A hand touched his shoulder, startling him into a wince.
But fingers closed with a firming grip and held tight.
He glanced up to find the regent at his side. Tylar stared toward the forest. “They are not to blame.”
Brant did not know what he meant. “Who—?”
He nodded upward.
From the forest’s edge, they stepped out of the shadows and into the firelight. Hunters. A hundred score. Stripped to breechclout, the women bare-breasted. They carried bows, strings taut, arrows notched.
The Huntress was baring her fangs.
“Can you smell it?” Lorr asked, nose high, eyes glowing. “The arrows. Poisoned with venom from the jinx bat. One nick will kill.”
Though Brant didn’t have the wyld tracker’s nose, he had eyes sharp enough to sense movement past the first line of bowmen. More hunters stalked the depths. But his eyes were not keen enough to spot what Tylar had noted earlier—not until it was brought to his attention.
“Their mouths,” Krevan said.
Squinting closer, Brant noted that the hunters’ lips and chins were stained black, as if they had been drinking oil.
Brant knew it hadn’t been oil.
“She’s draughted them with her own blood,” Tylar said. “Burned them with Grace. They are in thrall to her as certain as any seersong.”
Brant now understood the regent’s words a moment before. They are not to blame. There was only one to blame for all the horrors here.
As if reading his thoughts, the Huntress again spoke to them from her distant balcony, lost in mist and smoke. Her words were calm, spoken with a strange dispassion.
“You will come to me, stripped of weapons. You will bend your knee. Your strength will be added to the forest.”
Her statements were not requests, nor even demands. Her voice held a simple certainty, as if she were merely stating that the sun would rise in the morning.
Tylar kept his grip on Brant. He leaned down and whispered in his ear. “Even if it destroys her, you must rip the roots of the seersong that ensnares her sanity. Can you do this?”
“What about the others?” He nodded to the black-lipped forest of hunters that waited with poisoned bows, bound to the Huntress.
Tylar did not offer any gentle words, only the truth. “I don’t know.” He faced Brant and asked again, “Even so, can you do this?”
Gripping the stone at his throat, Brant glanced back at the stakes bearing aloft the graybeard and the two children, then met Tylar’s gaze. He nodded.
Tylar gave Brant’s shoulder another squeeze, then released him. Ahead the hunters parted and shifted into two columns. They formed a deadly gauntlet down which they were meant to walk.
“Stay close together,” Tylar warned and set off, leading the way.
“And don’t let any of the arrows scratch you,” Rogger added, bolstering Lorr’s warning.
Brant followed beside Dart, both now shadowed by the giant. As Brant approached the forest, he again pictured flames spreading and burning through jungle and wood. While he had wished it only a moment ago, now he knew it was his hand that must set torch to the tinder, to potentially destroy the realm, from the top down. And it wouldn’t be only wood that would be consumed.
He stared at the line of hunters.
Can you do this? he asked himself. I must.
Dart glanced to him. He read the fear in her eyes. She reached out a hand. He gratefully took it, not caring how it made him look.
As a group, they climbed free of the valley of stakes. The fires below scattered ashes skyward, a bonfire to the dead.
At last, they reached the rim of the hollow. The ancient pompbonga-kee trees rose in a dark bower over their heads. Below, the line of hunters waited. They headed down the gauntlet of bows. The deadly path led unerringly toward the oldest of the pompbonga-kees. The lowest level of the castillion could be seen entombed within its thick branches.
Closer yet, the tree’s massive roots rose as mighty knees of bark and knot. Between them gaped the entrance to the castillion. And standing in the gap stood a tall hunter, thickly shouldered, naked to breechclout, lips stained. He bore a wreath of leaves upon his crown, marking him as the supreme Hunter of the Way, the latest to win the great challenges.
But what challenges had he won during these maddened days?
The sentinel’s arms were bloody to the elbows. He reeked of death and pain. His eyes were aglow with the ravings of the Huntress, an echo of her corruption.
