Stone of Tears

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Stone of Tears Page 7

by Terry Goodkind


  She sank back into the chair. "How important is the Prophecy that forked?"

  "It is a core Prophecy. There could be none more important."

  Decades. It wouldn't take years, it would take decades. A core Prophecy touched almost everything. Her insides fluttered. This was like going blind. Until the tainted fruit of the false fork could be culled, they couldn't trust anything.

  She looked up into his eyes. "You do know which it was that forked?"

  He smiled proudly. "I know the false fork, and the true. I know what his come to pass."

  Well, at least there was that. She felt a ripple of excitement. If Nathan could tell her which fork was true, and which was false, and the nature of each branch, it would be valuable information indeed. Since the Prophecies were not in chronological order, there was no way to simply follow a branch, but this would be a very good start: they would know right where to begin. Better yet, they had learned of it as it happened, and not years later.

  "You have done well, Nathan." He grinned like a child who had pleased his mother. "Bring a chair close, and tell me of the fork."

  Nathan seemed drawn up in the excitement as he pulled a chair to the side of the desk. He flounced down in it, squirming like a puppy with a stick. She hoped she wouldn't have to hurt him to get this stick out of his mouth.

  "Nathan, can you tell me the Prophecy that has forked?"

  His eyes twinkled with mischief. "Are you sure you want to know, Sister Margaret? Prophecies are dangerous. The last time I told one to a pretty lady, thousands died. You said so yourself."

  "Nathan, please. It's late. This is very important."

  The mirth left his face. "I don't remember the words, exactly."

  She doubted the truth of that; When it came to Prophecies Nathan's mind saw the words as if they were written on a stone tablet. She put a reassuring hand on his arm. "That is to be understood. I know it is difficult to remember every word. Tell it as best you can."

  "Well, let's see." He looked at the ceiling as he stroked his chin with his thumb and finger tips. "It is the one that says something about the one from D'Hara who would shadow the world by counting shadows."

  "That's very good, Nathan. Can you remember more?" She knew he probably remembered it word for word, but he liked to be coaxed. "It would be a tremendous help to me."

  He eyed her a moment and then nodded. "By winter's breath, the counted shadows shall bloom. If the heir to D'Hara's vengeance counts the shadows true, his umbra will darken the world. If he counts false, then his life is forfeit."

  A forked Prophecy indeed. This had been the first full day of winter's season. She didn't know what the Prophecy meant, but she knew of it. This one was the matter of much study and debate down in the vaults, and worry over which year this Prophecy might came to pass. "And which fork has the Prophecy taken?"

  His face turned grim. "The worst one."

  Her fingers fumbled with a button. "We are to fall under the shadow of this one from D'Hara?"

  "You should study the Prophecies closer, Sister. The following Prophecy goes on to say: Should the forces of forfeit be loosed, the world will be shadowed yet by darker lust through what has been rent. Salvation's hope, then, will be as slim as the white blade of the one born True." He leaned closer and whispered. "The only one of darker lust, Sister Margaret, would be the Lord of Anarchy."

  She whispered a prayer. "May the Creator shelter us in his light."

  His smile was mocking. "The Prophecy says nothing about the Creator coming to our aid, Sister. If it is protection you seek, you had better follow the true fork. It is in that way He has offered you a glimmer of hope for defense from what will be."

  She smoothed the folds of her dress on her lap. "Nathan, I don't know what this Prophecy means. We can't follow the true and false forks if we don't know what it means. You said you know those forks. Can you tell me? Can you tell me a Prophecy on each fork, one that leads each way, so we may follow their path?"

  "Vengeance under the Master will extinguish every adversary. Terror, hopelessness, and despair will reign free." He peered at her intently with one eye. "This one leads down the false fork."

  She wondered how it was possible for the true Prophecy to be worse. "And one of the true fork?"

