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The Infinity Mantle: RAYNE
Part 3 (RAYNE) at a glance. All chapters are now available to read for free! Just click Lore of Arcana in the sidebar and start reading :)
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Infinity: Epilogue
Epilogue
Far
Reaches
Valleur
possessed added biology that allowed them to breathe air alien to humankind, a
fortunate situation given where the scatterlings of Ardosia were forced to ground.
On a rock twirling near a hot star, waterless,
sluggish lava below the surface that would one day evolve into volcanoes, they
huddled.
They could not stay long. Air issues were one
matter; water was an imperative. The younglings would succumb first.
While squads of four continued the search for
temporary and viable habitation, four hundred Valleur clustered in misery and
grief on the barren wasteland.
At least a hundred would not see another universal
day, their injuries fatal. Most of those were children, and their deaths
created greater grief. So few left - the young should be the future.
Rillinon stared unseeing over the huddles and
wished he died on Ardosia. Better than this hell.
He watched them breathe their last, one here, three
there, and cursed the seers who looked, saw and had not offered warning before
dying around a copper disc. Their equivocation led to absolute doom.
His wife and daughter, dead. What future now
remained?
He caught sight of Camot, war leader. The man
appeared bowed, weighed down, and thus it should be. A war leader unprepared.
His reward should be eternal guilt.
A squad returned then and Rillinon pushed himself
up. This squad was the one Camot dispatched back to Ardosia. Perhaps there was some
good news.
“… raining,” one was saying as Rillinon closed in.
“The Dome Guardians extinguished the fires.”
“Anyone left alive?” Camot barked.
Nobody said anything and that was answer enough.
“Is Ardosia habitable?” Camot asked next.
“Not yet,” the same man replied.
“Even if it were …” another began.
“We would be targets, yes,” Camot growled, and
dismissed them. He noticed Rillinon and beckoned him closer.
“Anything on Dantian?” Rillinon asked.
“They found Dante, but no sign of the Vallorin,”
Camot murmured. “The Rift is unattended.”
“We should consider Valaris.”
Camot bent over, hands on knees. “How I wish I
could offer that option.” He looked up at Rillinon from that lowered position.
“Guess where the Darak Or went after leaving this realm?”
Rillinon was horrified. Another world would soon
suffer what Ardosia had. “If Vannis is alive …”
“What can he do before soltakin touch murders
everything that is wholesome and sane in a world?” Camot straightened and
passed a hand clearly shaking over his face. “The Valleur are cursed. Best to
hide where no one will think to look.”
Then, giving Rillinon a troubled, helpless kind of
shrug, he stumbled away. What future was now left, indeed?
A young voice whispered nearby, words of
desperation, the kind to penetrate even numbness.
It
will all burn, daddy. It burns.
Rillinon saw the man first and recognised him. It
was Anastir, Dantian’s master sorcerer and also the sole Elder to escape
Ardosia. He was prone and unmoving on the unforgiving rock and beside him a
little girl swayed to and fro, thin arms clasped around legs black with soot.
It
will all burn, daddy.
Something unlocked inside Rillinon then, and he
began to heave and shudder. Tears ran unchecked over filthy cheeks. The young
should be the future.
He approached and knelt beside the girl, reaching
out to lay fingers in Anastir’s neck. He drew back. Dead. The last Elder had
succumbed. He shifted to face the swaying youngling. Her hair covered her face;
her lips moved saying the same words over and over. He lifted his hand and
brushed her hair aside, tucking it behind an ear.
He rocked back on his heels.
Varelie.
The Valleur were cursed. How many times had he not
heard that? Perhaps it was true; it certainly felt like it now. If it was true,
then this girl was in danger. Danger would remain no matter how long she
managed to escape hounding. Would the Darak Or come looking for her?
It did not bear thinking about. An innocent
hounded. If the Valleur were ever to regain a semblance of what they were once,
that future lay with this slip of a girl.
Daughter of Vallorins. The mother of the future.
She was now the House of Valla.
Perhaps he should have given it more thought before
acting on what was pure impulse and instinct in that moment, and perhaps he
would have chosen exactly as he did. Sometimes destiny carried no nuance and
remained unrecognised.
Rillinon reached out and placed the tips of his
fingers on Varelie’s forehead. “Little one, I will take your pain away. Will
you trust me?”
She ceased chanting and looked at him with huge
eyes. “Will you be my daddy?”
He swallowed hard. His daughter was the same age as
Varelie. He would transfer all the love he possessed from the dead to the
living and be again whole. “Yes.”
Rillinon pressed firmly against her forehead. Your
life begins now, little one. You have no memory of who you are. From this day,
you are my daughter.
He opened his arms. “Daddy’s arms are empty.”
The little girl smiled and scrambled into them,
twining her arms around his neck. Rillinon held her close as tears rolled
again.
A new start. There was always hope.
“I love you, Mitrill.”
~ The End ~
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Monday, March 13, 2017
Infinity: Chpt 45 - Obelisk
And here it is, the final chapter! Now you know Rayne of the Mantle (and that there is mystery surrounding him) and Vannis of the Valleur is once more free in a different time. Taranis of the Guardians too has secrets we need to unveil. Infinity's game swiftly changed to become something else, and Margus has entered the arena. Rayne's dreams of a lost girl led him to Ardosia and he found an answer, but it isn't the one he sought ...
