A bald man can never claim to want anyone out of his hair, but Dem certainly wanted them out of his shop and life and as quickly as possible. If they hadn’t stumbled into his shop by mistake, then they were terribly misinformed about D’Marei’s desire to help them or anyone. And yet he could not drive them away. They seemed impervious to direct orders, oblivious to rudeness, and unfazed by the profound shadows with which Dem typically surrounded himself. What did they want, then?
The old rummy said they possessed the remnants of an elixir they wished to have reproduced. D’Marei was not interested. Then the rummy poured a drop onto the countertop—a single drop—and it positively crackled with an energy he was certain only he could perceive. And yet, the strangers, this chorus of cretins, at least knew the elixir’s purpose, while Dem did not. It was an aggravating circumstance, but he played it cool and feigned only mild interest. The rummy announced that he and his pals wanted barrels of the stuff, a demand that nearly made the alchemist choke on his own bile. The only payment they offered was D’Marei’s right to keep the recipe. He was about to dismiss the fools when the rummy slapped his hand over the drop and made as if to wipe it away. Still, D’Marei would not budge. The old man then claimed the elixir was Vykers’ favorite beverage. In anyone else’s mouth, he’d have called it a lie, but Dem saw not a trace of deceit or conspiracy on the stupid faces before him, and the coincidence was too uncanny to be ignored. Dem assented. What else could he do? And so, his visitors allowed him to examine the drop of elixir and perform whatever experiments he wished in order to determine its worthiness. It was, in Dem’s private estimation, the most magnificent stuff he’d ever encountered. Where had they found it? The idiot Shaper said something about finding it in the bottom of a deep hole, which, upon reflection, was about as reasonable an answer as Dem was likely to get.
He agreed to try and replicate the stuff. In fact, he could not wait to begin the attempt. The rummy handed over the remaining elixir. If he was a little too eager in ushering his new clients out the door, he was as generous with his assurances of success as he could be.
For the next week, he worked day and night on the issue and was frustratingly unable to determine the elixir’s ingredients. Then, in a moment of inspiration, he decided to create a solvent that would break anything it touched down to its core components. Once he achieved this, he studied each and realized that many were unknown to him and, thus, mankind in general. But he was not without recourse. Long ago, he’d stumbled across an enzyme that produced more of anything that was mixed into it. Oh, it was not an instantaneous process; the enzyme required complete darkness and a very particular temperature in which to work. Nevertheless, in a short time, he had his first batch of the strangers’ elixir, which he tested on cockroaches, mice, birds, rabbits and, finally, himself. He was giddy as a love-struck milkmaid for days. Indeed, he’d never been so happy in all his life. This stuff, this magic elixir, imparted euphoria without any of the drawbacks of liquor, Wildside mushrooms or other suchlike indulgences. But he understood that his judgement had been impaired whilst under the elixir’s influence, so he needed to test it on someone else.
Trinta.
She was more than skeptical when he showed up unannounced and uninvited at her shop one evening, and her unease only grew when, after a bit of small talk, he offered her a taste of his newest liquor, as he called it. Of course, he had to imbibe some first, in order to prove he was not here to poison his old paramour, but he gave Trinta a much larger helping and, in no time, she was dancing about the room and singing at the top of her lungs like a madwoman. She professed her enduring love for him, wished to have his baby and more. It made him laugh to see her in such a state, but no harm was done on either side, and D’Marei returned to his haunt contented.
He wondered, though, if it was possible to overdose on his newest discovery. Thus, he set about testing it on the neighborhood’s street folk, until he determined the answer to be no. Without exception, his subjects fell asleep long before any ill effects could present themselves.
Now, now he had the tool he’d been seeking to penetrate Cindor’s defenses. His brother’s body had continued to regenerate, to grow, and it needed water and nourishment to continue its development. D’Marei introduced the elixir into Cindor’s water, little by little, day by day, until he was able to get the bastard to swallow a massive dose of the stuff. At last, Dem was able to tap into his brother’s skull without eliciting the slightest peep from his subject. Cindor never flinched when Dem drilled a hole into his head, nor did he seem the least perturbed when the alchemist inserted Melyrian tubes into that same hole. Dem felt a giddiness that had little to do with the elixir.
