Free Read Novels Online Home

The Dark of the Moon (Chronicles of Lunos Book 1) by E.S. Bell (15)

 

 

 

The Other God

 

 

Connor Crane whipped his sword in a blinding series of arcs. The Vai’Ensai dodged them with minuscule turns and steps, and then hefted his immense sword to knock aside Connor’s slimmer blade. Connor felt the blow up to his elbow but held on. He countered and Kyre jerked his head back just enough to and let Connor’s sword tip whistle under his chin, then brought his own broadsword down in a chopping blow. The sword thrust was easy to avoid. Connor danced out of reach, then dodged the kicking boot that came at his midsection.

The Vai’Ensai nodded his horned head. “Good. Yesterday was not so good.”

Connor laughed. “That’s for certain! I still have the bruise on my rump to prove it.”

They squared off again; the empty yard rang with the sound of clanging steel. Connor met the Vai’Ensai blow for blow but he suspected Kyre was taking it easy on him now.

“Do you think,” Connor asked between parries, “we’ll need to leave Isle Lillomet?”

“It is not for me to say.”

Connor stepped back and held up a hand to stop their sparring. The afternoon sun was cloaked in clouds, its heat trapped in thick, wet air. He wiped his forearm across his brow. “Don’t start that again.” He grinned. “You came for me, remember?”

“Of course I remember,” Kyre said, his brow ridges furrowing. “It was only eleven sunsets ago that I found you.”

Connor shook his head and laughed. “I meant, seeing as how you sought me out, don’t you think you should know what for?”

Kyre rested his huge hands on the huge pommel of his huge broadsword. “I told you all I know. The stone and fire spoke your name and then it spoke mine. My threefold duty was clear: walk with you, protect you, die for you.”

His clawed hand went to the iron disc around his neck. He had shown the pendant to Connor the morning when Kyre had surprised them all by striding into the infirmary and declaring he wasn’t to leave Connor’s side. The iron disc bore strange markings that looked like small rents clawed into the metal. Kyre said it bore the name Connor Crane.

A strange thrill went through Connor each time he thought that he had some part in a strange Vai’Ensai ritual. He smiled now. Kyre came for me.

“Why do you give me so strange a look?” Kyre asked.

“What look?”

“Grateful. I have not yet fulfilled my duty.”

Connor shrugged and sat down on a bench. Kyre automatically moved to stand beside him. He did not sit.

“See up there?” Connor pointed to a window carved into an upper floor of the Moon Temple.

“Yes.”

“They’re up there right now, talking about you. About me. Us.”

“They ask many questions,” Kyre remarked.

“And they’ll ask more. Be warned.”

Kyre shrugged his massive shoulders; his wings shrugged with him. “Questions do not scare me.”

Connor smiled at that and then sighed. “I should consider Celestine, even in my thoughts, as the High Reverent. But she is a good friend of father’s, or like a sister to him, which makes her like an aunt to me. That’s how I think of her. And since the Two-Faced God doesn’t Hear me, I guess it’s all right to think of her as an aunt first and High Reverent after.” He waited for the old familiar ache that always came with the admission the god didn’t Hear him. He smiled. “Not this time.”

Kyre didn’t reply. He spoke little and listened more. Connor liked that.

“And my father…” Connor continued. “He worries. Because of my episodes. And he feels bad because I want to be a Paladin and that’s the one thing in all Lunos he can’t give to me. Well, that or my mother. She died having me and he thinks that’s his fault too.” He shielded his eyes from the muted glare of the sun. “Do you have a mother?”

“Yes,” Kyre said.

“What’s her name?”

“I don’t know.”

“You don’t know? Don’t you miss her? Or your father?”

“Miss?” Kyre pondered this for a moment. “My father was an outstrider—one who patrols the coasts of the Cloud Isles. He was gone for many turns of the moon at a time. That was his duty. My mother laid her eggs with other females during the season of regeneration. When my nestmates and I hatched, the females raised us while keeping guard over the isles.”

Connor’s eyes widened. “You were hatched from an egg?”

“Yes.”

“But you seem more human than…lizard.”

“Lizards,” Kyre said with mild distaste tinting his words, “do not form tribes, nor read fire and stone, nor fight, nor speak…”

“Aye, right then,” Connor held up his hands, laughing. “I meant no offense.”

