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Authors: David Farland

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Spirit Walker (14 page)

BOOK: Spirit Walker
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The pterodactyl watched dully.
It must have flown three hundred miles from Dervin’s Peninsula since dawn,
Tull thought.
It’s too tired to escape.

The dragon winged upward and struck from below, slashing with the poisoned horn at the tip of its nose. The pterodactyl didn’t try to evade, and the dragon grabbed the pterodactyl’s wings with his tiny forearms. The two fell in a tangle, and from the forest floor squirrels began calling
Pahaa! Pahaaa!

Moments after the two monsters had fallen behind a screen of firs, the dragon shouted a booming
Graaaw,
as it began to feed in triumph.

Scandal looked over at the brush where the dragon had hidden. “By God, we were lucky!” Scandal said. “That dragon was stalking us!”

“I’ll take watch,” Phylomon said. “We can't wait until we reach Gate of the Gods before we become wary.”

That night, as they sat around the fire eating kabobs barbecued over the fire, Phylomon said, “I once knew another man named Scandal.”

“Really?” Scandal asked. “It’s not a common name.”

“Ayaah. He was a recluse living in the marshes down in Beckley, named Jessoth Scandal.”

“My great-grandfather!” Scandal said in astonishment. “My dad spoke fondly of him. I even have some of his recipes.”

“I thought so,” Phylomon said. “He was like you—a self-styled gourmet. But he had a fondness for reptiles. He used to keep alligators in a pit. He’d feed them only skunk meat for a month before he butchered them. Claimed it gave them better flavor.”

“Did he?” Scandal asked. His eyes grew round with dismay—quite a feat considering the fleshy folds that nearly covered them.

Phylomon looked over at Tull and winked, then got up and walked out into the meadow with his plate in hand. The sun was going down, and the shadows deepening to purple, but the sky was still light enough to see by. The crickets began their shrill, thrumming music, and the evening smell of warm soil filled the air.

The first stars would soon be “striking their campfires,” as the Pwi said, and Freya floated pale blue over the trees. Phylomon touched one of the medallions hanging from his necklace, stroked it softly. It brightened like a lantern. He held the medallion up and thumped it with his finger. Three bright flashes fired. Phylomon closed his fist over the medallion. The flesh of his hands glowed purple, showing each long bone in his fingers.

Tull came over. “What is that?” he asked, nodding at the necklace.

“A photo-converter. Part of an old lighting system,” Phylomon said, not sure how much to answer. With sixty years of training Tull might master Hegled’s Theory of Charmed Plasmatic Flow and its Effects on Spin and Shell Mutability, then he could understand the photo-converters, perhaps. He might even comprehend the deeper meanings of the theory—that to travel at the speed of light, a man must become light; that to travel at the speed of a tachyon, man must become a tachyon. Yet he’d never gain the technology to implement these concepts, not in a thousand years.

Phylomon explained the photo-converter. “Around us in the air are many tiny particles that pass through us at high speeds, like stones too small to see. When the crystal is compressed, the particles pass through a zone where their spin and speed are changed, and they emit light.

“Now that we are on our journey, I will use this light to call to the Creators. It is their job to care for the plants and animals of this world. If we can contact them, warn them that the eco-barrier is down, they can give birth to some new serpents and restock them.” Phylomon watched Tull a moment to see if he understood. Many Pwi regarded the Creators as mere legend, beasts of myth. “Perhaps, added to the serpents we catch, it will be enough to rebuild the eco-barrier.”

“Do you think a Creator saw that? Will it come now?”

“I don’t know,” Phylomon said. “Shepherd-One watches over this land. I have not seen him for many years, but once we used to talk often. He creates birds—dumb animals
with large eyes, simple brains—to report on plant and animal populations. When the birds finish their journeys, Shepherd-One consumes them, unravels the memories stored in their DNA. In this way he learns what is happening in the world. If I flash my light often enough, one of his birds will see it, and Shepherd-One will know that I want to speak with him.”

“Will he come then?” Tull asked.

“The Creator himself? No. The Creators are much like giant worms in form. They are nothing more than brains and stomachs, with their omniwombs attached. They keep themselves hidden from predators in large caverns underground in the far north. But he could send a servant to come see us, something with a mouth and brain—perhaps a creature that looks like a woman with wings, perhaps a monstrosity unlike anything you have ever seen. And that creature will carry my message to the Creators.” The light in Phylomon’s hand slowly died.

