by Sharon Lee
They do say that practice makes perfect.
The music of the land beckoned me. I allowed myself to sink just below the surface, observing with a sense that wasn’t really like hearing or sight, but a combination of both. From this level, I could feel the disparate voices that made up the song, like the biggest jigsaw puzzle in the universe.
Every piece fit right where it was best suited; each informing the pieces immediately touching it; connecting, and connecting again, the whole stronger than the parts. At least the parts that were doing their jobs. The parts that had fallen silent, they weakened the whole; they offered nothing for pieces adjacent to them to anchor to, and created an unstable situation.
Buoyed by the land’s song, in it, but not quite of it, I allowed myself to expand, casting my net wide, until suddenly, I heard it—Check that.
I didn’t hear it.
I narrowed my attention until I had that patch of stillness directly in my sights. Holding it close, I expanded myself very, very slowly, trying to identify the pieces nearby, the voices that were still joined in song.
This was the nerve-wracking part, and, sadly, the part that practice hadn’t made anywhere near perfect. Or at least, not yet.
I brought every bit of concentration I possessed to bear, and took…call it a mental snapshot of the still zone, and its surrounding pieces.
Then I rose to the top of the song, and higher still, until I was fully back in my own body, lying flat on my back on the living room floor, my face cooled by the breeze from the open doors, and a cat purring on my chest.
I raised my hand, and held it near her face, the backs of my fingers parallel with her cheek; close, but not too close.
She leaned into them, rubbing her cheek down my skin, the purr output increasing.
“Okay,” I said softly. “Now what happens is that we look at the map and try to match that snapshot I took to the lay of the land, so to speak.”
The cat smiled.
“You’re cute, too, but I need to change position to look at the map, so here we go…”
I rolled, slowly. The cat came to her feet and walked against the roll—just like I was a log floating down the river, and she was the log driver—until I was on my stomach and she was standing on my ass. I propped up on my elbows, pulled the map to me, and held my mental snapshot against it. The technique that seemed to work best, when it worked at all, was to focus on both the image and the map and wait for a sign.
In the past, the sign had taken the form of a sudden and overwhelming conviction that this place right here on the map was what I was looking for. It was pretty damn’ intense when that happened.
Unfortunately, what usually happened was that I would focus until my eyes crossed, the map would blur, the mental snapshot would disintegrate and a line of white pain would sear through my head, leaving me with a sullen headache.
I focused, trying to look through the snapshot and into the map. Distantly, I was aware of something happening on my back, but didn’t really connect it with the cat until I felt whiskers tickle my ear as she hunched on my shoulder to stare down at the map with me.
It was either the whiskers in my ear, or the thought of her studying the map—or both. I laughed, the image and the map wavering in my bilevel vision.
I snatched at my control, fumbled, and saw a flash out of the corner of my mental eye before I lost it all.
“Damn,” I said mildly. I leaned my head softly against the cat’s head.
“You can’t do that, kid. I’m an amateur at this stuff. I need all the concentration I can bring to bear. I appreciate the help, though.”
I sighed. At least I didn’t have a headache this time.
“I thought I saw something just before it all went to hell,” I told the cat. “But it went by so fast that I didn’t get it.”
The cat stiffened on my shoulder, as if in surprise. I felt her weight shift, and saw one furry paw come down hard on the map.
I blinked, and slowly extended a finger toward the paw, which obligingly lifted away. The force of her blow had left a dent in the map; a claw tip had put a tiny tear in the glossy paper.
I put my finger on the tear, and felt a jolt of certainty.
“Holy moly, kiddo, that’s seventh-level shit. You’re wasted here.”
The cat jumped off my shoulder, using her back legs hard. I hastily reached for a magic marker and drew a circle, noting the place with a touch of astonishment.
“St. Margaret’s Church?” I asked, and rolled to my feet.
The cat was sitting on the floor between the living room and the kitchen, staring hard at exactly nothing. Somehow, her pose conveyed affronted dignity.
“Hey.” I stretched out on my side on the floor next to, but not touching her.
