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Authors: Barbara Campbell

Foxfire (37 page)

BOOK: Foxfire
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Enjoying the rare solitude, Keirith felt contentment banish his lingering anxiety about Rigat's absence and his concern about his spirit-wounded comrades. He watched the wispy clouds fade from rose to violet, and the sky pale to the subtle blue-gray of a wood pigeon. His breathing grew deep, his limbs heavy, as if his body were surrendering to the inevitable twilight. The birds had surrendered as well, their chirps and squawks and warbles fading with the light. Less than fifty paces away, the camp bustled with activity, but stillness filled his body, his mind, his spirit.
A sinuous cloud, purple as a fresh bruise, drifted past. High above it, an eagle soared in a long, slow spiral. Suddenly, it folded its wings and plummeted earthward. The muscular legs reached out. The deadly talons seemed to pluck the cloud from the sky. As the eagle flew toward him, Keirith realized it
had
snatched up the cloud, which dangled limply in its grasp. Transfixed by the vision, he watched the eagle until it hovered before him, so huge that it blocked out the sky.
The talons relaxed. The cloud drifted slowly to the ground. It was as insubstantial as ever, but he could See the color changing from purple to green as it wriggled toward him, just as he could See the black scales that zigzagged down the adder's back, the dark “X” on the back of its head, and the familiar red-brown eyes, wise and unblinking, that stared up into his.
Waves of warmth flooded him as Natha flowed over his feet, up his thighs, across his chest, and finally curled around his shoulders. His spirit guide's tongue caressed his cheek.
“I've tried so hard to reach you,” Keirith whispered.
“You try too hard,” Natha replied. “You always have. When all you have to do is let go.”
“Why do you put up with me?”
“You are a foolish hatchling, but you are mine. Now and always
.

