Secret Sacrament
Page 29
“Our love surrounds you always,” said Sheel Chandra tenderly, “and we are as close as your next thought of us.”
Very softly, not knowing whether the Master would know, Gabriel kissed his own fingers, and placed them lightly on Sheel Chandra’s upturned palm. Then, making no sound, he got up and went down the long stairs, through the shining passages, and out into the night wind rich with the scent of cultivated earth, trees, and citrus fruits. He sighed deeply, and became aware again of the window ledge beneath his hands, and of his feet firmly planted on the ancient floor of the fort tower. From the courtyard on the other side came sounds of flutes. A few minutes longer he stood there, then he went down the stairs and joined the people by their fire.
“It was good up there, haii?” they asked.
“Very good,” he said, picking up some meat from a bowl on the hearth and chewing on it. “I could see all the world to the ocean.”
Later, instead of preparing for bed, he rolled the sleeping mat and blankets, and collected up his and Ashila’s clothes.
“Why are you doing that?” she whispered.
“We’re going to our own Ta-sarn-ee,” he said, “if the guards don’t stop us.” He took her hand, and they went out carefully between the rows of beds, to the courtyard.
Two soldiers were on duty by the main gate, standing to attention, their bows held ready in their hands. They watched as Gabriel and Ashila crossed the courtyard, and one of them muttered to the other, “Shouldn’t we stop them? The towers are forbidden to the Shinali.”
The other guard, an older man, shook his head. “I had a toothache, and he fixed it. He deserves some reward for what he does here. Say nothing, lad; I’ll answer to Razzak if need be.”
In the lofty room of the tower, Ashila gazed out across her people’s land, her eyes full of longing. “They’ve not walked on it yet or changed it,” she said. “It’s still our land.”
“It always will be,” said Gabriel, standing behind her and enfolding her in his arms. For a long time they stood looking down at the grasslands.
“Your place, are you missing it?” she asked, her eyes on the Citadel hills and the smoldering lights of Navora.
“I was, but I’m not now,” he replied.
She kissed his cheek, then moved out of his arms and inspected the tiny room. Gabriel had already placed the fur and blankets on the floor, for their bed. He had brought a candle as well, and he lit it now, using the flints Ferron had left for him. The tiny flame sent a warm glow across their sleeping place.
Gabriel lay on his back on the bed, watching Ashila, his hands linked behind his head. She walked about the windows, looking out each one, marveling at the view. Last, she took a long look at the Shinali land, then went and lay down with him.
“It’s strange, being only us two,” she whispered.
“We don’t have to whisper,” he said. “And if you’re lonely I’ll invite Zalidas and a few of the others up here.”
She leaned up on one elbow and caressed his hair and face. “It’s good having a light,” she said. “I love your face. And your heart. And your spirit. And everything that is you. All my life, it seems, I’ve had knowing of you. When I first saw your face, it was not a stranger’s. What made you come to us, Gabriel? Why did you run on our land, that day of your brother’s burning?”
He did not answer immediately but lay looking at the timber beams of the tower roof. The candle flickered on the wooden floor beside him, its glow ebbing and flowing across his features. “When I was little,” he said, “I broke a marble statue of the Empress. I ran away, and found . . . I found a Shinali bone. That’s when it all started.”
Ashila touched the small leather bag on his chest, feeling for the Shinali bone. Gently, Gabriel removed her fingers from the leather and held them tightly in his own. Beneath their hands, his heart thudded.
“It was her bone!” Ashila whispered. “The daughter of—”
“Please say nothing else,” he said. “It’s gone, the bone and my feelings about it. It’s gone now, to the All-father.”
“I’m wanting to ask you just one thing.”
“Then ask. But I may not answer.”
“The All-father, he has given you peace?”
“More than peace,” he replied, lifting her fingers to his lips and kissing them. “He has given me you.”
Ashila settled down again, her head on his chest. A moth came in and fluttered about the candle flame, searing its wings. In the sky beyond their windows a night bird shrieked, and the wind from the sea sighed about the tower.
In that huge, beautiful, silent solitude they loved one another, freely and with joy. Afterward they lay in each other’s arms, watching the stars traverse the sky, and Ashila sang an old Shinali prayer for restoration and tomorrow.