As stated when I began sharing The Infinity Mantle with you, this is the start of a epic series. This is the groundwork; now the longer tale begins! One last clue will be yours in the Epilogue - come back tomorrow to find out :)
Chapter 45
To be all that you can be
~ The first truth
Valaris’ Moon
Margus turned away.
To
concentrate on strategy he had to look elsewhere. Valaris’ beauty and presence
negated clear thinking. He wanted it now.
A
blinding flash.
It
was not a blaze of light; it was the flash of magical signature.
The
thread pulsed into brilliance.
Margus
gazed down attentively upon the world below. There. An island off the west
coast.
He
recognised what it signified. The Vallorin walked upon Valaris after nine
millennia. He glanced at his prisoner, eyes flicking over the noble form.
Vallorin to Vallorin. The Maghdim Medaillon would be his soon.
Vannis,
last Vallorin of this universe, was as visible as the yellow sun was; there was
nowhere to hide on Valaris.
Watch the skies, fools.
The Obelisk
They arrived
on a perfectly square grassy plain.
The
new-old forest hedged the perimeter, and it rustled with life. The shadeless
area was large, the sun beating down despite the hour, instantly raising a
sweat. The grass was unkempt, as if it was allowed to grow without upkeep
before cloaking, and sweet little mauve wildflowers peeped out.
Vannis
muttered about slack gardeners.
Saska
wandered around. “Why is there a time limit between the Pyramid and here?”
“Incentive.
Without it, you would now be within the Pyramid studying its marvels. They are
addictive, yes?”
Vannis
studied Rayne as he walked to where the base of the tower would appear. Ah, I am not wrong. Blue fire and an
affinity to the sites.
He
continued, “The Obelisk is a transmitter, the sound for the scenes in the
Retrogressive Spheres. The two sites are the two parts of a whole.”
“Aven
will be receiving a bonus soon …” Saska proceeded to tell him of the old man’s
quest for the truth, and smiled widely over the pleased look that lit his
features. “I am curious. The Ruby was altered and used by human sorcerers to
enable a so-called Path to Enlightenment. What did they find at the sacred
sites?”
“That
episode was a fiasco. Valaris’ humans rediscovered sorcery and the prevailing
wind was open-minded and I thought to aid that, hasten it along in a benign
period, one in which I sought to atone for my past. I permitted the gem to be
found, but there was a problem in that one of the sites was no longer viable,
thus it was altered to activate. The Pyllanthos Theory was already an accepted
ideal and it fit, and was incorporated.”
“You
changed it?”
“No,
but I placed the thought in their minds. They gathered fourteen sorcerers
together, did the necessary and, as happened to your team of fourteen, the
steps were revealed. Thus began the journey, but without driving threat at the
time.”
“It
went wrong.”
“Utterly
wrong. They were unable to uncloak the sites, not knowing they were Valleur,
and created abominations in their stead. Sites were revealed, but they were not
Valleur; rather they were creations of the mind, and proved their power, and
what they brought forth … gods; some twisted and each different. The Individual
Path they called it, and became addicted to the effects of their creations,
trying to outdo each other; true abomination. I wanted to obliterate them, but allowed
it to go on, revenge in a way, but also hoping they would somehow stumble upon
the truth. Not the Valleur sites, per se, but the Light of real truth.”
“Which
never came to pass, and you finally removed the Ruby.”
“I
had to, and Valaris descended into a narrow darkness worse than anything
before, and I was powerless to change it. A breeding ground for despair and
hatred, wholesale killing of anyone suspected of magic, and therefore Drasso
and his uncanny success. I made many mistakes.”
“We
all make mistakes.”
He
inclined his head. “True, my dear, but on that scale? I have much to atone
for.”
“Do
you still despise them?”
“Humankind?
I do not know. I like to think I learned from the lessons of the past, but a
long, long road of hatred and revenge lies behind me. My feelings, whatever
they are, must remain personal, for this is a human world and I brought on much
of the prevailing psyche. Whether or not I am beyond hatred should no longer be
the issue, for I need atone, I need
it, or I shall never be entirely free. And nobody deserves to be enslaved to
one mind, particularly if that mind is from the past and has outdated ideals.
Valarians must be released from my mistakes.”
“Even
if you want to strangle them?”
“Even
if, yes.”
Saska
smiled in sympathy. Vannis would become a good friend, a great friend. Rayne,
however, felt far away.
Vannis
shook his head. “Narrow-minded, the lot of you.” He pointed a finger at her.
“As the solitary powerful Valarian, Rayne is the only person I wholly place my trust in at this moment. Power does
not equate to evil, Saska. Despite the suspicions of the Siric.”
The
Vallorin was right. “It changes him,” she said after a time.
“Unavoidable,
yet time will return him somewhat to what he was, as will patience. You care
about him - I see that. Exercise patience and understanding, and he will not
turn from you for too long.”
“You
think he will turn from me?” Already it hurt.
Vannis
looked away. “Recognition of self comes at a high price.”
Saska went
to Rayne. He drew her in simply by being in a space she could step close to.
Rayne
of the Mantle was no more. Rayne of Galilan was no more. She needed to feel her
way around this new persona. This was a man apparently a match for Guardians
and Vallorins.
