The Godspeaker Trilogy (192 page)

Read The Godspeaker Trilogy Online

Authors: Karen Miller

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

BOOK: The Godspeaker Trilogy
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“It can,” she agreed. “But in this case, it won't be.”

“You don't know that!” said Adric. “Not for sure!”

“It's called having faith, Adric,” she told him. “Ask Helfred, if you've forgotten.”

“By God,” said Edward slowly. “You're prodigious casual with our lives, Rhian.”

I know. I know. I'm sorry, Edward . “Zandakar won't fail us, gentlemen,” she said. “And neither will Han.”

They were too tired, or too dispirited, to argue any more. She was grateful for that, even as it pricked her with guilt.

“It's been a long day, my friends,” she added, gentling her voice. “You're tired. I'm tired. Our hearts are sore with grief. Let's withdraw, and seek our well-earned beds. We'll meet in the council chamber at nine of the clock, and together make final plans for our stand against Mijak.”

“Majesty,” said Helfred, nodding. “That seems the wisest course.”

As he and the dukes departed, Dexterity hesitated. “Majesty…Rhian…” His voice broke. “Can you forgive me?”

“Oh, Dexterity,” she said, and held him close. “You were following your conscience. If that's all God asks of us, how can I ask for more?”

“But what if Edward's right? What if Hettie's gone because I did the wrong thing?”

She tightened her arms around him. “I'll never believe that. Hettie told you to trust Zandakar, and that's what you did.”

“Then where is she? Where is she ?”

“I don't know, Dexterity,” she said, and released him. “But wherever she is, she won't want you blaming yourself. Now get some rest. I'll see you in the Dexterity nodded, and trailed out. She was alone with Alasdair.

“You lied,” he said, still slouched in his seat.

She folded her arms. “I had to.”

The cold look in his eyes admitted no such thing. “And when Mijak comes, and Han doesn't, what will you say then?”

“He'll come.” He will. He will . “Alasdair, why did you do this? Why did you tell the council about Jatharuj when we agreed —”

“Because I had to!” he shouted, leaping to his feet. “Because I was there , Rhian, I saw the armada die ! I saw the blood price everyone else paid for Zandakar's choice! I saw the ships on fire and sinking, I heard the sailors screaming, I saw them drown, saw them torn apart, saw them – have you any idea the sound a man makes when he's burning alive? Do you know what he smells like? Do you know—”

“Yes, I do!” she shouted back. “Have you forgotten Marlan? Alasdair, I'm sorry you were there and saw all those terrible things. But no matter how terrible they were, you shouldn't have told the council about Jatharuj! Look at all the trouble it's caused!”

He shook his head slowly, wondering. “You'll defend Zandakar no matter what, won't you?”

“It's not about defending him , it's about defending Ethrea . You know we need him. With Mijak coming—”

“How can you be so blind , Rhian?” said Alasdair. “How can you honestly think he won't betray you again?”

“And how can you be so sure he will ?”

“Well,” he said softly, after a moment. “At least that's a start. At least you admit he's betrayed you once.”

She didn't know how to answer that. Oh, Alasdair. Alasdair. How has this happened ?

“I have to go,” she said abruptly. “I have to—”

His eyebrows lifted. “See Zandakar?”

“We'll talk later,” she said. She could barely see him for tears. “All right? We'll talk later. We will. We'll…talk.”

And she walked away then, before he broke her completely.

Zandakar sat in his castle chamber and waited. No soldiers guarded him, but still he was a prisoner. He was imprisoned by Rhian, whose lightest word was his law. He waited for her to come and tell him of the armada, even though he knew already the news was not good.

Those ships of wood will not stand against Dmitrak. Cities of stone cannot stand against the god's hammer, it smites cities, it smites—

No. The gauntlet was a hammer, it did not smite for the god. The god did not want cities destroyed, it did not desire streets running with blood. It did not want Alasdair king dead in the ocean.

If he is dead, Rhian will blame me. If he is dead, I am to blame.

The pain he had lived with since Jatharuj clawed him. Every night in his sleep he saw the faces of the dead, he heard the dead screaming. There was no Lilit to hold him, no Lilit to soothe his tears. And so he was tasked for the dead at his feet.

If Yuma is dead, if Dimmi is dead, if Vortka, my father, if he is dead too…

In the silence his harsh breathing, the pain clawing at his throat.

I want Mijak to be stopped. I do not want them dead.

