Authors: Michael A. Stackpole
Keerana nodded, then bowed his head. “Shall I begin now, my lord?”
“Please. My friend and I shall make ourselves at home.”
The warrior gave Nelesquin a salute, then withdrew. The Prince looked at Kaerinus. “They are quite remarkable in their loyalty and ferocity. Rather like dogs in that way, only smarter.”
“Not many dogs would engage Soshir at Tsatol Deraelkun.”
Have you forgotten I did just that and lost to him?
Nelesquin watched his companion for a moment, then shook his head. “You will see Keerana engage him there and take the fortress.”
“That is a bold claim.”
“He would sooner die than disappoint, and with what I have brought, he will prevail.” Nelesquin sighed and glanced at Gachin again. “Their loyalty does complicate things. Imagine, allowing this one to rot here in the palace.”
The Prince gestured, and violet energy trailed from his fingers. It swelled to a billowing cloud that engulfed the corpse and bier both. Lightning flashed argent within the cloud. The heat of high summer pulsed heavily enough to send Kaerinus’ cloak rolling across the floor. It wrapped itself around the base of the column within the empty alcove.
A wan smile twisted Nelesquin’s lips. He waved his hand toward the alcove. The cloud filled it, then fell away like Kaerinus’ cloak, unveiling a statue of Nelesquin.
Kaerinus smiled. “Very well done, my lord. Your return makes things right again.”
Nelesquin opened his arms, intending to rise on magical wings, but weakness washed over him. He staggered, yet before he could fall, Kaerinus caught him. He lowered the Prince to the ground, but Nelesquin refused to be prostrated before his own statue.
Nelesquin shoved him away, surprised at his own weakness. “Speeding my ship, making that statue . . . I have overtired myself.”
“There is some truth to that, but it is not the whole of the matter.”
“I have not felt this weakness before.”
“Yes, you have. You have just forgotten.”
Nelesquin shook his head, but dizziness sapped his strength. He sank back onto his elbows. “It was not like this, the time we perfected the magic. I felt some weakness, but it was transitory.”
“As this will be, my lord; but you will tire.”
“I don’t understand.”
Kaerinus crouched beside him. “When we perfected the means to sever your spirit and soul, then draw your soul from your body, we guaranteed you could not die. When your body ceased to function, Grija drew off your spirit and thought your soul had come with it. Your spirit languished in his realm until your return. Body, soul, and spirit form the eternal triangle—your spirit anchoring your soul in whichever realm it inhabits. Your spirit drew to it the materials to create a body as you emerged from the underworld, but this creation was not perfect. You feel the lack of your soul. Once we return it to you, you shall be greater than you ever were.”
“As we planned.” Nelesquin smiled. “I have not forgotten the bargain, Kaerinus. When I am world emperor, you shall rule many nations. Ours will be the whole of the earth. You, me, and my consort.”
“Consort?”
“Nirati Anturasi. She is the one who granted me escape from the Nine Hells.”
Kaerinus’ eyes narrowed. “Nirati Anturasi. I know her. I have touched her with magic. I had not thought she was that powerful.”
“No matter.” Nelesquin sat up again, clutching his knees to his chest. “I shall husband my strength until we can undo what was done at my death.”
“Do you sense where your soul lies?”
Nelesquin concentrated for a moment, then nodded. “North, distantly north. If I could feel more, I would command it to appear.”
“And the effort would likely kill you.”
“Ironic, no?” Nelesquin slowly rose to his feet. “I felt something else. The Empress. She stands between me and my destiny.”
Kaerinus shook his head. “That is not a place I should like to be.”
Nelesquin smiled. “That is an opinion I am sure she will quickly come to share.”
Chapter 6
I
leaned on the battlements of Tsatol Deraelkun and stared down at the battlefield. Green fields had been churned into bogs of grasses, matted with blood. The
kwajiin
had recovered their dead companions and withdrawn. My scouts had trailed them, and reported they were returning to Kelewan.
It didn’t matter. We knew they would appear again, soon.
