Chapter 17
DANGER DANGER…DEATH!!!!
“NO!!!” Aryl heard the shout, realizing it was hers only after Naryn and Morla whirled to stare at her.
Horror filled their faces as they heard the sendings too. “Aryl—what—who?”
“Tuana.” Naryn gripped the table, pulled herself upright. “It’s Tuana!”
Carts. They’d been talking about Tuana’s carts. Ziba had just gone to find Stryn Licor, whose family built carts. While they’d waited with Morla. While she’d introduced Naryn to Oswa and little Yao. While they’d smiled shy smiles.
DANGER!! cracked that peace. Voices shouted, in the meeting hall, outside; inwardly, their own sendings of shock and apprehension reverberated mind-to-mind. The exiles, through this before, were quickest to react. A bleak undertone of fear began to spread.
Something had to be done. Tightening her shields, Aryl concentrated and plunged into the M’hir, driving into every mind nearby. PEACE! a command, with all her strength. You are safe. Sona is safe, more gently, but not letting any elude her. The sendings are from Tuana. Peace.
Even as she felt Sona’s fear subside, even as Oswa stared at her with tear-filled eyes, the drumbeats of DANGERDANGER ceased.
Oh, no. It couldn’t be.
The world shifted toward Sona. Her awareness of place, her existence relative to every other Om’ray, shifted with it.
Everyone cried out, staggered. Someone fell.
Only Yao sat still, unaffected. She steadied her mother.
Unable to credit her sense, Aryl reached for Tuana and found its glow of Om’ray all but gone. A few glimmers, clustered together, their combined pull no more than Yena’s. To her inner sense, Rayna was Cersi’s new center, bounded by Pana, Grona, and Sona to the sun’s rest, Amna and Pana to its rise. Vyna, as always, alone and beyond.
Naryn raised her head. Her eyes were huge and confused. “Where did we go? There were over six hundred of us.” Morla tried to make her sit; the other pulled away and stood straighter. “Where did we go?”
Into the ground that had tried to swallow her. That had drowned the Tikitik. That had destroyed Sona…
“We don’t know yet,” Aryl said aloud. It was easier to lie with words. “We need to get everyone together.” They were all running here, to be together. To be with her.
A grip on her arm. “Go,” Haxel ordered grimly. “Find any survivors. I’ll look after Sona.”
“I’ve never been there—”
“Find a way. Go!”
She was right. Aryl didn’t hesitate. She dove for her boots. Her hands knew what to do with them; her mind didn’t have room to wonder why she needed them.
Her hands broke a fastener. Enris. He would have felt this, no matter how far away—
“Enris.”
The bizarre echo stopped her cold. Had the others noticed?
“Aryl?” Yao leaned over to tug her coat. “Your pocket’s talking.”
So much for secrecy. Aryl pulled out the geoscanner, noticing almost in passing that its symbol was green—no Oud active nearby. Enris? Without thought she reached. Before she found Tuana, she found four Om’ray where none had been, where none should be. Near Sona’s Cloisters.
One, beyond doubt, Enris Mendolar.
With Marcus?
They hadn’t, she thought numbly, been there a moment ago. He’d learned to use the M’hir. But why go to the Human?
Marcus had said the word to get her immediate attention. She raised the ’scanner, wondering what she could possibly reply, then thumbed it off and replaced it in her pocket.
“What was that?” Naryn. Who, Aryl realized, didn’t know the Strangers existed, or that Cersi was one of many worlds.
That wasn’t her problem now.
Everything else was.
Sona poured in, those who had been Grona, Tuana, and Yena gathering in confusion and fear. Bern held Oran, called Aryl’s name. Haxel shouted over the din, “Go!”
“Naryn, help your people.”
“You’re going to the tunnel—” the Tuana guessed, grabbing her own coat. “Take me with you. If this was the Oud—I have to know.”
There wasn’t time to argue. Aryl threw herself out the door, into the snow. She closed her eyes and cleared her thoughts, entering the M’hir.
