pressed deeper into the lengthening shadows as a small, bearded male
dressed in black Ghorvish robes, his head swathed in the traditional
white sinschal, turned a corner and headed toward them. Riane
slid down into deepest shadow, crouched and still, her head down, her
face obscured. The false Ghor passed her and when she heard him being
stopped by Mehmmer, she lifted her head. "The
way to the Giyossun district?" The false Ghor's voice was
brittle and querulous with impatience. "You are on the wrong
side of the city." Mehmmer
stood squarely in front of him, blocking his way. "Yes, but how
do I—" "I
have no time for such foolishness, female," he said shortly. "A
thousand pardons," Mehmmer replied. "But I, also, am Ghor.
I am new to Agachire and I ask only—" "I
have an appointment with the kapudaan himself." The
false Ghor tried to sidestep her, but she would not let him pass. "Can
you not spare a moment to help one of your kin?" Riane
rose and silently moved out into the street. "You
are trying my patience." "But
surely I do not need to remind you of the Prophet Jiharre's words—" "Out
of my way!" The
false Ghor was about to push Mehmmer, but some sense made him whirl.
In that instant, Riane struck him a blow to the temple with the hilt
of her dagger. His eyes rolled up, and he slumped to the ground, his
arms outstretched. "A
disgusting creature," Othnam said as he stepped out of the
shadows. "It was all I could do not to run him through with my
push-dagger." He bent down and was reaching out toward the false
Ghor when Riane gasped and pulled him back. "Miina
protect us all," she murmured. Concern
overran Mehmmer's face. "What is it?" "Look
there," Riane said, "at his left hand." "He
has six fingers!" Othnam exclaimed. Mehmmer
looked more closely. "And the sixth is pure black." Black
and ugly as death, Minnum had said of the sauromician's extra
digit. "It
is a mark of Miina," Riane said. "He is a sauromician, long
ago cast out of the Ramahan abbeys for his evil ways." "And
he has been whispering in Makktuub's ear, no doubt poisoning the
kapudaan's mind." Mehmmer drew her slender-bladed scimitar. "We
must kill him." She
sliced through the sauromician's throat. Blood fountained, then
immediately congealed, turned black as his sixth finger. The wound to
his throat closed, shrinking until it was no more than a pucker, a
scar, before disappearing altogether. Mehmmer
stepped back, gasping as Othnam knelt, used his push-dagger to
puncture the sauromician's heart. Again, blood spurted up, and again
immediately congealed, the wound healing spontaneously. "The
sauromician is protected by a powerful spell of some sort,"
Riane said. "Keep away from him." But
Othnam would not listen. He reached out, touched the beard, which was
as false as the sauromician's Ghorvish claim. He stripped it off,
noting the sticky underside and, loosening Riane's sinschal, fastened
it around her jaw. "There," he said. "At least this
evil creature has provided us with something of value." Mehmmer
looked at them both. "We cannot simply leave him. He has seen my
face and yours." Riane
knew Mehmmer was correct. If they simply walked away, the sauromician
would surely come after them as soon as he regained consciousness.
But without her own sorcery Riane had no chance to counteract the
spell he had cast upon himself. She rubbed the side of her head.
What was it Minnum had said about the sauromician? You will know
him by the stigmata the Great Goddess in Her wisdom has given him: on
his left hand is a sixth finger, black and ugly as death. As she
thought about it, two phrases stood out, in Her wisdom and
black and ugly as death. Why had Minnum chosen those
particular words? He had told Riane that he was enjoined from
teaching, but what if he been trying to give her clues as to how to
handle a sauromician should she come upon one? She
stared down at the wrinkled, dark-skinned face, curved and
deadly-looking as a knife blade. She looked at the left hand with its
sixth digit, black as death. .
. . the Great Goddess in Her wisdom . . . Unsheathing
her dagger, Riane knelt beside the sauromician. The blade hovered
over the hand then, remembering the spell, she put the dagger away.
Taking hold of the sauromician's left wrist with one hand, she
grasped the black digit in her other hand, snapped it quickly back.
The bone snapped like a dry twig, the skin crackled like paper in a
fire. With a pop! there emanated from the finger a foul stench
like an open grave, making her gag. The
sauromician arched up and began to spasm, slamming his body again and
again into the packed red dirt of the street. An eerie keening arose
from somewhere deep inside him, setting Riane's teeth on edge. The
body was suddenly, sickeningly flooded with a milky liquid oozing out
of every orifice, every pore. Almost immediately, this liquid
evanesced into a darkening steam, spawning an intense wave of heat
that caused Riane to stumble backward into Othnam's arms. "What
in the name of Jiharre—!" Mehmmer
was mesmerized by the unholy disintegration as, in truth, they all
were. The
body gave one final, terrifying thrash, the keening abruptly ceased,
and the steam vanished, leaving, for only a moment, a skeleton, whose
bones softened like clay oozing, liquefying and running into the
dirt. Bronnn
Pallln had thought about the many ways he could approach Marethyn
Stogggul. In fact, in the time since the fateful dinner party at
Dobbro Mannx's residence, he had thought about nothing else. At
night, he dreamed about her. In
the end, he decided to visit her when she was at her most vulnerable.
And so it was that in the hour after she closed her atelier on
Divination Street he found himself setting his private hoverpod down
in a small clearing beside a series of deep pools several kilometers
northeast of Axis Tyr. Marethyn, who had been kneeling beside one of
the pools, looked up, and he immediately warmed to the fright in her
eyes. "Bronnn
Pallln," she said, a catch in her voice, "what are you
doing here?" "Hunting."
He took the sport ion pistol out of its holster and frowned. "You
know, Kundala is famed for its large predators." He came toward
her. "It is quite dangerous for a defenseless Tuskugggun like
you to be out here on your own." "Your
concern is misplaced. I have been coming here without incident since
I was a little girl." She
began to get to her feet, but a heavy hand on her shoulder kept her
in place. "Then
you have been remarkably lucky." He brandished the ion pistol.
"But you never know. There are reports of perwillon in the
area." "Perwillon
inhabit caves," she said. "Is
that so?" His lips pursed. "And where did a Tuskugggun gain
such knowledge?" He smirked down at her. "It wouldn't be
from Sornnn SaTrryn, would it?" "I
... I do not know what you are talking about." Bronnn
Pallln gave her the same indulgent look she had seen the Genomatekks
give Terrettt from time to time. "You
are an artist, are you not? I myself have no interest whatsoever in
art; I cannot fathom the rationale for its existence, really. Why is
it, I wonder, that you dedicate yourself to utter nonsense when you
could be doing something useful like raising children." "Why
are you doing this? What do you want?" He
could feel her muscles bunching under the hand that kept her on her
knees. "I am an exceedingly busy V'ornn, you know. And what am I
busy at? you might ask. Tracking down the traitorous trail your
Sornnn SaTrryn has made." "He
is not my—" She cried out as his finger dug into
her shoulder. "Do
not interrupt or contradict me, Marethyn. This is the first lesson
you must learn." She
did not answer, but he could see by the rapid rise and fall of her
breasts how terrified he had made her. Thus confident, he continued. "I
came here today as a courtesy to warn you. Out of the loyal
relationship I enjoy with your family and the high respect in which I
hold your brother. Your involvement with Sornnn SaTrryn—and
please do not bother to deny it—is a tragic mistake. You have
put yourself in grave peril." "What?
How do you mean?" "Firstly,
Sornnn SaTrryn is not qualified to be Prime Factor. Quite apart from
the obvious fact that he spends too much time in the Kor-rush and too
little time at his duties here in Axis Tyr, he has a highhanded
manner with the other Bashkir that is causing friction rather than
reconciliation between the Consortia." "What
you are saying is absurd, poisoned. You hate him because you covet
his position." "Secondly,"
Bronnn Pallln went on relentlessly, "as I said, he is a
traitor." Marethyn
laughed harshly. "You must think me an utter fool." "If
I thought that I would not be here now. I would let you be beheaded
with your lover. But I will not." He tipped his head slightly.
"Now listen to me carefully, Marethyn. I have evidence that he
is the Bashkir who has been selling Khagggun weapons to the Kundalan
Resistance. This is not so absurd now, is it, what with his deviant
love affair with the Korrush." His fingers ground into muscle
and bone, making her wince. "Now I say to you in all good faith
that you must give him up before your brother is told of his perfidy.
If you do not, well, you know Kurgan Stogggul better than I do. I
will leave it up to your own imagination what he will do to you." "I
don't want to hear this." "But
you must. It is for your own good." Tears
came to Marethyn's eyes, and a sob seemed torn from her breast. "You
know what this means." "Yes.
You love Sornnn SaTrryn, I can see, but he has played you false. The
only possible explanation is that he has been planning to involve you
as a cover for his traitorous actions." "He
never loved me," she wailed. "He was using me." "Truly,
I am sorry for this seeming harsh treatment, but given your history
of being headstrong and stubborn what other course could I take?"
Bronnn Pallln released her, took her tear-streaked face under her
chin, and lifted it so that her eyes met his. "There is,
however, a way out for you, if not for him." "There
is?" Now
he smiled, hearing the clear note of servility in her voice. Up until
now, no one had succeeded in breaking Marethyn Stogggul. Studying
her, he saw what her monstrous personality had for so long obscured.
She was a beautiful, highly desirable Tuskugggun. Perhaps, when this
was all over, he reflected, he would take her to bed, even marry her,
get her with child, make a true Tuskugggun out of her. In fact, the
more he thought about it, the better he liked the idea. What better
way to cement his relationship with the Stogggul Consortium. Kurgan
would have no choice but to respect the V'ornn who tamed his wayward
sister, Marethyn. He
drew her up to stand beside him. "I have knowledge that Sornnn
SaTrryn has taken you to his warehouse. The place of his Resistance
activities." "Is
that what that chamber was? I was wondering why he had so many
Kundalan artifacts." She began to cry again. Foolish
Tuskugggun, Bronnn Pallln thought. Full
of untenable emotion, therefore so easy to use and abuse. He
put his face close to hers. "You will take Line-General Lokck
Werrrent there, Marethyn, and when Sornnn SaTrryn is arrested and
charged with crimes against V'ornndom you will be safe from harm." She
looked deep into his eyes, her lips half-parted. "Do you swear
this, Bronnn Pallln? I will not betray him otherwise." Bronnn
Pallln kissed her on one cheek, then the other. "Marethyn
Stogggul, I swear on all that matters to me to protect you and keep
you safe." It's
as obvious as that ugly scar on your face. The war will begin with he
Jeni Cerii." "Too
obvious. It will come from another quarter. I say the Rasan Sul ,
will be first to strike. They have been seeking ways to expand their
spice explorations for years." The
two palace guards at the provisions gate were in the middle of this
debate when Riane appeared before them. They were expecting the false
Ghor, so waved her through. She had pulled her sinschal out over her
forehead and had lowered her face, staring down at the tops of her
stained and dusty slipper-shoes, but so engrossed were they in their
feverish speculation she needn't have bothered. Once
inside, she kept her head down and quickly and silently made her way
to the haanjhala, where she told one of the saddda guards that
the kapudaan had asked for the first ajjan. When Tezziq was brought
to her, Riane took her by the arm and hurried her away down the
hallway. By
means of the special hand signs devised by Makktuub, Tezziq kept
asking what she wanted. Riane, searching for a deserted chamber,
ignored her. But as soon as she found what she was looking for, she
pulled Tezziq into the tented chamber and half stripped off her false
beard. "Riane!"
Tezziq's eyes opened wide. "You're alive!." Riane
embraced her. "Of course I'm alive." "But
I thought. . . well, Baliiq said that you had jumped from the terrace
to your death. I did not believe him, but then the same story began
to circulate through the palace. And now here you are." "I
made a promise," Riane said, holding her at arm's length. She
pushed hair back from Tezziq's face. "And now I will take you
with me out of here, but first I must retrieve something that was
stolen from me." "What?" "Tell
me, when you have been with Makktuub have you caught a glimpse of a
tall figure in metallic armor?" "The
Gyrgon? Yes, I know of him. Makktuub speaks of him sometimes in the
aftermath." "Does
he have quarters here in the palace?" Tezziq
nodded. "A chamber, small and spare as a beggar's, adjacent to
the kapudaan's quarters." "Take
me there." "No,
I cannot]" Fear contorted Tezziq's beautiful face. "Please.
Ask me anything else." Riane
gripped Tezziq's arm. "It is imperative that I retrieve what the
Gyrgon stole from me." "I
have seen the cold fire come off him. I have seen the cruelty he is
capable of" Tezziq shuddered, but she nodded and, taking Riane's
hand in her own, began to lead them down a series of intersecting
corridors. Each time they neared a guard, they shifted positions to
give the impression that Tezziq was being guided by the Kapudaan's
Ghorv-ish spiritual advisor. In this way, they traversed the distance
between the haanjhala and Makktuub's quarters. "Here
it is," Tezziq said, shivering, as she brought them up short
across from the tent flap. "Let me go in alone to see whether
the creature is there." Riane
watched her uneasily as she crept across the corridor, then, drawing
herself up, swept into the tent. Riane heard only silence. A moment
later, Tezziq stuck her head out and gave the all-clear sign. The
chamber smelled strongly of clove oil and burnt musk. It was at odds
with virtually every other chamber in the palace—doubtless in
all Agachire, for that matter. There were no cushions or carpets, no
low chased-bronze tables, no decorations of any kind. In fact, the
chamber was quite bare, save for one item, an alloy-clad container
perhaps three meters long shaped like a compressed oval. There was a
word etched into it in spiraled V'ornnish letters. They
stood still and silent, staring at the huge object. "What
does it say?" Tezziq whispered. "
'K'yonnno’, " Riane said in a similar hushed tone. "It
is the Gyrgon theory of Law and Chaos." Tezziq
wrinkled her brow. "I do not understand." "The
first rule of K'yonnno is Stasis and Harmony are synonymous. It is
rumored that the Gyrgon mission is to find the key to immortality,
which, if you think about it, is the ultimate stasis and, in their
minds, at least, blissful harmony." "But
Jiharre teaches that for everything there is a time and a place and a
purpose. Without the first two, the third cannot exist." She
shuddered. "I cannot imagine anything more horrible than life
without purpose." "I
agree," Riane said, "which makes us so very different than
the Gyrgon." "So
what is this?" "I'm
not sure," Riane said, approaching the huge object, "but if
I had to guess, I'd say that it is where the Gyrgon sleeps." She
put her hands on the thick convex lid. It was smooth as crystal, so
shiny she could see the rather startling reflection of the false Ghor
she had become. She briefly touched the fulkaan stud in her nostril.
Then, she found the catch and, depressing it, stood back. With a soft
sigh, the lid lifted and
she peered into the emptiness within. The interior appeared to be
composed entirely of neural-net circuitry. A clutch of cables and
flexible links attached to the net at different places lay curled,
waiting for the Gyrgon to plug their free ends into his armored
biosuit. Riane
peered more closely, for there, amid the serpentine clutter, was a
small square black package. Nith Sahor's greatcoat. She
reached for it, but just as she did so, Tezziq clutched at her and
mouthed the words, Someone is coming!. Riane
clambered into the sleep casket, pulled a terrified Tezziq in with
her and lowered the lid. Just in time, for voices burst into the
chamber. The moment the lid had clicked into place, the neural net
awoke, doubtless expecting to take Nith Settt into slumber. But there
was plenty of room; the sleep casket was twice as deep as it had at
first seemed. Listening
to the voices, Riane recognized Makktuub. By the neural net's banks
of lights she could see Tezziq mouthing the name of the other
speaker, Sawakaq, the minister who had originally brought her and
Othnam and Mehmmer to the kapudaan. "—should
have begun twenty minutes ago," Makktuub was saying. Riane
scrambled to the foot of the sleep casket in order to better hear
what was being said. "The
Ghor came through the provision gate on time. I checked with the
guards," Sawakaq replied. "Then he disappeared." "Inside
the palace?" Makktuub's voice grew dark. "Another
strange and unexplained incident to add to the rest that have
occurred of late." "Unsettling,
to say the least," Sawakaq admitted. "I advise doubling the
number of guards inside the palace." "An
excellent precaution, unless it is precisely what the Jeni Cerii are
hoping we will do. No, instead, send a message to double our patrols
along the Jeni Cerii border. If they seek to confuse us here in
Agachire they will be sorely mistaken." "And
what of the Gyrgon?" Sawakaq said. "He was quite explicit
about informing him about any changes in either our defensive or
offensive battle plans." "As
you can see, minister, we are in his quarters. We came in good faith
to keep him updated, but his movements are of his own design."
Makktuub's voice became slightly more muffled, making it clear that
he had moved back to the tent flap. "Find the Ghor, Sawakaq. Use
whatever means at your disposal, but I want him brought to me
forthwith." "Yes,
kapudaan." Footsteps
gliding away, then silence. Riane held her breath. She was very close
to Tezziq, could feel her warmth, could see the inside of the sleep
casket refracted in her glossy eyes. Tezziq's mouth was half-open as
if she wanted to say something. "Just
a minute," Riane whispered and, raising her hands over her head,
pushed the lid up. At first, she thought it was either locked or
stuck, and she felt the sweat pop out along her hairline and under
her arms. But possibly it was simply heavier pushing it from a
crouched position than it had seemed lifting it when she was
standing, because as she strained it began to move. Slowly, she rose
from her squat, the lid swinging up, letting light into the interior. Tezziq's
eyes were half-closed, the pupils dark and dilated. Riane put an ear
to her chest, could detect a shallow, ragged breath. "N'Luuura,
no!" she breathed. The
cables, alive as any creature, had inserted themselves into Tezziq at
the insides of her elbows, the backs of her thighs, her navel. Konara
Inggres lit the prayer candle and the familiar scents of orange-sweet
and mugwort wafted up to her. She studied the flame-bent wick,
braided by the leyna, charred black at the tip. She studied the squat
candle itself, the tallow mottled and beautifully translucent as
ancient skin. She could recall fashioning candles similar to this one
when she herself had been a novitiate, and found herself clinging to
the sense of continuity the memory provided. On the scarred wooden
table beside the candle was a well-used pewter dish with a wide
flared lip in which were strewn the remnants of thick-sliced
wrybread, the crusts yellow and glistening with half-melted cor
butter. This homely sight was also of comfort to her, which was why
she had come down to the refectory tonight. As a child, she had often
sneaked into the refectory for this selfsame snack. Tonight a deep
sense of panic gnawed at her. Her hermetic world—the one she
had been born into, the one in which she had lived all her life—had
suddenly been invaded, and the worst part was she did not know by
whom or to what purpose. "I thought I would find you here." She
started even though she knew the voice. Konara Lyystra came striding
in, smiling widely. "Now that Mother has taken over and we are
released from our punishment duties it seems I see you less and
less." "Other
duties interfere," Konara Inggres said neutrally. She held
herself still and steady as Konara Lyystra sat down across the long
refectory table from her. The panic, held in temporary suspension by
her will, burst like a blister, left her shaking. "There have
been so many changes of late." "I
imagine you are referring to Konara Urdma's sudden death." "Partially." The
wide smile never left Konara Lyystra's face. "An artery burst in
her head, a congenital defect, no one could have known or suspected." "There
are other things." Konara Inggres said this warily. "Could
you be referring to Konara Bartta? We knew something was amiss when
we entered the chamber in which she had secreted the had-atta. You
yourself said—" "I
know what I said," Konara Inggres replied rather too sharply. Konara
Lyystra cocked her head. "It took someone of Mother's vast
sorcerous skill to extract Konara Bartta from the stasis-web. But you
knew. Your instinct was unerring." Konara
Inggres wrapped her arms around herself. It chilled her to the bone
that Konara Lyystra's expression never changed. Nor had the slightly
glazed look left her eyes. Ever since that night Giyan had arrived.
What had happened in Konara Urdma's office when Konara Lyystra had
gone to greet her? Konara Lyystra had not spoken of it, and as the
days progressed, Konara Inggres became afraid to ask. "You
do not seem particularly pleased that she has returned," Konara
Lyystra said, jolting Konara Inggres out of her brief reverie. "I
know very little about Giyan," Konara Inggres replied. "I
meant Konara Bartta." That
wide smile was unnerving, Konara Inggres thought, as if she knew a
secret jest. "I
know how you feel about Konara Bartta. But I assure you that now that
Mother is here everything will be all right." It
was positively sinister, that smile, Konara Inggres decided. And here
was another thing that frightened her, her friend saying, I
know how you feel about Konara Bartta, just as if they had
never shared this antipathy. Which was why she had tried to avoid
her, and when, like now, she could not, she was circumspect and wary. "I
am certain I will come to share your opinion," she lied. Konara
Lyystra took a crust of wrybread and popped it into her mouth without
her smile narrowing one millimeter. "Excellent," she said.
"We are all counting on it."
17 Chimaera
Just
hours to midnight on this dank moonsless night in the ides of autumn,
and the last dying leaf of summer had been ground to mulch beneath
winter's oncoming heel. Out on the Sea of Blood, the lanterns on
Courion's ship swung to and fro as the vessel passed through lashing
wave crests and deep troughs. There were four such lanterns, ornately
runed as a Sarakkon's head, one each on the high, arching prow and
slender aft, two more midship, at port and starboard. Courion
had a striking and formidable appearance. He was, like most Sarakkon,
tall and slender, well muscled and fit, his skin the deep color of
pomegranates. He had a sleek, compelling face, with high cheekbones,
dark intelligent eyes, and gently bowed lips that made him appear as
if he were always slightly amused. Over his shaved, elongated skull
was tattooed a bewildering array of runes that reappeared on bare
arms that bulged from his sharkskin vest. He had a thick sable beard,
curling and oiled, in which were threaded runes made of carved lapis
lazuli and jade. His fingers were encircled with massive rings of
star sapphire and ruby and lynx-eye. With each pitch and roll of the
ship the ends of his wide, knotted belt, woven of cured sea grape,
traversed a short arc. The pattern of knots was different for every
Sarakkon Kurgan had seen. They bore great significance, but what they
meant no V'ornn knew. "Until
tonight, we have not seen you since you attained the office of
regent," Courion said. "Not even at the Kalllistotos." Courion
laughed, watching the line playing out from the tip of his fishing
rod, fashioned from a searay's tail, which he had cured himself in a
combination of mercury and sea salt in order to increase its strength
while maintaining its flexibility. "How uninteresting is our
free time without the magnificent entertainment of wagering against
you." "Knowing
you, you only want to coerce me back into the ring." "You
fought well, acquitted yourself with a warrior's courage." Kurgan
had once made an imprudent wager with the Sarakkonian captain that he
had promptly lost. In lieu of the payment he could not make, Courion
had required him to fight in the Kalllistotos, garnering him a
measure of respect from the Sarakkon no other V'ornn had attained.
Save perhaps Nith Batoxxx, "But
I am regent now, and the regent of all Kundala has more to occupy him
than the Kalllistotos." "That
is a very great pity." "I
still find time for combat practice." Kurgan felt the urgent
need to keep talking in order to make certain his diaphragm kept all
his three stomachs from rebelling. V'ornn did not take naturally to
the sea. "Good,"
Courion said. "A fit body is a virtue." He
could, of course, have met with Courion anywhere he chose, but he saw
this fishing trip as a test of his own inner strength. Truth be told,
he had been born without the desire to be like other V'ornn, and Nith
Batoxxx, opportunistic as he was subversive, had nurtured this
fortuitous aberration. "I
have an entire planet to oversee. Tedious work, for the most part,
which surprises me somewhat." "Why?
Cogs and flywheels, the mechanics of anything is nothing but
humdrum." "You
are right, of course," Kurgan acknowledged. "But I find
compensation by being more closely in touch with the Gyrgon
Comradeship." "From
what we have gleaned of you V'ornn, this is true of all regents."
Courion gave several whiplike upward swipes with the tip of his
searay rod. Kurgan
spread his legs a little more in order not to be tossed against the
gleaming wooden taffrail. "Nith Batoxxx, in particular. You
remember him. I met him on this very ship." "We
could hardly forget a Gyrgon." Courion pulled up hard on his
rod; the tip had bent almost double. "Any Gyrgon." Kurgan
adopted a light, almost bantering tone. "Believe it or not, he
is interested in something Kundalan. Seven Portals to a land of
riches, so he claims." "Oho!
That is for us!" Courion cried. "We are all for riches!" "I
doubt he is telling me the whole truth- Do you know anything about
these Portals?" Courion
shook his head. "Alas, no." He shrugged. "The only
portals we know are on our ship." "By
the way, I never asked you. What was Nith Batoxxx doing on your
ship?" "Help
us now," Courion said tersely as he hauled hard on his rod and
began to reel in the line. "We seem to have hooked the monster
of all Chimaera." Of
a sudden, as if to punctuate that remark, not three meters from the
stern the sea began to boil. Kurgan saw something that turned his
blood to ice. Something huge had leapt out of the water. Its
first breach gave him only a flash of a dark and sinuously glistening
body that was almost all monstrous head. Then it was under again in a
geyser of creamy foam, and Courion, braced against the taffrail, was
reeling for all he was worth. "Mother
of Yahe, it's a black one!" Courion cried. Members
of his crew, who had been going about the business of keeping the
ship on course, and others who had been off duty or be-lowdecks, came
running and Kurgan heard them shouting excitedly to each other.
Apparently a Chimaera of this size was rare enough, but a pitch-black
one, to boot! They were agog. Just at that instant, the Chimaera
leapt upward again and all of them—Kurgan included—got a
good look at it. It was huge—perhaps half as long as the ship
itself— with a long, tapering, forked tail, sharp as knife
blades, and three wicked-looking cartilaginous dorsal fins rising off
its back. In the flickering lanternlight, its absolute blackness was
positively eerie, making it seem even larger and fiercer than it
actually was. But by far its most hideous feature was its mouth,
which, impossibly, appeared to take up the entire front third of the
creature's muscular body. In midleap, it twisted itself, a
hearts-stopping maneuver that slammed Courion into the rail. A cold
red eye seemed to fix Courion in its mad gaze. Then, with a great
fountaining that drenched Courion, Kurgan, and much of the crew, it
plunged once again beneath the waves. They
all peered over the side. The wake the thing made in its frantic
thrashing to free itself from the tormenting hook glowed
phosphorescent. And still Courion lifted the rod, reeled in more of
the line, only to peel
the line back out when the Chimaera made another dash away from the
ship. Over the course of the next several hours it tried everything,
including running under the ship, an attempt, Courion said, to get
the keel to saw the line in two. "That
presupposes a will," Kurgan said. He was tired by this time; he
could only imagine the exhaustion that Courion felt. "And a will
presupposes a consciousness." "You
do not know this fish," Courion said tersely as he twisted the
rod. "Mother of Yahe, he's running again." "Why
don't you let one of your crew spell you, at least for a little
while?" Courion
shook his head. "Landing him will mean nothing, then. Until the
hunt is played out and he is beside the ship, we must do this on our
own." Kurgan,
watching Courion's bunched muscles, the sweat running off him, had to
admire the Sarakkonian captain's courage and fortitude. Even a
Khagggun would gain a measure of satisfaction observing his
chronosteel-like tenacity. It
was after midnight by the time Courion at last got the best of the
great Chimaera. It took one last, rather halfhearted run out to sea,
then seemed to roll over, and Courion began his frantic reel-in,
drawing it closer and closer to the stern of the ship where they
stood, their muscles jumping with a surfeit of tension and fatigue.
For almost an hour now, one of Courion's crew had stood by his side,
a long pole with a bronze hook on one end held in a gnarled and
swollen fist. "Close,"
Courion said softly. "Very close now." He held his rod
almost at the vertical as the spent Chimaera lolled nearer them. Kurgan
was watching it closely, feeling a stone lodged in one of his hearts
at the size of its gargantuan maw, bristling with multiple sets of
triangular, needle-sharp teeth, which occasionally snapped
ineffectually at the air as it rolled this way and that. "All
right," Courion said to him. "When it is against the side
of the ship we are going to give you the rod. Hold it in exactly the
angle we designate and keep one hand on the reel so the line will not
go slack." He glanced briefly at Kurgan. "This is most
important because the line is the only thing keeping it in place."
He grinned through his exhaustion. "Don't worry. You need hold
it only long enough for me to gaff him." A
moment later, the beast banged against the hull and Courion's ship
shuddered down to its keel. This close up, the Chimaera was so
mammoth Kurgan had trouble processing the image. His mind kept
wanting to shrink it down by half or more. "This
is the angle," Courion said, handing over the rod. "Yes,
just like that." He made a small adjustment. "Brace your
thighs against the rail, and for Yahe's sake keep your hand tight on
the reel or we'll likely lose it." Kurgan
nodded and Courion took his guiding hand away. Kurgan could feel the
tremorings of the creature as if they were seismic shocks transmitted
up the taut line and down the searay rod. The Chimaera looked
quiescent, more dead than alive to judge by the one red eye, clouded
and still, that stared up into the night from the side of its long,
tapering head. Translucent waves washed over it as the current
bounced its body repeatedly against the hull, and still the eye
remained fixed. Next
to him, Courion accepted the long gaff and, bending over the top
rail, swung it down toward the Chimaera. With an expert motion, he
fixed the hook in the upper corner of the beast's mouth, so that he
could better maneuver it. Members of the crew had meanwhile been
lowering a block and tackle on a heavy chain wrapped around a large
hand-wound windlass, with which to winch the Chimaera out of the
water. All that was left was for Courion to guide the beast onto the
massive hook sunk into the block and tackle as it was lowered all the
way to the foamy wave tops. Kurgan
took his assignment seriously. Knowing that he was out of his element
he consigned himself to the expertise of the Sarakkonian captain,
trusting that with each order obeyed he would learn something no
V'ornn before him knew. In this vein he concentrated on keeping the
angle of the rod just right, making sure the line stayed taut. His
right hand was white as it tightly gripped the reel just as Courion
had instructed. He was trembling a little, not out of fear but out of
the sheer exhilaration at being in on the kill of this extraordinary
hunt. His eyes burned a little in the biting salt wind, his nostrils
flared at first scent of the Chimaera's blood, which leaked out of
the side of its mouth where the barbed hook dug deep and where the
barbed end of Courion's gaff further exacerbated the wound. Courion
had brought the Chimaera's head partway out of the water as the block
and tackle was lowered the last several meters. He was now
bent almost completely in half over the top rail. It was a delicate
procedure considering the bulk of both fish and hook, and it had to
be done just right. He hauled a little more on the gaff, straining to
his limit as he pulled the Chimaera the few last centimeters above
the waves. At
that instant, something quite extraordinary happened. Kurgan, who was
concentrating on the beast, reeling in the line as Courion lifted it
farther, saw it, but N'Luuura only knew whether anyone else had. That
great red eye, half-occluded and fixed, abruptly blinked and cleared.
Kurgan's brain did not perhaps understand the significance of this
but his body, already in full self-preservation mode, certainly did. In
a stupefying and cataclysmic display of canniness and strength, the
Chimaera leapt clear out of the frothing water. As it did so, it
torqued its body away from the ship, taking the gaff and Courion with
it. Courion was lifted clean off his feet. His knees banged against
the top rail and then, as the Chimaera started to fall back again
into the water, he began to go over the side. Though
the beast's wicked move was accomplished in no more than a
heartsbeat, Kurgan saw it as if in slow motion. He saw its great red
eye glaring as if in ferocious outrage. Was it looking at Courion or
at him? Even later, in the besotted calmness of the aftermath, it was
impossible to say, but he could not shake the disquieting conclusion
that he had glimpsed a malign intelligence where he had least
expected to find one. At the moment, however, he reacted without
thinking. Letting go of the spinning rod, he grabbed Courion around
the waist, pulling him back on board, anchoring him to the ship's
deck as the gaff's hook tore free of the Chimaera's bloody mouth. With
little grunting sounds, Riane tried to pull Tezziq free of the Gyrgon
umbilicals, but as soon as she did she was thrown back against the
side of the casket by a painful shock wave. Riane shook her head to
clear it. Tezziq looked glazed-eyed at her, tried to say something,
failed. "Stay
calm," Riane said. "I will get you out of here." Her
gaze swept over the banks of readouts positioned strategically around
the casket's neural net. Here, Annon's fluency in V'ornn was
invaluable. She forced herself to read slowly and carefully,
switching off the anxiety that urged her to get out of here before
anyone else chanced by. Decoding
the Gyrgon sigils, she determined that each umbilical had a different
purpose. In addition, each was attached to a different energy pod, so
that even in an emergency situation they would continue to function.
The cable snaking into Tezziq's navel provided nutrients, the ones
inserted in the crook of her elbows contained a complex formula of
electrolytes that restored the Gyrgon's often overtaxed neural grids,
the umbilicals that had attached themselves behind her knees were
pumping a powerful chemical cocktail that induced delta-level brain
activity, in other words, deepest sleep. Beside each power node was a
scale to calibrate accurately the amount of fluids being conducted
through the cables. She could see that the normal dosage for a Gyrgon
was more or less one-fifth of maximum. She
soon discovered that the only way to detach the umbilicals without
trauma to Tezziq was to disengage their power sources from the neural
net; as she had already learned, safeguard circuitry engaged the
moment someone tried to remove them incorrectly or by force. She
could hear Tezziq sobbing a little, and she stopped what she was
doing. "Are they hurting you?" Tezziq's
eyes moved wildly, their pupils dilated, and Riane began to worry
about the effects the Gyrgon-manufactured chemicals might have on her
system. She appeared to be dreaming with her eyes open, but was she
dreaming Gyrgon dreams? Riane
kissed Tezziq's damp brow. "Hold on a little longer," she
whispered. "I'll have you out of here in no time." Returning
to the power supplies, she saw that they were some kind of gel paks
that pulsed with light. The first time she tried to disengage the
first gel pak, a bolt of pain ran up her arm. She shook her hand to
get the numbness out of it and tried again with the same result. This
time it took longer to get the numbness out. She stared hard at the
power supply, thinking. The pulse, of light ran through it every
thirty seconds. She tried touching the circuitry between the pulses
and received no shock. So she began work, keeping counting silently
to herself, lifting her fingers a second before the pulse appeared.
In this way, she was able to disengage the first gel pak. Now she
turned back to Tezziq, pulled the umbilicals from her elbows without
incident. They left no entry at all, merely a welt of raw and
reddened flesh. Tezziq
moaned a little, twitching, and Riane put a hand to her cheek before
returning to the neural net. In the same manner she had handled the
first power pak, she disengaged the second one. Out came the
urn-bilicals from behind Tezziq's knees. Two
down, one to go, Riane thought. But
when she commenced to study the third power pak, she could see that
it was different. The photon pulses rippled through it every five
seconds. Not enough time for her to get the job done. She tried it
anyway and lasted twenty seconds before the pain became too much and
she had to take her hands away. She held them under her armpits,
waiting for the numbness in her fingers to subside. While she waited
she considered the photonic pulses, and when she felt the circulation
returning she took out the infinity blade and, on a hunch, jammed it
directly into the center of the gel pak. The unknown alloy pierced
the skin of the power supply and the weapon absorbed the photonic
pulses, drawing the energy out of the gel pak. Behind
her, Tezziq gave a little sigh and, as Riane removed the umbilical
from her navel, she cried out as if in great pain. Her fingers
gripped Riane's shoulders, her long nails digging into Riane's flesh. A
flash of anger caused Riane to stab the infinity blade into the nexus
of the neural net. A welter of hyperexcited ions bubbled up, but as
quickly as they exploded the infinity blade absorbed them, until
there was no power left within the sleep casket. Riane felt a measure
of satisfaction in the destruction. She
grabbed a gel pak, jamming it into her robes, gathered Tezziq into
her arms, and lifted her out of the sleep casket. Tezziq moaned a
little, and her eyes were rolling beneath her half-closed lids.
Steadying herself, Riane unfurled Nith Sahor's greatcoat. Minnum had
told her not to use sorcery in the Korrush save under Perrnodt's
direction because it would likely draw the attention of the
sauromicians. She did not know whether this warning might also apply
to V'ornn techno-mancy, but she had no other choice. There was no way
she could leave the palace the same way she entered it. Throwing
the greatcoat across her shoulders, she lifted its edge with her free
hand, closing it over both her and Tezziq. She felt its sheltering
embrace, the comfortable cavelike gloom that seemed to stretch on
into infinity. Then, clutching Tezziq tightly to her, she thought of
Othnam and Mehmmer and the powerful Gyrgon neural-net circuitry
engaged, sweeping them away. In
the small hours, with the ship buoyed by a following wind, sailing
peacefully back toward the port of Axis Tyr, Kurgan and Courion were
belowdecks, comfortably ensconced in the captain's fan-shaped cabin.
Runes were carved into every wooden surface, embossed on every metal
surface, etched into every pane of glass along the bowed rear
bulkhead. An embalmed searay, its stippled skin pale, shiny with
lacquer, hung upon the concave wall over the bed. Its beautiful wings
were stiff as shock-swords. Courion
had broken open a bottle of Sarakkonian brandy, a thick bitterish
liquor Kurgan had never tasted before, for which he felt certain he
could develop a strong and abiding liking. For a time they merely
drank in a kind of companionable silence that was new for them both.
Gradually, they began to speak of everything save Courion's brush
with death. Kurgan
smelled the curious Sarakkonian spices that arose from their oils and
unguents, their leathers and cloths, the deep orange wax with which
they formed the molds of their indecipherable runes. He felt the
gentle rolling of the deck beneath his feet and tried to attune his
motions to that rhythm, to let it take him up in its arms, a V'ornn
upon the ocean, an odd and disquieting thought because the V'ornn
traditionally shunned oceans and deserts as being barren, empty of
natural resources to plunder. And yet here he was, his hips moving as
he had seen Sarakkon hips moving, timing his center of balance to the
whims of the tide. He found that he very much liked the feeling of
power it gave him, a kind of mastery over the sea no other V'ornn
possessed. At
length, Courion said, "You acquitted yourself well. You saved us
from the sea." "Ironic,
isn't it?" Kurgan took some brandy in his mouth, left it there
until the soft tissue began to burn. "The
Chimaera is the subject of many legends. Therefore, it is both
revered and feared by all Sarakkonian captains," Courion said.
"Few would dare to fish for it; fewer still have landed one. As
for the black variety, no captain has returned home to parade its
carcass. To trifle with a Chimaera, many say, is to court disaster. A
black one, especially, because they are exceedingly rare and,
according to legend, intelligent." Kurgan
thought of that daemonic red eye staring at him with its malevolent
intent clear and present. "You speak of the black Chimaera as if
you had seen it before." "Most
Sarakkon have never seen one. Now we have encountered one twice. The
first time, we were aboard the first ship we served on out of
Celiocco on the southern continent." "You
were not a captain then." "No.
And not for years afterward." Courion stared into his drink as
if searching for an answer to a long-held question. "We were
just a raw mate. As such, we paid scant heed to the shoreside stories
about the captain. As it happened, they were more or less right. He
was a maniac. He would share nothing of our course even with his
First. Two weeks out, we spied a mountainous black Chimaera just like
this one and were ordered to give pursuit. The captain insisted on
torturing it before going in for the kill. The sea was dark as
midnight with its blood. He laughed at the Chimaera's pain, and at
the last minute it turned and rammed the ship, stove in the hull
below the waterline. The ship sank like a stone with all hands. We,
alone, survived." "How
did you—?" Courion
shrugged. "We were extraordinarily fortunate." "Now
you and the black Chimaera." "Linked
as one? Our crew thinks so." Courion finished off his brandy in
one swallow. "And
you?" "We
think it makes a fine midnight's tale." There
was a small silence. Kurgan looked at Courion, slightly tense now
though he was stretched out in the lamplight. He thought of his
Summoning when Nith Batoxxx had purportedly shown him his own
fear—drowning off Courion's ship. Or was it drowning? There
is another thing here for you to fear, Nith
Batoxxx had said. I find
it interesting that you cannot yet identify it. The
black Chimaera? But Kurgan had not yet known about it when the
Summoning had occurred. Nith Batoxxx had said the construct had been
created from Kurgan's own mind. "You
never answered my question about why Nith Batoxxx was on your ship." "We
think you should ask him." Kurgan
grunted. "Have you ever tried to ask a Gyrgon anything?" Courion
threw his head back, and his laughter bounced off the bulkheads. Kurgan
leaned forward, and said softly but distinctly, "I know." Courion
swung his legs around as he sat up. "What is it you know,
regent?" Kurgan
came and sat down next to him. His nostrils flared at the spicy
Sarakkonian scent. "Let us talk business for a moment. How can I
obtain some salamuuun?" "You
know as well as we do. Take your leisure at a kashiggen." "Yes,
of course. But then there is the high price to pay and the artificial
quota the Ashera set on it. Just between friends there must be
another way." Courion
shrugged. "Why ask us? We are Sarakkon." "Precisely!"
Kurgan slapped his thigh. "And what would a Sarakkon know of
this when no V'ornn save an Ashera has even an inkling?" Courion
sat silent and very still. "Nith
Batoxxx has an inordinate interest in salamuuun. Do not continue to
deny it. I know it for a fact." Of course he did. Rada's illegal
memory net had revealed as much. Courion
looked away. "It is not possible to discuss this." "If
Nith Batoxxx is planning on wresting control of the salamuuun trade
from the Ashera, I would be most interested." Kurgan refilled
his goblet. "But I will tell you this. If he is involving you in
his dangerous scheme, I would be exceedingly wary." "And
why would that be?" Courion's voice was tightly throttled. "To
tell you the truth, I am beginning to suspect that he is mad." Courion
began to laugh. "He
exhibits manifestations of harboring two distinct personalities. You
do not believe me? Sometimes his voice darkens and seems to be
floating out of him. And his posture changes, one shoulder rising
higher than the other. Have you not noticed this?" The
Sarakkonian captain drained his goblet. His expression had changed
subtly. "These odd, quicksilver changes, we admit that we have
wondered over them." "They
are getting worse, aren't they?" Kurgan put down his goblet.
"Several days ago I caught him talking into a mirror, in a
language I could not identify. That would be cause for alarm on its
own. Then I got a look at what was reflected in the mirror." The
ship rocked a little in a freshening breeze, and then, its sails
filled, it shot toward Harborside. "What
has five faces, two of them animal?" he asked. Courion
shook his head. "Were you drunk, regent?" "I
know what I saw. Five horrific faces, all vying to gain ascendancy at
once. The deeply disturbing effect was of looking at living,
breathing Chaos." "We
have heard that Gyrgon can take the form of many beings." Kurgan
shook his head. "No. This is another matter entirely." He
ran his hands along his hairless skull. "This V'ornn. There is
something different about him. More dangerous." Courion
shrugged. "Look,
what you do not seem to grasp is that it is a Gyrgon's perverse
pleasure to give his word in trust in order to break it. They
love playing with us as if we were toys." "When
it comes to other races, is that not an altogether V'ornnish trait?"
A watch-change chime sounded, and Courion rose. "Time to go
topside." They
clambered up the steep companionway at the end of the narrow
corridor. At their backs a small squall had thrown itself over the
stars. The night was thick and utterly black. Ahead of them, Axis Tyr
lay in slumber, its sentinel lights glittering in a weblike tangle.
Courion made his way to the high prow, and Kurgan followed him. The
captain grasped the seaweed-encrusted hawser, adroitly balancing
himself as he put one foot onto the butt end of the bowsprit. Above
them, the great sails arched and cracked. Courion
shouted a series of clipped commands. Activity picked up immediately,
the crew climbing into the rigging, preparing as they neared land, to
furl the sails in stages. "Gyrgon
are dangerous enough," Kurgan said with some urgency, "without
them being mad. I do not know what this one is capable of." "Here
is what we do not fathom," Courion said. "All this talk
about the Gyrgon. And yet you belong to him." "I
belong to no one." "You
swore an oath of fealty to him on this very ship. You wear his
okummmon." "I
will carve it out of my own flesh. When the time comes." "Youthful
folly!" Yet there was no derision in Courion's voice. There
is another thing here for you to fear. What
could there be here to fear? "I
am deadly serious," Kurgan said. Several
nights ago, when he had gone to the Old V'ornn's villa something had
happened. He
did not know what, except there seemed to be a small hole bored into
his head, a void of memory toward the end of the evening that would
not return no matter how hard he tried. This concerned him deeply.
His hatred for Nith Batoxxx was now at a fever pitch. The thought
that he was in some way being manipulated infuriated him. Courion
stirred. "For you, trust is such a fragile thing. Are we not
correct, regent?" "You
are," Kurgan admitted. "We V'ornn find trust a disturbing
and difficult concept to adhere to." "We
would give the world to be free of our bondage to the Gyrgon." "Would
you tell me why he is talking to you about salamuuun?" The
two of them were the still eye of the storm of activity that raged on
all around them. No one came near them or even looked their way. A
Sarakkonian crew was as completely disciplined as any Khagggun pack. Courion
said, "What is there but to trust you?" Leaning toward
Kurgan, he said, "This salamuuun. Its chemical makeup has defied
even the Gyrgon. Is that not correct?" "Yes.
Something in the compound destabilizes the basic complex molecule the
moment anyone tries to analyze it." "It
happens that we have been refining a natural compound that achieves
many of the same psychotropic effects as salamuuun." He pulled
open an inner pocket of his leather vest and produced a yellow-white
object that looked like a flower with severely erose petals. "This
is oqeyya." He dropped it into Kurgan's hand. "It is
a fungus that grows only in the caldera of Oppamonifex, the largest
volcano in the Great Southern Arryx. Nith Batoxxx heard of it purely
by accident sometime ago. He was in disguise in Blood Tide." Kurgan
knew the disguise—the Old V'ornn. But he said nothing of this
to Courion as he gave him back the fungus. "The
oqeyya is dried for three weeks at high altitude. Then it is
soaked in a thick mixture of herbs and carna oil. It is dried again,
washed in seawater, and burnt. The green ash that remains has
powerful psychotropic attributes." "Is
this oqeyya a viable substitute for salamuuun?" Kurgan's
pulse was pounding as he imagined undercutting the Ashera Consortium.
This new compound would ruin them. "Not
yet. There are one or two toxic side effects," Courion conceded.
"But the Gyrgon has promised us that with his help it soon will
be." "Here
is my advice. Never trust a Gyrgon. Especially not this one." "What
choice has he given us?" Kurgan
sat back, well pleased by the progress he had made this night. "Well,
now, that is something for us both to determine." A
scattering of red dust bloomed along the road north as the
ku-omeshals lumbered into the soft violet crush of twilight. "It
is time," Othnam said. "That you learn something of the
Prophet Jiharre." "Koura,"
Mehmmer intoned. It is written. Ahead,
the Djenn Marre rose sharp as a serrated blade, seeming in the light
peculiar to the steppe close enough to reach within a day's leisurely
ride. Their snowcapped peaks, blindingly aglitter in the afternoon's
silent fall into night, seemed for the moment immune even to
Kundala's inexorable spin. There
was nothing leisurely in the kuomeshals' pace. Othnam and Mehmmer
struck the hairy flanks of their mounts with short flexible sticks,
and Riane did the same with hers in order to keep up with them. She
had Tezziq's limp form draped over her thighs. Tezziq's head and feet
jounced against the kuomeshal in time to its long loping stride.
Riane had stripped off her ajjan's dress, clothing her in a spare
Ghor robe and sinschal from Mehmmer's saddlebags. They were heading
north to the rendezvous point, the place where the Ghor had taken
Perrnodt. Nith Sahor's greatcoat was folded away beneath her robes.
It would not have accommodated the four of them. Othnam
said, "Jiharre lived at the very top of the world, along the
highest peaks of the Djenn Marre, where, we believe, Kundala meets
heaven. His prophetic utterances frightened his family and the
townsfolk, who were highly superstitious. They thought him a
sorcerer, and shunned him. But their antipathy did not silence him.
He was a prophet, and if his voice went against the grain, so be it.
He did what he was called to do, what he fervently believed in,
because without that you are nothing, life is nothing, might as well
curl up, close your eyes, and wait for death to claim you." Slowly,
ice-blue shadows crept up from the mountain flanks, extinguishing the
heart of the day's fire. "Jiharre
was exiled, cut off from his family and his friends, who turned their
backs on him. They burned his clothes and his personal effects,
grinding the ashes between the clawed roots of the mossarche tree,
and poured boiling water on them so that they would forget him, so
that his name might never again pass their lips. His people turned
their backs on him because he dared to challenge their beliefs and
biases, because he believed in something greater, a unifying force
that ruled the Cosmos, and it was this force that spoke to him in
holy visions, and these holy visions told him of the threat of a
great evil to come, and what he was required to do. And so Jiharre
went alone and unafraid into the wildness of the Korrush and founded
Za Hara-at, Earth Five Meetings, a city of such power it stood guard
against the ancient threat." Behind
them hunkered the striped jumble of lamplit Agachire, glittering on
the steppe like a faceted jewel, packed zaggy streets smelling of
spices and ba'du, dinners charring over crackling flames, chant-songs
rising like perfumed offering smoke, the city preparing for the onset
of darkness and war. The
three rode close together, hunched over to better protect themselves
from the wind. Already Riane's legs ached from the unnatural position
sitting between the humps, for the kuomeshal was larger and wider
than any cthauros. She smacked the kuomeshal rhythmically with one
hand while holding on to Tezziq with the other. Tezziq had not moved,
had not regained consciousness, and this gnawed at Riane. The longer
the ajjan remained unconscious, the more Riane worried about her. "That's
far enough," Riane said at length. "We have to look after
Tezziq." They
heard her voice even over the wind, but failed to put up their
beat-sticks. She dug her heels into her kuomeshal's sides so that it
galloped ahead of them. Then she wheeled it abruptly around so that
it stood in the path of their beasts. They
reined in. "It
is a mistake to stop," Othnam said. "For any reason." "Especially
for an ajjan," Mehmmer sneered. "Go
on without me, then." Riane
used the beat-stick to tap the crown of her kuomeshal's head, as
Mehmmer had taught her to do, and it knelt, first on its forelegs,
then on its two pairs of hind legs. "You
know we cannot do that." Othnam gazed down at her. "I fail
to see the point." "Why
are you doing this?" Mehmmer snapped. "Because
she helped me." Riane poured some water from her skin over
Tezziq's lips and cheeks. "Because she is my friend." "She
is menne, unclean, without faith," Mehmmer said. "She
is no better than a kuorneshal." "That
is precisely how the V'ornn think of us," Riane said. "A
lower form of life, fit only for drudge work and death." "You
should not be touching her," Othnam warned. "It is
sacrilege." "Why?
I am not Ghor." "You
are the messenger of Jiharre," Mehmmer said. "In
your lore the Prophet Jiharre challenged the beliefs and biases of
his own people. This you told me yourself. You said it yourself. If
you cannot rid yourself of the enmity, then you are doomed to die in
the Gyrgon's game." "Perrnodt
is your priority," Othnam said. "We will wait fifteen
minutes, no more." Hunched
over the body, Riane whispered, "Tezziq, Tezziq. You must wake
up now." She slapped the ajjan on both cheeks, and Tezziq's eyes
fluttered open. "Ah, there, that's better," Riane said,
smiling. "Here. More water." As
Tezziq drank, Riane said, "I am sorry. I should have protected
you better than I did. I do not know what I would have done without
your friendship." She gestured at the shadows that crept
eastward across the undulating Korrush. "But here you are,
outside the palace, free from your prison." Looking
slowly around her. Tezziq began to silently weep. "Ah, Riane, wa
tarabibi, I have no words to thank you adequately." Then,
abruptly, her head came up and she startled. "Who are those?
Ghor?" Her
voice was thin and trembling. "They will kill me the first
chance they get." "They
are Mehmmer and Othnam, brother and sister, and yes, they are Ghor,
but they have pledged that you are safe with them." Tezziq
pressed herself into Riane's arms and shook her head. "No, no.
You do not know the Ghor. They are fanatics. They will lie and cheat
if it serves their purpose. This I have heard often from members of
my own family before I was brought here." Riane
stroked the top of the ajjan's head. "They will not harm you,
Tezziq. This I swear." "I
believe you, wa tarabibi," Tezziq whispered in her ear.
"All the same, you would do well to keep a close eye on them." "I
will," Riane promised. She drew Tezziq up beside her, gave her a
handful of dried fruit. "Eat this slowly while we ride. Do you
think you are strong enough?" "Strong
enough to do whatever you ask of me," Tezziq said with a wan
smile. Then, giving Othnam and Mehmmer a baleful glare, she climbed
aboard the kuomeshal.
18 Trap
You
are certain this is the place," Line-General Lokck Werrrent
said. "So many of these Bashkir strongholds look alike."
Marethyn, standing in front of the looming facade of the warenouse,
said, "This is the one." Across
the darkling scrim of the sky a Khagggun hoverpod hummed. There came
the muted green flash of expelled ions as it banked south. Lights
along Harborside were already on, the acid-bright aurora given off by
the Kalllistotos floodlights hovered overhead, a vast bloodletting
scar. "Can
you show me where?" the Line-General asked her. "Inside, I
mean." Marethyn
nodded. Her hearts beat fast, and she conjured up images of Tettsie,
of riding cthauros, of the red-and-gold woods in autumn. She was
terrified and exhilarated. It was an effort to keep herself from
trembling. The
Line-General used his ion cannon to defeat the lock. Then he
gestured, and together they went into the interior. He was careful
not to touch her or even to approach her too closely. "I
want to reiterate that you are not under suspicion," he said in
his gruff but not unpleasant manner. "All that is required of
you is the truth." "You
made that perfectly clear at the outset," Marethyn said, her
face a perfect mask. "But I thank you for your kindness." He
grunted, switched on a portable photon torch. Echoes of their
footfalls accompanied their progress down cramped aisles bordered on
either side by neat stacks of crates, barrels, and boxes. The air was
dense with dust and packing particles, which tickled the back of
Marethyn's throat. She coughed into her hand, relieving some of the
almost unbearable tension. Line-General
Werrrent's photon torch picked out the Consortium crest stamped onto
each box, barrel, and crate and he paused for a moment. "Again I
will ask. You are certain this is the place?" he said sternly,
as if to a small child whose grasp on the language was perhaps
incomplete. "Positive,"
she said in her most authoritative tone, and led him through the
darkened interior up to the small, spare chamber in which she and
Sornnn had made love. The door was closed and locked. It took
Line-General Werrrent some moments to defeat this lock. With a
contemptuous gesture, he kicked the door open. He
stared into the darkness for a moment, his hand in front of
Mar-ethyn's waist to keep her from going inside until he had a chance
to look around. Using his photon torch, he quickly found the fusion
lamps and powered them on. The chamber looked much the way she
remembered it, the magnificent carpet, the shelves filled with
Kundalan artifacts, the long boxes perched in one corner. There were
no flowers in the vase, in fact, no vase at all on the small table. "If
I might ask," he said, "what were you doing here?"
Seeing the blood rush to her cheeks, he added, "Come, come, my
dear, I am a V'ornn of the Cosmos. I have heard it all." "I
am thinking of my brother," Marethyn said. "If he should
find out that Sornnn SaTrryn and I—" "You
have my word that he shall remain ignorant of your private life. Are
you saying—" "It
was late at night. We were both slightly drunk, I suppose. In any
event, he swung me around and kissed me so hard I felt it all the way
down to my toes. We . . . there wasn't anyplace else around. We
happened to be standing right out front, and we were giggling a
little, like children, and I guess we thought, well, why not?" Line-General
Werrrent nodded. "A little added piquancy, eh?" By
imagining the Line-General catching a sight of her naked, she made
herself blush. "I really wouldn't want to say." "I
understand perfectly. You come here often, do you?" "Oh,
no. Just that once. I think we were embarrassed afterward. We are
adults, after all." "A
wise decision." The Line-General began his reconnoiter. "Stay
right here," he warned, "and be sure you touch nothing." Crossing
to the desk, he rummaged around, pulled open the drawers and emptied
them, rummaged some more, all without finding anything. He took
another look around, noticed the two long boxes, standing on end.
Approaching them carefully, he stared at them for a long time. "Khagggun
alloy," he muttered. "What
does that mean?" He
ignored her, put one hand on the top box, set it carefully down on
the dusty floor. Taking out his ion dagger, he pried open the lid.
Marethyn took a couple of steps into the chamber to take a look over
his shoulder. She saw, packed in a neat row, six new ion cannons. Line-General
Werrrent took one up, turned it over, peered at the serial number
imprinted to the underside of the lower barrel. He did the same with
each of them in turn. Then he opened the second box. He donned a
communicator that wrapped around the back of his head. It had a thin
armature that ended in a crystal ocellus four centimeters from his
left eye. He opened a photonic channel and spoke a lot of gibberish,
identifying himself by code, Marethyn surmised. "I
am in the sixth warehouse on—" He turned to Marethyn. "Aquasius
Street," she said weakly. "Right.
Aquasius Street." He turned back to the ion cannons. "Give
me a readout on the war materiel stolen in the last six months.
Serial numbers. Give me only ion cannons, handheld." He
waited a moment, then the readout appeared on the ocellus in front of
his eye, magnified by the lens of the ocellus. "Right.
Get a pack in full battle armor over here right away." He rose,
unwound the communicator from his skull. "This is Khagggun
property, stolen two weeks ago," he said, apparently to
Marethyn. Returning to the desk, he took out his shock-sword and
sliced through it. He did this over and over until the desk lay in
ruins. "What.
. . what are you looking for?" Marethyn asked. It was easy to
sound frightened. "A
ledger of some kind, of transactions with the Resistance." He
took a deep breath, looked around again. Then he swung his
shock-sword in a horizontal arc and a line of the Korrush artifacts
leapt off the lowest shelf and shattered on the floor, He used the
toe of his boot to push aside the shards. Then he went to the next
shelf up. He repeated the process again and again. Marethyn
saw the stone carving of the fulkaan fly into the air and smash open.
She saw something bounce once, only to be hidden under the carving's
powdery ruin, then the toe of Line-General Werrrent's boot flicked
out and there it lay, an accusatory finger gleaming in the cool
fusion lamplight, the incriminating data-decagon. Are
you certain this is necessary?" Konara Inggres tried to keep the
apprehension out of her voice as Konara Lyystra led her to the door
to what had been Konara Urdma's office. "Mother
wishes to see you," Konara Lyystra said with a firm hand on her
elbow. "You aren't thinking of disobeying her, are you?" "Of
course not." Konara Inggres turned around, playing for time.
"But can't you tell me why she wishes to see me? I mean, I have
so much to do and so little time—" "There
is always time for Mother." Konara
Lyystra's lacquered smile was like a knife thrust in her belly. Where
was her friend? she wondered for the thousandth time. What had been
done to her? "Lyystra,
listen to me." "Yes?" Konara
Inggres bit her tongue. Even her urgent tone could not wipe the
placid expression off her friend's face. She could do ought but to
give in to Konara Lyystra's gentle push. She opened the office door
and, with an escalating sense of dread, walked into the office. Giyan
looked up as she came in. Konara Inggres could feel Konara Lyystra as
close behind her as if she were a V'ornn Khagggun guarding a
prisoner. "Ah,
Konara Inggres." With the warmest of smiles lighting her face,
Giyan rose from behind the desk and hurried to greet her visitor. "So
good of you to come." She took Konara Inggres' hand between her
own. It was curiously cold and dry, like a marsh lizard's skin. "Sit
down and we shall share icewine." Konara
Inggres perched on the edge of a chair while Konara Lyystra poured
two goblets of icewine. When she had delivered them, Giyan dismissed
her just as if she had been a rank acolyte. Giyan
handed Konara Inggres a goblet, then drew up another chair opposite
her. She sat so close their knees fairly touched. "So,"
Giyan said, "how are we coping with the recent changes at the
abbey?" She
had the disconcerting habit of asking a question without the proper
inflection, so that it was often difficult to know whether she was
soliciting an answer or simply making a comment. "All right ...
I guess." "There
is no shame in admitting the difficulties." Giyan leaned briefly
forward, patted her knee reassuringly. "My return. Konara
Bartta's resurrection. Konara Urdma's untimely death. Any one of
these changes would be disconcerting. But all three taken at once."
She clucked her tongue against the roof of her mouth, an unfortunate
sound like insects rubbing their hind legs together. "It
has all been a little hard to fathom." "Of
course it has." Giyan patted her knee again. "I am glad you
can admit it. It is evidence that we are all Kundalan." Was
there a sarcastic gleam in Giyan's eyes, Konara Inggres wondered, or
was she being paranoid? "Konara
Lyystra tells me that you have been a trifle, oh, how did she put it
again, cool, yes, that was it, cool." "I don't
think—" "Oh,
my dear, she is merely protective of you. And worried."
"Worried?" "Certainly.
The strain of the changes." Now Giyan's voice changed a shade.
"And of keeping your secrets." "Secrets?"
A thin coating of ice seemed to have formed in Konara Inggres' belly. "Konara
Lyystra was candid enough to confide in me your dislike of Konara
Bartta, of the changes at work in the abbey curriculum." Staring
into those cold whistleflower-blue eyes, Konara Inggres could do
nothing but bite her lip in an agony of terror. "Never
you fear." Giyan winked at her. "The curriculum is about to
get a complete overhaul. I could not agree with you more. Disgraceful
what Konara Mossa and Bartta took it into their heads to do. I am
about to have a talk with my sister. I warrant it will not be a
pleasant conversation, but she will soon see the error of her ways."
Giyan's smile seemed a meter wide. "I can be very persuasive
when I set my mind to it, let me tell you." She sighed. "And
between you and me it was a blessing that the Great Goddess Miina
took Konara Urdma so precipitously. I would have had to strip her of
her office, you see, and that would have been more demoralizing to
the abbey than the quick and merciful death accorded her. "So."
She put Tier hands together. "Are there any questions you need
answered?" Konara
Inggres shook her head. She was now in the grip of the fiercest
terror she had ever known. It was all she could do to keep her teeth
from chattering. She mumbled her good-byes as they rose. Her legs
were stiff as tree trunks as she walked haltingly to the door, and
when she passed beyond the threshold she broke out into a cold sweat. That
night Rada saw the regent's assigned Haaar-kyut saunter into Blood
Tide. Though he was a First-Captain, he was dressed in a
Third-Marshal's uniform. He pushed his way through the noisy throng
and sat alone at a table. Rada waved away a waitress, went and took
his order herself, When she returned with his goblet of mead, there
was a data-decagon at the bottom. He
was very good, he did not make any sign that he knew her. His eyes
did not follow her while she moved about the smoky room. And when she
set the goblet of her best sweet mead in front of him he smiled up
into her face. She
had heard some interesting gossip, and she had spent considerable
time deciding what to put on the data-decagon and how exactly to
phrase it. One item concerned the proliferation of laaga, the
Sar-akkon drug, among the youth of the city. Another the unrest
building among the Khagggun who had not yet attained Great Caste
status. There had even been an incident involving one of the
Genomatekks who worked at Receiving Spirit who was attacked by a
number of unidentified assailants. The hot rumor was they were
Khagggun. Kurgan had asked her to find out what she could regarding
the Portals, but there had been nothing to report. She had even asked
a number of acquaintances and contacts without any success. At the
last minute, she decided not to include her lack of success in this
area. This was an interesting role for her to be playing, and, much
to her surprise, she had warmed to it quickly. Besides the relief she
felt at no longer having a debt to pay off, she experienced a little
thrill of excitement at the level of clandestine service. She
watched from across the tavern as the Haaar-kyut drained his goblet
and retrieved the data-decagon from his mouth. Then he paid his bill
and left. She
went into the kitchen to make sure the orders were being filled
properly. Steam rose from a multitude of black pots on the gigantic
stove. A waft of pungent aromas tickled her nose. Passing behind her
cooks, she took a sample from each bubbling pot, nodding approvingly
after each taste. She paused behind one of her cooks and tapped him
once on the back. He finished adding pepper to a stewpot, barked an
order at his assistant, and, untying his apron, disappeared out the
rear door. Satisfied
with her night's work, she returned to the riotous bedlam of the
tavern proper just in time to watch a fight develop between a huge
Mesagggun and a hulking Sarakkon with a skull full of hideous
tattoos. She waited a moment before wading in to break it up. It was
a pity, really. The V'ornn was bigger, but her money would have been
on the Sarakkon.
19 Koura
High
clouds streaked the vast sky, endless gossamer streamers caught up in
the thermal currents. Others, thicker darker lower, crouched on the
rim of the southern horizon, perhaps already ridding themselves of
their turbulent moisture. And
so they continued their journey northward. Othnam had said that the
Ghor were guarding Perrnodt at a sacred site of prayer and vigil some
twenty kilometers north of Agachire. By Riane's estimation they were
almost there, though the peculiar optical properties of the Korrush
made such judgments notoriously inaccurate. Up
ahead, she could see a ring of thornbeam trees, gnarled and greyish
black, their branches tasseled with fruit, their looping roots dug
down deep in the barren soil to find water and nourishment. And she
was reminded of the ring of thorned sysal trees within which, she had
been told, Nith Sahor had lost his life. But if that were so, then
where had he regained it? Another in an endless parade of Gyrgon
enigmas. Othnam
raised his arm, slowing them as they approached the natural circle of
thornbeams. And then he stopped altogether and the four of them sat
side by side, silent, breathless. At
length, Riane said very softly, "What is it?" "I
do not know," Othnam said. "There
is no lymmnal," Mehmmer said, and her nostrils flared. "No
lookout. No Ghorvish brethren come to meet us." Riane's
stomach turned over as she saw brother and sister draw their
scimitars and spur their kuomeshals on with their beat-sticks. She
followed suit, and soon enough they were moving through the stand of
trees. Mehmmer
gasped and Othnam muttered, "Ah, good Jiharre, no." There,
arrayed on the north side of the circle, four Ghor bodies had been
strung up, hanging by their necks from the highest branches. At their
feet, two lymmnal lay slaughtered and disemboweled. "Paddii!"
Riane cried. The
kuomeshals snorted and shook their great ugly heads, and it proved
difficult to get them near the dangling bodies. Othnam started on the
left, Mehmmer went to the center. Riane, for her part, urged her
mount to the rightmost body and, swinging her dagger, cut Paddii
down. "All
dead," Othnam said. "Except
Perrnodt." Mehmmer wheeled her kuomeshal around. "She has
vanished." Othnam
had come up beside them. "Who perpetrated this outrage,
Makktuub's guards?" "No."
Mehmmer shook her head. "Think, my brother. Think of the spy we
executed not far from here." "The
Jeni Cerii have revenged themselves upon us. They murdered our
brethren and have kidnapped Perrnodt." "But
where have they taken her?" Riane said, turning this way and
that in the saddle. Silence.
Sun burning low in the sky, a copse of clouds, high and distant and
still, baring the blank, uncaring face of the world. Somewhere it was
raining, but here black carrion birds circled, effortlessly switching
from thermal to thermal, patient as the Korrush itself. While
Tezziq watched with a closed face, Riane helped Othnam and Mehmmer
dig a three-meter-wide depression in the reddish dirt. Then she and
Othnam piled the bodies—Ghor and faithful lymmnal alike—in
the center of the roughly circular depression while Mehmmer sang the
death prayer in her clear strong voice. They would not have allowed
Tezziq to help them even had she been inclined to, which clearly she
wasn't. They did not allow her anywhere near the burial circle, but
ordered her to stay with the kuomeshals. This she did without
protest, turning her back, staring at the dark and brooding Djenn
Marre, thinking perhaps of home, a place she had believed she would
never see again. Mehmmer
continued singing the death chant, and Riane watched numbly as Othnam
spread a line of a clear viscous substance on each of the bodies.
Then, using a flint-box, he struck a spark and, at once, flames
licked upward. He stepped back, joining Mehmmer in mid-stanza. Riane
listened to the words rolling off their tongues and thought of Paddii
joyfully holding his newborn, Paddii running beside the kuomeshal on
which she had found temporary shelter, Paddii giving her back her
dagger, Paddii coming out here from Agachire to tell the Ghor
guarding Perrnodt that she and Othnam and Mehmmer would be detained.
Paddii had been killed because of her. Because of her desire to
rescue Tezziq and Nith Sahor's secret. She knew she had done the
right thing, but this could be no solace for Paddii or his family,
and so she said a prayer of her own, a small thing, begging the
forgiveness of the Goddess Miina. And she made herself believe that
the flames heard the prayers for the spirits so recently departed
even as they cleansed and consumed the husks of the chosen. While
the smoke wound its way toward the heavens, they spoke quickly and
carefully, as if the very air they breathed was alive with malignant
force. "The
situation has now changed," Othnam said. "We must return to
get reinforcements." "What
about Perrnodt?" Riane said. No
one uttered a word. Riane
went over to the thornbeams under which the Ghor had been strung up.
Pointing due west, she said, "What lies that way?" Mehmmer
shrugged. "Nothing but the wild." "Unless
you count the in 'adim, a series of low-lying washes." "Dangerous,
too," Mehmmer said. "The bottom looks dry, but often it's
only a crust covering deep quicksand pits. No one goes there." "What
of Perrnodt?" Riane said. "Will they kill her? Take her
back to their territory and imprison her? Hold her for ransom?
