The Godspeaker Trilogy (167 page)

Read The Godspeaker Trilogy Online

Authors: Karen Miller

Tags: #Fiction / Fantasy / Epic, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction

BOOK: The Godspeaker Trilogy
10.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Zandakar folded his arms. “Vortka will stop Mijak. Vortka is chalava-hagra. Chalava speak to Vortka, it say—”

“What?” he prompted. “Zandakar? What did your god tell him? What did I tell him, while I was burning?”

And suddenly Zandakar's face was masked in pain. Twisted with anguish.

The night was still warm but suddenly Dexterity felt chilled. Oh, Hettie, Hettie, I knew something was wrong . “Zandakar, I warn you. I'll not take one more step until you tell me what I said. Before you tell me what's wrong ! And don't tell me nothing's wrong, because I'm not blind or stupid. And I did not come all this way to be treated like a child!”

“ Chalava ,” said Zandakar at last, his voice a strangled whisper. “You tell Vortka chalava wei want blood. Wei want blood ever. Harjha. Targa. Bryzin. Zree.” His fist thudded against his chest. “I kill them for chalava. Chalava wei want!”

Oh dear . So at last, Zandakar knew the truth. And what could he say now? What words were there, in Ethrean, or Mijaki, or any living tongue, to ease the pain? So many murdered, and all for a lie.

Zandakar took a step back. “You hate. You hate this killing Zandakar.”

What? “ Wei !” he said swiftly. “I don't hate you, Zandakar.”

In the silence, Zandakar's harsh, ragged breathing. “I hate.”

Dexterity stared at his anguished face. “Yourself? No. No, you mustn't do that.” Not with that wicked knife stuffed down your shirt . “I know it's dreadful, all those people who died, but it's not your fault. You thought you were doing what chalava wanted. You were told it's what chalava wanted. You're not to blame, Zandakar.”

Another silence. Zandakar's stare shifted, touched on the harbour, then came to rest on the next row of warships, the dreadful might of Mijak. Then he pinched the bridge of his nose between thumb and forefinger, as though his head pained him. After what had happened with the stone scorpion it was such a human gesture. Disarming. Disconcerting.

Dexterity touched his arm. “Zandakar, I think we should go back, while we can. If I can burn for Vortka, then I can burn for your mother.” Not that he relished the prospect, or could control it, but surely it must be their best hope of success. If he prayed, prayed hard…

“ Wei ,” said Zandakar. “Vortka say wei .”

“Well, I don't answer to Vortka!” he retorted. “And neither do you. Not any more. We came here for Rhian and for Ethrea. You swore a blood oath to protect them, which means stopping Mijak in Icthia, which means—”

“ Wei !” said Zandakar, almost shouting. “Stupid Dexterity listen. Danger, zho ? Vortka say danger.”

Well, that was convenient. And puzzling, when Vortka knew first-hand the message they brought, and its importance. Unless…

Oh dear, Hettie. Has Vortka tricked us? Is he only pretending to believe the truth about his god?

Very carefully, he laid a hand on Zandakar's arm. “Look. I know this Vortka is your friend, gajka , but I think we have to consider—”

“ Wei gajka ,” said Zandakar. “ Adda .”

“Adda?”

“I think you say father,” said Zandakar. “ Zho ?”

Stunned, Dexterity gaped at him. He didn't know what he'd expected, but it certainly wasn't this. “But – but you said your father was Raklion .”

Zandakar shook his head. “ Wei . Vortka.”

It was like the solid ground had turned to mist. “He told you this? Just now?”

“Zho.”

Dexterity tugged at his beard. “Are you sure he's not lying?”

“ Zho ,” said Zandakar. In the torchlight, his face was frightening.

“All right, all right,” he said hastily. “I had to ask. Rollin's mercy.” He shook his head, bewildered. “You never knew ? You never suspected ?”

“Wei.”

“And are you pleased he's your father?”

Now Zandakar's eyes flashed from ice to flame. “ Zho .”

If there'd been somewhere to sit he'd have sat down, very hard. It had been a long, eventful night already and clearly it wasn't over yet.

“So…is he Dmitrak's father, too?”

“ Wei .” Zandakar's eyes gleamed. “Nagarak.”

The way he said the name wasn't promising. “I take it that's bad?”

A nod. “ Zho . Bad. Nagarak bad.”

And did bad blood breed true? As with dogs and horses, did a rotten sire mean rotten stock?

I think it must. It was Dmitrak at Garabatsas.

But before that, in those other places, it had been Zandakar.

So perhaps bloodlines mean nothing. Perhaps it all comes down to choice, whether a man is good or evil.

After all, Zandakar had been both. That had to mean something.

Oh, Hettie, it's so complicated, and I'm a simple man.

