Brave Story (61 page)

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Authors: Miyuki Miyabe

BOOK: Brave Story
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“No, actually.”

Wataru leaned against the wall. “Then, can’t you do anything? Maybe there’s a key to the door…”

“Like I said, there’s nothing I can do,” the sweet voice said quickly. “I just came to cheer you on. I crawled all the way up here just to talk to you before it was too late. You should thank me.”

“Thank you…” Wataru glared at the window.
What did she mean “crawled up here”?

“Wataru, you should really try to stop breathing so heavily in there. Breathe by the window.”

“Why?”

“The smell of the sula isn’t good for your head.”

Wataru leaned flat against the wall, staring at the heaps of leaves rustling in the faint breeze from the window.

“Not good for my head?”

“They cloud your mind,” the sweet voice said. “They’re used, sometimes… for torture.”

Wataru was about to protest how ridiculous that sounded, when he heard a clattering noise against the heavy door.

The door was thrust open, and a large man holding a bowgun quickly entered the room. He was wearing workman’s clothes, heavy boots, and had a bristly beard.

The arrow set in the bowgun was pointed straight at Wataru’s head. Without a word, the bearded man moved to the side of the door, and a second person entered. His companion was smaller, and thinner, and he wore a longsleeved robe—much like the one worn by Father Diamon at the Cistina Trabados Cathedral. Not only that, but in his right hand he held a scepter, and in his left, a small hand mirror, just like the statue of Cistina.

“You have awoken,” the robed man said in an oddly high-pitched voice. “Do you know where you are?”

Wataru worked his numb tongue into motion. “Triankha…Hospital.”

“I see. Then your memory is intact.” The robed man smiled faintly. On closer inspection, he seemed little more than a boy, a pretty, naïve boy—wait, or was he a girl?

“I—I came looking for a friend,” Wataru said, his voice trembling. “Branch Chief Pam in Lyris said that a boy of his description had been seen at Triankha Hospital…”

The robed man, still smiling, approached Wataru. As he walked, the sula leaves on the floor of the cell swirled to the side, making a path. “We, too, received word from Chief Pam. He said that a daemon—a servant of the Goddess—with a terrible madness in his eyes, and evil plans in his heart, had set foot on our holy ground.”

“Pam said what?” Wataru gaped. “But he was the one who told us about Triankha Hospital!”

That was when he finally realized what had happened. They had been drawn here on purpose. The chief had lied. He didn’t know where Mitsuru was. He had sent them off into the sula wood so that they could be captured.
He lied to me!

“It was a trap…” Wataru muttered, unable to control his trembling. The robed man stepped even closer, still smiling. He knelt, and brought his face so close Wataru could feel his breath. “You’re a Traveler, yes?”

Wataru didn’t answer. Chief Pam didn’t know that. And he thought it best not to tell these people.

“You need not say a thing, you still cannot hide the truth from us,” the robed man continued. “We know what you did in Gasara. We hear many things. Chief Pam only feigned innocence. He knew it all from the very beginning.”

So that’s how it was. Wataru now totally regretted telling people his secret. He should have listened to Kee Keema.

“So what if I am a Traveler?” Wataru said, forcing himself to breathe calmly. “What do you care? Is that wrong?”

“Travelers are our eternal enemies,” the robed man answered quietly. “To go against the teachings of the Old God would be a sin.”

Wataru didn’t like the sound of that one bit.

“You’re believers of the Old God?”

The robed man nodded curtly. “It is so.”

“And I bet you’re behind the rise in discrimination in Lyris. And the cathedral—that’s for your purposes, isn’t it. It’s really a church to the Old God.”

The robed man did not answer, but the glimmer in his eyes was enough for Wataru to know he was right. “You’re proselytizing for the Old God at the Cistina Trabados! And the chief is one of your converts!”

“He seems a bright lad. Pity,” the small man said. The bearded man made no reply—he just continued to point his bowgun at Wataru’s head.

