Read The Brotherhood: Blood Online

Authors: Kody Boye

Tags: #Fantasy, #Fiction, #Epic

The Brotherhood: Blood (86 page)

BOOK: The Brotherhood: Blood
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Are those the boars Miko was talking about?

If so, it was no wonder the Elf didn’t want them in the woods.

“Red-eyes.”

Startled, Odin looked up to find Sunskin sitting nearby, legs planted on the ground and hands hanging limply in her lap. “Yes?” he frowned.

“You drame of things that made you shake.”
“I did?”
“You did.”
“I…” He paused. “You woke me up, didn’t you?”
“You were not conscious, but you did wake, if only in spirit.”
“I saw you. You… had your hand on my chest.”
“To still your shakes. Yes. I did.”
“Thank you.”
“There is no need to thank me. Come—sit by me, child of Felnon.”

Odin turned, surveyed the area and, finding both Miko and Nova asleep, crawled across the room. He settled down beside the Ogre with the slightest bit of unsurety.

She could crush me with one finger if she wanted to.

Still, that meant nothing. She opened her home to them—what reason would she have to hurt him?

None.

In the back of his mind, he knew Miko would spare no mercy to someone who hurt him, not even his own mother.
“Was there something you needed?” he asked, taking a moment to brush his hair out of his eyes.
“No.”
“Oh. All right.”
“I simply wanted company. My son spent a long night staring at the firebugs.”
“I wanted to ask you about that,” Odin mumbled, looking down at his hands. “Sunskin… can he… can he…”
“Can he what, child?”
“Can he see things I can’t?”
“How am I to know what he sees and what you cannot?”

“He’ll sit in one spot for hours at a time, staring at nothing but the sea or the fireflies we watched last night. I worry about him. Whenever he gets like that, he won’t answer me. He won’t even move or breathe when he’s looking at whatever it is he’s looking at.”

“Have you considered that there are things only certain beings can see?”
“Yes. Me and Nova talked about that on the way to Neline. Miko’s also mentioned it himself.”
“Then what is there to question if you already have an answer?”

“That’s the thing—I
don’t
have an answer.”

“Like I said, I am unable to know what you see, nor do I know what my son sees. It would not surprise me if he saw things the eyes cannot see. His blood, though pure, is tainted. His father took root of his mother’s beautiful body and corrupted it in ways that you could not begin to imagine, child. What other reason would a beautiful creature with eyes of gold and skin of silver let such a monstrosity touch her?”

“Are they really that bad?”

“Even the most sinister of Goblins or the most disgusting of Orcs could not begin to match the evil that rests within a Drow’s heart. They say you cannot be born evil, but that is a lie, my friend. That is a lie indeed. Eons ago, when the world was young and the beautiful, White Elves had just built their shining city, a group of men and women broke into a sealed chamber and stole a book that held our world’s most darkest secrets.”

“What book?”

“A book so filthy, so corrupt, that any who touched it lost a part of themselves. Their skin turned grey, their bodies craved blood, so much so that they became vampires—bloodsuckers, things that stalked the night and fed of the weak and innocent. But that is not all the book did. No. Such a book could not taint one so just by touching it.”

“What turned them into Drow then?”

“The magic inside the book blackened their hearts and cursed their blood, their minds, their seed. That magic was Necoromancy, bone magery, flesh summoning, the gift to bring a corpse back to life—nothing inside that book was ever meant to be read, nor should it have ever been written.”

“So the magic inside it cursed them forever?”

“And turned them into a completely different race,” the Ogre nodded. “You must understand, my child—my son is not a pure-bloded creature like you or I. His mind endures an endless state of torture and his body lives in a constantly state of agony just to keep itself alive. He is by no means perfect.”

“What’s the point of living if you’re always in pain though?” he frowned. “Why suffer with it?”

“Because there are greater things in this world than death,” the Ogre said, “especially when there are much worse things to suffer afterward.”

 

Rising from sleep in a tangled yet elegant grace, Miko rose from his spot on the floor, arched his back and pushed his arms over his head, flexing nearly-gleaming muscles in the light of a new day. He stood there for a moment, reveling in the warmth the sun bathed im in, before turning to face Odin and Sunskin. “Hello,” he nodded, bowing his head. “Good morning Mother, Odin.”

“Good morning,” the Ogre said. “You slept well?”
“As always. You?”
“As always.”

Smiling, Miko stood, grabbed his cape, and secured it around his neck, but not before whipping the folds free of dirt. “Odin,” the Elf said.

“Yes sir?”
“Would you be wiling to walk with my today, maybe experience a little more of the culture here?”
“Of course. Why wouldn’t I?”
“Maybe you’re not one for walking.”
“If I weren’t one forwalking,” Odin chuckled, “I don’t think I would’ve asked my father to let me join the military.”
“True,” the Elf smirked. The tip of an exposed ear twitched just before Nova mumbled something under his breath.

Did I just see what I think I saw?

Could the Elf really have heard the sound before it actually happened?

No. That’s just silly.

Even so, he could not doubt what he had just seen.

You learn something new every day,
he thought, pushing himself to his feet.

“We’ll be back around midday, Mother,” Miko said, setting a hand on Odin’s shoulder. “Please tell Nova that we won’t be gone for long.”

“I will,” Sunskin said. “Be safe, and stay away from Bafran. Avoid his home and take the easy path. There is no need for conflict.”

“I understand. Thank you.”

Bowing his head, Miko gestured for Odin to follow.

 

“How come you wanted to take me for a walk?” Odin frowned, sliding up alongside his knight master as a group of Ogres passed. “Is it because you wanted to get away from the mound?”

