
Sixteen years it has been since the dazzling Khatrimantine Empire fell to the vast hordes of the Mogaun. Sixteen years since the invaders' evil deity, the Lord of Twilight, was shattered into five hosts, five lost souls destined to become the Shadowkings. Sixteen long years since the forces of the Earthmother and the Fathertree were defeated, and the Rootpower magic itself was destroyed...
But for Suviel, one of the few surviving mages, it was not a final defeat. Nor was it so for Ikarno Mazaret, Lord Commander of the Knights of the Fathertree. They and their companions face a deadly struggle against terrifying odds in their fight for freedom. Byrnak, one of the many warlords who squabble amid the Empire's ruins, discovers that he is one of the five Shadowkings and thus compelled to bring the Lord of Twilight into fleshly being. Across the battlefields and dreamscapes of the land, he is driven ever closer to this goal.
Tauric is the lost heir to the Imperial throne. He must learn courage and the realities of command if he is to survive the battles that lie ahead. These lives and uncountable others will be changed forever when the Empire's last valliant defenders take arms against ancient sorceries and new terrors.
The following extract contains the first two chapters of Shadowkings by Michael Cobley, published by
Simon and Schuster, July 2001.
Chapter One
"Honour the dead, for they are
many and we are few."
- The Book Of Earth And Stone
In a high mountain valley, under the looming, starless
canopy of night, campfires burned amid ancient ruins.
Men, fighters all, knelt or crouched close to the flames,
muttering, eating, joking, throwing dice. Off to one
side, at the foot of a shattered, mossy pillar, two
figures sat either side of their own fire. One was a
lean-faced woman who frowned as she ran a small whetstone
along the sabre that lay across her knees. The sleeveless
leather jerkin she wore half-open was battered and scarred,
yet carefully patched, much like the down-at-heel boots
that lay on the ground nearby.
Her companion was a black-haired bear of a man, cloaked
in heavy furs which only partly concealed a dented chestplate
and mailed leggings. In a big, scarred hand he held
a black bottle of wine but it seemed half-forgotten
as he stared with amber eyes into the heart of the campfire.
Flakes of ash whirled up into the cold, unforgiving
night and an occasional spark flew across to land on
the man's exposed hands. He appeared not to notice,
just sat there with a gaze that was dark and steady,
harsh as granite, sharp as a naked blade.
A burnt-through branch slumped into the centre of the
fire. The flames quivered, sank a little lower. Keren
Asherol paused from honing her blade, looked across,
then shook her head.
"You're brooding again," she said mildly.
For a moment, no reply. Then: "Warhounds should think
of the hunt, not the hunter."
His voice was deep, with no trace of weariness, the
words well formed.
"More dreams, eh?"
Byrnak, Warlord of Northern Honjir and Protector of
Bidolo, drained the wine and tossed the bottle away.
He gave her a surly, hooded look. "Even the finest warhound
can become a burden."
Keren met his gaze. "I think the word you're looking
for is 'warbitch'."
A glittering, dangerous smile creased Byrnak's features.
"A bitch who is lucky to have such a benevolent master."
Reflected fireglow gleamed in his eyes and cast a sulphurous
tinge across his face. "And what of you? - are your
own slumbers tranquil?"
"Of course," she lied, resuming the sharpening of her
sabre. Across the fire, Byrnak gave a derisive snort
and went back to the flames.
Keren had last shared Byrnak's bed willingly six months
ago, when it was spring and his brutal attractions had
not palled. Since then she had preferred the solitude
of her own bed, and the known hazards of her
dreams. It was sixteen years since the Battle of Wolf'
Gate but the horror and slaughter of it still crept
up from the well of memory to fill her nights with rage
and guilt.
Heat from the fire prickled her bare skin and heightened
the numb ache of a scar on her lower right arm. A shaft
of moist mountain air blew through the vast ruined antechamber
where they sat, bringing smells of high wood and bush,
earth and bark and rotting leaves. Then the wind shifted
direction, drifting to her the odours of cooked meat
and the sounds of the men clustered round their own
fires. They were a strange mix, mostly rootless rogues
from Honjir, Jefren and Anghatan, with a few odd ones
like Yanama, a marsh raider from Ebro'Heth, or the daggerman
Erruk from the moors of northern Yularia. There were
no Mogaun, however. Keren listened to the quiet laughter
and snatches of flutesong for a moment, smiled, then
turned her sword over and began to work the other side.
