Read Dragons on the Sea of Night Online
Authors: Eric Van Lustbader
Bnak would tell her this so often that quite soon it had become a ritual. But no matter how often he said it Miira made no reply. She would merely smile the soft and dreamy smile she allowed only him to see, the smile he had seen while he was on his sojourn among the Shinju.
Three months after a son was born to Miira, Bnak's enemies invaded their villa in the gray and dismal hour before dawn. They slew the guards Bnak had posted and stole the infant from his crib in the small room adjacent to where his parents slept.
They offered Bnak a choice. Either he could resign his post and leave the capital with his son safe in his arms or he could have the infant delivered blue-faced and lifeless at his doorstep.
Now Bnak knew what would happen to the government should he be forced to flee the city. The plots would multiply until those who sought to take his place would be overwhelmed. The governmental leaders would be slain, the city â the entire nation for that matter â would be thrown into turmoil and confusion. Rivers of blood would run through the capital and the gods only knew where or when they would stop.
To stay and fight for reform or to flee and see all that he had worked for crumble to dust and blood. This was no decision that he could make on his own. So he did what he always did with questions knotty and of high import: he consulted Miira.
Though she was beside herself with grief, still she counseled him to follow the dictates of his heart. (âI often wonder,' Moichi said, interrupting the tale briefly, âwhether she was intuitive enough to have known that Bnak's goal of a united country was but an unattainable dream of a man of good heart and soul.') âMy heart and your heart are one, Miira,' Bnak said with tears in his eyes. âTell me what I should do.'
âWhat does your heart say?' she asked, holding his hands. She looked deep into his eyes now with that purity he had come to know so well. âThe truth now.'
âLoyalty is everything to me. That's the truth of it, beloved,' he said. âIf I betray them, if I betray my loyalty, then I am no man. I am nothing.'
Miira was unsurprised. This purity of purpose was what she loved best about him, what reminded her most of the best of her own people. âDo as you will, husband,' she said with a voice like the tolling of a bell, âfor I fear either way our son is lost to us for ever.'
She meant, of course, that their son's abductors had no intention of letting him live. They were desperate men, desiring power above all else. What was the life of one infant â especially a half-breed â to them? Less than nothing. They would, Miira feared, simply take pleasure in his death.
Bnak clapped his fists over his ears but it was too late â the bitter truth was branded into his brain and he could do naught else but to follow Miira's advice and do what he would. He had to forget his son ever existed, wipe all the precious memories away. Start over.
Could he carry out such a heinous but requisite task?
He knew he must.
He defied his enemies, the enemies of the state. He remained loyal, he remained a man. But at what price?
The next morning, as they had threatened, their son appeared at the gateway to their villa, strangled with a blue cord.
After the requisite three day mourning period, Bnak returned to his duties at the ministry. He pulled in all the favors he had been hoarding for years and the directive went out across the length and breadth of the capital: find the abductors, the murderers.
But on his way home that night he was ambushed, his guards slain, and he was brutally murdered. At almost the same instant life was seeping out of him, men invaded his villa, looking for Miira. They found only empty rooms.
In another quarter of the capital, the chief ministers were assaulted in their bed chambers. Blood flowed in the streets, as Bnak had feared. Chaos reigned as the old was destroyed and the new sought to solidify its power in the corridors of the ministry and in the streets. Thousands died; the capital was turned into an abattoir as the loyalists battled the insurgents.
During those dark weeks of brutal warfare and death, Miira rose each morning in the cave at the northernmost outskirts of the city to tend to the wounded men and the women who had been beaten and raped. She no longer had the time nor the desire to make up her face, and yet, out of habit, she continued to look at her reflection in her Shinju mirror. She did this mainly to keep the memory of Bnak alive. In the moment just before he was ambushed, she had been pulled out of sleep by a harsh shriek that, upon awakening, she knew existed only in her Shinju mind. In that shriek was carried the crosstown assault and imminent death of her husband. Also, the hastening bootsoles on the street along which their villa was set. She had leapt out of bed, grabbed clothes, money and her mirror and had fled the villa by a secret passage just moments before it was invaded by those sent to kill her.
