Epic: Legends of Fantasy

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Epic: Legends of Fantasy Page 43

by John Joseph Adams


  Reiko’s breath hissed from her. He knew her name. She had dropped through a flaming portal into hell and this demon with bulging eyes knew her name.

  She had tried to slay him as she had the others, but could not press her sword forward, as if a wall had protected him.

  And now he asked for blessings.

  “What blessings do you ask of me?” Reiko said. She controlled a shudder. What human had hair as pale as straw?

  Straw lowered his bulging eyes to the demon lying in front of him. “Grant us, O Gracious One, the life of our Duke Lárus.”

  This Lárus had a wound deep in his shoulder. His blood was as red as any human’s, but his face was pale as death.

  She turned from Straw and wiped her sword on the thick moss, cleaning the blood from it. As soon as her attention seemed turned from them, Straw attended Lárus. She kept her awareness on the sounds of his movement as she sought balance in the familiar task of caring for her weapon. By the Gods! Why did he have her sword? It had been in her rooms not ten minutes before playing hide and seek with her children.

  Panic almost took her. What had happened to her Aya and Nawi? She needed information, but displaying ignorance to an enemy was a weakness, which could kill surer than the sharpest blade. She considered.

  Their weapons were bronze, not steel, and none of her opponents had manifested armor. They dressed in leather and felted wool, but no woven goods. So, then. That was their technology.

  Straw had not healed Lárus, so perhaps they could not. He wanted her aid. Her thoughts checked. Could demons be bound by blood debt?

  She turned to Straw.

  “What price do you offer for this life?”

  Straw raised his eyes; they were the color of the sky. “I offer my life unto you, O Great One.”

  She set her lips. What good would vengeance do? Unless... “Do you offer blood or service?”

  He lowered his head again. “I submit to your will.”

  “You will serve me then. Do you agree to be my bound man?”

  “I do.”

  “Good.” She sheathed her sword. “What is your name?”

  “Halldór Arnarsson.”

  “I accept your pledge.” She dropped to her knees and pushed the leather from the wound on Lárus’s shoulder. She pulled upon her reserves and, rising into the healing ritual, touched his mind.

  He was human.

  She pushed the shock aside; she could not spare the attention.

  Halldór gasped as fire glowed around Li Reiko’s hands. He had read of gods healing in the sagas, but bearing witness was beyond his dreams.

  The glow faded. She lifted her hands from Lárus’s shoulder. The wound was gone. A narrow red line and the blood-soaked clothing remained. Lárus opened his eyes as if he had been sleeping.

  But her face was drawn. “I have paid the price for your service, bound man.” She lifted a hand to her temple. “The wound was deeper...” Her eyes rolled back in her head and she slumped to the ground.

  Lárus sat up and grabbed Halldór by the shoulder. “What did you do?”

  Shaking Lárus off, Halldór crouched next to her. She was breathing. “I saved your life.”

  “By binding yourself to a woman? Are you mad?”

  “She healed you. Healed! Look.” Halldór pointed at her hair. “Look at her. This is Li Reiko.”

  “Li Reiko was a Warrior.”

  “You saw her. How long did it take her to kill six men?” He pointed at the carnage behind them. “Name one man who could do that.”

  Would moving her be a sacrilege? He grimaced. He would beg forgiveness if that were the case. “We should move before the sun sets and the trolls come out.”

  Lárus nodded slowly, his eyes still on the bodies around them. “Makes you wonder, doesn’t it?”

  “What?”

  “How many other sagas are true?”

  Halldór frowned. “They’re all true.”

  The smell of mutton invaded her dreamless sleep. Reiko lay under sheepskin, on a bed of straw ticking. The straw poked through the wool fabric, pricking her bare skin. Straw. Her memory tickled her with an image of hair the color of straw. Halldór.

  Long practice kept her breath even. She lay with her eyes closed, listening. A small room. An open fire. Women murmuring. She needed to learn as much as possible, before changing the balance by letting them know she was awake.

  A hand placed a damp rag on her brow. The touch was light, a woman or a child.

