by R. J. Larson
29
As the whirlwind released her, Ela drew in a shaky breath. Mercy. One more shift like this and she would certainly retch. Where was she? Ela swept her rumpled hair away from her face, then focused her gaze on the glittering spectacle before her.
Bel-Tygeon was seated several marble steps above her on his gold throne, clad in gold from his crown to his shoes, his long fingers tensed over a crystal-and-gold scepter angled toward the polished floor. For an instant, the king stared at her, clearly perplexed. Then his dark eyes widened and his lean, handsome face tensed. “Prophet! What are you doing here?”
Good question. Infinite? What am I doing here . . . in Belaal’s throne room?
Amusement permeated His voice. Look.
Ela pressed one hand to her head and stared into the brief vision. Absorbing her task, she hid a smile. “Majesty, what should a prophet do, but warn the king?” And shake his throne.
If a threatening stare could strike her down, Bel-Tygeon’s glare would do so now. “You are tempting death by entering this place uninvited!”
“As any prophet expects. Sir.”
A voice boomed behind Ela, gruff and hateful. “Sire, shall I remove her?”
General Siyrsun, Ela knew without turning. Belaal’s general of the army and leader of the first attack on Parne. She’d seen him in her vision, his face marred by rippling purpled scars earned in Parne. Ela suppressed a shiver as the Infinite allowed her some of the general’s thoughts. He cursed her daily for those scars and longed to carve the same over Ela’s face and down her arms—before cutting out her heart. Not what she’d wanted to know. Ela blinked, then focused on Bel-Tygeon instead.
The king didn’t smile, but he leaned forward, clearly interested. Toying with the gold-and-crystal scepter, he said, “You would kill her, general, the instant you drag her outside.”
The general’s voice neared Ela. Along with his footsteps. “As we all say, sire, you are Wisdom itself. Why should I not wish to kill your enemies?”
Ela suppressed a shudder and fixed her gaze on Bel-Tygeon. He smiled a taunt at Ela as he told Siyrsun, “Yes. Remove her.”
Without turning, Ela cried out, “General Siyrsun, by His Holy Name, the Infinite commands you and your men to stand where you are until He releases you!”
The general’s furious growl answered. Around the gleaming throne room, exclamations of surprise punctuated the air as Ela’s enemies obviously tried and failed to move and apprehend her. Ela shook her head at the king. “Bel-Tygeon, the Infinite’s will is for you to live and to celebrate eternity, if you listen to Him. And I am His faithful servant, not your enemy.”
“A nice sentiment, though inadequate.” Bel-Tygeon waved his scepter toward her, its crystal glittering in the light. “But enough. Your theatrics have our attention. Tell us what your Infinite wishes to say, and then leave.”
“You and your counselors have planned a ceremony for your naming day, involving sacrifices and worship. To you.”
“Yes. And why not?” Bel-Tygeon stood and descended from his throne. “It is our tradition, as it has been for generations. Why shouldn’t I continue in our ways?” He lifted his arms in a gesture of arrogant displeasure. “Why am I the first king of Belaal chosen for your Infinite’s wrath? What is your true game, Prophet?”
“This is hardly a game, O king! You are the first ruler of Belaal to command exclusive worship for yourself, banning all other gods as you enslave your people!” Watching his expression chill to majestic remoteness, Ela continued. “Your arrogance stinks to the heavens and will only continue to grow unless you are corrected—which the Infinite is concerned enough to do. You’ve done nothing to deserve your place in this life. Your Creator has granted you everything, yet you cannot see beyond yourself.”
“I see perfectly. You need not worry.” Bel-Tygeon sauntered past Ela, toward General Siyrsun. For the first time, Ela turned to look at the proud military leader, and the sight was not appealing. Siyrsun’s powerful, scarred face was livid with rage, but he remained silent as the young god-king circled him, paying particular attention to his booted feet. Bel-Tygeon’s lips pursed thoughtfully, and he nudged Siyrsun’s left boot with his own gold-embellished shoe. “General, are your feet dead as stone, or do you sense pain?”
“There is no pain, O king, but neither are my feet dead. They simply refuse to move.”
“Interesting.” Bel-Tygeon’s mouth twitched as if suppressing a grin, and for one horrible instant, he reminded Ela of Kien contemplating mischief. Impossible! Pursued by the Infinite or not, this fraud-god was nothing like her charming Kien.
