The Fire Seer (14 page)

Read The Fire Seer Online

Authors: Amy Raby

Tags: #Fantasy Romance, #Mages, #Mage, #Seers, #Magic, #Paranormal Romance, #Historical Romance, #Historical Paranormal Romance, #Paranormal Historical Romance, #Romance, #Love Story, #Seer

BOOK: The Fire Seer
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“No,” said Rasik. “If word gets out, half the city will be hunting them.”

“If we’re done watching the onagers,” said Taya, “I need to scry the crime scene. Where is it?”

“There.” Rasik pointed to a rocky island about ten feet into the river. The water between the shore and the island was shallow, and a large boulder just beyond created an eddy, preventing the water from flowing too fast through the channel. Taya could easily wade across.

“What was Narat doing on that island?” Taya asked.

“Well,” said Rasik, “it’s a common spot for trysts—get behind those rocks and no one can see you. But her lover didn’t show up, so she must have been alone.”

“We’ll never get the horses down there,” said Mandir. “Rasik, you stay here with the horses, and I’ll go out to the island with Taya.”

“No. Mandir, you stay behind, too,” said Taya. “There’s barely enough room on the island for my scry-fire. I don’t want you to get burned.”

He shook his head. “You’re not going out there alone.”

“I mean it,” said Taya. “You can’t come. Scrying takes every bit of my concentration, and if I have to worry about things like keeping my fire away from you, it increases the chance that I could be hurt.”

Mandir acquiesced, grumbling.

Taya dismounted and handed the reins to Rasik. She hopped off the bank into the shallows. The river bottom was part sand and part smooth pebbles. Water swirled around her feet, questing, toying with her. Taya murmured a few respectful words in the mother tongue, assuring Agu that she was one of the
ilittu
and she meant no harm. It might or might not make a difference with Agu; she was the least predictable of the mothers. Ripples ran across the surface of the water, acknowledging Taya’s presence. Behind her, she heard Rasik’s sharp intake of breath at the water goddess’s response. She smiled to herself and waded to the island.

She made the trip without incident and was relieved when she stepped out onto dry land. Mother Agu’s unpredictability always frightened her a bit.

She called to Isatis, a crueler goddess but more honest and straightforward, and summoned the flames in a great circle around her.
Come in power, Mother Isatis,
she called in the mother tongue.
Come in greatness.
The fire roared to life, exultant as it leapt toward the sky.

You are rage incarnate. You are the cleansing fire who sears the wickedness from the world, and the warmth that holds back the cold sting of death. Bless your humble daughter, who loves and fears you, with another vision.

Isatis responded not with a single vision, but with hundreds. Taya reeled in confusion. In the fires, she saw countless images, each depicting the same event: a wall of water rushing down the Lioness’s path and swallowing up whatever stood in its way. But each flood was different. In some images, greenery covered the hillsides, indicating it was the season of Lalan, while in others the lowlands were flooded, which meant it was the season of Agu. In some images, a single man or woman was taken by the flash flood, in others more than one, in still others boats or herds of animals. Taya stared at the images in confusion. She hadn’t yet asked Isatis for a specific vision, and the Fire Mother seemed to have anticipated her. One of these scenes had to be the one showing Narat’s death. But which one?

 


 

From the shore, Mandir watched, fascinated and horrified, as the cyclone of flames enveloped Taya. He knew she was well trained in what she did, and she was not in any real danger. Still, it was all he could do not to run to her rescue.

“I’ve seen a lot of Coalition pass through here, but until you two came I’d never seen that done,” said Rasik. “What makes Taya a fire seer? What skill does she have that other people in the Coalition don’t have?”

Mandir glanced at him. “Well, for one, she’s a woman. Isatis has yet to accept a male disciple.”

“Oh.”

“Isatis chooses her disciples,” said Mandir. “There would have been some sort of display when Taya was chosen. I wasn’t there when it happened, but Isatis picks her disciples for their eloquence.”


Eloquence?

“Not in the river tongue,” said Mandir. “In the mother tongue. Most of us in the Coalition learn enough to speak it awkwardly, and we have some stock phrases we use when performing magic. But if you read the old documents written by our ancestors, the language is metaphorical and full of flowery, poetic phrases they used when addressing the Mothers. Most of us don’t have the knowledge or the fluency to speak it in that way. But a few do, and Isatis favors them.”

