by Mel Odom
Darrick watched the other barges plying the harbor. Today was a busy day for Seeker’s Point. Longshoremen usually had two jobs in the village because there wasn’t enough work handling cargo to provide for a family. Even men who didn’t take on crafts and artisan work hunted or fished or trapped when finances ran low. Sometimes they migrated for a time to other cities farther south along the coast like Bramwell.
“Interested in what?” Darrick asked.
“Them symbols I see ye a-drawin’ and a-sketchin’ now an’ again.” Sahyir brought up a water flask and handed it to Darrick.
Darrick drank, tasting the metallic flavor of the water. There were a few mines in the area as well, but none of them was profitable enough to cause a merchant to invest in developing and risk losing everything to the barbarians.
“I know ye don’t like talkin’ about them symbols,” Sahyir said, “an’ I apologize for talkin’ about ’em when it ain’t no business of me own. But I see ye a-frettin’ an’ aworryin’ about ’em, an’ I know it troubles ye some.”
During the time he had known the old man, Darrick had never mentioned where he’d learned about the elliptical design with the line that threaded through it. He’d tried to put all that in the past. A year ago, when the gambler had died while under his protection, Darrick had lost himself to work and drink, barely getting by. Guilt ate at him over losing Mat and the gambler. And the phantasm of his father back in the barn in Hillsfar had lived with him every day.
Darrick didn’t even remember arriving in Seeker’s Point, had been so drunk that the ship’s captain had thrown him off the ship and refused to let him back on. Sahyir had found Darrick at the water’s edge, sick and feverish. The old man had gotten help from a couple of friends and taken Darrick back to his shanty up in the hills overlooking the village. He’d cared for Darrick, nursing him back to health during the course of a month. It had been a time, the old man had said, when he’d been certain on more than one occasion he was going to lose Darrick to the sickness or to the guilt that haunted him.
Even now, Darrick didn’t know how much of his story he’d told Sahyir, but the old man had told him that he’d drawn the symbol constantly. Darrick couldn’t remember doing that, but Sahyir had produced scraps of paper with the design on it that Darrick had been forced to assume were in his own hand.
Sahyir appeared uncomfortable.
“It’s all right, then,” Darrick said. “Those symbols aren’t anything.”
Scratching his beard with his callused fingers, Sahyir said, “That’s not what the man said that I talked to last night.”
“What did he say?” Darrick asked. The barge had nearly reached the shore now, and the men pulling the oars rested more, letting the incoming tide carry them along as they jockeyed around the other barges and ships in the choked harbor.
“He was mighty interested in that there symbol,” the old man said. “That’s why I was a-tellin’ ye about the Church of the Prophet of the Light this mornin’.”
Darrick thought about it for a moment. “I don’t understand.”
“I was worried some about tellin’ ye that I’d done a bit of nosin’ about in yer business,” Sahyir said. “We been friends for a time now, but I know ye ain’t up an’ told me everythin’ there is to know about that there symbol or yer own ties to it.”
Guilt flickered through Darrick. “That was something I tried to put behind me, Sahyir. It wasn’t because I was trying to hide anything from you.”
The old man’s eyes fixed him. “We all hide somethin’, young pup. It’s just the way men are an’ women are, an’ folks in general is. We all got weak spots we don’t want nobody pokin’ around in.”
I got my best friend killed, Darrick thought, and if I told you that, would you still be my friend? He didn’t believe that Sahyir could, and that hurt him. The old man was salt of the earth; he stood by his friends and even stood by a stranger who couldn’t take care of himself.
“Whatever it is about this symbol that draws ye,” Sahyir said, “is yer business. I just wanted to tell ye about this man ’cause he’s only gonna be in town a few days.”
“He doesn’t live here?”
“If he had,” Sahyir said with a grin, “I’d probably have talked to him before, now, wouldn’t I?”
Darrick smiled. It seemed there wasn’t anyone in Seeker’s Point who didn’t know Sahyir. “Probably,” Darrick said. “Who is this man?”
