Read The Palace of Impossible Dreams Online
Authors: Jennifer Fallon
Boots howled again as the next one appeared, even more rapidly than its brother. It too proved to be male, and was dealt with by the midwife, efficiently and impersonally, before being thrust into Warlock's arms to hold, once the cord was cut and the pup had demonstrated the strength of his lungs.
“Will there be another?” Elyssa asked. She wasn't ready, just yet, for the entertainment to be over.
The midwife stood up from her stool and walked to the side of the pallet. Boots was still on her hands and knees, panting in pain, but her howls had eased momentarily. The midwife poked her belly for a bit and then nodded. “Feels like there's another one yet.”
Tides, three pups
, Warlock thought. Rare, but not so rare it was remarkable. Under different circumstances he might have been happier to get the news, but given Elyssa's interest in his offspring, he suspected the fewer pups he and Boots produced, the better.
I was a fool to ever listen to you, Declan Hawkes. I should have taken Boots away from Lebec and headed out on our own.
In his arms, one of the pups he was awkwardly holding stopped crying. He looked down at it and for a moment the pup seemed to meet his eye, almost as if he knew who Warlock was. Then the pup sighed, closed his eyes, and promptly went to sleep.
Only to wake with a start as Boots howled in pain again.
“The third one's crowning,” the midwife informed them.
“Three healthy puppies,” Elyssa said. “Aren't you a clever girl, Tabitha?”
The last pup seemed rather more reluctant than its brothers to leave the womb, but eventually, in a whoosh of sticky blood and amniotic fluid, the pup slipped free. This one lay limp and exhausted in the midwife's arms and took considerably more encouragement than its brothers had needed to start breathing on its own. It was female, smaller and much more delicate than her ginger-coated brothers, with white paws and belly. Elyssa took it from the midwife once the cord was severed. The midwife then turned back to Boots and the soon-to-be expelled placenta.
“Who's a proud daddy, then?” Elyssa asked, grinning up at Warlock. “Three live pups. What a stud you must be, Cecil.”
He had no idea how to respond to that; he just wished he had another arm so he could take the pup from her. He didn't like the way Elyssa was eyeing his daughter as if she was a particularly tasty morsel the suzerain couldn't wait to dine on.
“One more push,” the midwife was telling Boots. “Then you can rest.” It was the closest the midwife had come to expressing any sort of sympathy for Boots's agony.
Elyssa leaned forward to take a closer look at the two male pups. “Aren't they handsome boys?”
“Yes, my lady.”
“Did you want me to name them for you?”
Like I have a choice
 . . . “I'd be honoured beyond words, my lady.”
Elyssa thought on it for a moment and then smiled. “I shall name them for their birth,” she said, reaching to touch his firstborn on the forehead. “You shall be Despair.” To the second pup, she said, “You shall be called Torment.” And then, to the tiny creature she held in her arms, she added, “And you, my sweet, shall be known as Misery.”
Warlock was stunned. On the pallet behind Elyssa, Boots howled again, a cry of anguish Warlock suspected was in response to the immortal's
dreadful names for their children, not the expulsion of the afterbirth that shortly followed. As soon as the placenta landed on the bed, Boots fell upon it and began to devour the bloody mess, her body craving the nutrients stored in it.
“Do you like their names, Tabitha Belle?”
Warlock's gaze fixed on Boots, her face bloody and savage, willing her to agree. The names Elyssa had inflicted on their pups were nothing compared to the fate of all of them, if the immortal ever realised they were Scards.
Boots hesitated, the primal instincts of her canine ancestors very much to the fore. Warlock held his breath.
“To serve you is the reason I breathe, my lady,” Boots snarled after a long, tense pause.
And then she fell on the remains of the afterbirth again, devouring it with such vicious savagery Warlock was quite certain Boots was wishing the bloody mess was not a placenta, but the Immortal Maiden herself.
“It's hot here.”
Azquil turned from studying the green overhanging waterway they were slowly traversing, to look at Tiji. He smiled at her in that uncomfortable way he had of making her feel as if she was the only other creature on Amyrantha besides him. “I know. Isn't it wonderful?”