Torture and rape her?" "Who
can know?" Mehmmer shook her head sadly. "We are not Jeni
Cerii." Riane
looked directly at Tezziq, who still had her back to them. "Tezziq,"
she said softly. Tezziq
turned around to face them. "What
will they do to her?" "Why
are you asking her?" Mehmmer said, alarmed. "All
she is intimate with," Othnam said, "is Makktuub's member." "Tezziq,"
Riane said, ignoring them both, "do you know?" "Even
if I did"—Tezziq's eyes blazed at Mehmmer and Othnam—
"Why should I tell you?" "Because
I am asking." "This
is nonsense," Othnam said. "We
are wasting precious time," Mehmmer said. Riane
walked slowly toward Tezziq. "Would you knowingly cause the
death of another?" At
last, Tezziq's gaze fell upon Riane. "You know I would not." "Perrnodt
is not Ghor. But even if she were, it makes no difference." "It
makes a great deal of difference!" "Why?" "Because
the Ghor—" Tezziq gave the brother and sister a quick
glance as she lowered her voice. "They are evil, I have told
you. The stories I have heard—" "Are
just that," Riane said. "It was Mehmmer and Othnam who
helped me escape from Makktuub's palace." "In
exchange for what?" "Nothing.
They have asked me for nothing." She
turned to them, and said, "Is this true? Your motives were
absolutely pure in helping Riane to escape from the haanjhala?" Brother
and sister exchanged a quick telling glance. "Of
course," Mehmmer said. "No."
Othnam took a step forward. "It is not, strictly speaking, the
truth." "Brother!" "There!"
Tezziq said triumphantly. "Didn't I tell you?" "Let
him speak," Riane said. To Othnam she said, "I once asked
you why you were helping me. Was your answer a lie?" "No.
Neither was it the entire truth." Othnam sighed. "The whole
truth is we wanted—" "Makktuub
had our parents executed," Mehmmer said quickly and angrily.
"Because they stayed true to our faith, they would not
compromise themselves, they would not comply with his order." "Makktuub
called it a misstep," Riane said. "It
is always thus. The executioner is free to couch the awful truth in
euphemisms, while the poor victims are silenced." Othnam nodded.
"In any event, it was a fatal decision." "While
we have pledged ourselves to be more pragmatic in order to keep the
peace between Ghor and the kapudaan," Mehmmer said, "still
we felt a desire to take our measure of revenge against him." "To
take you back from him," Mehmmer said, "simply because he
desired you." "In
fact, I do not believe that it was Makktuub who wanted to imprison
me," Riane said, thinking of how uncomfortable the kapudaan had
been on the terrace. "It was the Gyrgon, Nith Settt. He had
begun to question me about Perrnodt before I managed to escape. She
seems to be the reason he was so interested in me." "What
about her?" Othnam began. "We
shall have to ask her," Riane said, "when we find her." "If
you find her," Tezziq said. "As
Othnam has said, we must make all haste back to the Ghor encampment
to recruit reinforcements," Mehmmer said. "If
you do that, Perrnodt will surely die." They
all turned to their attention to Tezziq. Riane
found her tongue first. "What do you mean?" "If
we do not find her soon, they will kill her," Tezziq said. Mehmmer
snorted. "How could you possibly know such a thing?" "I
am Jeni Cerii," Tezziq said. Mehmmer
fell silent. Riane could see that Othnam was a little bit in shock. "Tell
us what you know, Tezziq," Riane said gently. "Please." "The
ir'adim, that is where they will have taken her," she
said. "Why
there particularly?" Tezziq
let out a slow controlled breath. "The Jeni Cerii use the
ir'adim as a place to hide, to stage raids against your tribe.
If Perrnodt is still alive, that is where we will find her." Toward
sundown, Olnnn returned to the spice market. He was without armor. He
had a small backpack strapped to his back. Ever since his meeting at
Spice Jaxx's with Lokck Werrrent he had been haunted by something the
Line-General had said. You cannot imagine how many Resistance we
have lost in this warren. They come here to disappear; it is a
repository of the rotten, the subversive, and the disaffected. With
furtive glances, a trio of Kundalan servants hurried by. A hunchback
in tattered robes hovered near a cornice, watching the mounds of
spices for his chance to cut and run, A Kundalan female with an evil
and withered face eyed him warily as she took her purchases. A fat
merchant, momentarily idle, did the same, wondering doubtless why the
Star-Admiral was taking his leisure here. Which one of these vermin
he needed to speak with—the rotten, the subversive, or the
disaffected—was at the moment unclear to him. All he was
certain of was that if he was ever going to find the fugitives, he
needed to know where they were going. To do that he needed to know
what they were looking for. He needed, therefore, to plumb the depths
of the sewer running beneath Axis Tyr. He
could think of no better place to start than here. Choosing
an outside table at Spice Jaxx's, he ordered two tankards of warm
ten-spice mead. He watched as sacks of fragrant gowit cinnamon were
delivered to the merchant in the stall next door. The
trouble was he lacked the skills to talk to those outside the
Khagggun Caste. To his credit he knew that. What was required was a
guide. He wished he could ask Malistra for advice, or maybe a
spell-casting to set him on the right path. But she was dead, and not
even her Kundalan sorcery could bring her back. But thinking of her
had put him in mind of another female. She was not Kundalan, but she
was acquainted with many. And
here she came, bareheaded, diademed, glowering between her escort of
two of Olnnn's own Khagggun. "I
trust you like ten-spice mead," he said when they had brought
her to a halt before his table. "I
like it well enough," Rada said, sitting down at his invitation.
She watched him dismiss the escorts. "Are you certain that you
can trust me to be alone with you, Star-Admiral?" "Let
us not get off on the wrong foot," he said as amiably as he was
able. "Too
late for that," she said shortly. "You had me marched out
of Blood Tide like a common criminal." "With
your head bared you look like a common criminal. Or a Looorm." "This
is how I choose to look." "Not
when you are with me. Pretend you are a decent Tuskugggun. Raise your
sifeyn." She
put her hands to her shoulders, slipped the gauzy cowl over her
gleaming oiled skull. He
smiled. "Much better." He spoke to her as if she were a
wayward child. "Now go ahead. Drink. I wish you to partake of my
hospitality." Rada
engaged him with her eyes. He
shrugged. "As you wish." "Nothing
today is as I wish." She wore robes dark as a two-day bruise.
Her beauty burst from this unlovely color like a cornflower rises
from black dirt. "You have a harsh sense of hospitality,
Star-Admiral." "I
am Khagggun. Everything about me is harsh." He shrugged. "What
I know is war." "And
killing." "War
is killing." "You
might as well be speaking an alien language." He
smiled again. "Then we will not speak of war." Rada
took a sip of her mead. "That would please me." Out
in the market, the hunchback found his opening, swiped a handful of
gowit cinnamon, and dashed off. Olnnn raised his hand and one of his
Khagggun appeared from out of the teeming throng, caught the
hunchback by the scruff of his filthy robes, dragging him back to the
spice stall. Rada,
seeing what had happened, said, "Nothing is too insignificant
for your attention." "The
law was broken. The criminal must be punished." "Such
a petty infraction. Such a poor criminal." "Tell
me," he said, "of what use is the law if it is not enforced
absolutely?" "Of
what use is a Star-Admiral," she replied, "who applies the
law blindly?" He
pushed his own tankard aside. "I require your assistance." "So
much for small talk." He
was doing his best to ignore her sarcasm, but he wondered whether he
put up with it because of how beautiful she was. It was instructive
seeing her away from the grim and grimy lamplight of her nighttime
tavern. If not for her thorny mouth, he might admit that he was moved
by her comeliness. "I
am in need of a guide," he persevered. "Indeed.
And what exactly do you need a guide for, Star-Admiral?" "I
am looking for a Kundalan sorceress." She laughed. He
regarded her with an unhealthy mixture of lust and contempt. "As
a Khagggun, I know I will never find one on my own. I know there are
very few left on Kundala." She
pursed her lips as if deep in thought. "I believe we had
something to do with that." "We
are blamed for all the Kundalan's ills," Olnnn said
dismissively. "Who
else is to blame?" "Why,
the Kundalan themselves. They were well along on the slippery slope
of corruption long before we arrived." Rada
finished her mead. "Why should I agree to be your guide?" "I
am ordering it." "And
if I should refuse?" "Don't." This
was all he said, but his reply sent a chill down her spine. She well
knew the stories about this new Star-Admiral, and was inclined to
believe most of them. Her tough, bantering replies masked her
stone-cold fear of him. It angered her that he could elicit such a
shameful response in her. She felt the heel of his boot at the back
of her neck, she tasted the dirt at her feet, and she nearly wept
with the injustice of it. She
sought to cover her weakness with a straightforward question. "Tell
me, Star-Admiral, what is it you wish to ask a sorceress?" "I
need her to read some passages in a couple of books." She
stared at him as a way of screwing up her courage. "The
fugitives are searching for something," he added. "I
believe the only way to trap them is to find out what they are
looking for." "If
we can find one." "Don't
tell me a sorceress has never walked into Blood Tide. You will find
her." His
eyes were fever-bright, and again she felt herself grow frightened.
She clasped her hands between her legs to stop them from trembling. "What
makes you think a sorceress will answer you truthfully?" "You
will tell me that, Rada." They
came quartering out of the northeast, Khagggun mounted on cthauros.
There were five of them, not so many, Sornnn thought, but more than
enough. The three First-Marshals had their ion cannons drawn. Sornnn
turned to the rather rotund figure of Bronnn Pallln. He had accepted
Tallin's invitation to go night-hunting for claiwen, large,
six-legged predators that could live as easily underwater as on land,
whose natural habitat was the Great Phosphorus Swamp. "Line-General
Lokck Werrrent himself," Sornnn said. "What is this all
about, Bronnn Pallln, do you know?" Bronnn
Pallln shrugged, acting stupider than he looked. "Hold
there!" Line-General Lokck Werrrent called. "Prepare to be
questioned." "Is
this how you speak to the Prime Factor?" Sornnn called. "What
mean you, Line-General, to intercept us in the dead of night?" Line-General
Lokck Werrrent reined in his cthauros as he came within six meters of
Sornnn and Pallln. "I
might ask you what you are about in this wilderness at this late
hour." "Your
concern for our safety is admirable, Line-General," Bronnn
Pallln said rather jovially. "If you must know, we are hunting
claiwen, though N'Luuura knows with all this clatter I doubt there's
a beast within ten kilometers of here." Line-General
Lokck Werrrent did not respond. Instead, he held out his hand. In it
was the data-decagon he had discovered in the secret warehouse
chamber. "Here is evidence, hard and irrefutable." The
Line-General held up the crystal so that its facets caught the
moonslight. "A careful accounting of every theft of Khagggun war
materiel for the past year and the subsequent sale of said war
materiel to the Kundalan Resistance. These are the gravest offenses
against V'ornndom, which demand the ultimate punishment. What say you
in your defense, Bronnn Pallln?" "Me?"
Bronnn Pallln laughed, a high eerie sound with a note of disbelief.
"But surely you mean Sornnn SaTrryn, Line-General." "I
mean you, sir." "But
the warehouse—" "The
stolen weaponry was found in a secret chamber in your warehouse,
Bronnn Pallln, as was this ledger of your traitorous transactions." "This
. . . this must be ... it has to be a mistake." Bronnn Pallln's
eyes were as big around as plates. "Which warehouse, if you
please?" "The
sixth one on Aquasius Street," the Line-General said. "These
days, save for temporary storage overruns, the warehouse is rarely
visited by my Consortium," "Which
makes it a perfect venue for your traitorous activities,"
Line-General Werrrent said cannily. "But.
. . but Sornnn SaTrryn is the one with obvious leanings to the
Korrush, while I have no such—" "Do
you take me for a fool, Bronnn Pallln? It would be sheer folly for a
traitor to publicly announce his bias. Pending the regent's tribunal,
you are now considered an enemy of the state." At his gesture,
two of the Khagggun drew up, one on either side of Bronnn Pallln's
cthauros. One leaned over, took the reins from his shaking hands. "I
gave you information." An increasing note of desperation had
entered Bronnn Pallln's voice. "Marethyn Stogggul and Sornnn
SaTrryn—" He turned suddenly. "You did this to me,
Sornnn SaTrryn. You set me up." "Come
now," the Line-General said without a trace of sympathy. "Sornnn
SaTrryn, will you please enlighten the traitor?" "This
is embarrassing, but Marethyn and I went a little crazy. We were
drunk and—" "Liar!"
The blood rushed to Bronnn Pallln's face, and he became so agitated
his cthauros began to snort and stamp, obliging the Khagggun on
either side to hold on to him tightly. The
Line-General put his hand on the neck of Bronnn Pallln's mount, with
one gesture calming the beast and silencing Bronnn Pallln. "Please
proceed," he said to Sornnn. "We
were in an exceedingly amorous mood," Sornnn said to Bronnn
Pallln. "I apologize for breaking into your warehouse, but it
was deserted and close at hand, and we did not think there would be
any harm in—" "This
is the most outrageous lie." "Marethyn
Stogggul corroborates his story," Line-General Werrrent said
blandly. "Who corroborates yours?" "Talk
to the Genomatekk, Jesst Vebbn. He will tell you that it was I who
hired him to find out who the traitor was." "We
have already spoken to Genomatekk Vebbn," the Line-General said,
"He came forward voluntarily and told us that you had asked him
to fabricate false evidence against the Prime Factor." "Why
that slimy little—V Bronnn Pallln roared even as he
recalled how he had so cavalierly screwed Vebbn. "It is all a
pack of lies! By N'Luuura's spiked gates, don't you see, they are
plotting against me!" "Oh,
yes, of course," the Line-General said sardonically. "Sornnn
SaTrryn, the regent's sister, Genomatekk Jesst Vebbn, they all bear
you ill will and, to boot, are plotting with the Resistance." He
shook his head. "Do you not hear how foolish you sound?" He
gestured to his complement of Khagggun. "Take him away. I will
catch up with you shortly. And if the prisoner continues his
invective, do wire his mouth shut." When
they had gone, Line-General Werrrent said, "I apologize for his
slander, Prime Factor." "Not
necessary," Sornnn said. "Professional
jealousy is a bitter tonic, eh, Prime Factor?" "Truly
poisonous," Sornnn agreed. Line-General
Werrrent shifted on his saddle. "I would ask you something." Sornnn
pulled his cthauros around. "It
is of a somewhat sensitive nature." Sornnn
was now greatly interested. "As you wish, Line-General." "We
are two patriots talking together in the fastness of the night." "I
understand completely, Line-General." "Yes.
I thought you would." Lokck Werrrent kept a tight rein on his
mount. It had scented something crawling through the swamp and
apparently wanted no part of it. "I am interested in your
opinion concerning a matter of grave importance to ... to the state."
He lowered his voice. "Do you believe the regent, Kurgan
Stogggul, wishes to continue with the program his father began to
raise Khagggun to Great Caste status?" Sornnn
studied the other's blunt and brutal face. "You want me to be
honest." "Absolutely.
Otherwise, I never would have asked." "Wennn
Stogggul felt no compunction in turning on his Star-Admiral,"
Sornnn said. "He was mad for power. From what I can see, his son
Kurgan is no different. Except I believe Kurgan Stogggul to be far
more intelligent." The
Line-General revealed none of his inner turmoil in his expression.
"Please be so kind as to continue." "Frankly,
Line-General, I never could understand why the regent would add to
the Khagggun's power. It made me wonder what he has planned for you." Lokck
Werrrent nodded formally. "I appreciate your candor." "I
fear for us." Sornnn turned his cthauros in the direction of
Axis Tyr. "I fear for us all." It
was a mean place, the walls dark with scrawled epithets, the floor I
of packed dirt. The air was rancid with refuse and urine and
indigence. Vermin crawled everywhere. Olnnn wrinkled his nose in
distaste and shook Rada by her elbow. "What
joke is this?" he rumbled. "No sorceress would live here." "If
you touch me again," she said with a slight tremor, "I
shall walk out of here, and you will not get what you want." "You
have no idea what I want." She
eyed him carefully. "If I were you, I would not make that wager,
Star-Admiral." They
stood toe to toe for a moment in a kind of mental stalemate, fear and
need weighing in equal measure while the scales tipped this way and
that, buffeted by fierce emotion. At length, Olnnn chuckled. "In
truth, I have never met a Tuskugggun like you. I don't know whether
to swat you or grab you by the waist and ..." He stopped,
recognizing that glare in her eyes. He put up his hands. "Yes,
yes. I know you that well, at least." As
they recommenced their walk through the execrable warren of hovels
deep beneath Devotion Street, he said, "Pity you were born
female. I warrant you would have made a notable warrior." "Pity
I am V'ornn." This
response brought him up short. "What do you mean?" She
turned to him. "Had I been born Kundalan, I would be a warrior." "Were
you Kundalan," he replied dryly, "chances are you would be
dead." He
heard the soft mewling of a small animal, the pad of tiny paws, but
he did not turn around. From out of an open doorway arose a sudden
gust of coughing and the sickly-sweet stench of disease. "Remind
me to have this festering sore razed." "Yes,
Star-Admiral," she said, matching his dry tone, "that is
the answer." "That
is my answer, yes. I am Khagggun." "And you are so proud of
that!" "Listen,
you." He put his face in front of hers. "Many of my
comrades have died to keep you and all you hold dear safe. How many?
So many I have lost count. But when I sleep I see them. They come to
me in my dreams and whisper their pride. It is their pride and their
heroism that have kept us from being overrun by the Centophennni." Their
eyes locked. Something beyond hatred passed between them. So
surprised was Olnnn that he drew back a pace. "This
way," Rada said, her voice slightly thickened in displaced
emotion. She
took him into a chamber almost at the end of the corridor. Though
bleak, it was less dank and noisome than the rest he had passed.
Streetlight dribbled down a shaft and through a small window high up
in a half-rotted wall. One lamp was lit, low and long-necked, of
faithfully rubbed bronze. It was apparently filled with fragrant oil
because the space was infused with a complex and spicy scent. By its
glow Olnnn could see that the chamber was free of filth and litter. A
single carpet was laid upon the floor of oversize stone squares, In
the center of this carpet sat a figure, small, spare to the point of
emaciation. It was also definitely male. Olnnn
regarded the figure with an ill-disguised disgust. "I am in need
of a sorceress," he said. "Can you tell me where—" "Rada,"
the figure said. "Why have you brought this killing engine
here?" "Forgive
me, Sagiira. I had no choice." "There
is always choice, my child." "Enough
of this." Olnnn stepped forward. "There will be serious
consequences if you do not produce the sorceress, old one." "There
are already serious consequences." Sagiira lifted an arm that
seemed so utterly devoid of flesh it might have been mummified. "You
have touched one of the sacred books of Miina." He held his head
at such an angle Olnnn could not see the eyes in his skull-like face.
"Tell me, killing engine, how does your leg feel?" Olnnn
automatically touched his ensorceled femur. "What do you mean?"
But he knew. The fizzing sensation in his bare bones had not left
him. And hadn't it begun just after he ran his finger down the page
of one of the books that lay open on the refectory table in the Abbey
of Warm Current? "Why
ask me?" Sagiira said. "When you already know?" Olnnn
glanced at Rada. "I
have done what you asked!" she said softly. "Here is the
only sorcerer I know." "But
he is male," he protested. "There are no male sorcerers." Sagiira
wagged his head. "What you do not know, killing engine." "Do
not call me that]" Olnnn snapped. "You
are what you are." Olnnn
scrabbled in his backpack, took out the book. As Sagiira shifted
slightly to take it, lamplight played briefly over his face, and
Olnnn saw that he was blind. It was as if his eyeballs had been
plucked from his head. "Were
you born blind?" he could not help himself from asking. "I
had sight once." Sagiira ran his hands over the book. "That
sense was taken away from me a long time ago." The open book lay
in his meager lap. "Do you have any idea, killing engine, what
it is like to lose your sight? No, of course you do not. You have no
conception of what sight is or can be." "Of
course I understand." "No.
You are V'ornn." Sagiira's sticklike fingers paused on a page,
tapped out a kind of rhythm. "In the time of long ago I could
see the future. That was the major portion of my sorcery. Now I am
blind in every way it means to be blind. Do you see?" He
laughed, exposing brown teeth and inflamed gums. "I saw you
coming, killing engine. I saw what you would do to us. I tried to
stop them, but they would not listen. They threatened me, and
foolishly I joined them, and for that great sin I was blinded."
He cocked his head. "You do not understand a word I am saying,
do you?" He shook his head. "The title of this book is The
Gathering of Signs. But you knew that already, didn't you? Your
bones told you. They are speaking to you, killing engine." Olnnn
stared at the sorcerer, wide-eyed. "How do you know that?"
"The spell lying in them came alive the moment you touched this
book. Did I mention that it is sacred to Miina?" "Yes you
did, Sagiira," Rada said softly. "Ah,
ah!" He wagged his head. "Age creeps through me with the
raking claws of a perwillon." He closed the book, hugged it to
his sunken chest. "Once I could read this. I had it memorized.
Now I am damaged—damaged beyond repair." "There
are fugitives I must find," Olnnn said, desperate to change the
subject. "They were looking through this book, searching for
something. What was it?" "You
must follow them north to find out," Sagiira said. "But
these fugitives should not be your concern." "One
of them almost killed me. And because of her my leg—" "Your
leg is what should concern you," Sagiira said. "Or rather
what lies beneath. The spell." His nose wrinkled. "I can
smell it." "What
spell? The skcettta left a spell?" "Not
Giyan," Sagiira said softly. "The other sorceress." "Malistra?" The
sorcerer nodded. "I
do not believe you," Olnnn said shortly. "But
you will." Oddly, Sagiira had turned his head toward Rada.
"Because you cannot stop what Malistra has planned for you." And,
indeed, Olnnn could feel the fizzing in his bones building to a
crescendo. All at once he cried out. Pain flooded the ensorceled leg,
and he collapsed onto the stone floor. "Here
it comes, killing engine. Are you ready? No, I don't suppose you
are." Olnnn
writhed in agony, rucking up the edge of the sorcerer's carpet. His
eyes bulged in their sockets, and he gasped to breathe. "No.
Even a killing engine such as you is not prepared for this." Olnnn
felt something on his leg, or in it. Yes, that was it. Inside his
femur a bulge was appearing. He watched in a kind of fascinated
horror as a copper-colored serpent squeezed through the porous layers
of his bare femur, its flat, wedge-shaped head coalescing as its body
wound itself into a tight coil. "Malistra!"
he said in a hoarse whisper. "She
was powerful, all right," Sagiira said. "I think she fooled
us all. Even her master." Olnnn
was in too much pain to try and make sense of the sorcerer's
rambling. He had more pressing problems. The
serpent, coiling and uncoiling, glittered in the lamplight. All at
once it began to hiss. Its obsidian eyes impaled Olnnn, and its
forked tongue nicked out. "Lisssten
closssley, Olnnn. If you hear my voiccce, it meansss the ssspell I
buried in the bonesss of your leg hasss been activated. You are
doubtlesss with a female. Do you care for her? And ssshe for you? I
hope so. Because now you are forever tied to her asss ssshe isss tied
to you." Out
of the corner of his eye, Olnnn saw a look of horror etched clearly
on Rada's face. "You
have never needed a female before. You do now," the serpent
continued. "Only ssshe can eassse your pain. Eventually, you may
forgo her company for asss much asss twelve Kundalan hoursss at a
time. But that isss your limit." "Why?"
Olnnn cried. "Why are you doing this to me?" "To
protect you. You have a nemesssisss. A powerful nemesssisss who
masssqueradesss asss your friend." "Kurgan
Stogggul," Olnnn said. The
serpent's forked tongue flicked out. "Given the opportunity, he
will kill you. Sssooner rather than later. I sssaw thisss in my
mind'sss eye while I wasss healing you, and I took thessse
measssures." The serpent slithered along his bones. "There
isss a very specccial power inss-side Kurgan." The serpent
reared its head, its forked tongue flicking past its lipless mouth.
"I have given you the ability to kill him, but only if you can
find it within yourssself to change." "What
are you talking about?" "All
power corruptsss, Olnnn. If I learned anything in my lifetime it isss
thisss. The bessst of intentttionsss are asss nothing to the
corruptt-tion of the ssspirit power caussses. If you kill Kurgan,
your power and pressstige will multiply a hundredfold. Asss you are
now, it will corrupt you wholly. It will consssume you. The female
will sssee that corruptt-tion doesss not dessstroy you." "How
can you know that I will not be corrupted along with him?" Rada
cried. The
serpent's flat, triangular head turned in her direction, the eyes
burning like cold flame. "What would you do with sssuch power,
female?" "Me?
I—I have no idea." The
serpent's head shot forward. "Sssurely there are grudgesss to
sssettle, enemiesss to be beheaded. You could have your pick of
meth-odsss, sssavor the momentsss of—" "What?
Mol" Rada recoiled. "You're evil. Pure evil." "You
sssee?" The serpent smiled, an unnatural expression for a
reptile. "You do not covet sssuch power, you do not wisssh it.
You will sssave him from himssself." "What?
I don't want any part of—" Having
delivered its message, the serpent was already coming apart at the
seams. Copper scales pattered to the stone floor as the thing turned
inside out. Immediately, it began to shrivel, darkening, breaking
apart and curling like ashes in high heat. Within moments, it had
vanished. "This
cannot be happening," Rada said, slightly stupefied. She turned
to the sorcerer. "It must have been an hallucination." Olnnn
gripped his leg bones. "The pain is real enough." He was
breathing hard. "You
would do well to listen to Malistra's words," Sagiira said.
"Both of you." "I
want no part of this," Olnnn said. "Nor
I," said Rada. "Foolish
talk," Sagiira said. "You are caught in the spell. There is
no alternative, no way out."
20 Twins
This
is an inferior host you have provided for me," Bartta said. Her
hands, their backs still reddened from the aftermath of her ordeal,
played over her own twisted, humped body, and her eyes blazed. "You
have done this to me on purpose!" Myggorra, the arch-daemon
inside her cried. And gestured, rather theatrically. "Look at
you—tall, golden-skinned, beautiful. Tell me you haven't given
yourself the best of it." "On
the surface it may look that way," Giyan said with a small
grimace, "but you cannot imagine how hard this host is fighting
me: In this modern age it is difficult to believe that the Kundalan
could have produced such a potent sorceress as this one." Bartta
sniffed. "You're just saying that." Giyan's
face was briefly distorted. "Would that I were, brother. It is
taking almost all my energies just to keep her pinned in Otherwhere." For
Konara Inggres, tucked rather uncomfortably into a hidden niche
behind the stone wall that housed the hearth, this curious
conversation was freighted with strange cargo. When Giyan had said,
it was a blessing that the Great Goddess Miina took Konara Urdma,
all of Konara Inggres’ fears
had crystallized, because every Ramahan knew that Miina did not take
the priestesses. When they died, one of the Five Sacred Dragons—
which one it would be depended on the individual Ramahan—took
them up in its mouth and deposited them into new bodies to be born
again. From that instant onward, Konara Inggres had known that her
suspicions had been correct. Giyan was not who she appeared to be,
and neither was Bartta. But who were they? They spoke of hosts. What
did that mean? And what did they want, why were they here? When
she had seen Bartta heading toward what had been Konara Urdma's
office, she had been seized by a terrible premonition and, abandoning
all thought of attending to her duties on the other side of the
abbey, she had whipped around the corner. The service corridor,
narrow and dingy, had thankfully been deserted, and she slipped into
the small storage area, groped in utter darkness to the far wall,
where she had depressed a camouflaged stud. A hidden door slid aside,
and she had climbed in. Curled up in the cramped space, with her
heart beating so hard she could feel it in her throat, she had put
her eyes to the peepholes. A
brief but ferocious commotion snapped Konara Inggres out of her
reverie. She put her eyes back to the peepholes in time to see
Bartta's fingers around Giyan's throat. "With you so preoccupied
I should have no trouble taking what should have been mine from the
beginning." Giyan
bellowed from deep inside her, a horrifying, blood-congealing sound,
and backhanded Bartta so hard she flew back across Konara Urdma's
office, fetching up against a stone wall. "Watch your tongue,"
she cried. "Do not forget that it was I who decided to break the
Law." She strode across the small chamber, catching the slightly
stunned Bartta up by the front of her robes, shaking her like a leaf
in a storm. "Mine was the risk and mine the reward." She
spat into Bartta's face. "Besides, you were never a match for
me, so do not entertain any vainglorious ideas." "What
about the unholy war? When will it begin?" With Bartta's servile
voice, Myggorra sought to deflect Horolaggia's towering rage. "Ah,
yes, the long-awaited war." Giyan, thus distracted, dropped her
twin, walked slowly back to Konara Urdma's desk. "One Portal
only is open, and that one just enough for us archdaemons to squeeze
through with a few chosen others in altered form. All the Portals
must be opened simultaneously for the invasion to begin in earnest." "For
that we need the Gatekeeper." Bartta rearranged the disarray of
her robes. "And his identity is still another of Miina's
mysteries." Giyan's
whistleflower-blue eyes glittered. "This is not a question for
you to either ask or answer." Bartta
bristled. "Am I not deemed worthy?" "All
of us have a role to play," Giyan said simply. "This is the
strength of the grand plan." Bartta
stamped her foot. "It is a way to keep me in line." Giyan
regarded her for a moment, then she rose and, laughing, clapped her
sister on her round back. "It is always about you, isn't it?" The
laughter vanished without a trace. "That is why you obey me and
not the other way around." Konara
Inggres tried to adjust her contorted body into a position marginally
less painful. This clever little spy niche had been built by Konara
Mossa in the days when she had reigned supreme at the Abbey of
Floating White. To Konara Inggres' knowledge no one knew of it save
herself and Konara Lyystra. They had stumbled upon it quite by
accident and, climbing into its interior, it had been clear by signs
of disuse that even Konara Bartta had not known of its existence. Konara
Inggres' attention was drawn back into the office by the sound of a
knock on the door. When Giyan said, "Enter," Konara Lyystra
appeared. She was glassy-eyed, and she moved with that peculiar
stiffness Konara Inggres had noted with a mixture of dismay and
apprehension. "The
mirrors," Konara Lyystra said, "have all been destroyed." "Well,
that is a relief," Giyan said. "Did you bring the recruit?" "Yes,
Mother." In
her tiny niche, Konara Inggres stiffened, her heart pounding
painfully in her breast. "I
have brought Konara Tyyr." Giyan
nodded, but as Konara Lyystra turned to go, she said, "Konara
Inggres may not be a candidate. If this proves true, she will, like
Konara Urdma, have to be eliminated." Konara
Inggres jammed her fist into her mouth in order to stifle a scream. "I
believe I can bring her around," Konara Lyystra said. "Do
not allow your host's friendship with her to influence your
judgment," Konara Bartta said. "All the konara must—" Giyan
held up a hand, and Bartta fell into a sullen silence. "You
have one week. No more," Giyan said to Konara Lyystra. "Is
that understood?" "Yes,
Mother." "Now.
Bring in the recruit." Konara
Lyystra disappeared from view and Giyan drew forth from behind the
desk a black serpentskin satchel, from which she took a small
egg-shaped object. Then she did a very odd thing. She placed the
object onto the center of her tongue. Just before it disappeared into
her mouth Konara Inggres was certain she saw the egg-shaped object
sprout ten short legs. A
moment later, the two konara appeared in the doorway. Konara Tyyr was
white-faced and trembling, but she allowed Konara Lyystra to steer
her in front of Giyan. "Good
evening, Konara Tyyr," Giyan said, smiling. "Good
evening, Mother." "Has
Konara Lyystra told you why you are here?" "Yes,
Mother." "Then
tell me." "You
must test me to see whether I am able to reach a higher state of
consciousness." "So
that you may be closer to the Great Goddess Miina." Konara
Tyyr stared into Giyan's eyes. "You
do this of your own free will?" "Yes,
Mother." Giyan
nodded and briefly took Konara Tyyr's hands in her own. "You are
ice-cold, my dear. We must warm you up." So saying, she grasped
Konara Tyyr by the shoulders and kissed her hard on the lips. Konara
Inggres twisted around so she could see more clearly, so she could
see Giyan's lips open, so she could see the passage of the ten-legged
egg-shaped thing from Giyan's tongue to the other's mouth. Immediately
thereafter, Konara Tyyr's body began to thrash and convulse, obliging
Giyan to hold on to her so tightly the marks of her ringers became
weals. It was over so suddenly that for a moment Konara Inggres began
to doubt what she had seen. Then the glassy-eyed expression she saw
in Konara Lyystra reproduced itself on Konara Tyyr. "You
are arrived," Giyan said curiously. And
Konara Tyyr nodded. "I am free." "Not
quite yet," Giyan said softly, as Konara Lyystra guided Konara
Tyyr to the door. "Have a care. Avoid excessive talk with the
other Ramahan, and if you should see a mirror, destroy it rather than
pass before it. Is this clear?" "It
is." "Konara
Lyystra will see to your full orientation." Curled
inside the spy niche, Konara Inggres was drenched in cold sweat. What
profane ritual had she been witness to? she wondered. Who
was this Giyan? Clearly she was not simply the young Ramahan
priestess who had been banished from the abbey over twenty years ago.
In the interim, she had been the consort of the former regent of Axis
Tyr before his death. Now she was a fugitive of the new V'ornn
regime. But none of this explained her bizarre behavior. "Now
to work," Giyan was saying. "We must map out our changes
for the Ramahan syllabus. Until we have trained our cadre of konara,
you and I, dear Bartta, shall teach all classes, which we will hold
in the main chapel under the eyes of the image of the Goddess Miina." She
chortled, a sound that all but froze Konara Inggres' blood. For it
was a sound so harsh and evil it was difficult to believe that any
Kundalan could ever utter it. "And
what shall we teach, do you think, Bartta? In Healing Arts we shall
teach the power to instill fear. In Herbology, we shall instruct our
charges to concoct poisons, tasteless, odorless, utterly
undetectable. In Oracular History, we shall preach the wisdom of our
father who art in hiding." Konara
Inggres was weeping. She could not make sense of any of this, but one
thing she did know was that she was witnessing the beginning of the
end of the Ramahan as Miina had conceived them. A despair such as she
had never known now swept through her. She felt alone, terrified,
witless. The presence of such evil here in Miina's sacred sanctum all
but paralyzed her. Her sheer proximity to Giyan and Bartta seemed to
be draining her ability to think clearly. She shivered, abruptly
cold. It was as if the very life force was being drained out of her,
and she grew even more terrified. Her
bloodless hands, pressed so hard against the intervening stone, began
to tremble and she clamped her jaw shut lest the sound of her teeth
rattling should alert Giyan and Bartta to her presence. She closed
her eyes and recited to herself the seventh prayer. O
Great Goddess of the Five Moons Who
dwells in night's divine mystery Hear
me now, Your humble servant, Who
abides by Your Laws, who is guided by Your Word. In
death, let me be taken up by Your fierce Children. Let
me feel, O Goddess, their gentle kiss. That
I may live in hope And
do Your holy bidding to the end of days. Her
face was wet with tears. She felt like a lost, motherless child. As
they headed north, the waving grasslands gave grudging way to
occasional outcroppings of rocks of an odd greenish grey hue. The
terrain began a modest rise, and quite soon the rocks, which appeared
more frequently, became boulders, then boulders that stood upon
larger boulders, the Shoulders of Jiharre, as Othnam had called them.
Thus were they forewarned that they were approaching the ir'adim. Othnam,
who was in the lead, slowed his kuomeshal's pace from a brisk trot to
a measured walk. "We
should dismount here," Tezziq said. "The kuomeshals do not
like the ir'adim and, in any event, on foot we will be able to
approach with more flexibility and stealth." Othnam
and Mehmmer exchanged a quick glance. "What
if this is just a way for her to return to her people?" Mehmmer
said pointedly. "My
sister is right," Othnam said. "Who knows what secrets of
the kapudaan and the palace she might pass on to the Jeni Cerii." "I
am not a spy," Tezziq said. "I hold no love in my heart for
Jasim, and I have no desire to return to his clutches." "She
wants to be free, nothing more," Riane said. "Freedom is
surely a goal you as Ghor must understand." Tezziq
was shaking her head. "They do not believe me. I can see it on
their faces." Riane
tapped her kuomeshal, who laboriously lowered itself to its knees.
She and Tezziq dismounted. "At some point, I think you must take
the leap of faith and accept that not all Jeni Cerii are your
enemies." "Surely
you have family you long to see again," Mehmmer said, addressing
Tezziq. "I
have lived almost my whole life in haanjhala, first Jasim's, then
Makktuub's," Tezziq replied. "I had a sister and three
brothers, but I cannot remember them. As for my parents—"
She shrugged. "It was they who sold me to Jasim when I was
eight. On the cusp of sleep, he poured into my ear many secrets. The
haanjhala became my life. Why should I remember my parents or wish to
see them again?" "Tezziq
and I are continuing on," Riane said to Othnam and Mehmmer's
closed faces. "If you decide to return to your compound now, I
will only be grateful for the help you have given me." Sister
and brother exchanged another of their charged glances. "She
is ajjan, and Jeni Cerii, to boot," Mehmmer said. "We
warned you," Othnam said. "She is your responsibility now." "May
Jiharre and the sacred fulkaan be ever with you, Riane," Mehmmer
said by way of farewell. Without
another word, they wheeled their kuomeshals around and headed back
toward Agachire. The
sky was white overhead, without perspective or limit. The ominous
massif of the Djenn Marre appeared closer than ever, the mysterious
font of the Great Rift dark with fulminating clouds. A sand-laced
wind reached them, scouring from out of the Great Voorg to the
southeast, obliging them to wrap their sinschals tighter around their
faces. "I
will miss them," Riane said. "Why?
They are Ghor." "And
so should I hate and fear you as they do because you are ajjan and
Jeni Cerii?" Tezziq
shook her head. "We are better off without them. They would
never have willingly followed my lead." Riane
tied her kuomeshal's reins around an upright rock, took a wa-terskin
and several other items out of the saddlebags, and they headed north
up the steady incline toward the ir'adim. It was not easy
going, for the usually reliable footing of the Korrush had turned to
sandy dune. Tezziq showed Riane how to walk with knees deeply bent,
leaning into the slope, then leaning slightly backward on the
downslope so as to maintain one's balance. In
this fashion, they proceeded for perhaps an hour. As they neared the
crest of the highest dune they had so far encountered, Tezziq pressed
the flat of her hand downward and, at the signal, they both dropped
to their bellies, continuing their ascent in a crablike squirm. They
paused just beneath the undulating crest of the dune, lifting their
heads cautiously until they gained a view down into the in'adim
itself. Riane
saw a series of large crescent-shaped gullies with slightly concave
crusty bottoms across which expanse the wind from out of the Great
Voorg sent skittering small snaking trails of sand. Of a
semipermanent Jeni Cerii encampment there was no evidence. They
crossed over the crest and, keeping to the dune's inner slope,
continued heading northeast,
following the sinuous spread of the in'adim. "How
far would they have taken Perrnodt?" Riane whispered. "That
depends on what they mean to do to her," Tezziq said over her
shoulder. "But I would not think very far. Certainly they would
keep her where they felt the safest, which would be here in the
in'adim." So
far as Riane could see, the in'adim was nothing but sand. No
rock, tree, blade of grass, not even a humble patch of lichen existed
on the Shoulders of Jiharre. The sand itself, when she scooped up a
handful, was coarse and rough as a rasp's crosshatched teeth, and was
a brownish grey color not unlike that of dried Kundalan blood.
Between slippage in the treacherous dune and the fact that visibility
was limited by the extreme curves of the in'adim, their
progress seemed painfully slow. They
came upon the first Jeni Cerii so quickly that Tezziq was obliged to
push Riane onto her stomach. The two of them lay half-buried in the
sand, their hearts thundering as they watched the Jeni Cerii warrior
walking up from the basinlike bottom of the in'adim. He was
heading directly toward them. Only a fortuitous hump in the side of
the dune kept them out of his sight. But that would not last long. Tezziq
was thinking the same thing, for she put her lips to Riane's ear. "We
must kill him quickly and silently. If he announces our presence to
the others, all is lost." Riane
nodded. Tezziq was right, they had no choice. She withdrew her dagger
and moved slightly in order to get herself into a more advantageous
position. The Jeni Cerii was very close, and she steeled herself for
what she had to do. She knew she would only have one chance, that she
must kill him with the first swipe before he could raise his voice in
alarm. Here he came. Her muscles tensed. She had decided to slit his
throat; that way, even if her aim was off slightly, his throat would
be so congested with blood he would not be able to make a sound. Still,
she wanted every advantage, so she waited until he was almost upon
her before she sprang. Right now, the element of surprise was a
weapon even more potent than her dagger. She drew her arm back, ready
to spring, but at the last moment something froze her. A pulse beat
in her temples, and her blood sang in her ears. She twisted backward,
out of the Jeni Cerii's path and signed for Tezziq to do the same. The
ajjan, though curious, did as Riane ordered. The Jeni Cerii went past
them, disappearing over the crest of the in'adim. Riane
scrambled back to where Tezziq lay. "What
happened?" Tezziq asked. "Why did you not kill him? He
could have found us out. It was only the sheerest good fortune that
he did not see us." "Think
so?" Riane turned and looked back down into the in'adim,
pointing. Tezziq
tensed as she saw another Jeni Cerii heading up the dune. "Do
you see?" Riane whispered. "This one is coming from the
same direction as the first one." She moved her arm, tracking
the figure. "As he comes close, pay special attention to his
feet." "His
feet? What—?" Then Tezziq saw it. "They are not
touching the sand." Sure
enough, she had discovered the oddity that had at the last moment
stayed Riane's hand. "That
is impossible." "It
would be," Riane said, "if this and the other one were
really Jeni Cerii warriors." Tezziq
shook her head. "But they are Jeni Cerii warriors." "No,"
Riane said, "they are holoimages." When she saw the
bewildered look on Tezziq's face, she added, "They are a kind of
projection, part of a Gyrgon's technomancy." "Do
you mean these things are not alive? But they look so real." "That
is the point," Riane said. "But
why are they here? What are they doing?" "For
one thing, they are meant to make us believe that Perrnodt was
abducted by the Jeni Cerii." Riane was thinking furiously, one
theory superseding another as she began to work out the trajectory of
recent events. "She
wasn't?" "No.
I have been thinking about it. I have been wondering why Perrnodt
never leaves her kashiggen. Why, if the Gyrgon Nith Settt wanted
something from her, wouldn't he go to the kashiggen himself and get
it from her? I think the only explanation is that for reasons I am
not yet able to explain he could not get to her while she was inside
the kashiggen." "So
he manufactured a situation where she would be forced out." Riane
nodded. "I believe Nith Settt realized that my escape meant the
Ghor would hurry her from her sanctuary before it was surrounded." "So
the Gyrgon followed them, killed the Ghor and abducted her." "That
is what the holoimages mean." Another
was heading toward them, and Tezziq reached out her arm as if to make
it pass through the image, but at the last moment Riane pulled her
back. "These
holoimages cannot see, of course, but they are sentinels nonetheless.
They can sense us if we come within about thirty centimeters of them.
Khagggun—the V'ornn. military caste—uses them as
off-world scouts or in extremely hostile environments." She
glanced at Tezziq as they hunkered in the lee of the dune. "Where
is the Jeni Cerii staging area?" "Approximately
five kilometers northeast of here. But you no longer believe they
were involved in abducting Perrnodt." "Exactly,"
Riane said. "That's why I think the Gyrgon will keep his
distance from the staging area." She pointed. "All the
holoimages came from the northwest. I think we should head in that
direction." "We
will have to cross the in'adim basin," Tezziq pointed
out. "No
problem," Riane said, unfurling Nith Sahor's greatcoat. But when
she wrapped it around them, nothing happened. "That's very odd."
She frowned, examining the inside of the flexible neural net. "It
won't activate." She wondered what this failure meant and at
once felt a chill in her belly. Was Nith Sahor dead? Is that why his
greatcoat was inoperative? She prayed to Miina there was another
explanation. Folding
the greatcoat away, she stared out over the innocent-looking basin.
"Can you get us across?" "I
think so," Tezziq said. Half-bent-over,
they scrambled down the steep dune, sheets of sand cascading away
from them. When they reached the edge of the basin floor, Tezziq
grabbed a handful of sand and threw it out ahead of them. The sand
sank into the basin. "What
is the quicksand like?" Riane asked. "That
depends on the currents," Tezziq replied. "It can be
viscous, like honey, or watery, like gruel." She
scooped up another handful and threw it to the left. It, too, sank.
But when she threw sand to the right, it remained. "Fill
your pockets," she instructed Riane. They heaped sand into every
pocket in their robes. "We
must be careful, but we must not tarry," Tezziq warned, "for
the in'adim is notorious for its sudden shifts, like currents
in an ocean. What may feel solid one moment can liquefy the next. So,
above all, we must keep going." So
saying, she stepped out onto the floor of the in'adim, placing
her foot alongside the tiny mound of sand. Sprinkling more sand, she
made her way forward. As Riane followed her, careful to place her
feet in the imprints Tezziq made, she saw that they were not heading
in a straight line. Rather, the solid ground took them on a
circuitous route that often seemed to backtrack on itself. It was
like being in a maze where the choice of routes had been rendered
invisible. At
least, she thought, Tezziq kept them moving, though how much real
progress they were making across the basin floor was difficult to
determine. Each time they seemed to be pressing forward they would be
stymied by a floating pond of quicksand they knew would pull them
under if they stepped into it. What made Riane triply nervous was
their obvious vulnerability out here in the flats of the in'adim.
Not only was the barren waste without shelter, but there was
nowhere to dodge a direct assault by a determined Gyrgon. The
light was changing as the afternoon waned. The flat, featureless sky
had opened up into a bowl of beautiful blue porcelain banded by
delicate ribbons of high cloud. Protected as they were by dunes on
all sides, the air was still and limp, and a curious kind of
enervating lassitude gripped Riane. Once or twice, she discovered to
her horror that her eyelids had closed, and, following blindly, she
had nearly stepped off the proscribed path made by Tezziq's
footprints. High above, several birds, large, black, featureless at
this extreme distance, effortlessly rode the thermal currents. Instantly,
like a bubble rising to the surface of a pond, another memory
appeared out of Riane's enigmatic past. She was climbing a sheer
cliff face, her clawed fingertips dug deep through snow and ice to
the frozen rock face beneath. Above, a cloudless sky of purple-blue.
Below, a dizzying vista of craggy rock, hard-packed snow veined with
glittering ice. The wind rushing through the Djenn Marre moaned in
conversation, and she spoke to it as if it were a living entity, as
if it were an old friend. And still she climbed, the thin air sawing
in and out of her lungs. Her
hands were numb as were her feet, but still she continued at a slow
but inexorable pace. The sun with its purple spot hung in the sky,
burning her skin. Ice and fire, all at once. She
heard it then, from somewhere far away, echoing through the crags,
the song of songs, and her heart leapt with elation. She had found
him, at long last. She stopped climbing, then, and waiting, hanging
in space, kilometers from everywhere. It was just her and the Djenn
Marre and the song of songs, coming closer and closer until, at last,
she heard the steady beat of its enormous wings. She turned into the
sun, squinting, and she saw its shadow approaching, and she opened
her mouth to speak the words she had spent so many years learning to
enunciate just right. . . Riane,
in the bowl of the in'adim, blinked and shook her head. What
had triggered the memory? What did it mean? What had she been
searching for amid the highest peaks of the Djenn Marre? What had she
studied so long and arduously? She shook her head again. Like all the
surfacing memories, this posed more questions than it answered. She
had the sense of looking at a vast puzzle for which she only had a
few tiles. Turning her mind away from this new mystery, she
concentrated on helping Tezziq scatter sand, on putting one foot in
front of another. But, somehow, she could not rid her mind of the
Gyrgon, who had murdered the Ghor and made off with Perrnodt. As
if he had been conjured up by her thoughts, Nith Settt appeared on
the far dune. Riane recognized the familiar high, angular helm with
its finbat ears and evil-looking horns, the menacing row of alloy
talons arching from the thick-ridged brow. "I
knew you would come, Riane," he said. "What I didn't expect
was that you would drag this Jeni Cerii skcettta with you." Riane
pulled at Tezziq's robes. "We have to move. Now." Nith
Settt raised his arm, his black-gloved hand pointing toward them.
Green ion fire sparked and stuttered. In
that instant, the patch of solid sand they were standing on
disintegrated. Tezziq screamed, pitching forward. Riane leapt back,
made a vain attempt to grab on to the ajjan. She landed on solid sand
and stretched herself prone, reaching out for Tezziq. In the
periphery of her vision, she saw Nith Settt crouched on his haunches,
wrists resting easily on his knees, observing the drama. "You
stole something from me, Riane." His voice echoed over the flat
expanse of the in'adim. "Now I will have it back." Riane,
wholly absorbed in trying to save Tezziq, could not even risk a
glance in his direction let alone distract herself in useless
conversation. Stretched out over the quicksand, she had managed to
grasp a handful of Tezziq's robes. "Let
go of me," Tezziq cried. "The sand you're on may give way
at any moment. Save yourself while you still can." "Sound
advice, Riane," Nith Settt called out. "Best to heed it
quick as you can." Riane
ignored them both. She was busy hauling Tezziq toward her so that she
could get a two-handed grip on her. This was not as easy as it
sounded. The quicksand in this area seemed to have a viscous
consistency that grabbed at any body in it, holding it fast. Riane
felt her muscles bunch and strain. Tezziq was almost in range of her
other hand when the basin floor shifted again, and Tezziq was pulled
under. "Give
it up, Riane," Nith Settt said. "The ajjan is a lost
cause." Shut
up, Riane thought. Shut up. Wriggling
herself farther out over the quicksand, she reached into the viscous
muck. It was dark and oddly warm, and she thought of the legend that
the in'adim had been made with the blood of the Prophet
Jiharre. She was obliged to lean over so far that her cheek lay
against the slowly shifting surface of the quicksand. Was it her
imagination or could she smell the sweet-salt scent of blood? She
renewed her grip on Tezziq and, using both hands now, hauled her back
up. Tezziq's head and shoulders popped up above the surface, and the
ajjan gasped and choked and spat up dark viscous fluid, almost as if
she were vomiting blood. "Can
you move?" Riane asked her. "Just a little bit." "A
fool's effort," Nith Settt said. "Why do you even try?" Tezziq
was struggling forward with the greatest difficulty, and Riane could
see the fear in her eyes. "Just
a little more, Tezziq. Please." She
squirmed forward herself, but as she did so, she felt a finger of
sand give way beneath her. "It's
happening." Tezziq screamed. "There's no more time. Get
back, Riane." It
appeared that the sand Riane was lying on was bifurcating, and it was
anyone's guess whether either of the remaining tongues would be of
sufficient mass to support her. The sand continued to crumble beneath
her, and Tezziq twisted, trying to get away, but this only fired
Riane's determination to hold on more firmly. She hauled with all her
might. "Impressive,"
Nith Settt said as he stood up. Riane
had forgotten all about him. The
Gyrgon gestured with his gloved hand. "Too bad it was all for
nothing." An arrow of livid ion fire snaked out, catching Tezziq
as she rose up on her knees. She arched back, her nails raking the
air. "No!"
Riane cried, and lunged for her. But it was too late. Tezziq spun off
the spit of sand, landing heavily in the quicksand. Her eyes were
fixed and staring as she slowly spun, disappearing beneath the
surface. "Wa
tarabibi," Riane whispered. "Now
that I have you to myself." Nith Settt's fingers curled upward,
and another jet of ion fire spurted toward Riane. "I
applaud both your strength and your ingenuity, Riane," he said.
"But the contest is done. I will not kill you as I did the
ajjan. Not for some time, anyway. It seems to me that you are an
altogether extraordinary Kundalan. Only when you have told me
everything there is to know about you will I allow you the peace of
death." "You
don't really believe that I will tell you anything, do you?" "Oh,
I know you will. Not that you will want to, no. But even an
extraordinary Kundalan is only, after all, a Kundalan." The ball
of ion fire was on the move, heading directly at Riane. "I know
how to deal with your kind." Riane
ran. The ball of ion fire followed her. She changed directions; so
did the ball. It was gaining on her. As she ran this way and that she
could hear the Gyrgon laughing. Each desperate moment brought it
closer to her. Its cold fire filled the sky. She could hear the evil
sound of its energy-crackle as it split apart the very air around it. "You
cannot escape," Nith Settt shouted. "No matter what you
do." Riane
changed tactics. Clearly, she could not outrun the ion fire. The only
other alternative was to meet it head-on. From out of her sopping
robes, she grabbed the gel pak she had disengaged from Nith Settt's
sleep casket. Would it work? She had no way of knowing, but she had
run out of alternatives. She turned and hurled it at the ball of ion
fire. They met in midair. A white flash ensued, followed by a
percussive burst that threw her onto her back. Gasping, she rolled
over, digging in her robes for the infinity-blade. Gripping the wand
tight in her hand, she rose, her heart thudding painfully in her
breast. Her ears were ringing, and there were bright spots in front
of her eyes. The ball of ion fire was gone, consumed in the midair
ignition. Dimly,
she was aware of the Gyrgon with one arm thrown across his face. The
blast had shaken even him, and that gave her heart as she launched
herself at him. She held the wand in front of her, thumbing the gold
disc as she crashed into him. Riane grimaced with the pain that
branched up her arms and into her shoulders from the ion energy
generated by Nith Settt's armored exomatrix. Frantically, she thumbed
the wand's disc again. Nothing happened. The infinity-blade had not
appeared. The
wand had only one charge remaining. There must be a way to activate— Nith
Settt's hands arced in toward her neck. Buried deep inside her, Annon
recalled that their touch was supposed to kill, but she also retained
a memory of something Eleusis Ashera had told Annon, that he had, in
fact, survived a Gyrgon's touch. As Nith Settt's fingers closed
around her throat she felt the pain of the ion surge overloading her
nerve synapses. Bright colors sparked behind her eyes, and a curtain
of blackness rippled through her as she passed in and out of
consciousness. And
then she had the thought, and she thumbed the gold disc twice
rhythmically in quick succession. The goron beam erupted, the
helix-shaped infinity-blade unfurled, slicing through the ion fire,
absorbing the hyperexcited ions, sucking them into itself. With
her last milliliter of strength, she swung the infinity-blade hard
and fast, breathless at its power, and it turned the V'ornn-made
alloy battle armor white as ice as it sliced through it. Nith Settt
trembled and spasmed, an eerie sound emanating from him that echoed
across the in'adim. The infinity-blade was devouring the
Gyrgon-based energy with electrifying efficiency. "Who
are you?" Nith Settt whispered even as his helm cracked apart. "I
am she who is your death," Riane said through teeth clenched
tight in pain and rage. "I am Revenge." She stared
pitilessly down at his drawn and whitened skull, the embedded
circuitry blackening, steaming even as she spoke. "I am the Dar
Sala-at."
And now see what has happened. The Gyrgon has been
dispatched to whatever hellish clime he came from. Watch
your tongue, my dear. You know that clime, and it wasn't in the least
hellish. The black Dragon, her scales opalescent in the sorcerous
mist atop Heavenly Rushing, shook her beautiful head. I was not,
however, referring to the Gyrgon, who even I admit are better off
dead. And
look who sent him on his eternal journey. The great ruddy Dragon
cried in his thunderous voice. Yes,
yes, the Dar Sala-at. She
has learned that they can be killed. An
important lesson, I admit. But at what cost, I wonder. What was
Minnum thinking, giving her an infinity-blade? I told you sauromidans
cannot be trusted. You
said they lie, and that is so, the red Dragon pointed out. But
trust is another matter entirely, isn't it? It
sometimes astonishes me, Yig, the fascination you have with
semantics. He
let out a blast of belching fire. I am pleased, my dear, that
after all these eons I still have the capacity to astonish you. I
daresay, on occasion, you would astonish anyone. Even Miina Herself.
But before you start your endless preening, please explain to me how
the Dar Sala-at is to deal with the stirring of the sauromidans? Evil
luck, that, Yig admitted. Evil,
indeed. These sauromidans are a scourge. They have renounced Miina. And
the Ramahan have not? The
Ramahan will not turn on the Dar Sala-at. Do
not be so certain of that, Paow, now that Pyphoros and Horolaggia
have gained a hoofhold. The
abbeys—what is left of them—have been
rotten with evil for years, the black Dragon said. This is
simply the culmination. This is Ambat, the time of the Dar-Sala-at,
the moment of Transformation. Either they will be destroyed utterly
or there will be a complete reversal and they will be restored to
their former sacred glory. Yig
switched his great flame-studded tail. Truly, how can this be
Am-bat? The Prophesy is not yet complete. All the players are
not yet in place. But
they soon will be, Paow. With Pyphoros' meddling the last is
slouching toward consciousness, just as it was foretold. Pyphoros.
It is supremely troubling that he has been abroad, working his
devious evil for more than a century. Interesting
the host he chose. Interesting,
yes. But hardly surprising, Yig said. Pyphoros always flowed
toward the power center. That was part and parcel of the Schism,
wasn't it? Speak
not of the Schism, Paow said shortly. It is forbidden. Yig
stamped his enormous taloned feet. Too much these days is
forbidden. I feel like Seelin, in chains of red jade— He
broke off as Paow frowned or, more accurately, produced what was, in
a Dragon, its approximate analog. Her arrow-point ears flattened
against her glossy scales, and her nostrils flared. Who comes? There
could be heard, above the thunderous roar of the waterfall, the
unmistakable sound of the beating of great wings. This was followed
by a burst of living cobalt, as Eshir, the Dragon of air, descended
through the thick, sorcerous mist to land beside her compatriots. What
news of our sister? The black Dragon asked nervously. Seelin
remains twenty thousand fathoms deep, Eshir said in her sweetly
lilting voice. The Keeper is so well protected he remains
inviolate. Without
Seelin, Yig said angrily, the Transformation inherent in Ambat
cannot take place. All
this means, dearest, Paow said, is that all the elements are
not yet in place. I have told you, it is still early in the game. And
all the circumstances are stacked against us, Yig muttered with
ill-concealed impatience. Paow
put a black paw on his powerful foreleg. Please, my dear, promise
me that you will not interfere again. What?
Eshir said. What has happened? Go
on, tell her, Yig grumbled. She will find out sooner or later. Paow
sighed. Learning of
Horolaggia's incursion into this realm, my darling mate took it into
his scaly head to put Minnum into play. The
sauromician? The
very one. And
because of him, Yig said, the Dar Sala-at has slain the
Gyrgon, Nith Sent. Now
that is news! Eshir cried. Pyphoros was getting too close to
the Veil of a Thousand Tears. But
the potential repercussions, Paow said. In these dark days— These
days have been made dark by the archdaemons, Yig said. I am
accused of being impetuous, but look at them! Horolaggia has basely
broken the Primal Laws laid down before the beginning of Time, before
the coming of Kundalan. Laws they know nothing about; Laws we Dragons
must, in the absence of Miina, enforce. His transgression demands
punishment, swift and certain. Oh,
my dear, no! What do you propose? I will not allow you to expose
yourself to more danger. Am
I not as brave as Seelin? Even while imprisoned, she managed to
project herself into Kundala in order to help the Dar Sala-at. This
is her fate. She and the Dar Sala-at are joined. As
if she and I are not? Yig tossed his horned head, sending a
geyser of flames arcing into the mist. Dearest, do not worry so.
Though circumstances grow darker with every day that passes, we shall
yet prevail. From
your mouth, Eshir said prayerfully, to
Miina's ear. Wherever
in the Cosmos She may be, Paow whispered, twining her tail with
her mate's. And as one, the three Dragons craned their serpentine
necks up, looking past the curling opalescent plumes of mist to the
vastness of other Realms, which remained a mystery even to them.
Book Three: RED-JADE
GATE
Red jade is unique among
all minerals for its capacity to conduct heat. Red-Jade Gate is a
regulator, composed of a series of what might be termed canal locks
to keep the hot emotions of anger, lust, and Jove in the proper
balance ...
—Utmost
Source,
The Five Books of Miina
. . . O-Rhen Ka is the
casting meant to open Red-Jade Gate. Keep the enemy in your line of
sight; meant with extreme caution.
—The Book
of Recantation 21 Crash
When
she heard the signature hum of the Khagggun hov-erpod, Eleana broke
cover and began to run. She was carrying high and a sprint was no
problem as long as she did not have to cover a great distance. The
baby, pressing a little against her lungs, was tending to make her
short of breath. The
lookout in the hoverpod saw her right away, and the craft changed
course, dipping down to skim low over the terrain. The three Khagggun
in the hoverpod were headed directly into the setting sun. Eleana
felt her breath hot in her throat, and she had to steel her nerves to
continue to run when her instinct was to turn and face them. Still,
this was Rekkk's plan and she had agreed to it and the moment she had
revealed herself she was committed. She
hewed to the prescribed path, heading between two outcrop-pings of
boulders. Beyond, there was a steep dropoff to a hedge-filled
riverbank. She was more than fifteen kilometers from the Abbey of
Warm Current and in no danger of leading the Khagggun back there. Passing
between the boulders, she felt a peculiar tingling in her spine, a
rustle of fear, which she quickly brought under control. She trusted
Rekkk; he had assured her that with so many boulders around to
refract their ion beams they would not risk trying to shoot her from
the fast-running hoverpod. She could hear the hoverpod's hum, louder
now, as it drew nearer. As it rose a little to clear the tops of the
boulders, she could hear the lookout communicating with the pilot. She
was past the rocks now and so was the hoverpod. The ground dropped
away under her running feet so abruptly that her teeth clacked
together. It was at this moment that Rekkk rose from his hiding spot
on the far side of the easternmost boulder. He had fitted a stone, no
larger, really, than a pebble, into the slot of the special okummmon
that Nith Sahor had manufactured for him. Rekkk,
concentrating on what he wanted the pebble to become aimed at a
certain spot on the undercarriage of the hoverpod. The pebble—powered
by Gyrgon technomancy—exploded out of the okummmon as if
propelled by an ion launcher, tore through the air and, with a loud
ping!, jammed itself into the hoverpod's left-hand spent-ion
vent. The
craft immediately dipped to the left, and Eleana, on the alert for
the noise, dropped as Rekkk had instructed her to do and rolled to
her right. In this way, she was out of harm's way when the hoverpod's
blunt left wing plowed into the ground. The bank was so steep that
the hoverpod slewed violently, throwing its occupants off-balance. As
they stumbled against the cockpit bulkhead, Rekkk was up and running,
shock-sword out and humming as the hyperexcited ions arced between
the twin blades. The
leading edges of his blades tore through the armor of the first
Khagggun, severing an arm, plowing through several ribs. The
Kha-gggun collapsed in a welter of blood, and Rekkk engaged the
second Khagggun, flicking his weapon away and plunging his own
through the Khagggun's hearts. This
aggressive attack proved a mistake, for Rekkk was fully extended, his
shock-sword inside the dying Khagggun when the third slammed his
thick-booted foot into the side of Rekkk's head. Rekkk grunted,
staggered back, slipping on the slick bank and losing his grip on his
shock-sword. The
third Khagggun pressed his advantage, vaulting over the side of the
hoverpod, swinging a deadly ion mace over his head. Rekkk rolled, but
the initial attack caught him a glancing blow on his shoulder. Inside
the armor, his muscles went numb, and his fingers could not grip his
own ion mace. He rolled back the other way, narrowly missing a
massive second blow. The head of the ion mace bounced along the
spongy bank, then whistled in the air as the Khagggun whirled it
around for the death blow. Rekkk
desperately flexed his fingers, clumsily pulling his ion mace out of
its sheath. But, in his prone position, it was the wrong weapon
because he could not swing it with any force. He managed to struggle
to his knees, but the blow from the Khagggun standing over him was
already past its apex. The spiked sphere whistled through the air,
blurred with the speed of its passage. And then the Khagggun reared
back, his arms flying up, the ion mace whirling end over end out of
his grip. Rekkk saw the point of a shock-sword—Eleana's
shock-sword— protruding from his chest. She had struck him a
fierce and mighty blow between the shoulder blades that had
penetrated clear through him. He went to his knees, his arms
flailing, and she pulled the blade free, sideswiping in a slow and
deliberate fashion that took his head clean off his shoulders. "N'Luuura
take it," Rekkk gasped, "I taught you well." Eleana
grinned, fetched his shock-sword, and handed it to him as he regained
his feet. "You
also taught me that a warrior must never lose hold of his weapon." "I
was concerned about you. And the baby." He grinned back at her.
N'Luuura, it felt good to be on the move again. His bones had been
getting soft with worry at the abbey. Together,
they wiped their blades on the thick mat of glossy green moss and
hurled the two corpses from the hoverpod. Then they rolled all three
down to the rushing water and pushed them in, where they spun away
downriver. They
waited until the corpses had vanished around a bend, then they
clambered back up the steep slope. Halfway up, Rekkk heard a tiny
exclamation and turned in time to see Eleana sitting on the ground,
her legs wide apart, her head between her knees. "Eleana!"
he cried, putting his arm around her. "I'm
all right," she said thinly. "I'm—" Then she
coughed thickly and vomited. Rekkk
held her forehead while she retched miserably. "I
am so stupid," he murmured. "I should never have allowed
you to run. The strain—" "Oh,
shut up and stop treating me like an invalid!" she snapped. He
handed her a water bladder, and she rinsed her mouth, then swallowed
some water as best she could. She laid her head back in the crook of
his shoulder. "Ah,
Rekkk, this baby thing is harder than I ever could have imagined." "It's
just new, that's all." "No,
no. You know it's more than that." He
smoothed the hair back from her face. "Eleana, what do you
expect from yourself? You were born and raised into war—killing
in order to survive, that's what you took in like mother's milk. But
what you're beginning to learn now. Life isn't all mayhem and murder.
It isn't all intrigue and betrayal. There are other moments." He
put his hand gently on the curve of her belly. "Magnificent
moments that will endure long after this war is over and done with." She
closed her eyes. "What if the baby comes . . . and Giyan is not
here?" "She
will be." "But
what if?" He
kissed the top of her head. "Then we will deal with that, too." "And
Riane?" "She
is the Dar Sala-at," he said. "She will return from the
Korrush stronger and more powerful." He put his knuckle beneath
her chin and lifted her head. "It is written in your Prophesies,
is it not?" "So
the Ramahan claim. But I have never seen these Prophesies, nor do I
know anyone who has." "Not
even Giyan?" "I
do not know about Giyan." "Then
you must take it on faith that she has," he said softly. "You
must take it on faith that the Prophesies exist and that they are
true." He smiled down at her. "Even Nith Sahor believes in
them." She
was far too distraught to pick up on his choice of tenses. And
then he laughed. "Imagine! A V'ornn trying to convince a member
of the Resistance that the Kundalan Prophesies really exist! You see
the absurdity of it." She
nodded. "But you are not like other V'ornn." He
squeezed her shoulders and she made a sign and he helped her to her
feet. "I'm
all right now. Really." She pushed his hand away. "I want
my baby to know his mother's strength." And she climbed the bank
in swift sure strides, and they gained the lower wing of the hoverpod
together. Rekkk
shook his head as he watched her, then he ducked down and removed the
pebble from the left spent-ion vent and fired up the hoverpod. It was
a little unnerving for Eleana to be in a Khagggun hover-pod—the
Resistance had never captured one. Rekkk whistled and soon enough
they spotted the red-blue-green blur of the Teyj. It sang a song when
it saw them and landed on the edge of the cockpit, singing still- "Hang
on," Rekkk said, and Eleana gathered the Teyj to her, holding it
against her just above the swell of her belly. The Teyj carefully
folded its four wings and sang a soft unfamiliar song. "Listen,"
she said, laughing. "I think it's singing to the baby." Slowly,
Rekkk manipulated the hoverpod, which shuddered and moaned as it
disengaged its wing from the bank. Gaining the sky, Rekkk aimed it
due north so as to avoid any major cities. The land fell swiftly away
from them as they shot forward, the toylike trees becoming a long
smear of green. They crossed a trailing spear of reddish light, saw
the last shred of the sun sinking behind the western horizon, and
then above them was the calm cobalt vault of the heavens. A
cloudbank, curled low in the south like a dragon, hung motionless,
its underside glowing pink and pristine for a moment before slowly
fading to a smudgy grey. Overhead,
night rolled in. The wind had died, but the sky had turned frosty,
stars aglitter, and Eleana pulled her cloak tighter about her
shoulders and throat. She reached in a side pack she had provisioned
before they left Warm Current and offered Rekkk some dried meat. He
shook his head, and she gnawed on it without really tasting it. Her
eyes watering and her cheeks grown numb, she hunkered down against an
alloy bulkhead, took a handful of dried leeesta, and crumbled it in
her palm. The Teyj ruffled its underwings and sat on the pillowy part
of her thumb. It cocked an eye at her. "Go
on," she said. "You must be hungry even if Rekkk is not." The
Teyj ducked its scarlet-and-green-plumaged head and, using the tips
of its sharp curved beak, devoured the small pieces of dried leeesta.
Eleana hummed a little, comforted by its hunger. A small common
normal act in her abnormal life. She reached out and stroked its
tail. The Teyj ceased eating long enough to eye her again, the glossy
black ball seeming to take all of her in. Then it went back to
eating. Eleana, abruptly exhausted, put her head back against the
bulkhead, closed her eyes, and drifted off to sleep. She
was roused by an insistent electronic sound, an arrhythmic beeping. They
were still going full out. Rekkk was using the photonic V'ornn
navigational instruments to keep them on course in the darkness. "What
is it?" she asked as she gained her feet. The Teyj fluttered
close by. "It's
a Khagggun pack code," Rekkk said. "Headquarters is trying
to raise the crew of this hoverpod because they haven't checked in." Eleana
came fully awake, rubbed sleep out of her eyes. "I thought pack
elements were only required to do so every fifty hours." He
grunted. "Apparently, the new Star-Admiral has increased the
frequency for the pack elements looking for us." The
beeping continued unabated. "Can't
you disable it?" she asked. "No.