The blue-skinned warriors had abandoned the bodies of their
vhangxi
. I really couldn’t blame them, as the batrachian creatures had smelled none too pleasant in life, and even less so after they had been slaughtered. The web-footed, leaping beasts were good in an open-field battle—that much I’d seen when they destroyed the Iron Bears. Laying siege to a mountain fortress, however, requires more brains than bravery. The
vhangxi
had neither.
The mud had begun to dry, freezing footprints as if they were tiny fluctuations on a calm brown sea. If I looked closely, I could have picked out tracks of scavengers, including a few of the
vhangxi
survivors hiding in the nearby woods. They would venture out to feed, and House Derael’s archers placed bets, then killed them.
A small island lay at the center of the battlefield, with a stone circle upon it. I’d come close to dying there. Gachin
had
died there, and his assault with him. Had he killed me and left anyone alive to remember the fight, I might have had a small shrine erected in my memory.
Instead I just had a story destined to become legend.
As with other Mystics, though, I was healing quite nicely, and far more quickly than a man of my years should. My right ear still itched from where the Soth Gloon, Urardsa, had sewed it back on. The wound in my chest had closed, but it still hurt when I coughed. One more scar in a lifetime of them. But the good thing about scars is they mean you survived.
“Master Tolo, are you going to die?”
Smiling, I turned toward the boy who had climbed up to share the tower with me. I’d met him when he was only nine, on the road with his father and grandfather, bound for Moriande and the Harvest Festival. Barely six months later, it was hard to recognize him. Dunos had been small for his nine years, but bright-eyed and happy. He weathered his withered left arm well: his greatest desire at the time had been to become a swordsman, though he would have been happy to help in the family mill.
Even now, despite the horrors he’d witnessed, he still possessed a touch of innocence. His lower lip trembled and his green eyes glistened. “They said you were going to die.”
I slowly shook my head. “They misunderstood.”
“They said the Gloon saw it. They can see the future.”
“Not always, Dunos.” I removed the twin swords from my robe’s sash and sat at the base of the wall. Dunos sat at my feet, his withered arm looking close to normal sheathed in ring mail. He’d been given a red robe once worn by Pasuram Derael, resplendent with the family’s wounded-bear crest embroidered in yellow. In spirit, he was one of them.
I made sure my voice was warm. “Do you remember when we were in Moriande and went to the healing Kaerinus performed?”
“We were there with that lady, Nirati.”
“Yes, we were. You saw that big scar on my chest, remember?”
He nodded. “It looked like someone tried to cut you in half.”
“They did a better job of it than the
kwajiin
. I went to the healing in hopes that it would be healed. It wasn’t.” I tapped a finger against my temple. “There was something else I needed healed and, over time, it has been. The scar . . . well, I remember little about it. It’s much like you and your arm.”
“I was out playing and found a glowing stone in a riverbank. I grabbed it and don’t remember anything until my father fished me out of the mill stream.” Dunos lifted his left arm and let it drop. “When I woke up, my arm was like this.”
“I remember you telling me. You were a mile or more downstream, but you survived. I survived, too, and woke up in my master’s home. They took care of me. They nursed me back to health. My master trained me to be a great swordsman. He passed on all the lessons he’d learned from
his
swordmaster, Virisken Soshir.”
I handed him one of the two swords I carried. “Take a good look. The cords wrapping the hilt are orange and black in a tiger-stripe pattern. The man who carried them came from Moryth.”
He peered closely at the cords. “Yes, I see the little bronze tiger charm under there.”
“That’s Chado, the tiger of heaven. Look at the handguard. You see the dragon at the top of the disk? That means the swords were manufactured before the fall of civilization. They also mean the swords belonged to a member of the Emperor’s Bodyguards.”
Dunos nodded. “Virisken Soshir.”
“You’re absolutely right.”
He looked up. “Why did Count Derael give these swords to you?”
“He didn’t give them to me, Dunos.” I met his wondering stare openly. “He
returned
them to me.”
Dunos’ brows arrowed together.
“The thing Kaerinus healed was not the scar, but the memories I’d lost when I was so badly hurt. I’m not Moraven Tolo, not really. I’m Virisken Soshir.”
The boy blinked, not comprehending.