“Torlenia was hot too. You didn't seem nearly as keen on the heat there.”
“Torlenia is a dry heat. Our kind prefers the humidity.”
Our kind.
The phrase was still new to Tiji, one she'd still not grown accustomed to in the weeks since they had found her, crossed the Docilae Ocean, and brought her here to the northwestern coast of Senestraâthe last enclave of her own kind.
“You're looking very pensive again.”
Tiji shrugged and felt her skin tone flickering once more. She wasn't used to being around people who could read her expressions, or her body language. Even Declan hadn't known her that well. Thinking of Declan made her think of Arkadyâa thought followed, as usual, by a wave of guilt.
She'd let Declan down. She'd failed to help Arkady. She'd not been able to get a message to him to let him know that Cayal believed he'd found a way to die.
And yet, she'd found her own kindâsomething she had never dared hope she might do someday.
Tiji felt guilty then, for not feeling
more
guilty about not helping Arkady, or getting a message about the Immortal Prince to Declan. She turned to study the green leafy tunnel through which they silently sailed, the sharp-prowed boat slicing through the murky water. The three amphibious Crasii towing their boat swam swift and sure along a route they obviously knew well. Tiji admired their skill, quite certain that left to her own devices she would be hopelessly lost in the wetlands in a matter of minutes.
“I was just thinking of a couple of people.”
“More human friends?”
“Sort of.”
He shook his head in amazement. “I've never met a Lost One with so many humans they consider friends.”
“I've only mentioned two.”
“That's two more human friends than most of us will ever have.”
“You don't like humans, do you?”
“I don't trust them, Tiji. Friendship doesn't really come into it.”
“I'd trust Declan Hawkes with my life.”
Azquil smiled and put his arm around her, squeezing her comfortingly. “Well, you won't have to any more. You're home now, and the Trinity will protect you.”
Her new companion spoke a lot about the protection of the Trinity that the chameleons enjoyed. And he quoted them a lot too. It seemed the Trinity had a quote suitable for every occasion. Not wishing to constantly remind him of her ignorance, she'd never asked him exactly what the Trinity was, assuming the chameleons had their own set of gods, in much the same way the canines and the felines prayed to The Mother, the goddess creditedâaccording their loreâwith the creation of the Crasii.
“I still wish you'd let me get a message to him.”
Azquil shook his head. “Our protection lies in few humans knowing we exist, even fewer knowing where we live. We cannot risk this spymaster of yours learning about us.”
“But I have something very important to tell him. And Declan wouldn't betray us.”
“You can't be sure of that, Tiji. He may even promise not to, and fully intend to keep his word. But there will come a time . . . some vital matter of state will lie in the balanceâperhaps even this information you claim is so importantâand he'll be forced to choose between his own kind and ours.”
“Butâ”
“Trust me, my friend, the location of the last enclave of Chameleon Crasii is something a lot of humans would pay a great deal to learn. I know what
I'd
do, if I was human and put in that position.”
Azquil's assessment of Declan's character was disturbingly accurate, so she decided not to pursue the matter. Maybe, once she'd been with her own people a little longer, they'd decide to let her send him a message.
The boat sailed on, emerging from the leafy tunnels of overhanging branches into a strange landscape of chequerboard greenery. She looked around in amazement as they emerged into bright sunlight and what
seemed to be scores of surprisingly rectangular islands dotting a shallow lake that stretched for several miles in every direction.
“What is this place?” she asked, her eyes wide.
“Our farmlands.”
It was then she realised the islands weren't islands at all, but floating platforms filled with topsoil, upon which the Crasii grew their crops. As they sailed nearer, she spied movement in the tall reeds of the nearest island, which had already been partially harvested. She wasn't sure what crops they were and it took her a moment to realise there were chameleon Crasii working the platforms, naked and almost completely hidden by their ability to blend with their surroundings.
It was a clever idea. If some adventurous humans stumbled across these strange floating fields, the workers only had to remain still and they'd never be spotted.
