Blade Kin (9 page)

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Authors: David Farland

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Genetic Engineering

BOOK: Blade Kin
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Phylomon looked deep into Tull’s eyes. His words were blasphemy. No Spirit Walker in his right mind would knowingly train a pupil who saw his power as a weapon.

Suddenly Phylomon recalled a memory over three hundred years old. He had been on a battlefield, burned black with cinders, littered with twisted corpses, and on a hill he saw an oak, blackened like the bodies.

Under the oak rested a dragon, a simple horned dragon like all the ones that the Starfarers had formed to protect Calla from the pteranodons and pterodactyls that would otherwise fly over from Hotland.

But this dragon was blackened and its feathers singed, as if it too had been burned in the fire. As Phylomon walked to it, the dragon lifted its wing: cradled beneath the wing was a young boy, a Neanderthal with piercing blue eyes set deep beneath his brows, eyes aflame with rage, hair so blond it almost gleamed white: Terrazin Dragontamer.

The memory came so clearly, so frighteningly, that Phylomon drew a breath. The final battle of the Talent War flashed before Phylomon’s eyes, the battlements of Bashevgo cracking from the blast, laser canons warping in on themselves while legions died, clawing their battle armor from their faces, clawing their own eyes from their sockets, clawing the air.

Phylomon began to breathe heavily. The memory frightened him more than he could say for reasons he could not quite fathom.

I taste your fear,
his symbiote whispered.

“Are you all right?” Tull asked, and Phylomon looked in Tull’s eyes; they were Terrazin’s—hinting at rage, despair and madness. He had more than “Revolution in his eyes.”

The Starfarer closed his tired eyes, whispered to his symbiote, “I’ve executed many men for what they have done. In that I was just. But I’ve never executed a man for what he might do.”

What he might do.

Circles,
Phylomon told himself,
I’ve been walking in circles all these years. Here I am, at Smilodon Bay, and it is all starting again.

Things Chaa had said after his last spirit walk suddenly made sense to Phylomon.

After Chaa had looked into the future, trying to learn why the sea serpents had died, he spoke to Phylomon, saying, “Tull can end the war in two years. He alone can destroy the nations of Craal and Bashevgo, defeat the Slave Lords. You will die within two years.”

If Tull were another Terrazin, of course he would defeat the Slave Lords. If Tull were another Terrazin, Phylomon would not escape him alive. What hope could Craal and Bashevgo have against such a monster? Their six million Blade Kin against a sorcerer like Tull—their resistance would matter less than that of grass against a scythe.

I taste fear,
the symbiote whispered, and Phylomon’s skin tightened involuntarily, preparing for attack.

Chaa,
Phylomon told himself,
you foolish young Spirit Walker, to harbor such hopes. I managed to kill Terrazin once, but at great price! At great price!

As if doors had opened in Phylomon’s mind, he saw the truth:
Do you think to train Tull, to keep your monster on a leash, and then kill him once he has won your war for you? Do you think to sacrifice him as you did your own sons?

Phylomon picked up the pale-blue symbiote, carried it across the street, and hurled it into the bay.

For the rest of the afternoon, Phylomon hunted for Chaa, but the Spirit Walker eluded him till dusk, when he spotted Chaa down at the redwood bridge, fishing pole in hand, like some human.

He had a wooden bait pail at his side. The Spirit Walker looked up as Phylomon approached, smiled.

“So, you have had a good day?” Chaa asked. Chaa didn’t have his line in the water. Instead, the bait—a ball of chicken guts—rested inches from the surface.

“I’ve been searching for you,” Phylomon said.

“I know,” Chaa answered. He squinted off toward Tull’s cabin. “You know, I think Tull and Fava will make a good pair. Everyone in town has given them wedding gifts. What will you offer them? Gold? A jewel? An old man’s loyalty?”

“I know what you are thinking,” Phylomon said. “Your plan is dangerous.”

Chaa nodded thoughtfully. Waves rolled beneath them, and suddenly Chaa dropped the line, let it sink. Almost as soon as his line touched the water, a huge fish lunged upward, grabbed the bait. Chaa fought it for a moment, then swung it up onto the bridge. It looked like a ling cod, with sharp teeth, but it had a blue skin like Phylomon’s.

Phylomon realized that Chaa had been waiting to catch just that fish, the one that the symbiote had clung to. The Spirit Walker was showing off his power.

Chaa peered up at the blue man. “You think evil of me, but I know what I’m doing,” Chaa said, and he wrapped the fish in a blanket.

Phylomon stood, dazed by the Spirit Walker’s nerve. “Throw it back!” he warned. He looked in Chaa’s eyes.