“Hey,” I said again. “Nancy should’ve told you that I’m an idiot. Always saying the wrong thing. What I meant was—you really helped me out, and I’ll go check that spot”—no putting this off until it was safe, I thought; not with hurt feelings in play—“tomorrow. That thing with being wasted? I’m only worried you’ll get bored with me and the job and move on. I wouldn’t like that.”
She turned her head and considered me out of solemn amber eyes. Then stretched her neck out—and nipped me lightly on the chin.
The level of relief I felt was ’way out of proportion with the problem. I smiled and reached out to rub her between her ears.
“Thanks.”
She purred.
“So, since it seems you’re staying, we ought to figure out a call name for you. Any suggestions?”
The cat yawned.
“Not useful, unless you want to be called Sleepy.”
That earned me a glare—also not particularly useful. I stared back.
The cat blinked first.
She sighed, stretched, and tucked up against me where I lay on the floor, her back against my chest. Another sigh and she seemed to go immediately to sleep.
I closed my eyes and cleared my mind.
The darkness behind my eyelids lightened, like I was looking through fog; I heard the familiar crash of waves, the sound of a buoy bell underneath. The fog lightened more, and suddenly I was looking at a rock. It was a biggish rock and unusual, even taking into account that I was probably looking at it from cat-high.
For one thing, the surface glittered, like it was made up of a thousand sharp crystals. For a second thing, the crystals seemed to be rooted in a stem of granite—sort of like a knife bouquet.
I noted the rock even as I tried to keep my mind open. If the cat wanted to show me something else, I’d better be with the program.
But it seemed as if the rock was the thing. Gradually, it faded from my awareness, and I opened my eyes to find I was staring into a pair of serious amber eyes.
“Okay,” I said, reaching out to rub her ear. “I got it, now all I have to do is decode it. I don’t suppose it’s remotely possible that you’re wanting to be called Crystal?”
The cat yawned.
“Figured.”
I thought about it. Given where she’d come from, it was almost a sure thing that the rock in question had been part of the Camp Ellis jetty, though I was willing to bet that the cat didn’t want to be called Jetty, either.
“Well,” I said, rolling over onto my back, “I’m not going to call you Rocky. Belle? Foggy?”
Two more yawns.
I sighed, rolled to my feet and went over to the bookshelf, and ran my fingers over the spines of the reference books there until I came to the tatty copy of Roget’s International Thesaurus, Fourth Edition, published in 1977.
Perfect.
I sat down on the floor, crossed my legs and cracked the book.
The cat came over and put front paws on my knee.
“Half a sec,” I told her. “We’ll getcha something good.”
Here we were—383.11. I cleared my throat.
“Let’s see—lithic, adamantine, flinty, spall…” I looked up. The cat yawned.
&nb
sp; “Right. Hey—chesil’s kind of pretty.”
Another yawn. I sighed.
“Breccia…”
Claws pricked my skin lightly through my jeans.
I looked up and met the cat’s eyes.
“Breccia,” I said, just to be sure.
She squinted her eyes in a cat smile, and I closed the thesaurus.
* * * * *
It was Olida alone she found at the goblin’s cavern, and that was fortunate. Improved though she was, she thought that taking both at once was yet beyond her.
Indeed, she suspected that Daphne alone would have been…difficult. Olida—
Olida would present no difficulty.
“Sister, you were gone so long that we became concerned,” the goblin said, and indeed, her concern seemed genuine.
But, then, she reminded herself, Olida wished the Borgan dead. Of course she would be concerned if the proposed murder weapon became lost.
“Daphne went out to look for you,” Olida continued. “Did you see Borgan? What did you learn?”
“I saw the Borgan, yes,” she said, smiling as she rested in the secret currents of the goblins’ cave. “I learned that he is very strong, and that the sea loves him above all else. Indeed, I must congratulate you, sister, on your strength of will. How have you remained aloof from the sea’s emotion?”
Olida’s gaunt face grew gaunter.