Her
suspicions were confirmed when he acknowledged her without a trace of the
former wonder. She understood, but it hurt nonetheless. She was furious he was
forced into this hell, and her eyes sparked.
He
saw it and grimaced, looking away.
Phet
flew in a wide circle overhead, and she heard his friendly tones within. The human sorcerer is not the same man who
went to Ardosia. An echo of sadness was evident in his tone.
Indeed not, old friend.
“Rayne?”
He
looked at her again. She dropped her eyes first and stepped back.
Beside
her now, Vannis watched and waited. Rayne’s eyes flicked to him.
“You
have the honour of uncloaking the Obelisk.” Inwardly Vannis sighed. There is arrogance absent before. He is more
like me.
“A
test, Vallorin? Each uncloaking is different.”
Vannis’
expression did not change. “Curiosity.”
“Really.”
Without further dissembling, Rayne faced the centre. His lips moved
soundlessly.
There
was a crackling in the air akin to the hum of rampant static.
Vannis’
eyes narrowed. An outsider would have to speak the Valleur tongue aloud to make
Valleur magic work. A true adept could think it.
And
there it was, the Obelisk, a shimmering four-sided shaft of unknown material.
Metalloid, Saska guessed correctly. Monolithic and tapering, it finished in a
pyramidal point. Nothing altered in the surroundings; that transformation was
already complete.
Phet
swooped down to alight on the point and screeched loud. It speaks, he sent in amazement.
Saska
waved at him and Vannis laughed.
Rayne
said, “It is activated. We are two steps into achieving the balance Valaris
requires.”
Vannis
murmured, “I wonder where your limits lie.”
“Rayne?”
Saska murmured.
“We
have other priorities, Saska.”
She
watched as he walked away. As did Vannis, but he did so with greater
understanding. As did Phet, and he did so with clear understanding.
For
the charismatic Falcon everything, too, would change.
Ardosia
They
employed major sorcery to extinguish the fires.
A
blanketing suppression snuffed the flames in one roar of dampened sound. It
took many hours to gather the power to do so, but when it settled over Ardosia,
it worked better than expected.
The
Centuar stamped their hooves and swished tails. It was a massive achievement.
Taranis
clapped hands. Then he was serious, for time moved on. Somewhere a Darak Or
prepared to bring this annihilation to another world.
“Invoke
rain for five days and nights and clear the atmosphere. The least we can do is
restore some natural balance to this world, allow it to renew and save what
animal life remains. If it doesn’t work … well, we shall check from time to
time.”
The
Lady of Life was an option for renewal, should rain not begin the restoration
process. She, however, preferred all avenues followed before a call went out.
Belun
nodded, serious also. It was the least they could do. He hated being witness to
this abandonment; this emptying of what was once good and decent.
He
called his Centuar to him and they commenced the hand gestures and intonations
that would unlock their minds and prepare them for the sorcery that heralded
extraordinary rain. They had to be careful, for too much would cause greater
damage, but too little would not help the planet.
While
they were thus engaged, Taranis wandered.
Through
soot and ash he could discern or imagine the proud edifices of a proud nation.
The Valleur built for eternity, but even that had not saved them from the wrath
of this new enemy. Their great buildings succumbed. They succumbed.
He
wanted to scream at the heavens, finding it unfair so many paid with their
lives due to the spite of one.
The
Siric, the Sagorin, the Centuar and the others, they were the Guardians and,
once the Rift opened to what lay beyond, it became part of their
responsibility. They were duped. They had been suffering under the mantle of
fear, but they had not looked hard and long enough to see beyond Chaos to a
people potentially in danger. They had not known enough to look.
That
did not absolve them from their responsibility.
The
Guardians failed to protect the weak. The Guardians needed to atone. Someone
had to kneel before the Vallorin and offer up … what? No degree of atonement,
no words of sympathy, and no act of contrition would now alter what came to
pass.
The
only course of action left was to prevent Margus causing more damage. He had to
be stopped, whatever it took. Therein was a measure of atonement.
After
more hours of preparation later Belun and his Centuar huddled together.
Above,
rain clouds gathered in a gradually less polluted atmosphere and, as they left
Ardosia, the first raindrops fell, hissing into the scorched earth.
They
chose soft rain, nothing destructive and yet encompassing and drenching. Lakes
would fill, rivers run, and the smouldering embers below the surface would be
doused by degree until Ardosia again stood a chance at renewal. The animals would
have water to drink and seeds could sprout again in their time. They
accomplished a major feat and yet, confronted by the terrible destruction of a
world, it felt mean, a tiny drop in a huge ocean. Massive achievements, yes,
but after the fact.
“What
of the bodies?” Rilt asked.
“When
the temperature is normal, we will send the Gravedigger Guild in,” Taranis
said.
They
left Ardosia behind.
They
saw other planets, uninhabitable, empty. In the furthest reaches they came
across a giant vortex in space, in which whirled the debris of a vaporized
world.
“It’s
new,” Belun remarked, his eyes narrowing. “Destroyed recently.”
“Yes.
The Darak Or burning his bridges, you think?” Taranis said.
“If
he can do this, he is far more dangerous than we suspect,” Belun returned
uneasily. “Dear Lady, I hope no one was living there when he did that.”
