Storm of Chaos

Home > Fantasy > Storm of Chaos > Page 14
Storm of Chaos Page 14

by Andy Peloquin


  Too many. The realization settled on her like a burden, but she refused to let it weigh her down. Sword in hand, she stalked toward the next house and the Indomitables clustered in front of it. Two of the black-armored soldiers watched as their comrade pounded on a grey-haired man, holding his white-haired wife in firm grips.

  Anger burned in her gut and she allowed that heat to wash over her. She would save as many as she could, one life at a time—even if she had to beat every Indomitable in Shalandra senseless to do it.

  Chapter Sixteen

  The root in Aisha’s pouch was barely larger than her middle finger, yet it burdened her mind with the weight of a mountain. The truth of what the Shadow Root offered threatened to drag her to her knees.

  One dose is all it takes to shut off this power. Her mind recoiled from the thought, as it had in Imbuka’s cluttered hovel. Yet she couldn’t deny that a small part of her wanted to consider it. She could take the Shadow Root and be free of the Kish’aa forever. Destiny had grown heavy to bear.

  Yet her thoughts kept returning to Imbuka’s words about the Whispering Lily. “If you wish to survive the gift of the Kish’aa,” the Spirit Whisperer had said, “you must never touch the Whispering Lily. Using it will only hasten the Inkuleko, drag you deeper into the realm of the spirits. Not even the Shadow Root is potent enough to stop its effects. Its use leads only to death!”

  A shudder ran down her spine. The vehemence in his voice and the fearful light filling his eyes produced little doubt in Aisha’s mind. She had to stop using the Whispering Lily.

  But that somehow felt…wrong. Without it, I would never have been able to control the spirits in the Keeper’s Crypts. It was only thanks to the Whispering Lily that I saved my friends.

  That thought left her far more conflicted. If she gave up the Whispering Lily, she would once again be lost, stumbling blind in the dark, struggling to understand the incomprehensible.

  The shaman had told her she’d only gain mastery over her powers with practice. But here, in the midst of the war against the Ybrazhe, Necroseti, and Gatherers, she could spare little time to learn her powers. Every day brought some new fight for survival. When she needed to call on the Kish’aa again, could she resist the urge to use the Whispering Lily? If it was the only thing that would save Kodyn, Briana, and the others, she might have no choice but to use it.

  Desperation and hopelessness washed over her. She felt trapped, locked in a dark labyrinth from which there was no escape. Her breakthrough in the Keeper’s Crypts had given her hope, and the discovery of the Serenii pendant—the one that now hung around her neck—was the light at the end of the tunnel. Yet her visit with Imbuka had all but condemned her to continue wandering in shadow once more. The Umoyahlebe had given her answers that could set her on the right path, but in the end, he’d made it clear.

  “Your journey with the Kish’aa is for you to travel alone,” the one-eyed shaman had said as she departed, his voice almost sorrowful. “Each Spirit Whisperer must find their way among the spirits for themselves. I will offer you what help I can, but in the end, you are the only one who can uncover the truth of your power.”

  Her hand went to the pendant around her neck. The spark of Thimara’s life danced from the stone to her fingertips, sending energy sizzling along her arm. Aisha might not yet understand everything about her powers, but she could understand that embracing the Kish’aa meant binding herself to fulfilling their mission. Something kept them bound to this world and she alone could find the way to sever those bonds.

  Aisha kicked herself for forgetting to mention the pendant to the Ghandian shaman. He might have known of its use or how it worked. She nearly turned back to return to the Foreign Quarter, but something stopped her. She’d gone to him for help and come away more confused. At that moment, the burden already felt too much to bear without adding to it.

  She welcomed the cool darkness of late evening on the Cultivator’s Tier. Silence hung like a dark, heavy cloak over Commoner’s Row. The peace and quiet brought back memories of the nights spent on the Ghandian plains, lying with Nkanyezi, her little sister, among the tall grass and watching the stars wheel overhead. That had been a simpler time, free of the worries that now plagued her, the burdens that she could not seem to get out from under.

