“In the strict sense of the word, I don’t think she is.”
“Don’t you know?”
Willow sighed. “Franjean, we’re talking prophecy here. When was the last time you heard of an oracle being specific? No one’s sure what she can do and it’s not as if she’s able yet to tell. Myself, I wonder if she’s like the dragons, outside all the rules and structures that define the world. That would explain their interest in her.”
“Never seen a dragon, Willow,” and there was envy in Rool’s voice.
“It was a wonder, even if it was out of my own imagination.” Willow shook his head, to bring his focus back to the moment at hand. “As for Elora Danan, I’m fairly sure wards are no use against her, nor are spells on her, she possesses a kind of natural immunity.”
“If that’s so,” Franjean challenged sarcastically, “then how could Witch Queen Bavmorda have hoped to destroy her with the Rite of Oblivion, eh?”
“She was a baby, Franjean,” was Willow’s sensible reply. “Power’s useless without the knowledge to properly wield it.”
“She’s still a baby,” Rool said.
“Bavmorda’s dead. And we’ve spent the best part of the year since exterminating her Death Dogs.”
“And that leaves all the world brimming with sweetness and light? Including the trolls and ghouls and goblins and gaunts and things too foul to even own names?”
The brownie had a point.
“That’s not a problem, Rool. I think I have added my knowledge to her strength, through my bear,” he said with a sudden, shy smile, pleased at the rush of inspiration. “That should make her defenses as comprehensive and resilient now as when she’ll be full-grown. Not much use against a steel knife, I’ll grant you—that will have to be Madmartigan and Sorsha’s lookout—but pure hell for a magic one. Satisfied?”
She stirred, and he feared he’d woken her, but all she did was shift toward her back in such a way that her arms flopped open on either side of her. She was all twisted up in nightgown and comforter, one bare leg exposed to the evening chill. The hearth was doing its valiant best, but even this late in the spring the nights remained significantly colder than the days; there’d be frost on the breaths of those sentries standing watch outside. Willow tucked the bear snug under the crook of the arm nearest him. As if that had been all she was waiting for, Elora rolled suddenly toward him, wrapping both arms about the bear and drawing her legs together, knees up, to ensure the stuffed animal’s safe imprisonment. Her gown was a proper tangle, there was nothing he could do about it without surely waking her, so he contented himself with rearranging the covers. So taken was he with the baby’s charm, that he missed a hurried conference between the brownies, in which they decided there was no way they were letting him travel home alone, in so obviously demented a state. They were inside his traveling pouch before he knew what they were about, and try as he might to get them out, they remained well and truly hidden.
“Suit yourselves, then,” he told them. “I’m done here.”
Not quite. There was one final obligation, as easily and happily fulfilled with Elora as with his own. He smoothed her hair from her brow and gave her a kiss and a wish for the sweetest of dreams, the happiest of tomorrows, and that was that.
The next he knew, it was morning. He woke with a start, beside his wife, where he’d known he’d been all the night through.
He was so thankful for that realization that it was a long few moments before his mind registered what his eyes beheld from the first, a pair of brownies sitting side by side at the foot of his bed.
After that, giving the lie to the still loveliness of the sunrise, with mist curling off the riverfront, the field cast in azure shades accented by the merest hint of morning rose, the quiet broken by an intermittent birdsong, the whole of the dawn as prosaic and normal as could be, he learned that while he’d slept…
…the world as he’d known it had come to its end.
The eagles told them the rider was close.
Thorn didn’t see.
The brownies were nervous enough around the Tall Folk in their own country, but there at least they had a wealth of trees and undergrowth to mask their presence. Here, in the shadow of the great mountain range that split this continent from top to bottom, there was nothing but prairie grassland from slopes to horizon. They wanted to hide and told Thorn so, repeatedly, each more loudly and insistent than the other, volleying protests and epithets back and forth as if it was a game of tennis.
Thorn didn’t hear.
