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Authors: Lindsey Scholl

Tags: #Young Adult Fantasy

Obsidian (32 page)

BOOK: Obsidian
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“We have to find Chiyo,” he said, interrupting Amarian’s question about Kynell. “Quickly! The Sentries and fennels have broken through the barrier walls.”

Amarian swallowed his comment and nodded. “I figured it was just a matter of time. Chiyo is down at the base of that tower—it’s where he’s set up headquarters. Fly Thelámos down. I’ll meet you there.”

Vancien did as he was told. He soon found Chiyo in conference with Tengar. They were arguing over how to use one of the Risen battalions. Tengar wanted to reassign them to repair the siege engines, Chiyo insisted on keeping them near the gate to which they were already assigned.

“But they’re not
doing
anything there!” Tengar protested. “At least we could put them to work for a while.”

“General Chiyo!” Vancien called as Thelámos landed. He jumped to the ground as both men came out to greet him.

“Welcome back, Vancien!” Chiyo said, shaking him by the hand. “It’s good to see you alive and whole. Well done!”

“Generals,” Vancien nodded toward Tengar. “I have bad news. The Sentries and fennels have broken through the outer wall. It won’t be long before they either tear it down completely or come to the base of the city wall itself.”

Chiyo turned toward Tengar. “The battalion stays at the gate. Lady Jana and Captain Hunoi are commanding them; they’ll know what to do. Go tell the engine teams to change their trajectory and be on the lookout. Fennels are smart climbers, but the casing tar should hold them for a while.”

Tengar saluted. “Of course, General.” He trotted off, not a little annoyed.

Chiyo, meanwhile, had another mission for Vancien. “I think you should go and find Telenar. Those Patroniites need to be ready for anything, especially with the fiends so close.”

Just then, Amarian ran up. He must have plummeted down the stairs, so quickly did he arrive and so winded did he look. Bedge was at his feet, looking as if she were enjoying herself.

“Sir fell down the big stone steps!” she cried joyously. “Bounce, bounce, he went! Until Bedge stopped him.”

Amarian looked a little sheepish. “I tripped. So, what’s the plan?”

Chiyo took a moment to decide. “Vance, go find Telenar. Amarian, come with me. We need to alert all the gate battal—” He stopped mid-sentence as Bedge’s energetic maneuvers caught his eye. He knelt down to her level, pondering a better idea.

“You have a lot of energy, don’t you, little one?”

“Oh yes! Bedge can bounce and hop all over the city!”

“Do you think you can run to each Risen battalion along the wall? Will you tell them that the Sentries and fennels are coming soon?”

Bedge did not stop bouncing. “Yes! Yes! Bedge can do that!”

“Good. Go do it. And then come find Amarian.”

Eager though she was, she did not take off at once. First she looked at Amarian. Only when he told her to go, and be quick about it, did she take off like a shot.

“That’s quite the partner you have there, Amarian.”

Amarian gazed at her trail of dust. “She does have her uses. Vance, what are you waiting around here for?”

Vancien jolted to attention. “Oh, right. Telenar.” After sending Thelámos off to the stables, he ran toward the palace.

To his surprise, he found Telenar in his old office, alone, or close to it. Corfe was sitting in a corner, staring out the window.

“Don’t mind him just now,” Telenar said as Vancien came in. “He’s wrestling through some things.”

“I thought you were out doing some counseling.”

Telenar gestured for Vancien to sit, which he was happy to do. It was comforting being with his mentor; despite all that had happened, Vancien knew he had much to learn from him. He hoped, when this was all over, that. . .well, he didn’t know what. But it probably wouldn’t happen.

