CHAPTER 34

Through the numb folds of an empty place, he felt the gentle caress of a hand on his cheek. Images appeared in his mind's eye, people and places he didn't recognise, though memories of them rose in his thoughts. Only the patient brush of delicate fingers kept them back. The comforting touch spread warmth down his cheek, over his neck and chest, and into his limbs. Slowly the warmth made him aware of the rest of his body, the crumpled and broken lines of his skin. The scar on his chest glowed bright white, casting threads of light out into the darkness.

'Isak, you must wake.'

The voice stirred a memory as deep as instinct, but no more. He didn't mind. The soft syllables of her voice drove away the pain and he wanted no more than that.

'Isak, you must fight.'

The name sent a tingle down his spine. He resisted, but something deep inside stirred. The tang of blood danced about his teeth.

'Isak, wake now. Help is coming.'

Unbidden, his chest rose as he took in a huge gulp of air. The musty warmth faded from his skin as daylight began to sting his eyes. He recognised his name now, as he did the pain that flooded back in. The taste of blood grew thick in his mouth.

'I think the prophets were wrong.'

Isak, hanging limp in someone's arms, winced at the sudden brightness. As his senses returned, he realised that he couldn't recognise the accent of whoever had just spoken: her Farlan sounded almost ugly, as if she were pronouncing each syllable with contempt.

'Why do you say that, Mistress?' came a whining reply.

'How could it be so easily captured if it is to be the weapon we believed? Ostia?'

'I can tell no more than you, Mistress,' replied a third voice. Isak forced his eyelids open. Duchess Forell stood to one side, hands clasped anxiously to her chest. The woman who had just spoken, Ostia, was beside the duchess, a little oasis of serenity and calm amidst the scattered ruin of the pavilion behind. They were inside the jousting arena, Isak thought, but all was still, even the few remaining soldiers were standing motionless as they watched the proceedings.

All three women wore plain white capes of the White Circle over sumptuous dresses of purples and blues, studded with gems and woven with silver and gold.

'It is young, young enough for training.'

Isak focused on the speaker, blinking in surprise as he took in her remarkable size and the colour of her skin. A female white-eye. Her white hood was up, but Isak could see that her face was rust-coloured. It put him in mind a little of Xeliath's smooth chestnut colouring, but dusted with red.

'Let it stand by itself,' the woman commanded. Isak felt the supports disappear from under his arms and he sagged. As his eyes drifted down the length of her body, he stiffened with shock: she was cradling a Crystal Skull, her long fingers clamped protectively about it so that both eye sockets were covered. The Skull itself was small, unassuming, its surface dull, but Isak could still feel the looming weight of the Skull pressing down on his throbbing temples.

So that was how he'd been overcome earlier: the Skull was powerful beyond anything he could ever have imagined – and even now it was holding him captive with terrifying ease.

Isak tried to look around the arena surreptitiously. He could see no sign of his companions, just a scattering of bodies that looked dead. He could hear the distant clash of weapons.

They abandoned you.' The strange white-eye sneered at Isak. They broke and ran, but they will not get far. Shall we see which ones still live?'

She looked at the woman Isak thought was Ostia, who nodded. He could sense it as she began to draw magic, looking out towards the city with an enquiring expression, until a frown crossed her face.

'What is-?' Suddenly she yelped and clutched at her head. 'By the pit of Ghenna, what was that?' she shouted.

'Well? What happened?' the white-eye demanded angrily. Clearly her own skills were limited, however much strength the Crystal Skull could lend her. Isak concentrated on Ostia: to be able to spy on the city gates was an amazing feat; to get close enough to be hurt by the daemon was astounding. Isak wondered if Bahl would be able to do that.

'Clever bastard,' mused Ostia. She ignored the white-eye's vocal impatience, but a few moments later, said, 'I doubt anyone will have managed to close the gate on the king – a daemon has just incarnated in the gate-house.'

Isak chuckled. 'Not as clever as you thought? What a pity.'

A quick spasm of pain ran through his body as punishment. The white-eye hissed with anger, 'You will not think so when you have been bonded to me. Then you'll be as eager as a dog to deal with the problem of the king.'

As she spoke, Isak blanched and his eyes went distant and fearful. He felt as if he were watching an arrow speed towards him. Suddenly he convulsed violently and the two guards gripped his arms again to stop him falling flat. The strange white-eye looked to Ostia for explanation.