Once into the rhythm she glanced at Byrnak again - his
stare was as unwavering as before, but now there was
a kind of haunted anger to it.
What do you see? she thought. What do you
fear?
Byrnak was a living mystery. Ragtalk among the men
placed him variously as a lost prince of the Imperial
blood, a renegade Rootpower mage, a black sorcerer from
the Erementu hinterlands, or even a formless monster
from the Rukang Sagas, returned in human shape. When
pressed, he claimed to have been an iron mine slave,
a pit fighter, and a chief's bodyguard in Rauthaz before
a misjudgement with a battlestave caused him to flee
south. It was so prosaic it could almost be true.
Byrnak let out a breath of noisy impatience, rose and
went over to the saddlebags piled carelessly at the
foot of one of the massive pillars. Keren watched him
pull out another black bottle, uncork it with his teeth
and take a hefty swig. Then, bottle in hand, he prowled
around the crumbling antechamber, pausing occasionally
to study a worn inscription or relief carving or to
pick away a patch of dark moss. These were ancient ruins,
perhaps from the time of the Jefren League, but there
were still older ones littering these mountains. Keren
once overheard a Fathertree priest tell a mage that
kingdoms, conquerors and empires had washed across the
continent of Toluveraz like waves on the shore. She
had thought that an exaggerated comment at the time,
but her wanderings since had shown her that there was
something to it.
Suddenly, Byrnak uttered a vile oath and hurled the
bottle against a crumbling wall. Dark wine splashed
across the ancient stones and the muted chatter of the
men faded away, their uneasy eyes glancing his way.
"Where are the scouts?" he snarled, hands clenching
and unclenching. "Haven't they found that bastard scum
Shaleng yet?"
Shaleng had been Warlord of Northern Honjir until two
years ago when Byrnak and a band of dedicated followers
infiltrated his stronghold outside the city of Kizar.
Byrnak became the new Warlord, but Shaleng had escaped
into hiding where he had gathered a gang of cutthroats
and rapists whose increasingly daring - and bloody -
raids were undermining Byrnak's authority.
"You're the one who taught them," Keren muttered sourly. "It's
bound to take a little time..."
In one swift motion Byrnak stepped towards her, snatched
the sabre out of her lap by the hilt and threw it point-first
into the heart of the fire. Keren jerked away from the
scattering of sparks, sprawling on her back.
"Gainsay me to my face once more, woman, and I'll kill
you."
The savagery of his stare burned into her skull. He
seemed to tremble with contained fury and a for momen
Keren thought he was going to strike her. Then there
was a commotion from out in the ruined hall and he looked
up, breaking the terrible spell. A slender, black-clad
youth dashed in and fell to his knees before Byrnak.
"My Lord, we have him!"
Byrnak stared at the youth with a joyful intensity
and reached out to stroke the youth's brown curls. Keren
kept her face blank, hiding her revulsion.
"Falin, my little hawk - where?"
The youth's face glowed with adoration.
"At the village of Wedlo, Lord. The raid began less
than an hour ago."
Byrnak's grin was rapacious and with his hand still
resting on Falin's head he looked at Keren.
"Take the second and third companies, cut off their
retreat and any avenues of escape. I'll take the first
and deal with Shaleng personally."
The camp was suddenly alive with activity as orders
were given and fires were doused. Byrnak brought Falin
to his feet and they both went off to one side. Keren
rose and grasped the sabre's hilt, pulling it free.
The leather-wound hilt was hot from the fire, embers
still clinging to the blade, and for a moment it seemed
that flames were coming from the blade itself. Then
she knocked the sword against a blackened stone at the
fire's edge and the embers fell away. "Captain?" said
someone nearby.
No more, Keren thought, staring at her sabre.
No more.
She turned to see Domas and Kiso, captains of the second
and third companies, standing there. "Have all the scouts
returned?" she said.
