Stone of Tears (89 page)

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Authors: Terry Goodkind

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic

BOOK: Stone of Tears
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Kahlan realized Chandalen had told them nothing. “One of the dead men, off in that direction, is General Riggs, of the Imperial Order. Orsk here,” she pointed down to the one eyed man, “killed most of the men of the Order. They came here to get me. Prindin killed our guards, and his brother, and he tried to kill me.” Whispers and gasps spread among the men.

Captain Ryan’s eyes looked like they would pop from his head. “Prindin! Not Prindin. Dear spirits, why?”

She waited until silence settled over the men. She spoke in a quiet tone. “Prindin was a baneling.”

Stunned silence was all she heard for a moment, and then the worried whispers of “baneling” spread back through the ranks.

“You men are doing a fine job. But now you must fight on without me. I must get to Aydindril.” Disappointed murmurs filled the air. “I would not leave you if I did not know you were up to the task. You have all proven your worth and your heart in battle. You are men the equal of any.”

The men stood a little taller. They listened intently to her, as if hearing their general.

“I am proud of each and every one of you. You are heros of the Midlands. This army of the Imperial Order, threat though it is, is representative of a larger threat to the Midlands, to the world of the living. That the Keeper would send a baneling to stop me is proof of that.

“I believe the Imperial Order is aligned with the Keeper. I must now turn my attention to this threat. I know you will fight on, as you have sworn, and show the enemy no quarter. I know the days of the Order are numbered.”

Kahlan realized that her neck didn’t hurt. She touched her fingers to the bite. It was gone. Suddenly she felt that perhaps she had escaped the Keeper’s grasp in more ways than one.

With a serious demeanor, she regarded the young faces that intently watched her. “Though you will fight on without quarter, you must not let yourselves become what you are fighting. The enemy fights to kill, and to enslave. You fight for life, and freedom. Keep that always uppermost in your hearts.

“Do not let yourselves become what you hate. I know how easy it is to do. It almost happened to me.”

Kahlan put a fist into the air. “I promise to never forget a one of you. Promise me, that when this is finished, both the threat from the Imperial Order, and the threat from the Keeper, that you will one day all come to Aydindril, so the Midlands may honor your sacrifice.”

The men all lifted a fist in pledge. A cheer went up.

“Captain Ryan, please tell the men at the other camps my words. I wish I could speak to them all myself, but I must leave at once.”

He assured her it would be done. Kahlan lifted the sword in both hands, holding it out.

“King Wyborn wielded this sword in battle to protect his land. The Mother Confessor has wielded it in defense of the Midlands. I now place it in capable hands.”

Captain Ryan’s fingers carefully lifted the sword from hers. He held it as if holding the crown of Galea itself. He gave her a beaming grin.

“I will carry it with pride, Mother Confessor. Thank you for everything you have taught us. When you first found us, we were boys. Thank you for making us into men. You have taught us not only to fight better but, more importantly, what it means to be soldiers, and to be protectors of the Midlands.”

He took the hilt in his fist and held the sword skyward as he turned to his men.

“Three cheers for the Mother Confessor!”

As she listened to the three wild cheers, Kahlan realized that in all her life she had never heard anyone cheer the Mother Confessor before. She had to strain to keep her surprise from showing. She lifted a kiss on her fingers and thanked them all.

“Captain Ryan, I wish to take Nick, and I will need two other horses, also.”

Chandalen lurched forward. “Now why do you need horses!”

She lifted an eyebrow to him. “Chandalen, I have an arrow wound in my leg. I can hardly stand, much less walk. I need to ride, if I am to get to Aydindril. I hope you do not think me weak because of it.”

His brow knotted up. “Well, no. Of course you cannot be expected to walk.” His eyes turned angry again. “But why do you want two other horses?”

“If I ride, you must, too.”

“Chandalen does not need to ride! I am strong!”

She leaned close and spoke in his tongue. “
Chandalen, I know the Mud People do not ride horses. I would not expect you would know how. I will teach you. You will do fine. When you return to your people, you will have a new skill that none of them have. They will be impressed. The women will see that you are brave.

