The Standing Dead - Stone Dance of the Chameleon 02 (27 page)

BOOK: The Standing Dead - Stone Dance of the Chameleon 02
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'And it will be hard on the girls without a connection to -' said one man.

'Some wounds can never heal,' Ginkga said over him as if she was unaware he had been speaking. Carnelian noticed many of the women had hardened their faces.

'We brought a Twostone lad home with us,' Fern said.

'A hearth will be found for him,' his mother said, which pleased Carnelian.

'What of the salt you carried?' a voice demanded and, round the margins of the room, the men looked at Fern and Loskai with narrowed eyes.

'None was lost,' said
Fern
, and he stepped forward folding back the cloth from a bundle in his hand to reveal a long yellow cake. He placed it carefully at Harth's feet. She picked the salt up and it was passed back, through the women, to the man who had spoken. He examined it minutely, before, satisfied, he reverently rewrapped it.

A grumbling rose up, mainly from the men.

Galewing pointed a four-fingered hand. The lepers extracted from us more than twice the usual tolls. You're responsible for that loss.'

Fern flushed while Loskai began protesting his innocence.

'Not one, but both of you will bear the responsibility for this,' snapped Galewing. 'Unless you wish to blame the dead?'

Loskai seemed to consider it, but he saw, as quickly as Carnelian did, that the Elders would not stand for this.

A woman spoke out. 'Are you more concerned about salt than the safe return of our children?'

This isn't a case of one or the other, it is -'

'I think you'll find, Galewing,' said Akaisha, 'the Tribe has lost no salt.'

The leper tolls -'

'Perhaps the only advantage of not returning through the Valleys was that my son and his companions paid nothing to the lepers.'

'But . .. but their long detour caused more salt to be consumed,' blustered the Elder.

'We've seen with our own eyes the unbroken loaf they've brought back and there's a little more salt besides as well as twenty and eighteen bronze, double-headed coins.'

She looked at Loskai. 'Isn't that so, child?'

Loskai was forced to give a nod.

Akaisha turned back to Galewing. 'I recall you brought back two loaves and fifteen coins. If I'm not in error, this means that, of the twenty loaves this Assembly gave into your keeping, more have been returned than would've been expected from an uneventful journey to the Mountain.'

The veteran frowned, then ducked her an apology but still looked unhappy as he fingered one of the salt beads in his hair.

People were looking at Galewing, their raised eyebrows registering surprise. Akaisha twitched a smile at her son.

'What I still can't understand is how the Manila could come so early to the Twostone koppie,' said Kyte, looking haunted.

The Elders looked uneasy.

'We debated that enough when you returned,' said Harth. 'It's a mystery without solution. Now we must concentrate on the issue for which this Assembly was called.'

She moved out and turned to face the Elders. 'You've seen them and know why they came here. Think hard, my mothers and fathers, for the Tribe has never been in greater danger. What are we to do with these Standing Dead?'

'Could we not send them back to the Mountain?' said one man.

Harth turned to her son, her white eyebrows raised. 'Well?'

Loskai looked at Osidian with a cold smile broadening on his lips. Still smiling, he shook his head. 'I don't think so, my mother. If this one could find his way across the Earthsky to the Twostone, I'm sure he could as easily bring the dragons here.'

They told me they wouldn't,' Fern blurted out.

Harth turned on him gaping. They knew where the Koppie lies?'

Fern grimaced. He glanced at Carnelian apologetically. They know
who
we are.'

Harth's eyes ignited. 'You
actually
told them?'

They saw it in the pictures on my father's hand.'

Carnelian saw the veterans regard their palms as if they had suddenly snagged them on thorns.

'He looked at the pictures and spoke the name of the Tribe,' said Fern.

Akaisha rose and surveyed the Assembly. 'You see? If the bodies of our dead had been left behind they would've led the vengeance of the Mountain here.'

Ignoring her, Harth drew closer to Fern. 'Is that why you brought them, child?'

Fern looked at the ground, shook his head. 'No, my mother. I brought them because they asked me to.'

Voices rang out in anger.

Harth waited until the hubbub had subsided. The
y asked you to?' she said, quietl
y.

They helped me save the souls of my nearest kin.'

They led you into sacrilege,' said Harth, severely.

They asked for sanctuary.' He opened his arms to the Assembly. 'My mothers, my fathers, you can all see how badly they've suffered at the hands of their own kind.'

They are of the Standing Dead,' she shouted into his face.

Harth turned her fury on Carnelian, who flinched seeing the hatred in her eyes.

They take our children. Fern ...'

'Yes, my mother?'

'Give this one my words.'

'But, my mother, one of them —'

'Just do as you're told,' a man growled from off to one side.

Fern lowered his eyes, then looked round at Carnelian. 'Mother Harth wants me to translate for her,' he said, in Vulgate.

Carnelian gave a nod.

Harth was already speaking.

Fern translated. 'Do you know how much we hate you?'

With a glance to Osidian, Carnelian answered. 'I know you've every reason.'

When Fern translated the Master's words for her, Harth laughed without humour. She said something in a sarcastic tone.

'Every reason?' As Fern was translating, Harth was already saying more.

'You take our children,' said Fern keeping her in the corner of his eye.

A man spoke.

'The best of us.'

A woman.

'I lost a daughter and a son,' translated Fern, his face gleaming with sweat. Others, mostly women, were calling things out and Fern was trying to relay as much as he could.

'Since I was born, my hearth's lost ten children.' 'Mine, twelve.'

'My grand-daughter just last year.'