Domas smiled and nodded. "All safe, all back."
"Then ready the men. We've a hard night ahead."
As they hurried off she bent to pull on her boots,
then took a rag from her belt and wiped the ashen smears
from her sword before sheathing it at her waist. She
was aware of Falin and Byrnak staring at her from across
the ruined chamber but ignored them, buttoning her leather
jerkin as she followed the captains out to where the
horses were being harnessed and saddled.
There's nothing for me here, she thought bitterly.
Why do I stay?
* * *
They rode down from the Nagira Mountains like vengeful
wolves. A cold steady rain was falling, turning the
ground muddy, but their mounts had been bred for war
and none slipped or stumbled. Wedlo was a small town
squeezed between densely wooded hills and the north
bank of the Dreun which coursed southwest into central
Honjir. Once they had reached the hills, Keren sent
Kiso and the second company to approach from the woods,
with orders to eliminate any guards they encountered.
As Kiso and his men slipped away through the trees,
Keren continued northeast with the third company.
By the light of hooded lanterns, she and one of the
scouts led her thirty riders at a canter along a narrow
forest path. The attack would have to be fast and savage,
yet coordinated: they would have to seal off the north
road, seize the wharfs, then move into the town itself.
And it would have to be soon for in just a few minutes
Byrnak and his men would come charging in from the south.
"Be there," had been his last words. "I don't want to
have to do all the work myself." Keren cursed under
her breath, wiping rainwater from her face with her
free hand. Ahead the trees and foliage were thinning
and the lights of Wedlo were becoming visible, a scattering
of lampglows and an ominous funnel of smoke and sparks
rising from the town's centre. The scout, a short, wiry
Dalbari called Paq, turned, his waxcloth hood dripping,
and raised a finger to his lips. "Slow," he whispered.
The order rippled back along the column as he pointed
out a shack just near the town's north entrance and
another over at the riverbank.
"Sentries?" Keren murmured.
Paq nodded, holding up three fingers. Keren detailed
Domas and another six to take care of Shaleng's guards
but no sooner had they dismounted when a warning shout
went up from away to the south. The voice cut off
suddenly with a choking scream, but the damage was done
- figures emerged from the shacks with lit torches and
more came running from the town.
"Damn Kiso," Keren muttered, then ordered the company
to head straight for the town. There were the sounds
of blades drawn from scabbards as the riders turned
and moved through the trees. Once out on open ground
they formed up in attack pairs and charged the waiting
guards.
After that it was a desperate whirl of blades as Keren's
riders, some dismounted, pursued Shaleng's cutthroats
and hunted for the bandit chief himself. Keren found
herself cornered by a swordsman and a spearman working
in unison. The swordsman slashed at her horse's face
and she managed to catch the blow on her boot while
parrying a thrust from the spearman. But her parry lacked
force and the spear glanced off her mailed leg and gashed
her horse's neck. The beast whinnied in pain and reared.
Fighting to bring it under control, she made a stabbing
slash at the spearman and caught him in the throat.
As he went down in a spray of blood she turned to see
death in the form of the swordsman's blade arcing towards
her unprotected side.
Then a rider came charging out of nowhere and knocked
him flying. In reflex Keren had begun to lean away but
she still felt a cold sting as the sword's tip caught
her upper arm. The swordsman tried to regain his feet
but was cut down by the rider. It was Domas, helmetless,
his blade dripping red.
"Where's that cretin Kiso?" Keren snarled.
Then, at the far end of town, she glimpsed Byrnak's
company, hard-pressed by a superior number of bandits.
Gathering those still on horseback she led a charge
at their rear. The surprise attack scattered them, and
as the riders chased them down, Keren realised suddenly
that Byrnak was missing. When she questioned one of
Byrnak's company he simply pointed over at a large,
four-storey house whose upper windows were leaking smoke.
"He's in there … with Shaleng."
She wheeled her horse and galloped across. She was
almost at the house's tall double doors when a tall
man with a long, single-edged axe jumped up from behind
some stacked barrels and rushed at her. He made to swing
at her but tripped so that the axe bit into her horse's
head. Uttering a ghastly scream the beast collapsed
under her, blood jetting from its cloven skull. Keren
scrambled clear of its thrashing hooves, regaining her
feet in time to face her attacker. It was Shaleng.