I couldn’t blame him. I’d found that realization completely alien, and yet I’d also known it was true. Somehow, over five hundred years had passed between the time I rode with Empress Cyrsa to Ixyll and found myself at
Serrian
Jatan. My former apprentice became my master, never revealing to me who I really was. In retrospect it was easy to see he’d known all along but had never seen fit to tell me.
Dunos pushed through his confusion and focused again. “Didn’t the Gloon say you were going to die?”
“No. He said because I now know who I truly am, I’m
free
to die. But I’ve been close a number of times, and I really have no taste for it.”
“Me, neither.”
I reached out and tousled his brown hair. “That’s good. I don’t want you dying. You have a long life ahead of you.”
He shrugged. “I’m pretty good at avoiding the
vhangxi
. They’ve hit me a couple times, but it hasn’t hurt.”
“Excellent.”
“So, you were a warrior a long time ago?”
“I was the last Emperor’s bodyguard. I was one of his sons—not a prince like Nelesquin, but I was trusted nonetheless. Then the Turasynd came.”
“That was a long time ago. You’re alive because you’re a Mystic, right?”
That
was
the obvious answer. I was alive, in part, due to being a Mystic. But Phoyn Jatan, who had been younger than me, was now far older. It should have been impossible that I had somehow skipped several hundred years of aging, but I’d met Ryn Anturasi. Count Derael said Ryn had given my swords to his ancestor, and yet he was hale and hearty when I met him. Moreover, he had some odd conveyance that had transported me from the heart of Ixyll to Erumvirine in the blink of an eye. Given evidence that he could instantly travel vast distances and perhaps even through time, I had to assume that he found me and brought me forward to be healed and retrained as Moraven Tolo.
“I think you’re right, Dunos.” I frowned. “You’ve seen the scar, though. Someone wanted me dead, and I don’t know why.”
The boy shrugged with the confident carelessness of a child. “It had to have been Prince Nelesquin. He was your enemy.”
“Life is never as clear-cut as bards’ tales.” I wanted to elaborate, but a thought occurred to me. The Time of Black Ice and the war against the Turasynd had created two key figures: the Empress Cyrsa and Prince Nelesquin. She waited, sleeping, to save the former Empire. He was evil incarnate and the source of all the hardships that had befallen the world. His
vanyesh
were demonized. And various other heroes, like Amenis Dukao, had their cycle of stories, which never let common citizens forget the great sacrifices made to stop the Turasynd.
But Virisken Soshir remained virtually unknown. I’d learned a great deal about him, but only from Phoyn. The stories about Cyrsa seldom included anyone even close to me, and even when they did, my name was mangled beyond recognition. Granted, some of the stories Phoyn told me were unpleasant, I had clearly not been an easy taskmaster. But I’m sure the people I’d led from Kelewan would agree with that assessment.
Ranai Ameryne would. In our escape from Kelewan, I’d used a crowd of hopeless souls to distract the enemy so we could break through their siege lines. Though memories of my life as Virisken were distant, disorganized, and fragmented, at the time I felt no difficulty with what I had done. Virisken, an Imperial bastard, had no qualms about using his inferiors. I had been ambitious—easily the equal of my half brother—so a conflict between us was inevitable.
Thinking on it now, however, I did feel remorse. I’d told Ranai that the people were destined to die anyway, and that some of them
might
escape. I didn’t believe it, but I also did nothing to help them. If I had turned my force and attacked, more of them might have gotten away. We surely could have pulled some out with us.
But would one or two, or even a dozen, have made any difference? Virisken would have said no because they were homeless peasants being driven before the invaders. People like them always fell to advancing warriors, just as mice fell prey to hawks. It was the way of the world.
But that was the attitude of a bastard child who believed himself better than his legitimate kin. He should have been in line for the throne. He would rule more efficiently and better than they had. However, the chances of his attaining that throne were nonexistent.
Unless there was a revolt and a new dynasty replaced the old
.
I shivered, because the person I had once been felt no qualms about that idea either. In fact, he found it attractive.
But I was no longer that person.
That
was the reason Phoyn had trained me as he had. It was not to hone my skill with a sword, but to remake me as a man. The trauma of my wounding had cost me my memory, and Phoyn made me over into the man he had perceived me to be. He saved me in more ways than one.