The final chapter in Part II - Arcana. Now that you know Vannis, we will return to the main story tomorrow :)
Chapter 34
If the barriers crumble, blind
them.
~ Ancient Oracles
From the main balcony, Vannis saw the hundreds of
fires of the human encampment.
They
were a sal distant, occupying the natural amphitheatre where he recently said
farewell to his people. They sully even
that … and he released a breath. He could not now care about the
unconscious insult; there were greater concerns. Like death.
His
eyes narrowed. The amphitheatre was a natural trap, but an attack on the enemy,
even herded as they currently were, would not alter the result. He had too few
to swing the fortunes of war. It was time to bow to the inevitable. It was time
to make peace with the Goddess.
We have done our worst and they
keep coming. They will keep coming, no matter how long we delay them. He clutched the Medaillon. Soon, my son, it will be yours, waiting for
you when you breathe your first sweet breath.
A
heartbeat. Two.
Vannis
clutched the golden medal tighter, concentrating. Another? Is Mantra carrying two?
He
released it. It thudded against his bare chest.
What will be, will be. She will
know to recognise the second if there is another. She will be a good mother,
one who will not permit that kind of strife in her household. She will know.
They will be thorough in this new pregnancy, their new future, and another will
not be overlooked. I am content to have recognised my son. Nemis. May your life
be long, fruitful and, above all, may you know love, happiness and peace.
He
heard a footfall behind him.
“My
Lord? May I speak?” He was young still, born on Valaris. He had been eager to
fight. He was not so eager to die.
“You
have my ear, Namud. What is it?”
“My
Lord. There are few of us left, too few to defeat that multitude,” and Namud
waved his hands at the fires. Vannis tapped his chin, and the young man
hastened on. “We have cloaked the sites and thus removed the larger portion of
this world’s natural, tapped magic. We leave them nothing of value and the
Valleur race continues unsullied beyond the Rift. We are guilty of terrible
deeds; we cannot hope to make restitution, not even in the Hereafter. Aaru is
now denied us. Truly, it is time to die. Yes?”
Vannis
nodded, growing impatient. “If we cannot defeat them, we deserve death, Namud.
Continue.”
“I
have not spoken of this to another, my Lord, for I believed it my duty to
approach my Vallorin first.”
“Namud,
I care not whether you bind or loosen your tongue, not this late in the game,”
Vannis growled. “Will you get to the point? I must still make what peace I can
with my Maker!”
“Y-yes,
my Lord,” Namud swallowed. “I thought … well, should we not scry the future? As
a final measure? Perhaps it reveals a different path to this … death? Perhaps
there is something we could try, something we have not thought of?”
He
fell silent and looked at his hands. In a sense he accused his Vallorin of
dereliction of duty, and the punishment was death, but death waited anyway. He
did not want to die.
Anger
warred with guilt. “You find yourself not so eager to die, Namud? Is that why
you accuse me of this oversight?” When the young man nodded, daring to look up,
Vannis said, “I will let you in on my secret, Namud; I am not so eager to die
either.” His mouth twisted at the man’s widened eyes. “However, I shall not
live with these humans. In that, death is preferable. You have spoken a truth,
young man. I have been remiss in my single-mindedness.”
Vannis
faced the encampment and was silent for a time. Namud would not leave until
dismissed.
Then,
“I did scry before we enjoined battle, and I have seen it come to pass, every
terrible deed. Yet, Goddess help me, I did not change this fate. I saw this
standoff as it is now. Humans at the doors, with every advantage.” Another
silence. “I looked no further. Perhaps all I needed to see was the fighting,
the rest mattered not …” He swung back to the young man. “It matters now. Call
everyone together in the Throne-room - we are scrying for a final vision. And,
Namud, thank you, son, for your wise counsel.”
Namud
smiled, his eyes glowing at the praise. He raced out, a hopeful bounce to his
gait.
Vannis
stood a while longer, willing away simmering resentment.
Young upstart, how dare he
question me? I want done; I am tired. I cannot scry when I am this emotionally
poor … and
gradually the darkness in his eyes dimmed.
He
thought on the good from his long life. His world before the humans, Mantra,
his son, and drew those thoughts to him like a protective cloak, even the loss
of it causing him to smile.
I had something to lose, he thought. How blessed I am.
His
eyes were yellow when he descended down to the Throne-room.
They
prepared the fire in the centre.
An
octagonal ceramic dish of pure white, needing two men to heft, was brought in.
Rosewood was stacked in a pyramid shape in the centre of the heavy dish, ready
to be lit. Alongside, a simple wooden bowl, two hands wide, its origin lost to
antiquity, the dark wood polished to a high sheen by time and use.
