Part 30 (1/2)
Indris gave the Tau-se an insincere smile, then turned his attention to where he was going. With the amount of ma.s.s the galley had lost, it was easier to keep airborne, but its irregular shape was harder to steer. As he turned the vessel northward, to skim across the canopies of the sycamores, the railing in front of him hissed. It s.h.i.+mmered brightly for a moment, dazzlingly bright, then broke away into streamers of ash and motes of light.
He spared a glance at Changeling. The blade was striated, as if it were a raw flexed muscle, lines of shadow rippling between ligaments of bright opalescence. Steam rose about her, and the deck nearby was scorched from her heat. Indris felt the strain of so much disentropy to the point of bursting, yet it was Changeling who bore the worst of it by far. Without her to strengthen him, he was sure he would have died long before they reached Amnon.
The galley dropped. Indris felt as if his stomach had risen into his mouth. The wobbly boat rose again quickly, much lighter.
”What did we-” he began to ask.
”Well,” Hayden drawled, ”looking down through the cargo hold, I can see the tops of the trees where part of the hull used to be. Reckon that ain't good.”
They rose higher as they circled the southern, then eastern faces of Zephyr Hill. Wind whipped Indris's face as they swept by the pale incline, almost cliff sheer. In a few moments the galley was careening past hillocks of spa.r.s.e gra.s.s, on course for the splintered teeth of boulders that dotted the hillside where it stretched toward the Marble Sea. To the east and south, Zephyr Hill descended in a series of sharp terraces dotted with trees and huddled stones rounded smooth by wind and rain. Sea eagles nested there, plumage ruffled, their voices shrill in the wind of the galley's pa.s.sing.
”Tell Ekko they'll have to jump as soon as we stop moving,” Indris choked out to Shar. ”This thing won't last much longer.”
The Seethe war-chanter dashed away, sure-footed despite the deck bucking beneath her. Indris spared his s.h.i.+pmates a glance. A few of the Tau-se shrugged as they sauntered to the edge of the deck or to the few rails that remained. Others jokingly threatened to push their comrades off. Some even had to be kicked awake where they had slumbered in the sun.
As the fragmented hull touched the ground, part of it sloughed away. Timbers flew into the air, snapped as if rotten. Bra.s.s and iron fittings pinged into each other, then ricocheted into nearby boulders. Great clods of earth were hurled up as the sharp prow sliced into the earth. Then it, too, gave way.
The galley shuddered to a halt in a long furrow of soil and stone. No sooner had the vessel stopped moving than the Tau-se bounded for the ground. Shar leaped gracefully, so light she seemed to glide to the ground. Two Tau-se grabbed Hayden, then hurled him into the waiting arms of two of their companions who had already made landfall. Indris pulled Changeling from the deck. Wood puffed away as ash as he dashed for the side and jumped over.
As he hit the ground, Indris urged the Tau-se further away from the wreckage. From behind them came ticking creaks, the dry snap of wood, and the bellowed protests of metal bent out of shape as what remained of the galley collapsed. The galley slumped as parts of it were consumed in smokeless tongues of nacreous light. When it settled, finally, there was little left except for the top deck and jagged beams of the forecastle.
”We really did make it,” Ekko observed. ”Though I doubt the galley is going anywhere soon.”
Indris laughed weakly, then lay back on the sun-warmed gra.s.s. He folded a forearm over his eyes. Lightning flashed behind his closed eyelids and his hearts tolled. The taste of bile built up in the back of his throat, and he sat up. He could feel the acid burn in his chest. He imagined a lightning rod might feel like this after a violent storm, if the same lightning rod was thrown from the roof and run over by a herd of stampeding horses.
Changeling was in his hand, the weapon silent as even she struggled with the reaction from channeling so much disentropy. Despite his fatigue, to hold her was intoxicating. The way her energy had flowed across his soul like honey over a lover's skin. He could almost taste it.
Ekko a.s.sembled his people. The Tau-se split into five-person formations. Three formations ranged up the shallower incline here near the top of Zephyr Hill. The others took position around Indris, eyes focused outward. One of the squads near the crest of the hill loped back to speak with Ekko.
”We are only about one hundred meters away from the Garden of Stones,” the woman reported in a purring voice. ”There are soldiers wearing the colors of the Great House of Nasarat guarding the Lotus House. They wear the insignia of Roshana's Whitehorse. There are others with them.”
