Read The Shattering Waves (The Year of the Dragon, Book 7) Online
Authors: James Calbraith
The dark mist from under the door reached his feet and climbed up to his knees. It felt cold and slimy.
“That’s politics, son. That’s diplomacy. I’m sorry.” He reached out his hand. “Come, Bran. It’s all over. There’s nothing left here worth staying for. Forget them. Let’s go home.”
Bran touched his father’s hand. It was cold, firm, reassuring. Dylan helped him up. At this moment, Nagomi cried again from the top of the tower. This time, he heard his name called among her screams of pain. He pushed Dylan away.
“I told you before, none of this matters,” he said. “War, politics,
Taikun
,
Mikado …
I don’t care about any of this. I have to save my friends.
Rhew
!”
He pressed his palms against the door and spewed a steady, gushing stream of dragon fire from his hands. The torrent of flames poured incessantly, even as Bran’s power waned. His link with Emrys became strained as the dragon’s mind succumbed to the wild. He smashed his fist at the rock again, until blood spattered the gate. He let the flames feed on it. Unable to penetrate the stone, the fire rushed back, enveloping him in a blazing whirlwind.
“Bran,” said his father, “that’s enough. You’ll hurt yourself.”
He paid Dylan no heed. The fire was finally chipping away at the rock, boring its way through inches of molten lava. The surface of the door became covered in a web of thin cracks and fissures. The dark mist was swirling up to his chest.
I can do it. I can actually do it!
Dylan laid a heavy hand on his shoulder. “It’s time to go, son.” He dragged Bran away from the door. The boy spun, losing his balance. For a moment, the world was a whirlpool of flame and smoke.
“No!” Bran cried. “Leave me alone!”
He didn’t know when the Soul Lance flashed in his hand. But he thrust it into Dylan’s chest and poured more flame along its shaft. The Lance smashed through his father’s shield, pierced his ribs and came out the back. Dylan stared at it, wide-eyed.
“You insolent brat …!”
He raised a hand. A cloud of ice, lightning and fire gathered around his fist. Bran twisted the Lance and slashed upwards, crushing Dylan’s ribs with a sickening crack.
His father vanished in a shock of lights. Bran fell on his back. The world whirled around him in a kaleidoscope of colours. He tasted ash on his tongue.
It took Bran one look at Nagomi’s sullen, despairing face to realize she must have gone through the same ordeal. He reached out and pulled her to his chest.
“I saw Sacchan …” She spoke through sobs. “Turn against us, killing you … killing Takasugi-
sama
… I couldn’t do anything about it. I was so weak.”
He stroked her hair. “It’s all right. It was just a bad dream.”
He looked to Yokoi. The nobleman was sitting on a boulder in his usual position. His face was grim and stern, but bore no trace of the anguish that showed in Nagomi’s eyes.
“What about you, samurai?” Bran asked. “What did the magic show you?”
“Nothing I hadn’t seen already,” replied Yokoi. “My comrades, dying in flames, the rebellion vanquished, the
Taikun
victorious …” He coughed. “The spell could never work on me because I have already lost all hope. When I came to, you two were still writhing in the ash. The woman,” he added, nodding towards Gwen, “helped me take you two out of range of this foul magic.”
“We owe you our rescue.” Bran bowed in the most elaborate manner he remembered.
Yokoi winced. “I don’t need gratitude from a barbarian. I did what I had to do.”
They were in the centre of the valley, beyond the stone ramparts. It was as small now as Bran had remembered. The black tower and the purple dome were gone, replaced by a stone shed, with a fallen-in roof and a crooked gate in front, a twisted caricature of a
tori.
It reminded him of Suwa’s Waters of Scrying. The sky was the usual steel-blue of the cold morning.
“We will have to go back across that barrier again,” he said.
“I don’t think so,” replied Yokoi. “I tried. Nothing seems to happen if you want to
leave
this place.”
“What about this?” asked Nagomi, pointing at the stone shed. “Is this what we came here for?”