Bel-Tygeon swept a cool glance over the crowd of men in the huge golden chamber. Some shuffled from foot to foot, but many were clearly held in place and not the least bit happy. Then Bel-Tygeon returned to Ela, stood directly in front of her, lifted his crystal scepter, and commanded, “Free them. You’ve performed an interesting trick, but its fascination has ended.”
Hmm. Short attention span. Seeing the branch change from a subtle metallic shade to glowing blue-white, Ela braced herself inwardly. “I cannot free those men, sir. Your Creator commanded them to remain where they are. He will release them when it pleases Him to do so.”
Bel-Tygeon studied the branch and muttered, “He does not rule here.”
“So you say.” Ela paused as the Infinite whispered questions into her thoughts. Finished listening, she raised her voice, defying the proud king before her. “Bel-Tygeon, the Infinite asks, ‘Who are you? Did you create the heavens? Were you present when the foundations of Belaal were set in place and the mountains were raised to shelter your lands? Can you cause those lands to shift beneath the feet of mortals?’ No! But He does—now!”
Gentle, but deliberate, she rested the end of the branch against the shining floor. Ferocious light blazed from the base of the branch down through the marble and ripped along the throne room’s floor, lifting the stones beneath the feet of Bel-Tygeon and all his courtiers, bringing them to their knees.
Clinging to her vinewood insignia, Ela watched huge cracks open outward through the marble from the branch like fiery blue-white roots. Lightning-brilliant spirals snapped in the air above—outlining the translucent form of a burning tree. Ela’s hair swept about her in an arc and lit to molten silver beneath the Infinite’s fury. As He spoke into Ela’s thoughts, she called out His warning, barely recognizing her own voice, “When the Infinite created this world, mortals were mere dust! Your pretensions cannot affect Him—yet He calls to each of you. Seek Him!”
A vortex of air encircled her now, closing in, sweeping her away.
Leaning on the branch, Ela found herself in the tiny enclosed garden adjoining the chamber she shared with Caitria. Watching the garden walls spin, Ela sank to her knees and retched. Thoroughly miserable, she finally lifted her head and took a full breath. “Infinite?”
I am here.
Ugh! How humbling to know that her Creator could see her in such an inglorious state. Well, He’d seen her looking worse. But she definitely needed that nap now. Ela staggered inside the chamber, poured a goblet of water, and drank.
Finished, she crossed the chamber to her pallet. Caitria woke up and blinked at her. Sleepy-voiced and still splotchy from the berries, Caitria mumbled, “Ela? You’re a mess. What happened?”
Dizzied, Ela flopped onto her pallet. “I think the Infinite just . . . destroyed Bel-Tygeon’s throne room. You’ll hear about it soon enough. Until then, I need to rest.”
Outside in the broad yard, now well trimmed thanks to Scythe and the smaller horses, Akabe checked the soil over the cooking pit. At least pit cooking conserved wood and yielded no smoke. If only it could conserve food. They had no other supplies apart from their stash of dried venison, a small clay jar of flour, and the remains of his family’s now-wild kitchen garden—which was thankfully walled off from the horses in the central yard. Where were his men—along with Faine’s reinforcements and Faine’s report of their plan’s success o
r failure? “Infinite, I beg You, protect my men!”
Calming his thoughts, Akabe tested the ground. Slightly warm, but not enough to deserve another layer of soil. Sweating a bit beneath his protective vest, Akabe stood and looked around. The quiet air and silence weren’t reassuring. No birds were singing. Surely something was afoot. If Kien didn’t reappear with Scythe soon, Akabe must presume other ominous creatures were roaming through the trees on the slopes below. Such as assassins.
Even as Akabe thought this, thuds shook the ground, reassuring him. Obviously the destroyer was returning from his daily run. No wonder the birds were silent. Akabe approached the massive pit he’d dug in front of the gatehouse with Kien’s help—and with Scythe dragging away the excess dirt. The same Scythe who was now shaking the ground. Best not to walk too near the trap until the destroyer halted. “Riddig! A little help!”
“Already on my way, sir!” Riddig’s footsteps echoed on the wall above as he scurried to the gatehouse stairwell. The surgeon soon emerged from the narrow stone portal, his white hair wild, his beard a mass of pale bristles. “Allow me, sir.” Shifting his bow onto his back, Riddig tugged up one of the swords impaled between the slabs at the gate’s base. Swords served as unconventional bars, but they worked.