20
HOPE
GABRIEL CROUCHED BY Tarkwan, and inspected the unhealed wound in his thigh. “I need to clean this with a heated knife,” Gabriel told him. “If the infection goes unchecked, your whole leg may go bad.”
“Do what you must,” said Tarkwan. “I’ll be needing my legs for walking on my land again, in freedom.”
“I’ll ask Razzak if I can borrow a knife. Ashila will help, and I’ll stop what pain I can.”
“If Razzak’s in a good mind, ask him for our spears and slings, as well,” said Tarkwan, with bitter humor.
Gabriel grinned and got up to go to Razzak’s office.
He returned shortly, accompanied by two armed guards, and carrying a cloth containing a small pair of scissors, a needle and thread, and a knife. Ashila was with him, with a bowl of water and her medicinal herbs. Other Shinali gathered about, silent and watchful, as the guards positioned themselves one at Tarkwan’s right shoulder and one at his left, their swords bare. Zalidas crouched at Tarkwan’s feet, chanting a prayer for his spirit to journey in a good place while his body endured pain. In the courtyard, not far away, Thandeka had lit a small fire. Gabriel was about to give her the knife to heat, but one of the soldiers forbade it. “Only you touch the knife,” he said to Gabriel.
Gabriel placed the blade across the flames and returned to Tarkwan. Kneeling by his head, he moved his hands behind the chieftain’s neck, his fingers tracing deep pathways to block the pain. Tarkwan relaxed, his eyes closed. With one hand he held the bone torne on his chest.
“The pain, it is gone?” Gabriel asked Tarkwan, in Shinali.
Tarkwan nodded, and Gabriel picked up the scissors and began cutting the stitches that remained across the gaping wound. It would all have to be scraped and burned back to the healthy flesh before he washed it out with lotions made from Ashila’s antiseptic herbs, and stitched it closed again. Sunlight poured over his hands, for he worked in the bright light at the edge of the Shinali barracks. A few flies buzzed over the wound, and Ashila brushed them away. Then Gabriel got the knife from the fire and began cutting away the infected parts, at the same time sealing the blood vessels with the heated blade, preventing fatal bleeding. All the time the Shinali clan watched, and the guards waited, tense and suspicious. Not understanding Gabriel’s way of stopping pain, the soldiers marveled at what appeared to them to be the chieftain’s incredible self-control and endurance.
Suddenly there was a commotion near the gates, and several of the Shinali shouted that someone had arrived. Fearing authorities from the city, Gabriel glanced up but could see only Shinali people gathered on the steps. Then he remembered his communion with Sheel Chandra last night, and fear changed to hope.
“Keep working,” said one of the guards, seeing Gabriel’s hands still. “The sooner that knife gets safely away from these savages, the better.”
Gabriel continued, while Ashila used clean rags to wipe away the gathering blood and the bad tissue he cut free.
Some of the children came running in, yelling about women from the farms, and baskets of food. Understanding some of their words, Gabriel thought of his mother. Had Salverion been to see her, told her he was here? Again, his
hands faltered. With cries of delight other Shinali raced to the gates. Only the elderly stayed to share their chieftain’s healing, to give him the strength of their presence. Zalidas chanted on, quietly, and Tarkwan remained motionless, though he smiled a little, hearing his people’s pleasure. Gabriel worked on, cutting away the last of the infected flesh. Then he heated the knife again and burned the wound clean. Just as he began to suture it closed, a guard came up the barrack steps, with one of the visitors. “This woman wants to speak to a healer,” the guard announced. “Says she’s got medicines and ointments.”
Not moving from his position at Tarkwan’s side, Gabriel looked up. His eyes met his mother’s, and for a moment they both smiled. Astonishment crossed her face as she saw his dark hair. Very slightly, warning her, Gabriel shook his head. Then he looked down again, hoping his joy did not show. “If you don’t mind waiting, I have to finish here first,” he said. “I won’t be long.”
“I don’t mind waiting,” she replied. “At least it’s relatively quiet here, compared to my house. It’s full of rowdy children whose father loves them too much to discipline them. It’ll be chaotic there when I get back. But I shouldn’t complain. I ought to be thankful they’re all healthy and happy. And free.”
