Daughter of the War

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Daughter of the War Page 6

by Angela Roquet


  Nyna’s eyes met Rea’s from across the basin, and she smiled briefly before Rashal stepped before her with a bowl of sacred ash. The sister dipped her thumb into the mixture and then smeared it across Nyna’s brow, cheek, and chin in an arc that represented the crescent Moon, a symbol of new growth.

  Rashal quickly moved on to the next daughter. There were thirty-three in all who would be going to the maternity pool tonight. Thirty-three new daughters who would be born in the flatlands the following spring.

  Rea wondered what Nyna’s daughter would look like and what she would name her. Would she sleep in the bed they’d shared as girls? Work in the same gardens?

  The musing ended as Rashal finished and led the girls away toward the stairs they’d ascended only moments before. The rest of their ceremony would continue in a cave deep within the mountains. Nyna cast one farewell glance over her shoulder at Rea before she disappeared behind the procession of new mothers.

  “Sister Padal will now anoint the new Sisters of the Quill,” Lady Cora said, drawing Rea’s attention back to the dais.

  The hallowed ash Sister Padal painted on three of the remaining daughters’ faces was similar to that of the mothers’, but with the addition of a line down the bridge of the nose to expand the crescent into a half Moon. The half-Moon was a symbol of hard work and progress, such as they soon hoped to inspire in the new daughters who came to the temple.

  Padal led the three new Sisters of the Quill from the sky basin. Only two remained—Rea and another studious daughter by the name of Gildra. They were the best of their order. While Gildra received the sort of praise Rea coveted, Rea was confident that she was more knowledgeable in the ways of the Moon’s Chosen, though she would never make such a boastful remark. She was content to share the Moon’s blessed Calling to the highest sisterhood.

  “Sister Tawndra will now anoint our newest Sister of the Moon,” Lady Cora said.

  Rea blinked stiffly, wondering if she had misheard the high priestess. But then Tawndra walked right past her to stand before Gildra. She swept her ashy thumb in a full circle around the daughter’s face. When she finished, Tawndra directed Gildra toward the stairs. Rea gaped after them as an unsettling knot twisted in her gut.

  Had she become invisible? Did the Sisters of the Moon each have their own attendant to take them to the high priestess’s private prayer room? Or was this a final test?

  She turned back to Lady Cora and felt the knot in her stomach tighten at the woman’s loathing expression.

  “Sister Armal will now anoint the newest Sister of the Hearth,” Lady Cora said. “For the generous Mother makes room for all at her bosom.”

  Rea’s breath labored until her mouth went dry and her head throbbed. The heavy dinner she’d eaten threatened to make a reappearance as Armal approached with a small cup of ash. She did not look pleased about the outcome of Rea’s Calling, nor did she look surprised.

  Armal had been telling Rea for months that this was her fate, trying to warm her to the idea. Rea had only thought it wishful thinking, that the older sister did not want to miss her company.

  As Armal pressed her thumb to Rea’s forehead in a single dot, a symbol of the dark Moon, representing the shadows the Sisters of the Hearth moved within, Rea knew Armal’s words were more than cautionary to keep her from getting her hopes up.

  She had known.

  Which meant, so had Magora.

  The ceremony now complete, the remaining sisters in the sky basin began moving toward the stairs. Lady Cora stepped down from the dais, ready to depart as well, but Rea was not.

  “Why?” she shouted, her voice echoing across the sky basin. “What defect did the Moon see in me?”

  Several of the sisters who waited near the stairs gasped, and soon, a furious murmur bubbled up from the mouth that spiraled down into the temple.

  Magora shuffled across the basin and reached for her arm, but Rea flinched away from her, her gaze still fixed on the high priestess.

  “This is the Calling the Mother has decided for you. Make peace with it.” Lady Cora lifted her chin, daring Rea to reject the Calling. But she had said too much already, and despite her displeasure with Magora, her warning about testing fate still made her back crawl with the memory of Tawndra’s whip.

  Lady Cora’s robes twined about her ankles as she turned away and headed for the stairs, ushering the others to continue on. Sister Rashal and the new mothers awaited her blessing at the maternity pool, and she would not allow a fledgling Sister of the Hearth to delay her.

