Shadow Gate
Out of habit, out of respect, she cleared the stones, raked out the fire pit, and shifted such wood as was still usable into a new stack, splitting kindling. You had to leave things as you would hope to find them.
Herelia had been closed to reeves for so many years that she doubted any reeves chanced the Liya Pass in these more dangerous days, for fear of being ambushed, as she had been twenty years ago. Nor, in the circuitous route she had taken over many days and nights flying up here, had she seen much traffic on any of the tracks or roads in these parts. The land appeared quiet and orderly. Subdued. Probably it was. But looks could be deceiving.
In the gray light before true dawn, she flew Warning along the high ridgeline to the black knob of the Tit. The Guardian’s altar tucked on a shelf of rock below the summit glittered with the first sparks of sunlight. She’d had a hard time maneuvering Flirt onto the ledge, but Warning simply galloped as on a ramp down to earth. Marit dismounted, and the mare trotted across the labyrinth, seeking the spring.
Now, the gamble, the sticks tossed, the game set in motion.
She set her right foot on the entrance, and her left. She named each turn as the woman wearing the cloak of night had taught her: Needle Spire bright with the morning sun; Everfall Beacon; Stone Tor; Salt Tower beside the Salt Sea; Mount Aua; Highwater stream; the Pinnacle; the Walshow overlook; Swamp Bastion; Horn Vista; the Dragon’s Tower; Thunder Spire; the Five Brothers; the Seven Secret Sisters; the Face on the Kandaran Pass, where night still shadowed the Spires. A hundred and one altars sacred to the Guardians wove through the land and, together with the Ten Tales of Founding, held the garment together.
The Rocky Saddle. The Eagle’s Talon. Haldia Overlook.
She tasted blood, a faint lingering taint. One of the others had stood at Haldia Overlook recently, was maybe even walking the labyrinth ahead of or behind her. She pushed on. Unlike the last time she had walked this labyrinth, no voices whispered at her ears; no man’s figure greeted her as she stepped into the hollow. But instead of being blinded by a flare of light, spun halfway around and thrown by the altar’s sorcery to the peak of the knob, she simply halted beside Warning, who watered unconcernedly at the pool.
Marit knelt, dipped her bowl, and drank deeply. Rising, she ran a hand over the soft stubble of her hair, still and always the same length as the days when she’d kept it cut short because that was the fashion reeves wore.
You think that you are dead, but you are living. It is others who tell you you are dead, and you believe them, and by believing them you corrupt the strength the gods pour into their chosen vessels.
Yet why then did her hair not grow?
Sometimes you had to go with the evidence.
She walked back to the rim of the ledge. Remarkably, the rope she’d left here twenty years ago swayed in the morning breeze, still fastened above. She gripped the rope in a hand and tugged as hard as she could, and cursed if it didn’t hold. Amazing how indestructible good hempen rope proved to be.
She curled up the trailing end of the rope and knotted it in a cradle around her hips. Climbing up on the ledge, she leaned backward into the air and, hand over hand, worked her way up the knob, pausing at intervals to rest with the rope looped up tight around her body. Arms and legs aching, she scrambled the last rugged slope up to the summit where a metal post had been hammered deep into the rock. The frayed remains of banners streamed around her: blood-red, black of night, heaven-blue, mist-silver, fiery-gold-sun, earth-brown, seedling-green, twilight-sky, and death-white. The cloaks of the Guardians.
And she laughed, because there it was. The metal post was hollow, like pipewood, and cursed if someone—maybe the handsome man with demon-blue outlander eyes set in a brown face—hadn’t simply slipped a sword in at the top, the hilt peeping up above the blustery rumble of sun-bleached banners.
