The Song of Eloh Saga (80 page)

Read The Song of Eloh Saga Online

Authors: Megg Jensen

Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #sword and sorcery, #Sci-Fi & Fantasy

BOOK: The Song of Eloh Saga
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I’d never thought about it that way. All this time I thought I had picked up a really heavy rock and moved it when all along I had been moving the air. I did still have a lot to learn.

The guards yelled at us, but they didn’t have bows and arrows with them. Feeling brave, I raised my arm and waved to them. I giggled. We were so close to being free and I felt confident we’d escape. Nothing could stop us now.

Bryden yelled as arrows rained down on us from the highest ramparts of the castle. I covered my head with my arms and pleaded with Bryden to do the same.

“No! If I stop moving the water now we’ll never make it to the boat on time.”

Without stopping to think about whether or not I could, or should, do it, I held up both of my hands to the sky. I reached down into that part of me that loved Bryden, the part that always calmed the fires within and I felt the refreshing chill course through my body.

I pushed the air, just like Bryden had, and pushed back against arrows. Instead of hitting the air and falling down to the water, the arrows spun around. They flew back to their source. Screams echoed through the air as men dropped away from the walls of the castle, now protecting themselves from the arrows they had shot at us.

My laughter joined with Bryden’s as our boat slowed to a stop in front of the ship.

“I didn’t know you could do that.” He scrambled over to the side of the ship and grabbed the rope ladder hanging over the side.

“Neither did I.” I held my hands in the air against the arrows some brave warriors were still shooting at us, despite receiving as many in return from my shield. I glanced behind me. Bryden pull himself over the edge of the boat with help from a white-sleeved arm.

“Your turn,” Bryden yelled over the edge. His hands went up in the air, like mine, and after a nod of his head, I dropped my hands. I spun around and grabbed the tight rope ladder. It was rough and scratchy, tearing at my skin, but I didn’t care. I scaled the ladder, trying to be careful not to go too fast. One false step and I could lose my grip and fall into the water. My legs trembled. I couldn’t save myself if I fell in.

As I neared the top, the same arm and hand appeared over the side. I took hold of the arm, clasping the elbow and pushed up and over the edge. I rolled along the floor and stopped. Pulling myself up to sitting, I looked up at the mystery friend Bryden had mentioned earlier.

I gasped. She looked like me. It wasn’t just that we shared the same skin tone or hair color. No, we looked exactly alike.

“Hey twin,” she said.

 

Chapter Twenty-Six

Before I could answer, she spun around and headed for the wheel. Bryden unfurled a sail while I sat on my behind and watched the two of them. Where did he find her and how long had he known her and why didn’t he ever mention I had a twin?

The arrows clunked the side of the boat, no longer having enough force behind them to reach us on deck. We weren’t blocking them, but it didn’t matter, they were just throwing away good arrows. The sea swallowed them, hungry for anything they threw at it.

The boat lurched away from the castle and toward the open sea. I’d looked out on this sea so many times in my life, wondering how close we were to my people and feeling like they were so far away. I never knew they were seafaring. Apparently I had a lot to learn.

I stood, wavering from side to side as the boat pitched. My stomach flipped and I closed my eyes. I tried to focus on calming my body and not on the fact that I was on a rocking boat.

“We can’t leave, not yet,” I said to Bryden, opening my eyes and watching my sister. It was hard to take my eyes off of her. “We have to save Mags and Trevin.”

Bryden put his hand on my shoulder. “Trevin is safe with his old midwife, Renee. I know her well, she’d never hurt a fly. I don’t know where Mags ran off to, do you?”
I shook my head. My only hope was that she’d found the horses we stashed away and galloped off on one to safety. But where could the ex-queen, wanted by the king, probably with a huge reward on her head, go? There was no one to guide her, no one to help her. No one she could trust.

But without knowing where she was, there wasn’t much I could do to help her either. I stared off into the distance, wishing her well wherever she was and hoping we’d be reunited soon.

“Something’s not right,” I said. I couldn’t discount the nightmares that had shown this ship more clearly than I ever could have imagined on my own.

“Everything’s fine,” Bryden said. “We can trust them. These are Dalagans, our people, Lianne.”

I took a deep breath, vowing to trust Bryden. He’d never led me astray yet. “So, where do we go from here?”