About a half-hour later, during which time Tiji's head swivelled constantly in wonder at the complexity of the network of floating fields, they reached the first sign of civilisation since sailing past the Delta Settlement several hours ago. It appeared to be an inn of sorts, a large house on stilts that doubled as tavern, store and trading post.
“Welcome to The Outpost.”
“The Outpost, eh?” she said, studying the ramshackle building curiously. “Is everything in your homeland so poetically named?”
“It's your homeland too, Tiji,” he reminded her.
“Then why does it feel so strange?”
“It will begin to feel like home soon enough.” Azquil smiled. “And I'll agree,
The Outpost
is not exactly the most imaginative name for such an important place, but it serves its purpose. Once we're past here, you'll be treading ground that's never known anything other than the Trinity and Crasii footprints.”
Tiji glanced over the side of the boat. “Seems more like I'll be treading water.”
“Actually, from now on, we'll be on foot,” Azquil said, as the amphibians rose out of the water and pulled the boat toward the small dock in the shallows. Tiji struggled to keep her balance as they tied up the boat, and then, with a nod to Azquil, the amphibians slipped back into the water and swam away.
“Where are they going?”
“They have their own settlement not far from here. They'll come back when they're needed.”
Accepting Azquil's hand, she stepped up onto the dock, catching a whiff of something familiar and decidedly rank on the airâsomething she knew but couldn't quite place. “How will they know when they're needed?”
What
is
that smell?
“Lady Ambria knows how to call them.”
“Lady who?” she asked, tormented by the familiarity of the odour she couldn't quite place.
“Lady Ambria. She's the left hand of the Trinity.”
She frowned. “You keep talking about that. What exactly is theâ”
Tiji stopped, staring in horror as a figure emerged from the trading post. It was a woman, a human woman at first glance, who seemed in her thirties, perhaps; certainly no older than forty. The newcomer was pleasant enough to look at, although there was nothing remarkable about her. She was dressed in a simple sleeveless shift, her long dark hair braided and hanging loosely over one shoulder.
The woman smiled as she approached, wiping her hands on her apron.
Tiji took a step back in fear.
“Azquil!” the woman explained. “You're back! And with a new friend I see.”
The chameleon bowed respectfully. “It's good to see you again, my lady. This is Tiji.”
The woman held out her hand, smiling. “Welcome home, Tiji.”
Tiji backed away from her. She knew now what it was she could smell. “Don't touch me!”
The woman looked at Tiji for a moment and then turned her gaze on Azquil. “Silly boy. You didn't warn her, did you?”
He shrugged. “I didn't want to frighten her, my lady.”
The woman nodded in understanding and turned to Tiji again. “I'm sorry. Azquil should have warned you about us.”
“Us?” she spat, backing up so far along the dock that her next step would land her in the water. “There's
more
of you here?”
Azquil held out a soothing hand. “This is not what it seems, Tiji . . .”
“Not what it
seems
?” she said, glaring at the pair of them. “She's a
suzerain
, Azquil. Is that what your precious Trinity is?
Three
of them? You
haven't brought me home to be free. Tides, you've brought me here to be
enslaved
again.
We find the Lost Ones and bring them home
, you said. Well, now I understand why. You don't want to help me. You're in league with the immortals.”
“He's here.”
Declan glanced up from his ale at Clyden's warning and turned to see a man's silhouette in the open doorway; he was bending a little to avoid banging his head on the low lintel of the entrance to Clyden's Inn. Declan breathed a sigh of relief. Not only had he come, but as requested, he'd come alone.
The Lord of Summerton took off his cape, shook the raindrops from it and looked around the gloomy taproom. He spied Declan and made his way through the rough-hewn tables to the hearth where Declan was sitting, nursing his third ale of the morning. Apparently, now he was immortal, it was next to impossible for him to become intoxicated. Clyden finished wiping down the table, nodded a greeting to Aleki and headed back to the bar to wipe that down again too. This early in the day there were few customers and little else to occupy him.