by Hilari Bell
The bridge that had already been blown up? He wasn’t saying this right. He was too tired, too confused to find the words. Jase reached up to rub his face, and his grandfather noticed the bandage on his arm. He looked at Jase and then—Jase could see it now—he looked at his grandson with a shaman’s eyes.
Jase couldn’t tell what the old man saw, but his eyes widened. His grandfather opened his mouth and then closed it, staring as if he’d never seen Jase before.
Astonishment gave way to an expression Jase hadn’t seen for a very long time.
“Come in,” he said.
And the door opened.
Epilogue
She hadn’t thought she could feel this way about a human. A human who wasn’t a plaything, or a pet, but someone . . . real. Equal.
Someone she cared about.
Who’d have dreamed that confused boy would take the warrior path?
Oh yes, he’d see her again. And she probably owed Kelsa a visit too.
But that would have to wait, till the task was done.
Raven flew steadily south, with the rising sun behind her, and the medicine pouch flapping around her neck. It made flying harder, wasted energy, but she needed it. Not for the catalyst, but to keep the memory bright. Her kind wasn’t good at remembering.
This would remind her, not only of him, but that humans could work, could heal, and with her guidance mend the damage they’d made. Kelsa and Jase had proved that, and with no enemies to stop them, the humans who would follow could complete that healing in peace.
No other human she guided would have to face the challenges they had. No other human would ever match the two of them.
But Raven had a world to heal. And now, only the doing remained.
***
The End
Author’s Note & Acknowledgments
I find that science fiction and fantasy doesn’t usually require me to write an author’s note—because science-fiction and fantasy authors make stuff up. Most fantasy research consists of reading the ancient tales of whatever mythos you plan on stea—ah, borrowing, and that doesn’t usually require an explanation. And science-fiction research (at least the way I do it) usually consists of tracking down articles in science magazines, which also doesn’t need a lot of acknowledgment.
To write Trickster’s Girland Traitor’s Son,I had to drive from Utah to Alaska—though I probably shouldn’t say “had to” because the trip was a fantastic experience from start to finish. And even in Trickster’s Girl,most of what Kelsa sees and does are things I saw and did (except for the stuff I made up), so there was still no need for an author’s note.
Traitor’s Sonwas another matter, largely because in this case I planned on “borrowing” from people who are still alive, and from a culture that still exists—which is always a tricky proposition if you’re not a member of that culture. Writers often set stories in places that exist today, in the real world. But when a mystery writer sets her story in a small town and then realizes that the twists and turns of her plot require her to make the only son of the local sheriff a drug dealer, and that sheriff blackmails the mayor to keep his son from being prosecuted . . . that’s when the mystery writer makes up a different name for her small town so she doesn’t get sued . . . or even just make life difficult for the mayor and the sheriff’s son.
My original plan was to get to Alaska, figure out which Alaska Native culture (even then I knew there was more than one) would suit my novel best, learn all I could about it, and then put that culture into my novel. But the more I learned about the five distinctly different Alaska Native cultures—all of which have their own language, customs, history, and incredibly ingenious technology—the more I realized that putting both the traitor and his son into an existing culture was not only fraught with pitfalls for an ignorant Caucasian from the Lower Forty-Eight, but that I might also end up inadvertently slandering some innocent lawyer and his kid.
So in the end, I decided to do what science-fiction and fantasy writers do best and made up my own tribe. The Ananut people and all their history, customs, and beliefs are pure fiction, invented by me. And I apologize to the Eyak of the Copper River for plunking my Ananut down in their territory.
The other bit of live research I did for Traitor’s Sonproved conclusively that writing novels is the best job in the universe: I got to go for a test ride in a Tesla Roadster. Zero to sixty in 3.7 seconds. My sincere thanks to Tara Flanagan and Mario Gambacorta of Tesla Motors in Boulder, who gave me all the information I needed and much more—including the weird things authors need to know, such as what would happen to that gorgeous car if you crashed it. As for the Tesla itself, I have only three words. Coolest. Car. Ever. (And zero to sixty in 3.7 seconds.)