  The sheepskin’s weight would telegraph her movement if she tried grabbing the hand. Better to open her eyes and feign weakness than to create an impression of threat. There was time for that later.

  Reiko let her eyes flutter open. A girl bent over her, cast from the same demonic mold as Halldór. Her hair was the color of honey, and her wide blue eyes started from her head. She stilled when Reiko awoke, but did not pull away.

  Reiko forced a smile, and let worry appear on her brow. “Where am I?”

  “In the women’s quarters at the Parliament grounds.”

  Reiko sat up. The sheepskin fell away, letting the cool air caress her body. The girl averted her eyes. Conversation in the room stopped.

  Interesting. They had a nudity taboo. She reached for the sheepskin and pulled it over her torso. “What is your name?”

  “Mara Halldórsdottir.”

  Her bound man had a daughter. And his people had a patronymic system—how far from home was she? “Where are my clothes, Mara?”

  The girl lifted a folded bundle of cloth from a low bench next to the bed. “I washed them for you.”

  “Thank you.” If Mara had washed and dried her clothes, Reiko must have been unconscious for several hours. Lárus’s wound had been deeper than she thought. “Where is my sword?”

  “My father has it.”

  Rage filled Reiko’s veins like the fire that had brought her here. She waited for the heat to dwindle, then began dressing. As Reiko pulled her boots on, she asked, “Where is he?”

  Behind Mara, the other women shifted as if Reiko were crossing a line. Mara ignored them. “He’s with Parliament.”

  “Which is where?” The eyes of the other women felt like heat on her skin. Ah. Parliament contained the line she should not cross, and they clearly would not answer her. Her mind teased her with memories of folk in other lands. She had never paid much heed to these stories, since history had been men’s work. She smiled at Mara. “Thank you for your kindness.”

  As she strode from the room she kept her senses fanned out, waiting for resistance from them, but they hung back as if they were afraid.

  The women’s quarters fronted on a narrow twisting path lined with low turf and stone houses. The end of the street opened on a large raised circle surrounded by stone benches.

  Men sat on the benches, but women stayed below. Lárus spoke in the middle of the circle. By his side, Halldór stood with her sword in his hands. Sheltering in the shadow by a house, Reiko studied them. They towered above her, but their movements were clumsy and oafish like a trained bear. Nawi had better training than any here.

  Her son. Sudden anxiety and rage filled her lungs, but rage invited rash decisions. She forced the anger away.

  With effort, she returned her focus to the men. They had no awareness of their mass, only of their size and an imperfect grasp of that.

  Halldór lifted his head. As if guided by strings his eyes found her in the shadows.

  He dropped to his knees and held out her sword. In mid-sentence, Lárus looked at Halldór, and then turned to Reiko. Surprise crossed his face, but he bowed his head.

  “Li Reiko, you honor us with your presence.”

  Reiko climbed onto the stone circle. As she crossed to retrieve her sword, an ox of a man rose to his feet. “I will not sit here, while a woman is in the Parliament’s circle.”

  Lárus scowled. “Ingolfur, this is no mortal woman.”

  Reiko’s attention sprang forward. What did they think she was, if not m
ortal?

  “You darkened a trollop’s hair with soot.” Ingolfur crossed his arms. “You expect me to believe she’s a god?”

  Her pulse quickened. What were they saying? Lárus flung his cloak back, showing the torn and blood-soaked leather at his shoulder. “We were set upon by bandits. My arm was cut half off and she healed it.” His pale face flushed red. “I tell you this is Li Reiko, returned to the world.”

  She understood the words, but they had no meaning. Each sentence out of their mouths raised a thousand questions in her mind.

  “Ha.” Ingolfur spat on the ground. “Your quest sought a warrior to defeat the Troll King.”

  This she understood. “And if I do, what price do you offer?”

  Lárus opened his mouth but Ingolfur crossed the circle.

  “You pretend to be the Chooser of the Slain?” Ingolfur reached for her, as if she were a doll he could pick up. Before his hand touched her shoulder, she took his wrist, pulling on it as she twisted. She drove her shoulder into his belly and used his mass to flip him as she stood.

