Elizabeth Haydon - Destiny - Child of the Sky

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“Now, however, one very clever F’dor has found a way for its blood to reproduce without having to diminish its power by breaking open any of its own to do so. Tis a most disturbing turn of events. Through the Rakshas the F’dor has perpetuated its demonic line, which opens a very dangerous door to the future, and what we may have to face one day very soon.

“I know when you look at them you see children. You must learn to look deeper, and see what is really there, lurking beneath the surface, even in the sweetest of them. Otherwise you may be caught unaware.”

Rhapsody exhaled. “Please tell me I am not making a mistake entrusting them to you,” she said, her voice calm but her eyes shining with intensity. “We need to stay the course, to follow the plan. If we can get them to the Lord and Lady Rowan, and if they can separate out the demon blood, we will not only have the means to find the demon, but the children should be freed from whatever evil taint they now carry. They will be saved from the damnation of the vault, of being eternally demonic. But I need you to be honest with me, Oelendra; can you keep a cool head about this? Because if you can’t, I need to come up with another plan. I will not allow your hatred of the F’dor to jeopardize their safety.”

Anger burned in the Lirin champion’s eyes. “Am I to imagine that you just questioned my ability to keep a cool head?” Rhapsody exhaled and crossed her arms.

Oelendra pressed again, her body tensing. “Say what you mean, Rhapsody.”

“I just did,” Rhapsody replied tonelessly. “You hate the F’dor to the exclusion of all other motivations. I need you to see your part in this as not just assisting Achmed to find the demon, but to help shelter and protect these children as well. They may be demon-spawn, but they were born of innocent women, and they have immortal souls. I need you to remember that. You cannot allow them to be the target of your hatred of their father. Elsewise we are no better than the demon itself.” A humorous twinkle entered her eyes. “There is my answer to your question. If it would help you hear it better I could set it to music and play it on my lute—oh, wait. Now, what happened to that lute again?”

Oelendra blinked, then winced, then succumbed to a guilty chuckle, remembering how she had smashed the instrument into kindling in a rage over the demon. Rhapsody laughed and put her arms around her mentor. “Forgive me?” she asked as she embraced Oelendra. “For speaking the truth?” Oelendra replied. “No one, especially a Namer, should apologize for that. And you have my vow, Iliachenva’ar—I will protect them with my life.”

“I know you will,” Rhapsody whispered in her ear. She gave Oelendra’s broad shoulders a final squeeze, then turned back to Achmed as Oelendra went to ready her horses. “Did you feed Vincane?”

“To what?”

“Not humorous. Oelendra needs to leave forthwith, and we have to be on our way as well.”

“He wasn’t particularly cooperative, but he has inhaled soup through various holes in his head. I was tempted to make a few more.”

“Well, it probably won’t hurt for him to be hungry until Oelendra makes camp again.”

While Achmed tied the apprentice across one of the roans’ saddle, Oelendra came back to Rhapsody and handed her a small cage made of reeds. In it a black winterbird fluttered, then settled into a curious stare.

“Here’s another avian messenger for you. I will bring one to you at each meeting place, so you can tell me where you will be.”

“Thank you,” Rhapsody said, embracing Oelendra again. “Please know that I do appreciate all that you are doing to help us, and regret the danger in which we are putting you. But you were the only one I knew that would be able to accomplish this successfully.”

“I am honored by the trust of the Iliachenva’ar,” Oelendra replied, smiling as Achmed hoisted Aric over her own mount to ride with her, far away from Vincane. “Look after yourself, Rhapsody—I fear that there may be eyes on these children.”

“There are. And they are the best eyes that they could ever wish to be watching over them. Travel safely. I will notify you when we have the next two.”

Oelendra nodded, then looked up into Achmed’s face again. They stared at each other for another moment; then Oelendra nodded, mounted, and rode off, holding the reins of Vincane’s horse tightly as she went.

“By the way,” she called to Achmed over her shoulder as she left, “once this is over I expect you to repay me by sending her to help unite the divisive factions of the Lirin kingdom again. We will need every Lirin soul ready for what is to come.”

Achmed hid a smile as Rhapsody waved back. What the Lirin champion did not know was that he had already repaid her a lifetime ago by not accepting any of the multitudinous contracts on her life he was offered back in the old world.

12

The old Cymrian forges, Ylorc

Gunthor rounded the bend in the dark corridor with his two aides-decamp, whistling cheerfully. He was in fine fettle on this particular morning; the watches had all gone well, the recruits were coming nicely to heel, the reinforcements in the Hidden Realm and the great watchtower of Griwen Post were performing to expectation. He was on his way to his last stops on his morning inspection tour, the two enormous forges where the weapons were produced for export and for the armament of the Firbolg army.

The former was the first stop; this was a commercial smithy, and the product it put forth was confined to the less sophisticated designs that he and Achmed had decided were safe to allow into the hands of their trading partners in Roland. If they were anything that resembled a threat I might not have considered giving them access to even these crude weapons , Achmed had recounted to him and to Rhapsody over a bottle of wine provided by Lord Stephen as a gift to celebrate the trade agreement last spring. But as far as I can see, Roland won’t pose a problem until it unites, and, even then, they’d break themselves on the mountain before we’d have to teach them another lesson. Putting these inferior weapons into the trade stream may make them overconfident, give them a false idea of what we are capable of making . The king had spun his wine in his glass, then downed it. No, I’m not worried about Roland , he had said, gazing through the glass at the fire. Sorbold, on the other hand, will always worry me .

The better of the weapons, those made in the second forge, were Achmed’s original designs: a heavy but well-balanced throwing knife with three blades; short, compact crossbows with extra recoil for use in the tunnels of Ylorc; split arrowheads and heavy darts for blowguns, balanced and designed for deeper penetration; midnight-blue steel drawknives which were really razor-edged hooks that replaced the makeshift close-combat weapons of many Bolg; and of course the disks of his own cwellan, the strange, asymmetrical weapon he had crafted back on the Island of Serendair and had used to ply his trade of assassination very successfully so long ago.

Grunthor smiled at the blast of heat that slapped his face as he came into the first of the weapons foundries. He looked up with pride at the half-dozen tiered galleries of anvils and fires. Long-dead Gwylliam had designed the smithy complex as if he thought to work there himself. The forges were attached to a central ventilation system that drew the soot gently rumbling through the cacophony, high toward the peaks where the heat was made use of elsewhere before it escaped. The damper system allowed the individual forges to be controlled by teams of only two or three workers each, supported by some few dozen water carriers and coal-hod bearers. In addition to the natural bellows of the flume, each forge had its own crank bellows, the action of which also drew cooler air for the general circulation, and made the place seem less like an inferno and more like the practice hall for some genius if lunatic orchestra.

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