“We were the first,” she hissed. “We! The waters were fierce, and full, and mighty; we served her passions well. She loved us. Us! Then he came, and she—changed. He calms the waters. He makes her vulnerable. But, we are the first—and we will protect her.” Olida spun in a tight circle, and for a moment bubbles obscured her.
“We’ve been able to resist Borgan’s influence on her, because we love her.”
So, the poor goblins loved the sea precisely as the sea loved the Borgan. As firstborn, they would have no choice. They could not feel otherwise, even though the temper of the sea had changed. In fact, the sea’s new love must constantly pain them—and pain kept their hate alive.
Poor goblin. She sincerely pitied it, burdened so long by hatred and pain.
Soon, now, it would feel neither. Surcease—that must be her gift.
She smiled softly and allowed her diminished aspect to arise. The dark waters began to glow, reflecting the small glory of which she was capable. Olida’s hard face softened; her eyes grew misty and wide.
“It saddens me,” she murmured, “to say this, sister, but—you cannot prevail against the Borgan.”
“No…no, we must!” Olida stammered, but her voice was as soft as her face; her will was breached already. “With you—you to aid us…” She lay limp in the waters, vulnerable, unresisting, and utterly unaware of her danger.
It was her will that the goblin knew neither danger nor fear. There was no need to inflict further pain on a being that had been so wracked and for so long.
Not even were that being a goblin.
“Poor child, you cannot prevail,” she said, stroking the currents in a subtle request. “Even I…cannot prevail against the Borgan.” She opened her arms. “Come to me now. Give me your anguish.”
The current obliged her. Olida, bedazzled and unresisting, flowed into her embrace, and lay in her arms like a child in truth, eyes gazing into her face, as if she peacefully watched the moon, floating in the sky.
“You have been so very brave, for so very long,” she crooned, bringing the goblin to her breast. “You have been strong. I honor you and all that you have accomplished.” She kissed the pale forehead. “What is your name, sweet child of the sea?”
“Korkilig,” Olida whispered.
She smiled and bent her head.
“Korkilig,” she murmured, “you are mine.”
Chapter Twenty-One
Sunday, July 9
Low Tide 4:30 P.M. EDT
“It has been a little slow,” Vassily told me, adding, with the air of an old hand, “but it is Sunday. When everyone has checked in, and had their dinners, then it will be quick again.”
The kid has four Season Sundays under his belt, Kate, I told myself. If he’s not an old hand, he’s not a newbie, either.
Also, he was right. Early Sunday usually was slow, the reason being that the tourist population changed over on Sundays. The weeklies were all checked out by ten o’clock Sunday morning, and heading back to wherever they called home. The new batch of weeklies started check-in at three o’clock. After that, they’d want to grab a couple of hours on the beach, and get something to eat. The amusement park, open ’til midnight—they’d get to the amusement park when the breeze off the ocean turned cool, and the sun was starting to go down. Seven-thirty, eight o’clock, I’d have more riders than I could manage, all the way to midnight, and past, too; until the summer cops managed to herd everybody out, and Marilyn locked the gate.
Monday would be a little less intense, and Tuesday, again, park attendance sliding off until Friday, when everyone suddenly realized that there was only tonight, and Saturday night, to ride all the rides, and play all the games—and the park would be packed past closing again.
“It’s nice to have a crowd,” I said, “keeps me out of trouble.”
“Yes,” Vassily said, and hesitated.
“Something wrong?”
“No…I do not think so.” He chewed his lip, looking over my shoulder, possibly at the carousel, or possibly at something only he could see. I waited to see which it was—and it proved to be the latter.
“Kate Archer, I have prayed to my angel in heaven,” he said, seriously.
“Thank you,” I answered, hoping I wasn’t going to have to dance around the question of whether I, too, had prayed to the angel in heaven. Or in Varoth. Whatever.
“My angel answers me, and he gave me these words to say to you. They are…”
He drew in a breath, and when he exhaled, his voice was deeper, vibrant; each word as fully formed and weighted as a stone.
