Ecko Rising (30 page)

Read Ecko Rising Online

Authors: Danie Ware

BOOK: Ecko Rising
9.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Roderick saw Rhan’s expression congeal, saw the figment of dread and dismay as it gathered under his skin.

Adyle was smiling like a man with well-weighted dice. “It seems,” he said, “that the Seneschal’s ears are closed to warnings. Despite the policy of this city, a policy that’s been in place since the days of Tekisarri himself, Rhan has been importing eoritu from Amos –” he threw a small packet across the table “– and I have every reason to suspect the Bard is his distributor.”

What?

The accusation was so sudden, so utterly unexpected... Roderick’s blood thundered in his ears. His panic manifest. He couldn’t breathe, he couldn’t swallow. As if from some huge, roaring distance, he heard every word, every breath, every shock, every sigh.

“You
dare
?” Rhan’s flare of white anger was unexpected – he was furious enough to cover any fear. “You dare go through my
house
?”

Horrified, the Bard realised that with this one stroke he had lost the Council, lost their attention and support and sympathy. He would never get the chance to speak his beliefs, to make them understand what he’d felt and seen, never enlist their help for what he now faced.

And the accusation itself...!

Without quite realising it, he was on his feet, shrugging off the escort’s attempt to push him back down. “What is this game you play? You know I did not do this!” His blood screamed at him, screamed desperation. Leaving the soldier behind, shouting startled orders, he started to jump down over the seat tiers. Mostak turned, his hand going for the weapon he had left at the door.

“Gods-damned
sehvrak
!” Rhan spat venom.

But the Justicar Halydd was louder. “I knew it! My Lord Seneschal, this time I’ll take you your
head
! You and that Gods-damned crazed storyteller!”

“The Bard’s got nothing to do with it,” Rhan shot back, “this filthy little
sehv
is playing
games.
What do you want, Phylos? Why have your lackeys gone through my house?”

“Deny it,” Phylos said. Arms crossed over his huge chest, he was chin up, his expression severe. “Deny the eoritu’s yours.”

The game had indeed been reduced to two sides, and now one of them was winning.

The Lord Foundersson Demisarr was on his feet, hands helpless, mouth wordless.

Swearing, the soldier Mostak left his seat to intercept Roderick.

“Yes, the packet is mine,” Rhan said. “But...” He stopped at the look the Foundersson gave him, a hurt child, uncomprehending. “My Lord... Demisarr...” He deflated like a windless sail. “I...”

“You’ve just
admitted
it.” Grinning like a bweao, Phylos snatched the packet, opened it, sniffed it, threw it at Halydd.

The Justicar went purple, shaking with outrage. She shrieked, “
I will not have this substance in the city!

“Oh,
get over it
!” Rhan rounded on Halydd, his sudden snarl echoed from the walls. “It’s mine – alone. I don’t trade it, Roderick’s never been near it. Take my head if you can – if your sword arm’s still strong enough!”

Roderick vaulted the last of the empty stone seats and stumbled to a halt at the foot of the table. Before him, chaos – the Council of Nine, the rulers of the Grasslands, squabbling like children, jealous, vicious, greedy.

He had Ecko. There were monsters in the grass. He had witnessed a piece of the past come to life. The very elements stirred beneath their feet. Their harvest burned around them and they used it only for political gain...

He found himself angry. For the first time in returns beyond count, his hope and his fear were real, and close.

The world herself screamed in his blood.

This is a decision!

And to help her, he had to face down this theatre of fools.

* * *

 

“For
SHAME
!”

The acoustics in the theatre were flawless – the force of Roderick’s cry robbed the Council of breath, of motion. He stood at the foot of the table like an avenging black-clad figment, stood as though it were his to command. His gaze met that of the Foundersson.

“This is the Theatre of Nine, the leadership of the Varchinde, raised by the hand of Samiel and the vision of Saluvarith himself. This is no place for games!”

Shocked into silence, they stared.

“You hold the might of the Grasslands in your unready hands, fire spreads through the very thing that brings you life – and yet you sentence your people to perish? Are you so bored? So consumed by greed?” He looked around at each Council member. “How can you face the memory of the Founder with behaviour such as this? How can you sit in this place of your forefathers, and not be shamed?”

Phylos tapped his index fingers together, his eyes narrow and burning.

