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Authors: Elizabeth Haydon

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BOOK: The Hollow Queen
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“I do. Thank you.”

The woman who was at once the Lirin queen, the Lady of the Cymrians, and his second-oldest living friend smiled a little more broadly at him.

“It's strange; I can remember virtually every detail about you, or at least what I've known and experienced with you—Grunthor too. But I only remember Ashe, who I have been told is my husband, from the time when we met him in Bethe Corbair on our initial journey to the Bolglands, and the journey he and I made to find Elynsynos. And I can barely recall the fact that we have a child at all—some days I am shocked to be reminded of it. But I met you as Rhapsody, and as a result, all those memories are intact. It's amazing what memories are tied to different parts of one's nomenclature.”

Achmed swallowed his initial comment and smiled in return.

“Well, I'm glad you remember what is
important,
at least,” he said lightly. “Thank you for the unnecessary escort. I should be off. Did you bring the floating lanterns?”

“Of course,” Rhapsody said. “They're in the left saddlebag, if you don't mind getting them yourself.”

“Not at all.” The Bolg king slashed the rope on the saddlebag and affixed it to his pack.

“Would you mind telling me why you wanted objects the Lirin use in religious celebrations over the sea, and that for humans are mere toys? Floating lanterns. It seems a strange thing to bring into Sorbold. Are you planning to use them to signal for help?”

“Perhaps.”

“I don't think I will see them from here—or from Roland.”

“Oh well. Another idea into the Great Latrine of Life.” He glanced around the glen. “I should be off.”

“Travel well,” she replied as he turned to the Mondrian and slashed the bindings of the rest of his gear. “The liverymen should be here momentarily in response to the call; do you want me to delay them so they do not see you?”

“They won't see me,” the Bolg king said as he shouldered his packs. “I perceive no breakage of branches or changes in the wind—I have more than enough time to be clear of this glen before they arrive.”

“Good.” Rhapsody patted his arm. Then, as her smile faded, she let the hand of her good arm encircle his elbow, pulled him closer to her, and pressed a soft kiss onto his cheek, letting it linger there for a moment. “Be careful. I know it's not a necessary warning, but take it as a sign of friendship.”

Achmed exhaled. “Given that you are about to go back into Bethany soon, and into the heat of the war, I would offer the same advice. In your case, I think it's a similar sign
and
a necessary warning.”

“Why? Do you think me suddenly foolish just because I got injured in battle?”

“You've always been foolish; there is
nothing
sudden about it. And no, not because you were injured. You are not yourself, Rhapsody. And while I have to admit I find this aspect of you oftentimes preferable to the woman I met in Easton long ago, I grudgingly admit that when your instincts were your own, misguided as they often were, you knew yourself enough to keep yourself safe most of the time. Even though I did have to sing you back to life once back then.”

She grimaced. “I beg you not to remind me. My body recovered, but my eardrums never did.”

Achmed's expression grew even more solemn.

“You have used your only chit given to you by the house for free,” he said seriously. “You have tricked Fate one too many times; you have no fixes left. Now everything counts, especially when you are not with Grunthor or me. We have been in truly dangerous situations together, but now you are more or less alone and in the center of a continent at war, as well as being the mother of a child that is the sole obsession of a soulless man who rules the sea, and a good deal of the continent. We Three are spread more thinly than we have ever been before; if you recall, all our greatest victories in and out of battle have been together, not apart. All I am asking is that you try to remember not to take risks. You've never been especially good at it, but now you are working, quite literally, with one hand tied behind your back.”

“Actually, it's in front of my chest.”

“Well, there is little enough difference in the topography of those places on your anatomy that one can be forgiven for not noticing the arm placement. One day, one hideous and eventual day, we face the possibility that the Three will become Two, or even One. I just don't want that day to be any time soon.”

Rhapsody shrugged with her one good shoulder.

“You are a believer in the myth that we may live forever,” she said. “Until this moment, I've never even heard you entertain the notion that we Three might die. I didn't realize it was an option.”

“It's not. Especially not for you. You are, after all, someone's mother now. Even if he is irritating and smells bad. And even if you don't remember him.” He exhaled deeply, as he often did when words were difficult. “I apologize for being unduly offensive about him.”

Rhapsody shrugged. “No need. I feel no insult anymore, if I ever did. It's amazing how little I feel at all.” A thought occurred to her, and she opened her pack, pulling forth the box of Black Ivory given to her by Faedryth, the Nain king, and containing strange, translucent strips of a filmy material, burnt at the edges, that she had not been able to identify. “Does the name
Werinatha
mean anything to you, by any chance?”

The Bolg king, a man who was almost impossible to surprise, blinked in astonishment.

“Yes,” he said tersely. “Why?”

Rhapsody shrugged. “Anwyn said something to me in the broken vault of Kurimah Milani, when I followed her down and killed her some months ago. It has been nagging at me, and has something to do with this strange substance that Faedryth unearthed in the mines of the Nain kingdom.”

The Bolg king looked over his shoulder, listening for the approach of the liverymen, then silently motioned for her to continue.

“She told me that history, Time itself, had been altered for me. She made reference to a figure I have mentioned to you that I had seen in the realm of the Lord and Lady Rowan, behind the Veil of Hoen—the Weaver, the manifestation of Time in history. She said that there was a flaw of some sort in the Weaver's tapestry, where the threads of Time had been cut and rewoven—a thread removed that affected all of the rest of history. And that, for some reason, it was done to improve my lot in life in the Past—though she had no idea by whom or why. She said it had something to do with my grisly death in childbirth that was unnatural.”