But, in any event, very soon now it will not matter." "What
do you mean?" He
glanced at her, his dark eyes grave. "If I were the watch
commander and could not raise one of my pack elements, I would
immediately dispatch a fully armed hoverpod to find out what
happened." "But
they won't be able to find us. You'll see to that." "Unfortunately,
the device through which the codes are sent and received is an
integral part of the craft, and I cannot disable it. It will pinpoint
our precise location. They know where we are." Eleana
felt a cold dread creep through her. "Did you know this was
going to happen?" "Eventually,
yes. I just thought we'd have more time." She
felt a shiver run down her spine. "How much time do we have?" "Depends
on how close the nearest hoverpod is." He shrugged. "An
hour at most, I'd estimate." She
drew near him, and the Teyj fluttered into the crook of her arm.
"What are we going to do?" Rekkk
was silent. He stared into the navigational interfaces. Eleana
glanced behind them as if she could already sense their pursuers. The
hoverpod flew on, fast as it could go. In
typical response, Olnnn wanted to kill Rada. In fact, he tried. Not
once, but twice. The
first time, they were on their way back from the foul warren of
hovels beneath Divination Street. They did not speak. There was
nothing left to say. A
rumbling overtook them briefly as a hoverpod passed overhead, one of
Olnnn's own newly instituted patrols. He heard a pair of Bashkir
arguing stupidly over a business deal, another Bashkir, fat and soft
and pampered by the tradition of his caste, laughing drunkenly with
his Looorm. A young Mesagggun walked hand in hand with a Tuskugggun,
murmuring to one another. He looked darkly at a Kundalan servant
scurrying along like a rodent eager to return to its hidey-hole. And
like a wyr-moth to a flame he hurried to meet his rage. The
alleyway in which they eventually found themselves was narrow and
desolate. Sulphurous light spilled from the streetlamps. Dead leaves
lay in thick drifts. All around them rose the nighttime roar of the
city, the insistent susurrus of a million insects ceaselessly
foraging. There
was the reek of violence in the air. He
watched Rada darkly as she walked in front of him. Tied to a
Tuskugggun. The sheer unfairness of it made his blood boil. Without
warning, he grabbed her around the wrist and whirled her to him so
that he felt her hard breasts. He jammed his mouth down upon hers. "Don't,"
she said. "I'll kill you," or something close to that. Not
that he heard or cared. He backed her against the damp and seeping
wall and ground into her, and when she commenced to wriggle away, he
slapped the side of her head so that it snapped back, then he tripped
her, falling on her even as she fell, exulting in her hot and panting
body beneath him. She
continued to squirm, and this exhibition of resistance, quite
formidable for a Tuskugggun, made him even more determined. He
would have her and kill her and be done with it. All of it. Over in a
few vicious moments. An eternity of violence encapsulated in the
pulsing hearts of Axis Tyr. He
considered this just punishment, righteous retribution for her
undisciplined mouth, for her effect on him. He used his thighs to
spread her legs, used his clawed fingers to bare her breasts, burying
his face between them until she bit his ear and drew blood, and he
hit her again, this time with his balled fist. She
cried out in pain and the fire in his ensorceled bones rose up and
gripped him. He faltered and slipped to his knees in front of her. Her
eyes found his, and she said, "Your violence will kill you. This
is the lesson of that spell. How long will it take you to learn?" He
panted out his agony. "What I want," he rasped between
gritted teeth, "is to be free of this accursed spell." "Then
let me kill you," she hissed. "It is the only way." They
lay like that, bitter enemies, locked in an intimate embrace they
could neither tolerate nor avoid. After
a time, he began to laugh, and fell away from her. He watched her
from glittering eyes as she rearranged her robes. The fire was slowly
ebbing from his bones. "Keep
laughing," she said darkly. "You are an evil beast and one
day I will kill you. You can make sure wager on it." He
marked her words, even though he had not meant to; somehow they
heartened him. The
second time he tried to kill her was in broad daylight. Not that
Olnnn cared a whit. He was Star-Admiral. Who was to gainsay his
actions save the regent? She
was in his tent, and she said something, it did not matter what. It
was her manner, her mocking tone, her flashing eyes that underscored
her fearlessness. How could she not be afraid of him? He, whose
ferocious temper gave even the most battle-hardened Admiral pause.
Who was she? Only a Tuskugggun from whom he was used to eliciting
fear and abject obedience. With
a guttural cry, Olnnn rose and, drawing a shock-sword from its alloy
scabbard, thumbed it on. The tent filled with the humming of the
hyperexcited ion flow arcing between the parallel blades. He came at
her. "Go
on, kill me," she said. "Kill me now." He
meant to. He had murder in his hearts. But he could not. Already, the
fire in his ensorceled bones was streaking through him, and he felt
all the strength vanish from his sword arm. He dropped the
shock-sword, stood with his shoulders slightly bowed. "I
cannot go on like this." His fists were clenched so hard his
nails dug into his palms, drawing blood. "I have to murder
something, or I will go mad." She
came up to him, then, and looked him in the eye. "It is hard for
me to decide whether I hate or pity you more." His
bloody hand gripped her throat. In response, both her hands wrapped
around his throat. Her thumbs sought the soft spot between the ridges
of translucent cartilage. "Let's
make a pact," he growled. "We'll kill each other and murder
this accursed spell together." "I
can smell you," she said. "To
march into battle is one thing," he rasped. "Even to be
outnumbered, to face certain death at the hands of the Centophennni.
But this is different." His eyes blazed. "My life has been
warped by Kundalan sorcery until I can no longer recognize it." "I
can smell your cowardice." He
spat at her, and this made her smile. "At
least now I have an effect on you," she told him softly. "I
am no longer a Tuskugggun nonentity, a wyr-maggot beneath your notice
except to rape at will. I have engaged all your emotions, limited
though they may be." "I
do not understand you." His head shook slowly from side to side.
"I cannot live like this." "Now
you're getting it, Star-Admiral. That, apparently, was Malis-tra's
point. You have to find another way." "I
am V'ornn. I am Khagggun. I know only one way to live." "Then,
as Sagiira told us, you will die. And if you die, so will I, because
this spell has ensnared us both. But I will tell you this,
Star-Admiral. I will make no double-suicide pact with you. I have no
intention of dying anytime soon. If that means I have to keep you
alive, by guile or by force, then that is precisely what I will do. I
will change you, whether you like it or not." I've
picked them up on the scanner," Rekkk said. "Quartering in
from the southeast." There
was no anxiety in his voice, no emotion at all. Eleana noted this
with one part of her brain while with the other part she was
preparing for war. She put one hand on her belly and wept inside that
her baby should be caught in the same quagmire of violence that had
ensnared her. This emotion did not stop her from rechecking her
shock-sword. "Are
they gaining on us?" "Just
slightly," he said. "Then
we cannot outrun them." "They
are blessed with a following wind." "Turn
into it," she offered. "We can use it ourselves." "I
could do that. But it would take us kilometers to the west." He
glanced at her. "The ion cannons should be in the locker just
where you are standing." She
reached down, thumbed the electromagnetic latch as he directed, and
drew out one of the blunt ugly weapons. "You'll
need to keep us very steady." "When
they get that close that could be a problem." "Then
the thing is useless." "Prepare
to use it, anyway." She
knew an order when she heard one, and since they had been on a
heightened war footing ever since they had taken down the crew of
this hoverpod, she obeyed. Crouched against the aft starboard
bulkhead, she rested the triple barrel of the ion cannon on the top
lip. She felt the deep vibration of the ion-fusion engines and knew
right away how fruitless an exercise this would be. Still, she put
her eye to the sighting mechanism. She could see nothing in the
darkness, but quite soon, she knew, she would. Even
as she had that thought she felt the pitch of the engines alter. They
were heading lower, and slowing. Well, that was something, she
supposed. When the pursuing crew blew them out of the sky they would
have a shorter distance to fall. "I
hope you know what you're doing," she said, as they continued
their descent and deceleration. "I
want them to think I'm looking for a spot to land." "What
are you really doing?" she asked. "Looking
for a spot to land." "Are
you trying to make me laugh?" "I
don't know. Is it working?" "I'll
tell you when we get out of this." She
had turned the scope on the ion cannon up to its highest
magnification, and now she thought she saw something, flickering like
a low-magnitude star in a hazy sky. She had set the scope to detect
spent-ion flux, and as soon as she got a computer lock in the scope's
viewfinder she squeezed off her first round. At this extreme range,
she did not expect to score a hit, and she didn't, but the salvo
served notice that they were prepared to fight. Behind
her, Rekkk ducked as he banked the hoverpod, taking it between two
rows of trees. Grey-brown branches whipped by, and the hoverpod began
to buck. The trees were making it difficult for Eleana to regain a
lock on the pursuing craft. The crew had not returned her fire,
knowing the distance between them was still too great. Besides, from
their point of view, there was no rush. They had sighted the renegade
hoverpod; it was only a matter of time until they brought it down and
killed or captured its occupants. Rekkk
took them low over a hill, through a shallow dell and across a small
patch of open cor pastureland that stood between two tall stands of
kuello-fir. Eleana recognized the hilly terrain. They were north of
her birth territory and west across the Chuun River. She knew this
area well, having hunted and been hunted by Khagggun across this
thickly forested and rocky expanse. They
were skimming low now, meters from the rising terrain. Directly ahead
of them rose the ragged mist-shrouded foothills of the Djenn Marre
and Eleana's eyes grew wet at the sight of home. Rekkk
called for her to pilot the hoverpod, and she took over the controls,
guided by his competent hands and his whispered voice. "Keep
us low as you can," he said and, behind her, began to remove the
purple Haaar-kyut armor that had served him so faithfully since he
had purloined it from the Khagggun barracks in Axis Tyr weeks ago. Eleana
was fighting a fierce downdraft that threatened to plow them into the
steep side of a highland rock formation when Rekkk took over,
swinging them briefly over to lift the left wing above a jagged
outcropping, then leveling them off again. A
dull booming off to their right and rock and trees exploded in blue
fire. "They're
within ion-cannon range," Rekkk said. Eleana
returned to her position against the aft starboard bulkhead, picked
up her ion cannon. The pursuing hoverpod popped into her scope like a
starburst, and she squeezed off a round, a near miss that
nevertheless made the other craft veer sharply to the right. Meanwhile,
Rekkk was powering ion thrusters, so that they crested the near ridge
with centimeters to spare. The hoverpod jounced as the undercarriage
scraped an admonishing finger of the rock face. Above them, treetops
exploded, raining down in a welter of shards burning with pale
lambent fire. The
Teyj screamed shrilly, and Eleana dropped the ion cannon, spent the
next couple of minutes flicking the burning debris out of the
cockpit. It wasn't easy as the constant rolls Rekkk was putting them
through tossed her from bulkhead to bulkhead. All
around them, the terrain was being ripped asunder, and even skimming
as low as they were it was becoming increasingly difficult to
outmaneuver the pursuing hoverpod. "We're
not going to make it," Eleana shouted. "Have
faith!" Rekkk shouted back. At
that moment, weapons fire struck the back edge of the right wing,
searing through it. Eleana grabbed the fluttering Teyj with one hand,
but was flung backward so violently she lost control of the ion
cannon, which pitched over the side. She was scrambling for the
weapons locker when the next blast struck them. The hoverpod seemed
to scream, its nose rising almost to the vertical as Rekkk struggled
to control it. The trailing edge of the left wing plowed a deep
narrow into a small section of open field, then they struck the
leading edge of a rock outcropping, and the alloy hull began to
crumple. Blinding
waves of blue fire lit up the night, and Rekkk lifted Eleana, threw
her over the steeply canted side of the hoverpod, jumped over
himself. They sprinted into the burning trees, tucked low, one hand
over their noses and mouths as they ran. Behind them, the hoverpod
exploded in a blue-green fireball, the shock wave so great it spun
them around, took them off their feet, tumbled them over roots,
flattening fields of ferns. Then they were up and running again, the
Teyj making for the swaying treetops. The pursuing hoverpod, ion
cannons bristling, descended upon the flaming ridge, a full pack of
Khagggun in armor the color of burnt umber disembarking at the
double, led by Attack-Commandant Accton Blled. The
moment he hit the ground, Attack-Commandant Blled ordered three
quarters of his pack to search for survivors. Under his exacting eye
they paired up and fanned out, carving the immediate vicinity into
segments. As
his Khagggun melted into the flaming woods that stretched upward
along the high ridge, Blled directed the remainder of the pack to
pick through the smoldering wreckage of the downed hoverpod. He held
one Third-Captain back. Drawing
his shock-sword, he laid the double blade across the Kha-gggun's
throat. "Third-Captain, did you not hear me say that I wanted
these traitors alive?" "I
did, Attack-Commandant." His
pack was only weeks old. He had chosen them himself, but he had been
given little time to gather his forces. He needed to be absolutely
certain of every Khagggun. "And
yet," Blled said, "you fired the direct hit." The
Third-Captain licked his lips. "I was returning fire, sir, as I
had been all along. I was aiming for the wing. It was not until I
fired that I realized the hoverpod had already struck the ground." "Is
that an excuse?" "No
excuse is acceptable, sir," the Third-Captain barked. "Just
so," Blled said. "Sir!" His
attention was diverted by a Second-Marshal, high-stepping through the
cindered debris. "The heat was too intense to find mortal
remains, but—" He was holding something in his right hand,
blackened, still smoking. Blled
removed his shock-sword from the Khagggun's throat, took the item for
a closer look. "A piece of battle armor." He ran a
fingertip over the blistered surface. "Unmistakably." "Purple."
The Second-Marshal nodded. "The Rhynnnon Rekkk Ha-cilar was
wearing a suit of stolen Haaar-kyut armor." "No
doubt," Blled said. "This is his." He handed it back.
"If there are other pieces, find them and place them in the
hoverpod." "Yes,
sir!" The Second-Marshal saluted and double-timed it back to the
wreck. Blled
turned to the Khagggun, "It would seem as if the Rhynnnon is
dead. But what of his Kundalan skcettta?" "This
was a very bad crash. It happened very quickly," the Khagggun
said, knowing that boldness was now his only option. "The
probabilities are they both burned to cinders. But if the skcettta
somehow managed to survive, we will hunt her down." "I
do not deal in probabilities, Third-Cap tain. I am interested only in
what is. But you are right about one thing: if the fugitives survived
this crash, we will find them."
22 Dreams
and Revelations
Wa
tarabibi, do not weep so." Tezziq put her hand against
Riane's feverish brow. "You are injured, wa tarabibi,"
Tezziq whispered. "Lie back and rest. I will take care of
you." "But
I cannot rest," Riane protested, though her head felt as if it
were splitting asunder. "I must protect you." "Against
what?" Tezziq smiled and kissed Riane with lips cool as marble.
"Nothing can harm me. Not while I am with you, wa tarabibi.
You took me out of my silk-lined prison and set me free. What
more could I ask of you?" And
then, to Riane's horror, the skin began to peel off Tezziq's face,
dripping like candle wax onto Riane's chest, and Riane shivered
deeply at the chill coursing through her, and she screamed, "Tezziq!
Tezziq!" A skull grinning down at her. "Ah, Miina, no}" And
she started awake, the dream like awful tendrils snaking through her
mind. "Tezziq,"
she whispered, through dry lips. "Wa tarabibi." "Sister!"
Othnam called. "She is at last awake." And he bent down and
gently guided Riane's lips to the waterskin. When
she had drunk her fill, Riane said, "You came back to help us. I
knew you would." "We
could not leave you to your fate," he said with his typical
quick grin. His teeth were very white against his darkly bronzed
skin. "The
ajjan?" Mehmmer said as she squeezed in beside her. "Dead,"
she whispered. "Sunk beneath the in'adim." "The
blood of Jiharre brooks no infidels." "Jiharre's
blood did not harm me," Riane said reasonably. "In any
case, it wasn't the in'adim; Nith Settt killed her. She gave
her life so that I might survive." "Riane,
you must eat," Mehmmer said sternly. "The battle with the
technomage has depleted you badly." "I
have lost a good friend," Riane mourned. "I have no
appetite." "Forget
your friend. She is beyond your help." "I
will replenish myself," she said softly, "if you will
recite the prayer cycle for the dead." All
at once, her head was filled with Mehmmer's beautiful contralto,
ululating the prayer for Tezziq's spirit. "Where
is the food?" she asked. Othnam
looked at her out of sad eyes. "There is Perrnodt to think of,"
he whispered. Mehmmer's ululations reverberated in her skull. Riane
sat up, groaned, and put her head in her hands. When she opened her
eyes, Othnam and Mehmmer were gone. Had they ever been there? Riane
could not stop the pounding in her head. She fell over sideways. Was
it possible to have a dream within a dream? Had she been
hallucinating Othnam and Mehmmer as well as Tezziq? Had the two Ghor
tried to come to her rescue? Or had they never returned at all? But
she was certain that they had come back. There
is Perrnodt to think of. Perrnodt!
She put the heels of both hands against the red sand, digging
them in to keep herself from pitching over. She turned her head and
saw the twisted remains of Nith Settt. Crawling
to the dead Gyrgon made her so dizzy she almost passed out. She sat
very still and concentrated on breathing as deeply as she was able.
Then she went on. Dead,
without his helm, he looked like a skeleton that had been badly
burned in a fire of unknown origin. His armor was shredded, twisted
into the shape of flower petals. The kind of flowers you conjure up
in a dream. The veradium point in the crown of his skull shone dully
in the morning sunlight. There was a rotten smell that began to make
her sick. She
sorted through the remains. His flask had burst open in the
conflagration, the water instantaneously evaporated, but she
discovered in a rent alloy cylinder some food, warm and still
smoking, that seemed edible enough. As she swallowed, she seemed to
gain sustenance swiftly as if she were ingesting the flesh of her
enemy, which infused her with supernal strength. Her
head was rapidly clearing. She rose and walked some distance away
into the lee of a high dune. Part of it had been scooped out, no
doubt by Nith Settt, to make a kind of cavelike shelter. "Who
are you?" she heard a female voice say from inside the cave.
"Where is the Gyrgon?" The voice sounded oddly distant. "I
am Riane," she said. Crouching,
she cupped her hands to filter out the sun's glare and caught her
first look at Perrnodt. She sat propped against the curved back wall
of the cave. She looked to be more or less the same age as Giyan,
with night-black hair, long and curling and wildly massed in a corona
about her head. Though tall, she was whip-thin, and this, along with
her very pale, very thin skin had the effect of making her appear
fragile. Even with her pale eyes, her face was too severe to be
beautiful, but this austerity lent her a kind of inner strength even
in repose. "The
Gyrgon is dead," Riane said. "I have come a long way to
find you." Perrnodt
scrambled forward. "I am imprisoned here. The Gyrgon erected
some kind of ion field." Riane
tried to order her head to stop its throbbing. The low-angled morning
sun only made matters worse. Right up against the barrier of the ion
field, she looked it over carefully. She could see that it was
composed of filaments of what appeared to be light particles that
moved horizontally in sine waves across the mouth of the artificial
cave. Returning
to the dead Gyrgon, she began to peel off his exomatrix in an attempt
to discover whether, as in the case of the sleep chamber, there was
any kind of energy source she could salvage. The pieces of the
cracked exomatrix came away like the carapace of an armored beast.
She carefully checked the concave inside of each one, but could find
no evidence of a gel pak. What
then powered the exomatrix? Was it the energy field of the Gyrgon
himself? If that was the case, she was out of luck. Or was she? She
stared at Nith Settt for a long time, thinking. Then she placed her
hands around the veradium point at the crown of his skull. Shielded
from sunlight, it continued to emit a dim glow. With
a grunt, she took out her dagger and slammed it hiltfirst against the
skull. The thing shattered like an eggshell and she extracted the
veradium point. It was faceted like a crystal, and, like a crystal,
it was translucent.
Holding it close to her face, she could see photonic filaments,
similar to the ones embedded in the ion field, running through it
from top to bottom. With
it in her hand, she returned to the artificial cave entrance. The end
of the veradium point that had been embedded in Nith Settt's skull
was sharp as a quill point. She took this end and ran it down the ion
field, describing a vertical line. In its wake, the ion field
wavered, and she tentatively put her hand against it and folded it
back. Quickly, she ran the veradium point farther down the ion field.
Then she stepped through the rent sideways. She
heard a pop, felt a sudden, sharp pressure in her inner ears. But she
was through. She reached for Perrnodt, pulled her to safety. They
staggered into the deep shade in the lee of a dune and, almost
immediately, Perrnodt passed out. The headache Riane had awoken with
had returned with a vengeance. She knew that they both needed food
and drink. The Gyrgon's food was gone. Her kuomeshal, and its
supplies, was out of reach on the other side of the in'adim. Wrapping
herself once more in Nith Sahor's greatcoat, she closed her eyes and
pictured the spot where she had left the beast. Nothing happened. She
tried again. Still nothing. This was the second time it had failed to
work in and around the in'adim. Why? She shook her head and
immediately regretted it as the headache flared anew. She could not
worry about that now. She had the more pressing problem of survival
to consider. She
would have to brave the Jeni Cerii encampment. She
wondered if she dared leave Perrnodt here, alone and unprotected. But
what choice did she have? They would soon both be dead without
nourishment. If only Mehmmer and Othnam had come back. But they
hadn't. She had to resign herself to the fact that they had abandoned
her at the last. They had helped her so much, and at such a high
cost, she could not bring herself to think ill of them. She
stood, walking into full sunlight so that she could judge the sun's
angle and the length of the shadow in the dune's lee. She judged that
she had about two hours to find the Jeni Cerii, steal the supplies
they needed, and get back here before Perrnodt was thrown into
broiling afternoon sunlight. Brushing
off the last of the sand from Perrnodt's halo of black hair, she took
her leave. Recalling her conversation with Tezziq, she headed due
north, closely paralleling the near side of the in'adim. She
kept a wary eye out for Jeni Cerii patrols. She
passed across sandy scrubland, flat, featureless, ugly. Her Ghorv-ish
robes had finally dried, but they were stiff with dirt, sweat, and
silty muck from her nearly fatal swim in the in'adim. They
felt as heavy as a velvet curtain and twice as hot. She began to
sweat, and the more she sweated, the thirstier she became. She tried,
as much as possible, to keep to shaded areas, but as the sun climbed
toward its zenith, these cool spots evaporated to virtually nothing. The
sun burned her eyes, and she staggered. Her breath rasped in her
throat. She sat down abruptly, her arms flailing, as the vision came
upon her . . . The
Djenn Marre rises up all around her, the sharp purple ridges rimed
with ice. Clear, crisp air, thin as a gossamer streamer of cloud,
fills her lungs. The familiar chill even in full sunlight. She is
skelling up a rock chimney, using precarious hand- and footholds. Far
below, the chimney remakes itself in a new rockfall that has
partially filled a tremendous crevasse. If she should fall. . . But
that thought has never crossed her mind. She is a climber, as
fearless as she is accomplished. This
is the first Riane, the one who existed before the spirit of Annon
was put into her dying body. The Riane before the fall that had
presumably caused her to lose her memory, before the duur fever that
had racked her. Riane
the pure-blood Kundalan. Now,
as she looks up, she can see something perched on the very pinnacle
of the rock chimney. From her current acute angle she cannot tell
what it is. It looks, however, very big. She
continues her climb, the breath sawing through her half-open mouth.
Disciplined, she pauses every few moments so as to conserve her
energy. She sips water from a flask of some soft but durable
substance she cannot name. The sky is utterly clear, an astonishing
violet. Sunlight like a razor against her skin. She hangs in the deep
shadow of an overhang and launches her head back, staring at whatever
might be perched atop the chimney. She has watched it for weeks, this
mysterious thing, wondering at that distance what it might be. Today
she has decided to assuage her curiosity. She
is now almost three-quarters of the way up. Unlike other chimneys in
her experience this one tapers very little or not at all. The rock is
hard and clean. When she does not find adequate handholds, she uses a
small, efficient metal implement—again, the name escapes her—to
chip them into the rock face. The implement dangles from a braided
cord around her right wrist. She made the cord herself, from the hide
of a large animal she killed. She can see the animal, trace its
outline with the delicate brush of memory, but its name dangles in
the black abyss of forgetfulness. The
implement has a long, curved head, pointed at one end, wide-bladed at
the other. She once buried the point of it in an attacker's eye. She
can recall the feel of his callused hands on her shoulders, pushing
her roughly down, his powerful knees spreading her legs. The matted
hair of him, the smell of him, like the shining pelt, the stench of
that animal she had killed. She had needed no one to come to her
rescue. She had swung the implement in a short, powerful arc. Her
attacker was too busy grunting to notice it until it pierced his eye.
By then it was too late. It went right through into his brain. She
had thrown him off even while he was still thrashing. She
is looking up now, into the violet sky, at the top of the chimney.
Whatever is perched there seems at this distance to be floating. She
is very close, but the shadows are so deep and sharp she still cannot
make sense of the shape. All
at once, it detaches itself from the rock chimney and, soaring,
spirals down toward her. It is so huge it blots out the sun. Chilled,
she shivers. And
in fascination watches it come . . . Riane,
in the burning sand beside the in'adim, rolled over and
moaned. Sand had attached itself to her lips, and she spat it out of
her mouth. She immediately regretted the action because it cost her
some vital fluid. She
stared up into the sky bleached white by the blaze of sun, and
blinked. Another vision. Another shard of Riane's lost past. What did
this one mean? What had been atop the rock chimney? What had she
seen? Riane was left with the impression that this vision, above the
others, was vastly important. She
was rolling this enigma around in her mind when she heard voices. She
froze. The voices came from just beyond the low rise in front of her.
She slithered on her belly up to the top of the rise. There in front
of her were a pair of Jeni Cerii wrapped in blue-and-white-striped
robes. They were armed with long, curved scimitars. Their heavily
bearded faces were dark and shiny as oil-rubbed wood. Grained as well
with the beat of the sun and the scouring of the wind. At their hips
were waterskins and by the look of them they are full or almost so.
Doubtless, they had food, as well. Riane
took her dagger in one hand, the dead infinity-blade in the other.
Rising up into a squat, she made a sound. Instantly, the Jeni Cerii
looked in her direction. They moved with astonishing speed. As they
came they drew their scimitars. They did not seek to query her. And
why should they? She had encroached on their territory. Their secret
encampment was but a kilometer or two away. They did not care who she
was; they wanted her silent and dead. Riane
threw the infinity-blade. It whirled, end over end, striking the lead
Jeni Cerii square on his left knee. He went down, clutching his leg,
and Riane feinted right, drawing the first swing of the second Jeni
Cerii's scimitar. The air whistled at the wide blade's swift passage.
Riane came in under the arc, jabbed out with the point of her dagger,
piercing her assailant's side. He grunted, swiveled on his pivot foot
and, ignoring the flow of blood, delivered a backhand swipe. The
flat of the scimitar struck the back of Riane's head, and she pitched
forward. Immediately the Jeni Cerii was on top of her; she could feel
his sticky blood. The blade of the scimitar came down, aimed for her
neck, and she buried her dagger into the meat of his right forearm.
He grimaced but made no sound, only leaned forward, keeping the
scimitar on its downward trajectory. She
twisted the point inside him, dragged the blade through his muscle
until she severed an artery. Blood fountained, and the Jeni Cerii's
eyes rolled up into his skull. Using her hip, she flung him off her. She
was up and turning toward the Jeni Cerii she had immobilized when her
right arm went numb and her dagger dropped from her nerveless
fingers. It instantly sank into the sand. She saw the Jeni Cerii and
the wound in her shoulder at the same moment. Limping forward, he
head-butted her. She fell, half-stunned, and he grabbed the cowl of
her Ghorvish robes, tossed her down the low rise. She landed in
almost the same spot where the infinity-blade had fractured his
kneecap. When she tried to regain her feet, he kicked her hard just
below the ribs. Grinning, he limped over and delivered a lazy punch
to the same spot. Riane
groaned, curling up into a ball. He struck the wound in her shoulder,
and while she writhed in agony, he hefted his scimitar and studied
the back of her neck, calculating the vectors of the killing blow. Satisfied,
he placed the slipper of his damaged leg on her side. Anchored by his
good leg, he drew back the scimitar. Riane found that she could only
move her top arm. She whipped it forward, her forearm smashing into
his fractured knee. The
Jeni Cerii howled and collapsed on her. His weight bound her, hurting
her hip. She was altogether numb between her legs. The blade of the
scimitar lay between them, and she reached for it. He slapped her
away and took possession of it, bearing down. The
pain in her hip was excruciating. It was at that moment that she
realized she had fallen on the infinity-blade. Without thinking, she
pulled it free, thumbed it on. The scimitar whistled at her, a blur
of deadly motion. Then,
without warning, the infinity-blade awoke to life. Cutting through
the oncoming scimitar it continued its relentless arc, slicing the
Jeni Cerii in two. Riane,
lying half-insensate in a pool of blood, stared at the softly humming
infinity-blade and wondered what had happened. Giyan
had a close and unique relationship with death. It seemed improbable
that she should remember the feel of her own umbilical cord being
wrapped around her neck at birth, that she could recall the murderous
look on her mother's face as she prepared to kill her evil-omened
twins. But she could. Only
the swift and timely intervention of her father had saved the
infants' lives. Another
strand of the sorcerous web crept across her, and she screamed a
silent scream. The strand was alive, as if it was made up of millions
of tiny insects armed with barbed stingers. Since
childhood she had had a premonition that death, angry at being denied
what was rightfully his, was never far from her side. Often, in dark
corridors or lying in bed late at night, she would hear a whisper of
the wind, the creak of an unseen door or floorboard, see the
shadow-web of tree branches on the wall and know them for what they
really were. Death stalked her in her dreams, as well, a handsome
face, a compelling one not unlike that of Eleusis. It was as if in
death Eleusis had melted into her in some elemental way. As if having
been driven beyond the boundary of mortal flesh he had slipped easily
into the role of death's-head. The
strand advanced millimeter by agonizing millimeter. She had sometime
earlier come to the conclusion that it was going so slowly in order
to maximize the pain it was causing her. Even so, she submitted
without a struggle. And she had done so from the beginning. She had
read enough about the Malasocca to know that the harder she
struggled, the more agonizing the wrapping would become. Now,
trapped in her Osoru Avatar, enmeshed in the archdaemonic web of
Horolaggia's design, she felt a welling of the slow assault of death.
It was like a ringing in her ears, a knocking on the door to her
soul, the swift clip-clop of approaching hooves. She could
feel death's presence like the silent fall of ashes onto a
gravestone. The
filament had begun at her right shin and ended at her left hip. A new
one began, causing her to scream again into the anxious nothingness
of Otherwhere. She
was not frightened of death, only frightened for her child. Bitter
irony that the very sorcerous act that had saved Annon from his
enemies had opened the Portal enough for Horolaggia to escape. If
only her desperate love for her son had not caused her to cross the
circle of the Nanthera. At the last moment, she had changed her mind.
She could not bear the thought of losing him, of seeing his essence
migrated into another body. She had wanted her Annon back. In a vain
and foolish gesture, she had violated the circle of the Nanthera, had
inadvertently broken the sorcerous lock on the Portal long enough for
the archdaemon to slip through. The
sky had turned a sulphurous yellow, deep red above the darkling
mountains closest to the Abyss. There, daemonic sigils rained down in
a torrent from fulminating clouds. All
around her, hidden but heard, a vast and depthless lake in the mist,
arose the moaning of the host of daemons incarcerated for eons in the
Abyss. The
second filament completed its run, and a third appeared. There was no
surcease. The
Ras-Shamra that was Giyan wept with the pain of integration with the
archdaemon. He controlled her body, was inside it, working it like a
puppet. But part of him was always here, spinning this agonizing web
that slowly but surely was surrounding her in a cocoon. When
the spinning was done, when she was completely encased, she would
die, and Horolaggia would claim her body as his permanent home. Was
there in truth nothing she could do? Stories she had read of the
Malasocca hinted that this was so. Another
filament seared across her consciousness and it was all she could do
not to cry out. The ground was wet with her blood. She felt the life
force draining out of her. The
daemonic sigils continued their assault on the fabric of Otherwhere.
An eruption began somewhere within the mountains. Lava and ash
darkened the sky further. The stench of burning was everywhere. The
scar of chromium light struck the circular sea-green shanstone floor,
the music picked up the beat, and the dancers responded
instinctively. By day, the shanstone was dutifully polished to a
reflective gloss, and each night lovingly scuffed to dullness. The
dancers were moving in a kind of concentrated, frenzied,
semireligious mass, a dervish of energy, an accident about to happen. Three
stories down, beneath desolate, starry Devotion Street, the music
boomed. The quintet was V'ornn—Tuskugggun, of course, since
they were the artists and musicians—but the music was an
amalgam of gorgeous minor-key Kundalan melodies and tripartite
dissonant V'ornnish harmonies. The trip-hammer tempos that gave it
bones and brawn were strictly a product of youth, from one culture,
the other, or both, it mattered not to either the quintet or the
dancers. Cthonne
was jam-packed, youths not yet in their teens sandwiched together,
sweaty, bug-eyed, grinning, put to the endurance test by the barrage
of music, light, the intensity of the mass. Marethyn saw V'ornn, both
Great Caste and Lesser Caste, and Kundalan, each with their own area
of dancefloor, each with their own style of dancing, or possibly not
because the longer she looked the more it seemed they had learned—
or at least absorbed—from one another. For the serpentine line
of demarcation was as fluid as the sands of the Great Voorg and, here
and there, the two races danced side by side, or even for an instant
mingled. Marethyn
was dismayed and delighted. When had this underground life sprung up,
children climbing frantically into adulthood, breaking rules and
regulations, flying in the face of V'ornn stratification, Gyrgon law?
Rebels, just as she was. "They
look so blissful," Marethyn shouted in Sornnn's ear. "You
would never believe they were enemies." "They're
not," he replied. The
chromium scar of light was joined by a cadmium oval so cool it risked
sizzling like dry ice. A second drummer had joined the quintet,
hooded and robed, playing not with traditional V'ornn titanium-alloy
whisks but with thick-callused fingertips. The music took on a more
sinuous beat, less industrial, more sonorous, with a texture like
softly breaking waves. The hand-drummer began to sing, sinking into
the syllables with the vigor of an ecstatic. The lyrics spoke of the
pain of loss, the despair and the fierce joy of not belonging. Sornnn,
leaning in toward her, said, "Marethyn, tell me. How frightened
were you with Bronnn Pallln and Line-General Lokck Werrrent?" "Very
frightened," she said. The
ghost of a smile on his face. "Only frightened?" She
looked at him. "No. Exhilarated, too." "I
am unsurprised. You played your part to perfection. You fooled them
all—the Deirus, Pallln, Werrrent." "I
hope it was worth it." "You
know it was. We have neutralized a ruthless conniver in Bronnn Pallln
and a dangerous enemy in Olnnn Rydddlin who, like many Bashkir, hates
and fears me for my involvement in the Korrush." He looked at
her. "Tell me about your fright." She
thought of the moment when she had run her finger along the dust in
the warehouse and he had very gently and very romantically made
certain that she would not do that again. Because it was not a
SaTrryn warehouse, and he did not want anyone to know they had been
there until the trap had been sprung. "Tell me how you managed
to get those weapons inside Bronnn Pallln's warehouse." He
considered for a moment. "It was not difficult. Bronnn Pallln
does not adequately compensate many in his employ, including the
warehouse lading overseer. He was pleased to take the generous coin
my representative offered him in exchange for an hour of his
absence." He cocked his head. "Now, about your fright." "What
is this all about, Sornnn?" "I
want to know whether you would be too frightened ever to play out
another such scenario." "If
the cause was just." "Because
you have a well-honed sense of self-preservation." He leaned in
a little closer. "Your fear will protect you. It will keep your
mind sharp in all situations." Marethyn
watched the ecstatic dancers because she was suddenly afraid not to.
There was something both primitive and powerful in the strobing
lights and the pulsing backbeat which seemed somehow synchronized
with the rushing of the blood in her veins, pulling her away from
everything, from the secret she now carried between her hearts. His
secret. Because she knew this was about more than just Bronnn Pallln
and Kurgan Stogggul, more than just about his life, important to her
as it was. But she would not say anything about that now. Not unless
he broached the subject first. He
had procured drinks from somewhere, had led them up to a balcony
overlooking the cavernous space. The furious furnace heat of hundreds
of moving bodies slapped them in the face. Incense was pearling, the
air thick as stew. The oval of light accompanying the chromium scar
had lowered to a liquid candied bronze. They
stood, leaning against the turned railing, looking down into the
vast, writhing space so that Marethyn felt slightly giddy. Possibly
it was the writhing beat, the primordial excitement of being here, a
secret dance club where V'ornn and Kundalan existed side by side
without enmity. She did not want to be afraid, so she put her head
against his. "My
only regret," she said, "was that I abused my friendship
with Kirlll Qandda. He is so kind to Terrettt, the only one in
Receiving Spirit who is. Yes, I felt exhilaration, but I also am
ashamed." The
youths seemed like one shining multilegged beast, a single-celled
creature, amorphous and anonymous. Marethyn was aware of the
slipstream of energy ripping through the club, aware, too, that she
and Sornnn were observers, apart and, therefore, alone. And there
arose in her breast a curious longing like a pain. "Kirlll
Qandda was bound to be squeezed. Think of it this way. The
information you gave him may have saved his life." Watching
them like this, moving mindlessly, ecstatically, hypnotized by the
backbeat, it suddenly dawned on her the risk they were all taking in
congregating here. The complicity, the signature act of rebellion
they shared, that had brought V'ornn and Kundalan together. Just as
Eleusis Ashera had predicted when he had proposed the reconstruction
of Za Hara-at, the city in the Korrush where V'ornn and Kundalan
might live as equals. The project that had sown the seeds of his
murder at the instigation of her own father. "Still,"
he said, "if you are concerned about him, then by all means
speak with him." "What
would I say?" A
youth in black and silver, coppery skull shiny with sweat, drifted
across the balcony, moving somnolently into the reeflike shadows
close to the wall. Marethyn's gaze was momentarily diverted from the
dancers. The youth wedged his shoulder against the stone wall and lit
a laaga stick. He sucked the pungent smoke deep into his lungs. "If
you speak with him, you cannot give anything away." She
nodded. "Anyway."
He took her hand. "Your actions had a greater effect. It is
called liberation." The
lights had gone low, the music morphing into something looping and
dreamy, a gentle respite, an oasis before the next sandstorm of music
tore through the cavern. Sornnn was looking around as if he was
expecting to locate someone in this controlled frenzy. "There
is something I want to tell you," he said in her ear. He was
still looking about. "It's about my father." They
had not spoken about Sornnn's father since Tettsie's death, but under
cover of night he had taken her to meet his mother, whom she adored
within minutes. The two of them—Marethyn and Petrre Aurrr—had
gone to the deep pools together, scattering Tettsie's ashes into the
dark, chill water. Marethyn had yet to summon the strength to open
the red-jade box her grandmother had left her. She simply could not
bear to touch it; the wound was too raw yet. She needed time to
settle into the notion that Tettsie was truly gone. His
lips fluttered against her ear as he spoke. "This is what I
thought and held to be true. My father was a superb businessman, but
he was removed from the V'ornn thusly: when he met the Korrush
tribes, he fell in love with them, their customs, their culture,
their view of life. Through them, he learned to love Kundala, and
from that moment on he dedicated his life to trying to save it and
its inhabitants. He was both a benefactor and a conduit for the
Resistance. Now I am beginning to see him from a different
perspective." "Because
of your mother." "Yes,
but there's something else," he said. "Tettsie helped me to
stop looking at him with a child's adoring eyes. I see him now as he
really was. And while I have little doubt that he harbored genuine
feeling for the Korrush and its inhabitants, it seems to me that he
was primarily motivated by the element of risk. Speaking to my
mother, hearing her side of their relationship, many small
unexplained quirks and incidents have come into focus." He
leaned in, his lips up against the shell of her ear. "You see
the logic of it, don't you, a V'ornn addicted to risk beats the
independence out of his own wife because, in his own home, the place
he comes to sleep at night, he has no tolerance for risk, the seeds
of independence she will inevitably sow in his children." He
pressed his forehead against the side of her skull and she put her
hand to the back of his neck. He
said, "The greater the risk, the harder my father played for it.
He simply could not stop himself. And it poisoned his relationship
with my mother, in a very real sense destroyed his family, for
without her we were surely the poorer." He
drew away for a moment and looked around, not nervous, and yet on a
kind of alert, part of him roving the cavernous club in case there
was a change, no matter how subtle, in the tenor of the night. The
music beat urgently on. "I
think Tettsie knew this," he said. "I think it was what she
was trying to tell me—what she wanted to warn me of. She did
not want me pursuing you, drawing you into my secret world unless I
was absolutely certain of how I felt about you. She did not want what
happened to my mother to happen to you." All
at once, she felt the sudden return of her fear. "Sornnn—" "Let
me finish before I lose my nerve altogether." He took her hand.
"I have loved you since the moment I first saw you, but if I
could not trust you, there was no point in continuing. Do you see?
Because of who and what you are. Because you are not like other
Tuskugggun, because you are strong and want something more for
yourself." "You
see me as strong, and so you imagine me fearless." "You
already know, or I think you do, why Olnnn Rydddlin has kept me in
his sights. Shall I not go on?" "Thank
you. For loving me and for trusting me this much." She took hold
of his hand. Gazed into his face, already feeling far away from here.
"But I don't know. I want you to tell me everything. And yet
this very thing makes me short of breath." He
leaned over and kissed her cheek. "You are an artist, Marethyn.
Perhaps you should stay an artist." She
put her arms around his neck. "Take me home, Sornnn." He
kissed her then, long and hard with the music's throbbing pulse
transmitted from his teeth to hers, and it seemed to last all the way
back to her atelier. In
the rear, there was a loft, and above the loft arose a huge skylight.
Years ago, when she had bought the atelier, Marethyn had installed a
bed and some few furnishings she deemed essential, for she often
worked long hours or was struck by inspiration at odd moments. So she
often slept here, under the stars. She had always found this space
private and romantic but never more so as when she shared it with
Sornnn. In fact, on the occasions now when she slept here alone she
felt bereft, and longed for him close and warm by her side, breathing
soft and evenly, lulling her to sleep. When,
as now, returning from Cthonne, they made love, the space was
transformed into a kind of temple, resplendent with glittering stars
that appeared to belong just to them. Their passion seemed infinite,
their capacity for pleasure expanding exponentially, and when they
were finished and lay, drunk with lust and with each other, entangled
and moist, Marethyn wept with a joy she could never have imagined. And
their whispered conversation. "Sornnn." "Yes." "Beloved." "Wa
tarabibi." "Yes.
Wa tarabibi." He
laughed to hear her utter the Korrush phrase that was so resonant
with meaning. "Sornnn.
I have never been so happy." He
raised himself on one elbow. "And I, wa tarabibi." They
had not spoken again of that other thing, the thought of which made
her lose her breath. He respected what she said, the only male ever
to do so. And this made her love him all the more. She
held his face between her hands and gazed into his eyes. "And
now I cannot sleep." Reluctantly, she let go of him. "I
need to paint." As she lit the atelier's lamps, she said, "I
will understand if you want to—" "I
will watch you," he said softly. "From here. Until dawn.
Until you are finished." Marethyn
kissed him and, without bothering to put on a robe, went naked down
to her easel and set out a fresh canvas. She found that she was in
the kind of tightly controlled frenzy that presaged hours of intense
work. Her hearts beat fast; her mind was on fire. She still felt him
in her loins, still heard the insistent music of Cthonne in her inner
ear as if it had lodged there. The
instant she touched pigment to canvas she was engulfed again in
Cthonne's sound, vibration, strobing light, a massed energy all
attuned to the music's relentless beat, and she knew what it was she
needed to re-create with bold strokes and nuances of color. She
listened to the beat remembered in her inner ear, letting it crash
over her, become part of her, guide her brushstrokes, so that she was
inside the energy stream, the great single-celled creature that
pulsed and throbbed to the bone-jarring beat. All the while, she used
her special artist's eye to decode the minutiae of detail into
intent. She recalled a Kundalan female with her head thrown back, her
long hair flying, a V'ornn male with metal eyes and a permanent
sneer, dipping and swaying, a Kundalan couple dancing so close they
could have been a single entity, a V'ornn couple with their backs to
each other, mirroring each other's steps as if by telepathy, a host
of others brought into clear and precise focus. And she sensed the
strangeness of the palette laid out before her, the essential unease
of it, detected these things like fugitive colors hidden beneath a
topcoat of pigment. She
did not yet know everything that lay hidden here—this was the
genesis, after all, for her seizure of controlled frenzy, the desire
to parse out her memory of Cthonne, to depict it and in depicting it
deconstruct it into discrete understandable segments—but one
sentiment she was certain wasn't anywhere in Cthonne's packed space
was a sense of certain defeat. Neither were the unending
disappointment, nor betrayals, small and grand, failed hopes that
appeared, to a greater or lesser degree, in almost every Kundalan she
had met. There was a sense of serenity generated by the music and the
energy that beat back the bleakness and despair that was everywhere
else on Kundala. She saw it now. It was the promise of oneness, a
surcease from the pain the Cosmos inflicted. She
thought of the youth in black and silver getting high on laaga and
painted him, crammed in a corner, gaunt and bent as an old V'ornn.
Here was the fright and the danger she herself felt so close to now.
Living alongside the hope generated inside Cthonne was the sweaty
hearts-palpitating pallor of desperation. These youths were on the
edge, pushed to their limits by constant dread, a noxious and
corrosive byproduct of the century of enmity, hatred, brutal acts of
war, bitter retaliations, racial slurs, unthinking violence. And
she thought of her original assessment. They were an accident waiting
to happen. Possibly. But in the re-created scar of chromium light,
she was painting a white-hot spotlight that pierced through flesh and
bone to the very core of them, that would illuminate the deep vein of
potential power that rippled beneath their brittle, honed,
semisui-cidal surface. At
firstlight, she broke off painting to make them some star-rose tea
and breakfast. She could feel Sornnn's dark intense eyes following
her and felt a delicious tingling all through her body. In the
cupboard on a shelf by itself, she saw the still-unopened red-jade
box Tettsie had left her. She held still, staring at it, her
pigment-smeared fingers at her throat, clutching a carved crystal key
held on a thin tertium chain. She could hear her own breath soughing
in her inner ears. From the time that Tettsie's legacy was made
known, she had never taken off this chain, had felt the small weight
of the key burning in the valley between her breasts. Sornnn had
never once commented upon it, but he liked to kiss it as he kissed
and caressed the tops of her breasts. In this way, she realized that
it had become part of her. She
felt abruptly, as if she had fallen into a dreamlike stupor. As if
with someone else's hands, she reached up and brought the red-jade
box down onto the shanstone counter. It seemed to burn her fingers
with a cool steady fire. Dimly,
she heard Sornnn calling her name, asking if she was all right. She
did not answer. Her fingers trembled as she took the key from around
her neck and inserted it into the lock. She turned it and gasped as
the box sprang open. The
interior was empty save for a small crystal, snugged into a satin
cradle. It took her a moment to recognize it as a data-decagon. She
held it in her hand, and before she could think about it inserted it
into a data-port. At
once, Tettsie's face sprang to life on the small crystal screen. She
was smiling her beautiful crinkled smile.
Marethyn's eyes welled up with tears. "Dearest
Marethyn," Tettsie said. "I know you are grieving my death.
I cannot stop that, nor would I even if I could. It is part of the
natural process of letting go. But, while you grieve you must also
celebrate my life." This
statement surprised Marethyn. "Doubtless,
it will surprise you to hear this, since you have been privy to
all—well, mostly all—the hardships in my life. And they
were grave, I grant you that. But believe me when I tell you that in
time I was amply compensated. Now that I am dead I can admit how much
it pained me to keep much of my life secret from you. This was not of
my own volition; it was an absolute necessity. Ask Sornnn. He knows
about such things. Intimately." There
was a brief pause, as if Tettsie had stopped the recording for a
moment to gather her thoughts. Marethyn turned, saw that Sornnn had
come silently down from the loft. He stood beside Tettsie's
remembrance-cloth, watching her. "You
know," she said to him, the idea dawning on her. And she held
out her hand. "Come here." He
stood beside her as Tettsie's legacy unspooled. "I
imagine he is there," her grandmother was saying. "Beside
you. Holding your hand. He is a good V'ornn, and you possess the
intelligence to decide whether or not he is for you. You may wonder
how I know so much about him. This, also, is part of my secret life.
Do you wish to hear this, darling? Think hard. If you wish me to
continue, do nothing. Otherwise, pull the data-decagon now and see
that it is completely and utterly destroyed." A
small silence ensued. Acutely slanting sunlight was flooding the
atelier. Marethyn imagined she could hear the sun moving, a slow and
deliberate creak as of aged bones, as it commenced its foreshortened
arc across the sky. She gripped Sornnn's hand. "So.
You have decided," Tettsie said. "Good! Now you will hear
everything." Tettsie's
face became more intent, and Marethyn realized that her grandmother
was leaning forward. "During
most of my life with your grandfather I was desperately unhappy. For
a time, I could only see myself in his image. Much to my horror, I
found that I, like all Tuskugggun, had been brainwashed into
believing a certain set of basic principles about myself as a female.
Then as I told you, I rebelled. But eventually I discovered to my
horror that my rebellion was only skin deep. Think how shocked I was,
darling! And wounded. And in despair! "And
then, ten years ago, just after your grandfather died, I met someone.
It was pure happenstance. We came across each other in the spice
market, though we were there for totally different reasons. I had
arrived at that place because I was lost and wanted to become more
so. She was there on business. "We
began to talk. I suppose in those days I was wearing my despair like
a sifeyn. She took me to Spice Jaxx's, where we had a drink. Well,
the drink became two, then a meal, then tea. We spent all afternoon
talking! What did we talk about? Everything, I suppose. But what was
important was her vision of how a Tuskugggun could make the most of
her life. How we, as Tuskugggun, could make a difference and in
making a difference come to know—really know—who we were. "It
was she who told me how we Tuskugggun are defined by the males. How,
through centuries of societal custom, we are taught to be and do and
say what the males want us to be and do and say without even being
conscious of it! "And
so, darling, my secret life began. And through this Tuskugggun I met
Hadinnn SaTrryn, and then Sornnn. Well now, doubtless you are
surprised again. I cannot say I blame you. I am certain that you
thought you knew me through and through. We all believe that about
our loved ones. But it simply isn't true. You never know it all, nor
should you. "I
had planned to share this secret with you, my most beloved, when you
and Sornnn were wed. If you are listening to this I am already gone.
My health was fragile. I knew that. Please forgive me for not telling
you. What would have been the point? There was nothing you could do,
and you would only have worried." Tettsie
clucked her tongue against the roof of her mouth. "
'How mysterious my Tettsie is!' I can hear you saying this to
yourself. So now I will reveal the mystery. The way I broke free of
my chains, the way I learned to live a full and rich life on my own
terms was in joining this Tuskugggun and Hadinnn and Sornnn in aiding
the Kundalan Resistance. They gave their skill and their cunning. I
gave coins, which, thanks to your grandfather, I had in great
abundance. I cannot tell you how deeply it pleased me to use his
coins to aid the cause of freedom. It may sound simplistic, darling,
but the slavery of the Kundalan is our slavery. Their freedom is our
freedom. Once you see this, everything becomes so clear and
well-defined. "I
realized quite belatedly that I was ashamed of being V'ornn. But
better late than never! I found that I could neither condone nor
forgive my own race's treatment of other species. I did not agree
with its racial policy of world-rape. You see how deeply ingrained
the brainwashing is. One does not even consider questioning what has
over the millennia become the V'ornn way of life. I came to realize
that my own personal despair was masking a greater truth: that I
despised myself and my entire race. I did something about that. So
can you. But only if you wish it. "The
bulk of my coins remain, as you know, in trust with Dobbro Mannx. Why
did I do that, you might ask, instead of willing them to you? There
are several reasons. The first is that I want them to go to the
Resistance. The second is that having heard my secret, having come
this far, you have a decision to make. I want you to continue my
work. But it really doesn't matter what I want. Don't let an old
Tuskugggun— and a dead one at that—influence your life.
You are a highly gifted artist. You hardly need me to tell you that.
And art can be enormously fulfilling, no question about it. But is it
enough for you, Marethyn? I think I know you. Though I have already
gone on record as saying no V'ornn really knows another completely I
am old enough—and dead enough!—to indulge myself one last
time in this manner. "Sornnn
is there with you now, isn't he? Yes, of course he is. But do not ask
him his opinion, darling! When it comes to you, he has his own bias,
as you are well aware! And he is a male. A most unusual male,
admittedly, but still a male. This must be your decision. Yours
alone. If you decide to go ahead, you will take this data-decagon to
Dobbro Mannx. I have encrypted it for his data-port. It will give you
access to the coins for the purpose already outlined. And Sornnn,
well, Sornnn, you will introduce my beloved granddaughter to our
mutual friend. "Marethyn,
if you decide to remain an artist, please be so kind as to give the
data-decagon to Sornnn. He will decide how and when and by what
clandestine means it will assist the Resistance." Tettsie
smiled, looking so much like the Tuskugggun who had taken the girl
Marethyn to the deep pools in summer that Marethyn's hearts thudded
with joy. "Marethyn, listen to me, I know this is an emotional
moment for you. I also know that you tend to overthink
decisions—especially ones you deem important. I beg you not to
overthink this one. Listen to your hearts, your spirit, and do not be
influenced by any V'ornn, including me. There are many ways to
remember me. The painting you were doing of me is one such way. If
this is your way, all the better for you. I beg you: do not do this
for me, for any V'ornn but yourself. You cannot think your way to
fulfillment; you must feel it. Come to think of it, it's instinctual,
just like painting, so, really, for you it should not be difficult.
Either way, I love you. You cannot know in how many ways you have
brought me deep and abiding delight! "Good-bye,
my dearest child. I trust that your great and generous spirit will
guide you onto the right path. Trust it as I do and you will not go
wrong." Tettsie's
smiling image flickered and died. Tears
were streaming down Marethyn's face, and Sornnn put his arm around
her, hugging her close. She felt his hearts beating in concert with
hers. She heard her grandmother's voice like a prayer in her head.
Over Sornnn's sun-warmed shoulder she saw the painting she had been
creating. She studied it not with a critical eye for technique or
color but to spark her memory of Cthonne. Something—some
critical thing— kept drawing her back there. Don't
overthink your decision, Tettsie had warned her. Use your
artist's intuition. What was the intuition telling her? She loved
being an artist. It gave her a freedom and independence few
Tuskugggun enjoyed. And yet, she had begun to recognize in herself a
certain restlessness, an undeniable feeling that there must be more
to life than what she had. And then Sornnn had come into her life,
and she had love. But with him there was more than love. Together
they had begun a secret life. Yes, it was true. In the clear light of
Tettsie's legacy she could see that the moment she agreed to help
Sornnn she had begun to be the V'ornn her grandmother hoped she would
become. This decision had excited her, yes, but it had also
frightened her deeply, which was why she had pushed it away. Because
somewhere in the depths of her artist's spirit she had known there
was more. She had known that he wanted to share this secret with her.
At Cthonne, in the center of the frenzy, her fear had gotten the
better of her, and she had pulled back. Now
the revelation had come from the mouth of her dead grand-mother. She
should have been shocked, stunned, upset. But she was none of those
things. Instead, for the first time since she had become uneasy with
her life, everything was clear, everything made sense. Tettsie
had been right. It had taken no thought at all. No decision she had
ever made seemed so right. It was pure instinct. She
turned in Sornnn's arms and looked up into his face, and said, "Yes.
I choose. I, Marethyn Stogggul. I choose yes." "There
can be no going back now, Marethyn." "I
do not want to go back. I do not know what I would do if I did." She
was frightened and exhilarated and very sure of what she was doing.
These emotions produced from deep inside her a fleeting tremor in her
hands, and she thought of Tettsie and growing old, and she knew that,
like her grandmother, when her own time came she wanted to be proud
of the life she had lived. At
last she understood why Sornnn had taken her to Cthonne the night
before. Here existed a small but functioning model of Eleusis
Ashera's dream where V'ornn and Kundalan lived side by side in peace
and harmony. Through
her brushstrokes they were born again, all of them, and she saw them
as Sornnn saw them, and knew that they, these youths, were also a
bomb waiting to be detonated. 23 Take
No Prisoners
Kurgan
had reluctantly returned to his unutterably boring duties as regent.
He found that as time went on he had lost all patience for the
niceties of diplomacy and the arcane formalities of protocol. He
barked at every V'ornn who crossed his path. He ground his teeth in
frustration as he was slowly and inexorably buried beneath a mountain
of minutiae. Small
wonder that he took as many breaks as he thought he could get away
with, hanging over the balustrade of this balcony or that, sucking
thick laaga smoke deep into his lungs. He liked the way it made him
expand until he filled the entire palace. He opened his mouth and
swallowed the structure whole. This brought a chuckle to his lips. Often,
he felt like killing something and, descending into the interrogation
cells the Gyrgon had built beneath the palace, chose a prisoner at
random and went to work on him with a lighthearted determination,
whistling the hunting song the Old V'ornn had taught him when he was
much younger. The
inevitable death, which would come suddenly and too soon, left him
feeling emptier than before, and he would take his ire out on the
first Haaar-kyut unfortunate enough to cross his path. Possibly
that was why, on this particular day, having grown weary of the
drivel collecting around him, he did not visit the interrogation
chambers. Instead, he smoked alone on one of the outer balconies that
overlooked the crowded street. He
was thinking of Courion, wondering when he would hear from him, when
he saw the young Kundalan female. He was certain it was the one he
had seen before—from this very balcony, if he was not mistaken.
The one he had forcibly taken that long-ago golden afternoon by the
stream when Annon was still alive. Their last hunt. He
threw aside the butt of his laaga stick and called for a Haaar-kyut.
The young Khagggun appeared instantly, and Kurgan pointed out the
female before she could again vanish into the throng. While
the Haaar-kyut gave orders to have her fetched, Kurgan went in and
read the latest data-decagon from Rada. He was beginning to wonder at
the wisdom of his enlisting her. So far, the intelligence she had
sent had been minor. On the other hand, he thought he should be happy
at that. Then he came across the item about the Khagggun unrest. This
was the second time she had mentioned it. Hadn't he ordered Olnnn
Rydddlin to deal with any dissatisfaction among the lower-echelon
Khagggun over the suspension of their Great Caste rights? What was
the Star-Admiral up to? Certainly he hadn't yet captured Rekkk
Hacilar and the Kundalan sorceress Giyan. He
banged a fist on the table so hard a pair of Haaar-kyut sprinted into
the chamber, shock-swords drawn. He dismissed them with a backhand
wave. Damn
him to N'Luuura! He
turned at the sound of a voice. Expecting the Haaar-kyut guard with
the Kundalan female, he turned, smiling, only to see the Star-Admiral
striding out onto the terrace. The full force of his black mood blew
like wind in a sail. He
took several strides around Olnnn Rydddlin and sniffed loudly. "What
is this I smell? The stench of failure follows you like cor feces." The
Star-Admiral contrived to laugh, but Kurgan could tell that he had
inserted a nettle, if only a small one, between the plates of Olnnn's
gleaming blue-and-gold armor. "I
am pleased to see you in such a good mood, regent," Olnnn said.
"I have, in fact, good news to report." "You
have brought the Rhynnnon's bloody head." "No,
regent." "The
sorceress skcettta Giyan, then?" "No,
regent." "What,
then, would please me?" Kurgan exploded. "We
have in custody the traitor who has been supplying the Resistance." Kurgan
paused, for a moment taken aback. "Really? And who might this
traitor be?" "The
Bashkir Bronnn Pallln." "Now
that is interesting." Kurgan tapped his lips with a ringer. "I
wouldn't have thought. . . but then, why not? My father screwed him
royally when he passed him over for Prime Factor. Of course he would
have made a mess of the office; surprising he didn't make a mess of
this as well." "In
the end, he did, regent." Kurgan
nodded. "And where is the traitor now? Down in one of my
interrogation cells, no doubt?" "No,
regent. According to protocol, traitors against the V'ornn Modality
are confined in Khagggun prison until they are bound over for the
tribunal." "I
do not give a rotten clemett for protocol. I want Bronnn Pallln
brought here. I want to interrogate the skcettta myself." "But,
regent. You can't—" "I
can't?" Kurgan shouted. "Since when does my Star-Admiral
tell me what I can and cannot do?" "Regent,
I only mean ... I am thinking of the high command. They will be
displeased by this breach of—" "Stop
prattling, Star-Admiral." Kurgan's hand swept in an imperious
arc. "Just do as I order." "Yes, sir!" "Now
off with you. You have your duties to perform." He grinned as
Olnnn turned on his heel. He rubbed his hands together. At last some
delicious action! "I cannot wait to begin." Moments
after the Star-Admiral left, the young Haaar-kyut returned with the
Kundalan female. That should have pleased Kurgan, but it did not. On
closer scrutiny, he saw that she was not the one he had taken down by
the stream. He cursed. Annon
was dead, and the female was lost to him. He took her anyway, bent
over like an animal, in a white-hot fury of motion and emotion. He
used his fingernails to draw blood. She made no sound beneath him,
not even a whimper, and this infuriated him all the more. His fingers
were wound in her thick hair. Images of Courion and Nith Batoxxx
danced in his head. He closed his eyes in an attempt to bring back
that sun-dappled afternoon, the sight of the female that had so
quickened his pulse. He
pretended with this imitation, bucking against her and grunting out
his fantasy. She
was better than nothing. But still, when it was over, he had her
thrown away like a loaf of stale wrybread because if it wasn't the
real thing, he never wanted to see that face again. The
stench of death rose to bring the blackcrows in anxious flocks. Like
all carrion birds, they were, despite their size, exceedingly
skittish, bright gold eyes trying to look everywhere at once. With
each small sound they rose in a blood-flecked cloud, only to settle
again upon ridges of bleached bone and rotting flesh. The
leading edge of Attack-Commandant Blled's scouting party appeared,
first one and then another, breaking cover, advancing in a
sem-icrouch, covering the distance between the tree line and the
perimeter of the mass grave silently and efficiently. Then
Attack-Commandant Blled himself appeared, flanked by two more
Khagggun. "This
is as far as they could have come," Attack-Commandant Blled
said, checking a wrist readout. "If one or both of them are
still alive." At his hand signal three Khagggun fanned out,
beating the underbrush. His communications officer began to receive a
narrow-band photon burst. "There is still not one shred of
evidence that anyone escaped the blast," he informed his
superior. "And they have found more pieces of the Rhynnnon's
armor at the wreck site, enough so they have more or less
reconstructed the entire suit." As
his Khagggun had done, Attack-Commandant Blled walked all around the
perimeter of the reeking pit. His Khagggun returned from their recon
with negative results. Another hand signal and two Khagggun descended
into the nauseating quagmire of the death pit. One of them began
almost immediately to retch. His eyes tearing up, he fumbled his way
back to the edge and began to climb out. Attack-Commandant
Blled said, "Get back in there, Third-Captain, and do your
duty." "With
all due respect, sir," the Third-Captain said, "why are we
wasting time looking for ghosts?" At
once, Attack-Commandant Blled went over and, with an almost
nonchalant swipe of his shock-sword, severed the Third-Captain's head
from his shoulders. The corpse danced a little jig before
Attack-Commandant Blled kicked it on the shoulder, sending it
toppling onto the oozing mound of Kundalan corpses. "Any
other questions need answering?" Not
one Khagggun said a word, but when Attack-Commandant Blled gave a
hand sign another Third-Captain at once jumped into the pit. The
blackcrows screamed and lifted, so disturbing the Khagggun that they
fired off several rounds from their handheld ion cannons before
Attack-Commandant Blled ordered them to stand down. They ignored the
unbelievable stench, the watering of their eyes, as they used their
shock-swords to spear downward randomly into the morass. They held
their breath as they picked their way through the pit. When they met
at the far side they were gasping, and they scrambled up the slippery
side of the grave, silently cursing N'Luuura as they at last regained
firm ground. Their comrades gave them a wide berth, and there was a
bit of good-natured ribbing at their expense. Attack-Commandant
Blled frowned, then nodded. "All right then." And
with a last look around he gestured, and they crept backward,
reinfiltrating the forest whence they had emerged. Silence
returned to the pit of death, and the blackcrows once more settled,
tearing ravenously at their own felled comrades along with the
outsize, two-legged creatures on which they had been feasting for
weeks. One
of the blackcrows, larger and more aggressive than the others,
unearthed yet another layer of rotting dead. As others of its kind
flocked to its discovery, it shrieked, slashing with its cruel beak
until fear overwhelmed gluttony and they gave way, returning sullenly
to the picked-over mounds, where they contented themselves with
worrying the tough remnants of tendons off the ends of bones. The
blackcrow dug deeper, gorging itself on half-rotted flesh, all the
while keeping its suspicious golden eyes upon its brethren to ensure
that they maintained their distance. Doubtless it was this
inattention that caused it to miss the sudden movement beneath it.
The ion-dagger point pierced its breast, spitting the bird entirely
in the instant before it could take flight. Its wings spread,
trembling and quivering in spastic response, but the gold had fled
its eyes; it was already dead. Its
brethren paused in their meal and fell upon it wholeheartedly when
its huge black carcass came hurtling down among them. Rekkk
raised his head out of the center of the stinking quagmire, said,
"N'Luuura take these blackcrows." He took a quick but
thorough reconnaissance, then, reaching down, pulled Eleana,
slithering, through the gelatinous muck. She was still clutching the
hollow communicator sheath, used by Khagggun for photonic
transmissions, that Rekkk had fashioned into breathing tubes for
them. "It
worked," he said with some satisfaction. "They're gone."
Eleana led them to a small rill some three hundred meters northeast
running swiftly through a gap in moss-covered rocks. There, they
squatted and, as best they could, washed off the stench of death.
Where the Teyj had gone they could not say. They were too exhausted
to keep going. While Eleana foraged for edible mushrooms and ferns
Rekkk searched out a suitable spot to spend what was left of the
night. He found a cave, shallow but dry, in the shank of the massif
that continued its rough, dizzying ascent all the way, it appeared,
to Stone Border. Its only drawback was that it overlooked the death
pit, which glowed eerily in the incandescent moonslight. They
dared not light a fire, so they ate the food Eleana brought back cold
and raw. The taste was only marginally palatable, but at least the
gnawing in their stomachs was somewhat assuaged. Rekkk volunteered to
take the first watch, but as Eleana curled up against his back she
felt wide awake. "We
are close to Stone Border," she said, "but the last few
kilometers are the steepest." Rekkk
looked up into the heart of the massif. "There lies the Abbey of
Floating White. And within it Konara Urdma, the traitor who is
responsible for all those lost Resistance lives. We are the only ones
who know her identity. We have to get to the abbey and neutralize
her." "Have you thought about how well gain entrance?"
He touched her swollen belly. "They will not refuse you,
Eleana." "You know, that just might work," she said.
"Just as long as you don't frighten them to death."
24 The
Collapse of Memory
Perrnodt's
legs were already in sunlight when Riane returned to the dune. She
took the dzuoko over her shoulder and carried her to the other side,
where the shadows were already beginning to pool. She stretched her
parallel to the dune so all of her was within the narrow band of
shadow. As soon as she did so, Perrnodt's eyes fluttered open. Riane
collapsed to her knees, slowly gave Perrnodt some water, then drank
some herself. "Are
you all right?" she asked. "You passed out almost as soon
as I got you through the Gyrgon's ion field." Perrnodt
nodded and asked for more water. Riane
watched her drink. She was clothed in the blue-and-white-striped
robes of one of the dead Jeni Cerii. It was blood stained and ripped
where her dagger had punctured it on the side, but wearable. The same
could not be said for the other robe, which had been shredded by the
infinity-blade. The
weapon's abrupt resurgence had been much on her mind when she
retrieved her dagger from its sandy grave, and all during the long
and lonely walk back. When she had shed her filthy Ghorvish robes she
had discovered the stone Mu-Awwul had given her engraved with the
sign of the fulkaan. It had lain, forgotten, in the same pocket where
she had placed the infinity-blade, and that had set her to wondering.
She had placed the stone next to the infinity-blade. As it had drawn
near she felt a kind of magnetic pull. When the stone touched the
edge of the infinity-blade it began to pulse. What
was it that Mu-Awwul had told her when he had given her the stone?
Power and jjhani flow from the image of the fulkaan. At
the time, she had imagined his words to be figurative. After all, he
had given her a talisman of Jiharre, a symbol of good luck, of—in
his word, jjhani—spiritual harvest. But now she saw that
he had meant it quite literally. There was a power in the stone,
strong enough to reactivate the infinity-blade. How this power could
be compatible with the weapon was a complete mystery, one she meant
to clear up with him as soon as she was able. "I
am feeling better," Perrnodt said, sighing. "But I am
starving. I do not suppose you have food, as well?" When
Riane produced some dried meat from the satchel she had taken off the
dead Jeni Cerii, Perrnodt said, "Judging by how you are dressed,
you must have come across a Jeni Cerii raiding party." As
they ate, Riane told her of the Jeni Cerii camp. Then she recounted
the recent history. "I
know you are Ramahan," Riane said. "I was told you know the
location of the sanctuary where the Maasra is hidden." Perrnodt
eyed her suspiciously. "So much dangerous knowledge for one so
young. And you have killed a sauromician and a Gyrgon, you say?" "The
remains of Nith Settt lie over there," Riane said, pointing.