There is a fluid that surrounds the brain, which, if exposed to the right reagents, can leach the very thoughts and memories from that brain. That fluid, then, consumed by a second person, imparts those same thoughts and memories into the new host’s brain. Once Dem had extracted all the fluid his brother had to offer, he held it up in a rare glass beaker, before the nearest candle. The fluid was slightly pink from Cindor’s blood, no doubt, and there were small bits of matter floating within it. If he thought too much on that nature of the stuff, Dem knew he might never drink it, and so, without another second’s thought, he downed the whole beaker in one massive gulp.
At first, he felt nothing. He looked down at his brother and could see that finally and in truth, he was dying. But as his former thoughts began to flood into D’Marei’s brain, he could not have cared less. Now he knew how to Shape! He could make fire with a thought. He could Jump. Now he knew how to enter the castle without springing its countless magical traps. He knew what made the Dead ’Un so unique. He understood that Cindor had never hated but feared him. He knew all of Cindor’s sexual proclivities. He knew, too, that Tarmun Vykers was much, much older than anyone had ever suspected. He knew the Queen’s true identity. The flood of knowledge was as intoxicating in its way as his strange new elixir. He was learning so many wonderful, amazing secrets. Yet there were horrors, too—things of which he wished he’d remained blissfully unaware…
Such as the fact that the world was coming to an end within his own lifetime.
The Mist Beyond the Circle
By Martin Owton
The smoke was the first sign we had; the smell of woodsmoke on the evening breeze. We left the carts of turf then and ran. The settlement was two miles away, hidden in a fold of the hills. Evening was deepening into night as we reached the drystone wall of the home field. Beyond it, the embers still glowed where the big barn had been fired. Two of the cottages were smoking rubble heaps, two others still stood roofless, the thatch of the remaining one was scorched where the fire had failed to take hold. The stockade which had held the livestock was empty, and the body of Anya’s mother Mairead lay before the gate, her blood staining the trampled earth.
We ran through the settlement calling for our loved ones, numbly, blindly, unable to accept the evidence before us. No voices answered though we cried out as loud as we could before we fell to weeping, the ten of us together, except for Aron. He stood apart taking in the scene then strode to the one intact cottage, which he had shared with Tomas and Tomas’s wife Nieve. He returned with two lanterns which he lit with the flint from the pouch he always carried and handed one of them to Tomas.
“Everyone into the cottage, there’s nothing to be done out here,” Aron said softly, but with an authority it did not occur to me to question. Nodding to Nieve, he said. “Get some food, we’re going to need it.” Taking the other lantern, he walked off into the dusk in the direction of the ruined barn.
We silently trooped into the cottage and packed into the main room, sitting where we could. Nieve roused the hearth fire which still smouldered in the grate and swung the cauldron over the heat. No-one spoke except Niall; he continued to bawl pitifully even though the rest of us were past tears. I felt they were all looking to me for leadership. After all, I had brought this collection of younger sons with no hope o
f inheriting land back here, to the fields and woods of our childhood. I had begged the tenancy of the farm, derelict for years since the civil war, from the Earl, and supervised the rebuilding. But I felt paralysed by the loss of Anya, unable to think of anything but my pain.
Aron returned with a large oilcloth bag in his arms; there was a powerful smell of the midden as he placed the bag beside the door. “More than a few of them, mounted. They drove the stock off north-west.”
“Into the wildlands,” I said. “But why? Who are they?”