“Was that true, about Scandal’s great-grandfather?” Tull asked.

“No,” Phylomon said. “Scandal blasphemed my testicles this morning, so I felt he needed a ribbing. I knew a Jessoth Scandal, and I seem to remember where he lived. But it was a hundred years ago and the details about the man are so blurred with other memories that they no longer really exist.”

“Only the left one,” Tull said. “Folks around here only blaspheme your left testicle.”

Phylomon smiled. “You people are very bold, very open in what you say to me. I like that. Closer to Craal, people are more … opaque. Their faces are closed, secretive. They keep their feelings hidden.”

“Ayaah,” Tull said. “The sailors say, ‘If you want an honest opinion from a Crawly, it’s not hard to get as long as you’re willing to shove a flaming torch up his ass.’”

Phylomon laughed, and Tull looked at the blue man. “Myself, I always pictured you differently. I always thought of you as some old wizard, working away at your arcane technologies. You’re more
human
than I’d imagined.”

Phylomon laughed loud from the heart, and his voice echoed through the glade.

Chapter 13: The Dryad's Return

As Tull and Phylomon talked, Phylomon saw the mayor’s Dryad step from under the trees at the edge of the woods. She was small, almost boyish in figure, wearing a dress of emerald green and carrying a long knife in one hand. She watched them for a moment, then ran through the grass to Phylomon. Grasshoppers jumped from her path.

“Tchavs?
Food?” she asked in Pwi.

The child’s green eyes were wide with fear, wild with hunger, yet Phylomon could see the beauty she’d become. She reminded him of Saita, a Dryad he’d loved when he was young. He’d met the creature in the mountains during her Time of Devotion, and was unable to resist the aphrodisiac perfume of her body during her mating frenzy. She had been voluptuous, and Phylomon could not imagine Saita ever having been anything like this child—small, boyish. He reached into his traveling pack for a sack of baked and buttered hazelnuts.

“Don’t feed her!” Tull warned. “She might follow us.”

“I will only follow you to the White Mountains, where I hope-with-painful-hope to find the aspen forests. I can pay for the food!” the Dryad said. Her voice was as soft and musical as the tinkling of small bells. Phylomon had to strain to understand her.

“What is your name, child?” Phylomon asked.

“Tirilee.”

“And what coin will you pay for the food?”

“Information,” she offered. “Two men followed from town. They circled you and went on ahead. They’ve got a gun, a big heavy one. It takes both of them to carry it. They tried hard to make sure you would not see them, and they talked of meeting up with others ahead.”

It was much as he had expected she would offer. Dryads were notoriously hard to spot, yet they had tremendously keen senses. Phylomon bent his head in thought. “So … it does not sound as if they came to return our stolen property.”

The Dryad smiled up at him. The mottled coloring of her silver skin gave her face an elongated look. The feral gleam in her eye was uncommon for such a child.

“Do you think they’ll attack?” Tull asked Phylomon.

“I’m certain,” Phylomon said. “I haven't cleaned the slavers out of your town yet. By executing a few, I earned their resentment. By flashing a fortune in gems before their eyes, I stirred their greed.” Phylomon warned. “I certainly don't think that they will attack so near Smilodon Bay. The evidence would be too easily discovered. They’ll wait a few days, until we get into the Rough, beyond Gate of the Gods.

“Tell me,” Phylomon said to the girl, “Do you know the men you saw?”

“The mayor’s brothers,” Tirilee answered. “The stupid one, and the longhair.”

“Those aren’t slavers,” Tull said in surprise. “She's talking about Hardy. He’s a friend of mine—a simpleminded man. And his brother Saffrey is—”

“Willing to commit murder,” Phylomon said. “It sounds as if the brothers were close—if you made an enemy of one, you made enemies of them all.”

Tull nodded. “That’s the way of it.”

“You call Hardy your friend,” Phylomon said, “yet in his eagerness to avenge his brothers, he plans to kill you and your wife. Somewhere ahead, they will point that gun at us, and they won’t kill me and leave witnesses behind. I’d choose my friends more carefully from now on, if I were you.”

Phylomon handed the Dryad the nuts, took some jerky from his pack. “There will be more when you need it, child,” he said. “Keep an eye out for us, and you shall be well rewarded.”

She flashed a feral smile. Some people thought that Dryads were gentle creatures. Phylomon knew better. This girl would enjoy seeing the slavers die.