Easier, every time.
Easiest of all, to go where she’d been before, to go to who she most wanted to see, needed to see…
Aryl concentrated…
Someone seized her arm. She tried to pull out of the M’hir, to stop the ’port, but it was too late.
…she found herself, with Naryn, standing in the Human’s shelter.
“I told you she would come.”
Marcus seemed to take Om’ray popping into sight in stride—that, or he was so glad to see her, he didn’t care. “I’d been up all night. I was taking a nap.” With that odd greeting, he turned to a young Om’ray lying on his bed. The child was unconscious, his leg bent in too many places. The Human began assembling his gear, muttering something in his words.
Trusting he knew what to do, Aryl looked to the others.
Who were staring at Naryn, who stared back, as if she hadn’t seen the Human or their surroundings at all.
Yuhas Parth. A welcome surprise. With his Chosen.
And Enris Mendolar.
A storm gathered around him, in him. She could taste it, despite his shields. All the Tuana were bloody and covered in soot. The Human’s white furnishings and floor were streaked red and black, marks of Om’ray tragedy. Enris stood among it all, larger than life, grimmer than death. “You.”
“Enris.” Naryn lifted her head. Her net had come loose; locks of hair rose to frame her pale face in red.
“Why aren’t you dead?” His tone was almost conversational. Almost. Aryl could envy the Human, deaf and blind to the terrible hate Enris allowed to spill from his mind. “Why are you here and not dead?”
The color left Naryn’s cheeks but she didn’t flinch or look away. “We didn’t know,” a broken whisper. “The Oud found us in the tunnels—”
“The tunnels?” Yuhas’ Chosen choked on the words. “You tres—you did this? You brought the Oud down on us?” She threw herself at Naryn. Yuhas caught her by the shoulders, grabbed her tight; she collapsed, sobbing, in his arms. His hand dropped to his belt, as if hunting a knife that should be there.
“So it was your fault.” Enris was too calm. Blood seeped down his neck from deep scratches along his cheek and jaw. Aryl doubted he knew they were there. “So you’re to blame, Naryn S’udlaat.”
“Stop it,” she told him, told them. This wasn’t right. They were Om’ray, Tuana. They should have been glad to know they’d all survived, not snarling like scavengers over ripe carrion. There’d be time for accusations and guilt—and grief—once she was sure Sona was safe. “The Oud attacked Tuana?”
Enris frowned as he finally looked at her, as if he didn’t remember who she was. “The Oud. A reshaping,” he said, cold and flat. “Everything and everyone above ground is gone. Except the Cloisters.”
“We should go, bring back any more survivors—”
His mouth twisted. “The Adepts are safe where they are, and those with them. There’s no one else.”
Bile rose in her throat.
“What do you mean, Enris?” Marcus demanded. He half stood, one hand touching the child as if he couldn’t bear to leave him, his expression desperate and afraid. “Oud coming here? Hurt us next?”
Not if she could help it.
Aryl brought out her Speaker’s Pendant. “Marcus, can you call them, bring them to talk to me?”
“Yes, but—”
NO!
His sending hurt; she didn’t let him see it. Instead, Aryl raised an eyebrow and said coolly, “You’ve been away, Enris Mendolar. Things have changed.”
His look to the Human and back at her was deliberate. The way his eyes then locked on Naryn and his hands became fists was not.
“Call the Oud,” Aryl told Marcus.
The child, Worin Mendolar, was awake and struggling to sit before the warning lights flickered red and blue. “You don’t move,” Marcus told him. “The regenerationcycle takes time. Your leg will be fixed soon.”
How a machine that looked like a tube with bumps could repair a broken bone, Aryl couldn’t imagine, but she had no trouble believing the Human. Nor did Enris, whose face showed its first glimmer of normalcy as he knelt by his brother and held him still. “Listen to Marcus,” he said gently. “He’s a friend. You can trust him.”
