by Megg Jensen
Without a second thought I pushed a nearby woman off of her chair. The body slid to the floor and I slammed the chair against the wall. After heaving myself up on the chair, I pushed the window open and scurried over the ledge. I peered into the bright, cloudless sky.
Before jumping out the window, I took one last glance in the room and saw a token, just like the one I’d found in Ivy’s place, sitting on the table where my neck had lain. Shaking my head in disbelief, I jumped out the window, quickly followed by my cloaked savior.
“Put this on.” The figure handed me a similar cloak. “It will keep you hidden until we get back to my house.”
I flung the cloak around my shoulders, buried my head in the hood and followed him into the surrounding forest.
4
“Reychel, it worked! I can’t believe it worked,” Ivy squealed as I slipped inside a house just behind the cloaked figure. She grabbed me, pulling me into a tight hug.
“Ivy?” I stuttered. I looked around at the small cabin, so unfamiliar, but so warm. “What happened? What’s going on?”
Ivy laughed. “You’re safe. We’re safe and we’re going to be free! Tania rescued us.”
The cloaked figure spun around, flinging the cloak off in a whirl. Her blonde curls danced through the air, revealing a striking woman flashing the most infectious smile.
“I didn’t think I could pull that one off, but I did it.” Tania laughed, tossing the cloak on a hook behind the door. “I’ve never gone into a room with so many people before. Well, not hidden like that, at least.”
I stared at my rescuer, my mouth hanging slack. “You’re...”
“A woman?” Tania asked, her voice lost the deep tone and sparkled like falling stars. “The voice put you off a bit, didn’t it?”
“Yeah,” I said. “How?”
“It’s part of the spell. Easy stuff.” Tania put her arm around Ivy. “Your friend here thought I was a man too. It’s good for the disguise. Keeps people guessing.”
“You saved me. I’m forever in your debt.” I slid to the floor at Tania’s feet. My second time in one day of groveling at someone’s feet. I reminded myself not to make it a habit.
“You’re in no one’s debt. Not ever again,” Tania said, pulling me to my feet. “If I have anything to say about it, you’ll be a free woman for the rest of your life. It won’t be easy. You have no pedigree to present, no family to live with, but there are many of us out there and any of us will help you if you just ask.”
I sat down on the nearest chair. My chest stretched tight with each breath. I supposed my heart had been pounding the whole time, I just noticed now that things were calming down.
“Isn’t it crazy?” Ivy yelled, jumping up and down around the modest room, barely missing hitting her head on a ceiling beam. My mouth twitched and I couldn’t help but smile. I’d never seen Ivy so excited about anything.
“Ivy wouldn’t leave without you,” Tania handed me a cup of tea. “We approached her three days ago in the market, offering to free her. She immediately accepted, but swore she couldn’t leave without her best friend.”
“Didn’t I tell you that I would never leave without you?” Ivy grinned at me.
“Unfortunately we can only free one person at a time,” said Tania. “There are only two cloaks here in Wendak. The rest are scattered throughout the realm. We can’t spare any more than that for each major town. We had to wait a few hours until after your birthday party.” She rolled her eyes at the word party. “It’s risky taking more than one slave at a time. Raises suspicions.”
“I didn’t want you to feel the same pain I did,” Ivy said. “It was the worst thing I’ve ever been through. I couldn’t imagine putting you through it too, when I knew I could stop it.”
Ivy bumped me with her hip, nudging me to the side to make room on the chair. Flinging her arms around me, she smothered me in another tight hug. It was surreal.
“Who’s this we?” I asked Tania, trying to process all of the new information. “Where are the others?”
“Well, in Wendak it’s just my husband Jon and I. There’s at least one couple in every town. We’re the only free gifted here.”
“Gifted?” My tea slipped down the wrong pipe. I coughed, bent over and Ivy clapped my back.
“It’s true, Reychel. Tania and Jon are gifted,” Ivy said.
