by Barb Hendee
An instant later, the door opened.
Ghassan came through, followed by Brot’an, Chap, Leesil, and Magiere. The last two carried something heavy between them, hidden inside a large canvas cover.
“You are back!” Wayfarer cried, rushing around Osha and straight to Chap.
Wynn’s full attention turned to the bulging canvas Leesil and Magiere set down. She looked up at Leesil, not able to even ask. He nodded once, and she remained frozen in place.
They had the final orb.
A flood of questions filled the cluttered room. Wynn noticed that Ghassan and Leesil answered most, and Magiere was too quiet. Wynn wondered what horrors Magiere had faced to attain this last orb. At least she looked all right, with no serious burns or injuries.
Still, Wynn couldn’t help feeling that this final task had cost Magiere something.
Leesil exclaimed that he was starving, and so Wynn hurried to put a meal together. As soon as she was across the room, crouched down, digging in their stores for bread and cheese, Leesil came in behind her. One look in his face told her that he’d sent her off alone for a reason.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
He glanced toward the corner where Chane lay dormant, and then back to her. He appeared uncomfortable, which wasn’t like him.
“Do you . . . remember . . . how when we first came to stay here, you’d sit with Magiere so the two of you could talk.”
Of course she did, and she nodded.
“Tonight,” he said, “once we’ve eaten and settled, could you . . . could you do it again?”
Wynn hesitated. “What is this about?”
Leesil’s discomfort visibly grew. “Something happened out there, and I’m worried she needs to talk to someone . . . and for once that someone isn’t me.” He paused. “Will you do it?”
“Of course. I’d do anything for Magiere.”
He nodded with a slow exhale and rose up to head back to his wife.
Later that evening, not long past dusk and after another orb had been settled in the bedchamber, everyone was occupied in some fashion. Wynn piled cushions against the front wall and drew Magiere aside to sit next to her.
“I’ve been hoping all evening to hear what happened . . . from you,” Wynn whispered. “Can you tell me?”
Across the room, Chane sat sharpening the shorter of his two blades. Shade lay on the floor beside him.
Magiere watched them both for a moment and then looked to Wynn and nodded.
* * *
The next morning, Magiere took Wayfarer on the short walk to the market. She wore a light cloak with the hood up and forward, and she made certain Wayfarer did the same. As Ghassan had promised, there were no imperial or city guards searching the streets. To Magiere, it seemed that she and Leesil were no longer hunted.
It felt strangely normal to walk in the city and head out only to buy food. After talking late into the night with Wynn, she had begun to feel more like herself or at least less like a traitor to herself. Wynn never saw the world in black and white, right and wrong, but in variations of gray to be constantly reexamined. Magiere had never fully understood that before.
The crowded market lay up ahead.
“What is our next step?” Wayfarer suddenly asked.
Magiere took a deep breath filled with the scents of fresh bread, roasted meats, people in the streets, and other simple things in the air.
“Restock the cheese . . . again,” she answered. “Chap finished it off last night.”
Wayfarer stopped walking. “I meant with the orbs. Now that they have all been recovered . . . now what?”
Magiere stopped as well. This was the last question she’d have expected from Wayfarer.
“We need to find places to hide them,” she answered carefully, “where they will never be found by anyone again, especially the Enemy’s . . . servants.”
“Wynn told me . . .” the girl began, “told the rest of us that the wraith went to great lengths to gain the orb of Spirit. He even abandoned the orb of Earth upon finding it, as he did not want it. Once he had the orb he sought, he used it to alter the body of a young duke.”
One of Magiere’s hands clenched nervously to hear Wayfarer speak of such things.
“So,” the girl continued, “it would be wise to move the orb of Spirit someplace where no undead can enter.”
“Well . . . yes,” Magiere finally agreed.
“No undead can enter the lands of the an’Cróan,” Wayfarer added, looking up into Magiere’s eyes. “The same should follow true for the lands of the Lhoin’na. What if Osha—and I—took the orb of Spirit to them? It would be safe and beyond the reach of any undead.”