Finally, I owe the state of Alaska an apology for . . . shortchanging it. In Trickster’s Girl,my protagonist traveled from Utah to the Alaska/Canada border—and Kelsa is a nature girl who could appreciate and marvel at the gorgeous places she passed through. Jase, the protagonist in Traitor's Son,is nota nature boy. In fact, he’s the kind of kid who can drive the Glenallen Highway, otherwise known as Glacier Alley, and not even see the ethereal ice floes that look like they’re floating on the other side of the valley, because he’s thinking about his car. (It’s an amazingly cool car, but still!)
In a novel, you see the world through the eyes of your protagonist. Jase is who he is, and that means I can’t describe the Glenallen Highway, or the arching waterfalls of Keystone canyon on the way to Valdez, or the enchanted fairy-forest where we camped outside Sitka, or whales half breaching out of seas as clear and clean as glass, or rain-shrouded fjords, or the soft chee-chee-chee-chee-cheesound bald eagles make when they’re talking to each other, or the terns dipping daintily into the turquoise water of the Kenai River, or sunset at 1:25 a.m. in the campground outside Denali, or . . .
Once we knew we were going to Alaska, whenever my mother and I met someone who’d been there, we’d ask them what Alaska was like. They’d open their mouth and then get this funny look on their face and say, “Alaska is fantastic.” And then they’d stop. Now that I’ve been there, I know that the problem isn’t that there’s not more to say, but that if you start trying to tell someone how beautiful, how wild, how open and clean and incredibly varied Alaska is, you end up babbling till your victim’s eyes glaze over. If I had to pick just two words to describe Alaska, the first would be grandeurand the second unearthlyAside from that . . . Alaska is fantastic. And through Jase’s eyes, there’s simply no way for me to do it justice.
How the story begins
An excerpt from Trickster’s Girl
Kelsa moved onward, both her light and her attention fixed on the rough floor. The glitter of crystals around its edge warned her about the first ice patch, but she slipped a little anyway.
“To the right,” Raven murmured. “The floor rises. There’s no ice there.”
They picked their way between the frozen puddles for another dozen yards before a long stretch of floor coated with a thin gleaming skin brought Kelsa to a stop.
“I can’t see any way around it.”
“We haven’t passed the bend yet,” Raven protested. “We can still see light from the entrance.”
Kelsa looked back. The white circle behind them looked plenty far to her.
“This is deep enough.”
Raven stirred restlessly, but made no further protest.
Kelsa pulled the medicine bag out from under her shirt. Warm from the heat of her body, it felt as if it belonged to her—which was probably why Raven had insisted she wear it.
She sat the flashlight carefully on the floor and began untying the cord that closed the bag. “All right. What do I say?”
She only hoped she could say it in English instead of Navajo, though if it had to be Navajo he could probably coach her through it.
“You’ll have to figure that out,” said Raven. “It’s your magic.”
“What? You said all I had to do was drop a pinch of dust
and say the incantation to activate it.”
“That’s exactly what you have to do.” Raven’s tone was utterly reasonable, though his teeth were beginning to chatter.
“But I don’t know any incantations! This is crazy! You—”
“Don’t get upset,” Raven snapped, “or you won’t be able to focus, and this is important! You were reaching out to the tree spirit when we first met. That’s how I knew you could do this. Just reach out to the earth in the same way and tell it, persuade it, to heal!”
He sounded all too serious. Kelsa gazed around in exasperation. Even with her night vision and the flashlight, she couldn’t make out more than a small portion of the floor and a bit of the wall beside her. But she could sense the space around her and the rock enclosing it, old and solid. The bones of the earth itself.
She didn’t need to see. This wasn’t a place of seeing.
Taking care not to spill the pouch, Kelsa sank down to sit on the cave floor. The stone was rough and cold under her butt—not at all comfortable. But that was part of this place too.