“I take none,” Kyre said and Connor wondered what it would take to really rile his strange new friend.

A threat to me, he decided.

He looked up at the windows where he was sure his father and Celestine were also discussing his strange new friend. But he’s mine.

“I didn’t know my mother either,” Connor continued. “She wasn’t from here, but some other isle. I don’t even know which because my father doesn’t remember the name. A tiny little place, he said, with forests and lots of strange stones that were stood up in strange formations all over. My father met her while he was a Captain. He says he loved her and I guess he did since he brought her back to Isle Lillomet and married her.”

Kyre said nothing.

“On the night I was born, my father said there was a storm like he’d never seen. A storm that wasn’t common to the season. He said that the lightning crashed so often and so close that the sky was lit up like day.” Connor turned to Kyre. “That means something, don’t you think?”

“It is not for me to say.”

“It means something,” Connor decided, pleased. “It must. Anyway, my mother is gone and my father doesn’t talk about her anymore. All he talks about is Skye. Do you know Skye?”

“I have heard stories from the Zak’reth war,” Kyre said. “She is a great warrior.”

“She is more than that,” Connor said, ticking off the titles with his fingers. “Commander, war hero, Justarch of Lillomet, High Reverent... She married my father after the war. He was obsessed with her. And she was with him too, I guess. For a time. But she left him four years ago. Just sailed away. Not a word to anyone until real recently.”

Kyre remained silent.

“I don’t care where she is or what she’s doing, but she hurt my father. She left to unite Lunos they say, but he’s been devastated. I used to think she was spectacular. Now, I hate her.”

As soon as the words left his mouth, Connor glanced around, certain Reverent Taliah was listening and ready to pop out from hiding and chastise him.

“I don’t care if she never comes back. I hate that she hurt him, but when she’s around, nothing exists for my father but her. I don’t exist. The whole Alliance could fall apart and I don’t think he’d care so long as had Skye.”

Kyre snorted and spat onto the ground. Connor knew it was because he wanted to spit, not because he was moved by any emotion.

“But now my father’s distracted,” Connor went on. “He spends all his time worried about Skye and that makes him feel guilty about me. So then he tries to make up for it by meddling in my business. But it doesn’t last. Eventually, he just winds up pining for Skye again. Then I have an episode, and he’s back worrying about me again. It’s like the seasons.” He barked a short laugh. “You can always count on the same thing to happen again and again.”

Kyre flexed his wings and there was a silence. The young man regarded his friend again. “My last episode… The one where they said lightning was all over me? Father tried to quell that talk but I heard it anyway. Do you think that storm caused me to have that episode?”

“No.”

“Do you think I caused the storm?”

“Yes.”

Connor’s heart pounded with exhilaration. Or fear. Or both.

“I think so too,” he said. “I made the storm. I made it.” He beamed and then scratched his head. “But what does that mean? Is it a god’s magic? Or from my mother?”

Kyre spat again. “I am what you would call in the Tradespeak a ‘foot soldier.’ It is not my place to know everything the fire and the stone tells the elders of my tribe.”

“Are we going to go to the Cloud Isles?”

“No. Humans are not permitted. No one is permitted but Vai’Ensai.”

“What are we supposed to do next?” Connor asked. Then he grinned. “I’m sure the Admiral and the High Reverent are dying to know.”

“I believe the time will come when you will know what to do.”

“I think so too. I have a feeling… Come on.” He stood up. “Let’s go the archery yard. My shooting needs work.”

Kyre didn’t agree or disagree; he didn’t try to reassure him or console him or encourage him or tell him what to do. He merely nodded and Connor’s smile split his face wide open as they walked in silence to the targets.

 

 

Celestine watched Archer watch his son from the window.

“What are they talking about?” Archer Crane demanded. “They spend all day every day together. For more than a week.”

“Whatever they speak of,” Celestine said, “I hope the Vai’Ensai is more forthcoming to Connor than he has been to us.”

Archer didn’t seem to have heard. “I talk to Connor all day long but he doesn’t listen. Not like that.”

Celestine smiled and joined her friend. “If you notice, Connor is doing all the talking and Kyre is doing all the listening.”

“That’s hardly the point.”

Celestine’s smile slipped. “He is going to leave us soon, Archer,” she told him quietly. “You must know this is true.”