“Likely
a futile hope,” Taranis said. “May all that is good help us now. Come, there is
nothing we can learn of Margus here. We are needed elsewhere; let us leave this
place.”
On
Ardosia rain came and would go, in cycles, as nature reasserted itself.
Was
it the rain seers saw huddled over a copper circle?
Or
had they seen another kind of ‘rain’?
Outside Mintor on Tor
Island’s east coast
Where their
skin made contact, a blue heat shimmered, and sparked into miniscule fireworks.
There
it was. The proof.
Rayne
snatched his hand away. “Clearly not the Medaillon.”
“Not
even close. An explanation offered to Taranis on the spur of the moment.”
Saska’s
breath whistled in deep sleep, the sound seeming to rise with the rhythmic
sound of the waves breaking on the beach. Rayne glanced at her and breathed a
sigh of relief.
“She
should know this,” Vannis murmured.
“Not
yet. Revelation upon disclosure upon astonishment since she was summoned to the
Gatherers’ Circle after the Dome was inactive for a thousand years – she is
different now from the Sylmer I met in the Great Forest and changing by the
minute …”
“As
you are.”
“And
thus I need deal with it first.”
“Do
you know what ‘it’ is?”
Vannis
lifted both hands to the Rayne’s face, to draw his fingers down those tense
cheeks, and set a-fire trails of blue shimmers, miniature spangles of electric
stars.
His
hands dropped, and he could not locate the obligatory words. He had to say it.
He almost shouted it out on Ardosia … and now he was afraid to.
Rayne’s
gaze was bleak. He was accustomed to rejection. His father never accepted him,
his mother was a politeness that hurt, his friends were voices in a crowd, and
society as a whole rejected him from the outset, if only in his mind.
Society
would kill him if it knew what it was he protected since becoming Lord of the
Mantle.
Saska
would reject him soon. He had hoped Vannis would not add his name to
that list. He hoped Taranis would not.
“Kinfire,”
he said, his gaze direct.
Vannis’
eyes were sky-blue.
“Valleur
blood,” Rayne added, the shutters descending.
The
woman on Ardosia in a sense confirmed the likelihood for him. A Valleur with a
Valleur blade. It explained almost every twist of his dual reluctance with and
affinity for the realms of sorcery.
“Not
simply Valleur,” Vannis said, finding his voice. “Valla blood. My blood. You are a Valla. Only we, the
ruling House, have trebac.”
The
two men engaged via their eyes, and locked in.
“My
god, I wait millennia … to be torn all over again.” Vannis lifted his face to
the night sky, raised a fist, and shouted out, “Mother, by all your minions,
what are you doing to me? What happened to my family?”
Rayne
paled, watching him.
“Do
you not see? You are descended from Nemis, my only son, my only blood, my heir!
Did he return to Valaris, Rayne? A Valleur never forgets; he can recite his
lineage back to his first forefather among the Ancient ones! Where do you come
from? Tell me!”
Rayne
stepped back. “I do not fit in with your plans, is that it, Lord Vallorin? I am
not worthy of your blood? If I knew of my past, if I knew I was Valleur - Valla - would I still battle inner
demons? I spent every day of my life feeling torn, an urge to know why, how,
and wondering always how I instinctively attuned to the realm of magic, and
hating it, hating myself at the same time. Belonging nowhere, lost, seeking
answers! Somehow, somewhere, your blood came to me, but until kinfire - sorry, trebac - on Ardosia I had no idea. I am
human also, and maybe that is why this particular Valla has forgotten!”
By
the time he was done, bleakness surrendered to fury.
Saska
shifted in her sleep.
“Goddess,”
Vannis murmured, rubbing his eyes. “That is not what I meant. Forgive me, for I
meant not to disparage or hurt you. I did not mean to reject you. Gods, you are
my blood! No matter how it came about, you are a Valla. Kin.”
Vannis
lurched forward and gripped Rayne’s shoulders.
“Rayne,
I know Mantra with Nemis in her womb
left this universe. Their safety, their peaceful new lives is what sustained
me, but someone came back, how else to explain you, and the thought of what
that was like …” Vannis lowered his head and drew a breath.
Rayne
gripped the hands on his shoulders, sparking them anew. “I think I understand.”
He
did. Never belonging, hiding from what you were, always unhappy, even when you
laughed. Any Valleur who pierced the Rift will have experienced that, more so,
and it caused Vannis anguish.
Vannis
looked up. “I cannot understand how a member of my House returned escaped my
notice. I would have prepared for you.” He stood back, dropping his arms. “An
innate arrogance, I am afraid, this belief that a Valla is all-seeing. Well,
while it is true a Valleur baby never forgets, you have lived the kind of life
that could be repressing those memories.” Vannis was sad. “The moment will come
when you recall, as it will for Averroes, and I pray it will not be too
traumatic.”
“The
relief of knowing will outweigh the trauma, for me, anyway.”
Vannis’
eyes lost the blue, and shot into amber. He laughed with joy. “Rayne, do you
know what this means? I am not alone! You are not alone! Even if not a single
Valleur survives Ardosia, still the blood lives! I am not the last … oh, gods,
I am not the last …”
He
heaved a moment, swallowing over that enlightening notion, and came closer,
extending his arm.
