She lowered her gaze to the child curled up at her side. She was brave, devoted, good-hearted and innocent. All the human values one would wish, yet wrapped in crippled flesh. Who was anyone to judge her? How dare anyone do so? The very thought affronted her to the core and brought a burning heat to her face. She realized she would kill anyone who dared.
There. That was more like it. Proper Seguleh thinking.
That was how the girl saved her life.
When the Enchantress T’riss came to them Ina had already made up her mind. And the way the sorceress looked at her, the secret smile on her lips, told Ina that she knew as well.
‘So you will stay,’ the Enchantress said.
‘Yes. If I may.’
‘Of course.’ Her gaze lowered to rest gently on the girl. ‘It looks as if you have a place here.’
Movement drew Ina’s attention aside: that giant fellow had returned and now stood among the trees, watching, as if afraid to approach.
‘Lek,’ the Enchantress urged, quietly. ‘Look who is here …’
The girl stirred, blinking. She found the man standing a little way off and her head snapped up. ‘Nagal!’ She ran to him with her limping hopping gait, and wrapped her arms round him. He patted her head.
‘An old friend,’ T’riss explained. ‘You will not be entirely alone here.’
‘Alone or not, there is no other place for us.’
The Enchantress peered round, nodding. ‘Yes. You are lucky, I think. Lucky in what you have found.’
‘And Ardata? What of her?’
The smile slipped away. ‘I want to be generous, but I do not know. It seems that some are incapable of change or learning and because of this the lessons come all the harsher, and perhaps too late. We shall see. I understand that it took a millennium of imprisonment in his own creation for Draconus to admit that perhaps he’d been wrong. So, there is hope.’
‘Then … she is gone?’
T’riss appeared surprised. ‘Not at all. As I have heard said — just because you cannot see her doesn’t mean she isn’t here.’
‘Ah. I see.’ Ina gestured to the burnt prayer-scarves and fragments of offering bowls scattered about the grounds. ‘Then the devout will continue their entreaties and the godhead will remain enigmatic … as is its definition.’
The Enchantress frowned mock disapproval. ‘You Seguleh are a far too sceptical people.’
‘Strange that I should end up here then.’
‘Perhaps you are in need of more philosophy.’ And with that, the Enchantress inclined her head in salute and went her way.
Ina sat for a time letting the sun’s heat suffuse her while she worked on forcing herself to relax. It was difficult; she wasn’t used to it. She glanced over to where Lek and Nagal talked. Lek, she saw, was urging him to come and speak to her. The big fellow actually appeared childishly shy. Strange how she would never have imagined that. Living here … new faces were probably a shock.
Many more will be coming now, though. Once word spreads. And of course they will look for the physical embodiment of what they are searching for. For Lek, daughter of their goddess.
She would have to begin teaching her soon.
* * *
He came in the night amid a burgeoning silver glow that suffused the temple grounds until all was lit as if by a lamp of white light. The youth, Ripan, led the way, piping an eerie and high energetic tune that sounded almost celebratory. Saeng sat waiting on a step. She held Pon-lor’s head cradled on her lap.
Old Man Moon entered the grounds and bowed before Saeng. ‘Congratulations, High Priestess.’
She snorted her embarrassment. ‘High Priestess of what?’
The old man opened his hands. ‘That is for you to shape. You are the priestess.’
She dropped her gaze, nodding. ‘I see.’
‘What would you have of me?’
‘Can you heal him?’
The old man knelt on his skinny shanks, just as any village elder would. He studied Pon-lor. ‘Hmmm. He has sustained ferocious damage to his skull and brain. And there is infection, swelling and fever. Normally such a mind would lie beyond recovery. However, the Thaumaturg mental training has served him well. He has managed to retain much of himself hidden away in disparate corners of his mind — so to speak.’ His gaze rose to her and she was startled to see a silvery glow in the pupils of his eyes. ‘And of course you are lucky in that this happens to be a particular speciality of mine.’
And though she knew the answer already, she asked: ‘What is your price?’
His sly teasing smile told her his answer. He turned his head. ‘Ripan. Start a fire.’
The youth’s shoulders dropped. ‘Must I?’ he whined.
‘A fire, Ripan.’
The youth slouched off, muttering and twirling his pipe.
Moon laid a hand on Pon-lor’s forehead. ‘Rest,’ he murmured. ‘Gather yourself … and remember.’ He sat back, his lean arms akimbo on his knees. ‘Now I shall collect the necessary ingredients.’ He stood.
‘Where … this time?’ Saeng asked, dreading the answer.
Old Man Moon grinned down at her. ‘Why — where you left off, of course.’ He walked off, stiffly, like an elder.
I do believe he enjoys it far too much, she grumbled to herself.
Later, Old Man Moon returned to carry Pon-lor to a square of flat dressed paving stones, all brushed clean of dust and litter. A fire burned nearby. Ripan sat at it, looking bored and unhappy, his chin in one fist. A set of crude earthenware bowls lay next to the fire. Each possessed a stick that might have once been an offering. Indeed, all the objects struck Saeng as having been salvaged from the various nearby temple niches, shrines and altars. She wondered what effect this would have upon the procedure. All to increase its potency, no doubt.
She quickly looked away as Moon unceremoniously pulled at his ragged loin wrap. When he had lain down she looked back, forcing herself to eye his skinny shrunken buttocks — one half tattooed. ‘I am to finish the job, am I?’ she asked dryly.
‘Indeed.’
The glow emanating from the being had changed, inverted itself. Now, as before, the countless bands of pricked-out stars in their constellations glowed with their liquid silvery light while his flesh seemed to absorb light in a black night-dark background. The star field that was his back gently turned before her eyes, mimicking, she knew, the very sky above. She felt that if she pitched forward over him she would fall for ever as if into nothingness.
She shook herself and realized that she had been staring, fascinated. ‘As before?’ she asked.
‘If you would.’ Lying on his stomach, his arms under his chin, he reached out and sketched with a fingertip. The lines he drew glowed with a cold limpid light on the stone. ‘The blue ink, please.’
Saeng nodded and selected the roughly formed earthenware bowl that held a shimmering unearthly blue fluid. It gleamed like the sapphire light of some stars. She picked up a prayer stick, studied its sharpened end, then daubed it in the ink.
Crouching down over him, she set to work.
*
Murk returned to the treetops that night. He found that he now enjoyed sitting high up with his back against a trunk, his legs straight out, ankles crossed, on a fat branch. He watched the bright star field peeping through the intermittent cloud cover and the flashes of lightning from a rainstorm to the north. Bats swooped before his vision, chasing insects. The swollen head of the bright sky-spanning arch that was the Visitor was diminishing — passing beyond. Returning whence it came. The full moon shone down, reclaiming its rightful place as ruler of the night. To the west, the thick dark clouds were dispersing, drifting off. The leaves around him, however, still held their pale layer of ash.
So, it was over. Tomorrow the Enchantress would send them on to wherever they wished. Yusen had held firm in his insistence on a slow cautious approach to this news of imperial pardon. The troop would request to be sent to some minor frontier outpost where they’d test the truth of it.