Read Destiny: Child Of Sky Online

Authors: Elizabeth Haydon

Tags: #Adventure, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adult, #Dragons, #Epic

Destiny: Child Of Sky (91 page)

BOOK: Destiny: Child Of Sky
6.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The fragile Seer looked toward the sky as the eyes of the throng locked onto her.

“There is no Lady Cymrian," she said as if in a dream, lost inside herself.

'Thus says the Seer of the Present, the indisputable authority!“ Ashe cried. "My fellows, as of this moment, there is no Lady Cymrian! Your claim is rejected, Grandmother!"

After a moment of silence, the Bowl erupted in hoots and cheers. Anwyn was thunderstruck; she glared at Achmed and Ashe, who were exchanging the glance of inadvertent co-conspirators.

'Silence!“ she snarled, and the thunderous applause diminished. "You are a leaderless rabble, unable to even discern the difference between royal blood and the self-aggrandizing opportunist who took over a realm of monsters and called himself King."

'You're wrong there,“ said Oelendra in a commanding voice. "I believe everyone here is able to discern who the self-aggrandizing opportunist is. Give up, Anwyn; spare yourself any further humiliation. This Council has come together to build up what you have destroyed, to fix the trust that you and Gwylliam shattered. The Three have rid this land of the demon you are solely responsible for. Had you been any kind of ruler at all, you would not have sold us to the F'dor for your own petty purposes. Leave and go back to your cave. You are a thing of the Past, in all senses of the word."

Anwyn turned slowly in the direction of Oelendra's voice. Unlike the others that had decried her, this particular shout had caught her attention, and the deliberation with which she moved to face her accuser was apparent to the assemblage. The Council grew quiet as the Seer looked down into the Lirin warrior's eyes, an expression of undisguised hatred disfiguring her face.

'Thus speaks the so-called Lirin champion,“ Anwyn said in a mocking voice; she laughed derisively as Oelendra's nostrils flared and her eyes began to gleam with an antipathy that matched the Seer's. "Well, well. How very interesting. Given the subject is treachery and self-serving behavior, I would think that you would have chosen to remain silent, Oelendra, to try and avoid scrutiny of your own actions. I guess you are as much a fool as you are a coward."

Loud shouts of angry protest issued forth, mostly from the First Fleet and Lirin encampments, but the sound was swallowed almost instantly by a vibration within the Bowl of the Moot. Anwyn had the floor, and she knew it. Triumph began to shine in her eyes, as she strode farther up the rocky outcropping to the west of the Summoner's Ledge.

When she got to the summit of the Speaker's Rise, she reached out her long arms to the sky in a gesture of celebration, as though she was gathering power to herself.

Then she pointed at Oelendra and laughed, a loud, nasty laugh that echoed off the rockwalls of the Moot.

'You pathetic hypocrite," Anwyn said, staring down at Oelendra. Unconsciously the crowd around the Lirin champion began to peel away slightly, leaving space.

Though Oelendra was surrounded by her contingent still, she was alone in the circle. Rhapsody's blood boiled, and she tried to step away from the Summoner's Ledge; if no one else would stand by Oelendra, she would. But her feet were frozen where she stood; she could not leave the Ledge.

'There she stands, the Holy Warrior, the sworn enemy of the mythical demon.

You've made quite a reputation for yourself, haven't you, Oelendra? The passionate crusader, singular in her quest to deliver us all from the evil that Gwylliam unwittingly brought with him. Refusing the leadership, refusing the power, to concentrate on ridding the world of the F'dor. Aren't you noble. How many have come to you, seeking to make your quest their own, to be ridden mercilessly, trained obsessively, then sent without exception to their deaths? Do you still weep for them, Oelendra? Do you mourn the loss of the flower of the Cymrians? When the power was yours all along to prevent it yourself?"

The silence in the Bowl grew heavier. Even as far away as he was from her, Ashe could see Oelendra's jaw clench tighter, and the look of hate in her eyes grew more intense.

'Tell them, Oelendra, while you have them all here. Tell them how you knew, you knew the appointed time and place to kill it decades ago. Manwyn told you, in the presence of my son, exactly when and where you would need to be in order to destroy the demon, back when it was still weak enough to do so without the aid of the Three. Do you deny it?“ Her eyes flashed and her voice grew harsher. "Do you?"

Two hundred thousand eyes turned to Oelendra. Her head was still erect, her back and shoulders straight, but something had left her eyes. “No," she answered. Her voice was barely audible.

