The Fall of Ossard

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The Fall of Ossard Page 26

by Colin Tabor


  Had the city fallen too far?

  Yes it had, and I had to accept it.

  It was time to return to Newbank.

  Part III

  Ossard, The Nest

  21

  Newbank Celebrates

  I shepherded Baruna, Marco, and the others across the meandering waters of the river. It was surprisingly easy. I offered to vouch for the Heletians amongst them, but the Flet ferrymen were happy enough to take them - for a fee. To get them across took a while as their numbers had again grown. By the time we’d finished it was dark, but at least we were home.

  We returned to find the district celebrating. The streets about the river were busy with people, many dancing, laughing, and drinking by the flaring and ruddy light of the city-side fires. People cheered the blazes as they did each departing boatload of warriors crossing to join the fight.

  It was sickening.

  These weren’t my people, not those who could revel in such misery and death. I turned my back on them in shame only to find myself facing Baruna, Marco, and the others.

  I realised that these were my people. They were the ones seeking peace, not the blood-lusting fanatics and opportunists fighting over the ruins of Market Square, or the cruel people behind me who claimed loyalty through a coincidence of common heritage. My people stood before me; those loyal to life for its own miraculous sake.

  Baruna asked, “What of your family?”

  While I’d not found any trace of Maria and Pedro, the day’s events had left me exhausted. I needed to rest.

  I looked to those gathered, and for the first time I saw them in both this world and the next. They shone before me, their pure souls flaring, all good people caught in a tainted and dying place. About us raged flames, hate, and madness, yet between us nested hope.

  An unusual green light sparkled within them, almost hidden away in the depths of their souls. I noticed it also shone out from my own, pulsing like a heartbeat. Seeing it in the dark void of the celestial, a place normally disturbed only by blues, violets, and life-lights of white, made me realise how unique we were.

  We did have a link, a common purpose…

  I smiled. “We have to get you settled, all of you.”

  Their faces lit up, and to my surprise I realised that many of them were also confused as to why they followed me.

  I continued, “We’ll go to my home where there’ll be room for all, though it will be cramped. Once there we can prepare for what comes next.”

  Relief flooded their faces. They were glad to have direction amidst Ossard’s chaos. Beside me, Baruna and Marco grinned.

  A young man called out, “Please my Lady, what does come next?”

  It was a good question, and left me only too aware of their eyes upon me. I began unsure of what to say, but with an intention of only sharing the truth. “I won’t give you false comfort, for the upheaval about us is only the first flicker of the flames to come. Doom is approaching; the very fall of Ossard. You can either join the madness or turn from it. The fall’s hunger for power and death surrounds us, but what of peace and life? That’s what I seek. If Ossard can’t host them then the city is twice damned and I’ll leave.”

  He asked, “Where will we go?”

  “There is a place where we’ll find sanctuary, and from there we’ll look for an opportunity to stop our home’s final fall.”

  Hope sparkled in their eyes and smiles settled on their faces. They were reassured, and with that reassurance came a strengthening of their feelings towards me: They had faith.

  Two thirds of those following me were Heletian, seeing me wonder if they’d be safe in Newbank when it spread so aroused. I hoped so. “Please follow close, we’ll talk more when we reach home.”

  They nodded and left me to lead the way.

  We got to my home to find it secure and quiet. I unlocked the door and led them in, directing them through to the courtyard; it was the only place I’d be able to talk to all of them when gathered. I hadn’t counted, but I guessed that they now numbered about two score or more.

  A voice exclaimed from the kitchen, “What’s all this?” It was Sef.

  I laughed as I got Baruna to lead on the others, telling her, “Kurt’s in the stables, tell him you’re my guests.” I rushed into the kitchen to find Sef standing over the cooking fire where he tended a stew.

  He smiled, but gestured to the parade of silhouettes passing behind me. “What’s going on?”

  “They followed me.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “It started at the square.”

  “One of them was with you at the opera house?”

  “Yes, Baruna. I’ve asked nothing of them, and they just want to follow me - ever since my casting.”

  “Yes, the casting…” he sounded troubled.

  “What’s wrong?”

  “Didn’t you sense it?”

  “Sense what?”

  “The strangeness of the casting, of the blessing Schoperde gave you?”

  “I don’t know what you mean?” But my doubts began to stir.

  “Well…” he began, but his voice faded as he looked over my shoulder.

  I turned to find Marco.

  He said, “They’re gathered.”

  “I’ll be out soon.”

  He left, so I turned back to Sef. “What?”

  The Kavist stepped forward and placed his hands on my shoulders as he met my gaze. “Juvela, for a while you thought you were to be a witch like your grandmother, today you thought you were a daughter of Schoperde, but now I suggest that you are in fact something else.”

  I began shaking my head from side to side as I stepped back and pushed his hands away. “Sef, I am of Schoperde. I handled her blessings. I know that I’ve never known a lot of her or been particularly devout, but today I felt her grace!”

  “Juvela, I don’t doubt you felt something. She’s a god, the god of life, and the one who also oversees the birth of new deities.”

  I tensed as my apprehension grew. “What are you saying?”