“Well, first you should be properly introduced to Sebrina,” he said, motioning with his head to my sister. I gulped. I was suddenly more afraid of her than I had been the king. She represented a world I didn’t know, but wanted to know so desperately.

I wasn’t ready, but it didn’t matter. I couldn’t escape or hide anywhere. We were trapped on this boat together.

I nodded and Bryden put his arm around my shoulders, guiding me over to the wheel where Sebrina looked off into the distance. I blinked twice, sure that it was impossible for her to look so much like me. But she stood in front of me, even stood in the same stance I frequently found myself settling into. I couldn’t deny it. This girl was an exact replica of me.

“Hi,” I said, shyly, not sure how to talk to her.

“Hey,” she answered. “I know this is really strange for you, Lianne. I’ve known about you my whole life and for you to find out about me now, so unexpectedly, it must be shocking. Don’t worry about feeling shy around me. I get it. We have the rest of our lives to catch up. You don’t have to do it all right now.”

“You’ve known about me this whole time?” I asked.

“Sure, everyone in our country knows all about you, Bryden and Kellan. We’ve grown up hearing stories about the sacrifices our families made for the three of you. I’ve always wondered what you look like, since twins aren’t always the same, but it’s kind of shocking for me, too, to see how much we are alike.”

“Do you have any brothers or sisters?” I asked Bryden. He nodded and his face lit up.

“A little sister and an older brother,” he said. “I haven’t met them yet. But I hope I can soon.”

“So are we headed back there? Back home?”

Sebrina’s shoulders shook when she laughed. “Just wait until you see what’s around this bend,” she said, guiding the boat around a curve in the waterway.

My eyes widened as I took in the scene before me. Hundreds of ships lined up and down the river, most as big, if not bigger, than ours. I forced the nightmares from my mind and focused on trusting Bryden.

“What’s going on?” I asked, stunned at how little I knew about our circumstances. I looked to Bryden, but he didn’t look surprised. “Where did you get all of these ships? I thought Dalagan was poor.”

“There’s a lot you have to learn about us.” Sebrina smiled. “There isn’t time now, but soon, I promise. The land we come from is riddled with disease. It’s uninhabitable. The Fithians have plenty of bountiful land to share.”

I pulled away from Bryden and stumbled over to the side of the boat, gazing at the only place I’d ever called home. I’d estimated about fifty people on my ship and I couldn’t even count the ships in the distance. I didn’t know if there was room for everyone in Fithia.

I’d loved Fithia my whole life. The green grass in the summer, light snowflakes in the winter. While I wanted to go home to my people, in my heart, I feared moving to that icy landscape I’d heard so many horror stories about. I wanted to stay here. If they took Fithia, then I could.

I didn’t hear Bryden walk up behind me until his lips were on my ear. He kissed me lightly, relaxing me a bit. He had a knack for doing that.

“I know it’s all very confusing.”

I whirled around and looked him in the eyes. “How much do you know?”

“They didn’t tell me much after my accident. Just enough to make sure I kept quiet about the magic. If anyone had found out, I might have been killed. It was a big burden to carry alone. Then they waited and they watched.”

“Watched? Watched how?”

“They have seers, Lianne. People who can look in a pool of water and see what’s happening in other places. It’s amazing, really. I thought the magic I’d taught myself was fantastic, but it’s really so basic. We have a lot to learn. Anyway, once they felt I was ready, they made contact with me again for the first time since I was five. The small group of three men snuck across the border and I met them in the grove.”

“My grove? Our grove?”

Bryden nodded. “The same. I told you before you weren’t the only one who knew it was there. What’s most amazing was that one of them cast a spell over it, keeping it hidden from the eyes of all who traveled by. You were never supposed to find it, but you did. Why do you think no one else ever found you there?”

I had always thought it was strange that no one had ever happened upon me, but never given it much thought. I’d been so happy to have it to myself.

“These three men,” I asked, “are they the same three that were caught and killed last week?”

Bryden looked over at Sebrina, who had turned her eyes back to her fleet.

“They are,” he whispered. “That’s what spurred them to mount this attack. They were going to wait for us to come home in five years, but after their men were killed they were afraid too many of their secrets would get out. They were afraid the Fithians knew about their plans.”