“A sage,” Sahyir replied, “to hear him tell it.”
“Do you believe him?”
“Aye, I do. If’n I didn’t, an’ didn’t think maybe he could do ye some good, why, we’d never be having this talk, now, would we?”
Darrick nodded.
“Accordin’ to what I got from him last night,” Sahyir said, “he’s gonna be at the Blue Lantern tonight.”
“What does he know about me?”
“Nothin’.” Sahyir shrugged. “Me, young pup? Why, I done forgot more secrets than I ever been told.”
“This man knows what this symbol represents?”
“He knows somewhat of it. He seemed more concerned learnin’ what I knew of it. ’Course, I couldn’t tell him nothin’ ’cause I don’t know nothin’. But I figured maybe ye could learn from each other.”
Darrick thought about the possibility as the barge closed on the shoreline. “Why were you telling me about the Church of the Prophet of the Light?”
“Because this symbol ye’re thinkin’ about so much? That sage thinks maybe it’s tied into all that what’s going on down in Bramwell. And the Church of the Prophet of the Light. He thinks maybe it’s evil.”
The old man’s words filled Darrick’s stomach with cold dread. He had no doubt that the symbol denoted evil, but he no longer knew if he wanted any part of it. Still, he didn’t want to let Mat’s death go unavenged.
“If this sage is so interested in what’s going on down in Bramwell, what is he doing here?” Darrick asked.
“Because of Shonna’s Logs. He came here to read Shonna’s Logs.”
Buyard Cholik lay supine on a bed in the back room of the Church of the Prophet of the Light and knew that he was dying. His breath rattled and heaved in his chest, and his lungs filled with his own blood. Try as he might, he could not see the face of the man—or woman—who had so gravely wounded him.
In the beginning, the pain from the arrow embedded in his chest had felt as if a red-hot poker had been shoved into him. When the pain had begun to subside, he’d mistakenly believed it was because he hadn’t been as badly hurt as he’d at first feared. Then he’d realized that he wasn’t getting better; the pain was going away because he was dying. Death closing in on him robbed him of his senses.
He silently damned the Zakarum Church and the Light he’d grown to love and fear as a child. Wherever they were, he was certain that they were laughing at him now. Here he was, his youth returned to him, stricken down by an unknown assassin. He damned the Light for abandoning him to old age when it could have killed him young before fear of getting infirm and senile had settled in, and he damned it for letting him be weak enough to allow his fear to force him to seek a bargain with Kabraxis. The Light had driven him into the demon’s arms, and he’d been betrayed again.
You haven’t been betrayed, Buyard Cholik, Kabraxis’s calm voice told him. Do you think I would let you die?
Cholik had believed the demon would let him die. After all, there were plenty of other priests and even acolytes who could step into the brief void that Cholik felt he would leave in his passing.
You will not die, Kabraxis said. We still have business to do together, you and I. Clear the room that I may enter. I don’t have enough power to maintain an illusion to mask myself and heal you at the same time.
Cholik drew a wheezing breath. Fear rushed through him, winding hard and coarse as a dry-mouthed lizard’s tongue. He had less room to breathe now than he had during his last breath. His lungs were filling up with his blood, but there was hardly any
pain.
Hurry. If you would live, Buyard Cholik, hurry.
Coughing, gasping, Cholik forced open his heavy eyelids. The tall ceiling of his private rooms remained blurred and indistinct. Blackness ate at the edges of his vision, steadily creeping inward, and he knew if it continued it would consume him.
Do it now!
Priests attended Cholik, putting compresses on the wound in his chest. The crossbow quarrel jutted out, the shaft and feathers speckled with his blood. Acolytes stood in the background while mercenaries guarded the doorway. The room was decorated with the finest silks and hand-carved furniture. An embroidered rug from the Kurast markets covered the center of the stone floor.
Cholik opened his mouth to speak and only made a hoarse croaking noise. His breath sprayed fine crimson droplets.