“You
are Valla and I greet you, kinsman.”
Rayne
stepped into the Valleur ritual greeting naturally, as if he had been doing it
every day of his life; a forearm-to-forearm clasp that brought two people into
each other’s space intimately, a symbol of trust and goodwill.
They
stood like that, alone in the universe. Blood called to blood with a powerful
inner rushing that was physical, undeniable and … welcome. Swift, surprised
smiles flitted simultaneously across both faces, and they released.
It
was a further confirmation; one rarely experienced, for usually kin knew each
other from birth. The rushing stilled at birth, later taken for granted.
It
needed only two to make a family, and shared blood made them one.
Belonging
had come.
Dead of
night.
Vannis
was awake. Saska slept nearby, soothed by the ocean’s chanting. He sensed how
exhausted she was. Rayne walked the beach in darkness, thought probably chasing
thought, as it was for him.
Rayne
was of the House of Valla. It was time to quiet his mind and hark to the second
sighting granted via the scrying bowl; A
Valleur of half-blood, Valla blood, more powerful than Nemisin, will ascend the
Throne …
The time for that prophecy, its fulfilment, approached.
Sunday, March 12, 2017
Infinity: Chpt 44 - Vannis
Chapter 44
“Build a structure able to stand
the test of time upon a natural energy node, and you will build with magic and
essence also. It is a great gift to future generations, but it is also a grand
gesture that creates balance in the world. A true geomancer knows where to
locate a site that will be sacred forever.”
~ Ancient Oracles
Valaris
Tor Island
Vannis requested a space to find equanimity in
before they rejoined the team and thus Rayne accessed an image in his mind of a
clearing much like the one the team waited in.
They had traversed it soon after leaving the Square Pyramid; thus was it accessible to memory.
As
they landed, Rayne thought on how simple everything was up to the leaving at
the Pyramid. Everything was now different.
He
thought also of the Siric and his warnings about cause and effect.
Vannis
did not move and they did not speak. Although Rayne desired to demand answers
to the blue fire between them on Ardosia, for the Medaillon never reacted in a
manner like that, it was clear Vannis seemed unaware of anything, although eyes
tracked movement with bemusement.
Rayne
retreated into the shadows, but was unable to look away. He wanted to give the
man the privacy he needed, yet needed to witness this return. This became the
moments and minutes of Vannis’ real return to life, his real freedom. It was
something akin to honour - his, and the Vallorin’s.
A
sigh of deep, profound release sounded loud in the silence, and Vannis blinked
his eyes, licking his lips as if thirsty. He threw his head back to stare up in
wonder at the blue sky. The next instant he closed his eyes, to experience, to
absorb the warmth of reality, to take in the energy of life.
He
was tall and golden, lean and strong, and wore his power casually, as if it
were of no consequence, so intrinsic he no longer needed to examine it, and
Rayne, watching, wondered what it felt like, that confidence, that certainty.
He was also awed the man could recover so fast. He saw Vannis’ nostrils flare
at the spicy smells of forest and water and flowers and bird-droppings combined
with a hundred other fragrances, smells he and others took for granted. He
turned his back then, finding the strength to walk away, to afford the Vallorin
the privacy, for the joy of freedom was an individual concept.
Vannis
blinked his eyes open and caught the tactful withdrawal, then forgot about
Rayne as ears discerned a thousand sounds, both familiar and alien, long ago
heard, a long wait for this.
Freedom.
Now it would be real.
He
could see, hear, taste, smell, touch, and everything was new, miraculous.
Yesterday and today blurred, Ardosia receded into the background, time lost its
unholy hold over him, he trembled, and silvery tracings made their way over his
cheeks. Life was precious; never would he undermine its beauty and majesty
again.
Rayne
studied the glory of the new-old trees spread like benign sentinels about him,
protective friends never to be ignored.
Seeing
the Vallorin’s silent pain and joy caused him to thank all gods he never knew
that kind of imprisonment. A frisson of fear ran through him. He, too, stared
up at the blue heavens, amazed by the hues after the terrible darkness over
another world, and wondered why he should be afraid, in this way, now.
It
was not fear of the man behind him, that much he knew, but fear nonetheless
connected to the golden man. Like with Taranis, there was a bond, but this one
was frightening, and did not sit comfortably. Blue fire, dear gods.
He
heard the unmistakeable sounds of running footfalls behind him, and saw Vannis,
barefoot, racing around the small clearing, deliberately digging his toes into
the fresh grass. The pure pleasure of the act transformed the grave features
into a beacon of light.
Vannis
halted, heaving, and smiled, grinned, laughed, his eyes large and glorious
amber, before fading back to Valleur yellow. He doubled over, standing with his
hands on his knees to find breath again.
He
raised his head to smile at Rayne, and Rayne returned it, a witness to the
transformation that freedom wrought.
Vannis
said, “Thank you.” Thank you for knowing, for understanding, for compassion,
for not judging, for freedom, for witnessing. “I am able to absorb other
personalities now. Amazing, isn’t it, what a few minutes of sunshine can do for
the soul?”
It
had been far more than a few minutes, Rayne mused, but would not say so.
A
blink from Vannis. “We will talk, but after we have mobilised the team.” He
grinned then.
Taranis’
words. Rayne smiled. Fine. He needed time also. “They are not far. Do you want
to walk?”
