Phoenix in Shadow - eARC (24 page)

Read Phoenix in Shadow - eARC Online

Authors: Ryk E Spoor

Tags: #fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Epic, #Fairy Tales; Folk Tales; Legends & Mythology

BOOK: Phoenix in Shadow - eARC
10.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter 32

Kyri couldn’t keep herself from gawking as they finally entered Sha Kaizatenzei Valatar. The sun was setting, casting long, pink-tinted shadows across the city, and the softening light made the buildings with their impossible delicacy look even more ethereal. The bridges they had seen, bridges which in some cases spanned half the city, were made of polished slabs of shining metal, stone, and wood that simply
sat
on thin air, with exquisitely slender traceries forming railings on either side. Aside from the railings, nothing linked the slabs together or supported them.

Pointing with her one free hand (Miri having the other currently), Kyri said, “Miri, how is that
possible
? I know that in theory magic can do almost anything, but that’s...”

Miri laughed. “Oh, we can’t do that by ourselves. Not yet, anyway.”

“Not yet,” agreed Hiriista. “I had forgotten how this must look to one who had never seen such things. The civilization that was here before us...they had solved many riddles that elude others, and one was obviously how to conquer the rule of air and weight. Within buried wreckage and ruins across Kaizatenzei there are pieces of what seem to have been ships and buildings which, freed of their entombment, could soar of their own accord into the sky, needing neither power nor ritual to do so.”

“Amazing,” she said.
One more confirmation of the legend of the Lords of the Sky. Even now, twelve thousand years later, parts of their ships are still ready to soar.
“So you built all of this?”

“Almost all,” Miri said. “The Tower of Light was here before any of us, and holds the Great Light within it. Its delicacy and beauty inspired us, however, and thus we have tried, as much as we can, to make our city complement and reflect the loveliness of the Tower.”

The Great Light.
Tobimar’s glance was lightning-quick, but she knew what he was thinking.
Unless our deductions are entirely wrong, then up there is the Sun of Terian, probably the most sacred relic of Tobimar’s religion.

“The Great Light?” Tobimar asked, even as she thought that.

“Our symbol and support,” Miri said, pointing to the shining multicolored brilliance at the very top of the Valatar Tower. “The Great Light and its Tower were here in the beginning, and have endured even when the other towers across the land finally fell.”

A perfect opening.
“I remember someone mentioning towers standing in the other cities. So were there lights of some sort in those, as well?”

“According to the old records, yes; lights very like the Great Light, but they faded or vanished eventually, and when they did, their towers crumbled.” Miri anticipated their next question. “And we don’t know why they faded; some think that their light was merged with the Great Light, others that it was used defending us from the darkness surrounding Kaizatenzei.

“But the Great Light has never flickered or faded, and we believe it is eternal.”

“I would truly love to see it. Is that possible?” Kyri was impressed by how controlled Tobimar’s apparently casual question was.

“You will have to ask Lady Shae—but, honestly? I can’t see that she’d say
no
! Not only are you unique visitors, but also you’ve done so much for us simply on your way here that I can’t imagine her denying you much of anything.”

Even the houses within Valatar were beautiful, though Kyri realized that part of that was the singing
rightness
which was more intense and pure here than ever before. To her eyes, everything was touched with a hint of light, from the older gentleman who bowed and stepped aside to let them pass to the little girl chasing a feathered lizard—obviously a pet—around her yard, to the houses and even the birds that fluttered by.
What must it be like to
live
here?

The base of the Valatar Tower was even more beautiful at close range than it had been from afar. Kyri was entranced by the filigree of crystal and metal—gold, platinum, and others—worked through the polished stone of the folded-petal walls.
It even seems...no, it
does
shimmer with light of its own.
She could feel, now, a faint
Presence
far above, a power that was not that of Myrionar but echoed the purity and majesty that she had felt from the god when it had manifested to her.
It
must
be the Sun, then. What else could it be?

But as she concentrated on that sense, for a moment—a splintered instant—she felt
another
Presence—no, at least
two
other Presences, in a flash as though a door had abruptly opened and shut, or she had walked past a wall with a tiny hole through which light could pass in only one direction. But
these
Presences were neither light nor comforting. One was immense, black, brooding, hungry, filled with fire and resentment. The other was cold, calm, calculating, but with dark amusement waiting just beneath and a vast well of power waiting to be drawn upon.

