Authors: Dora Machado
Kael clutched his swords with a battle grip, yet the short, stout, middle-aged woman who strode past him with a massive basket perched on her hip seemed harmless. She looked more like a cranky, overworked peasant than a dangerous foe. A cursory glance at the heap of ashes reminded him that he trampled in the stones’ perilous territories.
“You'd think two are enough after all this time,” the woman muttered in a shrill, grating voice. “But noooo. I get to do it again. Are you as ignorant as the others were?”
The others?
Was she talking about Grimly's men?
Kael surveyed the woman's pinched face. A stern pout dominated the lines of her brooding mouth. Little astute eyes burrowed in the wells of furrowed slits. Her massive forearms were as sturdy as the heavy plough they must have wielded in the fields. The dirt-stained hands were topped with callous sausages for fingers. A man different from Kael might have concluded that she was a hallucination of his oxygen-starved, heat-baked mind. Not Kael.
He steeled himself for the uneven confrontation. Since he wasn't a stonewiser, his life would be of no consequence to her. But it could be tricky. He needed the information only she could provide and, other than his wits, he had no way to deflect or defuse her dangerous powers.
The woman huffed. “Don't tell me you don't know who I am.”
Kael had an idea, but he saw no advantages to discussing his suspicions.
She slammed the heavy basket on the table. “What kind of fools are we growing these days? Are the likes of you supposed to be the bright future of mankind? If you don't know who I am, then what by Meliahs’ stinking pits are you doing here?”
“I'm looking for someone,” Kael said. “He came this way. I'd like to know why.”
“Why?” She laughed, a screech almost as unpleasant as her voice. “Who gave you the right to ask questions? I get to ask the questions around here. Do you know why you are here?”
He endured her glare wordlessly.
“Great,” she snapped. “Just great. And a damn mute to top it all. I suppose it doesn't really matter, does it? After all, what's time for a simple creature like you?” She grabbed an ear of corn from her basket, ripped off the husk with a sequence of angry tugs, and tossed the stripped ear into yet another basket.
Kael was sure the new basket hadn't been there a moment ago, and neither had the three-legged stool upon which the woman plopped down. He had grown accustomed to expect surprises from the stones, but this was beyond anything he had experienced before, too real to be false, too eerie to be real.
His blade sliced the air where the basket's tough weave should have stopped it. He could feel the faint resistance of its presence on the table, but when he reached out, the image crumpled, only to rearrange itself around his hand. The air was growing hotter. His lungs were laboring like slaves. He needed to finish his business and get out, before it was too late.
“The men who came here,” he said. “Did they come for stones?”
“Do you see any stones here?”
“Not the kind I expected. Perhaps they stole them from you?”
“I might look harmless, but no one can take anything from me that I don't want taken.” She eyed him thoroughly. “At least you're burly enough to do the job. I can tell you're skilled. You were taught well. You honor labor and sweat. He didn't.” She pursed her lips in the general direction of the ash heap.
“Is that why you killed him?”
“Do you mind a life lost? Aw. How sweet of you. He was nothing to me.” She tore into another corn husk.
“Did you kill the other man as well?”
The woman's double chin quivered with indignation. “Do you think I'm a common murderer? Only the ignorant and the unworthy need to die.”
“Then where is he? Where did he go?”
“There is only one way to me and one way from me. I don't know where he went. He might have mumbled something about going to the coast.”
“Did he mention the woman who sent him here? Do you know of a mistress called Grimly?”
“Now why would he do that? And why would I care about this mistress anyway? Why would I care about any of you pitiful mongrels?”
“You were interested enough to allow those men in here,” Kael pointed out. “Am I right to think that you had something to do with opening the way into this place?”
She grinned an enigmatic smile. “At least you're not so conceited to think
you
did it.”
“Was there a child with the men?”
“A child? Of course not.”
“A young one, a baby in arms,” Kael insisted. “Perhaps he stayed outside, with the woman?”
“I don't have to answer your daft questions.”
“True. On the other hand, I would be most grateful if you could tell me what you know.”
