by Ted Dekker
Now the Mortals would see the fate of any who defied him.
“Do it in front of the ruins.”
The two pulling the cart dipped their heads and started forward at a jog, followed by two others. The air hung heavy and still as the party separated from his army and angled toward the ruins a quarter mile ahead along the eastern cliffs.
For several long minutes no other movement. The cliffs remained empty, the sky silent, the valley dormant.
The detachment stopped near the ruin steps and quickly went to work digging a hole.
“Anything?”
Brack’s mount shifted beneath him. “Nothing. But they watch.”
Undoubtedly. And they would see.
The preparations took only a couple minutes aided by thick muscle and sharp shovels. They pulled the Mortal from the cart, still bound to the ten-foot pole. The air stirred, lifting something from the top of the pole a banner bearing Saric’s crest.
They hoisted the prisoner up for all to see before moving him into position over the hole and unceremoniously dropping the end of the pole inside.
The Mortal’s body jerked and hung still, like a pig on the end of a stick, arms bound to his sides, feet dangling.
They filled in the hole, tamping down the earth so the pole could stand on its own, then stepped back and awaited his signal. Nomads were too strong to be demoralized by the sight, but planting the body would serve as clear notice: Saric claims this valley.
He nodded. Brack lifted a red flag.
One of his children withdrew a sword, walked over the Mortal, and shoved the blade up under his rib cage. The man on the pole jerked his head back and strained, the cords standing out along his neck, then went limp, a lifeless puppet on a spike.
As he watched the slaying, Saric could not help but consider just how easily life was taken, yet how difficult it was to create. How it was his to give and take.
There could be only one Maker.
The Dark Bloods gathered the cart and left the pole standing in front of the ruins. High above a lone buzzard had already begun to circle in the gray sky.
“Take us up,” Saric said.
The army surged ahead.
In less than ten minutes they were across the small river along the western floor. Saric glanced back at the army winding its way up the slope to the plateau, now only a half mile distant. Numbers, not agility or speed, would win this day. Overwhelming power, bred for war by alchemy. He wondered how many of his children would die today. For him. And he vowed in his heart that for each one that gave up his life, he would mourn and make two more in their stead…
And then four.
A scout at the top of the rise signaled clear.
“You should hold back, my Lord,” Varus said.
“They run. I do not. Form the ranks wide.”
Varus issued the orders and the serpentine formation broke into three, two of the companies veering west.
Like a rising tide of black water they crested the hill and edged onto the plateau that stretched nearly a half mile before falling into distant canyon lands. The grass stood two feet tall. Trees to the west. Cliffs to his right, east.
Still no sign.
Within half an hour, the division he’d sent earlier would be in place to flank the Mortals. With any fortune at all, they had pulled their scouts in to focus on the plateau. Surely they needed every man.
“Hold.”
The massive army fronted by fourteen hundred cavalry rumbled to a standstill along the plateau’s southern edge. To a man, they faced forward, eyes and muscles fixed, waiting for command. The air grew quiet.
Saric felt his eyes narrow. Not with impatience or anxiety, but with strange appreciation.
The Nomads were nowhere to be seen. The field was empty. Nothing except a tall, stripped sapling in the middle of the field, a quarter of a mile distant. Only after a moment’s curious scrutiny did Saric notice one additional detail: hanging from a rope affixed to the top of it was something like a bladder or a large gourd…
Or a head.
The appreciation drained away as the head lolled in the wind, turning so that he could see the gaping mouth and bloodied face even from this distance.
“Janus,” Varus muttered.
Ice flooded Saric’s veins. Not at the thought of the man himself, but because in killing him, the Mortals had struck far more than the man. They had lashed out at the image the man was made in.
At Saric, himself.
So then… the Mortals would neither flee nor die quietly. So be it.
Run with your Maker’s speed, Feyn. Bring me the boy…
He stared a moment longer at the head hanging like a macabre ball from that pole. Black rage bubbled up within him like tar.
It was in that state that he wondered if the lone figure galloping at breakneck speed from the far side of his vision had been conjured by his own wrath. If it had risen up from the ground like the vengeful dead.
But this was no apparition. It was flesh and blood. A feral tangle of beaded braids and leathers with a starburst of metal studs as though Chaos itself had touched it. All that was refined was untamed in the rider. All that was evolved was primal in him.
Roland.
The Nomad slowed his horse to an arrogant, easy walk and stopped next to the pole.
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
FIVE MILES NORTHWEST OF THE SEYALA VALLEY stood the old outpost at Corvus Point, an abandoned crossroads along the ancient highway toward which Jonathan and Jordin now rode.
The building itself was barely eighteen feet in length. Its boards were weathered, its paint, if there had ever been any, washed gray. Even some fifty yards off Jordin could see the darkness of the interior between the planks. Off to the right, the crumbling remains of a concrete trough had sprouted tufts of grass and creeping weed. The pump was gone, likely requisitioned decades ago along with the door.
A horse was tethered to a post on the end of the shack’s crooked front walk—a black, majestic animal that Jordin found herself envying for its sleek lines and sheer aesthetic beauty. Seeing it didn’t help her state of mind.