”Heavy cavalry.” Ekko's opinion was quite clear from his tone. The Tau-se rarely rode animals for any reason.
”Ekko, please tell me you still have the Angothic Spirit Casque?”
”I still have the casque, Amonindris.”
”Then gather the Lion Guard, if you would. There's a daughter who's lost a father whom I may need to help become a rahn.”
”You're late,” Femensetri observed as Indris entered the Lotus House. Roshana and Siamak looked up from where they sat. There was no sign of Mari, which he found more disappointing than he would have expected.
”I'm here,” he pointed out. ”Where's Mari? I thought she'd be with you.”
”She's with Nazarafine.” Rosha crossed the room to stand beside Indris. She scanned the ranks of the Tau-se, Shar, and Hayden. Indris knew she looked for a sign of the father who was not there. He ignored the question in her eyes as he turned to Femensetri.
”We need to talk, you and I,” he gestured outside.
”Indris, we really don't have the time to-” Rosha began. She stopped talking when Indris raised his hand.
”We need to make time. Ekko?” The Tau-se handed Indris the cloth-wrapped bundle of the Spirit Casque. Indris faced the others. ”Where's Corajidin?”
”He arrived shortly after noon, much earlier than we antic.i.p.ated.” Siamak hooked his thumbs through the sash at his waist. ”He's been at his villa ever since. He sent several couriers, one to Knight-Marshal Na.r.s.eh, another to Nadir, second in command of the Erebus armies. Belamandris and his Anlki seem to be in control of the city, supported by four hundred or so Iphyri and several companies of nahdi.”
”Our forces are outnumbered, Indris.” Rosha's expression was pensive. ”If more of the Erebus soldiery manage to enter the city-”
”We're not here to fight the Erebus army,” Femensetri interrupted. ”Nazarafine should be at the Tyr-Jahavn by now, with the two motions to depose Corajidin as governor of Amnon, as well as Asrahn-Elect. Usually the suspicion of murder would be enough to raise questions, but he has too many supporters who'll not speak against him.”
”And for Nazarafine to veto the Teshri's decision would lead to more civil unrest,” Siamak said.
”So it'll be difficult for us to force Corajidin out of power.” Rosha shrugged with equanimity. ”We doubted the sun would set without blood being spilled.”
”True enough.” Indris nodded. ”Remember though, we don't want to kill unless we have to. These are our own people, not monsters. They deserve mercy.”
”Even Corajidin?” Ekko growled.
Indris rested his hand on the big Tau-se's armored shoulder. ”Were I Belamandris,” he said, ”I'd seize control of the Tyr-Jahavn. Whoever holds the council chamber will control the flow of information to their allies. The Teshri will only get to make one decision about this.”
Ekko walked away to speak with his fellow Tau-se. Indris meant to follow when Rosha grabbed him by the shoulder. ”You stay. We know things didn't go as planned in the Rmarq and Daniush is dead. Please, just tell me. Where's my father?”
”Vahineh a.s.sa.s.sinated Yasha?” Indris could not keep the incredulity from his voice. ”And Mari did nothing to stop her?”
”Well, that should calm Corajidin right down,” Ekko said wryly. ”We may as well open a keg and sing our victory songs.”
”It's not funny, Ekko.” Femensetri eyed the Tau-se darkly. ”Vahineh's put us in a right hole. Mari's right. Corajidin will be even more intractable now.”
”I've seen what the man is capable of,” Indris reminded her.
Rosha remained silent as the four of them reached the Vault of the Echoes, nestled among weeping figs on the hill overlooking the Garden of Stones. The Vault of the Echoes stood on a broad diorite pillar some ten meters high, surrounded by a wide stairway secured by steel gates. A hot wind scoured them where it gusted between the double row of carved marble columns that supported the vault's domed, moss-colored marble ceiling. There were no walls. The alabaster floor of the vault was inset with an intricate, six-petaled lotus mosaic of polished quartz pieces. A faint blush of fire shone in each petal.
”You failed.” Femensetri leaned with her back against one of the pillars, her crook resting between her folded arms. Her expression was bleak as she scowled at Indris. Rosha stood on the edge of the vault, her back to the others. Indris had been so young when his own mother had died. So much time had pa.s.sed, he had no words of empathy for his cousin's loss.
