CHAPTER 27
Drakis awoke with a start, sitting upright so quickly that he felt three vertebrae in his back crack back into place. He drew in a great gulp of air and then held it for a moment, his eyes blinking as he tried to make sense of his surroundings.
The walls of the circular space were a dark, rich brown color. The curve of their surface showed slick and glistening in the thin light that spilled down through a woven grating that capped the room ten feet or so above his head.
At length he let out his breath and stretched slowly. Every muscle in his body felt stiff and aching. It was to him as though he had slept for a thousand years, and yet he still longed for the bliss of unconsciousness. He rubbed his hand quickly over the bristles of his emerging hair and was surprised at how long it had gotten.
How long have I been in here? he wondered. For a while, he fingered the matted animal furs under him. He remembered running into the woods. Then something about Mala finding him. . leading him somewhere. .
He frowned at the thought of her, his mind tumbling through a cascade of memories. He loved her-had to love her-and yet the things he had done to her, had suffered because of her were shameful, painful, and unforgivable. .
A small, quivering voice cut through his dark musings.
“Drakis?”
He turned at once toward the sound. He sat on a slab of stone about the size of the tombs where the bones of the Rhonas dead were so often placed. There were two more of these slabs set around the floor of the curved room, but only one of them was likewise occupied.
“Mala,” he replied as evenly as he could manage. “I’m here.”
Mala sat with her legs pulled up tight against her chest as she rocked nervously back and forth. “Please, Drakis. Is it you?”
Drakis smiled ruefully, gripping the edge of the stone bier with his hands as he leaned forward. “I might ask the same of you. Are you all right?”
“I. . I don’t know.” She raised her face toward the light. Her eyes were red from crying and still filled with tears. The beautiful shape of her head was now covered with a bristle of rust red hair, nearly obscuring the dark stains of the House tattoo. But there was something in the heart-shape of her dirt-streaked face and her wide mouth that called to his heart. And her eyes. . those emerald eyes. . called to him still.
“Where are we?” he asked.
“I. . I don’t know that either,” she said, her voice quavering. “I’m frightened.”
“There’s nothing to be frightened about. .”
“Have you seen the walls?”
Drakis turned his head around, pressing it closer to the reddish brown surface. “I don’t see what. .”
He stopped.
The wall was composed entirely of enormous cockroaches. Their legs were linked together, forming a thick pattern so dense that it was impossible for Drakis to tell if there was anything beyond the mass of roaches or whether they alone formed the wall. He reached out gingerly to touch it.
“No, Drakis! Don’t. .”
The wall of roaches reacted at once to his touch, a clattering, chattering sound engulfing the cell as the walls around them contracted inward in a violent spasm. Drakis leaped off of the stone slab with a yelp, reaching without conscious thought for his weapon and only then realizing that it was no longer at his side.
Mala screamed hysterically, pulling herself into a tighter ball as the size of their confined space grew rapidly smaller.
Then, with equal swiftness, the surrounding cockroach wall stopped and receded, though, to Drakis’ eyes, not quite so far back as it had been before.
Drakis concentrated on bringing himself under control. His breath was too quick, and he could feel the heat of his flushed face. He had no idea where they were nor how they had gotten here, but he was certain that anywhere else would be better for them. At once he turned his face toward the overhead grating and was again surprised. What had appeared to him to be a thick grillwork he now saw was constituted entirely of large snakes, their bodies woven to cover the opening. He could not discern much of anything in the light beyond the snakes, but he held little hope it was much better than where they were now.
Drakis looked down at the soft, fine-grained floor under his feet. Various skulls protruded from the deep white grains along the wall’s peripheral base; the sand was composed of crushed bone.
“It will be all right,” Drakis said, as much to himself as to Mala.
“How will. . will this possibly. . be all right?” Mala asked through gulping sobs.
Drakis turned. He longed to go to Mala, to take her in his arms and comfort her. He took a step toward her, and then he stopped and stood awkwardly in midstride, watching her.
She gazed at him, her tear-filled eyes narrowing on him, reflecting a world of pain, longing, hatred, hope, and despair. When she spoke, her words were more of an accusation than a question. “You remember, don’t you?”
Drakis heard his own quickened breaths in his ears. His mouth had suddenly gone dry, and he was having trouble looking her in the eye. “Yes, Mala. I remember. . I remember a great many things now. . we all do. .”
Her lips parted in contempt.
Drakis let out a harsh breath. “But, yes, I remember.”
“How could you, Drakis,” her voice shook as she spoke. “How could you do that to me? The servants who brought me to Shebin’s rooms scorned me and tore at my clothes. . all the while screeching that my hoo-mani body was too ugly to tempt them. . and then they forced me to watch you. . you. . and that hideous, soulless elf bitch. .”
Her voice trailed off to nothing.
Only now did he remember it all-how he had spurned Tsi-Shebin the day before because of his love of the garden slave called Mala and how her vengeance had taken its own cold course. So she had changed his Devotions that night to include erasing his memory of the woman he so tenderly loved so that she could arrange her horrific and unforgivable humiliation.
It was not the first time, Drakis knew, that Tsi-Shebin had played cruelly with him or with those he dared love other than her.
He shook with revulsion, feeling the urge to vomit and all the while knowing that it was he alone who made him sick. . that it was himself whom he hated the most. Drakis was filled with unspeakable shame over what had happened and what he had done.
Yet his other memories of Mala persisted at the same time: of their yearning to touch softly through the bars that separated them, of the quiet talks they stole, and the warm smiles they shared.
He looked again into those emerald eyes and saw his own loathing and longing reflected back.
“Mala,” he said quietly at last. “I am so terribly sorry-more sorry than I think there are words to tell. I wish there were a way that I could take it all back or change it all. I even sometimes wish that I could just forget it all and go back to being ignorant and happy.”
Mala gave a short laugh, wiping her eyes against the soiled cloth covering her knees. “I’d settle for ignorant.”
Drakis smiled slightly and nodded. “Well, if all you’re looking for is ignorant, then here I am.”
Mala gazed at him again, her face serious. “Drakis, I don’t know how to forget. I look at you and I see so many different faces now all at the same time. So many of them I hate and so many of them I long for all at once. I can’t make myself forget what I know. I need you, Drakis. . I don’t understand what is happening to us or where we are going. . but I need to follow you, be with you and be comforted by you. But every time I see you I also see your other faces, and I just can’t. .”