Chaa asked evenly, “Do you think I am a stupid man? A wicked man?”

Phylomon moved forward, thinking to harm the Spirit Walker, and Chaa grabbed the bait pail, splashed the contents over Phylomon, and the blue man’s skin burned where it splashed—puckering and steaming.

Ammonia
, Phylomon realized too late. His symbiote convulsed, throwing him to the ground, and in his mind Phylomon could hear the symbiote, shrieking in pain. Acid could not mar the thing, fire could not burn it. But pure ammonia shredded the Starfarer’s symbiote like paper.

Chaa stepped up, put a foot on Phylomon’s chest, and held the bucket over him, threateningly.

Phylomon could only lay panting, his symbiote shocked into unconsciousness, every nerve burning in pain. He looked around, embarrassed to have been taken down so easily, afraid that other townsmen might see, learn his secret weakness.

“I am neither stupid nor wicked,” Chaa said. “I’ve Spirit Walked the lives of ten thousand men, and though my body is young, I have lived far longer than you. I know how you Starfarers removed your symbiotes. And if I were a wicked man, I would kill you now and take your skin! But I do not need your skin. For the first time in three hundred years, a living symbiote has fallen into our hands. Do you think you are the only one on this world who desires or deserves immortality?”

“No,” Phylomon admitted.

Chaa stepped back. “I am a man of peace, but I know what you are thinking. For a thousand years you have fought the Slave Lords and failed. You fear to leave a symbiote where your enemies could get it. But now, it’s my turn to fight, and Tull’s.

“I warn you: Leave me and my family alone!”

***

Chapter 14: Broken Futures

Over the next four days the people of Smilodon Bay settled into a routine. Tull spent the mornings and afternoons in a field outside town with Fava, Phylomon, and the Pwi. They sparred with swords, longspears, shields, and the Neanderthals’
kutow
—a double-headed ax as heavy as a mace.

The practice field became crowded as Pwi and an occasional human poured in from nearby towns and back country. Often more than six hundred would practice at once, young men and women like Tull and Fava, children from the age of twelve on up, old men who should have fought their last battle ages ago.

Fava exulted at the sight. “Have you ever seen so many people!” she cried over the thump of maces on shields, the clack of wooden practice swords, the laughs and yelps of pain. “Surely we are a great army! The Lords of Bashevgo will never expect our attack!”

Tull did not have the heart to tell her that in Craal he had watched an army pass him on a mountain road taking over six hours just to move the ten thousand warriors with their armored mammoths. “Yes we are growing strong,” he agreed.

In the Rough guns had long been rare, the supply of gunpowder unpredictable. Human Slave Lords who depended on armies of Neanderthals to protect them controlled the dispersal of personal armaments in order to keep them from the wrong hands.

Even in the Rough men who sold guns and ammunition had a curious way of dying young—blown apart with their own gunpowder. The Pwi feared such weapons.

But Phylomon taught them the ancient arts, and in the back of the blacksmith shop they learned to combine sulfur with potassium nitrate and crushed charcoal from the ashes of the forge to form a weak gunpowder. They smelted brass and copper for bullet casings, tin for bullets and with six men working at the forge at six shifts per day, they were able to make crude long-barreled guns like those that the Blade Kin of Craal had begun to use, yet their output was less than two weapons a day.

During the nights Tull and the others kept a tight watch over the town, still hunting the mayor. For nearly a week there had been no sign of him, and Tull was becoming more and more convinced that Garamon had escaped their net.

But on the morning of the fifth day after Phylomon had returned, Tull was still keeping watch on the north end of town, at a communal fountain where the human women washed their clothing.

Darrissea Frolic came that morning, wearing her long black cape. Her face was flushed and sweaty from practicing on the training field with the Pwi.

The gangling human girl was outclassed by the Pwi with the sword, yet she had been working hard during the week. She broke the thin crust of morning ice from the washing rocks, went to work scrubbing a heavy wool tunic. As she washed the clothes, Darrissea talked endlessly about weapons and sword strokes and parries until Tull wearied of her chatter; then she turned to him and changed subjects. “You know Phylomon better than anyone. Do you think he likes me?”

An intensity hung in the girl’s voice, and Tull felt unsure how to answer. “I don’t know. Have you ever even spoken to him so that you can ask him?”

“I’ve thought about it,” Darrissea admitted. “But every time I try, I feel stupid. I want to know how he feels about women.”

“He has married once or twice,” Tull said, “Hundreds of years ago. The kwea of those marriages weighs on him. He loved his wives very much. But he is so old now, so different from us, I do not think he will ever marry again.”

“Oh,” Darrissea said, and she looked dreamily into the sky.

Tull laughed. “Do you like him?”