"The sauromician died near the kapudaan's palace in Agachire." Perrnodt
turned in that direction and sat very still. For a moment, nothing
happened. Then Riane felt a kind of tremor as of the earth moving,
but the earth was not moving. She saw Perrnodt's eyes roll up in her
head and she knew what this tremor was. Perrnodt had parted the air.
She was moving—or, rather, part of her was. She was not
Thrip-ping. This was something else altogether. In
a moment, the tremor had subsided, Perrnodt's eyes had returned to
normal. "Yes," she said. "Nith Settt is, indeed,
dead." By
the way she said this, Riane understood. "You believe I may be
an agent of the Gyrgon." "This
Gyrgon—the one who was sent here—it is strange with him."
She had a curious lilt to her voice, almost as if she were singing
her words. "He knew of the Maasra's existence. How? He
wanted to get his hands on it. Why? Before this, the Gyrgon have
never exhibited the slightest interest in the Prophesies or the lore
of the Ramahan." Riane,
thinking of Nith Sahor, knew that to be not quite true. But then Nith
Sahor was an anomaly among Gyrgon. All at once something struck her.
She said, "The Veil of a Thousand Tears appears in Prophesy?" "More
than once," Perrnodt said. "It is written that the Dar
Sala-at will claim the Maasra. It will be lost and rewon in
bloody battle. In the process, the Dar Sala-at will be betrayed." Riane
felt her heart thudding in her breast. It was eerie hearing her own
future spoken aloud as if it were already history. Did this mean that
she no longer had free will? Which of her choices—because life,
hers above all others, perhaps, was composed of crucial choices—would
lead to this particular fate? Could she not find a way to keep the
Maasra from being lost? Could she not maneuver so as to avoid
this bloody war? What was the point of power, of being the Dar
Sala-at, if her path was already set in stone? And
then another, more immediate, consequence hit her. It is written
in Prophesy that of the Dar Sala-at's allies one will love her, one
will betray her, one will try to destroy her, Giyan had warned
her. Now Perrnodt had echoed that warning. "What
precisely are these Prophesies I keep hearing about? Is there a book,
or a series of books that have been translated or interpreted by the
Ramahan?" Perrnodt
produced a wan smile. "You have told me that you were trained at
the Abbey of Floating White. But you are young yet, a novice. The
Prophesies are for—" "I
am not simply a Ramahan novice," Riane said. "I am the Dar
Sala-at." Perrnodt
neither exclaimed in wonder nor burst out laughing. She seemed to
absorb this revelation with a degree of skepticism. Riane recalled
Giyan telling her that even among the Ramahan there would be a fair
amount of doubt because she was female, that there would be
naysayers. She fervently hoped Perrnodt would not be among them. "I
must admit, that is quite a claim," Perrnodt said at last. "It
would explain how I was able to kill the sauromician and the Gyrgon,
would it not?" Riane said cannily. "Yes,
that is a possible explanation," Perrnodt acknowledged. "On
the other hand, you could simply be clever." "In
your time at the abbey did you ever know a novice clever enough to
defeat such enemies?" Perrnodt
said nothing. "One
who could Thripp?" "Actually,
no." She smiled. "But I very much doubt you can, either." "At
the moment, you're right." Riane touched the mole beneath her
right ear. "But take a look at this." Perrnodt
hesitated for an instant before leaning over. Riane turned her head
to give her a better look. Perrnodt gave a tiny indrawn breath. "You
know what this is," Riane said. "My Gift was hidden for
safekeeping while I was in the Korrush." "A
wise decision." Two of Perrnodt's fingers were pressed against
Riane's neck. "Who made it for you?" "A
sefiror named Minnum," Perrnodt
drew back as if stung. "Is that what that imp told you, that he
was a sefiror?" Riane
nodded. "He's not?" "He
has taken a Venca word and—" "I
know what it means," Riane said. "Sefiror is one of a
mystical community." "Well.
The novice knows a Venca word." "I
know more than a word," Riane said. "It
is impossible for a novice to have learned the Root Tongue,"
Perrnodt said in Venca. "And
yet I can speak Venca fluently," Riane replied in the same
language. Now
Perrnodt did react. "Dear Miina?" she cried. "Everything
you have told me is the truth. But the Dar Sala-at a female . . ."
She shook her head. Still not quite believing it was so. "You
must tell me about Minnum," Riane said. "I believed him. I
trusted him to lock away my Gift." "First
things first." Perrnodt beckoned. "Come just a bit closer." When
Riane had rearranged herself, Permodt put both hands on Riane. Riane
felt a coolness seep through her. Perrnodt touched the false mole,
and at once all her Osoru knowledge exploded in her mind like
fireworks. She gasped, trembling a little with the delicate force of
it. "The
power inside you—" Perrnodt sat back, shook her head. "One
thing about Minnum, he does meticulous work." "If
he is not a sefiror—" "Minnum
is not a sefiror." "What
is he then? He said he was the last of his kind left alive." Perrnodt
laughed. "Would that it were so] But, alas, no. There are
others of his kind secreted about. You yourself told me about one." "I
did?" Perrnodt
nodded. "Minnum is a sauromician." "He
is a male sorcerer," Riane said. "He was able to
encapsulate my Gift, so I know he wasn't lying about that." "But
he was lying about almost everything else. Oh, do not blame him, my
dear. He cannot help himself. His lying is a curse, part of his
punishment." "He
told me Miina was punishing him for his sins." "He
did?" Perrnodt was clearly surprised. "Now that is
interesting. I imagine it cost him a great deal to tell you that
truth." "And
he told me to seek you out." "Minnum
did that?" "He
must have known that you would tell me the truth about him." "That
means he believes you are who you say you are." "But
he is not sefiror?" "No.
In every way imaginable sauromicians and sefiror are separate. For
one thing, sauromicians are male while sefiror are both male and
female. For another, the two employ an entirely different mode of
sorcery. Sauromicians use a sorcery that is an offshoot—a
corruption, really—of Kyofu. I say corruption because it is
necromancy. This is impure. It involves killing and using the dead
bodies as the basis for sorcery. They allowed other influences to
create a kind of amalgam that they believe is more powerful than
either Osoru or Kyofu." "Is
it more powerful?" "I
do not know. What I do know is that it is unholy. And being unholy,
they cannot cleave to the power bourns that crisscross beneath the
surface of Kundala. In fact, contact with the bourns will kill a
sauromician. The sefiror, on the other hand, practice a sorcery that
is based in part on the bourns. It is as pure as it is ancient. It is
the twining of Osoru and Kyofu." "It
is called Qadi'ir." "Yes.
It is Eye Window. But there is another, more fundamental difference
between sauromicians and sefiror," Perrnodt said. "Sefiror
are Druuge." She looked hard at Riane. "Do you know of the
Druuge, child?" "Oh,
yes. I have encountered them." And Riane told her how she had
come upon a trio of the holy nomads in Middle Seat, how they had
saved her from three aggressive Khagggun by chanting, by using her
Third Eye to pull her into the Channel, as a lens to focus their
sorcery—the magic of words. "Great
Goddess Miina!" Perrnodt breathed as she kissed the back of
Riane's hand. "Now I see why Minnum believes. You truly are the
Dar Sala-at." Now
Riane recognized the singsong lilt, she knew why Perrnodt was fluent
in Venca. "You
are Druuge, Perrnodt!" she whispered fiercely. "You are
Dru-uge!" Pack-Commander
Cooolm was in charge of the traitor Bronnn Pallln. The prisoner sat
in two sets of ion chains, in the Khagggun thick-walled prison on
Grey Vapor Street. It was not an assignment he found in the least
palatable, but he could not work himself up into the requisite peak
of ire. He knew his compatriots were off hunting down Kundalan
Resistance cells while he was stuck herding a fat and traitorous
Bashkir. He found he did not care. He
was no longer a young V'ornn in the full flower of his youth. He was
battle-scarred; his once-vaunted viciousness melted into a weary
indifference that only sporadically disgusted him. Lately, he had
taken to frequenting a succession of Looorm in a bleak ggley-chain of
nights whose sole purpose lay in the obliteration of memory. There
were those comrades who believed Kundala was the end of the line,
that the Gyr-gon, having sunk into a haze of inaction and rueful
reverie, would never give the order to leave. Pack-Commander Cooolm,
having himself fallen into a similar stupor, provided no opinion on
the hotly debated topic. However, he was aware enough to mark the
increasing ferocity and repetition of this debate among the packs.
One could almost call it an obsession. Better by far to keep these
ruminations to himself, for if the rumors proved to be the case, he
suspected that they had all fallen very far indeed from the moment,
just over a hundred years ago, when they had first set their
colonizing boots on Kundala. He
tuned out the prisoner's constant yabbering, looked upon him with
contempt. Yet he received little pleasure in contemplating the
excruciating pain of the forthcoming interrogation because he would
have no hand in it. He was a mere guard, a lowly job a Third-Marshal
could have handled. Not that he minded; he was tired from a lengthy
evening excursion. Besides, he was Khagggun; his duty was to obey.
His orders had come from Line-General Lokck Werrrent himself, and
Cooolm was resigned to completing this wretched task without a hitch. Doubtless,
this was why he felt a sense of foreboding when he saw the fearsome
Star-Admiral Olnnn Rydddlin approaching with his escort.
Pack-Commander Cooolm ordered his Khagggun to attention. He barked at
one of his pack to shut the prisoner up once and for all. He had had
enough of his mewling protestations of innocence to last him a
lifetime. Besides, he had no intention of allowing the Star-Admiral
to be subjected to the foul cacophony. Cooolm
licked his lips. Why was the Star-Admiral here? Had he, Cooolm, done
something wrong? He noticed that the Star-Admiral carried with him no
bodyguard. Rather, and even more shockingly, he was accompanied by a
Tuskugggun clad in a uniform sporting the Star-Admiral's own
blue-and-gold colors. "Pack-Commander,
good day," the Star-Admiral said. "I am here to interrogate
the prisoner myself." Pack-Commander
Cooolm, still staring openly at the Tuskugggun, was so taken aback
that he was quite literally at a loss for words. "You
will allow me access at once," the Star-Admiral ordered, with a
distinct edge to his voice. "And then you and your Khagggun will
clear the area." "Sir?" "This
interrogation is strictly classified." "Yes,
sir." Pack-Commander Cooolm snapped to attention. "At once,
sir." At his hand signal, a member of his pack opened the door
to Bronnn Tallin's cell. The Khagggun who had been in with the
prisoner stepped out. "Pack-Commander,
your jaw is hanging open," the Star-Admiral said shortly. "Is
there a problem? Do you require a Genomatekk?" "No,
sir. Not a bit," he yelped, deeply consternated. "But, sir.
There is a Tuskugggun ... I mean to say, she will be with you when
you—" "This
is my staff-adjutant." "I
am not. . ." Cooolm gulped, but some perverse emotion caused him
to persevere. "I am not familiar with that position,
Star-Admiral." "From
now on see that you are better informed," Olnnn snapped,
stepping smartly into the cell. "What is your name?" he
added darkly. "Pack-Commander
Dorrt Cooolm, sir. Yes, sir. I will." "Until
further notice you are relieved of your command, Pack-Commander Dorrt
Cooolm. Report to the western supply adjutant for immediate
reassignment. Since you seem overly stressed, perhaps you will find
transferring materiel more suited to your temperament." "Yes,
sir. Thank you, sir." Cooolm was now on the Star-Admiral's
N'Luuura list. And in front of his entire pack. What must they think
of him? He cursed his stupid mouth. Well, at least he hadn't been
demoted. He bit his tongue so he would not further add to his misery.
But, really, a Tuskugggun in Khagggun uniform. The sight made him
want to vomit. Or murder the first Kundalan who crossed his path. And
he could see from the look on every one of his pack that they were
feeling precisely the same thing. I
know that look," Rada said to Olnnn as Cooolm and his pack of
Khagggun moved out. "They have murder in their hearts." "You
had best get used to it. You will be seeing a lot of it in the days
and weeks to come," he said. "Why worry about it? We
Khagggun always have murder in our hearts; sometimes it seems to me
we were all born that way. We are warriors. Think of it as an
indispensable trait." She
laughed harshly. He
eyed her. "Come to think of it, though, we should get you armed
and dangerous. I would not care to see you hurt in a brawl." "I
have broken up my share of brawls, Star-Admiral." "Still.
You are at my side. You require more appropriate garb." She
glanced over at the cowering Bronnn Pallln. "I had better take
the gag out of his mouth." "Why
would you want to do that?" She
regarded him with some curiosity. "You did tell the
Pack-Commander that you wanted to interrogate him." "If
you take the gag out of his mouth," Olnnn said, "he will
only scream." At
this comment, Bronnn Tallin's already pale face turned ashen and,
indeed, he began to scream behind his gag. "That
smell!" Rada pushed herself away from him. "Star-Admiral,
he has soiled himself." Without
a word, Olnnn took Bronnn Pallln by the scruff of the neck and
hustled him to the far end of the cell. When he saw Rada coming after
him, he told her to stay at the door and make certain they remained
undisturbed. "What
are you going to do?" she asked with no little suspicion. "Just
do as you are told," he barked at her. Then
he whirled and, with his back to her, hissed at Bronnn Pallln, "You
bumbled everything, you Bashkir skcettta." He
hit Bronnn Pallln full in the face. The Bashkir stumbled back against
the wall, his eyes fairly bugged out in abject terror. The Bashkir's
knees abruptly buckled, and Olnnn was obliged to hold him on his
feet. "If
becoming Great Caste means I have to be anything like you, then here
and now I renounce it all." The
silent scream that clogged Bronnn Pallln's throat was cut short as
Olnnn slammed the back of his head repeatedly against the wall. As
blood spurted, he stepped briskly away, turning just in time to see
Rada hustling toward him. "I
think the prisoner failed his first interrogation." "You
. . . you killed him. Murdered. Just like that." She was almost
apoplectic. "How could you?" He
held her back from trying to help Bronnn Pallln, who with every
progressively more labored beat of his hearts slid farther down the
wall until all that was left was a wide smear of turquoise blood that
dripped onto the top of his sweat-sheened head. She
made to strike him, and he stopped her. "First," he said,
"in these matters you must learn not to gainsay me. Second, this
Bashkir was a traitor to the V'ornn Modality. Evidence came to light
that he was the leader of a conspiracy to sell arms to the Kundalan
Resistance." Seeing the look of unrelieved hatred in her eyes,
he began to shake her a little. "Third, and most importantly, he
was in possession of knowledge that could compromise me with the
regent." "So
you murdered him." "I
could not have him talking to the regent," he said at a low and
savage pitch. "I induced this skcettta to find a way to ruin
Sornnn SaTrryn, who is currently in the regent's favor. Somehow, he
ended up implicating himself. Do you understand now? If the regent
got his hands on him everything would have been put in jeopardy.
Everything." The
stench of death hung heavy in the cell, enveloping them. Bronnn
Pallln seemed to stare at her out of bloodshot eyes with a mixture of
accusation and shock. She
closed her eyes and, seeing him still, trembled a little. And Olnnn
said in a gentle, almost tender tone, "You see, it is not so
easy being a warrior."
25 How
the NarBuck Is Born
The
wind soughed fitfully through the Marre pines. All around them there
were small stirrings. A trio of marc-beetles, large and black and
glossy, marched across the needles no more than a meter from where
they sat. "Lying
there still as death in that grave I was put in mind of my
grandfather," she said. "Funny. I haven't thought of him in
many years. It has been so long since I saw him, I can no longer
remember what he looked like." Wrapped
tightly in her cloak, she settled more comfortably against him. "He
used to take me for walks. I was very little. He'd put me on his
shoulders. My legs dangled on his chest. His strong hands held me in
place. He used to tickle the soles of my bare feet. Oh, Miina, help
me to remember his face!" "Tell
me more about him," Rekkk said gently. "I
haven't forgotten his big square hands, ropey with veins," she
said. "I can feel their strength now, as he grasped my ankles.
He would take me to the deepest heart of the forest, where everyone
else was afraid to go. Leaf-green and misty golden sunlight. Birds
calling. Insects whirring by my face. And I was never frightened.
Isn't that strange? But then, perhaps not. My grandfather, he made me
feel safe." She sighed, overtaken by memory. "When we were
deep inside the forest he would turn me in a slow circle, and say, 'I
feel the world around me and this is good because then I remember the
past fully and completely and I can see in my mind's eye how it was
before.' " Rekkk
stirred. "Before we V'ornn came." "Yes,"
she said very softly. "He always began the same way, used
exactly the same words, as if it was a kind of ritual. As if it was
his job to pass history on to me so that future generations who—" Silence. Rekkk
looked out over the pitiless place of the dead. "Go on. It's all
right." Eleana
could feel the baby breathing and Rekkk breathing as if they were all
part of the same organism. "That future generations born and
bred under V'ornn rule would remember what Kundala once was. And
could be again." He
put his arms around her, and whispered, "Will you do something
for me? I want to pretend that your grandfather is still alive, that
just this once he has taken me into the depths of the forest with
you, that he will tell me what it was like here once upon a time." Eleana
closed her eyes and willed herself to conjure up her grandfather, a
big, sun-browned Kundalan who had lived his whole life out of doors.
He had a large hooked nose, she recalled that clearly enough, and a
generous mouth and laughing eyes, but somehow she could not put these
parts together into a whole, and her heart ached. "He told me
many tales of the Great Goddess Miina and the sorcerous creatures
that once roamed the flanks of the Djenn Marre. But of all of Miina's
creatures my favorite was the narbuck." "What
is a narbuck?" "Ah,
well." Her voice had turned dreamy. "Imagine a pure black
cthauros, imagine him three times a cthauros' normal size, imagine he
has six legs, white hooves, a long, curving neck, a proud head with
expressive liquid eyes. Now imagine further that on the thick
helmlike ridge of bone between those eyes rises a tapering spiral
horn, straight as an arrow, white and glistening as moonslight, fully
two meters long." "Did
these narbuck really exist?" "Once
upon a time," she whispered. "So my grandfather told me,
and he never lied or even exaggerated. It would have gone against his
idea of history, which was to him a holy thing." "What
did he tell you about them?" Wind
eddied in the cave mouth, stirred the long-branched kuello-firs. The
shadows of the dancing boughs made it seem as if the dead, skeletal,
half-eaten, were stirring. "You
don't want to tell a V'ornn?" "No,
Rekkk. You of all V'ornn should hear this." She shook her head.
"It's just that, well, I'm realizing that I've never told anyone
before." He
reached around her. "And now you will have your baby to tell. So
his past—the history of his world—will be as alive for
him as his present will be." She
gazed out onto the stinking pit, a raw scar of the bitter present she
fervently wished to keep from her son. "As
a V'ornn, I know the power and importance of the past only by its
absence," Rekkk said. "The V'ornn have no past that is
chronicled or fully remembered, no history of our homeworld survived.
Radiation from the cataclysm that compelled our great leap into the
Cosmos seeped into our core matrix. It took us some time to realize
that our history was eroding, that every day we were losing more of
it. Desperately, we tried to retrieve what was lost. To no avail.
What remained were fragments which, we discovered, cannot be trusted.
Once inside our data-matrix, the radiation evolved into a kind of
virus, altering the matrix-code. Ever since that time we have been
orphans, wanderers." "Conquerors,
despoilers. You take away from others what you yourselves have lost." "I
don't believe I ever thought of it quite that way," he said.
"But I have no defense." "The
warrior lives within me still, I see." "What
did you imagine?" "That
motherhood would take . . . That having the baby would change me
forever." "Why
worry about nothing? You are already changed from the Resistance
leader Giyan and I contacted months ago." She
looked at him. "And you, Rekkk, you are changed most of all." "V'ornn
are not supposed to change." "That
is what I am saying." He
smiled a faraway smile and kissed her on the cheek. "Will you
grant my request? I do so want to hear about the narbuck." Turning,
she grooved her back against his chest, returning to her
contemplation of the moonslit night. Safe against his beating hearts,
she marveled at this present which, even a few short months ago, she
could never have imagined. "My grandfather loved the forests of
the highlands where he was born and lived his whole life. Even as a
boy no older than I am he preferred them to the company of other
Kundalan. He would take the bow and arrows he'd fashioned himself and
spend days alone in the forest, teaching himself the lore of the
land. He
never thought about survival; the forest was his temple. He often
told me he imagined that it had been made especially for him. "Anyway,
on the morning of his fifteenth birthday he was far to the north,
hiking along a treacherous and enthralling ridge when he saw the
narbuck. Not that he knew what it was. How could he? It had no horn.
But it was big and so white as to seem colorless. It walked along the
ridge on its six legs as delicately as if it were a dancer. And there
was something about the animal, some aura or magnetism or
what-have-you that he could not define but which, later on in life,
when he told me the story, he knew was sacred. "And
of course he was right, for the narbuck is one of Miina's creatures,
the original pair cast from The Pearl during the creation of Kun-dala
itself." "This
narbuck he saw," Rekkk said thoughtfully. "Why did it have
no horn?" "I'm
getting to that." Rekkk
looked over her head to the tops of the kuello-firs, where a crowned
owl, its long brindled wings tucked tight around it, perched on the
end of a swaying branch, staring at him, at the death pit, at
everything at once, in that vaguely unsettling way owls have. "So
whatever this thing was—this holiness—took my grandfather
by the heart and compelled him to follow the narbuck. That was not as
easy as it sounds, for the ridge was partially composed of friable
rock. Time and again my grandfather's boots went out from under him
as small sheets of rock sheared off. But each time it happened, he
learned something more about the nature of the ridge, which was a
living thing, he would tell me. "And
my grandfather, he had no thought to stop or to turn back but only to
go on, because it seemed very important to see where it was the
narbuck would end up. He did not know where this conviction came
from; he merely acquiesced to it, as a boy, floating in summertime,
allows the current of a river to carry him where it will." The
crowned owl swiveled its head; something had caught its attention.
Its huge pale eyes reflected the moonslight for just a moment,
turning them eerily translucent. "So
now morning had melted into afternoon and afternoon had merged into
twilight, and still he followed the narbuck over the monstrous
snaking ridge. They had been climbing, mostly gradually, but even so,
after all those hours, my grandfather was higher up in the Djenn
Marre than he had ever been before. The weather had turned, and he
could see dark clouds that earlier had lain sleeping far to the
north, snugged behind the towering massif of the Djenn Marre, closer
then, roiling in the newly gusting wind. And for the first time a
spark of fear crossed my grandfather's mind at the thought of being
caught out on this ridge in the coming storm. "It
was too late to turn back. All he could do is to follow the narbuck
and pray to Miina that it would lead him to safety. That was the
moment when he heard the first crack of thunder, booming across the
plunging ravines on either side of the ridge. He felt the pressure
plummeting, and he knew that the storm would be severe." In
an instant, the crowned owl's mighty wings unfurled, and it leapt off
the branch, sailing silently through the night. Rekkk lost it for a
moment as it dipped down, banking. Nothing but the wind soughing
through the kuello-firs. Then it reappeared in a wholly different
place, something struggling in its beak. "Light
was getting to be a problem, then the first of the rain hit him full
in the face. The force of it, borne by the brunt of the swirling
wind, nearly unseated him from his precarious perch, and he struggled
a little, arms flailing. As he regained his balance, he noticed that
the narbuck had stopped. It stood still, its head turned a little. It
looked to my grandfather as if it was waiting. "Clinging
to the wet, slippery rock with boot soles and hands, he made his way
toward the narbuck. Thunder boomed, louder this time, the sound
displacing the air, making his eardrums hurt. As soon as he was a
handbreadth away from the narbuck's flank it started up, its hooves
clip-clopping across the friable rock without disturbing so
much as a tiny shard. My grandfather saw this and decided to walk in
the places the narbuck had trodden. "The
rain had picked up, and the wind as well. Thunder ripped through the
clouds, which seemed no more than a meter or two above his head. And
just when it appeared as if the storm would blow them both off the
ridge, the narbuck led him off to the left, down a steep and narrow
path, impossible to find, my grandfather would later swear to me,
even in daylight. "For
twenty minutes or more they descended at a harrowing angle. My
grandfather was like one blinded. In the pitch-darkness he put one
hand on the narbuck's flank, allowing it to guide
him. And then, all at once, they were off the ridge. My grandfather
felt level ground beneath his boot soles, and he smelled wet rock, a
ton of it rising steeply on both sides, and wind ripping down a
narrow space, ruffling his hair, tingling his scalp. He felt the
weight of the rock towers pressing in on both sides and he knew that
they were passing through a gargantuan defile in the rock face." The
crowned owl, back in moonslight, had folded its wings, alighting on a
branch significantly closer to the cave mouth. It seemed to stare
right at Rekkk as it quickly broke the back of its dinner. Then,
efficiently and fastidiously, it devoured the small mammal, bones,
fur, and all. "Just
past the defile, my grandfather sensed the rock retreating. The rain
pelted down and by the way the raging wind swirled, he believed they
were in a large open bowl-like clearing. The narbuck had stopped, and
this time there was a finality to the lack of movement that told my
grandfather that the sacred animal had reached its destination.
Thunder crashed, the boom hollowing out the bowl, defining the shape
and size more clearly. It was vast, far bigger than my grandfather
had imagined, and he found himself for a moment wondering how so
large an open space could exist within the bosom of the mountain
range. "Then
the narbuck snorted and raised its head, and my grandfather had the
sense to back away. Not far but not so near, anyway. The thunder had
become a constant thing, so deafening the ground trembled, and my
grandfather clapped his hands over his ears, which did no good at
all. "And
then, the clouds directly above them were lit up as if from the
inside and for an instant the natural arena into which the narbuck
had led him was revealed to him and all the breath went out of him
for the size was beyond comprehension and my grandfather knew there
could be but one explanation. He had been led into a holy place
carved by Miina Herself into the Djenn Marre. "And
then there was no more time for thought because the blinding light,
the arterial energy of the storm, lanced down and struck the narbuck
between the eyes. The animal bellowed, louder than the thunder
itself, as it was driven to its knees. It crouched there, quivering,
altogether silent. It was no longer white, but black as deepest
night, as if in that instant it had been cindered. My grandfather
wondered if it was dead, and his heart began to shrivel at the
thought so that he was compelled to run to its side, to stroke its
wet and heated flank. And at his touch, its head came around on its
long curving beautiful neck and he saw the horn, driven there by the
lightning or possibly it was the bolt of lightning itself, made solid
and manifest by the unseen hand of the Great Goddess. "And
for a moment my grandfather did not know whether he himself was alive
or dead, whether he was really inside this numinous bowl or whether
he was back on the ridge, mortally wounded by the storm, dreaming
this fever dream as life slipped away. And then the most
extraordinary thing on this most extraordinary of nights happened.
The narbuck lowered its head so that the horn was tipped toward him.
Rain curled down its tight-spiraled side; the edges appeared sharp as
knife blades, they glittered as if embedded with faceted jewels.
Nevertheless, because it was what the narbuck wanted, because he
knows that it was why he was brought here, my grandfather reached out
a trembling hand and grasped the horn. And in that instant he saw the
shining magnificent face of Miina." The
crowned owl was gone, vanished into the night sometime while Rekkk's
mind was reliving the creation of the narbuck. He watched the tips of
the kuello-firs nodding in a kind of metronomic rhythm. His mind was
alight with the story Eleana had just related, but it was also filled
with the afterimage of the owl. He knew, because Giyan had told him,
that the crowned owl was Miina's messenger. Often, it brought answers
to difficult questions, but just as often it was the harbinger of
violent death. Rekkk
said, "There has been no lightning on Kundala in all the time we
have been here." "And
so the narbuck stopped being born." "Why?" "V'ornn
destroy. It is in your blood. Miina would not allow you to kill the
sacred narbuck." "And
yet this Great Goddess of yours allows us to murder Her children." "You
know why," Eleana said. "We were disobedient. The Ramahan
usurped power, tried to gain control of The Pearl for their own
selfish ends. For this blasphemy She has cast us into the pit, where
we cannot get the stench of our own death out of our nostrils." "What
will end this cycle?" Rekkk asked. "How will the Kundalan
find Her favor again?" "You
know that too," Eleana said. Her soft breath misted from between
her lips. "Prophesy says the coming of the Dar Sala-at is the
beginning of the Great Transformation." Vapor
hung off the trees branches, rose like smoke from the death pit.
Rekkk wondered where the crowned owl had gone. Was it hunting in the
shadows or had it returned to Miina's side? "And
what about me?" he said. "What will happen to the V'ornn if
your Prophesy proves correct?" "Who
can say?" Eleana shrugged. "I doubt if even Lady Giyan
knows." Shadows
lengthened, deepened in the waning of the afternoon. Riane was
impatient to begin the next phase of her journey, but so near to the
Jeni Cerii encampment she knew they dare not travel in daylight.
Besides, their ordeals had left them depleted. So they sat at the
base of the dune, ate and drank, regaining their strength. "Giyan,"
Perrnodt said. "I have not heard her name in so long, but I
think of her often. We knew each other briefly at the Abbey of
Floating White, where you began your own training." "Why
were you living so far from the Great Voorg?" "Not
all Druuge spend their lives in the Great Voorg. But it is better if
those who know of our existence believe that." Perrnodt sighed.
"Our paths are written in Prophesy. Mine began by finding out
the current state of the abbey's spiritual disrepair." "I
imagine you found it extensive." "Frighteningly
so." "It
has become worse." Riane gave her a look. "How did you end
up here in the Korrush?" Perrnodt
smiled. "I did not end up here, as you put it. I was called. By
the Great Goddess." Riane
drew her knees up to her breast. "Miina spoke to you?" "Ah,
no, child, not in so many words. But I felt Her here—" She
pointed to the center of her forehead. "And here—"
She placed her hand over her heart. "There was no question of
not going." "It
was written. I know." Perrnodt
smiled. "So
you left the abbey and journeyed here." "No.
First I stayed in Axis Tyr for some time. Unexpectedly, I met
someone. I broke my vows and bore him children." Her
green-flecked eyes seemed to take in every iota of Riane's being.
"The younger would be about your age now." "You
have not seen them?" "That
was the punishment for my transgressions. I abandoned them to come
here. I had a vision. I was shown my path. I went unquestion-ingly." Riane
thought this very sad. "Are you a ... do you have the Sight?" "Why
do you ask, child?" "Because
I have visions, too. And I want to know if I will eventually . . ."
She broke off abruptly, bit her lip. "You
have heard that those with the Sight go mad." "In
the end, yes. That is what I have been told." "That
is not the entire truth. There are instances . . ." Perrnodt
closed her eyes. "What I would not give to see Giyan again." "Then
you must take me to the sanctuary of the Maasra." "Not
yet, Dar Sala-at. You are not yet ready." "But
Giyan . . . Each moment the archdaemon's web spins more tightly
around her. I have seen her. You cannot imagine how she suffers!" "Ah,
Dar Sala-at. Your great compassion is part of your makeup. But you
cannot allow that great compassion to lead you to make foolish
decisions. If I say that you are not yet ready to defeat Horolaggia,
then you must trust that it is so." Riane
jumped up. "All I ever have is elders telling me what I cannot
do!" "Come,
impatient youth, sit down next to me," Perrnodt said, smiling.
"I will think of you as my own child. The child I have never
seen and never will see. I understand at last why Miina called me
here. Come, now. I will teach you all the things that you must know."
26 Higher
Consciousness
Bronn
Pallln's head, stuck on a Khagggun pike, crowned on the grounds of
the regent's palace like the standard of a defeated race. Every time
Kurgan saw it his teeth ground in fury. How had the traitor died so
precipitously? How could Olnnn Rydddlin have been so careless? And
there was another thing he did not even consciously acknowledge. The
sight of that severed head reminded him of his dream, recurring more
frequently now, of what he thought of as the drowned female, white as
ice, her long pale hair curling around her face like platinum and
veradium serpents. Help me! she cried silently. Please help
me! Why
had Olnnn Rydddlin been interrogating the prisoner himself instead of
transporting him to the palace as Kurgan had ordered him to do? Kurgan
was so angry he had called for Line-General Lokck Werrrent. Though he
was very much aware of the Line-General's relationship with Olnnn
Rydddlin, Kurgan was absolutely certain of Werrrent's loyalty to the
regent's office and the V'ornn Modality. That was not, however, how
he began the conversation, for he had no intention of letting the
Line-General know this was why he wanted to speak with him. "We
need an immediate redeployment," Kurgan said when Werrrent
appeared before him. "Please send two packs to Za Hara-at. The
Mes-agggun and Bashkir architects require more security than they
already have." Werrrent
was taken aback. "I beg your pardon, regent, but against what? A
filthy backward tribe?" "I
do not know," Kurgan said as he tossed a data-crystal to the
Line-General. But he recalled his sense of something stalking through
the ruins when he and Sornnn SaTrryn had journeyed there some weeks
ago. "Read the dispatch yourself, if you must. Someone or
something is killing the V'ornn who venture too deep into the dig.
This we must do if our architects are to get an idea of the city's
layout." He paused a moment. "I know the Za Hara-at project
is a private business arrangement between my Consortium and the
SaTrryn. Nevertheless, I would consider it a personal favor if you
would extend me the courtesy ..." "I understand." The
Line-General nodded crisply. "I will do as you ask, regent." "Excellent."
Kurgan rubbed his hands together. "A suitable compensation
will—" "No
compensation is necessary, regent, I assure you." "Very
well then. You have my thanks, Line-General." As
Werrrent turned to leave, Kurgan asked him to wait a moment. Werrrent
turned back, waiting expectantly. "As
long as you are here," Kurgan said in a casual tone of voice,
"please be good enough to enlighten me as to how Bronnn Palllin
died in Khagggun custody." It
was a morning of fitful weather. Cold, damp, dreary. The sky, a dull,
leaden color, seemed oppressively low. Occasionally, a fistful of
rain clattered against the rooftops. "I
am afraid, regent, that I can add very little to the official
incident report." "Which
I have already read," Kurgan said shortly. "Bronnn Pallln
was overweight. He had a hearts condition." "Then
there is the matter of excessive fear." "Excessive
fear?" "Yes,
regent. I have seen it before in prisoners. It is true that your own
fear can kill you." "The
back of Bronnn Pallln's head was caved in!" Werrrent
glanced out the window. "The Deirus did a remarkable restoration
job, don't you agree?" "I
wanted to interrogate the traitor myself!" Kurgan thundered. "I
understand, regent." "Do
you? I wonder." Kurgan, hands clasped behind his back, stalked
around the room, obliging the Line-General to keep turning in order
to face him. "In hindsight, it seemed logical that Bronnn Pallln
would be a traitor, passed over as he was for Prime Factor. But then
I got to thinking. My father played Bronnn Pallln and his father for
dupes; he skimmed a mountain of coin from the Pallln coffers and what
did they do? They thanked him profusely for his sage advice and
help." Kurgan snorted. "Does this seem the sort of Bashkir
to be clever enough to engineer thefts from Khagggun warehouses?" "He
did not have to be clever, simply connected," Werrrent pointed
out. "We have discovered during our time here that there is no
dearth of clever Resistance members. They are fierce and courageous
fighters even in the face of their desperate position. What they lack
are resources, V'ornn connections." He shook his head. "N'Luuura
take it if they ever evolve a charismatic leader." "So
then, from this discourse I take it you think Bronnn Pallln was
guilty." "We
recovered a mountain of materiel from his warehouse—shock-swords,
ion cannons—virtually everything that was missing. He was our
traitor, all right." "Then
we come back to the mystery of what the Star-Admiral thought he was
doing." "Perhaps
only his job, regent. You have put him under severe pressure—" "He
told you that?" "He
may have, yes." Kurgan
came and stood very close to Lokck Werrrent. "These are perilous
times. I hear things." "What
things, regent?" "The
Khagggun are unhappy with the suspension of the okummmon implants." "I
cannot deny that, regent. Their unrest grows every day." Kurgan
nodded. This confirmed Rada's reports. He knew Werrrent would not lie
to him. "I gave the Star-Admiral explicit orders to keep the
unrest under control." "I
believe it is under control, regent." "But
for how long? I told the Star-Admiral to deal with any unrest in no
uncertain terms. We cannot afford a Khagggun riot. Has he done so?" "I
really cannot say. But speaking for the Khagggun under my own
command—" "Oh,
I have no doubts about you, Line-General. None whatsoever. You have
years of battle-hardened experience under your belt. Whereas the
Star-Admiral, well, I don't think I have to tell you. He is young and
fiery and oh so impetuous, yes?" "There
is nothing to fear from any Khagggun," Lokck Werrrent said, "so
long as we are told the truth." Kurgan
nodded. "Then I am satisfied." The
Line-General knew a dismissal better than most V'ornn. He was halfway
to the door when Kurgan said, "By the way." Werrrent
turned back. "Yes, regent." "As
a personal favor to me." He
bowed stiffly. "I serve the regent." Kurgan
came and said in a lowered tone of voice, "Keep an eye on him,
would you? Nothing official, of course. Just between the two of us."
He manufactured his warmest smile. "It is not that I distrust
him, you understand. But the Star-Admiral's responsibilities are
legion. I do not want him overwhelmed or forgetful of what he
considers minor matters." He put his arm around Werrrent's broad
shoulders. "I know I can trust you, Line-General. You two have a
long history. I can be assured that you, of all the high command,
will not hold his age against him. After all, you do not hold my
youth against me." He nodded. "You see where I am heading,
don't you? This is for the Star-Admiral's own benefit." "As
you wish, regent." "As
we both wish." Kurgan walked Lokck Werrrent to the door. "And
if all goes well, I see a promotion at hand for you, Line-General.
Yes, I most certainly do." The
V'ornn brain," Kirlll Qandda said to Marethyn, "is divided
into nine main lobes." As he spoke, he pointed to the holoscan
glowing with lambent light. "To wit, the dual forebrains, four
transverse lobes, two in each side, here and here, and beneath these
six, the sylviat, where the senses are decoded, the sinerea, the
central lobe where cor-tasyne and other chemicals are manufactured,
and the ativar, that is, the primitive brain." Marethyn,
having been summoned by Kirlll Qandda, stood beside him in his small
cramped office-cubicle in Receiving Spirit. It was overstuffed with
diagnostic and research implements, holoscreens, photon projectors
and ion simulators of all kinds, and row upon row of data-decagons.
She saw none of those things, however. Her mind was filled with the
guilt she felt at having used him. Her guilt was all the greater with
the realization that to save Sornnn she would do it all over again. Kirlll's
forefinger moved. "The ativar is partially embedded within the
sylviat. As such, it is almost impossible to get at. It is the most
convolute of all the lobes, and it is the least understood." "Oh,
Kirlll." Marethyn shook her head. "I feel like a first-year
anatomy student." The
Deirus' face went pale. "My apologies, Marethyn Stogggul. My
enthusiasm has overwhelmed my good sense." "No,
no. I am sure it's just. . . well, I am an artist not a scientist." "The
fault is entirely mine," he said abjectly. "I am most
terribly sorry." For
the first time since she had walked into his office she realized that
she had been avoiding his eyes. Now she looked into them and saw his
own guilt, his belief that he had betrayed her secret tryst with
Sornnn. "I
never cared for Bronnn Pallln, you know," she said softly. "I
never trusted him at all." He
ducked his head. "When you are a Deirus . . . The pressure from
all sides is unimaginable. Coercion is a way of life." He
stood there, staring at her like a whipped wyr-hound. She suppressed
an urge to put her arm around him. "Still.
I should have resisted." He shook his head vehemently. "You
are a good V'ornn. I understand that." "Kirlll,
I—" But no matter how bad she felt, she would not betray
Sornnn's confidence. "Tell me about Terrettt, please." He
licked his lips and nodded, pointing to a photon-illuminated panel.
"These are scans of Terrettt's brain." He switched to
another holoscan, and then another and another. "As you can see,
the ativar lobe is also most difficult even to map fully." He
put up a final scan. "Until now. I have developed a method that
isolates the ativar and allows a three-dimensional image to be taken
of it." His forefinger described an arc that paralleled a dark
grey shallow wedge. "We are looking now at that part of
Terrettt's ativar never before seen. It is, in every way, anomalous." "How
would you know?" Marethyn asked. "You said before this
there was no way to scan it fully." "But
we have seen many, many ativar lobes during countless autopsies."
He reached for a data-decagon. "Would you care to see the
documentation? I have crystals of—" "Perhaps
some other time," Marethyn said. "Right now I want to know
what this discovery means for Terrettt." "Why,
it means everything!" Kirlll Qandda said with more
animation than she had ever seen in him. "I believe that I have
discovered the cause of your brother's mental aberration." She
peered more closely at the dark-grey shape. "It is a congenital
defect then." "Well,
that is possibly the most fascinating thing. I do not believe he was
born with this abnormally developed ativar." Marethyn
started, drawing away from the holoscan as if it had just come alive.
"But what other explanation is there?" "I
have done some preliminary tests. I wanted to complete them before I
summoned you." He slid a data-decagon into a communication port,
and a spiral of words and what appeared to be incomprehensible
mathematical equations bloomed on the holoscreen closest to her face.
"I cannot yet say with absolute certainty, but it is my
hypothesis that at a very early age a chemical cocktail was injected
directly into Ter-rettt's ativar." "What
accusation is this?" Marethyn felt cold shock wash over her.
"What Genomatekk would do such a hideous thing?" "None."
Kirlll Qandda laced his long-fingered hands together. "No
Genomatekk would have had this knowledge so many years ago." "Then
who?" Marethyn
stared wide-eyed at him. All of a sudden, she felt the urge to sit
down and, as if divining her thoughts, he slid a chair behind her. "Gyrgon."
She whispered the word. "But why?" "Why
do Gyrgon do anything?" He shrugged. "It could only have
been an experiment." "On
a Stogggul?" She shook her head vehemently. "Impossible^" "Nothing
is impossible for Gyrgon," he said gently. "You know that
as well as I do." Her
hand curled into a fist. There were tears in her eyes. Poor
Terrett! "But
what did they want with him? Have you any idea?" "I
have not yet completed analyzing the chemicals." She
jumped up. "But surely you must have, what did you call it?" "An
hypothesis. As it happens, I do." He wagged a bony forefinger.
"But I doubt whether it will make you happy." "I
am thoroughly unhappy now," she said shortly. "What could
possibly make me feel worse?" He
nodded. "As I said, the ativar is the least understood of all
the lobes of the V'ornn brain. But, as it happens, it is a private
study of mine. No V'ornn knows the precise function of the ativar.
Some Genomatekk researchers have gone so far as to claim that it is
vestigial, serving no modern-day function at all. I could not
disagree more. My studies have shown that, among other things, the
ativar once linked the V'ornn to, uh, how shall I say it, to a state
of higher consciousness. But it is active and thus far from
vestigial." Marethyn's
brow furrowed. "Higher consciousness?" "Precisely.
Think of it as a bridge from consciousness—the state you and I
are in now—to something, well, 'other.' " She
shook her head. "I still do not understand." "Higher
consciousness," Kirlll Qandda said softly, "might be a
dream state, something you and I experience as we arise from a deep
sleep. Or again it might be an empathic state, or a telepathic one,
or an ability to see the future. The Ramahan claim to achieve a
higher state when they practice their sorcery. The point is, all
these examples have one thing in common. They involve a
disassociation from time and place, as well as a mysterious and
ephemeral connection to another plane of existence." Marethyn's
hearts beat fast. "Madness." "Well,
yes. A lack of understanding of nonmainstream medical theory would of
course lead Genomatekks to label these deeply disassociative states
as madness." She
gripped the Kirlll's arms. "I want to see him. Now." "I
need to warn you—" She
felt a clutch in her throat. "He is not mad, then!" Kirlll
Qandda's expressive eyes caught hers. "Please listen carefully.
This was a Gyrgon experiment and, unfortunately, not all of their
experiments are successful." She
was shaking. "What are you saying?" "The
chemical cocktail appears to have been meant to alter the makeup of
his ativar. But that is not the end of it. Because it was
administered at such an early age I can only conclude that one of the
goals was to increase the ativar's mass. In this, the Gyrgon were
successful. Terrettt's ativar is larger and more highly developed
than any we have in our database. Unhappily for him, something then
seems to have gone wrong." "What,
exactly?" Her voice was harsh whisper. "That
is what we must find out," he said. "And we must do it
without any outside interference." He paused to allow the full
import of his words to sink in. "Do you understand me, Marethyn
Stogggul?" She
nodded, already half in a daze. "I will tell no one." "That's
the spirit." Kirlll Qandda steered her toward the door. "I
will take you now to see him." Terrettt
sat in his room, his chair facing the window, staring blindly at the
Sea of Blood that lapped, dark and grey-green, at the pilings along
the Promenade. All around him was a carpet of his latest paintings,
sprouting like mushrooms from a forest floor. The stillness was
palpable, rippling out from him to reach even into the darkest
corners of his chamber. It seemed even to etch itself into the
topographical map of Kundala's northern continent she had bought him
months ago. Other than his paintings it was the only patch of color
in the glaring white room. The
paintings rustled like kuello-firs as Marethyn moved them carefully
out of the way, creating a narrow path for her and for Kirlll Qandda.
It took her some time; often she stopped to study the paintings she
held in her hands. "They
are becoming erratic," she said with a deep and abiding ache in
her hearts. "He
is more and more fixated on these seven spots," the Deirus
pointed out. "Once he embroidered them at the edges of his work,
then they became more central, filling the sky or the sea. Now they
are the dominant element." "I
have noticed the same thing," Marethyn said, scrutinizing the
painting she held. "Ever since, I have been making a list of
everything I can think of that is seven in number." Kirlll
Qandda chose two more at random and held them up. "It may mean
nothing at all. That is to say, nothing that would have any meaning
for us. He is often fixated on things." "But
it could be meaningful," Marethyn said. "And that is what I
choose to believe." Clutching
her brother's paintings to her breast, she made her way to where he
sat. He had given no indication that he had heard them or, indeed,
that he was aware that he was no longer alone in the room. Marethyn
bent down and kissed him on his pale and damp forehead. "Terrettt,
Terrettt!" she said softly but urgently. "It's your sister,
Marethyn." He
said nothing; he did not move. In fact, he seemed scarcely to be
breathing. "Terrettt,
how are you?" Kneeling,
she put one arm across his thin and bony shoulders. She could smell
him, and though she had become somewhat inured to it, suddenly the
mental state it bespoke made her weep. He
turned, his pale eyes studying her. It was as if the small,
inconsolable sounds she made had woken him from his unnatural
open-eyed slumber. "Terrettt,
I know what they did to you, the Gyrgon. I know you are not mad!" "This
cannot be wise—" Kirlll Qandda began, but stopped when she
held up a hand. "You
are not mad, Terrettt." She delivered the sheaf of his most
recent paintings, each covered by the seven colored whorls, into his
lap. "Do you hear me?" He
nodded. At least she believed it to be a nod. She had to believe it,
because what else was there for her when it came to him? She had
never believed that he was mad, even when first the Genomatekks, then
the Deirus had confronted her with all their so-called irrefutable
evidence. Their mouths had said one thing, but her hearts had told
her something altogether different. If anything, she had thought of
him as a kind of prisoner, locked in a mysteriously malfunctioning
brain. But she knew that deep inside him was a core that saw color
and light, shape and composition, perspective and spatial
relationships in the most extraordinary ways and was able to
amalgamate them all into a fiercely imagined whole. Who, then, had
the right to call him mad? No one! Sucking
back the drool from the corner of his mouth, he ran his fingertips
over the rough surface of the top painting, but Marethyn scarcely
noticed. "Ah,
Kirlll Qandda!" she cried, turning to the Deirus. "Thank
you! You have given me back my brother!" The
Prophesies are written in no book," Perrnodt said between
dae-monically difficult lessons in Osoru and Kyofu, the two different
forms of sorcery. "You have encountered my kind before, so you
know our traditional form of dress. You have seen that we cover the
bottom half of our faces with the saabaya—a veil of
purest undyed white muslin. The saabaya is covered with Venca
script. These are the Prophesies, once handed down orally from one
generation to another that are now lovingly and painstakingly
inscribed on each new saabaya as it is made. We carry them
with us wherever we go." "But
what are the origins of the Prophesies? Who made them?" "The
Dragons, Dar Sala-at. Miina's Five Sacred Dragons. They have second
sight. The Prophesies are theirs." Riane
nodded. "I thought they might have come from Ramahan who became
oracles." "No.
Those who have given in to that part of their Gift have all gone
mad," Perrnodt said darkly. Riane
felt a sudden swift shudder pass through her. "What
is it, Dar Sala-at?" "I
think Giyan has oracular powers." Riane
rocked a little, and Perrnodt put an arm around her. The
seemingly endless Korrush day had swiftly, breathlessly fallen into
the cavern of night, bringing with it an indigo chill. Stars burned
in the velvet sky. Somewhere, far away, a lymmnal howled, and they
were reminded of how dangerously close to the Jeni Cerii they were. "All
Kundala has fallen on evil times," Riane said. The V'ornn—" "The
V'ornn! They are only a symptom," Perrnodt spat. "It is our
disease, Dar Sala-at. You have suffered in the Abbey of Floating
White as I have. You know the pernicious nature of this disease. I
believe absolutely that the V'ornn—this vicious pestilence,
this accursed plague—was visited upon us by Miina. The Great
Goddess in Her wisdom knows that it takes extreme measures for the
cure to be enacted. The evil must approach its zenith, the situation
must become intolerable for the Kundalan to cry out as one, for the
Great Wheel to finally make its turn. For what else will save us but
the wretchedness of our own despair? Only when we are faced with our
own annihilation will we recognize the true evil of the path we have
mistakenly taken. The trouble is the Kundalan capacity for
self-delusion." "What
are you saying? That the cure is worse than the disease?" "I
am saying that they are two sides of the same coin. One cannot exist
without the other. This is the Great Balance, the nature of the
Cosmos. This pattern is repeated endlessly everywhere and everywhen.
However, we need the Gift and the proper training to see it. This is
what you must have if you are to prevail against your enemies. And
believe me when I tell you that they are legion. "The
changes you must wring from us are of the most painful nature. Most
will resist. Their faith will be sorely tested, and many will balk,
even revolt against these changes because they are unknown and,
therefore, too frightening. They will turn against you, join with
your natural enemies, line up to eagerly slay you so that the life
they know will not be shattered." "I
do not understand," Riane said. "The life they are living
now is in bondage to the V'ornn. They are terrorized, tortured,
killed at random and without warning." "Everything
you say, Dar Sala-at, is true. And yet, many will choose their
current situation because it is all they know. They have grown used
to the suffering. It is illogical; it does not make sense, and yet I
can vouch for the truth of it because in my lifetime it has happened
before. Do not make the mistake of believing that the V'ornn are the
first threat to Kundala. There are histories here. Layer upon layer,
buried in the red dust of the Korrush in Earth Five Meetings." "Za
Hara-at." "Yes."
Perrnodt's ripe eyes were shining. "Za Hara-at." "I
wish I had been alive when it was in full flower." "Perhaps
you were, in another lifetime." Perrnodt rubbed her palms
together. "Now show me how you Thripp." Riane
closed her eyes, summoning the whorled mists of Otherwhere. She
willed herself to spin and, spinning, project herself from the many
layers of the Cosmos. Nothing
happened. Her
eyes popped open. "You
cannot Thripp, can you?" Riane
looked at the Druuge curiously. "How did you know?" "Dar
Sala-at, as I have been telling you, you have immense power within
you. However, without the proper knowledge of how, where, and when to
unleash it you will not long survive among your enemies." She
opened her hands, palms up. "When Thripping was discovered among
the Druuge eons ago it was used as a means of ethereal exploration.
It was done in the abbeys and nowhere else. Even with the Gift, even
with the mononculus to protect you from the radiation tides between
Realms, you can only begin your Thrip in and around holy places. The
location of abbeys is no haphazard. Each one was built above a nexus
node of the power bourns that run deep in the mantle of Kundala.
There are, of course, more nexus nodes than there are abbeys of
sacred sites, but without being within a radius of thirty meters of
one of these power nodes you cannot Thripp. Therefore, it becomes
extremely important for you to be able to use your Third Eye to
detect the bourns." "But
here where we are in the in'adim is a holy place. According to
the Ghor, this is where the Prophet Jiharre was killed." "That
is an excellent point," Perrnodt said. "The explanation
will not please you. You are correct. Beneath the in'adim lies
a powerful bourn nexus. However, it is tangled and, therefore,
inactive. This is one of the later examples of the slow creep of evil
that infests Kundala. The planet is a living entity. The bourns are
its arteries. If more tangles occur, the entire network of bourn will
be in jeopardy of atrophying." "What
will happen then?" Riane asked with her heart in her throat. "That
is speculation," Perrnodt said. "But it seems likely that
all sorcery will vanish with the bourns." "We
cannot allow that to occur." "We
trust in you, Dar Sala-at." Perrnodt arranged herself. "Shall
we continue our lessons?" Riane
nodded. "When I was in the Abbey of Floating White, there were
times when I felt the bourns humming." "I
daresay you did." Perrnodt took Riane's hands in her own. "Now
I will teach you how to feel them all the time."
27 Mirror,
Mirror
Konara
Inggres could not sleep. Since she no longer felt safe roaming the
backwaters of the abbey, she lay rigid on her cot, staring at the
damp stone ceiling of her chamber. Every once in a while she emitted
a small moan. Her mind was a seething labyrinth of dread. A litany of
dire consequences crowded out coherent thought. Ever since she had
painfully crawled out of the spy niche behind Konara Urdma's office
she had been trying to make sense of everything she had seen and
heard. In vain. Within every shadow she now saw the grinning face of
evil. The stench of pure terror was upon her. What
had Giyan and Bartta become? What had Giyan done to Konara Lyystra
and Konara Tyyr and why were mirrors so important to these evil
infidels who had insidiously invaded the abbey? At
last, despite her attempts at prayer and meditation, the agitation
that consumed her mind spilled over into her body, compelling her to
sit up. She found herself drenched in cold sweat and, unable to find
a calm place within herself, decided to take a shower. The smell of
her own terror was making her sick to her stomach. Besides, while no
mirrors were allowed in the Ramahan sleeping quarters—even
those of the konara—there was a mirror in the baths. When
she arrived, the bath was lit only by the fitful glow of the lamps in
the corridor. She went in and located the mirror. Standing before it,
she looked at her reflection which, at first glance, appeared
perfectly normal. But then as she had been able to do when she had
entered the chamber where Bartta had secreted the had-atta, she
began to discern something that wavered at the very corners of her
consciousness, and she brought to bear that special sorcerous
knowledge she had secretly acquired during her endless hours of
research in the back rooms of the Library, the same knowledge that
had allowed her to break Bartta's Spell of Binding on the had-atta
chamber and to replace it without anyone being the wiser. Drawing
upon certain texts, she had trained her Third Eye to pick up the
ephemeral residue of sorcerous spells. Now
as she stared at her reflection she became aware of a flickering
blackness, like dark flames fomenting in the edges of the mirror.
Curious, she took hold of the mirror's frame and pulled it free. But
there was nothing in it. The "mirror" remained on the wall. She
set the frame down and walked from side to side, looking at the
reflective rectangle in order to get a better idea of what it was,
for it was like no mirror she had ever seen or heard of. She conjured
Transverse Guest, an Osoru spell meant to uncover the source of
unknown castings. Extending a forefinger, she pressed it against the
surface. The tip disappeared up to the first knuckle, and even though
she pulled it out almost immediately, it retained the eerie sensation
of having been dipped into ice water. She
peered more closely at the rectangle. Transverse Guest told her some
things. For instance, she knew this was not an Osoru spell, but then
again nor was it Kyofu. What, then, was it, and who had cast it?
Konara Inggres was willing to bet that Giyan—or whatever had
taken hold of Giyan's body—was responsible. The trouble was,
these conclusions brought her no closer to an answer, She had only a
rudimentary knowledge of corporeal possession, and whatever she did
know was a by-product of her Osoru snooping in the Library's back
rooms, an agglomeration of moments, brief and stolen so as not to
arouse the suspicion of the other konara. She determined that she
would have to return there with the express intent of finding out all
she could on this little-known topic. But
first, she had to find herself a real mirror. All thoughts of a
shower had vanished in the full bloom of purpose. Carefully,
she returned the frame to its place on the wall and was about to exit
the baths when she heard furtive footfalls in the corridor heading
her way. Just in time, she shrank furtively back into the shadows.
Her heart was in her throat as she observed a group of young acolytes
whisper by. At their head was a black-robed figure whose face was
obscured by the edges of an enveloping cowl. She felt, as the cowled
one passed, a certain chill run down her spine. Then she noticed
something that paralyzed her with fear. One of the cowled figure's
hands had a sixth finger. A black sixth finger, as if it had
been seared in a furnace. From her studies of banned texts, she knew
the cowled one must be a sauromician. She had thought them all long
dead, scoured from life by Miina's vengeful hand, but now, evil upon
evil, one was here skulking clandestinely around the bowels of the
abbey. The
sauromician led the acolytes down the corridor and into a spare
storeroom. There, he began to address them and Konara Inggres, her
heart pounding in her chest, crept out to listen. Terrifyingly,
he spoke of Giyan as Mother, as the one who would reinvigorate the
abbey, return the Ramahan to their rightful place as rulers of
Kundala. The fact that the Ramahan had historically never served such
a role seemed lost on these poor souls. But they did ask, timidly, to
be sure, how Mother would save them from the tyranny of the V'ornn.
The clever sauromician appeared prepared for just this question for,
without skipping a beat, he answered in his dark and ominously furred
voice that he would soon take them to see the Dar Sala-at. And when
he did, they would swear to give their lives for the savior who was
written in Prophesy. Of
course, these were basest of lies, Konara Inggres knew that. But the
acolytes shared neither her experience nor her Gift, and so they were
completely taken in. She backed away, her heart sick but knowing that
for the moment at least she was powerless to stop the evil threading
its way through the abbey. First things first. Alone
in the corridor, she wiped the sweat off her face with her sleeve,
and on silent feet went in search of a mirror. This task, so simple
on the face of it, proved quite impossible to achieve. The mirrors
she knew of were either gone or had been replaced by the same
sorcerous thing that she had discovered in the bath. Her
search at length led her deeper and deeper into the entrails of the
abbey, until at length she came upon the excavation that Riane had
worked on with the late Shima Vedda. It now lay deserted, ever since
Bartta had thrown Shima Vedda down a cistern and killed her. The
refectory that she and her crew had been in the process of restoring
had been abandoned in favor of a newer one high up enough in the
abbey to be lit by windows as well as lanterns. In truth, most
Ramahan preferred the newer quarters, but Konara Inggres had wondered
at the sudden change in design. Now
she came upon the old refectory just as Riane and Shima Vedda had
left it that fateful evening when they had discovered the rent in the
underfloor that opened up to the historic Kells below. Like every
Ramahan, Konara Inggres was familiar with the legend of the Kells.
When the Great Goddess Miina created the abbey, She placed at its
heart a series of three sacred chambers known as the Kells from which
She could observe unseen the holy work of Her disciples. The
rope ladder Riane had deployed in order to descend had been disposed
of and the rent sealed over with a simple casting, the emanation from
which drew Konara Inggres' attention even though it was beneath
several heavy pieces of Shima Vedda's dusty and cobwebbed equipment.
Leaning her shoulder into the effort, she moved the equipment away,
stood panting a little, hands on hips, staring down at the spell,
parsing it into its incantatory parts. With a whispered incantation
and a wave of her hand, she dismissed the casting. Rummaging around,
she discovered a small pile of wood and pitch-soaked reed torches.
She lit one, tucked two more into the belt of her robe, and knelt
over the rent in the floor, which was now quite a bit larger than it
had been when Riane and Shima Vedda first come upon it, owing to the
severe seismic activity of a month before. Thrusting
the flicking torch head down into the triangular chamber below, she
discovered what seemed to be a citrine table just below her. By
lowering herself with some care she was able to stand on this item,
balance herself, then, with a shower of flaming sparks, jump the rest
of the way to the black-basalt floor of the Kell. As
soon as she did so, she discovered that what she had been balancing
on was no table at all, but a magnificent sculpture of the citrine
serpent sacred to Miina. At least, she knew from her research that it
had once been sacred to Miina. Nowadays, the acolytes were taught
that the serpent was the Avatar of Pyphoros, that it was a symbol of
lies and deceit and was thus anathema to the Great Goddess. She
crouched beside the sinuous sculpture, ran her hand over the incised
scales. Then, turning, she held the torch up and saw the niche in the
wall where the citrine had been set Miina only knew how many
centuries before. She was mystified. How it had moved from the wall
to the floor she could not say, since upon a detailed examination of
the niche she discovered neither a crowbar's mark nor the remnant of
a sorcerous spell. In any event, there was no doubt in her mind that
she had entered a holy place and, before she continued her search,
she got down upon her knees in front of the citrine serpent, whose
name was Ghosh, and prayed for forgiveness and for the Goddess's
blessed return. She
remained in this pose for some minutes after ending her prayer,
immersed in silent meditation in order to gather her scattered wits
and to try to banish the terror from her heart. Then she rose and
continued downward, as Riane had done, pressing the bare mechanism
she had discovered in the stone niche where Ghosh had resided. She
rode the two-square-meter section of the stone floor downward into
the Kell beneath. This one was a perfect square, enameled black.
Besides the color, there were two notable items. One was a cenote,
its heavy basalt cover lying to one side. The other consisted of a
trio of carved animals, huge and lithe, with terrifying cats's heads
and rippling pelts of gold strewn with jet-black spots. They had
sleekly muscled bodies, powerful-looking jaws. Long, slender tails
arched over their backs. Their mouths gaped open to show three rows
of sharp teeth. Like the Ghosh in the Kell above, Konara Inggres
could see where they had once been inset into the wall. Now they were
arrayed around the well at the cardinal points of an equilateral
triangle, as if waiting for something to emerge from the still, black
water. The
cenote, in fact, gave Konara Inggres an idea. She searched her memory
for the complete incantation, then, holding her hands out over the
surface of the water, she cast First-Gate Correspondence. At first,
nothing seemed to happen, and, seeing as how she had never before
cast the Osoru spell, she did not quite know what to expect. As
she inclined her upper body over the well, she saw a whitish mist
forming across the surface. At first, it was like the delicate skeins
water spiders made as they skimmed over a pond, but soon enough, the
mist coalesced into an opaque coating. She moved her hand in a
counterclockwise motion over the mist, and it began to be drawn up,
vanishing just before it reached her open palm. What remained,
floating on the surface of the water, was a small copper-rimmed disc
that shone in the torchlight. She plucked it off the water and turned
it over, smiling into the image of her face reflected in the mirror. Auraed
in concentrated pools of bronze light, the creatures appeared to be
moving in a slow formal ominous dance around the perimeter of a large
oval. Headless and armless, they displayed every facet of their
gleaming armor. And this armor of shimmering deeply colored alloy,
browed, taloned, winged, and spiked, was wicked-looking. "So,"
Olnnn said. "What do you think?" "What
can I think?" Rada replied. "I have never imagined myself
in armor." "If
you are to be with me, then you must be armored, and you must learn
how to wield a shock-sword." "Have
you come to a decision, Star-Admiral?" They turned as the
armorer appeared. Like all V'ornn armorers she was a Tuskugggun, this
one a small, unremarkable female named Leyytey, with dark eyes and an
overserious demeanor. She pointed with a long, pale hand. The tips of
her fingers were stained copper by her work. "This model is
among my latest and would be perfect for your physique." "The
armor is not for me," Olnnn said. "It is for my new
staff-adjutant." "I
am sorry, Star-Admiral, but he will have to come in. I cannot do a
proper fitting otherwise." "This
is my staff-adjutant," Olnnn said, gesturing to Rada. "Of
course, Star-Admiral," Leyytey answered without missing a beat.
She led them around the display. "In that event, may I suggest
this one?" She indicated a suit of a dull bronze color. "I
can easily modify it for a ... smaller somatotype." "See
that it is done at once," Olnnn commanded. "And a
shock-sword with your keenest killing blades." As
Leyytey passed behind Olnnn, Rada thought she saw a smirk briefly
pass across the armorer's face, and she felt her cheeks flush with
humiliation and anger at the knowledge that Leyytey must think her
the Star-Admiral's latest conquest. Rada
spent some time watching Olnnn conduct business, delivered and
dispatched by a fleet of hoverpods. It was the hoverpods that
interested her. They were sleek and small. She wondered what their
top speed might be. She ate a quick light breakfast from a leeesta
stand next door to the armory. Across the teeming boulevard was the
looming white facade of Receiving Spirit. Every once in a while just
outside the entrance she saw a Gyrgon appear as if from a sorcerous
mist and vanish just as mysteriously. They came and went with
funereal gravity, and if it happened that some V'ornn was unfortunate
enough to be within arms' length of one of them, they would stand
very still until the Gyrgon was gone. She
heard Olnnn talking heatedly with one of his First-Captains. They
were discussing the regent. She was astonished by how much of the
Star-Admiral's time was taken up with carrying out the orders—
many of them petty—of the regent. She could see how much this
angered Olnnn, and her conviction was borne out when she heard him
curse mightily as the First-Captain turned smartly away. From what
she had overheard it seemed possible to her that a rift had occurred
between Kurgan Stogggul and Olnnn Rydddlin, and that interested her
even more than the hoverpods. When,
an hour later, her equipage was ready, Olnnn instructed her in the
method of putting on the armor. Then he took her directly to the
Kalllistotos. The ring was deserted, as the slate of bouts was only
at night. "How
does it feel?" he asked, as they climbed between the wires. "A
bit awkward," Rada told him, "but only when I try to change
directions too quickly." "You
have good posture and muscle tone. And you are strong." Leyytey
had refashioned the armor in a glimmery blue-green, the
Star-Admiral's color, and it sported the Star-Admiral's gold crest on
shoulders and chest. At her side hung a shock-sword. Leyytey had
asked her to hold many models in the two-handed grip Olnnn had shown
her until the armorer was satisfied that she had one that was
balanced just right for her height and weight. In the atelier,
looking at herself in the armor, she had been overcome by a strange
and slightly giddy feeling. She had always hated this armor as a
symbol of male dominance and Khagggun arrogance. But now that she
found herself inside it she felt infused with its power, and she had
to fight against seeing herself as a leaf being borne aloft in a
rising storm. "Draw
your shock-sword and hold it as I instructed you," Olnnn
ordered, as they faced each other in the center of the ring. The
morning was cold and crisp, with none of the damp rawness of the
previous few days. Everything sparkled as if it had been newly
polished overnight. Heavily canted sunlight had just barely begun to
creep across the Kalllistotos plaza. Rada felt dwarfed by the plaza's
vast and chilly emptiness. She felt the maleness of the
place—everything outsized and hulking and angular—and she
imagined she could smell all the blood and pain that had been spilled
in the ring. "Defend
yourself," Olnnn announced suddenly, sweeping his shock-sword
toward her. The
first clang of alloy against alloy staggered her, and she almost
dropped the weapon. Ribbons of pain veined her hands, and her
forearms tingled unpleasantly. "I
do not know the first thing about this," she lied. "Then
you will have incentive to learn all the faster." Olnnn struck
her blades again, not hard, not as if she were the enemy, but not a
friendly tap, either. "As you can see, a shock-sword has two
blades, parallel and in close proximity to one another. When you
throw the safety off, an arc of hyperexcited ions flow back and
forth, causing the blades to vibrate a thousand times a second. They
can cut through anything. If you pierce an enemy just right, it will
quite literally tear him to pieces. But the ion flow has its own
rules and can be almost as dangerous to the one who wields it
inexpertly." He droned on in this vein, telling her what she had
already discovered. She
took her first swing at him, making sure she showed him her
clumsiness. In the course of her life she had had cause now and again
to take up a shock-sword and wield it. In fact, she had one stripped
from a dead Khagggun in the Djenn Marre foothills that she had kept
in a case beneath the floorboards of her office in Blood Tide. She
had recently taken it home, secreting it where no one but she would
find it. She had practiced with it daily, learning the hard way the
trickiness of using it. As
Olnnn worked her around the ring, she allowed her clumsiness to
vanish by stages, until by the third sweaty hour they engaged one
another in a series of rapid-stroke attack-and-defense maneuvers. "You
are a quick study," Olnnn said, "for a Tuskugggun." Despite
the jibe, Rada could tell that he was as impressed as he was
startled. For her own part, she could not despise him more. She was
convinced that the creep on her flesh that had kept her awake ever
since he had attacked her would never dissipate. Because of him she
would never be the same. She had always been contemptuous of those
weak-minded Tuskugggun who were dependent on males. Now it was she
who was bound to one; and not simply a male, but a Khagggun, to boot!
