by J B Cantwell
“Yes,” he said. “Exactly.”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“Think of the verse,” he said. “He of the line. Lost in the wilds. Earth is known, among seers at least, as the wild planet. Perhaps our champion is, in fact, in our midst already.”
“What?” I said.
“You heard me.”
“But I can’t be him.”
“He doesn’t have a magical bone in his body!” Jade protested. “It can’t be Aster. Father, just because he’s from Earth doesn’t make him the champion.”
Almara smirked.
“He is of the line. Jared’s line. He has magic, whether the two of you have yet discovered it or not.”
I may have resolved to destroy the Corentin, but nothing like this had ever occurred to me. Champion? And Jade was right: I didn’t have any power. Except…
I turned to face her.
“I can run,” I said. My talent at running faster than a cheetah seemed worthy of noting, especially considering I had barely been able to jog across the hallway back home without having an asthma attack. “And the dream, the dream about Cadoc and Stonemore.” Months ago I had dreamt a premonition about meeting Cadoc, running from him, and it had come true. Very true. And hadn’t my heart problems all but vanished in the last several months? I had to entertain the possibility that what I was experiencing could be related to magic.
There was only one problem, and my heart fell into my stomach as the reality of it hit me. I didn’t do magic. Not consciously, at least. Magic seemed to happen around me, to happen to me, but I didn’t actively conjure it.
“Those were coincidences,” she said. Her haughty attitude reared, and her pride spoke for her.
“You think I want to be champion?” I shot back, getting irritated. “What I want is to go home. What I want is for things to be normal again. But things aren’t normal, Jade! I can’t go home. You can’t go home. None of this is working out the way we’d hoped. So what are we supposed to do? Give up? And do what?”
“And have a normal life!” she shouted. “Can’t we just do that? Go off somewhere and live and be happy? Why do we have to keep chasing this monster? Father, you could create a link and all of us could go to Earth, away from all of this. Away from the Corentin. I bet that you’d get better, being farther away from him.”
“Maybe,” I said. “But I won’t be better. Nobody knows what will happen to me if I go back to Earth. I could end up back in the hospital. I could end up dead. And, even if not, Earth isn’t somewhere you would want to live. Earth is so—”
“What?” she jeered. “Safe? Non-magical? Those are things I can live with, Aster. I’ve seen enough magic to last me several lifetimes.” Her voice cracked with her last words, and her lips began to tremble.
I sighed heavily and tried to take her hands, but when I did she jerked away from me.
“You don’t understand,” I said more calmly. “Earth is…sick. It’s not like here.”
She laughed sarcastically through her tears and gestured around at the landscape. “You don’t think this is sick?”
“This is sick. But so is Earth, just in a different way. Here we fight demons and monsters to try to make things right. On Earth you don’t even have a chance of doing that much. The Earth I know is barren.” And the Jade I knew would wither in a place like that.
“But on Earth I could hide.” Her voice was small and miserable, and her giant green eyes fell to the ground.
I put my hands on her shoulders.
“Listen to me,” I said. “There is nowhere for us to hide. I know it’s hard and it’s horrible, but it’s true. Things aren’t going to get any better by us doing nothing. We can’t get around this one.”
She refused to meet my gaze.
“We have to go through it to get to the other side. There is no one else.”
I released her and turned to Almara.
“So you really think I’m this champion person?” I asked. He nodded. “But I don’t know any magic. How can I get the book if I don’t know how?”
He shrugged. “We always thought the champion would know what to do. We didn’t think he would be untrained.”
“Ugh!” Jade groaned, her temper flaring again. “This is ridiculous!”
“Look,” I said, “if you want to break the book from whatever weird enchantment it’s under, be my guest. I’m just trying to figure out how to move us forward here.”
She crossed her arms over her chest and glared.
“Fine,” she sniffed, wiping tears angrily from her cheeks with the backs of her hands. “Father, show Aster how to conjure the magic so he can get the book. Go ahead.”
He smiled.
“Well, that’s not a bad idea,” he said.
She turned and stormed off, taking the rocks two at a time, mumbling curses to herself.
“We’ll do it tonight,” I said. “When we stop for the night. Ok?”
He nodded, then stretched out his hand, ready to move on.
It would have been helpful to talk as we walked, to be able to pick his brain. How do I do magic? How do I raise power from the ground with nothing but my fingers? How do I break a seven thousand year old enchantment with…nothing? But the climb was too steep, and instead of speaking, we spent all of our energy breathing. We stopped for lunch a couple hours later, but Jade was still so irritated that she sat away from us. Almara and I stayed quiet, chewing the stale bread that remained in the pack.
Later in the day, well before sunset, Jade suddenly fell flat to the ground. At first, I thought she had been struck by an arrow, but when she waved her arm frantically at us I realized she had seen something. Almara and I dropped to the ground and waited.
Slowly she raised herself to barely a crouch, and approached the top of the nearest rise. Poking her head over the top, she looked at whatever lay on the other side for several long minutes. Finally, she turned and walked back down to where we lay.
“There’s a village,” she said when she reached us. “It looks deserted.”
