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Temple of the Traveler: Book 02 - Dreams of the Fallen

Page 13

by Scott Rhine


  The remaining stage changed. On three sides it became a room drawn from Tashi’s patchwork memory. The others could watch it all unfold as a play. Brent forced woundwort from his pouch into Bjorn’s mouth while he held pressure on a fountain of blood. A poultice and a bandage should be next, but Brent couldn’t move his hands to get them or his friend might pass out from blood loss and shock. If they lost mobility, they were both dead.

  Tazed o dream filled the theater as Zariah set the scene. As she spoke, the High Priestess of Sleep changed shapes. Her eyes remained the same and her voice softened a little, but her body became young. Her skin was cream and her form strained against her clothing in several interesting places. “I am Alana, your secret lover, these many years. While my daughter celebrates her sixteenth birthday in the feasting hall below, I claim my due from your flesh.”

  “No,” whimpered Tashi.

  She tossed more incense on the coals. “You cannot refuse me. I’ll scream rape and they’ll all come running.”

  His breathing became erratic, and the scene darkened a little.

  She sprayed plum perfume into the air and waited for the mist to drift over to him. His hand began to tremble. She continued. “You want me more than life itself.”

  Brent looped a tail of the sash over Bjorn’s wounded arm but couldn’t spare concentration for anything else as he worked with foot and teeth to put it in place for a knot. Fortunately, Nigel had found the desired passage from his scroll and began singing. The ancient ritual was accompanied by meticulously annotated sheet music. He’d heard the Rite of Binding performed at least twenty times on criminals, himself included. The ceremonies had little in common other than announcing the caster’s authority, a precise naming of the accused, and the legal justification. Nigel had even heard it done successfully by a drunk. The notes, he’d been told, were more important than the exact words.

  “I’m the last of the College of Bards, the lone practitioner of the Way of Memory, High Priest by elimination. I call you forth for your crimes, Zariah, pupil of the vile Abu Nirah. I call you forth to serve the Six-fold Path in proportion for your deeds of murder, theft, and heresy.”

  At the first words, Zariah looked merely annoyed, but then her forehead wrinkled. “Warriors, find that voice and kill it!” Somnambulists scattered to the winds to obey.

  But Nigel shook his bells and remained unnoticed as he raised his voice above the scuffle. “I bind you with this geas until the service is complete. In the names of Hadri Zin, the first of the Bards, and Nigel Wandroos, the Last, I bind thee!”

  Zariah panicked. “Serog, kill that bard!”

  The dragoness detached quickly from her perch, but Nigel was already standing behind Zariah. He’d picked up a certain magic coin that the sheriff had dropped. They couldn’t stop him from intoning the final words. “I call on the favor of the Traveler himself, twice promised, to seal your powers against you now!”

  Wings blurred and jaws slashed, but too late. The coin struck Zariah in the chest. Iron chains grew. She howled as the weight of them pulled her to her knees. But try as she might, she couldn’t conjure herself free.

  Unfortunately, Nigel had been decapitated by the dragon’s attack. His head rolled across the floor, a strangely peaceful smile on his face.

  Tashi broke free of his paralysis. “Stop it, woman. I killed you once already!”

  Zariah, stuck in the form of Alana, began to see the enormity of her mistakes. Her clothes were reduced to thin rags, barely covering her shame. “How can that be?” She spoke her question simultaneously h the dragoness.

  Serog convulsed in agony. Between fits, she babbled, “Innocent blood in the sanctuary. How? Argh! He was a traitor and a thief.” She made a whistling sound as the next fit seized her.

  Brent replied to the dragon, “Jotham absolved him less than an hour ago.”

  Soldiers hacked at the headless body of the actor while the dragoness rolled on the floor in pain, squashing several of them in her throes.

  Tashi replied to Alana. “You were brought before the Guild Council, accused of adultery by your daughter. I’d achieved a great victory, earning me a favor with the Guildmaster. I could’ve used it to send you to a nunnery and spared your life. But I didn’t. Everyone would’ve saved face. Instead, I left. I let them kill you instead.”

