The Stair Of Time (Book 2) (20 page)

Read The Stair Of Time (Book 2) Online

Authors: William Woodward

BOOK: The Stair Of Time (Book 2)
3.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

 

Out of Time

 

 

 

As soon as Gaven reached the desired height,
that is to say directly across from Andaris, he stopped and stared, hollow-cheeked and wild-eyed, sucking wind like a man who’d just raced up a flight of stairs, which, of course, he had.

The two men stoo
d like that for some time, bewilderment passing between them like a ball that neither dared to drop.  The points of color that had bloomed high on Gaven’s cheeks now began to fade, returning the creased, scaly skin of his face to its previous lackluster gray, a face that was at least eighty, perhaps eighty-five years old.  And not a comfortable, well-fed eighty-five either.  No indeed.  A hard, lean eighty-five that had been bought and paid for with long years of strife. 

The once big man, now stooped and gaunt, wore only dirty rags, no weapon other than his eyes, which presently pierced Andaris’ heart more deeply than any dagger, for they were the eyes of a madman struggling for sanity—bright, fevered eyes that bore through his heart to his very soul, threatening to drive him mad, as well.

“But how can you be so young?” the once big man rasped, his once resonant voice rattling from his lungs, air whistling in and out, each syllable dripping with sickness.

Andaris struggled to speak.  He opened his mouth, found his throat too dry for words, swallowed, and said, “I…don’t understand what’s happened.  I lost you in the mist, waited for a while, and then started climbing down the stairs.  It’s only been a matter of hours
.  A day at the most.  How can you be so…old?”

Realization dawned in Gaven’s eyes, replacing
some of the madness with reason.  He started laughing, not the deep, booming laughter of yore, but rather a harsh cackle that deteriorated into a coughing jag, echoing all around with ominous portent. 

This confirmed what his appearance had so strongly suggested.  He was not long of this world.  Black lung or the like had had its way with him.  Death would soon come
, choking him on his own fluids.

Another fragment of unwanted poetry filled Andaris’ mind:

 

Sickle, cycle, sickness, death,

Atop a bony steed to steal thy breath,

E
yes ablaze with fire so blight,

G
alloping thunder through the night.

 

Where it came from was a mystery.  If it was something he’d dreamt, his subconscious had kept it well hidden.

“I’ve been searching all these years!”
Gaven wheezed, tears streaming down his still broad cheeks, twin tributaries running past the scaly hollows of his face to his chin.  “And now I find you with me at the end and…you at the beginning!”

He shook his head, still unable to
believe.  “You can’t fathom the things I’ve seen, Andaris!  This place is much more than we imagined!  It’s a nexus, built by the Lenoy to travel to different points in time and space.  I’ve mapped part of it out, but it would take much longer than I have left to finish—perhaps many lifetimes.  I’ve only begun to understand, and now I’m…dying, curse the fates.  There are many worlds.  Some more beautiful and wondrous than I thought possible.  Others more…horrible.  But none are what they seem.”

“You can’t have been wanderin
g all this time,” Andaris said half to himself, feeling numb.

Gaven’s bushy eyebro
ws shot up, the ghost of a long-dead grin haunting his lips.  “No.  I stopped tryin’ to find you…and Rogar…almost fifty years ago.  Tried to forget it all.  I was happy for a while—almost anyway.  I found a world much like our own.  It’s called Adrianna.  I met a beautiful young woman who reminded me of Trilla and…and I made her my wife.  Her name was Alicia.  She had golden hair and emerald eyes….”

The pain on the once big man’s face was almost too much to bear.  It was clear Alicia had been everything to him.  “Was?” Andaris asked.

“I had a whole passel of kids, just like I always wanted.  But then Alicia passed away and I started having these nightmares, and I knew I had to try to find my way back before
I
died—damned fool that I am.  I wanted to see my native soil again.  Just one last time.  I wanted to hear the— ”

Gaven suddenly stopped speaking and looked down, fear growing sharp in his old eyes.  “No!  It’s too soon!  Hurry!” he yelled.  “Throw me a line!  Something’s wrong!  It’s an hour earlier than it should be! 
Everything’s breaking down!  It’s out of order!  Number four hundred and twelve should move first!”

Andaris fumbled with his pack, pulling out a thirty-foot length of finely braided silk rope that had been enchanted to be as strong as steel, or so the traveling merchant from whom he
bought it had sworn.  After coiling what he deemed to be the correct length into his right hand, he threw. 

Gaven reached for it but missed, and then the staircase on which he stood began to rotate
clockwise.

Andaris reeled in the rope as fast as he could, hand over hand, preparing for another toss.

