Brennus lied. “I was. . searching for the Chosen. As you asked me to do.”
The Most High turned once more to face him, and Brennus’s lie crumbled under the weight of his eyes.
“And I was also searching for. . something else. Something I hope to show you someday.”
The Most High seemed not to hear him. He spoke absently, almost to himself. “Matters are afoot in Faerun, in Toril. I don’t mean the wars. The Dalelands will soon fall to our forces, but I mean something more than squabbles over territory. Something is changing. There’s power in the air, stirrings.” He seemed to remember himself and looked over at Brennus. “Have you felt it?”
“I have sensed something,” Brennus said carefully, although he’d been so fixated on Rivalen and Mask and Erevis Cale’s child that he’d had time to notice little else.
The Most High nodded. “I need you to refocus on the work I’ve asked of you, Brennus. Find the Chosen for me, as many as you can, as fast as you can. I believe they’re important.”
“Important, how? This change you feel, it’s connected to the Chosen?”
Telemont nodded, turned, paced before the cube. “The Chosen and the Gods. Pieces are moving. I’ll admit that it’s still opaque to me. But yes, the Chosen are involved somehow. I need them found.”
“And then? You hold them? Kill them?”
Using his divinations, Brennus had already identified a score of Chosen for the Most High, but it was painstaking, time-consuming work. Surprising work, too. He had not expected there to be so many Chosen. It was as if the gods had birthed a brood of them in preparation for something neither he nor the Most High had yet been able to discern.
Brennus had provided names, descriptions, and locations of those he’d found, and after that, he had no idea what happened. In truth, the only Chosen he was interested in was already dead-Erevis Cale.
The Most High stared into Brennus’s face. “Just find them, Brennus.”
Brennus nodded. “I hear your words, Most High. Will that be all?”
The Most High approached him, and his expression softened. “Must it be like this forevermore, Brennus? I barely see you. We were never. . close like you were with your mother, but there wasn’t always this distance. You no longer attend the Conclaves. Your brothers ask after you. Yder is overseeing war with the Dales, yet I suspect you know nothing of it. Our Sembian forces recently took Archendale. Did you know that?”
Brennus knew nothing of any of it. His obsession with Rivalen had driven him into isolation. “I’ve no interest in the movement of our armies. That’s work for Yder. I have my own work.”
The Most High’s expression regained its imperious cast. “Your work is an obsession with your brother, with your mother, with revenge.”
It was too much, and the shouted answer slipped Brennus’s control before he could rein it in. “And it should be your obsession, too! He murdered your wife! You should want revenge! You! You fear him, though, don’t you?”
The Most High’s mouth formed a tight line. “You overestimate his power and underestimate mine. And now you’ve come dangerously close to overestimating my capacity for indulgence.”
Brennus swallowed and said nothing, knowing an apology would sound foolish. Inside his cloak, the homunculi trembled uncontrollably.
“You do as I’ve told you,” the Most High said. “Am I understood?”
Brennus stared into his father’s face, bowed his head, and said, “Most High.”
“Am I understood, Brennus?”
“Your words are clear.”
The Most High studied his face, seemingly satisfied. His expression softened once again. “If it helps, I believe Rivalen is being punished, Brennus. He’s gone mad. He thinks he’s going to end the world.”
Brennus blinked. “And you think he can’t?”
“Of course he can’t,” the Most High snapped, and shadows swirled around him. “He stares at a hole in reality for days on end. His thoughts bounce around in the cage prepared for him by his goddess. He dreams only of darkness and endings and suffers for it.”
“He should suffer.”
“My point isn’t so much about him as you. Live your life, Brennus. We have work to do in Faerun.”
“I will, Father.”
The Most High stared into Brennus’s face for a long moment before nodding. He pulled the shadows about him, was lost in them, and was gone.
Brennus swallowed down a dry throat, exhaled. The homunculi poked their gray heads out of his clothing, looked around, their pointed ears twitching.
“Father gone now?”
“Yes,” Brennus said.
“Do as he ask?” they inquired as one.
“Eventually,” Brennus said. He moved to his scrying cube and once more tried to resurrect the image of his mother’s murder.
Chapter Seven
Standing in the doorway of Ana and Corl’s small, warm cottage, Elle drew her hood tight. The austere darkness of the late afternoon contrasted markedly with the warm glow of the cottage.
“Our thanks once more for the eggs, Elle,” called Ana from behind her. “You’re welcome,” Elle said, tying the string under her chin. “You’d do the same if your hens were producing.”
“Even so.”
“It’s Idleday,” Elle said, half turning. “So stay in and keep dry.” Ana tended a cauldron near the hearth. Her husband, Corl, sat in a roughmade chair before the fire, sharpening the blade of a hoe.
“Aye,” called Corl. “There’s naught to be done in this weather, anyway. And thank you, Elle. You’re a saint.”
Corl’s sincerity touched her.
“Go feed that baby something,” Ana said, smiling at her and nodding at Elle’s belly.
“Aye,” Elle said. She pulled the door closed behind her and stepped out into the muddy cart road. The namesake elms that ringed the village whispered and creaked in the wind. The rain smelled of decay. A shit rain, Gerak would have called it, and she would have frowned at his use of profanity. She worried for the village’s crops. A fouled rain would harm an already fragile harvest. More of her neighbors than Ana and Corl would suffer.
The dark sky rumbled. The underside of the clouds looked burned, as if the world had caught fire and charred them black. But she knew how to read the sky, the subtle variations among the blacks and grays, and she thought the low, swirling clouds promised an end to the rain, and soon.
Odd, she thought, the things to which a person became accustomed. She’d grown up in Sembia’s darkness and knew it as well as she knew the soil. But she’d never seen the unveiled sun and wasn’t sure she’d know what to do if she ever did. But she hoped to find out one day.
The thought summoned a smile. She felt oddly hopeful. Gerak would return on the morrow or the day after, perhaps with fresh meat, and she carried his child in her womb, a life unexpected. She ran her hands over the bulge of her stomach and her eyes welled. The changes to her body wrought by the pregnancy seemed to make her weep over everything. She felt silly but smiled nevertheless.
She wiped her eyes as she walked the sloppy cart road, her mind on the baby, barely cognizant of the mud fouling her shoes and soaking the bottom of her cloak. She thought of a time years earlier, when Chauntea’s greenpriests still traveled Sembia, using their magic to assist villagers with their crops. She remembered an elderly greenpriest, as thin as a reed, who had preached that where life grew there was always hope. Back then, Elle had rolled her eyes at the words. But now, with a child in her womb, she understood exactly what the priest had meant.
The child in her belly was hope.
Again her eyes welled. Again she smiled in embarrassment at her own sentimentality.
“Hope,” she said, testing out the word. It sounded good, sounded right. She ran a hand over her belly. “If you’re a girl, we’ll call you Hope.”
The sky rumbled with thunder. Elle refused to surrender her smile or her mood. She made a dismissive gesture at the sky.