Wind From the Abyss

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Wind From the Abyss Page 1

by Janet Morris




  Wind From the Abyss

  Janet E. Morris

  Silistra, Book 3

  1978

  ISBN: 0553112503

  To my sister

  Contents

  Author’s Note

  I: In Mourning for the Unrecollected

  II: The Wages of Forgetfulness

  III: Seeking Stance in the Time

  IV: The Gulf of Alternate Conceptions

  V: Draw to Crux

  VI: An Ordering of Affairs

  VII: Into the Abyss

  VIII: The Passing of Khys

  IX: The Law Within

  X: In Deference to Owkanen

  Appendix 1

  Appendix 2

  Glossary

  Silistran Calendar

  Author’s Note

  Since, at the beginning of this tale, I did not recollect myself nor retain even the slightest glimmer of such understanding as would have led me to an awareness of the significance of the various occurrences that transpired at the Lake of Horns then, I am adding this preface, though it was not part of my initial conception, that the meaningfulness of the events described by “Khys’s Estri” (as I have come to think of the shadow-self I was while the dharen held my skills and memory in abeyance) not be withheld from you as they were from me.

  I knew myself not: I was Estri because the girl Carth supposedly found wandering in the forest stripped of comprehension and identity chose that name. There, perhaps, lies the greatest irony of all, that I named myself anew after Estri Hadrath diet Estrazi, who in reality I had once been. And perhaps it is not irony at all, but an expression of Khys’s humor, an implied dissertation by him who structured my experiences, my very thoughts, for nearly two years, until his audacity drove him to bring together once more Sereth crill Tyris, past-Slayer, then the outlawed Ebvrasea, then arrar to the dharen himself; Chayin rendi Inekte, cahndor of Nemar, co-cahndor of the Taken Lands, chosen son of Tar-Kesa, and at that time Khys’s puppet-vassal; and myself, former Well-Keepress, tiask of Nemar, and lastly becoming the chaldless outlaw who had come to judgment and endured ongoing retribution at the dharen’s hands. To test his hesting, his power over owkahen, the time-coming-to-be, did Khys put us together, all three, in his Day-Keepers’ city—and from that moment onward, the Weathers of Life became fixed: siphoned into a singular future; sealed tight as a dead god in his mausoleum, whose every move but brought him closer to the summed total, death. So did the dharen Khys bespeak it himself ...

  I: In Mourning for the Unrecollected

  The hulion hovered, wings aflap, at the window, butting its black wedge of a head against the pane. Its yellow eyes glowed cruelly, slit-pupiled. Its white fangs, gleaming, were each as long as my forearm.

  I screamed.

  Its tufted ears, flat against its head, twitched. Again and again, toothed mouth open wide, it battered at the window, roaring.

  Once more I screamed, and ran stumbling to the far wall of my prison. I pounded upon the locked doors with my fists, pressing myself against the wood. Sobbing, I turned to face it.

  The beast’s ears flickered at the sound. Those jaws, which could have snapped me in half, closed. It cocked its head.

  I trembled, caught in its gaze. I could retreat no farther. I sank to my knees, moaning, against the door frame.

  The beast gave one final snort. Those wings, with a spread thrice the length of a tall man, snapped decisively, and it was gone.

  When it was no more than a speck in the greening sky, I rose clumsily, trembling, to collect the papers I had strewn across the mat in my terror. They were the arrar Carth’s papers, those he had forgotten in his haste to attend his returning master’s summons.

  I knelt upon my hands and knees on the silvery pile, that I might gather them up and replace them in the tas-sueded folder before he returned.

  Foolish, I thought to myself, that I had so feared the hulion. It could not have gotten in. I could not get out. It could not get in. Once I had thrown a chair at that impervious clarity. The chair had splintered. With one stout thala leg, as thick as my arm, had I battered upon that window. All that I had accomplished was the transformation of chair into kindling. The hulion, I chided myself, could have fared no better.

