An Unexpected Deity (Book 7) (23 page)

BOOK: An Unexpected Deity (Book 7)
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“Thanks for the rescue, sorry about the dream I sent; that wasn’t my finest decision.  What do we plan to do next?  How are you going to get my powers back for me?” the god asked.

“Holy lord!” Kestrel heard one of the humans behind him gasp.  “It really is the god!”

Kestrel removed himself from Woven’s grasp, then promptly knelt to the god, who stepped forward into the chamber, an imposing figure.  Krusima spotted the dead Viathins that lay on the floor.  “Looks like you had a bit of work to get this far.”  The god was sure of himself; even in his departure from a prison cell, he exuded confidence and commanded the attention of all the others in the room.

“Great lord, we have come through adventures beyond our imagination,” Gates said worshipfully.

              “How long until we’re under attack again?  I could stand to have my powers back – I’d take care of any battle myself!” Krusima exclaimed.  “Have you released your father yet?” his attention seemed to jump around as he adjusted to being freed from his cell.

“No, that’s the next thing I’ll do,” Kestrel answered.  “I just needed to rest my powers a bit before I try to cut his door out of the wall,” he explained.

“Morph’s not that large.  Save yourself some trouble and cut a smaller hole, and come use the wall between my cell and his – it’s thinner; it’ll be easier to cut,” the human god explained.

“Let me go in and find the best spot.  Come in,” Krusima said, motioning towards Kestrel as he plunged back into the cell he had just been released from.

“Kestrel!” Stuart stepped forward and grabbed the elf’s arm before he could follow Krusima.  “Did I just hear the great lord say that we’re going to rescue your father?” he asked.

Kestrel looked at the man.  His face looked stunned; even all the events of the past several extraordinary hours had failed to produce the expression of shock that Kestrel now saw on the warrior’s face.

But there wasn’t time to discuss it, nor did Kestrel know how he would have discussed it, what he could have said that would capture all the emotions swirling around in his soul.  Without a word of response, only a curt nod, Kestrel pulled loose and followed Krusima into the small, stony cell that had held him captive.

The god already stood in the room, and was pointing at the wall.  “There, start cutting the stone right there,” he directed.

Kestrel searched in his soul, looking for any means of finding additional energy he could use to cut through the stone, to help him achieve the task ahead.  There was nothing extra in him – he was going to drain himself completely, he realized.  But the conditions demanded such action, and so he focused his energy once again, then pressed his finger to the stone, and began to slice his way into the wall.

“Stop!  Stop!” Krusima shouted.  “Do you want to kill yourself?  What are you doing, wasting all that power?

“Here, do this,” Krusima said.

He reached over and formed Kestrel’s finger and thumb into an ‘O’ shape, with a small gap between their tips.

“Now, release just a little of your energy from each of them,” Krusima told him, as the god pressed his hand against the wall.

Kestrel sent his energy flowing though the two digits, and watched the result with slitted eyes, not sure what to expect.

The energy reached the gap between the two fingertips as it flowed into the opening from each side.  As the two streams of power met, they produced a blindingly bright fusion, and as Kestrel held the open spot against the wall, a fine stone dust flew out in all directions, while he effortlessly cut a deep, narrow slice through the stone, faster than Kestrel’s previous effort.  The new technique required less physical action on Kestrel’s part, as well as less of a draw on his divine powers.

He looked at Krusima in wonder, then grinned, as he rapidly sliced a tall oval in the stone wall, then ceased his efforts.

And suddenly, amid the pleasure of the discovery of a more efficient way to tap his powers, and amid the celebration of reaching his goal, and amid the exhaustion and uncertainty of the long grueling journey to reach that point, Kestrel realized that he faced an important emotional interaction.  He was about to meet his father.