  For the first time in years, Aisha allowed herself to simply wander. Her red cloth headband marked her as Earaqi, and the hour was early enough that the Indomitables wouldn’t question her presence. She had no need to hurry back to the Temple of Whispers—Briana and Hailen would still be wrapped up in their study of Suroth’s journal. Kodyn should have returned by now, and Evren with him. Between the two of them and the army of Secret Keepers, Briana would be safe.

  And the last thing Aisha wanted was to be locked away in the gloomy, windowless stone Temple of Whispers. She needed the open sky, the cool night breeze, and the darkness. A few minutes of solitude would give her time to grapple with the burden that weighed heavily on her.

  Ahead of her, people had gathered on Commoner’s Row. Fifty or sixty young Earaqi men and women, with a few Intaji youths mingled among them, milled about, speaking in hushed whispers and casting furtive glances at Aisha as she passed.

  Yet Aisha barely saw them. The threat of the Unshackling—Inkuleko, as Imbuka had called it—loomed largest in her thoughts. If she didn’t find her way among the Kish’aa, the means of controlling the power of the spirits, her mind would shatter and lose its connection to her body. She would become that empty shell, a husk like her father.

  One path led to madness, the other to death. She faced a choice, yet had no choice at all.

  She knew what her mother would do— Naledi, warrior chieftainess of the Ukuza, would charge into battle and scream defiance into the face of her fear. Her father, the Umoyahlebe, would ponder his options and search for a logical approach, a way to understanding. Ria, her mentor and the Master of House Phoenix, would attack the problem from all sides, never relenting until she triumphed. Master Gold, Kodyn’s mother, would laugh at the danger and find a way to outmaneuver it.

  Yet none of these people that she admired stood here in her place. She wrestled with the dilemma alone. No clear way forward made itself visible, at least none she could see. Any choice could lead her down the paths to life, death, or insanity.

  What would you do? She found herself speaking to the spark of life in the pendant. You were a Secret Keeper, Thimara, a priest that had dedicated your life in service to a mission, to a god. So if you discovered that you had some great power, what would you do with it?

  An image flashed through Aisha’s mind: Thimara, sitting hunched over a table piled high with parchments, images, and instruments.

  Find answers, make a decision, the Secret Keeper’s presence seemed to say. No other way forward.

  Aisha shook her head. Easy for you to say. You knew what you had to do. You had the Guardians to tell you what path to take.

  The gift and curse of choice, Thimara replied, her voice barely above a whisper in Aisha’s mind. Freedom to go where you will, mingled with the burden of responsibility.

  There was no escaping that truth. No matter what path Aisha chose, it was her choice to make. She couldn’t lean on her father’s wisdom, her mother’s courage, or Ria’s fierce determination. She had to make a choice; hiding from reality wouldn’t solve the problem.

  So be it. Aisha’s fists clenched by her side. If the choice is mine, then I choose to embrace my destiny.

  Her father had told her she would “find her destiny in the City of the Dead”. Already, she had discovered the Whispering Lily, learned that she could master the spirits, and found the ancient Serenii pendant with its marvelous abilities. Whatever lay in store for her, whatever difficulties were ahead, she would face them as she had everything else: a grin on her lips and steel in her heart.

  Resolve hardened within her as she stalked up Trader’s Way and west along the Artificer’s Courseway toward the Temple District. Commerce Squ
are was thankfully empty at the late hour, the streets beyond dark and quiet. Aisha welcomed the silence, the cool shadows of night. Rest would clear her head to approach the challenges that lay in her future.

  She steeled herself as she approached the Temple District. Outside the Sanctuary, hundreds of blue-white lights illuminated the darkness. The spirits of the dead clustered around the temple that had been their final resting place. As one, they turned to face her, their empty eyes locked on to her face as their cries set her head buzzing.

  Aisha clenched her jaw and reached for the pendant around her neck. The moment her fingertips brushed the stone, the low hum diminished, sharpened, and coalesced into individual voices.

  With a gasp, she released the pendant, and the droning, ringing sound flared loud in her mind. When she gripped the Serenii stone, the voices became clear once more.

  Keeper’s teeth! Aisha sucked in a breath, fingers locked around the pendant, her mind racing as the dead clamored in her thoughts. I can hear them so clearly, and without the Whispering Lily!