Having told him that much of his family and her recent marriage, she fell silent. Gabriel continued his task, not knowing what to say, longing to look again at her face.
Lena waited, the basket of medicines in her arms. Trying to appear casual, ignoring the guards with their drawn swords, she watched her son as he sutured the Shinali’s wound. Never had she seen him heal before, and she marveled at his swift skill and the surety with which he worked. A scene came back to her from long ago: that terrible day of Jager’s funeral, the argument with the uncles, and Gabriel’s startling announcement that he wanted to help people. She smiled to herself, remembering the look on his face that day, so fiercely determined. And here he was, doing the work he had always longed to do. She felt inexpressibly blessed to see it, to witness at last a part of the life he had chosen.
Tarkwan groaned, and Gabriel asked him in Shinali if his pain had come back. Tarkwan nodded, and Gabriel touched the base of his skull again, and the upper part of his spine. “I’m near finishing,” Gabriel said, also in Shinali. “The woman here, she’s my mother. Soldiers, they must not . . . ah . . .” He groped for the right words.
Ashila said, also in Shinali, “We’re all knowing, Darshan. Don’t be fearing.”
Lena listened, thinking how strange it was to hear Gabriel speak Shinali. She remembered Myron’s funeral, and Gabriel’s visit then to the Shinali; and she remembered the name of Ashila, the one he had grown to love. She looked at the young woman who helped him now, wondering. The girl glanced up at Lena and smiled, and Lena knew. A great joy went through her, and a sorrow. She thought about the Shinali carving she had seen sometimes about Gabriel’s neck when he was a boy, and wondered if he still wore it. What was the connection? Lifelong it was, powerful, and she could not even begin to understand it.
She looked past him, to the interior of the barracks. Beds were spread on woven grass matting, all in tidy rows, with narrow pathways left between. Several Shinali lay there sleeping, and Lena wondered if they were ill. There were cooking pots and bundles of clothes piled tidily along the walls. Dust lay over everything, and the place was grubby, despite the obvious attempts at cleanliness. From somewhere came the smell of latrines, and the warm air was full of flies. They buzzed about Lena’s head and crawled over Gabriel as he worked.
Tarkwan’s eyes opened a slit, and he studied Gabriel’s mother. “Were you one of the farmers who sent us blankets and food, when the winter was a high lot bad?” he asked.
“Yes. I organized it,” she replied. “I hope you didn’t mind that we came on your land.”
“Your blankets warmed our bodies as much as your kindness warmed our hearts,” said Tarkwan. “I thank you. We’ll not be forgetting.”
“I hope . . . was hoping that this spring we’d be able to trade seeds for crops, and that you would show us how to care properly for sheep,” said Lena. “I was hoping we could be friends, living together in peace. I want you to know that I love the land I bought from you, and will look after it well.”
“The time of peace will come,” said Tarkwan, “and we will be helping you.”
One of the soldiers gave a hard laugh and lowered the point of his sword to Tarkwan’s throat. “Keep your mouth shut, dog!” he spat. “The only peace you’ll get is in the grave.”
Fortunately, just then Gabriel finished. “It’s done now, Tarkwan,” he said, standing up and leaving Ashila to wash the wound and bind it. Thandeka brought him a bowl of water, and he washed his hands, and also the scissors and knife. He handed the instruments to the guards, hoping they would leave. But they did not.
Not daring to ask them to go, in case it aroused suspicions, Gabriel said to Lena, “Thank you for waiting. You’d better show me these medicines you’ve brought, and explain what they are.”
“Just simple herbs and potions, all labeled,” Lena replied, taking the cloth off the basket, and picking up a small pot of ointment. She handed it to him, and for an instant their fingers touched. Longing to embrace, to speak freely, they simply smiled. “It’s good of you to bring them,” Gabriel said. “My helper here, Ashila, she’s grateful, too.”
Ashila stood, and Lena saw that she was almost as tall as Gabriel himself. They looked fine together, so fine. Lena bent her head over her basket, hiding her emotion. “There are other things here,” she said, fumbling with the contents. “There are bandages, too. But no soap. I wish I’d brought soap. I should have thought . . .”