The stone oval in the wall shook.  Krusima reached over with a brawny arm and shoved at the piece that had been cut free, and it toppled away, leaving an opening, through which stepped Morph, the elven god of speed, and Kestrel’s long unknown father.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 15

 

No appearance could have been imagined that would have been more elf-like that the figure of Morph, coming through the opening.  He was whippet-thin, lean, and muscular and with a face of angular planes.  His shape was the very definition of an elf, the archetype from which all others had been reproduced as less-perfect copies, it seemed.

He entered the new cell and stood, surveying his surroundings.  He saw Krusima and nodded in recognition, then turned slightly and saw Kestrel.  Immediate recognition crossed his face, then gladness, and a following unspoken sadness, an acknowledgement of something he had failed to perform.

“Kestrel, you are a great hero to make such a treacherous journey here.  We owe you our thanks for the freedom you’ve given us.  And I owe you more than that, without doubt.  We must talk, after circumstances allow.  What plans do you have for us now?” the elven god asked.

“My lord, I was sent to set the two of you free, as I was commanded to do by Kai,” Kestrel said.

“Bless her eternal soul,” Krusima said.  “Your favorite goddess, and one you’ve accomplished a good deal for.”

“But my thought was that if we could set both of you free, we would still have to confront Ashcrayss, to recover the powers I understand he has stolen from you,” Kestrel spoke in a faltering voice, unnerved by the displeased expression on Krusima’s face.

“Oh lord!” Wren spoke peeking into the cell.  “It truly is our god!”

“Which of my friends is this?” Morph asked Kestrel.

“This is my cousin, Wren, the daughter of my mother’s sister,” Kestrel replied.

“I see some resemblance,” Morph observed.  “You are a most lovely subject.”

“Morph – focus!” Krusima snapped.  “The boy is right; we’ll have to confront Ashcrayss.  If we don’t, he’ll still have our powers, and our world will crumble and die, as will we.”

Kestrel started to move towards Wren, and out into the larger chamber.

“Where are you going?” Morph asked.

“My partners are out there.  We need to discuss our plans with them,” Kestrel answered.

“Discuss?” Krusima asked in a chilly tone.

“Their lives are at stake, and this was not their quest in the beginning, but they have been faithful and helpful throughout the challenges we have faced,” Kestrel tried to keep his voice humble.  “They deserve to know what their future may hold.”

“Listen to the boy,” Morph told the human god.

Wren stepped back out of the way as Kestrel came through the jagged door opening in the cell, and he saw that all the others in the party were staring in astonishment.

“Kestrel friend, Wren dear tells that the elf-god is your father; is this truth?” Stillwater asked as he floated down next to Kestrel.

“It is truth, Stillwater hero,” Kestrel confirmed.

The three living humans suddenly fell to their knees as the two deities appeared.

“Tell them to get up,” Woven growled.  “Deities that get put in prison are hardly worth worshipping.  Corrant would never fall victim to anything like this.”

“We are going to help our gods fight against the Viathins’ god, and then they will help us return to our own land,” Kestrel soothed his companion.

“My subjects, thank you for coming on this long journey to rescue us,” Krusima told the humans.  “Your way here has not been easy, I’m told, and it will not get easier yet, until we make our way to the temple where Ashcrayss receives the sacrifices and listens to the worship that restores his strength.

“We will have a perilous journey to reach the temple, but it will not take more than half a day,” he told the assembled group.  “What weapons do you bring?” he asked.

“My lord, we brought Kestrel,” Lark said.  “He has been our greatest weapon.  But these two stout warriors have used swords, and the elven girl has used her arrows and staff, and the gnome has thrown stones that were as deadly as arrows.  Even the imp has been an important warrior.  It was he who killed all of these dead Viathins,” she praised the imp.

“That is truly an extraordinary claim for one of the little ones, who seldom do more than cause mischief and mayhem,” Krusima replied skeptically.

“Stillwater is a fierce and faithful warrior,” Kestrel agreed with Lark.  “The girl tells the truth when she says he was the one who saved us from the trap laid for us down here.”