At least this explained why Zandakar was so eager to trust Vortka. But did that mean he had to trust the priest, too? Just take Vortka's word for it that they shouldn't find Hekat? Trust him to speak to her, on Ethrea's behalf?

“Dexterity,” said Zandakar. “You trust me, zho ?”

Oh dear. “Yes. Yes, of course I do. But—”

Zandakar pressed a fist against his heart. “Trust me, trust Vortka. Trust Adda. Zho ?”

It was the closest he'd ever seen Zandakar to begging. Oh dear, oh dear . “If I agree,” he said slowly. “If we go now, without doing anything more to stop Mijak – am I going to be sorry? Will Ethrea pay the price for my mistake?”

“ Wei ,” said Zandakar. “Dexterity, wei . Vortka save Ethrea.”

Oh, Hettie, sweet Hettie. Please don't let me be wrong about this…

He took a deep breath and let it out in a rush. “All right, then. We go.”

With Zandakar leading the way they continued along the dock, past row after row of looming warships. In the distance the horizon was lightening, growing paler with the approach of dawn. The night had escaped them without him noticing. Dexterity found himself beginning to panic.

What if Sun-dao's left us? What if he's sailed away? What if we took too long in the township and he thought we'd been captured, or killed? Oh, Hettie! He didn't look well. What if he's died?

But no. Sun-dao was waiting in the cramped Tzhung boat. He watched them clamber from the dock to the gently pitching deck, fingers laced before him, the ends of his long, bone-threaded moustaches dangling down his narrow, tattooed chest. Though he still looked weak, he was also furious.

“You find the Empress of Mijak? You find her son, Dmitrak?”

Dexterity glanced at Zandakar. “Ah…not precisely.”

A sharp gust of wind stirred their boat's sail, their clothing, their hair, but did not ripple the surrounding water. “I must see this empress,” Sun-dao hissed. “I must see her son. Take me to them.”

He stepped back, unsteady. “Why?”

Sun-dao rattled off something in Tzhung. From the look on his face it wasn't anything polite. “You foolish man,” he spat. “I leave emperor, I leave my witch-men, for me to do what I must do.”

“What you must do? What we must do, surely. We came to try and stop Mijak, and I think we've succeeded. We now have an ally against its empress.”

“What ally ?” said Sun-dao, scathing.

Dexterity jutted his beard at the witch-man. “Do you know, I'm not inclined to tell you. We're not answerable to you, or to your emperor. Take us home to Ethrea and we'll tell Queen Rhian. What she chooses to tell Han is entirely up to her.”

Another, stronger gust of wind. Sun-dao's sunken eyes glittered. “You stupid toymaker. Mijak must be defeated!”

“Yes, of course it must,” he retorted. “Do you think we don't know that, Sun-dao? Set one foot in the town and you can smell the blood. I can smell it still. It's quite turned my stomach.”

Sun-dao's long, unbound hair was stirring more than could be explained by a breeze. On his arms and bare torso, the inked tattoos writhed.

Dexterity stepped back another pace, almost bumping into Zandakar. He glanced sideways again. “I don't like this,” he murmured. “Something's not right.”

Sun-dao took a painful step forward. “Take me into Jatharuj. Take me to the empress.”

Heart thudding, Dexterity stood his ground. “Why?”

“Why is not your business! Take me to them now!”

“I'll do no such thing. And don't you take that tone with me, Sun-dao.” He turned to Zandakar. “Can you believe his effrontery? I'll be lodging a formal complaint when we get home.”

“ Zho ,” said Zandakar. He sounded…dangerous. As though any complaint he lodged would be lodged with a blade. “Sun-dao. I know you, I think. You came to kill empress. Kill Dmitrak. Zho ?”

What? Dexterity stared at him. “Zandakar, what are you talking about? Sun-dao wouldn't—” And then he stopped. Something dreadful and unseen was crawling over his flesh. He turned, so slowly, and looked at Sun-dao's face.

The witch-man was snarling, his tattoos frantically alive beneath his amber skin.

Oh, Hettie. Don't tell me …“Is he right, Sun-dao? Did you come here to kill them?”

Sun-dao's eyes opened wide. Now a deep crimson glow burned in their depths. Within the last few moments it seemed the flesh had melted from his face, leaving nothing but a thin papering of skin over bone. His hands were unclasped, his arms held wide.

The salt air began to crackle with power.

Dexterity swallowed. Oh, Hettie . “This is disgraceful. Wait till Queen Rhian hears what you had planned.”

Sun-dao said nothing. The witch-man looked scarcely human. And all around them a wind was rising, cold and sharp like a winter storm filled with ice, to slice frail flesh to bloody ribbons.

He turned to Zandakar. “We have to stop him. Whatever he's planning, we can't let him—”

Zandakar wasn't listening. His hand slid inside his shirt and pulled out the scorpion knife Vortka had given him. As his fingers closed around its black hilt the blue-sheened blade leapt to life with that same surge of blue light. It seemed more…violent, this time. As though the knife and Zandakar were somehow connected. The warrior's face was ugly with rage.