“But—he’s not-real.” Worin cried with an anguished effort to squirm free.
“Be still, Worin.”
“The child’s right.” Yuhas and his Chosen, Caynen S’udlaat, had stayed as far from Marcus as the crowded room allowed. Naryn apparently didn’t care. “It’s not-Om’ray. Not-real!”
Before Aryl realized what Marcus intended, he held out his hand. “Real inside. See?”
Only good manners to touch an offered Om’ray’s hand, to accept that private contact. For Worin to do it took courage. Enris immediately laid his over both, receiving a puzzled glance from the Human that quickly changed to a pained grimace.
“Sorry!” Worin pulled his hand free and gestured apology. “Real inside,” he agreed soberly. Almost a smile. “Kind. But different.”
“Should be,” Marcus managed to say. His hand was still within Enris’ grasp. He didn’t try to pull free, simply waited. And winced again.
What was Enris doing? Aryl started to object—
Which was when, with admirable timing, the lights went through their warning change.
Enris let go. “The Oud are here,” she said, almost relieved.
Yuhas pushed away from the counter. “I’m going with you.” Caynen blanched but offered no protest.
They’d played hide/seek together in the canopy. She knew his ability as he knew hers, knew and trusted his Yena reactions. But his life was not his alone to risk. “I need you to stay with the rest.”
Naryn wrapped her scarf around her neck, her hair sliding back and forth over her shoulders as if impatient. Marcus stared at it. Oh, he’d have questions about that later, Aryl thought.
If there was a later.
“Naryn—” she began.
“I want to hear for myself.”
Enris was at the door, looking out the window. Muscles worked along his jaw. Aryl remembered how she’d felt, seeing a Tikitik for the first time after their attack on Yena. It wasn’t Om’ray to want to kill another being.
She wouldn’t have minded the chance to watch one die. Then.
Now? The Agreement was about keeping the peace. There was no place for Om’ray to live, if that peace ended. They all knew the hard truth. Whatever had happened to Tuana, to Yena, to Sona mattered less than survival.
Maybe, Aryl thought wearily, this was why normal Om’ray only remembered those whose lives and memories they could still touch. To carry the dead into the future—how could peace endure their weight?
“I’m ready.” Marcus brushed at dirt on one sleeve. Dirt brought through the M’hir from Tuana, in a heartbeat. Was that more remarkable than dirt from this world, clinging to clothing from another? He caught her gaze and smiled. It wasn’t a good smile. The Human was afraid, but would come with her. He could call for his people and leave this world and its troubles behind, but chose to come with her. Aryl found she could smile after all.
Until she realized Enris had watched this small exchange, watched and judged it, and now frowned at her.
Aryl found she liked that frown. UnChosen should pay attention. Should notice—
A hand brushed hers. Control, Naryn stressed. Remember what I showed you. Now’s not the time—unless you want to risk him refusing you, too.
Startled, she concentrated and strengthened the guard she’d learned, suppressing the desire she hadn’t felt rising closer to her surface thoughts. Too close. The last thing she needed right now was to lose herself, be a Chooser.
It was, Aryl decided firmly, the very last thing Enris would want.
Three Oud on their vehicles. Three Om’ray.
One Human.
And a great deal of snow.
The storm was over, its clouds shredded by the mountain ridges. The sun, though low, transformed the landscape. Drifts pillowed every rise; glittering white blanketed the clearing. Unlikely rounds topped nekis stalks and the towering cliff might have been hung with gauze. At any other time, or company, the sight would have taken her breath away.
At least it covered where the Oud had killed the Tikitik. Enris didn’t need to see it.
The snow, however, was its own challenge. The door opened easily enough, sliding to one side, but Aryl’s first step sank until snow covered her knee. She sighed inwardly and thrust her other foot into the stuff, lurching ahead to take the next step.
So much for a bold, confident stride.