"Slut!" he shouted, his long-jawed face contorted with
fury. "I needed the horse alive, not you!"
The heavy battleaxe seemed as light as a walking stick
in his big hands. He spun it in a blurring figure-of-eight
then aimed a swift crosscut at her midriff. Keren leaped
backwards then ducked to avoid a second blow to her
head. She snatched a handful of dirt, tossed it up into
Shaleng's face and came up to shoulder-charge him. Choking,
the bandit-chief staggered back but managed to grab
Keren's jerkin, pulling her off-balance. Half-blinded,
he swung at her as she stumbled forward, but she kept
her feet, parried the axe and slid her sabre along the
wooden haft and into his hand. Shaleng let out a roar
of agony and the axe flew from his bloody grip. Without
hesitation Keren plunged her blade into his throat and
he died at her feet.
Gasping for breath, swaying where she stood, she looked
up and saw Falin the scout staring open-mouthed. Muscles
ached and the wound in her arm stung as she bent and
picked up Shaleng's axe. It was a Mogaun-forged piece,
its heavy haft carved along most of the length, its
blade bearing cruel, tearing hooks at top and bottom.
"Here," she said hoarsely. "Take this to your lord
and master...no, wait, I'll give it to him myself."
She had reached the steps at the front of the house
when the doors were thrown open and Byrnak stepped out.
He assessed all that had happened with a single glance.
"So you took my prize for yourself, woman."
"I had little choice in the matter," Keren said, tossing
the axe at his feet. "But if Kiso had done as I'd ordered
- " "Yes," he said. "I know about that." He reached
down behind him and dragged a body out onto the veranda.
Handless, footless and dead, it was Kiso. "The fool
thought I might die without his aid." He gave the corpse
a brutal kick, then grinned at Keren.
"But that's not all," he went on. "Look at what else
I found." He turned to one of his men. "Bring out our
new pet!" A slight figure, a young man naked from the
waist up, was thrust forward and Byrnak casually threw
him sprawling on the veranda. Keren immediately noticed
the filthy blue breeks he wore.
"A Rootpower priest," she said numbly.
"That's right, Keren, my lovely - the last of a dying
breed, but soon to be extinct, eh?" Byrnak's malicious
laughter was echoed by the crowd at his back. "They
were getting ready to torture him, but I decided to
reserve that pleasure for myself."
Keren turned away. The moans and cries of the wounded
came from all around and the air stank of blood and
smoke. Across the town square, one of their riders was
despatching the dying of both sides with a spear. Others
were looting what freshly-harvested grain and roots
the villagers possessed. More laughter came from behind
her and she heard Falin join in from nearby.
She took a kerchief from her jerkin pocket and tried
to clean her sabre. But the blade was bitten and notched
and tore the cloth, leaving it in rags.
This is death's realm, Keren thought emptily.
And we are its ragged people.
Chapter Two
"Prayers are like smoke or water
- they either vanish without trace or feed what is unseen."
- The Book Of Stone And Fire
The birth was going badly.
For at least the tenth time that night Suviel Hantika
wished she could find within herself a shred, the merest
glimmer of Rootpower to help heal the suffering woman.
From the frail mindbond she had already made, she could
feel the awful pain of torn inner tissues and exhausted
muscles. But all she had was the Lesser Power, sufficient
only to dull the worst of the woman's agony while praying
that she would live.
Pray? Suviel thought bitterly in a corner of
her mind. Pray to who or what?
Shouts and fearful cries from the street outside filtered
through to the tiny, shuttered back room, but Suviel
kept the circle of her concentration pure and unbroken.
The muffled, savage sounds told of another beating,
robbery or murder, familiar evils in a city which had
changed hands twice in as many months.
There was another contraction. The woman let out a
gasping moan and Suviel fought to keep her self separate
from the torment. When the midwife and the other crones
looked pleadingly at her, Suviel masked her weariness
and bent closer to the woman's ear. Stroking the sweat-beaded
forehead and neck, Suviel murmured the thought-canto
of Subdual. The half-words circled in her mind, things
of smell, sound, texture and enigma interlocking with
themselves and her own being. Shared with a patient,
it was meant to coax the natural healing abilities into
working harder.