Just then, the robed man moved his hands quickly. Thinking the scepter would hit him, Wataru flung up his arms, covering his head. But the blow never came. The robed man was holding out his small hand mirror, sticking it in Wataru’s face. “Look! This is absolute proof! Evil daemon of the Goddess, know that the Mirror of Truth reveals only pure souls. You are as nothing to me!”

Indeed, there was nothing in the mirror. Even when it was pressed up so close it nearly touched his nose, all Wataru could see reflected was the white rock wall behind his head.

“Your destiny ends here, servant of the Goddess. By our hands shall you be reduced to the filth and sinful dust whence you came.”

The robed man shouted so loud his cheeks flushed red. Jumping in the air, he thrust the scepter and mirror above his head. Seizing his chance, Wataru mustered all his strength and pushed as hard as he could against the man. With a great cry, he fell on top of the bearded man behind him. Both tumbled to the floor, the bearded man flipping onto his back with a heavy thud. Wataru leapt up and shot for the door.

“There is no escape!” the robed man shouted, climbing to his feet behind Wataru. He swung his scepter, and a whirlwind rose in the room, lifting the dried leaves from the floor. As Wataru watched, they fluttered into two piles at either side of the room, but he didn’t stop to see what happened next. Grabbing the handle and yanking the door open, Wataru dashed out into the hall.

Along the side of the smooth rock wall that ran down the hallway, Wataru saw several doors just like the one he had come through. The wall on the other side of the corridor was smooth, without a single window. He looked right and left, but both ways faded quickly into darkness, and it was impossible to tell how far they went.

Wataru ran to the right. His leg was on fire. The white hallway was perfectly straight and featured an endless string of heavy metal doors. No matter how far he went, it was exactly the same.

Suddenly, a door about fifteen feet ahead of him opened wide, swinging so fast it bounced off the wall and started to close again. Then, from the other side of the door, a large lump of dried leaves appeared. It looked as though the leaves had gathered to form the shape of…

It’s a man.
The leaf-man was twice as tall as Wataru, with an oversize head, and it walked with two bristling arms extended, like a mummy in an old horror movie. It stood before Wataru, blocking the passage.

Wataru screeched to a halt and whipped around so fast it hurt his neck. One by one, the doors behind him were opening. From each stepped a leafman. He was surrounded.

The long corridor filled with the pungent odor of leaves. Wataru felt his legs shake beneath him. He felt dizzy. His vision dimmed.


Edoro wara sabtalongi sigur!
” a high voice was chanting. It was the robed man, standing at the side of the corridor, scepter and mirror crossed on his chest. “Come forth, o spirit of the woods, destroyer of the evil Goddess’s schemes, your voice shall join ours and bring righteous victory!”

As one, the leaf-men opened their mouths and howled. A sound like a giant cloth ripping filled the air. Then they charged.

 

When Wataru came to, all around him was darkness.

The wound in his right leg continued to throb. He was lying on his side. The floor beneath him was hard. He couldn’t move his hands. Am I tied up? He couldn’t move his feet. He couldn’t stand.

When he tried to roll over, there was a metallic clinking sound. The sound of chains jostling against one another.
Why is it so dark?

He heard low singing—not one but many voices. They weren’t that far away, but Wataru couldn’t decide which direction the sound was coming from.
Right? Left? In front? Behind?

He heard a footstep and sensed someone’s presence. A hand grabbed him from behind by the collar and dragged him violently upward. He felt the hand unfastening something by the nape of his neck. Suddenly, the darkness broke. Whatever had been covering his head was taken off.

He was outside. It was night. He could see the Triankha Hospital, the sula forest.

A great crowd surrounded Wataru. They were wearing clothes that looked like large grain sacks. They held candles in their hands, and they wore white hoods. He couldn’t see their faces, but Wataru instinctively knew they were all ankha. This must be them, the believers in the Old God, the flock of Triankha Hospital and the cathedral back in town.