“No,” Miko said. “I want this stay to be benficial to your knighthood, just like your experience in Neline was.”

“What are you going to teach me here?”

“Whatever comes naturally. As you’re probably aware, I’ve never played the role of a teacher, which is why our journey to Neline was fractured and disjointed. I should have made more of an effort to teach you.”

“You taught me things, sir. You showed me how to send better messages with magic, how do defend myself in a fight, how to cope with situations outside my own.”

“I’m glad you think so, Odin. In all actuality, hwoever, you taught yourself most of those things.”

“How—”

“I showed you few techniques and even fewer methods of defense. Icklard and Domnin were the ones who showed you how to send messages. I merely instructed you in how to send them long distances. And as to combat and dealing with outside situations, you defended yourself and learned to handle things through experience.”

“But—”
“I have done things normal social interaction could have taught you.”
“That’s the thing,” Odin mumbled, bowing his head. “I never had any.”

The Elf stopped in midstride. “Odin,” Miko said, setting both hands on his shoulders. “Such isolation normally drives men mad. The fact that you survived shows you’re capable of handling things most normal individuals cannot.”

“That doesn’t matter,” Odin sighed, trying to turn his eyes up to face his knight master, but unable to do so. “I was locked in a tower for two years—so what? It’s not like I wasn’t
completely
devoid of attention. I had Jordan and Daughtry, not counting the healer I had when I was sick.”

“That doesn’t matter either—you
still
had
very little
interaction with people.”

“I—”

“What’s the longest time the weapons master stayed with you, Odin? What was the longest magic lesson you had, or the longest time the healer spent with you in that tower?”

“I don’t—”

“Then my question is answered.” The Elf pulled his hands away. This time, Odin managed to lift his head to look the creature in the eyes. “Do you see my point?” he asked.

“I think so.”

“Strength does not only lie in brawn or brain, but spirit. When trapped, a soul begins to wilt and fade like a flower. When that flower dies—when it finally looses all its petals—it can no longer be saved. The same can be said for the soul. Its fire can only burn for a certain amount of time before it is finally extinguished.”

“Why are you telling me this?”

“Because you are stronger than most ordinary men,” Miko said, turning and beginning back down the road. “Sometimes… even stronger than me.”

Odin didn’t know what to say.

As the Elf continued down the road, hair whipping and cape blowing in the afternoon breeze, Odin couldn’t help but wonder why his master had just said that.

His doubts quickly faded as Miko gained distance.
Picking himself up, he took a deep breath, ran his hand over his eyes, and chased his knight master down the road.
If anything, that brief conversation would only strengthen their relationship.

 

In a dark, wooded area near the end of the village, Miko set his hand on a piece of bark and extended his arm, curling the fingernails on his free hand until each inch-long nailed touched one another.

“What’re you doing?” Odin asked.
“I’m going to show you something you should only attempt in the most dire of situations.”
“What is it?”
“Powerful, powerful earth magic.”
“You mean using the elements from nature?”
“That’s exactly what I mean, Odin.”

Bracing himself, Miko pushed his right arm against the tree. Muscles tightening and brow furrowing in concentration, the Elf closed his eyes. Magic tickled the air like sparks from a fire, flickering around Odin’s head and popping his ears. Occasionally, he grimaced and nearly reached up to fumble with them, but stopped upon noticing a change in Miko’s demeanor. What originally appeared to be a troubled, concentrated creature now appeared stoic—calm, clear, and seemingly without a worry in the world.

“Miko?” he frowned. “Sir?”

The Elf pulled away from the tree.

Autonomous, he turned, eyes still closed. His arm, still outstretched, slowly lifted until it rested at an oblique angle. The other did the same. Each fingers spread until the muscles in his hands visible tensed.

“As you can see,” the Elf said, lips unmoving, but somehow able to produce sound, “I have nearly abandoned my sentient inhibitions.”

“Sir?”

“Watch me, Odin. Watch me become one.”

One?

The Elf’s eyes opened. Green fire laced the rims of his purple irises.

Before Odin could begin to say something, the tips of Miko’s bare feet began to change. Curling, twisting from the ground up, roots the size of vines entered the Elf’s ankles and wrapped around his legs, bulging his skin out as though he were afflicted with parasitic worms bent on destroying him from the inside out. What appeared to be only a brief transformation was refuted as his chest began to change color. Black veins spread across quaking abdominals, white sap leaked from weeping pores, and deep groves appeared in his chest as skin softened, then hardened over with bark.

He’s… he’s…

“Changing into a tree.”

Before his head became shrouded in bark. Miko closed his eyes and pursed his lips.

From the tips of his long, sharpened fingernails, tiny, miniscule branches began to grow, spreading like twigs scattered amongst the forest floor. Buds the color of the brightest lime sprouted along the way of these branches until, finally, they bloomed into brilliant, yellow flowers, opening like carnivorous maws threatening to swallow the whole entirel.

The Elf’s body whole, his presence covered in bark, his person began to thicken, building itself layer upon layer, until it appeared to be nothing more than a simple, misplaced tree standing in the middle of the open clearing.

Odin couldn’t believe his eyes.
His knight master—a living, breathing piece of flesh—had just turned into a tree.
“Suh-Sir?” he asked, stepping forward, not sure whether to touch what had just been the Elf or not. “Are… are you there?”

I am here,
Miko’s voice said.

“How… how did you—”

By touching the tree and gathering its presence inside me, I have been able to take my essence and transform into the construct you now see before you.

“But this means—”

Yes, my friend—this means every rock, every tree, every
leaf
could be watching you.

BOOK: The Brotherhood: Blood
10.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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