  Hulions, upon occasion, have been known to eat man flesh. Hulions, furred and winged, fanged and clawed, are the servants of the dharen. I had had no need to fear. Yet, I thought as I gathered the arrar Carth’s scattered papers, they are fearsome. Perhaps if I had been able, as others are, to hear its mind’s intent, I would have felt differently. My fingers, numb and trembling, fumbled for the delicate sheets.

  One in particular caught my eye. It was in Carth’s precise hand and headed: “Preassessment monitoring of the arrar Sereth. Enar fourth second, 25,697.”

  I had met, once, the arrar Sereth. Upon my birthday, Macara fourth seventh, in the year ’696 had I met him, that night upon which my child had been conceived. I had read of his exploits. He frightened me, killer of killers, enforcer for the dharen, he who wore the arrar chald of the messenger. Sereth, scarred and lean and taut like some carnivore, who had loved the Keepress Estri, my namesake, and with her brought great change upon Silistra in the pass Amarsa, 25,695—yes, I had met him.

  I sat myself down cross-legged upon the Galeshir carpet, papers still strewn about, forgotten, and began to read:

  The time is approximately three enths after sun’s rising, the weather clouded and cool, our position just south of the juncture of the Karir and Thoss rivers. I highly recommend that you look in upon the moment.

  The arrar Sereth, on the brindle hulion Leir, touched his gol-knife. It was the first unnecessary movement he had made in over an enth. My presence, alongside upon a black hulion, disquieted him. The brindle, gliding at the apex of its bound, snorted. He touched its shoulder, and the beast, obedient, angled its wings and began its descent.

  When its feet touched the grass, he set it as a grounded lope. I followed suit, bringing my black up to pace him.

  Sereth regarded me obliquely. I, as he, served the dharen, he thought, and touched his hulion to a stop.

  We had been riding all the night, up from Galesh, where I had met him with the two beasts. He had served the dharen, most lately, in Dritira. And before that, in the hide diet, and before that upon the star world M’ksakka had he dealt death and retribution at Khys’s whim. And dealt them successfully, though those tasks had been fraught with deadlier risk than a man might be expected to survive. His thought was wry, recollecting.

  “How did you find M’ksakka?” I asked, to key him, to bring something else above the impenetrable shield he has constructed. My hulion growled at the brindle he rode, and that one answered.

  “I will make a full report to Khys,” he said, slipping off the hulion’s back. “Let us rest them.”

  I joined him where he lay upon the grass, staring at the sky.

  “I missed this land,” he said. “The sky there is dark and ominous, always clouded. M’ksakkan air stings eyes and lungs. Everything is covered with a fine black dust. I would not go again off the planet.”

  “Perhaps he will not send you,” I conjectured.

  He saw M’ksakka, and that seeing was colored by his distaste, both for the world and the work he had done there. The methods he had employed displeased his sense of fitness. The value of the M’ksakkan’s death was to him obscure. I saw the moment: the adjuster’s surprised eyes, wide and staring as Sereth’s fingers closed on his throat, around his windpipe; the M’ksakkan’s clawing hand upon his wrist as he ripped out the man’s larynx, vocal cords dangling; then the blood, spurting, and the sound of the adjuster’s choking death.

  And I saw others he had killed, those who were anxious to try their skills aga
inst a real live Silistran. He had been hesitant to do so, but more hesitant to face an endless line of their ilk, so he had killed the first three. Again, his thoughts sank below readable level. The hulions lay quiet, lashing their tails. The clouds scudded heavy over the sun. A soft, drizzling rain commenced,

  “The dharen is pleased with you,” I said.

  He sat up, his mind absolutely inviolate. “What do you want, Carth?” He stared down at me. I lay perfectly still. He made no attempt to read me for his answer. He merely waited.

  “A first impression. You are coming up for assessment,” I answered, rising up. “We want to get some sense of you. Your mental health is now our concern.”

  He tossed his head, ripping grass from the sward.

  “You brought child upon that wellwoman in Dritira,” I prodded.

