Part 24 (1/2)
Tinker made a face; silly nonsense was what she hated about fairy tales.
Lain tapped her on the head to stop Tinker from making faces. ”Oni are fearsome ogres usually depicted as seven feet tall with red hair and horns. I've heard a theory that the oni are actually lost Vikings with horned helmets.”
Now that sounded familiar. It all clicked together in her mind. ”The three men who attacked us were very tall, with red hair. Windwolf called the pseudo-wargs Foo dogs. He also recognized your references to tengu. If we have legends of elves, and they are real, by simple logic then, the oni are real too.”
Lain admitted Tinker's theory might be true with a thoughtful nod of her head, and then poked holes into it. ”The world doesn't always follow simple logic. The cultures of the ancient worlds were highly contaminated by each other. The Chinese interacted with the j.a.panese, and then traded on the Silk Road to the Middle East, which spread into Europe. You can find the same children's story of Cinderella with the evil stepmother and the magical fairy G.o.dmother in almost every culture now. The oni could be just the j.a.panese version of our elves.”
”But someone used Foo dogs and onilike people to try to kill Windwolf.”
”There's so little we know about the elves, even after twenty years. For all we know, these attacks are part of political infighting.”
Tinker considered it, and shook her head. ”No. Tooloo just gave me a history lesson and-provided it's all true-the elves are quite h.o.m.ogeneous.”
”Ah.” Lain murmured and thought for several minutes. ”Then maybe there's something about oni that the elves aren't telling us.”
Tinker glanced toward the foyer where Pony stood guard. ”Weren't telling us. Windwolf has changed the game by swapping one of the players to the other team.”
”Well,” Lain locked up her workstation. ”You crack that nut, and I'll make lunch.”
Tinker felt guilty when she walked into the foyer and realized that Pony had been standing there since they returned from Tooloo's. ”Why don't you sit down?”
”It's not proper-”
”Oh, sit down!” She pointed at the chair beside the door.
Pony sat, unhappy but obedient.
Tinker settled on the fourth step of the staircase, which put her level with Pony. ”What do you know about oni?”
”Oni?” Pony lifted his hands to his head and made his index fingers into horns.
”Yes, oni.”
”They are cruel and ruthless people with no sense of honor. Their weapons are crude, for they are a younger race than either elves or humans, but they sp.a.w.n like mice and would crush us with sheer numbers.”
So much for oni being mythical. ”They live on Elfhome?”
Pony looked puzzled at this. ”No, then they would have been elves. They live on Onihida.”
”So, where is Onihida?”
Pony screwed up his face in the way that Tinker recognized as him reaching the limit of his ability to explain something. Finally he held out his left hand, palm down. ”Elfhome.” He waved his right hand under it. ”Earth.” Then, holding his right hand still, he moved his left hand under his right and waved it. ”Onihida.”
She pointed at his left hand. ”How did you get to Onihida? Or did the oni come to Elfhome?”
”We found them.” Pony looked daunted. He sat silent for several minutes, thinking. ”There were at one time certain caves and rock formations that formed Pathways to walk from one world to the next. They were perilous, for the movement of the Moon and the planets made them inconstant.”
It confirmed her family legend of caves being gates. Tinker suspected that a mineral deposit running through quartz next to a strong ley line could mimic the hyperphase field of a man-made gate. Like the gate in s.p.a.ce, the power needed to be supplied to only one side to create two-way travel. Based on what Windwolf told her about gravity affecting magic, then perhaps ley lines had ”tides” which would cause the gates to occasionally fail.
Pony plunged on. ”While we bent our minds to shaping magic, humans learned to forge bronze and then steel. For goods we could not make ourselves, we walked the Pathways to Earth. We kept close to the Pathways and traveled heavily cloaked and mostly at night, for without magic we lived a breath away from death. But the risks were always well rewarded with rich trade goods.”
Obviously Pony was using the historic ”we” since the Pathways had mysteriously failed prior to the 1700s, and he had just hit his majority.
”But some of these Pathways led to Onihida,” Tinker guessed.