  One of the Somnambulists, trapped by the vision, approached her from the side. “Why?” she begged. “We were lovers.”

  “It wasn’t me that they caught you with!” Tashi shouted.

  The Somnambulist drew back his sword like a headsman. Zariah in the Alana body shouted. “Wait! You’re wrong.” The sword wavered and froze in mid air. “Did you actually see me killed?”

  Tashi blinked. “No. But there is no way the guild would have let you survive.”

  Zariah’s mind raced. “There must be. There was, I mean.” She turned to the dragon. “Help me.”

  In great pain, the Dawn being pondered the dilemma. Her answer astounded them all. “Her marriage was a covenant of brotherly substitution. If there are no male children for seven years, the woman may put aside that brother and choose another.” Her head jerked and she began to vomit dark blood.

  “So that the line may continue,” finished Tashi.

  “Yes,” agreed Zariah. “He was in violation, not me. I was just trying to get an heir for my real husband who’d died at the hands of his armies.”

  “I didn’t kill you?” said Tashi, grappling with the implications.

  “No. But this time, you can be the one to set me free. Free me from these chains, and I can choose you. We can be together forever. You and me.” Zariah licked her newly formed lips suggestively and shifted some of her sparse clothing aside to reveal more cleavage.

  “No,” shouted Brent. “First, she must shut the Door. The Door is to the past, and all you’ve suffered. Have her close it and forgive you.”

  “Stay out of this,” the dragon hissed.

  “Shatter his dream state, he’ll kill the witch,” said Bjorn.

  “She’s a ward of the Traveler now, bound to his service. I must protect her,” Brent said to them all.

  “The executioner will still kill me,” said Zariah.

  “Not if your powers stay bound, and you serve your sentence.” Brent said.

  “She’s evil,” stressed Bjorn.

  “That doesn’t change the law or how we treat pople. You’re a criminal and the Master showed you mercy,” argued the boy. The dragon stared at him through squinted eyes.

  “She doesn’t deserve it!” insisted the remaining member of the Stone Monkeys.

  Tashi surprised everyone by speaking. “No one deserves it. That’s why it’s called mercy.” He blinked twice and faced the boy. “I didn’t kill her.”

  Brent smiled reassuringly. “Not this time.”

  “Thank you,” the sheriff mumbled, swaying from his injuries. “You’ve saved my life at least three ways today. I have much to repay, fellow walker.”

  Nervous, Brent said, “You could start by helping with the dragon and all these soldiers.”

  Tashi said one word. “Parley.”

  “As long as you honor the laws of the ancients, I accept,” said the dragon.

  Brent said, “So no one hurts anyone with magic or weapons or runs away till we’ve come to an agreement?”

  The dragoness nodded. The scene rippled and the play vanished. The energy for the illusion had been costing her too much. Zariah lurched forward, unbound, but still in the form of Alana.

  Bjorn fumed. “You’re cracked!”

  “This could take days. As the host, Serog has an obligation to protect us, feed us, and tend to our wounded,” Tashi explained.

  “Count me in just to see this beast serve tea and biscuits,” the critically injured Bjorn laughed.

  Chapter 15 – In the Dark

  Sandarac, self-proclaimed Emperor of the North, was exhilarated and terrified at the same time. His generals had sent word earlier that the great
battle in the Vale was set to take place any hour between now and sundown. The battle would take hours, if not days, to decide. And then the messenger birds wouldn’t bear news to him until many hours after that. His fate would be decided by others while he fretted. Some low-level functionary fit only to scrub bird droppings from the floor would bring him a tiny letter with the deed to his empire, or a sentence of death.

  He refined a few supply chain orders for the prolonged waiting period, moved the ships closer in case his armies needed a rapid retreat, and stared helplessly at the map.

