Read Belladonna Online

Authors: Anne Bishop

Tags: #Magic, #Imaginary places, #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Fantasy Fiction; American, #Epic, #Dreams

Belladonna (22 page)

BOOK: Belladonna
8.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Michael stared at Sebastian. "I'm in a part of the world that's nowhere close to home. I know that. I can
feel
that. But you're saying that a mile down the road can pass between a couple of stones and end up within walking distance of a village I've stopped at once each season for the past ten years?"

"That's what I'm saying."

He'd met some crazy people in his travels, but he'd swear by the Light that Sebastian wasn't one of them. Which meant he could be back in Elandar, no more than a long day's walk from Dunberry. Not that he'd go to Dunberry. Not anymore. But...

"If I make that choice, I won't find Caitlin Marie, will I?" Michael asked.

"Probably not."

And I'll never find Belladonna.
An unshakable certainty rang through him. If he didn't make this journey, he would never find the woman who haunted his dreams.

"We'll go on to Sanctuary."

Sebastian nodded. "Best clear your mind of everything but the thought that you need to cross over to Aurora."

"Teaser said these stationary bridges only go to specific places, so you can be certain of where you end up when you cross one of them."

"Nothing is that certain in Ephemera," Sebastian replied. He tapped the demon cycle on its shoulder. "We're crossing over to Aurora."

"Do we need to hum a particular tune?" Michael asked.

The demon cycles jerked to a stop, and they and Sebastian looked at him with the same quizzical expression.

"I had to hum a note when passing between the Sentinel Stones in order to get from the Merry Makers' bog to the Den,"

Michael mumbled, feeling his face heat as Sebastian continued to stare at him, "So I just wondered."

"That spot between the Merry Makers' landscapes and the Den is a border, not a boundary," Sebastian said.

Michael's only response was a lift of his shoulders to indicate the explanation lacked any useful information.

"A boundary requires a bridge," Sebastian continued blandly. "A border is a place where two landscapes connect without need of a bridge. They're usually marked with stones just to make it easier to find the spot."

"So what was the humming all about?"

Sebastian shrugged. "They might have had a reason for you to do it, but it had nothing to do with reaching the Den."

"That ripe —" Michael caught himself and considered the wisdom of roundly cursing one demon in the presence of another, larger demon. That he was riding. Not to mention that the man escorting him was at least part demon. "As you say, there was probably a reason."

"Indeed."

He could hear the laughter in Sebastian's voice, Fine. Grand. Let the ripe bastard laugh at him. Wouldn't be the first time someone had laughed at him.

"Aurora," Sebastian said to the demon cycles,

Aurora,
Michael chanted silently.
Aurora. We need to reach

Sebastian and the demon cycle passed between the stones and vanished right before his eyes.

"Lady of Light!"

Even though he'd done this twice now himself, seeing someone else disappear was more frightening somehow. If he'd had time, he would have jumped off the demon cycle, but they were passing between the stones before his brain could tell his body what to do.

Then ...

"Arrgh!"

Michael ducked his head and closed his eyes against the sudden daylight. When he could see again, he looked around — and swallowed hard.

They weren't in the same place anymore. Close enough by the feel of the land that, if he'd been walking a circuit back home, he might have considered the distance between the two places as a reasonable bit of travel. But nothing was reasonable in this part of the world, and it finally started to sink into his heart and brain that he was a lot farther from home than could be measured by something as simple as distance.

"Does that still lead to the Den?" Michael asked, tipping his head to indicate the straight lane.

Sebastian shook his head. "Follow the lane from this side and it will take you to the road that goes to the neighboring village, which can be reached without using a bridge. When the Landscaper initially altered the landscapes a few weeks ago, there was a border between Aurora and the Den. A bit unusual since one is a daylight landscape and the other is dark. But it turned out a border was a little too easy to cross, so a bridge was put in to keep the mothers in Aurora from worrying overmuch that their sons

— or, worse, their daughters — would be slipping over to the Den."

"But some still do."

"Some do."

"If that's a stationary bridge, why can't all of them go to the Den?"