  For a moment, Rea tried to be thankful that she had not been led away by Lady Tawndra. But she would have gladly taken a hundred lashings if it meant being named a Sister of the Moon. It couldn’t have been any more painful than the way her heart was now shattering.

  “Come, girl,” Magora said, taking Rea’s arm. “The night is young, but I am not. We still have much work to do.”

  Chapter Seven

  “YOU’LL DO WELL NOT to anger the high priestess,” Magora said as she and Armal led Rea down the long tunnel to the bathing cavern.

  Several of the sisters who’d witnessed the outburst had lingered behind in the main hall to offer disapproving glares as Rea made the transition to the dormitory of her new sisterhood. Magora had not spoken until they were out of earshot, but Armal waited until they’d reached the bathing cavern before making herself heard.

  “Defects?” she snapped at Rea. “Is that what you see in us?”

  “Quiet now,” Magora grumbled. “Let her rest with her grief. She’ll think on her words later and make amends for them.”

  “Will I?” Rea asked. Anger boiled within her chest and spread through her limbs, making her skin flush. “Have you seen it, wise sister? Is this part of the Moon’s great plans for me?”

  The sting of Armal’s hand across Rea’s cheek sent her back a step. The sharp smack echoed through the bathing cavern, and it tore a sound from Rea’s lips, an utterance more pitiful than any Tawndra’s whip had produced.

  “You’re a hateful girl,” Armal hissed. “You don’t deserve the Moon’s blessing.”

  “Enough,” Magora barked, grasping them both by the arm.

  The fire drained from Rea, seeping out through tears that flooded her eyes. She wiped them away with the palm of one hand and cupped her sore cheek.

  “Forgive me,” she rasped in between sob-choked breaths. “I just...I just wanted to follow my mother, to know her the only way I can.”

  “And you will,” Magora said, giving her arm a small shake. Rea was too disheartened to wonder at the meaning of the sister’s cryptic words. She had been so very wrong before.

  “I’m sorry,” Rea said, disregarding Magora’s comment.

  Armal sighed, and the scowl that pinched her face softened. “I know you are, sunshine.”

  “Come.” Magora tugged Rea around the steaming pool and toward the crystal passage that led to the bluff. “A little busywork will ease your distress, and these bedsheets aren’t going to fold themselves.”

  THE FARTHEST EDGE OF the drying cliff curled around to the northern side of the mountain. The mighty peaks of the West Ridge continued onward up the coast of LouMorah, but Rea had a clear view of the sea to the west, and the desert in the east.

  The two looked eerily similar under the light of the full Moon, their flat expanses stretching to meet mirrored horizons. But every now and then, the wind would kiss the sea, and waves would crest and roll inland. Rea could hear them crashing the rocks, though the mountains hid the shore from view.

  The east half of the mountain was aglow tonight, brighter than the soft blue of the Moon. Small bonfires dotted the flatlands, and the torches that bordered the stone steps to the temple had been lit for those making their way home.

  Rea knew Nyna’s mother would be waiting halfway up the path with the others who had sent their children off nine years before. They would have wreaths of flowers to crown the new mothers with, and baskets full of berries and goat cheese. />
  Those seeded would tell the outcome of the Calling, delivering the news to the proud few mothers whose daughters were now sisters of the temple. Then together, they would follow the path back to the flatlands to have a celebration feast with all the mothers of the Moon’s Chosen.

  Rea tried to be happy for Nyna instead of feeling sorry for herself. She thought of Armal and Magora, whom she would now spend all her days with. It was not such a terrible fate. She had to admit, sharing a damp room with Armal was far more appealing than being neighbors with Tawndra and Lady Cora.

  Still, her heart longed to roam where Lyra had lived, where she’d prayed and slept. Rea wanted to understand why her mother had been seeded. Had she asked the Moon for the blessing without Lady Oleena’s consent? Had she wanted Rea so desperately that she’d risked the high priestess’s wrath and broke tradition? And why would the Moon grant such a bold request if the Mother did not have some special plan for Lyra’s daughter?

