Grym Prophet (Song of the Aura, Book Three) (17 page)

BOOK: Grym Prophet (Song of the Aura, Book Three)
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A lone horseman raced in and out of the sandy hills, a billowing gray cloak flapping out behind him, a small mewling bundle clutched to his chest. His long felt cap whipped left and right as he galloped on. In seconds he was gone, and the desert was quiet once more.

 

A minute passed. Then two.

 

A darkness, blacker than the night, seeped out from between the dunes. A shriek broke out over the silence, long and high and horrible. The chase was on. Far ahead, the mysterious horseman kept riding, even with the dark presence behind him. His destination was close, and if he could only reach it in time… Ymeer was so close...

 

The shrieks behind him grew louder. His enemies were gaining on him.

 

This book...the prophet realized... It's the story of my life.

 

Chapter Thirteen: Blood Ties

 
 
 

Wanderwillow did not keep the other young Striders idle while Gribly was gone. After a brief telling of their tale- most of which he seemed to know or guess already- the Aura began to teach them. “There is much knowledge you each must have, and which has been kept from you by unhappy circumstance until now. I will try to explain a little more of your gifts to both of you, and to the young prophet when he returns.”

 

And indeed he did. It came as no surprise to Elia that one of the Aura would know all there was to know about Striding, and though some of his words shocked her, others confirmed what she had suspected all along, from experience and coincidence.

 

“There are three parts to the world of mortals- the world you call the Natural,” he asserted, his deep melodious voice somehow carrying his exact meaning to Elia's ears. She had a feeling that he could be talking in gibberish and she would still understand him perfectly- perhaps he even was...

 

“I've heard that the ancients said so,” Lauro interrupted. Elia wished he wouldn't, but he did, many times. “But does anyone still believe it anymore?”

 

“Whether or not they do,” chided the Aura, “It is most certainly
true.
Do you know what the parts are?”

 

“It was said...” Lauro squinted, trying to remember. Elia smiled; it all reminded her of learning her runes as a child. Class. They were taking a class. “Sea,” Lauro started.

 

“Good. And what else?”

 

“Sky.”

 

“Then...?”

 

“Stone. Sea, Sky, Stone. The three elements of the Natural World.”

 

“Indeed,” Wanderwillow confirmed. “Now, since you know so much, do you know what these parts have to do with the process that men and nymphs refer to as Striding?”

 

“N... no,” the prince admitted, frowning. Elia sympathized with him, no matter how he usually made her feel. The kindness in the Aura's voice made one want to please him at all costs, and failure seemed the most painful thing in the world.

 

“Elia? Know you the answer, my child?”

 

She gulped, blinked slowly, and nodded. “I... I think so. It has to do with what Karmidigan showed me in Mythigrad... about storms being part frost, part wave... doesn't it?”

 

The Aura smiled, and Elia's heart glowed inside her. “In a way,” he said.

 

She bit her lip, considering. “I think,” she finally began, “That Striding of any kind, Wave, Frost, Sand, Wood, is a gift the Creator has given us, men and nymphs both. The gift is the ability to change a small part of those bigger parts.”

 

“That makes no sense,” Lauro interrupted again.

 

“Think about it,” she responded. “What does a Wave Strider like me, a Frost Strider like Karmidigan, or one of the Mist Striders from the old legends have in common?”

 

Finally it dawned on the prince, and his eyes grew wide. “Water!” he exclaimed.

 

“No,” she countered, “The
Sea
.”

 

“Sea, Sky, Stone,” chanted Wanderwillow under his breath. Louder, he said, “You've almost figured it out, Halanyad. There is more.”

 

“Oh.” Elia's smile drooped a little, but not for long. Her hunger for knowledge outweighed any other emotion.

 

“The answer lies with what you have already experienced. When you combined your gifts with the gifts of the Frost Striders, to summon a storm of water and ice that would strike your Sea Demon enemy, did you not feel your mind slip free of its usual boundaries? Were you not able to touch elements of the Sea that were not available to you before?”

 

“I... Yes, I was... almost. I felt as if could control the storm itself. As if
all
the water was part of me, and not just the liquid kind. Ice... cloud...”

 

“Indeed. For however brief a time, you touched all of the Sea Element.”

 

“I did?”

 

“You did.”

 

“That's incredible!” Lauro laughed, seeming genuinely happy. Suddenly his voice died and he frowned in thought. Elia wondered what it was about, but she soon had a question of her own.

 

“Then... how am I able to control fire sometimes? That isn't part of Sea, Sky,
or
Stone, as far as I can see.”

 

An ominously silent pause came over the clearing. Lauro snapped out of his reverie to gape at her. “That's right! That night with the draik... How could I forget?”

 

“You can Stride Fire?” The silence fell again, even heavier. Wanderwillow had spoken... and impossible as it seemed, he had sounded
confused.

