Tales of Golmeira- The Complete Box Set

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Tales of Golmeira- The Complete Box Set Page 22

by Marianne Ratcliffe


  A tall figure, cloaked in black, stood silently before her. The wind whipped at a hood that obscured the face so that she was unable to distinguish any features. A chill ran through her frame and she tried to slam the door shut, but the figure reached out and held the door open. Inexplicably, a fog descended across her vision and confusion raged in her mind. Looking down, she saw a snake writhing in her hand. Horrified, she threw it away. The fog cleared. To her dismay she realised she stood before the visitor unarmed and defenceless. Dalbric too had dropped his mallet and stood empty-handed and equally bewildered.

  The black-cloaked figure raised his hands and pulled down his hood, revealing an elderly man with an large birthmark across his face. His eyes lit upon the children by the fire and he made as if to step towards them. Dalbric held out an arm to block his way. The intruder held up his hands.

  ‘Please – I apologise for my intrusion,’ he said. ‘I assure you I mean no harm. I have long been searching for the children you have here. I would know that they are safe and have not been harmed.’

  ‘They are safe enough,’ exclaimed Etta, ‘but someone has tried to harm them. How do we know you are not one of their tormentors? What was that trick you played on us just now?’

  The stranger stepped backwards. ‘I’m sorry,’ he said. ‘As you can see, I carry no weapon, so I used a gift I have to resolve things safely. I would not have entered your minds, except for the danger of the situation.’

  ‘I don’t know who you are, or what you want, but these children are under my protection,’ Etta said.

  ‘Your sentiments do you great credit,’ said the old man, bowing his head. ‘My heart is glad to see that they have been taken in by such kindness. But I assure you I mean no harm. It is a sad time when suspicion is in everyone’s hearts.’

  ‘A sad time when such things can happen to children,’ retorted Etta.

  The stranger’s face crumpled and there was a catch in his voice as he asked, ‘Why? What has happened? Is Zastra hurt? Or the little one? Tell me I am not too late.’

  His anguish was clear, and Etta relented slightly.

  ‘The girl is gravely ill. The fever has lessened now, thank the stars. If it weren’t for the nightmares that disturb her rest, I think she might recover.’

  As if on cue, Zastra began to writhe and thrash beneath the blanket, her face crumpled in fear, although she was still asleep.

  ‘I can help her, if you will allow me to try,’ said the man.

  ‘I don’t trust him, Ma,’ Dalbric said, folding his arms. Etta’s eyes flicked from her son to the stranger. With a sigh, she made a slight motion of her head toward the fire. The visitor needed no further encouragement. Kneeling by the girl, he laid a hand gently on her head and closed his eyes.

  Zastra was trapped in a swirling vortex of migaradons, burning castles, black-cloaked mindweavers and scar-faced assassins. She was trying to pull Findar and Kastara out of the vortex, but they were too heavy. Their tiny hands slipped from her sweaty grasp and they were sucked into the depths. She was drawn in after them, with no power to resist. Then, miraculously, she felt a presence; a strong, quiet calmness, and she was lifted out of the vortex and deposited on a grassy, sunlit hillside. Blissfully, she drifted into a deep and peaceful sleep.

  Etta and Dalbric saw only that the child had calmed under the gentle touch of the old man.

  ‘Such things should not have been witnessed by one so young,’ said the man, sadly. ‘My poor, dear Zastra.’

  They sat for a while, watching over the sleeping children. The night drew in, and the wind grew into a gale. Rain clattered against the shutters. Etta looked around the small cabin. Normal hospitality would have her invite the stranger to stay, but they had not much room and even less food. With the two children to tend, they would struggle to feed another mouth. The man stood up.

  ‘I will trespass on your hospitality no longer,’ he said. ‘Will you allow me to return in a few days to see to the health of the children?’

  Etta nodded. ‘If the girl asks, who shall I say you are?’

  ‘Tell Zastra that Master Dobery called,’ said the man, raising his hood and departing into the tempest.

  Zastra tried to open her eyes, but they seemed locked shut, sticky and heavy. A dim, unremembered nightmare dragged at her. As she moved, a sharp pain jagged across her back, prodding her in to semi-consciousness. Her blurred vision made out a small figure with hair the colour of hay. It was nursing a baby. Zastra felt a nagging sense of urgency. She strove to wake, fixing onto the baby like a drunk who must hold onto a stationary object to stop the whole world spinning. Seeing her move, the baby pointed and clapped his hands in delight.