At the same moment the ground shook beneath them, a faint but emphatic shudder that jingled crystal, set the Tower swaying for a moment, and made everyone stumble just a bit.

That gave her enough time to hide her reaction. She managed to keep any expression from her face, caught herself and kept moving forward without more than the slightest hitch in her stride. Her heart sank, and Kyri realized that part of her had really started to believe that Kaizatenzei was as pure as it looked.

But it’s not, and there are dark, dark enemies waiting for us, perhaps within the castle itself.

At the same time, that didn’t mean that most people here were not exactly what they appeared to be. She believed...she
had
to believe...that most of what she saw was real.

“Are earthquakes common here?” Tobimar was asking.

Kyri thought that there was a fractional pause before Miri answered, as though she were distracted. But if there was, it was extremely short. “Not
common
, but not unheard of.”

She pointed to the shore of the great lake, which was visible down one of the streets; Kyri could see small, disturbed waves lapping chaotically at the beach. “The source appears to be somewhere out in Enneisolaten. You remember there are volcanoes near Alatenzei; if such are somewhere beneath the great Lake, it is unsurprising we’d have these occasional shakes.”

The door to the Tower flowered open before them, and she saw the entrance hall was as light and airy as the exterior, with arching filigrees of silver and pearl outlining and emphasizing the curves of the almost translucently delicate walls, and marble of many subtle shades—rose, white, violet, shading to aqua and azure below.

Within were two guards—a somewhat-overbroad man, dark-skinned with a great black bushy beard, and a slender waifish woman with startlingly pale blonde hair—both wearing armor similar in design to Miri’s. The man’s armor was deep violet and indigo overall, while the woman’s was amber and citrine with hints of orange.

The man straightened up instantly—he had been leaning nonchalantly against the wall—and raised an eyebrow. “Back so soon, Miri? Why, you left only this morning!” His voice had the rumbling timbre of a man who, if he chose to shout, could probably be heard a mile away.

The other guard had looked more at the newcomers. “I think she completed her mission, Tanvol.”

“What? Oh, marvelous! Are these—”

“They are! Phoenix, Tobimar, this is Tanvol Davrys, Seventh Light, and Anora Lal, Third Light of Kaizatenzei.”

The two Lights bowed in the same manner as Miri, and Kyri strove to match them. “May your days be ever bright. Welcome to the Valatar Tower, Phoenix and Tobimar.” Tanvol glanced a bit farther back. “And of course you as well, old lizard.”

“I thank you, naked mammal,” Hiriista said with a steamkettle laugh. “Greetings to you, Anora.”

“And you, Hiriista. I see you’ve been making sure our visitors stayed out of trouble.”

A hiss of amusement. “Oh, I think I might describe things differently.”

“Come
on
,” Miri said. “We can talk later, right now I have to bring them to—”

“Yes, yes, go on, Lady Shae’s mentioned multiple times that she wanted these visitors brought in straightaway,” laughed Tanvol.

The next door flowered inward, rather than outward, and led to an intersection, with a corridor that obviously proceeded around the entire building, and another short corridor directly ahead, ending in a large set of double doors that looked as delicate and ethereal as the rest of the Tower. Despite that, Kyri had a feeling that she would find it impossible to break those portals unless she called upon the power of Myrionar—and maybe not even then. “Miri, is there any particular tradition or ritual we should observe when greeting Lady Shae here?”

Miri hesitated. “Well...no, not really. I mean, there’s a normal bow and greeting that citizens do if they’re coming to ask her help or have her hear a case, but you’re not citizens and don’t fit in any other category. You’re
unique
!”

With that, she bounced (there was no other way to describe it) to the doors and flung them open. “Shae, they’re
here!

Tobimar failed to restrain a snort of laughter. “No ritual indeed.”

Kyri couldn’t keep a grin off her face. “But that
is
Miri.”

As they entered, they could see a similar tolerant, fond smile on Lady Shae’s face. “Yes, I see they are. You might have annouced them properly...but all right, I see you couldn’t possibly have done so.” Shae stood and bowed, which they returned. “Phoenix of Myrionar, Tobimar of Zarathanton, I bid you welcome.” The smile took on a hint of Miri’s mischief. “And what do you think of our little town?”

Kyri found herself laughing along with Tobimar. “Was it so terribly obvious, Lady Shae?” she finally managed.

“That you thought we were a quaint, small country which was probably not terribly advanced? Not
obvious
, perhaps, but certainly easy enough to derive from your conversations.”

