Rebel Fay nd-5

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Rebel Fay nd-5 Page 34

by Barb Hendee


  A naming-and Leesil.

  Chap stood there… long enough that he grasped the connection.

  Leesil was traveling to the place where allan'Croan took their true name, or so they believed. If he gained hallowed ground, it would be to plead for a branch from Roise Charmune. But Brot'an hoped Leesil might gain more.

  Why would Brot'an'duive want this to happen? Why did an Anmaglahk master want to know Leesil's true name?

  "I can't speak your language. I won't get it right."

  Sgaile's throat closed at Leshil's panicked words. He stood shaking, and still could not open his eyes to this thing no one had ever seen, nor did they know where it came from or why it stood vigil over this hallowed ground.

  His people only knew it by a name and the oath that spoke of its deadly nature.

  "Aharneiv…" he began again, and then faltered as he felt its hissing breath upon his face.

  Would it understand in any other tongue? And if it did, would it let him live, coming here with Leshil? All who came to Roise Charmune must come alone!

  Sgaile began the litany once again, this time in words Leshil could understand.

  "Father of Poison…"

  He waited in tense silence for Leshil to repeat it.

  "Father of… Poison…" Leshil whispered.

  Sgaile took a quick breath. "Who washes away our enemies with Death…"

  Leshil echoed him again.

  "Let me pass by to my ancestors, first of my blood. Give me leave to touch the Seed of Sanctuary."

  As Leshil repeated his words, the serpent's breath faded from Sgaile's face, and he waited long in silence.

  He heard coils grating upon the earth… and then the softer wet sound of mulch beneath the trees somewhere ahead. Longer he waited with his eyes shut, until the sound nearly faded altogether.

  Something dropped upon Sgaile's shoulder, and he opened his eyes, breathing so quickly he grew dizzy. He kept his eyes on the dark oaks ahead, afraid to catch even one more glimpse of Aharneiv.

  It was gone.

  Leshil's hand slipped off Sgaile's shoulder and fell limply at his side.

  "We… are free… to go on," Sgaile whispered.

  He almost did not believe the words as they came from his lips. Sgaile glanced sidelong at the half-blood-who had just changed his whole world, and perhaps that of Leanalham.

  For more than two years, he and his grandfather had urged Leanalham to wait, to put off her name taking, though their arguments grew weaker with each passing moon. They feared that she would not return from this place, not with human blood in her.

  Still, Leshil did not move.

  "You have gained hallowed ground," Sgaile urged. "You are accepted as blood."

  Leshil slowly turned his eyes toward Sgaile.

  "I'm here for one reason," he snapped."For Magiere, caught among your kind because of me. I don't care how you or your ghosts see me."

  Leshil stepped on toward the clearing. Sgaile hung back, stunned back into silence.

  Human blood, by any degree, was a baffling thing.

  Leesil stood before the tree at the bare clearing's center and stared up at its wild branches filling the air above him.

  It wasn't shaped like the tall and straight ash trees he had seen. Stout branches sprouting from its thick trunk curved and wound and divided up into the night. A soft glow emanated from its fine-grained wood to dimly light the clearing.

  Leafless and barkless-yet somehow alive.From its wide-reaching rootslumping the earth to its thick and naked pale-yellow body and limbs, its soft rippled surface glistened beneath its own glow.

  "You must touch it," Sgaile whispered from behind. "Roise Charmune will know why you have come, and the ancestors will decide.

  Leesil shivered. The night was only cool, but it had suddenly grown crisp within the clearing.

  This was what he'd come for, but after passing the guardian serpent, he wavered at touching this tree. He quickly slapped his hand against its bare trunk, just to be done with it, and shivered again as the temperature dropped sharply.

  "Sgaile…?" he said.

  The man looked anxiously about and folded his hands under his arms against the mounting cold. Whether from fear or frigid temperature, he shook where he stood.

  "I do not know," Sgaile whispered.

  Someone stepped around the naked tree's far side.

  The figure wore the gray-green of an Anmaglahk, cloak tied around its waist and cowl pulled forward. But it was short for an elf, no taller than Leesil himself.

  Leesil began to pull back.