He did not like to think it, he was angry with Vortka for sending him away. He wanted to know why those cities were dead, he wanted to know who had told him to kill them. If the god did not want it, who spoke to the godspeakers? Who spoke to Yuma? Who did she hear when she swam in the godpool?

Does she listen to demons? Are there demons in Mijak? Have I killed for demons instead of the god?

He felt his heart thudding as though he danced his hotas . He felt a hot sweat dampen his skin.

Demons.

The more he thought of it, the more he thought it was true. He thought Vortka knew it. He thought Dexterity had told Vortka that in Jatharuj, when they burned and did not die.

And Vortka said he would tell this truth to Yuma. She will never believe him, demons have whispered in her heart for too long. They whisper to Yuma, they whisper to Dimmi. Yuma and Dimmi are deaf to the god.

Aieee, the god see them. This was not their fault. They did not understand, they were tricked by demons. All of Mijak was tricked by demons.

Yuma…Yuma…please, listen to Vortka. Listen to Vortka before your godspark is devoured.

His chamber door opened. Rhian walked in, she was pale, she was exhausted. Her beautiful eyes blazed bright blue with anger.

“The armada was defeated,” she said, and kicked the door shut. “Six hundred and thirty-seven ships sailed out of my harbour. Only two hundred and ten sailed back. Ebrich of Arbenia is dead. Dalsyn of Harbisland is dead. Rollin's mercy, the only leader of a trading nation not to perish is Han.”

Slowly, he stood. “Alasdair king?”

“He survived,” she said. “So did Ludo. But all the trading nations have deserted us. Our alliance is dead, too.”

“Tzhung-tzhungchai?” he whispered. “Emperor Han?”

“Emperor Han wants your head on a pikestaff! He wants to spit your heart on a fork and roast it! Hundreds of his witch-men perished. Tzhung-tzhungchai is brought to its knees .”

Rhian was so angry, she was weeping. Did she know it? He thought she did not. “Will Emperor Han help Ethrea against Mijak?”

She roamed about the chamber. “He says he will – if I give him what he wants.”

He sighed. “Does Alasdair king say for you to give me to Han?”

She flicked a hot glance at him, still pacing. “What do you think? Practically the whole council says it, Zandakar. They know everything about Jatharuj, now. Alasdair told them. Believe me, you are not a popular man. But what happens to you isn't up to the dukes. It's not up to Alasdair. I decide what happens to you. And what I decide decides the fate of this kingdom.”

His heart was hurting, it hurt to breathe. Alasdair king had told the dukes of Jatharuj? Aieee, the god see him. He was not in Jatharuj alone. “Dexterity. Do the dukes blame him for the armada?”

“Not as much as they blame you,” she said. Then she pulled a face, her angry eyes gentled. “He blames himself. He's wondering now if he was right, in Jatharuj. Are you wondering, Zandakar? Do you blame yourself?”

He pressed his fist to his chest. “I am sorry so many armada ships died. Yatzhay . Yatzhay .”

She stared, the gentleness gone from her eyes. “There can be no repeat of Jatharuj, Zandakar. You serve me. You serve Ethrea. You serve no-one else. Zho ?”

How could he tell her the truth in his heart? How could he make her understand about demons? If he told her he wanted to save Yuma and Dimmi, she would not believe that meant he would still fight for Ethrea. She would think he betrayed her. She would give him to Han.

If she gives me to Han, I will never save Yuma. I will never save Dimmi. I will never see Vortka again.

“I will fight for you, Rhian,” he said. “I will fight for Ethrea.”

That is not a lie.

“You'd better,” she said, there was no laughter in her. This was not the Rhian who danced hotas in the morning. “Because if you don't… if you don't …I swear to you on the graves of my family, I'll give you to Han. And when he kills you… I'll cheer .”

She was not Lilit. She did not love him even though he had sinned. She was Yuma for her people. If he failed her, he would die.

As her hand touched his chamber door's handle, she turned. “There's a council meeting at nine. Be there.”

“ Zho ,” he said. “Rhian hushla .”

“Jones,” said Ursa, staring at the fool's closed chamber door. “Jones, you might as well let me in, for I'm not leaving until I've seen you.” She knocked again. “Jones!”

A passing servant slowed, and stared.

“He's a heavy sleeper,” Ursa explained. “Don't mind me.”

The servant blushed and nodded. “Madam physick,” he muttered, and went on his way.

The door's latch and handle rattled, then it pulled open a reluctant half-handsbreadth. “I don't need physicking, Ursa. Go and bother someone who does.”