  Findar… She sank back into the depths.

  The next day, Zastra woke fully. An unknown hand gave her a cup of water, which she swallowed gratefully, her throat as raw as sand. The same gentle hand then supported her as she was fed some hot soup. She couldn’t really taste it, but the sensation of warm liquid was pleasant and soothing. Even in the dimness of the hut the light seemed unnaturally bright. Findar crawled toward her and Zastra recognised her brother, weeping tears of joy as she clasped him to her.

  She looked up to see a lanky teenage boy and his mother. The family resemblance was clear in the straw-coloured hair, green-blue eyes and the slightly hooked nose.

  ‘You’re safe here, Zastra,’ said the boy. ‘Both of you.’

  ‘Dalbric found you,’ said the woman, smiling encouragingly. ‘You were both in a bit of a state, but the littlun is fine. You’ve had quite an adventure, by the look of you.’

  ‘Yes,’ whispered Zastra.

  ‘Where are you from?’ asked Etta. ‘Do you have family? Your parents will be worried.’

  There was a long silence.

  ‘Our parents are dead,’ Zastra managed to utter at length, and turning her back lay and stared long into the depths of the fire.

  Chapter Forty

  Zastra recovered slowly. The mixture of malnutrition and long illness had made her extremely weak, but the kindness of her rescuers slowly brought her back to health. After a few days she was able to sit up for short periods. When Etta told her about the visit of Dobery, Zastra’s eyes lit up and she looked out impatiently for his return. It was several days before he reappeared, laden with a large sack of food. Zastra tried to rush over to him but her legs were too weak. Dobery dropped his parcel and ran to her, clasping her in a firm embrace.

  When Zastra and Dobery had recovered themselves, everyone sat down to a hearty meal of roasted meat and vegetables, cooked using the supplies Dobery had brought. Findar was then put to bed and Etta asked Zastra to tell them her story. Zastra hesitated, looking to Dobery for advice.

  ‘These are good people, Zastra,’ he said. ‘We owe them the truth.’

  Haltingly at first, she related her tale, from the terrible events at Golmer Castle through to her escape from Brutila. Etta and Dalbric listened in amazement.

  ‘We knew nothing of this,’ said Etta. ‘We seldom go down into the valley, and even then, we rarely see soldiers. We pay tax once a year when we sell our goods down in the valley – which I resent, since I don’t see what we get back for all the money we pay.'

  ‘You really don’t know what’s happening in the rest of Golmeira?’ asked Zastra.

  ‘Don’t know and don’t care,’ Etta remarked. ‘We keep to ourselves up here. Of course, every once in a while, one of the village children has an impulse to go and live in the valleys. Most come back. Poor and tough our life may be, but it’s ours and it keeps us free from bother most of the time. But I don’t understand how you escaped from that horrible woman with the grey hair.’

  ‘Me neither,’ Zastra said. ‘One moment I was trapped on the ledge, expecting her to swoop down and kill me. Then the migaradon just crashed into the mountain.’

  ‘Tell me,’ said Dobery, ‘what were you thinking at the time?’

  ‘I was remembering what Orwin had told me about Brutila – about whe
n she was a girl and they left her on that snowy mountain with the scrittals.’

  ‘That may explain it,’ said Dobery. ‘When a mindweaver enters your mind, they can see what you see. That picture must have been terribly traumatic for Brutila. I suspect that she was taking cintara bark, which can make visions seem like reality. She would have been transported back to that time when she was a helpless child, alone and abandoned. Her mental control over the migaradon would have been broken, with terrible consequences. It was your compassion for the child Brutila that saved you, as nothing else could have.’

  ‘What do you mean, mental control?’ asked Dalbric, who had listened to the tale with fascination.

  ‘Ah, that is a long story, young man,’ said Dobery, ‘and it is getting late. I should be on my way.’

  ‘No, stay,’ said Etta, reaching out towards him. ‘You brought food, so you’ve earned your placed at our table. We’ll find room for you somewhere.’

  ‘Thank you. Your kindness...’