The animal’s shod hooves struck in a leaden cadence, her every step bespeaking a fatigue sunk deep into her bones. She’d run as far and fast as she was able, but she was done. The scent of fear was strong from her, its cause brutally clear from the fresh wounds that scarred her flanks and haunch. A Daikini warrior sat atop her back, his own boots scored by the same claws that had slashed his mount. The parade-ground perfection of tack and armor was dulled by a thickening coat of trail dust, the curve of back and shoulders giving eloquent evidence of the toll this journey had taken.
In basic form, he looked much the same as Thorn himself, though like all his race he stood better than twice the Nelwyn’s size, mostly in the legs. As a race, Daikinis considered themselves lords of the earth, and didn’t share well with those—like Nelwyns and the far smaller brownies—who’d come before.
Both bow and blade were slung loose, close at hand for quick and easy use. The young man’s eyes never rested, scanning the way ahead as intensely as his every other sense did the trail behind; every so often he would reach forward to stroke a hand along his mare’s sweat-stained neck, then give her powerful shoulder a reassuring pat. She needed rest, as did he; even this stumble-footed pace was more than she could long maintain. Stark from both horse and rider was the certain knowledge that wherever they stopped would be the site of their last stand. The trail they followed would bring them right to Thorn and his companions; the pace they maintained meant they’d reach them near nightfall.
Thorn didn’t care.
His own boots cast puffs of dirt into the air about his feet as he made his way to the edge of the Scar. Dust, without any of the weight or consistency of proper earth, leached dry of moisture, of minerals, of life itself. Dull gray to the sight, powder to the touch, the crumbling detritus of a tomb, it cast a shadow film over eyes and tongue that tainted every sensation. Scrub weeds and tumbleweed marked the landscape; those seeds unlucky enough to put down roots found no substance, either to anchor or sustain them. Most were blown away by the first rough wind; the few that remained were ugly, stunted things, with little hope of lasting a season, much less beyond.
Before him, the continental divide formed an unassailable rampart stretching to the right and left as far as the eye could see.
Except for this place.
Until twelve years ago, a mountain stood here, paramount in the range. That awful night, as cataclysms and disasters raged across the whole of the Twelve Domains, it had simply been…destroyed.
Thorn had seen all manner of natural disasters and each time been awed by how quickly and tenaciously nature had rushed back to heal the wounds. Here, though, those normal rules seemed no longer to apply; everything and everyone that had lived within sight of the blast was gone, as though they’d never been, and nothing had stepped in since to fill the void.
“As with all the others,” he said aloud, mainly to break the eerie silence, absently winding a length of braided beard around his right forefinger as he surveyed the desolation before him. “A whole world, I’ve wandered, to see such sights as this. One after the other, one by one by one, the smashed and broken places.” Almost as though the devastation couldn’t be believed, it wasn’t real, unless seen with his own eyes. This was the last. As awful to behold as the first.
His first and dominant impression of the Scar was one of smoothness, as though a terrible God had sliced the mountain from its
fellows as neatly as Thorn might a fresh-baked muffin from its tin, and then wantonly smashed it to bits. The ground within had been seared to bedrock, stripped of even the potential for new life, fused on top to glass, so that the scene most resembled a shallow bowl—although this one was miles across and easily a hundred feet deep. No dust settled within the rim, creating the impression that the crater was wiped neatly and properly clean each morning by some giant cloth. Whenever there were storms, the water that fell outside the Scar rushed away downhill, each drop of rain apparently desperate to find a more hospitable place to light. Looking within, however, Thorn couldn’t see even a hint of liquid, where there should have been a lake reflecting the brilliant blue of the late-spring, late-morning sky.
There was a queer beauty to the place, that he had to admit. The dominant color was black, shot through with streams and reefs of darkling shades from the palette of some mad potter.
In his mind’s eye, Thorn saw another field of primal desecration, this one set amidst rolling woodlands, a place once renowned for its beauty, forever ruined. The strength of its walls, the courage of its knights, the skill of its sorcerers, none of that saved the fabled Daikini fortress of Tir Asleen. The castle and its rulers embodied the hope of the world and it had been wiped away in a single instant.