“I
want to draw my sword and behead that monster on the moon,” Vannis muttered,
and shrugged. “We will be walking soon enough. Picture where they are … I will
follow.”
Rayne
nodded, paused. “Yesterday I could not transport through the spaces. Today …”
“Yesterday
you believed you could not. Today you know you were in denial.” Vannis lifted a
challenging eyebrow.
Rayne
stared at him a beat. And vanished.
Snorting
a laugh of disbelief that no one heard, Vannis followed.
Rayne led
the way into that other clearing, long shadows crossing it served to mark the
passage of time, and Averroes and Saska were at him.
No
doubt the wait drove them close to insanity.
He
shook his head. “Questions later, please.” He focused on Averroes because she
was easier to manipulate. “Introduce Vannis.” He watched her intently until she
nodded.
From
the side-lines he watched the reduced team, noted how subdued they were in
sensing the aura of authority. They did not say much, merely reservedly
greeting Vannis in turn, and Rayne wondered how Aven would have handled
himself; probably with unsinkable aplomb.
Gods, wish you were here, old
man; we could use your spirit right now.
His
lips thinned. And McSee? Would he have knocked Vannis flat to the ground,
telling him to stop fooling with everyone? A smile tugged at his mouth a moment
later. That would be interesting, to say the least.
McSee.
Our paths will cross again.
“I’m
still here,” Saska muttered. “Ignoring me won’t make me go away.”
And
was that not an absolute truth?
“What
happened on Ardosia?”
Silence.
She now knew that world’s name. “Annihilation.”
More
silence. “Did you fight?”
“Barely.
The enemy was leaving when we arrived.”
She
touched his arm. “It won’t happen here.”
He
looked at her. “It could.” He moved away. “I cannot talk about it, not yet.” Too much has changed.
She
nodded after a moment and they gave attention to the team now with Vannis.
Vannis,
Rayne noted, was doing fine. Clear of voice, without judgement. He coped
remarkably well, considering his history of disdain for humans.
Saska
was thoughtful, watching closely.
The
Falcon relayed every word back to the Dome, to whoever was there. The blue bird
dipped his head in greeting on being presented, and Vannis grinned. Phet had
that impact on others, and everyone would know it soon. Phet, in his unique
manner, was a charismatic.
Introductions
over, Vannis commented on progress to date, which caused the subdued team to
glance at each other warily. It spoke of unnatural power, and no one was wholly
comfortable with the idea of a freed Vallorin that possessed it.
Vannis
glanced at Rayne with a wry smile, who shrugged.
If
she was given instructions via the Falcon, Saska gave no sign, but the next
moment she stepped up to Vannis and bowed.
“Lord
Vallorin, on behalf of the Immortal Guardians I extend our deepest sympathies.
The destruction beyond the Rift caught us unaware, and we beg your forgiveness.
If we had known; if we had more time …”
Vannis
held a hand aloft to forestall her. “Please, no more. I thank you for your kind
words, but I shall not function if I dwell on it. The wholesale murder of my
people must be put aside for the time being. Please do not mention it in my
presence again.” Vannis gave a twisted, sorrowful smile. “Not until I am ready
to face it.”
Saska
paled at first as he spoke his reprimand, but swiftly she understood his state
of mind, and said, “It will be as you say.”
Vannis
beckoned Rayne closer.
Rayne
closed the gap. His realisation regarding the Falcon passing information back
to the Dome was discomfiting. But what was wrong with that? Saska and Phet were
seconded to Valaris for that reason, and the Dome did need to be informed. It
was not Taranis listening on the other side; he was on Ardosia.
Gods,
he did not want to be responsible - he did not want to be the one to send
people to their deaths. Their inaction already caused slaughter; action could
achieve worse.
Cristi,
he noted, hid behind Samson, as shy again as on first arrival, Kisha and Kylan
hung well back, both pale, and Mordan stood stiffly to attention, holding his
carved staff in both hands. Averroes forced calm, and Saska was, well, Saska -
prepared, willing to act, with caution underlying it. And fire. Senior Guardian
on Valaris, she ached to blaze a trail for others to take note of. Perhaps she
should be in charge.
Perhaps
that would be worse. He would be guilty of sidestepping responsibility.
Rayne’s
gaze slid from her, and he faced Vannis. “Lord Vallorin?”
Vannis
was familiar with the deferment to authority. “Thank you.” He faced the team as
a whole. “I have seen each of you glance to Rayne for confirmation … even you,
Guardian. It appears you regard him as your de facto leader. I dare suggest
this is the case even with Taranis present.”
He
stated it without inflection, and moved on, giving no one an opportunity to
deny or ponder his statement. Only Saska reacted, paling, but she did not look
at Rayne.
“He
has deferred to me at this point, and I am to tell you where we go from here.
This meets with your approval, Rayne?” Vannis paused and before Rayne could
reply he added, “An evocative name. Why were you given it?”
Confounded
by the sudden change in direction, Rayne nonetheless remarked, “Because the
Valleur attach great value to a name?” How did he know that?
“Indeed,”
Vannis said.
“I
believe I was the new life in the desert of my parents’ marriage.” I never knew that before this moment.