The Oud vehicles, predictably, had forced their way through, leaving dark trails of exposed ground behind them. Their fabric coverings bore a thick layer of white, as if they’d sat outside during the storm, though the clear domes over their front ends had been wiped clean.
Preparing for company?
Don’t trust them.
Hearing Enris again she quite liked. Thinking her a fool? Surely he remembered better than that. I’m the Speaker.
And would have fallen face first in the next instant if he hadn’t grabbed her belt. She pulled her foot free—it had broken through some icy crust beneath the snow—and freed herself from his grip.
Annoying Tuana.
She shouldn’t think of him as Tuana any more. She shouldn’t think of herself as Yena. Those places, those Clans and families, their homes and shops, glows and tables and carpets and silly bits of nothing that filled cupboards and drawers until you tidied them only to find a reason to keep some of them still—all were gone from the world; to be forgotten, once no living memories remained.
As Sona would be, if she failed.
Tired of fighting the snow and her emotions, Aryl stopped short. “We see you,” she said, her voice carrying in the cold.
The centermost Oud reared up, creating a plume of snow, and produced its pendant. “Sona Speaker. Here is.”
The other two Oud lifted on their platforms and began tossing objects from beneath their bodies at them. Packs. Bulky Tuana-style packs. Nine large ones, well used. A small one, torn along a side. A hail of blades and tools followed, most burying themselves in the snow. The gear taken from Naryn and the others?
As if it mattered.
“That’s not why I want to talk to you.”
“What is? Water want? Other?”
The Oud being reasonable. The Oud being considerate, if a little late. Did these not know what had happened less than a tenth ago? Dare she ask?
Enris shifted beside her, snow creaking under his big feet. Like thunder from the sky, building to an explosion of light and fire.
She’d ask. “What happened at Tuana today?”
“Why did you destroy it and kill everyone?” Enris roared, stepping forward.
The Oud reared higher. “Whowhowho?”
Aryl drove her shoulder into him, hard enough to throw him off-balance. Stop! she sent desperately. Give me a chance. Please, Enris, more softly. Trust me.
He subsided. Slightly.
“Tuana was—” she stumbled over their term, “—reshaped. Why?”
Naryn stood with Marcus. Aryl waited for the Oud to answer, hoping for a reason that wouldn’t crush her new friend with the kind of guilt she carried. Hoping for a reason they could understand.
Cold. She was always cold these days. Could see the clouds from her breath meet and mingle with Enris’. The Oud spoke without breath, its limbs rubbing together to produce words. It didn’t matter, Aryl told herself. They were still words.
“Balance,” the Oud said finally. “Balance goodgoodgoodgood. Peace.”
A child without a mother lay broken in Marcus’ bed. Enris stood beside her, so consumed by rage and grief it felt like her own. An entire Clan, lost. “It’s not good!” she denied, her voice rising. “Oud killed Tuana’s Om’ray. What could that possibly balance? It’s not good. Not good!”
It hesitated, as if surprised by her anger. “Decided other. Sona Oud.”
What did it mean?
“Exactly.” The snow shifted as the Tikitik stood, its skin as white as its surroundings, save for the short black barbs on the outside of its arms and gleaming black orbs that were its four eyes. “I see you didn’t die, Enris Mendolar.”
“Day’s not over,” that worthy replied.
They knew one another?
Aryl glared at it. Thought Traveler was attracted to trouble like a biter to blood. “Do you know why the Oud destroyed Tuana?”
“We were in their tunnels.” Naryn was at Aryl’s shoulder, hair a wild cloud. “Was that why? Was it my fault?”
Thought Traveler barked his laugh. “Tuana has been re-born because of you, Apart-from-All. Did you not realize the Agreement holds the lands of Oud and Tikitik in balance? That when you resettled Sona and welcomed the Oud—who, it must be said, had pushed rudely into these mountains before your time, but still—that the Tikitik were owed a replacement?”