Magiere couldn’t help the fear, which always came in anger. “You and Osha, take an orb to—”
“He is more than he appears,” Wayfarer interrupted. “And once the orb is in that land, we would be safe there as well until . . . whatever is next.”
Magiere stared down at her, unable to say anything.
Aside from such a dangerous notion, she knew something had gone wrong between Wayfarer and Osha, and Osha and Wynn, and even that linked to Wayfarer’s sudden eagerness to get involved.
Magiere grabbed Wayfarer’s hand, pulling her along. “We’ll talk about this later.”
* * *
That night, once again Leesil lay on a pile of cushions on the main room’s floor, holding Magiere against his chest. Ghassan and Brot’an had taken the bedchamber to get some rest. Chap lay curled up near one of the bookshelves on another of the large cushions.
Wynn and Chane had taken Shade out to do her nightly “business.” Osha and Wayfarer were engaged in some kind of board game with draughts that Osha had bought at the market.
In a sense, Leesil had Magiere to himself for a short while. Part of him almost couldn’t believe the final orb had been found. The exhausting, bloody, seemingly endless searches were at an end. Tilting his head down, he pressed his face into the top of Magiere’s hair.
“What are you thinking?”
“We may have a hiding place for the orb of Spirit,” she whispered.
He tensed, for that wasn’t the kind of answer he’d wanted. “Where?”
“Somewhere safe, though we need the same for the orb of Air. We shouldn’t hide two in the same spot. I know Chap did that, but only he knows where they are, and we shouldn’t try it again.”
None of this was what Leesil wanted to talk about. “Any ideas?”
“Not yet.” Magiere rolled onto her back, looking up at him. “I’ll think of someplace . . . or Chap will . . . or Wynn.” She touched his cheek. “And once it’s done, we’ll go home. Promise.”
He almost couldn’t believe they were this close to being done. He brushed the side of her face with his fingers as he whispered, “Home . . . finally.”
EPILOGUE
Another large ship docked that night at the teeming port of the empire’s capital. Once the ramp was lowered, only one passenger disembarked. He was tall and well formed but with a face so pale that it glowed briefly within a deep hood as he neared a dock’s lantern.
Not a bit of other flesh was exposed. Beneath his cloak, he wore black gloves, a leather-laced tunic, dark pants, and high riding boots. A wide leather collar of triple small straps was buckled around his throat.
No one here would have recognized the man known as Duke Karl Beáumie, for that was who had once inhabited this flesh.
Sau’ilahk, first and highest of the Reverent, servant of il’Samar during the Great War, walked the pier now trapped within that dead flesh. He gazed upon the imperial city, which had not been here during his living days. It had also been many years since he had returned to this land in his centuries as a wraith. Now he could actually sniff its air.
It smelled as wretched as he felt.
Upon gaining this living flesh, which he had sought for so long, the body had been slaughtered by another undead on that same night. This was not the homecoming he’d long envisioned—immortal perhaps
but still undead. It was not fair, and his god . . . his Beloved . . . had hissed at him in spite for the last time.
Stepping off the pier, Sau’ilahk had one purpose in mind: to find the one who had done this to him.
When he found Chane Andraso, he would make that undead watch as he finally took the life of Wynn Hygeorht. Even then, he would not finish Chane. That lowly vampire would be left to suffer such a loss for a thousand years . . . or until his suffering grew too much, and he ended his own existence.
Sau’ilahk reached the port’s main archway and entered the city. There were few people out in the streets, and not one bowed a head to him, let alone prostrated themselves before him. How he longed to grab one at random and feed, for he had nearly starved for lack of life while on the vessel. Only once did he drain the life of a sailor during a night squall—after which he dumped the body overboard. Any more than that would have raised suspicions among the crew.
He was still learning about his new existence and how this body worked.