“Plans? Do they know who turned the men in?” I whispered back. I told Bryden while we were escaping that it was Kellan.

“No,” he said, shaking his head, “I don’t think so. I don’t know what they’d do if they knew Kellan had betrayed them all.”

 

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Sebrina pulled our ship in line with the others and sent the anchor down. We were going to wait until everyone was ready and then lead the attack back into Fithia. She walked over to me and I pasted on a smile. I wasn’t sure how ready I was to talk to her yet, but I knew it had to happen sooner rather than later.

“That’s not your real smile,” Sebrina said, flashing one of her own. It looked fake to me too. “Don’t try to fool your twin.”

I laughed. She definitely had more spunk than I did. I don’t think I ever would have said that to a stranger, even if she was my twin.

“Are you okay with all this?” Sebrina swept her arm out to the side and I gazed at the line of ships. They went as far back as I could see. Bodies moved about on the ships, preparing for the upcoming battle. I felt the fires lick inside my belly, but I wasn’t sure why. Not everyone in Fithia was an enemy. The librarian and John, the guard, had risked their positions and lives to help me escape.

“I don’t know,” I answered truthfully. If she could read my body language so easy, she’d probably sniff out a lie quick enough too. “I have friends there.”

“Everyone will be given the chance to step back or surrender. We will only fight the people who resist us.” Sebrina gazed back at the fleet and sighed. “We don’t want war anymore than you do. But we need some fertile land to settle on. I don’t think we’re asking too much.”

“You don’t want war?” I was confused. I thought this was just a continuation of the war that defeated them so long ago.

Sebrina’s eyes clouded over. “Yes, it’s just the war. I mean, it’s not, but…Lianne, I’m really not the one to explain this to you. I want to. I just don’t know where to start.”

“Is someone going to kill King Rotlar?” I asked.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I’m a sailor. I don’t know much about the actual war plans. I don’t fight at all.”

I began to laugh, the shaking beginning in my shoulders and reverberating through my whole body. “We may be twins, but on some things we are so different. I’m one of the best fighters, probably one of the best ever. And water? I hate it and I hate every second I’m on this ship.”

Sebrina smiled, the same toothy smile I’d seen on my own face. So different, but so alike.

“Do you want to change?” Sebrina stepped back and looked at my filthy dress. I’d forgotten that up until an hour ago I’d been in a dirty dungeon cell and my clothes showed it.

“I don’t have any extra clothes with me. Do you?”

“Of course, any good sailor always has at least three changes of clothes. We have a tendency to get wet out here. If you go down the hatch, mine is the last room on the left. My clothes are in the big armoire.”

“Thanks.” I gave her another hug. I waved at Bryden as I ran down the stairs below deck.

I followed Sebrina’s directions, finding her room easily. A ship wasn’t nearly as complicated as a castle, even though some of the ships behind us were huge. There was less space to work with.

I rummaged through her wardrobe, but every outfit was the same. I giggled, wondering if anyone would be able to tell us apart. I pulled off my dirty dress and tossed it on the floor. I pulled on the pants and shirt, just like Sebrina’s, and so different from the dresses I’d been required to wear my whole life. Well, except when I practiced fighting. That was the only time I’d ever gotten away with wearing pants and even those had been Kellan’s old pants. I didn’t have money to buy my own. Sebrina was a lucky girl, allowed to wear them all the time.

I grabbed a band out of a cup and pulled my red hair back in a ponytail, just like hers. Maybe we were about to head into battle, but we might be allowed a few minutes for a little fun. I wadded up my dirty dress and tossed it out the hole passing for a window in Sebrina’s room. It didn’t make a noise as it fluttered on to the water.

I didn’t want it back. Not only was it stained and torn, but it also reminded me too much of Aric’s death. A death I felt I could have averted if I’d planned better. I would never forgive myself for his death and I wondered how Mags felt about it. I hoped someday she would forgive me.

Shaking my head, I left Sebrina’s room, determined to face what was before me now and put aside the wounds of the past week. I could revisit them anytime, but now, today, I had to concentrate on the upcoming battle. Glad that I wasn’t in charge and didn’t have the weight of everyone on my shoulders, I grinned and headed up on to the deck.

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