She wanted only to humiliate him as he had humiliated her. It felt to
her now that the only way she could find sustenance was to feed on
his abasement. And
it was this powerful prod that in the end drove her to abandon her
caution and duel with him as an equal. Perhaps not physically as an
equal, but she was possessed of a tenacious spirit and she had the
element of surprise on her side. The
reddish oblate disc of the sun had risen high enough to seem as if it
was spilling its blood into the ring as they came together this last
time. She crossed his shock-sword at the base of the blades, then
quickly disengaged and interlaced the tips with his, twisting sharply
as she did so, then as his expression froze, sliced swiftly and
decisively so that her blades ran down the entire length of his,
interfering with the ion flow between his twinned blades. It was a
dangerous maneuver, one that she had never tried before. If it was
not performed correctly, the feedback from the dammed ion flow could
severely damage her neural pathways. With
a deep-felt grunt she slammed her shock-sword home, the bases of
their blades crossed, the guards clanging. She could feel the heat of
his breath against her cheek, could see the surprise morph into
humiliation in his expression. They were toe to toe, teeth gritted,
the sparks from the dammed-up ion flow arcing in a kind of penumbra
around them. He
grimaced with the pain she was causing him and did something with his
wrists—it was too deft and quick for her to see what it was—
and she was disarmed without being aware that she had let go of the
hilt. Her shock-sword lay at her feet between them. He was wide-eyed
and panting, and she willed herself not to look down, not to bend,
not to go to one knee to retrieve her weapon. "Had
we been enemies, you would be dead now," he said, his voice
hoarser than it ought to have been. "But
we are enemies." He
did not pull away, did not lay the edge of his blades against her
throat, but stood with his legs wide apart, his knees slightly bent,
staring at her as if she were the only object left in the world. She
felt taken up by that gaze, as if she were held in a great hand, and
she was terrified and immensely resentful. Terrified that she had
suddenly, perilously exposed her secret self to him; resentful that
he still seemed to have a mysterious power over her. So
when he reached out and touched her armored shoulder with his mailed
hand she shrugged it off and turned away, baring her teeth at the few
Mesagggun who had stopped on their way to their shift to observe the
curious display. To her relief they started and hurried on their
way, fearful of incurring an armored Khagggun's wrath. "Rada." She
heard his voice from behind her. He spoke her name softly;
nevertheless, it seemed to reverberate around the plaza as if mocking
her. Yet it wasn't until he repeated her name that she turned and
faced him. He
had retrieved her shock-sword. His own weapon was sheathed at his
left hip. "Where did you—?" She
winced at the dreaded question. "I told you I was born a
warrior." "I
did not believe you." "Of
course. I am Tuskugggun." She shrugged. "Well, perhaps
after all it was luck." He
studied her, silent and inscrutable. At length, he held her
shock-sword out to her hiltfirst. "This morning you earned the
right to keep this," he said. She
wanted to spit in his face as he had spat in hers. But that would
have made her just like him. Besides, she found to her dismay that
her mouth was as dry as the Great Voorg. There was nothing for her to
do but to hold out her hand. She felt the weight and the exquisite
balance of the shock-sword as she took hold of it. She had waited a
long time for this moment—all her life, it seemed. But never
could she have imagined these circumstances. "Star-Admiral,"
she said impulsively, "there is something that I—" He
waited, silently watching her. She
did not want to tell him all at once, did not want him to think this
was an easy thing for her. "Recently, perhaps a week or so ago,
the regent summoned me. He offered to make a deal. He was concerned
that as regent he would lose touch with day-to-day life in Axis Tyr." Olnnn's
cruel mouth curled with the ghost of a smile. "What really
concerns him are plots—plots he might not know about. After
all, it was just such a plot that led to his father's demise." Rada
nodded. "In exchange for my being his eyes and ears in Axis Tyr,
he agreed to repay the debt my mother ran up on Blood Tide." Olnnn
crossed his arms over his chest. "And did you accept Kurgan
Stogggul's kind and generous offer?" "What
do you think? He is the regent." His
eyes narrowed warningly. "Why have you confessed this?" "He
took me by force that night. There was nothing I could do. Then." "But
now you are with me, and it is another story." "It
seems to me that the regent is no longer your friend." "You
have an inquisitive nature," he said shortly. "I
run a tavern." She shrugged. "It goes with the territory." "You
are in altogether different territory now," he said. "That
nature may be an asset. Or it may get you killed." He cocked his
head. "But I know you well enough to understand that such
admonitions will not deter you. Say what you will." "That
night," she said, "the regent and I were interrupted by an
urgent knocking on the door. I could see in the brief glimpse
afforded me that the Gyrgon Nith Batoxxx was standing in the hallway
just outside the bedchamber. The regent closed the door behind him
but with my ear to it I could hear their conversation." This
made Olnnn laugh. It was a free and easy sound, and Rada recognized
in it a kind of respect. "By all means, continue," he said. "The
conversation concerned the program to elevate Khagggun to Great Caste
status." Olnnn
immediately looked around. As the hour had grown later, the
Kalllistotos plaza had become infiltrated with the usual mob endemic
to such areas of the city. Some were hurrying about their business,
but others lounged against walls and pillars idly chatting and
looking on. He nodded silently to her, and they climbed down and went
swiftly to the nearby Promenade, where, she presumed, they would be
mobile and he could keep them away from potential eavesdroppers. Seabirds
called through the morning chill. In the east, the morning's blush of
rose could still be seen, flat and knifelike, just above the low grey
cloud bank. An onshore breeze brought them the clean, bracing saline
scent of the sea. As
they passed the ships at harbor, he said, "It is safe now to
continue." She
told him what she had overheard, about how the Gyrgon were against
the ascension, that they feared it would set a dangerous precedent
for the other castes, that it was Kurgan Stogggul's idea to halt the
process but that Nith Batoxxx wholeheartedly agreed. "Nith
Batoxxx said that he would not tolerate any unrest among the other
castes. He said that it was up to the regent to
deal decisively with any sense of rebellion among the Khagggun." "I
knew it!" Olnnn smacked his fist into his hand. "That was
my suspicion for weeks now. All I lacked was proof, and now I have
it!" It
is assumed by many Ramahan—even some of the most senior
kon-ara—that the power bourns running through the core of
Kundala are all the same. This is not so." Light
winked out as another Korrush night arose from its dusty bed and the
temperature began at once to cool. Perrnodt was sitting behind Riane,
braiding her hair in the mistefan, the Druuge style. As she
worked at this intricate task she continued with her lessons. She
never stopped. While they walked northward, skirting the large Jeni
Cerii encampment, while they ate, even during infrequent rest breaks
while they occasionally relieved themselves, she continued. And there
was no question of sleep. They kept walking and reviewing hard-won
lessons. She showed Riane how to catch naps during the days as short
as three minutes that were more refreshing than eight hours of the
most tranquil slumber. In this way they were making good time,
despite the cold that crept into the winter mornings, the intense
chill that gripped them after the sun went down. Each shiver reminded
Riane of the passing time. It was midwinter. Once the solstice
arrived it would be too late to save Giyan from being permanently
possessed by Horolaggia. If that happened, she would cease to exist.
Horolaggia would have her skills, her memories, everything that she
was, including her Gift. "Are
you listening to me?" Perrnodt said sharply. "There is no
time for daydreaming. Every lesson I teach you is a vital one." Riane
nodded, apologizing. "The
bourns were laid down at Miina's direction by the Five Sacred
Dragons," Perrnodt went on. "Since each Dragon represents
one of the five elements—earth, air, fire, water, wood—the
bourns exhibit the trait of whichever Dragon created it. For
instance, the bourns deep beneath the Abbey of Floating White were
laid by Paow, black Dragon of wood. She is the Dragon of Vision. By
contrast, the bourns beneath Middle Palace in Axis Tyr were laid by
Seelin, the green Dragon of water and of Transformation." At
once, Riane understood why it was Seelin whom Annon had seen when,
briefly, the Door to the Storehouse had opened. "What about
under the Abbey of Listening Bone," she said, "which is now
the Gyr-gon Temple of Mnemonics?" "Those
bourns are unusual, even among Kundala's bourns. They were created
together by the paired Dragons, Paow and Yig. Yig is the red Dragon
of fire and of Power. Dragons may mate often but they pair only
rarely, and then it is forever. Woe betide the fool who presumes to
sunder a pair of Dragons." "Why
would anyone want to do that?" Riane asked. "To
break their power." Perrnodt sat back and cocked her head,
surveying her handiwork. "Let me see. It has been some time
since I tied the mistefan. Not a bad job of it." She
had divided Riane's hair into three thick streams of gold,
intertwining them tightly, the result being a wide braid that hung
down Riane's back like a V'ornn shock-sword. With
night hard upon them, they rose and broke their meager camp. "Now
where we are going," Perrnodt said, as they continued their
journey northward, "where the Maasra is hidden, is the
most sacred place on Kundala." She pointed due north. "We
go to Im-Thera. Or, more accurately, deep within the ruins of Za
Hara-at." As
they walked, she made a tiny adjustment to Riane's mistefan. "The
site was chosen for many reasons, chief among them being that the
nexus beneath it is unique inasmuch as it is made up of bourns laid
by all the Dragons. Which means that the five elements are interwoven
in one spot. This being so, the power is immense. It is also
exceedingly dangerous." "Give
me an example," Riane said. "If
mishandled, it has the potential to rip open the very fabric between
Realms. The chaos that would ensue from discrete Realms invading one
another is incalculable. There are, for instance, forces within
Realms which are inimical to others. The result of their meeting
would be instantaneous annihilation for all the Realms involved in
the rift, including ours." Riane
gave a little whistle of awe. Immense power. Perrnodt wasn't
exaggerating. "The
Maasra, being semisentient, is able to tap into a small
portion of this power," Perrnodt continued. "That is how,
ultimately, it protects itself from those who covet it, those who
would use it for their own gain or to further their ends." "Then
we need not fear others who would—" She
broke off at the telltale whisper of wind. A small furry ball came
whizzing into view, and a familiar voice said, "Killing a Gyrgon
and a sauromician! This is some mess you've managed to get yourself
into, little dumpling." "Thigpen!"
Riane cried, stopping in her tracks. "How did you find me?" "I
cast the opals, how else?" "I
thought you weren't going to call me little dumpling anymore." "I
changed my mind," Thigpen said a little huffily. She shook
something unseen off her orange-and-black-striped fur. "So long
as you insist on being mischievous, I shall continue to call you
little dumpling." Riane
grinned. "By Miina's grace, it's good to see you, old friend." "Likewise,
I'm sure." Thigpen
was up on her four hind legs, squinting hard. "And why, may I
ask, have you disfigured your nose?" Riane
touched the ajjan stud. "The kapudaan of the Gazi Qhan had it
done to me." Thigpen
sniffed. "Hardly a friendly gesture, if you ask me." "It's
a long story." "A
Rappa!" Perrnodt said, standing stock-still. "This is
something of a surprise." For
an instant, they both fell silent. Riane was ashamed and quickly
introduced the two of them. "The
Dar Sala-at's teacher," the Rappa said with palpable relief. "I
have now gotten the best possible news!" "Speaking
of news," Riane said with no little apprehension, "what of
Eleana and Rekkk?" Though she had locked away her vision of
Rekkk's death fall, she had not forgotten it. "There
I am unfortunately in the dark," Thigpen confessed. "I had
to leave them quite suddenly, and since that time I have been
otherwise occupied." "Well,
that needs a bit of explaining." "There
was a disturbance." Thigpen's whiskers had begun to twitch, a
sure sign of anxiety. "What
kind of a disturbance?" Thigpen
glanced at Perrnodt with a wary eye. "It's
all right. You can trust her, Thigpen. She is a Druuge." "Really?"
The Rappa's eyes opened wide. "She is not dressed like a
Druuge." "Why
do you prevaricate?" Perrnodt said. "Your kind have been in
the Great Voorg for centuries. They are Druuge companions." Riane
turned to Thigpen. "Why didn't you tell me?" "I
do not tell you everything," Thigpen said shortly. "My
goodness, why would I want to overstuff your head with trivia when
you already have so much to learn?" "I
would hardly call this trivial" "You
will learn of the Druuge in your own time, little dumpling. It is not
my place to speak of them." "In
this she is right," Perrnodt broke in. "But come. Let us
return to the subject at hand. I have an unpleasant feeling it is
urgent." "In
a moment," Riane said. "I have another question. It occurs
to me that you must have known that Minnum could not be, as he
claimed, a sefiror. Minnum is not Druuge. He is a sauromician." "I
see the teacher has been busy instructing her pupil," Thigpen
said dryly. "Never
mind that. Why did you lie to me?" Thigpen
sighed. "We needed to find out what Maasra meant. For
that, we had to find a dialectician, and to do that we had to—" "Find
someone who could cast Ephemeral Reconstitution," Riane said. "Precisely."
Thigpen nodded. "A sauromician. When you told me that you had
stumbled across a sefiror I was delighted but dubious. It turned out
that my suspicions were confirmed." "But
you did not give him away." "If
I had, would you have trusted him?" Riane
shook her head. "No." Thigpen
spread her forepaws. "Well, then." "But
you trusted him. A sauromician." "I
have seen Ephemeral Reconstitution cast before. In this, I knew he
could not play us false without my knowing. And he did not." "He
lied about other things." "That
is self-evident. My only concern at the time was the conjuring of the
spell." She bared her teeth. "If he had attempted to lie to
us about that, I was prepared to deal with him." She stroked her
whiskers with her forepaws. "Are you angry with me, little
dumpling?" "I
am considering it," Riane said, only half-serious. "In the
meantime, tell us about this disturbance." Thigpen
came down off her fours. "Before I do, I suggest we take a look
at what is just up ahead." Riane
and Perrnodt turned. Long-winged carrion birds circled the sky just
ahead of them. They hurried forward. "I
smell death," Perrnodt whispered. A
dark mound lay in their path not three hundred meters ahead. Riane
could just make out the stiff-legged forms of a pair of kuomeshals,
and her heart skipped a beat. "Little
dumpling, no!" Thigpen cried. But
Riane was already running toward the kuomeshals. They lay in a
tangle, looking as if they had been felled with one titanic blow.
Riane was brought up short at the sight of their heads. They looked
as if they had exploded from the inside out. "Sauromicians,"
Perrnodt said, coming up on one side of Riane. "I
knew it." The Rappa's whiskers twitched spastically.
"Sauromicians are a vengeful lot. They always were." She
put a forepaw on Riane's arm. "I am very much afraid you set
this in motion when you killed one of them." "We
had no choice, Othnam, Mehmmer, and I." "I
am sure you didn't," Thigpen said gently. "However, no
action is without its consequences." They
watched Riane as she pushed heavy legs away so she could get to the
saddlebags. "Dar
Sala-at, Thigpen is right. If there are sauromicians around, it would
be best if we steered clear of them." "I
know these bags," Riane said, becoming more frantic in her
searching. "I know these kuomeshals." She leapt over the
dead beasts. "They belong to my friends Othnam and Mehmmer." "The
Ghor brother and sister who befriended the Dar Sala-at during her
time in Agachire," Perrnodt explained to Thigpen. Then they
heard her cry out and ran after her. They
found her kneeling beside two bodies. One was male, the other female.
Both were dressed in the black robes of the Ghor, though these robes
looked as if they had been torn open by wild beasts. Ragged ribbons
fluttered in the breeze. The bare torsos were black with blood. The
intestines had been removed. They curled about the corpses, slit
open, pored over. Riane
remembered Minnum saying that sauromicians were necromancers. They
divined things by killing and reading the entrails of the dead.
"Othnam and Mehmmer," she whispered. "The
sauromicians have worked their black sorcery," Perrnodt said
darkly. "Killed
very recently." Thigpen eyed the carrion birds overhead. "Else
these two would be bare bones by now." Perrnodt
nodded, turned to Riane. "Did you ever tell these friends of
yours that you are the Dar Sala-at?" "Yes,"
Riane whispered. They had been with her when she had told Mu-Awwul
who she was. "Bad."
Thigpen looked around worriedly. "Very bad, indeed, little
dumpling." "Now
the sauromicians know, too," Perrnodt said. Riane,
horrified and deeply saddened, nevertheless drew on Annon's
inflexible warrior's resolve. It was no time to be overwhelmed by
emotion. The full force of the grief she carried would have to wait.
She whispered through gritted teeth, "Perrnodt, do you know the
Ghorvish prayer for the dead?" "Dar
Sala-at, I sympathize. But there is no time. It is more imperative
than ever that we make haste out of this accursed wilderness. We are
obviously deep inside sauromician territory." Gently,
Perrnodt and Thigpen raised Riane up, and they set off. They were
careful not to let her look back. Overhead, the carrion birds circled
lower. Despite
her resolve, Riane felt tears streaming down her face, now three of
her Korrush friends were dead. Because of me. If I had never come
here. . . . "The
disturbance, little dumpling," Thigpen said, unable to bear
Riane's silent grief any longer. "It was in my birthplace."
She meant deep inside the Ice Caves, where she and Riane had first
encountered one another high up above Heavenly Rushing in the Djenn
Marre. Riane
swallowed. Focusing on the friends here with her helped take her mind
off those she had lost. And there was another thing. Thigpen's
whiskers were twitching like crazy. "There
was a disturbance in First Cenote, the sacred pool near our birthing
place," Thigpen said. "That is why I had to leave our
friends so precipitously." "How
could you know about it?" Riane interrupted. "You were
hundreds of kilometers away." "I
received a message. We are telepathic." "Kind
of you to finally mention it." "Rappa
telepathy extends only among our own kind," Thigpen said
hastily. Riane
nodded. "All right. Continue." "You
remember First Cenote." "Of
course. There is a Prophesy among the Rappa that the Dar Sala-at will
gaze into First Cenote and see the power of the Cosmos made
manifest." Thigpen
nodded, amplifying for Perrnodt's benefit. "The Dar Sala-at told
me she felt ill at ease when she neared it. At the time, I could not
understand that because we always supposed that, like the pool at the
base of Heavenly Rushing, First Cenote was a place sacred to Miina.
However, when I asked her to look into it, she saw the image of
Py-phoros, an occurrence that deeply disturbed her and puzzled me. At
the time I said that something evil was at work." "That's
right." Riane nodded. "I
had no idea what it was, then subsequent events drove the mystery out
of my mind. But when I was summoned back to First Cenote I knew
immediately." The
Rappa's eyes were dark and hooded, and Riane realized with a start
that they looked haunted. "The
reason there was a disturbance, the reason you saw what you saw,"
Thigpen whispered, "is that my brethren discovered that somehow
Pyphoros has used First Cenote to escape from the Abyss." Riane's
heart was in her throat. She did not dare tell them that the Portal
seal had been broken when Giyan had violated the sorcerous circle of
the Nanthera in a futile attempt to get Annon back. To do so would
have revealed that the essence of Annon lived on inside of her. And
yet, in the next instant, Thigpen give her another shock. "The
truly frightening thing is that we have discovered that the rift in
the seal of First Cenote is old," the Rappa said. "Perhaps
a hundred years or more." Riane's
mind was racing. That meant there were rifts in two Portals. Giyan
had performed the Nanthera less than a year ago. "Ah,
Great Goddess." Perrnodt's face was lined with worry. "Listen
to me, Dar Sala-at. You said there was nothing to fear regarding the
Maasra falling into evil hands. In fact, there is much to
fear. You see, in the days when Za Hara-at was at its zenith,
Pyphoros and his daemon army were locked away in the Abyss. There are
secrets even now honeycombed within the bones of the ancient citadel
that Pyphoros would give anything to possess. The Veil of a Thousand
Tears is the key to all of them. Now that we know he has returned to
this realm we can be absolutely certain he is scheming to get the
Veil." Riane
thought about this for some time. At last, she said, "We shall
simply have to make certain this never happens." Perrnodt
sighed. "I can guarantee there will be nothing simple about it." "Do
you mean to give up even before we have begun?" Permodt
called a halt to their trek. She ran her fingers through her hair
seven times. With each pass, the wild mass became less curly. When,
at length, her long hair streamed down her back instead of being a
wispy halo around her head, she said calmly, "Sit behind me now,
as I sat behind you. Now take my hair and divide it into thirds. I am
going to teach you how to braid the mistefan." As
Thigpen looked on, as she felt Riane's hands grasping her hair, she
said, "The mistefan is a powerful symbol among us, Dar
Sala-at. It lets others know that we are prepared for battle." Thigpen
kept an eye out for sauromicians while Perrnodt instructed Riane.
When they were done, the Druuge rose and pointed north. "Let
us now make all speed," she said. "Not three hundred meters
ahead is the end of the dead space. We will be over a bourn nexus
point, and we can Thrip to Za Hara-at."
28 Spinner
of Webs
Kurgan
watched the Tuskugggun crone at her spinning wheel. There was a
concentration about her, an aura. She worked with thread
painstakingly unraveled from a pile of stinking rags. This was her
entire world. This
wreck of a building knelt atop the highest hill in Axis Tyr, the
entire city laid out before it. Not three hundred meters away stood
the soaring, fluted arabesques of the Temple of Mnemonics. The native
Kundalan shanstone had been augmented by sheets of Gyrgon neural nets
hung from the ramparts of the high walls. They fluttered like
gargantuan banners in the early-morning haze, lending the structure a
quasi-organic facade the original architects could never have
imagined. "What
is she making?" he asked Courion in a hushed voice. "We
do not know. We sometimes wonder if she does." A
nasty looking wyr-hound lay by the hearth, watching them with
distrustful eyes. Curved yellow fangs protruded upward from its lower
jaw. "Of
course she is quite mad," Courion continued. "Who else
would live in such close proximity to the Gyrgon?" Kurgan
glanced out the window. The empty street was guarded by small animals
with fever-bright eyes and hollow rib cages. They cowered in the
shadows of old Kundalan buildings ransacked at the beginning of the
occupation. The cracked and stubbled faces stood deserted and
forlorn, an archaeological site waiting to be discovered. There was
about the area a massive, hollowed-out numbness that pressed down
like deadweight. Some said this was a deliberate effect of the
bannered neural nets. Courion
led the way past the crone. He
had contacted Kurgan at last. "After careful consideration of
your warning regarding this Gyrgon, we believe we have come up with
an answer to our mutual problem," he had said. "It is
simply a question of how much risk you are willing to take." "To
get Nith Batoxxx off my back forever," Kurgan had replied, "I
am willing to take any risk you propose." Their
shadows fell across the spinning wheel, but the Tuskugggun scarcely
noticed. She was humming a plaintive tune in a clear, bright alto
that belied her advanced age. The
rear of the cracked and half-razed residence consisted of two small
rooms. One was clearly the Tuskugggun's bedroom, just a simple pallet
and a couple of piles of clothes with not even a fusion lamp to be
seen. It was as if her madness had driven her back into a dim
prehistoric age. The other chamber was even smaller, a storeroom
cluttered with useless junk. Webs clung in the corners. A ragged hole
in the roof had been plugged with bits of scavenged wood and wool. A
coating of dust thick as the crescent of his fingernail muffled their
footsteps. As
he looked on, Courion slid aside a pile of rubbish. Beneath was a
trapdoor flush with the filthy floorboards. Courion opened it and,
beckoning the regent forward, disappeared from view. Something
made Kurgan look back into the main room. The spinning wheel was
going, tapped rhythmically by the crone's long, veined fingers. She
was looking at him without expression. "What?"
He jerked his chin. "Is there something you have to say to me?" The
crone continued her silent spinning. Kurgan
shrugged, stepped onto the topmost rung of a vertical wooden ladder,
and climbed down into a confined space. Mold, borne on an insistent
breath of air, tickled his nostrils. He turned into the breeze.
Courion was lighting a torch. By its light, he saw that they were in
a narrow tunnel. Its arched ceiling merged with the walls on either
side. He put his hand out. The shanstone tiles were perfectly seamed
one against the other. "This
will take us directly into the base of the temple's central core,"
Courion said. Kurgan
followed wordlessly. He was apprehensive, but he would be exiled to
N'Luuura before he would admit it. "How
can you get us into the Temple of Mnemonics?" he had queried
Courion when the Sarakkonian captain had outlined his plan. "The
oqeyya," Courion had replied. "Nith Batoxxx does not
want to run the risk of carrying it himself. Accordingly, he provided
us with a way to bring it to him in his laboratory. This way the risk
is all ours." Gyrgon
were unpredictable enough, but Nith Batoxxx held deeper secrets that
Kurgan was burning to know. He thought of the Old V'ornn's patient
tutelage, of Nith Batoxxx's unnatural interest in him, especially now
that he had become regent. What was the Gyrgon's ultimate purpose? He
discounted anything Nith Batoxxx had told him or promised him.
Obviously, these were all lies. He had no doubt that the truth lay
hidden somewhere in the Gyrgon's laboratory. Courion knew that, too,
which was why he had proposed this perilous raid. The
smell of damp stone. Somewhere water dripped, and there was a
creaking, as of leather, old and stiff. The draft of air, gusting,
whistled through a crevice and then, as if surprised by the sound,
subsided. They
turned left, then right and, perhaps a hundred meters farther on,
left again. Unlike most Kundalan structures the tunnel was
featureless, and somehow this increased Kurgan's apprehension. He
felt as if he were walking into a trap. He looked darkly at the back
of Cou-rion's head. What did he know of this Sarakkon, anyway?
N'Luuura only knew where his real loyalties lay. Kurgan grasped the
hilt of his triangular-bladed dagger and considered plunging it
between the Sar-akkon's shoulder blades. Trust was a difficult thing
for most V'ornn; for him it was virtually impossible. Each
individual had his or her best interests at hearts. Once it became
clear that one's own interests collided with theirs trust became
illusory. As the Old V'ornn had beaten into him, trust no one, most
especially those who would befriend you. Wennn
Stogggul had been paranoid. Kurgan had played upon his fears and
caused his demise. He had promised himself that he would never become
like his father. And yet he was affected by powerful genetic tides.
Try as he might to blot it out, he heard his father's voice, a
maniacal warning. And
yet the facts were these: this particular Sarakkon was as adventurous
as Annon once had been. Brave as well, there was no denying that.
And, perhaps most important of all, he was bound by the Sar-akkon's
strict code of honor. Kurgan had saved his life; he now owed Kurgan
his loyalty. Without
warning, Courion turned to him and Kurgan drew his dagger partway out
of its scabbard. "Are
you planning to cut us into ribbons, regent?" Courion said
quietly. "Are we relying too much on our friendship? Should we
never turn our back on you?" They
stood before a gigantic door made of a matte black metal he could not
immediately identify. It was banded and studded with gold jade. "You
are not my friend," Kurgan said. "I have had but one
friend, and he is dead." "Pity." "Dead
at my conniving." "You
do not worry us, regent, if that is your meaning." Kurgan
came and stood very close to the Sarakkon. "We have shared some
things, you and I, extraordinary things. But do not think for a
moment—" "And
we shall share more, regent, even more extraordinary." Kurgan
stood looking into those depthless eyes, and the vision from his own
mind Nith Batoxxx had shown him arose like a leviathan from the deep. There
is another thing here for you to fear. What
was it? What was here that he wasn't seeing? Courion
said, "Once we enter, do not talk or otherwise make a noise that
could be overheard. This includes drawing your dagger. And remember.
Step only where we step. The path that Nith Batoxxx has provided will
take us safely through, but deviate from it only slightly, and we
guarantee we will draw a cluster of Gyrgon, furious at our trespass." Kurgan
watched the Sarakkon turn a lever. A small door opened within the
huge one, and they stepped through. The
tinkling of bells, the tick-tock of hyperexcited ions, the
vibration of massive engines rumbling deep within the labyrinthine
foundation. Courion had left the torch in the tunnel. They stood in
pitch-blackness. Kurgan's fist was tight on the butt of his dagger.
He fought the urge to draw it. The air was bristling with the sizzle
of unknown experiments. He imagined a potent energy beam being pulsed
from the maw of some newly imagined weapon. Just
ahead of him, Courion snapped on a handheld lumane that Nith Batoxxx
must have given him. A narrow beam of highly concentrated light arose
in front of them. Just enough collected at their feet for Kurgan to
see by. They
set off. Quite
soon, Kurgan realized that the Temple of Mnemonics did not contain
corridors like any normal structure. Whether this was a Kun-dalan
design or a restructuring by the Gyrgon was impossible to say. They
had walked only several paces before they dropped down a kind of
shaft. All around them lights twinkled and stuttered. There appeared
to be nothing solid beneath them, yet they descended at a steady rate
of speed. Kurgan, somewhat startled, saw his reflection speeding past
him, replicated again and again. With
a warning tilt of his head, Courion stepped out of the transparent
shaft. Kurgan shadowed him, careful to step only where the
Sarakkonian captain placed his high shagreen boots. This procedure
was repeated three times. Once, they ascended, but for the most part
they kept going down. At
last, the lumane beam revealed them to be in a large chamber. It was
something of a relief after the enclosed spaces they had passed
through. Kurgan was just thinking this when he saw that they had come
to the edge. The floor simply dropped away at a ninety-degree angle.
Courion briefly directed the lumane down, but even the powerful
photon beam could not reach the bottom. Then,
before Kurgan's startled eyes, Courion stepped out into what surely
must be naked space. He did not fall. He paused, beckoned to Kurgan.
He placed one foot directly in front of the other, by which Kurgan
deduced that he was walking along an exceeding narrow gangway. Kurgan
followed him. There was no point in looking down, so he stared at the
Sarakkon's intricate tattoos and made sure he was directly behind
him. In
short order, they reached the other side. Ahead of them was a huge
sphere. Courion walked to their right, around the curving side. At
length, he came to a small circular hatch, which he fiddled open. He
stepped through, and Kurgan followed. Thirteen
tear-shaped globes spinning in an oval orbit leaked cold purple-blue
light onto a windowless lozenge-shaped chamber that, by its looks,
could only be a Gyrgon laboratory. Oddly, the Kundalan murals on the
walls had been left intact. Odder still, they were covered by a
webwork of orangesweet vines. "Nith
Batoxxx's laboratory," Courion said. His voice sounded a little
eerie inside the chamber. "How
did you know Nith Batoxxx would not be here?" "This
is the hour of salamuuun, a sacred time for him," Courion said.
"He is scanning the Realms or whatever it is he does on his
flights." He shook his head. "If we leave here within fifty
minutes, we will not encounter him," Kurgan
took a look around. He could not believe it. He was in the center of
the Gyrgon inner sanctum, the dark heart of the V'ornn Modality's
dreams, and of its secrets. He was confronted by a multitude of
holoscreens, massive databanks, tier upon tier of incomprehensible
equipment. He
tried to take it all in. "Everything," he whispered.
"Everything I ever wanted or aspired to is in this laboratory."
He reached out, turning over one mysterious implement after another.
"It is simply a matter of finding out where it is all hidden." Courion
was looking around the large egg-shaped chamber, whose virtually
seamless skin crawled with rainbow colors. Kurgan
paused as he came upon a red veradium box. Opening it, he saw five
birth cauls neatly arrayed. What need would Nith Batoxxx have for
these? he wondered. He turned them over. On the inner surface of
each one was etched the name of the V'ornn to whom the birth caul
belonged. He went through three before the fourth caught him up
short. STOGGGUL
TERRETTT, he read. Breathless,
he turned over the last birth-caul and his hearts skipped a
double-beat. STOGGGUL
KURGAN. He
was holding his own birth caul. "Look!
An opening of some kind." At
the sound of Courion's voice, Kurgan hastily put his birth caul back
in the red veradium box and closed the lid. He turned. Courion was
running his hand over the egg's pale skin. He hadn't seen what Kurgan
had discovered. The
Sarakkon said, "Always when we came here Nith Batoxxx made
certain it was sealed. He never went near it or even glanced at it.
What do you think?" Kurgan
came over and stood beside him. He was still trying to work out why
Nith Batoxxx would have his birth caul and that of his mad V'ornn
brother. "A vault of some sort?" Courion
grinned. "What does one put in a vault?" And
Kurgan said, "Secrets." Together,
they peered at the round port. It had three shallow depressions in
it. "This
V'ornn technology defeats us," Courion admitted. He
made way for Kurgan, who saw that the depressions were actually
whorls. Kurgan searched through the Gyrgon's paraphernalia until he
found what he wanted. Bringing the scanner back to the hatch, he ran
it over the three depressions. Its photonic screen soon lit up with
an enlargement of the whorls. "There
we go," Kurgan said in triumph. Courion
peered closer. "V'ornnish writing." "Instructions." Putting
aside the scanner, he shook his head. "I do not trust this. Why
put the correct sequence for opening the lock on the lock itself?" Courion
nodded. "Unless depressing the sequence as shown will backfire
on the intruder." "Killing
him." Kurgan returned his gaze to the sequence. "Gyrgon
possess a perverse sense of humor. What if we were to reverse the
sequence?" Courion
licked his lips. "Are you willing to try?" Without
a word, Kurgan worked the depression in reverse order. A moment
later, the hatch swung open, and a low illumination came on inside. He
laughed and, pushing the Sarakkon out of the way, ducked his head and
stepped into the vault which, as it happened, was not a vault at all.
Inside it held only a padded chair. Someone was strapped into it with
his back to Kurgan. "What
is it?" he heard Courion say. "What treasure trove have you
found?" He
reached out, spun the chair toward him. "Oh,
N'Luuura take it!" he cried, jumping back so hard he hit the
back of his head on the edge of the chamber. "What
is it, regent?" Courion said from the laboratory. He
stared at the figure slumped in the chair. It was a Sarakkon. He
studied the faintly curling lips, the pattern of tattoos across the
Sarakkon's head, the runed cubes and balls of
jade and lapis lazuli in his thick curling beard, the huge rings of
star sapphire and ruby and lynx-eye on his fingers. It
was Courion, dead as a slaughtered water buttren. Kurgan,
uttering another curse, drew his dagger and emerged from the chamber. There
was Courion, alive as he had ever been. Except now he was laughing. "Too
late to be alarmed, Stogggul Kurgan." Kurgan
hurled the dagger at the Sarakkon captain, whose image was now
rippling like a mirage. Nith Batoxxx caught the dagger in midnight
with his mailed glove. "Courion
is dead," the Gyrgon said. "Pity, really. He was a rare
specimen of his kind." He leered at Kurgan. "Still, you
must admit he served his purpose admirably." It
so happened that Spice Jaxx's was open all the time. This suited its
varied clientele, a fascinating mix found nowhere else in Axis Tyr,
not even at Blood Tide. The merchants were, like their conical stacks
of spices, night-blooming. Spice Jaxx's was their home away from
home, a hushed, low-lit jewel box in the center of the spice market
vibrating with the heady scents of cinnamon, pepper, and wer-mace
that so moved them. Looorm took their leisure here in slow-paced
languor, radiating like stars their artful, crystalline beauty. They
drank as fashionably as they dressed, lifting tiny handleless cups of
thick, rich ba'du imported by the SaTrryn as they gossiped among
themselves. Even between bouts of energetic sex their gestures were
small rituals of pleasure, artifice raised to a higher power called
mystery. And then there were their high-paying customers, who came to
fuel up on the good food and potent drink before and after their
sweaty trysts. They also talked business, these wealthy Bashkir, with
nothing more on their minds than the next great deal they had heard
about or hoped to get wind of. Every
once in a while Kundalan drifters fell by for a hurried bite to eat,
skittish as blackcrows, keeping a wary eye out for Khagggun patrols
that never appeared. No V'ornn paid them much heed, certainly not the
Deirus with whom they invariably shared space. No V'ornn, not even
the Looorm, cared to be anywhere near the Deirus. But the Kundalan
who arrived and departed like ghostly shadows had no such bias. There
was even, on occasion, brief conversations between the two groups. The
Deirus were a naturally curious lot and, doubtless because of their
own pariah status, they exhibited little of the xenophobia so
prevalent in other V'ornn castes. Secrets were common currency to the
Deirus. What they did, when they did it, and with whom remained
sealed in granite vaults they carried within their hearts. The love
they knew so intimately was evil. And yet they looked like every
other V'ornn; they felt love as any V'ornn felt it. These were
possibly the real reasons they were reviled. Because
they had learned to turn a blind face upon the world that feared and
despised them, they could find it within themselves to have pity for
the Kundalan. It
was to the shadowed space in the rear of Spice Jaxx's where the
Deirus clustered that Sornnn now took Marethyn. They had spent an
hour or so at Cthonne dancing with the ecstatic youths to the curious
hybrid music the band played. The drummer, hooded and robed, had sat
in again, his powerful hands beating a complex tattoo on the skins,
driving the backbeat into every corner of the dancers' skulls. They
stood amid the Deirus and drank steaming ba'du, for which Marethyn
was developing a serious love. Every so often as they spoke or gazed
into each other's eyes they touched one another in the manner lovers
know well. She was telling him about Kirlll Qandda's shocking
revelations regarding Terrettt's condition, that tests had shown that
Ter-rettt had been the subject of secret Gyrgon experiments on his
ativar almost from birth. "How
could they have done such a thing?" she asked between sips of
ba'du. "What would they have wanted from him? And why,
particularly, Terrettt?" "Wa
tarabibi, this is the Gyrgon we're talking of," he said
gently. "You may have to resign yourself to the fact that you
will never know." "I
can never resign myself to such a thing," she said fiercely.
"The Gyrgon destroyed my brother's life. Do you think I can just
forget about what they have done?" He
signaled for another round of ba'du. "All right. What do you
propose? March into the Temple of Mnemonics and demand an
explanation?" It
was such an absurd notion that, despite the keen edge of her anger,
she laughed. "No, of course not. I ... well, I don't know yet.
But give me some time. I will think of something." Their
ba'du was brought by a young Tuskugggun waitress of dark good looks
whose skull gleamed with spiced oil. She placed the tiny cups in
front of them without taking the empty ones away. "Is
everything to your satisfaction?" the waitress asked Sornnn in
such an intimate tone that Marethyn felt herself bristle. "A
perfect drink in a perfect world," Sornnn replied. Marethyn
had no idea what he was talking about. He
downed his ba'du in one swallow, bade her do the same. When she had
thrown the dark liquid down her throat she saw the beautiful waitress
give Sornnn a brief nod. He took Marethyn's arm and, together with
the waitress, they moved deeper into the shadows at the rear of Spice
Jaxx's. Marethyn glanced back at the Deirus. They were talking with
one another, oblivious. No one else was looking in their direction. The
waitress turned and disappeared through a door that lay hidden deep
in the shadows. Sornnn and Marethyn followed her through. She
was waiting for them in a small chamber built of rough stone. Behind
her was an equally rough staircase blasted out of bedrock. She had
pushed her sifeyn off her skull, revealing a lovely diadem of tertium
and veradium no waitress could afford. "Marethyn,"
Sornnn said, lifting a hand toward the diademed Tuskugggun, "this
is Rada TurPlyen. Rada, this is Marethyn Stogggul. She has agreed to
take her grandmother's place in our organization." Rada
took Marethyn's soft artist's hand in her callused one. "This is
such welcome news!" And
then it clicked into place. "You are the one Tettsie met here.
The Tuskugggun who changed her life." "A
chance meeting so many years ago." Rada nodded. "And such a
fateful one! But I rather think that your grandmother changed her own
life. I was only a facilitator." She inclined her head toward
Sornnn. "As were the SaTrryn." "Rada
is my connection to the Resistance," Sornnn said. "She has
owned the Promenade tavern Blood Tide for some years. It was there
she recorded the conversation between Olnnn Rydddlin and Bronnn
Pallln that warned me of their plot against me. This was how, with
your very capable help, I was able to defuse it." "The
ruse turned out to be an exceedingly clever one," Rada
acknowledged. "Not only did it remove a cloud of suspicion from
you, but the death of that snake Bronnn Pallln has put Olnnn Rydddlin
in an increasingly untenable position with the regent." She
shook her head. "But all this largesse has come at a heavy
price. Almost everything we were able to steal from the Khagggun is
now back in their hands." Sornnn
shrugged. "It could not be helped." Then he grinned at her.
"On the other hand, I pity the Khagggun who uses any one of the
ion cannons I spiked." Rada
laughed, clapping him on the back. "Well done, Sornnn!" Marethyn
felt another little stab of jealousy at the familiar manner in which
Rada addressed him. "How
goes your balancing act?" Sornnn said. Rada
shrugged. "Too soon to tell." "This
is dangerous territory you have chosen to play in." "I?
I hardly had a choice in this. The regent made me an offer. If I had
refused, I very much think I would never have walked out of the
palace that night. And as for Olnnn Rydddlin, I had even less of a
say. What strange luck has bound me in sorcery to him and to his
sorcerous mistress, Malistra, I have yet to understand." "In
any event," Sornnn said, "we will miss your keen eyes and
ears in Blood Tide." She
shrugged again. "I have left the running of the tavern to my
sister Nestta, at least for the time being. She is smart and loyal.
As for the data-decagons I weekly send the regent, they still contain
a combination of truth we deem harmless and the disinformation you
and my other contacts concoct. I make certain I am back at Blood Tide
each week to place it in the regent's messenger's goblet." Sornnn
nodded, adding brief explanations here and there to bring Marethyn up
to speed on Rada's triple role as spy for the regent, companion for
the Star-Admiral, and continuing conduit for intelligence to the
Resistance. Rada told them of the difficulties Olnnn was facing in
keeping her new status from the regent's Haaar-kyut. "Have
you heard anything at all about these so-called Portals?" Rada
asked. Sornnn had been one of the first contacts she had asked about
them. "The regent's replies are becoming increasingly more
filled with urgent questions about them." "What
Portals?" Marethyn asked. Rada
took out a laaga stick, lighted it. "It seems a particular
Gyrgon, Nith Batoxxx, believes there are seven Kundalan Portals."
She blew the aromatic smoke out through her nostrils. "What they
lead to I have no idea. But the regent has informed me that he is
most desirous to know their locations." She shrugged. "Anyway,
who cares what the Gyrgon wants? I am pressing you, Sornnn, because I
need to keep real intelligence flowing to the regent to mix in with
the disinformation." Sornnn
shook his head. "Nothing so far. But it is hardly surprising.
This sounds like something a Ramahan might know something about." Rada
nodded, took another hit off the laaga stick, and beckoned silently
to them. She led them down the rough-hewn staircase. It was dark, but
she did not once falter, proof that she was familiar with the route. The
staircase led to a subbasement in which a hole had been punched. A
steep spiral of steps had been roughly hacked out of the bedrock.
Without hesitation, Rada continued the descent, Sornnn after her.
Marethyn brought up the rear. It
became increasingly cold and dank. Marethyn heard strange sounds
echoing, deep and atonal. Then a brief drift of voices, as ephemeral
as the smoke from Rada's half-open lips. Light flared below her, and
she saw Rada and Sornnn standing on a floor of gleaming polished
porphyry. Wrought-bronze
lanterns, filigree blackened with carbon and age, were set at
intervals in triangular wall niches. They trailed off on either side
for as far as she could see. Two youths were facing Sornnn and Rada,
both more or less the same size. They watched her, silent and
brooding, as she descended the last few treads. A Kundalan male and a
female, armed with ion pistols and the haggard faces born of
desperation. Rada took the laaga stick from between her lips and held
it out. The female accepted it, inhaled deep into her lungs, and held
it while she passed it to the male. He, also, took a big hit. They
expelled the smoke together, slowly and luxuriously. He handed the
laaga stick back to Rada. The
two of them continued to regard Marethyn as if deciding how they were
going to kill her. The echoing sounds continued, and Marethyn had an
intuition they were being watched from the shadows. "This
is Marethyn, Neyyore's granddaughter," Rada said, using
Tett-sie's real name. "She is taking her place." She
introduced Majja, the female, and Basse, the male. The
two youths watched her sullenly, hip-sprung. They were all muscle and
hard edges, hormones and attitude. "In
the mountains they have honored Neyyore," Rada said to Marethyn
as if translating the youths' silence, "with fire and prayer.
Miina has heard her name." "Thank
you." Marethyn ducked her head. "Have
you killed?" Basse's
question hung in the air like invective. "Basse,"
Rada said quietly. "No."
He shook his head. One hand was on the grip of his ion pistol. "I
want to know." Majja
said, "She doesn't look like she could kill a blood-flea." "Have
you killed?" It was a foolish question for Marethyn to
have asked. In
a flash, Majja had drawn her ion pistol and jammed the muzzle into
the side of Marethyn's neck. Rada and Sornnn each took a step away. "Don't
do that," Basse said, standing back so he could keep all of them
in his field of vision. His ion pistol was half out of its holster. "We
are both female," Marethyn said to Majja. "Surely we both
feel—" "This
isn't a game," Majja whispered fiercely. "She
thinks it's a game," Basse nodded. "If
you think it's a game," Majja said, "you are going to get
yourself killed and possibly some of us with you." "We
won't have that," Basse said. "Do you understand?" Marethyn
nodded. She licked her lips. To think her life was in the volatile
hands of these youths. How much laaga had they smoked? she wondered. "Let's
all lower our temperatures," Sornnn said. "Rada and I have
brought you good news." "We
need good news." Majja put away her ion pistol and stepped back.
"Three hours ago we found another mass grave." "How
big?" Rada asked. "The
biggest yet." Basse folded his arms across his chest. "More
than three hundred." "We
are no longer able to stand our ground," Majja said. Basse
said, "We need more powerful weapons. Now." "You
know what happened," Sornnn said. "Our hoard had to be
sacrificed for the greater good." "There
will be no greater good," Majja said heatedly, "unless we
are better armed." Sornnn
shook his head. "These things take time." Basse
said, "The new Star-Admiral is relentless. Each day more of us
die. Each day it is more and more difficult getting new recruits." "These
things take time," Majja sneered. Basse
said. "You V'ornn have the Cosmos, we have only Kundala. Can you
understand that?" "Please,"
Marethyn said. "We are here to help you." The
two youths exchanged a glance. Majja
put her hands on her hips and looked her square in the eye. "Let
us see if you mean that, granddaughter of Neyyore." "We
know of a stash containing new-model ion cannons, proximity mines,
ion-pulse projectors," Basse said. "The weapons are being
convoyed in three armed grav-carriages from here in Avis Tyr to
Line-General Lokck Werrrent's headquarters in Glistening Drum. It is
scheduled to leave the Khagggun armory in three days' time. If we
could lay an ambush—" Sornnn
was shaking his head. "It will be too well guarded." Majja
cocked her head. "But we have you, Rada. You are at the
Star-Admiral's side. If you could give us the exact route . . ." "I
could never get it to you," Rada said. "Not with the
Star-Admiral keeping such close track of my movements. I almost
missed the rendezvous tonight." "Find
out what you can." Majja ran her hand down Marethyn's arm. "And
give it to Neyyore's granddaughter. She will come with us." "No,"
Sornnn said at once. Marethyn,
her hearts beating fast, said, "Sornnn, I promised to help." "Not
this way." He shook his head. "You will help the way
Tettsie helped. You will provide us with the funding we need to—" "We
need the weapons!" Majja cried. "Now!" "Otherwise,"
Basse said, "all the coins on Kundala will not avail us." Marethyn
nodded. "I will—" "I
forbid it!" Sornnn roared. "You
forbid it?" She turned to him. "You are the one who brought
me into this." "Not
to go into battle. Not to be on the front lines." "This
is not for you to say," she said quietly. "These children
are in battle every day. They are on the front lines. Why am I
different? Why should I be protected?" He
took her in his arms. "Because I love you." "And
is there no one to love them? Or are their loved ones all dead by our
hand?" She looked up into his face, placed her palm against his
cheek. "Dearest Sornnn, I entered this of my own free will
because this is what I wanted." "Marethyn
..." It was a kind of strangled cry. She
kissed him tenderly. "Now you must let me do what must be done."
29 The
Dispossessed
Konara
Inggres sat in one of the small chambers, windowless and airless, at
the back of the Library and stared at the mirror she had conjured up.
It was really quite beautiful, perfectly round, its frame of beaten
copper incised with sigils that ran in a kind of sinuous dance all
the way around its circumference. The reflection the mirror itself
provided was extraordinarily clear and sharp, bright as a gimnopede's
eye without even a hint of the wavering that was endemic to all
Kundalan mirrors. In other circumstances, Konara Inggres would have
been pleased with her accomplishment. As it was, however, the
mirror's presence only seemed to increase her feeling of dread. She
had written a brief note to Konara Lyystra asking her to come to the
Library, entrusting it to one of the acolytes for a sure and speedy
delivery. Now, bathed in cold sweat, she had become terrified by the
boldness of her design. She had never thought of herself as capable
of being calculating and devious although, she supposed, learning to
be politic might conceivably be cast in that mold. After overhearing
the conversation between Giyan and Bartta she had no illusions
concerning the risk to her body and spirit. But Konara Lyystra was
her best friend. An evil daemon had invaded her, and if Konara
Inggres could do something—anything!—to free her from its
influence, she knew she had to try it. The
cubicle was at the very rear of the vast, two-story Library. Three of
the four walls were covered from floor to ceiling with shelves. The
seamless flow of books was interrupted only by the doorway and, above
it, a decorative fanlight panel, now dark with dust and grime. It was
into this shadowed recess that Konara Inggres had wedged her
sorcerous mirror, having climbed up the rolling ammonwood ladder with
which each of these cubicles was equipped. She sat at the rear of the
compartment, facing the doorway, her eyes flicking upward now and
again to find her own face staring back at her with a combination of
shocked anticipation and acute anxiety. She
saw her friend striding confidently toward her across the polished
agate floor of the Library and, all of a sudden, felt the need to
urinate. Too late for that. Under the table, she crossed her legs.
She had been here for hours, preparing herself for this very moment,
but now that it was here she quailed inside. She concentrated on
controlling her breathing and what she needed to say. Konara
Lyystra entered the cubicle. Difficult though it was, Konara Inggres
stitched a natural-looking smile to her face, got up, and embraced
her friend. As she did so, she looked up at the mirror and saw, to
her horror, what was inhabiting Konara Lyystra's corpus. It
had the greasy-looking triangular head of a serpent and the body of a
gigantic millipede. It was a Cerrn, the sorcerous mirror had revealed
to her, a warrior-daemon one step up from a Tzelos. Even as her mind
coldly registered this fact she could not have been more revolted. It
was all she could do not to thrust the abomination away from her and
run screaming from the cubicle. In fact, she wanted to turn away from
the image, but she could not. Gripped by a horrific fascination, she
continued to stare at the hideous thing, unsure of whether she was
losing her mind. Inside, she wept, and prayed to Miina without
understanding or insight as to how the Great Goddess could have
abandoned her and all the Ramahan to this abysmal fate. She
ticked off the litany of crimes and heresies the abbey's ruling
konara had been perpetrating against Miina for more than a century,
and she knew the answer to her own question. Since the time of Mother
there had been no strong and pious konara to wrest control from her
power-mad successors. And with each one, the abbey had crawled
further away from the sacred teachings of Miina. Into
her head slithered the doubts remembered from her recent debate with
her best friend. What if Miina did not exist? What if she, Konara
Inggres, and all Kundalan were alone in the darkness of this long
night? She felt a wave of despair lap at her. "You
wished to see me," the creature posing as Konara Lyystra said to
Konara Inggres, as they broke their embrace. "You said it was
urgent." "Urgent.
Yes." Konara
Inggres gestured to a chair in which her friend seated herself while
Konara Inggres returned to her accustomed seat behind the desk. She
put her elbows on the tabletop and laced her fingers together. "I
am eager to be able to spend more time with Konara Giyan." "Mother." "Yes."
Konara Inggres nodded. "Mother." With each flick of her
eyes, she saw reflected in the mirror the Cerrn squirming
uncomfortably inside Konara Lyystra's body. Konara Inggres smiled to
keep herself from screaming. "In her talk with me, Ko—Mother
expressed a desire to see a modification in the curriculum. After
careful consideration, I believe that she is right. As far as History
of Sorcery is concerned, I was wondering whether you could advise me
on how to redesign the syllabus." Konara
Lyystra smiled. "I would be delighted to help you all I can. But
I think Mother will be the one to—" "Of
course she will approve the changes." The
Cerrn, dark and squirmy and repulsive, moved behind Konara Lyystra's
eyes. "I believe she will be wanting to make the
changes." Konara
Inggres sat back. "I see." "Is
that a problem in any way?" "Not
at all." Konara Inggres pursed her lips meditatively. "It's
just that—" "What?" "Well,
I hesitate even to bring this up." "But
why not?" Konara Lyystra's smiled broadened. "Are we not
the best of friends? Do not the best of friends trust each other and
share everything?" "That's
the way it has always been with us." "Well,
then. Nothing's changed, has it?" Was
that a dyspeptic note of paranoia Konara Inggres detected in her
friend's voice or was it simply that she herself was balanced on a
knife edge of suspense? She could not tell, but there was no point in
dismissing the possibility. She
laughed softly, marveling at the naturalness of it. "Of course
nothing has changed between us. Why should it?" "I
have become very close to Mother in such a short time. It occurred to
me that you might have become a bit ... well, you know . . ." "Jealous?" "Yes,
that's the word," Konara Lyystra said a little too forthrightly.
"Jealous." "My
goodness, no. It is a great honor for you, and it makes me proud that
you are my friend." Konara
Lyystra beamed. "Yes, yes. That is as it should be." In
this way, Konara Inggres determined that there was a strict limit to
the intelligence of the creature who had possessed her best friend.
This knowledge added to a fundamental base. While she had been
waiting for Konara Lyystra to arrive she had not been idle. Rather,
she had been busy consulting the ancient ill-used books here,
assiduously researching the subject of possession. For instance, she
had discovered that possession of a Ramahan was possible only by a
daemon, and possession by a daemon was only possible if one or more
of the sorcerous Portals to the Abyss had been broken open. There
were several ways to go about a dispossession, as the ancient texts
called the casting out of the daemon. This was not a simple
procedure. The first step was to separate the daemon from the host
body-mind network. The second, equally difficult feat, was then to
kill or immobilize the daemon itself. There was, she had read, only a
very short amount of time—perhaps as little as ten seconds—when
the daemon, wrenched from its temporary home, was disoriented and
thus assailable. The third step was perhaps the hardest, because when
the daemon was inside its host it opened White Bone Gate. This was
one of the fifteen Spirit Gates inside each individual. The opened
gates allowed the body's natural energy to flow in a pattern unique
to that individual. If there was a disruption in even one gate, an
illness of the soul would result. White Bone Gate was the main
bulwark against the infiltration of evil. If it was open or damaged,
evil would inevitably enter to deform the spirit, and until that
spiritual Gate was closed the host remained vulnerable to the
incursion of evil. Konara Inggres had no doubt that this is what had
happened to Bartta. The
Cerrn, the texts had revealed, made up in power for what it lacked in
intelligence. It was a dangerous, even a formidable adversary for a
konara trained in dispossession, let alone one like her who was
struggling to absorb so much knowledge in a short amount of time. She
could not afford to make a mistake, yet in the back of her mind was
the thoroughly disquieting notion that her haste would almost ensure
some kind of slip-up. She found that her palms were wet, and she
rubbed them together underneath the table where Konara Lyystra could
not observe her extreme anxiety. She
felt little filaments of terror shooting through her like painful
sparks as she drew from a low shelf just behind and to one side of
her a tray she had prepared some hours ago in the still-dark
refectory. As
Konara Lyystra was about to stand up, she said, "Don't go. I
took the liberty of preparing refreshments." She slid the tray
onto the desktop and distributed the service. "A pot of cool
sanguineaberry infusion and individual qwawd-blood puddings." "Mmmm."
Konara Lyystra's avid eyes were riveted on the array of puddings.
"Looks absolutely scrumptious. You don't see those every day." When
she had read that many daemons loved qwawd blood, she had recalled a
brace of the large birds hanging by their long necks in the
refectory's cold room, waiting on the cooks to season and roast. She
poured the infusion into small ceramic cups and pushed a pudding in
front of Konara Lyystra. Neither of these things would her friend
have eaten on her own, but like many daemons the Cerrn suffered from
an excess of greed, and she could see by the avid look on Konara
Lyystra's face that she had, as it were, hit the peg square on its
crown. Without
a word of thanks, Konara Lyystra popped an entire pudding into her
mouth and nearly swallowed it whole. She washed the pudding down with
her cupful of sanguineaberry infusion. While Konara Inggres was
refilling her cup, Konara Lyystra reached for another qwawd-blood
pudding. As she did so, her mouth fell open. Though she had steeled
herself for the sight, Konara Inggres almost gagged as she saw the
Cerrn's cilia rippling in its extreme greed across the top of the
tongue. Immediately, she cast White-Bone Rushing Out, the
dispossession spell she had learned earlier that morning but had, of
course, never practiced. For
a moment, Konara Lyystra's body froze in midreach. Her eyes opened
wide, and she began to blink very rapidly. So softly that at first
Konara Inggres had to strain to hear, there emerged from her breast a
sound not unlike the beating of insect wings. The
rest happened so quickly that Konara Inggres leapt back off her
chair. First, Konara Lyystra's eyes began to bleed. Blood ran from
her nose, drooled out of her mouth. Then, her head snapped back so
that she was staring straight up at the vaulted ceiling, her jaws
hinged open and, with a nauseating sound, the Cerrn was summarily
ejected from its host. For
an instant, it lay stunned in a puddle of slimy gastric juices. It
was smaller than Konara Inggres had imagined, and somehow mesmerizing
in its altogether ghastly countenance. This last the text had covered
but possibly not well enough, for Konara Inggres felt herself captive
of her own morbid fascination and it was only when it began to stir,
flopping and thrashing, that she reached for the shard of heart-wood
she had secreted on the shelf behind her. But
by this time the Cerrn had regained much of its senses and,
recognizing its antagonist, rippled its multilegged body and shot
through the intervening space toward Konara Inggres' face. Konara
Inggres had barely time enough to impale it on the heartwood shard.
Then she slammed it down onto the tabletop, sending teapot, cups, and
disgusting qwawd-blood puddings flying in all directions. Using both
her hands, she ground the stake all the way through the Cerrn while
it twisted and beat itself in its death agonies. At
last it was still, and Konara Inggres, taking a deep breath, rushed
around from behind the desk and knelt beside her friend where she had
collapsed to the floor. Using the edge of her robes, Konara Inggres
wiped the blood from Konara Lyystra's face and, for her efforts, was
rewarded with her friend's eyes opening. They looked placid and calm
with no trace of the squirmy darkness that had so recently haunted
them. Konara
Inggres let out a laugh and, taking her friend's head in her lap,
kissed her on the cheeks and forehead. "Ah, thank Miina!" "Inggres,"
Konara Lyystra whispered in a thin, sere voice, "where am I?
What has happened?" Before
Konara Inggres could reply, a shadow fell over them and they both
looked to the figure looming in the doorway. "Yes,"
Giyan said with a great deal of concern in her voice, "that is
precisely what I want to know." I
told you to be careful, didn't I? I warned you there was something to
fear in your relationship with the Sarakkon. I really must say I gave
you every opportunity to prove your loyalty to me." Nith Batoxxx
circled Kurgan, the triangular blade of the dagger slapping into his
mailed palm. "And what happens?" "How
long?" Kurgan said tightly. "You
betray me the first chance you get." "How
long have you been Courion?" All
at once Nith Batoxxx strode toward him. "I am through playing
games with you." Kurgan
neither cowered nor ran. He thought of the Tuskugggun crone, spinning
her stupid wheel. Had she known? Is that why she had looked at him
just before he had gone down the ladder? Or was she just, as Courion
had said, mad? But, then, that hadn't really been Courion who had
said that. It had been Nith Batoxxx. "What
has five faces," Kurgan said, "two of them animal?" He
grimaced in pain as the Gyrgon gripped him. The hyperexcited ions
danced along his flesh, making him feel as if he were being dipped in
fire. Slowly,
Nith Batoxxx turned him around until he was facing the egg-shaped
chamber. "This
is a goron-wave chamber. Let me show you what happens to anyone who
is put inside." He raised his free hand, and the circular hatch
slammed closed. Another gesture brought down several holoscreens. He
turned on the goron wave and when it had passed through the interior
of the chamber, she opened the hatch and shoved Kurgan inside. There,
Kurgan was witness to the horrifying results. Courion's eyes were
completely white, his teeth had turned to dust in his mouth and his
tattoos had been burned all the way through his skull. "And
he was already dead," Nith Batoxxx said as he took Kurgan by the
scruff of his neck and shoved him, stumbling, from the chamber.
"Imagine what it will do to you." Kurgan
kept his mouth shut, knowing full well anything he said would
infuriate the Gyrgon all the more. "I
am going to place you in there," Nith Batoxxx said, "and I
am going to loose the goron wave a little at a time. I understand it
is like having a million tiny mouths feed off you at the same time." "Is
this meant to frighten me?" Kurgan stood his ground. "I
have been too well trained. I have no fear. Even you were unable to
find any fear inside me. So you created your little fantasy with
Courion." "A
test," Nith Batoxxx said. "Let us call it by its proper
name. A test you failed." "If
failure means not having to be yoked to you, then it is well I
failed." Nith
Batoxxx seized him so hard he rose into the air. "You swore an
oath of fealty to me. Your word—" "My
word means nothing to the likes of you." Kurgan was spasming
with the pain the Gyrgon was causing him. He could not imagine the
goron-wave chamber being any worse than this. "You coerced that
oath out of me. Did you really think I would abide by it?" With
a roar, Nith Batoxxx grabbed him by both hands. He almost passed out
with the agony. There was no part of him that did not pulsate
painfully with needles of hyperexcited ions. He could feel his hearts
racing too fast; imagining his blood beginning to boil, he began to
retch, but was quickly too weak even for that. "I
will not break," he whispered. "I will not bow down to
you." "Oh,
yes, you will." "I
will die first." "Then
by all means." Nith Batoxxx grinned evilly at him. "You are
Stogggul. I know your family rather well. You are all deceitful,
lying skcettta." "I
owe all my deceit to the Old V'ornn." Kurgan tried to keep his
voice steady. "I believe you know him rather well." "What
means this?" "I
think it is time we both stopped playing games," Kurgan said
through chattering teeth. The Gyrgon's face, the goron-wave chamber,
the entire laboratory was going in and out of focus. "I know who
you are, who you become when you leave this temple and wander the
streets of Axis Tyr. Show me the Old V'ornn." He knew, finally,
that he was going to sob, so he laughed raggedly to cover it. "Show
yourself! Come on, there's a good Gyrgon." "You
want me to reveal myself?" Nith Batoxxx thundered. "This is
what you desire? So be it then!" Kurgan
gave a sharp yelp as the bronze skin and pulsing neural-net circuits
at the crown of the Gyrgon's head peeled back in a surf of yellowish
foam. This almost immediately evaporated into a mist, exuding the
foul must of the grave. Instead of revealing bare skull, there
appeared a black hole, from which snaked a scaled appendage, whiter
than death. Then another appendage came questing and another until
there were five in all. These
appendages shot straight up in concert. As they did so, they began to
twine with one another. The rotten stench had by this time fully
permeated the laboratory, and Kurgan felt once again the need to
retch. He
was wrenched from his incipient illness by the next phase of what was
taking place in front of him. The twining appendages seemed to have
reproduced. Now they were melding together, forming the trunk of a
huge and powerful-looking body. It appeared to be at once bipedal and
animal in that its stance was a semicrouch, one shoulder higher than
the other. Then,
from the core of this eerie headless trunk a halo of light emerged.
It rapidly coalesced into a spinning orb. As the orb settled upon the
massive shoulders it spun more and more slowly, and Kurgan caught now
and again the hint of a face. But it was never the same face. The
orb, coming to rest, resolved itself into a head unlike any Kurgan
had ever seen, save once. Here before him was the thing with five
faces, three Kundalan, two animal. His glimpse of it in the mirror
had been too brief or perhaps too shocking for him to have kept a
clear memory of all the faces. But now he could see them clearly, and
it seemed to him that each one was defined by a specific emotion. A
long, saturnine face with black flashing eyes was animated by anger,
another, beautifully sculpted, was lit by lust, a third, at once
bloated and dissipated, was the epitome of envy, a predator bird's
imperious countenance radiated pride, while a sleek catlike face
watched him greedily. Kurgan,
for once in his life overwhelmed, struggled despite his pain to
scramble away. "The
real me seems not much to your liking, regent, is that safe to say?" The
voice, deep and echoey, was the one he had heard snatches of coming
at times from Nith Batoxxx's mouth. It filled the entire laboratory
like the bursting of a thunderstorm. "What
are you doing?" he cried. "What illusion are you casting
now?" The
thing before him laughed. "Illusion? This world you live in is
the illusion. You V'ornn! You pass through space, you conquer worlds
and races and think you are the emperors of the Cosmos. But you have
not the slightest conception of the multiplicity of the Cosmos. You
inhabit one tiny island in an ocean so vast it is beyond your limited
comprehension. "Illusion?"
The thing shook Kurgan like a rag doll. "You V'ornn are more the
illusion than I am. I am Pyphoros, Lord of archdaemons. And I have at
last returned to this realm from the prison accursed Miina confined
me to eons ago." With
the most serene of smiles on her face, Giyan made a vicious lunge for
Konara Inggres, but Konara Inggres was prepared for this. She was
already chanting, and in chanting, spinning, and spinning, Thripped
out of the Library at the Abbey of Floating White into Otherwhere. For
a moment her mind was filled with the guilt of leaving her friend
behind. But she knew that Giyan had given her no choice, and she
shook her head to clear it. She was not yet such an accomplished
Osoru sorceress, having trained herself in secret, that she
understood the changes Horolaggia had wrought in this sorcerous
realm. Nevertheless, the cacophony of wailing voices made her aware
that all was not well here. And, unlike Riane, she had the advantage
of years of book study, and therefore knew that somehow the veil
between Realms had grown so thin it was in danger of rupturing. What
damage daemons running amok in Otherwhere could perpetrate she could
not imagine. She only knew that she could not allow it to occur. She
found herself on a vast plain running with blood. In the far distance
she could make out the looming jagged length of the mountains within
which, she could already sense, lay ominously beating the evil hearts
of daemonic Avatars. Instinctively, she knew that she was no match
for them, for she felt their power pulsing in waves that produced
storm clouds, ruddy and fulminating, above the rock spires. And
so she kept her profile low, slouching in shadows, picking her way
carefully across the newly blasted landscape. She had absolutely no
experience with Thripping, and therefore felt dizzy and nauseous, not
knowing that she needed a mononculus inside her to absorb the noxious
radiation that existed in the netherspace between Realms. She simply
put her feeling of weakness down to inexperience, assuming she would
grow stronger with each Thrip. Despite
her temporary infirmity, she kept moving, wanting as soon as possible
to find Giyan. It was not easy to think clearly, what with the
growing din of the babbling voices and the fear of pursuit. She knew
from her readings that the daemon in possession of Giyan could not
Thrip; daemons could not employ Osoru sorcery. Similarly, it could
not use Giyan's Osoru Avatar, for in order to possess a Ramahan it
was required to bind the sorceress's Avatar in Otherwhere. But she
did know that the archdaemons like Pyphoros had power over Avatars of
their own, and this was her fear now, that Giyan was possessed by an
archdae-mon who would send its Avatar after her, even though it could
only exist for a short time in this realm that had been created by
Osoru sorcery. She
knew that she had a small window within which to operate. When she
had conceived of the plan to dispossess Konara Lyystra of the daemon
infesting her she knew there was a possibility of Giyan discovering
what she was up to. Accordingly, she devised an escape route into
Otherwhere—daring and dangerous inasmuch as she had never
attempted to Thrip before. But she could think of no other way out of
the dire straits unfolding in the abbey. She understood that she was
not powerful enough to defeat the daemons already in residence. It
was difficult enough to keep her Osoru abilities a secret from them
and from the possessed Konara Lyystra. She knew she had to take
action quickly or surely she would be found out and eliminated, as
Giyan's possessor had so succinctly put it. In short, when she
thought it through, she needed help. Sorcerous help on a powerful
scale. And who better to provide that help than Giyan herself? Now
here she was slouching through Otherwhere, searching for Giyan's
pinioned Avatar, with precious little time to consider her next move.
She kept one eye ahead of her, the other on the fulminating clouds
above the jagged peaks, knowing that it was there that she would
first spot movement from the slumbering daemonic Avatars. From
what she had gathered from her clandestine reading of the forbidden
Osoru texts, Otherwhere was a realm constructed on the bedrock of
symbology, and as a sailor scans the horizon for a sail or a raised
fist of land, so she looked for symbols. And, at length, she saw
something, and headed for it as quickly as she dared. As
she approached, she saw that it was a gigantic inverted triangle,
black as night, onto which was pinioned, head down, a great bird. And
without being told, she recognized this bird from her readings as an
Avatar known as Ras Shamra. "Shima
Giyan," she called softly, for shima was the level Giyan had
attained before she had been banished from the abbey. "Who
calls me by my old title?" And
Konara Inggres gasped, for she was near enough now to see that the
Avatar's eyes were blinded by blood that seeped from a thousand small
cuts on her body. "It
is I, Shima Giyan, Leyna Inggres. Now Konara." "Ah,
ah, dear Inggres. I recall you as a little girl. I marked you as one
with the Gift. Of course, I told no one." Konara
nodded her thanks. "Since you left, it seems that with each
passing year the abbey is beset with more evil." She was
grateful that Giyan was not wasting time asking her how she had
managed to nurture her Gift in the hostile environment of the abbey. "How
much damage?" Giyan asked. "You
don't know?" "I
am cut off here. But quickly, tell me. Horolaggia cannot overhear us
unless his Avatar appears." Konara
Inggres nodded. Her mouth was dry. "The daemon possessing you
has taken over Floating White, and has brought Bartta back from her
sorcerous limbo, only to be possessed by another daemon." "This
news is more evil than you know," Giyan said. "We are
dealing with archdaemons. This means that Horolaggia is not the only
one to have escaped the Abyss. He has somehow freed his brother
Myggorra." Konara
Inggres gasped. "You are speaking of the offspring of
Pypho-ros]" "Indeed.
