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Awakenings

Page 18

by Edward Lazellari


  “Your instincts are telling you there’s something your eyes are not seeing,” Lelani explained. “It’s part of the spell to make others want to avoid running into me.”

  “How do I…” Cat motioned to Lelani’s back.

  Lelani crouched. “Close your eyes,” she said. “Put your left hand on my left shoulder. Now reach across and grab my other shoulder. Lift your leg up.”

  Lelani stood.

  “Looks like a piggyback,” Seth said.

  “It feels like bareback riding,” Cat said. She folded her arms across Lelani’s breastbone.

  “How far?” Cal asked the centaur.

  “Down this ravine and up the next h—”

  A crossbow shaft suddenly pierced the forearm Cat had braced around Lelani’s shoulder. It continued through the centaur’s shoulder and broke skin on Cat’s chest. Lelani suppressed her scream with a grunt. Cat shrieked in the centaur’s ear.

  “CAT!” her husband yelled. A bolt grazed Cal’s cheek, peeling a strip of skin like an orange. Seth ducked for cover.

  Lelani jumped into a large ditch with Cat. The shaft had pierced beneath her clavicle and emerged out the back, where it continued to cut into Cat as they jostled. Cat slid back off the point, which ripped flesh. The tip was serrated.

  “Break the end off!” Lelani yelled between sharp breaths.

  Another bolt split a branch by Cal’s head. He fired in the direction of the shot.

  “My lady, break off the tip!”

  Cat cut her fingers on the serrated tip, trying to snap it off, but the shaft wouldn’t give. Lelani handed her a hunting knife.

  “Cut through the wood.”

  “Seth, can you outflank him?” Cal asked, holding out his other pistol.

  Seth had found a depression behind a fair-sized boulder to crouch in.

  “I’m not moving my ass from this spot!”

  Cat sliced through the shaft. Lelani grabbed the end in front of her and pulled in one quick motion. Cat screamed again from the wood scraping flesh out of her forearm. She fell off the centaur and landed on her back. Her shirt was stained dark red. She began hyperventilating. Lelani washed Cat’s wound with water from her canteen. Even though Lelani was the more injured of the two, Cat was not trained to assimilate such shocks. After cleaning out the splinters, Lelani took out a vial of white powder and sprinkled it on Cat’s wound. It fizzed in the blood like sodium bicarbonate in vinegar.

  “Oh God! It burns,” Cat wailed. “It feels like acid.”

  “You’ll live,” Lelani told her. She was starting to feel light-headed from her own loss of blood. “Wrap the gash with cloth and apply pressure.”

  “What about you?” Cat asked.

  Lelani sprinkled the powder on the entrance of her own wound and handed the vial to Cat. “Pour this over the exit point.” She put a branch in her mouth and bit down hard as the powder began to sew her shredded cells together. Cat poured the rest of the powder on the sorceress. The pain was intense, so much so, Lelani spasmed and bit through the branch. They both leaned back in the hole and caught their breath. No more bolts had flown for the past few minutes. “Is anyone coming?” she asked Cat.

  “I don’t know. Where’s Cal?”

  Cat took a peek. A series of bolts struck the tree above their makeshift foxhole. Cat ducked.

  “I couldn’t see anyone.”

  “Stay down!” they heard Cal yell, a few trees over.

  Lelani reached into her backpack and pulled out a five-foot composite longbow and a quiver of arrows.

  “How the hell did that fit in there?” Cat asked.

  “I’m a good packer.”

  “Cat! Are you and Lelani okay?!” Cal had moved to a birch a few feet away and crouched low. Seth was still under his rock.

  The centaur looked to Cal for instructions. He tossed his extra pistol to Cat and fell back behind the birch as a bolt slammed into the tree.

  “Fire in that direction,” Cal said. “Keep them down and keep them believing we’re in this spot. Lelani and I will do the rest. Save one bullet.”

  “Why?”

  “If Seth tries to run away … shoot him in the ass.”