“As in the prophecy Manwyn threw at you in Yarim?”

“Perhaps. Anwyn said that this filmy substance was the only record of it.”

Achmed glanced into the Black Ivory box, then shook his head. “Go on.”

“Apparently she heard one word when scrying into the Forgotten Past, as she called it, though I don't know if it was connected in any way to that whole ‘death in childbirth' episode. She said it was a name that connected me to another person in my life, earlier than I had come to know that person in this second iteration of Time. It was the name of someone that this person and I had both cared for, and whose death brought us together. Then she spoke the name—Werinatha—and that was all she said.”

Silence filled the forest glade.

“I was wondering if that ‘another' was you.”

“Perhaps,” Achmed said, “since Werinatha was indeed someone I knew.”

“Who was it?”

The Bolg king lasped into silence again. Rhapsody stood quietly awaiting his answer. Finally he spoke.

“A fellow student at Quieth Keep—the place I met that infernal idiot Jal'asee, from Gaematria.”

“It sounds like the name of a woman.”

“Yes.”

“Did she—did she die in whatever accident happened at Quieth Keep, that you and Jal'asee argued about when he came to Gwydion Navarne's investiture?”

The Bolg king was silent again for a long moment. “Yes.”

“Hmmm. Well, Anwyn said that supposedly I knew this woman too, or in some way she connected me and someone else who knew her, and who also knew me. So that may indeed have been you. Anwyn was a vicious liar, but she, like her sister Seers, was supposedly unable to lie about the realm that was her domain, the Past, without losing her power to see into it. So while I have no idea what any of this means, at least it is good to know that the prophecy about death in childbirth is something that may have already occurred, in the Past, and that Time, for whatever reason, was altered to spare me from it.”

Achmed glanced over his shoulder again.

“I hear the liverymen,” he said. “They will be here in a moment, and I don't wish to be seen.”

“Very well,” the Lirin queen said. She squeezed his arm affectionately. “Be on your way.”

Achmed looked at her for a long moment. He let his free hand cover hers that encircled his elbow, then took it from himself, raised it, and pressed it to his lips, releasing it a moment later. “Goodbye.”

Her slight smile returned. “Goodbye. I hope when I see you again we will be celebrating victory.”

“Well, if you are still acting as a Namer, your words of hope may be a good contribution to that. They certainly can't hurt.”

He turned and slipped into the shadows that the rising sun was allowing to break into the trees, casting dusty light all around.

 

14

SOUTH OF SEPULVARTA, IN THE TEETH, SORBOLD

Hrarfa was starting to become worried.

During the course of their journey the Faorina spirit whose host body she was clinging to had grown even more distant and quiet. Hrarfa knew, or at least suspected strongly, that it was still there, still aware; there was a testy, almost hostile mood she could sense in the dark of their walking stone prison.

The inability to successfully manipulate her demonic co-conspirator was disturbing to Hrarfa. Her most recognizable characteristic throughout the entire history of her time in the upworld, free from the Vault and able to take on human hosts that were weaker than she was, or willing, was the ability to manipulate and deceive even powerful host entities, or their associates, into doing whatever it was she wanted.

In her last body, that of a beautiful First Generation woman named Portia whom she had caught unaware and had violently overtaken, eating the poor woman's soul alive in an orgiastic fever of glee, Hrarfa had easily managed to successfully seduce Tristan Steward, a weak man but nonetheless a powerful one, into giving her everything she wished for, the price for which was the repugnant but necessary surrendering of her host body to his lascivious needs.
What's a little repulsive knobbing if it achieves the desired end?
she told herself while he continuously gripped her thighs painfully as he rode her up against closet walls, fornicated her, facedown, in piles of stable straw, groped her in the backs of carriages and insisted on sliding his insufficient tarse into her mouth at any available opportunity in a variety of uncomfortable positions.
He has no idea his conquests of me gave me control of his soul long ago
.

He certainly had not been the first man, nor the hundreth, to succumb to her will while assuming she was his toy into which to pound himself.

But the young misfit she had convinced to share the body of the stone titan was another matter.

Hrarfa did not understand the motivations of the Faorina spirit, the demonic child named Faron. Obviously charms of the flesh had no power over him, nor, it seemed, did her constant promises of reunion with his dead father always mollify him.

It was, however, the only reassurance that ever seemed to work.

Now, after a long period of silence while they were leading the combined regiments across the northern border of Sorbold on their way to the Bolg kingdom, Hrarfa tried once more to make contact with Faron.

Faron—once we have the rib of the Earthchild, we will have the key to the Vault. And then our kind will be set free, after millennia in bondage.

After a long and customary silence, she finally heard a response.

And then?

Hrarfa hesitated, recalling that the Faorina spirit was only half F'dor, that it had a sense of existence that the Older and Younger Pantheons had never embraced. The insistent, overarching need for sweet destruction, even unto that of the Earth, and Life itself, might terrify him. She took the equivalent of a breath, then made her thoughts as gentle as was possible to make them.

And then, we will be free. All the souls, our family, that have been imprisoned unjustly from the beginning of Time, will move about the world, unfettered. And your father will be with you once again.

There was silence within the vault of Living Stone, a tiny reflection of the one which held their race.

Then, after a long absence, a thought made its way into Hrarfa's awareness from the primitive mind of the being with whom she shared the stone body.

BOOK: The Hollow Queen
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