It toyed with her—with them all. Like Mauro, it took pleasure from their pain and suffering. “You’re lying. Why would the Oud kill so many Om’ray because a few of us came here?”
The Tikitik dipped its head, like a sly child. “Why do you think they like lists? They can’t count.”
The Oud Speaker flung itself from side to side, crashing into its companions. With each movement, it spoke, loudly. “Oud calculate.” Thud! “More than.” An Oud was tumbled from its vehicle and humped back on top, crouching low. “Less than. Extrapolate.” A final thud, then it settled. “Tikitik stupid!”
“I meant no insult, Esteemed Speaker,” Thought Traveler said smoothly. Its larger pair of eyes never left Aryl. “I merely educate your counterpart.”
“Don’t listen to it,” Enris urged.
She didn’t want to.
She had to.
Was it her doing?
“How did killing the Tuana—” the words were slivers of wood in her mouth, “—restore the balance?”
Thought Traveler’s long toes lifted it on the snow. It pranced, more than walked, toward her. “Tuana is again Tikitik. The Lay Swamp already spreads. We have begun our planting. There will be rastis once more on the plains, homes for our mothers. Dresel for our dear Om’ray.”
“What Om’ray?” Enris said harshly.
“The strongest.” That sly head tilt. “The best.”
Hush, she sent to Enris. “What do you mean, ‘again’?”
It came close to her, fingers scooping the air. She could smell it: stale dresel, old clothes. “Did you think this the first time, Apart-from-All, that Oud and Tikitik have exchanged Clans for the sake of balance? Do you think it the last?”
“Balance good!” the Oud agreed.
Aryl’s hand clenched over the pendant.
It had been her fault. All of it.
She’d stepped on a branch that couldn’t hold her, led her people there, gathered the innocent Grona and Tuana to her folly. Believed she was a Speaker, a leader, that she could save everyone.
All she’d accomplished was death. “Why kill them?” Numbly. “Why kill Sona?”
“I did warn you, Apart-from-All. The Oud do not appreciate your fragile nature. They came seeking their metal, water for their industry, and found secrets from the past. Their desire made them impetuous. They reshaped to supplant us and killed Sona’s Om’ray instead.”
Abruptly, its face thrust at hers—she refused to pull away, even when the writhing protuberances around its mouth patted her lips and chin, tasted the tears from her eyes.
“Delicate, your flesh.” This so quietly she doubted anyone else heard. “Dangerous, what lies within. I will tell you another truth, Apart-from-All. The Oud cherish what could destroy them. We are not such fools.”
Then it was gone, running on top of the snow.
Aryl lifted the pendant from her neck, over her head, yanked it free of her scarf. Raised her hand and drew back her arm to throw it away.
The Oud Speaker lowered itself until its speaking limbs were barely free of the platform. “Sona Oud? Goodgoodgoodgood? Water want?”
She hesitated, her arm shaking.
Starvation. Flood. Storm.
The Tikitik stole Yena’s defenses, invited what climbed in truenight to eat their flesh…watched and laughed.
The Oud dug the ground from beneath Tuana’s feet…and seemed surprised they were upset.
The Oud “cherished” them?
“Marcus.”
He pushed between her and Enris, slipped in the snow. The Tuana caught his arm to steady him. “I’m here.”
“Triad First,” the Oud agreed, whether in greeting or identification Aryl wasn’t sure.
But it was right. The Human was the only one used to the confusion of many kinds of being, of thought. He’d said the Oud’s lifecycle was different.
She lowered her voice, though no one knew how well Oud could hear. “Marcus, could they have destroyed Tuana without realizing it would kill its people? Could they make that kind of—mistake?” Enris flinched at the word. She didn’t blame him.
Marcus gave her his troubled look. “We saw them kill Tikitik. I don’t think by mistake. Might be,” he glanced uneasily at the creatures, “might be they don’t value life as we do. Colonial-society—”
“Our words.”
“The Oud may be less individual, more group-minded. If some Oud die, it doesn’t matter to them so long as the group continues.”