“What is it, Master Sayes?” the priest beside Cholik’s bed asked.
“Out,” Cholik gasped. “Get out! Now!” The effort to speak nearly drained him.
“But, master,” the priest protested. “Your wounds—”
“Out, I said.” Cholik tried to rise and was surprised that he somehow found the strength.
I am with you, Kabraxis said, and Cholik felt a little stronger.
The priests and acolytes drew back as if watching the dead return to life. Perplexity and maybe a little relief showed on the faces of the mercenaries. A dead employer meant possibly some blame in the matter, and definitely no more gold.
“Go,” Cholik wheezed. “Now. Now, damn you all, or I’ll see to it that you’re lost in one of the hell pits that surround the Black Road.”
The priests turned and ordered the acolytes and the mercenaries from the room. They closed the massive oaken double doors, shutting him off from the hallway.
Standing beside the bed where he’d lain hovering between life and death, Cholik gripped a small stand that held a delicate glass vase that had been blown in the hands of a master. Flowers and butterflies hung trapped in death inside the glass walls of the vase, preserved by some small magic that had not allowed them to burn while the molten glass had been formed and cooled.
The secret door hidden at the back of the chamber opened, turning on hinges so that the section of wall twisted to reveal the large tunnel behind it. The church was honeycombed with such tunnels to make it easier for the demon to get around inside the buildings. Even as tall as the ceiling was, the demon’s horns almost scraped it.
“Hurry,” Cholik gasped. The room blurred further still, then abruptly seemed to spin around him. Only a moment of dizziness touched him, but he saw the rug on the floor coming up at him and knew he was falling although there was no sensation of doing so.
Before Cholik hit the floor, Kabraxis caught him in his huge, three-fingered hands.
“You will not die,” the demon said, but his words took on more the aspect of a command. “We are not done yet, you and I.”
Even though the demon was in his face, Cholik barely heard the words. His hearing was failing him now. His heart had slowed within his chest, no longer able to struggle against his blood-filled lungs. He tried to take a breath, but there was no room. Panic set in, but it was only a distant drumbeat at his temples, no longer able to touch him.
“No,” Kabraxis stated, gripping Cholik by the shoulders.
A bolt of fire coursed through Cholik’s body. It ignited at the base of his spine, then raced up to the bottom of his skull and exploded behind his eyes. He went blind for a moment, but it was white light instead of darkness that filled his vision. He felt the pain of the quarrel as it was ripped from his chest. The agony almost pushed him over the edge of consciousness.
“Breathe,” Kabraxis said.
Cholik couldn’t. He thought perhaps he didn’t remember how or that he lacked the strength. Either way, no air entered his lungs. The world outside his body no longer mattered; everything felt cottony and distant.
Then renewed pain forked through his chest, following the path the quarrel had made and spiking into his lungs. Gripped by the pain, Cholik instinctively took a breath. Air filled his lungs—now empty of blood—and with each heaving breath he took, the incredible iron bands of pain released their hold on him.
Kabraxis guided him to the edge of the bed. Cholik only then realized that his blood smeared the bed coverings. He gasped, drinking down air as the room steadied around him. Anger settled into him then, and he glanced up at the demon.
“Did you know about the assassin?” Cholik demanded. He imagined that Kabraxis had let the assassin shoot him only to remind Cholik how much he was needed.
“No.” Kabraxis crossed his arms over his huge chest. Muscles rippled in his forearms and shoulders.
“How could you not know? We built this place. You have wards everywhere around the grounds.”
“I was also making your miracle happen at the time of your attack,” Kabraxis said. “I made two whole boys from the conjoined twins, and that was no easy feat. People will be talking about that for years. While I was still working on that, your assassin struck.”
“You couldn’t save me from that arrow?” Assessing the demon’s abilities and powers had been out of Cholik’s reach. Did the Black Road consume Kabraxis so much that it left him weak? That knowledge might be important. But it was also frightening to realize that the demon was limited and fallible after Cholik had tied his destiny to Kabraxis.