NEVER IN HER life before had Mai enjoyed isolation, but after the birth she was content simply to rest on a pallet in the cave, seeing no one, food and drink and cleaning arranged by Priya and, later, Sheyshi. The baby was very small, but he seemed healthy, nursing and sleeping and eliminating. He rarely cried, and sometimes she sat outside on a pillow by the pool and cradled him in her arms as spray off the falls cooled her back. Probably she should not expose him to the moist air, but she felt an inexplicable kinship with the falls, as if it had soothed and comforted her during the final stages of labor when those eerie strands of light had filled the cave. The valley, too, was very beautiful, and its high walls cradled her, the crags and mountain peaks looming like stalwart guards. In this place, she was safe.
“Mistress, do you want to go lie down?” asked Sheyshi.
“No, I’m content here in the sun.”
“You should lie down for one month,” said Sheyshi. “Otherwise the evil spirits might eat you.”
“I’m fine, Sheyshi. Maybe you could brew me some more of that nice tea with spices.” Anything to stop her hovering!
Given a task, the slave hurried off to the small encampment newly set up down the path to accommodate the daily comings and goings of reeves out of Naya Hall bringing provisions and news. The baby slept, his tiny round face entirely peaceful, although he slept so much she had scarcely seen his eyes open except for that first startling moment after his birth when he had stared at her as if recognizing her. He weighed nothing, really, light to hold but so vast that her heart had opened to encompass heavens and earth, fire and water, all of creation.
“Mai.”
She smiled down at the sleeping baby, and then she rose with careful dignity and turned to greet her husband. “Anji, greetings of the day.”
He looked a bit ragged, as if he hadn’t slept, but his clothes were neat and clean and his hair was tied tightly up in the Qin topknot, not a strand out of place. He held a basket in his hands. Awkwardly, he offered it to her, looking very serious.
“These gifts I bring, mare’s milk, goat’s butter, sheep’s yoghurt, to strengthen your blood.” He set the basket on the low wall and opened a pouch slung at his hip. From this he drew length after length of gold chain and jewel-set necklaces, a fortune beyond price. “Among my mother’s people, a woman of honor wears her clan’s wealth, for she alone possesses the vitality to resist its corrupting influence. This is yours now, which once belonged to my mother’s mother.”
He draped them over her neck, a heavy weight indeed, and only then did he bend his gaze to the child.
She gently unwrapped the sleeping baby, who stirred and stretched as his limbs were exposed. “He is whole, and although small he is so far healthy. He sleeps a lot, though.”
He examined the child’s head and torso and genitals and limbs and fingers and toes, and only then did he smile, the sudden brilliance quite staggering.
“He needs a name!” she said indignantly.
He nodded. “That’s why I waited seven days. He’ll be Atani, after my father, who loved his younger brother too much to see him murdered, although it cost him much on his own behalf. I’ve also been told that by Hundred custom it is a Water-born name, proper to a child born under the shelter of a waterfall, during a storm.”
“Atani,” she murmured, tracing the infant’s perfect tiny lips and his flat baby chin. He burbled, mouth rooting as he woke up. His eyes opened, black pools absorbing the mystery of the world, and shut again.
“You have done well, Mai. Not that I am surprised.”
“Will you hold him?”
“After the moon’s cycle is complete. Otherwise my touch may alert demons to his presence. It’s enough that I can look at him, and at you, until that day.” He did look, but at her more than at the child, eyes narrowed with the very slight look of satisfaction that meant he was well pleased, perhaps even gloating, if Anji ever gloated.
“Captain!”
He turned. “You are an uncle, Tuvi-lo.”
The chief walked up as Mai displayed the naked baby. “So I am! What a fine lad.”
“Whole with no blemishes,” said Anji.
br /> “Atani-hosh, I pledge my loyal service,” said the chief. Then with a big grin he nodded at Mai. “To the mother, strength and honor.”
“I’m hungry. I think I’m always hungry!”
As if she had heard, Priya walked out from the cave. “Captain Anji! You must not touch Mai or your son until the turn of the moon.”
“I have not. But I have brought Mai foods that will strengthen her blood.”
Priya took the infant to wrap it, and Mai sat on the wall an arm’s length from Anji and ate the food he had brought, rich butter, voluptuous yoghurt, stingingly strong fermented mare’s milk, while he related the tale of the skirmish and the fate of the Red Hounds.
