Shade and Sorceress (28 page)

Read Shade and Sorceress Online

Authors: Catherine Egan

Tags: #sorcerer, #Last Days of Tian Di, #Fantasy, #Epic, #middle years, #Trilogy, #quest, #Magic, #Girls, #growing up, #Mothers, #Witches, #Dragons, #tiger, #arctic, #Friendship, #Self-Confidence

BOOK: Shade and Sorceress
9.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
PART 3:
The Sorceress
~
~ Chapter 16 ~
Kyreth sat at his desk,
waiting. When the expected knock came he drew a symbol in the air with his finger. A door appeared and opened. Ka entered, his robe dark with dragon’s blood.
“Your Eminence knows what has transpired,” said the manipulator of fire, bowing.
“What of the Warrior Witch?” demanded Kyreth.
“She slew two of the dragons and injured the other three but made no attempt on our lives. Her purpose was to prevent us from pursuing the girl. We let her live, thinking it best to consult you before taking further action.”
“Did she return the barrier star?”
“She did not. She claims it as a gift from the girl.”
Kyreth stood.
“Eliza is already on her way to the Arctic. Find her and bring her back. Destroy the Shade.”
“It is done,” said Ka. “But what of the Triumvira? They would have killed her. They were most unruly and disrespectful of Your Eminence’s authority...”
Kyreth cut him off. “Do not tarry any longer. I will see to our relations with the Triumvira in person.”
Ka bowed deeply and left the room.
~
The gryphon began to lose altitude as soon as he emerged from the mouth of the volcano. He landed hard on a wedge of rock sticking up out of the sea. As soon as the two girls had climbed off his back, he crawled to the water’s edge, and there he began a slow, stuttering transformation. Before it had always seemed to happen in a flash, but now they saw his beak lengthen into the nose of a dolphin while his wings clung to his back and lifted into a dorsal fin, his feathers and fur smoothed into slick grey skin. He slithered into the water and disappeared. Nell and Eliza lay on the rock. A long chain of volcanic islands surged up out of the sea around them. These volcanoes had been visible from Holburg on clear days, a dark sickle in the far-off sea, sometimes smoking.
“Was that real?” asked Nell at last.
“He’s a Shade, remember,” said Eliza. “He can change.”
“Is he coming back?” asked Nell.
“I dinnay know,” said Eliza.
Neither one of them could have said how much time passed before Charlie crawled out of the sea, morphing back into a gryphon with a beak full of fish. They fell on the fish and ate them raw, relishing in particular the eyeballs, which contained water. They sucked the bones of the fish clean, leaving nothing edible.
When their energy was restored somewhat, Nell said, “What’s happening? Are we in Tian Xia?” She squinted towards the archipelago, knowing they were not.
“We were,” said Eliza. “You traded your memory of it for passage back, Nell. You saved us.”
Nell’s violet eyes widened and her lips parted slightly.
“It’s a long story, aye,” Eliza said. “I told the Boatman to take us home. This must be the closest Crossing to Holburg. We need to find a safer place than this to talk about everything. The Mancers and maybe others will still be looking for us.” She thought about how she had stabbed the King of the Faeries with her dragon claw and a cool thread of fear rippled through her.
“Is Holburg nay the first place they’d look?” demanded Nell.
“We should go quickly, then,” said Eliza. “We need food and supplies before carrying on.”
“Carrying on to where?” asked Nell.
“I’ll explain everything when we’re
safe,
aye,” said Eliza, though she thought she would never truly feel safe again. “Let’s go.”
~
The gryphon flew north towards the archipelago, keeping low over the sea as they approached Holburg so as not to be seen from the town. When he landed on the southern cliffs, Eliza was nearly overcome with emotion. She longed to run into the town, to go back to her father’s house. But it wasn’t safe to show herself, and he wouldn’t be there in any case.
“I’ll get supplies,” Nell volunteered.
“Go through the caves and keep out of sight, just in case,” said Eliza. “I’ll need warm clothes as well as food.”
The gryphon turned back into a pale, limp Charlie. “Bring some cookies, if you can, aye,” he said.