Telenar started wiping his spectacles, as he always did when he was stressed. “I was counseling. I went all around, looking for those who were refusing to go into the tunnels, or who wouldn’t let the Risen Ones go about their duty, or who kept clamoring to be on the soaking crew. But then, sometime before dawn, I just stopped. There was nothing I could say. After all, I didn’t understand him any more than they did. They kept asking me questions about the Advocates, and what he meant, and why he wasn’t with everyone at the same time.” Through glasses that were almost as smudgy as they were before, he looked at Vancien. “And I just didn’t have an answer for them. So I came back here to wait,” he tapped the desk in front of him, “and read.” He ran his hand over a much used, heavily marked copy of the Ages that lay open on the desk. “He came in about an hour ago. Hasn’t said a word.”

Vancien looked over at Corfe, who was still staring out the window, not moving. The sight of him in the corner and Telenar reading behind the desk was eerily calm in contrast to the heavy activity outside.

“I spoke with him again, when I was out tonight.”

Telenar’s head jerked sharply. “Have you? What did he say? I confess I don’t understand what he’s doing here. It’s strange, but I feel more distant from him now than I did before he came.”

Vancien nodded. “I know. I felt that way too. But then he came to me, out at Relgaré’s camp, before I took Thelámos over the army. And he talked with me—just me,” he added, as if marveling at it. “He said. . .”

But Vancien did not finish his sentence before they heard loud cries outside of Telenar’s window. They hurried over to look. Men and Risen Ones were all racing toward the eastern wall. Even the soaking crew, distinguished by their wet clothes, were heading in that direction. Both Telenar and Vancien looked instinctively for Kynell, but they didn’t see him. Telenar drew back and looked at Vancien.

“You have to find out what’s going on. And I can’t just leave him.” He jerked his head toward Corfe, who had shown only the slightest reaction to sudden noise.

“What will you do?”

“Try to put him with some of the other priests. I believe several of them are on soaking duty.”

Vancien did not spare a glance for Corfe as he left, but he could not help looking back at his friend. Telenar was sitting again at his desk, flipping through the Ages.

“You should go to him, Telenar. He’ll talk with you.”

Telenar shook his head, and Vancien could not stay to discuss the point. He took off down the hallway, pulse racing. When he emerged out into the orblight, he began to jog through the streets, squinting at the distant battlements to see what was happening. Occasionally, a boulder would whistle overhead, forcing him to take cover. Even when he made it to the Eastern wall, it was almost impossible to tell what was going on.

After a few moments, Hull found him.

“Vance! Thank Kynell you’re here. The Sentries and fennels are at the base of the wall. They’ve found a way to scale the casing tar, though they can only do it slowly. There are thousands of them!”

“Aren’t we dumping rocks on their heads?” Vancien asked.

“Yes, but it just knocks them back a bit. It won’t kill them. And we’re running out of rocks.”

“So what’s our plan then?”

“Chiyo is over there.” He pointed to the general’s temporary headquarters. “We’ll find out soon enough.”

“Is Kynell there, too?”

Hull gave a sharp jerk of his head. “No. He’s with the soakers again. I don’t know why.”

Vancien did not either, but he was relieved to see that even the Risen Ones were confused about the Prysm god’s behavior.

“Glad to see you made it back safely, son,” Hull added.

“Me too. I guess it was fortunate for me that the Sentries and fennels were already on their way.” He bit his tongue, but not before all the words came out. How selfish that sounded!

Hull clapped him on the shoulder as they headed in Chiyo’s direction. “It was a good thing. I prayed for you to come back in one piece.”

“But why? I mean, if I had died, I would have come back as a Risen One, right? And then I would only be stronger.”

Hull shook his head. “The Risen Ones are here and the living ones are here. A man can die only once in this fight. It’s Kynell’s wisdom—otherwise, it could only end when everyone on Rhyvelad was killed. Plus,” he added, “I don’t want to outlive you.”

They had arrived at Chiyo’s base. He was again arguing with Tengar.

“A sortie is our only option,” Chiyo was insisting. “We have to move before they get their claws into that tar.”

“And I’m saying that we maintain the defense at the top. Tarl, what do you think?”

The Sentry captain scratched one long claw under his chin. He had recovered well from Corfe’s failure. The presence of Risen Sentries made him believe anything was possible—even serving Kynell. He fanned his ears in and out, looking over the handful of men who had assembled to face of this new danger.