He gave a suspicious grunt and still held the scowl. “Then why do we need the third horse?”

“We’re taking Orsk.”

“What!”

Kahlan shrugged. “You can’t draw a bow until your arm recovers. How will you protect me? Orsk can wield an axe with his one good arm, and you can throw a spear with yours.”

He rolled his eyes. “I am not going to be able to talk you out of this, am I?”

“No.” Kahlan gave him a small smile. “Now, we better get our things and be on our way.”

She surveyed the men one last time. Her men. She gave them a salute of her fist to her heart.

They all silently returned the salute.

She had lost much with these men. She had gained much.

“Take care. Each and every one of you.”

CHAPTER 48

“So, when are we going to meet your people, the ones who will guide Sister Verna and me to the Palace?”

Du Chaillu glanced back over her shoulder, pulling her mass of black hair out of the way to peer at him. She was leading her horse. Richard had grown tired of her complaints, and when she finally refused to ride any longer, he decided not to make an issue of it and let her walk. Richard had decided to walk for a while himself. Sister Verna rode behind them, watching Du Chaillu like an owl from atop her horse.

“Soon.” Her cool, distant expression disturbed him. “Very soon.”

Her attitude had slowly changed since they had left the Majendie land, as they went deeper into hers. She was no longer chatty and open, but had grown haughty and distant. Sister Verna rarely took her eyes from Du Chaillu, and Du Chaillu, in turn, didn’t miss a move the Sister made. They were like two cats with their fur standing on end, silent and sill, but ready to spring. It wouldn’t have surprised him if soon he saw their teeth bared.

Richard had the feeling the two of them were constantly testing each other, but in ways he couldn’t see. By the Sister’s attitude, he didn’t think she was pleased about what she was discovering. Richard could tell, from experience, when the Sister was touching her Han. He recognized the shroud of it in her eyes. She was touching it now.

In the gathering darkness, Du Chaillu turned abruptly from the wide forest trail, leading them on a narrow path through the thick, tangled growth. Dark water holding dense thickets of reeds and broad leafed plants with pink and yellow, trumpet shaped flowers lurked to the sides. Richard’s eyes scanned the shadows among the trees.

Du Chaillu came to a halt at the edge of a sandy, open area. She lifted the reins of her horse to Richard. “The others will join us in this place. Wait here, magic man.”

The term she used to address him lifted his hackles. He took the reins. “Richard. My name is Richard. I’m the one who saved your neck. Remember?”

Du Chaillu looked at him thoughtfully. “Please don’t ever think I do not appreciate what you have done for me, for my people. Your kindness will be always in my heart.” Her eyes seemed to go out of focus, and her voice softened with regret. “But you are still a magic man.” Her back straightened. “Wait here.”

She turned and disappeared into the forest around the clearing. Richard stood watching her vanish as Sister Verna dismounted. She took the reins to all three horses.

“She is going to try to kill you now,” she said, as if telling him that she thought it would rain tomorrow.

Richard glared at her. “I saved her life.”

Sister Verna started leading the horses to the trees. “You are a magic man to these people. They kill magic men.”

Richard didn’t want to believe her, but he did. “Then use your Han to prevent it, Sister, to preserve life, as you told Du Chaillu she should do with her new child.”

Sister Verna stroked her horse’s chin. “She has use of her Han, too. That is why the Sisters have always avoided these people; some of them can use their Han, but in a way we do not understand.

“I have tried little things on her, to test her. The spells I send at her disappear like pebbles dropped down a well. And, they do not go unnoticed. Du Chaillu knows what I try to do, and somehow is able to annul it. I told you before, these people are dangerous. I have fought every step of the way to prevent this. I warned you not to swing the axe. You saw my efforts as misguided.”

Richard gritted his teeth. His left hand gripped the hilt of the sword. He could feel the bumps of the word Truth woven into the wire, and through it the heat of its rage.

“I have no intention of killing anyone.”