“Remember, as you struggle for power, that the world does not turn around the voices of this chamber; cares not for your
politics.
I have looked in the falling waters of the Ryll – and for all you plot and grapple and scheme, the thoughts of the world heed you not. If you do not look beyond yourselves, my Lords, your people will starve and perish – and hoarding their wealth will only delay the inevitable. The farmlands will burn, Merchant Master, they will be torn apart by creatures of nightmare, and you will live just long enough to
watch
.”

He had them now – Rhan shone, Demisarr held back tears. Phylos eyed him with a calculating smirk.

“I am here –” with a bound, he was on top of the table, standing there as if he could call fire from the very sky “– to plead with you, my Lords, to throw myself upon your justice and mercy as I have done once before. The elements awaken: alchemical creatures are loose in the grass and the stone of your city has life. I see harbingers of the very peril the world has long feared – the peril I have brought to this Council once before. The Count of Time threatens us all, my Lords – we cannot be turning, one upon another, hurling accusations, sacrificing the innocent for a mere moment of power, a false dawn.”

He walked, his cloak a billow of black in the cold, white room, crushing the herb and its accusation beneath his boots.

He stopped before the Foundersson.

“We must trust, remember what Fhaveon herself was built for. This is a city of power and strength – and I have come to give her new direction. If you wish to challenge the blight in your crops, then you must heed me. You must help me find the greater threat and thus bring the cure and new life to the Varchinde entire!”

Echoes of passion tumbled across the silence. The Council was still.

Then the Foundersson stood, looked up at the Bard with a gleam of hope in his pale blue eyes.

For just a moment, Roderick thought he had won – that he had brought the world’s fear to the notice of the Council of Nine.

For just a moment.

Then Demisarr spoke.

“You are a visionary, Sir Roderick, a crusader for a truth so ancient we’ve lost its meaning...” He paused, shook his head, looked to Rhan... Then his eyes were pulled back to the packet, contents spilled on the tabletop, and he seemed to fold in upon himself, weighted once again by the white cloak upon his shoulders. “Your ardour touches my heart, touches all of us, but you’re asking the impossible. As you say, I’m the son of my forefathers, bound by their law. The elements you speak of are but remnants of children’s superstitions, alchemy is a tale of Tusien.” He picked the packet up, spilled its contents onto the table at the Bard’s booted feet. “Such things have no place in here. I am the Lord of Fhaveon. I must do as the mandate of my family bids. I must care for my people.”

“That’s not...” The words passed the Bard’s lips before he could bite down upon them. “The world wakens, my Lord.” It was a whisper, but it carried to the very roof. “You must heed me, acknowledge my request...”

“Like my father did last time?” Demisarr smiled, almost sadly. He crumpled the packet, let it drop. “Roderick, there is no great enemy upon Rammouthe Island, no lore you have missed. Every soldier that followed you died.” He stood up, met the Bard’s gaze. “Get off my table.”

Mostak laid a cold hand on Roderick’s arm. “Stand down,” he said softly, “or I will break both your legs.”

Shaking, unable to find a word or a thought to formulate his failure, Roderick did as requested. Dry leaf matter scattered onto the floor.

Demisarr picked a fragment up, crushed it between thumb and forefinger. “Roderick of Avesyr, members of the Council of Nine – I’m appalled. This accusation is against my mentor, my teacher, my oldest friend. It eviscerates me like a blade.

“My word is this.

“Adyle, this one packet isn’t proof – you could’ve brought it from Amos yourself.” The Justicar snorted. “We reconvene in one halfcycle – ten days. You’ve got that time to prove the guilt of the Lord Seneschal and Roderick of Avesyr.”

Rhan’s expression was as cold as the marble wall, cold as his own carving. Roderick’s blood was pounding in his ears like the feet of an army.

Ecko had abandoned him. The Council had not heard his voice.

Mostak’s hand was like cold stone upon his arm.

The Count of Time was closing his grey cloak about Roderick’s senses. He found tears at the backs of his eyes – it had all been so close, so nearly within his reach...!

“Rhan, you are under arrest – your title is foregone until your innocence is proven. You are no longer... no longer Lord Seneschal of Fhaveon.” Demisarr’s voice cracked, he took a breath and carried on. “And I don’t need to mention what’ll occur if you fail to attend the next Council.” The Foundersson glanced at the Bard. “Either of you. Roderick, you also. You will join him. Neither you nor your tavern are permitted to depart the city.”

“I have no way to control The Wanderer,” Roderick said. “You –”

“Then it’ll move without you,” Demisarr said. “You’ll stay. Mostak?”