“They have individuals,” Enris countered harshly. “They know who we are, who you are.”
“Other Oud not.” In his urgency to be understood, Marcus struggled to put words together. “I’ve see—seen Oud who work and never talk. Seen Oud who talk and decide—make decisions. There could be more kinds. Castes. Or some stage of lifecycle when an Oud could be an individual, at other part of life, not. Complicated life—I don’t know, we didn’t ask. Do you understand? But nothing like Om’ray or Human. Actions are not like Om’ray or Human. You can’t think of them that way.”
Aryl chewed her lower lip. If she understood him—something she hoped but couldn’t be sure—then the Oud might not feel remorse or guilt. Or any other emotion she could grasp. “What can I do?” she asked hopelessly.
Marcus put his back to the Oud, faced her and the other Om’ray. “Let me talk to them.”
“No! I don’t know what you are,” Naryn objected hotly, “but you don’t speak for us. Aryl—you can’t let it.”
Aryl looked at Enris. His face was pale where he’d wiped away soot. Pale and hard and desperate. Anything, that expression told her. Anything that keeps us alive.
Marcus waited in the snow, shivering, in his not-quite-Om’ray clothes. He should have seemed the weakest here, out of place. Instead, suddenly she saw him as she thought others of his kind must: a leader of exceptional skill, confident of his abilities, experienced and brave.
Frightened, yes. But no fool.
She nodded, and the Human turned to the Oud. “Speaker. What happens to Oud who die?”
Not what she’d expected, nor, from Enris’ expression, had he. Who cared about those already dead? Or the Oud’s dead?
The Oud Speaker reared to answer. “Dead reshaped.”
“Reshaped to what?”
The Oud rose higher, its pendant dangling from a limb. “Tikitik.”
Aryl blinked. Naryn choked.
Marcus didn’t appear surprised. “What do Tikitik become when they are reshaped?”
“Om’ray. Better is.”
Aryl opened her mouth to protest. The Human, perceptive as always, reached back and signed her to stop. “And Om’ray?” he asked.
The Speaker rocked gently.
“What do Om’ray become, when reshaped?” Marcus persisted.
She’d been wrong to let him speak. This was madness.
“Oud. Best is.”
Did he expect her—expect anyone—to listen to such nonsense? That the Oud believed the bodies of each race somehow became the other?
“Did you destroy the Tuana Om’ray to make more Oud?”
How could he ask that?
What if it were true? They’d never be safe. The Oud would surely kill them all…
“Oud less,” the Speaker denied. “Tuana reshaped. Tikitik more.”
Marcus shook his head. “I don’t understand,” he objected, sounding shaken for the first time. Aryl agreed. “Where are the Tuana Oud?”
“Oud reshaped.” The Speaker shook its pendant vigorously. “Tikitik more. Balance.”
The Oud had died, too? Some mass suicide, required to remove themselves from land that was now Tikitik?
If they expected her to feel guilt for Oud deaths, Aryl thought darkly, they should have let the Om’ray escape first.
Before the Human could ask another question, the Speaker spoke again, quickly. “Om’ray live, best is. Om’ray more, Oud more. Goodgoodgoodgood.”
Ever-curious, Marcus asked, “How?”
In answer, all three Oud reared, their limbs clenched together.
And all three Om’ray cried out.
Aryl fought to keep her focus as SOMETHING twisted inside. Her Power, her inner sense, all that connected her to other Om’ray was being disturbed, pulled and pushed away, taken and replaced…until she retreated into the comfort of the M’hir and could find herself again.
Enris. She summoned him there, felt the link between them form and grow strong, Power reaching to Power. Naryn, she called.
No!
She ignored his objection. They were Om’ray. They had to survive.
Naryn. Clinging to her at first, then, gaining confidence. Naryn extended a link to Enris.
The M’hir churned with his hate. His revulsion!
