Page 39 of Godslayer


  Cerelinde shook her head and looked away, remembering the way Godslayer had sunk into Satoris’ unresisting flesh. “I did only what I believed was needful.”

  Aracus took her hand in his gauntleted fingers. “We have paid a terrible price, all of us,” he said gently. “But we have won a great victory, my Lady.”

  “Yes,” she said. “I know.”

  She yearned to find comfort in his touch, in that quickening mortal ardor that burned so briefly and so bright. There was none. It had been the Gift of Satoris Third-Born, and she had slain him.

  He had spoken the truth. And she had become the thing that she despised.

  “Come,” Aracus said. “Let us seek Malthus’ counsel.”

  He led her across the courtyard, filled with milling warriors and dying Fjeltroll. They died hard, it seemed. A few of them looked up from where they lay, weltering in their own gore, and met her eyes without fear. They had seemed so terrifying, once. It was no longer true.

  Malthus was kneeling, his robes trailing in puddles of blood. He straightened at her approach. “Lady Cerelinde,” he said in his deep voice. “I mourn the losses of the Rivenlost this day.”

  “I thank you, Wise Counselor.” The words caught in her throat, choking her. She had seen that which his keeling body had hidden. “Ah, Haomane!”

  “Fear not, Lady.” It was a strange woman who spoke. In one hand, she held a mighty bow wrought of horn. Though her face was strained with grief, her voice was implacable. “Tanaros Kingslayer is no more.”

  Cerelinde nodded, not trusting her voice.

  Though half a dozen arrows bristled from his body, Tanaros looked peaceful in death. His unseeing eyes were open, fixed on nothing. A slight smile curved his lips. His limbs were loose, the taut sinews unstrung at last, the strong hands slack and empty. A smear of blood was across his brow, half-hidden by an errant lock of hair.

  The scent of vulnus-blossom haunted her.

  We hold within ourselves the Gifts of all the Seven Shapers and the ability to Shape a world of our choosing … .

  Cerelinde shuddered.

  She could not allow herself to weep for his death; not here. Perhaps not ever. Lifting her head, she gazed at Aracus. He was a choice she had made. He returned her gaze, his storm-blue eyes somber. There would be no gloating over this victory. His men had told her of the losses they had endured on the battlefield, of Blaise Caveros and Lord Ingolin the Wise, and many countless others.

  She saw the future they would shape together stretching out before her. Although the shadow of loss and sorrow would lay over it, there would be times of joy, too. For the brief time that was alotted them together, they would find healing in one another, and in the challenge of bringing their races together in harmony.

  There would be fear, for it was in her heart that neither Ushahin nor Godslayer would be found on the premises of Darkhaven. Haomane’s Prophecy had been fulfilled to the letter, and yet it was not. Without Godslayer, the Souma could not be made whole, and the world’s Sundering undone. The Six Shapers would remain on Torath, apart, and Ushahin would be an enemy to Haomane’s Allies; less terrible than Satoris Banewreaker, for even with a Shard of the Souma, he would not wield a Shaper’s power, capable of commanding the loyalty of an entire race. More terrible, for he did not have a Shaper’s pride and the twisted sense of honor that went with it.

  There would be hope, for courage and will had triumphed over great odds on this day, and what was done once might be done again.

  There would be love. Of that, she did not doubt. She was the Lady of the Ellylon, and she did not love lightly; nor did Aracus. They would be steadfast and true. They would rule over Urulat with wisdom and compassion.

  And yet there would be doubt, born out of her long captivity in Darkhaven.

  Shouting came from the far side of the courtyard. More Borderguardsmen were emerging from Darkhaven, carrying two limp figures. The Bearer and his uncle had been found and rescued. One stirred. Not the boy, who lay motionless.

  “Aracus.” Malthus touched his arm. “Forgive me, for I know your weariness is great. Yet it may be that the Soumanië can aid him.”

  “Aye.” With an effort, Aracus gathered himself. “Guide me, Counselor.”

  In the midst of slaughter and carnage, Cerelinde watched them tend to the stricken Yarru, their heads bowed in concentration. The young Bearer was gaunt and frail, as though his travail had pared him down to the essence.

  She tried to pray and could not, finding herself wondering, instead, if this victory was worth its cost. She longed to weep, but her eyes remained dry. She watched as the Bearer drew in a breath of air, sudden and gasping, his narrow chest heaving. She longed to feel joy, but felt only pity at the harshness with which Haomane used his chosen tools. She listened to the shouts of Men, carrying out the remainder of their futile search, and to the horns of the Rivenlost, declaring victory in bittersweet tones.

  And she knew, with the absolute certainty with which she had once believed in Haomane’s unfailing wisdom and goodness, that no matter what else the future held, in a still, silent place in her heart that she would never share—not with Aracus, nor Malthus the Counselor, nor her own kinfolk—she would spend the remainder of her days seeing the outstretched hand of Satoris Third-Born before her, feeling the dagger sink into his breast, and hearing his anguished death-cry echoing in her ears.

