by J. R. Wagner
James looked at Kilani, who appeared to be daydreaming and not paying the least bit of attention to the goings-on around her. The revelry continued for some time—as did the ignoring—until James finally lost patience and went in search of Peroc, who'd wandered off behind one of the structures, each slung with dried animal hide. At the peak of each tent, James saw stacks of human skulls, one on top of the other, skewered by a pointed spear. The sight was unnerving and for the first time since they'd arrived, he was concerned for their lives. He dodged men and women dancing in circles as he made his way in the direction he'd last seen Peroc. James noticed the tall, stern-looking woman he'd seen at the head of the hunting party staring at him as he passed.
A loud boom froze James in his tracks. Everyone around him appeared immobile as well. The afternoon light went dark as if someone had thrust the sun behind the horizon in mere seconds. The fire, which had been low and steady, grew until its flames reached high into the air. The native closest to James brought her hands together. Her claps resounded as if she were banging on a large drum. Soon all the tribe were clapping in rhythm and forming a line on each side of the fire. James could not see Kilani, Luno, and the others.
The tall woman stepped out from her place in one of the lines and stood with her back to the fire, facing James. She continued to clap as she spoke.
“Since our mother's, mother's mother dwelt here, the island foretold of the coming of one who would lead us. All this time we have, by law, never had a rightful chief. All this time we've waited for the one foretold. Peroc, our brother, believes this day will see us our leader. He could travel across the water, it was said. He would speak the language of the land. He would master the spirit of the island. Peroc believes he is found. Peroc, step forward.”
The clapping stopped and in a burst of orange light and smoke, Peroc appeared just in front of the woman.
“Show us why you believe,” said the warrior woman.
Peroc turned to James and beckoned him to come forward. Reluctantly, James stepped into the center of the rows of tribesmen and walked toward Peroc.
“You speak our language, do you not?” Peroc asked.
“I speak your language,” James replied in the native tongue.
“Tell us how you arrived here.”
“We traveled from the main island,” said James.
“And by what means did you travel?”
“My friends constructed a ship,” James said, realizing he had spoken the word “ship” in English because there wasn't a word for something that travels over the water in the native tongue.
“I traveled over the water,” James said to the curious expressions of the crowd.
“Now,” said Peroc, “show us.”
James believed if he refused to display his powers, none of them would ever leave alive.
“Tertiri zé Manukto vinka,” said James.
Thousands of pinpoint light orbs rose from the palms of his hands. He sent them into the air with a tossing motion. They rose into the overhanging trees, where they hung like stars. They grew brighter and larger until the ground below was lit like the day. James could hear reactions coming from the onlookers. The lights dimmed and shrank. They began to fall like snow all around the tribe. Several men and women reached up to catch the falling stars.
With a wave of his hand the miniature orbs quickly rose and began to swirl above their heads. They swirled closer and closer until they had all joined together. The single orb shot high into the air and exploded like a firework. This drew applause from the tribe.
“We have been watching them since they've arrived and seen things we cannot explain. Now you must believe the explanation is simple. Before us stands our new leader. Our chief. Are there any who doubt this proclamation?” asked Peroc, looking at his tribe. Nobody spoke. James could see the warrior woman looking at him. She was the only one with a hostile expression.
“Then let us welcome him and his friends,” Peroc shouted.
Cries of approval were shouted as the tribe quickly ran about. Someone placed a gentle hand on James's back and coaxed him forward. The darkness that had consumed the area at the beginning of the ceremony lifted slightly, allowing James to see Kilani, Luno, Roger, and William being ushered in his direction. A blanket was unrolled just in front of him and hands from all directions placed food of various types upon it. Soon James's group stood surrounding the blanket. They sat upon request. Each of them was adorned with a headdress similar to the one the warrior woman had been wearing when she'd returned from the hunt. James wore by far the largest and most ornate.
The group was instructed to eat while the tribe danced around them in a choreographed display.
“Ho, Chief,” Luno chortled. “Seems you're wanted just about everywhere you go.”
“Zey are cannibals,” said William. “Did you see zee skulls? Nique te mere!”
“We'd be premature to pass such a judgment. That could simply be how they honor their dead. Let us not jump to conclusions,” said Luno.
“This place gives me an uneasy feeling,” admitted James. “I'm not sure William isn't right.”
“No sense ‘n lettin' a good meal go to waste, I dare say,” Roger said, picking up a piece of meat and stuffing it into his mouth. “Fantastic,” he said, chewing.
Reluctantly, James reached down and selected a piece of meat and put it into his mouth. It was, without a doubt, the tastiest thing he'd eaten since he'd arrived in The Never. The others quickly dug in, enjoying the feast. All except Kilani, who slowly picked at the food. When they'd had their fill they were led to the center of the clearing. The ring of fire was long gone as the sun fell below the rim of the crater. The tribe sat in a large circle around the stone platform.
Three women seated just behind the circle played on three drums. Torches stood in the ground around the platform, casting eerie shadows. James and company were seated facing the front of the platform. The drumming changed rhythm the instant they sat. There was a cry of fear in the distance. James looked into the faces of the tribe folk nearest to him and saw no concern. The wails continued. He looked in the direction of the ruckus and spotted two torches steadily moving closer to the platform.