Now, in the cave of war, she looked daily upon her reflection. It was a wholly different image that greeted her. It had been frequently said that there was a kind of magic running through the Shinju. Rumors still surfaced, now and again, but no civilized man believed them, of course. Why would they? If the Shinju actually possessed magical powers would Bnak's people have been able to invade their land, slaughter them, take what had once been theirs?
And yet had anyone else been present to gaze into Miira's mirror they might have had grave second thoughts. For her reflection no longer bore the imprimatur of her husband's love. Bnak was dead; their son, as well. Miira's heart was cold, gray ash. Her normally calm and flexible spirit had become the dark adamantine jewel of fury.
Even as she tended the wounded and dying, counseled the psychologically battered, she burned for vengeance. And, staring into her mirror at what was reflected there, she knew what she must do to dissolve that dark jewel, though she had vowed never to do so and to break the vow meant certainly that she must die.
As Bnak's enemies had done so cleverly before her, Miira now made a comprehensive diary of the new regime's comings and goings. She listed all the key ministers and, after their names, the times of the day when they were inside the ministry building.
After a month of this diligent detective work, she sat down to evaluate her copious notes. By this time the worst of the fighting had subsided to sporadic outbreaks among the last remnants of the die-hard loyalists. The stranglehold of the new regime was all but complete. There was, she discovered, the hour of midnight when all the ministers met in council. Midnight, she thought, putting aside her diary. The hour of Bnak's death.
How she slipped past the phalanxes of guards is anyone's guess. In any event, no one saw her enter the ministry; no one saw her inside until she appeared within the central chamber of state and by then it was too late.
She passed around the great oval table at which her enemies sat, sleek and self-satisfied. Those murderers. There was still time to turn back, to forego vengeance. But her mind was filled with memories of Bnak and of her baby. And she broke her sacred vow.
She used her power; the power of the Shinju, for all the rumors were quite correct. As she passed behind each minister, she placed her mirror before them, and each had no choice but to look at his image reflected there.
What they saw no man, perhaps, can say. But I suspect it was different for each of them. One by one, they clawed the air as if phantasms were assailing them. Their faces twisted grotesquely in horror and dread. They fouled themselves abysmally; some wept uncontrollably in their death throes.
And when the last of the ministers had died, Miira too, looked deep into her mirror and, it is said, died on the spot (Moichi concluded).
Aufeya, who had been sitting up in the berth for some time now, her own aches and fears forgotten as she became more and more enthralled with the tale, said, âIs this story true? It is so fantastic. Terrible and fantastic.'
âAye, it is that, but though it makes a gripping tale I doubt its veracity.'
Aufeya seemed lost in thought for some time. Then she threw the bedclothes off and, padding about the cabin, began to dress. âI want to go on deck,' she said. âI'm stifling in here and dawn is breaking over the water. I want to see it. It has been a long, fearful night.'
Even in this early hour there was much activity on deck. Arasomu checked in briefly with Moichi. He had made two slight course corrections during his watch. According to the information that Moichi had provided him he believed they would sight the shore of Iskael before noon. The skies were fair, with scattered ribbons of high wispy cloud, and the wind was freshening out of the northwest quarter. It was ideal weather.
âI find it curious,' Aufeya said when they were alone, âthat you hold no truck with superstition yet you are a mariner and mariners are a powerfully superstitious lot.' She tossed her head, glad to be abovedeck in fine weather. âIn fact, I've heard you call upon the Oruboros even though you believe in the One God.'
Moichi shook his head. âI call upon him, no. I curse him on occasion because one does not speak of the God of my people in that way. Just as one does not call upon Him to change the wind or ensure success in business. He is not like the tiny gods of smoke and stone other people kneel before. He is the universe; he is everything. He lives; He provides for His people. But He does not grant petty favors like some desert jinn out of legend.'
Aufeya smiled. âAnd the Oruboros does.'