  ‘No need to thank me,’ she said brusquely. ‘Now, I’ll make us some hot chala. I can see these two won’t get any sleep anyway until they hear your story, Master Dobery.’ Dalbric and Zastra fidgeted impatiently while the chala was made, until at last Dobery could tell his tale.

  Chapter Forty-one

  Dobery began with his trip to Waldaria with Morel and her company of soldiers, organised in response to the murder of one of the council of mindweavers.

  ‘When we arrived,’ he said, ‘it was clear that something was very wrong. The locals were frightened but no one would talk to us. There was a region of the Waldarian Forest that seemed to hold particular dread, so Morel decided we should investigate. We were ambushed by a large force of Kyrgs, allied with black-cloaked mindweavers. Thorlberd had laid his trap well and we were heavily outnumbered. Morel saw the hopelessness of our position and gave the order to flee.’

  ‘What about Morel?’ asked Zastra, anxiously. Dobery shook his head, his brow knitted in sorrow.

  ‘She fought bravely, forcing a gap in the line of Kyrgs so that many of our men and women could escape, but in so doing she was overpowered. At that point, I too turned and fled deep into the forest, leaving the ambush and its terrible toll far behind. After wandering aimlessly for some time, I came upon a clearing in which gangs of soldiers were tugging on huge chains against something deep within a vast cave. It was a migaradon; without doubt the most fearful sight I have ever seen. A black-cloaked mindweaver mounted the beast. I saw how the rider made mental contact with the insane monster to calm and control it. That night, silhouetted against the moons, I saw a flight of the evil beasts leaving the forest, their terrible cries renting the air. With despair in my soul, I saw that they headed in the direction of Golmer Castle.

  Seeking to understand what I had seen, I probed all the minds I could reach. I found answers within the mind of an old man called Alfin. He had been a servant in the household of the Lady Migara, Zastra’s grandmother. You never knew her Zastra and be grateful for it. She was a ruthless, ambitious mindweaver. Perhaps because he sensed her lust for power, her father, Fostran the Third, decreed that his grandson Leodra should succeed him, rather than Migara, as would usually occur. Migara was incensed at being passed over. She began experiments within the Forest of Waldaria, crossbreeding bats, otters, vizzals and many other varieties of beast. Her aim was to breed a flying beast to conquer anyone that stood in her way.

  This man, Alfin, had a mindweaving ability so rare that I have never heard it described before; a special power of healing. Migara discovered his ability and forced him to assist her experiments. He was able to repair defects in these crossbred animals that would otherwise be fatal even before they were born. With Alfin’s help, many survived despite their deformities. The first successful pups were derived from otters, but covered in scales and with stubs on their back, like stunted wings.’

  ‘I don’t understand,’ said Dalbric. ‘What was she doing?’

  ‘The migaradons…’ whispered Zastra in horrified realisation. Dobery nodded.

  ‘That’s right, Zastra. Over the course of many years, the migaradon evolved, becoming large enough to carry a person. However, they could not control the wild nature of the brute. Born as it was from an unnatural mix of identities, its mind was filled with conflicting instincts, leaving it on the verge of madness. When Fostran died and Leodra became grand marl, Migara was already suffering from the illness that was to kill her, and so she persuaded Thorlberd, her favourite son, to continue her work.

  ‘Why?’ exclaimed Zastra. ‘Why would he plot against his own brother?’

  ‘It seems he shared her desire to make Golmeira a military power. He also resented being ruled by a non-mindweaver, even if that person were his brother. Migara died, but Thorlberd carried on with the experiments, eventually discovering that crossbreeding with fellgryffs instilled enough intelligence into the beast to enable them to be controlled by those mindweavers with the art of communicating with animals.’

  ‘Communicating with animals?’ exclaimed Dalbric. ‘Is that possible?’

  ‘Indeed it is – a rare, but not unknown ability,’ replied Dobery.

  ‘Like Colinar,’ said Zastra.

  ‘Exactly so, my dear.’

  ‘But to use fellgryffs,’ exclaimed Zastra, her brow furrowing as she recalled the quiet intelligence and courage of the fellgryff that had saved them in the mountains. ‘Oh, it’s just too horrid!’

  ‘What will Thorlberd do next?’ asked Dalbric.