No. Aryl refused to allow it. The others! Worin! Had they been—what had the Oud done?
These are Oud Torments. We’re taught not to use Power near them. Naryn’s mindvoice, clear and sure. This…this is why. I told you. They have their own Power, too different from ours. But it doesn’t affect us here… with wonder.
She could feel Enris reaching for his brother, for Yuhas and Caynen, felt the three minds drawn into the M’hir, how he held them there, safe from the Oud.
Away from her. From Naryn.
Aryl didn’t waste time feeling hurt. Safe from the Oud didn’t mean safe from the M’hir. And they’d left Marcus, their own bodies…
She eased herself from the M’hir, regaining cold feet and a foul taste in her mouth.
The twisted sensation was gone. All the Oud were lying on their vehicles.
Marcus had her by the shoulders. He gave her a shake. “Aryl! Aryl!”
She grunted something, busy recalling the rest. “That was—”
“Painful,” Naryn supplied. “Stupid not-Om’ray.”
Enris was already halfway to the shelter. Checking on his brother or abandoning her?
Both, Aryl decided.
“Aryl!”
“I’m fine, Marcus. The Oud—” None of the words he’d given her fit what she’d sensed from the creatures. “They did something we could feel. Not telepathy. Not words or communication. Their presence. It was—unpleasant.”
“Better now?”
“Yes.”
“Good.” A dismissal; the Human, unaffected, had no idea how devastating the moment had been for the Om’ray. Something to remember, Aryl thought. “Listen to me. The reshaping. The Oud aren’t talking about bodies. Not flesh. The Oud talk about—” he waved his gloved hands around his head, “—telepathy, parts of mind, what we not see/touch, what you feel. They believe all connected. Om’ray. Tikitik. Oud. Same inside. Continuum. I need more words. Spirit. Reincarnation. Soul. Religiousbeliefs.” He sputtered along, frustrated. “Important to understand—”
Reading her expression, or guessing, Marcus squeezed her shoulders and gave her another, very gentle, shake. “Not important. Sorry, Aryl. What matters is what it means. The Oud need you. Value you. It’s a place to start. Let me try again. Please. I want to help you. Help Enris. Help Sona.”
She still held the pendant. Aryl stared down at it, then, slowly, put it back around her neck. “You’ve already helped, Marcus, more than you know. Stay with Naryn.” She walked around him. “Speaker!”
The centermost Oud reared ever so slightly, then swayed in place. Had the disturbance affected them, too? “What is? Water want?”
Consistent creature.
Om’ray more, Oud more. She didn’t understand why or how; she didn’t care. Her heart began to pound. Why would it negotiate for the future of Sona, unless it needed one, too?
“We want water in the river,” Aryl said firmly. “Can you do that?”
“Can. Not all. Oud some.”
“Sona to have more than Oud.” That, for its ability to calculate. In case it thought she didn’t know about the second emptied river.
The Oud rose a little more. “Yesyesyesyes. Oud some. Sona more than.”
Now for what was important. Aryl brought out the Human’s geoscanner, the device that carried voices, too. The Oud stilled. “Sona is not like other Clans,” she told it. “We have friends who see into your tunnels. Friends who will warn us if you start to reshape beneath our feet.” Not that she knew Marcus could, but neither did the Oud. They had to respect the Strangers’ more advanced technology. “If you do, we will leave.”
“Not go! Not go!” The Speaker flailed its pendant. “Agreement stands. Oud not reshape village. Oud not reshape fields. Om’ray grow. Om’ray more than. Oud more than. Goodgoodgoodgood!”
Not good enough. “You will not tunnel under us,” Aryl insisted. “You’ll remove the tunnels you put there. Without—” she added hastily, “—damaging the surface.”
A considering pause. “Oud stay. Fix bridge.”
It was negotiating.
Keeping her voice calm, Aryl made her own offer. “We don’t need the bridge. You can stay here. Hunt for the Hoveny. The Makers.” She gestured toward the cliff excavation, then to her feet. “You will not tunnel under us.”