“No, I don’t know that,” Archer said, finally turning away from the window. “We don’t know anything beyond that Kyre yammering about stones that can speak and how he is now Connor’s official—unofficial—body guard.” He tugged at his collar.

“There is some precedent here.”

“What precedent?”

“Selena Koren has been marked by the Two-Faced God and she’s guarded by a Vai’Ensai. She always maintained otherwise, but it’s clear to all that Ilior protects her.”

The horrified look on Archer’s face came and went as he dismissed the notion. “A coincidence. Connor has not been marked by any god. Selena has. She’s being punished. He is not. And we sent Selena away. We will not do the same to Connor. Kyre, however, is free to leave whenever he wishes,” he muttered under his breath.

Celestine sighed. “Connor is going to leave Lillomet.”

“Kyre is not taking Connor anywhere,” Archer snapped. “I won’t allow it.”

“I believe it will be Connor taking Kyre, not the other way around. Whatever Kyre’s role, it is second to Connor’s. The storm—”

“Was a common occurrence.”

“And the lightning that danced over your son’s body without burning him?”

“It was a figment of my imagination.”

“And mine? And the half dozen others who witnessed it before we arrived? To say nothing of Dorian, whose arm was singed.” Celestine moved around her desk and sat on the edge to look down at the admiral slumped in his chair. “Have you ever seen that before during one of his episodes?”

“Of course not,” Archer snapped. He cleared his throat and said in a quieter tone, “No, I have no idea what that could be. You’re the godly one, Cel. You tell me where it came from. Don’t Aluren weave light out of water?”

“Aye, but lightning is not in the purview of the Two-Faced God. Neither,” she added, “is the ability to call storms.”

“I’ll grant that the lightning was…strange, but whether Connor made that storm is still debatable.”

“There are other, lesser gods, of course,” Celestine said, “but I am not deeply schooled in their magic. Taliah would know better than I.” She softened her voice. “What about his mother? I know you don’t wish to speak of her, but we need to know. Connor needs to know.”

“The Deeps take me, Cel, I don’t even remember the name of the island where I met her. I was blinded by her and could hardly see anyone or anything else.” He smirked, thinking of Skye. “A habit of mine, apparently.”

“Any detail of the island might help.”

Archer’s gaze sought the window again, though from his chair he wouldn’t be able to see more than the cloud-filled sky. Celestine could see his thoughts go back twenty years.

“It’s in the Western Watch, this island, but remote. I believe we were stationed near Isle Juskara. I remember that desert land well enough. But the island where I met Elia was very small and very green. Gray stone and green forest, that’s what I remember. And there were pillars of that stone cut from the mountains and arranged in strange formations. Elia called them druid circles. Druids.” His dark eyes lit up with recognition. “That was their name for adherents. She said that the druids went to the circles to commune with nature; animals, wind, rain…” He looked at Celestine, his face very pale. “Elia…She never said she was one of these druids, but she seemed to know what she was talking about. Oh, gods, Cel.” He held his head in his hands.

“Don’t fret, Archer. Knowing is better than not knowing, even if the answer is unpleasant.”

“Says you,” Archer said without looking up.

Celestine smiled at her friend. She returned to her desk and withdrew a pile of scrolls from a drawer. “Would you please stop feeling sorry for yourself long enough to tell the page outside the door that I wish to see Taliah? I believe she is back now from her visit home.”

“Taliah?” Archer asked, rising. “What for?”

“Because she is well-versed in the deities and customs of other islands,” Celestine said. “Largely to prove that the Two-Faced God is superior in all ways, of course, but her knowledge will prove useful no matter her reasons for acquiring it.” She found the chart she was looking for and unrolled it over her desk as Archer returned from relaying the High Reverent’s orders to the page.

“I wasn’t aware that Taliah was so studied,” he said when he returned to his seat. “I had always thought her…”

Celestine gave him an arch look.

“A charming woman.”

Celestine sniffed. “She’s also a stickler for formality. Remember to use my title and to call her Reverent Taliah, if you please.” Celestine smoothed the map. “Now come and try to remember which island chain you were on when you met the mother of your child.”

Archer stared at her, and then they both burst out laughing. Celestine was glad to see the crease of worry erased from between his eyes, at least for a moment. He came around to her side of the desk and examined the map. The Western Watch, with each of its islands finely detailed with every port, city, and bay demarked exactly.