And then the staircase began to move away.

Gaven’s eyes were now wide with panic,
disbelief mixing with dread and grief and horror and…too many other emotions to name, making for a near indescribable expression.  Suffice it to say, it was far more than any eyes, no matter how old, should be made to hold.  Tears streamed anew down his face.

Once again, Andaris threw the rope, and once again Gaven missed.  He wouldn’t have before, but now he was old and…slow.  A look of horrible acceptance filled the once big man’s eyes and he cried out, “I’m sorry, Andaris!  Find my
family!  Tell them what happened!  Tell them I love them!  And whatever you do, if you come to a door with crossed hammers against a field of rye, don’t open it!  Please heed me!  Don’t— 

And then he was gone, voice snuffed out, staircase disappearing into the abyss, swallowed by the ever-present darkness along the borders of sight.  Courageous to the last, Gaven Dunarin, son of none and father of many, rode the spine of that spinning beast into, for all Andaris k
new, the bowels of Kadra itself, never to be seen again.  Not
that
Gaven anyway.

 

 

 

Grandmamma

 

 

 

Eli had been sitting, or more like dozing, on the couch with Mandie for the better part of two hours when he heard a familiar tune being cheerfully hummed from the kitchen.  The wholesome aroma of oatmeal cookies rising in the oven was much stronger now.  That, along with the humming, triggered flashes of vivid memory—bright, colorful scenes playing out against the back of his eyelids, scenes which soon coalesced into a dream.

 

***

 

Eli was five years old again, sitting on the floor of his grandparents’ house, wrestling with Bo, the family dog, after whom he would one day name his horse.  Bo had his mouth around Eli’s fat little arm, pretending to be fierce by growling and baring his teeth.  Eli just laughed and laughed as he tickled the dog between the ribs.  There was the general sense of safety and comfort.  Things were blessedly simple here, his heart and shoulders not yet burdened by the many trials of adult life.

The
smell of freshly baked cookies stacked high on a tin platter—to Eli it was silver—now wafted from the kitchen with confectionery delight.  And with it came more humming.  His mouth began to water.  A minute or two to cool and they’d be ready to eat!  As an adult, Eli had only been able to remember a few stray words from the songs his grandmamma had taught him.  He would sometimes wake in the night, mumbling along with her sweet voice.  Then the words would flee, drifting from his grasp like whispers on a breeze.

Now, l
ike always, his grandmamma stopped humming and began to sing, but this time her voice was so clear that it felt like more than a mere dream.  So much so, that he could almost believe he was actually there….  Part of him knew that he was dozing on the couch with Mandie.  But another, increasingly ubiquitous part was on the floor with Bo, wrestling and laughing as his grandmamma’s high, quavering voice rose from the kitchen like a blessing.  He and Bo perked their ears to listen, postponing their match until after she’d finished.

 

Oh don’t you remember,

A long time ago,

Two babes in the woods,

Their names I don’t know,

 

Were stolen away,

On a bright summer’s day,

Poor babes in the woods,

Poor babes in the woods.

 

Among the trees high,

Beneath the blue sky,

They picked wildflower blooms,

And watched the birds fly.

 

Then on blackberries fed,

And strawberries red,

They turned towards home,

To climb in their beds.

 

And when it was night,

So sad was their plight,

The sun it went down,

And the moon gave no light.

 

 

They sobbed and they sighed,

And bitterly cried,

And just before dawn,

They lay down and died.

 

Poor babes in the woods,

Poor babes in the woods,

Poor babes in the woods,

Poor babes in the woods.

 

And when they were dead,

The robins so red,

Brought strawberry leaves,

And over them sp
read.

 

And all the day long,

On the branches they thronged,

To mournfully sing,

And this was their song:

 

Two babes in the woods stolen away,

So far from their home,

O
n a bright summer’s day,

Amidst wildflower fields
,

T
hey did lose their way,

 

Pretty babes in the woods,

Pretty babes in the woods
….

 

***

 

“Eli, honey,” came a sweet old woman’s voice.  “Are you ready to sample my cookies?”

Sarilla,
he thought. 
Finally.
  Eli opened his eyes and turned around, but instead of the witch, he saw his dear ol’ grandmamma standing there before him.

“My goodness, what’s the matter, dear?  You loo
k as though you’ve seen a spirit.”

Eli
’s blood boiled.  He knew magical folk were prone to mischief, but this was goin’ too far!  “You don’t have the right—”  He stopped as abruptly as he’d begun, for his voice was that of a five-year-old boy’s.  He looked down at his pudgy arms, Bo staring quizzically up at him from his lap, ears perked, head cocked to one side.  There could be only one explanation: he was still dreaming.

