Read The Legend of El Shashi Online

Authors: Marc Secchia

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy

The Legend of El Shashi (48 page)

“I dreamed
… it was awful.” She took a ragged breath. “Arlak-
nihka
, would you forgive me a request?”

“Anything.”

“I refused you before, I know, but … no. It is too much to ask.”

“Your sight,” I realised. “
I’d be only too willing to try, P’dáronï-
nishka
. You crossed the Fiefdoms for me. What’s a couple of eyeballs compared to that?”

“But
I’ve little courage in this. Or hope.”

I searched her face.
“You’ve changed your mind?”

“Arlak-
nevsê.
I know you better now. I know what you can do. And … I just have the oddest feeling that I don’t want to return to Eldoran as I was. Great and terrible things may happen there, and so I need to be able to see. To be of use. Not to have to rely on seeing through your eyes alone. What do you think?”

“It’d be a difficult operation,” I answered,
rather slowly as I churned the idea about in my brain, “perhaps the most difficult I have ever attempted. The eye is a complex organ. I would somehow need to encourage it to grow back whole … using a technique I’ve sensed you use. I don’t know if this ability is unique to the Armittalese? But when you regrew the skin of my stomach you did it … in an amazing way. This time, you could be my teacher. We have little time. We’ll arrive in Eldoran in three days.”

She let out a gust of air she had been
holding. “But do you think it’s the
right
thing to do, Arlak-mine?”

I nodded, knowing she would sense the movement even in the dark. “Ay.
Now there’s a question for the yammariks. I believe Mata intends for wholeness and restoration. Whether in this life or the next–that I cannot say. But it is perhaps the greatest gift I could think to give you, a gift I have many times over the anna yearned to give you but withheld, out of love and respect, because you were not ready.”


Now I am ready.” P’dáronï placed her hand in mine.

And I worked the rest of the night.

*  *  *  *

That following day we helped ourselves to the clothes freely offered at the shelter. I took for myself the hooded hassock of a manservant and P’dáronï added an Eldrik travelling cloak and proper slippers to her outfit. She would
play a noblewoman fallen upon hard times, and I her manservant. We found her a slender cane beside the fireplace and turned it into her stick, commonly used by the blind community in Eldoran. We took two purple scarves to clothe her distinctive hair in the colour of mourning, and tied a bandage made of the cloth of a linen shirt over her eyes. Now, we hoped, people would not look too hard beyond the bandage and her mourning colours. I had her practice a hunched-over walk. By this artifice I hoped to detract from her unusual height amongst the slender, petite Eldrik women. And with our finest Dissembling in place, with our stories honed to display in the casual parts of our minds to the curious via the
gyael-irfa
, we embarked on the final leg of our journey toward Eldoran.

Within the makh
we came upon a merchant travelling up from Eldoran. We drew aside upon the wayside at once.

“Good master, alms for a poor widow,” I begged, raising and lowering my hand in the approved way. After a moment, a coin clinked on the worn paving stone near my feet.

“Mataboon!” called the trader.

“Bless thee
, kind master! Mata smile upon thee.”


“It worked,” said I, pocketing the small coin. “That’s the price of bread, right?”

“Twenty anna ago,” P’dáronï retorted. “Keep your wits sharp and the onion deep.”

“Ay, mistress.”

“Ooh, I much prefer this
arrangement to being the slave. Now, how can I best exploit my manservant?”


I’ve a modest list of suggestions–”

P’dáronï
whacked my kneecap with her cane, making me yelp more in surprise than pain. “I’ll be giving the orders, you bumbling simpleton!”

As we travelled along I allowed P’dáronï to rest upon my arm. This gave me freedom to continue working upon her eyes and for her to see through mine. The optic nerve was proving particularly challenging. I could not work out why the signals from the retina
refused to reach her brain. I must have made a mistake … quietly, we explored this problem together for the rest of the day.

The following day we
caught up with a trader called Lithan who had ten carts full of thorrick-hay bales bound for Eldoran in his train. He allowed us to hitch a ride with him in the foremost cart. For an Eldrik he was a jovial fellow, and while I was wont to relax a little, P’dáronï pulsed me sharply to reinforce the layers of my Dissembling onion. Grumbling inwardly, I did so.

While we
jounced along at a jatha’s pace P’dáronï questioned him about happenings in Eldoran. I noticed she did not once touch upon a sensitive topic. Her questions were all about prices, places to stay, trends in the Weavers guild, and the arts, while she dropped small hints about the fictional relatives we would be staying with and her sorrow at her dear husband’s untimely death. I secretly felt it a little early for my wife to be doing away with me, even for a story!

But after a lunchtime repast of fruits and the ubiquitous Eldrik lahi-bread, which his wife had made dense, nutty
, and altogether delicious, Lithan volunteered news which jolted us to the core.

“Day after tomorrow’s a big Banishment in the capital, y’know,” Lithan said in his broad countryside accent, as if this were a cheerful event for all the family to enjoy. “They finally caught the biggest jatha of the lot, y’know. Eliyan, ex-First Councillor of the Sorcerers. Y’know, plotting against the
gyael-irfa
an’ suchlike. ‘Tis an awful bad thing, y’honoured lady.”

“Oh, that is terrible,” P’dáronï said primly, making the common sign against evil. “Such a criminal.”

“Y’know they reformed those others but not him–not that … ‘scuse me, mistress, I was about to swear y’know. Not Eliyan. No, he’s for the Banishment. Him and some others. A few bad Inquisitors, they say. Got to keep the
gyael-irfa
pure an’ suchlike, y’know. Can’t have his like being poison in the lake.”

