City of Light (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy) (18 page)

BOOK: City of Light (The Traveler's Gate Trilogy)
4.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Simon cleared his throat. “No, thanks. That’ll be fine.”

“Then if we’re all done with questions?” She looked around the room, meeting the eyes of Indirial, Simon, Feiora, and Eugan. They all nodded at her gaze, even the raven.

“Go quickly, and return safely,” Leah said. Simon flipped up his hood, and Indirial did the same.

The door swung open for a brief moment. From the outside, it might have looked like happenstance, maybe a gust of wind. Anyone who didn’t look directly at it might have missed the motion entirely, at least until they heard the door shut.

During the half-second in which the door was open, two Valinhall Travelers, one raven, and a glassy Lirial crystal the size of a marble passed through without a sound. An observant watcher may have noticed a flicker of shadow, a wink of reflected light.

Then the door slid softly shut.

C
HAPTER
T
EN
:

S
TORIES
IN
THE
C
ITY

Alin wrenched open the violently purple door and glanced inside. One of the native inhabitants of the Violet District stood within, on top of a wooden table. It looked like a giant ball of fuzz, as though someone had rolled up a bundle of wool, dyed it violet, and given it stick-thin arms and legs. A pair of clear, comically large eyes bulged from its head.

The furry creature was holding a dinner plate over its head, its spindly arms stretched high. It looked like it had climbed up on top of its table for greatest height, so that it could smash the plate on the ground.

It gave Alin a wide, bright smile. “Traveler! It disturbs me to see you, but I will smile as though I am pleased! I hope you have a pleasant day, as long as I am not in it! Please, leave me to my own business!”

It said all that in a chipper voice with a pleasant smile. Alin cast a brief cloud of Silver Light inside, found that the purple fuzz-ball was the home’s only occupant, and pulled the door shut. He wouldn’t have understood before, but now the Violet was a part of him. Honesty at all times, that was the Violet way, even at the cost of compassion, mercy, or understanding.

Behind him, through the closed door, he heard something shatter. As though a plate had crashed to pieces on the ground.

Rhalia’s Gate still drifted beside him, keeping pace with his shoulder. He could have let it close and open it again, but the nature of Elysia was such that it preferred to open only once a day. When he could respect the rules, he would.

“Are you sure it was in the Violet District?” Rhalia asked.

Alin shook his head, letting Violet honesty have the reins. “I can’t be sure. It might even have been my imagination, but I thought I had glimpsed something with the Silver Light. Just for a second. It’s either here or in the Blue District.”

Rhalia hovered in Elysia, her legs crossed under her, sitting three feet above the ground. She swept a lock of golden hair behind her ear. “It’s worth looking into, then, sure. But please, try not to antagonize the people.”

She’s right,
said the Rose Light.
We don’t want to scare anyone.

“I’m not antagonizing them, I’m conducting an inspection. They will accept it, as they were ordered.” While Alin walked, the Enosh citizens to either side of the street bowed at the waist when he passed. He paid that no more attention than to the stones at his feet, which transformed when he walked by. Each cobblestone on which he stepped turned from a shade of purple or violet to bright white, as if his footprints were soaking them in paint.

Both the respect of the people and the transformation of the city were not unusual, to be noted or commented upon. They were natural reactions to the Incarnation of Elysia, and he accepted them as such.

Rhalia sat cross-legged in the air above Elysia, her hands resting in her lap. Her gold eyes were far away. “Alin,” she said distantly, “can I tell you a story?”

You would be wise to listen,
the Silver Light told him.

We have the time,
the Green said.

But I don’t want to hear it,
Alin thought. None of the powers of Elysia liked that very much, so he relented.

“Of course,” he said. The Rose Light was not pleased with his tone.

Rhalia let out a slow, even breath. “When I was a girl, the Elysian Travelers were in charge. They supervised all the other Territories, and whenever an Incarnation broke through into our world, they were the ones to take care of it.”

Alin pulled open another violet door, revealing a woman sitting in a chair, holding a dripping shirt above a wooden tub. Her eyes went wide as she saw him, and her head jerked as though she were stopping herself from looking for a way out.

He shook his head at the foolish fears of humans, shut the door, and moved on.