“Grateful?” She threw her head back and cackled like a bickering crow. “As if I had gone through all
this
just for the purpose of easing
your
puny existence.”
Kael swallowed his frustration. Creatures like her were seldom helpful except to themselves, but this one was as infuriating as they came and testy to boot. As far as he knew, there was no reasoning with the stones. A stonewiser might have found this encounter fascinating, but he was pressed for time. He had been gone too long. His camp's safety was at stake and he couldn't afford to lose Grimly's fresh trail.
“Don't look so concerned.” The woman flashed an insidious dimpled smile. “What's a life but a few pints of blood for the goddess?”
“Spoken like the warring sage.”
“So you do know who I am!”
“You are—”
“Don't you dare speak my name.”
“—as intractable in the stone realm as you were in life.”
“And even more accomplished now than when I lived.” She laughed again. “Smarts. Mankind's single redeeming quality. You're looking better and better for the job.”
“What job?”
“Why, the job you came to do, of course.”
“I'm afraid you have me confused,” Kael said. “I'm no stonewiser. I'm just a man seeking justice. If you're not going to help me, I might as well leave.”
As soon as he turned away, a sprout of dark blades burst from the ground to block his path. Kael was vexed. He knew from experience that the woman would be interested only in stones and stonewisers. What could she possibly want with him?
“I didn't say you could leave yet.” Her eyes narrowed. “You might be an ordinary mutt, but the stones like you well enough. After all, they allowed you in here, didn't they? Shall we find out why the stones think so highly of you?”
The sensation that scoured Kael's mind was as odd as it was unnatural, sudden, unpleasant, invasive and disturbing. He could feel her mind's eye scouring his brain, her claws raking his skull even though the woman's hands were nowhere near him.
“A land-healer, are you?” the woman said. “Convenient. Of course, there's hardly ever such thing as convenience when it has all been carefully ordained.”
Ordained?
What by the rot was the woman talking about? He was having trouble breathing, let alone thinking, but he trained his eyes on her and tried to kick her out of his mind.
“It's a fair effort you're making to boot me out,” she said. “Notable but useless. You're also a roamer, I see. That's just good training. Yet there's more to you than meets the eye. What is it?” A sly smile overtook her face. “Of course. You've got wiser blood in you, don't you? It's diluted enough to grant you passage, but strong enough to make you ideal. Was it your father? No, no, allow me.” She tilted her upturned nose towards Kael and inhaled deeply. “Your mother? How delightful. She was a stonewiser. A pure one. The maternal line is always strong to perfume the blood. I bet your blood would be… delicious.”
The sight of her fat little tongue sweeping over her lips had every hair on Kael's body standing on end. Whoever—no—
whatever
she was, the woman knew way too much about him. Kael's senses homed in on the escape route he had identified from the outset, a quick leap over the beam to his right, then a sprint through the outermost formation—
“Don't even think about it,” the woman warned. “You, I'd like alive.”
It was alarming news, but defiance was a better option than submission or fear. He needed to keep her talking. Whatever little knowledge he could gain from this encounter could make the difference between finding his son and losing him forever.
“I don't understand,” he said. “What good can the life of an ‘ordinary mutt’ be to you?”
“Cocky, aren't you? Mocking me so easily. You've got steel for guts and granite for a backbone. I'll give you that. But I was never a kindly soul and even courage can be reckless.”
“I mean you no offense,” Kael said. “I simply find your interest in me surprising, that's all. Why would a powerful creature like you cling to a common man like me?”
“Because I need you to do the goddess's bidding.”
“The goddess's bidding? Or your own?”
“They are one and the same.”
“Somehow, I doubt it,” Kael said. “I want nothing to do with you or your stones.”
“What if I told you that doom is coming?”
Kael scoffed. “Predicting doom is always the surest bet.”
“It doesn't frighten you?”
“Doom is the coward's argument, the fear monger's tale, the easy victory.”
The woman's face darkened. “Are you so careless as to provoke me with your insults?”