  "Do not move!" Sgaile warned. "Do not take your hand from Roise Char-mune!"

  Leesil didn't believe this was a vision. Surely one of Sgaile'scaste must have followed them.

  The figure raised a hand and held it up before Leesil's eyes. In that closed fist was an Anmaglahk stiletto, silver-white blade pointed downward from its round, plain guard.

  Leesil snatched the figure's wrist with his free hand.

  The clearing lit up as if under a burning noon sun.

  Where there had been cold, now sweltering heat choked the air in Leesil's lungs. Within the figure's cowl he saw a face… his face.

  Leesil stared into his own reflection within that cowl.

  There were the faint scars on his own cheek from where Ratboy had clawed him. His own amber eyes stared back at him, somewhat too small for an elf's, above a chin not quite tapered enough for a full-blood's.

  His reflection looked older, somehow. And tears began running down his-its-face.

  Leesil stood there, gripping the wrist of his reflection.

  Heat made his double, his twin, or whatever it was ripple before his eyes. A shift in the land beyond the surrounding oaks tugged at his attention.

  He thought he saw barren mountains beyond rolling tan hills that were too smooth and perfect. High peaks rippled in the distance as those hills radiated heat. Sgaile hissed out one word.

  "Ancestors!"

  Darkness filled the clearing. The cold bit again at Leesil as his gaze shifted back. His breath caught as one puff of vapor rushed from his lips.

  He saw no reflection of himself anymore. His grip was closed on a slender translucent wrist that glowed like the naked ash. And he looked into… through… the transparent face of a tall elven male.

  The man's eyes turned stern as he looked back at Leesil. His face was broader at the cheekbones than other elves'. An ugly scar slanted from his forehead to his right temple and another marred the left side of his jaw below his peaked ear. He had seen battle during his life; his hand around the stiletto appeared toughened and calloused.

  No, not a stiletto… the elven warrior held a branch of naked pale wood like that of the ash tree. Long and straight overall, the wood showed gentle wavering throughout its length like any natural branch stripped of its bark.

  Pale glimmers erupted in the darkness behind the branch's bearer.

  Leesil remembered the ghost horde of the Apudalsat forest, all hideously wounded in the moment of their death. These were different.

  They appeared as in life, dressed as they must have been long ago, though their transparent forms held no color but that of the ash tree's wood. A thirdwere male, the rest female, and not all appeared old. Leesil counted at least a dozen.

  Their attire varied. Some were clothed no differently from the elves Leesil had seen around the council clearing. But others wore hauberks and bracers of hardened leather, either plain or covered in overlapping plates and scales of metal. Two wore helms of triple crests with scrollwork spirals engraved in their sides, as did the one Leesil still gripped.

  They carried spears, some as long as pikes, and quivers and bows slung upon their backs. Not the short ones the Anmaglahk disassembled to hide away, but longbows capable of great range. One middle-aged female with scars down her left upper arm had thick triangular war daggers on her wide studded belt. They looked more like a human weapon than those Leesil had seen among elves. The spear in he
r grip was shorter than her height. Its thick shaft appeared to be metal instead of wood, and its head was wide-bladed and nearly as long as a short sword.

  And that one, with wild eyes full of fury, smiled at him beneath narrowing eyes.

  But there were none among the spirits dressed as Anmaglahk.

  An elder woman in a robe approached behind the tall warrior holding the branch. Her face was slender and lightly lined with age. Long hair waved and floated as if she moved through water.

  Take the limb of Roise Charmune… and guard it as it will guard you… as you will guard life, Leshiarelaohk.

  Leesil heard her voice, though her lips never moved.

  Tell Sorhkafare we wait for him.

  A different voice.Male, tired but purposeful, like a sigh of relief after long burden.

  Leesil turned his eyes back on the scarred and wide-cheeked warrior in his grip. The man's gaze shifted toward Sgaile then flickered once to Leesil. He seemed puzzled by something between the only two living people in the clearing. Then the spirit looked deep into Leesil's eyes.

  Tell Sorhkafare that Snahacroe still waits for his comrade… when he is finally ready to rest. Tell him… Leshiarelaohk.

