Part 34 (2/2)
Around him, men looked nervously at the air, gazes darting into the gray and white sky. Otah caught the runner by his sleeve.
'Go,' he said. 'Go, and tell me what's happened.'
Dread widened the boy's eyes, but he took an acknowledging pose before retreating. The Khai Cetani seemed poised to ask something, but only turned away, walking to the roof's edge himself. Otah went to the servant girl. Her face was white with pain.
'What's the matter?' Otah asked her, gently. 'Where does it hurt?'
She couldn't take a formal pose, but her gesture and the shame in her eyes told Otah everything he needed to know. He'd spent several seasons as a midwife's a.s.sistant in the eastern islands. If the girl was lucky, she had been pregnant and was miscarrying. If she hadn't been carrying a child, then something worse was happening. He had already ordered the other servants to carry her down to the physicians when Cehmai appeared, red-faced and wide-eyed. Before he could speak, it fell into place. The girl, the unearthly shriek, the poet.
'Something's gone wrong with the binding,' Otah said. Cehmai took a pose of confirmation.
'Please,' the poet said. 'Come now. Hurry.'
Otah didn't pause to think; he went to the stairs, lifting the hem of his robes, and dropping down three steps at a time. It was four stories from the top of the warehouse to its bottom floor. Otah felt that he could hardly have gone there faster if he'd jumped over the building's side.
The s.p.a.ce was eerie; shadows seemed to hang in the corners of the huge, empty room and the distant sound of voices in pain murmured and shrieked. Great symbols were chalked on the walls, and an ugly, disjointed script in Maati's handwriting spelled out the binding. Otah knew little enough of the old grammars, but he picked out the words for womb, seed, and corruption. Three people stood in tableau at the top of the stair that led down to the tunnels. Maati stood, his hands at his sides, his expression blank. Otah's belly went tight as sickness as he saw that the girl at Maati's feet was Eiah. And the thing that cradled his daughter's head turned to look at him. After a long moment, it drew breath and spoke.
'Otah-kya,' it said. Its voice was low and beautiful, heavy with amus.e.m.e.nt and contempt. The familiarity of it was dizzying.
'Seedless?'
'It isn't,' Maati said. 'It's not him.'
'What's happened?' Otah asked. When Maati didn't answer, Otah shook the man's sleeve. 'Maati. What's going on?'
'He's failed,' the andat said. 'And when a poet fails, he pays a price for it. Only Maati-kvo is clever. He's found a way to make it so that failure can't touch him. He's found a trick.'
'I don't understand,' Otah said.
'My protection,' Maati said, his voice rich with despair. 'It doesn't stop the price being paid. It only can't kill me.'
The andat took a pose that agreed, as a teacher might approve of a clever student. From the stairwell, Otah heard footsteps and the voice of the Khai Cetani. The first of the servant men hurried into the room, robes flapping like a flag in high wind, before he saw them and stopped dead and silent.
'What is it doing?' Otah asked. 'What's it done?'
'You can ask me, Most High,' Sterile said. 'I have a voice.'
Otah looked into the black, inhuman eyes. Eiah whimpered, and the thing stroked her brow gently, comforting and threatening both. Otah felt the urge to pull Eiah away from the thing, as if it were a spider or a snake.
'What have you done to my daughter?' he asked.
'What would you guess, Most High?' Sterile asked. 'I am the reflection of a man whose son is not his son. All his life, Maati-kya has been bent double by the questions of fathers and sons. What do you imagine I would do?'
'Tell me.'
'I've soured her womb,' the andat said. 'Scarred it. And I've done the same to every woman in the cities of the Khaiem. Machi, Chaburi-Tan, Saraykeht. All of them. Young and old, highborn and low. And I've gelded every Galtic man. From Kirinton to Far Galt to right here at your doorstep.'
'Papa-kya,' Eiah said. 'It hurts.'
Otah knelt, drawing his daughter to him. Her mouth was thin with pain. The andat opened its hand, the long fingers gesturing him to take her. The Khai Cetani was at Otah's side now, his breath heavy and his hands trembling. Otah took Eiah in his arms.