She let the cave seep into her senses: silent blackness and the scent of damp stone. It had a different aliveness from that of the trees, from anything in the world above. He’d been right. They hadn’t been deep enough before.
She took some time to assemble all the words, but they felt right. Real.
“Bones of the earth, flowing liquid to the surface, crumbling to form the flesh of the world. You are so strong, nothing but time defeats you. Be strong now. Strong enough to forgive.” ERB-1 loomed in her mind, in her heart. She’d been calling it dust, but what the pouch really held was sand, gritty between her fingers. Her father’s ashes were mixed in with them. “Be strong enough to heal. Be strong!”
She scattered a pinch of sand over the cave floor as she spoke. The moment of stillness that followed was just long enough for her to feel monumentally silly—then all thought was wiped away by a shattering blow that set every bone in her body vibrating like a mallet-struck gong. The vibration went on and on, receding into darkness, pulling her with it.
Kelsa was lying on the tunnel floor when thought returned, lumps of stone pressing into ribs, hip, temple, and one sore knee. Her head ached fiercely.
“Ow! What the hell was that? Did you hit me?”
“No.” Raven sat cross-legged beside her, looking far too comfortable on the hard stone. “You had a good connection to the ley, and some of the power lashed back through you. You were right. We were deep enough.”
The smug smile was back.
“Frack you.” She picked up the light, pulled herself to her feet, and started unsteadily out of the cave. Her headache lessened with each step, which it wouldn’t if he’d hit her hard enough to knock her out. She was done with him, anyway.
Kelsa felt almost normal by the time she climbed back to the surface of the lava field, more shaken and angry than hurt. It took her several moments to notice that no one was on the trail anymore. The tourists were milling around the parking lot, waving their arms as they talked.
“What’s going on?”
“I told you that nexus power frequently has physical manifestations.” Raven was retying the cord around the medicine bag’s neck.
She glared at him, then started back to the parking lot.
“Did you feel it! Biggest I ever—”
“Thought it would knock me right off my feet,” an elderly woman was saying. “Would have, if I hadn’t had my walking stick.”
“I wonder if it did any damage.”
“I wonder how big it was, on the Richter scale. Must have been at least a two.”
Kelsa stared at the chattering crowd. Then she turned and waited for Raven. He was only a moment behind her.
“There was an earthquake? While we were in the cave? Why didn’t I feel it?”
“You more than felt it.” He took her arm and led her over to a picnic table. “Sit down. You’re still pale.”
“Did I . . . Did we . . . You’re kidding!”
“I doubt it did much damage,” Raven said. “Healing magic almost never does.”
“But that’s crazy!”
“You know, one of the main symptoms of crazy is denying or ignoring what your senses perceive. You can hardly deny you perceived that.”
She couldn’t deny it. Any more than she could deny she’d seen him shapeshift. Which meant . . .
“I could heal the tree plague? For real?”
“Not heal it,” Raven admitted. “That will take a lot of people doing the same thing you’re doing all over the planet.”
“Is that what the other shapeshifters are doing?” Kelsa asked curiously. She had a lot of questions about shapeshifters, and he’d evaded most of them.
“No,” Raven told her. “This is our first attempt. In fact, this is the first proof we’ve had that humans can heal the leys at all! But if you can strengthen and open this ley, all along its length, when the plague reaches the forests of the Northwest it will stop. And then, maybe, we can start pushing it back. If you succeed, your scientists will probably claim the bacterium couldn’t survive outside the tropics. But if this ley isn’t healed, strengthened, if the power doesn’t flow along it like it does now in the nexus point you just blew open, then that plague willmove out of the tropics.”
“So.” He held out the medicine pouch, dangling from the cord around his fingers. “For the final time, Kelsa Phillips, will you take up Atahalne’s quest and finish the healing he started?”
She didn’t have enough money to travel to Alaska. She didn’t have time to get there and back before her mother missed her. She was only fifteen . . .
“Yes.” Kelsa took the medicine bag and hung it around her neck once more. It felt right there. “But first, you’re going to answer some questions.”