The Lesser Power began to chime softly through her
mind and she could feel calmness edging into the woman's
turbulent awareness, slow as a tentative dawn. But the
waves of pain were so intense, so full of the dreadful
damage taking place, that Suviel began to feel ghost
twinges in her pelvis. She ignored the echoes and reached
deeper into her own physical and mental resources, pouring
her own vitality into the Subdual canto.
Exhaustion crept slowly, inexorably upon her. Her
arms grew heavy, her breathing shallow, her throat dry
and aching. Yet while part of her was absorbed in the
ritual of the canto, another part became aware of the
details of her surroundings: the yellow glow from the
wall lamps; the old women, small hooded figures clutching
Earthmother amulets; the midwife, a tall, bitter woman
who had once been a Khatrisian aristocrat; the pregnant
woman and the scrap of life, a boy, that was struggling
to be born. Across the room, in shadow, was the woman's
despairing husband, a standard-bearer in Gunderlek's
ill-fated rebel army; family friends had smuggled him
into the city, past the Warlord Azurech's guards.
Then the vision drew further back to show her, as if
through mist, the flat-roofed, two-storey house and
its drab neighbours, the tiny yards, one with a scrawny
dog gnawing on a bone, and the dark, cobbled street
littered with rubbish and the still body of a man lying
near an alleyway, death grimace on his face, bloody
tear in his ear from which some bauble had been torn...
At some point she was vaguely aware of being helped
from the room by one of the old women, who whispered
trembling thanks and comfort. The child - a boy - had
been born safe and well and his mother still lived.
The husband came up to her as she sat before a low fire,
stammering out a gratitude she could only accept with
a tired nod. The fire's heat soaked into her, wrapped
her in a soft warmth which somehow became thick, heavy
blankets and a quilted down mattress and a cotton-covered
pillow smelling of herbs. Weary through and through,
she caught the faint sweetness of melodyleaf and a hint
of musky rainbark and was swept off into slumber.
Daybreak's pale and haggard light seeped into her room,
filling it with greyness, dissolving the last threads
of sleep. Once dressed in the plain green dress and
patched brown cloak of her herbwoman disguise, she left
the little bedroom and found steps leading up to the
roof. There had been rain during the night. The air
was cold and clean and the roof's crudely mortared planks
were still dark and wet. She found a fairly robust crate
and sat down to look across the city, letting thoughts
come to her as she watched the dawn grow.
Before the fall of the Empire, Choroya had been a prosperous,
lively cityport famed as much for its acting troupes
as for its merchant princes. Now the theatres were burnt-out
shells and the exchange halls were sullen, half-deserted
places where the poor produce of the northern farmlands
fetched exorbitant prices.
Suviel peered into the hazy northern distance, to the
spreading patchwork of fields and smallholdings that
stretched away to the far-off foothills. She could make
out the dark stretches of encroaching marsh and several
dull grey areas where nothing grew, ground that had
been poisoned by Mogaun shamen during the invasion.
Once, this land had fed fully half of Honjir but the
recent harvest of inferior grain and feeble livestock
would be scarcely enough to keep Choroya and its stinking
shanty towns from starvation through the winter months.
This is the bane that lies across the land,
she thought bitterly. Warlords and bandit kings who
pursue their skirmishes and petty wars amid the ruins
of our greatness while the people suffer and weep and
bleed.
Suviel raised a fold of her cloak to dry tears from
her eyes. Then she looked into the further distance
beyond the mountains and saw in her mind all the lands
of Khatrimantine as they were in her youth, from the
lush woods of Kejana to the vineyards and orchards of
Ebro'Heth, from the singing cave-cliffs of Yularia to
the windswept isles of Ogucharn. She remembered riding
with the witch-horses of Jefren, sailing into the teeth
of a summer storm aboard a Dalbari fishing boat, and
undergoing the dreamrites of magehood on a cold mountaintop
in Prekine.