“And free?” I asked. “I didn’t think there were any free gifted people. You’re supposed to be slaves.”
“Some were slaves and some were born that way. Born gifted out of captivity. Some from gifted parents and others, well, others are born to parents who don’t have the spark,” Tania explained.
“How is that possible? I thought only the gifted could give birth to gifted children,” I said. “At least that’s what we’ve always been taught.”
“It’s not true, sweetie.” Tania stroked my bald head. “All it takes is two parents and little blessing from Eloh.”
I took another sip of her tea, not because I was thirsty, though I was, but because I needed a moment to think. Ivy joined Tania at the sink, washing dishes. Menial work, but voluntary; so different than the life we lived at Kandek’s castle.
The cottage was nothing like I had ever seen, but it was everything I had imagined in my stories. Unlike Kandek’s castle, Tania’s wooden cottage was one level with walls covered by a tough mixture of clay and water. The dirt floor was punctuated by flagstones. A small sleeping loft tucked in to one corner of the ceiling. This house was held together by love, not by slavery.
Tania turned to us with a grim look.
“The hard part of this is that we have to say goodbye so quickly.” Tania wiped her damp hands on her apron. Ivy dried the last bowl and nested it with the other bowls on the shelf.
I looked to Ivy and she returned my glance with a tiny smile and a shrug.
“You have to leave. Everyone here knows that Jon and I have no children. If we suddenly have two fifteen-year-olds living with us there will be too many questions. Everyone will figure it out quickly and we can’t afford to be discovered. Ivy has been hiding in our sleeping loft today, but many people drop by unannounced. It’s too risky.”
“When do we have to go?” I stood up and washed my mug in the sink.
“Tomorrow. In fact you must be gone before first light so I suggest you both go to bed early tonight. I know you have a lot to talk about, but you need as much sleep as possible. You’ve got a long journey ahead of you.”
“But everyone will know. We’re both bald,” I smiled giving Ivy a little rub on her head. Fine golden stubble sprouted from her scalp, tickling my fingers.
Tania laughed. “I have plenty of wigs in storage.” She pointed to a rug on the floor. I looked at the rug, wondering how it would become a wig.
“Trapdoor.” Tania smiled. “I’ll get an early dinner for the two of you and then you really should go to the loft and sleep.”
“But I have so many questions,” I said.
“I know you do,” she said placing a small kiss on my forehead. “I can’t explain everything to you, but after you arrive in Keree my friend Johna will tell you more. She’ll give you specific directions on where to settle and start your new life.”
Ivy grasped my hand and tugged.
“Let’s go up.” She pointed to the ladder. “There’s something I want to show you.”
I smiled at Tania as I turned and followed Ivy up the ladder to the loft.
“I just can’t believe all this,” I said.
“Wait until you see this,” Ivy crawled across the bed to the window. She peeked behind a curtain and then pulled back out, a pout on her face. “It’s started raining.”
“That’s okay,” I said. “We’re inside.”
“No, I just wanted to show you the sun. Since you hardly ever get to see it, you know.”
I hugged Ivy and then pulled the curtain wide, taking in the scene before me. The rain fell lightly against the window pane, picking up speed with every d
rop. Thunder rolled in the distance as the sky grew grayer.
“It’s lovely,” I sighed with a smile. “I’ve never seen a rainstorm before. When I was allowed outside or at a window it was always sunny with big, puffy clouds. I’ve heard the storms but never seen them. It’s almost a bit overwhelming.”
As I turned to look out the window again, a flash of light snapped through the hazy sky. I screamed and jumped back from the window.
“What was that?”
“Lightning,” Ivy laughed. “I’ve told you about it before.”
I tried to compose myself, but a nervous giggle slipped through. “I guess I never expected it would be so,” I paused, “bright. It’s amazing the way it appeared out of nowhere. No warning, nothing. This is so much better than a boring, sunny day.”
I glanced back at the blonde fuzz on Ivy’s head.