“Tcha,” she said, and pushed hard on the door.

“Ursa,” Jones protested, falling back. “Why don't you ever listen to me?”

“I could ask the same question of you, Jones,” she retorted. “As I recall, I told you not to get mixed up in any of this. Dead wives and slave ships and heathen warriors and didn't I say it would all end in tears?”

Jones shrugged, his eyes red-rimmed, his face too pale. “Did you? Well, it always cheers you up to be proven right.”

He turned away to stare out of his chamber window at the dawn, shoulders slumped, hands dangling defeated at his side. She'd never been a demonstrative woman, but it was hard not to go to him. Not to show him…

“You've heard about the armada, of course,” he said, then grimaced. “I expect half of Ethrea's heard by now.”

She was as tired as he looked. She'd not been to bed yet. “I heard. I've been up all night physicking the sailors who came back.”

That turned him round. “Are there many sore hurt, Ursa? Are any like to die?”

“A dozen, maybe,” she admitted. “A score not dying, but poorly enough. Another score you'd call the walking wounded. None of them witch-men. They've all vanished, it seems.”

“I think for good,” he said, “though Rhian denies it. The emperor wants Zandakar, in payment for his losses.”

“Blood for blood?” She snorted. “That's civilised, I must say. Rhian's not—”

“No, no. She defends him, like always. It's caused trouble between her and Alasdair. He and Duke Ludo…they're hurt by what happened with the armada.” He shuddered. “What they must've seen. I can't bear to think of it. And the council's siding with them. They want her to hand Zandakar over. They don't trust him any more – or me – because of Jatharuj. Because we didn't – we didn't—”

She stared, shocked, as Jones dropped to his bed like an old man not strong enough to stand on his own two feet. She knew about Sun-dao and Zandakar because he'd told her, but—

“You said that part of what happened in Jatharuj was being kept secret.”

“It was,” he said. “But Alasdair was angry. Duke Edward says Hettie's abandoned me because I didn't help destroy Mijak when I had the chance.”

She'd not seen him so desolate since the night Hettie died. “That old fool? That blustery duke? Oh, Jones, what would he know?”

“I was so certain Jatharuj was about the knife. And about finding Vortka. What if I was wrong, Ursa? What if I've been wrong about everything ?”

“ You haven't ,” she said fiercely. “You've been proven right every step of the way. Not right at once, maybe, but in the end, you've been right. And Hettie would never abandon you. Something's keeping her from you. Whatever evil that's in Mijak, that's what's keeping you apart.”

“You think so?” he said, his voice unsteady. “It's not because I've let her down?”

“Let her down? Oh, Jones! You couldn't let Hettie down if you tried! You couldn't let anyone down. It's not in you.” She sat beside him, and gave him a little shake. “Stop blathering nonsense. When did you last eat? You've gone light-headed for lack of food.”

“I think my appetite died with the armada,” he whispered. “Oh, Ursa. Mijak's coming. What are we to do ?”

“The only thing we can do, Jones. Hold fast to our faith, and to each other.”

He pulled away from her and pushed off the bed. “I don't think that's going to be enough. I think we're about to become another Garabatsas.”

“You don't know that, Jones,” she protested. “What are you doing? Are you giving up ? You can't give up. Rhian's relying on you. A lot of people are relying on you.” And Rollin's mercy, I'm one of them . “Jones—”

“Ursa, please. Just go. I know you mean well, I know you think you're helping. But you're not. At least you are , but—” He shook his head. “I'm sorry. I'm not fit for company.”

She stood, not sure whether to be insulted or frightened. “This isn't good, Jones. I'm speaking as a physick now, not as your friend. Brooding, blaming yourself, it's not good. I don't like it.”

He offered her the travesty of a smile. “Don't worry. I'll be fine. I just…need some breakfast. You go. Get some rest. After last night, you've earned it.”

She'd only upset him more if she insisted on staying.

Troubled, she left him. But instead of seeking her bed in the castle chamber given over to her use, she trudged her way to Helfred's palace and sat in the small public chapel, praying.

Hettie, if you can hear me, you'd best get back here. Now.

Rhian and Alasdair shared a bed after the night's long, fraught council meeting, but they were as distant as though he still sailed with the armada.

He didn't sing in the morning. He didn't speak. He didn't smile.

Dressing in silence, heartsick and dreading the council meeting to come, Rhian stared in the mirror at her scarred face.

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