Sebastian smiled. "Even with a stationary bridge, you have to resonate with the landscape in order to cross over."

He heard the message. "You're saying I resonate with the Den."

Sebastian tipped his head in acknowledgment. "Like I told you last night, no one comes to the Den by mistake. Shall we go?"

Michael didn't see the signal Sebastian gave the demon cycles, but as they neared a tidy cottage, the creatures swung to one side, keeping to the edge of the cleared property before heading into the woods. The cycles followed a footpath, the kind of shortcut that was made by friends and neighbors in order to reach each other's houses instead of taking the long way around. At a fork, they followed the part that curved to the right. When the path ended, Sebastian hesitated, then swung away from the house and grounds that must have been the usual destination in order to reach another path that ran through another patch of woods, The demon cycles finally stopped on the edge of a clearing with a pair of stones Michael was starting to recognize as a bridge.

"Whose house was that?" he asked.

Sebastian dismounted and walked toward the stones, leaving Michael little choice but to follow.

"My aunt's," Sebastian replied. "My cousin Lee has a cottage nearby."

Probably reached from the left-hand fork in the path. "And your cottage is the one near the bridge between Aurora and the Den." When Sebastian nodded, Michael felt a pang in his heart. Family living in the same village, their homes connected by well-used paths in the woods. Distant enough for privacy, close enough for comfort. And not together out of need or duty, but because they enjoyed each other's company. What would it be like to live that way instead of following a pattern of rootless wandering?

"That's a resonating bridge," Sebastian said, pointing to the space between the stones. "Keep your mind focused on why you want to reach Sanctuary, and you should get there."

Michael stopped adjusting the straps of the travel pack Sebastian had loaned him. "Should?"

"A resonating bridge can take you to any landscape that resonates with your heart."

"I suppose that's a comfort," Michael said, eyeing the stones.

"Is it? Do you know every facet of your heart, Magician?"

Michael shivered, suddenly comprehending the magnitude of what he was about to do and how many things could go wrong.

The Heart of the Bog stepped closer. "You are worthy of what you seek, Magician. Remember that." It tapped Michael's chest
above his heart. "In here!"

The memory steadied him, even though he wasn't sure why it should. "All right. I'm ready."

"On you go, then."

Michael waited a beat. "You're not coming?"

Sebastian shook his head. "You have to find Sanctuary on your own. When you cross over, you'll see a large building nearby.

That's a guest house. Someone there will be able to help you take the next step."

Michael held out his hand. "Thank you for all you've done. And for the loan of the pack. I'll get it back to you."
Somehow.

"It's a kindness," Sebastian replied as he shook Michael's hand. Then he stepped back. "Travel lightly."

"How do you know the Traveler's Blessing?" Michael asked, startled.

"It's called Heart's Blessing in this part of the world," Sebastian replied. Then he smiled. "There's hope for you yet, Magician."

Hope.
Heart's hope lies within Belladonna. I need to find Belladonna.

Taking a deep breath and blowing it out slowly, Michael walked between the stones.

Sebastian stared at the empty space between the stones. "Guardians of the Light and Guides of the Heart, if he is who I think he is, keep him safe on this journey."

Turning away from the stones, he walked back to the demon cycles. "I'm going to visit my auntie, so you two should go back to the Den."

He could almost feel the friction caused by bits of demon cycle brain rubbing together to spark a thought.

"Cottage?" one of them finally said.

"Lynnea's still at the cottage."

They left him without a second thought, zooming through the woods at reckless speed in order to get to the cottage.

Sebastian set off at a leisurely pace, enjoying the quiet of a crisp autumn morning as he followed the almost-hidden path that would take him back to his aunt Nadia's house.

He just hoped Lynnea wouldn't be annoyed at him for the unexpected company. And he hoped Dalton, who had been a guard captain in Wizard City and was now working as a law enforcer in Aurora, wouldn't have a reason to cross over to the Den and inquire about the whereabouts of missing livestock since they both knew that if the demon cycles were responsible, missing livestock, translated to thoroughly eaten livestock — although the farmer did find a hoof and the end bit of a tail the last time Dalton had felt the need to come calling. And the three demon cycles that had given him, Lynnea, and Teaser a ride to Nadia's house on that particular occasion had rattled for days, sounding too much like bones and hooves being shaken in a metal barrel.

