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Angelica

Page 59

by Sharon Shinn


  He looked like the Archangel, searching Samaria for a missing prize.

  Paul and a couple of the clan elders went over to greet him and reintroduce themselves, for it had been several months since he had seen them last, and he was a busy man who might have forgotten their names. Susannah busied herself with the baby, a cooing, happy girl who divided her time between sleeping and smiling. But she glanced up from time to time to see if she could gauge what the conversation between the Tachitas and the angel might be about.

  “Have you made up your mind what you might say to him?” Ruth asked, coming up behind her.

  “He might not have come here to see me,” Susannah replied.

  Ruth stared at her. “Are you a want-wit?” she demanded. “Why else seek out the Tachitas?”

  Susannah swung the baby up to nestle against her shoulder. “Perhaps he is seeking out all the Edori, to tell them that the invaders are gone.”

  “Perhaps he is seeking out all his wives to tell them to come home,” Ruth retorted, and Susannah could not help laughing.

  But her face was smooth and serious when Paul brought Gaaron over to their campfire. Ruth smiled at him and showed him the new baby, only two months old and sweeter than tree-warm honey. Gaaron also spoke grave hellos to both the boys, though the younger one hid his face for fear of the broad wings, and the older one was struck dumb by the sight. A few words with Susannah’s father followed next, and then Gaaron turned to his angelica.

  “Susannah,” he said. “Will you come walk with me a little way? I have a great deal of news, and I don’t want to interfere with the daily work around the campfire.”

  How could she refuse such a carefully worded request? She did not look him full in the face as she nodded, laid aside the spoon and spices she had taken up, and gave Ruth one quick, rueful glance. Ruth kept her face neutral, but her eyes were full of interest.

  “Let’s walk over this way,” Susannah said, picking up a couple of the camp buckets, “and we can bring back water.”

  Gaaron took one of the buckets from her and they strolled away from the tent in silence. Edori as a rule never allowed themselves to show curiosity, but Susannah could feel her family staring after her before turning to look at one another and wondering aloud what might be going on.

  Gaaron was the first one to speak. “So you’ve heard the news from Velora,” he said.

  She nodded. “Chloe told us. Is the city completely destroyed?”

  “About half of it. But enough of it remains standing that there is shelter for everyone, and the rebuilding has already begun.”

  “How many lives were lost?”

  “We have not counted them all yet,” Gaaron said. “A couple of hundred at least, or so it seems. Many of them burned beyond recognition, so it is a grim task to assess who is lost and who is merely missing.”

  “How many of Jossis’ people were killed?”

  “A few dozen that we found. We also found, beside their bodies, a few of those fire sticks that they used to burn the towns and villages.”

  “I don’t think those should be left lying about,” Susannah said in some alarm.

  He shook his head. “I have sent them on to Adriel. She says she has a room at Windy Point where she can keep them—a room that only the Archangel has access to. They will be safe there.”

  “So much to do and to decide,” Susannah said. “You must be very busy.”

  “With many things,” he agreed. “Messages from Neri and Adriel come every day—and so do offers of food and other aid. The Manadavvi and the river merchants have sent food and clothing and money. Solomon of Breven has offered help,” he added with a cynical note creeping into his voice, “but he wants payment for it. So far we have managed to do without his assistance.”

  “Do you think the invaders are truly gone?” she asked.

  “That is what Mahalah says. And there has been no sign of them for four days now. But I don’t know how we can be certain that they will never return. I’m not even certain what happened to drive them away.”

  “Mahalah says they were frightened away by Yovah.”

  “Mahalah has not been specific enough to satisfy me.”

  “What else can you do but watch and wait?” she asked.

  He shook his head. “Nothing. Go on with the day-to-day governing of the realm. Rebuild Velora. Plan for the Gloria. Proceed with my own wedding.”

  She kept walking, but she said nothing.

  “Which means you must return with me to the Eyrie today,” he added.

  “I’m not going to marry you,” she said.

  Gaaron stopped and put his bucket down. She had thought his response might be a quick flare of anger, but he seemed composed. “Then we must talk about that,” he said.

  She put her own bucket on the ground and faced him. She was more tense than she had thought she would be. When she had imagined this scene, as she lay awake in Mount Sinai, she had been serene and reasonable. “I have decided not to be your angelica after all,” she said.

  “And why is that?”

  “You have asked me often what it would take to make me happy at the Eyrie—among the angels—in your life,” she said. “And I had thought I could be happy enough doing the work of the god. Becoming your angelica because he asked me to. But I have realized that is not enough for me. If I am to marry you, I have to love you.”

  “And you do not love me,” he answered steadily.

  “I do love you,” she said, and she saw the shock on his face. “I just have not said so.”

  “Susannah—”

  “And I have not said so, because you have not said that you love me. And I will not marry you unless you do.”

  There was a long silence. Gaaron turned his head as if to look meditatively into the distance; he had quickly hidden his astonishment behind the usual mask of calm. But she was beginning to be able to read his face, even the texts he did not want to make public. “Susannah,” he said. “We were such good friends before. Can we not find a way to mend this breach and be friends again?”

  “I can’t,” she said flatly. “I cannot be married to the man I love and pretend that I want nothing more from him than kindness and companionship. I do not want to—I do not intend to—spend my days yearning for you. If I cannot have you as my lover, then I will not have you in my life at all. I will stay here with the Tachitas, or perhaps go back to the Lohoras, or perhaps find a place with some other clan, and go on with my life.”

  “The god wants you beside me,” he said, still looking away.

  “The question is, do you?”