“Are you sure?” I asked.
“Pretty sure. There’s no smoke coming from any of the chimneys, and I didn’t see anybody in the streets.”
I crouched down low and made my way up the hill, peering over the top as Jade had.
Below, a smattering of stone cottages sat on a small precipice. Off the edge of the mountain, terraced gardens, overgrown with weeds, tumbled down the side. The place did look deserted. But why?
I waved Jade and Almara to join me, and when she lay down on her belly beside me, her eyes were hard and calculating.
“What do you think?” I asked.
“I wonder why there’s nobody here. It looks like, whoever they were, they left in a hurry.” Apparently she was willing to forget our argument for the time being.
And she was right. Scattered around the tiny village, tools were left out to the elements. A cart of vegetables lay rotting in the afternoon sun. Nothing moved.
“Ok,” I said. “Let’s go check it out.”
“Wait,” she grabbed my arm as I made to head down the small hill into the town. “What if there’s something there, waiting for us? What if he is waiting for us?”
“We’ll be quiet,” I said.
“If anybody lies in wait,” Almara’s scratchy voice broke the tension between Jade and I, “they already know we are here.”
I felt each strand of hair on the back of my neck stand on end.
“Right,” I said, nodding. “Let’s go.”
We all got to our feet and made our way carefully down the steep hillside.
Once in the town, the eerie feeling of the place seemed to seep into our skins. My hands continuously scratched at my shirt, my back, my arms, to try to quiet the crawling feeling that covered me.
Eight small cottages, no bigger than small bedrooms in size, haphazardly made up the town. Doors were opened, chores left partially completed, meals unfinished on the tables.
“Where is
everybody?” I breathed.
Almara stopped walking suddenly, shaking his blindfolded head from side to side. Then, he slowly raised his arm in front of him, pointed a shaking finger at one of the cabins. Larger than the others, it could have been a church.
“What is it?” Jade asked.
Almara’s lips trembled, and soon his whole body shook, his mouth opened in a silent scream. We moved behind the closest cottage, and he collapsed to the ground.
“Stay here,” I said.
I walked back out into the open and approached the church, its wooden door still slightly ajar. A sharp odor so pungent made me cover my nose with my hands. I slowed, concerned, the final steps I took until reaching the entry hesitant. It was too dark inside to see, and when I pushed it open it groaned on loud metal hinges.
It took a moment for my eyes to adjust to the dim light in the space. Bits of dust floated in the afternoon sunlight that poured through the doorway. Then I saw it. The black, charred remains of a skeleton lay stretched across the floor five feet in front of me.
I stepped back, startled by the find, but my eyes remained glued to the inside of the room.
There wasn’t just one skeleton.
There were twenty.
From the largest man to the tiniest infant, the bones burned black, the bodies strewn about. This was where they had died. Not a single scorch mark marred the surface of the walls. They had fallen in this very spot, in these very poses, as their bodies had burned from the inside out.
I backed away from the door, running, and then tripped on a stone jutting out from the hard dirt road. I turned over and vomited my meager lunch into the street. Then I scrambled back to my feet and ran.
It was all I could do to not flee the village, the mountain, and hide. The primitive animal in me had intended to do just that, but as I was picking up speed I caught sight of the faces of Almara and Jade, he with his hands over his eyes, his mouth wide with mourning, her next to him, holding his arm, confused and unsure.
Tears poured freely from my eyes. I took her arm and dragged the two of them behind a building, out of sight of the horrific scene. Almara slumped against the wall, sliding down to the ground. I fell down on all fours, sobbing.
“What was it?” Jade asked anxiously. “What did you see?”
“Why? Why did they settle here on this evil mountain?” Almara wailed. “He burned them! He burned them all!”
“Who burned them? Who is burned?” Her voice was high and alarmed.
“You know who,” I said through sobs, wiping my face with the back of my sleeve.
“You mean, he’s been here?”
“Someone has,” I said. Or something.
“He is gone,” Almara said. “He left them…for us.” He croaked out the last two words.
“What did you see?” Jade said, kneeling down in front of me. “Aster!” She shook my shoulders. “Tell me what you saw!”
“Bodies,” I blurted. “Bones. Burned. All burned.”
Her eyes glinted with rage.
“Why would he do that?” I said to Almara. “Why would anyone do that?”
“To send a message,” he moaned, rocking back and forth. “Stop the quest.”
For us? The Corentin had burned all those people until nothing but bones remained, for us?
“We have to get out of here,” I choked, standing up abruptly. I grabbed Almara’s arm and heaved him to his feet.
“And go where?” Jade protested.
“We have to get up that mountain.”
“Why?” she asked. “So that he can do to us what he did to the people who used to live here?”
“We need to get out of here. Now.” I was done listening to her argue. I grabbed her arm with my other hand and pulled the two of them through the remains of the mountain village, but every step I took closer to the summit was weighted with my own dread.
Would he come for us next? No, something told me he wouldn’t. He was playing with us like puppets on strings. If he could see us now, he would be entertained, I was sure of that. He would save our destruction for the end. I shuddered, trying to think of how we might survive this.