To Kien, Akabe bellowed, “Keep to the side—remember the pit!”
“How could Scythe and I forget?” Kien called from beyond the wall. “We’re both blistered from digging the thing!”
Akabe grinned and set down the swords. “Stop complaining, my friend! Our blisters are well-suffered! You know I’m right!” The pit—spiked with numerous half-buried swords and pikes—might slow down their attackers long enough to allow a few volleys of arrows to thin their numbers.
As they hauled open the creaking gate’s intact side, Akabe muttered to Riddig, “I hope all our work is wasted—that the Ateans never appear.” To Kien, he yelled, “The way’s clear!”
Akabe listened for Kien to make another smart retort, but he merely urged Scythe inside, his voice low and abrupt. “Go. Hurry!”
At once, Riddig shifted his bow and quiver of arrows, his squared face tense. In silent agreement with his guardsman’s apprehension, Akabe snatched a sword, ready to slam it into place as soon as the destroyer cleared the gate. Scythe grunted as he stomped inside, lowering his big monster-head to avoid scraping the gate’s archway. After a nervous-seeming turn around the yard’s fading grass, he bent, allowing Kien to drop solidly to the ground.
Satisfied that Kien and Scythe were unharmed, Akabe slammed the sword in place and reached for another to secure the gate. “Welcome back. You seem uneasy. What’s happened?”
Kien nodded toward Scythe. “I don’t know what’s made him edgy today, but it’s affecting me. I’m ready to attack every shadow.” He grabbed a third sword and slid it in place and tamped it with his boot. Grim-faced, he looked from Akabe to Riddig. “Do you suppose the Ateans waylaid Lord Faine’s reinforcements?”
Akabe slowly lowered the last sword into place. He owed Kien and Riddig honesty. Their lives were as much at risk as his. “I fear so. It’s well past the time Faine and I agreed upon. I pray they’re safe.” Forcing a smile, he stepped back from the gate and dusted off his hands. “For now, however, I believe we’ve time to eat. Let’s dig up our food.”
Staring at the pit and the blade-guarded gate, Riddig said, “I’ll take my meal up to the wall. I agree with Lord Aeyrievale—I’m nervous.” He looked at Akabe now, forthright. “Majesty, if I die, I’ve left a note for my family in my chamber.”
Kien nodded agreement. “I’ve done the same. My notes are inside my knapsack. I carried them with me until I realized bloodied notes might be difficult to read—not to mention excessively upsetting to my wife and parents.”
They’d written farewell notes to their loved ones? Akabe quieted inside. They expected to die. As did he. But . . . “I didn’t consider notes. Even so, it’ll be short work. I have only Caitria. And Siphra.”
“Sir,” Kien murmured, “with the exception of the Ateans, your people love you—as the queen surely must.”
Polite of him to mention the queen. If only the sentiment were true. If she could love him after he’d endangered her life . . . Akabe shook his head. “Well-enough. I’ll write the notes after we eat. But this doesn’t mean I expect we’ll die. I’ve faced worse odds than these and survived. We’ll bury the Ateans and rebuild the temple. You’ll see.” If it pleased the Infinite.
Fighting emotion, Akabe hammered each of them with a fist before returning to work on their midday meal. They shoveled the heated soil away from the cooking pots, which they’d filled with venison, wild herbs, and old root vegetables culled from the old kitchen garden, then sat down to eat. Akabe chewed some meat and shrugged inwardly. He’d eaten worse. “Needs salt.”
Kien tasted his and grinned, some of his usual good humor returning. “I have just the thing to improve our meal. Wait here, both of you.”
He hurried into the tower and soon returned, unrolling a parchment-lined leather packet. “Taste this.”
Akabe studied the brown cubes. Oddly dried meat chunks. Were they edible?
Kien chose one and ate it quickly, as if enjoying the taste. Riddig added two to his wooden bowl of food, then hurried up to the wall. Akabe finally selected a cube, popped it in his mouth and chewed . . . solidified salty vomit. “Augh!” He spat out the filth, then backhanded Kien, who laughed. “You’re trying to kill me ahead of the Ateans! That’s Bannulk cheese!”