“Oud stay here. Sona Speaker stay here.”
About to object, forcefully, Aryl swallowed. By the Agreement, the two Speakers had to meet and talk.
She smiled her mother’s smile. “I stay with my people.” She held up the geoscanner. “The Triad First can contact me for you. I’ll come here.”
“Goodgoodgoodgood.” The Oud dropped flat. The three vehicles backed and bounced away, retracing the scar they’d left in the snow.
Aryl held her breath until they were out of sight, then let it out in a ragged sigh. “No bridge.” But so much more, if she was right. Safety. The Oud out from underneath. A chance to recover. Water.
Life.
Marcus patted her shoulder. “Did your best. Fine job. I’ll check on the child. Get warm.” His exaggerated shiver turned into a real one.
She watched him stagger through the snow, trying to use Enris’ deeper footprints though his stride wasn’t long enough. “You should go inside, Naryn,” she suggested, turning to the other. She wasn’t ready to join the rest. Her hands trembled as she tucked the pendant inside her coat, but it wasn’t the cold.
Now we know. The sending was emotionless; Naryn’s hair lay flat, like ribbons of blood. The Oud killed the Tuana Om’ray because you wanted to stay here. They will let the rest of us live because you’ve promised we’ll stay.
Aryl accepted the guilt, drew it deep inside. Yes.
When the others know, they’ll hate you more than Enris hates me. Are you prepared for that? Are you prepared for his hate?
“My people will understand—” she whispered. As for Enris…
“Understand what? Your ability to push yourself and others through space? How you’ve included that—that thing in dealings between Speakers? Why you took it on yourself to set the terms for all our lives?” The words were harsh, but Naryn’s eyes swam with compassion. “I understand, Aryl. I do. We’re the same. I know what it is to be set apart by my Power, by what I’ve done. And you’ve done what’s right. I believe in you. Those of greater Power must care for those of less. We must use our abilities to lead. But there’s a price.”
“I don’t want to lead—I never have.”
I have always been drawn to Power. An undertone of deep affection. I’ve always known who possessed strength. You are the most powerful Om’ray I have ever sensed, Aryl Sarc, heart-kin. Let me help with your burden. With your Choice. Only the most powerful Candidate is fit for your Choice. Enris must be yours.
“No!” To what, Aryl didn’t know. Confusion warred with desire. She had to think, to know what was right, to know what to say to her people. Enris…his family had just died. How could she feel…how could she want…“No,” this more calmly. “There’s time—time for any of that. We have to meet. Explain. Help.”
“It won’t be an easy Choice. He could refuse you.”
Something Naryn knew from experience. His refusal had cost her everything, including her life and that of her unborn, if they couldn’t find a way to sever that link.
“No.”
“He’s the only one you want. The one you trust.” Soft. Implacable. “The one who knows you. Who better?”
This wasn’t how it was supposed to be. How she was supposed to be. Cold. Alone. Afraid.
Her people loved her. They wouldn’t hate her. They couldn’t. They’d understand.
Enris was her friend. He couldn’t hurt her. When he was healed, happy again, he’d…
She could wait…she had to wait…
A wisp of hair slipped across her forehead, every strand a separate sensation. The chill of her toes and fingertips burned with sudden fire. Her next breath carved a channel through her throat and body, intricate and deep.
Not here. Not now. Aryl, wait! The dark centers of Naryn’s eyes reflected the snow. He won’t accept you now. We have to prepare, be ready. You could both fail. Hold on.
“I’m trying…” A hoarse, futile whisper. Aryl dropped to her knees, her hands buried in the cold, cold unable to stop the heat rising inside her. The DESIRE!
“Aryl?”
His voice.
NO! She threw herself away from him, from everything, launching herself into the M’hir, seeking safety, seeking control. Aryl pushed…
…and found herself on a wide branch, gazing out over the canopy.