  Now he looked down at her, and there was some kind of repressed emotion in his face. His eyes smoldered with it, but she did not think it was anger. Fear, perhaps, a fear even deeper than he knew how to analyze.

  “My life has been bounded by so many restrictions that I have not been allowed very many freedoms,” he said slowly, as though the words were being tortured out of him. “I consider all emotions to be a kind of distraction, and love to be the most irresistible distraction of all. It is all very well and good when it is going smoothly, but when it fails? When one person loves and the other does not? Or when one person still loves and the other turns away? I know myself well enough to know that I would not lightly endure such devastation. I know myself well enough to realize that I would not emerge intact. I have too many other things to do to allow myself to be broken by love. And so I have sworn to myself that I would not love you.”

  “You may have sworn not to say it,” Susannah answered softly, “but you do love me.”

  “I cannot afford love,” he said, and bent to pick up his bucket.

  Susannah caught up her own pail and hurried after him. “Then you cannot afford an angelica,” she said in a conversational tone. “And you will have to cancel this wedding when you return.”

  “You have to be at the wedding,” he said, still walking.

  “No. And I don’t have to be at the Gloria, either,” she said.
/>   That stopped him dead in his tracks. “Don’t have to—of course you have to be at the Gloria!” he exclaimed, finally roused to emotion. “If the Archangel and the angelica do not lead the masses in prayer—if representatives of all the people of Samaria are not gathered together to sing on the Plain of Sharon—”

  “I know,” Susannah said. “The god will smite the mountain, and then he will smite the river, and then he will destroy the world.”

  Gaaron started walking again. “So don’t be so foolish as to say you will not come to the Gloria.”

  “Well, I won’t.”

  He whirled around, exasperated and disbelieving, but she stood her ground. “I won’t,” she said again. “I won’t come sing at your side at the Gloria unless I am married to you, and I won’t marry you unless you say you love me.”

  “This is ridiculous,” he snapped. “To say you would risk the demolition of the entire world—”

  “Miriam told me,” Susannah said, “what Mahalah told you. That Yovah picks for every Archangel the spouse who is his perfect complement. So that if the Archangel is impetuous, the angelica will be wise. And if the Archangel is arrogant, the angelica will be humble. And you thought, because you are stubborn, that your angelica would be docile and easily swayed.

  “But what you didn’t realize,” she continued slowly, “is that I am even more stubborn than you are. Yovah picked me because you cannot wear me down. I will not do what you want unless you do what I want. And I want to live with a man who loves me.”

  “But Susannah—you cannot seriously tell me—you would not really let the god loose his wrath upon Samaria—”

  She shrugged and stepped forward again. At this rate, they would never make it to the river. “I think the god knows my heart better than you do,” she said over her shoulder. “And he will understand why I refuse to sing.”

  “But Susannah—”

  She kept walking, letting him catch up with her, and attempt to argue with her, and receive nothing from her but silence in return. They made it to the riverbed, a quick, shallow stream that fed into the Galilee not a mile from here, and she dipped her pail into the clear water.

  “Fill your bucket,” she directed as she stepped away from the bank, for he had stood there this whole time haranguing her.

  He did so hastily, but she didn’t wait, starting back on the rocky path toward camp. He hurried so much to keep up with her that water sloshed out of his bucket onto his leather boots and her cotton dress.

  “That’s cold!” she exclaimed.

  “Susannah, wait. Listen,” he said. He had set down his pail again and now he caught her by the arm to make her stay in place. Obediently, she waited, placing her bucket carefully on the ground beside her feet. “You cannot mean what you say,” he went on.

  “Which part of it?” she said.

  “Any of it.”

  She put her hands on her hips and frowned up at him, like any virago giving a scold to her errant husband. “And now you’re accusing me of lying?” she demanded.

  “What? I didn’t say that. Susannah—”

  “I tell you that I love you, and you don’t believe me. That means you think I’m lying.”

  “It means,” he said, and his voice sounded tired, “that I think you love someone else more. Or someone else, too. It means that I don’t trust your love, anybody’s love, to be there when I need it most. And I have too many people relying on me for me to rely on supports that will not hold.”

  Her face softened. She came a step nearer and reached up so she could lay a hand against his cheek. He had shaved that morning and his skin was free of whiskers, but it seemed roughened by other things: worry, work, wonder. She wanted to smooth away every line, refresh every tired pore with a kiss.

  “But you see,” she said softly, “I am the support you can count on. You have so many people to care for. I want to be the one who cares for you. I want to be the sweet voice in the dark that answers only to your call. I want to be your place of warmth and safety, your refuge and your home. I want to be the one you think of when every other thought is gone.”

  “You are that thought,” he said, very low. His head was bent down; his eyes were closed. It was as if he wanted to be conscious of nothing but the feel of her fingers against his cheek. “You are that place. You are that voice.”

  She put her other hand up and guided his face down toward hers. “Then say it,” she whispered.

  “Susannah, I love you.”

  “And the world did not end,” she said, and kissed him.

  His arms went around her first, bulky and uncertain; it was like being taken in the massive embrace of an oak, unused to clasping humans. Next his wings enfolded her, more cautiously, settling down on her with the weight and color of sunlight. She kissed him—or he kissed her—there was, in the whole world, nothing but mouth and cheek and feather and arm. He held her so tightly that there was not even air to breathe, but she did not need air. She had Gaaron, and that was enough.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Chapter Twenty-two

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Chapter Twenty-four

  Chapter Twenty-five

  Chapter Twenty-six

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  Chapter Twenty-eight

  Chapter Twenty-nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-one

  Chapter Thirty-two

 

 

 


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