Still, Brant did not fail to recognize who stood as sentinel.
He pictured a boy running wild through the woods, breathless, barely able to sustain his excitement at his uncle’s entry into the great contest. It had been the last time he had laid eyes on the boy—now a young man.
“Marron…”
Those piercing eyes found him—and for a moment, Brant saw a mirror of his own recollection. But instead of familiarity and lost friendship, all he saw was ferocity and ruthlessness in the other’s eyes.
Lips peeled back in a cold smile, revealing teeth filed to points.
This was the true face of Saysh Mal now.
Dart felt Brant stiffen beside her. His fingers clamped tighter on hers.
“Abandon your blades,” the other warned between sharpened teeth. “Defy and you will be winnowed now upon her blessed stakes.”
Dart refused to glance at the field of the dead. There was no doubt where they would end up if they refused.
The men were made to unbuckle their belts and drop their sheathed swords. Rogger unhooked his crossed straps of daggers. Calla shook off her wrist sheaths. Tylar lowered Rivenscryr into the same pile, half-burying it under Rogger’s daggers.
Dart watched Tylar release the blade. He looked almost relieved, unburdened. Afterward, he allowed himself to be searched, arms out. Hands passed over her own body. Finally they were permitted to proceed inside.
But as Lorr attempted to follow, a pair of crossed spears blocked him from stepping over the threshold. Another spear pointed at Malthumalbaen.
“None of the Grace-bred may foul her door. You will remain below to await her bidding.” Marron looked the two men up and down, with undisguised distaste. “If you are lucky enough, she may permit you to live. To be a dog at her feet—or perhaps a beast to pull her wagon.”
The last was said pointedly at the giant.
Malthumalbaen took a threatening step forward, but Tylar held him back with a raised palm. “Remain here,” he said. “Keep a guard on our weapons.”
The giant seemed to barely hear him, glaring down at Marron. Lorr slipped between them. “I’ll keep my eyes open and ears up,” the tracker said.
From the way Lorr studied the hunters, he plainly intended to seek some weakness in those who stood guard, to find a breach through which they might break.
Marron also made Rogger pause. “What’s that you carry?” he asked, nodding to the satchel.
“A gift for the Huntress. I heard she lost something. Thought she might want it back.”
Marron’s brow furrowed. He waved for Rogger to show him.
With a shrug, the thief revealed what he had stolen. He flipped back a bit of bile-caked cloth to reveal yellow bone. An empty socket and corner of upper jaw leered out.
Brant gasped, slipping slightly, fingers clutching to his neck. Dart still held his other hand. She knew his stone responded to the skull; now she felt it, too. His palm burned with a feverish touch. He squeezed tight, almost crushing bone.
Satisfied, Rogger flipped back the cloth, covering it again. The heat in Brant’s palm immediately extinguished, like a flame blown out. His legs firmed under him. As he was half-hidden by the giant, no one seemed to note his faltering. All attention had been on the skull.
Marron’s brow remained furrowed. “Give it here,” he said warily.
Rogger shoved the skull inside and held out the laden pouch.
“I’ll take it to her,” Marron said in a slightly petulant ton
e.
In those words, Dart heard the boy behind the man. She suspected the hunter sought to secure the skull less from caution than from a desire to please his mistress if the gift should be truly appreciated.
With matters settled, they proceeded inside. Led by Marron and surrounded on all sides, the party entered the tree and began the long climb up into the mists.
After a few turns of the stair, Dart searched below. She sought some reassurance. Though they had left all their blades below, they were not without weapons. Tylar carried his naethryn beast inside him, along with all the Grace in his humours. And Brant still bore his stone, a gift of another god, rich in a Grace that might untwine the roots of seersong from the mind of the Huntress.
And there was one last weapon.
Dart faced forward to spot Pupp dancing among the legs of Marron’s party. They remained unaware of his presence. A splash of her blood and the others would soon learn that they had let something worse than a stray dagger past their guard.