  They took off. With Lelani’s speed, she could outflank the assailant in time for the captain’s frontal assault. She glided between the trees and brush, bounding over creeks and ravines with surefooted confidence of an equestrian champion. Bolts flew around her, hitting true at the places she’d been a heartbeat before. Cal fired from below, forcing the assailant’s attention on him. Lelani’s shoulder throbbed, but the pain only added to her focus. She slowed, waiting for some noise to betray the attacker’s position. Her arrow was notched and ready to fly, but there was only foliage in her sight. She spotted the captain below, making his way up a ravine. The assailant had stopped firing. The frequency and limited origin of the bolts indicated only one attacker. Was his quiver empty? Had he left for reinforcements?

  A twig snapped behind her. She caught a glimpse of reddish fur from the corner of her eye. She kicked back with her hind legs, surprising the assailant. He hit the tree behind him with such force an avalanche of snow fell from its branches, burying him. Before he could gather his wits, Lelani fired a shaft into his chest, pinning him to the tree. The creature’s yowl echoed through the hills.

  “Lelani, you okay?” Cal shouted.

  “All is clear.”

  With its tongue hanging out, the creature panted rapidly, trying to take air through short bloody breaths. Froth and bloodspots stained its snout and fur. Its ears stuck up at Lelani’s wary approach. Its furry hands, which had only four stout fingers with thick black claws, shook violently. Cat and Seth soon joined them. She was leaning on Seth for support.

  “Looks like a dog,” Seth said.

  “What is it?” Cat asked.

  “A gnoll.”

  “That can’t be right,” Cal said. “Why would a gnoll work for Farrenheil—with Dorn?”

  “Bad guys,” Seth said. “They all stick together.”

  “Not that simple,” Cal said.

  “Dorn’s uncle is intolerant of nonhuman species,” Lelani explained. “He sponsored ‘cleansing’ campaigns into the forests and mountains of Farrenheil. Torturing, killing, and driving out everyone who didn’t look right to him. As a child, I remember centaurs coming from Farrenheil as refugees. My parents fostered orphans. They’d lost everything. The gnolls didn’t fare much better.”

  “Farrenheil and Verakhoon didn’t have the numbers to hit every fortification, town, and port in Aandor,” Cal said. “We couldn’t find reinforcements anywhere in the kingdom. Our banner men were under siege in their own lands. If Farrenheil made war pacts with nonhuman races, though…”

  “They could have tripled their forces,” Lelani finished.

  “Why would they join Dorn’s uncle if he’s out to ‘purify’ them?” Cat asked.

  “A truce keeps his attention off the purge—off of them,” Lelani said.

  “And because there are always spoils to war,” Cal added. “And Aandor is the biggest jewel in the box.”

  The gnoll whimpered. Its head fell forward, the spasms ceased, and it stopped breathing.

  “I almost feel sorry for it,” Seth said.

  “Don’t,” Lelani replied. “We were fortunate to encounter the beast before nightfall. They’re nocturnal. His bolts would have hit more true in the dark.”

  Seth took out his pack and pulled a Camel out with his lips. His hands shook as he tried to strike a match. Lelani grasped his wrist, preventing him from lighting up.

  “Smoke will give away our position,” she said.

  “There are others?” Seth asked. He looked around the woods nervously. “Jeezus, I need a freakin’ smoke.”

  Lelani looked ahead. The sky was in transition, the fading sunlight carved by the tree tips dwindled as the beams of shadow between them thickened. “The lay line is over that crest.”

  2

  Cal told them to stay hidden until he
and Lelani could recon. They were at the edge of the tree line and an open space materialized a few yards ahead of the last cluster of shrubs. Seth and Cat rested behind the skeleton of a snow-topped bush. The sky in twilight shifted from a light cerulean on the western horizon dabbed with traces of green and yellow, to a grayish blue above them, and finally a deep indigo in the east. The first stars that appeared in that indigo canvas would soon be covered as a cold front moved stubbornly down from the north.

  Seth peered into the moist gray ceiling above them and was surprised to find himself thinking about his cat in the middle of this life and death struggle. They had dropped Hoshi off at the YMCA, where Lelani kept a room. He wondered if they had left enough food and water out, and if not, would anyone answer the mewling that was sure to follow. Girlfriends and models came and went, but Hoshi was one of the few constants in his life. The cat was always glad to see him, unlike his present company.