  The spirits surged toward her, but Aisha made no move to flee. She could face them, could control them instead of letting them control her. Somehow, this pendant around her neck seemed to amplify her innate Umoyahlebe abilities. She could almost feel the stone twitching in her grip, as if drawing the spirits toward it. Can it sense the Kish’aa like I can?

  It seemed impossible—the stone was inert, a lifeless chunk of rock brought up from the ground. Yet few people on Einan understood the full power of the Serenii, who were said to have had the ability to reshape the world as they saw fit. Had the ancient people somehow found a way to hear, see, even control the Kish’aa? Had they had the same abilities she now possessed?

  Another impossibility, but she’d seen the way the ancient artifacts responded to Hailen’s blood. The Serenii had left behind countless marvels yet to be unlocked. Was this pendant another such?

  Aisha’s mind flashed back to something Hailen had said the previous night. He’d spoken of the Serenii “magic” and the words used to activate it. “Words aren’t what matter. It’s the sounds and reverberations that cause the effect.”

  A realization slammed into her with near-physical force. What if the Serenii stone can somehow “hear” the voices of the Kish’aa?

  The more she thought about it, the more it made sense. If she could hear the cries of the spirits, perhaps the Serenii had found a way to attune this chunk of rock to the sounds and reverberations of the dead. Could that be any more implausible than a dagger that consumed human souls or an ancient city that harnessed the power of the sun?

  Suddenly, she was gripped by a burning desire to race back to the Temple of Whispers and share her thoughts with Hailen and Briana. They could help her puzzle through the mystery of this strange pendant, perhaps even find something within Suroth’s journal that could help her understand the artifact’s purpose and uses.

  Her feet fairly flew as she raced the last few hundred paces to the Temple of Whispers. Two Secret Keepers stood outside—not the same two that had been on guard when she left hours earlier—but they let her through the vault-like door without question. One led her in silence through the plain stone chamber within, opening the wall for her. Aisha hurried down the short corridor toward Briana’s room.

  The stone door had barely slid open before Aisha burst into the chamber. “Briana, I—”

  She clapped a hand over her mouth to silence her excited cries before they woke Hailen. The room was dark, the glowing gemstone dimmed to a soft blue glow. Hailen lay sleeping on one of the room’s two beds. Briana, however, was nowhere in sight.

  Aisha’s brow furrowed. Where is she? She glanced around. And where are Kodyn and Evren, for that matter? They should both have returned by now.

  She contemplated waking Hailen to find out, but the deep lines of exhaustion etched into his face stopped her. The boy had been through a great deal over the last few days. If he had found a few minutes of peace amidst the turmoil of their lives, who was she to disturb him?

  A smile tugged at her lips as she stared down at the sleeping boy. Nkanyezi would be about the same age by now. She hadn’t seen her little sister in years, perhaps never would again. Yet in some ways, this boy—along with Briana, Kodyn, Evren, and her fellow Phoenixes of the Night Guild—had taken her family’s place. Just as she fought to protect Briana and Kodyn, she could do the same for Hailen.

  Silent as a stalking leopard, she strode toward the wall and slid to a comfortable seat in the corner. She laid her assegai across her lap and leaned her head against the cool stone. Her eyes closed of their own accord, the excitement of the previous days fading in the face of exhaustion. She would rest until Briana returned or Hailen awoke. Answers about the pendant and her powers could wait.

  Yet, as sleep dragged her deeper into its depths, a glimmer of hope settled deep within the core of her being. Her visit to Imbuka had given her more questions yet clarified her thoughts and feelings on the matter of her Umoyahlebe abilities. Come what may, she had chosen not to run, but to face the fear and fight.

  That, at least, she could do. She was her mother’s daughter, a warrior. Destiny weighed heavy on her, yet no matter how ponderous the burden, she would bear it.

  Chapter Seventeen

  Evren matched the Secret Keepers’ pace as they hurried west toward the Hall of Bounty. The sight of so many corpses filled him with a sense of urgency. If the Azure Rot truly was poison in some form, the death toll could climb into the hundreds, perhaps thousands, by the time they uncovered the source and ascertained the type of poison. Who knew how long it could take to formulate an antidote and spread it around Shalandra? Half the Slave’s Tier could die before they put an end to the plague!

