Orphan’s Song
The Songkeeper Chronicles — Book One
Gillian Bronte Adams
Orphan's Song by Gillian Bronte Adams
Published by Enclave, an imprint of Gilead Publishing, Wheaton, IL 60187
www.enclavepublishing.com
ISBN: 978-1-68370-029-6
The Songkeeper Chronicles Book 1: Orphan's Song
© 2014 by Gillian Bronte Adams
First edition 2014 under ISBN: 978-1-62184-036-7. Second edition 2016.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage and retrieval system without prior written permission from the publisher.
Published in the United States by Enclave, an imprint of Gilead Publishing, Wheaton, Illinois.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to actual people, organizations, and/or events is purely coincidental.
Cover designed by Darko Tomic
Printed in the United States of America
Enclave
an imprint of Gilead Publishing
To the One who puts a new Song in my mouth
Prologue
They were coming.
Gundhrold peered into the moonless dark, feathered wings ruffling in the breeze. Distant howls sounded to the beat of thundering hooves and clinking armor. Distant, but rapidly approaching.
Foul murderers. His claws dug into the bark of the limb and dark sap bubbled out of the scratches. A fresh scent hovered around him, strange amidst the eerie screams borne upon the wind, and he studied the russet sap staining his claws like blood.
The limb groaned as he shifted his weight and clacked his beak impatiently, straining to pierce the heaviness of the woods with his gaze. Where was she?
A twig snapped in the depths of the forest. A branch rustled. He tensed, raising his wings for flight. Soft footsteps on damp leaves, a shuddering breath, then a whispered voice spoke from the shadows. “Gundhrold? Are you here?”
At last.
Dropping from the tree, Gundhrold spread his wings and glided to the forest floor. He landed without a noise, catlike on all four paws, before a woman hooded and cloaked. “Lady Auna, you are late.”
The woman started, then breathed a sigh of relief. “Oh, it’s you.”
“Did you expect another, Songkeeper?”
“Do not call me that. Not when they are so close.” She pushed her hood back with a trembling hand, revealing eyes that sparked with urgency beneath a flood of gray hair. “There is no time. They have come for me.”
A wild undulating cry tore through the woods, nearer than before.
“Then I must see you safe from here.” He stood and stretched, wincing at the tremor that ran from his shoulders to his wing tips. “It has been long since I have carried a grown human in sustained flight. Nonetheless, we will manage. There is a clearing west of here where we can be off—the upper canopy is too dense here to permit flight.”
Auna shook her head. “No, friend, I am too old to flee. That is not why I summoned you.”
“My lady?”
“Memory must not perish tonight, Gundhrold.” She shrugged aside her dark gray cloak, revealing a bundle cradled in her arms. “We must not fail.”
Gundhrold peered at the bundle. “Is this . . .”
“It is,” Auna said, relinquishing the bundle to him. “This is your task, entrusted to your care and protection.”
The bundle seemed to grow heavier as the weight of his responsibility settled upon him. “I will not fail, Songkeeper.”
A soft, sad smile spread across Auna’s face, smoothing the wrinkles crisscrossing her forehead. “The land of Leira owes a debt to you Protectors that she can never repay. And now, friend, you must—” She stiffened suddenly, listening.
An otherworldly howl shook the ground, and the harsh scream of a raven split the night air. Flickering orange lights appeared in the forest, bobbing toward them, cracking twigs and splintering branches keeping time with the quickening tramp of feet and hooves. Auna spun around, gripping the edges of her cloak to her neck so tightly that her knuckles turned white.
“They have come.” Gundhrold clasped the bundle to his chest. Loosing his wings, he coiled to spring into the air, but his gaze strayed to Auna and he hesitated.
“Why do you delay?” she cried. “Go, before it is too late!” Clutching her cloak, she darted off through the trees, a glimmer of gray in the night.