Rosewater
dripped, drop by slow drop, into the ancient bowl until it was filled. Vannis
gave this honour to Namud, and smiled when the young man realised what a
tiresome process it was. Generally, when scrying for a newborn’s name, this
slow process was unnecessary, but given the gravity of their situation, Vannis
opted for the old, formal ceremony.
Namud
sat back at last, and Vannis took his place before the two dishes. The
remaining fifteen sat cross-legged in a circle about him.
When
all was ready, Vannis nodded, and together they declared, “Manik!” The rosewood
burst into fragrant flame to burn with a steady blue light. “Saldan!” and the
pyramid collapsed into bright blue embers in the shape of a flying blue dragon.
The smell of roses perfumed the air.
Vannis
nodded at Namud, who shuffled forward on his knees. He lifted the wooden bowl,
careful not to spill, and placed it on the hot dragon, before briefly dipping
his fingers in the warming rosewater and shuffling back into the circle.
Silent, the others came to do likewise, dipping fingers to show homage to the
future.
Last
was Vannis, who then remained with his face bent over the steaming water.
He
waited until he saw the first bubble shoot to the surface, and nodded.
As
one, they declared, “Manil!” The steamy surface of the water cleared and was
mirror smooth.
Vannis
kept his attention focused on the reflection not to miss a moment of the
visions, for future there would be, whether or not any of them lived in it. He
cleared his mind, while the Valleur collectively held their breaths, afraid to
make the slightest move.
Never
had a scrying been so important.
For
an hour no one moved and not a sound was heard. The air in the circular chamber
was dense with expectation and Vannis stiffened in his unmoving, bent position,
every muscle protesting, eyes bloodshot.
The
visions came, and they kept coming, flickering images the others could see come
and go.
Finally
it ceased. The surface grew dark, the water cold.
Vannis
toppled back into a semi-conscious state, his eyes moving from side to side
ceaselessly. They gathered around to lay hands on him, and eventually his eyes
closed, his breathing eased into cleansing sleep.
They
carried him to his bedchamber and put him to bed. His mind required a brief
time to recover, while sleep would organise the visions into a form easier to
understand.
Namud
stayed to keep watch, and the rest could do naught but wait and tidy away the
accruements. They were hopeful; for a race about to become extinct in this
universe, their Vallorin saw a lot of future.
It
neared midnight when Vannis awakened, instantly aware. He looked to Namud
asleep in a chair beside his bed. Shaking his head indulgently, he called out
to the man, who jerked awake, muttering apologies.
“Never
mind, no time. Let us go to the Throne.”
They
were waiting. Vannis strode to the seat and sat down. Now he would need the
authority of the ancient seat. He stared at his fifteen, his last loyal
subjects. How he loved and respected them.
“Namud
was right,” he said, his voice sure. “Remember this young man, for he showed us
a different path to death this night.” He inclined his head towards the young
man, who blushed.
Vannis
went on. “Know what we are about to embark upon is a kind of death, living
death. Hold this not against Namud, for we make this choice and we hold to it,
and when you wish in the future you died here this night, remember that.”
No
one said anything, but tension mounted. And hope.
“The
future I have seen is both of now and a far distant time, the time between
belonging to the humans, and therefore somewhat unclear.” Vannis paused and sat
forward on the seat. Pointing at them, he said, “You are to leave this place
before dawn and go north into the Vall Peninsula … quiet! It will be years
before the humans go into those icy wastelands; you will have sufficient time
to vanish from view, for disappear you must. No! Listen to me! It has
happened!” Vannis pointed to his forehead as the restive Valleur stilled. “There
is no mistake. No margin of uncertainty. It is.”
He
paused again, studied them, and when he was certain they would obey, continued.
“You
will steal the technology you require to accomplish your hideaway; they will
not need it, nor miss it. You are to uphold the Valleur laws as far as you are
able, and you must further our race for a future return. You are all men, thus
you will steal, coerce, flatter, seduce, by whatever means, women from the
humans … NO! IT MUST BE DONE!”
He
glared them into submission.
“Choose
women close physiologically to the Valleur, and beget children.” The fifteen
gazed at him incredulously. “There is not the time to present to you the images
as they came to me one by one - you need now to prepare - I ask that you trust
my interpretation. You know in your hearts I would not do you ill by lying,
particularly not in this and not now. This is our final time as Valleur; the
humans come tomorrow. I now know we are needed here, on Valaris, in the future,
for the humans who will suffer terrible onslaught … and, my friends, for the
Valleur beyond the Rift. They will need us, and that is why you vanish with the
dawn and you continue our race in another fashion. We shall rise again.