  He saw her. In many ways she had reminded him of the Keepress. It had been passes since he had taken a woman. On M’ksakka there were females, but nothing he understood to be a woman. He had not couched many of them. And in hide diet, there were only forereaders. In Dritira, with that woman who reminded him of the Keepress, he had spent his long-pent sperm. Four times he had used her, before she was more than a receptacle in his sight. And he had abused her, more than was his custom.

  “Get me the forms. I will collect my birth-price,” he answered. He did not want the woman.

  “You should take her. We have been considering her. She might yet make a forereader,”

  “Then it is a pity she caught. From inferior sperm can come only inferior stock.”

  “Khys has asked me,” I said, “to bid you welcome to any of the forereaders we hold in common at the lake. Spawn from such a union would be doubtless possessed of talent. The bitterness you hold is out of proportion to the reality. We all, at one time or another, find there is something we want that we may not have.”

  He did not answer me, but rose and went to his hulion. He thought of her as one thinks of the dead; with acceptance, and then of his life, and what compromises he had made to keep it. What he let me know, I have no doubt, will please you. What he did not—that is what concerns me. He allowed me nothing else for the duration of our return.

  His shield, as you will see, is set lower and much farther into his deeper conscious than any I have encountered. Most of his processing must take place behind it. Deep-reading him is out of the question. He visualizes barely enough to verbalize his will. That he is functioning superbly is attested to by his works. That he feels it to his advantage to serve us at present is a certainty. I worry over what might occur, should he choose, eventually, not to serve us.

  My formal recommendation is for a complete and detailed assessment. Also, I feel some attempt might be made to pacify him, in light of what he is fast becoming. Or perhaps even to eliminate him, lest he become, like Se’keroth, the weapon turned upon the wielder.

  And it was signed Carth.

  “Carth!” I gasped, as a dark hand snapped the sheet from my grasp. Still upon my knees, I twisted to see him. His dark eyes gleamed. He ran his hand through his black curls.

  “Did you find this informative, Estri?” he asked, towering over me, the paper crumpled in his fist. Carth was furious. I dared not answer.

  I started to my feet.

  “Pick them up!” he commanded, pointing.

  I scurried to obey him, scrambling for the sheets strewn upon the web-work, my stomach an icy knot. Once before, I had seen Carth this agitated, when I had written for him a certain paper. And he had called it audacious, and destroyed it. I finished, and rose to my full height, handing the tas envelope to him. My head came to his shoulder. He looked down at me, stern-faced.

  “You were ill-advised to do this,” he said. “He is not pleased with you. This”—and he threw the crumpled sheet across the room—“will only aggravate matters. You had best make some effort to placate him.”

  “What do you mean?” I demanded. “Has he taken some sudden interest in me?” I had seen the dharen precisely three times since I had come to reside at the Lake of Horns: the night he had gotten me with child, the day following, and once while I lay near death when the child had driven me to seek it. He had not been at the Lake of Horns when I bore his he-beast into the world. I had cried out for him during that premature and extended labor. He had not been available. Now, nearly eight passes later, he had returned.

  “Do not be insolent!” Carth’s voice snapped as his palm slapped my face to one side. Tears in my eyes, I put my hand to my cheek. It was what I had thought, not what I had said, that had brought me punishment. Shaking my head, I backed away from him. Though I had known Carth a telepath, a surface-reader, rarest of Silistran talents, never had he shown his skills before me, one who neither spoke nor heard the tongues of mind.

  “Estri, come here.”

  I went to him, my hand trailing from my cheek to the warm, pulsing band locked about my throat.

  When I stood before him, he lifted my face, his hand under my chin, that I might look into his eyes.

  “He is very angry, child. You must realize that what you think is as audible to him as what you say. I know it was not intentional, that you read what you did. Forget it, if you can. Concentrate upon what lies before you.” He patted my shoulder, all the anger gone out of him.

  “I do not want to see him,” I said, toying with the ends of my copper hair, grown now well below mid-thigh.