A sickening smile of victory crawled over Anwyn's face. “I don't think anyone heard you, Oelendra," she taunted, drawing herself up straighter. “What did you say?"

Oelendra sighed inaudibly; Rhapsody could see the light go out of her face. “No,"

she repeated. The breaking of her spirit was visible.

Murmurs of disbelief began to whisper through the Bowl, and there were mutterings on all sides. Anwyn was smiling gloriously at the humiliation of her longtime adversary.

'You knew it, and you refused to go. You shirked your responsibilities as Iliachenva'ar, not to mention those of the grand and glorious Lirin champion!

Admit it, Oelendra; you were afraid, the state of which you allow no one else the benefit. You heard the warning, and the risk was too great, wasn't it? So instead you allowed another to go in your place, another worth a thousand of yourself, to stand in your stead and endure the consequences. My grandson, the hope of the Cymrian peoples, an innocent, suffered indescribable agony, the loss of his very soul, because of your cowardice. Your inaction delivered him into its clutches! Do you admit it?"

'Stop it!“ shouted Ashe. "Who are you to taunt her? You, who destroyed the Purity Diamond, our one weapon against it? I went alone against the demon; it was my decision. If I don't hold her responsible for my fate, why should you?"

'Why?“ Anwyn asked contemptuously. "Shall I tell him why, Oelendra? Perhaps he would be interested to know that he is not the only one you have delivered thus.

Shall I tell him, tell all of them, of Pendaris?“ Oelendra's brow furrowed in disbelief. "Yes, Oelendra, perhaps you should tell them instead. Tell them how your husband died; tell them whether it would have happened had it not been for you."

Oelendra's face went white. Even from across the Bowl in his position at the head of the Second Fleet, Ashe could feel the breath leave her body, and he knew that this accusation was a new one, one that caused a fresh, deep wound. Anwyn let loose a crow of delight, and pointed at the warrior again. “This is why I should retain the title of Lady; I alone understand the Past, the history of the Cymrians! I alone know your secrets. Well, Oelendra? Tell them! Tell them who you have delivered to the F'dor in the Past; shall you deliver all of us to similar fates as well in the Future?"

The assemblage was now beginning to break into arguments and mutter loudly, far more bitterly and violently than they had before. Ashe looked across to Achmed and their eyes met. Between them a thought passed instantaneously: a riot was about to start. They both looked up to the Sum-moner's Ledge at Rhapsody, but she was bent over, obscured from their view.

When she stood again they could see she was rummaging through her pack. Her face was calm, and when her eyes met Achmed's, she smiled.

Rhapsody took out her harp and began to play. Ashe instantly recognized the tune; it was the song she had used during his renaming ceremony. The melody echoed off the walls of the Moot, the vibration increasing with each bounce. Wherever it touched, the earth began to shimmer.

'Anwyn,“ she said. Her word, spoken softly, drowned out all other sound in the Moot. The Seer turned to her with wrath in her eyes at the interruption. "Anwyn,"

she repeated, “be silent."

Anwyn's mouth opened in shock; seconds later she recovered, and her face burned with rage, her body coiling like a serpent ready to strike. The muscles of her throat tensed as she prepared to reply, and her eyes met Rhapsody's own with a hate unlike any the Singer had ever seen.

Rhapsody returned her gaze unblinkingly. Her face was serene, even glowing; the only sign that she was at all intent was the striking shade her eyes had turned. They were the color of spring grass, blazing with a light that caused even the Seer to hesitate for a moment. Then Anwyn spoke, or tried to; her mouth moved, but no words, no sound, came out.

Pity came into Rhapsody's eyes as Anwyn clutched at her throat; otherwise her face remained serene. The woman roiled in rage, curling down into herself with a silent scream that had no echo; when she looked back at Rhapsody her anger was replaced with a fierce look of fear.

'You have yielded the floor by repeatedly demanding that another answer your questions; indeed, you have violated your office as Seer of the Past by demanding an answer for the Future. Anwyn ap Merithyn, tuatha Elynsynos, I rename you The Past. Your actions are out of balance. Henceforth your tongue will only serve to speak of the realm into which your eyes alone were given entry. That which is the domain of your sisters, the Present and the Future, you will be unable to utter. No one shall seek you out for any other reason, so may you choose to convey your knowledge better this time, lest you be forgotten altogether."

She began to sing, and the faces of the throng of Cymrians went slack with wonder. Her voice was sweet but smoky, filled with sorrow, and her song spoke of their history, in all its horror and pain. The lyrics were Ancient Lirin, so not everyone in the gathering understood them, but those who did began to weep. The tears were not theirs exclusively, though; understanding of the words was not necessary to comprehend the message of the song.