Ginkga pushed past Harth and came to glare up into Carnelian's face. He could see the tears catching in her wrinkles. He could feel the drizzle of her spittle as she accused him. Fern's voice came from behind her.

'I've just returned from the Mountain where I had to give up my grand-daughter.'

Her face crunched tighter with her sorrow and Carnelian found he could no longer bear it and dropped his gaze in shame. He cringed as the woman went on, her words so violent Carnelian expected to feel her clawing at him. The tirade shifted to Fern.

Carnelian looked up and saw the Plainsman flinching.

'She was saying... her daughter's sorrow ... the pain.' Fern was crying.

'We can hardly let them go if they know who we are,' she shouted at him.

'And where to find us,' someone else cried out.

'Do any of the other tribes know they're here?' Harth demanded.

'I can't see how ... I can't see how they could,' said Fern.

Carnelian felt her eyes on him again, measuring him up.

Their bodies must never be found. We must bury them so deep in the Mother that even a thousand Rains will not dig them out.'

Carnelian stared at the woman and saw Fern was sharing his horror.

They came to us painted in the colours of the Skyfather,' he cried. He pointed at Osidian. That one bears a mark as if the Skyfather himself kissed his brow.'

The Assembly ignited into uproar. Several men pushed through the women to see for themselves. Withstanding Osidian's stare, they squinted up into his face and then fell to arguing.

Harth's voice carried above the din. 'How can we possibly let them live?'

She had the attention of the room.

'Just because the Gatherer's not due until the year after next doesn't mean the Mountain will not find out about these two.'

'Carnelian, do you understand all this hysteria?' Osidian's clear and ringing Quya chilled the room to silence.

The Elders stared at Osidian, who continued to focus on Carnelian as if they were alone. 'Well, do you, my Lord?'

Carnelian turned to Osidian. Just the sound of his voice seemed to have turned the Elders into the servants that were always present at the edges of a Master's vision.

They were discussing by what means they shall dispose of our bodies.'

Osidian smiled and flipped a hand to point lazily at the Assembly. These filthy savages are
actually
discussing killing us?'

He inclined his head and masked his face with a pale long-fingered hand and while he stood thus, the Plainsmen gaped at him as if his gaze had turned them to stone.

Osidian revealed his exquisite face, his emerald eyes. 'Barbarians,' he said in Vulgate. Those of you who can understand this coarse tongue convey my words to the others.' Without pausing for their assent, he continued, regarding them from on high as if they were errant children.

'You presume to sit in judgement on we who are the Masters of Earth and Sky? You who live only because we allow it; whose children we have taken to be our slaves since the Creation?'

Carnelian saw his words being passed by those who understood to those who did not.

Osidian took a step forward and the Elders rose in alarm. He seemed to grow larger, brighter. 'Barbarians, you should take care.' His voice rang clear around the room of bones and a terrible fire seemed to spring from his eyes and teeth.

The Masters have cast us out of Paradise and for that they have earned my hatred. They will forget us. But
you
- you can never forget them. And it seems you have already forgotten we too are Masters. If you kill us, our blood will be upon your hands. Do you think the servants of the God in the Mountain will not see its stain?'

As he scanned the Elders, Carnelian saw their staring terror of him.

'Do you think when the childgatherer comes he will fail to see the red reflection of our blood in your children's eyes? And what then?'

He paused looking for an answer. Where his gaze swept the Elders looked away.

'What do you think will happen then? Do you imagine for one moment, whatever enmity may lie between us, do you
really
imagine they would let such as
you
slay even the least of the Masters with impunity?

There are those here who have taken the Gods' salt,' he said, stabbing his finger here and there at the Assembly. 'Others have knelt to kiss the dust in the Mountain. Of these I ask: are the Masters merciful? How many of you hide that mercy's stripes across your backs? I can see the mutilations of lost fingers and shorn ears. How many of you have wept in the night for your lost children? Do not delude yourselves. The Masters know less of mercy than you do of power. They will bring the dragons here.' He stamped his foot on the floor of their mothers' bones. They will exterminate you man and woman, young and old, until your tribe shall be nothing more than a whisper lost in the wind.'

Kyte stood bravely forth. 'What's to stop us ... giving ... giving you up to the Gatherer?'

Osidian smiled chillingly. 'Do you not recall, auxiliary, the penalty for having looked upon our faces?'

The Plainsman went pale, caught in the green ice of the Master's eyes.

With relief, Carnelian watched Osidian relapse back into a languid state. Long after the echoes of his voice had vibrated away the Elders continued to gape, transfixed. Though Osidian was no longer as white as he had been, still in that dark place, in contrast to Loskai dwarfed beside him, with his green eyes and the bright beauty of his face, Osidian seemed undeniably an angel.

'What did he say?' Harth asked Fern urgently in a half-whisper.

Desperate to undo whatever harm Osidian had done, Carnelian spoke before Fern had a chance to answer her. 'He threatens...' said Carnelian, crudely in their language, 'your destruction ... if you touch us ... or give us up to the Gatherer ... but... Fern spoke tmthfully. I promised ... we wish no hurt on you.'

Harth joined her peers in turning her gape on him.

Galewing shambled towards Carnelian, stopping at a distance. 'You ... you understand our speech?'

'Much of it,' Carnelian said, in Vulgate.

As Galewing relayed the answer to the Assembly, their unease turned to near hysteria.

Harth turned on Fern. 'You knew this?'

Fern made a grimace then nodded.

His mother rose. 'What of it? We've always known the Standing Dead have sorcery. Is a broken knowledge of our tongue so great a mystery?'

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