A knot of apprehension had tightened in her belly during the ride from camp that morning. She’d seen Feyn at the Gathering, but only from a distance, and even then the Sovereign had been veiled.
Was Feyn beautiful? Could one person possess both power and beauty in equal portions? Not that it mattered—Feyn stood for Order. And she was Dark Blood. On principle alone, everything within Jordin should revolt at the very thought of her.
But Feyn had also died for Jonathan once, and for that Jordin would grant the sitting Sovereign a measure of trust.
She glanced at Jonathan, riding at her side. Enigmatic preoccupation and nervous energy had rolled off him in frenetic waves since their leaving. At first she thought he was simply anxious. But it soon occurred to her that Jonathan might actually be excited to see this Sovereign who had died for him. Who might, if all Jordin had observed and heard was true, make way for him to rule with her.
Jonathan and Feyn, side by side.
Jonathan leaned forward in the saddle. Lanky and strong, darkened by the sun, he was a magnificent warrior who had come into his own.
He was eighteen today.
How old was Feyn anyway? Thirty-something? How could Jonathan choose someone nearly twice his age?
No. It wouldn’t be like that. Their union would be a political alliance, no more.
Jonathan spurred his horse forward, eager to close the distance to the old shack. After a moment’s disconcertion, she nudged her horse after his, eyes darting to the figure appearing in the weathered doorway.
Her heart dropped at the sight. The woman was stunning.
Her skin was pale—uncannily so, by any Nomadic standard. The envy of Order; of the royals in particular. She never would’ve thought such pale skin attractive before, but something about Feyn’s regal bearing made it seem unquestioningly beautiful.
Her eyes were black, start
ling in the bright light, like giant pupils without any iris, glittering as the facets of obsidian. As the simple, dark jewels nestled against her earlobes.
The sight arrested her.
She was dressed in a regal white dress and wore two simple braids that twisted like carved columns down past her breasts toward her waist. Jordin would have eschewed such clothing as impractical, worn only by those who knew nothing of horses, but obviously she had ridden here from the city. She knew how to ride, and ride well.
Jonathan slid from his horse with the ease of one meeting a long-lost friend, showing not a shred of concern. He strode forward on his long runner’s legs just as Jordin came to a stop beside his stallion. In one high step he had cleared the broken boards of the two stairs, long missing from the front walk of the shack. And then he was on his knee, kissing the hand of the Sovereign herself.
The sight struck Jordin somehow as anathema. The skin on her neck prickled.
“My Lady,” he said, lifting his head and standing again.
Feyn nodded, her voice carrying beyond the broken porch. “Jonathan.”
She gave no sign that she’d even seen Jordin—her attention was solely on the young man who’d shown her such respect. Still, if he honored Feyn, Jordin would as well, if only because she trusted him.
She swung down from the saddle, eyes on the pair, but rather than follow Jonathan up the stair, she hung back until he swung around.
“Jordin, come! Meet the Sovereign.”
She lowered her head, walked to the shack and stepped up onto the uneven boards of the porch.
“My Lady,” she said, forcing herself to take the woman’s hand. She expected the woman’s pale fingers to be ice cold. They weren’t. In fact, they were warm. The ring of office gleamed the color of sun on her right hand.
Jordin started to go to her knee.
“Please,” the Sovereign said. “There’s no need.”
Jordin straightened with no small measure of relief and glanced at Jonathan. His eyes flitted toward her. “Jordin, will you give us a moment?”
She looked from him to Feyn, who towered a good head and a half over her. They were both tall. They were both stunning—her with ebony hair and pale skin; he with hair the color of turned earth, his hazel eyes rimmed in lashes that any girl would have envied.
They were beautiful together. Standing side by side like that, they could actually inspire a new age, she thought. With her poise and his enigmatic ways, the entire world would watch and follow them, if only out of curiosity.
Jordin’s throat was dry. “Of course,” she said.
She stood still for a moment, reluctant to leave. Finally, she took an awkward step backward, then stepped down from the front porch to walk back toward the horses, trying to appear purposeful.
Jonathan leaped off the porch, and she saw from the corner of her eye that he’d taken Feyn’s hand. Uncharacteristic tears distorted Jordin’s vision.
She was overreacting, she knew. Jonathan was demonstrative by nature. But she seemed unable to ignore the sight of the man she’d devoted herself to with a woman of such power.
Feyn stepped down behind him, and followed him toward a copse of trees.
Jordin recinched the girth on her saddle, glancing often at them. Checked Jonathan’s saddle. Wiped the tears away with a gesture so swift she barely noted it herself. Their voices carried to her in low tones not meant to be heard. She kept one eye on them, wanting the entire time to look away from the way Feyn held his eyes as she spoke. The way Jonathan took her hand not once, but twice. The way the Sovereign dipped her head, offering him respect.
Or was it more?
They glanced back at her once. Good. Let Feyn see her watching them. Her. Jonathan’s protector.