Chapter 14: The Gate of the Gods

The men camped with a strong wind that night, and they reached Gate of the Gods at noon the next day. The wall of black rock was composed of layer after layer of molten slag, each an inch thick. The gate was a simple arch, thirty feet tall at the center. Men had trampled the ground beneath the arch, while Mastodon Men, a type of giant carnivorous ape, had pounded off bits of the black molten slag for use as crude knives.

As the wagon crossed beneath the arch, Tull noted that Scandal inhaled deeply and seemed to stiffen with fear. Only then did Tull realize that the innkeeper had never traveled outside of his home town. He’d been drinking swigs from a bottle of wine, and now he nervously crawled onto wagon and began singing nervously, like a child trying to keep bad dreams at bay. His was a bawdy song noted for its endless verses:

Oh, with all the time I spent in jail,

I should have been a jailer,

But I love a whore in every port,

and that’s why I’ll stay a sailor.

Oh, I knew a girl named Dena.

She lived in old South Bay

She so loved to get naked,

She threw all her clothes away.

All the men were so happy,

they began to shout “Hooray!

“Hooray!—”

“Quiet, you fool!” Phylomon hissed, and the blue man hurried ahead, scouting the trail.

No one spoke for much of the day as they marched.

They watched for danger, and signs were everywhere. A dozen yards on the other side of the arch, they found the fresh track of a Mastodon Man—a footprint twenty-one inches long and twelve inches wide. The redwoods were tall and dark, and their bark was often scarred and pitchy twelve feet up where sabertooths had sharpened their claws. In the perpetual gloom under the redwoods, plants grew to enormous heights. Giant ferns stood over six feet tall, and the wild raspberry had selectively bred over generations so that only those with leaves as broad as plates flourished. Moldering serpentine limbs of vine maple climbed fifty feet into the air in an effort to reach the thin sunlight that filtered down, and all the limbs trailed old man’s beard.

The party traveled for hours, following a trapper’s path into the mountains, before they finally found a clearing in the late afternoon where the grass was thick enough to keep the mastodon from straying in search of food.

The clearing was situated on a gently sloping hill. There, a shallow pond, muddied by wild pigs, sat in a fold near the forest floor. They parked the wagon just inside the line of trees, and Scandal and Tull unpacked while the Pwi unhooked the mastodon and cleared an area around camp.

It was still two hours to nightfall. Phylomon took his great black dragon-horn bow from the back of the wagon and strung it, fitting a loop of the bowstring over one end, bending the bow with his knee, and fitting the second loop over the other end. He reached into his quiver and took out two rectangular pieces of leather, like tents, which he fitted over the strung ends of the bow so the bowstrings wouldn’t catch in the brush. “I believe I shall go hunt some swine,” he said quietly, nodding toward the muddied pond where the bank was pocked with tracks.

“Do you want me to come?” Tull asked, knowing what game Phylomon stalked. “I’m handy with a spear.”

“No,” Phylomon said, as if grateful for the offer. “I can handle them by myself. I’ve done it often enough.”

Scandal said in a bluster, “We’ve plenty of meat. I don’t want to be up butchering all night!”

“I don’t believe that even you know a recipe to make this particular breed of swine palatable,” Phylomon told Scandal. He ducked off into a thicket of vine maple and began stalking toward the hilltop without a sound, into the deep woods where “pigs” would sleep until early evening.

“You’re damned right I don’t want gamey wild pigs,” Scandal admitted. “but by the Blue Man’s left test … I mean, if you kill one, bring the backstraps back. They might be all right.”

Phylomon made his way up the hill so quietly that not even Scandal’s squirrel would have heard him. He’d kept to the old trapper’s trail all day and figured he would find sign of the Goodman boys to one side. The only sounds were the occasional rap of a woodpecker in a distant tree and the drone of bees. Far away, the snarl of a scimitar cat echoed through the hills.

A hundred yards into the woods, it was so dark that the heavy brush dissipated for lack of sunlight. The ground was pocked and furrowed where wild pigs had rummaged for mushrooms. Phylomon found cat prints larger than his hand with his fingers spread wide, and on a branch he found a tuft of yellow-white hair from a sabertooth. The hair was dry and old, and from the bones that moldered beneath the redwood needles, it looked as if the sabertooth had killed a moose calf here in the spring.