But would it all be enough against the raving might of a full god?
Dart wished Tylar had not abandoned his sword.
She also noted a limp in his gait. It slowly grew worse until he seemed barely able to bend his knee. A hand rubbed, but failed to warm whatever stiffness hobbled him.
Rogger mumbled something beyond Dart’s hearing, but Tylar waved him off.
After a full quarter bell of climbing, the steps finally emptied out upon a wide balcony. Mists wove across the planks and between the railing posts. Below, the flippercraft shone like a second sun, ringed in black smoke, glowing through the mists. Above the face of the sun was no more than a glare. The terrace hovered between the world of sunlight and the death below.
Oddly, the reek of rot seemed richer here, though there were no staked heads. Only a single figure waited, as stiff as any sharpened pole.
Her head swung toward them as they were led forward.
Marron dropped to his knees. His obeisance announced who stood before them better than his words. “I am yours to command, mistress.”
The Huntress stepped farther out of the mists, revealing a dark-skinned woman of stunning features, eyes aglow with Grace. She was dressed in green leathers, cross-strapped in black across her breasts and tied around waist and down her thighs, like some twining vine. Her boots were black also. She seemed as strong as the tree that supported her castillion. It was no wonder she showed no fear in inviting a godslayer into her midst.
Dart studied her.
There was no sign of ravaging in her calm features, no tick of insanity nor waste of condition. Even her ebony hair was meticulously braided into a looping coil at her shoulders.
She came to the edge of her guards and stopped. Her eyes seemed to see only Tylar.
“Godslayer,” she said, as if testing the word.
“Huntress,” Tylar acknowledged, stepping forward, favoring one leg. “What is the meaning of such a greeting? What dark corruption have you wrought here?”
Marron swung toward him, still on his knees, prepared to order his death at such an abrupt affront. Arrows were already nocked to strings. Their poisonous points glinted wetly.
But the Huntress stayed them all with a finger and merely cocked her head. “Of what corruption do you speak, Tylar ser Noche?”
He lifted his arm toward the railing. “The slaughter of your own people.”
She smiled, warm and kindly. “Ah, you mistake my actions. What I have done was only to make Saysh Mal stronger. Dark times are upon us. I have heard it whispered in my ear better than most. All the realms must be prepared, to gird our loins and ready for the great war to come. Saysh Mal will not fail Myrillia.”
“How do murder and cruelty make you stronger?”
“Murder and cruelty?” She raised her palms in confusion. “Does a gardenskeep murder when he trims away the sprouted sapling that taps strength from the main trunk? Is it cruelty to pull the weed so the fruit may grow that much heavier on the neighboring vine?”
Tylar kept his features a calm match to the god’s. “You cull the young and the old.”
“And the weak and infirm.” She agreed. “So all may grow stronger. I’ve readied a great army, and braced them with my own blood.”
“You’ve Grace-burnt them. Stripped their wills.”
She shook her head—not disagreeing, only dismissing. “What is will? It is weakness. I’ve taken away indecision, doubt, hesitation, disloyalty.” Anger threaded her words now. “So as to better serve Myrillia.”
“You’ve forced them. Given them no choice to serve or not.”
“It is my right. Do not other gods allow their Grace to be mixed in alchemies and fed to women freshly taken to seed, so their offspring might be stronger in ways that the natural born are not? How is what I do any different? Is the babe in the womb any less stripped of his choice in such matters, forged into the unnatural? All I burn away is one’s hesitation and doubt. The body is left pure.”
“Pure for what?”
“For the war to come! Have you not heard the drums in the night? Have you not seen the shadows shift on their own?” She stepped back as if to encompass more of the world as she gazed skyward. “Once ready, once stripped of all weakness, Saysh Mal will rise against the darkness. We will not let hesitation and doubt weaken us.”
Her voice keened higher.