  Seth resented every step dictated to him since Lelani entered his life. He had lost himself in the past forty-eight hours and couldn’t remember the individual he was only yesterday. His friends had abandoned him, his home was a cinder, dog-men were shooting arrows at him, and his only companions were a mystical horse-girl, a moody fascist cop, and his humorless wife. His past had nothing to do with the present. One day he earned a living photographing and fornicating with beautiful desperate girls, and the next he was running for his life on the yellow brick road. A massive disconnect had occurred—an alignment of stars against him. And strange as it was, this felt more real than the past thirteen years of his life.

  Cal signaled the all clear.

  The tree line encircled a pristine meadow; in the center stood a grand old tree. Unlike its counterparts in the woods, this tree had all of its leaves, green as on a moist August day. Around the tree was a small zone of healthy green grass, untouched by the weather. A few yards away sat a small white RV trailer hitched to empty air. Smoke wafted from a pipe on the roof. No tracks led to or from. Either no one was in or no one had left home recently.

  Seth walked a few steps and felt a snap underfoot that didn’t feel like wood. The snow was spotted pink. He retrieved what had cracked. A bone. A slimy bone. Some animal, he thought. It was picked clean, notched with tooth marks and stray clinging ligament. He realized that there were bones all around him. He spotted a paw; a five-fingered paw—with opposable thumb.

  “Uh, guys,” he said.

  Cal hushed him.

  “Shush yourself, man. There are pieces of some dude all around me.” That got their attention.

  Lelani examined the bones.

  “There are two people here,” she said.

  “Fuck,” Seth said. “This place gives me the heebie-jeebies. Maybe the other sentries are worse than dog-boy.”

  Cal examined the scene also.

  Lelani discovered shreds of scaled clothes, a spear, and some netting.

  “These are the other guards,” she said. “These items are from Aandor. One of them was a skilyte.”

  “A what?” Cat asked.

  “Swamp dwellers,” Cal said. “Not friends of Aandor.”

  “Perhaps we have an ally?” Lelani said. “Rosencrantz?”

  “No.” Cal picked up a thighbone and studied the nicks and scratches that covered it. “The gnoll got hungry.” Cal handed the bone to Lelani for confirmation.

  “It ate its partners?” Seth asked incredulously.

  “Gnolls are terrible allies.”

  “Wouldn’t their leader know this?” Cat asked.

  “Dorn probably ordered the gnoll not to harm them,” Lelani answered.

  “And he didn’t realize it wouldn’t obey?”

  “No. Treason and insubordination are rare in the Kingdom of Farrenheil. Dorn’s uncle enjoys putting people on trial for the most minor infractions. Execution is the family hobby. Thinks it sends a good message to the masses. Sometimes they even coax children to divulge their parents’ beliefs, then they arrest the parents and place the children in military orphanages. That’s how they maintain such a large army.” She threw the bone down with disgust. “What arrogance! They believe their whims can subvert nature. Their alliances with these base creatures will be everyone’s undoing, including their own.”

  “Right now, that’s a blessing,” Cal said. “Two less sentries we need to deal with.” He studied the trailer. “I assume that’s where the mojo is?”

  “Yes,” Lelani said.

  “And odds are, Rosencrantz is in that trailer.”

  “I’d take that bet,” she answered.

  “I’ll go first,” Cal offered.

  “No,” Cat responded. “We’ll go together. How much safer can it be in a forest with man-eating gnolls?”

  Seth chuckled. Maybe not completely humorless, he thought.

  He helped Cat stand and volunteered to be her crutch as he’d done often since they’d dispatched the gnoll. The other two needed to be unencumbered in case something sprang up. It made sense to everyone, and it helped alleviate the sour mood that sprang between them after he had refused Cal’s order to outflank the gnoll. It seemed like a team-player thing to do. Seth had a more practical motive for helping Cat. In the woods, you don’t have to be able to outrun a bear to survive an attack. You just have to be faster than the person you’re with.

  They cut a path through the snow. The clearing reminded Seth of the Roman colosseum; the trees surrounding the clearing, bristling in the wind, were a thousand cheering spectators. This didn’t bode well for the four of them, who were on stage. Seth felt vulnerable. Cloistered in the canyons of Manhattan, a person can’t appreciate the reality of open ground. A tactical disadvantage when being hunted.

