10: His Holy Bones (3 page)

Read 10: His Holy Bones Online

Authors: Ginn Hale

BOOK: 10: His Holy Bones
3.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Slowly John’s senses drifted deeper and his dreams sank into the calm of stones and earth. He floated through the steady flow of ground water as it seeped through fissures and poured into the deep chasms at Vundomu’s base. At the very edge of his awareness he felt the sun sink and then rise again. Its warmth crept across the sky and slowly it began another descent.

A cold, wet sensation brushed over the back of his hand. John bolted upright and then jerked back from a vision of white teeth and yellow hair. An instant later John realized that he was staring at a large yellow dog.

“Ji.” The murky confusion of sleep still hung in John’s thoughts. “You’re here.”

Ji simply nodded. It was an obvious statement and John felt a little embarrassed to have made it.

“I arrived about an hour ago. Kahlirash Wah’roa only just allowed me to come see you,” Ji said.

“Has something happened?” John suddenly straightened. “Have the Bousim rashan’im breached the Warren already?”

“No,” Ji replied. “And they never will. The Warren collapsed three days ago. The tremors from your assault on Vundomu brought it down.”

John could feel the blood draining from his face.

“How many survived?” John asked.

“Everyone. I evacuated the entire thing nearly two weeks ago,” Ji said. “Didn’t you get the news from Saimura?”

“Yes.” John barely recalled that conversation at the Hearthstone. It felt like it had been weeks since he’d seen Saimura. “He said you were emptying the Warren, but he didn’t know why.”

“And now you know why,” Ji said.

“You knew that I would do this?” John asked.

“Not always,” Ji said. John thought her expression was troubled, but he couldn’t be sure. “After you left the Warren, I began seeing the corridors collapse. Then I had visions of the streets crumbling and the chapel coming down. The visions became stronger and more clear, but after Ravishan brought you news of your sister, Loshai, then I knew that you would bring the entire Warren down.” Ji gazed past John to Ravishan. “How was he injured?”

“An ushiri stabbed him with a curse blade.”

“And he’s still living?” Ji cocked her head slightly. She placed her front legs on the edge of Ravishan’s cot and leaned over him. She took in several deep breaths. “A Payshmura treated him? You bore the wound.”

“Yes. The priest here did most of the work.” John indicated the old priest.

“I’ll see what more I can do,” Ji said. “You should go down and make sure that the kahlirash’im treat our people with respect. We’re willing to share our supplies, but I won’t have the kahlirash’im just appropriate them.”

“You brought supplies?”

“We brought everything we had,” Ji said. “Kansa and Tanash are down with the wagons. You should go to them. Keep that Commander Wah’roa in line.” Ji turned back to Ravishan.

“Will you be able to help him?” John asked.

“I’ll do all I can, Jahn. But you’ll just get in my way if you keep hovering here.”

“Sorry. I’ll go help Tanash.” John started to leave but then paused. “Thank you for coming, Ji.”

“We didn’t have anywhere else to go,” Ji said, but her tail wagged a little. “Still, you’re welcome. It’s good to see you, Jahn.”


John hurried down from the seventh terrace. The light was fading, but he could still easily make out the dark line of hundreds of Fai’daum interspersed between wagons and herds of sheep, goats, and tahldi. The line of them ribboned up from the ragged valley through the ruins of the first three terraces. A troop of twenty kahlirash’im stood between the nearest wagons and the walkway leading to the fourth terrace.

As John drew closer he recognized Wah’roa at the head of the troop and Kansa standing her ground in front of the wagons. Tanash sat on the closest wagon, holding the reins and looking both pained and bored. John waved at her and she squinted at him for several moments. Then, as John came closer, she suddenly grinned and waved back. Both Kansa and Wah’roa looked back at him. John took the last few feet of the walkway quickly.

Ji had been right to suspect that Wah’roa would want control of the Fai’daum refugees and their supplies. Though, John quickly grasped that it wasn’t just greed that motivated Wah’roa. Whole districts of Vundomu were still dangerous. Many oil fires had just been trenched and left to burn themselves out; several buildings remained unstable; and much of the water on the lower terraces had been contaminated by ruptured sewage pipes. Wah’roa didn’t want the Fai’daum or their livestock wandering haphazardly through Vundomu.