“I trusted the mercenaries hired with the gold that I have made available to you to save you from something like this,” Kabraxis answered.
“Don’t make that mistake again,” Cholik snapped.
Deliberately, Kabraxis twisted the bloody quarrel in his hands. Lines in his harsh face deepened. “Never make the mistake of assuming you are my equal, Buyard Cholik. Familiarity breeds contempt, but it also pushes you toward sudden death.”
Watching the demon, Cholik realized that Kabraxis could just as easily thrust the bolt through his chest again. Only this time the demon could pierce his heart. He swallowed, hardly able to get around the thick lump in his throat. “Of course. Forgive me. I forgot myself in the heat of the moment.”
Kabraxis nodded, dipping his horns, almost scratching the ceiling.
“Did the guards catch the assassin?” Cholik asked.
“No.”
“They failed even in that? They could not protect me, and they could not get vengeance on the person who nearly killed me?”
Disinterested, the demon dropped the quarrel to the floor. “Punish the guards as you see fit, but realize that something else has come of this.”
“What?”
Kabraxis faced Cholik. “Hundreds of people saw you killed today. They were certain of it. There was much weeping and wailing among them.”
The thought that the crowd had lamented his apparent death filled Cholik with smugness. He liked the way the people of Bramwell curried favor with him when he passed through the city’s streets, and he liked the desperate envy he saw in their eyes regarding his place in the worship of their new prophet. They acknowledged the power that he wielded, each in his or her own way.
“Those people thought the Way of Dreams was going to be denied to them as a result of your murder,” Kabraxis said. “Now, however, they’re going to believe that you’re something much more than human, made whole again by Dien-Ap-Sten. Talk will go out past Bramwell even more, and the miracles that were seen here will grow in the telling.”
Cholik thought about that. Although he would not have chosen the action, he knew that what the demon said was true. His fame, and that of Dien-Ap-Sten, would grow because of the murder attempt. Ships and caravans would carry the stories of the conjoined twins and his near assassination across the sea and the land. The stories, as they always did, would become larger than life as each person told another.
“More people will come, Buyard Cholik,” Kabraxis said. “And they will want to be made to believe. We must be prepared for them.”
Striding to the window, Cholik looked out at Bramwell. The city was
already bursting at the seams as a result of the church’s success. Ships filled the harbor, and tent camps had sprung up in the forests around Bramwell.
“An army of believers lies outside the walls of this church waiting to get in,” Kabraxis said. “This church is too small to deal with them all.”
“The city,” Cholik said, understanding. “The city will be too small to hold them all after this.”
“Soon,” Kabraxis agreed, “that will be true.”
Turning to face the demon, Cholik said, “You didn’t think it would happen this quickly.”
Kabraxis gazed at him. “I knew. I prepared. Now, you must prepare.”
“How?”
“You must bring another to me whom I may remake as I have remade you.”
Jealousy flamed through Cholik. Sharing his power and his prestige wasn’t acceptable.
“You won’t be sharing,” Kabraxis said. “Instead, you will take on greater power by acquiring this person and bending him to our power.”
“What person?”
“Lord Darkulan.”
Cholik considered that. Lord Darkulan ruled Bramwell and had a close relationship with the King of Westmarch. During the problem with Tristram, Lord Darkulan had been one of the king’s most trusted advisors.
“Lord Darkulan has let people know he’s suspicious of the church,” Cholik countered. “In fact, there was talk for a time of outlawing the church. He would have done it if the people hadn’t stood so firmly against that, and if the opportunity for taxing the caravans and ships bringing the people from other lands hadn’t come up.”
“Lord Darkulan’s concern has been understandable. He’s been afraid that we would win the allegiance of his people.” Kabraxis smiled. “We have. After today, that is a foregone conclusion.”
“Why are you so sure?”
“Because Lord Darkulan was in the audience today.”