The Devil's Garden (9 page)

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Authors: Jane Kindred

BOOK: The Devil's Garden
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Life in In’La, however, remained oppressive. The new government had a tight fist, and the public dissent that had handed it its power was no longer tolerated. Neither had its inequities died with Alya. Instead of petitions and offerings, there were levies and taxes—new names for the same system of favoritism. Laws of caste and sex were more strictly enforced, and neither Cree nor Ume felt safe to be themselves. A temple courtesan in Ume’s tradition was found murdered, her body thrown in the mud beyond the Garden for bearing the wrong fruit.

There was nothing left for them in the stifling, perfumed air of the Delta.

 

In the dark hours of an early-summer morning, Ume woke Cree after tossing most of the night. She kissed the cool slope of her nape until Cree flicked at her in irritation.

Ume spoke against her shoulder. “Do you still think about being a farmer or a smith?”

“A what?” Cree rolled over. “Go back to sleep, Ume.”

“In the
falend.
You told me once you thought it was better there. A woman could be anything she pleases.”

“The
falend?

“Do you think a woman could be a lady? Would I have to be a farmer?”

Cree turned back toward her, finally awake. “You want to go to the
falend?
Truly go?”

“Truly go,” said Ume. “We could have babies. I mean, you could have babies, but I’d do all the mothering. You could be what you like.”

Cree laughed. “Well, I don’t know about
that.
But no, love, you wouldn’t have to be a farmer.” She took Ume’s fingers and kissed the tips. “How could I bear to callus these pretty hands?”

 

Just after the solstice, as the winds began to blow from the south, they booked passage on a barge sailing upriver that would take them to Rhyman. Beyond the Delta, toward the desert and the
falend
beyond, they would travel on foot.

They arrived at the dock before dawn, Cree handsome in a black brocade coat Ume had made for her, her dark hair covered in a new black cap with a buckram bill and a twist of silk cord across the front—the latest style in In’La. Ume wore a gown of deepest gold with the amber-beaded veil. They might have been bound for a formal affair. If there was trouble, and for more rugged travel once they left Rhyman, Ume could wear the clothes she’d packed for Cree. But ahead of them lay the
falend
and the promise of a free life.

As they embarked, Ume knelt at the bank and murmured one last petition
—“VetmaaiMeerAlya”—
though his spirit was as lost as his body, denied the rite of fire.

“I wouldn’t do that in Rhyman.” The dockhand took her hand to help her up the gangplank. His voice had a familiar timbre like an aural déjà vu. Ume met his eyes and gasped. They were an exceptional shade of deep cobalt blue.

For a moment she was certain it was Azhra, following Cree’s custom and dressing as a man, but his vest was open, revealing a firm, flat chest. Yet he was the same height and size as Azhra, and his short hair the same sable shade. Did Azhra have a brother?

He tipped his hat to Cree as she turned back to see what was keeping Ume, and Cree made the same half-strangled gasp of surprise. “Azhra?” She spoke the name before she saw it couldn’t be.

As he drew the rope barricade between them, he leaned over the jute rail. “They say in the marketplace that the age of gods is past. That may be so, but the Anamnesis is still flowing. Sometimes you have to look deeper to see the thing that’s right in front of you.”

He tipped his hat again and shoved one boot against the barge to push it off into the river. “There’s one more thing I learned in the market.” He smiled, but his cobalt eyes were tinged with profound sorrow. “There is yet some magic in the Delta.”

About the Author

Jane Kindred has always had stories in her head. By the time she was twelve, reading fantasy and gothic romance by flashlight under the covers, she knew what she wanted to be: someone who created worlds of darkness and mystery that others could fall into, and maybe fall just a little bit in love.

Jane’s worlds are peopled with devils and gods, angels and demons, and ordinary humans who make extraordinary magic—much like the world we live in.

She now writes her stories to the sound of foghorns among the hills of San Francisco while two cats slowly but surely edge her off the side of the bed.

Visit http://www.janekindred.com to find out what Jane’s writing now or email her at [email protected].

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ISBN: 978-1-4268-9687-3

Copyright © 2011 by Jane Kindred

All rights reserved. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher, Harlequin Enterprises Limited, 225 Duncan Mill Road, Don Mills, Ontario, Canada M3B 3K9.

All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are pure invention.

This edition published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

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