“We killed all of the riders, except for two we took as prisoners. However, they did not talk. As for the agents in place within the settlement, three for sure we killed.”
“Who were they?” She shuddered. “I hate to think of walking past such men every day and never knowing.”
“Posing as laborers. I am sure there are others. We remain vigilant. My brother the emperor will attempt to strike again. He sees me as a threat to his position, more so even than my cousins.”
“Although they are the ones who have challenged him over the throne.”
“At the moment, my brother is the one who stands in the way of their ambition. Although it’s hard to imagine that they can defeat the rightful heir, the one the priests have sealed as legitimate. Now, of course, this boy likewise, a new grandson of the former emperor. So I’m not sure what to do with you and the baby, Mai.”
“Build me a cottage in this valley. Then it would be hard for the Red Hounds to reach me, neh?”
He surveyed the whitecapped mountains and the spilling water, inhaling the scent of sweet flowers, of extravagant leaves, of moist air. The deep cleft might harbor an entire village, and no one ever know.
“But I don’t really want to live here forever,” she added hurriedly, brushing a hand over the links of gold that weighed on her chest. “You know how I love the market. And I miss Miravia, if I’m ever to be allowed to see her again.”
He sat, saying nothing as he regarded the ripples in the pool with an expression so even that she began to grow nervous, thinking maybe he was very angry.
“Anji?”
“Marshal Joss told me a disturbing tale. Is it true?”
“That spirits attended the birth? I think so. I don’t know what to call them, truly, for they were like strands of silk more than spirits, but I felt such calm and protection at their presence. Now they’re gone. Sometimes I wonder if I dreamed it.” But when she turned to regard the waterfall, white skirts of mist rising where the water met the pool, she knew she had not.
“That he entered the chamber of birth,” said Anji.
Chief Tuvi whistled under his breath.
“The marshal brought me here safely. If we hadn’t turned back, I’d have lost the baby over the sea, for it came that quickly. Miyara—the other reeve—told me it is traditional for an aunt and uncle to witness the birth.” She watched him closely, not sure how to interpret his steady expression, but he glanced at the chief and shrugged as if to dislodge a weight, his shoulders relaxing.
“Uncle, eh? Then we must accept how things are done here in the Hundred. He’s a good man. It can’t hurt the child to be related by such bonds to the man who now stands as commander over all the reeves of the Hundred.”
Of course his words rolled out like so much nonsense. At first breath, she wondered what any of this had to do with the quiet woodland surrounding them, with the sun’s glamour setting the peaks in bright relief against a rich blue sky, with the brown earth under her slippered feet, and the whisper of a breeze in her ear bringing with it the faintest chiming lure of a distant melody sung by unseen voices.
She licked dry lips. “What do you mean, Anji? What has happened?”
“Hu!” He laughed for the first time, and she laughed, seeing his happiness in the quickness of his smile and the way he looked sidelong at her, almost flirting. “Grim news, truly, and a difficult path ahead. But it’s true it’s hard to feel the shadows in this place, as if the gods hold their hearts here.”
Sheyshi brought bowls of spiced tea, and the men settled more comfortably on the stone wall while Mai adjusted the pillow under her to cushion the places down there where she was still rather sore.
“I can’t sing,” he added with another smile, “although I know how you love your songs. So for you, plum blossom, and only for you, flower of my heart and mother of my son, I will tell you the story of the events of the last many days as a tale.”
AT THE HIGH salt sea, on the edge of the Hundred, a vast escarpment splits the land and the mountains plunge downward to a flat plain. If you stand on the sharp ridge that separates the waters from the cliff, you can gaze over the drylands, a desert that extends for an unknown distance, inimical to life.
But Kirit can smell the grass of home, even if maybe it is only memory.
She said, “Uncle, I killed the ones who hurt me.”
“I know,” he said sadly.
“I killed a lot of bad people. Their hearts were rotten.”
“Some hearts do rot. Although that does not give us leave to behave as they would.”
