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The Worldbreaker Saga Omnibus

Page 14

by Kameron Hurley


  A blast of air took him off his feet. He created a fast bubble of air to cushion his fall and landed lightly on the other side of the Sanctuary.

  Almeysia took the full force of the attack. The great stone lanterns of the gods ringing the altar smashed against the far side of the Sanctuary. Almeysia went with them, tossed to the floor like a tangle of seaweed.

  Roh let go of Para. The tension that had held him upright left his body. Exhaustion rolled over him. He sank to his knees.

  On the other side of the Sanctuary, Nasaka and Ohanni stood with Ahkio. Ohanni was a parajista and still had a whirling cone of air circling her, churning up dust and debris. Roh could see the misty blue shape of it, sapphire streamers whirling from her fingers.

  The Sanctuary was a ragged mess of twisted, seeping plant flesh and broken tables. Tattered paper lanterns tumbled across the floor. The tiles of the floor were broken, jagged in places where Almeysia’s plants had torn through.

  “Oma’s breath,” Ohanni said. “Did you do this, Roh?”

  Nasaka strode across the Sanctuary to Almeysia. “She’s alive,” Nasaka said. “Bring a draught, Ora Ohanni. I want her drugged. And you–” Nasaka turned to Roh. “You stay where you are. You have much to explain.”

  Roh stared into his hands. He had never been in a fight before. Not a real one.

  He fell to his knees, trembling. He should be retching, he knew. He should be horrified at causing harm.

  But he had never felt so alive.

  16

  The boar spiders swarmed Lilia at the edge of the Woodland. Each spider stood as high as her knee and whispered forth from deep burrows hidden by floxflass nests. Lilia froze, the way her mother had taught her. The spiders clambered up her trousers. One perched on her head. She closed her mouth and breathed through her nose, trying to stay calm. Boar spiders were like hornets – they only bit when provoked – but she was hungry and exhausted, and the fear that roiled over her was paralyzing.

  The swarm continued to gain strength. She must have stepped on a nest. Nests were often connected, and her misstep had triggered others in the area. She closed her eyes so she did not have to look at their fangs.

  A poor way to die, she thought, before even stepping foot in the woodlands.

  She began to count her breaths. Something heavy, much larger than a spider, crunched in the undergrowth.

  A vortex of air blasted her from above. She flailed, barely kept her feet. The tendrils of air bundled up dozens of spiders and propelled them into the dark woods around her. Lilia heard them land in the trees and crunch in the undergrowth. Several smashed wetly into massive tree trunks.

  She opened her eyes.

  Gian stood before her, just a dozen steps down the path, blue-glowing bonsa sword in hand. She looked much taller out here, formidable, like some historic hero from a tapestry come to life. A bear snuffled behind her, licking its snout.

  Lilia patted herself down, skin still crawling with the memory of the spiders. “I was all right,” she said.

  Gian smirked and came forward. “Of course you were.”

  Lilia scrambled away from her, back into the hanging ivy that flanked the path. “I’m not going with you.”

  “Aren’t you?”

  “I’m sorry. Tell Kalinda–”

  “Kalinda’s dead.”

  “Oh, no.”

  “A sanisi,” Gian said. She sheathed her weapon, putting out the blue glow of it, surrendering them again to the dim light that filtered through the forest canopy. Lilia wasn’t sure of the time of day. She’d been walking for hours, and her bad leg throbbed. Her breath came so heavy, she’d had to stop twice and take her mahuan powder.

  “Taigan killed her?”

  “Is that his name?” Gian surveyed the woodland around them, as if looking for more spiders.

  “Shouldn’t you be an Ora? You can channel Para. All the jistas become Oras.”

  “Not all,” Gian said. “Some become healers and seers, those with poorer gifts.” She leaned in to Lilia, peering at her as if she were a mystery that needed unraveling. She had broad cheekbones and black, black eyes. Lilia thought she might stumble into them. “And some of us believe in freedom of the individual over the tyranny of the common good.”

  Lilia wasn’t sure what that meant but let it lie. “What are you going to do, now that you’ve found me?”