Darrissea scowled. “Go ahead and laugh. He’s a good man. The first good man I’ve seen around here in a long time. I’m going to marry him someday.”

Tull laughed harder, and Darrissea pulled her tunic from the water and whipped it at him. Suddenly there was a shout from behind the houses west of town, and they both looked up. On the hill a Pwi boy was pointing into town. “Garamon! Garamon—behind the cloth shop!”

Everywhere Pwi took up the shout and ran for the jumbled buildings behind the cloth shop.

Tull stood firm, knowing that with so many guards deserting their posts, the mayor might try to slip through the net. For the rest of the morning the Pwi rushed through the business district, but found no sign of the mayor, though the boy swore vehemently that he had seen the mayor stealing clothes from a clothesline.

When another Pwi came to stand guard, and Tull felt secure that the town was under tight watch, Tull decided to take up his own hunt.

The mayor had owned the cloth shop, but as a criminal his goods had been confiscated, distributed around town. Tull went to the empty shop, which still had bolts of cheap fabric strewn on the floor.

The day was overcast with feathery clouds, and thin sunlight fell cold on the floor. In the silent room, Tull stood, stretched out with his mind. What had Chaa said? “You can feel your enemies, even in the dark or behind stone walls.”

The walls were stone, the room barren, yet Tull could feel Garamon nearby. He recalled the stone walls in Garamon’s home—a hidden passage behind a cupboard, and Tull went to work pulling shelves from the walls. He felt like a dog yapping at mice in a woodpile, frenzied, panting with excitement. He could taste the scent. Garamon was near, the murderous bastard, and Tull could feel him.

Tull pulled the fixtures from the walls, but found no passage. When he was done, he stood, panting, exhausted. He looked up into the rafters of the building. The strong beams crisscrossing under the roof. They offered no place to hide. He looked at the planks of the floor, began pulling them up at random.

By afternoon Tull had exhausted himself, and the sensation that Garamon was near had vanished. Either Garamon had left or Tull had become so numbed to the sensation that it no longer mattered. It might have only been wishful thinking.

Garamon has come out today,
Tull thought.
Perhaps he has run out of food or water. He will come out again.

Tull gave up the search. Walking home, he tried to think of some other place the mayor could hide. The rafters? Could there be a false ceiling above them?

He planned to check in the morning. Tull had left a cloak at Chaa’s house the day before so he stopped to get it. Zhopila and Chaa were gone, along with the children. Probably visiting old Vi or some other friend. Tull went inside found the cloak in Chaa’s Spirit Room.

Thirsty, Tull got the water pitcher, then opened the drawer where Chaa kept his herbs and looked at them. There were three bowls—powdered roots to make him hear, seeds to open his eyes. Even now Tull could almost feel Garamon.

The murderer was near, so near. Tull took a pinch from each bowl, chewed it, and lay down on the floor.

I must open my spirit eyes,
he told himself,
learn to see. Garamon is near.
Tull felt abruptly dizzy, realized that he could hear the ocean outside across the street, the waves lapping, as if he were outside.
I must open my spirit eyes.

Tull dozed, then wakened in a dark pit filled with rubble, bits of broken red brick, some of them whole, all of them covered with lichen in metallic green or flecks of gold.

He blinked, trying to awake from this dream, but he could not wake.

This is the Land of Shapes,
Tull realized, and he peered about in wonder. He tried to fight back his nagging fears, his worries.

The sky was the muted ocher of brass before it is burnished, and distant stars burned in it, dull like flecks of mica beneath molasses. Tull rose, looked out, and found himself in a tower overlooking a barren plain of red rocks—no wind rushed through trees, no lark peeped at the sunset. The day seemed bitter cold.

Around him Tull glimpsed a landscape pocked with similar haphazard towers in the distance, and he glimpsed other spirits, brilliant in hues of purple and silver and fiery red and black, each guarding its little crater of rubble.

The empty land between them looked like the scarred battlefield of some horrible apocalyptic war, a place where plants and life could never be again, a place of age-old broken stones. Somehow, lifting himself above the rock wall caused Tull discomfort, left him feeling vulnerable.

He did not understand what kinds of creatures the other glowing beings might be. Some would pop up above their walls momentarily, only to float down, reminding him by their actions of marmots in an alpine meadow, sticking their furry noses from their burrows to test the air.

The hollow of his soul hovered above ground, a solid dark mass. Tendrils of shadow, like tiny hairs, kept erupting, seeking to escape, but the white lightning flared over the hollow, twisting in a crazy dance, erasing the darkness.

Tull could see his body dimly: translucent hands, fingers, torso. Only the barest of substance, almost a distortion of space. His line of vision emanated from a position roughly where his head should be, but he could spin and view the world in a 360-degree circle without regard for appendages, as if this translucent body were meaningless in this world.