“Real
meaning; rare for a human. Forgive me for asking out of turn, now is not the
time for that. To continue …”
“You
have a plan?” Saska interrupted. Who was Rayne that a Guardian millennia old
and a Vallorin from a forgotten past were drawn to him, quickly, wholly, and he
to them? Why did they not question it?
“A
plan? That would be a trifle early, I think,” Vannis said. “The threat to my - our - world is dire, if only a fraction
of the terror unleashed on Ardosia is released here.”
“Margus,”
Saska murmured. “His name is Margus.”
“Well,
fitting. It means …” Vannis glanced at Rayne, who shook his head.
Sunless. Without light, Rayne thought.
“…
Lightless, Sunless,” Vannis finished. “A parody name, as if given after
something of import occurred. Now. The Guardians will work from the Dome. They
have the means to knowledge that could aid us, and there is where their real
contribution lies. They are better served in the seeking by remaining off
world. Do not expect direct participation at this time. In the meantime, we
prepare for confrontation here on the ground. We do all in our power to
undermine the Darak Or, delay him, subdue him, until we are ready to stand
together and do battle with him and his army.” Vannis paused and looked to each
of them, including Rayne. “Do not fool yourselves; Margus will come to this earth, and soon.” Dear Goddess, I must fight a war with these soldiers?
“What
can we do?” Mordan asked.
“Reawaken
the ancient magic of the land,” Vannis stated. “As you have done here on the
island.”
“Ah,
the sacred sites,” Mordan said, and gripped his staff almost in ecstasy.
Vannis
inclined his head and his eyes travelled the length of the staff. “Mordan, is
it? Well, Mordan, your recall of the Oracles is astounding, but I warn you; do
not use the magic unless you are certain of the result. Never speak Valleur
unless you are aware of the meaning. It is a tricky tongue, and has messages
within words, enchantments within casual grammar, and therefore not to be
trusted.”
Mordan
nodded and was not put out; he was relieved, for now no one would ask him to
repeat anything from it.
“And
your staff … I see what you have done, but be grateful you never tested it.”
Mordan
held it away from him, two-fingered, as if it were a poisonous snake. It should
have been comical; it was scary. “What does it do?”
“Nothing
in that state,” Vannis said, amusement lurking in his yellow eyes. “Essentially
it is a wand. Point it at something, shall we say a mountain, and read the
symbols in the correct order - suffice to say, poof, no more mountain.”
He
grinned when Mordan dropped it willy-nilly. Cristi bent to retrieve it and
handed it to Vannis, who took it and studied it.
“Excellent
workmanship. You have worked with your hands in younger days.” Vannis looked
up. “I am able to remove the enchantments, if you prefer …”
“I
prefer,” Mordan said.
Kisha
giggled.
Vannis
ran his left hand the length of the oak, and the carved symbols vanished one
after the other. He handed it back to Mordan, who accepted it gingerly.
“I
cannot wholly undo the magic - that is not in my power - but I have rendered
the destruction enchantments void. It is a strong staff, stronger than
appearance implies.” Mordan was discomfited, and thus Vannis added, “The
Valleur elderly fashion those in their final years. What you did was not wrong,
Mordan; use it well.”
There
was a short and more relaxed silence. Vannis’ act of goodwill helped put the
team at ease.
“To
return to the sacred sites. They are situated to tap into the natural magic of
the land, and by reawakening them, we return power, something Margus will find
difficult to counter, if not impossible. However, given the time constraints,
we shall be forced to separate.”
Cristi
squeaked dismay.
“What
kind of timing are you looking at?” Saska asked.
“What
leaps out at you?” Vannis countered.
“Moondark.”
“Three
nights, including tonight, of moonlight available to us, and thus we must make
haste,” Vannis said.
“No,”
Kisha breathed, holding onto Kylan’s hand.
“And
the solstice,” Rayne murmured.
“Right,”
Vannis agreed. “We assume the worst.” He focused on a subdued Averroes. “Little
one, you and the Herbmaster must go north into the wastelands of the Vall Peninsula.
You, because of your birthright, and the Herbmaster, because a healer is
respected in any culture. Yes, my dear, I am sending you to the half-Valleur.”
Kisha
said, “The Vall? It’s a dead land.”
“It
is a wasteland, correct,” Vannis returned, “but the half-Valleur live below.”
“They
exist?” Samson asked.
There
was a faraway look about Vannis as he replied. “Averroes is here; they must
exist still. They hid well; after a time even I could not track them and did
not want to, if truth be told. I imposed upon them exile, a half-life for my
remnant fighting force.”
“And
they are half-Valleur because …?” Saska queried.
“…
because they were commanded to mate with humans.”
“Ah,
and how did they manage that, seeing as you despised us humans so much?” Kylan
asked.
“Use
your imagination,” Vannis said. It was a sore point; an unforgivable issue. He
inhaled calm, and looked to Averroes. “Find and prepare them. They may not at
first believe you. They are ostracized long, but they are faithful. Can you do
this?”
As
Averroes nodded, Kylan muttered, “It’s a long way; we cannot get there before
Moondark.” He was not happy with the notion of abandoning Kisha.
“The
Medaillon will assist you into the region, but, Averroes, from there you must
follow your instincts. You were born there, and someone took you away when you
were young under circumstances neither of us can now guess at, but you will
remember. A Valleur baby never forgets; it is in your blood. Trust yourself.”