  “Lot of things I could do, couldn’t I? Wrap you up in a vortex and cart you back to my safe house. Maybe just cut you in two and leave you here.”

  “You sound like the sanisi,” Lilia said.

  “Don’t try and shame me,” Gian said. “It was my aunt killed back there. The woman who saved you, and me, and at least a hundred other children from that hungry war and the Kai’s army back home.”

  “What war?” Lilia said. The Dhai had no armies. She shook her head. “You’re trying to confuse me.”

  “Maybe,” Gian said. Lilia wasn’t sure she liked the way Gian looked at her. “How far away is this place you think you lived?”

  “It’s on the coast. The other side of the woodland. In the northeast. There’s a peninsula that juts into the sea.”

  “Fasia’s Point. Yes, I know it.”

  “It has a name?”

  “Most things do.”

  “We can lose the sanisi in the woodland,” Lilia said, trying quickly to come up with a rational reason to plunge ahead. “He’ll know every road. Take me to Fasia’s Point. By the time we come back, he’ll have lost us.”

  “What happens after Fasia’s Point?”

  “Then, I’ll… I’ll go wherever you want.” She held out her scarred wrists, an old habit. “I swear it.”

  Gian stared at her outstretched arms. “Your mother was a blood witch, wasn’t she?”

  Lilia dropped her arms. “Where did you hear that? No one says that.”

  “In the valley, they don’t,” Gian said. “In the woodlands, they do. And… other places.” For the first time, Gian pulled her hand away from her bonsa sword. The branch loosened its hold on her wrist, retracted. “I’ll take you to Fasia’s Point so you can see what’s there. But you won’t find your mother.”

  “I promised I’d go back.”

  “So after I take you there, and we lose the sanisi, and you see what you can see, you go where I want. No fuss. No arguing. No running off into the night alone.”

  “Why does it matter?”

  “Because I made a promise, too, to Kalinda. I promised no harm would come to you, and I’d deliver you to her people. I make good on my promises. In that, we’re alike.”

  “I’ll go,” Lilia said. Roh’s life for hers, fulfilling her promise for Gian’s… she was trading a good many things these days, all of which involved her freedom. She was done bargaining, but Gian didn’t need to know that yet.

  They spent the rest of the day climbing up into the hills. Lilia knew they entered the Woodland proper at dusk, because that’s where the formal road ended. They traveled instead on a mossy path lined in red roses and fireweed. The trees, too, changed, from elegant and well-groomed bonsa trees to tangled rattlers and stinging foreshore. The trees grew twisted and massive, like a maze constructed by a mad giant with a very perverse idea of how to channel Tira. But it was the bone trees that evoked the Woodland the most for Lilia. She saw her first in many years as they climbed through a crush of rattler trees that grew across the path, Gian’s bear chomping through what they could not clear themselves. The bone tree stood alone in a little clearing, no taller than Lilia. Its dirty yellowish trunk and spiny branches were made of literal bone, the remnants of the small mammals and birds it caught in its clawed branches. The creatures were drawn by the sweet smell of the poisonous sap it secreted. The sap killed all nearby plant life, too, hence the patch of dead ground ringing the tree. A dozen long-toothed, grinning skulls made up one branch of the tree, twisted together with amber sap and a shimmering silver webbing of organic matter. The skulls were no bigger than her palm. They were treeglid
er skulls.

  That night, they camped in an area Gian carved out for them just off the path. The cyclone she called cleared a perfect circle of poisonous vines and biting saplings. Lilia poked around in the underbrush, looking for bladder traps or root hooks.

  “How’s your leg?” Gian asked. She crushed a handful of scorch pods together and lay flat on her belly in front of their flickering light to kindle a fire.

  “Fine,” Lilia said. In truth, the pain had become constant. She rested when she could but considered it a point of pride to keep up with Gian.

  “Really?”

  “No. But when people ask, they don’t really want an answer. They want reassurance that it’s all right not to care.”

  Gian pushed herself up, wiped her hands on her tunic. “Is that so?”

  “I know how people are.”

  Gian unpacked sticky balls of rice and dried mangos. “You must not know a lot of people,” she said, and offered the food to Lilia.