“Banishment is good, master
trader,” I muttered from my side, trying not to grind my teeth together too audibly. “When’s it being done?”

“Like I said, y’know, day after tomorrow. Noon in the square.
As always.”

T
he trader nodded sagely. We were all good, innocent Eldrik. We would not taint the
gyael-irfa
.

I turned my strength and power upon P’dáronï’s ruined orbs
all that day long, accelerating the growth of retinal cells and membranes and clear, unclouded lenses at such a rate that tears streamed from her eyes. I had to dull the pain, but not too much or the growth would be retarded. I kept returning to the detail of my own eyes to try to understand and copy what was required. I still had not solved the problem of the optic nerve. P’dáronï had to change the bandage over her eyes several times as it became sodden.

In the evening, we quietly forged a desperate plan.
P’dáronï was adamant that without the strength of Eliyan those Sorcerers who remained would rapidly fall to Jyla’s cohorts and be overwhelmed, being forced to join her or be Banished. Therefore we either needed to free Eliyan beforehand, or be present at his Banishment. He would be detained in the Pentacle. Home of the Inquisitors, it was more a prison than a Guild. Although I remembered only tiny flashes in my darkest nightmares, that was where I had been held and tortured. So that left us the road between the Pentacle and the square … and the ceremony itself.

But first, we needed to gain Eldoran.

Come dawn, when we emerged from our pretty
holia
, discreetly hidden beneath a flower-covered mound at the wayside, the trader and his carts were gone. They had vanished, without leaving any tracks, as though a godlike hand had erased them from existence. In their place stood some twenty or twenty-five Sorcerers clad in their black sherimol cloaks. The morning mist wreathed their forbidding forms in menace. Behind them was a thicket of spears. Soldiers, no telling how many in the mist, to back up with iron what magic might not accomplish.

With one accord P’dáronï and I drew together.

“Well,” she breathed, “I assume we were expected.”

I did not know whether to laugh or
howl. “I assume you can’t snap your fingers and turn them into a posse of warty toads?”

P’dáronï made a show of pursing her lips. “A few cockroaches at best.”



The picture she supplied was akin to a macabre porker’s breakfast. I gulped. Now I could see the skin of a huge bubble shimmering above us, a kind of membrane that appeared to flex and tremble very slightly at the breath of wind stirring the mists.

<
Pulse: Strong-to-break?>


Her mental tone was as bitter as I felt. To have run and leaped and struggled all this way only to be snapped up like unwary fish by a swift eagle …

I replied:

“It might as well be death if Jyla wins.” P’dáronï shook her head.

One of the Sorcerers stepped forward, passing inside the barrier though a portal briefly opened by his fellows. Spreading his cloak and taking an arrogant stance, he shouted: “Surrender, intruders! You are outnumbered and overmatched!”



I forced my features to remain still. My grephe tingled. I shouted back, without his booming magical amplification, “Who demands our surrender? We have done no harm, broken no laws–”

“Silence, you infidel!” thundered the Sorcerer. “
You are guilty of Dissembling! Guilty of grieving the unity of the sacred
gyael-irfa!

!>

“You blundering
numbwit!” I roared back, throwing P’dáronï a startled glance as my voice blasted forth at a tremendous volume–obscuring the trembling rapidly escalating beneath my feet. “I hold the source of the Sorceress Jyla’s power! I bring it to her for use against the enemies of the Eldrik, against those who would destroy our unity from within! Can you not feel the Web of Sulangi about me? Are you blind to the ocean of
lillia
at my fingertips?”

On cue I suddenly
found myself glowing from head to toe in glorious violet
lillia.
I fed power back to P’dáronï to help her sustain the illusion.

“Shall I spare a fraction
of time to wipe you and your petty band of fools from the racial memory forever?”

P’dáronï’s rich laughter filled our shared mental space
as she watched him through me.

The Sorcerer glanced rapidly over his shoulder at a shout of alarm from his fellows.

I saw horns in the mist. Horns! Beside me, P’dáronï gave a low cry of amazement. The rumbling we had taken for an unexpected rising of the Wurm resolved itself into the thunder of untold thousands of head of jerlak stampeding toward the band of dumbfounded Sorcerers and their backing soldiers. Speech was impossible; the world shook and we shook with it.

How pitiful they now seemed
to me! Several Sorcerers and Warlocks teleported rapidly, but not far enough–screams rose near and far. Metal crashed against metal, and horn against metal. I saw a black robe flipped into the air. He fell amongst the heaving bodies and disappeared. Fire flared in the mist. Jerlak bellowed and converged on the spot in a fatal, seething tide, swamping the Warlock who had dared to attack them. His screams of agony were chopped short.

Suddenly, without warning, a
great beast stamped before us, his breath steaming in twin geysers from his nostrils in the cool morning air. He was as white as sea-spume. He shook his dewlap and, with a toss of his mighty horn, bellowed his welcome.

P’dáronï shrank against
my side. I am afraid I was shrinking against her!

I
wrenched forth my shrinking tongue and exclaimed, “Thurbarak! White thundering mountain!”

Lowering his head, the great bull
fixed me with his gaze.
We meet again, El Shashi.
His voice filled my mind with its presence and a sense of deep, abiding calm. He turned to regard P’dáronï with all the ageless wisdom of his gaze.
Well met, Star of the Ammilese March
. She bowed deeply in the Armittalese way of highest respect, from the waist with her arms raised straight behind her, almost as if she were preparing to dive into a pool of water.
We must ride for Eldoran. This is my son Thurmagor, and my daughter Hoyibarak. They will bear you hence.

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