He leaned closer. “When you remember, you will recall the Changeling prophecy.
You will know yourself.”
She
asked, “And after we find and convince them?”
“The
Ruby is there, and once the sites are uncloaked it can be used to travel
between them, as well as to see. Search the gem to find us when the time comes.
They will know how. Uncloak the Maze. It is a site on the Vall and they know
what to do.”
“I
want to go with them,” Kisha stated.
“No.
You have another task.” Vannis was firm. “It is time to go.”
“Wait,
all right?” Kylan said. “Jeez.” He pulled Kisha aside. “Don’t let anything
happen to you, please,” he begged from his heart and pulled her into an
embrace, which she returned fiercely, fighting tears.
“Be
careful,” she whispered.
Averroes
meanwhile approached Rayne. “If anything goes wrong, will you tell Aven?”
“You
will be fine,” he said, drawing her to one side. “You have an instinct about
you, Averroes, a natural confidence …”
“Yes,
well, it has been sorely missing all my life.”
“You
were in exile,” Rayne responded. “Today your feet are on the right path. You are the Changeling, feel it. You will
change hearts, Averroes.” Almost he bent his head to kiss her, but then thought
better of it.
She
smiled up at him as if she knew. “Courage, sorcerer, hmm?”
He
barked a laugh. “Just go … before I whack you one.”
Kylan
and Kisha disengaged and Vannis bid Averroes take the Herbmaster’s hand. He
laid his own hand upon the clasped ones while holding the Medaillon in the
other, and they vanished.
Rayne
was thoughtful as Averroes left. He suspected she would not be the same person
when they met again.
It
was likely he would not be either.
Vannis
released the medal. “Next we have to reach out to the clanlands. They
innocently get on with life muttering about the contrariness of this summer’s
weather. You four northerners are the only choices to affect this task.”
Mordan,
Kisha, Samson and Cristi nodded, each beginning to smile. They were going home.
“Warn
your people, prepare them, and when you are done, we will come for you and any
who choose to meet the Darak Or head-on. Our paths will intersect before long.”
With
their agreement, he sent them north also, again employing the Medaillon.
Then it was
only Vannis, Rayne, Saska and Phet in the glade.
The
little blue Falcon was unblinkingly curious, his black eyes moving from face to
face.
Rayne
remarked, “Sending the others away won’t speed the uncloaking process.”
“It
does, for they will slow us otherwise. They are doing what they are best suited
to.”
“We
are to stay together?” Saska asked.
Vannis
lifted a shoulder. “A Vallorin, a sorcerer, a Guardian and a communicator - how
not?”
“What
happens to the game now?” she asked next.
“Infinity
has no hold,” Rayne said, his voice devoid of feeling. “In fact, she will fight
for survival before long. The game is forfeit.”
“Oh,
she will come up with something, trust me,” Saska said. “She always does.”
“What
is this game?” Vannis asked, and when they told him, he laughed long and hard.
“Who would have thought we would be so successful in our illusion! How they
must have laughed at her from behind the Chaos screen!” Then he sobered. “This
Margus is good.”
“The
truth of the illusion was evident on his side,” Saska pointed out.
“No
more game, but the plan remains.” Vannis sucked at his teeth. “There is no way
Infinity could convince the Arcana to re-enter this realm, yet she convinced
them to keep the Rift open … because of me? Did she somehow realise I was
alive, and would they have agreed to that kind of trade-off? How could she have
known?”
“She
didn’t know enough,” Saska offered.
“Mistakes
occur when one doesn’t know enough. She knew to use the Ruby, the fourteen
sites, enough to force a game of revenge … no matter, it was meant to be. To
return to the plan. We unveil the sites, for they are more than magic; they are
the balance that is Valaris. Together they restore equilibrium, which is to our
advantage. If we achieve one day of balance before Margus attacks, we have the
upper hand.”
“Can
it be done before Moondark?” Saska questioned.
“Probably
not; we do what we can.”
“Unbalance
is dangerous,” Rayne said.
Vannis
looked at him before replying, “It is not the way with the sites. Each one
renewed adds strength only.”
“Paths
have a way of twisting out of control.”
“Agreed,
thus we keep eyes and ears open to chance opportunity and unheralded mishap.
Every so often a twisted path leads to greater success.”
Rayne
thought that was misplaced optimism and said so.
“Would
you rather we crawl into a hole and give up?” Saska snapped.
Her
attack was upon the gulf between them. “By now you know I see a demon behind
every bush,” Rayne murmured.
“Right,
but being negative …”
Vannis
interrupted. “Set the horses free; we go to the Obelisk by easier means.”
Saska
shook her head in a long-suffering way and went to unsaddle the patient beasts,
saying she needed to do it, needed a few minutes alone. She placed the saddles
under a large tree, stacking them one atop the other. Phet perch fussily on
them, picking at his wing feathers while she removed the horses’ halters. She
grinned at the bird and slapped rumps one after the other to send them on their
way.
“She’s
feisty,” Vannis murmured.
Rayne
glanced at her. “Very.”
“It
will be hard to build a relationship during a state of war. Erect your defences. It will be easier on both of you.”
Again Vannis was filled with challenge. He raised his voice. “To the Obelisk!”