Celestine watched her friend as he studied the islands in the southern quadrant. He was still very handsome, she decided, despite the hardship of the last few years. He would turn forty-four this winter if her memory served, but his hair was thick and dark with no hint of gray yet. His eyes were also rich brown and very warm when he wasn’t worried about Connor or Skye, and he laughed easily and readily; less so now that Skye was gone. Because of the time Celestine and he spent together, there was talk of liaisons between them that they both found amusing. It was forbidden for the Aluren to copulate with anyone outside the faith and even if it were permitted, Celestine would not have sought anything other than friendship with Admiral Crane. His devotion to Skye was a part of his very being. Palpable. Tangible to those who knew him best. Like his scent or the color of his eyes.

Celestine wondered, though, if she would have found Archer attractive if they were two ordinary citizens meeting on the street. She thought not. He was rough around the edges, often temperamental, a masterful sailor, and a genius at tactics and strategy. But he wasn’t an intellectual and there wasn’t one thing mysterious about him. And these two qualities, Celestine imagined, were the hallmarks of any man she might care for.

In the dark, lonely hours of the night, lying abed in her cell, she conjured a companion who was clever and thoughtful, sensitive and kind, but perhaps with a slight shadow slanting over him. A man with whom it would take long months, years perhaps, of delicious conversations and ruminations about life and history, and art and theology, before she could rightly say she understood him. Or he her.

But the Moon Temple was nearly empty. Only a handful of adherents and even fewer Paladins walked the halls now that Gerus and Selena were absent. Celestine’s loneliness warred with the duties that had been thrust upon her. At twenty-four, she was too young even in her own estimation to be High Reverent. But there was no one else. And duty to her Temple and her god came first. She vowed she would make the Temple busy again, fill its ranks, and then, when Skye returned victorious, Celestine would step down as High Reverent and perhaps be permitted to indulge in a creating a fuller life for herself.

But not yet, she sighed, and observed her friend. I pine for my love just as strongly as he does for his. The difference is that he knows her name, and my companion, whoever he may be, is as yet a stranger. She suspected this mutual condition was part of what made she and Archer such good friends. We are equally wretched and lonely.

“Cel? I think I have it,” he said, laying his finger to the map.

She gave herself a shake and looked to the chart. “Isle Devala.”

He nodded. “Keep in mind that twenty years ago, this island had hardly a real port and I don’t believe even that had a name. They were a strange people; very kind and beautiful, but reserved. Elia was very beautiful. She passed all her beauty to Connor when she died.”

“You are kind to a fault; Connor is you twenty-five years ago.”

“Yes, but his eyes. That impossibly dark blue color? The color of the night sky the moment before the sun sets? That’s her.” He looked up. “It’s Devala.”

“What about Devala?” came a voice at the door, thickly accented and with a growl beneath it.

“Reverent Taliah,” Celestine said, motioning the Juskaran inside.

Taliah bowed reverentially to Celestine, and the numerous beaded necklaces she wore over her blue and silver tunic clacked, as did the copper rings at the end of her many black braids. Her crimson skin showed the beginnings of crow’s feet around her gold eyes, with which she took in the office and those in it with a sharp, owl-like stare. She gave the admiral a crisp, respectful nod. “Admiral Crane. It is good to see you again.”

“And you as well, Reverent,” he replied. “I trust your visit home was satisfying?”

Taliah snorted. “Visit? It was a mission of conscription and highly unsatisfying. Too many of my people are deaf to the god, either by fate or by choice. The Juskari are overly proud of the size of their islands. As if the great swaths of sand allow them to forget the greater swaths of ocean they float upon. By and by they’ll learn that reducing their fealty to the Shining face to prayers for calm seas during trading voyages aren’t enough.” She waved a crimson-skinned hand. “It pains my heart to speak of it. How may I assist you, High Reverent?”

“We need your expertise and acumen on a private matter. What do you know of the Devala Isles? Specifically with regards to their deity. Or deities, as it were.”

“They are nature-loving people,” Taliah said. “They worship our beloved Two-Faced God but like many heathen isles, only after their own god has been honored. In this case, the god is named Wor’ri.” Here, the Juskaran woman narrowed her gold eyes at Celestine and Archer and she spoke slowly, watching how her words landed on them. “The adherents on these islands call themselves druids and the reward for prayer to Wor’ri comes to them in the form of wind, rain, and lightning. Wor’ri is a storm god. Primarily. It has other aspects but that is its principal domain.”