Now only the foul Acolytes of Twilight trod the hallowed
halls of Trevada where once mages had taught and studied,
and abominations moaned in the chambers of the High
Basilica.
There was a footfall behind her. Cursing herself for
wallowing in memories, she dried her eyes once more
and turned to see the midwife waiting, hands wringing
a neckerchief, face full of uncertainty. Then she stepped
forward.
"Shin Hantika," she said tearfully, starting
to kneel.
Alarmed at this use of the forbidden mage title, Suviel
rose and quickly grasped her by the arms, forcing her
to remain standing.
"No, Lilia," she said. "Not here, not out in the open.
Anyone could be watching."
The midwife began to apologise but Suviel laid a hand
on her shoulder and hushed her. Lilia Maraj, she recalled,
was a daughter of one of the Roharka nobles and had
been a children's tutor at the palace.
"Don't worry," she said calmingly. "Tell me - how soon
did you know who I was?"
"It was not until you used the healing lore for the
second time - I remembered you from when I used to bring
children to the mage halls to tend to their cuts and
bruises." Her voice grew wistful. "They were so alive,
so full of curiosity. Always getting into bother..."
"How are mother and child?" Suviel said.
Lilia sighed. "Weak, but recovering. I doubt that she
will be able to give birth again. Her baby is very well,
though. A robust little soul he is, too."
"Good. I'm glad," Suviel said sincerely, then laughed
softly. "Few things these last few years have pleased
me as much as helping to bring new life into the world."
Lilia was silent a moment, a deep weariness showing
in her faintly lined features. "It's an awful world
to be born into," she said quietly, then looked up,
suddenly animated. "Why must it go on like this, lady,
why? Surely the warlords and the chieftains cannot last
forever."
Suviel sighed. "The clans of the Mogaun have strength
and a kind of unity, and their shamen have great and
terrible powers, Lilia. All the things which were taken
from us."
Lilia shook her head. "I believe that the time must
come when we can regain our freedom."
"Gunderlek thought the time was now," Suviel murmured.
They were both silent for a few sombre moments.
"Shin Hantika, you escaped the fall of Besh-Darok,"
Lilia went on. "Did no-one else survive, none of the
other mages and loreweavers, none of the temple knights?
Is there truly no way of bringing back the light into
our lives? Is there no-one to help us?"
Suviel heard the despair in her voice and for one pitying
moment wanted to say, Yes, some of us did escape and
have these sixteen long, black years remained in hiding
or disguise, working selflessly towards the very end
you've wished for.
But the potential dangers were too great: If even just
a rumour of still-living mages reached agents of the
Acolytes, nighthunters and other sorcerous beasts would
be loosed across Khatrimantine to hunt down any user
of the Lesser Power. She and her colleagues would have
to flee, perhaps even across the Wilderan Sea to Keremenchool.
No, the risk was unacceptable.
She steeled herself. "Lilia...I was near the river
when the firehawks descended on the mage halls. No-one
could have survived that inferno. I'm sorry..."
Suviel saw the desperate hope in her eyes die. They
both stood in silence for several moments. Suviel was
about to offer words of comfort when Lilia spoke, head
bowed.
"It is not you who should apologise, lady. I was wrong
to burden you with my fears and longings when you have
to make your way in this world without the rootpower.
I can't begin to imagine how you've coped with such
a loss."
Yes, Suviel agreed silently. You cannot.
"With nearly all the mages and loreweavers dead," she
continued, "the responsibility for ridding the empire
of the foul Mogaun must lie with the people themselves.
We only have to find the strength."
Suviel heard the seed of anger in her voice and shivered.
Gunderlek had voiced similar sentiments while gathering
his ill-fated, ragtag army.
"Lilia," she said. "I have to go."
"I understand. It's dangerous for you here." She took
a deep breath. "Don't worry about the others speaking
of you - as far as we know, you were just an old herbwoman
passing through."
"Thank you," Suviel said and turned to leave. Half
way down the steps she looked back. Lilia was sitting
on the crate, hugging herself tightly while staring
past Suviel at the grey reaches of the sea.