  She had thought these were demons, but by their actions they were men, full of swagger and rash judgment. She waited. He would attack her again.

  Ingolfur raged behind her. Reiko focused on his sounds and the small changes in the air. As he reached for her, she twisted away from his hands and with his force, sent him stumbling from the circle. The men broke into laughter.

  She waited again.

  It might take time but Ingolfur would learn his place. A man courted death, touching a woman unasked.

  Halldór stepped in front of Reiko and faced Ingolfur. “Great Ingolfur, surely you can see no mortal woman could face our champion.”

  Reiko cocked her head slightly. Her bound man showed wit by appeasing the oaf’s vanity.

  Lárus pointed to her sword in Halldór’s hands. “Who here still doubts we have completed our quest?” The men shifted on their benches uneasily. “We fulfilled the first part of the prophecy by returning Li Reiko to the world.”

  What prophecy had her name in it? There might be a bargaining chip here.

  “You promised us a mighty warrior, the Chooser of the Slain,” Ingolfur snarled, “not a woman.”

  It was time for action. If they wanted a god, they should have one. “Have no doubt. I can defeat the Troll King.” She let her armor flourish around her. Ingolfur drew back involuntarily. Around the circle, she heard gasps and sharp cries.

  She drew her sword from Halldór’s hands. “Who here will test me?”

  Halldór dropped to his knees in front of her. “The Chooser of the Slain!”

  In the same breath, Lárus knelt and cried, “Li Reiko!”

  Around the circle, men followed suit. On the ground below, women and children knelt in the dirt. They cried her name. In the safety of her helm, Reiko scowled. Playing at godhood was a dangerous lie.

  She lowered her sword. “But there is a price. You must return me to the heavens.”

  Halldór’s eyes grew wider than she thought possible. “How, my lady?”

  She shook her head. “You know the gods grant nothing easily. They say you must return me. You must learn how. Who here accepts that price for your freedom from the trolls?”

  She sheathed her sword and let her armor vanish into thought. Turning on her heel, she strode off the Parliament’s circle.

  Halldór clambered to his feet as Li Reiko left the Parliament circle. His head reeled. She hinted at things beyond his training. Lárus grabbed him by the arm. “What does she mean, return her?”

  Ingolfur tossed his hands. “If that is the price, I will pay it gladly. Ridding the world of the Troll King and her at the same time would be a joy.”

  “Is it possible?”

  Men crowded around Halldór, asking him theological questions of the sagas. The answers eluded him. He had not cast a rune-stone or read an entrail since they started for the elf-house a week ago. “She would not ask if it were impossible.” He swallowed. “I will study the problem with my brothers and return to you.”

  Lárus clapped him on the back. “Good man.” When Lárus turned to the throng surrounding them, Halldór slipped away.

  He found Li Reiko surrounded by children. The women hung back, too shy to come near, but the children crowded close. Halldór could hardly believe she had killed six men as easily as carding wool. For the space of a breath, he watched her play peek-a-boo with a small child, her face open with delight and pain.

  She saw him and shutters closed over her soul. Standing, her eyes impassive, she said, “I want to read the prophecy.”

  He blinked, surprised. Then his heart lifted; maybe she would show him how to pay her price. “It is stored in the church.”

  Reiko brushed the child’s hair from its eyes, then fell into step beside Halldór. He could barely keep a sedate pace to the church.

  Inside, he led her through the nave to the library beside the sanctuary. The other priests, studying, stared at the Chooser of the Slain. Halldór felt as if he were outside himself with the strangeness of this. He was leading Li Reiko, a Warrior out of the oldest sagas, past shelves containing her history.

  Since the gods had arrived from across the sea, his brothers had recorded their history. For six-thousand unbroken years, the records of prophecy and the sagas kept their history whole.

  When they reached the collections desk, the acolyte on duty looked as if he would wet himself. Halldór stood between the boy and the Chooser of the Slain, but the boy still stared with an open mouth.