“Not like your brethren of the cloth,” she continued. “They were not of Saysh Mal. They sought to stop me, cloaked in the same shadows as those that wait in darkness to claim Myrillia. They were no different than the voices who whispered to me in the night and sought to loosen my resolve with terrors and promises. Whispers out of bone.”
Seersong, Dart realized. Her father’s bones had started this song that ended now in a chorus of slaughter and screams. The Dark Grace had driven the Huntress into some realm of terror where cruelty could be justified in the name of security.
The Huntress spread her arms high. “The ravens had to be silenced before they spread word of my preparations. Ravens in the night…and their wings had to be clipped!”
Dart finally followed her gaze. It had not been directed skyward to encompass the world. The Huntress’s mind was still tangled here, landlocked, and bound in pain.
All their faces turned upward.
Hanging from the branches overhead, half-lost in mists, rested a flock of giant birds, black wings spread wide, batlike and heavy.
Not birds.
Men.
Shadowknights.
The former oath-sworn of Tashijan had been gutted and strung up with their own bowels. Their cloaks and capes extended like wings, soaked with mists and blood.
Aghast with horror, Dart averted her eyes. She gaped at the Huntress.
How could she…?
The Huntress lowered her arms and faced them again. “Your arrival here—he who slew the daemon Chrism—only further supports the righteousness of my actions. You have been flown here to serve me, by destiny and fate, by the sounding of my warhorn. Daemonslayer and godslayer. With you bound beside me, we will free Myrillia.”
Tylar finally stared toward the Huntress. Dart noted the flash in his eye. It was not Grace. It was certainty.
“Never,” he said.
He had climbed here, risked all, hoping to sway her from this path. The Huntress was no servant of the Cabal—in many ways, she was more victim than collaborator. But Tylar knew that neither mattered.
Here was something worse.
Madness given the strength of a god.
“You will drink my blood and join me at my side,” she ordered. “Or all who stand beside you will be flailed of skin and sinew. Their cries—like the whispers out of bone—will sway you to do what must be done.”
“I will need no swaying. I know what must be done.” Tylar stepped aside and used his palm to push Brant forward. “I was also led here not just by fate and destiny—but by the word of one of your own.”
The Huntress finally seemed to note
that there were others beside Tylar. She had been so focused on the Godslayer—and all that his arrival portended—that she had ignored those who shadowed him.
Her eyes found Brant, narrowed with momentary confusion, then widened with shocked recognition.
“The banished returned! Another sign! Brant, son of Rylland…hunter and bringer of dark gifts…”
Hope shone from her face.
Marron spoke into her silence. “It is I who bring you gifts now!”
He hurriedly shrugged off Rogger’s satchel and pushed it toward her, almost prostrating himself on the planks, so eager to please, and afraid to have his place usurped in her eyes.
The Huntress backed a step. She must have suspected what lay hidden within the folds of cloth, recognizing a familiar bulge. “It cannot be…”
“Mistress?”
“It had vanished. Surely vanquished.” Her voice began to tremble. “The dark whisper in the night. Then silence. The first sign. I was free to build my army.”
Then her manner sharpened. She leaned forward, eyes narrowing slyly. “Unless…unless you test me, godslayer. To make sure my legion is prepared.”
“You have found me out,” Tylar said, limping forward.
“Take care,” Rogger whispered through his beard, chin lowered. “You play with broken daggers here.”
Tylar nodded, to both Rogger and the Huntress. “Can you face the skull and still hold fast?”
She rose again to a stiff-backed posture, proud and strong. “I have winnowed my realm to its purest.” Then she added with a glare to the south, “Or at least almost…if not for her…”
Tylar glanced to Rogger and Krevan. Both shook their heads, unsure what this newest raving portended.
She faced Tylar, then eyed the satchel, almost with longing. “I would hear it again…so I might resist it this time.”
Tylar nodded, offering both his palms, open and inviting toward the satchel. “So we have come.”
The Huntress sank to her knees, not touching the satchel. She reached out, then away again. A war fought over her features: fear, desire, agony, anguish. Her fingers trembled.