Part 38 (1/2)
Elcho Falling and Isembaard.
Axis hardly slept for worrying. Everything could go wrong far too easily. He wondered if Maximilian, somewhere on the northern plains of Isembaard, was also lying awake, perhaps staring at the stars, wondering if Josia's message had got through to Axis, and if Axis and Georgdi could coordinate enough to accomplish what Maximilian needed.
If only he could tell Georgdi the reason behind what was about to happen. It would make everything so certain. But Axis couldn't tell him. He didn't know if the One could intercept his mental speech or not, and he didn't know if Eleanon could.
Too many uncertainties. Too many things to go wrong.
Axis sighed, turning over restlessly in his blankets to stare at the stars.
Maximilian was so anxious he could not even lie down. He spent the night pacing about the camp, sometimes standing for almost an hour at a time, staring northward.
He loathed the fact he had so little control. He depended on Axis and Georgdi coming through for him: the plans had to be ferried from Maximilian to the land of the dead, and from there back to the land of the living where so many other factors could warp the original message.
Axis had only to sleep in and everything would fail.
Eleanon could attack precipitately and neither Axis nor Georgdi would be able to follow through.
Georgdi, not knowing what was at stake, could prefer to have his breakfast than to contact ”Josia” so early.
No one else in Maximilian's camp slept, either. They sat around the campfire, eyes following Maximilian as he paced, and no one, not even Ishbel, dared say a word to him.
Axis rose well before dawn. He tried to keep his activities routine -- perhaps the Lealfast were watching him from above, relaying his movements to the One -- but he was too restless to do much other than dress, fidget, ignore the food one of the soldiers brought him, and wander around the campfire, turning to watch the eastern sky for the first intimation of dawn every minute or so.
If he were being watched, Axis knew he could be making either Eleanon or the One, or both, very anxious. They would wonder what he planned.
He waited as long as he could, then he called to StarHeaven.
StarHeaven! StarHeaven!
It took her a moment or two to wake from her sleep, moments that Axis spent pacing back and forth cursing under his breath. StarHeaven!
Yes?
I need you to wake Georgdi. Now. Ask him to call Josia to his window from his magical Twisted Tower. Tell Georgdi that Isaiah and myself consider a dawn attack and we wonder if Josia can tell us the disposition of the Lealfast and Kezial's armies. Can you do that?
Axis -- StarHeaven . . . do . . . it . . . now! I need Josia to advise us!
Then, risking everything, Axis sent her a bolt of pure emotion -- a combination of anxiety and urgency and desperation. Icarii rarely used pure emotion to communicate. It was unsettling and physically disturbing to the recipient, but Axis hoped that it would impress on StarHeaven, like nothing else, the sheer urgency and importance of his request.
He felt a stunned silence from her. Then .
Immediately, StarMan. I understand.
Thank you, StarHeaven. Please let me know immediately you have spoken to Georgdi. And please impress on him the -- I understand, StarMan.
Axis shut up. He wanted to shout at StarHeaven all the way along the corridors of Elcho Falling into Georgdi's quarters, but he literally bit his tongue and kept his mind quiet.
Maximilian stopped suddenly, then turned to the campfire. ”It will soon be time,” he said.
Ishbel and the two Emerald Guardsmen rose.
”Do you have the tools?” Serge said. Last night he and Doyle had taken two st.u.r.dy knives and fas.h.i.+oned them into digging tools.
Who knew how tough that simple stepping stone would be to raise.
”Yes,” Maximilian said. He looked at Ishbel and she came over to him.
”Ishbel .”
”What is it?”
Maximilian hesitated. ”I don't know what might happen. I don't know what might go wrong.”
”Maxel --”
”Listen to me a moment, Ishbel. Ifit goes badly wrong either you or I, or both of us, are going to have to untether ourselves from the Twisted Tower.”
”What? I don't understand.”
”The Persimius kings and princes,” Maximilian said, ”kept open the pathways to the Twisted Tower so that, should they ever need the knowledge, there it sat. Every young prince learned the pathways to the Twisted Tower. I had to teach you. Remember?”
She nodded.
”For thousands of years,” Maximilian continued, ”in a direct unbroken line, all the princes and kings of the Persimius name kept open the pathway. Each of them travelled there and back. Each kept the mental skills needed to reach the Twisted Tower. That is the real connection. At the moment, Ishbel, you and I are the only two remaining alive who have the skills needed to reach the Twisted Tower and that is enough to keep the Twisted Tower tethered to this world. It is needed, it is used. Our minds, Ishbel, are the machinery that connect the Twisted Tower to this world.”
”I still don't understand what you are trying to tell me.”
”If we forget those skills, Ishbel, if we lose them, then there is no connection left between this world and the Twisted Tower. It will simply drift off, perhaps even evaporate completely, I don't know, but there will no longer be any connection between this world and it. We are the bridge, Ishbel.”
He took a deep breath. ”Losing the Twisted Tower and all its knowledge is the last thing I want to do. I would prefer that I disconnect the pathway so that, if needed at a later date, I can put the stone back and reconnect ourselves to the tower. But if I cannot do what I intend this day, then we may have to untether our minds from the tower. If I fail, and the One takes me, then you will have to do it. Untether the Twisted Tower from this world.”
”And lose you with it?” Ishbel said.
”If need be, yes. Ishbel, we have to be prepared for this.”
She gave an unhappy nod. ”How do we do lose the skill?”
”It is actually fairly simple. You remember how I put my hands about your head? How I cradled it?”
”It felt as if your fingers dug into my mind, s.h.i.+fting it slightly, twisting it.”
”And thus we can 'untwist' our minds. It is easier if we do it simultaneously, if we take each other's heads in our hands and twist away the other's mind, but we can also do it to ourselves. Ishbel, if I am trapped, will you do this?”
”I would prefer it if you came back.”