Gundhrold launched from the ground and landed three-legged on the branch he had occupied minutes before. His fourth paw hugged the bundle, softening the jolt of his landing. Below, dozens of hounds raced up and skidded to a stop, snuffling and tearing at the loam where he and Auna had been standing. A howl of triumph burst from their throats, and they dashed away into the woods, following the path Auna had taken.
All but one. A massive beast lunged at the base of his tree, claws scrabbling at the bark, howl echoing through the woods. Even from a distance, he could smell the hound’s rancid breath—like a battlefield, it reeked of death.
Though the hound could not reach him in the tree, it would be followed by the Khelari—soldiers with weapons, with axes, bows, and fire.
He scrambled along the branch, running awkwardly on three legs. The hound followed, its cries joined by the shouts of men drawn to the pursuit. At the end of the branch, Gundhrold dove, glided to the next, and ran again and again, ever westward, toward the clearing and flight. He missed the craggy mountains and desert plains of his youth, where there were no trees to obscure flight and no Khelari to necessitate it.
The clearing came into sight just ahead, and he raced toward it, wings unfurled, heedless of the grasping branches on either side. A bough snagged his right wing, and he tore it free, releasing a cloud of feathers, and leapt into the air.
For a moment, he hung suspended over the clearing. The hound burst from the trees below with a mass of armed men hard upon its heels, shouting and brandishing weapons. Torches blazed in their hands, lighting the clearing with an orange glow . . .
Wings beating, Gundhrold soared up out of the clearing and banked to the left. Something thrummed past his ear and vanished into the starless sky. An arrow. Another twang sounded and pain exploded in his right shoulder. His wing fell limp. A black feathered shaft stuck in his side, the steel point grating excruciatingly against bone. Gundhrold grasped vainly at the air and then dropped like a stone into the clearing.
He hit the ground with a dizzying thud and immediately teeth sank into his neck. He lashed out with his claws and the hound yelped. It retreated across the clearing and stood staring at him, head hanging, bloody slobber dripping from its tongue.
Gundhrold flexed his wings and growled at the pain. Still clutching the bundle to his chest, he inched to his feet and slowly turned around. Black figures surrounded him, weapons aimed at his heart. Above, ravens swarmed to the tree tops, feathers glinting midnight blue in the torchlight, croaking calls rasping from their throats. And in the woods, chanting throbbed like the pulse of the ocean, drawing nearer like the incoming tide.
A mounted man broke through the circle of Khelari and dismounted, dropping his reins on the ground. Gundhrold’s gaze darted to the slim bow in the man’s hands and the black feathered arrow already on the string. His claws dug into the loam. Wounded as he was, he could not hope to dodge an arrow on the ground.
But the archer did not shoot. He lowered the bow and let the arrow slip from the string,
then waved a dismissive hand at the Khelari. “We will let the Takhran deal with him.”
The chanting grew louder and deeper, blending with the baying of the hounds. A dozen men marched out of the woods, followed by a pack of the beasts. They halted in front of the archer and shoved a gray-clad figure out of their midst. The figure stumbled to its knees in the middle of the clearing, head bowed, hands bound behind its back.
“Auna,” Gundhrold whispered.
“Ah, the Songkeeper.” The archer strode forward and towered over her, black armor melting into the darkness. His eyes, darker still, glared from beneath a sharp brow set above a curved nose. The ringing of a drawn blade filled the clearing and a sword flashed dully in the man’s hand as he raised it to Auna’s neck. “We searched long for you, Songkeeper, after slaying your sons. I had almost given up hope of finding you, but now at long last, here you are. You have failed.”
Auna’s shoulders sagged and her face grayed with weariness. She looked suddenly like a frail old woman. “I may have failed,” she said, “but you have not won yet. Emhran will not be forgotten.”
The archer lashed out with a mailed fist and Auna fell back beneath the force of his blow.
With a shriek, Gundhrold leapt forward, only to feel the sharp prick of the sword-point at his throat.