'Your children will be theirs,' it said. 'The next generation will have the Khaiem for fathers and feed from Galtic b.r.e.a.s.t.s, or else it will not be. Your history will be written by half-breeds, or it won't be written.'
'Maati,' Otah said, but his old friend only shook his head.
'I can't stop it,' Maati said. 'It's already happened.'
'You should never have been a poet,' Sterile said, standing as it spoke. 'You failed the tests. The strength to stand on your own, and the compa.s.sion to turn away from cruelty. Those are what the Daikvo asked of you.'
'I did my best,' Maati breathed.
'You were told,' it said and turned to Otah. 'You went to him. When you were both boys, you warned him that the school wasn't as it seemed. You told him it was a test. You gave the game away. And because he knew, he pa.s.sed. He would have failed without you, and this could never have happened.'
'I don't believe you,' Otah said.
'It doesn't matter what you think,' it said. 'Only what he knows. Maati-kvo made an instrument of slaughter, and he made it in fear; that makes it a failure of both his lessons. A generation of women will know him as the man who stole motherhood from them. The men of Galt will hate him for unmanning them. You, Maati Vaupathai, will be the one who took their children from them.'
'I did . . .' Maati began, and his voice fell to nothing. He sat down, his legs seeming to collapse beneath him. Otah tried to speak, but his throat was dry. It was Eiah, cradled in his arms, who broke the silence.
'Stop it,' she said. 'Leave him alone. He never did anything mean to you.'
The andat smiled. Its teeth were pale as snow and sharp.
'He did something mean to you, Eiah-kya,' it said. 'You'll grow to know how badly he's hurt you. It may take you years to understand. It may take a lifetime.'
'I don't care!' Eiah yelled. 'You leave Uncle Maati alone !'
And as if the words themselves were power, it vanished. The dark robes fell empty to the stone floor. The only sounds were Eiah's pained breath and the moaning of the city. The Khai Cetani licked his lips and looked uneasily at Otah. Maati stared at the ground between his hands.
'They'll never forgive this,' Cehmai said. 'The Galts will kill us to a man.'
Otah smoothed a hand over his daughter's brow. Confronting the andat seemed to have taken what strength she had. Her face was pale, and he could see the small twitching in her body that spoke of fresh pain. He kissed her gently where her forehead met her hair, and she put her arms around him, whimpering so softly that only he could hear it. There was blood soaking through her robe just below where the cloth widened at her hips.
'No. They won't. Cehmai,' Otah said, his voice seeming to come from far away. He was surprised to hear how calm he sounded. 'Take Maati. Get out of the city. It won't be safe for either of you here.'
'It won't be safe for us anywhere,' Cehmai said. 'We could make for the Westlands when spring comes. Or Eddensea-'
'Go now, and don't tell me where. I don't want the option of finding you. Do you understand?' He looked up at Cehmai's wide, startled eyes. 'I have my daughter here, and that's bad enough. When I see my wife, I don't want you anywhere I can find you.'
Cehmai opened his mouth, as if to speak, and then closed it again and silently took a pose that accepted Otah's command. Maati looked up, his eyes br.i.m.m.i.n.g and red. There was no begging in his expression, no plea. Only remorse and resignation. If he could have moved without disturbing Eiah, Otah would have embraced the man, comforted him as best he could. And still he would have sent Maati away. He could see that his old friend knew that. Maati's thick hands took a formal pose of leave-taking, appropriate to the beginning of a long journey or else a funeral. Otah took one that accepted the apology he had not offered.
'The Galts,' the Khai Cetani said. 'What about the Galts?'
Otah reached his arms under Eiah, one under her shoulder blades, the other at her knees, and lifted her into his lap. Then, straining, he stood. She was heavier than he remembered. It had been years since he had carried her. She had been smaller then, and he had been younger.
'We'll find the trumpeter and call the attack,' Otah said. 'Listen to them. If they're as bad as she is, they'll barely be able to fight. We'll drive them back out of the city if we do it now.'
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