“Certainly, we will accept your escort, but that doesn’t mean that we are under your command.” Kansa stared intently at Wah’roa and John suddenly noticed how much she resembled her brother, Pirr’tu. Looking at her thick dark brows and hard angular jaw, John couldn’t help but wonder if Pirr’tu, Tai’yu, and Saimura had gotten word from Fenn and Lafi’shir. He wondered if they were still waiting at the Hearthstone and what they had made of his sudden departure.

“Everyone entering Vundomu is under the command of the kahlirash’im,” Wah’roa stated. “This is our holy city. And those who come here will obey our laws.”

“I’m sure no one is thinking of breaking any laws,” John said.

Both Kansa and Wah’roa looked at him. Kansa’s expression was one of annoyance at the interruption, but Wah’roa immediately bowed his head to John.

“Do you wish them to be allowed in, my—”

“Jath’ibaye,” John cut in quickly.

Wah’roa took a moment, seemingly gathering his will, and then said, “If that is what you wish, Jath’ibaye, then it will be done.”

“It is. Thank you, Wah’roa.”

Kansa frowned at John curiously and Tanash stared at him with her mouth hanging just slightly open.

“Ji says that the Fai’daum will share their supplies with us. And many of Ji’s students are trained in healing. Their assistance could save men’s lives.”

John felt odd using the term ‘us’ so freely with Wah’roa. He’d hardly spent more than two days with the man, but during that time they had labored and suffered for a common cause. They had saved lives and stabilized much of Vundomu. John couldn’t help but feel a bond in that.

“We would be glad for the aid,” Wah’roa said.

“How do you think we could best shelter them all?” John asked.

“It’s my decision then?” Wah’roa raised his brows.

“You’re the commander of the kahlirash’im. You would know best.”

“All right.” Wah’roa straightened. “We can house the majority of them on the fifth terrace, but they have to stay clear of the fires. The animals will have to be taken to the sixth terrace or there won’t be water for them.”

“Does that sound good to you, Kansa?” John asked.

Kansa squinted at John as if she still couldn’t believe that it was him she was looking at. John wondered if he had changed since she had last seen him. Or more probably, he hadn’t changed and she couldn’t imagine what sway an incompetent witch like himself could have over a kahlirash commander.

“Yes, it sounds fine. Thank you.” The last she said to Wah’roa. He simply inclined his head.

“My men will escort you up,” Wah’roa replied.

Kansa nodded and strode back to the lead wagon. She took the reins from Tanash and then followed the kahlirash’im up the newly repaired walkway. John watched the wagons, shepherds, and herds of animals file past. He could see the wonder and fear in the people’s expressions as they took in the destruction around them. John gazed at the heaps of rubble scattered across the street. An arm jutted out from beneath one huge mass of charred stone.

“You wish to keep your true name a secret from them, my lord?” Wah’roa asked in a low whisper. The man was so slim and quiet that John hadn’t even noticed his approach. He’d thought Wah’roa had gone with the rest of the kahlirash’im.

 “Yes, if I can.” John leaned against the cracked stones; below he could see the pulverized wreckage of the lower terraces as well as the shattered valley. Wah’roa joined John next to the remnants of the terrace wall.

“Why?” Wah’roa asked quietly.

“They’re already afraid of everything that’s happened,” John said. “The last thing they need to find out is that the Rifter has crossed the worlds. For anyone who isn’t a kahlirash, the Rifter means the end of the world.”

“They will learn otherwise,” Wah’roa said. He gazed at John intensely. “They will come to realize that you are a cleansing rain brought down from the heavens.”

“Announcing something like that would only scare them more, especially right now,” John replied.

“But you are the divine wrath,” Wah’roa said. “Shouldn’t they fear you? Shouldn’t they bow down before you and beg your mercy for all their wrongs?”

“That’s the last thing I’d want,” John said.

Wah’roa seemed surprised by this. He said, “I…I mean no offense, my lord…but you are not what I expected.”

“No, probably not.”

Far below in the valley, bodies of the dead lay twisted and mangled at the edges of the vast chasm. There were too many to count. A chilling wind swirled up from John and snow began to pour down over the carnage.

 “If I hadn’t witnessed your ascent from the valley to the temple I would never have thought…” Wah’roa began but then broke off. He studied John. “I never thought the Rifter would seem so human.”

“I am human,” John said. He immediately realized that he was wrong. A human being didn’t tear stones apart with his bare hands or ride on storm winds. Human beings died when they were impaled, poisoned, and shot. Humanity was no longer his to claim. John felt an almost physical loss at the thought.

“I was human,” John amended.