  Leesil knew the first name from Magiere's vision-the long-forgotten name of Most Aged Father. The second might be this one holding out the branch. But that final name he couldn't place, though it was close to what his mother and her people called him.

  Leshil…Leshiarelaohk.

  He wasn't sure he could repeat it aloud, but its sound vibrated in his head, as if spoken again by both the elder woman and the dour warrior.

  The tall spirit opened his fingers, and the ash branch began to fall.

  Leesil released his grip and snatched it from the air.

  When he looked up again, the clearing was empty but for himself, Sgaile, and the soft radiance of the naked ash.

  He saw no spirits. Not a one.

  Leesil held up the branch of Roise Charmune.

  Chapter Nineteen

  Midafternoon on the second day, Magiere ripped aside the elm's doorway curtain at the sound of running feet. "Leesil?"

  Six anmaglahk stood outside, with Osha in the front, but there was no sign of Leesil or Sgaile.

  "Is time," Osha said in his thick accent.

  "Where's Leesil?" she asked. "How can the elves resume proceedings without Sgaile?"

  "You come," he urged.

  Wynn threw on Chane's cloak asChap rose, and they followed Magiere out.

  The guards flanked them as they hurried through Crijheaiche to the council clearing. Again Magiere grew uneasy as she stepped between the bridge-branched oaks and the closest onlookers backed out of her way. She took a slow calming breath at the sight of Leesil and Sgaile standing with Brot'an behind the oak table.

  Leesil held his hand out. Magiere hurried down the slope. One anmaglahk almost grabbed for her, but Osha waved him off.

  Faint dark rings surrounded Leesil's eyes, but he smiled at her. His muslin shirt and cloak were damp and smudged. He and Sgaile had returned in half the time Brot'an had asked for, so likely they had pushed on all night. Their gear was piled beneath the table, but Leesil's punching blades rested on the surface-along with something hidden by a shimmering piece of white cloth.

  "What are the blades for?" she asked.

  Leesil shook his head. "They were here when I arrived. Brot'an must have sent for them."

  Brot'an's hard glare told them both to be silent.

  Across the clearing's depression, Freth and Most Aged Father entered as before, his chair carried by four anmaglahk. As he was placed beside Freth's table, the old elf leaned forward and peered toward Leesil and Sgaile.

  Wynn stepped in close to Magiere, ready to translate.

  Sgaile looked as worn as Leesil as he stepped to the clearing's center. His hair was a mess, streaming down around his pointed ears in a white-blond tangle. He called out, "The review of the claim will continue. Advocate for the accused may proceed."

  Brot'an stepped out as Sgaile backed away, and the crowd fell silent in anticipation. Magiere watched the faces around the clearing, and when she reached Gleann, he lifted his chin to her with a wry, subtle smile.

  "I call on Osha of the Alachben," Brot'an said.

  Wynn whispered in Magiere's ear, " Osha of the Rock-Hills clan."

  Osha approached, and Brot'an lifted Leesil's winged blades, still in their sheaths. He drew one, raised it for all to see, and then turned to Osha.

  "Can you tell us what this is?" he asked.

  "It is one of Leshil's weapons," Osha answered quietly.

  Brot'an cocked his head toward those of the gathering. Osha cleared his throat and repeated with stronger voice.

  "Unique blades," Brot'an continued. "Do you know where he found them?"

  "I believe he designedthese himself," Osha answered.

  "And what are these used for?"

  "To destroy undead, or so he said… by taking their heads."

  "Irrelevant!" Freth shouted. "Leshil is not accused and these weapons have no bearing on the claim in dispute. The accused's advocate will keep to relevant testimony."

  "Relevance will be addressed," Brot'an replied calmly. "If the opposingadvocate will refrain from further interruptions. As Sgailsheilleache is not permitted to witness for either side, I have turned to another in this matter."

  Magiere followed Brot'an's seeking look toward Sgaile.

  "Objection noted and rejected," Sgaile proclaimed. "But the accused's advocate will be expedient in making this line of questioning relevant."

  As Wynn translated, Magiere wondered about the proceeding's rules. Brot'an seemed to have some freedom in questioning, but she wasn't certain why he was concentrating on Leesil's weapons. It seemed that Sgaile's limitations as adjudicator now worked against Brot'an, for Sgaile was the most familiar of all with Leesil and herself. Sgaile had been present in Bela when they hunted undead in its streets and sewers.