And in doing so they have violated the Primal Laws set down for
mortals, creatures, sorcerers, goddesses, archdaemons, and daemons." "Ah,
Shima Giyan!" Konara Inggres cried all at once. "How can we
be talking like this when you are held captive and in such agony? You
have only to tell me how I can help you." "You
cannot," Giyan said. "At least not in the direct fashion
you mean." "How
then? I know my power is no match for an archdaemon." "That
is true enough," Giyan said, "but we have yet to test your
ingenuity against them. You must return to the abbey. In the most
ancient section, below the commissary, are Miina's sacred chambers." "The
Kells, yes. I have seen them, Shima Giyan. It is there that I
conjured the mirror in which I saw the Cerrn that had possessed my
best friend, Konara Lyystra. I dispossessed it using White-Bone
Rushing Out and killed it by impaling it on a heartwood stake." "I
congratulate you," Giyan said, "but know that White-Bone
Rushing Out will work only with the low-level daemons like a Tzelos
or a Cerrn. For those who have possessed me and my sister other
measures must be taken." "Tell
me, Shima Giyan." "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears is being sought even now by ... someone
trusted by me. Her name is Riane. You must wait for her, for besides
the death of the host, the Veil is the only thing that will
dispossess an archdaemon. But I know that if you are here they must
be aware of your Osoru Gift. You must wage a war of stealth against
them. You must hide and keep yourself hidden even from those whom you
have in the past trusted. I cannot stress this enough, no one inside
the abbey can be trusted. You must assume that they are all
compromised. All of them, do you understand?" "Yes,
Shima Giyan." "This
friend of yours." "Konara
Lyystra." "For
the time being you must forget her." "But
Shima Giyan." The
Ras Shamra shook its head. "No exceptions, Konara Inggres, none
whatsoever. I understand your desire to help your friend. But you see
the result. In casting White-Bone Rushing Out you gathered to you
unwanted scrutiny. Now that you have identified yourself as their
enemy they will not rest until they have destroyed you." Konara
Inggres forced down a rising panic. "But how will I wage this
war of stealth you speak of in these dire circumstances?" "By
judiciously employing a weapon they cannot know is in your
possession. Tell me, when you were in the Kells did you see Ghosh,
the citrine serpent?" "Yes,
Shima Giyan. It was in the exact center of the Kell." "It
was not in its niche on the wall?" Giyan said sharply. "Are
you certain?" "Absolutely,
Shima Giyan. I prostrated myself before it and prayed to Miina for
guidance." "And
did guidance come?" Konara
Inggres thought a moment. "I suppose it did. Not long after, in
the Kell just beneath, I discovered the cenote. Around it were
arrayed in a perfect triangle three terrifying beasts carved of some
stone I could not identify. They had pelts of gold leaf strewn with
black spots. This cenote was where I cast the spell that conjured up
the mirror." Seeing the Ras Shamra tremble, she hesitated a
moment. "Is there something odd about what I have told you?" "That
Ghosh and the three Ja-Gaar are no longer where they have remained
for centuries means there is sorcery more ancient even than the
Ramahan at work. There is much to consider." Shaking the blood
from its eyes, the Ras Shamra cast its glance as best it could toward
the fulminating mountain range. "We have very little time left.
Listen carefully to what I tell you. Return at once to the Kells.
Pluck the right eye from Ghosh." "But,
Shina Giyan," Konara Inggres said, horrified. "The citrine
serpent is sacred of Miina. I cannot deface—" "You
will do as I say!" the Ras-Shamra thundered with such utter
authority that Konara Inggres could only bow her head. "Yes,
First Mother!" "Why
do you call me that?" "The
Prophesies, First Mother. They tell of the Ramahan sorceress who will
be imprisoned in Otherwhere by the archdaemon. It is she who is
destined to guide the Dar Sala-at. She is the First Mother." "Be
that as it may," the Ras Shamra said, "you will pluck the
right eye from the citrine serpent. Do this by turning it three times
left in its socket. You will then take it to the cenote where you
conjured up the mirror and immerse it for thirty seconds, no more, no
less. Do you understand?" "Yes,
First Mother." "When
you remove it—" The
sky seemed to be crying crimson tears, and the ground beneath Konara
Inggres' feet trembled with ominous thunder. The
Ras Shamra did not have to tell Konara Inggres what this portended.
"When you remove it," she hurried on, "place it wet
upon the center of your forehead, in that spot between your eyes and
above the bridge of your nose. Once you have immersed it, you must
not allow it to dry. If you do, it will crack apart and fall to
useless dust." "Then
what, First Mother?" Konara Inggres glanced nervously at the
soot-black clouds rising swiftly from the mountain peaks. "What
will happen when I place the eye against my forehead?" "Go!"
the Ras Shamra ordered. "Before he catches a glimpse of you!" Konara
Inggres closed her eyes. As she did so, she began to spin and,
spinning, Thripped out of Otherwhere just as the clouds were rent
asunder.
30 Za
Hara-at
And
there it crouched, waiting on the edge of eternity. Darkling,
windswept, subterranean. Half-devoured by time. Twilight at the rim
of the Djenn Marre, in sight of the Great Rift. Repository of ancient
secrets, a labyrinth of blood-dark streets winding out of light and
time, entering another place. An almost forgotten city, musty,
deserted, guarded. Za Hara-at. Two
kuomeshal stood side by side, heads down, drowsing. Coveys of finbats
fluttered in ragged streamers. A young Bey Das, skin dark as
pomegranate stew, long hair flying, dragged a kite behind him. He ran
in a straight line from the edge of the dig toward the ragged,
flyblown tents of Im-Thera. Tiny clouds of red dust floated in his
wake. The kite took flight in twilight's gusty arrival and the
finbats veered away to continue feeding. The kite dipped once, then
soared heavenward, and the boy made a brief ululating sound of
triumph, only to be cut short by his mother's angry cry of anxiety as
she pulled him back to Im-Thera. In
twilight, Za Hara-at was deserted. Though there was still plenty of
reflected light in the overwhelming sky, no Bey Das worked at the dig
after the sun slid behind the Djenn Marre. Light blazed from the
smallish encampment made up of Mesagggun and Bashkir architects hired
by the Stogggul and SaTrryn Consortia to begin the reconstruction of
Za Hara-at. The encampment was now completely surrounded by a
bristling of Khagggun armament. In the glare of artificial light, an
ion shield was being erected around the perimeter to keep out the
unknown predator who stalked the crumbled avenues of Za Hara-at and
to keep in the terrified Bashkir who longed for Axis Tyr. Into
this unsettling twilight Thripped the three travelers. They arrived
at the top of the main ramp that led down into the archaeological
remains of Za Hara-at. It was, Riane thought, like entering the
skeleton of a great and fantastic beast, for she felt with her
extraordinary Gift the life that pulsed in a place most believed had
been dead and buried for centuries. The city was sitting on a network
of bourn nexuses. She felt their separate vibrations like the
sections of an orchestra tuning up. "My
kind have told countless stories of Za Hara-at," Thigpen said,
her voice filled with awe. "But I am the first of my generation
to see it." "Once
this was a thriving citadel," Perrnodt said, as they continued
down the ramp. "And yet it was not the hub of ancient
civilization, for it was designed and constructed for one reason. As
a defense against an enemy so terrible that only such an engine of
unimaginable power could save us." "Too
bad you could not have resurrected it to stop the V'ornn invasion." "The
engine was designed to facilitate the destruction of the one terrible
enemy," Perrnodt said. "This is how such power is
safeguarded." They
had reached the beaten-brass streets of Za Hara-at itself. Embedded
in the streets were, here and there, runes carved from emperor
carnelian and lapis lazuli. Riane knelt, ran her fingertips over the
runes. They were Venca. GATHER
THE UNKOWING, she read. "Perrnodt,"
she said quietly, "who built Za Hara-at?" "We
did. The Druuge." Perrnodt stared down a broad boulevard into
the gathering darkness. "We needed help. The engine at the core
of the citadel was too complex even for us to manage on our own. So
we did something that was both necessary and foolish. We enlisted the
daemons to assist us." Riane
stood. "I thought you told me that the daemons were imprisoned
at that time." "No.
I said they were imprisoned at the height of Za Hara-at's power. They
helped us build the engine and then, of course, they wanted control
of it. That we could not allow. There was a fierce battle. Many on
both sides were killed. Then Miina stepped in and imprisoned them in
the Abyss. They never got to see the engine they had labored so hard
to build." "No
wonder Pyphoros wants to return." "He
covets the terrible secrets buried here," Perrnodt said. "He
will not rest until he gets them or is killed in the attempt." Thigpen
stirred uneasily as she glanced around. "Now that we know he has
found his way into this realm we must be on our guard. Since we know
that he cannot survive in his own form, we must look beneath the
surface of those we may come across here. Any one of them could be
possessed by the archdaemon." "This
way," Perrnodt said. She led them down the boulevard known as
Gather the Unknowing, past the shells of gabled houses and columned
temples. At length, it gave onto an octagonal plaza. Eight streets
radiated out from its periphery. "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears is in a formidable lair," Perrnodt
said. All around them rose double-storied structures whose purpose
was impossible to imagine. "It is sealed inside a box of fire,
which is surrounded by a coffin of water. In between is airless
dark." "How
do we find it?" Riane asked. "Not
we, Dar Sala-at. You must do this alone. The Veil is semisen-tient.
Go to the exact center of the plaza. Once you are there, it will
sense you and guide you to it." "Will
it also tell me how to retrieve it?" "No,
and neither can I. That you must discover for yourself. I can tell
you this much: keep track of the power bourns at all times." "And
when I do get it, what then? How do I use it to save Giyan?" "You
must find the way to free the Dragon's tears locked inside the Veil,"
Perrnodt said. "I regret that I do not have the requisite
knowledge to tell you how to do so. You must trust yourself and the
Veil. You must allow it to become a part of you. Once you merge with
it, you will know the way." Riane
nodded. She did not want to leave her friends, but she had no choice.
She looked Perrnodt in the eye, then she quickly knelt and ruffled
Thigpen between her triangular ears. "May
Miina be at your side this night and always, little dumpling,"
the Rappa whispered. Riane
rose and walked to the center of the plaza. At once, she felt the
bourn nexus point directly below her. The vibration slowly crept up
from her feet through her legs into her torso. When it reached her
brain, it spoke to her in the language of power bourns that Perrnodt
had taught her. She turned forty-five degrees to her left and found
herself facing one of the eight streets. As she headed toward it, she
heard Perrnodt's voice calling through the failing twilight. "Let
the bourns guide you where they will, Dar Sala-at. Keep to the
designated path and do not deviate." Riane
nodded. As she plunged into the thick gloom of the street, she lifted
her open palm and conjured a small globe that hovered in the air just
in front of her. It emitted a powerful beam of light that moved as
she moved, illuminating the way ahead of her. She
continued on, cleaving to the path along the bourns. The evening
collected around her like fragments of the past. Once, she looked up
at the enormous bowl of the Korrush sky, and it seemed so distant it
took her breath away. She reached a nexus and changed directions,
following another bourn-line. All around her the citadel was
breathing, churning the present into the past by the alchemy of its
unique origin. Designed by Druuge, built by daemons to be an engine
of unimaginable destruction. Lost now, dreaming of its lost zenith,
endless, depthless. Deserted. Except. Riane,
aware of a tiny tingle along her scalp, paused. Even though the power
bourne urged her on, she turned to her right. She heard something,
the creak of a board, the tiny discreet sound of a pebble dislodged,
bouncing on beaten brass. She
saw something stir in an alleyway and took a step toward it. A step
off the bourne. Her
sorcerous light illuminated a figure, impossibly tall, emaciated,
pale as a corpse. Fillets of knucklebones ran through his elongated
ear-lobes. He wore his hair long on the top, shaved on the sides. His
face appeared devoid of any flesh whatsoever. It was as if the skin,
yellow-white as tallow, had been pulled over bare bone, taut as a
drum. His eyes, sunk deep into his skull, blazed pale as moonslight,
the pupils tiny, black and pulsing. A runic scar, ruddy and livid,
rose from the center of his forehead. His ebon robes fluttered like
flags of death. Sauromician! Murmurous
mouth like the blade of a knife. He
stepped back into the shadows of the alley and Riane felt a sudden
compulsion to follow him. She took another step in his direction and
shook her head. She felt like she was under water. That murmurous
mouth. He had been casting a spell. Keep
to the designated path, Perrnodt had warned.
Do not deviate. Instinctively,
she conjured Mounting Irons, and she was freed from the sauromician's
spell. She peered into the alley, but he had vanished. She turned
back, searching for the power-bourne, but it, too, had vanished. She
had lost her way and Za Hara-at had swallowed her whole. Pyphoros
was shaking Kurgan to the point of unconsciousness. The archdaemon
had returned to Nith Batoxxx's body, but there was, at last, no
longer any trace of Nith Batoxxx's personality. It had been entirely
devoured. Pyphoros,
seeing Kurgan's eyes roll up, slapped his face hard to bring him back
to full consciousness. "For your insolence and your treachery I
should kill you on the spot. Part of me wants to, part of me would
gain great pleasure in your death. But I have lavished too much time
and energy on you. I have read the intestines of the dead and know
that you have a greater role to play, a higher destiny than you
know." He
brought Kurgan's face close to his own. "Know that I have come
to love you as a father loves his child. But you are contrary and
disobedient. You believe yourself able to outwit anyone, even me. So.
You must be shown how wrong you are." His face was so close to
Kurgan's that the regent was engulfed by the burnt sulphur of his
breath. "You once made a blood oath to me that you have
willfully violated. That cannot be tolerated. You are mine, Stogggul
Kurgan. I chose you, and I made you mine. Now you will wear the mark
that will always remind you of this truth." He
opened his mouth and a long thin black tongue emerged. It undulated
like a serpent, quivering as it neared Kurgan's face. The regent
tensed, tried to rear his head back, but Pyphoros held him in an
inexorable grip. "Is
that fear I sense, Stogggul Kurgan?" Pyphoros crooned. "Fear
at last?" Kurgan
glared at him. "Good.
I taught you better than that, didn't I? Yes. I taught you how to
turn your heart to stone." The black tongue hovered over
Kurgan's throat. "Now, once and for all, you will learn
obedience." The
tip of the archdaemon's tongue opened like a tiny eye and a drop of a
greenish liquid fell onto the hollow of his throat. Anyone else would
certainly have screamed. Kurgan, silent, gritted his teeth. The eye
opened again and another drop oozed out. Kurgan felt the pain reach
all the way into the marrow of his bones, and this time he moaned. "An
archdaemon's saliva is to be avoided at all costs, so the Ramahan
believe, because it causes pain beyond imagining." Pyphoros's
face twisted into a monstrous grin. "Just two drops, regent.
Imagine the damage a mouthful would do." Kurgan
lay trembling and sweating. At length, he touched the raw wound. The
pain made him gasp anew. "I
have marked your flesh with my talisman, Stogggul Kurgan. Every time
you see it you will know that our fates are entwined." The
archdaemon set him down none too gently. "While I have occupied
this animated prison I have been active." Having delivered his
punishment, he took on the pose of teacher, a role, Kurgan knew, he
particularly relished. "At my connivance, the Comradeship is
splintered beyond repair. Nith Sahor, the one Gyrgon able to heal the
wounds, is dead. At Gyrgon direction, the Khagggun have annihilated
your priests, outlawed the worship of your god, Enlil. Your Bashkir
quarrel among themselves, your once mighty Khagggun grow restive and
soft. And still you stay here, dreaming your salamuuun-induced
dreams, sinking slowly but surely into the muck of time. Why haven't
you gone?" "I
have as little respect for the Gyrgon as you do," Kurgan said.
"Maybe even less." Pyphoros
struck him so hard he crashed sideways to the cool laboratory floor. "If
you do not respect your enemy, what chance do you have of defeating
him?" He hauled Kurgan to his feet. "The same applies to an
ally." Kurgan
wiped blood from his face. He tasted it in his mouth. He touched the
slowly pulsing wound in the hollow of his throat. It had closed,
leaving a small mark, dark as a Sarakkonian tattoo. "What is it
you want from me?" "Secrets.
Information. Power. Ever since I returned to this realm I have been
searching for the Dar Sala-at, the chosen of Miina, the great hero of
Prophesy." "Why?" His
balled fists shook with his rage. "It is so unfair! Imprisoned,
all of us, by a Goddess who has lost Her mind?" "You
mean the Kundalan Goddess Miina? She exists?" Pyphoros
rounded on him, "If I wasn't in such a towering rage I would
find your expression amusing. Of course she exists." He
peered at Kurgan. "But you comprehend something of this, don't
you, Stogggul Kurgan? You are one of those special V'ornn who knows
the truth when he hears it." His eyes seemed to writhe in their
sockets. "To answer your question, I am searching for the
Portals to the Abyss. I told you about them. All seven need to be
opened before I can free the daemons from their eons-long prison.
There is one—and only one— who can do this." "The
Dar Sala-at?" "That
would be convenient, wouldn't it?" Pyphoros shook his head. "No.
It is foretold to be another. The Veil of a Thousand Tears will be
able to identify him. That is why I will have the Veil at all costs.
And it will be you, regent, who will help me obtain it." Terrettt
stared up into Marethyn's face and blinked away tears, "He's
crying," Marethyn whispered, bending over him. "I
have given him something new, something very different, formulated
especially for his enlarged ativar." Kirlll Qandda sat on a
small high stool in his patient's chamber at Receiving Spirit. "The
crying is a good sign." Outside
the window, the Promenade, invaded by the storm, lay darkling and
deserted. The turbulent Sea of Blood was stippled by silver rain.
Ships, their sails tightly furled, their hatches battened down,
rocked at anchor. The rain sluiced across their decks, gushed from
their scuppers. Gusts of wind hurled fistfuls of it clattering
against the thick shatterproof pane. The sound caused Terrettt to
turn his head. "It
is rain, dearest," Marethyn said softly as she touched his
cheek. "It is only the rain." The
walls were covered not only with the topographical map of the
northern continent Marethyn had bought him but also with his latest
paintings, which, more even than the earlier ones, were dominated by
the seven whorled circles that looked to her like tiny whirlpools.
She found them beautiful, hypnotic, almost haunting. "Marethyn,
there is something I have uncovered in my research into Terrettt's
case," Kirlll Qandda said. And when Marethyn glanced at him, he
went on. "I discovered that a Gyrgon was present when Terrettt
was brought in for his infant's physical. Furthermore, I believe this
same Gyrgon is the one who operated on Terrettt's ativar. His name is
Nith Batoxxx. Do you know him?" At
once, the conversation between Sornnn and Rada at Spice Jaxx's sprang
into her mind. The Gyrgon Nith Batoxxx desperately wanted to know the
location of the seven Portals. But what had this to do with poor
Terrettt? She shook her head. There was no use in involving the
Deirus in her speculation. Kirlll
Qandda nodded. "I want you to continue what you were doing. Talk
to your brother." "Terrettt."
She turned his face back until she was staring into his black eyes.
She was filled to overflowing with her love for him, and this made
her wonder if there was anyone to love Majja and Basse, the two
Resistance fighters she had met. She was waiting for Rada to contact
her so she could take them the route of the arms convoy. "Terrettt,
it is me, Marethyn. Do you recognize me?" For
a moment, nothing happened, then she felt his head give a spastic
nod. "Oh,
Terrettt!" Tears streamed down her face. She kissed his
forehead, his cheeks. She was just about to draw back when she felt
his hands on the back of her head, gentle as a spiderweb. "Terrettt?" Kirlll
Qandda had hitched himself forward, an intense expression on his face
as he silently urged her on. "Terrettt,
do you—?" He
opened his mouth and made a sound. She
cocked an ear. "What?" The
sound came again. "He
said 'Up'!" Marethyn breathed. "I'm sure. I heard it." With
the Deirus' help, she lifted him to a sitting position. He kept his
arms around her. He did not want to let go, and this made her laugh
again through her tears. When was the last time she had laughed in
this room? Never. Never, never, never before. His
mouth was working again, and she said, "What is it, dearest?
What do you want to say?" "Mar." Her
eyes were shining. "Mar-e-thyn." "Yes,
Terrettt! Marethyn!" she squealed. "Now can you say—" "Mar-e-thyn.
Can. You. See?" She
frowned. "See what, dearest?" His
face contorted. He was sweating with the effort to squeeze out the
words. "Can.
You. See. What. Is. In. My. Mmmind." Marethyn
cocked her head. "How could I do that?" "What.
I. Have. To. Paint." Now
she frowned. "Have to? Darling, why do you have to
paint anything?" Kirlll
Qandda had hopped off his stool and was now holding one of Terrettt's
paintings off the wall. Now he returned and held it up in front of
them. "Like this?" he said. "Look,"
Terrettt said in his semigarbled way. "Look." "What
are we looking at, Terrettt?" Kirlll Qandda said. Impatiently,
his finger tapped each whirl. "Look," he said. "Look.
Look. Look." It
happened by accident, really. Marethyn was sitting facing him.
Directly behind him was the huge topographical map. Looking so
intently at the painting, she was struck by how the colors conformed
to those of the map. Then, with a start, she realized that the shapes
more or less conformed also. "Wait
a minute!" She took the painting and went with it to the topo
map. Terrettt swiveled around and started to make excited grunting
sounds. Kirlll
Qandda came and stood beside her. "What is it?" "Look,"
she said. "Look!"
Terrettt echoed with great enthusiasm. "Look, look, look!" "The
painting is a representation of the northern continent." She
glanced quickly around. "All the recent paintings are!" Handing
off the painting to the Deirus, she took up one of Terrettt's
brushes, dipped it in crimson pigment. Studying the painting, she
made her first swirl on the map that corresponded to the first swirl
Terrettt had drawn. "It
is in Axis Tyr," Marethyn said. "The Eastern Quarter." "Yes!"
Terrettt said in a kind of ecstasy. "Yes, yes, yes!" "And
here is another one in Stone Border." She made another swirl,
and another. "And here, just north of the waterfall Heavenly
Rushing." She
made four more swirls, following her brother's blueprint. These were
in the heart of the Great Voorg, in the Great Rift in the Djenn Marre
mountain range, and at the southern island of Suspended Skull, just
off the coast in the Illuminated Sea. The last swirl she painted just
outside the tiny, flyblown village of Im-Thera in the Korrush. Red
brush in her hand, she turned and stared at her brother. "What
is so important about these places?" she asked. "Terrettt,
what is in your mind? What do you want me to know?" Terrettt
tried to work his mouth, but only drool emerged. Marethyn
swung her gaze to the seven crimson swirls she had placed on the map
and everything clicked in her mind. Looking at the map, Marethyn
believed Terrettt, channeling some unknown force with his
Gyrgon-heightened ativar, had located the locations of the seven
Portals Nith Batoxxx was so desperate to find. But how was this
possible? Had the Gyrgon engineered Terrettt to become some sort of
homing beacon? She felt a profound chill at the thought of how Nith
Batoxxx had manipulated him. She
felt him reaching out, and she took his hand. It was cold, and she
saw the bloom of fear in his eyes. Terrettt
clutched her all the tighter. "There. Is. Something," he
said. "Slow. In. The. Dark. Hanging. Feeding. Plotting." "What?"
she said, her hearts beating fast. "What is in the darkness?" "Slow.
In. The. Dark. Patient. Waiting." "Waiting
for what?" she asked. "Slow.
In. The. Dark. Waiting. For. The. Seven. To. Be. Opened. For. The.
End. To. Come." Riane,
alone in the dark of Za Hara-at, wondered where the saurom-ician was
and when he would try to attack her again. She had walked in every
direction without being able to find a trace of the power bourn. Now
she felt a certain heat on her thigh. Digging into her robes, she
discovered a warmth and drew out the stone given to her by Mu-Awwul,
the chieftain of the Ghor. She saw that the image of the ful-kaan,
the great bird of the Prophet Jiharre, was glowing orange. Power
and spiritual harvest flow from the image of the fulkaan, he had
told her. Use it wisely. She put the pad of her thumb over it
and felt the quick deep throb of the power bourn. She
returned to it, grateful once more for Mu-Awwul's gift. It had
somehow repowered the infinity-blade, and now it had served as a
beacon, guiding her back on her path. She hurried now, eager to get
to her destination and to leave the sauromician behind. Her
route took her ever deeper into the labyrinth of the dead city. Often
now she spotted breaks in the street, collapsed areas, either natural
or made by the Bey Das. Wooden ladders with rungs wrapped in rags led
down to the underlayer. Everywhere torporous silence lay like a
fogbank. A cold wind soughed around corners, fled down the deserted
avenues. There was no sign of the sauromician. Gradually,
signs of the Bey Das archaeological team disappeared until, at
length, she followed the bourn-line into a small and unprepossessing
plaza. Buildings seemed to crowd in on her from all sides. She knelt,
running her fingertips over the emperor carnelian and lapis runes set
into the cobbles. This was the Plaza of Virtuous Risk. In
the center was a triangular black-basalt plinth. This was interesting
because the dense stone, common enough around Axis Tyr, was unknown
in the Korrush. She could not imagine what it would have taken to
bring it all the way here. As she approached, she saw that a huge
copper basin, verdigrised by time, had been set atop the plinth.
Then, as she walked around the plinth, her sorcerous lamp picked out
the runes that had been carved on each of the three sides. SEAT OF
TRUTH, SEAT OF DREAMS, seat OF deepest KNOWLEDGE. These were the
three medial points around which the Kells in the Abbey of Floating
White were built. They corresponded to the crown of the head, the
heart, and the center of the forehead. She
moved closer, recalling what she had learned from Shima Vedda. The
first law of archaeology was the more time put into a structure, an
artifact, or a carving, the more important it is likely to be. Standing
upon the plinth, she peered down into the copper basin and discovered
that it was not a basin at all. It was a cenote like the one in the
abbey, filled with pitch-black water. The
Veil of a Thousand Tears is in a formidable lair, Perrnodt had
told her. It is sealed inside a box of fire, which is
surrounded by a coffin of water. In between is airless dark. Riane
was certain that she had come to the coffin of water.
31 Along
Came a Ja-Gaar
Minnum
stared bleakly at the sleety rain bouncing off the stone cistern in
the center of the courtyard of the Museum of False Memory. He was
sitting on a backless stone seat beneath the overhang of the loggia.
The weather beat on the roof like a drum. He was wreathed in thought.
Like a one-legged Kundalan, he had fallen into a reverie of how his
life used to be, and he felt again that phantom tingle his power had
brought him when he had been whole. He put his head in his hands. The
sound of the sleet skittering across the courtyard was a malevolent
whisper, mocking him. He held black thoughts in his head like a
farrier holds a fistful of iron nails. He
could go on like this, lying to everyone including himself. Or he
could screw up his courage and do what he should have done a long
time ago. He
watched the sleety rain build up in the corners of his courtyard
until it looked like cobwebs shining in the dusk. Interesting that he
should think of this as his courtyard. That told him something. The
question was whether or not he wanted to hear it. At
length, he rose and went inside and stood by the fire that blazed in
the huge blackstone hearth. He held his palms out to the flames to
warm them. Smoke curled up, and the fire snapped and sparked with an
anticipatory energy. He sighed, shook his shaggy head from side to
side. Curling a forefinger, he turned a long, sharp nail into the
flesh of the inside of his arm. As the droplets of blood oozed out he
took them on his fingertip and flicked them into the fire, which
blazed up with a soft Whoomp! Briefly, the fire flickered, as
if from a sudden draft, and for the blink of an eye turned
blue-green. When it had returned to its natural hue, a figure stood
in front of it. The
figure was cloaked from head to toe in a striped, beaded robe. Only
eyes as pale as a winter sky showed. The bottom half of the face was
covered in white muslin embroidered with script. Minnum squinted but
could not tell whether the figure was male or female. Perhaps it did
not matter. This was a Druuge, a member of the mysterious nomadic
tribe that wandered the sandy wastes of the Great Voorg. Minnum
believed that the Druuge were the original Ramahan, who broke away,
deserting the abbeys before the corruption of power made its first
insidious inroads. They were mystics and magicians of a level that
terrified even him. "Why
have you summoned me?" The
Druuge spoke—no, Minnum thought, it was more of a singing. "There
are archdaemons about." "Yes.
Two Portals have suffered damage. Pyphoros—" "Pyphoros
has escaped?" Minnum could not help gaping. "I thought it
was just Horolaggia who had managed to squeeze through." The
Druuge began to walk slowly around the exhibition space. "We
knew the moment it happened." Their
extraordinary magic lay in their language. Yet another fact Minnum
knew that he would not share with others. So many secrets, he
thought. Such terrible danger. "One
should never underestimate an archdaemon," Minnum said, in an
attempt to enhance his standing with the Druuge. "One
should never misunderstand an archdaemon," the Druuge
corrected him. The beads on the robe swayed rhythmically. Those
pale eyes frightened Minnum. Unlike the old days, many things
frightened him. "If
Pyphoros has returned to this realm," he said to the Druuge,
"then he will want the Veil of a Thousand Tears." "He
wants more than that," the Druuge sang. "He wants all the
secrets that lie hidden in Za Hara-at." "But
surely the Veil is—" "The
Maasra. What a sorry pass you have come to. You could not even
remember its proper name." The Druuge was peering into a crystal
case at the artifacts within. "Once you were fluent. Once you
held the Power on the flat of your tongue. But now. Look how you have
been brought low." The Druuge turned abruptly and took Minnum's
hand in his. "When we gave you the job of curator, when we
dispensed with the black finger Miina had given you as a stigma of
your collective sin, we had a glimmer of hope for you." The
Druuge released Minnum's hand, went to another crystal case, beads
clacking softly. "But what use is a curator with half a memory?
Miina has taken from you all that made you what you once were. And
now you know, sauromician-that-was, that power is sand sliding
through your hands. You clasp your fingers together, make them into
tight fists. Still the sand drains out." "Do
not remind me," Minnum said glumly. "I have toiled here in
almost absolute isolation for many years. I have killed no one; I
have refrained from divining through the dead. I have not practiced
the dark arts of necromancy since I set foot in the museum." "Is
this an attempt to make me feel sorry for you, or are you simply
feeling sorry for yourself?" the Druuge sang so that every stone
vibrated to the sorcerous pitch. "I
gave the Dar Sala-at the infinity-blade. I did exactly what the red
Dragon told me to do." Minnum tried not to look around him, in
case the Druuge was reconstructing reality. "I have atoned, and
still, as you say, the sand runs out." The
Druuge's silence seemed accusatory. "I
had the infinity-blade, and I chose not to use it." The
Druuge's pale eyes froze Minnum in his tracks. "Atoned, think
you? And yet from your responses it seems clear you still covet
power. The infinity-blade was meant for the Dar Sala-at. If you had
tried to use it, you would have been struck lower than you are now." "There
is nothing lower than what I am now." He was shaking with
repressed emotion. "You, holier than holy, cannot know what it
is like to be among the damned." He threw his head back. "I
want my old life back! It was a howl of rage and pain. "What
you had can never be again." The Druuge paused before yet
another case and peered within. "But should you desire it
sufficiently, you can have a new life." Minnum
stared at the Druuge. Tears trembled in the corners of his eyes. The
Druuge fixed him in a truly terrifying gaze. "Once you were
wise. You could be again. Miina in Her infinite wisdom has not
deprived you of that possibility. But you must find your wisdom again
in the very depths of your own spirit, where the wound Miina dealt
you is deepest." The
Druuge said, "This is why you summoned me,
sauromician-that-was." Minnum's
shoulders sagged. "I find that I ... Over the years ... It has
been so long . . . I—" "Tell
me, are you happy here?" "I
do not want—" "No."
The Druuge's sun-browned hand came up. "Do not say what you do
not want until you know for certain that it is not for you. You found
this hallowed ground for a reason. In this museum of mysteries your
new life begins. If you want it." The Druuge had returned to
stand again before the fire. "Whether you think so or not, you
are a born curator." "What
good is a curator who does not know the meaning of his exhibits?"
he cried. "Knowledge
is benign until it is coveted by you or someone like you. When you or
someone like you sees it as a means to an end it becomes a weapon." The
Druuge's song had turned abruptly dissonant, and Minnum clapped his
hairy hands to his ears, fearing that the Druuge would bring the
building down on him. "You
were witness to just such an act. You were there when The Pearl was
taken." "Yes." "You
stood by and did nothing." "Yes." "You
joined the wicked. You became the wicked." Minnum
was shaking. His teeth chattered uncontrollably and he prayed he
would not wet his robes. He could not remember ever being so
frightened. "Think
hard!" the Druuge sang. "Try to remember where your wisdom
resides. It waits for you. In pain. In the future." "What
more can I do than I have already done?" Minnum shouted in his
fear. "Miina has chained me." "It
is not for you to say what the Great Goddess has done. In fact, She
has given you the greatest gift. A chance to start over. What you do
with this chance is entirely up to you." Minnum
took a step toward the Druuge. "I want—" "What?
Power? Revenge? Recompense for the injustices visited upon you?" "You
are baiting me." "You
want to ask me how long your punishment is going to last." Minnum
clamped his mouth shut in abject terror. That was exactly what he was
going to ask. "What
do you want, sauromician-that-was? With me, you must tell the truth.
If you do not, I will know, and it will be the end for you." Minnum
did not doubt the Druuge for an instant. His heart was beating fast.
There was a blackcrow on a tree branch. He saw it with absolute
clarity. His decision made, everything dropped away from him. There
was a kind of relief in opening his heart. He
said, "I want not to be afraid." The
pale, terrifying eyes crinkled at their corners, and Minnum knew the
Druuge was smiling. "Well,"
the Druuge sang, "that is a start." What
is it he said to me? Oh yes, because you are an impetuous youth, he
has ordered me to keep an eye on you." Line-General Lokck
Werrrent grunted in disgust. "It is in your best interest for me
to spy on you, Star-Admiral, as well as in the best interest of the
Modality. The regent is certainly not lacking in nerve." "He
means to split us in two," Olnnn said. "He wants us to have
at each other. That is is how he brought down his father and
Star-Admiral Kinnnus Morcha. Egged on, they did his dirty work for
him." Werrrent
and Olnnn stood beneath the striped awning of a noisy and jam-packed
cafe. A stone's throw away sleety rain fell with a metallic clang and
rattle in the enormous plaza. A burly Mesagggun engaged a Khagggun
inside the brilliantly lit Kalllistotos ring. The upturned faces of
the rapt crowd, jostling, shouting, unruly, glistened, ran with
moisture. No one appeared to notice the foul weather, though
occasionally one or the other of the combatants slipped on the
increasingly slick surface of the ring. They
had already exchanged intelligence regarding Kurgan's desire to halt
the implantation of okummmon in Khagggun. "I
will be blunt, Star-Admiral," Line-General Lokck Werrrent said
under the noise. A
small smile played at the corners of Olnnn's cruel mouth. "As
always, my good friend." "I
am not entirely comfortable." Olnnn
looked over his shoulder at Rada, clad in her blue-green armor, the
Star-Admiral's golden crest on shoulders and chest. He was going to
have trouble with this turn of events, that was clear enough. Well,
there was no help for it but to take a hard line. That was the only
way he was going to impose his will on others. "Rada
is my staff-adjutant. Where I go, she goes." "But
a Tuskugggun. This makes no sense, Star-Admiral. And if I may offer
an opinion, it can only undermine your position of respect." Olnnn
clasped his hands behind his back, stared out at the match. The tide
had turned. The burly Mesagggun was under an increasingly ferocious
attack from the Khagggun. Blood was flowing freely, and the chants of
the seething throng rose in volume. Werrrent
said, "I trust I need not remind you that when it comes to
loyalty Khagggun have short memories. 'What have you done for me
lately?' is the internal motto they live by. And why not? Each day
they are asked to lay down their lives. It is not surprising that
they need constant reminders of whom they owe allegiance to." In
the Kalllistotos ring, the Mesagggun's eyes were rolling up in his
skull. The crowd howled, sensing the finish. "They
are like children, Star-Admiral. And like children their adoration
can overnight turn to disgust." Werrrent was standing with his
back ramrod straight. He was staring at the victorious Khagggun, arm
thrust triumphantly up into the foul night. "It is hard being an
idol. So difficult to live up to heightened expectations. And then
there is this: at the first misstep, the idolaters turn murderous.
Why? They despise you for having made fools of them." "Do
you consider Rada a misstep?" Olnnn asked. "Come
now, Star-Admiral, you know it is irrelevant what I think." Olnnn
smiled. "On the contrary, Lokck, as you think so do the others,
high command, midechelons and lower ranks alike." He raised a
hand. "Denying it would be a waste of both our time. And you
will agree that neither of us has time to spare." "The
regent spoke of promoting me," Werrrent said. Olnnn
watched the silvery rain come down. "Is this your wish?" "Not
from him." Olnnn
smiled; he knew exactly what Werrrent meant. "There is currently
a Deck-Admiral's position open." "I
was thinking more along the lines of Fleet-Admiral." "A
two-rank promotion. That would stir some talk." There were
currently only two Fleet-Admirals on Kundala. "Not
as much as this new staff-adjutant of yours," Werrrent said
dryly. "She
is here because I have ordered it," Olnnn snapped. "If that
is insufficient—" "It
is entirely sufficient for me, Star-Admiral." He shrugged.
"Still, talk centers on why she carries a shock-sword. Surely it
is simply for show, and that has never been the Khagggun way." Olnnn
understood now what had to happen. If he could not count on Lokck
Werrrent to accept Rada, then no Khagggun would, and he would indeed
have made a fatal misstep. He
beckoned silently to her, and when she arrived at his side he said to
Werrrent, "I will make you a wager, my staff-adjutant against a
Khagggun of your choosing in the Kalllistotos ring with shock-swords.
If she loses, she goes by the wayside and you gain the rank of
Fleet-Admiral. But if she wins, she stays, you remain at your present
rank, and your champion gets demoted." He grinned. "What do
you say?" "You
are bluffing," Lokck Werrrent said. "Pick
your champion, then, Line-General." Werrrent
stood stock-still. Rada could see that he was debating the pros and
cons of the wager. With so much at stake—a promotion that was
obviously of great significance to him and a potential loss of
face—she could tell that he did not want to take the wager. On
the other hand, backing down would absolutely cause him humiliation.
It seemed to her that Olnnn had overplayed his hand. He had backed
the Line-General into a corner. In her years running Blood Tide she
had always sought to find a reasonable way out for the antagonists
who went at it inside her tavern, knowing that this was all they
needed to settle their differences. "Star-Admiral,"
she said before the Line-General could speak, "if I might—" "Keep
still, Staff-Adjutant," Olnnn said with a cutting glance at her.
Didn't she know what was at stake here? "Speak only when you are
spoken to." "Now,
hold on. Star-Admiral," Werrrent said. Anything to forestall the
unpalatable choice he was being forced to make. "I would like to
hear what she has to say." Olnnn
was glaring at her, but Werrrent, addressing her as if she were a
child, said, "Go on, Staff-Adjutant with-no-name. Do not be
afraid. I have known the Star-Admiral all his life. In these matters
his growl is worse than his sword thrust." "My
name is Rada, Line-General. Staff-Adjutant Rada TurPlyen." She
slowly drew her shock-sword from its scabbard. The two Khagggun
watched her closely. Neither knew what she was about to say or do,
which was her aim. Without saying a word, she had gotten them back on
the same side. Now it was them versus her, far more familiar and
comfortable ground for them. "Line-General,
the Star-Admiral trained me himself. Since you have known him all his
life, you know what that means. I am good. I have excellent
instincts, and I am fast. But I do not delude myself. I would be no
match for any champion whose skills have been honed in battle."
She reversed the shock-sword, laid the blades across her palm so that
the hilt was toward him. "I surrender myself to you,
Line-General." But
Olnnn had already stepped between them. "Rada, this is not
possible. This wager is between the Line-General and myself. It is
not for you to—" Werrrent's
hand on his shoulder stopped him in midsentence. "Star-Admiral,
she is in armor, she is armed. She has the right." Olnnn
turned. "But Lokck." "Either
she is one of us, or she isn't." Olnnn
hesitated for just a moment, before he stood aside. "Take her
blade, then," he said. But
Werrrent did not move. Instead, he said to Olnnn, "Thumb it on." Olnnn
looked at him. "I beg your pardon?" "If
she is Khagggun, she will hold the shock-sword with the blades
active." "She
is not prepared. She has no idea." Werrrent's
steady gaze moved to Rada. "She has surrendered to me. It is my
right to ask this of any warrior." Rada
thought Olnnn looked like he was in a daze. He nodded. She did not
have to look at his face to know that he had been caught off guard. Acutely
aware of the Line-General's scrutiny, she held his gaze. Out of the
periphery of her vision she saw Olnnn step up beside her. Once before
she had held a shock-sword like this. She knew what was coming.
Still, the jolt of agony as Olnnn thumbed on the ion flow took her
breath away. She sucked in air. But she did not wince or cry out. The
two Khagggun were watching her. She concentrated on breathing as the
pain reached her hearts. The fire was so bad she thought it must shut
down all her major organs. Her hands began to tremble. "Line-General,"
Olnnn said softly. Werrrent
stood still and silent. The
tremor reached her forearms. Now she concentrated on breathing and
not dropping the shock-sword. The pain raced up her spine, branched
into the back of her neck, exploded in her brain. Her whole body was
shaking. From
what seemed like far away, she heard Olnnn say, "N'Luuura take
it, Lokck!" The
Line-General said, "Turn it off." But
when Olnnn moved to comply, he held up a hand. "No. She must do
it herself." "Lokck—" "If
she does," Werrrent went on inexorably, "I will not accept
her surrender. She will remain your staff-adjutant." His eyes
swung to Olnnn, "And you, Star-Admiral, will give me what I
want." Olnnn's
gaze swung in her direction, he called her name, but she did not
respond. Already,
she had twice fought off the blackness of unconsciousness. Her knees
had turned to jelly; it was as if she had a tertium band around her
chest squeezing all the breath out of her. Olnnn
called her name again. She
tightened her grip on the blades with one hand and almost passed out
again. With her other hand, she fumbled with the button that would
turn off the current of hyperexcited ions. Her fingers felt bloated
to three times their size. She could feel nothing. In a moment she
would begin to weep in pain and frustration, and everything would be
for nought. At last, she maneuvered a knuckle into the button and the
ion flow ceased. Tears
stood in the corners of her eyes. Olnnn was about to take her weapon
from her when Lokck Werrrent intervened. He lifted the shock-sword
from her numbed hand and slid it back into her scabbard. He
turned to Olnnn. "Star-Admiral, it seems to me Staff-Adjutant
TurPlyen could use a stiff drink." A
waiter at the cafe cleared a table for them, and they sat, Rada
between Olnnn Rydddlin and Lokck Werrrent. The entire staff was
staring at her. She did not care. Werrrent ordered N'Luuura-Hounds—a
shot of fire-grade numaaadis followed immediately by a goblet of
mead. After
the potent drinks were downed, Rada felt her system coming slowly
back to normal. She flexed her hands under the table out of sight of
the males. Lokck
Werrrent wiped his lips. "Star-Admiral, let me say now that
wagers between friends can only lead to discord. It was well that we
found this one unnecessary." He did not mention Rada; he did not
look at her. He had bought her a drink—a Khagggun drink—and
this was enough. Olnnn
laughed. "I agree, Fleet-Admiral." "Until
the official ceremony I am still Line-General." "In
any case, now you can be a degree less jealous." "I
was never jealous." "My
father would have been if he had lived to see me be Star-Admiral at
this age." Lokck
Werrrent cleared his throat. He knew what they were really talking
about. Khagggun almost never spoke about such intimate matters as
filial attachments. They were trained to think of their unit as their
family. Loyalty, not sentiment, drove them. Which was why such
moments were rare indeed. "I
am of the opinion that it is now the time of two armies." Olnnn
spread his hands. "It
is a fable." Werrrent's eyes cut to Rada for a moment.
"Something tells me you should hear this too, Staff-Adjutant."
He clasped both hands in front of him. "There were two brothers,
as close as brothers could possibly be. Until the elder became regent
and, locked inside his power, drew away from his younger brother. As
the years went on, they spoke less and quarreled more. Over what?
Petty matters, which before they would simply have laughed over. But
now these petty matters vexed them most fiercely because they
represented deeper irritations they could not express. They differed
over matters of policy and protocol, the abuse of power, and,
finally, the abandonment of law. And so the younger brother,
estranged and full of righteous ardor, set about gathering an army of
like-minded V'ornn. Hearing of his brother's treachery, the regent
mobilized his own army and set a price on his brother's head." "Is
this true?" Olnnn said. Werrrent
pursed his lips. "Does it matter?" Sheets
of hard rain swept across the plaza, which had quickly emptied
following the bloody conclusion of the last match. "In
the gloom just before dawn, the two armies came together,"
Werrrent continued. "They were evenly matched. Death was dealt
by both sides, and decimation was the result. Worse. By day's end
only a handful from each army remained, dazed, maimed, and bleeding,
no longer remembering why they fought or who the enemy was. "But
the brothers knew. All that long day they had watched from their high
outposts as V'ornn loyal to them had been slain, and now, at last,
they approached one another, striding through the grisly mire of the
battlefield. Their hearts were hardened, their minds were set. Power
and the envy it gives rise to were the engines that propelled them
both to strike. All through the night they did battle until the
breath sawed through their open mouths, until their blood ran from a
hundred wounds, until their legs trembled and they could no longer
stand. "And
still they fought, until at last fatigue caused a misstep, and the
younger brother dealt the regent a fatal blow." The
wind had picked up, the sleety rain coming in under the awning, which
slapped noisily now like a blackcrow descending upon a corpse. "A
fine fable," Olnnn said. "The abuse of power was avenged." "But
we have not yet reached the end." Werrrent sat back. "The
younger brother was so weakened by his wounds that he could not
prevent one of his own V'ornn from stabbing him through the hearts.
This V'ornn, a First-Captain, driven half-insane by the killing,
rallied about him what was left of both armies and promptly installed
himself as regent. The abuses of the slain regent were as nothing
compared to what this V'ornn would perpetrate." Olnnn
took a breath. "Where were the Gyrgon?" Werrrent
blinked. "What?" "How
would the Gyrgon allow such a thing to happen?" "It
is a fable," Werrrent said. "Of
course it is." "But
it is also a warning." Olnnn
folded his arms across his chest. Werrrent rolled his empty glass
around the tabletop. The two of them looked at each other, then away.
A waiter passed by, a tray of food held high. Another began to clear
a table. A V'ornn laughed at the back of the cafe, slamming the flat
of his hand against his thigh. Two huge Mesagggun shouldered their
way in, shook themselves like wyr-hounds, and sat down, stinking of
oil and tar. In the plaza the rain speared down, drowning everything. Olnnn
fingered his okummmon. "N'Luuura take it," he growled, "we
are like cor to the slaughter." And
Rada said, "Not if we slaughter the regent first." When
Konara Inggres returned to the Abbey of Floating White it was with a
high degree of trepidation, not to say fear. She had no intention of
running into the archdaemons in possession of Giyan's and Bartta's
bodies, so she Thripped directly into the triangular Kell. Since they
were sacred chambers, she felt safe, as if a small piece of the Great
Goddess was still enshrined there. She
bent over, retching, and wondered if her sudden illness was a
manifestation of her intense fear. The nausea soon passed, however. Recalling
the First Mother's instructions, she lit a reed torch. By its light,
she saw that Ghosh, the carved citrine serpent, was not in the place
she had last seen it. It had been moved back against the wall, as if
someone had tried to return it to its original niche. She looked
around, as if someone was waiting for her and would jump out of the
dense shadows. Her heart beating fast, she thrust the flaming torch
into every nook and cranny to assure herself that she was, in fact,
alone in the Kell. She
found that she was sweating. Wiping her forehead with the sleeve of
her robe, she placed the torch on a worked-bronze wall bracket and
knelt before the beautiful and frightening countenance of the sacred
serpent. As she studied the face she saw that the eyes were
separate—whole cabochon citrines set into the cavities. Each
eye was incised with iris and vertical pupil. With her hand nearly
touching the right eye, she hesitated. The thing was so cleverly
wrought it looked positively alive. Part of her was afraid the
serpent would bite her. Then she remembered the First Mother's
admonition for urgency, and she steeled herself. Her
fingertips transmitted the coolness of the semi-precious stone.
Grasping the orb, she turned it left three times, and it plopped
right into her hand. It was very heavy. It made her hand cold, and
she began to tremble. But
she did not falter. Continuing to follow the First Mother's
instructions, she took the torch and descended into the third and
lowest Kell, the perfectly square chamber. The black-lacquered walls
were reflected eerily by the nickering torchlight. She saw the three
Ja-Gaar. They at least, along with the basalt cover to the cenote,
were where she had last seen them. Breathing
a sigh of relief, she knelt beside the stone cenote and dipped the
citrine eye into the still black water. She counted off the seconds
to thirty. The cabochon lay in the palm of her hand. As she had not
immersed it deeply, she could see it clearly. She blinked, at first
uncertain of what she was seeing. The incised iris and pupil were
gaining form and color. It was as if the black water was transforming
the cabochon into Ghosh's eye. She
could see the iris turning a glimmering silver color and the vertical
pupil inside a deep violet. The thirty seconds expired, and she
pulled the orb out of the water. What had the First Mother instructed
her to do next? Ah, yes, put the still-wet eye in the center of her
forehead, precisely where she accessed her Third Eye. She
was about to do so when she became aware of a stirring of the water
in the cenote. At first it was just the whisper of a ripple. She
leaned over, peering into the cenote and saw, amid the utter
blackness, a movement. All
at once, the water fountained up in a great froth, and Bartta leapt
out, wide-eyed, ashen-faced, and grinning from ear to ear. Konara
Inggres screamed and toppled backward. As she did so, the citrine eye
rolled across the black floor of the Kell. She moaned, scrabbling
after it on all fours, but Bartta seized her from behind, pulled her
down hard onto her stomach. The
breath went out of her as Bartta landed atop her. Bartta's mouth
opened and a long, thin blue-black tongue flicked out, wrapping
itself around Konara Inggres' hair. It lashed itself tight and
pulled, jerking Konara Inggres' head back. "You
have disobeyed Mother," Bartta hissed in a voice clearly not her
own. "You have lied. You have the Gift. You have Thripped."
The tongue pulled back farther, and Konara Inggres arced like a bow
and cried out. Pain lanced through her shoulders and neck. She saw
spots before her eyes. "Having
been to Otherwhere you know the truth. You cannot be allowed to live.
Nor is possession any longer a viable option. You are too much of a
threat to us." Bartta
was making a sound. It was like the agitated susurrus of ten thousand
famished stydil descending on a field of wrygrass. With a sickening
start, Konara Inggres realized that the archdaemon inside Bartta was
laughing. "You
sickening, weak-willed worm," Bartta croaked. "What right
do you have to live your life in freedom when we have been trapped in
loathsome misery for eons?" Bartta
gouged her painfully in the ribs with a long-nailed finger. "You
Ramahan are too stupid for your own good. My father should have wiped
you out wholesale instead of slowly eroding the nature of your
religion. He is patient; I am not. Now that I am free of that hideous
prison I want only to destroy that which put me there." Konara
Inggres said nothing. For one thing, stark terror had caused her to
lose her tongue. For another, the pain was so intense that every
nerve ending vibrated to the archdaemon's gouging. For still another,
she was too busy keeping track of the skittering citrine eyeball as
it caromed off the enamel-black walls of the Kell. Bartta
bent over her. "You assume I am going to kill you, but death is
too easy an end for you. I am going to keep you alive. You will be my
plaything. Torture will be your fate. Endless torture. Day after day,
month after month, year after year I will return to you again and
again and you will hang on the knife edge of agony. Pain will be your
constant companion, an intimate that will become a part of you, until
it takes you over wholly and you are defined by it." Her
fingers dug in deeper, making Konara Inggres cry out. Eyes
watering, Konara Inggres spotted Ghosh's eye, which had settled
against one of the Ja-Gaar's forelegs. Blinking back tears of pain,
she saw that it was still gleaming, still slick with the water from
the cenote, and she remembered the First Mother's warning. Once the
eye was immersed she could not allow it to dry out; otherwise, it
would lose all its power. "What
are you doing? Trying to Thrip? I have fixed it so you cannot."
Bartta jerked back on her hair with the archdaemon's powerful
blue-black tongue. 'You will pay attention to me!" Konara
Inggres tried to crawl toward the Ja-Gaar's foreleg. Bartta was a
small female. Curiously, the possession had caused her to become even
lighter. It had also made her far stronger. Konara Inggres made some
headway before Bartta pulled her arm behind her back and began to
twist it. "I
knew there would be fight in you!" Bartta hissed. "Well and
good! I have thought of a way to subdue you." She lifted her
head with its twisted expression. "Where are you? Show
yourself!" And
obeying that command, Konara Lyystra descended into the Kell from the
one directly above. Her gaze was steady, her expression fixed. As
Konara Inggres gasped, Bartta laughed, the archdaemon's mirth making
her throat pulse like a wer-frog's. "As
you are about to discover, torture can take many forms," Bartta
said with undisguised glee. "Here is your first taste." She
fixed Konara Lyystra in her gaze, and said, "Take the needle I
gave you and plunge it into the side of her neck." "What
have you done to her?" Konara Inggres cried. "I
dispossessed her." "That
you did," Bartta cackled as Konara Lyystra moved toward them in
an odd, jerky rhythm. "But Horolaggia and I captured her before
she could escape us. We were stricken at what you had managed to do.
You killed one of us. Murdered him in cold blood. But you left your
friend behind, and we made her ours. Not in the same way. After what
you did, we could not possess her again. So we did the next best
thing. We exorcised her essence, stuffed it into a tiny black bottle
inside her where she can never find it. Now she obeys us and only
us." "Lyystra,"
Konara Inggres called. "Lyystra, you must resist them. You must
find yourself again." Konara
Lyystra kept coming on stiff legs, and Bartta—or the unholy
thing inside her—was shaking with laughter. "Go
on, talk to her if you must," the archdaemon taunted. "For
all the good it will do you." "Lyystra,
listen to me," Konara Inggres said. "Remember what I said
about faith." "Faith,
faith, faith," Bartta scoffed, turning the word over as if it
were a curiosity. Konara
Inggres contrived to ignore her. "If you doubt, then you are
without shelter and comfort in the face of the storm. Without faith
the storm will take you over, Lyystra. You must not let that happen." "Poor
thing, she has no choice," Bartta hissed. It
was the archdaemon's imprudent words that galvanized Konara Inggres.
It was clear that she could not gain the upper hand by sheer brute
force. But sorcery was another matter altogether. She knew from her
studies that daemons were cut off from Osoru. But could she overcome
one with it, and an archdaemon to boot? She
shut out the pain, Bartta's mocking words, the fact that her best
friend was advancing on her, grasping a needle loaded with Miina knew
what noxious herbal concoction. She erased everything from her mind
and opened her Third Eye. "What
are you doing?" Bartta croaked from seemingly far away. "I
told you, you cannot Thrip your way out of this." Konara
Inggres conjured Net of Cognition. With it, she identified Lyystra's
essence, even though the archdaemons had locked it away inside a
sorcerous bottle. At once, she cast White Well, gathering the bottle
to her. "I
said, what are you doing, stupid thing?" Bartta cried with a
mighty jerk of her tongue on Konara Inggres' hair. When no answer was
forthcoming, Bartta slammed her pointed chin into the back of Konara
Inggres' head. Konara
Inggres' face hit the black-basalt floor, and, with a pain that
reverberated through her, she felt her cheekbone crack. Still, she
would not allow herself to be deterred. Conjuring Transverse Guest,
she determined the sorcerous structure of the bottle and began to
dismantle it. Possibly
it would not matter, though, for Konara Lyystra had reached her and,
on Bartta's barked command, was kneeling beside her. "The
side of her neck!" Bartta cried. "Bury the needle deep
where the banart can do its work quickly." Despite
herself, Konara Inggres began to thrash about. Her concentration
slipped, and the archdaemon-made bottle began to remake itself. She
stopped it, redoubling her efforts, and was rewarded with a thin
streamer of warmth. Lyystra's essence was leaching back into her
body. Then
she felt the first prick of the needle. "Lyystra,
have faith," she gasped. "Fight the evil inside you." "I
have no strength," Konara Lyystra said dully. "Believe
in Miina, and you will find the strength." Konara
Lyystra's eyes turned inward, an inner struggle that had already
begun, working itself to the fore. "Inggres?
Is that you?" she said in a raspy whisper. The needle withdrew.
"What has happened? My mind is ... I cannot remember." "Fetch
the citrine ball that lies there by the creature's leg. Bring it to
me." At
once the archdaemon's intense curiosity was piqued. "Why? What
is it? What does it mean to you?" "Shut
up," Konara Inggres said through her haze of pain and was
rewarded with another agonizing gouge. Konara
Lyystra had turned away. She was staring at the citrine ball. "Lyystra,
fetch it," Konara Inggres urged her. "Bring it here." "Yes,"
Bartta hissed. "By all means fetch it. But bring it to me. I am
your superior, girl. You will do as I say, or I will see to it that
you are immediately expelled from the abbey." "Lyystra,
don't listen to her. She is possessed by an archdaemon. Everything
she tells you is a lie!" Konara
Lyystra was on all fours, staring at both of them. Then she reached
for Ghosh's eye, grabbed it, and turned back. "I
want it!" Bartta howled. "Give it to me!" Konara
Lyystra looked at it, saw that it was still wet, and began to wipe it
on her robes. "No!"
Konara Inggres cried in terror. "Keep it wet. Lyystra, do you
understand?" Konara
Lyystra looked at her out of bloodshot eyes. She nodded. "Why?"
Bartta screamed. "Why, why, why?" "Inggres."
Konara Lyystra's face was a mask of terror. "Ignore
the archdaemon," Konara Inggres said, "and bring it to me." Konara
Lyystra hesitated, just an arm's length away. "What if she is
Bartta? If I disobey her, I will be exiled." "Yes,
you surely will, child." Bartta's cupped fingers beckoned. "All
you need do to get back in my good graces is hand me the citrine
ball." "But
she is not Bartta," Konara Inggres said. "The archdaemon
has possessed her. You must believe that. Have faith." Konara
Lyystra nodded and gave her best friend Ghosh's water-slicked eye. As
she did so, Bartta gave an impassioned scream. The long blue-black
tongue erupted into view. With
a bloody hand, Konara Inggres pressed Ghosh's eye to the center of
her forehead. The
blue-black tongue stabbed out and, like a sword, impaled Konara
Lyystra through the throat. She screamed, blood fountained, and she
began to gasp and gurgle. Underneath
Bartta, Ghosh's eye, bathed in the black, still water of the holy
cenote, sank into Konara Inggres' forehead, pushing aside flesh,
sinking into the bone of her skull. When it reached the outer sac of
her brain a sorcerous light flared, falling upon the three carved
Ja-Gaar, awakening them to life. In
this sorcerous light, Konara Inggres could see the chain-link leashes
that bound the Ja-Gaar to her, against which they were now straining.
She reached out, let go of the leashes, releasing the Ja-Gaar. They
were freed blinking into the smoking semidarkness. Their incandescent
eyes fixed upon Bartta or—more accurately—that which lay
like a canker inside her. Snarling, they launched themselves toward
her like living missiles. The
archdaemon had just enough time to withdraw its wicked tongue before
they were upon Bartta. The ferocity of their attack threw her
completely off Konara Inggres. She rolled to the wall, her arms
covering her face, her knees drawn up. This meant nothing to the
Ja-Gaar, who began to maul Bartta savagely, ripping into her with
fangs and claws as if in this primitive way they could extract the
archdaemon wound like a great viper around her spinal column. And
perhaps they could, for there arose from Bartta's wide-open mouth a
sound no Kundalan was ever meant to utter. It was a noise of such
fearsome rage and pain as Konara Inggres had never before heard or
could have imagined even in her worst nightmares. But
at that moment the archdaemon's bloodcurdling bellow was of only
marginal interest to her. Ignoring her pain and the blood from her
fractured cheek, she had crawled to where her best friend lay
sprawled on the black-basalt floor. "Lyystra,"
she whispered as she put her friend's head in her lap. In vain, she
tried to stop the blood pulsing from the ragged wound in her throat.
Holding her tight, she bent over and kissed her forehead. "I am
here, as is the Great Goddess. We are both with you." Konara
Lyystra's face was appallingly ashen. Her body shivered and shook,
and a raling came from her fatally congested chest. But at the sound
of her friend's voice, her eyes opened, and she smiled. "You
were right. About everything." Her voice was so thick it emerged
from her parted lips amid a welter of gurgling bubbles. "If I
believe in Miina, will She save me from death?" Konara
Inggres forced a smile to her face. "You are not going to die." "The
archdaemon has done me grievous injury. There is no hope." "Have
hope. Have faith." She held her friend more closely. "I
do." Konara Lyystra looked up at her. All at once, her
expression changed, and she gasped, a larger bubble forming between
her lips. "I can see Her, Inggres. Oh, look! I can see the Great
Goddess. She exists]" In
a corner of the Kell, the three Ja-Gaar were noisily and deliriously
rending Bartta's body limb from limb. Konara
Inggres closed her eyes and began to pray. The
sacred Ja-Gaar had set up a howling. Miina only knew what it meant. She
looked upon Konara Lyystra, saw those bloodshot eyes staring past
her, past the ceiling of the Kell. They were fixed on Miina or
whatever it was she thought she had seen. A distant Realm. Darkness.
Nothing. Death. She
threw her head back and added her own long, mournful cry to the
Ja-Gaar's bestial howls.
32 Light
Floating on Water
The
odd thing about where the cenote was located, Riane thought as she
slipped into the pitch-black water, was that it had not been built
directly on the bourn nexus that lay beneath this small plaza. In the
chill, her mind worried at this oddity. For
a moment, she hung in the water. Finbats raced through the deserted
plaza. Then, as if an invisible hand had reached up, she was pulled
beneath the surface. The water was viscous and had a mind of its own.
It wanted to pull her deeper. She fought against the pull. The utter
blackness was oppressive. She kicked out, trying to regain the
surface, but she could not even maintain her position. She was being
sucked deeper. She pushed down a flash of panic and felt for the
pulse of the power bourns, but there was not even the faintest trace
of them. The
absence of light became overwhelming, and she reached out with her
mind, repositioning the sorcerous lamp over the center of the cenote.
She looked up and saw ten thousand tiny points of light dancing in
the blackness. They were not random, she saw, but resolved themselves
into spirals that descended into the cenote. She put her hand through
a spiral, and it was as if the power bourn had speared her. That was
why the cenote had been built slightly off the nexus. It held a rogue
branch that was broken into spirals instead of running straight
beneath Kundala's crust. Linked
now with the spiral bourn, she let it take her deeper, to the place
where the water ended and she could breathe again. The
only problem was that she emerged into a vacuum. It
was hot inside the Khagggun enclosure, and staring at the tiers of
data-decagons made Rada hotter. Sweat ran down the back of her neck,
collected inside her armor. All around her, Khagggun moved at their
precise, clipped pace, crisscrossing the enclosure with tight lips
and beady eyes. Behind her, Olnnn stood talking
with two of his officers. The war against the Resistance was going
well. Many were dead, many more would be soon enough. Majja and Basse
were right. The time to be patient was over. Without
looking to the right or left, she walked to the tiers of
data-decagons. She knew where the one she wanted was because only the
previous day she had watched the Pack-Commander in charge of the
convoy put it there. She had been waiting for him, and had contrived
to walk by just behind him as the data-screen came on. It was
fortunate she did so because she had seen that the date the convoy
was to leave Axis Tyr had been pushed up a day. She
risked a glance over her shoulder. Olnnn was engrossed in discussion
with his officers. The convoy was scheduled to leave in the morning.
It was now or never. Reaching out, she plucked the data-decagon and
slipped it into the reader slot. The screen bloomed to life, and she
concentrated fully. It took her a very short time to memorize the
route, but it seemed like an eternity. She
heard Olnnn call her name, and she felt a spasm between her shoulder
blades. Whipping the data-decagon out of the slot, she returned it to
its tier. Then she turned on her heel and went to where he was
waiting. The conversation had broken up. "What
were you doing?" he asked. "Reconfirming
your schedule for the rest of the day." He
nodded. "I need you to run an errand for me." He walked
with her to an area of the enclosure where they had some privacy, and
placed a data-decagon in her palm. "Take this to Fleet-Admiral
Lokck Wer-rrent. He is at the Western arsenal. Make certain you
deliver this to him and to no one else. Remain for his reply and
bring it back to me here. Is that clear?" She
nodded and went on her way, relieved to be out of there. The
data-decagon lay heavy and hot in the heart of her palm. If Werrrent
was currently at the Western arsenal, that must mean he was
overseeing the final preparations for the convoy. On her way to
requisition a hoverpod she contacted Marethyn, who was at Receiving
Spirit with her brother, Terrettt. Sornnn was with her. From the tone
of Marethyn's voice it sounded as if she had interrupted a serious
conversation. She
signed out a hoverpod and as soon as she was aloft she put the
data-decagon in the cockpit reader. She was anxious to know if Olnnn
had any last-minute instructions for the convoy. In this she was to
be disappointed. The data was encrypted. The
Veil is sealed inside a box of fire, which is surrounded by a coffin
of water. In between is airless dark. Riane
hung in the vacuum. Her lungs were about to burst. She cast Earth
Granary, the most potent healing spell, to create a bubble of air
around her. But each time it began to form the vacuum collapsed it. She
was growing dizzy and dislocated. She could no longer distinguish up
from down, the nothingness was endless, and her panic returned,
splintering cohesive thought into a flock of birds that flew in every
direction. A
throbbing commenced in her temples as her brain was deprived of air.
There was a way out of the vacuum; she had only to find it. She knew
she had to think the problem through, and she shackled the intense
fear. What did she know? She had solved the first level by bringing
light into pitch-darkness. But it was dark here, too. And airless.
But her first instinct to create a bubble of air for herself had
failed. She
started. Something had happened. What? Cold sweat broke out on her
anew as she realized she had passed out for several seconds. She
could not allow that to happen again, and she dug her fingernails
into the palms of her hands, drawing blood. And pain. That was
better. The pain would keep her awake and alert. What had she been
thinking about before she passed out? Laboriously,
she went through the process again. She could sense her body
straining for life. She so wanted to take a breath. A moment more and
she would suck in the nothingness and die. No
air, no air. Only
one other chance and she took it. She conjured First-Gate
Correspondence, transmogrifying the entire vacuum. Air flooded in
and, with it, a kind of pale phosphorescence. She gasped, sucked in
the air, felt her galloping pulse slowly subside. She
saw that she was floating in a donut-shaped space. Above her was the
purling water. And directly ahead was a clear cube of fire. Within
that, she knew, lay the Veil of a Thousand Tears. Pyphoros
began to arrange Courion's corpse, stretching it out fully on its
back. They were still in Nith Batoxxx's laboratory deep in the heart
of the Temple of Mnemonics. Kurgan was starting to feel the weight of
the structure, the boundaries of the lab. He was certain the
archdaemon had that in mind. He was sure the creature wanted him to
feel as much a prisoner as Pyphoros himself felt. Kurgan had a dull
headache, which had come on sometime after the sorcerous stone had
been implanted in his skull. There must be some way to remove it, he
was thinking. Not in your world, the archdaemon had said. What
had he meant by that? He
watched as Pyphoros pulled the ion glove off his host body's right
hand, leaning forward expectantly. This was the first time he had
seen a Gyrgon's bare hand. The palm was an intricate mass of
biocir-cuitry, as were the backs of the fingers. The characteristic
ion sizzle was gone. "Regent,"
Pyphoros said, "I believe it is time that you become acquainted
with the high art of necromancy." As
Pyphoros extended the hand over the corpse a line of palest blue
emerged from the tip of the middle finger. Despite the paleness of
the color the light it emitted was so glaring that Kurgan
instinctively put his hand up to shield his eyes. "We
open a fresh corpse and use our special skills to read the entrails." The
palest blue line descended toward Courion's abdomen and quickly slit
it open from breastbone to pelvis. A gust of noxious gases issued
forth. Courion's intestines bulged, gleaming evilly. The stench was
overpowering. Not that Pyphoros seemed to mind. Kurgan's eyes were
riveted on the intestines, which, guided by the blue rune, were
spreading themselves out into what appeared to be a complex pattern. "The
dead hold secrets they never had in life." The
blue rune now became a fine line. He followed its slow and ominous
movement as it described a serpentine path above the gleaming
entrails. Here and there, the blue line opened the intestines,
revealing dark and mysterious contents to the furiously intent
Pyphoros. A kind of singsong humming was coming from him, not
strictly speaking from his mouth, but from all of him at once. "Here
is the secret," Pyphoros said. "Running in stinking
rivulets, in the blazing language of the dead." Abruptly, the
palest blue line vanished, and the archdaemon looked at Kurgan. "Ah.