  Hunger got the better of her. Lilia ate quickly and fell asleep not long after. She woke briefly when Gian bent over her with a thick bedroll. “I brought two,” Gian said. “Get inside before the bugs eat you up.”

  Lilia crawled into the bedroll and slept like death.

  Gian woke her at dawn the next day, and they started out again. Gian led the way with her sword, hacking at vegetation that clogged the path.

  “Tell me a story,” Gian asked as she hacked away.

  “What about?”

  “Temple life. Baking. Did you do a lot of baking? What do ungifted people get up to there? It’ll be more than a week to Fasia’s Point, maybe two, at this pace.”

  So, Lilia told her stories of strategy games and dancing class. She talked about Roh and Saronia and the temple’s great library. At night, when Lilia’s legs cramped up, Gian came to her side, asked to take Lilia’s feet into her palms, and pressed the balls of her feet forward to help lengthen her seizing muscles.

  “Did you have any lovers in the temple?” Gian asked.

  They lay next to one another in a clearing deep in the hills, staring up through a rare break in the canopy at the great patterned map of the stars above them. Lilia had never seen so many stars – the blackest time of the night, between Para’s rise and fall – lasted only a few hours. She had never sat up that long.

  “No,” Lilia said. “I’m not like other Dhai.”

  “You’re just fine for a Dhai.”

  “What about you? Did the sanisi… did he hurt anyone else at Kalinda’s?”

  “There’s just me here,” Gian said. “I came alone.”

  “What do you mean?”

  She sighed. “We’ll be at Fasia’s Point soon. You’ll know why you need to come with me then.”

  “What did you want to be?” Lilia asked.

  “What?”

  “When you were younger.”

  “I’m only twenty.”

  “Did you always just hit people with a sword for Kalinda?”

  Gian laughed. Lilia loved to hear her laugh; it was a rich, deep laugh. She wished she was better at telling jokes, just so she could hear it more.

  “I want to save the world,” Gian said.

  “Is that all?”

  Gian turned onto her side, propped herself up on one arm. She caught Lilia with her black stare, and Lilia’s heart raced. Gian leaned forward, as if she might kiss her. Which would be an absurd thing to do without consent. But Lilia did not move. Gian paused, her face a breath from Lilia’s.

  “It’s full of many things worth saving,” Gian said.

  It took nearly two weeks to reach the coast. They had to abandon the bear outside a tangled woodland it could not squeeze through. By then, the sticky rice was nearly gone, supplemented with fiddleheads, acorn meal, and whatever half-digested fruit remains that had fallen into the massive pitcher plants littering the boggy areas around springs and streambeds.

  Lilia smelled the sea long before she saw it. When they pushed into a ragged clearing and beheld the edge of the plateau and pounding violet waters below, she caught her breath. The sky was pale lavender along the horizon and brilliant azure blue above, on fire with the light of Para.

  “Familiar?” Gian asked.

  “Yes,” Lilia said. “The smell is, at least.”

  “Just a little farther north,” Gian said. “That’s when the plateau breaks off into the sea.”

  They followed a game trail the rest of the day, keeping the sea to their left. Lilia spotted a treeglider staring at them from the lowest branches of a rattler tree, its eyes bright. Somewhere distant, Lilia heard the familiar hulking crash of a walking tree.

  They drove deeper into the plateau. Gian kept asking her if anything looked familiar. But Lilia saw no signs of her old village – no decaying cocoons or the charred remains of seedpods.

  Then Lilia saw it.

  A gray spur of rock jutting up from the weeds on the other side of a broad clearing. She knew that ledge. She had played there. It didn’t look nearly as tall, of course. What a foolish child she’d been, to think that she could fly if she just had enough faith.

  Lilia hurried across the clearing, looking for the remains of the thorn fence. But there were no bunches of sticks or charred root balls. All she saw were the shriveled poppies, their leaves browning with the coming of low autumn.

  Gian called after her. Lilia kept going.

  She scrambled around the rock ledge and up the low hill, following the creek. As she came over the rise of the hill, she half expected to see the massive webbing that protected her village. She was out of breath and wheezing hard, harder than she had the whole trip.