  Rea had held onto that hope for so long. Now, it was fading away, leaving a hollow ache in her chest. Her cheeks felt gritty with salt from her dried tears. The wind beat at her face, pulling more moisture from her eyes as she folded sheets on the moonlit bluff. Winter would be even worse, Rea realized. Now that she shared in Magora’s laundry duties, Rea wondered how long it would be before she looked as weathered as the old sister.

  A cheer from below confirmed that the new mothers had made it to the halfway point in the temple path. It would be a while longer before they reached the flatlands. Rea imagined she would still be out on the cliff, folding sheets in the stiff wind, the Moon mocking her as it disappeared in the sky.

  Head stuffed full o’ wool, indeed, Rea thought bitterly.

  She gathered up her full basket and hefted it around the corner toward the opening to the cavern. The lines on the west side of the cliff were now empty. They were mostly used by the daughters during the day when the sun was out, to quicken the drying process.

  The churning of the waterfall drowned out the singing that echoed up from the mothers. But Rea heard neither.

  Just inside the crystal passage stood a great white beast. Its long head was angled back, flat teeth nipping at a vine that grew over the rocky mouth of the opening.

  Rea dropped her basket and stumbled back a step, her breath shuddering as the thing looked at her. It snorted softly as it chewed, regarding her with black eyes that were almost as wide as one of the closed fists Rea clutched to her chest.

  “Great Mother,” she said, her voice hardly more than an exhaled breath.

  “No time for dallying, girl.” Magora appeared in the passage, jerking Rea’s attention from the beast.

  “Sister!” Rea waved her hands, trying to cut a shadow against the moonlight to warn Magora, though the creature did not move to harm her. The old sister stood but a few paces away, her wisps of hair dancing in the breeze—or perhaps due to the beast’s breath. The creature’s bobbing chin hovered over Magora’s head and gave her a disinterested sniff.

  “Make haste.” Magora clapped her hands.

  “But sister, there’s a...” Rea swallowed, unsure what to call it. “An overgrown goat?”

  “Nonsense. They never stray this far up the mountain.” Magora cackled as Armal joined her in the passage.

  “I’m done with the kitchen rags,” the younger sister said, drying her hands on her apron. She looked right past where the beast stood, not a hint of recognition or alarm. “Do you need help, Rea?”

  Rea blinked at the women and then the beast again. First the staff, and now this. Perhaps her mind really had come undone. The fact that she’d carried the delusion of her fate for so long did not bode well for her sanity either.

  “I’ll take this for you,” Armal said, fetching the basket from where it sat at Rea’s feet. When she turned to carry it through the passage, she nodded at Magora, completely oblivious of the creature that now lapped water from the pool behind the fall.

  Rea couldn’t even summon her voice to thank the sister. She stood fixed to the same spot on the ledge, blinking as if the action might clear her vision of the thing that could not be there.

  “Overgrown goat.” Magora snorted, and a grin broke across her wrinkled face. “Lyra would have loved that. Wait here, girl.” She hobbled off through the crystal passage.

  Rea gaped after her, not wanting to be left alone with the beast, but also not wanting to invite more ridicule. If she were losing her mind, there was no need to help it along. But if she saw true, and was the only one doing so, then the creature must have found her with some purpose.

  Rea pressed her back against the wall of the mountain and slowly moved toward the mouth of the passage, taking in the full size of the beast. Its color changed as the hide progressed toward the creature’s hindquarters, a soft gray dappling the white. A bulge of leather trimmed with gray fur was strapped to its back, and wide leather bags hung on either side of its flank, with more strips of leather dangling near its belly and long neck.

  The beast watched Rea as she snuck closer, her startled face reflected in one of its glossy, black eyes. It impatiently stamped one of its hooves on the ledge and shook its head, tossing about the coarse, black hair that sprouted in a line down the back of its neck.

  Rea froze in fear, worrying she’d spooked the creature, but then she caught a glimpse of parchment tucked under the bulky leather. She crept closer, holding her breath until she could snatch the fold of paper, quickly retreating to flatten herself against the face of the mountain after she’d done so.