  A long line of people formed in front of the Lower Wellspring. Men, women, and children held glass jars, wooden pails, leather skins, and anything else they could use to haul water. The crowd parted for the Secret Keepers with questioning glances.

  Dread sank like a stone in Evren’s gut as he saw the queue before the Hall of Bounty. The line stretched to the Way of Chains and disappeared around the corner. There have to be more than five hundred people! All of them would die the moment they consumed the poisoned grain.

  The Ministrants doling out the food and the Indomitables guarding the entrance to the Hall of Bounty looked up at the Secret Keepers’ approach. Surprise showed on the faces of the white-robed women and black-armored men. It was rare to see the mute, brown-robed priests outside their vault-like Temple of Whispers.

  Guardian Tianath drew a scroll from within her robes and proffered it to the officer in charge, a man with the blue band and horizontal silver stripes of a Sentinel.

  “What’s this now?” the man asked, narrowing his eyes at the parchment.

  The Secret Keeper thrust her chin toward the scroll, gesturing for the man to unroll it. The Indomitable complied, squinting down at the words written thereon. His eyes grew slowly wider as he read.

  “Keeper’s teeth!” the Sentinel gasped, his face darkening. “How is this—?”

  The Secret Keeper pressed a finger to her lips and shot a meaningful glance at the people behind him. Her message was clear: the contents of the scroll—likely a missive from Guardian Ennolar detailing their suspicion of the poison—would only cause havoc and panic among the Mahjuri.

  The Sentinel struggled to regain control of his expression, but his face had gone white, his eyes dark with suspicion. “Whatever you need, you have it.”

  The Secret Keeper thrust a finger toward the huge wooden double doors of the Hall of Bounty.

  “Go!” The Indomitable waved a hand for them to pass.

  “Hey!” An angry cry echoed from behind Evren as the Secret Keepers moved through the line of Indomitables that guarded the entrance. “That’s not fair!”

  “Wait your turn like the rest of us,” came an answering shout.

  “Damned Zadii, you have your own food!” a third voice snarled. “Go
back to the Artisan’s Tier and your fancy temple!”

  Dozens of voices took up protest, until a chorus of angry shouts rang out among the people.

  None of the crowd made a move—Secret Keepers had a reputation for ferocity when pushed to a fight, and the instinctive reverence for priests of the Thirteen made violence against clerics paramount to sacrilege. Which might explain how the Keeper’s Council had gotten away with their misdeeds and treachery for so long. Lady Callista and the Elders of the Blade were the only counterbalance to their power; unless the Indomitables or Blades interfered directly, the Necroseti could operate with impunity.

  At that moment, respect for the priests was the only thing that stopped the throng from turning violent. Evren wanted to shout, “They’re trying to save your lives!” But he knew that would do no good. Worse, it would incite panic and could set off the already angry throng. Until we find and contain this poison problem, no one can know the truth.

  He made to follow the priests into the Hall of Bounty, but the Sentinel stopped him. “You’re no Secret Keeper.”

  “I’m with them!” Evren thrust a finger at the retreating backs of the brown-robed figures.

  “Sure you are.” The officer snorted. “You and everyone in this line.” His face hardened and he shoved Evren. “Get out of here, Earaqi, before I arrest you for trying to sneak more rations. You’re not the first one to try doubling down by going to another tier for food.”

  Evren’s fists clenched, anger surging within him. He’d been walking right behind the Secret Keepers when they’d approached the guards, yet the Indomitable either hadn’t seen him or didn’t care. Whatever the case, the grim light in the guy’s eyes made it clear: Evren wouldn’t get through in one piece.

  Stifling a frustrated curse, Evren backed down from the confrontation and retreated from the Hall of Bounty. No sense fighting my way in when I can just hang back and wait for them to come out. He’d be nearby when the priests emerged, ready to accompany them to the Temple of Whispers to uncover the truth of the poison.

 

‹ Prev