The two of them watched as the snow blanketed the valley, covering the dead like a pure, white shroud.

“Will you destroy the Payshmura?” Wah’roa finally asked.

John didn’t want to destroy anything. But he hadn’t necessarily wanted to crush this army either. If he had to make the choice again, he knew he would still come to Vundomu. He would still murder thousands of men to try and save Ravishan.

“I’ll do what I have to do to free the issusha’im and to keep Vundomu safe,” John said. He turned back to the distant silhouette of the temple.

“We should get back,” John said.

“Indeed,” Wah’roa agreed with the hint of a smile. “Our new Fai’daum allies will need looking after.”

They walked up together.

When John reached the infirmary, Ravishan was still unconscious, but his skin felt warmer. A little color had returned to his face. Ji hunched beside another wounded man, whispering low, growling words over his damaged body. She glanced up at John but didn’t stop her spell to greet him. John spotted Kansa, Tanash, and four of Ji’s other students also moving among the cots, treating the wounded. The old infirmary priest seemed flustered by the influx of young women. He gave Wah’roa a pleading glance, but Wah’roa just shrugged.

John knelt down beside Ravishan’s cot. He took Ravishan’s hand in his own. Where his fingers rested against Ravishan’s wrist, John felt the weak kick of his pulse. John bowed his head and closed his eyes, but he didn’t sleep. He couldn’t have slept, but he needed to shut out the outside world, even for a few minutes. He needed to be with Ravishan, even if Ravishan could not respond to him.

From time to time he caught glimpses of Wah’roa or the other kahlirash’im watching him from the infirmary doorway. Sometimes he heard them offering prayers. Late in the evening, Sen’an brought John a bowl of boiled taye, bowing and apologizing to John for the poor quality of the meal.

John assured him that he preferred coarse food to most of the more refined dishes. John thanked him and ate a few spoonfuls, but he felt guilty about enjoying the nourishment while Ravishan lay there unconscious at the edge of death. He pushed the bowl away and lay his head back down on Ravishan’s cot.

Near midnight Wah’roa came for him. Another fire had erupted on the forth terrace. John spent the rest of the night devouring flames.

Just after sunrise, he stood on the outer wall, taking a break from the heat and smoke. Soot streaked his whole body and saturated his clothes. He scooped up a handful of fresh snow and scrubbed it across his face, then stopped, momentarily surveying the sparkling white valley below. Now that the snow had disguised the shapes of bodies and broken machinery, John could almost find it beautiful, so long as he didn’t think about what lay beneath the surface.

Then, from the corner of his eye, he saw the tiny shapes of riders approaching from the north. There were, perhaps, fifteen at first. But as he watched, more and more appeared over the rise of the hill. Even from the great distance they looked ragged. None wore uniforms. John thought that some of them might be wearing blankets rather than coats. Their tahldi straggled and stumbled through the wreckage of the valley. John caught sight of a group of people on foot as well. Then he noticed more, many of them hunched under the weight of packs, others leading goats on tethers. They were too disorganized to be Fai’daum, but they definitely looked like refugees of some kind. John wondered if they had come from Amura’hyym’ir. There was a chance that Lafi’shir and Fenn could be among them.

 Bells rang from the watchtowers and twenty of the kahlirash’im rode out to meet the people approaching Vundomu. John watched for a few moments, trying to pick out a familiar face from among the refugees. They were too many and all of them too far away. Several kahlirash’im dropped back to the people on foot and helped them up onto their tahldi.

John headed back up to the temple. He climbed the walkways slowly, checking the stones and iron girders for flaws. As he walked between the makeshift animal pens on the sixth terrace a sudden screeching, rending noise tore through the air. The sick sensation of the ripping Gray Space washed over John from the seventh terrace. The ushiri’im were back.

John bolted through the mud and wreckage. He charged up the walkway. He heard another shriek of the Gray Space and this time he smelled the burning ozone. They were in the temple.

John wanted to move faster, to call down the wind and lightning, but he didn’t dare. He couldn’t assault Vundomu again. He sprinted through the street and took the temple steps in a single leap.

Other books

The Memory of Death by Trent Jamieson
JakesPrisoner by Caroline McCall
Crown Prince Challenged by Linda Snow McLoon
The Osage Orange Tree by William Stafford
Alpha Fighter by Ava Ashley
Caught on Camera with the CEO by Natalie Anderson
Mortal Magick by Patty Taylor
Down Solo by Earl Javorsky