“He hurt some people before he took me,” Rinnie said. “I remember blood and Gura barking.”
Phoran’s hands tightened on hers. “Rufort’s dead. Kissel, I think, will be all right. I bandaged Gura, but he’d lost a lot of blood.”
“Look, there’s Lehr,” said Phoran.
Rinnie looked ahead and saw her brother running toward them. Phoran straightened a little more and sped up until they were running. Lehr caught up to them and turned to run with them.
“The Shadowed is coming after us,” Phoran told her brother. “We need to get out of here.”
Being able to breathe again made Phoran more aware of his surroundings, so he saw Toarsen and Kissel before they saw him. Toarsen had managed a more professional bandage than Phoran had taken time for, and Kissel was on his feet.
Kissel didn’t look like a man about to die, which was terrific. On the other hand, he didn’t look as though he was going to be running back to camp either.
“Gura,” Rinnie ran to the shaggy, black beast, but it was ominously still.
The scream of a hawk echoed through the empty streets. Phoran looked up in the sky toward the tower, but couldn’t see the bird anywhere.
“On top of that building across the street,” said Lehr, sounding grim. “It’s him, isn’t it.”
“Yes. We’re going to go back anyway. Toarsen, watch Kissel,” said Phoran, not taking his eyes off the watching bird. “Is Gura still alive?”
“Yes,” said Lehr reluctantly because he knew, as Phoran did, that the right thing to do was slit the dog’s throat.
“Can you carry him?” asked Phoran.
Willon was playing with them. They were none of them a match for the Shadowed. Only Rinnie and Lehr had any magic at all. Lehr’s bow was back at camp—and a hunting knife, which was the only thing their Falcon was armed with, was no match for Willon.
“Yes, I can carry him,” said Lehr softly.
If we are going to die, thought Phoran, we’ll do it together. “The dog was hurt trying to defend Rinnie,” Phoran said aloud. “We’ll get him out if we can.”
“That’s the Shadowed, isn’t it?” asked Toarsen. “Why is he just watching us?”
“Maybe he’s waiting for us to kill the dog,” said Phoran.
CHAPTER 20
Lehr grunted as he picked up the dog. It must have weighed 140 or 150 pounds, thought Phoran. He couldn’t carry the dog all the way back to camp. No more was Kissel in any shape to walk far.
Phoran glanced at the hawk watching them. Probably carrying the dog was going to be the least of their problems.
“Phoran. Where are you going?” asked the hawk. “Run, Phoran, run. It will do you no—” Something that Phoran couldn’t see hit the bird and knocked it from its perch.
A magpie flew from somewhere behind Phoran and landed on the ground before becoming Hinnum.
“Run, boys,” he said without taking his eyes off the great bird that floundered on the ground in front of them. “I can’t hold him for long.”
“Go,” said Phoran, voice cracking with relief.
“This way,” said Lehr, and led off with Gura in his arms.
The journey was nightmarish. They walked because that was the best Kissel and an overburdened Lehr could do. Phoran took the rearguard position, walking backward so he could watch behind them.
The skies, so bright and blue that morning, had turned dark and threatening. Since Rinnie was muttering softly to herself and had a tendency to stumble over nothing, Phoran was sure she had something to do with the growing storm. He remembered Lehr’s tale of the lightning that had struck the troll threatening them, and decided that Ielian had been proved wrong: Cormorants had more to offer than good weather for a farmer. Give Rinnie a little time to work, and she was a formidable opponent.
There were sounds and flashes of light from the vicinity of where they’d left Hinnum facing the Shadowed. A few of the noises were accompanied by vibrations that shook the ground beneath their feet.
When they reached the base of the ramp, Phoran said, “Lehr, give me the dog, then take my sword. Keep an eye on Kissel. You might have to help brace him from the other side.”
He took the dog and began the long climb. What had seemed an engineering marvel to Phoran the first day they’d come into the dead city was now torturous.
Kissel tried his best, but he’d lost a lot of blood, and their progress was abysmally slow. Lehr slid his shoulder under the one Toarsen wasn’t supporting before they were more than a dozen yards from the bottom.
“Give me the sword,” said Jes, startling everyone badly.