Tull explored his surroundings, the crater that he hid in. Better pieces of brick and blasted stones had been clumsily piled to form a wall of sorts, a barrier that encircled him, leaving scant room for movement. Dark shadows filled the crater, and Tull sank in the darkness.

The ground was muddy and trampled—no clean paving stones for the floor—and beneath the ground a rugged tunnel wound down into blackness, branching here and there. In the tunnel below Tull could see a human skeleton, hand outstretched, carrying a bit of broken stone, as if ready to place it on the pile.

Tull sank into the cave, observed the skeleton, picked clean by ants and beetles, reddened by dust. The room was similar to his cratered tower, ramshackle and haphazardly created, barely able to support the weight of the stones that piled above.

Tull hovered over the skeleton, peered into the dark of its eye sockets. Just beneath the bones, the tunnel branched again, leading to lower chambers, where the white glint of bones hinted at more skeletons in each little chamber.

The silence of the tunnels made him nervous. Tull floated back upward, surveyed the wall around him. A gap on one end showed a place where the stones had fallen, and were in need of support. A stone the right size and shape would do much to repair the wall, and Tull hovered upward, studied the wall, tried to remember the shape of stone he needed. And then floated out of his crater.

Everywhere were stones, broken and twisted, cracked by sun and rain. As Tull floated downhill, he felt amazed to see that there were far more craters than he had imagined, each with glowing spirit creatures inside. Around him he heard popping noises. He wondered what they were until he saw one large stone crack in half. A moment later he saw two other stones silently join together.

Among the craters spirits hovered, and all of them seemed to be trying to build houses, as if piling cracked rock were the only occupation in this land.

Yet most of them failed—they had not built houses or walls at all—instead the creatures sat on the barren plain with only a few scattered rocks standing about them in obtuse piles, contemplating their shelter.

Tull felt intrigued by their witless performance, their inability to form even the most ludicrous of pits. They seemed as mindless as pill bugs.

Tull floated down the valley, crossed the small hill, and in the distance saw a great structure, a twisted tower with vast rooms and open courtyards climbing into the sky. Dozens of buttresses ran up against it in odd places. Some buttresses seemed to turn into long running walls that stretched away from the tower for miles in all directions, all lending it support. The tower stood, convoluted almost beyond recognition, as alien in design as if it had been the handiwork of termites or crabs. At the top of the tower a green ball of flame bustled up and down, busily at work.

A strange compulsion overtook Tull, and he moved toward the tower, floating like thistledown. He glanced down at his legs, found that they were running faster than he would have thought possible, jumping from stone to stone, trying to maintain balance.

Tendrils of light leapt around the hollow of his soul, surging him forward. On some level he understood that legs were irrelevant in this stony land.

Along the way Tull looked at the edifices he passed and in one of them—a tiny hovel upon a near empty field—a yellow ball of flame worked trying to hold a pile of stones upright so that his single wall would not collapse. Tull moved in closer, saw the shape of the jellied clot. It was Byron Saman, an old gentleman from town, and Tull suddenly realized that these hovels and fields of stone were Smilodon Bay, as seen through his spirit eyes.

Tull passed beyond Byron, saw Caree Tech wandering outside a carefully tended little garden of stones set in mounds, one at each corner of the compass.

Tull moved uphill and realized that this great edifice, this towering monument to oddity, could only be Theron Scandal’s inn. It was true that Scandal had, in one sense, the largest house in town, and that Scandal was a man of grand ambitions, but Tull wondered at the towers’ proportions, and glided up a buttress, crawled into an open window. The grand ballrooms had winding staircases and were enormous and solid, large enough so that everyone in town could have fit in one of them. Not like the pitiful structures in the valley below, yet the rooms were empty of furnishings, littered only with bones, human skeletons reddened with dust. Tull floated up the staircases, through room after room, until he came to a small tunnel at the top of a minaret.

The passage above was blocked by the emerald glowing beast, the hollow of a soul massive and magnificent. Green tendrils of flame shot around from it crazily, and the beast toiled and fretted around the tower, building as fast as it could, straightening and rearranging. Tull wondered at this, wondered what Theron Scandal was building. Yet as he floated in closer, he saw that the jellied emerald clot was not Theron Scandal, but Phylomon the Starfarer.

Tull hovered upward, eased around Phylomon, and sat upon a stone wall, looking from the tower, gazing down upon the city of Smilodon Bay: Tull could see better from here, stretches of barren plain where rock had been cleared, sweeping fields punctuated by the grubby dens and hovels of the town’s witless citizens.

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