'I don't know, but I suggest you stop whatever it is you are doing to him.'

'I'm doing nothing,' she said angrily and took a step back as Isak fell to his knees and began to shake.

Isak.

The world swam beneath his feet. Without warning he retched, splattering the contents of his stomach all over the churned ground. The white-eye twitched her dress in distaste as vomit stained the hem, but she didn't retreat. She stroked the Crystal Skull musingly: this was no trick, that much she could tell.

Isak, can you feel it? Oh Gods, can you feel it? Xeliath's voice echoed loud in Isak's mind.

'What is it?'

A storm rushing over the Land. Nartis himself, coming to lay his blessing upon you. Panic rang out in her voice, panic and euphoric delight. Lord Bahl has gone to the Palace on the White Isle, gone to embrace his doom.

Isak felt the Land tremble through his palms. He felt hot sunlight on his skin, and the chill of stone corridors on his fingertips. As the cold bit into his toes, he recognised the place all too well.

The stone wall was freezing as he put a hand against it to steady himself. He looked out on to the unnaturally empty beach and recognised where he was. A single sun-bleached rock sat on the smooth,

flat sand, far from the listless encroachment of the tide. He turned from the window and let the faint breeze in the corridor carry him away like a dandelion seed. His thoughts were on the man he knew was about to die, a man he called friend. The man he had feared to tell his dreams to.

He was awake this time, and he knew not to fight the tide of where he was going. His bare feet whispered warnings on the smooth floor, but he ignored them and pushed on to an arched doorway ahead. As he entered the domed chamber his strength almost failed as the immense weight of age inside encircled him.

He dragged his shivering limbs to the statue ahead and one final effort brought his head up to rest on the pedestal. He froze at what he saw before him.

Lord Bahl stood in the centre, as he always had in the dreams, even when he had been just a nameless face. He looked imperious, potent, as magic and anger coursed through his body. He danced and spun with deadly breathless grace when the dark knight attacked, but each strike was met and countered. A deep laughter rumbled through the chamber and Bahl's blows grew faster and more desperate.

Then an opening came and the unknown knight lashed out, faster than Isak could follow. The legendary hooded face dropped and rolled away in a burst of crimson. Isak moaned out loud, as he had every one of the dozen times he'd dreamed of this death. Only this time it was true. Despite everything, it had come true – and he had never warned his Lord…

Guilt seeped into him like poison, and his tears fell like acid on his cheeks.

The knight turned at the moan, his fanged blade rising to meet another challenge. The black armour was of ancient design, and fantastically ornate, with beaded ridges and swirls of silver. The knight's hand was naked, fully exposed to the air, and as pale as a corpse's. The monogram at his throat – the entwined letters K and V – made it clear whose armour this had once been, and which legendary warrior had slain Lord Bahl.

Isak stood, and this time he found Eolis in his hand, but when he looked down at it, he saw the blade was as thin and unsubstantial as morning mist. He struggled to raise the weapon, but despite his fury he could manage to advance only one step. He sank to his knees, exhausted, shaking with grief. Looking at his hands, Isak saw that they were hardly visible in the reflected light, like the sword in his hand, and they were growing fainter with each passing moment.

Kastan Styrax chuckled malevolently and dropped his guard. A trail of blood – Bahl's blood, Isak thought with a near-sob – spattered on the stone. He gave Isak a mock salute and turned, his broadsword resting on his shoulder as he walked away.

He called out to Isak across the hall, 'Another day, boy.'

'Mistress, the ceremony will not work if he's unconscious.'

'Then I will wake it up. Ah, it is already.'

Isak opened his eyes to find the white-eye staring down at him. The duchess stood hunched at her side; Ostia was marking out a circle on the ground with her toe.

'Ceremony?' he muttered through his daze.

'Yes, dog, ceremony. Dangerous animals must be tamed if they are to be of any use.'

New strength surged into Isak's limbs. The air tasted sweeter as he took a deep strong breath. He felt the dizzying miles of air above him and the heavy security of earth and rock beneath his feet. A smile crept on to his lips, despite the death of his friend and Master. His veins sparkled with life as clouds rushed overhead to celebrate his ascension. The day had been clear and fresh, but as Isak sucked in each joyful lungful of air, he drew the storm closer.

Isak could feel Nartis now, not as the terrorising deity of his dream, but as a brother, a father. The air shuddered as the God's divine gaze broke through the clouds and settled like a crown on Isak's head. The God's strength was there to draw on; his anger loaned fire to Isak's drained limbs.