“Back then, there were two ways to become a Traveler of Elysia,” Rhalia continued. “You could be trained to do it, if you met the compatibility tests. Or, sometimes, you were born to it. That was very rare; I was the first in a hundred years to call power from Elysia without any training at all.”

Only one hundred years?
The Silver Light wondered.
Then why did it take over three centuries for the next natural Elysian Traveler to show up? Was it a bad run of luck, or did something change?

Alin cast a flicker of silver light in through an open window, found no one inside the house, and kept walking.

“The Master Travelers trained me quickly. Too quickly, some said, but they agreed that my nature would bend me toward virtue and keep me from corruption.” Sadly, she shook her head. “You’d think I would have done better, but it seems that some lessons you do have to learn twice.”

She thinks you were a failure,
the Violet Light whispered, but he managed to ignore it.

The next house he didn’t have to check; he could sense two more Elysian creatures inside. Not only would they have warned him if any intruders had violated their home, they would probably ask him to leave if he stuck his head in. So he didn’t bother.

“It was a time of great change,” Rhalia said, still staring off into the distance. “Discord and dissent grew into a war. One by one, the other Elysian Travelers died. Until, at last, I was the only one left.”

Rose-pink compassion swelled up in him, and he had to speak. “I can’t even imagine how hard that must have been.”

Rhalia twirled in place, gently, which was the first time Alin had seen her do so all day. Normally she spun and danced and whirled around in midair all the time, until it made him dizzy. Maybe she was focusing too much on her bitter memories.

“It…wasn’t so bad,” she said. “I had a sister, you see. Cynara.”

At that, Alin had to shove down some bitter memories of his own. He had practically been raised by his three sisters.

And how did you repay them?
the Orange Light asked.
You abandoned them, so two of them died. At least Ilana is safe.

She’s safe, but you’re not doing your job,
the Red Light barked.
You picked the lazy option, letting someone else take care of her. That should be your responsibility.

You’re afraid you can’t do it,
the Violet Light whispered.

And Alin shoved all of that down, floating on a cushion of pink comfort and green patience until he had his emotions under control once again.

“She wasn’t a Traveler,” Rhalia continued. “Not at first. She was a fighter, a mine-worker, and a leader. She had an amazing sense of justice.” Rhalia shook her head. “It wasn’t something I could appreciate until I had spent enough time in Elysia, but she never let a wrong pass when she could right it. She never saw someone hurting without trying to help them. She would have made a wonderful Naraka Traveler.”

For the next two houses, Alin levitated their locks out of the way using Orange Light on the inside. He pushed Silver Light through the doors, frightening two human families, but finding no trace of anyone who didn’t belong. Had he been mistaken after all?

The Green and the Red both told him to have patience, to keep working. He would know whether or not he was wrong after he finished searching.

Rhalia bobbed up and down in midair, sounding thoughtful. “I’ve often wondered if my sister would have done a better job in my place. She probably would have. I couldn’t handle being the only Elysian Traveler, you see. It was my responsibility to lead the Travelers, to banish every Incarnation, to save everyone…and I couldn’t do it. Often I failed, and the blame fell on me.”

Her voice held the faint echo of pain, and once again the Rose Light begged him to make it better.

This is her wound,
Alin and the Silver said at once.
I can’t share it.

“I drew more and more power,” Rhalia said softly. “Even when I wasn’t ready for it.”

The remark stung. She had clearly directed that at him, and she wasn’t being subtle about it.
She did try to warn you,
the Violet Light pointed out.
If only you had listened—

Alin shut off its voice and shoved Silver Light in a broad sweep down the street. It wasn’t nearly as accurate or detailed as if he had pinpointed a single house at a time, but he saw no silhouettes of a man holding a sword against a child’s neck, felt no flares of pain or panic. It seemed, at first glance, that everything in the Violet District was as it should be.

“It finally occurred to me why I was having such problems,” Rhalia said. She had stopped sitting in midair and started drifting back and forth, from one side of the Gate to the other, like a pacing ghost. “It was because no one was in charge! There was all this chaos…and I was sure it was up to me to impose order. I stopped banishing the Incarnations.”

