Even “sorry” didn’t seem adequate.
And what had happened to the oni army on Onihida, waiting to invade Elfhome through her gate? To the oni disguised as humans that worked on the gate with her? And Riki, the tengu who had betrayed her?
“Is it going to — get better?” Pony asked.
“I think so.” Tinker sighed, releasing her hair. “I can’t imagine it staying in this unstable state.” At least she hoped so. “The second law of thermodynamics and all that.”
Pony grunted a slight optimistic sound, as if he was full of confidence in her intelligence and problem solving. Sometimes his trust in her was intimidating.
“I want to get closer.” Tinker scanned the neighboring hillsides, looking for a safe way down to the valley’s floor. In Pittsburgh, nothing was as straightforward as it appeared. This area was mostly abandoned — probably with help from the oni to keep people away from their secret compound. The arcing line of the Rim, marking where Pittsburgh ended and Elfhome proper began, was defused by advancing elfin forest. Ironwood saplings mixed with jagger bushes — elfin trees colliding with earth weed — to form a dense impenetrable thicket. “Let’s find a way down.”
“Is that wise, domi?”
“We’ll be careful.”
She expected more of an argument, but he clicked his tongue in an elfin shrug.
Pony leaned out over the bridge’s railing, the spells tattooed down his arms in designs like Celtic knots — done in Wind Clan blue — rippled as muscle moved under skin. The hot wind played with tendrils of glossy black hair that come loose from his braid. Dressed in his usual wyvern-scaled chest armor, black leather pants and gleaming knee boots, Pony seemed oblivious to the mid-August heat. He looked as strong and healthy as ever. During their escape, the oni nearly killed him. She took some comfort that he was the one thing that she hadn’t totally messed up.
As they recuperated, she’d endured an endless parade of visitors between bouts of drugged sleep, which gave the entire experience a surreal nightmare feel. Everyone had brought gifts and stories of Turtle Creek, until her hospice room and curiosity overflowed.
Thanks to her new elfin regenerative abilities, she healed far faster than when she was a human; she awoke this morning feeling good enough to explore. Much to her dismay, Pony insisted on bringing four more sekasha for a full Hand.
Yeah, yeah, it was wise, considering they had no clue how many oni survived the meltdown of Turtle Creek. She was getting claustrophobic, though, from always having hordes of people keeping watch over her; first the elves, then the oni, and now back to the elves. When she ran her scrap yard — months ago — a lifetime ago — she used to go days without seeing anyone but her cousin Oilcan.
As Viceroy, her husband Wolf Who Rules Wind, or Windwolf, held twenty sekasha; Pony picked her favorite four out of that twenty to make up a hand. The outlandish Stormsong — her rebel short hair currently dyed blue — was acting as a Shield with Pony. Annoyingly, though, there seemed to be some secret sekasha rule — only one Shield could have a personality at any time. Stormsong stood a few feet off, silent and watching, in full bodyguard mode while Pony talked to Tinker. It would have been easier to pretend that the sekasha weren’t guarding over her if they weren’t so obviously ‘working.’
The bridge secured, the other three sekasha were being Blades and scouting the area. Pony signaled them now using the sekasha’s hand gestures called blade talk. Rainlily, senior of the Blades, acknowledged — Tinker recognized that much by now — and signaled something more.
“What did she say?” Tinker really had to get these guys radios. She hated having to ask what was going on; until recently, she always knew more than everyone else.
“They found something you should see.”
The police had strung yellow tape across the street in an attempt to cordon off the valley; it rustled ominously in a stiff breeze. Ducking under the tape, Tinker and her Shields joined the others. The one personality rule extended to the Blades; only Rainlily got to talk. Cloudwalker and Little Egret moved off, searching the area for possible threats.
“We found this in the middle of the road,” Rainlily held out a bulky white, waterproof envelope. “Forgiveness, we had to check it for traps.”
The envelope was addressed with all possible renditions of her name: Alexander Graham Bell, ‘Tinker’ written in English, and finally Elvish runes of ‘Tinker of the Wind Clan.’ The sekasha had already slit it open to examine the contents and replaced them. Tinker tented open the envelope and peered inside; it held an old mp3 player and a note written in English.
“I have great remorse for what I did. I’m sorry for hurting you both. I wish there had been another way. Riki Shoji.”
“Yeah, right.” Tinker scoffed and crumpled up the note and flung it away. “Like that makes everything okay, you damn crow.”
She wanted to throw the mp3 player too, but it wasn’t hers. Oilcan had loaned it to Riki. The month she’d been at Aum Renau, Oilcan and Riki became friends. Or at least, Oilcan thought they were friends, just the same as he thought they were both humans. Riki, though, was a lying oni spy, complete with bird-feet and magically retractable crow wings. He’d wormed his way into their lives just to kidnap Tinker. She doubted that Oilcan would want the player back now that he knew the truth; it would be a permanent reminder that Oilcan’s trust nearly cost Tinker her life. But it wasn’t her right to decide for him.
She jammed the player into the deepest pocket of her carpenter’s jeans. “Let’s go.”
Rage smoldered inside her until they had worked their way down to the discontinuity. The mystery of the Ghostlands deepened, drowning out her anger. The edge of the blue seemed uneven at first, but then, as she crouched down to eye it closely, she realized that the effect “pooled” like water, and that the ragged edge was due to the elevation of the land — like the edge of a pond. Despite the August heat, ice gathered in the shadows. This close, she could hear a weird white noise, not unlike the gurgle of a river.
She found a long stick and prodded at the blue-shaded earth; it slowly gave like thick mud. She moved along the “shore” testing the shattered pieces of three worlds within reach of her stick. Earth fire hydrant. Onihida building. Elfhome ironwood tree. While they looked solid, everything within the zone of destruction was actually insubstantial, giving under the firm poke of her stick.
Pony stiffened with alarm when — after examining the stick for damage done to it and finding it as sound as before — she reached her hand out over the line.
Oddly, there was a resistance in the air over the land — as if Tinker was holding her hand out the window of a moving car. The air grew cooler as she lowered her hand. It was so very creepy that she had to steel herself to actually touch the dirt.
It was like plunging her bare hand into snow. Bitterly cold, the dirt gave under her fingertips. Within seconds, the chill was painful. She jerked her hand back.
“Domi?” Pony moved closer to her.
“I’m fine.” Tinker cupped her left hand around her right. As she stood, blowing warmth onto her cold-reddened fingers, she gazed out onto the ghost lands. She could feel magic on her new domana senses, but normally — like strong electrical currents — heat accompanied magic. Was the ‘shift’ responsible for the cold? The presence of magic, however, would explain why the area was still unstable — sustaining whatever reaction the gate’s destruction created. If her theory was right, once the ambient magic was depleted, the effect would collapse and the area would revert back to solid land. The only question was the rate of decay.