“Well, as we said to Light Miri,” Kyri said, now serious, “we apologize for misjudging you...and for doubting the beauty and majesty of this, your capital.”

“Apology accepted, and thank you.” Lady Shae strode down her steps to face them. As Kyri had remembered, Shae was even taller than she was, towering at least a half-head above her, huge yet beautiful; she moved like a gloomcat or other big predator, lazily yet with confident power. “I had not expected you for another several days, at least, but it will not take long to arrange a proper welcome.”

“You mean a large and complex banquet which will include many political pit-traps for me to evade.”

Miri giggled and then caught herself, but Shae also smiled. “Perhaps that is a bit
too
accurate, but yes. Miri, take them to the guestrooms we set aside, and let them prepare. Dinner will be in...an hour and a half, shall we say?”

Miri bowed and then turned to the others. “This way!”

No rest yet. But I think I don’t have much choice.

And with what I sensed...now I know we’re at the right place.

Chapter 33

“There were some crystals that seemed suspicious,” Poplock told his three friends, “but I was able to blind them, if they’re watchstones, and a few wards made sure they’re not listening through those. Otherwise, nothing.”

“Watchstones? Really?” The
mazakh
looked worried.

“Like I said, I’m not sure—but they just didn’t quite seem to fit with everything around them, and this place looks like it was built with no expense considered too big, you know?”

Hiriista went to the indicated locations and studied the small crystals, now covered with what appeared to be dull mud. After a few minutes he sighed. “I believe you are correct, my friend. A
most
disquieting thing to discover here.”

“You sure they weren’t here all along?”

“Of course they...” Hiriista trailed off. “No,” he said finally, “no, I am not sure. I have never been in this
particular
set of rooms before, to begin with, but to be completely honest with you, I have never
suspected
such a thing, so upon reflection I find I cannot say that there were not any such things where I have stayed in the past. Still,” he said with a sighing hiss, “it is, as I said, most disquieting.”

“I find it almost comforting,” Kyri said from where she was brushing her hair, getting it back under control after the shower she had taken; Poplock always found that drying brush of hers fascinating, as it was such a delicately adjusted magical item of such utterly mundane utility. It also had the apparent side effect of drying clothing underneath the hair, preventing the white-and-green, elaborate dress Kyri had selected from her neverfull pack from being streaked and spotted with water.

“Comforting?
” repeated Tobimar with incredulity, as he also tended to his hair; he was avoiding the trouble of water spotting by leaving his fancy jacket and shirt off, only his singlet still covering his upper body. “What in the name of the Light do you find comforting in the idea that our hosts are, or could be, spying on us?”

Kyri smiled, though Poplock thought he saw a very sad edge to the smile. “Two reasons, really. First...honestly, put yourself in
their
position, and especially the Lady Shae’s. Here come these people through a pass that, as far as you know, leads to something as close to Hell as the world could hold. They
seem
to be all good people, they
appear
to be heroes that you could trust, but
are
they?”

“True,” Poplock said with a bounce. “And really, that’s the way
we’re
looking at
them
, right?”

“Given what we were expecting when we came here...yes, I guess so,” Tobimar conceded. “So you’re saying that doing so indicates that they aren’t being stupidly trusting.”

“Right, or at least that’s one big possibility. The other is that Lady Shae or someone else here that’s running the show suspects that we’re a danger, and they’re spying on us specifically to find out what we are and what we know.”

“Which is almost comforting because it means that your deductions were correct and the evil you seek is, indeed, here in Valatar,” Hiriista said.

“Right.”

Tobimar glanced warily at the blackened crystals. “But if they’re trying to spy on us to see what we know, and they see that their watchstones and other scrying aren’t working, I’m wondering if we’re in danger right now.”

Poplock gave a deliberate shrug. “If they’re that focused on finding out our secrets and ready to move? Yep, I’d expect they’ll be pounding on our doors any minute now. But I’m betting not. If they’re not routinely used, no one will notice what we’ve done, at least not soon. If they
are
routinely used, they probably still don’t want to call
attention
to it, and if
we
are polite enough not to mention it, they probably will let the subject be passed over. It becomes a signal—‘I know that you know that I know,’ if you know what I mean?”

Tobimar laughed. “I guess I do know. Yes, if Mother for some reason
was
spying on one of our guests back home, and the guest found out, neither of them would ever actually
comment
on it unless they felt the confrontation would itself be worth the effort. You’re right.”