“Does it itch?” I asked.
“Yeah,” Ivy said, rubbing her head, “a bit. It’s just weird having it there at all. Honestly I had to resist the urge to shave it this morning. It’s a hard habit to break.”
“I can’t wait,” I said. “I’ve always wondered what it would be like to have long luxurious hair. Like those women who visit for the branding ceremonies. Their hair is so beautiful.”
“They put bird nests in their hair,” Ivy giggled.
We collapsed on the bed in a fit of laughter. Just a few hours earlier I’d been scared out of my mind and now I was free. Away from the drudgery, away from the confinement, away from Kandek. It was almost too much to handle. But rest was soon to come and then the beginning of a new adventure with my best friend.
We huddled together on the bed, not even noticing that Tania had left the cottage until she flung the door open and shook out her wet cloak. She was followed by a tall man I assumed to be her husband, Jon.
“Girls,” Tania yelled as she climbed up the ladder, “you need to go. Now. The guards have been dispatched.”
She turned and stared at me with a frown.
“They are looking for you. Why? They’ve never dispatched this many guards for a missing slave.”
“I don’t know,” I stammered as Ivy and I climbed down the ladder behind Tania. “I’m so sorry.”
“We can’t risk being discovered. We’d all be tortured and forced to reveal our secrets and then probably put to death,” she said handing each of us a pack. “Let’s see, there’s food in each pack, along with a change of clothes. Thank Eloh I packed them earlier today. Here are a couple of wigs.” Tania tossed us each a wig. “Put them on and get going.”
We jumped to action, equipping our packs and fumbling with the wigs.
“Here’s a cloak for each of you. Make sure you keep the hood up in this wind or your wig might fall off.”
“Tania, I’m sorry if I’ve caused you any trouble,” I said.
“Oh honey, our lives revolve around danger. I just never expected one master to care so much about one slave. You must be something special.”
“She is,” Ivy said. “I told you I wouldn’t leave without her. You have no idea how special she is.”
We finished getting on our gear while Jon gave us directions. Then we gave Tania one final hug and raced out the door.
5
“Jon said to head to the east and to stay under the canopy of trees, so let’s walk near this path.” I pointed to a pebble-strewn path off to the left, hoping that was east. It was raining and the sky was covered in a dark haze. Without the sun to guide us, I couldn’t be sure. This was the way Jon had pointed when he told us where to go. I only hoped I had it right.
I pulled the hood up over my head, pushing my wig off kilter. Stray hairs poked my eyes and tangled with my eyelashes. Puckering my lips, I blew the bangs to the side. Success! I could see again.
“How does it look?” I asked.
Ivy glanced sideways at me as she stepped over a fallen branch. Her hand flew to her mouth, covering it seconds after a giggle escaped.
“That bad?”
Ivy grabbed the sides of my wig under my hood, yanking to the left.
“There,” she said, cocking her head and beaming at me. “Much better. Your bangs are straight now.”
We continued on, keeping the path in sight, but stayed far enough into the woods to be hidden from the casual passerby. The canopy blocked much of the falling rain, but drops still broke through, leaving the leafy ground slippery. The musty air was so different from the stale air I grew up with in Kandek’s castle, but it wasn’t unpleasant. It had its own texture, its own definition that to me equaled freedom.
“At least we have a head start,” Ivy said. “Tania and Jon were talking while we were getting ready and they said the guards were searching the town first. It’s a good thing we were already on the outskirts of the forest with Tania or we may not have gotten out.”
“How did that cloak work?” I asked, thinking back to today’s events. “I don’t understand how she could walk into the castle undetected and free me.”
“It was covered in some kind of magic. No one was supposed to be able to see her. It’s a good thing it worked or the two of you would have been in big trouble.” Ivy pushed aside a log with her foot.
“But I could see her just fine.”