“It is tough to say, General,” he responded to Chiyo. Tengar he viewed as little more than a nuisance. “Once they get to the top, they will come over in droves. But to send out a sortie would be a massacre.”

“See? The top is our best option!”

Chiyo shot Tengar a withering look. “One moment. We must think about this carefully.”

But he had only begun to ponder the problem anew when a young lieutenant came racing up on a voyoté. “General! General Chiyo!” His words were overwhelmed by the sound of trumpets rocketing through the city. It was a long, solitary note, signaling that Lascombe was being invaded.

“It’s the south-east gate! We’ve been betrayed!”

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

 

It had almost been too easy. Did the fools think that every soul in that city was a follower of Kynell? Zyreio knew human nature very well, yet he never ceased to be amazed by its naiveté. Did they not think that somewhere in those swells of men, women, Sentries, and cursed munkke-trophes there would be one person—just one—who would sell out his neighbors for money? Or vengeance? Or even simple curiosity?

Coercion had not been necessary. Zyreio had found his man tied up in a shop attic, foaming at the mouth, almost a full day after a shiver had gone through the very fabric of Rhyvelad. Of course the burst of power had come from Kynell; Zyreio knew the Risen Ones had appeared the moment it happened. Their arrival did not trouble him much. Now the presence of Kynell himself—that was a little surprising. But so far Kynell had done nothing but water down a few buildings. Zyreio’s more immediate concern was the wronged and bitter individual chained to the wall. Those types were usually the most eager for conversation with him.

The man was exhausted and hungry, too worn out and full of self-pity to be surprised at his appearance. He had simply looked up from his position on the floor, with his arm dangling from a chain above him. His greeting, as Zyreio recalled, had been less than ceremonious. Something to the effect of a snarl and a “What do you want?”

“Oh, it’s not about what I want,” Zyreio had purred. He had chosen a fancy wardrobe to impress the man with his power. Humans were especially susceptible to such shallow displays. “It’s about what you’re willing to do to get what
you
want.”

“And what do
I
want?”

“I assume you want revenge for being jilted by a man and his four-cycle old son.”

The pathetic man had started snarling again. “What do you know of it?”

Here Zyreio had felt it appropriate to get down on his level. So he crouched down, making sure he had his complete attention. “Many days ago, you were robbed of four good workers. Then, when you tried to get back a little of your own, a man appeared out of nowhere and chained you to a wall! Now I am here to offer you revenge and you’re asking questions?”

His victim glanced at the door. “How can I get revenge? I’m chained up like a galley slave.”

“Now we’re on the same page. Come, let us talk together like men.”

And so Gorvy had agreed to pick out a handful of men and Sentries like himself, unwillingly trapped in the city. At the appointed hour, armed with blades and violent indignation, they created enough distraction at the south-east gate for Gorvy and three others to loosen the two great bolts that held the gate shut. As the massive metal pins were lifted out of their sockets, the Sentries and fennels outside gave a mighty pull. The gate opened. Of course, Zyreio would have preferred to open the gate with a simple word of command. But that was not how this game was played. And as much as he hated it, he was not in a position to make the rules. Not yet.

__________

Gair ran the voyoté so hard that by the time the lunos had risen in full, the beast was exhausted. When they reached the spot where Zyreio had first appeared, it refused to go another step. Gair dismounted to give the animal a well-deserved rest, but to his dismay, it vanished again into the trees. Perhaps it was just as well. He couldn’t imagine that it would do well in the Chasmite army.

He went the rest of the way on foot. It did not take long until he was a stone’s throw from the Chasmites. They had been beaten into order and were now standing in agitated formation. Occasionally, one would give in to a burst of anger or start pounding its head to shake out whatever evil spirit was tormenting it. When that happened, an officer, himself just as jittery, would whip the soldier until he had cowered back into the ranks or was a gibbering mess on the ground.

BOOK: Obsidian
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