  Carth pursed his lips. “You have no choice. He will see you in a third-enth. Make ready.” And he turned and strode through the double doors that adjoined my prison to Khys’s quarters. Khys, my couch-mate, was again in residence. The dharen of all Silistra, back from none knew where, would again rule at the Lake of Horns.

  Make ready, indeed, I thought, combing my hair. I had only the white, sleeveless s’kim I wore; thigh-length, of simple web-cloth. My jewelry was the band of restraint at my throat. I retied the garment upon my hips. Throwing my hair back, I regarded myself in my prison’s mirrored wall. My body, copper-skinned, lithe, only shades lighter than my thick mane, postured at me, arrogant. I had thought, for a time, that the he-beast had destroyed it, but such had not been the case. Exercise had given its grace and firmness back to me. My legs are very long, my waist tiny, hips slim. Pregnancy had altered me little. My breasts were still high and firm, my belly flat and tight. Good enough for him, surely. I widened my eyes suggestively, then stuck my tongue out at her. She made a face back. I grinned and wondered why I had done so, turning from that wall that ever showed me the boundaries of my world.

  At the window, I waited, looking out upon the eastern horn of the lake. The fall flames of Brinar, harvest pass, fired the forest. The grass was losing its battle, browning. Hulions and forereaders and Day-Keepers strolled between the tusk-white buildings that circle the Lake of Horns like some wellwoman’s necklace. The green lake was calm and still, wearing the sky’s clouds for masquerade.

  Angry, was he? I did not care. I cared no more for him than that he-beast he had put upon me. I would not care.

  I had cared very much, once. He had been kind to me that first night. I had no recollection of other men before him, though surely there had been some. In my lost past lay all that had occurred before I came to the Lake of Horns in Cetet of ’695, two years, two passes back. And I had cared for him, he who first touched me, Khys.

  He had told me he would do many things. He had done some. He had put on me a son. He had seen to it that I was re-educated. I had been looked after, but not by him. He had also said that someday the band of restraint I wore would be removed from me, that I might explore my talents. That he had not done. After the pregnancy, he had promised, when I lay near miscarriage by my own hand. But no release had been given me after I birthed him his precious child.

  I touched the warm, vibrating band at my throat. I hardly minded its tightness. I could often forget that it was there. But its true significance I could not forget. Khys had explained to me that I wore the band for my own protection, lest the
mindlessness reach up again and take me. I had learned otherwise. Early in my pregnancy, when they still humored me, I had begged to be allowed to stay with the forereaders in the common holding, that I might have the company of womankind. Reluctantly, Carth had agreed.

  I had sent for him to take me back, weeping, upon the third day. Among the forereaders, I was an outcast. Those born at the Lake of Horns feel themselves better than all others. My skin tone resembles theirs. Those who come from the outside, or “Barbaria,” as the Lake-born call it, are an even tighter group. I fit neither. And I was the dharen’s alone. They were jealous, common-held. Or so I thought, until I saw an angry dharener stride into the women’s keep and collar a moaning, pleading forereader. So do they punish wrongdoers at the Lake of Horns. As long as she wore the band of restraint, the forereader could not practice her craft. She was isolate. She was blind, deaf, and dumb to mind skills. She could not sort. Neither could she hest. She was helpless. She was shamed. She was marked, disgraced. As was I.

  When Carth had retrieved me, I had demanded to know, sobbing uncontrollably, what it was I had done. He had for me no answer, but that I wore the band for my own protection.

  But after that, I began to wonder. I wondered until the child began to make itself known within me, until I could think of nothing else. Ravening, it tried to destroy me. In time, I tried to destroy myself, first, that perhaps I would not spawn such evil upon the world. But it would not let me die. It enjoyed too much the torture to which it could subject me from within.

  When it was born, finally, after thirteen enths of labor, I refused to look upon it. I would not feed it. They forced me twice, but the he-beast was so agitated, red-faced, and howling, and its teeth so savage upon me, that they desisted. I had never heard of a child born with teeth, but I had known it would have them. I felt their bite a full pass before the thing demanded exit. I was glad to be rid of it, a pass before it was due.

 

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