“Even the unexpected can contribute,” Morph said.  “We must be prepared to look for and accept assistance from any unusual source.  And we may have to make sacrifices that we do not expect, painful though they seem, for the good of all.

“Now, tell us of the way out, Krusima,” Morph said.  “I was brought here directly, as soon as I passed into this land and was caught by Ashcrayss.  I do not know any ways but the path to the cell,” he gestured towards the prison cells they had just been freed from.

There was a sudden, alarmingly loud clattering noise, a din that filled the prison chamber with sharp, staccato knocks and clacks, as a number of Skyes suddenly came tumbling down the stairs and into the room.

That’s the alarm!” Stuart said, grabbing a spear away from one of the dead Viathin guards.  “We’re trapped down here.”

“Kestrel can provide an escape,” Krusima said confidently.

“I can?” Kestrel asked, startled by the god’s assertion.

“I’m not totally stripped of abilities, you know,” Krusima snapped.  “I can sense that there is another portion of the dungeon behind that wall over there,” he pointed across the chamber.  “I suggest you open a way for us to pass through it and then I’ll lead our way out.”

Kestrel turned and stumbled over a Viathin corpse.  He was prevented from falling on his face by a timely catch made by Gates, whose strong arms grabbed Kestrel’s to keep him upright.

“Thank you,” Kestrel grinned.

“No, thank you, my lord, for your work,” the guard told him in return.

Kestrel nodded as he straightened, then hurried to the designated wall.  He circled his fingers to create the loop with the small gap, then placed his fingers by the wall, and generated the flow of power that produced the powerful arc whose energy sliced into the rocky wall.  Kestrel had no doubt that he would quickly find the chambers beyond, as promised by Krusima.

“Stillwater,” he called, “bring your water skin over here,” he told the imp.  “When this opens up, I don’t know what will be on the other side.  If you see any Viathins, spray them at once,” he ordered, as his finger continued to create the brilliant spark that cut away the stone.

There were shouts on the stairs, and Kestrel heard Wren calling the Skyes to come join the retreat as he finished his cut.  Krusima pressed Kestrel aside and pressed against the cutout stone, so that it toppled inward, revealing darkness within.

Stillwater sprayed his water into the new opening, and after a moment without reaction from any potential ambush beyond, he flew into the new chamber.

“There appears to be no one within,” he announced, poking his head back out to address the others.  “And there is a staircase leading up.”

“Morph, take the lead,” Krusima ordered, and there was a momentary flash of speed as the elven god exercised his strength and bounded across the room and through the new door that Kestrel had created.  “My people, go next,” Krusima motioned to the humans, who came hurrying across the room.  Lark gave Kestrel a piercing stare as she passed him, but said nothing as she followed Gates, with Stuart right behind her.

The Skyes were rushing across the room towards the door, as Krusima looked at them with a dismissive expression.

“Will they be able to slow the Viathins down at all?” he asked.

“They won’t have to,” Wren said stoutly.  “They’re coming with us.  They’ve done a great deal to get us here to save you.”  She said something to the Skyes in their own language, and they all moved more quickly.

“The enemy comes, Kestrel,” Woven said from his post by the door to the stairs.

“Are all the Skyes out?” Kestrel asked.

“The last one just made it,” the gnome announced.

Kestrel waved, and a blue shield appeared across the doorway, making Woven jump back with its sudden appearance.

“That will hold them temporarily,” Kestrel said.  “Now come and join us,” he told the gnome.

The Skyes were climbing up and over the low lip of wall that Kestrel had not cut free, and he reminded himself he would have to be sure to remember to cut to the floor next time, if there was a next time.

Krusima stepped through, interrupting the Skyes, and Wren followed.  Woven went too, and Kestrel saw Viathins arrive at his glowing gateway.  They stopped, glanced in through the transparent energy shield to see his new escape route, and a pair of them started running up the steps to spread the warning that the direction of the chase had changed.