“I'm not insulting you. I'm making a point. Sooner or later we all die. Sooner or later, what we are, what we built, what we treasure, it all passes. Doom is unavoidable and therefore, irrelevant.”
“Irrelevant? In all my years I've never heard anyone say that. But I'll admit it—yours is an intriguing notion.”
“Seeing all that's wrong with the world is not so difficult,” Kael said. “Seeing all that's right with the world and growing it, now that's a chore.”
“Reason and sense to match brawn and guts.” The woman whistled. “I see now why it must be you. Oh, yes, my wager is most definitively on you.”
“And what race will you have me run?”
“The goddess's own.”
“What if I said no?”
“You can't say no.”
“The goddess would give me a choice.”
“Choice?” The woman laughed. “What little you know of stones and goddesses. I need you, Kael of Ars. And you will serve.”
“I don't bend the knee to any man, or woman, for that matter.”
“Who says I'm either one of those?”
The pain that struck Kael was as sudden as it was devastating. His muscles cramped. His joints gave way. His knees hit the floor, sending jolts up his spine. He could have sworn that stakes had skewered his calves, pinning him down to the floor. He had experienced more than his fair share of pain in his time, but this was excruciating. He curled over his stomach, bit down on his lips and swallowed the scream surging up his throat.
The woman was laughing so hard that tears were streaming down her face. “Forgive my methods. I favor suffering over persuasion any day. Let's get this done. I might have forever, but you don't.”
“What do you want from me?” Kael rasped.
“Her,” the woman said.
“Who?”
“She who will defy the stones and destroy the world.”
The realization hit Kael like a kick to the balls. She wasn't after him. He should have known better. She wanted who she needed, the only one who might be capable of mustering the power to do her bidding, the only woman he'd ever called his own. His mind was spinning furiously. He wasn't going to surrender her. Not her. Not ever.
“What if I told you that a day will come when nothing but you will stand between her and the end of times?” the woman asked.
“I wouldn't believe you.” He tried to rip his aching knees from the floor but failed. He took a deep breath, succeeding only in scalding his lungs. He had to think clearly. He had to keep his wits straight.
“You'll know the signs,” the woman said.
“The signs for what?”
“It has all been told before. Her name will become the path upon which the faithful will travel. She will make life from death, think with her heart and feel with her mind. She will lie with the truth, cheat with devotion, lose to win and win to lose. Her life will be the goddess's last stand, but her death, now… her death will be the world's last blessing, bringing future to past.”
“You can't sway me with musty old tales,” Kael said. “The Wisdom is nothing to me.”
“The Wisdom is everything to you. You'll do what you must to make it happen.”
“To make what happen?”
“Her demise, of course.”
The words punched the breath out of his lungs. “No.”
“It's too late,” the woman said. “Her death is already in you.”
“No,” he said again, but a sight flashed before his eyes, an indisputable vision of Sariah dead in his arms. A sharp pain twisted his heart and squeezed his throat. Terror inched on his mind's fringes like an avenging army, cold and unforgiving. “I would never—”
The smile on the woman's face was just another omen for disaster. “Fate is not always arbitrary. Common sense. You can always rely on it to finish the job.”
“I can't—”
“You know her better than anyone. Who better suited to kill her than you?”
“I won't—”
“Oh, but you will. She must die. Like we did. Like
I
did.”
He knew it couldn't be. He wouldn't do it. Meliahs knew he would never be able to survive her death, let alone cause it. Yet he also realized that the present and the future had been woven together in a tangled knot to bring about disaster, true, unavoidable and done.
Kael's mind raced. Had the woman invested others with the same task? What could he do to prevent what he'd seen from happening? A sense of pragmatic logic prevailed. He and Sariah had defied worse odds before. Together, they had been able to overcome the most lethal of troubles. Together, they would be able to beat this newest challenge as well.
“I don't think so,” the woman said. “You won't be able to share this news with her.”
“What?”
“You can try, of course. You will. But you won't be able to. You'll see.”
Kael refused to believe the woman. She didn't understand the indestructible bond that he and Sariah shared. After all they had been through, nothing could keep them from each other, not even the stones and their damn tricks.