  "A close Prophecy after the true fork says: Of all there were, but a single one born of the magic to bring forth truth will remain alive when the shadow's threat is lifted. Therefore comes the greater darkness of the dead. For there to be a chance at life's bond, this one in white must be offered to her people, to bring their joy and good cheer."

  Margaret pondered these two Prophecies. She didn't recall either. The first seemed simple enough to understand. They could follow the false branch, for a ways, anyway, from this one. The second was more oblique, but seemed as if it could be deciphered with a little study. She recognized it as a Prophecy about a Confessor. The reference to "one in white" meant the Mother Confessor.

  "Thank you Nathan. This will make the false fork easier to follow. The other, the true fork, will be a little harder, but with this Prophecy to lead the way, we should be able to reason it out. We will just have to look for Prophecies leading away from this event. Somehow she is to bring happiness to her people." She gave him a small smile. "It sounds as if maybe she is to be wed, or something of that nature."

  The Prophet blinked at her, then threw his head back and howled. He rose to his feet, roaring in laughter until he coughed and choked. He turned back to her, his face red.

  "You pompous fools! The way you Sisters strut around as if what you do is meaningful, as if you even knew what you were doing! You remind me of a yard of chickens, cackling to one another as if they thought they understood higher mathematics! I cast the grain of Prophecy at your feet, and you cluck and scratch at the dirt, and then peck at gravel!"

  For the first time since she became a Sister, she felt small and ignorant. "Nathan, that will be quite enough."

  "Idiots," he hissed.

  He lurched toward her so quickly it frightened her. Before she knew it, she had released a bolt of power. It dropped him to his knees. He clutched at his chest as he gasped. Margaret recalled her power almost instantly, sorry she had reacted in this manner: out of fear.

  "I apologize, Nathan. You frightened me. Are you all right?"

  He grasped the chair back, drawing himself up into it as he gasped. He nodded. She sat still, ill at ease, waiting for him to recover.

  A grim smile spread on his lips. "Frightened you, did I? Would you like to be really frightened? Would you like me to show you a Prophecy? Not tell you the words, but show it to you? Show it to you the way it was meant to be passed on? I have never shown a Sister before. You all study them and think you can decipher their meaning by their words, but you don't understand. That is not the true way they work."

  She leaned forward. "What do you mean that is not the way they work? They are meant to foretell, and that is what they do."

  He shook his head. "Only partly. They are passed on by ones with the gift, ones like me: prophets. They are intended to be read and understood through the gift, by ones with the gift, ones like me, not to be picked over by the likes of your power."

  As he straightened himself, pulling the aura of authority around himself again, she studied his face. She had never heard of such a thing. She wasn't sure if he was telling the truth, or just talking out of anger. But if it were the truth...

  "Nathan, anything you could tell me, or show me, would be a great help. We are all struggling on the side of the Creator. His cause must prevail. The forces of the Nameless One struggle always to silence us. Yes, I would like you to show me a Prophecy the way it is meant to be passed on, if you can."

  He drew himself up, peering at her with burning intensity. At last he spoke softly. "Very well, Sister Margaret." He leaned toward her, his expression so grave it nearly took her breath away.

  "Look into my eyes," he whispered. "Lose yourself in my eyes."

  His ga
ze drew her in, the deep, azure color spreading in her vision until it seemed she was looking up into the clear sky. She felt as if he were drawing every breath for her.

  "I will tell you the Prophecy of the true fork again, but this time, I will show it to you as it is meant to be." She floated as she listened. "Of all there were, but a single one born of the magic to bring forth truth will remain alive..."

  The words melted away, and instead, she saw the Prophecy as if seeing a vision. She was pulled into it. She was no longer in the Palace, but in the vision itself.

  She saw a beautiful woman with long hair, dressed in a satiny white dress: the Mother Confessor. Margaret saw the other Confessors being killed by quads send from D'Hara. She felt the blinding horror of it. She saw the woman's sister die in her arms. She felt the grief of the Mother Confessor.