The soldier Mostak commented softly, “Pull a stunt like that again and I’ll gut you myself.”

“This is madness!” The Bard’s words were a rush. “This is all connected – this is just the beginning. You’ll see. You’ll realise – !”

“Enough!” Mostak said. “This is Fhaveon – and your crazed arse is mine. Your distraction tactic didn’t work – and your demented preachings end here. No more scaremongering, Bard, or I’ll throw you into the gorge myself.”

In the cold, white light, Phylos was smiling like a sated bweao.

* * *

 

“What a mess,” Rhan said. “One halfcycle – damn those conniving bastards for going through my
house
.” Rhan was pacing a small, plain square of a room, three steps one way, three steps the other. The walls were smooth and dry and pale grey. The door was bolted from the outside. “We’re up to our ears in tumultuous world-ending horseshit – and Phylos chooses
now
to challenge my office? Opportunistic bastard – I wonder how long he’d had that packet of herb?”

Roderick was quiet, sat on the floor in the corner with his knees drawn up to his chest, like some errant, black-cloaked child. To be so impassioned and desperate – and to have been unable to touch them... The false accusation bothered him less than his own failure.

He was lost. He had staked so much hope on this meeting – and his need had fallen to the floor in ashes. Ecko was gone; the Council had refused to hear him. He could not return to The Wanderer.

Perhaps the greatest test of his life was upon him – and he had failed before he had even begun.

“Phylos seeks power.” His response was reflex, empty. “If he owned the remaining crop, he could surely hold the city – possibly the Varchinde – to ransom. He could have anything he wanted.”

“But why?” Rhan spun on his heel. “World domination? Power for its own sake? I don’t think so. Those fires were like nothing I’ve seen in four hundred returns – the ground still ached with the damage inflicted and I could feel the elemental might within. But how does this tangle with your monsters, the resurgence of alchemy, your champion, your ‘Echo’?” He spun again. “I realise it’s all connected – but I’m more damned curious about where it’s going.”

Roderick looked up, the rocklight reflected broken from his gaze.

“You’re enjoying this.”

“Ha!” The ex-Seneschal grinned. “I built these rooms – had them built. When Rakanne’s son Adward expanded his hold over the Varchinde, there was resistance. Not war exactly, more... unrest.” He patted the wall as though he were punching it. “Never thought I’d be the one in here. Or that you’d be damned stupid enough to be in here with me.”

“I’ve never sold –”

“They know that. Whatever that bastard’s up to, he wants us both out of his way. There’s a pattern growing. It’s just a question of what.”

“Ecko talked about patterns,” Roderick replied bleakly.

Rhan turned, jabbed a finger at the Bard. “Snap out of it, Loremaster, this is no time to feel sorry for yourself. You’ve been waiting for this moment all your life and I can
feel
pure light in my skin. We are
here
to face this, exactly this! Perhaps my old enemy wakens at last. We’d better arm up and get
nasty.

Unable to bear Rhan’s words and their challenge and exhilaration, unable to bear his own loss, Roderick found himself on his feet and turning away, standing by the bolted-shut door. Figments lurked unseen on its far side. He felt a cry welling up in his throat that was desperate for utterance. He strangled an urge to hammer the wood until his skin broke and bled.

“I wish Ecko were here. He’d –”

“He’s not.” Rhan started pacing again, restless, almost eager. “But we’re not without options.”

“We’re under arrest.”
We’ve failed.

“Arrest, for the Gods’ sakes.” Rhan chuckled. “Do you think I’d be fool enough to build a gaol that could actually hold me?”

“You...?” The Bard gaped.

“Roderick of Avesyr, Guardian of the Ryll, bless you and your naïveté.” Rhan’s tone was almost gentle. “Have you forgotten? Whoever this fire-flinger is, they’re not the only Elementalist – I have light in my heart and my soul, in my skin and in my very existence.” He grinned. “I, too, awaken. Should I wish to, I could raze this city to smoking fragments, I could call lightning from the very sky and split the world asunder. Well, probably.” His grin spread.

Other books

Gun-Shy Bride by B.J. Daniels
Bitter Angels by C. L. Anderson
Legion and the Emperor's Soul by Brandon Sanderson
Feathermore by Lucy Swing
My Father's Wives by Mike Greenberg
Moral Zero by Sytes, Set
Renegade Bride by Barbara Ankrum