Not that he'd mentioned that detail to Dalton. When a man was the Den's Justice Maker, as well as being an incubus and wizard, he had a more flexible definition of law enforcement than the men who performed similar duties in the daylight landscapes.

Reaching Nadia's house, he gave the back door a perfunctory knock before he opened the door and stuck his head in the kitchen. "Anyone flying around in here?"

No one flying, but the stranger standing near the kitchen table spun around and dropped the cup and saucer she'd been holding.

"Who are you?" the young woman said in a shrill voice. She darted around the table to put it between them. "What do you want here?"

Sebastian was in the kitchen with his right hand halfway raised to call the wizards lightning when Nadia rushed into the room.

"Caitlin, darling, what's the — Oh." Nadia stopped, then brushed her hair back with one hand. "Sebastian. I didn't hear you come in. Caitlin, it's all right. Sebastian is my nephew."

Caitlin.

Sebastian lowered his hand and took in the young woman's details. A little younger than Lynnea, but the same height and general size. Same color hair but straight instead of wavy — and very short. No one would mistake one face for the other, but seen from the back, he could understand Michael's error.

Oh, Guardians and Guides.

He walked out of the kitchen and ended up in front of a flower bed that still had some late-blooming plants. He just stared at them, even when Nadia caught up to him.

"Sebastian." She sounded harried and a little breathless, and he wondered what sort of emotional mess he'd left behind in the kitchen. "What is going on?"

"That's Caitlin Marie, isn't it?" he said, keeping his eyes fixed on the plants rather than looking at his aunt. "Her hair is so short because she cut it off. That was the tail of long hair we found a few days ago."

"Yes. Lee found her in the bonelovers' landscape. She had altered the landscape enough to create a protective circle that kept the bonelovers from reaching her, but that's all she knew how to do. And even that was instinctive rather than a true understanding of what she was doing. She held on and held up until Lee brought her here. Once she truly believed she was safe, she ... fell apart.

Just as well that she did it here where my will dominates, so she's not manifesting."

"I didn't talk to Jeb directly when he came to deliver Lee's message," Sebastian said. "He met up with Teaser near the edge of the Den and said Lee had gotten back safe and sound. I don't think Jeb mentioned the girl, Caitlin."

Nadia drew in a deep breath, then blew it out in a huff as she frowned at Sebastian. "Then how did you know who she was?"

"I just saw her brother Michael off on the next stage of his journey. He's heading for Sanctuary, so he crossed over the resonating bridge near here. He's searching for his sister — and Belladonna." He finally looked at his aunt. "I almost brought him here. I figured you would be up by now, so I almost brought him to the house so you could see him, talk to him. If I had, he would have found his sister, and maybe he would have chosen not to go on to Sanctuary."

"He wouldn't have needed to. Lee intends to drop in on Glorianna to tell her about Caitlin and ask her to come here to meet the girl as soon as she can." Nadia paused. "Why didn't you go up with him? If a stranger shows up asking to see Belladonna, no one at Sanctuary will tell him anything or ask her to leave her island. He'll have made the journey for nothing."

"He'll be able to see her," Sebastian said, turning back to stare at the flowers since that was easier than facing his aunt. "If he's worthy."

She gasped. "Oh, Sebastian. You sent him there to be tested by the river?" When he nodded, she put a hand on his arm, a silent command to look at her. "Why?"

BOOK: Belladonna
8.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Fool Me Twice by Meredith Duran
Show and Tell by Jasmine Haynes
Amerika by Franz Kafka
A Single Man by Isherwood, Christopher
One and Only by Bianca D'Arc
Hot Point by M. L. Buchman
Yoda by Sean Stewart
Whispers in the Sand by Barbara Erskine
Broken Chord by Margaret Moore