* * *
An hour later, Suviel was riding at a steady canter
along the muddy road leading north from Choroya, through
one of the shanty towns that hugged the city's outer
walls. All along the track was the evidence of the most
recent siege. Wrecked carts, broken shields and spears,
the splintered remains of kegs and crates, burst wicker
baskets, remnants of food and grain ground into the
mire, and scorched and torn rags of clothing. A scattering
of debris now being raked through and squabbled over
by the desperate and the dispossessed.
Nothing she saw here, no scene of squalor or brutality,
was new to her, but it could not fail to rouse her sorrow
and anger. Azurech was a Mogaun chieftain, leader of
the Whiteclaw clan whose savagery had struck terror
into most of Honjir since their trek across the mountains
from Khatris just a few years ago. An uneasy league
of minor Mogaun chiefs and local warlords had kept a
kind of order back then, but month by month Azurech
had systematically defeated each one, absorbing their
warriors into his own host. Choroya, with its encircling
shanties of desperate, starving people, had been the
last significant stronghold. Now it was his.
While passing through the crowded lean-toes and filthy
tents, she was struck by the silence. No songs, no elders
recounting the ancient stories, no chatter, only a deadening
hush and resentful eyes following her. But then, the
order of their lives had been shattered. Once, it had
all been so faultless and clear – the spirit of the
Fathertree was the overarching principle, connecting
all things and all peoples through not just the priests
but also the visible, tangible benefits of the Rootpower
itself. In contrast, the Earthmother was the bedrock,
the unseen principle of stability, both a source of
life's blessings and the resting place for the spirit
at life's end. Twin forces in harmony with each other,
with the people and with the world and its seasons.
Now it was all no more, and for the sixteen years since
the Mogaun invasion existence had been a hollow mockery
of what had gone before. As Suviel rode past hollow-eyed
children and old women sobbing over still, covered forms,
her eyes stung with tears and she muttered bitter curses
under her breath. Yet her pity was tempered by a weary
sense of self-preservation that kept her riding till
the shanties were behind her.
The grey sky was turning ashen by the time she reached
a stretch of woods that marked the beginning of the
farm holdings. Once under cover of the trees she turned
off the road, carefully guiding her horse among the
moss-covered roots and slippery mire till she found
a westward winding path. After a two-hour ride through
the rain-swept trees, she came at last to where an overgrown
cart track led up into dark, bracken-cloaked foothills.
Despite her sodden clothes and chilled flesh, she smiled
- her memories had not misled her. Beyond the hills
reared the southern spur of the Rukang Mountains, a
cluster of craggy peaks riven by rocky gullies and sheer
gorges. Up there lay her destination, an ancient Rootpower
shrine called Wujad's Pool.
Suviel dismounted and led her horse up the track, all
the while keeping alert for any sound or sign of beasts.
Mountain paths like this had become dangerous since
the invasion. Where merchant caravans and bands of pilgrims
had once trod, now predators prowled and preyed and
clumps of thorny growth blocked the route. Often she
had to pause to hack a way through.
The rest of the day was spent thus, with the ceaseless
rain alternating between drizzle and lashing torrents.
Beneath a rocky overhang bearded with dripping moss
she made brief camp to rest and feed her horse, then
again stopped later under an eyeleaf tree, feeding herself
and wringing out her cloak.
Night was falling but she pressed on, determined to
reach the shrine before surrendering to sleep. At last
she came to the opening of a ravine just visible in
the poor light and after a moment's pause led her horse
in.
The walls were sheer, lichen-streaked rock. When the
last radiance of dusk was gone she unwrapped a tar-soaked
torch, lit it and continued. The ravine floor sloped
down, becoming grassy and increasingly covered in stunted
trees and spiny bushes that looked black in the torchlight.
The vegetation grew dense and the air took on a cold
edge and an ominous musty taint. Then the path opened
out and she halted, shivering in the sudden iciness,
staring with deep unease at what had become of Wujad's
Pool.
It was over five years since she had last visited the
shrine, since when some dreadful change had taken place.
Frozen grass and flowers crunched under her feet. Icicles
hung from the trees and hoarfrost glittered on the shattered
remnants of the small, four-pillared fane which worshippers
had built on the rock out in the pool generations ago.