There, a dozen years ago, Thorn hadn’t approached as close as this. He’d stood at the head of the valley, staring with dulled eyes as though he himself had become one of the dead, in the faint and futile hope that each blink of his eyelids would somehow restore the glory that once was, and especially the lives of his lost friends.
The memory was ice in his heart, and he folded over on himself as though he’d been stabbed, lowering his forehead as he knelt until it touched the ground. He was glad he was alone, for such a grief as this should have no witnesses. Neither brownies nor eagles ever came near these blasted, broken places—Bastian and Anele wouldn’t even overfly them—they had too much respect for the dead, and for the unknown force that had slain them. Thorn’s face twisted as though he’d been struck a physical blow, but no tears fell; he’d wrung himself dry that first monstrous day before Tir Asleen. For all the time that had passed, and all he’d learned since, the wound remained as fresh and raw as ever.
Its sole legacy was a resonance that led him from one site to the next, with the same inexorable attraction of a compass needle for the pole. After the first few, and especially as he honed his innate talent as a wizard, the pattern of destruction had become clear. Each location was a place of Power, a crossroads where the ley lines of energy of the physical world intersected with their counterparts in the Realms Beyond, the domains of faery, home to the Veil Folk. As a consequence, the devastation had been as great in their lands, and the scars as deep. There as here, some looked on what happened as a natural occurrence, others as a mystical sign, still others as an act of war. Each party had its own opinion as to cause and reason, each had a favorite place to lay blame, with the net result that relations between the Twelve Domains—never comfortable on the best of days—went into a steep and precipitous decline. The passage of better than a decade since the Cataclysm without any further such incidents had substantially eased fears among the Daikinis, but most of the Veil Folk lived at a different pace. To them, the human span was little better than a mayfly’s and the Cataclysm a flashpoint far too fresh in memory to be ignored.
Beyond the obvious—that a force of mind-numbing power had in a single, savage moment annihilated a score of locations across the whole of the world—nothing was known. Not the nature of the force, or its origin, or its purpose. The years since brought to Thorn the realization that surprisingly few were all that eager to learn any of those answers, as though doing so would call down the same doom, or worse, upon their own heads.
It was a choice Thorn himself faced at every site. He’d known from the start what was required of him, yet in each instance found himself holding back; he was no less reluctant today.
“No,” he said, face still buried from the world, giving his voice the hollow sound of someone speaking in a box. “That’s not right. I’m not reluctant. I’m afraid.”
He stood, walked away from the Scar for a couple or three steps before coming to the end of that reflexive impulse and trailing to a stop.
“Is this it, then?” he asked himself. “Is this what I’ve come to, all the work and wandering, a dozen years on the road, in hiding—all for nothing? You saved the best for last, Peck,” and he made the diminutive as cruel an insult as any who’d used it against him. “The resonances of the Cataclysm are as strong here as at Tir Asleen itself; if there are answers to be found, there’s nowhere better.”
The part of him labeled “Nelwyn common sense” wailed, I don’t want to be here, I want to go home! To be told in turn, But you are here. So what are you going to do about it? Then, more cruelly, And until this is done, you have no home.
He bared his teeth. Nelwyns were built small, so went the tales of Creation told by all save Nelwyns, because the Great Givers passed them by, their attention always caught by those of more significance. The Nelwyn purpose in the scheme of things was to provide amusement to those more blessed. But Nelwyn spirits and Nelwyn hearts and Nelwyn minds bore little relation to the bodies that housed them. With every hand against them, in a world shaped for creatures many times their size, they took on the characteristics of the land they made their home. They were tough, they endured; above all, they adapted. When faced with a threat, they got out of the way. When they couldn’t get out of the way, they fought, with a strength and tenacity that had to be respected. When they had to fight—man or God, this world or any of the others—they would find a way to overcome.