  Then, Margaret saw the Mother Confessor before the one from D'Hara who had sent the quads to kill the other Confessors. The handsome man in white stood before three boxes. To Margaret's surprise, each box cast a different number of shadows. The man in white robes performed rituals, cast evil spells, underworld spells, late into the night, through the night, until the sun rose. Somehow, Margaret knew that as the day brightened, it was this day. She was seeing what had happened this very day.

  The man in white had finished with the preparations. He stood before the boxes. Smiling, he reached out and opened the one in the center, the one that cast two shadows. Light from within the box bathed him in its brilliance at first, but then in a flash of power, the magic of the box swirled about him and snuffed out his life. He had chosen wrong; he forfeited his life to the magic he sought to claim.

  She saw the Mother Confessor with a man. A man she loved. She felt her happiness. It was a joy the woman had never experienced before. Margaret's heart swelled with the bliss the Mother Confessor felt at the side of this man. It was a vision of what was happening at this very moment.

  And then Margaret's mind swept forward in a swirl. She saw war and death sweep across the land. She saw death brought by the Keeper of the underworld. Death brought to the world of the living with a wicked lust that choked her with terror.

  Again the Prophecy swept her forward to a great crowd. At the center was the Mother Confessor, standing on a heavy platform. The people were excited and in a celebratory mood.

  This was the joyous event that would bring the fork of the Prophecy, one of the forks that must be passed correctly to save the world from the darkness snatching at it. She was caught up in the festive mood of the crowd. She felt a tingle of expectant hope, wondering if the man the Mother Confessor loved was to be the one she was to wed, and if that was the happy event the Prophecy spoke of that would bring joy to the people. Her heart ached that it was so.

  But something wasn't right. Margaret's warm delight cooled until her flesh prickled with icy bumps.

  With a wave of worry, Margaret saw that the Mother Confessor's hands were bound, and there next to her stood a man, not the man she loved, but a man in a black hood. He held a great axe. Margaret's worry turned to horror.

  A hand forced the Mother Confessor to kneel. A fist in her hair laid her face to the block. Her hair was short now, not long as it had been before, but it was the same woman. Tears seeped from the Mother Confessor's closed eyes. Her white dress shimmered in the bright sunlight. Margaret couldn't breathe.

  The great crescent axe rose into the air. It flashed through the sunlight, thunking solidly into the block. Margaret gasped. The Mother's Confessor's head dropped into the basket. The crowd cheered.

  Blood gushed and spread down the dress as the headless, lifeless corpse collapsed to the wooden floor. A pool of bright blood spread under the body, turning the white dress red. So much blood. The crowd roared with elation.

  A wail of horror escaped Margaret's throat. She thought she might vomit. Nathan caught her as she fell forward, crying and sobbing. He held her to him as a father would a frightened child.

  "Ah, Nathan, is that the event that will bring joy to the people? Is this what must happen if the world of the living is to be saved?"

  "It is," he said softly. "Almost every Prophecy down this true branch is a fork. If the world of the living is to be saved from the Keeper of the underworld, then every event must take the correct branch. In this Prophecy, the people must rejoice at seeing the Mother Confessor die, for down the other fork lies the eternal darkness of the underworld. I don't know why it is so."

  Margaret sobbed into his robes as his strong arms held her tight against him. "Oh dear Creator," she cried, "take mercy on your poor child. Give her strength."

  "There is no mercy when fighting the Keeper."

  "Ah, Nathan, I have read Prophecies of people dying, but it was only words. To see it as real has wounded my soul."

  He patted her back as he held her. "I know. How well I know."

  Margaret pushed herself up, wiping tears from her face. "This is the true Prophecy that lies beyond the one that forked today?"

  "It is."

  "And this is the way they are meant to be seen?"

  "It is so. This is the way they come to me. I have shown you the way I see them. The words, too, come with the Prophecy, and those are what are to be written down, so those not meant to see the Prophecies will not see them as they truly are, but those who are meant to will see them when they read the words. I have never before shown anyone a Prophecy."

  "Then, why have you shown me?"

