A Sky of Spells (Book #9 in the Sorcerer's Ring) (15 page)

BOOK: A Sky of Spells (Book #9 in the Sorcerer's Ring)
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“You have built a greater
city than even your father had, even at his peak. It is now invincible. Finally,
these people have found peace, thanks to you. You should be very proud.”

Gwendolyn wanted to say:
Yes.
You are right. Peace has come, and it will last forever.

But she could not bring
herself to utter the words. Deep down, something was gnawing at her, she was
not sure what. She thought of the blackened fruit. She thought of Argon’s
prophecies. She knew she should feel safe, and yet somehow she did not feel
entirely settled. Some part of her could not forget Argon’s ominous words, that
fateful choice she had made, back in the Netherworld, the sacrifice. His
prophecy. Argon’s words rang in her head, like a stranger knocking at her door
who would just not go away:

“It is when you feel most
secure that you always have the most to fear.”

 

 

CHAPTER NINETEEN

 

 

Thor held his torch high and
walked beside Gwendolyn in the dark, a procession of thousands of torches
winding its way through the summer night. The day’s long festivities had
finally morphed into night, and Gwendolyn led the huge procession out through
the rear gate of King’s Court, and onto the wide path leading up King’s Hill.

Thor was excited as he
realized it was time for the annual Lighting of the Night, the mystical
ceremony that occurred on every Summer Solstice. It was a time where the
revelries could continue in a more subdued form, lasting throughout the warm
summer night. It was a demarcation, a time that changed the nature of the
holiday from revelry to a sacred time.

Gwendolyn marched slowly,
somberly, as MacGil rulers had done for centuries on this night, lute players
following far behind, playing a slow, mournful tune. It was their job to both
entice and scare away the spirits that were rumored to dance on this night.

“I am hoping Argon will be
there,” Gwen said to Thor.

“I haven’t seen him in
moons,” Thor said.

“Nor have I,” Gwen said. “He
has the strangest way of disappearing. You don’t think he’s left us forever, do
you?”

Thor shrugged. With Argon,
one never knew.

Thor took Gwen’s hand as
they walked, and he felt the energy coursing through her—not just hers, but
also the baby’s. Thor was so on-edge these days, waiting for the baby to come
any day, preparing and getting nervous for the huge wedding, finally just days
away. He was anxious for everything to go smoothly—the wedding, the birth. He
wanted all of the endless waiting to be over already.

Gwen squeezed his hand, and
he looked over at her.

“Tonight,” she whispered,
smiling. “When the last of this is done, we shall have more time together.”

Thor smiled back. “There is
nothing I wish for more.”

High up, in the distance,
there came two screeches—Mycoples and Ralibar—circling, letting their presence
be known before they soared up and into the night. Thor took solace from their
presence. They often flew off in the night, yet they always returned in the
morning.

“When I see them,” Gwen
remarked, “I feel as if nothing bad can ever come to the Ring.”

“As do I,” Thor said. “With two
dragons, the Shield restored, the Ring is finally impregnable.”

They marched, thousands of
people filing in behind them, all of them chanting a slow, somber tune designed
to bring in the night. As they slowly ascended, the path taking them in broad
circles, looping again and again, Thor looked up and saw the hill, rising gradually,
hundreds of feet high. This hill was different than all the others, covered
entirely with smooth grass, and paved with perfectly round circles etched into its
sides. In between each circle was a small moat, filled with perfectly still,
reflecting water. As they all slowly ascended the path, circling again and
again, Thor watched all the torches reflecting in the water, a thousand points
of reflected light lighting up the hill.

King’s Hill was a magical
and mystical place, Thor knew, a place only frequented once a year, despite its
prominent position on the outskirts of King’s Court. It was also, mysteriously,
one of the few places unharmed in the war. As Thor walked, he could feel the
power of this sacred placed, the earth feeling alive, humming through his feet.

Thousands of revelers
followed Gwendolyn as she took one step at a time, leading the way with her
torch, towards the top.