Failed. There was nothing that would change the moment they were in now, so what benefit in trying to explain what had happened to bring them here?
He knelt in the middle of the lotus flower pattern in the floor. He hesitantly unwrapped the Spirit Casque, then set it before him. The diamond in the forehead of the casque rippled with light. Indris looked up at his former teacher. ”It could be-”
”Worse?” she said sullenly. ”It is worse, boy. Far-ad-din's not coming back either, so you say.” The Stormbringer looked at the Spirit Casque with revulsion. Her mindstone flared to black life, a vortex casting a ghastly pallor over her features. The blues, greens, and blacks of her eyes were lambent. ”We've only one course of action to offer the Teshri. There's no need to commune with him, Indris. I know what-”
”I'll not have you tell me what I can find out for myself,” Indris said. ”I spent too many years with your voice in my ears, and all it got me was trouble. Ariskander needs to be released from this thing anyway.”
She began to speak, but Indris ignored her. He allowed his eyes to unfocus on the shattered-window surface of the mosaic floor. Radiance danced in each cut piece; it pooled around the casque, then trickled along the grooves between each tile. He opened himself to the weft and warp of the ahm, woven into the stones and mortar of the Lotus House. It came in fits and starts at first. Then the cracks between the tiles began to fill with viscous gray-blue light, so sluggish it seemed to take on ma.s.s the way no light should. He looked more deeply. Valleys and plateaus of quartz dipped in sharp canyons. It rose in flattened plains. Colors at different heights took on shape, became geometries, pathways, a map of thought, cause and effect for him to follow. The lotus flower floor folded upward in his mind. Became a faceted s.h.i.+eld around his mind. His breath chimed against the walls. Sent ripples into the spirit world beyond.
The High Communion began.
Indris knelt there, his breath deep, even, eyes intent on the lick of shadow and light around him. Petal shapes, pale as ivory, seemed to float just beneath the surface. Motes of color swarmed in the floor, like the amber-and-onyx bees long believed to serve as the speakers for the dead. Theirs was the keeping of sacred trusts. Indris could feel their buzzing in his skull, though he could not understand what they tried to tell him. Their droning vibrated along his skeleton, pins and needles inside his body. His face felt flushed. Had he the choice, he would have waited until he was better rested, but Ariskander and Rosha deserved better.
The diamond in the casque chimed. Facets exploded outward as an amorphous, dappled shadow flickered back and forth. Indris stared down, watching as the shadow rose from the depths. As it drew closer, it flickered with a nimbus of sapphire light, the heat of which curled about Indris's face. Perspiration beaded his forehead. It trickled down his nose. A single drop formed, perfect and round, before falling to the floor and striking the mosaic with the sound of a hundred bells in his ears. There was a disconnect, a stutter in his mind, then- The escape from emptiness. Fear rose up in a sea to swamp him. Pain. Searing pain. A diamond nail through his brow that gathered...him. All of him. The casque brought darkness to the world. Corajidin's rabid features. His snarl. The madness of obsession. The scent of mint over sour breath. His threats. Oh, dear Ancestors, I will be trapped forever in-knives sliced his skin. The witch's questions questions questions. The qua-the Font of all life-so calm so cool so clear. Awakening! They want to know about the source of Awakening!- Sunlight kissed his face. He could feel it in his hair. The wind on his skin. It carried with it the susurrus of the leaves where they told of all they knew, heard, saw. The pounding of the elk's great heart as it bounded through ivy-wreathed ruins. The cool mountain air was beneath his wings as he looked down with his eagle's eyes. The release from the embrace of the river, to arc in blinding light, gills open though he could not breathe until he felt water immerse him once more. Watching his flock, a huge hound at his feet, the warmth of gra.s.s where it grew between his toes. Beneath, in the slow, deliberate, peaceful darkness of the soil the seeds as they- Power surged through him, a maelstrom that infused his limbs and ignited his mind. Names, places, facts, thoughts memories desires fears lessons plans places faces- ”No!” Indris configured his mind into a maze of faceted walls, crystalline mirrors that turned Ariskander's thoughts into reflected fragments. ”Ariskander! No! I'm not your heir! I'm not Nehrun!”