“I don’t know yet. I’ve been waiting for you to wake up before investigating it closer.”
Bran studied the nobleman’s face. He couldn’t figure Yokoi out. For a samurai, he was a cautious, deliberate, slow-acting man. One could almost call him
cowardly.
And yet, there was some spark in him that made him embark on all these risky adventures, involve himself with the situations he had no hope of resolving on his own — saving Satō’s father, joining the rebels in Mito, and now coming here, to the slopes of Fuji, to face the Serpent.
“Let’s do it, then.”
Bran came nearer the shed and investigated it with True Sight. The memory of the Shadows crawling out of the Waters of Scrying made him wary of the dark entrance beyond the crooked gate. As far as he could tell, here, too, was a staircase, carved into the hard rock. A faint wisp of sulphurous smoke rose through the cracks in the broken roof.
“It almost looks like—” Nagomi began.
“I know,” Bran said. “It must have been built for the same purpose. I don’t think you should get any closer.” He held her back. “Leave it to me and Yokoi-
dono.
”
“I’m not afraid of Spirits.”
“But you’re more sensitive to their influence than us, and we don’t know how corrupted they’ve become here.”
He nodded at Master Yokoi. The samurai approached with reluctant steps. “This is … older than the Abominations,” he said. He reached for the crooked gate. The stone buzzed under his touch. “The rocks are alive.”
“I will go first,” said Bran. “Whatever is down there, I can at least try to fight it with my magic — your blade will be useless.”
Yokoi nodded. Still, he drew his sword by an inch, and rested his hand on the hilt. Bran lit up a flamespark, drew in his breath, and crossed the threshold of the gate.
Nothing happened. There were no more tricks or spells inside the building, only the darkness of the staircase. It was different from the cave in Suwa, hot, dry, hewn in the black tuff. A broad vein of silver quartz ran along both walls, adding eerie angles to the shadows cast by the flamespark.
The stairs reached a shallow, triangular cavern, tapering away from the entrance. There was no lake here, just a fissure running through the middle of the floor and the walls, belching a plume of yellow smoke at frequent intervals. Two rows of oddly regular stalactites hung from the ceiling on two sides, diminishing in size towards the cave’s far end. A pile of rubble, reaching almost to the roof, concealed the tip of the triangle. The floor was strewn with red ochre dust, and delicate carvings adorned the walls.
Etched in soft volcanic rock, they were too eroded to read, but Bran recognized the unmistakable style of the Ancients. Nearer the centre of the cavern, and the fissure, they were concealed under another layer of designs, a fresh one: blood runes of the Fanged.
He heard Yokoi step onto the stone floor and gasp at the sight of the carvings. “The little folk!” He said. “I have never seen so much of their art in one place!”
“You know of the Ancients?” asked Bran.
“The
Ancients
? Do you mean the little folk? Yes, I have studied their artefacts in Kumamoto.” He ran his fingers along the etchings. “Potsherds, horn sculptures, an occasional carving here or there … But this is amazing. Too bad it’s been defiled by the Abominations.” He touched the blood runes with disgust.
“You haven’t met any yourself, then?”
“Met?” The nobleman laughed. “They disappeared over a thousand years ago! You’d be more likely to meet a Kumaso bear-man.”
Yokoi shook his head and stepped away from the wall. “I wonder what the Serpent used this place for.”
“The runes are fresh,” said Bran. The tale of Nagomi’s meeting with Koro would have to be told some other time. “Look at the blood dried along the grooves. The spells …” He studied the streams of magic in True Sight. “Too many to tell apart. But Satō was here, I’m sure.” He knelt down. The cavern floor vibrated under his touch, rumbling with forces hidden deep under the earth. There was no trace of a teleportation hex - this must have been the last stop. “The rock is scorched by the energies in many places. As if there was a fight. Maybe she resisted.”
“That means she’s still alive,” said Yokoi.
“I didn’t doubt it for a second,” replied Bran.
It also means she hasn’t been turned yet … At least not until they brought her here.