  His eyes sparkled as the big Flet struggled to hold back tears. “Juvela, someone has to shepherd in the new.”

  “But I feel a link to her!”

  “Juvela, I’m just a mortal priest, but you’re an avatar; the seed of a god yet to be born. You know that and so do I. Your soul is too old, textured, and layered for it to be anything else. It’s strong, so strong that none in this city who’d have reason to harm you prior to your awakening have been able to.”

  “But Schoperde gave me the means to save all those people?”

  “Your blessing did save many, and it was good and pure, but it wasn’t of Schoperde.”

  I shook my head in anger at these new questions and the confusion they brought. “If not of Schoperde, then who?”

  “You.”

  I was a god?

  He went on, “Sweet Juvela, your soul’s awakening. Now and in this life-time you’re going from an avatar to the divine!”

  I snapped, “Stop it! I’m sick of this! And in the end what does it matter?”

  He dropped to his knees in front of me. “Juvela, think of it: The city is dying, just like cities have died before amidst upheaval and bloody chaos - and from the greatest of those ruins always have arisen new gods.”

  I shook my head in disbelief at the connection he was making. “Are you saying that people are dying because of me?”

  “No! I’m saying that when cities the size of Ossard, cities rich in souls, fall, that it can uplift avatars to see them awakened into godhood. Who knows how many avatars walk the world, but right now you’re the strongest in Ossard. During the coming soul harvest, when all that gathered power begins overflowing, it’s going to find you.”

  I was horrified at the very notion.

  He went on, “Look at the Heletians’second god, Saint Baimio…”

  I laughed, a harsh sound in my upset. “The Heletians only have one god, Krienta!”

  “Yes, they don
’t call Baimio a god because of their dogma, they call him a saint, but they raise him above all others by naming him the son of Krienta, their creator. Well, once he was mortal. We’ve heard their Church’s tales, and not all of them are lies. He came into his power during the fall of Bar-Mor, the mountain city of the giants.”

  Was he comparing me to Saint Baimio? “Sef, this is crazy…”

  “And the gargoyle god of Dorloth, she arose from the fall of Quersic Quor of the Lae Velsanan’s Second Dominion of Kalraith.”

  “Sef, this is too much! Some of what you say makes sense, but linking it to me? I don’t want to be a part of it. You’re saying that I’m going to profit from the death of the city.”

  “I’m not saying you’re responsible. I’m just saying that as an avatar all that’s going on in the city might see you awakened.”

  “No, it can’t be true!”

  “Look at the people who’ve followed you here. Look at me!”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Juvela, I’m a priest of Kave with my soul and service vowed to him, yet here I am serving you! I want to. No, I need to! To be here to help, to see you through this.”

  “I don’t need your help,” my voice broke as I spoke, disturbed by my surging emotions. Was I having such an effect on people? What a sickening thought, yet the courtyard stood full of proof.

  He shook his head, “Juvela, you must understand; myself and those in the courtyard follow you because our souls demand it. Your mere presence has broken our old allegiances and replaced them with something new.”

  I was frightened by his words - and that they stank of an uncomfortable truth.

  Damn it, what did it matter?

  What mattered was that the good people in Ossard survived the coming turmoil - and we had more chance of doing it together. I took a deep breath and cleared my throat. “I’m changed, it’s true, but all I can say is that I’ll try to do the right thing. I’ve heard you, but I don’t want to talk about it.”

  He nodded and got back to his feet as he gave me a grin.

  I hugged him, sensing his love and devotion. Those feelings had been a part of my life for so long. They gave me courage as they flooded me with reassurance. I giggled, for a moment again that little girl who loved his stories of adventure and his bawdy songs.

  He chuckled and said, “You should go to them now.”

  I nodded and turned for the courtyard. Despite the moment of warmth, it seeped away as quickly as it had come, dragged under by thoughts of a city dying so that I might be a god.

  They waited in silence, some standing around the edge of the courtyard while others sat on the cobbles. Kurt was amongst them. He gave me a knowing smile and a quick nod.

  I walked to the centre of the yard, it ruddily lit by the flaring amber glow reflected from the pall hanging above. Again I hadn’t planned what to say, but this wasn’t a time for flowery speeches.

  I looked about at their faces, taking confidence in their souls’pure taste. Whatever I might be, at least I knew that these people were good and true. Finally my gaze came to rest on Sef where he stood in a doorway. I said, “I want to welcome you to my home, though it seems we’ve already outgrown it.”

  Some of them laughed.

  “I want to speak to you of many things, but one foremost: Of working to keep each other safe in a city falling apart…”

  I talked to them for a good while, including some of what Felmaradis had told me in hushed Flet. As I spoke others joined us, shown in by Sef. Where they came from I didn’t know, yet their purity also shone through.

  It was the beginning of something; it was undeniable.

  There was good left in the city, maybe not enough to save it, but certainly enough worth saving.

  I spent the next part of the evening organising the household to cope with so many guests. The arrangements were temporary and we all knew it. One way or another we wouldn’t be here in a few more nights, for in time Newbank would also be consumed by the fighting.