“Dexterity,” said Zandakar. “ Move .”

Mouth dry, heart hammering, he stared at that dreadful knife. “What are you doing? Put that thing away!”

“ Wei ,” said Zandakar. In his hand the blade shimmered, menacing. Its blue light brightened, bathing them in a cold illumination.

“Zandakar, please ! Before someone gets hurt!”

But his words were whipped away by Sun-dao's rising wind. It had a voice now, as well as sharp teeth of ice. Keening, hungry, it rocked the crowded warships on the water and whipped the harbour to white froth. Sun-dao's eyes were nearly all crimson now, and crimson sweat stood stark on his brow.

That's blood , Dexterity realised. Rollin have mercy, Hettie. The man's sweating blood .

Sun-dao's lips peeled back in a rictus of pain, or effort, or both. After all he'd done already, it was hard to believe he could do this. The wind's voice rose, its pitch too sharp to bear. Staggering left and right until he hit the boat's side, Dexterity clapped his hands over his ears but still he could hear it. The wind shrieked in his bones and his teeth chattered with cold.

Looming above them the tethered warships of Mijak plunged like wild horses. Any moment now, surely, their little Tzhung boat would be smashed to splinters between them. They'd be smeared to red paste, dead and forgotten.

“Sun-dao, stop it!” he shouted, reaching out a hand to Emperor Han's witch-man. He wished he dared seize him, but was too afraid. “You're going to kill us!”

“ Wei , Dexterity,” said Zandakar, above the screech of the wind. He stood on the boat's pitching deck as though it were a sunlit meadow, easily absorbing its unpredictable heaves. The scorpion knife in his fist was almost too bright to look at. Power seared the salty air. “Witch-man wei kill us. Kill Yuma. Kill Dmitrak. Warriors. Chalava-hagra .” His voice caught. “Kill Vortka.”

As soon as Zandakar said the words, Dexterity knew they were true. Sun-dao was summoning a wind to howl through Jatharuj and kill Mijak in its tracks. Even as he stared at the witch-man, dumbfounded, he heard smashing and crashing sounds coming from the township behind them. Horrified imagination showed him tiles ripping from roofs and windows scattering in lethal shards of glass. Trees tearing free of the soil, houses tumbling to dust.

No, no, he can't do this! It's murder. If he slaughters everyone in Jatharuj we'll be no better than Mijak.

“Sun-dao, listen to me, stop this!” he cried. “Sink the warships! Don't hurt the people! We mustn't hurt the people, I didn't come here to kill !”

I've killed once already. Never again.

Sun-dao shook his head, riding the lurching boat with ease. He stood at the storm's cold, still centre like a man carved from ice.

“What use?” he said as the wind howled harder. “Mijak will build more.”

“Perhaps, but not overnight. Sinking their fleet will at least grant us a little more time !”

“No time!” shouted Sun-dao. “Mijak must die!”

“ Wei !” howled Zandakar. “ You die, Sun-dao!”

As Dexterity watched, helpless, blue fire leapt from the scorpion blade, streaming in an eye-searing line towards the witch-man. Save for its colour it was the same fire that had poured from Dmitrak's gauntlet in Garabatsas.

Then he let out a strangled shout, because Sun-dao did not die in that dreadful stream of blue fire. Abandoning his windstorm to its own wild devices, Sun-dao held up one hand…and the blue fire shredded to pieces in the air.

Dexterity cried out as a whirling filament of blue fire seared his hand to the bone. The pain was awful. He wanted to be sick.

Oblivious, Zandakar attacked Sun-dao again. The second stream of blue fire was faster and thicker. It poured from the scorpion knife like a river in full spate, so bright that Dexterity fell to his knees with his fingers spread across his eyes, trying to shield his sight even as he watched.

Sun-dao needed both hands to save himself this time. This time he staggered backwards until he hit the small boat's mast. With his spine braced against the wood, his long, thin moustaches flailing round his face, he curved his carmine-tipped fingers into talons and screamed his defiance.

And this time the witch-man did not defeat Zandakar unscathed. One shred of the blue fire licked his cheek before burning out. Terrible blisters erupted. Blood bubbled and boiled. Sun-dao screamed, a high thin cry of agony, and his windstorm collapsed.

Other books

Line of Scrimmage by Desiree Holt
Hagakure - The Way of the Samurai by Yamamoto Tsunetomo
Notes to Self by Sawyer, Avery
Savage Lane by Jason Starr
Eye Contact by Michael Craft
Spinning by Michael Baron
Portobello by Ruth Rendell
The Flowers of War by Geling Yan
Midnight Jewels by Jayne Ann Krentz