'My people have a saying,' Isak began.

The women stopped what they were doing and narrowed their eyes at him. Isak looked from one to the other, lingering on Ostia for the longest. Suddenly she recognised some change in the air. Concern blossomed on her face as she felt Nartis. Isak could feel his own strength growing, and he saw in Ostia's eyes that she could see it too, but she ignored it, as though it was unimportant to her cause.

It confirmed Isak's thought that Ostia was not the enemy – or maybe it was just that she had no intention of making an enemy of Nartis. Either way, it was one less problem, and now Isak saw how to deal with the others. He grinned at the white-eye above him.

'They say that only a fool tries to cage a wolf.'

The white-eye stared back at him, then snorted in derision, quickly echoed by the duchess.

'Stupid creature,' the white-eye said. 'You call yourself a wolf? Ha! You are a beast, yes, but no one is strong enough to resist this ceremony, whatever grand statements you might make about your spirit.'

Isak continued to grin as his strength grew with every second. He could feel Nartis touch every inch of his skin as the power of divine blessing filled his soul. This was what it truly meant to be a white-eye, to have every fibre humming with rapturous energy. Ostia took a careful step back.

'I'm peasant stock,' he said. 'We don't make grand statements.'

'So?' She tried to affect boredom, but for the first time he could hear slight uncertainty in her voice.

'Wolves never travel alone.'

She didn't even have time to take in his words. Her eyes widened as a jolt of pain hit and her body went rigid. Her mouth fell half-open in a scream that never came. Without breaking stride, Mihn danced past her falling body, smoothly tearing Arugin from her back and bringing it up to meet the guard on Isak's right. Isak spun to his left and slammed his palm into the other soldier's throat. He felt a snap as something gave way under the blow, then reached down to grab the man's sword from its scabbard. The man's skin was also rusty-coloured; Isak briefly registered that his armour was unusually shaped and coloured.

He turned to see Ostia dive gracefully past, gathering up the Crystal Skull as the white-eye fell, then rolling back on to her feet like a street acrobat. Duchess Forell grabbed at the artefact as she straightened up, but Ostia easily slipped the Skull through the duchess's grip, then lashed out with her foot.

Isak thought he heard a bone break. The duchess collapsed, screaming in pain.

In his peripheral vision, Isak caught sight of a man – a mercenary? – darting forward and he turned and lunged, using his unnatural strength to drive through the man's shield and into his belly. He wrenched the blade violently out, snapping it clean in half, and threw what remained at the nearest soldier to give himself enough time to gather up the mercenary's sword.


Now the other mercenaries hesitated. Isak glanced at Mihn and saw two corpses lying at his feet. Tears streamed from his eyes as blood dripped from a weapon he'd vowed never to use again.

Then Isak felt a pulse of magic ripple out from the Crystal Skull as Ostia snarled something. He hurried to find some defence against the spell, whatever it was, before he realised it wasn't directed at him. Tendrils of energy rushed in all directions as crimson claws appeared in the air around the remaining mercenaries. They died without a sound, leaving only three figures standing amongst a heap of twitching corpses.

Isak could feel Eolis, his shield and helm off to one side, drawing him to them. He kept a wary distance from Ostia. 'Who in the name of the Gods are you?' he asked.

'Not in the name of the Gods.' She smiled hungrily, looking around at the corpses, and Isak saw elongated teeth behind quivering lips. She tugged her shawl over her head with a gloved hand. 'Do you not recognise me?' There was a tenderness in her voice that gave him pause; it reminded him of Xeliath.

'Should I know you?' he asked again, but as he said it, Isak felt a quiver of recognition. Not who, but what. She was fair-skinned, with dark hair, but with her wide face and small features she was clearly not Farlan.

The teeth, and the dark patch of skin that had blossomed on her cheek, burnt by the touch of sunlight, he realised. Finally, a name

came.

'Ah, I see it in your face,' she said. 'My name is Zhia Vukotic – but you do not know my face. I had wondered, but no matter.'

'Why did you kill your men?'

'If you can guess what I am, then you surely know I need no reason to kill, even by your standards.' She gave a mocking laugh. 'Yes, boy, I know that's not what you meant. I killed them because they would have proved an inconvenience; they were loyal to the Circle.'

'And you're not? I don't understand.'

'Evidently. Can you guess who they are? Or are you really so dim-witted? Then I should put you out of your misery now.'