Now she had his full attention. He stopped walking, and mentally ordered the Gate to swing around so that he could face her head-on. “What did you do with them?” he asked.

She met his shifting eyes with her golden ones. “I bound them to serve me, each according to its nature.”

Where did she get the power?
Alin wondered.

The Silver and Violet Light both laughed.
You know the answer,
they said.

“You became an Incarnation,” he said, and as soon as the words left his mouth he knew them for truth.

“My sister begged me not to,” she said softly.
 

“But…” Alin struggled to form his thoughts into coherent words. “I am Elysia, now. I thought a Territory could have only one Incarnation at a time.”

Rhalia smiled a little. “And so it does. With time back in my Territory, my status as Incarnation faded away. Now I am no longer Incarnation nor Traveler, but something…more limited.”

Alin imagined himself in her position. Letting his power fade away, becoming a shadow of what he was now? He’d rather die.

“I see,” he said, to keep the conversation on track. “What were you saying about your sister?”

“She tried to stop me with words, and even with force, but I was beyond her then. She gathered up others to oppose me, and they followed her. But I would not listen to reason.” She took a deep breath. “When I was at last out of control, Cynara searched for darker weapons to bring a stop to my rampage.”

“Did she?” Alin asked.

“After years of searching she found them in an old Territory. A place that we of Elysia had forbidden years before, on the grounds that it was too dangerous. The Crimson Vault.”

Alin’s hand automatically jerked toward his pants pocket, beneath his armor, where he kept the Seed of the Hanging Tree. Its power burned him, every day, begging to be used, pulsing in opposition to the light of Elysia, but he kept it with him. If someone stole it, they could use it as a weapon against him.

Especially if it made it into Leah’s hands. Leah, or one of her family…

“Are you one of Leah’s ancestors?” Alin asked.

Rhalia frowned. “Leah?”

Oh, right. She’s never met Leah.
“One of the Damascan royal family. She’s a Ragnarus Traveler.”

Rhalia spread her hands and shrugged. “As you would imagine, I haven’t kept up with this world since I sealed myself in the City. But I do know that my sister made some sort of bargain with the Founder of her Territory.”

Founder?
Alin wondered, but Rhalia kept talking.

“One result of that bargain was the Hanging Trees, which can seal Incarnations at the cost of blood. But I heard rumors that Cynara may have also bound the Territory to her own bloodline. If that’s true, then yes, I would be distantly related to Leah.”

Alin stood at the center of the Violet District. The people in the streets hurried away from him, afraid of meeting his gaze, and the purple cobblestones steadily bleached themselves as he stood still. Thoughts whirled in his head; Rhalia’s story blended with his own. She had made some mistakes, and he had to make sure he didn’t repeat them.

“So your sister betrayed you,” Alin said at last. The Orange Light agreed with him.

Rhalia smiled a little and drifted through a circle in midair. “She fought me in the streets of Cana. We were evenly matched for a while, but I knew she couldn’t pay Ragnarus’ costs forever. I was content to wait. And then she planted one of those Hanging Trees.”

Alin almost shuddered, thinking of the bloody, carnivorous trees that had feasted on the sleeping Incarnations for centuries. He
would
have shuddered, except that he was beyond such petty reactions.

“I knew that the Trees meant living death,” Rhalia continued. “So I opened a Gate to Elysia and bound myself inside.”

His mind violently rejected the idea. Elysia called to him, it sang to him silently every day, begging him to step through a Gate and rejoin his Territory once and for all. But he knew what it would mean for him. He could feel it. Once he returned to the City of Light, he would become a part of its fabric, never to leave again.

Just like Rhalia.

“I thought I was getting the best of Cynara,” Rhalia said. “She had given her life to her Ragnarus weapons, and all I’d sacrificed was my freedom. I had planned to wait until the next natural Elysian Traveler came along, and train them to take my place.”

Other books

Pleasure Bound by Opal Carew
This Life: A Novel by Maryann Reid
Signs of You by Emily France
Ride Me Away by Jamie Fuchs
Of Time and Memory by Don J. Snyder
Empire of Bones by Christian Warren Freed
Who Built the Moon? by Knight, Christopher, Butler, Alan