“Not dead yet, eh griffin?” The man’s snarl broadened into an amused sneer. “We have been watching for you. Do you think the Takhran does not know the role you and your kind have played these many years? Protectors?” His eyes flashed. “Traitors all.” His gaze dropped to the bundle in Gundhrold’s forearm and his expression hardened. “What have you there?”
Gundhrold clutched the bundle and clamped his beak shut as he shuffled backwards.
“You will not answer? Then I shall have to see for myself.” The sword-point lowered and the archer stooped over the bundle, lifting his hand to draw back the cloth.
An opening.
Jaws agape, Gundhrold reared back his head and struck. The cold steel of the metal gauntlet filled his beak and he clamped down on the archer’s wrist. A sharp crack, an agonized scream, and the man fell to the ground, clutching the bleeding stump of his right wrist to his chest. Gundhrold spat out the iron-clad hand and spun to face the rest of the Khelari.
The hounds bayed as they rushed in to attack. Gundhrold leapt to meet them, ignoring the pain in his side. He pounced on the first hound and dispatched it with flashing claws. The second fell victim to his beak. On the third pounce, he caught a soldier, and the man fell beneath him, vainly slashing with a dagger, screaming in terror as his paw descended. Arrows whistled on all sides, and the Khelari yelled as they hemmed him in.
Gundhrold bared his teeth. This was death. This was the end. And he would meet it with all the fury in his soul and wake in Emhran’s land to greet the dawn.
A faint cry like the first note of a song stilled the fury beating in his breast. He glanced down at the bundle, torn open in the midst of the fight, and halted, transfixed by a pair of blue eyes. An infant stared up him, head crowned with a thatch of soft dark hair, tiny fingers curled into a fist against white cheeks.
A woman’s scream tore his attention back to the fight. Auna lay on the ground at his feet, an arrow protruding from her side. Her mouth opened and she struggled to speak.
“Protector . . .”
The word recalled him to his duty. Barreling over two Khelari who stood in his path, he launched into the air. Agonizing pain tore through his shoulder, but his wing held. He labored to fly up, up, through the clearing and then out over the trees where the thick canopy would grant some protection.
Wind and weapons whistled past his head. An arrow bit deep into his side and a roar burst from his throat.
Cawing raucously, the ravens in the treetops took flight, diving toward his head to peck at his eyes. He lashed out with his left forepaw, swiping a cluster of black birds out of the sky. Then wheeling to the right, he soared past the clearing and sped toward the south, leaving the ravens behind.
For a brief instant, he caught a glimpse of the Songkeeper below, struggling to stand as the raging horde closed in around her, then she disappeared from sight in the broiling throng. “Emhran, guard her,” he croaked.
He had no strength left but for the next stroke and the one after that. But though he flew a straight course, the sounds of pursuit grew gradually fainter.
Darkness fluttered at the edge of his vision. Each beat of his wings drew a ragged gasp from his lungs. He faltered and dropped nearly twenty feet before catching himself and struggling to maintain momentum.
A sharp crack sounded; Gundhrold’s wing failed. A shudder seized his body, and he hugged the bundle as he plummeted through the forest. Branches rushed at his head, thwacking and tossing him this way and that. A shower of leaves drifted down around him as a rocky plateau appeared below.
Gundhrold screeched, flashing his left wing wildly, desperately trying to pull back, but to no avail. He crashed and a dizzying blast of lights burst across his vision. His talons flew open with the impact, and the bundle slipped from his grasp and fell over the edge of the plateau.
Unable to move, Gundhrold watched the bundle drift down. A soft cry echoed below. Then a roar like the rush of a mighty river filled his ears and darkness engulfed him.
PART ONE
1
“Wretched girl! What are you doing?”
Madame’s voice jolted Birdie to her senses, away from the world of light and beauty woven by the melody that still sang in her ears, and back to the damp stone of the kitchen. She lurched to her feet, cringing at the sight of Madame’s upraised hand.