“Hmm,” grunted Rasik.

Taya seemed to be taking longer than before. Mandir hoped that meant she was getting a particularly detailed vision. Noting a faint hum in the air, he cocked his head. He couldn’t quite tell where it was coming from. Upriver, perhaps. “Do you hear that noise?”

Rasik was silent for a moment, listening. He turned upriver and stiffened. “Flood and fire. Get her out of there. Get her out!”

Mandir saw it. The wall of water roared down the riverbed, slamming against the banks and sending up enormous geysers. It was headed straight for Taya, who was hidden away in her vortex of flames.

Mandir jumped into the shallows and ran toward the island through knee-high water that dragged at his calves. He had to get to her before the flood did—though what he would do when he got there, he didn’t know. “Taya!”

Rasik called to him from the bank. “Don’t go out there. Stop the flood with your magic!”

Not possible. For a jackal to rouse the wrath of Agu was easy, trivially so, and even the most sophisticated
ilittum
could not calm her back down. But he couldn’t stand on the shore and watch Taya be dashed to pieces. “Taya! Taya!” he called as he splashed through the water, hoping his voice might penetrate the fire. But when he dashed up onto the island, the flaming vortex was impenetrable in its blistering heat. “
Alaku, Isatis, besu!
” he shouted, trying to extinguish the fire, but his words had no effect. Taya’s magic was stronger than his.

The wall of water careened toward him, high as a horse’s head and white with froth, so loud in its onrush that it drowned out the roar of the fire. “
Nehu Agu!
” he cried. “
Nasu kilalli nehu!
” And the waves swallowed him.

Chapter 18: Hrappa

 

Taya couldn’t figure out where she was. Something had knocked her over, tumbling her upside down and sideways. She opened her mouth to scream and choked on water. Her eyes stung, and she could see only grainy darkness. She was moving—someone or something was dragging her along.

Was she in the river?

She flailed her arms and legs, seeking purchase against something, anything at all, but she could feel only the vicious tug of the current. Where was the surface? She had to find it, had to
breathe
. Her eyes were burning, but she wouldn’t close them, not until she oriented herself. As she struggled in the water, she struck something sharp. Pain erupted in a searing line along her hip.

Something brushed her right side, moving with the current. She whipped around. In the murky water she could just make out the sleek body of a passing water creature. Its forked tail appeared, waving gently, and she recognized it.
River dolphin
. And here she was, bleeding in the water.

But the creature didn’t seem to be interested in attacking her, and dolphins had to break surface to breathe. She didn’t dare grab its tail, lest it whip around and slice her open with its wicked teeth, but she swam after it, clawing desperately at the water. The dolphin was a strong swimmer. It outpaced her and she lost sight of it, but ahead she saw a brighter area of water. The surface! She flailed in its direction. Her arms and legs felt frighteningly weak.

Then something—some
one
—was in the water next to her, grasping her around the waist and hauling her upward. Mandir, Rasik, some random swimmer—Taya didn’t care who it was. She paddled with her arms, trying to assist as her rescuer dragged her upward with powerful strokes. Taya broke the surface, gasping and coughing. Her lungs burned. A glance showed her it was Mandir who’d fished her from the Lioness’s maw, and she was so grateful that she didn’t care in the least about his hands being all over her.

Whitewater splashed over her face. They weren’t out of danger yet. She and Mandir were in the middle of the Lioness, with the current sweeping them downstream.

Mandir jerked his head to indicate an upcoming sand bar. “Can you swim to that bank?”

Taya was not familiar with this stretch of river. The current must have carried her a long way. She tested her limbs. They were weak, and her left leg painful. She spat out a bit of river water and said, “I’ll try.”

Mandir turned to her with a more concerned look, as if he hadn’t expected that response, and said, “Forget it. I’ll get you there.” He wrapped an arm around her chest and in a slow but robust sidestroke, headed for the sand bar. Taya kicked a little, trying to assist him, but it was clear she was being more of a hindrance than a help, so she gave up and lay still, letting him haul her. For a moment, it looked like the current might drag them past the sand bar, but Mandir swam at an angle, fighting, and the Lioness yielded to his vigor.