  He gave her a sad look. "Margaret, we are in a battle with the Keeper. You are meant to know the danger we are in."

  "We are always in a battle with the Keeper."

  "I think, perhaps, this is different."

  "I must tell the others. I must tell them what you can show them. We must have your help to understand the Prophecies."

  "No. I will show no other what I have shown you. No matter the pain they would think to inflict upon me, I will not cooperate. I will never again do this for you, or another Sister."

  "But why not?"

  "You are not meant to see them. Only to read them."

  "But that can't be..."

  "It is meant to be, otherwise, your gift would work to unlock them. You are not meant to see them, just as you often tell me others with common minds are not meant to hear them."

  "But they could help us."

  "They would help you no more than the one I told that girl helped her, or the thousands who died. Just as you keep me a prisoner here, so others may not hear what they are not meant to hear, so I must keep all, but another Prophet, a prisoner of their ignorance. It is the will of He who has given the gift, and all else. Had He meant you to, He would have given you the key with your gift, but He has not."

  "Nathan, there are others who would hurt you until you revealed it to them."

  "I will not reveal it to them, no matter how much they hurt me. They will kill me before I do so." He tilted his head toward her. "And they won't try, unless you tell them."

  She stared at him, seeing him differently than she had ever seen him before. None before had ever been as devious as he. He was the only one they had never been able to trust. All the others had told the truth about their gift and its capabilities, but they knew Nathan lied, knew he was not telling them all he was able to do. She wondered at what he knew, what he was capable of.

  "I will go to my grave with what you have shown me, Nathan."

  He closed his eyes and nodded. "Thank you, child."

  There were other Sisters who would have hurt him for addressing a Sister so. She was not one of them. She stood and straightened her dress.

  "In the morning, I will tell those in the vaults of the Prophecy that has forked, and of the ones on the false and on the true branches. They will have to decipher them as best they can, with what the Creator has given them."

  "That is the way it is meant to be."

  She returned the ink, pen, and sand shaker to the desk drawer. "Nathan, why did you want the Prelate to come? I don't recall you
ever asking for her before."

  When she looked up, he was studying her with cool detachment.

  "That, too, Sister Margaret, is not for you to know. Do you wish to bring me pain, to attempt to make me tell you?"

  She picked up the book of Prophecy off the desk. "No, Nathan, I will not do that."

  "Then, will you deliver a message to the Prelate for me?"

  She nodded, sniffling back the tears that still burned at her eyes. "What would you have me tell her?"

  "Will you take this, too, to your grave, and tell no other but the Prelate?"

  "If you wish it, although I don't see why. You can trust the Sisters..."

  "No. Margaret, I want you to listen to me. When it is the Keeper you battle, you must not trust anyone. I am taking a dangerous chance in trusting you, and the Prelate. Trust no one." His bunched eyebrows gave him a frightening look. "Only those you trust can betray you."

  "All right, Nathan. What is the message?"

  He peered intently at her. At last his words came in a whisper. "Tell her that the Pebble is in the pond."

  Margaret blinked at him. "What does that mean?"

  "You have been frightened enough, child. Don't tempt your endurance again."

  "Sister Margaret, Nathan," she said softly. "I am not 'child,' but Sister Margaret. Please treat me with the respect I am accorded."

  He smiled a small smile of indulgence. "Forgive me, Sister Margaret." Sometimes his eyes ran shivers up her spine. "One more thing, Sister Margaret."

  "What is it?"

  He reached out and brushed a tear from her cheek. "I don't really know of your death." She sighed inwardly with relief. "But I do know something else of importance pertaining to you. Of importance in the battle with the Keeper."

  "If it will help me to bring the Creator's light upon the world, then tell me."

  He seemed to draw himself inward, looking out at her as if from a great distance. "A time will come, soon, when you stumble upon something, and you will have need to know the answer to a question. I don't know the question, but when you have the need to find the answer, come to me, and that, I will know. This, too, you must tell no other."

 

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