“I would guess they’re headed for one of the passes through the mountains. That means they’re making for Keshan on the coast; there’s a market there for slaves as well as stock. Keshan’s been a pirates’ nest for generations, too tough a nut for anything less than the High King’s army. It’s the natural home for all the bandits and cut-throats in the west. I would guess they’ve been watching us for the last few days, did no-one see anything?” asked Aron evenly. There was a general shaking of heads. I’d heard of Keshan, but I hadn’t realised we were close enough to be in peril. I wondered if the Earl had known when he granted us the land. I supposed he must have; we were the remotest of his holdings, the nearest to the wildlands.
“What about the Earl and his men?” asked Tomas.
“Too far away,” said Aron, his face grim. “Two days to his castle on foot, half a day’s ride back. They’ll be in the mountains by then,”
“We’ll never catch them then.” The despairing voice was Niall’s. His wife Caitlin had given birth to their firstborn two moons ago, and she had stayed at the settlement while we had gone to get the turf in. “I’ll never see them again.”
“Not so, man. Think about it,” said Aron. “They have stock to drive and prisoners to ward. You’ve driven stock before, what distance can you make through the wildlands at night without scattering your profit from here to the river? No, they’ll make camp to feast and drink. The cider stock is gone, that’s our guarantee they’ll not be riding through the night.”
“How do we track them in the dark? We’ve no dogs, we’ve nothing to fight them with if we did find them, and the nearest help is too far away to be of use,” said Tomas, practical as ever even in the face of this crisis.
“Wrong again.” Aron picked up the reeking bag, untied the drawstring around its mouth and gently drew forth its contents. A dozen or more standard army issue short swords lay on the beaten earth floor; each in a dark leather scabbard as long as my shin, protected from the moisture by a layer of grease. One was longer, its scabbard chased with silver.
“Where did those come from?” asked Tomas staring at Aron in surprise.
“From a past I thought I’d left behind,” Aron said and picked up the longer sword. His dark eyes and the silver threads in his hair gleamed in the lantern light; he and the sword seemed well matched. “I’d hoped I wouldn’t need this. Pass them out, Padraig.”
“We still have to find them,” I said reaching for a hilt.
“That indeed is more difficult, but there is some hope. Nieve, boil a kettle of water please,” Aron said and stepped through the doorway to the sleeping quarters.
I passed out the swords as Tomas searched for some rags to clean them. Everyone took one, even gentle Nieve, the tears in her eyes replaced by a look of cold determination as she cleaned the weapon.
Aron returned carrying a small leather pouch. He stepped around Nieve to look at the kettle. Lifting the lid, he poured the contents of the pouch into the heating water.
We sat in silence as the water boiled, each cleaning their sword and staring into the fire. My mind was paralysed as I rubbed at the blade, I could only think of Anya and what she might be suffering. I supposed everyone’s thoughts ran the same way. Aron took the boiling broth and filled nine mugs, which he passed around.
“Wait a while so it will not scald you, then drink it all and all of you together.”
I brought the mug towards my lips. The brew smelled like hot pond water or worse.
“Not yet,” Aron said sharply. “Wait till I give the word then drink it all, every last drop.” He bent to add more turf to the fire, building it up as if for a long evening.
“What’s in this?” asked Tomas cautiously.
“Dried mushrooms of a kind that grow on the open heathlands of the south. They open the doors of sight to those that have the gift.”
“And what good will that do us?” Niall said sharply. His voice sounded close to breaking.
“I don’t know, but it is all the hope I can give,” said Aron, ignoring the tone of Niall’s question. “Drink now and keep it all down.”
As I lifted the warm mug to my lips the smell of the brew made me gag. I took a deep breath and opened my throat to the disgusting fluid. My stomach rebelled, and I nearly refilled my mug. By an act of will, I swallowed and clamped my jaws shut. The stuff was worse than any of the herbs my grandmother had ever dosed me with as a child. Across the room, Aiofe staggered to her feet and ran for the doorway, her hand over her mouth. The others were in similar difficulties, and when I could sit up and look around, there was no-one who was not pale and sickly. Aron quickly passed a jug of clean water around, and we all rinsed the filthy taste from our mouths.