He followed the trail, walking north of it a hundred, two hundred yards, scouting the ground for human tracks. It did not take long to find them in the thick humus. The ground was springy, covered with leaf mold. In these woods, a walker could hide his sound, but not his tracks.

Phylomon deduced that the men had watched them strike camp, then headed away. The slavers had been kind—they’d even marked their trail here and there with bits of bright yellow cloth so they could follow it by torchlight. They'd scrambled over fallen redwoods, waded through dense ferns. Phylomon followed them.

A mile from camp he found a small hill where he could watch a trail that wound down into a bowl-shaped valley. Phylomon crouched by a blackened log and placed a small convex mirror in the bark above him so he could watch his back.

Fear. I taste your fear,
the blue man’s skin said to him.

Phylomon’s muscles began to twitch in tiny electric jerks. Phylomon often told others that his skin was a symbiote, but he did not tell them how intelligent the being was, nor did he tell them of its powers.

“Gireaux, my old friend,” Phylomon whispered. “We have strong enemies.”

Kill? Shall I kill them?
the symbiote asked.

“We shall fight them together,” Phylomon answered. “Weave your armor about me now and prepare to strike. Feed from me. You must be strong for this fight.”

Dizziness struck as the symbiote began to feed.

Phylomon’s heart raced. He could feel the creature drain him, siphoning his energy. His skin began to darken. The symbiote was stretching, drawing static energy from the air. It was a good day for it—storm clouds scudded across the sky. He felt his skin tighten, binding him as if in leather, and the symbiote tightened his eardrums, tuning them to the small sounds of the woods.

Phylomon sat, and for a time he replayed a memory in his mind. When he was young, he’d loved a woman, one of the poor short-lived temporaries. He’d been taking drugs to enhance his learning abilities at the time, so he recalled every moment of his youth. He replayed the memory of a visit he’d made to this forest with his wife. It had been in his youth, just after he’d led the Neanderthals in the attack that decimated the Slave Lords in Bashevgo. Those had been happy times, for Phylomon believed then that he'd destroyed the slavers forever.

The trees had been young, their trunks narrower. He’d made love to his wife in a bed of ferns, and they’d watched Thor rise. Green storm clouds had played across the face of the tan moon, strung out like pearls on a necklace, and when blue Freya had risen and overtaken Thor in its flight, the two moons shone from behind a banded cloud and colored the sky like opal.

Phylomon replayed that night, perhaps for the thousandth time. In a way, though his wife was long dead, she remained immortal within him.

Phylomon heard the slavers from Smilodon Bay long before he saw them. They’d sent a scout, a large fellow in a green tunic and tan pants.

Phylomon made sure that the man saw him, by walking about and stretching in a patch of sunlight, then sat down in a bed of ferns. The scout immediately dropped upon spotting Phylomon, then went crawling back to the others.

An hour later, the scout returned. Phylomon spotted him two hundred yards off to his left. He was a big man, grunting and sweating as he carried the gun. By that Phylomon expected that he was the simpleton that Tull had spoken of, for he had a simple man’s strength. He wasn’t an imbecile, but he was none too bright, either.

He circled Phylomon on stealthy feet, staying out of sight, then carefully crept in close to set the unwieldy gun down in the brush, taking long careful aim.

Phylomon watched the scout in his mirror, careful to pretend to be looking down in the valley. The scout kept ducking behind the ferns.

The swivel gun was made of crude iron and had a three-foot barrel. Pirates sometimes mounted such guns on boarding vessels. It held a single cartridge that fired a four-inch bullet. It was a clumsy weapon, meant for shooting on a ship at point-blank range.

Phylomon considered what to do. If he attacked the scout, he could surely kill him, but more slavers were out there, and Phylomon feared that some might escape. Phylomon did not believe the scout would try to shoot him with that clumsy old gun just yet. No, he’d wait until the other slavers gathered.

Although Phylomon felt the presence of the symbiote, could speak to it, he could not explain the exact nature of his enemies, nor could he communicate the concept of
gun
to the animal. Instead, he let his fear course through him and felt the skin harden like bands of steel.

Men began walking up through the woods along the trail, five of them pacing slowly. Their heads swiveled back and forth stealthily, as if they were hunting. They offered a simple diversion for the real threat behind. Phylomon watched the men, nocked an arrow as if he’d taken the bait, and then he scrambled ten feet to the left. He imagined the gunner scurrying to correct his aim, and then he whirled and fired his arrow.