The chanting voices belonged to the men. They had formed a large circle with Wataru at its very center. His hands and feet were chained.

The stench of sula leaves stuck in his nostrils. He felt lightheaded.

“Stand,” said a voice from someone at his side. He looked to see a believer standing next to him. Large hands emerged from beneath his grain-sack clothes.

“Stand.”

The giant hands stretched out, grabbed Wataru by the collar, and dragged him to his feet. The hands were covered with thick black hair on both sides. If he hadn’t seen the hair, he might have thought the hands belonged to a statue, they were so hard and cold.

“Walk.”

The hands moved, pushing Wataru toward the edge of the circle. Wataru stumbled and fell, only to be dragged once again to his feet.

“No stalling,” the giant grunted. “Stand. Walk.”

Wataru began to walk on unsteady feet. His Brave’s Sword was still at his waist, though his chains were too short for him to grab it. There was nothing he could do. He could hardly even think straight. He staggered forward, and the singing of the believers grew louder, turning into a great chorus. Part of the circle broke, giving Wataru a view of what lay beyond.

He couldn’t believe his eyes. Even after blinking several times and shaking his head, the scene before him didn’t change.

It was a guillotine. He’d never seen one before, but he was familiar with them from video games and comic books: a simple stand, with an angled blade for cutting off the heads of criminals.

The young man in the robe, holding only the scepter in one hand, still smiling, walked up to stand next to the horrible device. He wore a wine-red sash over his robe. Directly behind him, a great bonfire blazed, making him look as though he were surrounded by a golden aura of light.

Wataru found he couldn’t take another step forward. His knees shuddered, and he froze in place.
“Your destiny ends here, daemon, servant of the Goddess,”
the robed man’s voice sounded in his ears.

Wataru looked up. The blade of the guillotine shone as though with evil intent in the reflected light of the bonfire. He felt like it was smiling at him, teeth bared, ready for the kill.

This is ridiculous.
That was all he could think.
How could this happen to me? What have I done?

“And so we see that evil, too, knows fear,” the robed man said in a gentle voice. “But do not worry. Only by destroying your body, puppet of the Goddess, will your soul be purified. By the benevolence of the great Old God, your purified being will be reborn again in Vision, in whatever form you desire…”

“I’ll pass, thanks,” Wataru spat. “You have no right to kill me! I don’t believe in your Old God. I’m a Traveler, from the real world. I came here to change my destiny, not die!”

The robed men smiled even more broadly. “We have no words for those enslaved to the false beliefs.”

“Whatever! You don’t know what you’re talking about!” Wataru yelled. He turned to the other believers gathered there. “You know what you’re doing? Do you even know? Why…”

Just then, Wataru noticed someone standing beyond the guillotine. He wore the same robe as the rest of them, and he was holding an axe. Wataru’s words froze in his mouth. That’s the axe that will cut the rope that holds the blade…

“Enough of your foul words, polluted daemon.”

Wataru was pushed hard from behind onto the forest floor. The believers swayed, rapturous with joy and anticipation.

Heavy hands dragged Wataru to his feet, pulling him toward the guillotine. He stuck out his legs and jabbed to the side with his elbows, trying to resist, but the man holding him was incredibly strong. He only succeeded in kicking up dust, and further amusing the believers. He felt dizzy and nauseated.
I’m only wasting my strength. I won’t be able to escape this way. But how, then…how?

The hands yanked on his chains, and he took a few more wobbly steps toward the platform.
No, I don’t want to die this way! This is insane!

The more he shouted, the louder the song of the believers rang in his ears.

“I will give you one chance,” the robed man said, walking toward Wataru. “To truly purify your soul, and ease your rebirth into Vision, you must confess before your execution. Now, tell me, where is the other Traveler?”

Wataru’s hair stood on end.
He’s asking about Mitsuru! They want to capture him too!

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