The warrior woman stood and walked to the base of the platform. She waited silently as the torches approached. The cries ceased until the two torches, being carried by two members of the tribe, reached the ring of people surrounding the platform. James looked on in horror. They were dragging a woman whose feet and hands were bound. What clothes she wore were tattered and torn. She was very thin and dirty.
She had the complexion of a European. Her hair was long and mousey brown. The woman pleaded in a language James was sure he'd heard before but couldn't understand. She then began screaming and struggling against the two men dragging her toward the platform, but she lacked the strength to gain any real headway.
They finally reached the base of the platform. The drums stopped, and the warrior woman took a step up onto the first level and began to address her tribe. “The island demands this gift in exchange for our good fortune, and tonight we are fortunate indeed,” she said, looking at James. “What was foretold long ago has come to pass.”
The tribe cheered at this. The captive woman looked on in terror at the warrior woman as she spoke.
“Tonight the moon passes for the twenty-second time since our last gift. The time for another has come. The island has been good to us. In return, we must be good to her. If we are not, death will befall us all.”
The drums started again; this time the beats struck in quick succession. The members of the tribe began to sway from side to side. Four tribesmen, two men, and two women, with bodies painted entirely in red, stepped through the circle and grasped the woman. Two lifted her under her arms and the others held each leg as they raised her onto the platform.
James looked at Kilani and Luno, who wore horrified expressions. The red-painted tribesmen reached the top step of the platform. They placed the woman on the tabl
e-size stone, which James realized was hovering slightly over the top step. The woman kicked and spat and cried until she touched the stone. The moment she contacted it, she fell silent.
The red-painted tribesmen turned, leaving the woman on the stone. She did not make any attempt to escape. James again looked over at Luno.
“What the bloody hell is going on?” Luno asked.
“They said they're giving the island a gift,” said James.
“Human sacrifice,” said Luno.
James looked back at the platform. The warrior woman had removed a long dagger from her belt and was making her way up the steps toward the woman. James couldn't believe what he was seeing. He wasn't about to let it happen. He quickly stood as the warrior woman leaned over the stone table with knife in hand. The woman on the table hadn't moved.
“Stop,” James cried in the native tongue. “This is not acceptable. You must not hurt this woman.”
“Chief, I have no intention of hurting this woman,” the warrior woman said with a mirthless smile. She took her dagger and cut the bindings on the woman's wrists and ankles. Her extremities immediately snapped outward, as if fastened by invisible bonds. The warrior woman lifted her head, again grinned at James, and retreated back to the base of the platform.
Perhaps I'm wrong, James thought. The drumming stopped again and the torches surrounding the circle extinguished synchronously. For an instant, they were enveloped in darkness. Then a bright light shone on the platform. It was a perfect circle; its edge fell just one step below the stone table. The moon was aligned perfectly through the center hole in the trees and cast a beam of light more focused and intense than James or any in his group had ever seen.
The light was somehow mesmerizing and James couldn't help but look in wonder as it crept ever so slowly closer to the edge of the table. The warrior woman stepped completely off the platform, careful to avoid the light, and returned to her place in the circle as the light came within inches of the edge of the table. James remained standing, ready to act.
The round beam of light struck the woman's outstretched fingers first. She immediately let out a blood-curdling cry. Smoke began to rise from her hand as the flesh on her fingers quickly turned to dust. In an instant, James realized that the warrior woman wasn't going to kill this woman, but the island was. Beside him, Luno, Kilani, William, and Roger had all gotten to their feet.
James ran toward the platform as the cries continued. Nearly her entire hand was now nothing but bleached bone. A slight breeze blew away the grey powder that moments ago had been her flesh. In the distant darkness the cries of a man echoed those of the victim.
As James reached the edge of the platform, he felt energy similar to that which came from the stone tower he'd touched in the cave on the second widow. He tried to surge through it, but he was unable and fell back to the ground. The others in his group hit the ground as well.
He quickly stood. “Tertiri zé Manukto norge,” he said, sending a surge of electric energy that looked like a miniature lightning storm toward the barrier. The invisible wall absorbed the spell and did not yield. By this time the beam was creeping toward the woman's elbow and her cries continued at an earsplitting volume. They could also still hear the unknown man's cries in the darkness.
“You are defying the will of the island,” the warrior woman said calmly.
“The island did not put her on this table. You did,” said James. “Tertiri zé Manukto suomi,” he said. Several large rocks lifted from the dirt beneath the ground outside the circle. He sent them hurtling toward the invisible barrier. Upon impact, each of the rocks shattered into sand. He then lifted a large amount of dirt into the air. It began to swirl like a hurricane, creating a dense black cloud. James again directed it high into the air in hopes of blocking the moon's rays. Regardless of how high the cloud rose, the barrier continued even higher.
James abandoned this idea, letting the dirt fall to the ground like rain on the tribe. The light had passed the woman's elbow and was steadily moving closer to her torso. He knew he had only seconds before intervention wouldn't matter.