The words, so similar to Xevhan's during his nightmare, made Keirith shudder.
“Why do you cling to him?” Natha demanded.
“I don't! I don't want him inside of me.”
“Then let him go.”
“But . . .”
Natha's tongue flicked out again, and the weight of his anxiety seemed to melt away. “You make everything difficult. Especially excreting that one. Until you understand why, he will never leave you.”
He was still struggling to grasp the implications of that as Natha slid down his body. “You're not leaving?”
“No. There is much for you to See. Come. Fly with us.”
“Fly?”
Natha gave an irritated hiss. “Are you deaf as well as foolish? For you, I will endure this. But I will never understand why you enjoy it.”
The eagle's wings flapped with otherworldly slowness as it descended to the ledge. The feathered head swung toward him. The hooked beak opened to emit a thin chirrup.
With the ease only possible in vision, Keirith vaulted onto the wing, clinging to the tip of one feather. It kept changing beneath his fingers, one moment soft, the next spiky, the next as solid as wood. He pulled himself up, hand over hand, until the eagle apparently lost patience with his slow progress and raised its wing, tumbling him onto the broad back.
Like the feathers, the eagle's body felt utterly unreal—too resilient to be flesh, too yielding to be bone. He dug his fingers into the feathers of the massive neck, but even with his legs outstretched, he could barely grip the eagle's back with his ankles. As he struggled to find a safe position, its body dwindled until it was little larger than a real eagle. After Natha slithered up his back and curled around his neck, the great wings spread and lifted them off the ground.
He was flying. Not spirit-linked as he had been with the eagle at home, but soaring through the sky, fearless and exultant. His hair whipped across his face, and he threw back his head, his laugh mingling with Natha's exasperated hiss.
From this height, the river looked like a strand of gray wool in a huge green mantle. Here and there, the forest gave way to tiny patches of open fields and a cluster of huts small enough to hold in his hand. But near each Zherosi fortress, ugly brown wounds marred the flow of green where the loggers had chopped down the trees.
He closed his eyes, unwilling to allow reality to mar the joy of the flight. Then, shamed by his selfishness, he opened them again.
In the unnerving way that visions shifted time and place, they were much lower now. Three ships crawled upriver toward Little Falls. He must remember to tell Temet.
As the eagle glided over a low hill, a lake appeared. Villages hugged the northern and southern shores. Two peaks jutted up on either side of a narrow channel. And Keirith forgot the ships and the fortresses as he stared down at the village of his birth.
Oddly, everything looked exactly as it had fourteen years ago. There were the fields he had walked through, the familiar circle of huts. And near the summit of Eagles Mount, the pile of sticks and bracken where the eagles nested. But instead of the awkward fledgling he had spied on his last morning, he saw only a small white form nestled under the female's dark breast feathers.
Again, the vision shifted. At first, he was only aware of being enclosed by softness. Then he realized that he had become the newly hatched chick, peering out from under his mother's feathers, craning his neck to watch his father circle closer, clucking and chattering in his eagerness for food.
A faint tapping caught his attention. It came from the egg. In the three days since his hatching, he had watched his mother turn it with her beak, felt her shifting her body to shelter it from the wind and rain.
As the irregular taps continued, the egg shuddered. A tiny crack appeared. Another tap and the crack widened, branching into tiny fissures that snaked across the dark reddish-brown patches that stained the creamy shell. More insistent tapping and the shell splintered, revealing the tip of a tiny, hooked beak.
He butted his head against his mother's breast, but she refused to be diverted. With infinite gentleness, she nipped at the shell. A small, damp head appeared. It lolled against her until she nudged it with her beak. Then the thing began moving again, unseen wings battering against its shell.
Totally engrossed in the wriggling intruder, his mother ignored his high-pitched bark of resentment. When the chick finally broke free, she plucked away the fragments that clung to its damp, downy feathers.
The tiny head turned. Blue eyes stared up at him. Then it fell back on the sticks, basking in their mother's love and attention.
His beak darted out and stabbed the defenseless neck. A bright spot of blood marred the white down. With mingled horror and triumph, Keirith attacked again. The chick struggled helplessly, but his mother only shifted on the nest. For all the tenderness she had shown, she would not stop him. He was the firstborn. It was his duty—his right—to kill this weakling. There was only food enough for one. Only love enough for one. This was not murder, but a sacrifice, ordained by the gods. And he—not this intruder—was the one chosen to carry out their will.
The blood was warm in his mouth, as delicious as the soft flesh he tore with his beak. Two pairs of eyes watched him from the tangle of sticks—one pair the same blue as Mam's, the other the color of the blotches on the shattered eggshell. His brother's pleading eyes grew wide and empty. Natha's watched impassively.
Keirith's triumph vanished. Desperate to escape the carnage, he struggled to the edge of the nest. But his wings were too small, too weak to carry him skyward. Helplessly, he tumbled toward the rocks. He opened his mouth to cry out to Natha, but it was Rigat's name he screamed.
A shadow drifted over him. Strong wings enfolded him. His father cradled him against his breast feathers and lowered him slowly to the ground.
His legs were so weak he could hardly stand. Fa must be holding him up. But that was impossible; Fa was standing before him. When had he changed from eagle to man?
“Please,” he whispered. “No more.”
“But there is more to See.”
As Natha slithered through the grass, Keirith saw a figure rise up out of the ground. It loomed behind Fa, little more than a shadow under the trees. And although there was nothing overtly menacing about the figure, Keirith shouted at Fa to run, to escape while there was still time. The words emerged as shrill chirrups. He heard Natha hiss, then saw something flying toward Fa, and knew the sound had not come from Natha.
The arrow struck Fa in the shoulder. His legs folded under him and he sank slowly to his knees. Only when he fell facedown in the grass did Keirith see the second arrow in his back.
His scream shattered the vision and sent his spirit hurtling back into his body. The first convulsion made him jerk upright. The next slammed him back down. Rock scraped his elbows and knees as he twisted helplessly. He heard voices calling his name, felt hands trying to hold him. He bit down on wood—someone must have shoved a stick between his teeth—but he shook his head wildly and finally managed to spit it out so he could gasp out his name.
“Three times to seal the spirit's return.”
Gortin's voice, calm and patient.
“And after the boundaries of the spirit have been reestablished, those of the body must be as well.”
As the convulsions eased, he pushed weakly at the hands that still held him.
“Let him go. Don't touch him.” Faelia's voice, shrill with fear.
Too exhausted to sit up, he curled into a ball so he could run his trembling hands over his head, his shoulders, his torso, his legs.
“Dear gods, is it always like this?” Temet this time. The concerned father.
Oh, gods. Fa . . .
A hand grasped his. He opened his eyes and looked up into Faelia's face. “Fa . . . and Rigat . . .”
“Don't talk. Not yet.”
“It might be important,” Mikal said.
“Then he'll tell us when he's able! Temet, help me lift his head.”
He closed his eyes, fighting the wave of nausea. They lowered his head onto something warm and soft. Faelia's lap, he realized.
Her callused fingers stroked his forehead. “Do you want anything? Water?”
Right now, all he wanted to do was sleep—and forget.
Visions were unreliable—chancy, Gortin always called them. They could be reflections of your worst fears or glimpses into the future. They could warn you of genuine danger or a threat that existed only in your mind.
Rigat was his brother. He loved him. Worried about him. And aye, sometimes he resented him, but that didn't mean he wanted to kill him. Xevhan had done that, not him.
“Why do you cling to him?”
He was too spirit-sick and exhausted to think about Natha's words now. More important was the connection between the first part of the vision and the second. He must try to remember details, to discover if it was a real place or an imaginary one. He had to warn Fa of the betrayal that would occur.
Might occur.
Might have occurred already.
He seized Temet's hand. “The Gathering. I have to know where it will be. Not the location, but what the place looks like.”
“You saw something that will happen at the Gathering?” Mikal asked.
“I don't know.”
“Later.” Temet squeezed his hand. “You need to rest now.”
If the attack was going to occur at the Gathering, Fa was still safe. But who was that shadowy figure?
Not Rigat. He would never hurt Fa.
Not hurt him. Murder him.
There was some other connection between the two visions, some other explanation. There must be.
Chapter 25
J
HOLIANNA'S LADIES FLITTED ABOUT her like a cloud of gaudy butterflies, fussing with the flounces on her skirt, sliding bracelets over her wrists, straightening the serpentine crown that circled her head.
Not butterflies, she decided, listening to their chatter. Birds. Butterflies were blessedly silent.
Although she had insisted that the festivities continue as planned, she shuddered at the thought of yet another feast where she would have to smile and laugh and turn aside the inevitable questions.
“Forgive me, Earth's Beloved. Is it too tight?”
The incessant chatter died. Lady Alikia's fingers hovered uncertainly over the golden sheath of lilmia that bound Jholianna's breasts.
“No. It's fine.”
A sigh of relief eased around the circle and conversation resumed. Innocuous comments on the mild weather, speculations about the dishes that would be served tonight, fretful lamentations about the shortcomings of this one's new dressmaker and that one's new slave boy, all spiced with the occasional tidbit of court gossip.
BOOK: Foxfire
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