 

“Well, I
think
so,” Elia replied hesitantly, glancing down, afraid she'd offended him. “At least, I've done it once by accident, and once on purpose. The first time, I just stopped the fire from reaching me, and held it in my grip for a second... The second time, I used a small flame to make a blaze- and it almost killed Gribly. I haven't tried again since.”

 

“Hmmm,” breathed Wanderwillow slowly. He didn't frown- not exactly- but his eyes grew slightly dimmer, as if he were retreating within himself to consider this troubling new development. At last, he shook his head. “I do not know the answer to what you seek, but I have no doubt the Creator will reveal all in time. His ways are mysterious, but His paths are always straight.”

 

Just like that?
Elia wondered.
He really doesn't know? Well... at least he doesn't seem to think it makes me a sorcerer... or a Pit Strider.

 

“It makes little difference,” the Aura said, though Elia wondered if he was telling the truth. “What you experienced while Striding the storm is a small taste of what all the ancient Striders could do, when the gift was first bestowed upon them in ages long past. If a nymph, or later, a man, could mold part of Sea, Sky, or Stone to his will, he could do it to
all
of that part. There were no Wave Striders or Wind Striders then...”

 

“There were only
Sea
Striders,” realized Lauro, speaking his thoughts aloud. “And
Stone
Striders... and Sky Striders! Aha!” he said, almost jumping right up onto his feet again.

 

“What?” Elia blurted, taken aback.

 

“Lightning!” Lauro cried, “We always see it in the sky, don't we? That's why I could use it!”

 

“You've used
lightning?
What does that mean?” Elia asked, directing her question more to Wanderwillow than the prince.

 

“The path of Sky gifts one with control of all its elements,” the Aura allowed, “and yes... lightning is one of them.”

 

“That means I'm a Sky Strider,” Lauro surmised. “It does, doesn't it?” Wanderwillow nodded. A hard glint came into the prince's eye, and he blew out a heavy breath. “That means...” he murmured, slowly and deliberately, “That I'm more powerful than any normal Wind Strider... even the king of Vastion himself!”

 

“Your
father
?” Elia gasped.

 

“Yes,” Lauro said, and the hardness left his eye so quickly she wondered if she'd just imagined it. His shoulders sagged. “Why am I different?” he asked suddenly, sounding sad... almost.

 

“Because you are part of a greater plan,” explained Wanderwillow, his voice full of pity for what the young prince was undergoing. “That plan requires power that has not been seen in this land for many centuries... both for good, and for evil. It is not of my own design, nor of any other Aura, but the Creator's. You are similarly gifted, Elia.”

 

“I know,” she said, closing her eyes against the magnitude of it all. Suddenly they shot open again in realization. “So is Gribly!” she exclaimed. “He used to be able to Stride Sand, but now he can do it to rocks and dirt, too!”

 

“Yes,” the Aura said simply. “You are as yet the only three in all Vast and the lands beyond who have begun to regain the fullness of the old gifts... save one other.”

 

“Who?” Elia asked, confused. “Is it someone we know? Someone we've encountered? Someone in our families?” She barely noticed that it was
she
who was interrupting now.

 

“Oh, we know him,” said a voice behind her, and she twisted her sitting body to see who had spoken. Out from the trees stumbled Gribly, the Aura's book in his hand, white-faced and trembling.
How much did he hear?
she wondered. “We know him all right...” the boy said again. “He's the Pit Strider. Gramling. My twin
brother.

 
 

Chapter Fourteen: Wisdom. Sorrow. Love.

 
 
 

It all sounded so incredible... but Elia knew Gribly's story was true. She had rarely been to the sea-ports of the Zain in the south, but even she had heard rumors of the pirates who plagued the coasts of every kingdom, burning and looting, never attacking each other, sometimes seeming to be part of a larger alliance... which, Gribly announced, most of them were.

 

An alliance led by none other than his own long-lost father.

 

“I don't know how he got there, or how long he's been an outlaw,” Gribly told them all solemnly, “But I've been seeing the signs before now... it's just that I tried to ignore them. A pirate father... a sorcerer brother... not the family I always dreamed about.”

 

“Tell me about it,” Lauro grumbled from the side. They had widened their sitting circle to include the young prophet, who had lost his sickly look, though not his brooding attitude, at a touch from the Aura. “My father hates me as much as you say
your
father hates the Aura... and whoever it was that beat Traveller into running away. Imagine that! An Aura, fleeing!” Suddenly he winced, looking towards Wanderwillow as if he expected a lightning bolt to strike him at any second for his blasphemy.

 

“Your father hates you,” Wanderwillow was restating what the prince clearly thought of as fact, not asking a question. He ignored Lauro's comment and held out the book he had formerly given Gribly. “Or so you think. It is now your turn to see what these pages hold for you.”

 

Lauro's eyes widened and his hands trembled as they took the book from the Aura's hands. His grip slipped as he reached out, and the tome went tumbling to the grass. Elia leaned over and carefully retrieved it, dusting it off and handing it back to him. As she did so, she caught a glimpse of three words inscribed in gold on the front of the book that she had not seen there before.

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