  Wondering why he had let her take his life; and why Tanaros had spared hers. Wondering if there was another scion of Elterrion’s line upon the face of Urulat. Wondering if her mother had prayed to Satoris on her deathbed.

  Wondering why the Six Shapers did not dare leave Torath, and whether a world in which Satoris prevailed would truly have been worse than one over which Haomane ruled, an absent father to his Children.

  Wondering where lies ended and truth began.

  Wondering if she had chosen wisely at the crossroads she had faced.

  Wondering, and never daring to know.

  What might have been?

  EPILOGUE

  A SHADOW PASSED THROUGH THE Defile, disturbing the shroud of webbing that hung from the Weavers’ Gulch in tattered veils. The little grey weavers chittered in dismay, scuttling furiously, setting about their endless work of rebuilding and repair.

  No one else noticed.

  Ushahin-who-walks-between-dusk-and-dawn rode the pathways between one thing and another; between waking and dreaming, between life and death, between the races of Lesser Shapers, between a dying Age and one being born.

  He rode a blood-bay stallion, its coat the hue of drying gore, its mane and tail as black as the spaces between the stars. Lashed to his saddle was a leather case that contained a broken Helm, its empty eye-sockets gazing onto darkness.

  And at his belt he bore a dagger wrought from a single Shard of the Souma, the Eye in the Brow of Uru-Alat. It was red, pulsing with its own inner light, and it would have betrayed his presence had he not wrapped it in shadow, in a cloak of the vague ambiguities that lay between victory and defeat, between pride and humility, between right and wrong.

  Between all things.

  He kept his thoughts shrouded as he rode, and no one challenged him as he passed beyond the Vale of Gorgantum.

  Beyond him, the plains of Curonan stretched toward the east. He set out upon them, picking his way among the dead.

  Overhead, there was a sound.

  Glancing up, Ushahin-who-walks-between saw the raven circling and understood that it saw him in turn. He paused, waiting. It descended to land on his left shoulder, talons pricking. He sensed its sadness and looked into its thoughts as the Grey Dam of the Were had taught him long ago.

  He saw death and knew he was the last of the Three.

  The raven made a keening sound in its throat. He stroked its head, its errant tuft of feathers, with one crooked finger.

  Soothed, the raven settled.

  Ushahin-who-walks-between resumed his journey. He was pleased to have the raven’s company. Later
, he would give thought to vengeance, to the new pattern taking shape in the world, to the role that had befallen him, to the promise he had made to Lord Satoris, to the memory of the nameless child he had once been, before a rock in a stranger’s fist had shattered his world.

  Today, there was comfort in the simple communion of shared sorrow.

  There would be time for the rest.

  With his back to Darkhaven, Ushahin rode toward the Delta, where Calanthrag the Eldest awaited him.

  In the Sundered World of Urulat, the sun set on an Age.

  Tomorrow, a new one would dawn.

  TOR BOOKS BY JACQUELINE CAREY

  KUSHIEL’S LEGACY

  Kushiel’s Dart

  Kushiel’s Chosen

  Kushiel’s Avatar

  THE SUNDERING

  Banewreaker

  Godslayer

  PRAISE FOR THE NOVELS OF JACQUELINE CAREY

  “Carey creates strong, original characters, and the climax, when gods and men fall in battle like ninepins, not only nicely ties everything up but is quite moving as well.”

  —Publishers Weekly on Godslayer

  “A grand epic … showcasing Carey’s intimate development of deeply wounded, sometimes deeply flawed, yet utterly dignified and sympathetic characters, with some of the best dragons in all fantasy literature.”

  —Booklist on Banewreaker

  “Jacqueline Carey makes her fiction debut with Kushiel’s Dart, a beautifully written story and a gem of a fantasy novel. Carey has created an entire world with an extensive and believable history. Despite being chock-full of magic, it is remarkably real to the reader.”

  —Associated Press on Kushiel’s Dart

  “Another intricate and satisfying novel of dark magic, court intrigue, and good versus evil.”

  —Science Fiction Chronicle on Kushiel’s Chosen

  “This exquisitely piercing love story will take its readers on an unbelievable sensual journey. With its unique characters, history, and plot, Jacqueline Carey’s stunning Terre d’Ange trilogy concludes in an emotionally charged tale seasoned with explicit scenes of love and sacrifice.”

  —Romantic Times BookClub Magazine

  on Kushiel’s Avatar (4½ stars and

  a Gold-Medal Top Pick)

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  GODSLAYER

  Copyright © 2005 by Jacqueline Carey

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.

  A Tor Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, NY 10010

  www.tor-forge.com

  Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

  eISBN 9781429910965

  First eBook Edition : April 2011

  First Edition: August 2005

  First Mass Market Edition: July 2006

 


 

  Jacqueline Carey, Godslayer

  (Series: # )

 

 


 

 
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