The gunner had been kneeling and rose as Phylomon fired. An arrow that should have taken him in the chest lodged in the simpleton’s hip. He jerked the barrel of the gun, pointing it vaguely in Phylomon’s direction, and dropped the hammer. Smoke boiled from the barrel.

Phylomon dodged, but the ball slammed into his ribs, and the blue man was flung backward. He spun several times and dropped.

“On him, boys!” the gunman shouted. “He’s down!” Phylomon grabbed his side, felt a bloody mess. It was numb. He could see nothing, for he was blinded by pain.

He coughed, and tasted blood running from his throat, swallowed it. He heard the men charging toward him in the brush, and he pulled a long ragged piece of flesh from the gaping wound.

He had never been hurt so badly. His ribs were split and pulped, though the symbiote anesthetized him. He heard ribs cracking as the symbiote manipulated them back into position, felt hot burning as muscles regenerating. Phylomon pulled the knife that he kept strapped to his right leg, and cried out at the pain.

Fear. I taste fear,
the symbiote said.

He heard the gunman limping toward him, and several men drew around him in a circle.

“He’s wounded,” one man said. “Look at the hole! It's closing! Quick, shoot him again!”

Fear. I taste fear.

The gunman popped the chamber of the swivel gun open, grunted and swore as he pulled the red hot shell from the chamber. One fellow rushed forward and swung an ax down on Phylomon’s neck. It connected with a dull thud, and the man swore. “I can’t cut through!”

Why do you fear?

The gunman dropped another heavy shell into the chamber, and Phylomon’s vision cleared so that he could see a second fellow move toward the gunman. The two men grunted as they lifted the barrel, taking aim.

“Kill them,” Phylomon told his symbiote.

The evening air crackled and filled with ozone and white lightning as the symbiote earned its keep.

Before dinner, Scandal took Ayuvah downhill to pick blackberries, leaving only Little Chaa to watch the mastodon. Yet Little Chaa had called a crow to his hand and stood feeding it and talking softly while the mastodon foraged.

Tull stayed with the wagon and kept staring into the forest, listening for the wratcheting call of jays, the snap of a twig. He got into the wagon and pulled out his battle armor—a leather band for his head, an iguanadon-hide shield painted in forest green and brown, leather leggings and wrist guards. He pulled out his kutow. For a long time, he watched Ayuvah and Scandal pick berries down by the pond.

The orange-haired Neanderthal was a premier woodsman who hunted by scent, as some Blade Kin were said to do. Ayuvah’s presence made Tull feel safe. He wondered if he should tell Ayuvah what Phylomon was up to. But who knew what Phylomon would find? Perhaps the men would not be out there. Even if they were, would they really harm anyone in the party? Hardy Goodman the simpleton?

Wisteria saw Tull looking at his kutow and asked “Is something wrong?”

“No,” Tull said, taking her hand. He considered. No, he’d worked for Hardy many times. Hardy would never hurt him. Tull dropped his war gear, then led Wisteria to the wagon and hid within its shelter. Tull held her delicately, as if she were a bouquet of roses that he did not want to crush.

He’d seen the way Chaa and Zhopila treated one another, and he’d often admired their tenderness toward one another. They were not only affectionate, they’d found countless and often ingenious ways to serve one another: Chaa would hunt in the mountains in winter for merganser ducks to make pillows so Zhopila could have something soft to sit on while she ground her grain for dinner. Zhopila grew a patch of mint, which she then dried and brought into the house to make it smell sweet in Chaa’s meditation lodge.

Now as Tull stared at Wisteria, he wondered how he could show her the type of love he held for her. For the last two days he’d tried. He’d watched Ayuvah clear rocks and pine cones from Little Chaa’s bed, saw the way he kept his brother’s water jug filled, and Tull followed Ayuvah’s example, hoping that by emulating myriad small acts he could learn to love.

Yet, he sensed something odd in his relationship with Wisteria. She seemed cool toward him at times, cooler than newlyweds should feel. Oh, he felt something. The caress of her fingers as she teased the hairs at the nape of his neck gave him delicious chills and filled his loins with fire. The smell of her breath pleased him more than Scandal’s finest banquet. To lay his hand on her hip and know that Wisteria was his wife filled him with joy. Yet he could tell that she did not reciprocate, and this scared Tull, for he wondered if he was losing her because he did not know how to love.

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