The sulphur mist was dense near the floor. He took a deep breath. The cavern lit up with a bright yellow light. He sensed the presence of ancient spirits all around him. They were terrified and angry at the intrusion of their abode, unable to tell Bran and Yokoi apart from the Fanged who had visited it earlier.
I was right not to bring Nagomi here,
he thought. He stood up and let a coughing fit clear his lungs from the smoke.
“Look at this,” said Yokoi, pointing to a composition drawn above the quartz vein, on two sides of the fissure. The blood runes obscured it almost in entirety, and Bran could only discern the image with great difficulty.
“What is it?” he asked. “I can’t really tell …”
“It’s difficult if you’re not familiar with the glyphs. This here, underneath the dragon, is a mark of a great fire mountain,” said Yokoi. “I’m guessing it’s Mount Fuji.”
“There’s a thin line running from it, through the fissure, under what looks like hills,” noted Bran. “What’s at the end? It’s almost buried under the runes …”
“A piece of paper, quick,” ordered Yokoi, snapping his fingers. Bran reached into his satchel and tore out a page from his notebook. “Do you have writing charcoal?”
“I have a pencil. Here.”
The samurai pressed the paper to the wall and rubbed out the design. He licked the tip of the pencil and, with his tongue in the corner of his lips, traced a complex line joining the remnants of the etching together. His nostrils flared.
“I don’t get it,” he said. The pattern was a jumble of triangular figures. Bran leaned over.
“What if that line goes here?” he suggested.
Yokoi redrew the lines. The pencil dropped from his hand. The pattern was now clear: three equilateral triangles, joined together to form a greater triangle. Bran was the first to speak.
“Three dragon scales.”
“Enoshima,” said Yokoi. “There’s a tale of a tunnel leading from it to Fuji … I thought it was just another legend.”
They both looked up, in unison, towards the pile of rubble at the end of the cave. Bran was the first to reach it. “The ash is disturbed around the pile-up. This is recent.” He lit up a small flame in his hand and ran it along the boulders. “There’s a draft here.”
“It would take us hours to clean it up,” said Yokoi, eyeing the boulders.
“We don’t have to. We know where it leads. I
knew
we should be going to Enoshima.”
“Let’s not waste any more time,” the samurai said. “These fumes are giving me a headache.”
He started climbing the stairs. Bran stood on the first step, and took one last glance at the cavern. In the light of the flamespark, he at last noticed what it reminded him of — the stalactites, the red floor, the narrow tunnel at the end …
A dragon’s maw.
CHAPTER XIX
The sight of the giant, bearded Admiral and his men prostrating themselves before the sick-looking weakling of a man sitting on a gilded pillow would have been almost comical to Samuel, if it wasn’t for the circle of spear blades aimed at his neck.
“His Illustrious Highness the
Taikun
of Yamato,” said the interpreter, a slender youth trembling with anxiety, “wishes to know why this man is among you. We didn’t agree to the presence of a Dracalish representative.”
For Samuel’s benefit, Otterson pretended to understand only Dracalish. The court had access to only one interpreter of this language, until now delegated to translate for the Gorllewin envoys.
“He is not a representative, your Highness,” replied Otterson, his voice muffled by the floor into which he spoke — and his beard. “He is my personal physician.”
“Why don’t you have a Varyagan physician?”
“He fell ill,” replied Otterson. A ripple of laughter ran through the crowd of courtiers when the answer was translated. Even the
Taikun
raised a faint smile.
“Where did you find him?”
Why is he so interested in me? I thought we were here to discuss trade treaties, not the story of my life.
“He was a castaway from the wreck of a Dracalish
skip
. We picked him up just before the Sea Maze.”
There was a flurry of secretive movements in the
Taikun’s
entourage when the Admiral’s answer was translated. First, his wife, disinterested in the conversation until now, stirred and stared at Samuel with new curiosity. She gestured at one of the servant girls and whispered something in her ear. Then a man who had been introduced as the Chief Councillor noticed her gaze and also focused his attention on the doctor.