The Cataclysm had left its mark on Thorn as much as on the land. He was leaner than he’d been, his body toughened by uncounted miles of wandering across the whole face of the globe—which he knew now for fact was a globe. No need anymore for him to take the dragon’s word for it. His skin was tight across his face, highlighting the shape of chin and jaw, giving him the aspect of a Nelwyn better than twice his age. He’d let his hair grow, and beard as well, until all that could be seen of his face was a nose, strong cheekbones, and his eyes, and even they were set between a pair of magnificently wild brows. The beard he braided like his old teacher, the High Aldwyn, but the hair he’d chosen to style in the fashion of a Daikini warrior. Oddly, while the beard had grown in the color of dull silver, his hair had lost none of its youthful hue; if anything, it had grown more autumnal over time, making it a rich auburn—red with mahogany highlights—where before it had been the other way round. He dressed like a wanderer, in whatever struck his fancy and his comfort from the markets of every continent.
It was his eyes that marked him most, though. The hazel he’d been born with had given way to green and from there to a blue that was mixed with gray. Like sky when his mood was fair, like fresh-forged steel when it was not. They were haunted eyes, that had seen too much. But that was only on the surface. Beneath, past where even Thorn cared to look on those rare occasions when he caught sight of his reflection, was something far harder and more dangerous. The part of him that had earned him his name.
Thorn anchored a stanchion deep into the earth, with a goodly length of line tied snug about it, looped around his waist and through a metal ring affixed to his belt. He donned well-worn buckskin gloves to protect his long, sensitive hands and tossed the rope over the edge. He wanted to hesitate, but knew that if he did, he’d find a chink in his resolve, worry at it like a rat until the whole edifice crumbled. Some fights couldn’t be run from.
Part pathfinder, part stalking horse, came Sorsha’s voice from memory, as clear as if she once more stood before him, the warrior sent ahead of all the rest to charm an ambush out of hiding.
“How wonderful for him,” Thorn grumbled now, as he had then.
Putting his back to the Scar, he took tight hold of his line and stepped off the rim afte
r it.
As soon as he touched bottom and disengaged his harness, a piece of rock caught his eye, hardly bigger than a thumbnail. He picked it up, rolled it a few moments between his palms, his eyes half-closed, senses cautiously aware as they built a picture of the stone within his mind.
Great age, he felt, and yet, as the world viewed such things, this particular peak had hardly been born. Young and fresh, its stark, sharp lines barely touched by sun and wind and water, there was strength to it and special pride. This was a place of Power.
For all the good that had done it.
There was a keening in the air, a mournful dissonance that might be wind, but he knew better, because he felt it from the stone in his hand. He thrust the pebble into a pocket of his vest and wandered deeper across the crater. Cautious steps at first, out of concern that the surface might prove as slippery as it looked, but that wariness quickly passed. Anyone watching would perceive neither rhyme nor reason to Thorn’s progress. He’d walk one way, then another, pass stones by, pick one up, toss it aside, suddenly and inexplicably go back to one he’d skipped before to add it to the growing collection in his pouch.
His ramble was a revelation, as he continued to wander this boneyard of stone, collecting bits and pieces of the corpse. From outside, the surface appeared featureless, so like a household bowl in appearance he thought it would prove as clean in fact. However, while the mountain had been smashed to bits, it had been far from obliterated. Each step brought him another flashfire image of every aspect of the peak’s existence, from birth to sudden, early death. There was no consciousness, no life, as he understood the term, yet it had been as alive as he, rich in its own way with yearnings and desires.
When he was tired, he simply stopped and sat. He was hungry as well, he realized, his throat parched. The gleaming smooth surface of the Scar acted like a mirror, reflecting the heat at the same time as its dark color absorbed it, giving him a painful insight into what it must feel like to be on a blazing-hot griddle. He moistened his mouth with a swallow of water from his canteen, then took the edge off his growling stomach with a hunk of biscuit. His eyes were narrowed to slits, but that wasn’t any real help; the glare beat right through his skin and set the underside of his skull to throbbing. Next time, he vowed with asperity, he’d remember his damn hat.
Shadow Moon Page 4