  Before long bedrooms became dormitories, along with storerooms, and much of the living space. The kitchen bustled with the making of bread and the stewing of broth to serve close to a hundred. The cellar was emptied and aired, and then prepared as a serving space for meals. Only the stables remained free on the far side of the courtyard. If I had to, I’d give them over for more sleeping space, but for now I planned to use them as a store for what we gathered for our escape.

  Amongst all this activity I watched two Heletians struggle to lift a heavy chest; one stumbled as they carried it, seeing them drop it after only a few steps. It fell to the wooden floor with a great crash to leave a gouge across the boards. Mortified, the men cried out.

  I forced a smile and told them not to worry. Inwardly I shuddered as I thought of what Pedro would’ve said. Still, my husband’s biggest stir wouldn’t come of scratches on the floor or from scores of strange guests; it would be because of the changes wrought in me, and my unexpected fate.

  People settled in as best they could as I retreated to the only sanctuary that remained, my bedroom. I asked for Baruna, Marco, and Sef to join me. There was still much to discuss.

  As we gathered, I said, “Please sit.” And gestured to the bed.

  Sef and Marco hesitated with embarrassment.

  I laughed. “I think we’re beyond polite niceties, please, there’s nowhere else for us to speak.” The two men looked to each other before finally sitting down. In the meantime I pulled across a stool for Baruna. She gestured for me to take it, but I waved her offer away. I felt the need to pace.

  Sef said, “So where do we begin?”

  I looked from him to Baruna and Marco. “Well, we’ve all met this day, but neither Sef nor I know much about yourselves. Why don’t you share with us how you came to be here?”

  Shyly, Baruna looked to each of us, her nerves showing.

  Marco offered, “I’ll go first if you’d like?”

  Baruna shook her head. “Please, I need to tell my story, and now that I’m given the chance I feel I have to grab it.”

  Marco nodded.

  She took a deep breath. “My life started simply enough. I was raised by my family, large and loving, deep in the valleys where we lived in a poor farming hamlet.” And her eyes softened along with her nerves. “You know the sort, it struggling on amidst the ruins of an old and abandoned mining town. There wasn’t a lot of good land up that way, just slivers alongside the river, but it was enough. Besides, those abandoned towns might have run out of silver and been poor in farmland, but they’re still rich in one thing; well-crafted buildings. Mining towns grow quickly and die faster, but while they live their hearts know how to beat. Those old stone halls, taverns, and merchant houses just sit there waiting for families to come and warm them.

  “When my family arrived there a few generations back they managed to settle into one of the larger buildings that needed some work. It was a great home, solid against the valley winters, and one envied by many of our neighbours after we’d re-roofed and mended it.

  “It’s much the same across the Northcountry; hundreds of poor farming villages, some born-again mining settlements, and a few small towns - all there to serve this city’s hungry markets.”

  She smiled with her memories. “Growing up in such a place, in our big stone hall, surrounded by terraced fields while tending our goats was a blessing.”

  She paused to look at each of us, her eyes now sharp; she was going to share her pain. “But, it ended.

  “One summer, my grandmother took sick with a fever, it wasted her body and filled her lungs. She died after a long season of agony, one where the sickness seemed to peak and then fade, only to come back stronger before finally dragging her away. Yet the fever hadn’t finished with us. My twin brothers and mother also fell ill. They tried to fight it off, but also failed. It left my father, a brother, and myself to bury them.

  “We couldn’t handle our land, not when we were down four sets of hands. It became
a struggle, one that drained us. All the while our neighbours, who might have otherwise helped, had begun to shy away; the local priest had spread rumours about us.”

  I asked, “What did he say?”

  “He said my grandmother dabbled in the old ways, in green witchery. He even suggested that she’d ruled over our household and conducted rituals to win our family favour.”

  Sef cursed; as Flets in Ossard we’d all seen the hard face of the Church.

  Baruna said, “Some of our friends told us of his words - and others.”

  “What others?” I asked.

  “Our home had an unused wing that we’d walled off inside its wide and high roofed frame. It was huge, almost like a small noble’s house, and the most impressive building in the village. Some said the priest wanted it to use as a new home, and the vacant wing as a church.”

  Marco said, “There was a time when I’d thought the men of Krienta were noble and just…”

  Baruna snapped, but not at Marco, “Noble and just? Our priest stood as a dishonourable man. He managed to have three sons despite his vow of celibacy, all to a Flet woman who lived not as his wife, but as his slave. He offered us no help or comfort, just threats of damnation!” She stopped to calm herself.

  “We relinquished some of our fields and sold some of our goats, yet we still struggled from chill dawn to cold mountain dusk.” She shook her head, her eyes glinting. Tears built there, getting ready to run.

  Taking a deep breath, she continued, “A season later, when we’d settled into a new routine, my younger brother also came down sick.”

  Marco sighed, but he wasn’t alone.

  I asked, “The same fever?”

  “Yes.”

  Sef shook his head.

  “It got worse. My brother died not long after, leaving my father and myself behind. The morning after we buried him, my father awoke with a chill, and by sunset was burdened by the same fever.

 

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