”In a manner, yes.” Pony scratched at the back of his head, pondering how to-as Tooloo put it-compress history into a teaspoon. ”Where a Pathway opened on Earth, magic would flow out. While humans would only find a Pathway through blind luck, a domana domana could sense it from a distance. Still maps were made to keep careful track of the Pathways. One day on Earth, a could sense it from a distance. Still maps were made to keep careful track of the Pathways. One day on Earth, a domana domana found a Pathway that was not on our maps. Nor, when the matching location was investigated on Elfhome, could it be found where it opened. A group adventurous in spirit decided to investigate where the Pathway led. Twenty journeyed out, only two returned.” found a Pathway that was not on our maps. Nor, when the matching location was investigated on Elfhome, could it be found where it opened. A group adventurous in spirit decided to investigate where the Pathway led. Twenty journeyed out, only two returned.”
”The oni killed them?”
Pony nodded. ”At first, the explorers had thought they'd somehow traveled to Elfhome, for Onihida-unlike Earth-flows rich with magic. Then they realized that the plants and the animals were unknown to them, and showed signs of being spell-worked.” The elfin way of saying the object had been bioengineered. ”Whereas on Earth, they would have easily traveled undetected, wards revealed their presence, and they were surrounded before they could flee back to Earth. The oni lords 'invited' them to a nearby fortress. The explorers were treated well, served rich foods, and offered beautiful wh.o.r.es. The oni called them their brothers and tried to deceive them, but a dragon always shows his teeth when he smiles.”
”The oni wanted to know where the gate to Earth was?”
”Natural gates apparently were usually quite small.” Pony measured out four feet with his hand. ”Many only wide enough to take a pack horse through, and sometimes much smaller.” He reduced the width to only two feet. ”They were within dark caves, and like the veil effect,” he waved his hand about to take in the house around him, shoved from Earth into Elfhome, ”invisible. Anyone without the ability to detect a ley line could search closely, even to the point of stepping in and out of worlds, and never find it. Like the elves prior to the birth of domana domana, no oni pa.s.sing through a gate to Earth had ever returned.”
So that the oni didn't realize a gate wasn't just a deathtrap to be avoided until the elves showed up. ”Obviously the explorers didn't reveal its location.”
”At first, they easily evaded the questions, for they did not know the oni language, and deliberately misunderstood their gestures and the demands for maps to be drawn. But they were forcibly detained, taught the tongue, and asked more directly. Then they were tortured, then healed, and tortured again until their minds broke.”
”That's horrible!” Tinker shuddered. ”But the gate only led to Earth. The elves could have given it up to the oni without risking Elfhome.”
Pony stood to pace. ”The oni had spell-worked their warriors to be far stronger than the average man. What's more, they had discovered the secrets of self-healing and immortality, yet continued to breed like mice. With their numbers and abilities, they would have flooded Earth unchecked.”
”I'm surprised that the elves cared that much about Earth.”
”The explorers had traveled Earth for centuries; some had taken human lovers and sired half-breed children.” He leaned against the banister to give her a soulful look. She found herself suddenly aware of his eyes, dark and full of sincere concern. ”We have always seen humans as our reflection, good and bad. Man was how G.o.ds made the elves before the Skin Clan remade them.”
Pony spoke with the same bitterness as Tooloo used while explaining the origin of the domana domana as the ruling caste. as the ruling caste.
”If elves hate the Skin Clan so much, why hasn't spell-working been banned?”
”It was for a while. Blight struck our main grain crop, though, and a great famine followed, so one of our most holy ones, Tempered Steel, pet.i.tioned for reform. Evil lies in the heart of elves, not in magic. Evil lies in the heart of elves, not in magic.”
This was one bit of elfin history she knew-learned from puppet shows during the Harvest Faire-only she had never understood the full context. Much was made that Tempered Steel was a sekasha sekasha monk, which made sense now, since a monk, which made sense now, since a domana domana's motives for bringing back spell-working would have been questionable. The creation of keva beans was linked to Tempered Steel's reform, saving the elves from starvation.
”Two of the explorers survived?” She steered the conversation back to the oni.
”Two escaped, reached the gate and returned to Elfhome. Once their tale was told, sekasha sekasha were sent to destroy the gate from Onihida to Earth, and then systematically all gates from Earth to Elfhome were destroyed.” were sent to destroy the gate from Onihida to Earth, and then systematically all gates from Earth to Elfhome were destroyed.”
”That seems rather drastic.”
Pony clicked his tongue. ”They say an elfin carpenter is more thorough than a human one, for he has forever to hammer down nails.”
”Did they warn travelers first?”
”We had no way of contacting all the far-flung traders.”
Thus her elfin ancestor and Tooloo were trapped on Earth. While long lived, without a source of magic, even elves age and die.