“I know. Weird, isn’t it? There’s some sort of special magic she worked on it before leaving to get you. I was too nervous to pay attention, but the incantation had something in there about how only friends could see through the disguise.”
A free gifted couple with the power to enchant a cloak. It seemed unbelievable, but I’d seen gifted slaves use their powers and I knew it was real. Ranee and her invisible whips that left all too real welts. Kandek’s healer had once repaired a gash to his face within a day, not even leaving a scar. I had taken them for granted as tools of the Malborn, never as a force fighting for freedom, no matter what the old prophecies said.
“Tania was a slave once,” Ivy said. “Someone rescued her long ago just like she rescued us. She has the gift of disguise, which is why she was able to manipulate you into thinking she was a man. Jon has some affinity with nature, that I do know. It’s how they make their living. They sell vegetables at market.”
“They must be so wealthy with a gift like that.”
“I thought the same thing, but Tania explained to me how they live modestly and don’t produce too much. They don’t want to be caught. She told me that they just want to live like normal people. Blend in.”
“Hard to imagine after a lifetime of slavery, isn’t it?” I asked. “Did their masters know about their gifts?”
“No. I don’t even think Tania and Jon knew until they were rescued. That’s when they were told.”
“They were rescued and then found out about their gifts?”
“According to Tania, no one knows what their gift is until they’ve discovered it for themselves. Other gifted can see the spark, but not the specific gift. That’s all up to the individual.”
Ivy paused after jumping over a fallen tree. She turned to look at me.
“Tania saw the spark in me once in the market. It’s why she chose to rescue me. And she looked nothing then like what she actually looks. I think she was probably afraid that if I didn’t want to be rescued I might turn her in. Disguise is a great gift to have.”
“What’s your gift?” I asked. Part of me thought I should already know having spent years with Ivy, but I didn’t have a clue.
“I’m a soother. I can help anyone who is stressed or worried to feel better. I’ve known it for years. I just never knew it was a magical gift or that I could manipulate it.” Ivy smiled and I knew it was true. She had calmed me down more than once, especially at night when everything, not just light, seemed darkest.
“Thanks for begging them to rescue me,” I said. “Without your friendship I’d still be stuck there with a fresh fox brand on my neck.”
Ivy rubbed her neck. Still slightly swollen, her month-old brand was a painful reminder of what she had done for
me.
“That’s true. Had Tania not gone in to get you, no one would know how powerful you are.” Ivy said.
“Huh?”
“Your spark. It shines so brightly that anyone who can see it is blinded,” Ivy said, putting her hand on my arm. “You have gifts far beyond me.”
I stopped walking and stared at Ivy. Gifts? I had no idea what she was talking about.
“Me?” I laughed. “There’s nothing special about me, much less having a gift.”
“How did Tania act the first time she saw you?” Ivy asked.
“I was in the dungeon and she was suddenly outside my cell door. I didn’t hear anyone approach. Somehow she got the guard to sleep and then she whispered to me through the door. She told me to run when I had the chance.”
I shuddered, remembering those few miserable hours.
“Is that all?” Ivy prompted. “Think hard. How did she react when she saw you?”
I thought for a moment, remembering how Tania had frozen in place before giving the orders. She had stopped and stared at me, as if she had been startled by what she saw.
“She did seem a bit taken aback,” I said. “I just assumed it was the situation, not me.”
“It definitely was you,” Ivy said. “Now that I know how to see the spark, I can’t believe all of those years we were together and I never noticed it before. I guess it’s all about looking in the right way.”
“Can you show me?” I asked. “If I’m special too, I ought to know how to recognize others like us.”
Ivy pulled me down on to a huge tree trunk. The rain had let up a while ago and while the trunk was damp, it had absorbed most of the fallen water. The green moss tickled my fingers as I settled myself.
“Stare into my eyes,” Ivy said cupping my chin in her hand.
I squinted, looking at her eyes, not seeing anything different than the blue that was always there.
“You see the pupil? The black part in the middle?” Ivy asked.