“It
will be a diluted race you beget. Half-Valleur. But once enough younglings are
born, take care to mate half-Valleur to half-Valleur, in that manner always
retaining half the blood. Our genetics are strong and your descendants will
resemble us; yellow eyes, fair hair, golden skin, while also inheriting a large
portion of our abilities. My friends, you will do all this because of a
prophecy. You will pass this prophecy down through the millennia that follow
this night. You will remember it to all, so you may know it when it comes to
pass.”
Vannis
rose and stood before them. There was absolute silence.
“Listen
well; a dark-eyed child will be born
among you. She will be the Changeling who will return the Medaillon to the Last
Vallorin and release him from his tomb. He, in turn, will bring you freedom.
What does it mean? Exactly what it says and it can only come to pass if you
beget the half-Valleur and remember to the generations the words I have spoken.
You will take with you my son’s Medaillon. Do not fear; it can take care of
itself.”
He
closed his eyes, knowing Mantra would never know the peace and closure the
coming of the Medaillon would bring, painful as it would be.
Teach him well, my wife, for now
he will not know everything.
Vannis
drew himself up and opened his eyes. He was the Vallorin. “This will not be easy
for you, nor will it become simple with time, but it will be done. I shall have your oaths on it before you leave this
chamber.”
A
short silence ensued, one imbued with reluctance. An oath they would give,
willingly; what was expected of them caused their dilemma. Living death,
indeed.
Namud
stood to approach the Throne. As the youngest he was also the most daring.
“You
have my oath, Lord Vallorin.”
“Thank
you, Namud.”
“But,
my Lord? What becomes of you? You have not told us what lies ahead for you. How
will the Medaillon free you far into the future? From a tomb?”
“It
appears I have a destiny. I cannot tell you how or what, or even why. The
Medaillon will remain on Valaris. I
shall remain here; I shall not die. No, I am not permitted to tell you how I shall
achieve this. I would that I could end it now, for I desire no part in a world
settled by humans. I know not why exactly I need wait for the Changeling, only
that there is a darkness coming, although I do not perceive in what form. We
are to assist in preventing it, defeating it, a long while from now. It will
aid our brethren in another realm also. That is as much as I am able to reveal.
No more discussion. I shall have your oaths now.”
There
was a further prophecy, but Vannis held sway, not yet certain what it meant or
how it would touch them. He would have time, in plenty, to unravel it soon.
They
had followed him too long to disobey, and a scrying never lied. Kneeling, each
after his fashion uttered the words that would bind the generations.
When
it was done, Vannis said, “Thank you. You must now prepare to leave before
dawn. Do not look back under any
circumstances. Do not concern yourselves with me, for I know what I must do
and you cannot share in it. Take your leave of me and go. Do not enter the
Throne-room again. There can be no witnesses to what I must undertake.”
He
searched each pair of eyes, then nodded, satisfied.
“Namud?
As the one with the potential of living longest, I hand you the Medaillon. It
will not harm you. When your time is near, hand it to another.”
Namud
nodded, his eyes bright. The honour was great.
Vannis
uttered these final words and it made every difference.
“Darkness
and tribulation is not the whole of it, my brothers. Beyond lies light and hope
in which Valleur will be free to live with all races without strife. All we do
this day heralds a glorious future. Do not despair.”
They
came to kiss his hand a last time and Vannis greeted each by name.
It
was done.
An hour
before sunrise they headed in the direction opposite the human encampment and
they did not look back, even as their hearts were heavy.
Behind
them there came the sound of exploding masonry and a terrible cry rent the air.
Namud turned, his face white, but was grabbed savagely by his companion.
“We
are not to look back!” the Valleur hissed, his face contorted in grief.
Namud
clutched the Medaillon for comfort, and thus he saw without looking how the
great and beautiful palace tumbled down.
It
was the hardest act any of them had ever achieved; every fibre of their beings
desired to turn around.
The
dark heavens lit with blue meteors of iridescent light, shooting one after the
other, faster and faster … they gazed up, transfixed.
What
great power had their Vallorin harnessed for that? They knew not what he did,
only that he was forever lost to them, and saw those shining meteors as a final
farewell.
Then
… the darkness before the dawn was more complete than ever it had been.
As for the
humans, Vannis’ cry haunted them the remainder of that night, and for years to
come.
They
would wake in the morning and know not whence it came, only that they were
petrified of hearing it repeated.