  “Bring me the Troll King prophecy, and the Sagas of Li Nawi, Volume I. We will be in the side chapel.” Still gaping, the boy nodded and ran down the aisles.

  “We can study in here.” He led the Chooser of the Slain to the side chapel. Halldór was shocked again at how small she was, not much taller than the acolyte. He had thought the gods would be larger than life.

  He had hundreds of questions, but none of the words.

  When the acolyte came back, Halldór sent a silent prayer of thanks. Here was something they could discuss. He took the vellum roll and the massive volume of sagas the acolyte carried and shooed him out of the room.

  Halldór’s palms were damp with sweat as he pulled on wool gloves to protect the manuscripts. He hesitated over another pair of gloves, then set them aside. Her hands could heal; she would not damage the manuscripts.

  Carefully, Halldór unrolled the prophecy scroll on the table. He did not look at the rendering of entrails. He watched her.

  She gave no hint of her thoughts. “I want to hear your explanation of this.”

  A cold current ran up his spine, as if he were eleven again, explaining scripture to an elder. Halldór licked his lips and pointed at the arc of sclera. “This represents the heavens, and the overlap here,” he pointed at the bulge of the lower intestine, “means time of conflict. I interpreted the opening in the bulge to mean specifically the Troll King. This pattern of blood means—”

  She crossed her arms. “You clearly understand your discipline. Tell me the prophecy in plain language.”

  “Oh.” He looked at the drawing of the entrails again. What did she see that he did not? “Well, in a time of conflict—which is now—the Chooser of the Slain overcomes the Troll King.” He pointed at the shining knot around the lower intestine. “See how this chokes off the Troll King. That means you win the battle.”

  “And how did you know the legendary warrior was—is me?”

  “I cross-referenced with our histories and you were the one that fit the criteria.”

  She shivered. “Show me the history. I want to understand how you deciphered this.”

  Halldór thanked the gods that he had asked for Li Nawi’s saga as well. He placed the heavy volume of history in front of Li Reiko and opened to the Book of Fire, Chapter I.

  In the autumn of the Fire, Li Reiko, greatest of the warriors, trained Li Nawi and his sister Aya in the ways of Death. In the midst of the training, a curtain of fire spli
t Nawi from Aya and when they came together again, Li Reiko was gone. Though they were frightened, they understood that the Chooser of the Slain had taken a rightful place in heaven.

  Reiko trembled, her control gone. “What is this?”

  “It is the Saga of Li Nawi.”

  She tried phrasing casual questions, but her mind spun in circles. “How do you come to have this?”

  Halldór traced the letters with his gloved hand. “After the Collapse, when waves of fire had rolled across our land, Li Nawi came across the oceans with the other gods. He was our conqueror and our salvation.”

  The ranks of stone shelves filled with thick leather bindings crowded her. Her heart kicked wildly.

  Halldór’s voice seemed drowned out by the drumming of her pulse. “The Sagas are our heritage and charge. The gods have left the Earth, but we keep records of histories as they taught us.”

  Reiko turned her eyes blindly from the page. “Your heritage?”

  “I have been dedicated to the service of the gods since my birth.” He paused. “Your sagas were the most inspiring. Forgive my trespasses, may I beg for your indulgence with a question?”

  “What?” Hot and cold washed over her in sickening waves.

  “I have read your son Li Nawi’s accounts of your triumphs in battle.”

  Reiko could not breathe. Halldór flipped the pages forward. “This is how I knew where to look for your sword.” He paused with his hand over the letters. “I deciphered the clues to invoke it and call you here, but there are many—”

  Reiko pushed away from the table. “You caused the curtain of fire?” She wanted to vomit her fear at his feet.

  “I—I do not understand.”

  “I dropped through fire this morning.” And when they came together again, Li Reiko was no more. What had it been like for Aya and Nawi to watch their mother ripped out of time?

  Halldór said, “In answer to my petition.”

  “I was playing hide and seek with my children and you took me.”

  “You were in the heavens with the gods.”

  “That’s something you tell a grieving child!”

  “I—I didn’t, I—” His face turned gray. “Forgive me, Great One.”

 

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