Conscious of the soldiers, Gabriel put his hand across Lena’s, steadying her, giving her peace. “What you’ve brought is priceless to us,” he said. “Thank you. It was thoughtful of you to come. It means more to us than I can say.”
“Other farmers came with me,” she said. “We’ve brought food for the Shinali, clean clothes, and some games for the children. I don’t know if we’ll be able to come again. The commander said we weren’t to make a habit of it. But if we can come, is there anything else you need?”
“News,” he said. “Do you know how long we are going to be here?”
One of the soldiers stepped forward. “This isn’t a social visit,” he said to Lena. “Just hand over the medicines and go.”
As Lena handed Gabriel the basket, she said, “A friend of mine, also a healer, visited me early this morning. He is going to talk to the Empress. He said—”
“Enough, woman!” said the soldier. “And I’ll have the basket. I’ll search it first.”
It was given to him, and he rifled through it, removing a pair of scissors and a needle.
“They were for simple surgery,” protested Lena. “They’re hardly weapons.”
“With the Shinali,” said the soldier, “even little stones are weapons.” He gave the basket to Gabriel and indicated with his sword that Lena should go.
One last time she gazed at Gabriel. They were both near tears, both longing to speak. Suddenly, before they could give themselves away, Lena turned and hurried back to the gates. As she crossed the courtyard, a Shinali child ran up to her and shyly thanked her for the apple he was eating. Lena took the child’s hand and they walked together to the gates. It was the last image Gabriel had of his mother—that walk of hers across the yellow dust, hand in hand with the Shinali child. He thought of the Time of the Eagle, the prophecy of the renewed nations; of what Ashila had said about the farmers being the good branch, that part of the old Navora that would survive and live in unity with the restored Shinali people. For the first time he realized the full worth of his mother’s dreams and decisions and insights. Overwhelmed with gratitude and hope, he watched as she walked through the gates with the other farmers and disappeared into the brightness outside.
A month passed, and spring blazed into summer. Every five days supply wagons came to t
he fort, bringing firewood and food, but if Razzak received new information about the fate of the Shinali, he kept it to himself. The physician he had requested never arrived. Several times Gabriel pleaded with Razzak to let the Shinali wash in the river and drink fresh water, but the commander refused. He also refused Gabriel’s request that some of the soldiers hunt deer in the mountains, to supplement the paltry supplies allocated to the Shinali. Adult prisoners often went hungry so children would have enough to eat, and they all suffered diarrhea and vomiting from the contaminated well water. Moved to pity, some of the soldiers shared their rations with the Shinali children, and often brought them fresh drinking water from the river. But even this was a mixed blessing; one of the soldiers, suffering from measles, passed it on to a Shinali child. Having never known measles before, the Shinali had no natural resistance to the disease; it spread like wildfire, killing four of the children and two adults. Several more remained seriously ill.
Twice more the farmers came to the fort, bringing baskets of fresh fruit and vegetables, along with medical supplies and bundles of firewood, but Razzak did not let them through the gates. Gabriel did not see his mother again.
Almost every night Gabriel meditated, trying to commune with Sheel Chandra. Though he could move in his mind within the Citadel and once saw Salverion slumped wearily in a chair, his head bent in his hands, unreachable, he never found the Master of Mind-power. After a time he no longer tried, saving his energies for healing, and to assuage the unrest and desperation he sensed in the Shinali. Healing was becoming increasingly difficult, as his body became weaker.
One morning, exhausted after sitting with a boy critically ill from dysentery, Gabriel left the stifling barracks to go and rest. The morning was only half gone, but already the trapped air between the high stone walls was close and suffocating, and the flies were intolerable. As he crossed the courtyard, Gabriel stepped carefully between the rows of Shinali bedding and sleeping mats spread out to air in the sun. The children played as near to the shade of the porch as they dared, and some of the married soldiers, missing their own children in Navora, were showing them tricks with cards, or telling them stories. The young people were gathered in a shelter in the back of the fort, where firewood had once been stored. It was little more than a broken tile roof propped up by wooden beams, but it gave shade and was their own place.