Celestine sat down in her chair. Archer had turned his head to the window, his expression unreadable.

Taliah’s eyes flared. “This has to do with young Connor, does it not? I heard what happened last week and now we have yet another giant dragonman stomping around our temple.” She sniffed. “I am grateful you are just now welcoming me into the matter.”

“Taliah, we know very little about what happened to Connor or why there is a Vai’Ensai with him. You were away when Connor had his episode—”

“Yes, and since my return I’ve been treated to scraps of information, fed to me as if I were some stray mutt begging under the table.”

“You’re here now,” Archer snapped.

Celestine raised a hand. “Reverent Taliah, Connor’s mother was a native of those islands.”

The Juskaran looked between them. “She was an adherent—a druid—for Wori’ri?”

Celestine glanced at Archer who was sunk into a morose, thoughtful silence. “No. At least, we don’t believe so. She never mentioned to the Admiral that she had been. But given the events of the last week, and what you’ve told us of Isle Devala’s magic, I believe it’s safe to conclude she was endowed by her god in some way and has passed that magic on to her son.”

Taliah snorted indelicately. “Fealty to the gods is not hereditary. Either one is pious or one is not.”

“Perhaps that is not so for this Wor’ri,” Celestine said, wishing Archer would rejoin the conversation about his own child. “Perhaps, with the druids, the god bestows its magic through the bloodline. And in any event, Connor is extremely loyal and reverential to the god and yet it does not Hear him. If piety alone were enough, he’d be a Paladin by now.” Celestine shook her head. “This god, Wor’ri, must have already claimed him for its own.”

Archer turned and the despair in his eyes pained Celestine’s heart. “He is going to leave us, like you said. To Isle Devala. Where his true heritage lies.”

Taliah shook her head; the delicate chains connecting her earrings to her nose rings clacked with her ire. “No. We cannot lose him too! The Aluren need him. The Shining face of the god needs a warrior such as him.”

“The god doesn’t Hear him,” Celestine said wearily. “He can’t—”

“Then turn his training over to me! Who instructs him now? Brogan?” Taliah waved her hands as if the elderly Paladin were in the room and she were dismissing him. “I will do what Brogan could not and help Connor’s voice reach the god.”

“And what of the storm?” Celestine said. “What of the Vai’Ensai who walks with him? What of the lightning? There is nothing I want more than for Connor to join our thinning ranks, but it might not be up to us.”

“And so we give him to a lesser deity? One who pales in comparison to the Shining face of our god?”

“He is not ours to give or keep,” Celestine said, aiming her words at Archer who had retreated into silence. “We must learn as much as we can to help Connor in whatever paths the gods have chosen for him. Now then. You said that Wor’ri was primarily a storm god. What other magic does it grant to its devout?”

A shadow passed across her desk; a peliteryx or large gull had flown by outside.

Taliah fumed but started to answer the High Reverent when another shadow crossed the desk. Then another. Outside, there was a cawing of a raven, and then a scream of a gull.

“What is this?” Archer murmured.

The three of them went to the window. The sky was filled with birds. Cormorants, gannets, gulls, little sparrows and large pelicans; peliteryxes, their brass armor glinting in the afternoon light. The birds swarmed down from every part of the sky, toward a single focal point. Celestine sucked in a breath and Archer’s hand gripped her arm, hard. Taliah swore in the Juskaran tongue.

Connor was in the archery yard, a small figure standing next to the larger Kyre. Connor’s arms were outstretched and the birds converged, circling him, landing on his shoulders, or waddling at his feet.

“They’ll tear him apart!” Archer said in a strangled voice.

Panic had frozen Celestine but then she watched as the birds, perhaps a hundred of them settled around Connor. Kyre didn’t move; his weapon remained sheathed. He sees no danger because Connor called them. I know he did… She was too far away but in her mind’s eye, Connor was smiling.

“The other domain of the Wor’ri god,” Taliah whispered, “is the ability to command animals.”

Celestine nodded slowly. She flinched as the birds took off in the same instant, all spooked by the same sudden movement. Connor collapsed to the ground, writhing and convulsing, in the grips of another episode.

Above, storm clouds began to gather.