The chamber was empty, except for those Viathins that had descended the stairs and not gone back up.  A small mob of the creatures stood outside Kestrel’s glowing blue shield, watching, shouting and bellowing angrily.  Kestrel started to back out of the chamber, placing one foot through the passageway, watching the stymied Viathins, when a sudden thought, a possible tactical advantage struck him, and he stopped.

Kestrel stepped back fully into the chamber, back towards the Viathins.  His friends were making their escape, and he would have to catch up to them, but first he wanted to reduce and delay the Viathin pursuit.  The stymied guards grew more agitated at the sight of Kestrel coming towards them, and he let his shield slide slightly towards him, giving the Viathins the chance to inch closer, and to believe that his power was weakening, as indeed it truly was – though not as much as he wanted the Viathins to believe.

Kestrel stepped back towards the escape route again. And as he did, he released his grasp of his energy, letting the protective shield completely disappear, and allowing the bottled-up mob to explode forth, rushing towards him with complete disregard for anything but the opportunity to seize him.  As the score of large creatures rushed towards him, Kestrel re-established his energy shield directly in front of his own position, then extended the side walls in a curving, stretching form that grew into a circular cage which entrapped the squad of Viathins.

The monsters howled even more loudly, if possible, in response to their entrapment.  Kestrel casually circled around their cage to the door they had entered through, and used his waning supply of energy to collapse the ceiling of the doorway.  Despite having the efficient new method Krusima had taught him, Kestrel found the job to be difficult as he tried to both maintain the cage and collapse the ceiling at the same time.

He walked around to the passage way he would depart through, and collapsed it as well, once he had stepped into the next room.  He gasped in tired satisfaction then, as he released his hold on the power that had caged the Viathins in place, and he leaned against the wall of the dark chamber.

“Kestrel, are you abandoning us?” a voice suddenly sounded, and then a small light flared up, revealing Morph standing at the foot of a staircase on the far side of the dungeon room.

“We went quite a ways upwards before anyone knew you hadn’t come with us,” the elven god said.  “I thought I was the natural choice to zip down here to find you.”

“I just trapped twenty Viathins in the chamber behind us,” Kestrel answered.  “I thought that would help reduce the pursuit later.”

“Well played,” Morph told Kestrel.  “Your cousin, Wren, she does remind me of your mother.  She has the same elven cheekbones within that otherwise human face.  I’m sure that Wren can smile in happier times, but I’m just as sure she could never have a smile as sweet and pure as your mother’s was.

“That’s what drew me to her, that infectious smile she shared in her happiest times,” Morph said.  “We’d spend time together and she’d want to race me – me!” the god grinned gently at the recollection.  “She knew she couldn’t win, but she would make me race her anyway; I’d run backwards –  not so that I could show her up – but so that I could watch her laugh while she ran, her hair streaming out in the wind, glimmers of wind tears emerging from the corners of her eyes, and always that smile!”

Morph was silent for a moment, and Kestrel was too, torn by the narrative.  He felt some part of him object to the god discussing his mother, but a greater part of him reveled in the intimate portrait, of both his mother and his father, a trove of details that exposed them to him for the first time.

“She wanted to raise you as an elf, she told me firmly,” Morph went on, “A normal, regular elf, and she asked me to stay away.”  His face lost the gentle happiness that had radiated from it when he has spoken about Kestrel’s mother.  “And I complied.  This has happened a time or two before, and I agreed that you would be better off not knowing of your unique parentage, especially since there was no way to know whether or not you would inherit abilities or not.

“But your poor mother couldn’t truly raise you as a ‘regular’ elf, since she had not been raised that way herself, and with her human heritage and yours, there was not going to be any opportunity to be ‘regular’ in the Eastern Forest society,” the god went on.  “She had been raised by her own elven mother and human father, up in the borderlands between the Forest and Estone, about where Wren was brought up.

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