  Sandarac tried to hold court, but couldn’t concentrate. He had snapped at so many officials and sycophants that no one dared approach for the rest of the day. He paced on his sled along the floor of the map room. The light wasn’t good there at this time of day, but no one wanted him about the palace in his present state.

  The handmaiden recently rescued from the Room with No Doors was still unconscious. The only thing they knew for certain was that the sheriff had escaped. Lady Kragen should not be arriving for several days, time enough to rectify this problem once and for all. With luck, she would never hear of this mistake.

  The priests could tell him nothing about the Ho Mountain other than the fact that no one could have survived the storm of fire. It’d be after Nightfall before anyone could breathe up there again, which meant that they’d know nothing until the next morning.

  The final blow came when he went to dear Jolia for comfort and found her gone. His irritable funk grew into a rage. Sandarac summoned his counsel. The fire mage was asleep. Zariah couldn’t be reached. His generals were in the Vale. Only Beryl and the Viper attended him in person; the rest sent lackeys.

  The Keepers had food and Spring wine brought in to soothe the emperor. But he still paced like a caged lion. After a couple hours and a few dead guards, the Viper reported, “Your consort is most likely still alive, kidnapped. We’re doing everything we can to locate her. No stone will be left unturned.”

  “Who?” Sandarac demanded.

  “An arch-assassin called Jotham the Tenor.”

  Upon hearing this, Beryl gasped, “The Heretic?”

  Sandarac stopped pacing to glare at the fussy priest decked out in green and jewelry. Everyone else in the room stopped breathing in order to escape notice. “You know this villain?”

  Beryl blinked nervously. “Not personally. But he’s a powerful corrupter of the masses and stirs up no end of trouble. His lies are so convincing that he can twist the most loyal man into killing for him. We won’t be able to trust your consort even if she survives.”

  “You’ve never liked Jolia, but she’s never harmed a soul!” Sandarac insisted.

  Beryl cleared his throat, “She did stab those three men.”

  “That’s different! She would never turn on me,” said Sandarac.

  The Viper glanced at his papers. “Aye, Highness. It seems that this man talked a hand of Keepers into thinking he was sent from the gods, convinced one of your throne-room guards to kill a priest who shouted warnings about an assassin, and convinced your harem guards to admit him and lie about his presence. He then somehow passed unseen past a hundred men. Much as it pains me, sire, Lord Beryl may have the right of it.”

  “Who is this bastard that steals my loved ones to use against me?”

  The Viper continued. “He matches the description given to me of a master manipulator, a half-mad Imperial wizard called Jotham of Bablios. We believe him to be the Prefect’s spymaster for this half of the world. We know that the sheriff was one of his agents.”

  “This fits his description as I have heard it, sire,” said Beryl. “He recently caused such a political stir in Semenea that the King had him deported immediately.”

  “Deported to where?” asked the Viper casually.

  “The first available boat to the border. Um . . . Turiv,” exclaimed Beryl the less-than-wise.

  The ire in the emperor built to a thunderhead, focused on the green priest’s flinching face. “You had this spy and assassin in your hands? Yet you not only freed him, but delivered him to my doorstep on the eve of the strike that can win me all the kingdoms?”

  Beryl opened his mouth, fishlike, a few times, unable to rep “Hentelligently.

  Sandarac drew the thin honor from one of his Keeper guards and rolled toward Beryl until the tip of the blade was beneath the man’s breastbone. “Explain.”

  The priest in green swallowed hard. “I’m not sure of all the details. We had to do something to contain the rebel action that the Heretic started in the East.”

  Sandarac interrupted. “Rebel action? Farmers with pitchforks and torches?”

  “Oh, no,” Beryl clarified. “Whole squads of soldiers followed that wench older sister of . . .” He was cut off by the thrust of Sandarac’s borrowed blade. The cut was through the stomach, not the heart.

  The Keepers gasped as the emperor wiped his blade on the traitor’s cape.