Nell laughed slightly and nodded, then turned and trotted off in the direction of the cave opening. Charlie and Eliza rested by the Lookout Tree. She listened to the familiar surf crashing against the rocks. A few tears rolled down her cheeks, but she wiped them away before Charlie noticed. Here she had been safe and happy, though it seemed another lifetime already. With her father missing, Holburg was not her home anymore.
Nell returned some hours later as the sun was going down to find Eliza and Charlie sleeping soundly.
“Wake up, you two,” she said, nudging Eliza with her foot. Eliza opened her eyes and saw Nell was laden with bags.
“I had to sneak in the back, aye,” she said, her face flushed with excitement. “No one saw me. My parents were watching tv and didnay hear a thing. There are men guarding your house and mine, Eliza! They’re nay from the archipelago, that’s sure. They looked like military men or something, with uniforms. But they were chatting up Hettie Aldrom in the street so it was easy for me to get past them. Look, I’ve got water and food and warm clothes!”
“Water,” said Eliza immediately.
“I mean,
Hettie Aldrom.
She’s nay so very pretty,” Nell went on, unpacking the supplies she had brought.
They drank their fill and ate tuna sandwiches with mayonnaise, crisp fresh apples, and all the cookies they could stuff themselves with. When they were satisfied, Nell said, “Lah, time to tell me
everything.”
So Eliza told her, with Charlie interjecting details and asides, what had happened since their arrival in Tian Xia, and how in leaving Nell had given up her memories. Nell’s shoulders sagged when they reached that part.
“I should have thought of something specific,” she said mournfully. “I should have offered my memories of...oh
anything
other than that! The time I won the archipelegan science fair, or even the time Mentor Frist sneezed in class and snot shot out of both his nostrils and hit the blackboard! I would have been sorry to lose that one too, but to not remember
Tian Xia...!”
“Thank you for doing it, Nell,” said Eliza. “I dinnay know how else we would have escaped. You thought so quickly. I couldnay think at all, I was so scared.”
Nell gave an unhappy sigh.
“So what now?”
Eliza looked at Charlie. “Lah, you’ve been more than fair to me. I had my chance to ask the Triumvira for help, and they nearly killed me. You were right, aye. I’ll go with you to the Arctic.”
Charlie looked down and fiddled with his shoelaces.
“Look,” he said, “I know the Sorceress, a little. Maybe you should just go back to the Mancers. They did save your life, after all.”
Eliza gaped at him. “But, my da,” she said at last.
“Last thing I remember you were all about persuading Eliza to run
away
from the Mancers,” said Nell suspiciously. “What’s going on?”
“What’s going on is, I just dinnay think you should go to the Arctic,” said Charlie fiercely, looking up to meet Eliza’s eyes. “When I made my deal with the Sorceress, I thought...lah, I thought
you
were a Sorceress, I didnay think you were just a girl, and...and I didnay know you. But I’ve changed my mind, aye. I’m nay taking you there.”
“But what will happen to
you
if I dinnay go?” asked Eliza. “It’s your mission to get me there!”
Charlie shrugged. “She cannay get out of her prison. She can only send minions after me. I’d be alright.”
“Charlie...” said Eliza, putting a hand on his arm.
“I can take you back to the Citadel. Both of you. I should nary have...I just didnay know...” He broke off and stared at the ground.
Eliza shook her head. “No. The Mancers willnay help me. The Triumvira willnay help me. I know it’s a terrible risk but there’s no other way. If she cannay get out of her prison, I can try to make the trade from outside it. You have to take me, Charlie.”
“I dinnay want to see anything bad happen to you,” he muttered.
“She has nothing to gain by hurting me or my da!” insisted Eliza. “Everyone knows I cannay really do any Magic! Dinnay you think there’s a chance she’ll take the book and let us go?”
“Of course there’s a chance,” said Charlie. “But there’s a chance she willnay, too. She’s...unpredictable.”
“Can either of you think of
any other way
I’ve got even a chance to free my da?”
Charlie and Nell were silent.
“Then it’s decided. And if you’ll nay take me, Charlie, I’ll find another way to get there. I’ll walk the whole way if I have to.”
Charlie nodded his head slowly. “I’ll take you, aye,” he conceded.