That
night, the final night of awareness, Malin Drew, the leader of the human army,
and the man generally regarded by future generations as Valaris’ founding
father, dreamt he stood in the Valleur Throne-room, at the foot of the Throne,
and he asked a beautiful and terrible king … why?
He
received answer. Although he would not remember why he fought this being, or
who or what Vannis was, he would remember the words in his dreams until he drew
his final breath. He would understand his ‘why’ and when he awakened, the
feeling of pity and loss and sorrow would be with him well into the morning for
the rest of his days.
“We
were the first sentient creatures Mother Universe allowed within her embrace.
For time out of mind we were Masters, lords over all, known and unknown. We
were, we are, a good people. Then all changed when other sentient life grew up
and reached for the stars. We clashed and neither would surrender. Worst of our
enemies, besides the darklings who are enemy to all, were the humans. Yet,
essentially, we are the same in character and needs, and perhaps that is why we
could not co-exist. Most of our kind left this universe to retain what humanity
we had left. Yes, humanity, for that is what goodness really is. Your kind
taught us that. You are a good man. What a pity our two races did not become
sentient at one time; how differently we would have written our histories - we
may even have become one people. The Valleur you encountered here are the last,
trying to protect what we regard as exclusively ours. You cannot be allowed to
expose our fraud, the Arcana, our race cannot suffer more. You will be
isolated, afraid of much, and I have left legacies I cannot undo at this late
hour. Forgive me, even if you no longer know me.”
Before
Malin Drew awakened, he realised he stood before the man with tragedy in his
glorious blue eyes, and he knew with a terrible certainty that the man, the
king, the Vallorin, was immortal.
When
he did awake to that first day in his brand new world, he woke first with that
feeling of pity, loss and sorrow he would never understand. When he opened his
eyes on the encampment, the battlefields of yesterday, he was dumbstruck. What,
by all that was Holy, had happened?
Why are we at war? Where is the
enemy? Is this a dream … or a nightmare?
If
only he could remember.
They
would never explain it, and the sight of thousands of dead elsewhere, would be
put down to uncontrollable disease and omitted from the history books.
The
only certainty Malin Drew possessed that strange morning was that their new
world was named Valaris.
By the time
Vannis spoke the prophecy, by the time his Palace came crashing down over his
Throne-room, burying him under rubble twenty feet thick, his eyes were no
longer black or even yellow, but deep blue.
He
lost everything - his universe, his world, his people, his wife and his son.
His son he would never know, yet he felt that loss most keenly.
Even
the rubble of the Palace would eventually vanish. No one would know to dig him
out, if it were possible.
He
was alone.
Only
now, with it gone, did he realise, as those who chose to exit this realm did,
it was thoughts and wishes, relationships and feelings, people and history,
that made life what it was, made it important and tangible. It was not about
the where and what.
Leaving
what one knew, loved, and held dear, wrenched and hurt, but one could begin
anew elsewhere if one understood those simple concepts that held the true
worth. He did so in coming to Valaris - why, bless the Lady, had he not learned
the lesson then?
He
could be with his queen, could see his son born, watch him grow and teach him
as his father taught him.
Instead
he held onto an oath, an oath his father would not have had from him had he
been alive at the speaking. He maimed and killed innocents. He was selfish,
egotistical, arrogant and blind … stupid.
He
took the last Valleur to their deaths, and exiled a few to an existence that
went against everything they were.
How
they would curse their blood.
He
put in place a future to confuse, delay and hurt the people of Valaris, all of
them innocents. It could not be undone. He lost all, even self-respect. He was
a villain.
Maybe,
one day, they would recognise it had been ultimately out of love, and maybe
they would be kind, as he had not found within himself, and know him as
misguided, a fool, not evil.
Maybe.
One day.
There was no
way out of the subterranean chamber.
It
was the same as ever - his Throne, the gem-studded walls, the dais - and almost
he could walk through the huge doors into the glorious sunshine of the worlds.
It was not the rubble above or the stone surrounding him, or the depth to which
his sorcery had driven his chamber, that prevented escape, although each route
was physically impossible. He could not transport out as he would when
travelling distance. It was not the prophecy that prevented him leaving.
The
wardings he uttered before he could change his mind, to protect it from
destruction and discovery, held him. Wardings that would contain him because of
the prophecy, wardings dating back to ancient times, wardings that not even his
considerable skill in sorcery could undo.
His
Throne-room became his tomb.
Here
he would exist, in and out of reality, his body surreal, sometimes solid,
mostly not. Hungry, thirsty, lonely and bored, with only his milling thoughts
as company until the Changeling brought the Medaillon.