“He’s here,” she said,
looking up.

Thor looked up, and saw,
with relief, that Argon was there, standing at the top, in white robes and hood,
looking down, like a shepherd patiently awaiting his flock.

They were close to the very top,
and Thor remained a few steps behind as Gwen continued on, taking her place a few
steps below Argon on the highest plateau. She glanced back and saw her people
all stood below, spread in circles on the paths all throughout King’s Hill, and
she waited patiently for Argon.

Argon finally closed his
eyes and raised his palms out before him.

“The Night of Lights falls
on the longest day of the year. Yet it also marks the beginning of days of darkness.
Intermixed with light, there is always darkness—with joy, tragedy. Days are
alive, contracting and expanding; people are not stagnant, either. Our universe
is always in flux, and us along with it.”

He took a deep breath.

“This a holy day, not just
one for reveling. It is a day and night for reflection. Look at the waters
before you. Look at your torch light burning in them. Remember that light will
fade. Remember from where you came. Your time here is but short, but a fleeting
breath. We are all like a passing cloud, a summer breath, that is no more.”

Argon lowered his head and
stepped back, and Gwendolyn climbed the final few steps to the highest point on
King’s Hill. She stood there, beside Argon, and turned and faced the masses. As
she did, everyone immediately took a knee and bowed their heads low.

Gwen reached out and raised
her amber torch and slowly lowered it, touching it to the narrow strip of water
at the top of the mount. As she did, the water mysteriously lit up in flames.
Thor watched in wonder as the flames in the water spread, lighting the narrow
moats of water all up and down King’s Hill, rings of fire between the paths
spaced out every twenty feet, lighting up the mount, and lighting up the night.

All the people settled in
now that the waters were lit, taking spots beside the flames and getting
comfortable for the night.

Gwendolyn came down, took
Thor’s hand, and together they found a spot in the grass, leaning against the hill,
beside her brothers and close friends. Sitting nearby, beside the flames, were
Kendrick and Sandara, Reece and Selese, Godfrey and Illepra, Erec and Alistair,
Elden and Indra and Steffen and O’Connor. Krohn came up beside Thor and sat
beside him, resting his head in his lap. Thor looked everywhere for Argon, but
he was already gone.

The group sat staring out at
the fires all around them, each holding a silver goblet of summer wine, as was
the custom. They all waited as Gwendolyn raised her goblet first, as was the
custom, took a sip, then reached out and splashed the rest on the fire. The flames
mysteriously hissed and rose higher. The others all then raised their goblets,
and drank. Thor took a long drink on his, and the strong, yellow summer wine
went right to his head.

Thor leaned back beside Gwen,
draped an arm around her, and placed his other hand on her belly. He felt a
deep sense of content. His body was warm from the summer wind, from the flames,
from the wine in his veins. He and Gwen lay back in the grass, as did the other
couples in the quiet night, and they looked up at the night sky, filled with
sparkling red stars. Thor felt there was no place he’d rather be. Everything
felt so perfect in the world, and hoped it would never change.

Nearby, Reece and Selese leaned
back, kissing, sharing wine from a goblet, very much in love. Thor admired his
friend’s courage in proposing so soon, and he looked forward to their double
wedding. Beside them were Elden and Indra, sitting up beside each other, each
of them hardened warriors and neither of them expressive in their love for each
other. Thor could tell they were in love, yet they were on the opposite
spectrum on Reece and Selese in the way they showed it. The night was so quiet,
punctuated only by the soft summer wind, and the sound of the flames. Yet the
acoustics were odd up here, and the wind carried voices in the air, making Thor
hear the others conversations, whether he wanted to or not.

“Now that the wars are over,
I must visit my father,” Elden said to her. “Assuming he still lives. It will
be a long journey across the Ring to my home village.” He looked at her cautiously.
“If you’d like to journey with me?”

Indra stared,
expressionless, staring into the flames. She almost appeared as if she were not
interested in him—though Thor knew that she was. She just kept up her walls.