But I woke up,
he thought. 
I’m awake.  I know I am….

Eli
’s face froze in an expression of utter astonishment
.
  His brain, used to much simpler things, such as the plowing of fields and fixing of farm equipment, listed first to the left, then to the right, centering itself just long enough to allow him to speak.

“I…I don’t know what you’ve done,” he said in his little boy
’s voice, struggling to remain calm, “but if you saw fit to undo it, I’d be…grateful.”

“What
I
have done?” his grandmamma echoed.  “Why, Eli Johansen, I expected more from a person who could open one of my puzzle doors and charm my chamber guard. 
You
are doing this, not me.  I assure you.  That is part of my gift, the core part that I cannot change or dispel.  Everyone sees me differently, Eli.  And, in a way, I become what they see, incorporating some of what their mind creates into myself.”

Sarilla
smiled and winked.  “Your grandmamma was a wonderful lady, you know.  I can feel her love for you.  You must remember Mandie and Marnie describing me.  Does it correspond with what you’ve heard from others in your town?  People see what they expect…or want...or fear.  Sometimes I’m a haggard old crone.  Other times, I’m not even human.  It can be quite unsettling.  It does, however, give me a unique insight into people’s minds.  And once I’ve changed into someone, or some
thing,
I can always take that form again, any time I like, a skill which has served me well in the past.  Thus far, I’ve amassed one hundred and sixty-five personas.  A rather impressive number, don’t you think?”

Eli
scratched Bo behind his left ear, weighing the truth in Sarilla’s eyes—his grandmamma’s hazel eyes.  The situation was difficult to reconcile, to say the least.  He was wide awake, he was sure of it, but he was also five years old again, sitting on the floor of his grandparent’s house, a place he hadn’t stepped foot in for over twenty-five years.

“Don’t you understand?” she asked.  “You were dreaming about her when I arrived.  It’s perfectly natural that this should happen.
” 

P
artly because Mandie’s fate hung in the balance, and partly because he so fiercely loved his grandmamma, Eli pulled himself together and nodded, flashing her a boyish grin.  He didn’t need to understand.  He just needed to help his daughter, and the best way to do that was to keep Sarilla happy.

“So, ‘bout those cookies
….” he said.  “Will they taste the same?  Poor Marnie could never get it quite right.  The only thing she ever cooked where she followed the recipe to the letter, and no matter how she tried, something always went wrong.  I never told her, of course.  But she knew.  A bright ray of sunshine was my Marnie.”

Eli
reached up and wiped his eyes, disgusted to find that he was crying.  Bo whined and licked his face, making him laugh.  He was glad this was only temporary.  Apparently, while his cognitive ability remained more or less intact, his emotional fortitude was much like that of a five-year-old’s—all those years of building barricades gone.  And Eli wasn’t one of those people who wished to be young again.  No sir.  Why, just the sound of his own voice was enough to give him the willies.

“In a sense,” replied Sarilla, “they
will taste
exactly
the same.  In a sense, you are where and what you seem to be.”  She waved her hand from left to right.  “Look around.”

He did as instructed
, discovering that every detail of his grandparent’s house was as he remembered, even details that he had long since forgotten.  Here was a picture of a knight galloping through a forest atop a white horse, there was a wooden rocking chair with blue cushions, here was a rack of pipes with a side compartment for tobacco, there was a shield hanging above the fireplace bearing his family’s coat of arms—crossed hammers against a field of rye.

And t
hrough the unshuttered windows, instead of an old man weighted down with enough armaments to start and finish the next war, he saw the broad trunks of cypress trees.  Nothing quite so beautiful as the lowlands at this hour—sunlight slanting through the breaks, fog ferreting its way along the forest floor. 

What would happen
if I walked out the door?
he wondered. 
Would the illusion end?

As though reading his thoughts, Sarilla gestured to the door.  “Why don’t we go outside and sit on the porch to discuss this…
situation
regarding Mandie.  It’s a beautiful spring day, just like the ones you remember.  The sky really did used to be bluer, you know?”

Eli
nodded, realizing for the first time, to his great shame, that Mandie wasn’t here.

“She’s safe,” Sarilla assured him.

He nodded again and, with about an equal mix of eagerness and apprehension, followed her outside.

Other books

Missing by Darrell Maloney
An Accidental Death by Phyllis Smallman
Touched by Death by Mayer, Dale
Ironic Sacrifice by Brooklyn Ann
Inheritance by Chace Boswell
Harbinger by Jack Skillingstead
The Third Day by David Epperson