He noted the mocking tone in her voice. âThe Oruboros, the great ancient sea serpent, once lived, Aufeya. In another time his power was great, indeed.'
âYou talk about him as if he no longer exists.'
Moichi looked down at her, not knowing whether this was some game she was playing, needling him with her disbelief. Not for the first time, he was struck by how little he really knew her. âRonin slew the Oruboros when he was transformed into the Dai-San.'
At the mention of Moichi's bond-brother Aufeya dropped her amused look. She knew full well how important this already mythical figure was to him. âBut I don't really understand who â or what â the Dai-San is,' she said.
Now Moichi smiled. âDoes anyone, really?' His tawny eyes were misty with remembrance. âAh, Aufeya, what adventures we two shared.' His eyes cleared as he tried to explain the unexplainable. âHe was once a man, not unlike me, perhaps. But his fate lay in another direction. On Ama-no-mori, he was transformed by ancient Bujun sorcery that was part of a grand design. Pulled apart, then reassembled, he was compelled to ride the back of the Oruboros, to slay this venerable creature who he held dear so that he might be reborn as the Dai-San.'
âDai-San,' Aufeya repeated. âThat name is of a language unfamiliar to me.'
âAs it is to most. It is Bujun.'
âBut the Dai-San is not Bujun.'
Moichi shrugged. âAma-no-mori has become his adoptive country. It was there that his transformation began.'
Aufeya's eyes were huge. âIs he really more than mortal man?'
âIn the time of magic from which he was born anything is possible.'
âEven the legend of Miira's Mirror?'
She had him and he knew it. For a moment his brows knit darkly, then he burst out into deep, booming laughter. âPerhaps. But I believe the age of magic died when the Dai-San defeated the Dolman. This is the age of mankind.'
âAnd what of Sardonyx?' Aufeya demanded. âWas she not the most powerful sorceress?'
Moichi considered this highly charged topic carefully, as he always did with her. Sardonyx, who had been born Adenese, had been sold into slavery. Eventually, she had killed her master and had been thrown into jail for her crime. Eventually, she managed to escape, bribing her way out with her body. The rest of her history was a mystery â he was not even certain of the veracity of what she had told him. She was a consummate liar; she actually enjoyed spinning tales, changing personalities as readily and effortlessly as others breathed air.
Sardonyx had become fixated on Aufeya, and when Moichi had prevented her from getting her, she had returned to Daluzia from her castle in the land of the Opal Moon and had murdered Aufeya's mother Tsuki by somehow using Aufeya's body, thus wreaking a diabolical revenge on mother and daughter both. One was dead and the other could never forgive herself for what her body had done.
âAs far as Sardonyx is concerned,' Moichi said, keeping one eye on the wind and the other on Aufeya's face, âit is my considered opinion that she was more prestidigitator than thaumaturgist. To put it in its simplest terms she was a highly accomplished illusionist.'
âThen everything that happened to us in the land of the Opal Moon was a hallucination?'
âAh, no. You know it was not. But the Firemask, the artifact of power, that Sardonyx so desired, was real enough. And it was from the time of magic; its power was awesome.' Seeing her shudder and make the sign of the Palliate, he put his arm around her and kissed her cheek. âI think we'd both do best in forgetting all about Sardonyx. After I took the Firemask from her, her only thought was to avenge herself on your mother. Having, unhappily, accomplished that, she is now, I have no doubt, far away from here, back in her castle in the land of the Opal Moon.'
Together, they went to the rail, stared out at the rising sun.
Aufeya turned to Moichi. âYou miss him, don't you?'
âWho?'
âYour love for the Dai-San runs very deep.'
âHe is my bond-brother.'
âHe's much more, I warrant.'
Moichi was silent for some time, as if he were wrestling with a thorny problem. âIn some unfathomable way we are one. I cannot explain it further. He was created to defeat the Dolman and the forces of Chaos who threatened to claim this world and to put an end to the races of man for all time. My fate was to be at his side. He is the greatest warrior of all time; together we journeyed to the Kai-feng, the last great battle of mankind.'