It occurred to her that even now, Feyn could make an attempt on his life. Jonathan might chastise her for such a thought, but was it really outside the realm of possibility? Wasn’t he Feyn’s only true rival after her brother?
She had promised Rom to never let Feyn from her sight, but that promise paled next to her own commitment.
What if Jonathan and Feyn did rule together, side by side? She’d heard that Sovereigns didn’t marry—they only took lovers. But then a Sovereign had the power to change the law if he or she were so inclined. What if, by chance, it made sense that they should marry?
She lowered her head and forced herself to drag in a long breath. It wasn’t like her to be jealous. He was her Maker. The bringer of life. He’d poured out his life for her. It wasn’t for her to hold him with closed hands.
Could she stand by and protect Jonathan even if he were to marry Feyn?
She turned away from the horses, heart climbing into her throat. They were walking into the trees. Out of sight.
Panicked, she dropped the rein in her hands and headed after them.
She ducked the branch of a gnarled pine and hurried past three more with twisted, knotted branches that mirrored the fallout in her heart at the moment.
She hurried on, brushing aside branches, and pulled up sharply at the edge of a small clearing. Jonathan stood three paces away as though he had been waiting for her. No sign of Feyn.
He was alone.
She blinked, caught off guard. It was unlike her. She was faltering under the press of misplaced emotions.
“Where’s Feyn?” she asked in a voice far too thin.
Jonathan closed the distance between them. “She’s waiting. I said I needed to speak with you.”
The band around her lungs released, if only slightly. The scent of Dark Blood put Feyn behind and to their right. She was headed back to the shack.
“What do you think of her?” Jonathan asked
I don’t trust her. Not alone, and not with you.
“She seems… very powerful,” Jordin said.
“Yes, she is.”
“And very wealthy.”
He dropped his head and forced a thin smile. But his braids fell forward over his eyes so she couldn’t see his eyes. It was the posture of women she knew, when they wanted to shield their embarrassment or tears.
“Jonathan…” She reached a finger to lift his chin, regretting anything she had done or said to hurt him.
When he looked up there were no tears on his cheek. His eyes were filled with strange wonder.
“There’s something I’ve wanted to tell you for a long time, Jordin.”
Fear spiked her mind.
“I love you,” he said.
She stared at him, unable to respond.
“As a woman.” He reached out and took her hands in his. “I always have, from the first time you looked into my eyes after taking my blood. I chose you then and I choose you now.”
“Jonathan…” It was all she found the courage to say. She wanted to throw her arms around him and shower him with adoration, but her muscles seemed to have left her command.
He lifted her hand and kissed her knuckles. “I will become Sovereign.”
So Feyn had granted it?
“It’s happening then,” she said.
He smiled. “It will be a thing to see, I can promise you that. The earth will be shaken… A new age is dawning.”
“Because of you.”
His smile softened and he glanced down. Only then did Jordin find the words she longed to speak.
“I love you too, Jonathan. I’ve always loved you, more than you know.”
His thumb brushed over her knuckles. “You know that Sovereigns don’t marry…”
Despite her attempts to hold them back, tears filled her eyes. She nodded.
“Don’t cry, Jordin.” He lifted his other hand, brushed a tear from her cheek with his thumb. “If I could marry, I would choose you. It won’t matter; I choose you now. When I become Sovereign, you will see.”
She couldn’t help the tears slipping down her face. She didn’t quite know why she was crying… She’d never allowed herself to expect such beautiful words from him. The fact that he as Sovereign could not marry was
beside the point.
He loved her. He’d chosen her.
“You must also know that the days ahead will be filled with danger. Intentions may be misinterpreted. The dead will rise, but the cost will be heavy.”
“When have we not faced terrible challenges?”
They would be together. Somehow. Though she knew he faced far greater challenges than any to date, she would be by his side. She would bear them all, with the courage of that knowledge. He loved her. He chose her.
“They pale compared to what’s ahead.” He paused, face taut with concern, then lifted her hand and kissed her fingers again. “When the darkest hours come, I want you to know that I’ve known what divides the heart for a long time, but not until recently have I fully understood my calling. The Dark Bloods won’t rest as long as I’m alive.”
“As long as I live, no Dark Blood will touch you.”
Jonathan smiled. “My beautiful Jordin. I would place my life in your hands over any other. Without question.”
“They won’t fail you.”
“No.” But his gaze shifted, like the sky clouding before a storm. “But before you can join me, I have to do what I came to do with Feyn. Sovereigns have their duty. But you must never think I’ve abandoned you. I will build a new kingdom as Sovereign, that I can promise you. Not everything is known—Mortals may turn against me. But you, Jordin…”
Emotion choked off his words, but he pressed on. “Promise you’ll never leave me.”
“I would never leave you! I will go with you!”
“No matter what happens, don’t leave me,” he said. “I can’t bear the thought of being without you.”
“I won’t! Please, Jonathan, don’t speak like this…”
“Promise you’ll follow me, even if the others doubt and turn away. Promise that you will follow me.”
“I will always follow you, Jonathan.” And she knew, as she had known for years, that she would pour herself out for him as surely as he had for so many, and for so many others to yet come.