“So if we aren’t suddenly attacked in the next few minutes, we can figure that we’re safe for the moment, anyway,” Kyri said. “All right. We’ve only got a half hour before we have to go downstairs, so I have to tell you now: I sensed something dark, just when we were arriving.”

Poplock found himself leaning forward in anticipation.
Well, dust and mud! I’m actually
glad
we’re finding something! No wonder people back home though I was a little dried in the head.

“Sensed what?” Tobimar asked.

“Two things, actually. Both very strong. One of them was...angry. Hungry. I got an impression of fire and night at the same time. The other one was much more focused...felt very dark but controlled, amused, considered, and had an incredible mass of power associated with it.”

Hiriista narrowed his eyes. “Did you get a direction? A distance?”

Kyri screwed up her face, thinking, then shook her head. “I have to
guess
that it’s close—maybe in the Tower itself somewhere—but that’s just a guess, based on the fact that it was only here that I sensed it. But I suppose the Tower, with the Great Light above, could also be focusing powers like mine. Myrionar and Terian are closely allied, after all.”

Tobimar frowned, shaking his head. “That’s what worries me most. The Stars and Sun were...
are
artifacts of Terian himself; it was said that Terian constructed them with his own hand and infused them with his power, and Terian is acknowledged even by the other gods as one of the three or four most powerful beings of all. How in the name of the Light could evil
live
in proximity to that power, let alone hide from it?”

“Yeah, that’s sure been buzzing just out of reach for me, too,” Poplock said. “What I’ve heard is that anything really evil—the kind of darkness Phoenix senses and all—that even
touches
one of Terian’s artifacts goes
poof
in a big flash of light like the core of a lightning bolt, nothing left, just ashes. You’d think Demons and whatever would stay away from that like giant ants avoid Pondsparkle.”

“You would, yes,” Hiriista said thoughtfully. “Yet do not underestimate our opposition. If—as the Phoenix’s senses indicate, and the logical progression of your quest would require—somewhere here is hidden a vastly powerful portion of a demonic conspiracy, then it is not in fact so badly affected.” He pulled out his scent-pipe, which Poplock noticed Hiriista did whenever thinking hard.

“Still,” Hiriista continued slowly, “we can take it as a given that nothing of true evil would
choose
to stay near such powerful artifacts of a deity of the light unless there was some very, very strong motivation, some huge benefit to be gained from it.”

“Well, it camouflages them, right?” Poplock pointed out.

“Hmm, yes, I think we can take that as a given at this point. The radiance of the Lights literally dazzles the senses, to the point that even those of lesser gods cannot penetrate the light around them to see the darkness just a short distance away.

“Yet...” Hiriista inhaled scent, contemplated for a moment; Kyri and Tobimar were still finishing their hair, but were otherwise silent and attentive. Poplock waited.

The
mazakh
magewright shook his head with a hiss. “Yet there is more...much more...behind this. If what the stories Miri recounted say is true, then your Seven Stars are
gone
. Something has destroyed artifacts of one of the most powerful gods. Yet the
effects
of their presence remain; we can sense this in every one of the major cities that had one of the towers of the ancient days. Why? Surely the
objective
of destroying such an artifact would be to neutralize its effect, wipe out its power.”

“Unless,” Poplock suggested, “they wanted to
use
its power?”

“But using it would...” He paused again. “You may have something there, my little friend. I am utterly unsure how it could be accomplished, but the idea of
taking
the power of one of the gods would be tremendously attractive to any demon, if they could figure out some method to avoid said power-theft from being fatal.” He breathed out a few more scent-clouds. “I must think on this...and observe what is said and done. I trust you will all do the same.”

“Oh, trust me, my eyes will be watching
everywhere
,” Poplock said emphatically.

“Count on it,” Tobimar said, taking Kyri’s hand and giving it an emphatic squeeze. “So this dinner might be useful.”

“Almost certainly,” Hiriista agreed.

At that moment there was a soft knock on the door. “Lady Phoenix and company, dinner is served,” said the voice on the other side—a man’s voice, which Poplock thought belonged to a gray-haired man in severely-cut robes who had been just to one side of Lady Shae’s throne. This memory was confirmed when Tobimar opened the door and the man bowed low. “If you will all accompany me...?”

“Certainly, Pelda,” Hiriista said, putting his pipe away.