Kien—the show-off—ate two more cubes, then wrapped the remainder and tucked the packet behind his protective vest inside his belted overtunic. “Your venison tastes better now, doesn’t it?”
“By comparison, yes!” Akabe pretended a glare at Kien. “If we survive, I’ll repay you, my friend—you know I will.”
“I pray you will, Majesty.”
Seated on the wall walk above them, Riddig suddenly coughed and spat down into the yard. Akabe laughed. “He tried the cheese.”
“Both cubes at once, I’d say.”
They finished their meal and scoured the pans and dishes in cold well water. As Akabe and Kien were gathering utensils, Scythe huffed and circled them. Swift. Agitated.
Flattening his ears and snorting threats toward the gatehouse.
On the wall above, Riddig flung his empty dish into the yard, offered Akabe a frantic wave, then ducked out of sight.
Beyond the gates a horse whickered. And Akabe saw Riddig scuttle into the gatehouse as they’d planned, his bow and arrows readied. Akabe’s heart thudded as he and Kien ran for their curved hunting bows, arrows, and shields. Riddig’s warning whistle sounded from the gatehouse, also as agreed. Akabe shifted his hunting bow. “It seems our foes have arrived.”
To Akabe’s right, Kien adjusted his bow and grimaced. “Of course they’ve arrived! Our last meal included that wretched Bannulk cheese! Infinite, be with us . . . and with our wives!”
Scythe closed his swift-moving circle around Kien, trying to herd Akabe as well.
“Easy, good monster.” Setting an arrow in the bowstring, Akabe took a deep breath. So much for writing a note to Siphra. Or Caitria—his love. Infinite, please save my wife and, if You will it, Your temple!
Aloud, he added another prayer to Kien’s. “Infinite, there is none like You! Bless us, protect Riddig, and speed his arrows to the Ateans!”
30
Kien concentrated on breathing steadily as he listened to men’s agonized screams and horse hooves thudding just beyond the gateway. Obviously, from his vantage point at the bow loops in the gatehouse’s tower, Riddig had landed arrows in more than one man. Kien set his arrow, pulled it back until the bowstring creaked, then kept his gaze fixed sternly upon the weakened side of the huge gate.
If only that gate had been left intact! Useless to wish for what could not be changed—or repaired. Yet he meant to survive. For Ela. And to protect Akabe and the temple. Already the Ateans were hammering on the gate’s d
amaged side. Kien watched the huge metal-protected door shudder, and he prayed with all his might. Let the trap work! Let fewer than ten men pass beyond the sabotaged gate. Those odds might give them success.
Scythe moved in front of Kien then, blocking his view. And Akabe’s. The king snapped, “Destroyer, back away!”
“Scythe!” Kien glared at his formidable protector, holding the beast’s battle-hungry gaze. “Let us shoot down our enemies before they’re within reach! Come here!” He stomped the ground to his left and snarled, “Now!”
Rumbling ominous complaints, the destroyer turned aside, standing off to Kien’s left. But he aimed sullen looks and huffs toward the gate’s quaking weaker side. Two more men screamed beyond the wall, prompting Kien to send up additional prayers for Riddig’s aim. Riddig had about twelve arrows, Kien knew. He and Akabe each had three—they’d used the others in hunting. Each arrow must hit a target—preferably Atean.
Beside Kien, Akabe adjusted his hunting bow, praying aloud, “Infinite, protect Your servants. . . .”
The gate’s weakened side groaned open. Two men charged inside and tumbled into the pit, onto the swords and pikes so laboriously spiked within. Screams shattered the air, just as a nobleman urged his steed through the gate—too swiftly to notice the trap. The horse fell inside the pit as the nobleman bellowed a futile, “Halt!”
Outside, his cohorts filled the air with harsh sibilant curses. Sweat filmed Kien’s skin. His fingers twitched with the longing to shoot, but—as Akabe commanded—they must use their few arrows efficiently, only as the Ateans entered the fortress. However, the Ateans had retreated. A shriek echoed from outside as Riddig apparently hit another target.
Beside Kien, Akabe hissed, “Steady! We alternate shots, remember? Wait.”
“I am waiting!”
At last, one Atean rebel crept inside the gate, wielding his sword and shield. Three others followed. Akabe unleashed an arrow, hitting the first man in the eye. Howling, he staggered and toppled into the pit.