“Then what are we waiting for?” asked Nell.
“Oh Nell...” said Eliza, and broke off, unsure how to say it. Nell understood just by looking at her and immediately protested.
“I’m coming
with
you, Eliza! I’m nay just leaving you to go face the Xia Sorceress all by yourself!”
“It’s too dangerous, Nell,” said Eliza. “And Charlie will fly faster with just one passenger.”
“No! I want to
help
you.”
“There’s nothing to help with. I’ll just give her the book and hope for the best, aye. I’m nay putting your life at risk too.”
“You
cannay
leave me behind!”
But Eliza had gotten a fixed, stony look on her face, and she would not budge.
It was night now, the sky clear and full of stars. They had not bathed since leaving Swarn’s house in the Dead Marsh and Eliza and Nell could still smell that awful swamp, the Wakabu-kraw, on their clothes. So they walked along the cliff to where it crumbled into a slope and a ragged trail led down to the water’s edge. Here they stripped down and splashed into the dark water, bright phosphorescence sparking and dancing around them. Not so long ago, sneaking out here at night to swim among the glittering phosphorescence had constituted a great adventure for Nell and Eliza, but greater events had overtaken them and now it was a simple matter of getting clean. They took their time washing off in the cool salt water, then put on some of the clothes Nell had brought from her house. Nell was taller than Eliza and the clothes were a bit big on her but it felt good to be wearing something clean. They found Charlie dozing under the Lookout Tree again. Eliza was so tired that as soon as she lay down a dreamless sleep swallowed her whole. She did not wake until just before dawn. Charlie was shaking her by the shoulder.
“We should go before the whole town wakes up, aye,” he said gently. “If you still want to go, that is.”
Eliza nodded her head blearily. Nell woke too and looked at them as if she was about to cry.
“I want to come with you,” she said in a small voice. Eliza hugged her tightly. Though neither of them said it out loud, they both wondered if they would ever see each other again.
“We’ll be back soon,” said Eliza, trying to believe it.
“I know,” said Nell. “Good luck.”
Charlie became a gryphon again and Eliza climbed onto his back. He took the bags of food and water and clothes in his talons and took off into the faded pre-dawn sky. Nell remained alone on the cliff’s edge, watching her dearest friend become smaller and smaller until she was just a speck over the still dark water, and then she couldn’t see her at all any more. She turned and made her way slowly home across the island.
~
Swarn sat against the wall in the Hall of the Ancients, breathing hard. The carved head of a dragon faced her from its grotto in the opposite wall. Her right arm hung useless at her side. Its strength would come back in time, but for now the Mancers had crippled her and she was defenseless. The pain of it was searing.
“She is on her way,” said the Oracle, sitting comfortably on her eight folded legs and looking very serene. “They will not find her. Nia draws her on.”
Swarn did not answer. Letting Eliza go had been wrong, foolish. She had endangered the worlds. Eliza was taking a weapon to Nia and Swarn had helped her. She couldn’t explain what had come over her in the mountains. Looking Rea’s daughter in the eyes, she had not been able to make a third attempt on her life. And yet, of course, in allowing her to go to Nia, she was letting her go to her death in any case. It would have been more merciful to strike her down quickly. What would Rea have wanted her to do? But if Rea were alive, the girl would never be in such a desperate, hopeless position.
“You idiot witch,” said the King of the Faeries, limping into the hall, his face tight with pain. “Have you completely lost your mind? And do you know, I was just swarmed by the Faithful, who insist this girl’s destiny must be fulfilled and blah blah blah. The
Faithful,
for the Ancients’ sakes!”

Other books

The chuckling fingers by Mabel Seeley
Tragic Magic by Laura Childs
The Lewis Man by Peter May
The Last Letter by Fritz Leiber
Orbs II: Stranded by Nicholas Sansbury Smith
Blood Hunt by Lee Killough
The Suicide Murders by Howard Engel
Treva's Children by David L. Burkhead
Box Girl by Lilibet Snellings
Mystery by the Sea by David Sal