“For a second time I abase myself, and I offer an apology. The bouquet and depth of your power led me to believe that I dealt with an Ozali of some age and experience. I was mistaken; thus, what I offered as opportunity became an entrapment.
“Though I regret the manner of it, I cannot regret that we have shared power. I have been enriched in the sharing; indeed, I will say to you that I have been changed.
“It is my sincere hope that, in time, you will also come to regard the gifts shared, and the alliance thus created, as one of the unexpected treasures of your existence.
“Peace upon you, Kate Archer. May your powers never cease to delight you.”
Vassily bowed, and straightened, blinking rapidly before focusing once more on my face.
“The message, it was clear?”
“Clear as glass,” I assured him. “How’s your head?”
“My head is fine.” Vassily smiled beatifically. “My angel is gentle and good.”
I opened my mouth—and closed it again. Vassily’s relationship with Prince Aesgyr of Varoth was vastly different from my relationship with that same sly prince. Prince Aesgyr had given Vassily peace, while he had given me…what exactly?
Deep breath, Kate.
“Okay!” I told Vassily. “Honor now being satisfied, you can go get your supper; I’ll take it from here.”
“Yes. Good night, Kate Archer. Thanking you.”
He picked his hoody up from the operator’s stool, threw it over one shoulder, and left me.
One of these days, I thought, watching him cross Baxter Avenue to Tony Lee’s, I was going to have to find out what, exactly, the kid was thanking me for.
There being nobody in line, and nobody on the grounds who looked like they’d be wanting a ride on the carousel anytime soon after I stepped out to look up and down Baxter Avenue, I walked back under the roof and jumped up onto the decking to do an inspection.
The inspection was busywork, but I was thorough, checking the area first for trash. Nothing really to inspect,
there—Vassily was meticulous. No chance-blown bit of paper or plastic, no forgotten drink cup, or ketchup-smeared fries cone eluded him. The carousel deck looked freshly swept, and the animals gleamed, as if they’d been rubbed down with a soft cloth and wax.
Even the temporary fiberglass rooster—temporarily a member of the carousel’s company, that was; not temporarily fiberglass—shone as if it had been polished.
I walked the carousel widdershins, looking up into the sweeps. All the lights were shining bright. An outside circuit, again looking up, confirmed that the outline lights were all on duty, too.
If I wanted to be as thorough as possible, I’d inspect the cranking rods next, but that was really a job for when the park was closed, involving, as it did, a ladder.
I jumped back onto the deck, and, purely out of habit, stepped Sideways. The five animals that held—that had held—prisoners from the other five Worlds each glowed rosily, the supposed life essences partly obscured by the shadowy ropes of the binding spells. The scent of butterscotch—my magical signature—was thick in the air.
I considered them each minutely, detecting neither stress nor weakening. The binding spells and the life-glow not only looked convincing, they felt convincing. In fact, they felt so convincing that I wondered if my subconscious hadn’t woven a teensy tiny little truth spell into the binding spell. It was, I supposed, possible. Spellcraft, as Mr. Ignat’ was often pleased to tell me, was more art than science. He also swore to me that, as my jikinap and I got used to each other and how we operated, I’d find my spells informed by past work, and infused with special fillips that I hadn’t specifically called for.
Mr. Ignat’—being an old and very experienced Ozali—seemed to think that was a feature. Myself, I was leaning toward bug. I didn’t necessarily want my power making independent decisions, even based on a comprehensive database of my previous actions. Consistency isn’t exactly my strongest suit.
All of which sort of brought me around to Vassily’s angel from heaven, Prince Aesgyr of Varoth, the Land of Air and Sunshine.
Since I’d come to know Prince Aesgyr so well, and through no wish of my own, I knew that he was also an old and very experienced Ozali. He’d taken what I had to assume was a calculated risk in forcing a sharing of power—though maybe that should be instead, a desperate risk. Certainly, he’d been desperate to recover his consort, and he’d thought that I knew the location of each prisoner as an individual. Gran might have known that, but I never did, so Prince Aesgyr had taken his risk for nothing.