Pelda led them down one of the flights of stairs they had taken to get there, but from there turned down a smaller hallway that curved around the interior of the Palace and through a doorway on one side. As they entered, Poplock felt Tobimar relax slightly and similar relief become visible on Kyri’s face as they saw that the room, while large, was no great dining hall or ballroom, and the long table in the center was adequate for ten but not for a hundred.

“Welcome, Phoenix of Evanwyl, Tobimar of Zarathanton, and of course Hiriista!” said Lady Shae, rising as they entered. “Come, sit here to my side, that I may speak with you easily.” She gestured to three seats that were at her left hand, as Lady Shae was seated at one end of the table.

“Thank you, Lady Shae,” Kyri said, taking her indicated place directly next to the ruler of Kaizatenzei; Tobimar (with Poplock on his shoulder) sat next to her, and Hiriista took the third seat. Directly across from Kyri was Miri, with her fellow Lights Tanvol and Anora in the next corresponding seats. “I had thought from your words that there would be a great banquet—”

“Yes, that
was
my first thought, but Miri and the others pointed out that there was hardly time to properly arrange it, and undoubtedly many of the guests I would wish to attend would already have other plans this night. Time enough for that later.” Shae smiled. “And besides, I suspect you could do without such pomp for this night, am I correct?”


Quite
correct, Lady Shae!” Kyri answered emphatically, something Tobimar echoed.

A door on the other side of the room opened, and Shae rose with a delighted expression. “But here is one guest I had
hoped
to introduce you to. Welcome, Master Wieran!”

At
that
name Poplock focused all of his attention on the newcomer—without, of course, being obvious about it, which was something hard to do. Fortunately, he’d had a lot of practice over the past months of looking cluelessly stupid and gazing seemingly at nothing while actually studying something carefully.

The first thing that struck him was
precision
. The figure of Master Wieran was tall, angular, sharp, wearing an immaculate white outfit that covered him almost like a gown, yet was set in creases as clear as the cut of a formal suit, emphasizing the man’s height and spare figure. A single row of black buttons ran straight up the center of the sculpted gown or coat he wore, and small instruments of some sort projected from an exterior breast pocket. Wieran’s face was long, narrow, with a high forehead; his hair was moderately long and arrow-straight, white as the snow of the mountain heights.

Black, glittering eyes peered sharply from deeply sunken sockets beneath snow-white brows and scanned the entire room with a penetrating gaze as intense as any Poplock had ever seen; that gaze seemed to linger for an instant longer on Poplock than the little Toad was comfortable with.

Then Master Wieran’s thin-lipped mouth turned up in a smile and he spoke—in a startlingly low and gentle tone. “Thank you, Lady Shae. It was fortunate that my experiments are all in a condition to be left to themselves for a few hours.” He gave a bow that was as precise and unnaturally abrupt as the opening and closing of a fine pair of scissors. “And the chance to meet people who claim to have come from beyond the mountains, through the Pass of Night? Hardly to be missed.”

Wieran strode—with a quick, unvarying rhythm that reinforced Poplock’s impression—and took his seat at the very end of the table, opposite Lady Shae.

Fascinating,
Poplock thought.
Symbolically that makes them near-equals, facing each other, each dominating one end of the table, making him possibly outrank even the Lights in importance.

“We’ve heard much about you, Master Wieran,” Kyri said. “It’s good to finally meet you. I am called the Phoenix of Evanwyl, and this is Tobimar of Zarathanton and elsewhere. I understand you already know—”

“—Hiriista, yes, of course.” That gaze flicked—the merest blink of light from beneath the brows—to Poplock again before returning to Kyri. Poplock kept still, but he had a feeling that Wieran already suspected something.
And if so, he’s
really
dangerous. Even Hiriista had to think for a while about whether I was worth suspecting or not.

The
Phoenix—a title, then. Your armor was described to me. Symbolic?”

“Yes; I am a representative of the god Myrionar, and when becoming one of Its Justiciars, I relinquished my birth name for the symbol.”

“Representative of a god? Most intriguing,” Wieran said, as servants came in with floating trays of food.
Well, now, that’s just showing off this stuff they have. If they can do
this
with it, I’d think they’d have used some of it in the other cities.
Poplock could think of a
lot
of uses for a material that could float like that. “There are only a few gods worshipped significantly in Kaizatenzei, and I have not heard yours named before.”

Other books

The Grave of Truth by Evelyn Anthony
Wicked Games by A. D. Justice
Fool Me Twice by Brandman, Michael
Cradle Lake by Ronald Malfi