The pool itself was an opaque mass of ice, but it appeared
to have been in some kind of violent, turbulent motion
at the very moment of its freezing. The wavering glow
of her torch struck gleaming points of light from the
solidified ripples and wavelets which radiated from
a dark depression near the rock.
She hitched her horse's leads to a low branch and ventured
out onto the pool, gingerly approaching the rock of
the fane. There she saw a great hole in the surface
of the pool, its inside full of ragged spikes and blades
of ice, its edges fringed with frozen splashes and foam.
An awful sense of malevolence hung over it and the coldness
was so raw that she had to move back a few paces.
Appalled and shivering, Suviel wrapped her cloak tighter.
Something evil had emerged from the water and in so
doing had cursed the pool and its surroundings. But
what, and when? The odour of musty decay, a sure sign
of Wellsource sorcery, was strongest here and made her
even more edgily alert for any disturbance nearby.
She came to a decision. Retracing her steps she halted
at the bank, rested the torch against a small boulder,
then straightened and commenced the thought-canto of
Purification. The Lesser Power unfolded within her and
the chill faded from her fingers and toes. At her feet,
frost melted on leaves of grass and the edge of the
pool began to gleam and puddle. Tiny fish became visible
in the spreading patch of melting water, jerking into
life, tails flapping. Then a small shape struggled free
of the dissolving ice and in a flurry of wings and spray
launched itself into the air. Suviel smiled as the bird,
a greenwing, flew once around the glade before alighting
on a branch.
But the lesser power canto was beginning to fail. She
could feel the pressure of the Wellsource curse inexorably
pushing back, freezing the waters she had freed. Mere
seconds later all was as it had been, apart from the
greenwing on its frosty perch. Then without warning,
the bird took off and darted away among the branches.
Suviel immediately felt a change in the air and across
the glade saw the glow of torches approaching through
the trees. Quickly she snatched up her own torch, extinguishing
it in the wet grass, then went over to her horse and
loosed the reins. She led the animal back along the
trail and hitched it to a strong bush near the ravine
entrance before creeping back to the glade to watch
from behind some foliage.
Seven figures emerged from the trees opposite, one
of them leading a solitary horse burdened with several
bags. All were garbed in brown furs and black cloaks,
the livery of Yularian merchants, but Suviel knew that
these were no traders. There was an air of disciplined
purpose to their movements that marked them for warriors.
Five of them walked out onto the pool and positioned
themselves at equal intervals around the hole in the
ice. A sixth removed a number of items from the horse's
baggage then took them over to the hole where the seventh
stood. This man was taller than the rest, his hair was
silver and his narrow face was as lean and pitiless
as a bird of prey. Suviel began to shiver again, sure
that she was looking at an Acolyte of the Wellsource.
Common sense told her that she should slip away while
still undiscovered, but something crucial was unfolding
here and she had to witness it. The Acolyte began to
construct the foundations of a ritual, scattering drops
from vials and powder from tiny caskets in and around
the hole while muttering a continuous litany of sibilant
words unintelligible to Suviel. Then he waved his assistant
away, lowered his head and spread his arms, and started
to speak in a guttural, droning voice. Suviel could
sense the power that was gathering around the Acolyte
as the musty decay became a stench that filled her nostrils
and tainted her tongue.
And there was light, a pallid, greenish glow that pulsed
up from the hole in the ice until it was a swirling
column of nebulous skeins and hazy eddies. Within it
Suviel could make out a confusion of images, a man asleep
in a tent, three riders galloping across a burning desert,
a skeleton clambering out of its grave...
The Acolyte stepped back from the column of light and
a misty wave rolled out from it in all directions, coming
to a halt where ice met ground, so that the pool appeared
to be enclosed by an opaque wall. But when the pale
wave reached the patch of water Suviel had melted, the
Acolyte swung round to stare at it. An instant later
his furious gaze swept unerringly to where she was crouched
behind the foliage, piercing her to the soul. His eyes
were dead white orbs. She gasped in fear and lost her
balance, breaking that terrible link. As she regained
her feet and scrambled towards the trail back out, she
heard him say:
"Take her!"
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