  “I’ll honor his last request and issue a death warrant for both the spy and my beloved,” Sandarac said. “But he won’t live to see the warrant served. I hope Lord Beryl’s end will be slow and painful, giving plenty of time for the Viper to extract an honest description of Semenean troop strengths. Have his offices and mansion searched as well. I want to know what else my trusted allies haven’t told me.”

  “As you command,” said the Viper, carting a whimpering Beryl off with the help of a few guards.

  To the men remaining, Sandarac bellowed, “Get me Zariah and the fire priest. I don’t care what it takes or who you inconvenience!”

  Minutes later, a bird messenger arrived in his dimmed chamber. The words felt like the cold steel had to the traitor, sliding inexorably into his guts. “Sheriff and Kiateran commandos attacking temple. Help. Desperate.”

  Sandarac knew that this blow would be the one that killed him. He’d continue to struggle more fiercely than ever. But even if he ascended the throne of the unified empire, his spirit had begun bleeding from a mortal wound in this darkened room today, and no one could help him.

  Chapter 16 – The Mantle

  All eyes turned to Tashi now that the parley had begun. “So how does it work?” asked Bjorn.

  “Both sides start by laying out everything they want, starting with the most important. Whatever you agree on becomes binding on both parties. Whatever you don’t agree on immediately goes on the table for trading later. One person is the chief negotiator for each side. In the Brotherhood, other members at the table can call a discussion on his decisions, but a majority vote on any issue carries. We try not to contest the negotiator unless it’s really important because dissent looks bad in the face of the enemy. I want the boy to talk for us.”

  “What?” squawked Brent.

  “I’m not good with words. I get muddled lately, and I need sleep,” admitted Tashi, “without dreams.”

  “They can’t be allowed to get away with what they’ve done,” hissed Bjorn.

  “As for the dragon, it is just doing its job, really. Great ideas and places where the heavens touch the Earth must always have imposing guardians. Otherwise any fool can write his name on the foundations of the world,” said Tashi. “As for ariah, you don’t blame a wild dog for biting. Predators must be expected to behave like this. Did you believe otherwise when you walked into her den?”

  “I suppose not, but you’re putting a child up against a dragon?” asked Bjorn incredulously.

  “You’d rather be fighting?” countered the sheriff. Bjorn held up his hands in surrender. Tashi whispered a list of demands into the boy’s ear and the northerner added a few more.

  Brent stepped forward, nervous. “Uh . . . the first topic of discussion is healing of our two friends during the truce. We know that your temple can use the power of sleep combined with the Door to heal injuries and revitalize people. We’d like to start with that as a gesture of good faith.”

  “I am in pain,” snapped the dragoness. “Your request would take hours, and every mom
ent prolongs my agony.”

  “You can use dilation,” said Tashi, using the word he learned from the tailor. “Slow yourself and speed us.”

  “You spend most of your time looking like a statue anyway,” said Brent.

  “It could be done. But this would leave my daughter Zariah vulnerable. I’d also be unable to control the servants in that state and would be unable to guarantee your safety.”

  The boy was undeterred. “We’ll put all our weapons in a safe place. Underneath you if you like. Your guards are like your weapons. Order them all out and to stay out, and we’ll all be safe. Zariah stays inside, though.”

  “Then so do you,” countered the dragoness.

  “Agreed so far, but sleeping that long and healing is likely to make my friends pretty hungry.”

  “Aye, ‘tis a common side-effect of the spell on your kind. Zariah will guide you to her banquet table behind the blue silk screen. Eat as much as you can hold.”

  Brent seemed squeamish about the next point. “Since your people will be able to take their dead with them when they leave, and I can’t step foot outside, we’re at a disadvantage. I can prepare the bodies, but Ekvar and Nigel have the right to a decent burial outside. No offense, but I don’t think they would rest well if your fellows tossed them in the trash dump out back.”

  The dragon writhed for a moment. Zariah interceded. “There is an advocate for the dead traveling just north of here. I believe the locals call him ‘Owl.’ We can have him summoned here in a few hours.”

 

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