“Make yourselves comfortable and sit quiet now, it will take a while to work,” Aron said as Aoife returned shame-faced and tearful to sit beside Owain, her husband of less than a year.
I huddled down in a corner trying to force my mouth to forget the taste
“What do you suppose that was?” whispered Tomas, who was sat beside me. “I have never tasted worse in my life, and I have never seen Aron like this before. He has become a completely different man in the last hour.”
“He’s your cousin, you should know him if anyone should,” I replied.
“Second cousin. And I know less than you might think; I don’t even know how old he is. Older than me, but by how much? I never knew him as a child, he arrived for my grandfather’s funeral, and I just fell in with him. Obviously, he has fought and travelled, but who and where I don’t know. He rarely speaks of it, but I think he’s been to the Holy City. He had money aplenty, but I have never heard him mention a sweetheart. Other than I would say the rest of you know as much.”
I thought then about the Aron I knew. Quiet and competent with an inner calm and, though sorely tried by one thing or another, I had never seen him lose his temper. He was a good teacher of what he knew and an easily taught pupil. A staunch companion in the wild or the alehouse. It occurred to me that I had never once in the one and a half years he’d been at the settlement talked to him of things that he believed in or that mattered to him. It was while I thought about him that the ground seemed to fall away and, though I knew I sat on the packed earth, I felt a brief surge of vertigo. I lifted my head, and the room seemed to be growing misty at the edges. Abruptly Aron was before me, looking sharply into my eyes as if he could see the mist filling them.
“It begins,” he said softly and then louder. “Join hands, form the circle.”
Aron caught my right hand, Tomas my left, and the others joined likewise until the circle was complete.
“Listen now, clear your minds and join the chant.” With that, he began to chant in a low voice, words that had no resemblance to any language I had ever heard. He repeated the phrase endlessly and, not understanding, we all joined with him, filling the room with the sound. The mist grew thicker as we chanted, Aron’s grip seeming the only point of contact with the world.
“Find them now.” Aron’s voice came through above the chant. “Fill your mind with them. Reach out to them. This is your land. You are one with it. Send your spirit outwards and let the earth bring you to them.”
I tried to picture Anya as I had last seen her, half a lifetime ago, this morning. Her dark hair and blue eyes, her soft hands and voice, reaching out through the mist. I found something. Something touched me in the mist.
A woman’s voice spoke to me in my mind. “I have been
waiting for you, come with me.”
I left the room and the chant and stepped into the mist following the voice. Outside the room, the mist thinned, and I stood in the yard looking around. The familiar scene was lit by a directionless light that cast no shadows like midday on a cloudy day. I walked away from the cottage, and a figure clad in a bloody white smock walked towards me from the stockade where the gate still swung on its hinges.
“Take my hand.” The figure reached out one slim hand and looked me full in the face. Mairead. I felt fear then for I knew she was dead.
“The blood they have spilled and the fear they bring leaves a trail. The land itself burns under their passing. I will bring you to them. Hurry, we have a long way to go,” said Mairead.
We began to run, Mairead and I, down the track away from the farm. The country went past as if we were riding a tireless, galloping horse. We turned north into the wide unsettled lands that lay between the farm and the mountains. We were in country I knew well, every tree and rock was utterly familiar from childhood. Mairead still clutched my hand and drew me on as the land flew by. We came to a wide river and turned westward.
“Searching for a ford.” Mairead’s soft voice whispered.
A dark-wooded hill loomed ahead as we followed the riverbank, swift as swallows. A plume of smoke rose before the wood, and we made straight for it. The camp was inside a bend in the river. We slowed to walking pace as we approached. Large men, rough-haired and bearded, drank around a fire under a spitted sheep. We stood outside the circle. I counted ten warriors, then Mairead drew me away to where our prisoners lay in a small stand of trees. I looked for Anya and saw her huddled close to Caitlin who cradled her child desperately in her arms.
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