  The trailer was about fifteen feet long and in need of a wash. Dents and dings decorated the pleated aluminum skin. Cinder blocks lifted the hitched end off the ground. Cal reached it first and was about to knock, when—

  “Wait!” Seth said.

  “What?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “You don’t know what?”

  “I…”

  “Are we just going to stand out here?” Lelani asked.

  “Oh, for Christ’s sake,” Cat said. She hobbled up and rapped on the door.

  The vapors from their breath ceased in unison. Everything was silent. Then they heard clanging and banging within. The trailer rocked as the footsteps grew louder. The door creaked open and stopped at the limit of a chain, just enough space for a mouse to slip through. A single eye in the darkness took stock of them from the crack.

  “No trespassing,” it said in a low raspy voice.

  “We’re looking for Rosencrantz,” Cal said.

  The eye considered them, shifting from one to the other.

  “Wizards are a temperamental lot. They’re not like Jedi Masters—feed you soup and teach you tricks because you crash in on them. More likely to turn you into mice and feed you to their snakes. Go home … while you still can.”

  “I’m well aware of the temperament of wizards, sir,” Lelani said. “My own master, Magnus Proust, has turned a few assistants’ heads prematurely white.”

  The eye pondered this. “Magnus Proust?”

  The door shut. A chain rattled, then the door opened wide. He was a short, stocky man, bald on top with graying sides, red bulbous cheeks, and a little gray mustache. His skin was tanned, as though he recently returned from a cruise. He wore red-and-brown plaid pajama pants, slippers, and a black T-shirt that said, What Is Good? in stark white letters.

  “Don’t try nothing funny, or I’ll cut ya,” he said. There wasn’t a knife in sight.

  “We’re not here to hurt anyone,” Cat replied.

  The man took a long look at Cat and smiled. “You know, you’re the first people to show up around here that didn’t give me the creeps. You ought to see the things popping up lately. There’s a fucking gnoll in those woods. Kid you not. That damn thing howls at the moon and keeps us up all night. Sends shivers to my corns.”


  “Not anymore,” Lelani said.

  “You don’t say? Well, hot damn. That’s just great. The missus will be thrilled. Anything I can do to repay you folks?”

  “Yeah,” Seth said. “Blast the evildoers, find the kid, get me my job and apartment back, and send everyone else home.”

  “Uh … yeah,” the man said. “I was thinking more like snacks, maybe some Tang or hot chocolate.”

  “Magi Rosencrantz, please forgive my companion’s outburst,” Lelani cut in. “Proust speaks very highly of your skills. We need help.”

  “Well, I’ll do what I can, only … I’m not Rosencrantz. Name’s Benito Reyes. Friends call me Ben.”

  “Can we see Rosencrantz?” Cal asked.

  “You already have.”

  The four of them looked at each other hoping someone knew what he meant.

  “We have?” Seth said.

  “Please don’t say he’s a skilyte,” Cat added.

  “No. That’s Rosencrantz,” Ben said, pointing out the door.

  The oak bristled in the wind.

  “He lives in the tree?” Seth asked.

  “No.” Ben pointed again.

  “Rosencrantz is the tree?” Cat said.

  “Boggles the mind, dun it?” Ben responded.

  “Of course,” Lelani said. “I should have realized.”

  “How do you talk to a tree?” Seth asked.

  “It can be done, but I lack magical energies.”

  “You can take your fill there,” Ben said pointing to a rusty spigot sticking out of the trailer. “It’s tapped into the lay line.”

  Lelani smiled and went to the spigot.

  “Are you the … what?… butler, gardener?” Seth asked.

  “Same difference when your boss is a tree. Say, you folks must be pretty cold. Come in for a spell and warm up.”

  “You go,” Lelani said. “I want to recharge my cache first.”

  The trailer was filled top to bottom with periodicals, mostly yellowed with age: Life magazine, National Geographic, Rolling Stone, Time, Saturday Evening Post, Scientific America, Better Home and Gardens, Vogue, New Republic, New York Times, comic books, and countless trade publications from neurobiology to actuarial journals, going back to the turn of the twentieth century. They were stacked flat on the floor all the way to the ceiling, leaving just enough room for a single trail in the center. Seth spotted a copy of Action Comics number one, the first appearance of Superman. Each stack teetered and threatened the walkway.

 

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