“Good. Keep the anger of the sword out. You are going to need it if you are to survive. They are surrounding us as we speak; that much my Han can tell me.”

Richard felt as if things were suddenly spinning out of his control. He didn’t want to hurt anyone. He hadn’t saved Du Chaillu just to have to fight her people. “Then I suggest you call on your Han, Sister Verna. I am the Seeker, not an assassin. I’m not going to kill your enemies for you.”

She took a few strides toward him. Her voice was tight and controlled. “I told you, my Han is not going to be able to help. I would end the threat if I could, but I can’t. Du Chaillu has power against magic. I am begging you, Richard, defend yourself.”

His eyes narrowed. “Perhaps you just don’t want to help. You’re angry that I spoiled the arrangement the Sisters had with the Majendie. You plan on watching, like you always do, just to see what I’ll do.”

She slowly shook her head in frustration. “Do you really think, Richard, that I would spend half my life in my duty to find you and carry you safely to the Palace of the Prophets, only to watch you killed when we are on the doorstep of my home? Do you actually believe that I wouldn’t stop this if I could? Is your opinion of me that low?”

His impulse was to argue with her, but instead he considered her words. What she said made sense. Richard gave an apologetic shake of his head, then quickly glanced into the shadows. “How many are there?”

“Perhaps thirty.”

“Thirty.” In frustration, he folded his arms. “How am I to defend against thirty, by myself?”

She looked out into the darkness a moment, then cast her hands forward. A wind rose, carrying a veil of sand and dirt outward into the blackness. “That will slow them for a short time, but not stop them.”

She turned her brown eyes on him once more. “Richard, I have used my Han to seek an answer. The only thing my Han tells me is that you must use the prophecy to survive. You have named yourself the bringer of death, as the prophecy foretells. The prophecy is about you.

“You must use the prophecy if you are to defeat that many. The prophecy says the holder of the sword is able to call the dead forth, call the past into the present. Somehow, that is what you must do in order to survive—call forth the dead, call the past into the present.”

Richard unfolded his arms. “We are about to be overrun by thirty people you say are going to try to kill me, and you give me riddles? Sister, I told you before that I don’t know what it means. If you want to help, then tell me something I can use.”

She turned away, walking back toward the horses. “I have. Sometimes prophecies are meant to give aid to the one named by sending help across time, providing a key that may open a door to enlightenment. I believe this prophecy is such. This prophecy is about you; you must find its use. I don’t know its meaning.”

She stopped and turned to look back over her shoulder. “You forget, I tried to keep us out of the hands of these people. You said that in this matter, you were not my student, but the Seeker. As the Seeker, you must use this prophecy. You are the one who got us into this. Only you can get us out.”

Richard stared after her as she gentled the nervous animals. He had thought about this prophecy before, wondering, ever since she had told it to him, what it could mean. Sometimes he had felt as if he was on the verge of insight, but the feeling always slipped away from him before coming to fruition.

He had used the sword many times, and knew its capabilities. He also knew his own limitations. Against one, the sword was virtually invincible, but he was flesh and blood. He was no expert swordsman; he had always depended on sword’s magic in the past to make the difference. But he was only one man, and they were many. The sword could only be in one place at one time.

“Are they good fighters?” he asked.

“The Baka Ban Mana are without peer. They have special fighters, blade masters, who train from sun up to sun down, every day. And then they train by the light of the moon. Fighting is almost a religion to them.

“When I was young, I saw a Baka Ban Mana blade master who had gotten into the garrison in Tanimura kill nearly fifty well-armed soldiers before he was taken down. They fight like they are invincible spirits. Some people believe they are.”

“That’s just great,” he said under his breath.

“Richard,” she said, without looking to him, “I know we don’t get along. We could look at the same thing and each see something different. We are from different worlds, both of us are headstrong, and neither of us likes the other very much.

“But I want you to know that I am not trying to be obstinate about this. You spoke the truth in that this is about you as the Seeker, not as my student. In a way I do not understand, it is also bundled up with prophecy. You are riding a ripple in events. I am but a bystander in this. If you die, however, I die, too.”