We skirted around the smaller cottages, trying to stay away from that horrible place, but Jade pulled on my arm, craning her neck to try to get a glimpse of the massacre inside. I yanked her away, alarmed by the eager look on her face. But everything in that moment was frightening to me. Every crunch of rock, every whistle of wind, seemed to set me on edge anew.
As we climbed the hill on the opposite side of the town, I let go of the last of my sobs through my heavy breaths. When we got to the top I stopped, turning, to look back down at the ruined place. No one would ever live there again.
“Let’s walk for a while,” I said, turning away. “And keep your eyes out for somewhere to hide. I don’t want to be out here for any longer than we have to be. Not tonight.”
On the outskirts of the town we found another small group of fields. The weeds, like on the other side of the village, were plentiful here, but much of the harvest remained in the ground. We spent twenty minutes collecting root vegetables and greens before pushing on. My fingers pushed through the porous dirt as if sifting through ashes.
An hour later, as the sun sunk behind the mountain, we carefully made our way into another cave. I took the blindfold from Almara’s head and he slumped down in a corner, drawing his knees up to his chest like a child in the womb. I held the shirt in my hands, wondering just how much of the world it blocked out. I put it up to my eyes, and, sure enough, not a single sliver of light penetrated the fabric. And yet Almara had known about the bodies before we even got within viewing distance.
Was the Corentin just playing with us? I had thought that if I blocked Almara’s sight, the Corentin would have one more obstacle to face if he wanted to follow us. And it was true, no attack had come. Not to us. But Almara seemed oddly tuned to this place, and to the Corentin, too. I was starting to feel that he knew exactly where we were, and that nothing we could do would hide us from his sight.
We sat, without fire or warmth, for what felt like hours. Slowly the cave darkened as the day slipped away, but none of us paid the passing of time any attention.
I stared at the wall, wanting to erase the images from this morning from my mind forever, but not having the energy to fight their reentry each time I tried. I was outdone. Outwitted. Overwhelmed. I had heard so much about evil, witnessed it in Cadoc, felt it in my gut. But nothing could have prepared me for the carnage that had sat smoldering and waiting for me in that church today.
I was vaguely aware of a sound coming from the corner where Jade sat. First, a soft snap. Followed by silence. And then a low smack of rock, just barely echoing off the cave walls. I turned to her.
Her hand shot out, catching something in midair. A fly? She held it up to the dying light that came through a crack in the cave, inspecting her prey. Then, studying it carefully, she picked at it with her fingers.
I sat up, focusing on her more clearly.
It wasn’t a fly, but some sort of moth. I watched as she gripped onto one of its wings and, before I had a chance to protest, tore it clear off its body.
“Hey!” I said.
She looked up innocently, as if she had been doing nothing more offensive than stroking a kitten’s fur.
“What?”
“Do you have to do that?”
She shrugged. Then she looked back down at the little creature and tore off the other wing.
“Hey, knock it off!” I said, getting to my feet. I was suddenly on fire, furious about the dismemberment of the innocent bug.
But I was too late. She put the remains of the creature, squirming and writhing, onto a flat stone on the floor of the cave. Her eyes fixed, gleaming, on a second rock sitting nearby. As she watched it, it raised slowly into the air and came to hover over the first. A smirk flashed across her face, and then she brought the rock down hard and smashed the bug flat.
Smack.
&nb
sp; “What is it with you?” I yelled. “Why did you have to do that?”
She shrugged again.
“I don’t know,” she said, uncaring. “I’m bored.”
“You’re bored?” I asked. “So you torture butterflies to pass the time?”
“It wasn’t a butterfly, it was a—”
“I don’t care what it was! Knock it off!”
My skin was crawling from the sight. What was wrong with her? I stormed out of the cave, unable to look at her any longer. I thought that if I spent another minute in there, I might be sick again.
I walked up the closest hill, trying to put some distance between us, and thought about all the strange things she had been doing lately. At first, I had just thought that she was upset about Almara. But now I was starting to wonder if something else was going on. Too many times in recent days her reactions had been…off. The smashing of rocks at the beach. The way she tried so hungrily to see the bodies today. And now the moth.
It wasn’t such a big deal, I tried to reason with myself. It was just a moth. I’d seen Grandma swat at moths on the farm plenty of times.
But Jade wasn’t swatting at it like it was a pest. She had said she was bored. And she had looked like she was having fun.
I hadn’t really noticed it until now, but she had been acting weird for days. I had been so distracted by all of the other terrifying things going on that I hadn’t really registered the change in her. For a moment, an icy feeling of dread settled in my stomach. Was Jade losing it?
“I’m sorry about before,” she said from behind me. I jumped at the sound of her voice, surprised and a little bit frightened. “It’s just, none of this is what I expected. This isn’t how this was supposed to go. First Father, then the whole champion thing, now the murders in the village.” She paused, looking out over the valley. She looked like she was chewing on a thought, figuring out how to phrase it. “No offense, but how are we supposed to teach you magic? Nobody ever taught me. It was just something I sort of knew.”
“Maybe if you just explain,” I said.