  Lilia gasped and stumbled. Caught herself on a nearby tree. Ahead was a grove of birch trees. Massive butterfly cocoons as long as Lilia’s arm hung from their branches. A few of the cocoons were as large as Lilia herself. She saw scattered seedpods on the ground, just big enough for a small child to hide in. In the distance, on the other side of the hill, she heard the thrashing of walking trees and shuddered. There was no webbing here to keep them out.

  She saw no broken old trees or char in what should have been her village; nothing had been touched by fire here for hundreds of years, at least. The grove itself was not inhabited. She saw no paths. No stone structures.

  This place had never been her home.

  Gian came up behind her. “Is this it?”

  Lilia nodded. Her chest hurt.

  “I need my mahuan powder,” Lilia said, wheezing.

  Gian retrieved the powder. She bent next to Lilia, mixed the powder with water, and made her drink it.

  Lilia coughed and coughed. She pointed to the chalky outcrop below them, obscured now by the woods they had traveled through. “That’s where I saw… the riders. The Kai and her militia. It was… It was right here.”

  “Strangled heart,” Gian said. “Don’t you see, yet?”

  “Hey there!”

  A man rounded the top of the rise in what had been Lilia’s village. He raised a large walking stick, then began climbing down toward them.

  Gian rose. “He’s a woodland Dhai,” she said.

  Lilia finished her mahuan powder as the man came toward them. The day was hot, and he was bare-chested. He wore what looked like fibrous trousers. A linen tunic hung from his belt. He carried no pack, only the walking stick.

  “Are you traveling alone?” he said. “You valley Dhai?”

  Lilia noticed his accent now; she had met a few other woodland Dhai at the temple. She didn’t have much of an accent anymore, but his felt warm and familiar.

  “Is there a village here?” Lilia asked. She coughed. “Maybe… they moved?”

  “Village?” he said. “No. I’m sorry to bother you, but if you’re traveling on your own, you should know there’s a man in the woods, a hunter. Foreign. Saiduan. I’ve been through three family camps now, all dead. I bedded down with another group just last night. Two girls there said he’s been looking for one of ours.” He glanced at Lilia.
“Young temple girl, they said.”

  “Thank you,” Gian said. “We’ll keep an eye out.”

  He gestured behind him. “There are family camps just up the peninsula, if you’re looking for rest or company. You look thin. Are you hungry?”

  “We’re fine,” Gian said.

  Lilia noticed then that he’d come from the direction of the crashing trees. No one – especially not a woodland Dhai, who should know better – would have trekked up the other side of that hill through a herd of walking trees.

  She glanced behind them, back at the game trail they’d followed along the coast. “Ahead of us?” she said. “You mean the camps are behind us, where you came from.”

  He grinned. Too hard. “Not sure I follow.” He pointed back up the hill with his stick. “I came down from there.”

  “You doubled around,” Lilia said. “You circled behind us and came up the hill to pretend you were ahead of us. Why were you following us?”

  Gian put her hand on the butt of her willowthorn sword. The hilt of it elongated and curled around her wrist.

  “Hold on now,” the man said, raising his free hand. “He said you were a temple Dhai, but you do have the eye of a woodlander, don’t you?”

  “I don’t want to kill anyone,” Gian said. “I suggest you move on and tell the sanisi you couldn’t find us.”

  “Afraid I can’t do that,” he said, and Lilia noticed a trembling in his voice. “He sent me to track you. I turn back now and he kills me and my family.”

  “Then we are at an impasse,” Gian said.

  The man grinned again.

  He lashed out with his heavy stick.

  Gian yanked her sword out, too late. His stick thumped her in the chest, sent her stumbling back.

  He grabbed Lilia’s arm.

  Lilia shrieked and kicked at the dirt. She remembered chitinous red armor. Heavy air. And the trefoil with the long tail. She closed her eyes until she saw the bright, burning image of the trefoil in her mind.

  It will bring you back to me, her mother had said, but it had brought her back to the wrong place.

  Lilia kicked the man in the knee. He cursed, stumbled back. Swung his stick. Lilia covered her face.

 

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