Though he had been killed—drained—by a mere vampire, he had awoken as something else. He had not burned in the dawn, as expected, nor did he thrive on blood. He could still feed by touch, though he did so in flesh instead of spirit. He no longer knew what he was.
Now he was loose in a large population that ranged between opulent wealth and desperate poverty. A few night wanderers passed by, from sailors to merchants to commoners. It had long been his intention to purchase fine clothing. What he now wore had been scavenged. Any coin he had procured had been needed for the journey itself, and he had not come all this way out of nostalgia.
It had taken more coin back at the port of Oléron on the southern, coastal end of Witeny to learn where Chane—and Wynn Hygeorht—had gone. They had stolen the orb of Spirit from him. It was hard to know in any given moment whether that mattered more to him than vengeance.
A soft shuffling caught his attention, and he turned.
A ragged beggar crouched at the mouth of a cutway between a tea shack and a lamp shop. At the sight of Sau’ilahk, the bony man raised a chipped pottery cup.
“Coins for mercy?” he asked.
“Of course,” Sau’ilahk answered quietly, stepping closer. “But I do not wish for my purse to be seen.”
He slipped into the cutway while stripping off his right glove. Turning to face the opening to the street, he backed deeper in as he dug into his pouch. He raised one silver coin into plain sight, and at the sight of that, the spindly man followed. And when the street’s lights no longer touched him . . .
Sau’ilahk released the coin.
The beggar’s eyes widened—their eyes always filled with fright over a coin that might be lost in the dark.
Sau’ilahk grabbed the beggar’s throat with his gloved hand, and the man’s mouth gaped for a scream. He clenched that hand, choking off his victim’s air. He rammed his bare hand against the man’s chest, tearing aside the filthy shirt to gaunt flesh beneath, and then . . .
Euphoria made Sau’ilahk’s eyelids flutter as his prey shuddered, unable to even choke.
Sau’ilahk took all of the life he felt in that decrepit form in his hands.
When it was over, melancholy followed as he dropped his prey’s shriveled husk. He wanted more and stooped to pick up the coin he had dropped . . . along with any lesser ones in the beggar’s fallen cup. But he stalled upon exiting the cutway.
There was a chance that even in a near empty night street a lone beggar might have been noticed and then missed. He turned back the other way for the alley at the cutway’s rear.
“Another dead one.”
Sau’ilahk halted upon entering the alley, pivoted to the right, and looked for whoever had spoken. Light from the street at the alley’s far end revealed a small form stepping closer. Something looked wrong with its shape even before it drew near enough to see a small girl in a tattered nightgown.
Closer up, he saw the blood running down her front.
Closer still, he saw the alley’s cobble through her.
The ghost child stopped at arm’s length and looked up at him. Likely her visage was that of the moment after her death. Something had severed her throat.
“You cannot bother me,” he said.
“I would never . . . old one.”
The young voice was too articulate for her age. At the creak of wooden wheels on cobble, Sau’ilahk turned the other way.
Down the alley’s other length came something long and narrow with a bulk atop it. It was rolled on two large side wheels and guided by two tall shuffling figures. When it stopped, he made out two heavily muscled men. Curiosity kept him in place.
The men rocked the rolling litter forward, tilting it until its front end clacked on the cobble. Lashed to the litter was a preserved corpse now held erect by its bonds. His hands, folded and bound over his chest, were bare, exposing bony fingers. He was dressed in a long black robe. Where his face should have been was a mask of aged leather that ended above a bony jaw supporting a withered mouth, likely more withered in death than in his last moment of life.
Stranger still, the corpse’s neck was wrapped in hardened leather, not like Sau’ilahk’s own, but rather to keep the head upright.
There were no eye slits in his mask.
“You may call me Ubâd.”
Sau’ilahk looked down and found the ghost girl standing beside him. It was she who had spoken, and not the corpse.
“A mere necromancer,” Sau’ilahk said with disdain, looking back to the corpse. “And not a good one in having joined his dead.”
“Do not assume too much, Reverent One,” the child ghost taunted, still speaking for the corpse. “I know of you, Sau’ilahk, no matter what flesh you have stolen.”