She at last lifted her eyes to his. “I don’t know how to help you, Richard. There are people closing around us, to watch what will happen, and I know that if I try to interfere, I will be killed by them. This is about prophecy, you, and the Baka Ban Mana. I play no part in it, other than to die, if you do.

“I don’t know what the prophecy means, and I realize you don’t either, but keep it in mind, and maybe its use will come as you need it. Try to use your Han, if you can.”

Richard stood with his hands on his hips. “All right, Sister, I’ll try. I’m just sorry I’m no good at riddles. And if I’m killed, well, thank you for trying to help me.”

He looked up at the sky, at the thin veil of clouds that dimmed the moon. The darkness helped hide those who came. There was no reason it couldn’t be used to his advantage, too.

Richard was a woods guide, at home in the darkness of the woods. He had spent countless hours at games like this, with other guides. This was his element, too, not just theirs. He didn’t have to do it their way. Crouching, he moved off, away from the Sister and their horses, and became one with the moon shadows.

He found the first of them looking the wrong way. Still and silent, he watched the dark form wrapped in loose clothes, squatted on one knee, watching the Sister. Clutched tightly in one fist was a short spear, its butt planted in the sand. Two more spears lay on the ground.

Richard concentrated on controlling his breathing to keep from making a sound as he glided closer. Moving, stopping, moving again, he approached ever closer. His hand reached out. Inches from the spear, he froze as the head turned.

The figure sprang up, but Richard was close enough. He snatched the spear away. As the man whirled, Richard spun the spear and whacked him across the side of the head. He went down before he had a chance raise an alarm.

One down, Richard thought as he straightened, and without having to kill him. At least, he hoped he hadn’t killed him.

Slipping out of the darkness, a figure appeared. To the side, another. And then another. Richard turned about and saw more appearing. Before he could move away, he was surrounded.

The forms were wrapped in bark colored loose clothes so they would blend in with the surrounding country. Cloth wound around their heads hid all but their dark eyes, which shined with grim determination.

There was nowhere to run. Richard sidestepped into the clearing as the circle of forms moved with him. More were closing in all about. Richard turned, watching them as they formed two rings around him.

Maybe he could still do this without killing. “Who speaks for you?”

The inner ring of robed figures dropped their round shields and cast their extra spears to the ground, points toward Richard. Each clasped their remaining spear in two hands like a staff. Their eyes never left him. The outer ring of warriors cast their shields and all their spears to the ground and put their hands to their sword hilts, but didn’t draw them.

A soft rhythmic chant began, and the two circles slowly began moving in opposite directions.

Richard walked backwards in a tight circle, trying to keep watch on all of them. “Who speaks for you!”

The slow chant continued in time with their sideways steps.

A figure wrapped from head to foot like the others rose up on a rock beyond the outer circle.

“I am Du Chaillu. I speak for the Baka Ban Mana.”

Richard could hardly believe this was happening. “Du Chaillu, I saved your life. Why would you want to murder us?”

“The Baka Ban Mana are not here to murder you. We are here to execute you for stealing our sacred lands.”

“Du Chaillu, I’ve never even seen your land before. I had nothing to do with whatever happened.”

“Magic men took our lands from us. They laid down our laws. You are a magic man. You bear the sins of those magic men before you. You even bear their mark, to prove it. You must do as all before, who we could catch. You must face the circle. You must die.”

“Du Chaillu, I told you the killing must stop.”

“It is easy to proclaim the killing must end, when you are the one about to die.”

“How dare you say that to me! I risked my life to stop the killing! I risked my life for you!”

She spoke softly. “I know, Richard. For that I will always honor you. I would have born your sons, had you asked it of me. I would lay my life down for you. For what you have done, you will live on as a hero to my people. I will tie a prayer to my dress, that the spirits take you tenderly to their hearts.

“But you are a magic man. The old law says that we must practice every day, and be better with a blade than any other people born. We have been told that we must kill every magic man we can catch, or the Spirit of the Dark will take the world of life into the dark.”

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