  ‘Do you think he might attack Sendor?’ interjected Zastra, her thoughts turning to Kylen and Zax.

  ‘I fear so. I have been prying into any mind I could access, and I have learnt much that our council should have seen. Even as Thorlberd was plotting the downfall of your father, he was also thinking of Sendor. He sent spies to stir up trouble in the borders and he had messengers from the Sendorans killed to prevent the peace talks with your father. When Mendoraz came in person, Thorlberd arranged for the caralyx to be smuggled into the castle. It was supposed to kill Kylen or Zax, which might have been enough for war to be declared. In the end, pinning the blame on the Sendorans worked just as well. The chance of peace was lost and when your father sent more soldiers to the Sendoran border, the defences at Golmer Castle were weakened. It was a very clever plan. I’ve no doubt your uncle will invade Sendor as soon as he has Golmeira under his control.’

  ‘That’s sad news indeed,’ said Etta. ‘They still tell awful tales of the last war down in the village. It set families against each other, here in the Borders. I’d hate to see such times come again.’

  ‘How did you find us, Dobery?’ asked Zastra.

  ‘After seeing the migaradons in the Forest of Waldaria, I headed back to Golmer Castle as fast I could. Alas, I was too late.’

  Dobery paused, placing his hand on Zastra’s shoulder.

  ‘I do have some news which I hope will comfort you, my dear. On my way to Golmer I passed through the village of Hurlbridge. I was sneaking along the back of the houses to avoid the soldiers, but as I did so a door opened, and I found myself face-to face with Bodel. It would appear that sneaking is not one of my better skills. Bodel said I made more noise than a herd of fat goats frolicking in a field of dry twigs. A rather harsh judgement, in my opinion, but I cannot deny she had heard me.’

  ‘Bodel!’ exclaimed Zastra, her body stiffening in excitement.

  ‘Yes. She told me what had happened with you and the twins at Highcastle village. A few days after you had gone, she heard from your friend Heldrid that Bedrun was missing. Bodel was filled with joy and wondered if Bedrun might have gone to Hurlbridge, her sister’s village. She took Dalka and Kastara there. It turned out to be a most fortunate decision, since Brutila and her guards broke into Bodel’s house just a few days later, looking for you and the twins.’

  ‘What about Kastara? Is she all right? And Bedrun? Did they find her?’ The questions tumbled from Zastra in her impatience.


  ‘Bodel found a note from Bedrun, pushed under the door of Dalka’s house. She had been with the acrobats when the fighting started and they all escaped together, climbing down from the outer ramparts.’

  ‘Jofie!’ exclaimed Zastra. ‘Bedrun really liked him; she must have gone back down to talk to him again. Their acrobatic skills would have made it easy for them to escape over the walls. But why didn’t she go to Highcastle?’

  ‘Bedrun overheard the Bractarian troops saying they had orders to hunt and kill any friends of Leodra and his family. This terrified her, since she was known to be a friend of yours, Zastra. Understanding her danger, the troupe offered to take her with them. They were heading north for the Aridian mountains, planning to cross the border into Aliterra. When they passed through Hurlbridge, Bedrun was able to leave her letter.’

  Zastra was heartily glad that Bedrun had escaped from the horrors of the castle, although saddened that her friend’s life was in such danger because of her. Dobery continued.

  ‘As for Kastara, Bodel passed her off as little Joril without difficulty. Her sister Dalka’s illness had been a lengthy one and she accepted the baby as Joril, grown a little bigger and a little different while she had been ill. The blue fever can cause some memory loss and confusion, which helped us in this case. Dalka suspects nothing and has been spared the grief she must otherwise have felt at the loss of her daughter.’

  ‘So Kastara is safe,’ said Zastra. A warm sense of relief and joy washed over her.

  ‘Yes, my dear,’ said Dobery, patting her hand affectionately.

  ‘What did you do then?’ asked Dalbric.

  ‘I headed after Zastra and Findar as fast as I could. First to Highcastle village where I discovered that Thorlberd had set Brutila the task of finding you. Hers was an easily trail to follow,’ he said grimly. ‘At Riverford, she was wasting time searching all quarters of the city, so I went on ahead of her. Bodel had told me that you were headed to Lyria. I almost caught up with you at the market.’

 

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