“Please, Madame—”
Madame’s hand landed on her ear, and the last floating notes of the melody were lost in an explosion of stinging pain. Birdie stumbled. Her feet tangled in the squat three-legged stool, tumbling her down onto the warm stone of the hearth. The flames licked at her long hair, and she scrambled away from the fire.
“Daydreamin’ again? When there’s work t’ be done?” Madame loomed over her, hands propped on her angular hips. “Worthless! That’s what you are. Worthless!”
Birdie stared numbly from the dripping wooden spoon in her hand to the pot of blackened porridge bubbling over the fire. The smell of burnt food stung her nostrils.
Madame yanked her to her feet. “What were you doing?”
Birdie opened her mouth to speak, but the words withered on her tongue. It would never do to mention the melody. Perhaps it was best to say nothing.
Madame took a step forward, bony hand held out in front of her, finger jabbing toward Birdie’s face like a spear. “Mad as a night moth,” she declared. “A lazy, useless, worthless child! That’s what you are! Useless since the day Dalton picked you up off the road! Twelve years now, I’ve put up with this nonsense. And what have you done in return? Lolled around like a daisy. Spouted insane nonsense and caused endless trouble for my poor sons!”
Birdie caught sight of Kurt and Miles, the “poor sons” in question, peering at her around the door frame. Poor sons? More like two terrors. Miles stuck his tongue out before Kurt jerked him out of sight.
“Well, I’ve no use for a half-wit or a mad girl! A girl whose own parents didn’t care enough to bother with and abandoned to the kindness of strangers . . .”
The words stung more than Madame’s blows, but Birdie had heard them all before. Worthless. Half-wit. Mad girl. On and on, Madame’s rant continued, until she could no longer distinguish the individual words.
She studied the stone floor beneath her toes, clenching her fists to hold back her rising anger. She had to get out of here . . . had to get away. Without a word, she spun on her heels, pushed past the startled woman, and tore through the common room out into the clear light of day. She slammed the front door, enclosing Madame’s furious shouts within the walls of the inn.
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nbsp; Birdie ran. Past the barn, across the dusty inn yard, and out over the hills surrounding the Sylvan Swan Inn. Autumn grass crinkled beneath her feet. Blazing orange fire flowers burst as she brushed past, exploding into wild puffs of floating petals that drifted away on the wind. She ran until she gasped for breath and stumbled to her knees in a wide open space. Sobs rose in her throat, smothering her anger, and she flung herself flat against the cool brown earth and cried into her arms.
Deep below, a sepulchral rumbling from the depths of the earth— a distant melody— rose to greet her. Warm as a summer sunrise, the song caught her up in its embrace. The tears dried on her face. Her sorrow eased. The song was familiar—she had known it all her life—and yet new and wondrous, something too great to be fully known or understood. It spiraled upward, carrying her soul to reach for the sky. Then, it stopped abruptly and the melody faded away.
She sat alone on the hillside, the only noise the ordinary sounds of an autumn afternoon: the whispering of windswept grasses, the trilling whistles of the Karnoth birds winging northward to the ice and snow ere Winter Turning, and the peaceful munching of herds of sheep grazing in the troughs between one hill and the next.
Disappointment settled over Birdie. Always it was the same, every time she heard the song. Five notes without resolution. A beginning, constantly repeating, without an end. And yet the five notes were so beautiful that her heart ached at the sound and every fiber of her being yearned to hear more.
She closed her eyes and strained to listen.
“Agh, ye tummy-grubbin’ bit o’ crab meat!”
Birdie bolted upright at the voice.
“Will ye not move on?”
It seemed to be coming from just over the next rise. The speaker—a man—sighed heavily. “Ye won’t, eh? Then, by Turning, I’ll make ye . . .” There was a dull thwack followed by a yelp. When the man spoke again, his voice sounded pained. “Well fine then, have it yer own way. Here’s as good a place as any t’ break fer an afternoon snack. An’ ye can wipe that silly grin off’n yer silly donkey face, ye pitiful blatherin’ slewstop!”
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