He
could only pray he deciphered the images of prophecy correctly, or he would
remain half-alive, half-dead into eternity.
Perhaps,
yes, it was fitting punishment, this entombment, and all the more effective for
being self-imposed. He could hate only himself for this, rail against only his
own mind. Perhaps insanity lay in waiting around the corner.
He
could not leave, but he could ‘see’. He had his powers; he could scry into the
future, and would do so periodically to confirm his visions when doubt set in.
Ever the result would be the same.
Always
he had to await the Changeling.
He
could call forth events to ponder over, he could feel magical vibrations, and
could even influence circumstances.
Thus
it was he assisted those poor, beset-upon creatures in the Great Forest to
attain their crystal song to take them beyond the warp. It gave him great
pleasure.
He
marked the initial struggles of the settlers; they suffered the first years
without the mechanized farming implements that travelled far to assist them,
without their computers to maintain records and to analyse everything from
weather conditions to population and the mapping of a new world. There was
hunger, disease, and death, but they survived, and they flourished. As
generations flew by, they forgot about technology, they forgot they were
isolated, and relied on their natural skills, and it worked well for them.
He
felt the arrival of darklings and the havoc they caused. No space-warp could
keep creatures of the dark away, curse them. He sensed the stirrings of magic
within the humans, magic necessary to repel and keep at bay those evil
creatures, magic they were mortally afraid of. With hindsight, he realised he
did Valaris a great disservice in instilling a fear of magic; it left his world
vulnerable to evil. He should have left the sacred sites alive, at the very
least, to assist the holy earth in their subtle ways.
When
Drasso and Infinity commenced the campaign of annihilation, he called on the
Immortal Guardians anonymously. Only they, with their superior skills and
powers, could defeat those two. When it was over and he saw the blight that was
Valaris, he allowed the Oracles to remain, recalled the Maghdim from the
northern wastelands, and allowed them to be ‘discovered’, hoping, as the
Guardians had, the tools would serve to heal people and the land.
A
great risk he took in releasing the Medaillon to the spaces, but a prophecy
cannot be denied.
During
the many thousands of years of his entombment, Vannis was angry and vengeful
also, and during those spells he would sow the seeds of mistrust. He would
bounce the Ruby about, and send snippets of Valleur lore. During one such spell
he saw a small group of humans save technological items, saw them repaired and
rebuilt.
It
angered him, and he penned his dire warnings and vengeful prophecies into a slim
volume in the hated common tongue, and willed it out into the real world for
them to discover. Find it they did, but rather than destroy their handiwork in
fear of reprisal, they hid it and kept it secret.
He
let it go eventually, wondering what greater aim there was in holding onto
items growing outdated with each passing year.
It
was also during one of his episodes that he saw the sorcerers discover his
Ruby, and assisted in subverting it, knowing havoc would result. They did not
deserve magic; they did not deserve to see the truth of the sacred sites.
At
other times, Vannis was at peace and willing to amend for his crimes. He would
be aghast at the harm he engendered during an angry spell, and would then
withdraw his tools of magic.
For
long periods he would vanish into nothingness, a kind of extended hibernation.
During those long periods of ‘sleep’ Valaris would know peace and harmony and
new prosperity, until a signature jolted him into interference once more.
Time
passed, neither slow nor fast, and he waited on the Changeling.
He knew his
time was near when he felt a surge of power one day.
A
surge so strong, it set the walls of his Throne-room a-tremble. He knew then a
man of great and surpassing ability had been born, and examined anew the second
prophecy.
Upon
scrying, he saw a beautiful baby lying in a velvet-lined cradle, a baby loved …
a baby abandoned. As a boy, and later as a man, he was an unwilling sorcerer,
and yet naturally tuned into the forces. Unwittingly, he blocked Vannis’
attempts to closely follow his progress, his signature vanishing entirely when
he reached adulthood.
Then,
a number of years after that august birth, Vannis sensed the Medaillon enclosed
by two small hands that could only belong to the Changeling.
At
last.
He
grew impatient. Alternatively angry and at peace, he would rage for days about
punishing humankind, make them pay for all they had done to the Valleur, they
would SUFFER, and then he would chide himself.
Have you learned nothing, Vannis?
His
eyes were never yellow in those last years.
She is coming.
Darkness. There is a new darkness
over Valaris. The humans are helpless. The Immortal Guardians are involved
again. And the Changeling travels with them. Is this my atonement? For there is
a darkness coming, as foreseen, a darkness worse than the one they battle
already, one I cannot fully …
A Darak Or.
Hurry, hurry, little one, fleet
of foot now.
I am not the danger!
No comments:
Post a Comment