“Tertiri zé Manukto suomi,” he said, concentrating on the stone table inside the barrier. To his surprise, the table rose into the air. James sent it as far from the circle of light as he could inside the barrier. The woman immediately stopped screaming and looked around, confused. The stone table struck the far side of the barrier and came to an awkward rest on the steps. James knew this was merely a temporary solution. The moonlight was steadily making its way in the direction of the woman. He had time, but not much.
The warrior woman ran to James's side, an incredulous look on her face.
“You dare defile the ceremony? If this woman does not die, the island will seek its revenge upon us all. Especially the one who interrupted the ceremony.”
“I will not stand by and watch her die,” James said. “If I am truly your chief, I order you to help me.”
The warrior woman stood looking at James with a defiant expression. It was clear that regardless of his title, she had no intention of bringing an end to the ceremony. Kilani, who James had forgotten was even there, reached down to the warrior woman's belt and ripped away a small sac. She tossed it to James. The warrior woman turned on Kilani, ready to fight. Kilani brought herself to her full height, over a head taller than the warrior woman, and the warrior woman paused, realizing she was outmatched. Infuriated, she turned and marched away.
As this was happening, James reached into the sac, pulled a pinch of transporting powder from the bag, sprinkled it over his head and said, “Tertiri zé Manukto ahlnãs.” In a flash of orange light and smoke, he appeared inside the barrier beside the table. The woman looked up at James. She whispered in a language James could not understand. Tears streaked her face. James tried to lift her from the table, but she was held there by an invisible bond.
“Tertiri zé Manukto lehtinen,” said James. The table immediately fractured, then crumbled. The woman's body was free. What was left of her right arm was bright red and badly burnt. He lifted her into his arms, took another pinch of the transporting powder, and tossed it over his head.
Both the woman and James had disappeared. Kilani, realizing they were now alone, nervously looked at Luno. The four of them stepped closer together as the tribe recovered from the shock of what it had just witnessed. Several of the tribe were shouting angrily and moving about pointing at the platform.
“Now what?” William asked, eyeing the increasingly hostile tribe.
“Hold our ground. James will return,” said Luno.
The warrior woman marched quickly back toward the group, carrying a spear. Over her back she'd slung her bow and quiver. She stopped in front of the group and looked right at Kilani. She shouted in the native tongue.
“I will not fight you,” said Kilani.
The warrior woman clearly did not understand, because she grasped the spear and pointed it at Kilani, just inches from her chest. Before Kilani could react, Luno stepped in front of her, snatched the spear from the warrior woman's hands, and broke it over his knee. Enraged, the warrior woman began to pull her bow from her back.
“Tertiri zé Manukto reisa,” Luno said, extending his hands. Both bow and arrows immediately caught fire. The warrior woman quickly pulled them from her back and dropped them to the ground, where they burnt to ashes. She looked at Luno in shock and fear. Several tribe members began disappearing in orange flashes while others made their way back to the encampment on foot. The warrior woman, who'd retrieved another sac of transporting powder, disappeared in an orange flash. Within a minute, they were alone.
“Without James I fear we are extremely vulnerable here. We should leave at once,” said Luno.
“Into the jungle at night? I'm not sure that's a good idea. At least here we know what we're facing,” said Kilani.
With a flash, James appeared not three feet from where they stood. He was alone. He looked around, surprised to only see his friends.
&n
bsp; “What's happening,” he asked.
“The tribe has fled back to the encampment. I don't believe they're particularly happy with us at the moment,” Luno said.
“Where did you take her?” Kilani asked.
“Back to Harbor Town,” said James.
“What now, Cap'n?” asked Roger, looking at James.
“I'll take us back to the Queen Mary. Who first?” James asked.
Without waiting for a response, James put his arm around Kilani and they were gone. A moment later, they were standing on the deck of the Queen Mary. Their faces were less than an inch apart and in that instant, James wanted nothing more than to feel her soft lips against his. She quickly withdrew and James disappeared, leaving Kilani standing alone. Seconds later he returned with Roger, then William, and finally Luno. The group relaxed when Luno and James arrived. Before he could explain or the group had a chance to object, James disappeared again.
Luno, Kilani, Roger, and William paced nervously on deck. No one said a word after James disappeared without announcing where he was going. In a flash, James returned, accompanied by a man none of them knew. He was shorter than James—most men were—with broad shoulders and matching golden hair and beard. He looked drawn, thin, and weak. The man collapsed on deck. Kilani and Luno ran to help him up and ask what was going on, but before they could get in a word, James was gone again.
The man muttered something before falling unconscious. Luno and Kilani exchanged looks of confusion. There was another flash and James was back. Beside him stood Peroc. James held an ornately carved tree stump under his arm. He set the stump on the deck and removed his arm from around Peroc's shoulder. Peroc stayed close while eyeing the others as if expecting them to attack.
Exhausted, James sat on the stump and looked up at the group.
“Speak up plain, Cap'n, what in t'bloody 'ell is going on?” Roger asked.
“I knew they'd turn on Peroc, so I returned for him. He told me about the prisoner—the other screaming voice we could hear—and we rescued him as well. He is the woman's brother.