Phoran hadn’t seen him, and neither, he thought from the look on Lehr’s face, had anyone else.
“Don’t do that,” said Lehr irritably as he held out the sword to his brother who had, in broad daylight, suddenly appeared from nowhere.
“Keep going,” said Phoran.
“Mother, Papa, and Hennea are on their way,” said Jes. “Hinnum felt the Shadowed’s magic and went ahead to help if he could.”
“We saw him,” said Phoran, breathing in huffs as the steep climb made the dog feel heavier and heavier. “He attacked Willon so we could escape. They’ve been making a lot of noise.”
“I heard it,” agreed Jes shortly. Phoran was always surprised at how different this Jes was from the slow, soft-spoken boy he usually was.
“I haven’t heard anything since we started up the ramp,” said Lehr. “I hope it’s not bad news.”
As he spoke a bedraggled magpie flew up and landed on Rinnie’s shoulder. “Go,” it croaked, swaying unsteadily. “Go.”
Kissel staggered, and brought Lehr and Toarsen to their knees.
“Jes, take the dog,” said Phoran, pushing the limp animal into Jes’s arms before the other man had a chance to protest. Then he bent down and put his shoulder into Kissel’s belly and hoisted him up.
“Toarsen, draw your sword. Lehr, take mine back from Jes before he drops it or the dog. Rinnie, steady that bird before he falls off altogether.”
Kissel outweighed Phoran, but not as much as he outweighed Toarsen and Lehr. His calves already hurt from climbing up the cliff and the guard tower, and his ribs were sore from his fall, but Jes had said Tier was coming.
“Let me take him, Phoran,” said Toarsen, as the ramp ended at last. “You’re about done in.”
Phoran shook his head. Toarsen was all wiry muscle, but he wasn’t big enough to carry Kissel for long.
“How’s his bleeding?” Phoran’s breath was coming in heaving gasps that made it hard to talk.
“Not good,” Toarsen said. “He’s unconscious. I—”
“Hush,” said Jes, setting the dog on the ground and looking back down the ramp. “He’s coming.”
Then he shifted into the shape of a black mountain cat as large as any Phoran had ever seen.
“No,” said the magpie. “No. They will need all six Orders, Guardian. I’ll stop him.”
He launched off Rinnie’s shoulder with an uncertain flap of wings that steadied on the second stroke.
“Toarsen, take Gura,” said Phoran. “Let’s go.”
He wasn’t sure how far they’d come. Phoran’s world was rapidly reducing itself to putting one foot in front of the other. When he heard the sound of galloping hooves, Phoran knelt and very carefully set Kissel on the cobbles.
“You’ll be all right now,” he told him. “Tier’s here.”
Skew slithered on the slippery cobbles, and Tier was off the horse and bending over Kissel before Skew had quite stopped.
A pulse, too rapid and too faint, beat against his fingers and Tier looked up, taking in the rest of the party.
“Rufort and Ielian?” he asked.
Toarsen set Gura down gently beside Kissel. “Rufort’s dead,” he said. “Kissel and I both picked Ielian out of the Passerines as a loyal man. We failed in our responsibility. He killed Rufort.”
Phoran, pale and drenched in sweat, held up a hand. “I knew
that there was something wrong. He told Rufort that the Path was paying him—I found out last night and didn’t confront him. I bear equal responsibility.”
“Ielian was the Shadowed’s man, Papa,” said Rinnie.
When he opened his arms, she ran to him. Her little face was bruised, a black and swollen knot on her chin. Her bottom lip was split and puffy. Tier looked from her to Phoran.
“Ielian again,” he said. “Willon is responsible for the split lip, though.”
“Tell us,” said Seraph. She began a gentle examination of Gura, though Tier saw that her eyes blazed with rage. “Sit down, Phoran. If you keep swaying half-up, half-down, you’ll fall. What happened, Lehr?”
“Ielian lured us out of our way—I suppose he and Willon had arranged something of the sort. Before any of us knew something was wrong, Willon froze us where we stood.”