'They- I've never seen anyone like them before.'

Then I will explain. Your man has just killed the Queen of the Fysthrall. This is the Age of Fulfilment and the banished have returned. They have changed so much. Once they were so wonderful

…' Her voice trailed off, then she shrugged. 'Now is not the time. The White Circle is their cause, not mine.'

'So why are you involved? Because they were once your allies?'

'Nostalgia? Hah.' Her laughter echoed with the weight of years. The memory of the island palace stirred in Isak's mind. Zhia had the same weary, timeless quality about her. He forced down the memory of Bahl's death. That was for later; he could not let himself grieve yet.

'I leave the obsession with the past to my brother. In any case, they are far from what we once knew. They had no idea who I was, other than that I possessed more skill and knowledge than any other of the Circle. The temptation of a Skull was easily enough for me to play the part of a quiet and faithful servant. I didn't expect taking it to be quite so easy.'

That was the only reason you were with them?'

'You're showing your innocence now. With an eternity ahead of me, playing at politics keeps me busy even if it comes to nothing.' Zhia shrugged again, taking care not to dislodge her shawl and expose herself to the sun's touch. 'If it serves a future purpose, all the better.'

'Future purpose?'

Her garrulousness was making Isak suspicious. They were the very definition of foes: Isak was blessed even beyond most Chosen; Zhia with her brothers and sister, was cursed above all others.

Time is of the essence for Narkang's king. I suggest you find a way to join him.' She blinked, then curled her lip with impatience as Isak still didn't appear to understand. 'Look, boy: the Fysthrall are far more your enemies than I. They have one ambition, to take revenge on the Gods who banished them. Understandably, thanks to the Saviour prophecies, they see you as a threat to these plans – and it appears you feature in their own prophecies. You are – or have – the key to ending their exile.'

'So they are who the Saviour's supposed to fight?' Isak wasn't sure he wanted a true answer to that. Like most, he had assumed that there was some cataclysm to come, so the creeping worry of disaster would be lurking on the horizon until it actually happened.

They believe so, but they are intellectually insular. I suggest you would be better off having a care of your own shadow more than you do the Fysthrall. Your friend the king is the man to ask about the Saviour – he has written some excellent essays on the subject. The man is obsessed with history – and making his own mark upon it.


Now, return to your friends.'

Isak sensed her disappointment with him, but he couldn't work out whether it was because he wasn't all that she'd expected, or because Siulents had brought back old and unhappy memories.

'So what's your part in this now?' he asked offhandedly.

'Don't banter with me, boy, it's beyond you.'

'You said their cause was not yours,' he explained hurriedly. He was more than aware of the angry prickle of magic surrounding her. 'What do you want – it's obviously not my death.'

'Nothing you can give me, but it should be easy enough to guess, if you have any imagination. Enough of this. Go.'

He didn't wait to be told again. His friends needed him. Isak saw the main arena gate lying flat as Emin had promised, and bodies

– Kingsguard, mercenaries, ordinary people, both noble and peasant

– lying everywhere. He couldn't see Vesna's distinctive armour anywhere among the fallen, so presumably he had made it through.

A group of horses stood tethered to a rail at the back of the public stand, nominally guarded by a mercenary who'd walked out to a rise in the ground to see what he could of the fighting. The unnatural vigour of his ascension was still running through Isak's limbs, and his aim was true as he threw Eolis thirty yards to impale the man. Like a hunting dog, Mihn padded away to retrieve the sword. As he returned, Isak saw the streaking of tears on his face.

'Thank you,' he said as Mihn handed him Eolis. He caught Mihn by the shoulder and held him there, forcing Mihn to look him straight in the eye, though the man could hardly bear to lift his head.

'I am your bondsman,' he said, quietly. 'It was my duty.'

That's not what I meant,' Isak said. 'I know you don't fear death, as a sensible man should – and dying bravely would have been easy there, even though I saw how fast you were: you're as good a swordsman as I've ever seen. That must make it hurt all the more.'

'I needed Arugin. Dying bravely wouldn't erase my shame. Your cause is my life as much as my penitence.'

It was hard to argue with him, but there were things to be done. Isak made a mental promise that he would continue this later and then turned his horse towards the city. 'Come on, we need to get to the baths. The man who builds one tunnel builds many. I can't see Emin's reinforcements, so this could get desperate, and I don't intend to watch from the sidelines.'

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