Discomfort raised tension in the back of Sau’ilahk’s neck. How did this one know who he was in not knowing the body he inhabited? And how had this lowly necromancer come to be waiting for him?
“What do you want . . . corpse?” Sau’ilahk demanded.
“Oh, not yet. We wait for another.”
Sau’ilahk took a step, ready to tear the corpse apart. Soft but steady footsteps made him hesitate and look back the way the ghost child had come.
A lone cloaked and robed figure came down the alley. Something in its sure gait flooded Sau’ilahk with caution. He raised a hand, preparing to summon an elemental servitor to attack it.
A chorus of whispers filled his mind. From out of them came one clear voice in his thoughts.
Lower that hand, old . . . friend.
Sau’ilahk froze in confusion. That voice and the way it reached him . . . It took a moment for his memory to catch up. It had been so very long since he had last heard it . . . with his own ears.
“Khalidah?”
Caution turned to wariness as the leader of the Sâ’yminfiäl—“Eaters of Silence”—stepped closer. That triad of sorcerers had been the lesser and baser of Beloved’s tools so long ago. How could that liar of liars still exist?
And then Sau’ilahk sensed a living body where the shadowed form stood.
“Show yourself!” he snarled, his hand still raised.
“I think not,” Khalidah countered, this time with a real voice. “Like you, flesh suits me once again. Unlike you, I will keep mine whole and vital for now.”
Again, Sau’ilahk was lost. He did not remember the sound of Khalidah’s voice, but he knew the voice he heard was not the right one.
“How long have you—?”
A brief while, Khalidah answered again amid the whispers. Taking flesh was such relief after so long. But I am certain you understand this.
Sau’ilahk hesitated, for there was much here he did not know. “Why are you here? How did you find me?”
“I can find all that is dead,” the ghost girl answered instead. “Even those who serve il’Samar.”
He glanced down at the child and hesitantly looked to the corpse. Il’Samar was yet another name for Beloved. So these two thought to bring back any way
ward ones to their god?
“You will not call me,” he warned Ubâd. “Take that mind-twister in his new flesh, if you wish. Gift him to Beloved, but I—”
Oh, my my, you are still such an ignorant . . . priest!
Sau’ilahk spun back at that voice in his mind.
“We have no desire to serve Beloved,” Khalidah said aloud. “Have you not had enough of that yourself? Have you not had enough of our god’s broken promises? Oh, yes, I know you have.”
“We will take from Beloved what it took from us . . . ,” said the little ghost, though Khalidah finished, “And the way to kill a god is with its own tools.”
Sau’ilahk looked between the two. “You have found . . . all . . . of the anchors of creation?”
“We know how to get them,” Khalidah answered. “But more than that, we know where Beloved’s newest and most cherished is now.”
“The dhampir will serve us just as well as the orbs,” the ghost girl added.
Khalidah turned in the dark, heading back up the alley.
Be prepared, oh, petulant priest. I will find you again when the time comes for Beloved to die.
Sau’ilahk heard a low, breathy laugh up the alley.
Khalidah’s silhouette slipped into the far street, rounded the corner, and vanished. The attendants leveled the litter and rolled it off behind him, and the little ghost girl was suddenly gone.
Sau’ilahk had known disappointment and despair for so long that he was almost afraid to hope . . . to kill his god.
* * *
Khalidah walked the street with a narrow smile, malicious but hopeful. After having gone so long without flesh, since his escape from the sect, each body he had claimed was a marvel as well as a minor struggle.
This newest one was not yet fully his own, and he paused near a tea shop closed for the night.
As a poor place, it had no glass in its windows, which were shuttered tight. It did have a worn brass sign dangling before those shutters. He could not help wanting an amusing peek, so he grabbed the sign’s bottom edge. As he turned its dimpled surface, he caught a better reflection of his current face.
“I see you,” he whispered. “And you see me, do you not . . . domin?”