This secret, regent, it is about you." "Really?" "You
seem skeptical." "Not
at all." Pyphoros
laughed. "You really must learn how to be grateful, Sto-gggul
Kurgan. This secret, if I decide not to tell you what it is, I
guarantee that within hours you will be dead." She's
coming," Marethyn said. "The convoy date has been moved up.
It is leaving tomorrow at sunrise." Sornnn
looked bleakly at her. He felt enmeshed in the revelatory information
she had just given him. The genetic manipulation the Gyr-gon had
subjected Terrett to had somehow allowed him to locate the seven
Portals Rada had told him Nith Batoxxx wanted. They had been arguing
when the communication from Rada had come in. Sornnn had wanted her
to go to Kurgan and tell him about the seven Portals. It seemed to
him the perfect way for her to reconcile with him. Pride and,
doubtless, the spectre of failure had made her balk. Not that he
blamed her. He had had enough face-to-face experience with the new
regent to know that Kurgan was both volatile and unforgiving. Still,
he had pressed her. Not that Marethyn would ever admit it, but he
suspected that her estrangement from Kurgan had had a serious and
long-lasting effect on her. "Our
argument is moot," she said now. "I will be leaving the
city before nightfall." He
took her elbow, steered her away from the sleeping Terrettt. They
were alone in the room at Receiving Spirit. In the hallway,
Genoma-tekks and Deirus could be seen hurrying past, silent and
grim-faced. Once, the ion crackle heralded the presence of a Gyrgon,
but they did not see him. "Marethyn,
this is crazy," he said. "I should be the one to go." "You
are Prime Factor," she pointed out with perfect logic. "You
cannot risk being seen." He
had no answer for that. "We
have only a few minutes before Rada gets here." She slipped her
hand into his, led him to the window. The sky was grey and
angry-looking. Far out to sea, where the heavy clouds seemed to touch
the horizon, it was teeming. The grip of midwinter had finally taken
hold. The solstice was only days away. "I know you want to
protect me, Sornnn. But try to see things from my point of view. That
protection you're feeling is just another form of subjugation." "I
don't think it is." "But
the point is, darling, I do." "Marethyn—" "I
want my life to count for something." Her eyes searched his.
"This is how I will find out who I really am." She squeezed
his hand and smiled. "I have no intention of being a martyr. I
will come back to you, Sornnn. I swear it." A shadow passed
across her, and she looked out the window. "Rada is here. I have
to go." She
disengaged her fingers and kissed him hard on the lips. On her way
out, she did not trust herself to look back. When she passed
Ter-rettt's bed his eyes opened and he looked at her and spoke her
name.
33 Sacrifice
I
can feel him," Eleana said. "He's kicking?" Rekkk
asked. "I don't know what the baby is doing," she said with
a grimace, "but it hurts." Rekkk
put his arm around her and looked to the Teyj, who had gone on to
reconnoiter. "We had better stop here and rest." Eleana
looked around at the rock-strewn mountain field they were crossing,
its once lush summer grasses sere and shorn in brittle winter. "It
is too exposed here." She heard the Teyj calling as it weaved
and dipped in the air currents, and pointed toward the looming rock
face. "The teyj has found a cave. We'll have plenty of shelter
there against the heavy weather." "You'll
never make the climb." "You
should know never to say never to me, Rekkk." She grinned
through her obvious pain. "You have as good as dared me." And
before he could stop her, she had set off, crossing the remainder of
the field and starting up the slope that led to the first
outcroppings of the mountainside. They were high in the Djenn Marre,
at most a day from the Abbey of Floating White. Rekkk hurried after
her, grabbing hold of the rock. The Teyj fluttered excitedly just
over his shoulder. If they were going to get to the cave, he knew,
they would have to do it before the wet weather settled in and made
the rock face too treacherous to negotiate. Already, the following
wind out of the south had picked up, turning the air leaden with
incipient moisture. These
dark thoughts were abruptly terminated by Eleana's cry. He looked up
so fast his neck cracked, and he scrambled quickly upward to find her
clinging precariously with one hand while clutching her belly with
the other. "Eleana,
what is it?" But
she only shook her head, her face scrunched up, and she put her head
in the hollow of his shoulder as he took her in one strong arm and
headed up the scree. The loose rock made it more difficult to make
headway, but Rekkk persevered, using whatever was available to him —
cracks, crevasses, the limbs of stunted trees, battered and twisted
by the harsh weather—to continue their ascent. The breath came
hotly to his lungs and his muscles felt as if they were on fire. Pain
he had thought gone, associated with his wounds, returned to haunt
him like a daemon. But he kept going though the way became steeper as
he began to climb the true rock face, for he knew without question
that their greatest danger was being caught on the vertical when the
rain came. He
suppressed the urge to hurry, taking each step with care, testing
hand- and footholds, while the wind gusted at his back and whistled
in his ears. Once, he thought he heard something, and turned his head
to look. But that action caused him to pause, and pausing was out of
the question, so he saw nothing, and the moment the first slash of
rain pattered against his legs he forgot all about the sound. He
looked directly above his head and tried to blot out Eleana's moans.
He was terrified that she was going to have the baby right there
without protection, and that he would be helpless to save it. He
judged that they were perhaps two-thirds of the way to the top. He
kept moving, the afternoon darkening radically, another spray of rain
striking him like a blow. The temperature must have already dropped
by a good ten degrees. He
kept moving, one leg, one arm at a time and his world came down to
this crucial routine: search out a handhold, test it, haul them up,
fight for a toehold, balance, then start all over again. They
were almost to the ledge where Eleana had spied the cave, but a great
outcropping of rock intervened, overhanging his head. The way
directly above was completely blocked. The rain had begun a more
steady tattoo against the rock face. His entire back was drenched,
and Eleana had commenced to shiver as well as spasm. In despair, he
looked left and right, contemplating a lateral move, but no crack or
crevasse immediately presented itself, and they had passed the last
of the trees sometime ago. "N'Luuura
take it!" he cursed. He
heard the Teyj calling to him. It was banking and swooping, its four
wings helping it to maintain its balance and altitude in the gusts.
Rekkk saw where he was headed, a featureless block of rock just to
his right. With the temperature dropping, the sleety rain was
beginning to turn to snow. He squinted but could discern no handhold
through the sharply reduced visibility. What was the Teyj thinking? A
blast of wind almost dislodged him, and a host of flakes battered his
face. His foot slipped on the wet rock, and Eleana groaned and he
cursed. His fingers were rapidly growing numb. The
Teyj called to him once more, and he muttered, "To N'Luuura with
it!" through gritted teeth as he reached over to his right. His
fingertips felt along the rock and, at the very back of it, where it
became part of the mountainside, he found the crevasse the Teyj with
its keen eyesight and optimum vantage point had discovered. He curled
his fingers into the crevasse, pulled, felt no give, and swung over.
For a moment, he hung in space, feeling giddy with the height, then
the toes of his boots caught a crack, and they were safe. He
allowed the Teyj to guide him the rest of the way, a surprisingly
easy last hundred meters. Gaining the ledge, Rekkk gathered Eleana
into both arms, ignoring the spasming of his overtaxed muscles, and
ran for the mouth of the cave. The Teyj was already present as Rekkk
laid Eleana gently onto the dry dirt floor. He
went into the cavern's interior, but this high up could find no dried
branches or even twigs. He settled for a handful of desiccated bone
shards, which he dropped beside Eleana. Placing one of the smallest
shards in his okummmon, he conjured up fire in his mind and out of
the okummmon's slot roared a jet of fire that lit the pile of bones. The
gale hammered full force at the mountainside, turning the night
opaque, filling the cave mouth with a drifting of snow. The wind
howled and moaned deep in the bowels of the cavern, and the Teyj
violently ruffled its feathers in order to remain dry. Eleana
shivered, moaning, bringing Rekkk's thoughts back to their present
predicament. "What
is the matter with her?" Rekkk asked the Teyj. "Is the baby
coming?" The
Teyj sang and Rekkk heard its voice in the serene center of his mind.
It was the voice of Nith Sahor. The
baby will come when it comes. Eleana is ill. "Why
has it taken you so long to speak to me?" My
enemies have keenest ears. Rekkk. I am weak and vulnerable in this
body. I could not take the risk of them overhearing. Rekkk
put the back of his hand against Eleana's forehead. "She is very
hot." Duur
fever, Nith Sahor said in his mind. It mill get worse. It may
not get better. Rekkk
glanced up at the bird, hopping back and forth nervously on one foot
then the other. "How do you know that?" Because
the disease is manufactured. By us. The Gyrgon. "What?
Why?" It
was an early attempt to subdue the Kundalan Resistance. All
at once Rekkk was full of rage. "Did you have anything to do__?" Not
personally. It was the brainchild of Nith Settt. I argued against it.
All the same I am culpable. "You
must know its genetic makeup then," Rekkk cried. "Do
something." Would
that I could. I have told you, in this guise I am severely limited. "I
can make almost anything with this okummmon you designed. Tell me
what will cure her." There
is no cure I know of. We made certain of that. "Ah,
N'Luuura, if she dies . . ." Rekkk found that he was trembling. Perhaps
there is a way. "Then
N'Luuura take it, tell me what it is?" Rekkk shouted. "N'Luuura
take it, why are you Gyrgon so enigmatic?" We
may seem so only because you have yet to learn our locutions. On the
other hand, Rekkk, you know more than you think. You know that
Eleusis Ashera learned to believe in Kundala, in the importance of
Kundalan, and in their faith in Miina. You know that I, Nith Sahor,
learned the same things. Now, Rekkk, you have a Kundalan lover,
Kundalan friends to whom you are fiercely loyal. Rekkk,
holding Eleana in his arms, grazed her cheek with his lips. "How
will any of this save Eleana and her baby?" Tell
me, Rekkk, would you die in order to save them? "Of
course. Yes." Then
perhaps that is the only way. The legend of the ultimate sacrifice
runs at the very bedrock of Kundalan faith. It is the one weapon
non-Ramahan have in invoking enchantment. This much is certain:
Gyrgon technomancy cannot save them. What is left save Kundalan
sorcery? As
Attack-Commandant filled crouched in the dense shadow of a rock
outcropping, he could feel death at his shoulder, breathing softly
and evenly. Not his death; the death of those he pursued. With
darkness, the rain had changed to snow, heavy and wet and clinging,
silencing the birds, bending the branches far below to its will. Attack-Commandant
Blled scooped a handful of snow and stuffed it into his mouth, he had
not eaten since he had left his Khagggun in the dense forest near the
death pit two days before. He gloried in the pain his stomachs were
in; the sensation assured him that he was alive. From his vantage
point, he could now and again make out through the swirls of snow the
fitful glow of the fire emanating from the cave mouth on the ledge
above him. The tingling sensation he had felt upon walking the
perimeter of that pit had once again proved correct. He had picked up
the fugitives' trail by being vigilant and patient. He had sent his
Khagggun back to the crash site because he had too much respect for
Rekkk Hacilar's almost uncanny ability to discern and thwart pursuit.
Truth be told, there was another reason he had decided to continue on
alone; he wanted the glory of their deaths all to himself. As
the storm howled around him he was immune to both the cold and the
intense isolation it engendered. His inner eye gazed at the havoc and
destruction it had been his pleasure to take part in on a dozen
far-flung worlds. Like holographs lining a bookshelf he gazed
lovingly on these scenes, milestones of his life, trophies of which
he was inordinately proud. Nowhere present was any trace whatsoever
of the Tus-kugggun whom he had bedded or their offspring, unseen and
unacknowledged. It could be said without fear of contradiction or
exaggeration that his children, wherever they might be, were more
dead than the corpses explored over and over again by his eidetic
inner eye. It was not that he had forgotten them; for him they simply
did not exist. And
as for the skull of the korrrai, it did not matter whether or
not it was in his possession, whether or not he spoke to it. What
mattered was that his compatriots believed these things completely
with their hearts and with their spirits, for it was their conviction
that conveyed upon him this almost supernatural power which nourished
him in the cold and the dark of the raging storm. Rekkk
could hear the blood rushing through his veins even over the howling
of the storm. "What
am I, Nith Sahor? Certainly I am no longer V'ornn." Whatever
you are, Rekkk, is for you and you alone to discover. "One
day, even if it is in another lifetime, I swear I will come to fully
understand you." When he held out his arm the Teyj flew up and
settled upon it. "Dear Teyj, take care of her." He put his
hand on the crown of the bird's head. "I wish for you—" I
know what you wish for me, Rekkk. The song was like a caress
in the center of his mind. I wish the same for you. Rekkk
lifted his arm, and the Teyj fluttered up. It settled between Eleana
and the fire. "This
moment," Rekkk said. "You knew it would come, didn't you?" I
prayed that it could happen another way. This is a hard lesson to
learn: even champions must die. "I
thought Gyrgon did not pray." This
Gyrgon does. Rekkk
nodded silently. Taking one last look at Eleana's pale and
sweat-drenched face, he turned on his heel and went to the very lip
of the cave mouth, and the snowstorm struck him a physical blow. "Is
this right?" he shouted. "Is this what I should be doing?
Tell me! Give me a sign!" The
wind gusted and howled. His cloak was ripped from around his neck,
spun off into the turbulent night. The snow engulfed him. He thought
of all the wrongs he had committed, all the lives needlessly taken,
all the cruelty and injustice he had meted out. He thought of the
forgiveness with which his Kundalan lover and friends had blessed
him. And
then he let go of everything: his guilt, prejudices, anger,
impatience, frustration, uncertainty. His mind filled only with
Eleana and her unborn baby, he spread his arms wide. "Here I am!
I am Yours! Take me as You will! All I ask in return is that You
spare Eleana and her child!" And,
tipped out over the ledge, he felt the storm's force gathering, the
wind whirling like a vortex. Was that Miina's voice he heard,
calling? All
at once he was taken off his feet. Sucked up into the maelstrom's
bosom, he fell through the fusillade of snow.
34 Eleana's
Choice
This close to the Veil Riane
could hear it calling to her, although in point of fact she heard
nothing at all. Rather, she felt the fluidic shifts in the place
where she hovered suspended between water and fire. They radiated
outward from the center of the cube of fire. She could feel the
magnetic pull of the Veil, a kind of siren song, urging her to enter
the fire and pluck out the Veil. Still,
she hung back. There
were lessons to be learned in every step she took here. Nothing was
simple or as it appeared on the surface. This cube of fire, she was
certain, was no different. Staring at the flickering flames, she
reviewed what she had learned. She had survived the darkness of the
water by bringing light into it, she had survived the vacuum by
filling it with air. In retrospect, the pattern was clear. Both
times, the solution involved the opposites. Did
that mean she needed to inject water into the fire in order to make
the cube safe for her to retrieve the Veil? She reminded herself that
in neither case had the application of opposites been straightforward
or obvious. Otherwise, the bubble of air would have worked. Something
was bothering her. She moved closer to the fire, but still she did
not feel any heat. She tried to peer more deeply at the flames, but
it seemed impossible. Their centers were so bright they hurt her
eyes, and she was forced to turn away. There
were any number of spells she could use in order to conjure
water—Returning Current, Greater Mountain Stream—but she
did not believe they were the answer. These flames were different;
they would not respond to water. All at once, she had a clear and
acute sense of danger. She did not think she would be given a second
chance as she had here in the vacuum. If she guessed wrong, she was
finished. What
was she to do? And
then she thought of Kunlung Mountain. It was an enchantment of sorts,
though not a spell as either Ramahan or sauromician defined the term.
The Druuge used it to reach a kind of equilibrium in the mind, the
body, and the spirit. It was a high place, a consciousness of vista,
hence all such enchantments have mountain in their names. As
she cast the spell, she felt herself rising through time and space
until from the height of Kunlung Mountain she saw the entire view of
the complex strongbox holding the Veil of a Thousand Tears. She
peered down at the cenote filled with pitch-black water, the
donut-shaped space in which she sat, cross-legged, dreaming the
enchantment, and beyond, the cube of fire. And
that was how she saw it. The connection of all three vessels and the
solution. She rose and, walking around the cube, discovered the pulse
of the filament of bourn that passed through all three sections.
Using it as a pathway, she used White Well to gather a rivulet of the
pitch-black water above her and send it directly into the cube of
fire. Entering
the cube, the rivulet of water circled the flames again and again,
weaving a sphere of water to contain and then bank the fire. Only
rose-colored embers remained. And
in their center, the Veil of a Thousand Tears. It
ran like a river, coiled like a serpent, rippled like a standard in
the wind. It was a meter wide and perhaps three meters in length,
although that was difficult to judge as its shape kept changing. Riane
reached in and took it. It
was translucent and felt like liquid, as if the tears of the Five
Sacred Dragons had been sealed between gossamer-thin layers. She
could feel each and every one of them pulsing as if with its own
heart. And she thought she could hear the distant voices of the
Dragons calling to her. She
also sensed the Veil as a living entity, just as Perrnodt had said.
In her head flitted like fish about a reef not so much thoughts as
emotions. The Veil knew who she was. It had almost immediately sent
an unseen tendril into her heart and, embroidering its unique pattern
there, had made its intentions known. It
knew of Giyan's plight, and in its unique language it began to paint
pictures in Riane's mind, communicating to her just what she must do. From
his vantage point as he climbed the steep rock face,
Attack-Commandant Blled saw Rekkk at the verge of the ledge that led
to the cave in which his prey had taken shelter. And then the storm
intensified, and the Rhynnnon vanished into a blizzard of snow. He
never saw or even sensed Rekkk hurtle past him. Blled
held his position, at the ready. He waited for the storm to subside,
for Rekkk to appear again. This close to his prey, he disliked losing
sight of him. But when, after some time the storm did not abate, he
continued his climb, knowing he could not last long out in it. He was
thinking of the pleasure he would derive from dispatching the
Rhynnnon himself, of watching the light go out of the traitor's eyes.
He felt anticipation also at taking the measure of the Rhynnnon's
companion, the Kundalan sorceress who had maimed Star-Admiral Olnnn
Rydddlin. Other Khagggun would have coveted the acclaim that would
accrue to the one who brought back the pair's heads. Blled, however,
was solely fixated on the pleasure he would derive from holding their
still-pulsing hearts in his bare hand. With
these thoughts to warm him, he completed the almost vertical ascent
in the most inclement weather. He had wanted to attain this before
dawn and, hopefully, at the height of the storm, when he would be
least expected and could therefore maximize the element of surprise. Gaining
the ledge, he lay on his side half-hidden in a snowdrift and cast his
gaze about for the Rhynnnon. As far as he could tell, the ledge was
clear; Rekkk Hacilar must have returned to the cave when the ferocity
of the storm interfered with his reconnoiter. He
rolled through the drift. He could make out the cave mouth and, in a
small lull in the tempest, a dark patch above and to the left. He
made for that spot at a crouching run. It was perhaps a hundred
meters from the cave mouth. Blowing on his fingers to keep them from
stiffening, he made the climb up to the dark patch. It was a far
easier ascent than the one he had just made. As
he grew closer, the dark patch resolved itself into an ear canal, one
of those auxiliary tubes often found radiating from mountain caves.
These invariably fed into the main cavern itself. He crawled into it
and soon enough could make out the indistinct, fluttering sound of a
voice. Drawing his ion mace, he headed down the canal, the voice
growing more distinct with every moment. Wake
up. Eleana, wake up!
The Teyj flew around her. Eleana!
Eleana! The
Teyj fluttered its upper wings against her cheek before settling onto
her lap. Eleana's
fever dream was all at once filled with magnificent song, and she
opened her eyes. The duur fever that had racked her had vanished as
quickly as it had overtaken her. She gave a little gasp and clutched
her belly. "My
baby!" Fear
not. He is fine, the Teyj sang. He is blessedly untouched by
the fever. Eleana
blinked and looked around. "Someone
called me. It was like a symphony," she said, as if to herself.
She said, "I'm thirsty." She
watched as the Teyj flew through the mouth of the cave into the
snowstorm. Moments later, he had returned, fluttering in front of her
face. Open
your mouth. "What?" You
said you were thirsty. Open your mouth, Eleana. Obediently,
uncomprehendingly, she opened her mouth. To her utter astonishment,
the Teyj poked its beak into her mouth. She gulped at the melted
snow. The
Teyj drew back. More? "Come
here," She lifted her hand, and the Teyj settled on it. "Thank
you." You're
welcome. "I
can't . . ." She shook her head. "You are speaking to me?" Yes. "Who
are you?" I
think you know, Eleana, the Teyj sang. I did not die in the
ring of sysal trees. "Nith
Sahor!" she cried in utter delight. The
Teyj ducked his head. I instructed Thigpen to put me into the
Teyj's body. For safekeeping from my enemies. She
remembered that horrible night when they had been waiting for Riane
to get to the Storehouse Door in time. The night Nith Sahor's enemies
had come for him. The night they had all thought he had been killed.
In her mind's eye, she saw Nith Sahor, mortally wounded, nodding to
Thigpen, saw Thigpen's paw touch the center of a small black object,
saw it balloon like a sail, expanding outward until it hid them both.
Now she knew what had happened. She
stroked the Teyj and kissed the fluffy crown of its head. "Does
Rekkk know?" she cried. "You must tell him, Nith Sahor. He
will be so—" Rekkk
knew. A
chill ran through her, and she shook her head at the sorrowful tone
of the Teyj's song. "What do you mean, Rekkk knew." The
Teyj, growing agitated, fluffed its feathers. There is no easy way
to tell you this— "No!"
Her hands flew to her mouth. "Oh, no!" Tears sprang to her
eyes. "Please, please, please!" He
sacrificed himself to save you. There was no other way. "Why?"
she screamed. She was clawing her way to her feet. "Why was
there no other way?" Because
you were dying. You— "How
could he make that choice? What made him think he had that kind of
power?" You
would not have survived, Eleana. The baby would have died with you. She
stopped, trembling. "Tell
me this is a dream. Tell me I will wake up in a moment in the real
cave, and Rekkk will be kneeling beside me." The
Teyj folded his four wings. "Ah,
Miina!" Eleana covered her face with her hands and began to sob.
She dropped to her knees. "Cruel Goddess. Why have You done this
to him? Punish those who torture and murder Your children. Kill all
the V'ornn, Miina! But not him!" Eleana,
grieve for him, as I do. But do not despair. He prayed to Miina and,
in the end, the Goddess heard him. She
lifted her head, stared at the Teyj. He
sacrificed himself so that you and your baby would live. This is his
legacy, and it is meant for you. "But
I want him back!" Her
cry reverberated through the cavern and reached Attack-Commandant
Accton Blled, crouched still as a dormant perwillon at the end of the
canal. Slithering feetfirst into the cavern proper, he whirled his
ion mace over his head. The
Teyj gave a warning screech and flew at him. Blled swung the ion mace
with deadly accuracy, catching the bird on the wing. It went down in
a heap of feathers. That
gave Eleana the time she needed to reach for her shock-sword and
withdraw it. "What
have we here? The sorceress skcettta? You are younger than I had been
led to believe. And pregnant at that!" Blled laughed at her. The
ion mace made an ominous whirring as it spun faster and faster in a
tight circle above his head. "Where is the Rhynnnon Rekkk
Hacilar?" Eleana
rose, bracing her aching back against the wall. She clamped down hard
on all the muscles in her abdomen. "You will have to go through
me to get to him." Blled
laughed all the harder. "I see. This is what happens when
Kha-gggun forsake their caste. They hide behind female robes."
He shook his head, advancing on her. "By the look of you, you
are in no condition to give me pause with either shock-sword or
spell." He
swung the ion mace and she countered successfully, but the effort
cost her. She quickly realized that the bout with duur fever had
sapped a lot of her stamina. And because of the baby she had less
than usual. But she was determined that he would not be born in a
pool of his own blood; she vowed that Rekkk's sacrifice would not be
in vain. Blled
came in low, the ion mace blurred in a wicked sideswipe. This time
she barely got her blades in front of it. They rang like chimes. She
felt awkward and sluggish. The parry staggered her more than it
should have, and he swung a lazy, overhand blow. She flicked it away
easily, but it was a setup. The ion mace whirred and swung out in an
arc too wide to get inside her guard. Instead, the thick chain
wrapped itself around her shock-sword's twin blades. At once he
jerked the ion mace—and the shock-sword—toward him. But
Rekkk had trained her too well, and she would not allow herself to be
disarmed. His move brought her up against him, and he drove her to
her knees with his fist. She uttered a little moan. Blled,
cursing mightily, rammed her, so that she struck the cavern wall with
sickening force. Her head lolled, and she almost lost consciousness.
Seeing this, he tried to wrench the shock-sword out of her fist. He
almost succeeded, but she felt a painful spasm in her loins, a quick
gush of fluids running down her thighs, and all her senses awoke to
razor sharpness. The baby! It was coming! With
a strength born at the edge of survival she fought him. He cursed,
and his concentration narrowed. Consequently, he did not see the Teyj
flying toward him until it was too late. Its sharp bill punctured his
cheek just at the edge of the lower occipital ridge. Blood spurted,
and he lost vision in his left eye. Roaring, he lashed out. The Teyj
tried to dip out of the way, but he grabbed two of its wings and
ripped them from their sockets. The Teyj screamed. Blled, intent now
on the creature, loosened his hold on his ion mace. Eleana,
breathing hard, slipped the blades from the chain and drove them
tipsfirst clear through Blled's hearts. His eyes rolled over to fix
on her before he toppled backward, drowned in his own blood. She
cast her eyes about for the Teyj, gathered it into her lap, and gave
a little cry. She laced her fingers below her belly. "I feel
him," she whispered as fluid gushed down her thighs. "Nith
Sahor, the baby has dropped. He is coming." Sweat
rolled freely down her. Her thighs spread with a renewed spasm of
pain. Pulling aside her robes, she could feel the slippery crown of
his head. "Nith
Sahor," she called. "Can you believe it? He wants to come
now!" She was laughing and crying at the same time. "Now?
What is the matter with him? Oh, oh, it hurts!" Laughing and
crying. Cradling the head. "I am going to have to give him some
lessons in timing, don't you think?" She looked down at the
broken-winged Teyj. "Oh, Nith Sahor, I am so afraid. Rekkk—I
can't bear to think about him now. But if you die . . . N'Luuura take
it, if you die I shall never forgive you!" Eleana.
I am here. A song whispered in the center of her mind. She
closed her eyes, tears dripping onto her breast. Thank you, Miina,
she prayed. I
am dying. . . "No,
no, no, no!" It was a rising wail of despair. I
am sorry to disappoint you. I wanted to see your baby as much as
Rekkk did, but I can remain in this state only so long. Still, it is
. . . interesting to realize that I will be so missed. "You
can't die!" Eleana said fiercely. She moaned louder, widening
her squat. The fire in her loins and low back felt like a terrible
peristalsis. She gasped, trying as best she could to breathe between
the contractions. "You have to help me. I cannot have the baby
alone." Now she cradled his head and shoulders in her hands.
There was fluid all over. The contractions were building to a
crescendo. A moment more, and she held his head, shoulders, and
torso. Weeping and laughing, the cavern echoing with her cries. The
awful explosive pain that filled her belly made her desperate for it
to be over as quickly as possible. "He's
coming," she gasped. "Oh, Nith Sahor, he's here." And
she pulled the baby out and up into the light, slimy and dripping,
indistinguishable from an animal. Cradling him against her shoulder
she cut the umbilical and tied it off. She
turned the baby toward her. His face was pale. A quick clutch at her
heart nearly unnerved her. Save for a tuft of black hair on the slick
crown of his head, he looked almost entirely V'ornn. "Nith
Sahor," she cried, "he is so still and quiet!" Eleana,
bring him closer. With
a terrible fear driving her, she put the baby in her lap, next to the
Teyj. "Do
you feel him?" He
breathes. But just barely. "Ah,
Miinal" she wailed. "No!" He
has both Kundalan and V'ornn hearts. "Two
sets of hearts," Eleana whispered. "That should be good." In
theory it is. But practically we have found that the V'ornn hearts
often begin to overwhelm the Kundalan heart. "In
the body as on Kundala." She held the baby tighter. "Nith
Sahor, make him breathe. Make him live." Eleana,
even if I weren't mortally wounded, in this guise I have access to
very little technomancy. "You
must save my baby, Nith Sahor. You must!" There
is a way, Eleana, the Teyj sang. But it is not without danger.
It is not without drawbacks. "Anything!"
she cried, nearly beside herself with grief. "Whatever it takes
you must save him." The
Teyj scrambled painfully over the pale and nearly lifeless infant.
Eleana, you should know something— "Just
do it!" she screamed. The
Teyj dipped its head, so that the tip of its bill touched a black
object strapped to its leg. It was so small she had never noticed it
before. At
once, the blackness inflated like a sail, engulfing the three of
them. In an instant, they were sealed off from the world around them. "I
saw this before," Eleana breathed. "When Thigpen saved you
from dying." This
is what I am telling you, Eleana. "You
mean you—" It
is the only way to save your baby. This is how both of us will live. She
gasped. "Oh, Miina! No, you can't—!" Then
your baby is doomed. As for me, I have had a long life. It does not
matter if I die. "But
it does matter!" She was half-blinded by tears. "All life
matters!" Your
baby's breath is giving out. Tell me what to do, Eleana. This is your
choice. "I
cannot. You are asking me to play Goddess. It is not my place to
decide who should live or die." Didn't
that decision come into play when you killed this Khagggun? "That
was different." I
assure you that for him it wasn't. He is dead. You killed him,
Eleana. You made that choice instinctively. You must use your
instinct again. Life or death, which will it be? "But
my baby? What will become of him with you inside him?" Eleana,
at this moment he has no brain function. "Then
he is dead already!" she screamed. Not
yet. Not quite yet. But the moment is passing. And then it will be
too late. Choose now. She
threw her head back, clutched the infant and the Teyj to her breast.
"I want my baby to live!" All
at once she could not breathe. It was as if the black sail had
collapsed in on her, molding itself to her, to the contours of the
baby. She tried to breathe but could not. She called out for Nith
Sahor but she had no voice. She was in a dream. She looked down. Her
last sight before she lost consciousness was of the Teyj. It was
using its beak to pluck out its feathers. One by one it laid them
across the dying infant until it was completely bald. Its skin was as
black as the sail, as rectangular as the box that had been strapped
to its leg. It no longer looked like a Teyj at all...
35 Nawatir
Rekkk
fell through the fusillade of snow and wind, but he did not reach the
ground. Instead, the whiteness thickened, deepened, and became
opaque. The howling of the wind faded into a background wash, the
snow whirled in concentric circles all around him, but he felt
neither wind nor cold. As he watched, the snow seemed to congeal,
grow solid, take form and shape. And within the form and shape a
ruddy glow began to circulate, like a cyclone; the glow grew in size,
the ruddy hue becoming more pronounced until it took on the vibrancy
of rubies. And
then, out of this red, red mist, he saw the face—enormous,
glowering, terrifying. He saw the teeth first, gigantic and sharp as
knives, then the ruby-scaled snout with pulsing nostrils, the eyes
with their vertical-crescent irises. "N'Luuura
take me!" he breathed. "What are you?" I
am Yig. Sacred Dragon of Fire. "The
Dar Sala-at has spoken of you. You are one of Miina's Five Sacred
Dragons." It
is good that you know of me. "What
is this? I must already be dead." "I
assure you not." "Then
why have you saved me from dying? I have made a pledge." It
is you who have summoned me. Your warrior-prayer has brought down the
fire from the skies. "I
was praying to Miina." We
are Avatars of the Great Goddess. The
face, initially so terrifying, now seemed so beautiful it brought
tears to his eyes. "You heard my prayer." You
are Miina's child. Her priest. Her warrior. He
felt a shock wave arrow through him. "I thought that honor was
reserved for the Dar Sala-at." Yes. What
did that mean? he wondered. "But I am V'ornn." You
are Miina's child, Her priest, Her warrior. "I
do not understand." The
advent of the Nawatir is written in Prophesy. He
felt his insides began to congeal. "But you must take me. I have
made my sacrifice. My faith. ... I demonstrated ... I pledged to give
my life so that Eleana and her child might live." Your
faith is absolute, your pledge unshakable. These are attributes of a
true priest and a true warrior. This is who you are. "I
wish Miina to hear me. I would not have them die. They are too
precious to me." Even
though you have no conception of what that child could become? "Without
question." Your
faith is absolute, your pledge unshakable. Here is the proof of it. "I
am ready now to die." The
face of the Great Dragon showed many huge teeth. Have my words
fallen on deaf ears? It is not your moment to die, Nawatir. It is
your moment to serve Miina. And to serve both Kundalan and V'ornn.
There is a war coming. My brethren have tried to avoid it, but now
even they see that it is inevitable. You are Nawatir. The protector
of the Dar Sala-at. I charge you now with this office and bless you
with Miina's grace." "If
I am in truth this Nawatir you speak of, then I beg you guide me to
Lady Giyan, your most devoted servant, that I may free her from her
torment by the archdaemon Horolaggia." Giyan
is beloved of Miina, as is the Dar Sala-at, but her fate is her fate. "She
is also my beloved. I would not see her harmed." You
are the protector of the Dar Sala-at. It is not for you to question. "If
she dies—" War
breeds changes, Nawatir, and never a war so much as this one. Be
forewarned. Everything—everything
you know or have ever believed true—
will change. "My
love for Giyan will never change. It will never die." Without
warning, Rekkk found himself being sucked into the gigantic image.
Closer and closer he went. At the last instant, it opened its fiery
mouth, and he entered a great and fathomless darkness. He felt an
overpowering warmth suffuse him, ribbons of fire burned where blood
had pumped through his veins. His mind buzzed with ten million voices
all speaking at once. And then, abruptly, there was the utter
stillness of death, or the state beyond death, and for just an
instant Rekkk fretted that this was all a dream he was having on the
point of death. Then
he felt his faith reignite the fire in his blood, and he was lifted
up, transfixed and exalted in the very bosom of the Cosmos, and he
felt the torrent of unimaginable life pulsing all around him. It was
as if, for one moment, he had become a gravship falling though the
star-studded rnultiverse, seeing and feeling everything. It was as
if, for a moment in eternity, the Cosmos existed inside him. Eleana
cradled her baby, a beautiful boy. He was her baby, but he was also
something more. She knew that, and yet she did not want to think
about it. Not yet, anyway. The baby glistened and shone with viscous
birth fluids as it howled its passage into a new life. She crooned to
her child, and was about to wipe him down when a webwork of violet
energy strands appeared as if from the underside of the black Gyrgon
sphere that still enclosed them. She
started, her heart pounding hard in her breast, and sought to shield
her baby. Then she realized that the energy lines were emanating from
her baby, expanding upward into the black sphere. The baby quieted,
and she watched, fascinated, as the birth fluids evaporated, and his
skin took on a healthy pinkish glow. She watched the movement of his
eyes, still blind to the outside world, and all at once she gave a
startled cry. His pupils expanded and contracted, his head turned
slightly as his eyes alit on her. His bow lips curled into a smile.
He gurgled happily, and she held out her forefinger for him to grip. Now
the energy lines were multiplying, and she felt his heat, an oven in
her arms, a fire. Did he have a fever? Was he ill? But, no. She saw
him shimmer, his outline growing hazy and she shook her head, passed
a hand across her eyes. Perhaps it was she who was ill, or more
likely exhausted unto hallucination from her ordeal. But
when she looked again, her baby was no longer a newborn, but a child
of six months. The web of energy lines had multiplied several times
over. His mouth opened and closed, and she knew with a mother's
intuition that he was trying to speak. Dear
Miina, she thought. What is happening? But,
of course, she knew. Nith Sahor, buried deep inside her son, had
taken control. As the child shimmered again, his outline wavering,
she wondered whether this was how Gyrgon passed through childhood.
She hoped not. She could think of nothing sadder. She
was weeping now, for the years her son was losing, for all the
experiences he was missing, and her tears made him blur before her
eyes. Then, she felt him moving, touching her face, and in a
beautiful, melodious voice, he said, "Oh, do not cry, Eleana.
You who gave me life should feel only joy." And
she hugged him to her, a child of three years, or so she estimated,
the minutes of his life speeding by so fast she could not keep track
of them. And he threw his arms around her and kissed her, shimmering
again, growing, maturing, spurred on by his Gyrgon techno-mancy. And
he whispered in her ear the word she longed to hear. "Mother." Much
to his surprise, Rekkk Hacilar, the Nawatir, found himself returned
to the cave where he had left Eleana dying of duur fever. He had
assumed that the red Dragon would take him to the Dar Sala-at,
wherever she was in the wastes of the Korrush. Passing
a patch of ice, he saw himself clothed in deepest red, a
cross-hatched tunic and trousers of an unknown, lustrous fabric,
high, sueded boots, a thick belt from which hung two swords, their
scabbards incised with Miina's sacred runes. Across his broad, square
shoulders rode a hooded cloak that writhed and whipped as if of its
own volition. Then, he peered closer into the impromptu mirror and,
reaching out, pushed aside a crust of snowflakes. The face he saw
reflected there made his V'ornn hearts pound in his chest. While he
had retained his size and height, he no longer looked like a V'ornn.
Rather, he had the coloring, the features of a Kundalan. Blond hair
crowned his head, cheeks, and chin. He put his hand up, and
wonderingly stroked his close-cropped beard. How odd, how luxuriant
it felt to be growing these filaments called hair—and in such
profusion! How pale his eyes, like the ice crowning the tops of the
Djenn Marred And his skull—it was no longer long and tapering,
but as globular as any Kundalan's. Again and again, he traced with
his fingertips the new contours of his face with its high cheekbones
and generous lips. And, of course, he wondered what Giyan would think
of him, and whether he would ever see her again. Rekkk
turned, hearing the sound of two voices talking. The female voice he
recognized as Eleana's and he said a prayer of thanks to Miina. But
the other voice, that of a young male, was unfamiliar to him. He was
about to go and find out who was with Eleana when he sensed another
presence. It
was then that he saw the huge, fearsome-looking animal coming out of
the mist along the ledge. It was six-legged, black as pitch, with a
tapering muzzle. Tufts of silken hair sprouted from the backs of its
long legs, its elegant neck was a perfect arc, and its mane was
thick, stiff as the bristles on a brush. Its huge golden eyes
regarded him with uncanny intelligence. A long spiral horn, bluish
white, coruscating, rose from its forehead. "A
narbuck," Rekkk whispered. "I thought you were a legend." The
narbuck stopped a pace in front of him. Then it lowered its muzzle
into his hand. "Stay,"
he said. "Will you stay?" The
narbuck snorted and shook its magnificent mane. He patted its flank,
then he turned and went into the cavern. Rekkk Hacilar did not know
what to do next, but it seemed that the Nawatir did. Eleana
saw him first and she put her arm protectively around her son. He was
already a youth, and in many respects he resembled Kurgan, with his
long, angular face with its cruel slash of a mouth. But instead of
his father's night-black eyes, watchful as a snow-lynx's, he had
Eleana's grey-green eyes, open and curious, and he had her rosy skin
coloring, as well. He was holding a poultice against her lower belly.
She was sitting with her back against the cavern wall. Her legs were
drawn up by the fire. Her robes were blood-spattered. "Who
are you, stranger," Eleana said warily, "to come upon this
cave?" "Eleana,
it is me. Rekkk." "Rekkk
is dead," she said dully. Her hand closed around the hilt of her
shock-sword. "The Teyj told me. And, in any event, Rekkk was a
V'ornn. Clearly, you are not." "But
it is me. I have been transformed." Eleana
thumbed on the shock-sword, but the youth beside her bade her put it
down. "Hear
him out," he said in a melodious, golden voice. "Do not be
in such a rush to judge." "Who
is this youth—?" "If
you are Rekkk Hacilar, which I very much doubt," Eleana said
with an edge to her voice, "now is the moment to prove it."
She had dropped the point of her weapon but she had not turned it
off. The twin blades hummed ominously, the ion field between them
resonating. "We
hid in that pit of death," he said, "buried in rotting
corpses, breathing through reeds, in order to escape the Khagggun who
were pursuing us." Eleana's
eyes opened wide, but still she did not relent. "And then, when
we climbed out, what did we speak of?" "You
told me how your grandfather witnessed the birth of the nar-buck. How
it was turned from white to black by the lightning bolt that came
from the sky and buried itself in its forehead and remained there." "Dear
Miina! Rekkk!" "There
is a narbuck outside, Eleana. Whenever you want, I will take you out
to meet it. It is a most magnificent creature." "Rekkk,
who are you? What have you become?" "He
has given himself into the arms of Miina," the strange Kundalan
youth said, "and She has transformed him into the Nawatir, the
holy protector of the Dar Sala-at." Rekkk
gave the youth a curious glance, then knelt in front of Eleana, took
her pale hands in his. "Eleana! I thank Miina you survived." "Ah,
Rekkk!" She kissed his cheeks. "I thought you were dead." "I
would have been." He stroked her hair and hugged her to him. "I
should have been." He shook his head. "It is a mystery. I
would not let you and the baby die. I prayed to Miina to take me
instead. I went to the ledge and stepped off, I fell into the storm
but then I was taken up into the mouth of Yig, the red Dragon. He
spoke to me, Eleana. He told me that it was not my time to die. He
told me that Miina had heard my prayers, that She had chosen me to be
the Nawatir." "Rekkk."
Her eyes were shining. "You were born for this. First, Nith
Sahor's champion." "Where
is the Teyj?" For the first time, he glanced at the youth. "And
you. I do not understand. You look so like Kurgan Stogggul and yet
you have eyes just like—" He broke off, staring at Eleana. She
said, "You are not the only one to have experienced a miracle."
She nodded. "That's right. My son." "What?
Had he lived your baby would have just been born." He gestured.
"This male must be fifteen years." "Thirteen,
actually!" the youth said. "Tomorrow I will be fifteen." She
told him how she and the Teyj had been attacked by the Khagggun who
had been following them. How he had mortally wounded the Teyj and had
brought on the baby's birth before she had managed to kill him. She
pointed to where Sahor had dragged the corpse. "My baby was
dying along with Nith Sahor," she said. "He used the same
technomancy that had migrated him into the body of the Teyj to keep
the baby alive." She
tapped Sahor's hearts and head. "He is in here." Rekkk
peered at him carefully. "But there are no neural implants, no
circuitry whatsoever. And then there is this." He ruffled
the tuft of black hair that arced in a wave from the top of Sahor's
head. "I
am Sahor and something beyond," the youth said. "Though no
longer Nith, I exist in here, in this body. I have altered it and it
has altered me. I am neither V'ornn nor Kundalan. I am Other, and I
am here for the rest of my life. This is only right, do you not
agree, Nawatir." He produced a small black object, which he held
in the palm of his hand. Tiny violet emanations crisscrossed its
surface. "This taps into my Gyrgon DNA that had embedded itself
into the Kundalan strand. It has greatly speeded up the aging
mechanism. In seven days, when I reach the age of twenty, it will
again tap into my DNA and my aging will return to that of a V'ornn."
He put the black object away. "I have neither tertium circuits
nor okummmon. Though I retain the Gyrgon neural-net strand in my DNA,
I am forever cut off from the Comradeship. On the other hand, I sense
that I have abilities I have not yet begun to explore. And I have a
Kundalan mother. I believe I have gotten the better of the exchange."
He grinned and gripped Rekkk's forearm. "It is good to see you
back, Nawatir." Rekkk
regarded him gravely. "You knew. When you convinced me to seek
Miina, you knew." "Let
us rather say I suspected." Sahor said. "My studies of
Kundalan lore have served me in good stead. I have been thorough in
my research. In
any event, I convinced you of nothing, Nawatir. I recognized the
priestly devotion in you sometime ago. It was your faith and your
faith alone that allowed you to be transformed." The
Veil of a Thousand Tears rippled around Riane, its fluid form fitting
to the contours of her body. It painted for her a portrait of Za
Hara-at. The ancient city was a gigantic engine, a complex instrument
that had been used for fantastic feats of sorcery. This site had been
chosen because every power bourn on Kundala intersected here. Each
section of the city was built around a plaza, beneath which was at
least one power-bourn intersection. Each section of the city was
constructed for a different sorcerous purpose, each interlocked with
its neighbors to create the whole, a grid that, when activated, was a
source of almost incalculable sorcerous energy. The
Veil could be used for many things, depending on which Plaza of Za
Hara-at it was in. In order to save Giyan, she must release the
Dragon's thousand tears in the center of the Plaza of Perplexities. She
emerged from the cenote in the Plaza of Virtuous Risk into a biting
wind. The finbats had vanished, but the sauromician she had glimpsed
had returned. He
stepped from the shadows, chanting, and before she could defend
herself he had impaled her on a forked spear of pale blue sorcerous
energy. She saw that she was only an arm's length away from the bourn
nexus that lay deep beneath the plaza. If she could maneuver herself
over it she could draw from its power. But she could feel the spear
shredding inside her, winding around her spinal column, and all at
once she was paralyzed. The
sauromician, his black pupils throbbing, walked toward her. She could
see that he was careful to avoid the power bourns. "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears," he said. "The ultimate prize."
He thrust up his arm. "I will have it now!" Pain
began to crawl up Riane's spine as he tightened the spell upon her,
and a terrible cold began to drain her of energy. At his murmured
command, another forked spear streaked out toward the Veil. "It
is useless," Riane said. The paralysis was making talking
difficult. "The Veil is semisentient. It will kill you if you
try to take it from me." "Oh,
I am not an archdaemon. I have no intention of taking it from you,
Dar Sala-at." He saw her reaction and laughed. The knucklebones
through his ears shook. "Yes, I know who you are. Who else could
have come into the Korrush and caused such havoc? Who but the Dar
Sala-at could free the Veil from its hiding place?" He smiled,
revealing abnormally long incisors. "I have been planning long
and hard for this day. I know how to defeat the safeguards. I will
take you and the Veil along with me." He cocked his head. "After
a time, you will do as I tell you, and the Veil will do as you say.
It is as simple as that." "No,
Talaasa," came another voice ringing across the plaza, "as
it turns out it is not so simple at all." Talaasa
whirled, and Riane felt a slight lessening of the terrible cold that
had flooded through her. She could turn her head enough to see the
diminutive figure of Minnum approaching them. The
sauromician started to laugh. "What? You're not cowering in some
ragged doorway? I thought the carrion birds had already feasted on
your flesh." "Mock
me at your peril," Minnum said, coming on. "Oh,
do not concern yourself, Minnum. You are beneath my notice. You
little pipsqueak. Where have you been hiding yourself? While I and my
brethren toiled in onerous exile here in this wasteland you slipped
away, turned tail, and ran into some hole in the ground. You hid from
everything. Even your punishment." "On
the contrary. I found that there is no escape from Miina. No escape
from the sins we committed." "Sins!"
Talaasa scoffed. "What word is that? We did what had to be
done." "Then
you are still arrogant, still blind to the truth." Talaasa
spat. "Our 'sin,' if you could call it that, was that we failed
in our mission. I intend to see that does not happen again." "You
are sadly mistaken." "Our
way is the only way." Talaasa shook with rage. "Idiot! You
have only to look at what is left of the abbeys to see that they are
dying without us. What the Ramahan need, what we and only we can
provide them, is strong leadership. Don't you see how we were deluded
by Mother? This sharing of power between males and females could
never work, not for long, anyway. And why should it? Males are
clearly superior in both strength and brainpower. The females were
like a weight around our necks. They brought us down to their level.
They emasculated us." "You've
had your say Now back away," Minnum said. "Don't make me
kill you." "You
know, Minnum, you were always laughable. But this newfound
righteousness makes you pathetic." Minnum
gritted his teeth and cast a spell. Riane could feel it humming
through the air. She could also feel Talaasa countering it. "Is
that the best you can do, little one?" He cast a cold-fire bolt,
making Minnum jump back. "If you do not fear me yet, come
closer. I will teach you." He cast a second bolt, which singed
Minnum's hair. Minnum yelped and threw his arms wide. A thin orange
spiral formed in the space between his hands, then abruptly fizzled
out like a fire in a rainstorm. "Oh,
I think I am going to like this," Talaasa said, his eyes alight.
He cast yet another bolt, this one straight at Minnum's chest. Minnum
countered with a more potent spiral, which met the bolt halfway. The
bolt was momentarily halted. The two concentrated on their duel.
Talaasa gave a guttural cry. Sweat formed on Minnum's beetling brow
and began to roll into his eyes. Gradually, the bolt crept toward
Minnum as the spiral began to sag in its center. Talaasa,
sensing victory was near, redoubled his concentration. As he did so,
Riane felt his grip on her relaxing a bit more. Now she was able to
move slightly, and she wriggled, fighting against the bolt and the
pain and numbing cold it was inflicting. Centimeter
by centimeter she contrived to twist herself toward the bourn nexus.
But Minnum was sweating freely by then, and the bolt had almost
cleaved the spiral in two. It was seconds away from piercing him
through the heart. With one last surge, Riane crossed the nexus
boundary and felt its vast power flood through her. Warmth broke the
cold-fire bolt's grip, and Talaasa turned and screamed at her. In
that moment, Minnum gathered all his courage and sent his own
cold-fire bolt hurtling at Talaasa. Seeing this, Riane began to
conjure Reweaving the Veins, and Talaasa knew he had to counter it.
She had distracted his attention long enough for the cold-fire bolt
to smite him down. As
Talaasa went to his knees, the spell that had been holding her in the
air vanished, and she was pitched along the cobbles of the plaza. "Look
out!" Minnum called, running toward her. "Roll the other
way!" Too
late. She felt Talaasa's grip as he gathered her inside his long,
spidery arms. She was still half-paralyzed and, out of the grip of
the bourn nexus, shivering mightily. "You're
too close," Minnum shouted. "I cannot cast a spell without
hurting you." Out
of the corner of her eye, she saw the black sixth digit on Talaasa's
hand and lunged for it. He had been waiting for that. He slammed the
side of her head against the cobbles. Stars
exploded behind her eyes and, above her, she could feel an itching
along her flesh as the sauromician gathered another spell around
them. She could feel it sliding over her skin like a birthing
serpent, and she hauled on him, rolling him over, kicking him,
rolling again, until she felt it. He
felt it too, the proximity to the bourn nexus, and he struggled
against her, frantic to get away. But she had him, had the leverage,
and she rolled him one last time through the boundary and into the
bourn nexus. Talaasa
opened his mouth wide to scream, but he had already burst into flame,
low and dense, a core without heat or light. Just a shimmer like
fireflies on a lake at night, a smear of color that vanished all
within the blink of an eye. Then
Minnum was at her side, hauling her up and brushing her off. "Dear
Miina," he said, breathless, "that was a close one!"
He shook his head, his eyes alight. "The Veil of a Thousand
Tears. It truly exists!" "What
are you doing here?" Riane waved her hand at him. "Never
mind. There would be no reason to believe you, anyway." "Have
I lied to you? I don't recall—" "Minnum,"
she said firmly, "I know you are a sauromician." "Oh,
dear, oh, dear!" he cried. "This will go ill with me, what
with the sauromicians being deadly enemies of the Dar Sala-at." "I
already got a taste of that." She clapped him on the back.
"Thank you for intervening. That was brave of you." Minnum
blushed and stammered his thanks. He seemed genuinely bewildered by
his own bravery. "Come
on," Riane said breathlessly. "We need to get to the Plaza
of Perplexities for the Veil to save Giyan."
36 Firefight
The
leader of Majja and Basse's Resistance cell was a youth named
Kasstna. He was no more than a year or two older than Basse, Marethyn
guessed. He had the face of an animal, broad and flat, with
diamond-shaped eyes. His shoulders and arms were massive, giving him
a hulking, brooding appearance. In truth, she realized that he had no
reason either to like her or to trust her. She was V'ornn; she was
the enemy. And yet she had brought him and his cell vital
information, intelligence that would go a long way to stemming the
tide of death among them. Possibly he hated her for that. Though he
readily took the intelligence she had passed on from Rada, it was
clear that he did not trust her. He denigrated her every chance he
got. The
cell had decamped in the middle of the night, in a metallic rain that
sounded as if it was intent on shattering the trees. Marethyn, Majja,
and Basse had, hours before, crept out of Axis Tyr using one of many
Resistance tunnels that circumvented the city's well-guarded gates
and rendezvoused with the cell. Marethyn was wearing a dark-colored
tunic and trousers, high boots, a heavy traveling cloak to keep out
the chill and damp. On her left hip was an ion pistol Sornnn had
given her, riding low in its holster. Every once in a while, as she
moved hunch-shouldered with the Kundalan freedom fighters, she
touched the cold butt of the weapon both to assure herself of its
power and keep him close to her. The
cell numbered twenty in all, riding powerful cthauros. No one spoke
to her. But, then, no one spoke at all. During one of the short
breaks, while they washed down cold tasteless concentrate with water,
Majja showed her how to draw her ion pistol, aim it to track her
prey, and fire. Basse, watching this demonstration, laughed silently,
but afterward, he offered to share his laaga stick with her as well
as with Majja. Her first instinct was to refuse, but then she thought
better of it. She knew Basse was impressed by how expertly she rode.
She did not have the hearts to tell Majja that she could shoot the
tips off a gimnopede's tail feathers at fifty meters. The
three of them squatted under the canopy of a kuello-fir and listened
to the sleet come down like an artillery barrage. They smoked
silently. She looked into their eyes and wondered if they could
possibly be as frightened as she was. Then she wondered if there was
any fear left in them. They seemed like hollow shells, automatons
mechanically putting one foot in front of the other, doing what had
to be done. But in the silence of their own minds what were they
thinking? She felt an urge to put her arms around them, to tell them
that it was going to be all right. She wondered if they had ever been
rocked to sleep. She sensed the cell around her, their collective
breath a murmurous grace note. A scent arose from the bed of kuello
needles, cutting sharply across the wind, and she realized the laaga
had heightened her senses. She
saw Kasstna's outline appear. He made a curt gesture, and they were
on their way again, riding swiftly upland. They had already left the
city far behind. Roughly paralleling the convoy route, they
nevertheless kept their lateral distance so as not to give away signs
of their passage. Not surprisingly, the route's vulnerable points
were few and far between. None was without disadvantages and dangers.
Marethyn was impressed by how quickly Kasstna assessed them and
decided on the one that would give their ambush the best chance of
success. The
place he chose was a dry wash just west of Prosperous Reserve and
south of Joining the Valleys. The Khagggun, true to their nature,
were taking a route that skirted the villages and avoided entirely
the most densely populated areas that lay between Avis Tyr and
Glistening Drum. To do so, they had to pass through the dry wash. It
had the advantage of giving the cell high ground from which they
could attack the convoy on an equal level. There were two main
drawbacks. It was only spottily forested, and there was a blind spot
directly behind it, where the cliff face rose to a plateau higher
than the one the Resistance fighters would be commanding. A
thorough reconnoiter of that plateau, however, convinced Kasstna that
they had nothing to fear from the higher ground, and in the last hour
before first light they set about preparing themselves to take
control of the convoy. They were in possession of three medium-range
ion cannons which, along with their sidearms and their ingenuity,
would have to suffice. He
set two of the cell to watch their backs. The rest he deployed within
the Marre pines. Marethyn did not get to see much of the
preparations, which might have been the point because she was the
first one he assigned to rearguard duty. She was sharing that
responsibility with a swaggering, hollow-eyed male who, after coming
over to sniff her like a wyr-hound, contrived to stay as far away
from her as possible. She saw him through the predawn mist, smoking a
laaga stick behind a cupped hand. The
sleet had stopped several hours earlier, which was just as well
because the temperature had continued to plummet through the night.
Now everything was layered with a thin, treacherous slick of black
ice. Firstlight broke. The convoy had left the Western arsenal. It
would arrive in just over an hour. Marethyn found a stunted Marre
pine, its canopy heavy with ice and, crouching, put her back against
the rough-barked bole. Now and again, she caught a glimpse of Majja
or Basse as they went about their assigned tasks. Once, she caught
Kasstna glaring at her, and she returned his gaze unflinchingly. At
last, he turned away, and she allowed the ghost of a smile to play
around her mouth. Though her head had cleared, she could still taste
the laaga. And she was thirsty. She turned, cocking an ear. Away to
the south, she thought she heard the telltale thrum of grav-carriage
engines. The freedom fighters were readying themselves. The convoy
was coming. Though
her fellow sentry appeared content to stay in one position, she was
not. The cortasyne her body had been releasing ever since she had
followed Majja and Basse out of Axis Tyr at last got the best of her.
She jumped up and began a patrol. Her eyes scanned the higher plateau
that ran behind the one the cell was on. Even though they had already
checked it, this gave her something tangible to do. She
could hear the grav-carriages clearly now; they were less than a
kilometer away and coming fast. The Khagggun would not want to spend
more time than was necessary going through the dry wash. In
the hour or so since she had been assigned rearguard duty she had
more or less memorized the terrain of the higher plateau. Now, as she
scanned it once again, her eyes were caught by an anomaly. It wasn't
very large. In fact, she had to stare at it for several minutes
before she had satisfied herself it was really there. She
drew her ion pistol, and turned, briefly glancing over her shoulder,
trying to locate Kasstna in the grey mist. But every member of the
cell crouched hidden among the Marre pines, and, with the convoy
almost upon them, she dared not approach their position. She decided,
instead, to tell her companion. The
convoy's thrumming now filled the dry wash, echoing off the cliff
faces. With one last look at the anomaly, she darted from tree to
tree. Her companion hadn't moved. At least he had stopped smoking.
The first of the ion cannons erupted behind her as she reached him.
He stood against the trunk of a Marre pine, staring at nothing.
Mare-thyn tried to whisper to him, but the explosions swallowed her
words. She touched him, and he fell over sideways. As he rolled over,
she saw that the back of his neck had been severed by an ion dagger. She
did not stop to think how that might have happened. She grabbed the
corpse's ion pistol and, sprinting from tree to tree, contrived to
move nearer the anomaly. At the edge of the dry wash, the firefight
had commenced in earnest. She could not spare the time to determine
how the battle was going, but she now harbored the terrible suspicion
that their ambush was known to the enemy. She
was now within range. From her crouching position she peered up to
get a closer look at the anomaly when something struck her hard on
the side of the head. She pitched over, her shoulder, then her head,
hitting the ground. She sensed movement and saw the Khagggun who must
have killed the other rear guard. Without thinking, she turned just
in time to see a shock-sword cocked and ready to strike at her head.
The Khagggun took one step toward her, slid on the black ice, and his
shock-sword sank into the ground not three centimeters from her
rib-cage. For
an instant all was silence around her. She stared up into the
Khagggun's fierce, armored face. Reflected in it she saw her own
death. Terror welled up inside her, and she raised her right arm
without thinking and squeezed off a shot and blew his head off. She
rolled through a rain of blood, her hearts hammering in her chest.
Her vision blurred. She was crying and vomiting and shaking
uncontrollably. This was nothing like target practice. She had killed
another being. Part of her wondered how that could be. How could she
have taken a life? And she heard again Basse asking if she had
killed, heard again Majja's mocking comment, She
doesn't look like she could kill a blood-flea. She
got to her feet, forced herself to stop shaking. She could smell the
Khagggun's death mingled with her own vomit. She wanted to run away
and never look back. But she knew she could not. Then a premonitory
shiver ran through her, and her blood ran cold. Looking back up the
cliff side, she saw movement, and knew they were doomed. She
ran as fast as she dared into the midst of the firefight. The convoy
hung in the air, its complement of Khagggun returning the Resistance
fire. The Khagggun had already established a grav-bridge from the
convoy to the cliff, and more were on the way. She found Kasstna,
bloodied and on one knee, barking orders. She tried to tell him about
the Khagggun creeping up on their rear, but he took one look at her
disheveled state and assumed that she had lost her nerve. With a
guttural growl, he shoved her away, and she ran, slipping and sliding
on the black ice, dodging incoming ion-cannon fire, until she found
Basse. Dead Resistance fighters lay in a tangle of limbs all around
him. He
nodded grimly when he heard her news, and they went and got Majja. As
they ran they saw Khagggun swarming along the grav-bridges, leaping
onto the cliff, firing as they came on. Majja was using a couple of
her dead compatriots as a kind of redoubt, and they had to pull her
out of the fortification. The morning was ablaze with ion-cannon
fire. More and more Khagggun were forcing their way over the
grav-bridges. Together, they ran back to where Marethyn had last seen
Kasstna, but when they arrived they found him and the rest of the
cell dying or dead. They were the last ones left. The
ridge was teeming with Khagggun-—those who had swung over from
the convoy and the others who had been lying in wait. There seemed
nowhere to go. The moment to retreat had passed, and surrender seemed
the only viable option. i
remember my first kill," Olnnn said. "I was on Argggedus
Three." I "I remember Argggedus Three well." Lokck
Werrrent nodded. He looked resplendent in his new Fleet-Admiral's
armor, emblazoned with the four-pointed star insignia of his new
rank. "The place was a cesspit." "I
saw him, down through a stand of linm trees." "I
remember those trees. Nasty thorns that could shoot through a
Khagggun's flesh." Olnnn
and Werrrent sat side by side in the Star-Admiral's hoverpod
bristling with weaponry. Rada sat across from them. The lights of
Axis Tyr raced by. The blur of a thousand faces. Sounds of the city
broken off prematurely and trampled in the wake of their flight. "He
was crouched, this Argggedian, in a kind of natural arbor,"
Olnnn said. "He had been picking off our Khagggun all day. It
took me three and a half hours to find him. And when I did I sighted
him through the ion-cannon scope, pulled the trigger, and his head
exploded. Just like that. One minute he was in the scope, glowing
like a moon, the next, he was bloody meat. I didn't feel anything." "You
often don't," Werrrent nodded. "Not the first time,
anyway." Up front, in the cockpit, the pilot and First-Captain
guard kept their eyes on the changing cityscape directly ahead. Olnnn
hunched forward. "Later that day, I engaged the enemy with the
rest of my pack. Hand to hand. I looked the enemy in the eye and
watched the life go out of him. It felt him quiver and jerk. Then it
all made sense." Rada
listened to this conversation in silence. She could feel the tension
coming off the two Khagggun in waves that made her skin itch beneath
her armor. Olnnn had come up with a plan to murder the regent, or he
and Lokck Werrrent had, she did not know which. Possibly it did not
matter. She only knew that they were at the point of no return. That
was why they spoke so earnestly about death, trying to parse it, to
understand what was, essentially unknowable. They were males, and
they were Khagggun. They had to try or risk allowing the tension to
get the better of them. She
was aware that Olnnn was speaking more rapidly than normal, as if he
could not get the words out of his mouth fast enough. He sat with his
left wrist on his knee. She saw that his fingers trembled just
slightly, and by that alone she knew that he was afraid. He was a
male and a warrior, and he was afraid. She had felt his courage, and
now he was afraid, and this made her look at him in a different
light. She thought that if she could not understand his anger, she
could at last accept it. The
hoverpod was slowing. As it descended in a graceful arc Lokck
Werrrent stood up. She saw that they were in a dark and
deserted-looking part of the city. The nearest fusion lamp was out. A
pair of wyr-hounds loped across the street. Werrrent gave Olnnn a
significant look before stepping over the side. She turned, watching
him walk in his stolid, methodical manner down the street. The
wyr-hounds cringed, backing away with their teeth bared. As the
hoverpod took off, she saw light glinting off Khagggun armor and
weaponry. They
headed for the regent's palace. Olnnn
sat looking at her for some time. "When
are you going to tell me what you are planning?" she asked. He
came and sat next to her. She could feel his heat. It was almost as
strong as the vibration of the hoverpod beneath her. He turned to
her, and he kissed her hard on the lips. With
his hand at the back of her head, he whispered, "I know." She
looked at him quizzically, her hearts pounding. "I
know you memorized the route of the convoy. Lokck Werrrent and I
created that route with special care. You see, there is only one
place for a Resistance ambush, and we already have Khagggun hiding
there." "I
have no idea what you are talking about." He
pressed her hand between his. "Your friends are walking into a
trap, and there is nothing you can do about it." She
felt her hearts sink. She thought of Marethyn and wanted to weep. "What
I do not understand is why. Why would you betray your own kind to
help them?" "You
who talk about the enemy like trophies would never understand." "You
are right." He nodded. "I will never understand treason." "And
what is it you and the Fleet-Admiral plan to perpetrate tonight?" "It
is not treason." "Keep
telling yourselves that." "We
are patriots. The regent must die. For the good of the Modality." "Here
is why I did what I did," she said. "It is because the
V'ornn male has an infinite capacity for self-delusion. Any death can
be rationalized. Many deaths discounted. The mechanism—" He
hit her hard across the face, and her head snapped back. "Yes.
Well." She would not put her hand to the rising welt. "That
was to be expected." He
glared at her. "I thought you were different. I was even coming
to grant you a modicum of respect." "Here."
She moved. "Let me spread my legs for you." "And then
you betray me." "How
typical of a male," she said. "This isn't about you."
"Why do you hate me so?" Despite
her predicament she felt a laugh escape her lips. "You really
are a fool," she said. He
grabbed her then. "I know what I saw in your eyes in the
Kal-llistotos ring." "You
saw nausea. My stomachs were upset." With
a grunt of disgust he released her. They were almost at the palace
grounds. He lifted a finger. "No matter. It will all change in a
heartsbeat. We are scheduled to meet with the regent out in the
gardens. There, I will give him proof of your treachery, and he will
love me for it." "What
use is that? If he incarcerates me or kills me, you will die."
"He will do neither," Olnnn said craftily. "Because as
he is congratulating me for my success Werrrent's Khagggun will storm
the gardens. They will kill his Haaar-kyut, and I will slit his
throat." The
hoverpod was slowing again. Just below them, the grounds were
brightly lit with fusion lamps, which cast the stands of close-cut
sysal trees and hard-edged ornamental hedges in a harsh and feral
light. A gimnopede nest, long abandoned and come undone, caught in
the web-work of branches. The unexploded stumps of ancient sawn-down
trees. They were the bare bones of what had once been the largest
garden in Axis Tyr. What had been wild and magnificent was now
diminished and rule-bound as Khagggun security procedures established
clear-cut lines of sight from the palace outward. A rueful wind
ruffled the shorn, browned wrygrass. The bow-backed stillness of
defeat was everywhere. It was as if every mutilation and death
perpetrated in the interrogation cells below the palace had its
apotheosis there. She
could see a dozen armed Haaar-kyut stationed at strategic intervals
throughout the garden. Kurgan Stogggul, arms crossed over his chest,
was watching them descend. A Haaar-kyut stood next to him, whispering
in his ear. "As
usual, one bodyguard," Olnnn said. "First target for
Werrrent's best sharpshooter." The
hoverpod settled on the wrygrass, and Olnnn disarmed her, slipped a
photon collar around her neck. "You
are my prisoner," he said in her ear. "Act like one." "Who
needs to act?" she said. Then, as they were about to alight.
"Don't do this, Olnnn. Not yet. Remember the enchantment. Unless
you are changed, you will not be able to kill Kurgan. You are still
as duplicitous, as susceptible to corruption—" He
struck her a heavy blow on her cheek. "Shut up, skcettta,"
he said, pushing her out of the hoverpod. "I am not interested
in a traitor's opinions." Kurgan
stood glaring at her as they approached. "You
made a fool of me," he said, and struck her with his balled
fist. "What was it you were feeding me? Disinformation cooked up
by the Resistance?" He struck her again so hard he drove her to
her knees. Her head hung, lolling, and she wished for the plan to
begin, wished for action. She vowed she would never be on her knees
again. Kurgan
smiled at Olnnn. "Excellent work, Star-Admiral. My Haaar-kyut
had begun to hear rumors about you and a Tuskugggun in armor. They
had begun to doubt you, but I did not." "Your
faith in me is appreciated, regent," Olnnn said. "Many
Khagggun—members of the high command included—are
habitues of Blood Tide. Fire-grade numaaadis greases many wheels." Kurgan
nodded. "And mouths." Without
warning, the entire garden exploded into movement. Werrrent's
sharpshooter took the regent's bodyguard down. The rest of the
Haaar-kyut came under fire from Werrrent and his rapidly advancing
pack. Olnnn drew his shock-sword and swung it at Kurgan. Kurgan
stepped back, and Rada leapt for him from her kneeling position. "Rada,
no!" Olnnn shouted. Her
attack was so ferocious it forced Kurgan onto his back. She lunged
for his dagger but he grabbed her forefinger, bent it back. She
leaned forward with a forearm jammed against his throat. For a
moment, they stared into one another's eyes. Then her finger snapped
and a ripple of shock went through her. Kurgan pried her hand off the
hilt of his dagger, drew it, and plunged it into her throat. She
arched up, her arms flailing for him, and he plunged it into her
again and again. Olnnn,
his teeth bared in a rictus of rage, hurled himself at Kurgan. "I
am meant to kill you," he cried. "It is my destiny!" But
then, to his stupefaction, the Haaar-kyut bodyguard Werrrent's
sharpshooter had hit rose as if from the dead. As he did so, his
outline wavered and rippled like water, revealing the form of the
Gyrgon, Nith Batoxxx. The
Gyrgon pointed his left hand at Olnnn, but Olnnn kept coming on. He
could feel the full force of Malistra's spell echoing through him
like a howl. She had prepared him for this moment. He was a sorcerous
assassin who could be stopped neither by ion fire nor by Gyrgon
tech-nomancy. He was invincible. With
his shock-sword centimeters from the regent's throat he was blasted
back, taken off his feet. The sorcerous bones of his leg splintered
and flew apart, and a cold such as he had never known fell upon him. Pyphoros,
in his Gyrgon host body, stood over him, his left hand outstretched. "How
does it feel," the archdaemon asked, "to have all the life
force sucked out of you?" Olnnn
tried to reply, but he was mute. He could not understand what had
happened. He had been bound for glory; Malistra had told him so. He
was Star-Admiral. He had struck an alliance with the cleverest member
of the high command. The power and the opportunity had been his, and
he had seized it. Or had he? It all seemed an illusion now, the
opportunity a trap, the glory leaking out of him with his blood. In
an instant his life was over, and he had not even been granted an
honorable death. He managed to turn himself slightly. He was lying
beside Rada. Her eyes were staring and fixed. Her blood was still
warm. His mind was filled with a vision of her in the Kalllistotos,
her biceps tensed, her small breasts rising and falling, that look of
absolute determination on her face. He thought that he had seen her
then for the first time. Now, in a breath, she, too, was gone. He
felt inside him a kind of melting, as if his body, congealed in life,
was now melting as death's furnace drew near. He rolled his bloodshot
eyes and, looking down, saw, to his horror that the bones of his
ensor-celed leg were soft and yellow and sinuous. A head appeared at
one end, a tail at the other, the serpent Malistra was glaring at him
with tiny outraged eyes. Then the serpent broke apart, falling to
ash, and he was flooded with a pain beyond all imagining. A
rhythmic rumble along the ground, the tromp of massed Khagggun boots.