He took a deep breath. “Papa, Willon told us why he ran from Jes and me that night in Taela. He wanted us to succeed. He sacrificed his people so Mother would get all the Ordered gems. He couldn’t figure out what was wrong with them, but he thought Mother, Hennea, and Brewydd might. He knew that Volis had the maps. When Mother and Hennea couldn’t fix the gems, he wanted them to come here. He attacked you to force us to come here. Hinnum knew how to make the gems work right, but he wouldn’t talk to Willon. Willon sent Mother to talk to Hinnum.”
“What good did that do?” asked Hennea. “We won’t talk to him either.”
“Mother has people she cares about,” replied Lehr. “Willon promised not to harm any of us if Mother fixed the gems so that they worked for him. He took Rinnie hostage and left us to break free of his spell and tell you what had happened.”
“He took Rinnie?” asked Hennea, crouching beside Kissel. “Then why is she here? Did Hinnum rescue her?”
“No,” Rinnie said. “That was Phoran. He broke free of the Shadowed’s spell and came up to rescue me.”
“Phoran rescued you from the Shadowed?” Hennea sounded incredulous.
“Not exactly,” said Phoran wryly.
Tier tightened his hand on Rinnie’s shoulder; he’d come so close to losing her. “What happened?”
“He broke free of the Shadowed’s spell and told us how to do it, too,” said Toarsen, with a respectful nod in Phoran’s direction.
“It was an illusion,” Phoran explained, giving Tier a sheepish grin. “Some parts of me aren’t very nice, sir. The idea that a peasant, trumped-up parlor illusionist with delusions of godhood would try and command me, the Emperor, just seemed wrong. I couldn’t believe it would work—so it didn’t. The others had broken free by the time Rinnie and I got back. I don’t know how.”
Toarsen laughed, though there were tears in his eyes. He’d sat on the road next to Kissel, and now he touched him lightly. “Kissel, broke free before any of the rest of us. He said anything you could break free of couldn’t hold him. He talked the rest of us free.”
Phoran nodded soberly. “I chased after Rinnie. There’s a stair carved into the cliff, just below that guard tower over there.” He pointed to the second tower to the south. “I met Ielian, who was coming down the cliff as I came up. I tossed him off the cliff—”
“Too bad,” murmured Seraph.
“He’s dead,” Phoran told her.
“Thank you,” she said. “But I could have made it more painful.”
Phoran half bowed. “The next one I will save for you. I couldn’t be bothered with him because I knew Willon had Rinnie.” He shrugged. “Not that I was much help. We exchanged a half dozen words, then he tossed me off the tower.”
Tier turned to look at the tower in question again. “Down the cliff, too? You look good for a man who just fell several hundred feet.”
“Thank you,” said Phoran. “I feel good, too—relatively speaking.” The Emperor tilted his head and looked at Rinnie with a smile. “I think it was Rinnie who saved me: we’ve been too busy trying to run to stop and exchange stories to make certain. But instead of being splatted unpleasantly on the ground, I was lying at the base of the cliffs trying to catch my breath, and Rinnie was there.”
“The Memory threw me off the guard tower after you,” Rinnie said.
“What?” Phoran’s eyes flashed, and his hand went to his sword hilt. “It did what?”
Tier was feeling pretty murderous himself.
Rinnie grinned, first at Tier and then at the Emperor, looking more herself. “It grabbed me where I was cowering on the stairway and threw me off and said, ‘Cormorant, fly.’ I think if it hadn’t said that, I’d have fallen and squished right on top of you. As it was, I wasn’t sure I had been soon enough for you. You weren’t breathing and I was sure you were dead. Then you sat up, and your eyes were bulging and watering—I thought you could have been the walking dead, like the ones last night. But no, you started breathing and grabbed me without so much as a thank-you.”
All in one breath, thought Tier. Amusement won over the horror of hearing that something had thrown his daughter from a tower. It helped that Rinnie had survived.
Phoran bowed. “Thank you, my lady. I was remiss when I forgot to thank you earlier—though I believe the fear for your life took precedence at the time.”
Rinnie looked pleased, and said smugly, “I can’t wait until I get home and I can tell people that I saved the Emperor’s life.”
Lehr smiled at her. “No one will believe you, pest.”
“Where is Hinnum?” asked Hennea.
“The Shadowed was coming,” said Jes, who had exchanged his wolf form for the mountain cat. “Hinnum was already hurt, but he wouldn’t let me go.”