The day was very hot, and the air so dry her lips were already cracking. “I thought revenge would heal me. I found Shai. I looked into his heart, only his heart was veiled. But I do not need the third eye and second heart to know him, since I lived for two years in the same household. He was tempted, but he did not succumb. And if he could resist the worst in himself, then so must I. I won’t become a demon.”
The wind tore at their cloaks. Far away above the southern range, raptors circled so high that they were nothing more than specks in the fierce blaze of the heavens.
“What happened to her?” she asked. “Ashaya, who wore the cloak before me.”
He followed the distant eagles with his gaze, but finally looked at her. “When she walked out of the Hundred, she hoped the gods would abandon her, that she would be able to die and be free, without loosing the cloak into the hands of the others.”
“But I found the cloak.”
“Yes. You did. So maybe you freed her, or maybe she was already gone. It’s something to consider. What living person has ever attempted to uncloak a Guardian, eh? Who could manage it? I’ve been thinking about what happened to you, Kirit. It can’t have been the poison that killed you.”
“The poison that killed Girish?”
“Maybe the brew wasn’t strong enough to kill. Maybe he just choked to death on his vomit.”
She grinned. “As he deserved.”
“Eiya! There’s a conversation I’m not wise enough to assay. You told me the Qin captain forced you to walk into the sandstorm.”
“I wanted to rejoin my tribe. Their voices called to me from the storm.”
“Demons, most likely. Did he seek you out?”
“The captain? Neh. I went to find Mountain to tell him that the slave bearers needed water. A storm can last days. What use is shelter if you die of thirst beneath it?”
“A humble request, but a just one.”
“The captain saw me. He thought I would bring ill luck down on them because that’s what demons do. He gave me a fair choice. I could walk into the storm of my own will, or he would make sure I died some other way before the journey was over. That was the first time since I walked into demon land that I got to choose.” She hid her face behind a hand, and then, finding that the voices of her lost tribesfolk did not call to her as they had in the storm, she lowered the hand and looked at him.
He smiled gently.
“I can’t go home, Uncle. I am a different person, not that one who lived before.”
He sighed and said nothing, by which he meant he agreed.
Yet Rats can’t stay quiet for long.
“Do you know the tale of how the wide lake came to rest here, caught between the mountains and the cliff? It happened in t
he Tale of Change, when the delvings captured a merling and decided that in order to keep it from escaping back into the sea they must dig a prison far from the ocean and joined to no stream or rivulet down which it could slip and slide. So they cut a path deep through the earth and under the watershed—”
“I missed you,” she said.
For a breath, two breaths, and then five, he could not speak.
A rippling movement flashed above the drowsy waters.
“Look there!” she cried.
A rocky islet lay surrounded by the lifeless waters. The islet, too, revealed no sign of life except for the desiccated remains of flowers draped over a series of crude stone pillars. A horse flew gracefully over the sea and circled the islet, and then the rider noticed them standing exposed on the ridge.
They waited.
At length her mare clattered to earth on the ridge, and Marit dismounted. She halted a prudent distance away and drew from a leather sheath a serviceable short sword, nothing fancy to look at: plain, good steel. “The sword, called death, cuts the strand of life.”
“Where did you find it?” he asked.
“The place no one else thought to look,” she said with a grin. “I’m Marit, as I said before. Kirit I already know. Will you tell me who you are, ver?”
“No one who ever did a cursed thing in his life to deserve good or ill, verea. But my mother, who has long since crossed the Spirit Gate, gave me the name Jothinin.”
“ ‘Foolish Jothinin, light-minded Jothinin.’ An old-fashioned name. Just like in the tale.”
He smiled but said nothing.
“What is a Guardian?” she asked, but answered herself. “It’s not a thing already made. It’s what we become of our own shaping.”
He rested his staff against a shoulder and opened his hands in the gesture of welcoming. “Will you join us, little sister?” Kirit looked sharply at him but did not object. “We have scant hope of victory, but we must make the effort.”
She laughed, and the air wicked away her tears. “Allies, then?”