As they approached dry land, Mandir’s movements changed. He’d struck bottom. He took a few awkward steps through the water, still pulling her. Then he gathered her into his arms and stood, lifting her out of the water entirely. Water ran off her clothes and hair in rivulets. She struggled a little, embarrassed and wanting to be back on her own feet, but gasped as pain flared in her hip.

“Hold still,” growled Mandir. He carried her out of the shallows, up onto the sand bar, and then onto the bank, where Rasik awaited atop his horse, leading Pepper and the blood bay.

“Are you going after the jackal?” asked Rasik.

“Can’t,” said Mandir. “Taya’s hurt. Jackal’s probably gone by now anyway.”

Taya blinked in confusion. Had Mandir and Rasik seen the jackal? How had they recognized her? She shivered, suddenly cold.

Mandir, still carrying Taya, sat down on a rock. His forehead wrinkled as he peeled the sodden fragments of her Coalition robe away from her left hip. Then his face and hands went still. Worried, Taya twisted in his arms to see what he saw. Yes, she had an ugly gash there. The blood was oozing out and dripping down her leg.

Rasik, dismounting from his horse, came closer.

“What are
you
looking at?” Mandir snapped at him.

“Her injury, what do you think?” said Rasik.

“She doesn’t need you gawking at her when she’s half naked.” Mandir stood. “I have to get her away from the river. It’s too dangerous here.”

It occurred to Taya that she ought to be recoiling from Mandir’s touch. After all, she hated him. But in truth she took some comfort from it. Mandir had lost his shirt somehow. And despite his faults in character—which were many, she reminded herself,
many
—Mandir was flawless in body. She felt woozy and weak, even a little shivery after her dunking in the river. Mandir carried her effortlessly, and his skin was warm against hers. His chest and shoulders were hard muscle beneath a layer of soft skin. She laid her head on his shoulder and closed her eyes.

“Stay awake, Taya.”

There was fear in Mandir’s voice, and she didn’t know why. Surely there was no harm in drifting off for a moment.

“Keep her awake, Rasik. Jab her with your fingers or something. I’d do it, but my hands are full.”

“Are you kidding? You practically lose your mind if I even look in her direction, and now you want me to touch her?”

“Keep her awake! It might be bad if she falls asleep.”

Someone yanked a lock of Taya’s hair, jarring her halfway to alertness. “Hey,” she protested.

“Told you not to sleep,” said Mandir.

Next thing she knew, she was moving suddenly downward. Mandir was seating himself on a rock, still holding her. She blinked and tried to sit up, but the pain flared again, and she stopped short.

“Hold still,” said Mandir. “I have to heal this.” He turned to Rasik. “Go stand watch or something. Give the lady some privacy.”

With a scowl of affront, Rasik turned and walked off, leading the horses with him.

“The jackal’s a young woman, maybe seventeen or eighteen years old,” Mandir called after him. “If you see anyone like that, let us know.”

Taya flinched as Mandir peeled back her torn robe again and prodded her wound.

“Sorry, just getting a sense of how deep it goes,” said Mandir. “It won’t hurt much longer.” He rested his fingers on her left thigh, where the bottom edge of the gash began, and in soft tones, called upon the Life Mother. “
Balatu bantu, riabu sulmu ak samamu awiltu.
” His words were gentle, since Lalan would respond to nothing else, and Taya felt the Life Mother’s magic stirring. At first her leg hurt worse, as if by awakening the injury Mandir had disturbed a hornet’s nest beneath her skin. She winced and tried to sit up.

Mandir could not respond audibly; he needed his voice to sustain the magic. But he laid his free hand on her arm to restrain her. The pain subsided quickly, and Taya knew, without looking, that the gash was knitting itself together from bottom to top. Mandir used no thread, only the magic of Lalan.

The fog of confusion and weariness that had settled into Taya’s mind began to lift, and while she waited for the magic to do its work, she pieced together what must have happened. She’d been scrying on the island and had been struck by something and knocked into the river. Mandir and Rasik had mentioned the jackal. What could have slammed into her like that? She’d been in the middle of a cyclone of fire.

It could only have been water. It must have extinguished the fire, otherwise she’d have been burned. Had she been struck by a jackal-summoned flood? That seemed the only possible answer. Mandir had seen it happen, jumped into the river after her, and fished her out. Perhaps she really did need a
quradum
.

“Did you see the jackal?” she asked, twisting a little in Mandir’s arms. “Or are you just assuming she was there?”

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