“Speaking of which,” said Phoran. “Should we continue going?”
“No,” said Hennea. “What we do, we can do here as well as anywhere. Seraph, this is as good a time as any to see if that ring will work for you. Phoran, where are the names from the Owl’s temple?”
“Willon burned them,” said Toarsen. “He said he was sealing the temple so no one else could get them again.”
“I remember one of them,” said Phoran.
Hennea frowned at him. “You know how to read the language of Colossae?”
He smiled. “I’m not just a drunken sot, my lady. I am an educated drunken sot. I couldn’t read the maps or the gates, but the alphabet is the same as Old Oslandic, which I do know. If Toarsen has that piece of char still, I can write it on the stones.”
Toarsen fumbled in his belt pouch and handed Phoran the charred stick. Phoran wrote some odd lines on the ground that might have been letters.
“Do you know to which one the name belongs?” asked Tier.
Hennea shook her head. “I don’t remember.”
“Ah, well,” said Tier. “Either would work I suppose. So what exactly do we do?”
“The six of us, you, Jes, Seraph, Lehr, Rinnie, and I hold hands. Then you speak the name of the god—I’ll tell you how to pronounce it.” Hennea sighed unhappily. “The rest of it we’ll have to improvise, I don’t know what will happen. The Orders are not the gods of Colossae.”
“We should wait until Willon comes near?” asked Tier.
Hennea nodded.
“Is there something I can do?” asked Toarsen. “He’s not going to make it.” He’d lifted Kissel’s head onto his lap and he touched his forehead lightly. “Lost too much blood. I need to have a hand in the destruction of the man who killed him.”
Tier hunkered down beside the big lad and put a hand on his too-cold cheek. He looked at Seraph, who nodded.
“Don’t give up on him, yet,” Tier told Toarsen. “Kissel’s survived worse than this—and we’ll have a Lark to help him, eh, Seraph?”
“I don’t intend for the Shadowed to kill any more of ours,” said Seraph.
“So there,” said Phoran. “Seraph has said so—Kissel won’t dare to fail her.”
A faint smile appeared on Kissel’s face.
“See,” said Tier. “All men must bow to my wife’s whims. You’ll do, lad.”
He looked up at Toarsen. “I think this battle will be beyond steel, but I’ve no objection if you keep your sword handy and use it if you see a moment to do so.”
Toarsen nodded solemnly.
“Seraph,” Tier said. “If you’re ready, Kissel has been doing his best to hold on, but he could really use some help.”
Seraph fingered the tigereye ring and closed her eyes, trying to feel what was different, but she felt the same as she ever had. Just the same as she had when she’d tried to work some healing upon Gura a few minutes ago.
She looked down for a moment upon the young man who’d fought by her side against the Path that night in Taela. When she settled next to Kissel, Toarsen looked up at her with all the welcome of a bitch guarding her pups from a stranger.
“I’m not going to hurt him,” she told him, though she wasn’t at all sure of that.
“There’s not much that will hurt me at this point,” murmured Kissel unexpectedly, with the subtle humor that he liked to employ. He always seemed best pleased when his audience wasn’t quite certain he was trying to be funny.
“I’m glad to hear it,” she told him, though she wasn’t at all sure he was still conscious.
She tried to remember what Brewydd had done when she had been repairing Tier’s injuries—but she’d been distracted and hadn’t paid much attention to the Healer.
“Lehr?”
He sat on his heels beside her. “What do you need, Mother?”
“Did you ever watch Brewydd heal?”
“She’s a Lark, Mother,” said Lehr. “Can Ravens heal, too?”
Seraph held up her hand so he could see the ring she wore. “I’m a Lark today, too. But I need your help.”
“The Lark rings don’t work,” said Jes. “You and Hennea need to clean it first.”
Seraph turned to look at him. “Willon killed Mehalla to steal her Order, Jes. All those years ago. Something in this ring knows me, and I believe it means that this was once Mehalla’s.” She paused. “We need me to be a Lark today, but even if the gem contained nothing but the Order, I could not use it to become a Lark—any more than Volis was a Raven when he wore a Raven’s gem. I need to see if the person, Mehalla or not, who haunts this ring will help me be a Lark, just for today.”
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