She shrugged.

“It’s not like I have anything
better to do,” she said.

“Is that a yes?” he asked.

She shrugged again.

“Why not?” she said.

Elden reddened.

“Can’t you just admit that
you care for me?” he asked.

She turned to him, frowning.

“I am here with you because
your group took me from the Empire. And I am certainly not going back to the Empire.”

“Are you saying then you don’t
care for me?” he asked.

She shrugged and looked
away.

“I’m here, aren’t I?” she
said.

They fell back into silence.
That was the way it had always been between them, Indra determined to maintain
her cold, masculine, indifferent front, refusing to show any affection for Elden.
But Thor could see it in the way she stole glances at him when he wasn’t
looking, and he knew that she truly cared for him, much more so than she would
ever admit—and perhaps, tragically, more so than Elden would ever know. Thor wondered
what would ever become of the two of them?

“That is your third goblet of
wine, is it not?” Illepra asked Godfrey, not far away, on the other side of Thor.

Godfrey smiled as he
finished the rest of it in one large gulp.

“I wish it were the fourth,”
he said with a chuckle. Godfrey laughed and poured himself another.

Illepra frowned.

“You should not be drinking
so much,” she reprimanded. “Your injuries still need to heal.”

“Heal?” he said. “That was
six moons ago. I was healed within days.”

“You need to stop drinking,”
she said. “It is time for you to leave it behind.”

“What difference does it
make to you?” he asked.

She reddened.

“I’ve saved your life twice
now,” she said. “What was the point, if you will just throw it away?”

“I never asked you to,” Godfrey
said.

She raised her hands to her
hips.

“Since we returned to King’s
Court you had an opportunity to become someone new, to take part in the
rebuilding. Instead, you spend all your time in the taverns, celebrating.”

“Is there not much to
celebrate?” he asked.

“Have you no better way to
spend your time than to become a common drunkard?”

“Is there any better way to
spend one’s time?” he countered. “If there is, let me know. I haven’t seen it.”

She scowled.

“You promised me you would give
up drink.”

“And I did,” he said
sheepishly. “For a while.”

Godfrey, amused by himself,
broke out into fresh laughter.

But Illepra was unamused;
she suddenly got up and stormed away, furious. Godfrey watched her go, a
confused look on his face.

“I don’t understand her at
all,” he said aloud.

“Go to her,” Selese said.

“Why should I?”

“Are you that ignorant? Do you
not see how much she loves you?”

Godfrey’s face fell in
wonder, then recognition, and then he turned bright red, and not from wine. For
the first time, he seemed to really recognize it.

He looked down, and kicked
the ground at his feet. But he did not move. Instead, he took another long sip of
his wine.

Thor wanted to get away from
all the voices, to give them all privacy, and so he took Gwendolyn’s hand,
stood, and the two of them began a leisurely stroll, walking along the edge of
the fires. Thor sighed, wondering about the mysteries of love, of what brought
two people close to each other. It all seemed inscrutable to him.

As they went, they came
across Kendrick and Sandara, sitting on the outskirts of the group, in a darker
corner of the hill. As they approached, Thor could hear them talking.

“But the Ring is your home
now,” Kendrick said to Sandara.

Sandara sat there, tall and
proud, bearing the resemblance of the Empire, staring into the flames as she
shook her head.

“My home is far from here. In
a foreign land.”

“In the occupied Empire. Would
you rather be there?”

“Home is home,” she replied.

“And what of us?” Kendrick
asked. “Do you not care for us?”

She turned and looked at him,
and stroked his cheek.

“I care more for us than I could
say. That is the only reason I am still sitting here right now.”

Thor took Gwendolyn’s hands
and they continued walking, further and further, until they came across Erec
and Alistair, talking quietly amongst themselves.

“There appear to be many
weddings in the air,” Alistair said to Erec.

“And ours will come soon, my
lady,” Erec replied.

Alistair turned and looked at
him, eyes widening.

“Really?” she asked, filled
with hope.

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