  Freth whispered in Most Aged Father's ear. He glowered but kept silent.

  Brot'an turned back to Osha. "How did you learn the use of these weapons?"

  "Leshil told me and the others who escorted him to Crijheaiche."

  "Did he work alone?"

  "No, he said Magiere and the majay-hi"-he pointed to Chap-"hunted with him. Destroying undead was their vocation."

  Brief and broken murmurs sifted through the crowd. Magiere remained tall and straight, with crossed arms, and tried not to meet anyone's eyes.

  Brot'an held both his arms wide. "Her vocation was to destroy the undead. And why would one so-claimed undead"-he turned toward Most Aged Father-"hunt its own kind?"

  "Hearsay!" Freth shouted. "And conjecture. Your opening statements are concluded. Keep to the presentation of what is verifiable… or be done!"

  Sgaile cut in before Brot'an could reply. "Objection upheld. What was heard by the witness from another is not direct testimony unless the original speaker is not present."

  "A valid point," Brot'an replied. "Then let us hear it directly… I call Leshil as witness."

  "He is not one of us," Freth shouted. "He is notan'Croan and may not speak before the council."

  Brot'an paced back to his table. He ripped aside the shimmering cloth, and lifted what hid there into plain sight.

  It was a smooth branch, glistening bare of bark.

  "Once again, you presume to speak for the ancestors," Brot'an called to Freth. "And yet here is a branch from Roise Charmune. How is he not one of us… if he was given this?" He pointed the glistening branch at Sgaile. "I call upon the ajudicator to confirm."

  Sgaile nodded slowly. "In my presence… the ancestors gave it freely to Leshil."

  "They gave it to him directly?" Brot'an asked. "He did not procure it with their implied blessing?"

  The hiss of whispered voices surrounded the clearing. Magiere looked down at Wynn in confusion, but the sage only translated the words and shook her head, looking about with uncertain worry
on her round face.

  "Yes," Sgaile finally answered. "They appeared to Leshil and one gave him the branch of Roise Charmune."

  Brot'an and Sgaile were the only ones who didn't look stunned. Murmurs among the elders and clans grew until the noise drowned Sgaile's shouts for silence. Across the field, Freth stood silent. She looked back at Most Aged Father, but the old man only stared at Leesil. Even his spite was masked in surprise.

  Leesil scowled with his eyes on the ground.

  Magiere was so lost. If Leesil had the branch, why had Brot'an waited to reveal it like this? It seemed one more trick he played on his patriarch, perhaps to keep Freth and the old man off balance. Magiere wished she could risk asking Leesil questions in the middle of all this.

  "Not enough," Freth called, though it lacked her usual sharp conviction. "Even among our own, only those who've taken their full place as one of us can speak before the elders when in council."

  "Another true point," Brot'an answered, and Freth looked wary, as if she'd stepped into a trap. "Blood is not enough. A name is needed to bean'Croan… to be recognized as one of us."

  "Leshil does not have…" Freth began, but the last of her words had no voice and were only marked by the movement of her lips.

  "He does," Brot'an answered, and turned upon Leesil. "Speak your true name for all to hear and recognize your rights."

  Magiere looked at Leesil.

  "It doesn't mean anything," he whispered to her. "Whatever it takes to get you out of here… I don't care what they believe."

  "The witness will refrain from speaking," Sgaile called loudly."Except as directed by the council, an advocate, or the adjudicator."

  Magiere wanted to grab Leesil and make him tell her what had happened.

  Leesil took a long breath. "Leshi… Le… shi-air…" He sighed in frustration. "I can't pronounce it."

  Sgaile frowned, the tan lines of his face creasing, and he shouted out,

  "Leshiarelaohk!And it was not chosen by him… it was given by the ancestors themselves."

  All sound in the clearing faded instantly. Then a low thrum of voices grew and erupted into a deafening chaos.

  Magiere spotted Gleann leaning forward upon his small stool. He was silent, staring down to the field at Leesil. But unlike the shocked disbelief or outrage of others, his expression was eager-and even excited.

 

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