The song told of war, the war of their homeland, and their flight in desperation to escape its destruction. It built to a terrible crescendo, then resolved into a sea aire, the story of their voyage to the new world, through the Great Storm, and the wonder of the discovery.

Ashe, himself weeping in awe, felt a smile come over his face as the song changed yet again. He realized that the song was a rhapsody, with movements unique to each tale in the legend; somehow the thought delighted him. He listened raptly as she sang of the wonder of finding the White Tree, of meeting the inhabitants, of reuniting the Three Fleets, and all the glory days of the Cymrian Age that built great cities, sought deep knowledge, and strove for the betterment of their people.

Then, as the hearts of the masses were floating in poignant remembrance, their faces transfixed in proud memory, the tune changed again.

It became an insidious melody, secretive and dread, with discordant notes indicating breakdowns of the dreamlike aire that had preceded it. The light in the faces of the Cymrians faded, and their eyes darkened along with the music as she told of the Great War, of the destruction of Tomingorllo and the Lirin stronghold of Haner Til, the rout of the Third Fleet and the slaughter in Canrif and Bethe Corbair, and other stories of devastation and genocide that marked the blackest moments of the seven hundred years of senseless bloodshed. The pain in the song reflected in the faces of the people, and many of the tears turned to shuddering sobs. The tune became grueling, relentless, like the war itself, and just as it was about to break the spirit of the assembled Cymrians it resolved down into stillness, sustained by one long, vibrating note.

From that one note soft harmonics blossomed, then simple strains, building into a concerto countered by a deep chant; the dark, simple mantra played on the harp lent depth to the fresh, springlike descant she sang over it. It was a symphony of rebuilding, of change and vigilance, of assimilation and staunch maintenance of tradition; it was the perfect portrait of the Cymrians as they were now. And as that became apparent, Rhonwyn, the frail sister, began to smile, and spoke.

'We are here,“ she said, her eyes focusing for the first time. "It is now.“ Rhapsody's music abruptly ceased. "You're right,“ she said to Rhonwyn with a smile of unsurpassed gentleness. "And so we must stop, for this is not your time, Anwyn."

'What of the Future?!“ a voice from the assemblage cried out. "Tell us! Give us hope!" The cry was taken up by the crowd; tens of thousands of voices calling for the rest of the song. The voices were as an earthquake rocking through the Moot.

'Tarry a moment,“ Rhapsody answered them. "That belongs to us, not to her. Give Anwyn her due. She is leaving."

The hate in Anwyn's eyes was gone for the moment, replaced by tears of sorrow and marvel. She tried to speak again, but could not. She looked at Rhapsody's face, a face that contained no gloat, no victory, just peace. The awfulness of her realization that she was no longer the only Cymrian Lady who understood their Past was clear to all who saw her; so was her amazement that the one who did had not lived it. For the first time in the memory of the Cymrian people, she bowed her head.

'My tribute to you is ended. Go now, m'lady of the Past," Rhapsody said kindly.

“Go and sort out your memories. We will be making grand new ones for you to count soon."

Anwyn looked balefully at Rhapsody once more, then strode out of the Moot and disappeared.

Rhapsody's eyes searched for Oelendra, and when they found her she smiled. She held her harp aloft like a weapon, and a look of singular under standing passed between them: This is what I meant, she was saying. There are many kinds of weapons, and all of them are powerful in their way and time. Oelendra did not return the smile; she nodded, turned, and disappeared into the crowd.

The roar that issued forth from the multitude swept over Rhapsody like a tidal wave. It resonated through her body and her soul, and in that moment, for the first time since she arrived, she felt completely one with them.

She looked out over the crowd for faces she recognized, and her eyes came to rest on Ashe. Sunlight had cracked through the cloud-blanketed sky, illuminating the red-gold hair until it burned like a raging fire. The searing blue eyes were visible even from a great distance, and she could see them focused on her, burning with an intensity that made her flush.

BOOK: Destiny: Child Of Sky
6.79Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Right to Life by Jack Ketcham
Kneeknock Rise by Babbitt, Natalie
Touching Evil by Rob Knight
Demontech: Gulf Run by David Sherman
4th Wish by Ed Howdershelt
The Book of Awesome by Pasricha, Neil
Banishing Shadows by Lorna Jean Roberts
Holding On (Memories) by Hart, Emma
Four Spirits by Sena Jeter Naslund