Harsh barked orders crisply carried out. Not his orders.
Consciousness was fading and, with it, his life. His
arm felt as if it weighed a kiloton. He wanted desperately to touch
her one last time, but her armor was in the way. The warmth of her
flesh would have been such a comfort to him but all he could find was
molded veradium, colored and polished to a high shine. With
his death and the dissipation of Malistra's spell, Pyphoros lost
interest in him. All around them the chaos was slowly returning to
order. After drawing the attacking force by initially falling back
beneath their fire, the Haaar-kyut were reinforced by two packs that
had been in hiding. They caught Werrrent's forces in a murderous
cross fire. "A
massacre," Pyphoros said. "How exhilarating." By
this time, Kurgan had regained his feet. "It was well that the
okummmon you created for the Khagggun high command allows you to
secretly eavesdrop on their conversations." "Their
price for Great Caste status," Pyphoros said. "Nith Batoxxx
believed that you cannot be too careful with V'ornn bred for war, and
in this he was correct." Kurgan
noted the past tense. How long had the Nith Batoxxx personality been
all but dead, he wondered. First-Captain
Kwenn trotted over and gave a concise report of the mopping-up
action. All of the rogue Khagggun had been killed but their leader,
Lokck Werrrent, was nowhere to be found. Kurgan ordered a wider
search and put First-Captain Kwenn in charge. There was no point in
alerting Kwenn—and by extension the rest of the Khagggun—
that Werrrent could be tracked using his okummmon; that was sure to
create a furor he did not want. He turned back to Pyphoros. "Look
at me, drenched in blood." "But
not your blood, regent," Pyphoros observed. He gestured, and the
bloodstains vanished. Kurgan
went and kicked the Star-Admiral's corpse. "You certainly took
your time." Pyphoros
shrugged. "I did not anticipate the female's attack." "I
hope you will do better next time," Kurgan said. The
archdaemon laughed and cuffed him on the back of the head. "I
have already done so. I can hear my beloved city singing. Za Hara-at
has returned to life. At last, I know where the Veil of a Thousand
Tears is. Ready yourself, regent. Within moments we will be on our
way." He spread his greatcoat around them. "First we must
enlist SaTrryn Sornnn." "The
Prime Factor?" Kurgan frowned. He did not like the idea of any
other V'ornn being informed of the Veil's existence. "Why do we
need him?" "He
knows more about the buried city than anyone save the Bey Das who
have been excavating there. In this accursed Gyrgon host body I
cannot take the time to force information out of the Bey Das. SaTrryn
Sornnn will readily do as you or I ask." With
her artist's eyes, Marethyn saw the last stages of the firefight as
if it were a painting. Composition, textures, colors, and perspective
resolved out of the clusters of sprinting Khagggun, firelight
flickering, reflecting off their armor, bursts of green ion fire
caught in the visors of their glittering helms, the lines of them
advancing down off the cliff above them. From
their position hidden beneath a burning Marre pine, Basse aimed an
ion cannon at the Khagggun busy slitting the throats of his mortally
wounded compatriots. "At
least we'll take some of them with us," he said through gritted
teeth. Marethyn
put a hand on the ion-cannon barrel. "Wait," she said. "I
have a better way." They
dragged a dead First-Captain into the shelter of the Marre pine and
Basse and Majja helped her strip the corpse of its armor. She put the
helm on first and turned to them. "What
do you think?" Basse
nodded. Handed her the ion cannon while Majja helped her don the
armor. A
few moments later, they emerged from the burning corona of the tree
and hustled to the grav-bridge connected to the lead grav-carriage.
Marethyn held the ion cannon at the backs of Basse and Majja, who
appeared disarmed. The
Third-Marshal hanging back, guarding the grav-bridge, did not
question his superior when Marethyn told him through the helm's comm
system that she was bringing prisoners on board for interrogation. In
fact, he leered at Majja, and said, "Yes, sir. Requesting my
fair share of time with her, sir." Marethyn
contrived to ignore him, pushed the two Kundalan roughly onto the
grav-bridge, her hearts fairly pounding out of her breast. They were
halfway across when shouts broke out behind them. She turned to see
the Pack-Commander breaking out of the firelight, gesturing at them. "What
is this?" he cried. "First-Captain, who authorized you to
take Kundalan aboard the convoy?" "Run!"
Marethyn shouted as she tossed the ion cannon to Basse. The
three of them raced across the remaining span of the grav-bridge as
ion fire broke out, whistling past them. Luckily, there was no
blanket fire. The Khagggun had to be careful not to hit the
grav-carriages themselves. Basse and Majja were on board when a
well-aimed blast severed the grav-bridge and Marethyn felt herself
falling. She held on as the section of the bridge she was on swung
down, and she banged against the side of the grav-carriage. She
looked up. Basse was busy using the ion cannon on the three Khagggun
who had remained on board, then he began to fire on the Khagggun
crowding the ridge. Majja peered down at her and for a moment
Marethyn, her hearts in her mouth, was terrified that Majja would
choose not to see past her reflective visor. On the surface they were
Kundalan Resistance and V'ornn Khagggun, bound in eternal enmity. Then
Majja reached down and grabbed her hand, hauled her up into the
grav-carriage. As Basse continued to pepper fire into the Khagggun on
board, they raced to the controls. Marethyn had driven enough
hov-erpods to figure out how to pilot the grav-carriage. She fired up
the engines and pushed the throttle forward. With a deep and booming
rumble, the convoy began to move. But, almost immediately, it began
to heel over as they took a direct hit from the Khagggun on the
ridge. She screamed to Basse as she struggled with the controls, and
he returned the fire, his accurate shots killing some, making others
scatter. By
that time, she had righted the grav-carriage. Basse continued his
ferocious attack so that the return fire was sporadic and largely
inaccurate. She had a little trouble maneuvering a convoy of three
grav-carriages, but soon they had gained speed and altitude, leaving
the carnage behind. Basse,
putting his ion cannon up at last, joined them in the cockpit. "Where
to?" Marethyn said. She had taken off her high, hard helm, and
the wind and the sunlight had evaporated the sweat on her skull. She
could not remember a landscape so sharply delineated or colors so
vibrant. The world was singing to her. He
put a hand on her shoulder and pointed northwest. Marethyn, now
firmly in control, banked them into the shadows of the looming Djenn
Marre.
37 Night
of a Thousand Tears
When
the visitor's bell sounded in the Abbey of Floating White, it was
Konara Inggres who answered its insistent call. The hour was deep in
the night, but Konara Inggres was wide awake. She opened the door to
three strangers riding on what appeared to be an enormous black
cthauros. The gusty midwinter winds had snuffed out the gate
lanterns. The strangers were backlit against a brilliant spangle of
stars whose dancing light glittered off the silver-leaf domes
crowning the nine slender minarets that rose from inside the
bone-white stone walls. Down below, a wyr-hound started barking in
the many-tiered village of Stone Border. "How
can I help you?" Konara Inggres asked, holding her lantern high. "We
are looking for Konara Urdma," said the beautiful young female
with the grey-green eyes. She leaned to one side so she had a better
view; she was sitting between her two companions. "You would not
be Konara Urdma, would you?" "No."
Konara Inggres shook her head. "Konara Urdma is dead." The
three strangers exchanged a glance. "What happened?" the
young female asked. "Well,
now, that depends on whom you ask. And the answer you get will depend
on who you are." She took a step forward. "My name is
Konara Inggres, will you tell me yours?" Before
they could answer, a gust of wind rattled the gates and the huge
beast stamped one of its hooves. It turned its head, and she saw that
it was not a cthauros at all but a narbuck. "Merciful
Goddess!" She went down on one knee. "My prayers have been
answered." She rose and reverently touched the narbuck's damp
muzzle, soft as velvet. Her hand briefly gripped its horn, and she
sighed deeply. "We are delivered! Here is the Nawatir, riding a
narbuck, one of Miina's sacred creatures not seen on Kundala in more
than a hundred years." Konara Inggres was visibly shaking. "Then
. . . which one of you is the Dar Sala-at?" "Konara,
the Dar Sala-at is elsewhere at the moment," the Nawatir said in
a gentle and harmonious voice that stunned her as much as his
appearance. "We three are her companions." Konara
Inggres' eyes were shining. "You have seen Miina, then. The
Great Goddess has returned." "Alas,
no," he said. He was as terrifyingly tall, as broad-shouldered
as any V'ornn she had glimpsed, but his face was that of a striking
Kundalan with its ice-pale eyes, curling blond hair, and
close-cropped beard. She especially liked his mouth, which was
generously drawn and seemed somehow kind. "I am pledged to Her
emissary, Yig." "Merciful
Goddess, you saw the red Dragon?" Despite the chill of night,
Konara Inggres was sweating. Her world seemed to have completed the
somersault that had begun when she had discovered that Giyan was
possessed. "It
was Yig," Rekkk said, patting the narbuck's elegantly arched
neck, "who provided me with my narbuck." Konara
Inggres made the sign of Miina. "One by one the Prophesies are
coming true." She frowned. "But, Nawatir, your place is at
the Dar Sala-at's side. Where, then, is she?" "That
is a long story," Rekkk said. "In the meanwhile, may we
come in? Eleana has just given birth, and she is in need of rest and
sustenance." "Of
course." As Konara Inggres ushered them through the gates her
gaze lingered on the decidedly odd countenance of Sahor. Another
strange Kundalan, she thought. He had the huge, watchful
blue-green eyes and the guarded countenance of a sorcerer that was
wholly at odds with the angular, almost cruel face. And she had never
before encountered a Kundalan with only a tuft of hair at the crown
of his skull. "But where is the newborn?" "That
is an even longer story," Eleana said. She was worried that the
Ramahan would be suspicious of them. She tried not to look at Sahor
as she said, "Do not be alarmed, my son is alive and in good
health." "Then
all is as it should be," Konara Inggres said. "You could
not have arrived at a more auspicious moment. I am in desperate need
of allies." "And
why is that?" Rekkk asked as he dismounted from the narbuck. "Come
inside and you will see for yourselves." They
left the narbuck to wander the abbey's vast garden forecourt. Konara
Inggres led them into an unlovely section of the abbey into which
Ramahan were crowded. The chambers were in a state of total disarray,
especially in the innermost one, where all the furniture had been
shoved against the double doors leading deeper into the abbey.
Sitting beside this barricade were three huge catlike creatures,
their magnificent coats, golden with black spots, rippled. Their
heads swiv-eled, and their small, triangular ears flattened back
against their sleek heads. But they did not growl or bare their
teeth. "Ja-Gaar!"
Sahor spoke for the first time. "This
is Sahor," Eleana said. "I
could not help noticing," Konara Inggres said as she took Eleana
to lie down on a curved sofa she had not yet jammed against the
doors. "A V'ornn with hair." "He
is special," Eleana said. Flames
leapt in well-stocked fireplaces. In one, a black-iron pot was
suspended above the fire. After examining Eleana, Konara Inggres went
to the hearth, ladling soup into a rough-hewn bowl. Then she ground
up a combination of herbs, roots, and dried mushrooms and added them
to the broth, which she brought over to Eleana and bade her sip
slowly. Eleana did, watching the Ramahan behind her. They had a dazed
and vacant look about them, as if a close family member had died
suddenly and shockingly a handbreadth away. As in a firefight, time
had telescoped for them. They youngest ones had tears on their
cheeks. They kept their distance, slowing as they glided past. From
the corners of their eyes they watched the newcomers as they did
everything now, with a mixture of disbelief and apprehension. "The
abbey is at a crisis point," Konara Inggres said. She gestured.
"Please, help yourselves. There is plenty." As an acolyte
handed bowls to Rekkk and Sahor, she put her hands on her hips and
told them in clear, concise terms how the possessed Giyan had shown
up at the abbey. At
this startling piece of news, Rekkk and Eleana exchanged glances.
Eleana saw the relief flood through him. Simply knowing where Giyan
was, and that he was near to her again, gave him a renewed sense of
purpose. "This
is good to hear," Rekkk said to Konara Inggres, confirming
Eleana's thoughts. "We had lost track of her when she was
possessed by the Malasocca." "I
am afraid I cannot share your opinion," Konara Inggres answered.
"Giyan freed her twin sister, so that she could be possessed by
Horo-laggia's brother. Since then, the two of them have been
infecting the Ramahan with daemons whose essence they have somehow
smuggled through from the Abyss." The
Nawatir said, "Does the archdaemon inside her have the run of
the place?" "Not
quite. Giyan—the real Giyan imprisoned in Otherwhere—told
me how to bring the Ja-Gaar to life. They killed Konara Bartta,
sending Horolaggia's brother back to the Abyss. They are keeping
Horolaggia at bay, but only just. He seems to know that I will not
let them loose on his host body as I did with Konara Bartta. Now the
abbey has split into two factions," she concluded. "I lead
one of them. The other—a far larger faction, I am
afraid—follows the possessed Giyan. They claim that she has
taken them to the Dar Sala-at." "But
that is absurd," Eleana said vehemently. "There is only one
true Dar Sala-at." Konara
Inggres had begun to make a poultice for Eleana. "I have caught
a glimpse of him and believe him to be a sauromician. I have done my
reading. He has the black sixth finger." The
Nawatir wiped his lips. "In any event, the Dar Sala-at is
female." "That
will make her work all the harder." Konara Inggres knelt,
positioned the poultice beneath Eleana's robes. The Ramahan had begun
to murmur among themselves. Possibly they were praying. Or weeping
again. She rose. "There are those fixated on the
well-established notion that the Dar Sala-at is a warrior and
therefore must be male. Horolaggia is very cleverly playing upon
that." "All
the more reason why we must help her all we can," Rekkk said. He
told her how the Dar Sala-at was even now searching for the Veil of a
Thousand Tears, which would dispossess the archdaemon Horolaggia and
send him back to the Abyss without harming Giyan. "But our time
has run out," he said. "The solstice comes at midnight, and
there is still no sign that the Dar Sala-at has been successful. If
we do not act immediately, it will be too late. Giyan will be doomed,
and the archdaemon who possesses her will have access to all her
memories and knowledge, including her Gift." Konara
Inggres gasped. "But that would mean that the archdaemon would
be able to use Osoru." "Precisely,"
the Nawatir said. "Giyan is my beloved. I will not let her die.
If the Dar Sala-at cannot fight Horolaggia, then I must. Please. You
must tell me where in the abbey he is." "No!” They
all turned to look at Sahor, who had put his bowl aside. "Nawatir,
as you said, it is almost solstice, and we have no margin for error.
You love her too much; you will not be able to bluff him." The
Ramahan were silent, their heads turned to stare at him. "I
can." "Impossible,"
Rekkk said. "I won't hear of it." Sensing
an impasse they could ill afford, Konara Inggres came and stood in
front of Sahor. "You will have to gain the trust of the Ja-Gaar;
you cannot go near the archdaemon without one." She stared him
up and down. "Something tells me—what is it, I wonder, I
see in those huge eyes? Are you the callow youth everyone sees, or
are you far older and far more capable than any of us." It
was not a question she posed, and everyone in the little group around
her knew it. Nith
Batoxxx is outside. Waiting." Kurgan pursed his lips. "Sornnn
SaTrryn, you do not look well. Are you ill?" "No,
I—" "Good.
Because I need you at Za Hara-at. You know that dig better than any
other V'ornn, even, I warrant, the Bashkir architects we have hired." Sornnn's
residence had about it the distracted air of transience. It was like
a station that was now and again filled with the possessions of
travelers but had nothing of its own. The soaring ceiling seemed
therefore immense, the bare-walled rooms cavernous as a Nieobian
cathedral. The two V'ornn looked lost within its reaches. "Tell
me again why we need to go to Za Hara-at in such a rush?" Sornnn
said. "Nith
Batoxxx wishes it." The regent spread his hands. "And,
after all, he has backed our project in the Comradeship. It is the
least we can do." "Yes,
yes. Quite." Sornnn turned away, his thoughts turbulent with
recent events. He was gathering maps and hastily jotted notes,
paraphernalia he thought he might need. It was a good thing he made
frequent trips to the Korrush and so had his things more or less
permanently packed because at that moment his mind was far away from
Axis Tyr. How could he have let Marethyn go off with a Resistance
cell? How could he have stopped her? He shook his head. Would he even
begin to understand the female of the species? Probably not, he
admitted, but if anything happened to her . . . He could not afford
to dwell on that black thought; otherwise he would be in despair. "All
right," he said. "I am ready." Kurgan
nodded and turned to the door. Just before he opened it, Sornnn said,
"Regent, a moment." Kurgan
glanced back over his shoulder, a smile plastered to his face. He was
in no mood for the SaTrryn's philosophical maunderings. "Some
other time perhaps, Prime Factor. At the moment—" Sornnn
stood his ground. "You are going to want to hear this, regent,
trust me." "But
Nith Batoxxx—" "Especially
before we go off on some mysterious mission with a Gyr-gon." Kurgan
sighed and, nodding, came back to where Sornnn stood. "This had
better be good." Sornnn
took a deep breath. "It's about your brother Terrettt." "Oh,
N'Luuura take it, nothing you could say about that mad V'ornn could
possibly interest me. You are sorely trying my patience. Now come
on." "This
thing is," Sornnn said patiently, "Terrettt isn't mad." "Of
course he is mad. Every Genomatekk who has scoped him—" "The
Genomatekks take their orders from the Gyrgon." "We
all do," Kurgan said shortly. "What is your point?" "Marethyn
found this out, through her own initiative and determination,"
Sornnn said. "That is my point." "Why
didn't she tell me herself?" "I
think you know why, regent." Sornnn remembered the glossary of
key Bey Das phrases his father had complied, stuffed that, too, into
his satchel. "Kindly
enlighten me." "She
is afraid." "Please.
I know my sister far better than you. She is afraid of nothing." Was
that a touch of pride in his voice, or was that wishful thinking on
Sornnn's part? He said, "She is afraid that you will despise her
no matter what she does." Kurgan
watched Sornnn carefully for a moment out of his night-black eyes.
"She means something to you." "So
what? This discussion is about Terrettt." "Not
according to you." Sornnn
held up his hands. "You are right. The fact that you treat her
with contempt is difficult for her to handle. I thought if she
brought you this information herself it might effect a
reconciliation." "You
are meddling in Stogggul affairs, Prime Factor." "It
will be the last time." "That
is reassuring." Sornnn
snapped his satchel closed. "Perhaps you would rather—" "Let
me hear what my sister discovered," Kurgan said firmly.
"Initiative and determination are attributes I appreciate." Sornnn
glanced at the front door, then nodded. "Your brother Terrettt
was the subject of a Gyrgon experiment," he said. In the silence
that ensued he watched many emotions pass across the regent's
countenance. "Still uninterested. Or shall I go on?" Kurgan
nodded numbly for him to continue. "It
seems that Terrettt has an overdeveloped ativar. That is the most
primitive area of the V'ornn brain. It was deliberately enlarged. He
was experimented upon since birth. Only the Gyrgon could do that." The
master of deceit knew the truth when he heard it. Kurgan's mouth felt
dry and, thinking of Terrettt's birth-caul and his own secreted in
Nith Batoxxx's laboratory, his skin began to crawl. "What. . .
Does she know what the Gyrgon want with him?" Sornnn
had been set to tell the regent that Terrettt had somehow located the
seven Portals Nith Batoxxx desperately wanted, but his well-honed
instinct for survival stopped him. With V'ornn like Kurgan it was
always best to hold the final card. "Not yet." Kurgan
ground his teeth in fury even as his mind raced back through time. He
had been trained by a Gyrgon ever since he was very young, though
Nith Batoxxx had chosen to hide that fact from him. Nith Batoxxx had
dosed him in the garden of the Old V'ornn's villa. He and his brother
had been manipulated since birth, possibly—how could he
know?—even before. And yet, it had not been the Gyrgon at all
under whose spell he had fallen, but an alien creature's—the
Kundalan arch-daemon Pyphoros. Oh, that was ten thousand times more
humiliating! He cared nothing for Nith Batoxxx's fate; the Gyrgon
deserved his living death. But as for Pyphoros ... He touched the
dark mark on his throat, and he found bubbling within him the burning
desire to murder the perpetrator of this insidious web. I
do not like it here." Minnum shivered. "I do not like it at
all." "Swallow your fears," Riane said. "The
solstice approaches. There is but an hour until midnight. In order to
save Giyan we must get to Perrnodt as quickly as possible." Just
before, she had tried Thripping. But as in Axis Tyr, it was
impossible to Thrip within the boundaries of Za Hara-at. Instead,
they were obliged to retrace the power bourns back to where Perrnodt
and Thigpen waited. A
deathly glaze of darkness lay over the entire excavation site. All
the buildings seemed connected, the city organic in some way that
defied comprehension. Za Hara-at breathed, a soft rhythmic soughing
of the wind. After so many eons buried it had not yet expelled its
death rattle. Minnum
kept glancing back over his shoulder. "There is something here.
I can feel it." "More
sauromicians?" "I
do not know. No. I would not be able to feel them. They can mask
themselves like spectres in the dead places between the power bourns.
Something else. Something that frightens even them." He looked
around wildly. "What if it's . . ." He wet his lips. "What
if it is the archdaemon Pyphoros?" "Whatever
it is you will protect me from it," Riane said, as they switched
bourns. "Just as you protected me from Talaasa." She cocked
an eye toward him. "I am told that I will have a protector sent
from Miina. Perhaps you are my Nawatir." "Me?"
Minnum laughed uneasily. "Please don't even think that, Dar
Sala-at." "Tell
me, Minnum, you are a sauromician and yet you speak of them as being
separate from you." He
sighed. "I regret to say that you are correct. I wasn't entirely
candid with you when we met at the museum. While I did, indeed, live
here in the Korrush for some time, I left because of them, because I
knew that after all this time of lying low they were beginning to
talk of forming again." "So
you ran away." "A
shameful act. But what else could I have done?" Riane,
concentrating on tracing the bourns, said nothing. They were now in a
plaza she could not remember crossing on her way to the cenote. Minnum
ran a paw through his tangle of hair. "Their dream, as Ta-laasa
said, is to take over the abbeys and the spiritual direction of the
Ramahan." He turned to her. "Dar Sala-at, hear me now. The
saurom-icians will fight you every centimeter of the way. You are
anathema to them." "But
I am in Prophesy." "That
is precisely my point." Minnum paused. "They have become
Prophesy deniers. Their contention is that the Prophesies are
heretical, that they are nothing but lies meant to confuse the
Ramahan and throw the abbeys into disarray. This, they say, has
happened. That it has happened is a powerful argument on their
side, and they know it. They have begun to gather followers, and more
will join them, of that you can be sure. "But
there is another reason why I had to leave here. Once they made their
decision, the sauromicians cut all ties with the Druuge and declared
themselves enemies. I did not; I never cut my ties." "Then
why didn't you join the Druuge in the Great Voorg instead of fleeing
to Axis Tyr?" "Would
that I had been able to. The Great Voorg is a sacred place. I am
enjoined from going there." All
at once, Riane put a forefinger across her lips. The wind had died,
but along the streets and avenues of Za Hara-at there came another
sound. Minnum shivered. It was a howl, low and deep and agonized. "What
is it?" he whispered, despite Riane's admonishment to silence.
"There is something here, I tell you." He looked around.
"Something evil." Was
it Pyphoros? Riane's eyes were fixed dead ahead. "Whatever it
is, it is between here and where we need to go." "Is
there time to make a detour?" Minnum asked. "Right
now I do not see that we have much of an alternative." With
the help of her Third Eye, Riane identified another route that began
with a bourn-line that branched to the left. But as she ran toward
it, she sensed the creature moving with her. Just to make sure, she
went farther. The creature mirrored her, coming closer. They were out
of options. Go
that way," Riane whispered to Minnum, pointing left to a
perpendicular street. "But
you already—" "Just
do as I say!" Riane commanded. She
watched Minnum, shivering, walk hesitantly away. Her heart leapt. The
thing in front of them did not move. "Listen,"
she said. "We need help. For some reason, this thing is keyed to
my movements, so you must get to Perrnodt and Thigpen and tell them
what is happening. Tell them to meet me at the Plaza of
Perplexities." She
described where the plaza was, and Minnum nodded. "Now
go on," she said. "Fast as you can!" "Dar
Sala-at—" "Not
now, Minnum." But she stopped. His eyes were magnified by tears. "I
am sorry that I cannot help you more—" He struck his
forehead repeatedly with his balled fists. "All my sins, it
seems, have come back to haunt me." "Possibly
that is why you are here now." Riane smiled. "Have faith." He
swallowed hard. Then he nodded and stood a little straighten "I
will find my way, Dar Sala-at. You can rely on me." He
loped down the street in his awkward manner. A moment later, he had
vanished into the shifting shadows of Za Hara-at. Riane
returned her attention to the thing that crouched in wait for her
somewhere along the bourn-lines ahead. Then she headed off toward the
Plaza of Perplexities. She could feel the thing mirroring her
movements, but for the moment it came no closer, for which she sighed
in relief. The Veil guided her unerringly. But almost as soon as she
came upon the plaza she felt the paving tremble beneath her feet and,
turning, she saw that another cenote had appeared. Approaching it
hesitantly, she saw that the cobbles around the plinth were seamless.
It was as if the cenote had always been there. Mounting the plinth,
she peered into the cenote. It was empty. Now
came a rising wind, localized and powerful, a brief funnel that set
off her interior alarm. She had been in the center of such a wind
funnel a number of times when she had used Nith Sahor's greatcoat. At
the last instant, she leapt into the cenote, hanging against the
inner wall with her hands gripping the edge of the flat Up. In
the plaza appeared a Gyrgon. He raised his hands and a host of fusion
lamps ringed the plaza to light his way. Riane was astonished to see
that he had with him Kurgan and another V'ornn. The sight of Annon's
old childhood friend after so long stirred unpleasant memories of a
fine mild day when they had together spied Eleana, and Kurgan had
taken her by force, taken her despite Annon's attempts to dislodge
him from—With a barely audible growl, Riane wrenched her mind
away from the hateful moment. She peered hard at the third figure,
trying to place him. It took her a moment of searching through
Annon's memory, and then she had it. He was Sornnn SaTrryn. What
is a Gyrgon doing in Za Hara-at? she asked herself. And then she
remembered what Perrnodt had told her, that until all seven Portals
were open the archdaemons required a host body to remain in this
realm for any length of time. She looked more closely at this Gyrgon.
He was helmless and a kind of eerie inner flicker passed beneath the
hairless skin of his skull, illuminating pulsing veins filled with a
pale, yellow, bloodless substance. The pupils of his eyes pulsed, as
well, expanding and contracting, and his mouth was working
soundlessly like that of a puppet. And Riane, thinking, What more
perfect place to secret yourself if you were Pyphoros? knew that
she was at last confronting the archdaemon. It
was almost midnight. All she needed to do was hang, unseen, until
they moved off to another section of Za Hara-at. It no longer
mattered where Pyphoros looked; he would not find the Veil of a
Thousand Tears. Sornnn
SaTrryn was consulting what appeared to be a map. "Where is it
you want to go in Za Hara-at, Nith Batoxxx?" "We
need a cenote," the Gyrgon said, his voice thick and guttural
with Pyphoros' daemonic energy. He pointed. "Just like that
one." Riane's
heart skipped a beat. If they discovered her, she would never have
time to save Giyan. Her intense anxiety and fear caused her to make
her first mistake. She conjured Flowering Wand, a cloaking spell. "What
is that?" she heard the archdaemon possessing Nith Batoxxx
scream. "I smell the whiff of sorcery!" She
heard the sound of boot soles slapping against the cobbles and knew
they were headed her way. Cursing her own stupidity, she vaulted up
over the lip of the cenote and crouched, using the cenote itself for
cover. "Who
is that?" Pyphoros' angst-ridden voice rang through the dreaming
plaza. "What foul sorceress goes there?" Riane
took out the infinity-blade wand. All she needed was one more charge
and she could slice through the Gyrgon's armor. If she could kill the
host body, Pyphoros would be sent back to the Abyss. There
was no shadow to warn her, and she had failed to conjure Net of
Cognition to warn her of the archdaemon's proximity. Pyphoros stood
atop the cenote, Nith Batoxxx's greatcoat swirling about him. As
Riane looked up, he loosed a potent ion blast from the tips of his
neural-net gloves, and Riane was sent head over heels backward. The
wand went flying. Another
ion blast struck her and she sprawled on the cobbles,
half-unconscious. The Gyrgon stalked after her. It was then that he
saw what was wrapped around her. "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears'!" he shrieked, eyes alight. "You
are the Dar Sala-at? A female?" He began to laugh. "I
am now just beginning to appreciate how mad Miina has become." Riane
shook her head, trying to clear it. Where was the infinity-blade
wand? She saw the Gyrgon raise his arms and tried to move. But she
could not even crawl. She braced herself for another ion blast, but
instead she felt the tingle along her skin of a sorcerous spell, and
all at once, she was lifted into the air and a cage of black and
glittering strands formed around her. Each strand was growing what
looked like needle-sharp thorns. "I
am sincerely in your debt, Dar Sala-at," Pyphoros said in a
mocking tone. "I could not have found the Veil on my own, let
alone retrieve it." He
wriggled his fingers, and the thorns began to grow inward toward
Riane. "I
will have it now. That which is by rights mine." Pyphoros
worked the Gyrgon's mouth into the hideous rictus of a grin. "I
know you are stubborn, Dar Sala-at. I know you will not willingly
give it up. I do not care." He cocked his head. "Have you
any idea how agonizing it is to be burned alive? No, how could you?
But you will. Now." The
thorns began to drip an acrid, caustic fluid. Riane turned this way
and that inside her sorcerous cage. Even so, a drop struck her bare
arm, making her cry out. Her skin began to crisp in a neat circle the
exact diameter of the drop of acid. "What
is this?" Sornnn said, as he and Kurgan came across the plaza.
"What do you think you are doing?" He
started to lunge toward the Gyrgon, but Kurgan restrained him. "Keep
quiet," he hissed. "I
cannot keep quiet. He is torturing—" "You
will only get yourself killed," Kurgan said. "What is the
point of that?" More
thorns popped out of the strands, growing, so many that Riane could
not evade them. Wherever their oozing, viscous liquid struck, her
skin began to burn. The pain was so intense that she was soon on the
verge of passing out. "It
won't be long now, Dar Sala-at, before you are dead and the Veil is
mine!" Pyphoros called. Sahor
held the Ja-Gaar on a short leash. It was not one he could see, but
he felt it all the same. At first, Konara Inggres had balked. But
then Sahor had said, "Fear is what I know best. Horolaggia is
afraid of the Ja-Gaar. It is ingrained in all daemons. Trust me in
this." "Trust
a V'ornn?" Konara Inggres shook her head. "Well, why not,
when he knows more about daemonology than I do." Sahor
went down the dimly lighted corridor, moving slowly toward the heart
of the abbey, where Horolaggia, controlling Giyan, had positioned
himself. He was aware of a rustling around him and directed the
Ja-Gaar to prowl this way and that. The beast was like a lantern held
in the dark to keep nocturnal predators at bay. Wherever the Ja-Gaar
turned, the rustling fell back, momentarily stilled. Konara
Inggres had wanted to accompany him. She had argued that no one knew
the layout of the abbey the way she did. But Sahor was adamant. He
said that he did not want to have to worry about her safety while he
was confronting the archdaemon. In the end, she had settled for
providing him with a detailed map, which he instantly memorized. He
grimaced as his bones and muscles pulled apart and lengthened. He
turned a corner and, despite the constant pain of his hyperkinetic
growth, kept going. It was important to keep to a steady pace. The
first lesson you learned about fear was that it was insidious. The
second lesson was never to show it yourself. That was accomplished by
never admitting to it. Once you did so it seeped into your face and
betrayed you. Once your enemy could see your fear he could use it
against you. You had no defense against your own fear. An
ocean of hormones raged through him. The
last thing he had seen before he left Konara Inggres’ chambers
was Eleana's face. She had struggled off the sofa, and he knew that
if he left it a moment longer she would gather him into her embrace.
So he turned and left. Nevertheless,
the image of her face stayed with him during the first nerve-racking
moments of his journey into the hostile territory of the abbey. He
knew he could not afford to have her arms around him because then he
would fear for her, and he did not think that he could keep that fear
under control. This wild emotion filled him with wonder. The
transference into Eleana's baby had been unlike the transference into
the Teyj. For one thing, the Teyj had been of his own design and
manufacture; he had known precisely what to expect. With the
exception of his diminished ability for technomancy, he had been who
he always had been: Nith Sahor. For another, Eleana's baby was
half-Kundalan. He had felt the differences right away, the
heightening of emotions, the relaxing of Gyrgon's tertium-bound
rules. And then there was Eleana herself. He had grown fond of her.
Now he felt her woven into every strand of his DNA. He was no longer
Nith; he never would be again. If he was still part Gyrgon, he was
also now an equal part Kundalan. And he was all male rather than, as
all Gyrgon were, male and female. Eleana
was his mother, and this was how he experienced her. To say that this
was novel for him was an understatement. Gyrgon had no mothers—at
least none they could remember. They were taken from the Breeders'
wombs while still embryos because the attachments to the machinery of
the Comradeship were so complex they had to commence before birth. He
had been trained as a scientist—all Gyrgon were, since science
was at the root of their technomagic. But as his father had pointed
out to him there had once been Gyrgon who had been artists, writers,
painters, dreamers. Nith Sahor's own father had been among them. His
father believed that all the great leaps of technomancy had come from
the Gyrgon's artistic side, lost generations earlier. He had seen
glimmers of these artistic traits in his own son. Sahor
had understood none of this until now. Now
he saw that there were things that ran deeper than science, that
contrary to what he had grown up believing the Cosmos was an
infinitely mysterious place for the simple reason that it was not
ruled by science. Science was created by V'ornn in an attempt to
explain the Cosmic mysteries. To be sure, some of them could be
answered; otherwise, Gyrgon would never have created gravships and
ion cannons. But those deeper mysteries for which they searched,
questions that still confounded them, would remain forever beyond the
realm of technomancy. Miina
knew the answers to those mysteries, he was convinced of that.
Possibly the archdaemons did as well. The
corridor he had been following debouched onto a grassy courtyard. On
the other side rose the temple facade behind which, Konara Inggres
had said, Horolaggia was carefully plotting the demise of the
Ramahan. He could sense all around him tiers of spectral faces, drawn
in righteous anger. He could feel their enmity. An enmity the Ramahan
Mother had toiled for centuries to keep from her charges. All her
work had gone for nought. This was the lesson Nith Sahor had gleaned
from his extensive readings of Kundalan lore. Even the most
conscientious of mothers cannot protect her child from the
vicissitudes of life. The best she can do is prepare her child to
make his or her own decisions. And the only way to do that is to
teach her child right from wrong. It was only now as Sahor that he
understood that Gyrgon never had parents to teach them the
difference. The
Ja-Gaar growled low in its throat, and it pulled him forward across
the dark, sere grasses of solstice night toward the lair of the
archdaemon. Sahor had no fear for himself, but his hearts beat fast
in his chest for his mother. He longed to see her again. He realized
that from the time of his birth until this moment he had never been
apart from her. There was a hollow place inside him into which only
she would fit. He blinked back tears without any understanding of
what they were. He
was almost pulled off his feet as the Ja-Gaar strained against its
leash. He went up the temple steps in its wake and passed through its
mammoth portals. Clusters of low bronze oil lamps shed a ruddy
illumination too fitful to penetrate the shadowed corners. A red-jade
altar lay broken in two as if by a single rageful blow. The ceiling
was swaddled in stifling darkness. The sense of desolation was
palpable. The archdaemon Horolaggia had desecrated the temple. The
Ja-Gaar began to move in a circle, Sahor turning at its fulcrum. If
I die now it will be all right, he thought. I have
penetrated to the very heart of the Kundalan mythos. I have ceased to
be a member of the Comradeship. I have entered history, and all the
mysteries that lie before me have become moot. "Who
comes now into Mother's sanctum?" Horolaggia
appeared robed in Giyan's body. Sahor thought it astonishing how the
possession had altered her. Possibly it was only now in the end
stages that her exquisite face had been twisted by the arch-daemon
inside. She bore only a passing resemblance to the Ramahan priestess
he had known, and he mourned for her. "Who
dares risk Mother's terrible wrath?" Horolaggia in Giyan's body
stalked around the raised and shadowy periphery of the temple.
"Surely not another Konara. Surely not a Ramahan at all."
It was horrifying to see the grin he put on Giyan's face. "A
boy? A V'ornn boy?" Sahor
ignored the archdaemon's words. He was concerned with his movement
because Giyan now came down the marble stairs, her arms wide. Sahor
loosed the leash a half meter, and at once the Ja-Gaar sprang
forward. Their
movement caused the archdaemon to stop in his tracks. Giyan's
whistleflower-blue eyes had turned whitish, as if she were very old
or going blind. "I
am not Bartta," Horolaggia said. "I am beloved of many. You
would not loose your Ja-Gaar on this flesh." "I
am V'ornn," Sahor said. "I care nothing for Kundalan, Giyan
or otherwise. But you archdaemons are a threat to us. I will send
you back to the Abyss by having the Ja-Gaar rend your host's flesh." "What
cruel injustice is my fate!" Horolaggia cried. "To be
imprisoned for eons is terrible in itself, but to be misunderstood
is, it seems to me, far worse." "How
many Ramahan have you killed since your escape? It is impossible to
misunderstand murder." "This
from a representative of a race of murderers!" Horolaggia
thundered. "How dare you seek to confine me to prison when it is
you and your kind who should be locked away for all eternity!" "I
have no time to debate ethics with you," Sahor said. "It is
minutes before the solstice, minutes before you take possession of
Giyan forever. That I cannot allow." For this had been his plan
all along. It was why he had convinced them to allow him and not the
Nawatir to confront the archdaemon. For, in the end, he knew that
Rekkk's undying love for Giyan would prevent him from saving them all
by setting loose the Ja-Gaar. And
yet at the crucial moment of decision, he hesitated. He saw Eleana
rising before him. What if this were she instead of Giyan? Could he
allow the Ja-Gaar to rend her flesh into gobbets? His
indecision was his undoing. He had taken his keen eye off Giyan and
now, from behind him, came the false Dar Sala-at, the sauromician
Konara Inggres had glimpsed, to bind him and the Ja-Gaar in his
venomous spell. His legs were paralyzed and the Ja-Gaar collapsed
onto its side in a deep slumber from which no amount of tugging on
its invisible chain could rouse it. "Ah,
yes, I can feel it!" Horolaggia cried in exultation. He jerked
Giyan's head to the roiling darkness shrouding the ceiling. "Now
approaches solstice! Now comes the end!" The
stench of her own burning flesh kept Riane from total
unconsciousness. She was curled up in a ball, but still she was
burning alive. She tried to reach out, but, imprisoned, she could not
move. And then she remembered how she had freed Mother from her
sorcerous prison, and she began to put the Venca letters into words,
the words into phrases, the phrases into the Star of Evermore. It was
very difficult. The pain caused her concentration to waver. She
forgot words, forgot what
she was doing. Her burning self revived her somewhat, and she forged
on. And then she saw the Star of Evermore forming just above her
head. Slowly it began to rotate. As it rotated, its points cut the
strands of Riane's prison. As the strands were cut, the thorns shrank
and vanished with small pops. Faster and faster the Star of Evermore
spun, the air around her alive with its energy, and at last it cut
through the first strand, and she fell to the cobbles, groaning in
pain. But
already Pyphoros was striding toward her, his fingertips crackling
with lambent blue ion energy. "You
cannot escape me, Dar Sala-at," he said. "Not now, not when
I am so close to my goal." He was only two strides away, leaning
forward. "The Veil belongs to me. I will have it." Behind
him, Sornnn had broken into a sprint. He had spied the wand, and now
he scooped it up and cast it along the cobbles toward Riane. Riane,
half-blind from the sorcerous acid, heard it skittering, and she
rolled and reached for it. The wand hit the corner of a cobble raised
slightly above the others. It came to an abrupt halt just out of her
reach. "What
treachery is this?" Pyphoros turned and pointed and a bolt of
ion fire struck Sornnn in the chest, taking him off his feet. Pyphoros
turned back. Was
Sornnn SaTrryn dead? She did not know. But his heroic act had given
her a chance. She heaved herself over the cobbles. Her hand grasped
the wand, she thumbed the gold button in the required rhythmic
pattern, and the infinity-blade opened. It was pale and flickering,
and her heart sank. Still, it was the only weapon she had, and she
whirled with it. She aimed for his bare skull but he thwarted her,
and she twisted the blade in midnight. Its edge bit into the Gyrgon's
exo-matrix. His glaring red-pupiled eyes looked half-mad, and she
could see the archdaemon squirming behind them. He lifted his arm,
protecting himself, and she swung again, penetrating to neural-net
enhanced flesh. Thick yellow matter oozed, and Pyphoros bellowed. Riane
felt no triumph in this small victory, for the agony was cresting in
every centimeter of her burned skin. Her bones felt as if they had
turned to jelly. She
tried to concentrate on pushing the infinity-blade deeper, but the
pain was overwhelming all her senses. Her eyes fluttered up, and
Pyphoros redoubled his efforts. She staggered and almost lost her
grip on the infinity-blade. She saw it flickering, or maybe it was
her vision going in and out of focus, she no longer knew. Gritting
her teeth, she put all her weight behind the infinity-blade, felt it
sink another several centimeters into the Gyrgon. Pyphoros
screamed again. He was close enough to touch the Veil, but something
was preventing him from getting near it. She thought she knew what it
was. Her own life force. She
slid to her knees and heard laughter. It was Pyphoros, laughing at
her because she was dying, because the Veil of a Thousand Tears would
be his. She
could not allow that. The
infinity-blade was pale as death. A moment more and it would flicker
out and Pyphoros would have his victory. She dug in her robe with a
trembling, half-numb hand and drew out the fulkaan stone. It had
reinvigorated the infinity-blade before, it should again. But
before she could bring it against the wand, Pyphoros grabbed hold of
her hand. "What
is that?" he shrieked. "Give it to me!" She
felt a tremor from the stone, and a heat commenced where it lay in
the center of her curled palm. And then she heard it again, that same
howl, low and deep, that had so terrified Minnum. Kurgan
whirled. "What in the name of N'Luuura is that?" The
thing was on the move. It was coming. At
that moment, the infinity-blade flickered and died, and Riane felt
the full crushing weight of the archdaemon's spell. Her consciousness
followed the path of the infinity-blade, and she knew she was dying. In
the slow spiral downward, she returned again to the high tor of the
Djenn Marre. The sun shone brilliant and white out of a sky so
vividly blue it made her eyes ache. One cloud only wreathed the very
top of the peak she was climbing. And then the cloud moved, coming
toward her. Its outline resolved itself, and she saw that it was not
a cloud at all but a great bird, black and white, as clouds often
are. This giant avian opened its beak and uttered a howl, low and
deep. With a great fluttering of its wings it turned itself, and with
one taloned foot snatched her into the air, swinging her up onto its
back . . . The
howl, deep and low, shattering the utter stillness of Za Hara-at,
brought her back to consciousness. The bird came in low, sweeping
over the ruins of the buildings surrounding the plaza. It headed
straight for her, its startling violet eyes instantly assessing the
scene. Now
she realized what it was, this bird. It was the fulkaan, the
messenger and companion of the Prophet Jiharre. Riane—the
original Riane who had lost her memory just before the essence of
Annon had been migrated into her—had known Jiharre. She felt
the burning of the stone in her palm. Now she knew why the fulkaan
was keyed to her movements. It had been drawn by the stone into which
its image had been graven. Pyphoros
ignored the fulkaan. He had his hands on the Veil. With Riane so
close to death her life force was no longer strong enough to keep him
from it. He was tugging at it, trying desperately to unwind it from
her. The
fulkaan was swooping down very fast, its talons extended. At the last
instant, Pyphoros threw back his head, opened his mouth. A jet of
sorcerous flame struck the fulkaan. It screamed but still came on,
and Pyphoros reached up, grabbed at it. Its wings beat frantically,
and it began to veer away. Pyphoros lunged, ripping out one of its
talons, which he flung away in disgust. Though
the fulkaan had failed to harm him, the brief respite gave Riane a
chance to gather her strength. But
Pyphoros had drawn Nith Batoxxx's ringers into petrified claws, which
renewed their pulling on the Veil with the archdaemon's own unnatural
power. Riane had regained some strength, but not nearly enough.
Slowly but surely the Veil began to unwind. Riane
brought her hands up, but they had no feeling. Pyphoros was going to
get his heart's desire. His relentless tugging was unwinding it
further. There was nothing more she could do. And
then she saw Kurgan coming up from behind Pyphoros. She saw the
enmity in his eyes. At first, she mistook it for a hatred of her. His
arm came up, and she saw the fulkaan's bloody talon. As he clutched
it in his fist, she could appreciate just how huge it was. With an
inarticulate cry, Kurgan plunged the talon into the Gyrgon's right
eye. Pyphoros roared. Blood spurted out and, Riane saw, something
else, squirming and dark, a glimpse of Pyphoros' real form. Riane
felt the release of the archdaemon's sorcerous grip on her, and she
at once cast Earth Granary, feeling the strength flowing back into
her life force, the barrier between the Veil and those who wished to
misappropriate it. Pyphoros
was whirling this way and that in his pain, but she could already
sense him, searching for her, wanting to return his ion grip on her.
She saw the bloody eye, the essence of him squirming deep in the
socket, and she cast Fly's-Eye, a Kyofu spell that caused a chaos of
thoughts. It was a rather simple enchantment that Pyphoros would
counter quickly, but she needed time now, as with each passing second
her life force was returning. She
concentrated on his wounded eye, the one weakness in his sorcerous
armor—the Gyrgon host body. She had been running through the
passages of the two sacred books, Utmost Source and The
Book of Recantation, the sources for Eye Window, the most potent
form of sorcery. There was a spell called O-Rhen Ka. It opened
Red-Jade Gate. It was an exceptionally dangerous spell because it
unbalanced the emotional trine of anger, lust, and love. Madness,
destruction, chaos were often the result. Riane
began the incantation, hesitated. She felt the grip of Pyphoros'
spell returning and, fixing his wounded eye in her sight, she
completed the incantation. For
a moment, nothing happened. The night seemed suspended on the back of
an unnatural hush. Then, all at once, Pyphoros reared back. His hands
clutched at his face, but it was too late. The eye socket sundered,
his skull cracked open. As Riane ripped it away, Pyphoros came
pouring out. The Gyrgon was dancing a kind of death jig. As the blood
drained from him, so was Pyphoros' grip on life in this realm
loosened. At that moment, the Gyrgon's life thread winked out.
Pyphoros screamed as his essence poured out of the top of the
shattered Gyrgon skull. He shot up into the darkness of the night in
a knot of ebon mist. The fulkaan howled, his great beak snapping at
it before he swerved away. For
a moment, Riane knelt dazed. Her stomach threatened to rise up into
her throat, and felt an intense dizziness, the aftermath of casting
O-Rhen Ka. It was then that she realized that she no longer had the
Veil. At
first, she thought it was a dream. Then she looked up, blinking, and
saw Kurgan, a vulpine grin on his face, the Veil in his arms. "How
sweet is fate, Dar Sala-at," he said, "that you have
delivered to me my weapon against the Gyrgon." For
a moment, the two of them, old friends, baleful enemies, love and
hate, loyalty and betrayal, were joined in an eerie symmetry neither
understood. "Give
it to me," Riane said. "You have no idea—" "Perhaps
not," Kurgan said craftily. "But I mean to find out." As
Riane rose to confront him, he whipped out his dagger. "Come
on," he hissed. "Killing you would be a bonus." Riane
lunged forward, but her dizziness put her off-balance. She saw the
dagger rushing toward her. And then Kurgan's knees buckled, and he
pitched forward onto the plaza paving, insensate. Riane saw Min-num
standing just behind where the regent had been, his fist white where
he had struck the regent a mighty blow to his side. "I
told you I wouldn't fail you," he said. "Thank
you," she whispered. Riane
gathered the Veil into her arms and sighed, as each and every one of
the thousand tears seemed to speak to her at once. She made her way
to the center of the plaza and, as it directed her, lifted the Veil
above her head, wove it into the same knotlike pattern as that of the
power-bourn intersection deep beneath her feet. The
Veil opened like the petals of the flower and out burst the thousand
tears of the Sacred Dragons, fountaining up into the night, piercing
time and space, becoming one with them. The tears were everywhere and
nowhere. Silvery fish, they jumped and danced, slipping between
worlds, dimensions, forming the complex skein of tiny incremental
moments unseen and therefore unknown, moments that nevertheless
exist, that become the real weight and force and power of history. There
was almost nothing left of the Ras Shamra. Horolaggia had bled her to
the point of death. He had sewn her up tight in the Mala-socca's
sorcerous cocoon. Each filament pierced her flesh, bringing her
renewed agony. The hour of winter solstice was arriving. Moment by
precious moment, Giyan felt her life force leaching into the bloody
ground of Otherwhere. Her
death was upon her and she wept, but not for herself. Death had no
meaning for her. She wept for her child, Annon, removed from his life
by her own hand. She wept for Riane, the unknown and untried vessel
into which she had been forced to put him. For solstice was upon her,
and that meant Riane had failed and, failing, was doubtless dead. It
was the cruelest fate that kept a mother from protecting her child. She
turned her reddened eyes, all but swollen shut, into the heavens of
Otherwhere and waited for the white dragon avatar to swallow her
whole, to rend her with its sorcerous teeth, to turn her into
nourishment for its archdaemon. But
the white dragon did not appear, and then she noticed that the red
fulminations behind the mountain range had vanished, as had the
ceaseless cries of the multitude of daemons pressing at the barrier
between Realms, for it was a fact that Otherwhere existed in that
mysterious place between Realms. Instead,
a single tear appeared, shining silver. Then others joined it, and
they all burst apart, again and again in a rainstorm that drenched
her in blessed moisture. Wherever the tears struck—and they
struck everywhere—the archdaemon's filaments were
transmogrified into healing balm, until the Ras Shamra was restored. The
inverted triangle crumbled to dust, and with it Giyan's long
imprisonment. Opening its long beak, the Avatar gave a shout of
ecstasy that shook the very ground of Otherwhere. It soared high up
into the tumultuous sky and, seeing that all was as it had ever been,
it vanished.
38 Band
of Outsiders
The
oil lamps had lost their ruddy hue, and the suffocating darkness
rushed out of the temple interior as if propelled by sunlight. The
sauromician was burning. There was no fire, as such, and certainly no
flames. Nevertheless, he burned, blackening where he stood, his face
twisted in a rictus of death shock. Suddenly,
miraculously, Horolaggia was gone, vanished. The
Ja-Gaar, held at the very end of its leash, sprang forward as soon as
it arose from the sauromician's spell. Sahor could not have stopped
it even had he wanted to. The
Ja-Gaar leapt through the air, its muscles bunched, and bounded to
where Giyan stood. There, it rubbed its sleek flank against her
thigh. She reached down and put her hand into its open mouth and it
growled, a soft, gurgly sound not unlike that of an infant feeding. "You
are back," Sahor said. Giyan,
as beautiful and radiant as she had ever been, came slowly toward
him, the Ja-Gaar padding obediently at her side. Her eyes were their
luminous whistleflower-blue. She
stood regarding Sahor for some time. "You look like your father.
Almost. I know those eyes," she said. "Those are Eleana's
eyes." "I
am her child," Sahor said. "But you know who I am." She
held out her hand, and he took it. "You
are no longer Nith," she said. "I
am neither V'ornn nor Kundalan. I am Other." Her
eyes were shining. "Yes." She turned, then, a certain
tension coming into her frame. Sahor looked over his shoulder. The
temple contained sixteen columns. She was staring at one as if it was
alive. "Come
out," she said softly. Rekkk
stayed behind the column. "Have
you so soon lost your nerve, Nawatir?" Sahor called, not
unkindly. "I
followed Sahor here," Rekkk said. His pulse was racing so fast
that he could scarcely draw breath. Surely her powers as a great
sorceress would enable her to recognize his spirit. But what if not?
Worse, what if she could not love his altered countenance? His legs
grew weak at the thought. "Something deprived me of the pleasure
of killing the sauromician." "The
Veil of a Thousand Tears," she said, craning her neck for a
glimpse of him. "Thank Miina." "Then
the Dar Sala-at was successful." "She
was." Giyan took a step toward him. "Nawatir, I need to see
you." "I
am not—" All at once, gathering his courage, he appeared,
blond, bearded his dark red cape swirling around him. His ice-blue
eyes locked onto hers. "You
see, Giyan," Sahor said, "like me, he is not as he once
was." "Giyan—"
Rekkk's hoarse voice was almost a heartrending cry. "I
see that Miina has taken you up in Her arms." "The
arms of Yig," he said. She
moved toward him. "To think," she whispered, trembling,
"that you have encountered one of Her Sacred Dragons." "I
hardly know—" He stroked his beard, which still seemed odd
to him. "The changes—" She
stopped in front of him. She could feel his tension, his uncertainty,
his terror, and she reached out, her fingertips tracing with the
delicacy and precision of the sightless the new ridges and rills,
until she had absorbed every minute detail of his face. "Inside
still beat Rekkk's hearts. Inside still flowers Rekkk's love. This I
know in the very depths of my spirit." He
held out his hand, and she took it. "Take
me in your arms, Nawatir. You are my beloved forever." She
had begun to weep, and Rekkk embraced her with great emotion. He held
her tight and kissed her tenderly on her forehead, cheeks, and lips.
Her hands traced the new contours of his face. "Yes,"
she whispered. "Yes, yes, yes." Rekkk
felt as if at last his world was whole. "I thought I might never
see you again." "Did
you lose faith, dearest?" "On
the contrary." He drew her scent into the very essence of his
being. He was in an agony of longing for her, and he held her tight
for a very long time. "I found it." Riane
opened her eyes. An intense warmth suffused her body, washing away
all pain, even the memory of pain. She turned her head, saw Thigpen
crouched tensely a short distance away from her. The Rappa was
staring at her. Her whiskers were twitching incessantly. "Little
dumpling, are you all right?" "Of
course I am," Riane said. She rubbed her forehead, stared down
at her arms and legs, which bore not the slightest trace of burns.
She looked up. "Why are you crouched so far away?" "It's
that damned bird," Thigpen snorted. "He won't let me near
you." Riane
turned to look. The fulkaan had placed himself near her as if he was
her guardian. His predator's head was turned toward the Rappa. Riane
laughed and rose on one elbow. "Come on now. He won't bite you." Thigpen
came hesitantly forward, and the fulkaan glanced at Riane, who
nodded. A little ways away, she could see Perrnodt and Minnum tending
to Sornnn SaTrryn while Kurgan looked on. Noting
the direction of her glance, Thigpen said, "The V'ornn Sornnn
SaTrryn will be fine. The tears are healing him as they have healed
you." "And
what of Giyan?" Riane said, sitting up suddenly as anxiety
gripped her. "Is she alive or dead?" "Have
faith." Thigpen curled up against Riane's side. "The tears
came before the stroke of solstice." Riane
could see Kurgan looking at her, and it gave her an eerie feeling. He
could not know that the essence of his childhood friend and his
family's enemy lurked inside Riane's body. And yet he recognized
something in her, something he had not seen when they had encountered
each other months earlier in the caverns below the regent's palace in
Axis Tyr. She thought she saw in his eyes the desire to come over, to
talk to her, but he did not. In any event, Perrnodt said something to
him, and he turned his attention to her. Thigpen's
tail beat a brief tattoo. "At least we won't have daemons to
worry about anymore." Riane
sighed. "I wish I could believe that." "What
do you mean?" "They
helped build this city. I think there is more to their story than we
yet know." The
fulkaan stirred, his head swinging around, his piercing violet eyes
taking in the two of them. He made a sound low in his throat, and
Riane touched his wing tip. Sensing
the Rappa's unease, she stroked Thigpen's soft, thick fur. "This
bird is a fulkaan. It seems I knew him in another time, another
place." She
rose to her feet at the fulkaan's cry. Glancing around, she noted
that Kurgan had suddenly vanished. In all the commotion, Thigpen had
no idea what had happened to him and neither, it seemed, did anyone
else. Shrugging, she trotted over to the cenote, Thigpen at her
heels. The cenote, she noted, was now filled with water. The tears of
the Dragons had collected there. She heard a distant calling, and she
leaned in, immersing her hands. Immediately, the Veil began to
reconstitute, weaving around her in the complex pattern of its own
design. But
the cenote remained empty for only a matter of moments. All at once,
water could be seen, glistening as it rose from some mysterious
source far underground. Now the water was beginning to churn, and she
steeled herself, alarmed that Pyphoros had somehow found a way back
to this realm. Her
concern was misplaced, for now rising out of the cenote she saw
Giyan, who was quickly followed by Eleana, a Kundalan warrior tall as
a V'ornn, and another. The
Dar Sala-at ran into Giyan's arms, and they swung each other around. "Thank
you, Teyjattt," she whispered so only Riane could hear. "I
owe you my life." "No
more than I owe you mine," Riane said. "How did you get
here?" "The
cenotes form a sorcerous connecting network if you know how to
navigate through them." She told Riane how they had been in the
Abbey of Floating White, what had transpired there, and how, using
the cenote in the black Kell, they had arrived at Za Hara-at. "Konara
Inggres is now firmly in charge of the abbey," she concluded. "We
have nothing more to fear," Giyan told her. "When the tears
of the Dragons sent Pyphoros and Horolaggia back to the Abyss, they
destroyed the lesser daemons who had possessed the Ramahan and
re-sealed the Portal I inadvertently cracked when I violated the
Nanthera." "The
seal on the Portal at the bottom of First Cenote is also broken,"
Riane told her. "Pyphoros came through there long before you
performed the Nanthera." Giyan's
expression clouded with concern for a moment. "As soon as we are
fully recovered, we shall have to journey there to discover what
created the rift in the first place." With
her arm around her child, she took Riane to meet the new Nawatir and
Eleana's son. It took some time for Riane to grow accustomed to Rekkk
Hacilar's new image. Though she thanked Rekkk and Sahor for their
courage, she spoke to them a little distractedly. At the periphery of
her vision was Eleana, her body strong and hard, her warrior's eyes
watching shyly, angrily, warily. There hung between them the
unpleasantness of their last parting, and something more that Riane
could not bear to examine. How many times over the past weeks had she
run their reunion dialogue in her mind? Always, it ended awkwardly
and badly. Only
Minnum and Sornnn hung back. Neither felt they quite belonged in the
company of the others. They had quickly gotten to know one another,
and each was impressed with the other's knowledge of the Korrush and
of Za Hara-at in particular. Sornnn said that he was considering
staying on in Za Hara-at and wondered if Minnum would be interested
in a job helping him explore the ancient citadel. When Minnum readily
agreed to this excellent proposal, he felt this clinched his decision
to remain at the dig. In
the morning, he would send a message to the Resistance asking for
news of Marethyn. While it was true that he was anxious over her
well-being, he also admired her ardor to perform on her own merits.
And so his fear for her became a precious thing. A measure of the
gravity of his love. He found that he liked to look at it from time
to time to remind himself how radically his life had changed. He
experienced it as a stillness inside him, as if she had placed her
trust there, a gift, for him to discover after she was gone. When
Riane had introduced Giyan to Perrnodt there was an immediate spark
that would have been of particular interest to her had she not had
Eleana on her mind. She left them deeply engaged in sorcerous matters
and approached Eleana, who was talking quietly with Sahor. Eleana had
her arm circling his narrow waist. Sahor, intuitive almost to the
point of telepathy, nodded to Riane, kissed his mother on the cheek,
and sauntered off to try and communicate with the ful-kaan. He had
already become a lover of strange Kundalan creatures, seeing in them
another key to Kundala's secrets that Nith Sahor had been searching
for ever since he had landed on the planet. For
some time Riane and Eleana stood facing one another in silence. "I
am sorry for the way I left you," Riane began. "I never
should have done that." Eleana
said, "I see the way you look at Sahor. I know you see Kurgan in
his face. I beg you not to hate him." "He
has your eyes." "He
is not Kurgan. He never will be." They
walked a little farther away from the rest of the band of outsiders,
as they now thought of themselves. In the east, the sky was
lightening. There was a glow, faint but distinct in the intensely
clear air of the Korrush, and it was possible to look at the Great
Rift in the Djenn Marre and believe it was only kilometers away. "I
thought you hated me, that I had offended you." "No,"
Riane said at once. "Never." "Then
why were you suddenly so cold?" "I
was . . . afraid." Eleana
looked at her. "Afraid of what?" Riane
could not say what she knew had to be said. "We
are not friends," Eleana said softly. "We were never just
friends." Riane
felt her throat close up. "Looking
death in the face changes you. It changes who you are; it changes the
entire tenor of life. What we have been through during the last weeks
makes this absolutely clear to me." Eleana came closer. "No
matter the consequences, we must not be afraid to say what is in our
hearts." Her face had never been more beautiful nor more grave.
"When we are apart I dream about you. When I see you I cannot
cool my body down. I have never felt this way about anyone." She
stopped, only a few paces away. "Say something. Please." What
could she say? Riane asked herself. I love you was so
inadequate. Not to mention frightening in all its implications. She
felt An-non's dagger—the one Eleana had given him—heavy
on her hip. Unconsciously, she gripped its butt. She was not Annon
anymore, and yet when she was with Eleana, when she saw that look in
her eyes, she knew that Annon was still vibrantly alive. Her
obdurate silence was a mistake, however, because it caused Eleana to
ask the question she most dreaded. "Why
did Lady Giyan give you Annon's dagger?" "Because
. . ." The words stuck in Riane's throat. All around them, it
seemed that Za Hara-at was coming to life. A stirring, a sighing
filled the air. It might have been the fluttery swoosh of finbat
wings or the sweep of a gentle dawn breeze. But it also might be
something ancient, sleeping for eons, coming, at last, awake.
"Because you are right. Because we are not friends. Because we
never were just friends."
APPENDIX
I Major
Characters
Giyan—Bartta's
twin sister, Ramahan mistress of Eleusis Ashera, mother
of Annon Ashera Bartta—Giyan's
twin sister; Ramahan konara, head of the Dea Cretan Riane—female
orphan; the Dar Sala-at Eleana—female from upcountry Ramahan
at the Abbey of Floating White: Konara Urdma—head of the
abbey Konara Lyystra Konara Inggres Malistra—Kyofu
sorceress Thigpen—a
Rappa, one of Miina's sorcerous
creatures Mother—high
priestess of Miina Courion—Sarakkon
captain, friend of Kurgan Stogggul Jerrlyn—head
of the Fourth Agrarian Commune District (largest of seven) Minnum—curator
of Museum of False Memory
Cushsneil—Kundalan
dialectician (deceased)
Majja—female
Resistance fighter
Basse—male
Resistance fighter
Kasstna—leader
of Majja and Basse's Resistance cell
V'ORNN Annon
Ashera—eldest son of Eleusis Ashera
Kurgan
Stogggul—eldest son of Wennn Stogggul
Marethyn
Stogggul—Kurgan's younger sister
Terrettt—Kurgan's
brother Tettsie—Marethyn's
maternal grandmother Sornnn
SaTrryn—prime factor, scion to Bashkir spice-trader family Bronnn
Pallln—Bashkir ally of Stogggul family, passed over for Prime
Factor Nith
Sahor—a Gyrgon Nith
Batoxxx—a Gyrgon, see the Old V'ornn
Rekkk
Hacilar—once Khagggun pack-commander, now
Rhynnnon
Olnnn Rydddlin—once Rekkk Hacilar's first-captain, now
star-admiral
The
Old V'ornn—Kurgan's mentor; Nith Batoxxx's alter ego
Line-General
Lokck Werrrent—Khagggun commander of the Land of Sudden Lakes
corridor
Wing-Adjutant
Muko Wiiin—his adjutant
Gill
Fullom—venerable Bashkir
Attack-Commandant
Accton Blled
First-Captain
Kwenn—Kurgan's Haaar-kyut
Dobbro
Mannx—a solicitor-Bashkir of Tettsie's acquaintance
Petrre
Aurrr—Sornnn SaTrryn's mother
Rada—Tuskugggun
owner of Blood Tide tavern Jesst
Vebbn—Genomatekk in charge of the 'recombinant experiments'
Kirlll
Qandda—Deirus, Sornnn SaTrryn's friend Nith Isstal, Nith
Batoxxx's protege
Nith
Recctor—ally of Nith Sahor
Nith
Settt—ally of Nith Batoxxx
Nith
Nassam—ally of Nith Batoxxx
IN
THE KORRUSH The
Five Tribes: Jeni
Cerii—warlords—territorial capital: Bandichire Gazi
Qhan—mystics—territorial capital: Agachire Rasan
Sul—spice merchants—territorial capital: Okkamchire Bey
Das—historians/archaeologists—many at Im-Thera, abutting
main dig of Za Hara-at Han Jad—artisans—territorial
capital: Shelachire Othnam—member
of Ghor sect of Gazi Qhan Mehmmer—Othnam's sister Paddii—ally
of Othnam's and Mehmmer's Makktuub—kapudaan of Gazi Qhan Jiharre—Prophet
of the Gazi Qhan Tezziq—Makktuub's first concubine
Mu-Awwul—Ghor elder Perrnodt—Ramahan priestess
APPENDIX
II V'ornn
Societal Makeup
The
V'ornn are a strict caste society. Their castes are broken down
thusly: GREAT
CASTE: Gyrgon—technomages
Bashkir—merchant-traders Genomatekk—physicians LESSER
CASTE: Khagggun—military Masagggun—engineers Tuskugggun—females Deirus—physicians
relegated to taking care of the dead and the insane
APPENDIX
III Pronunciation
Guide
In
the V'ornn language, triple consonants have a distinct sound. With
the exceptions noted below, the first two letters are always
pronounced as a W, thus;
Khagggun—Kow-gun
Tuskugggun—Tus—kew-gun
Mesagggun—Mes—ow—gun
Rekkk—Rawk Wennn
Stogggul—Woon Stow-gul
Kinnnus—Kew—nus
okummmon—ah-kow-mon
okuuut—ah-kowt
K'yonnno—Ka-yow-no
salamuuun—sala-moown
Olnnn—Owl-lin
Sornnn—Sore-win
Hadinnn—Had-ewn
Bronnn
Pallln—Brown Pawln
Teyjattt—Tey-jawt
seigggon—sew-gon
s kcettta—shew-tah
Looorm—Loo-orm
bannntor—bown-tor
Kannna—Kaw-na
Kefffir
Gutttin—Kew-fear Gew-tin
Ourrros—Ow-ros
Jusssar—Jew-sar
Julll—Jew-el
Nefff—
Newf
Batoxxx—Bat-owx Boulllas—Bow-las
(as in, to tie a bow)
Hellespennn—Helle-spawn
Argggedus—Ar-weeg-us
When
a Y directly precedes the triple consonant, it is pronounced ew, as
in shrewd, thus: Rydddlin—Rcwd-lin Rhynnnon—Rew-non Tynnn—Tewn
but: K'yonnno—Ka-yow-no
Because
the following word is not of the V'ornn language, the triple
consonant does not follow the above rules, thus:
Centophennni—Chento-fenny
Triple
vowels are pronounced twice, creating another syllable, thus:
Haaar-kyut—Ha-ar-key-ut
leeesta—lay-
aysta
numaaadis—mu-ma-ah-dis
liiina—lee-eena
N'
Luuura—Nu-Loo-oora
Normally,
in V'ornn they is pronounced ea, as in tear, thus:
Gyrgon—Gear-gon
Sa
is pronounced Say, thus:
Sa
Trryn—Say-Trean
Kha
is pronounced Ko, while Ka is pronounced Ka,
thus:
Khagggun—-Kow-gun
Kannna—Kaw-na
Ch
is always hard, thus:
Morcha—
More-ka
Bach—Bahk
Skc
is always soft, thus:
skcetta—shew-tah
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