  It was a letter, and it appeared to be addressed to her.

  .

  Dearest Daughter of Lyra and Solurn,

  I trust the Moon’s Chosen have raised you well. I promised your mother that I would send for you after your nine years at the sister’s temple, on the night of your Calling. The Moon and Sun have conspired to save the sacred realms of LouMorah. They Call upon you now, dear Rea.

  This mare is my gift to you. Her name is Pooka, and she is under a cloaking enchantment that will prevent all but you from detecting her until sunrise. There is food and a waterskin in the saddle bags on her back.

  I know you must have many questions. If you wish to have them answered, I am but a two days’ journey into the desert. Pooka knows the way.

  Your Humble Servant,

  Hoshnador of Solanya

  .

  Rea read the letter again and again. This Hoshnador had known her name and her mother’s, too. If they were keeping a promise to Lyra, that stood to reason that they liked her mother—a rare and auspicious find. But the mention of Solurn troubled Rea. This was the second time she’d heard that name.

  The sisters’ brief lessons about their former trade partners had included a footnote about the elves’ breeding habits, how their offspring required two parents—one to produce seed, and another to carry it. Much like the birds and beasts of the flatlands.

  Hoshnador must be mistaken.

  As reviled as Lyra had been by so many of their people, enough of the mothers had witnessed Rea’s birth that it could not be denied. And Rea had felt the Moon move her as it had the other daughters during the Calling. She was one of them. No letter or singing staff could steal that truth from her.

  And yet, Rea was eager to know what this stranger knew of her mother. So eager that she abandoned her fear of the mare and found herself inspecting the leather footholds that hung below the beast’s belly and searching the saddlebags for the food and water the letter had mentioned.

  Rea thought of the dangers that might await in the desert, of the war that the sisters were not entirely certain had ended. The temple was safe, so long as she avoided Tawndra’s whip. She would never go without food or shelter. And she had Magora and Armal.

  Still, getting answers from someone unafraid to speak of her mother was a tempting lure, and it wasn’t as though she would learn anything new if she remained at the temple. Besides, if the high priestess were as powerless as Rea suspected, perhaps
the Moon did have a grander plan for Rea.

  She fisted the hem of her robe, pulling it up and out of the way as she stepped into one of the footholds and then threw her opposite leg over the saddle. The momentum nearly propelled her off the mare’s opposite side and into the fall, but Rea clung tightly to the creature’s mane, drawing a snort from its large nostrils.

  “I hope you’ve finished clearing the laundry from the north tip of the bluff,” Magora said as she reappeared in the mouth of the crystal passage. To Rea’s surprise, the old sister grasped the gnarled staff from the hidden room with both hands, leaning heavily on it as she caught her breath. It did not sing this time, but the dark handprint proved it was one and the same.

  “Sister, I...” Rea didn’t know what to say—about the staff or her thoughts about leaving the temple.

  Parting with Nyna had been difficult, but telling Magora and Armal goodbye would be even harder. Especially if they threatened to stop her or alert the other sisters.

  There was also the question of how Rea would find her way out of the mountains. The desert trail was likely overgrown and enchanted to discourage intruders from the lowlands. But the mare had somehow made it all the way to the temple, and Hoshnador’s letter had stated that the beast knew the way through the desert.

  “Come, child. There is precious little time until sunrise.” Magora hobbled ahead of the creature and clicked her tongue. The beast moved beneath Rea, following the old sister to the far end of the bluff.

  A jolt of panic shot through Rea as Magora neared the edge, but then she stopped suddenly. The mare stopped, too, pitching Rea forward in the saddle. She sucked in a startled breath and grasped the leather reins at the beast’s neck. For a daunting moment, Rea feared that she wouldn’t make it off the cliff—let alone down the mountainside—without falling to her death.

  Magora said nothing of the commotion. Her milky eyes sought out the Moon, and her lips moved in a hushed chant. The staff wobbled in her old hands, but she found the strength to lift it off the ground, striking the end against the stone ledge with a sharp clack-clack-clack that echoed in the night air.

 

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