“Ah, but Sandstorm is the raging place of wind and Dune. It is destruction, but it is not always bad. It clears away and scours clean. Sometimes it buries things which should not walk on the Earth. And it smashes through Mirage’s illusions in an instant.”
Jame stirred. Had she thought before of That-Which-Destroys as a positive force? Well, yes, in her more defiant moments. “That which can be destroyed by the truth should be,” Kirien had once said. Always? Sometimes Jame wondered.
The old woman went on to describe River, Oasis, and their child, the Pathless Tracker, who spoke to Stone and knew the rites to propitiate Sandstorm.
“When we die,” she added, “he leads us across the Desert and through the Sea into the Story of Things That Were. You would not have gotten this far if your guides were not his initiates. You Kennies don’t have to believe in Tracker, but you show him good manners if you know what’s best for you.”
“And who are you?” Jame asked.
“Me?” The old woman laughed and showed her few remaining teeth. The lower half of her face seemed to have become more skeletal as the night progressed, giving her a skull’s lopsided, bony grin. “I am Storyteller, Granny Sit-by-the-Fire. Every hearth and every campfire is my shrine. I tell truth you’ll remember, even if I have to lie to do it. Without me to tell you what you are, you would just be clever animals, no better than that overgrown wombat lying there farting by the sledge.”
Her listeners laughed, but laughter died suddenly. Something dark stumbled toward them out of the night, whimpering. In a moment, they had scattered, and the old woman withdrew into shadows, leaving the memory of bones.
Jame thought at first that the advancing figure was a wounded animal, but then she recognized one of the drivers who had whistled at Mint. The man dragged a leg and cried as he lurched forward. Damson walked behind him, cold-eyed.
“I was on guard duty,” she told Jame. “He said his friends might like a pretty face, but he preferred ’em plump and wanted to be friends. Then he grabbed me.”
“You have the training to deal with him without this.”
“Oh, I did that first. He’s got a broken leg, when he has time to notice.”
“Damson, let him go.”
The cadet grimaced and did. The man collapsed.
By now people were gathering, including Jame’s ten-command.
“You should have broken his neck,” said Dar, furious. He and Damson might play tricks on each other all day long, but they were teammates and this was an outsider.
A wagon master approached, throwing on his clothes. “What’s all this?”
“She led me on!” cried the man, groveling away from Damson. “She’s a witch!”
He collapsed again and writhed at the girl’s feet, frothing at the mouth.
“Stop that!” Jame grabbed Damson to shake her . . .
. . . and found herself abruptly in the soulscape, grappling with something dark and dire. Ivory armor slid over her limbs, shielding her. She lashed out.
. . . and Damson sprawled at her feet in the sand with a split lip.
“I said if you ever struck me, I would strike you back,” Jame said, shaken. “I couldn’t help it.”
Damson spat blood. “Neither could I.”
“They’re both witches!” cried the driver, beginning to wax hysterical.
“ Now what?” demanded the wagon master, distracted, as another man ran up to clutch his arm.
“It’s Nevin,” the newcomer panted. “Seized from his tent . . . through the floor . . .”
The master turned pale. “Gods help us. We’ve landed in a nest of snatchers. Everybody, get up! We have to move camp. Now .”
“A nest of what?” said Dar blankly. “Oh . . .”
Something green and scaly had emerged from the sand. It fumbled at his boot, gripped it with ten-inch claws, and pulled. Dar sank in up to his thigh.
“Help!”
Some of his friends grabbed him while others dug frantically. Finding his foot and the thing clutching it was no problem, but the sinewy arm, or neck, or whatever it was seemed to go down forever. Mint hacked through it. Dark blood spurted out of the hole, drenching Dar.
“Argh!” he said, trying to wipe the sticky goop off his face. “It burns!”
“Strike the tents!” the wagon master was shouting. “Move, move, move!”
One of the moas gave a squawk suddenly cut off, leaving only a puff of feathers afloat and the half-seen afterimage of a claw as broad across the palm as a man’s torso.
Everywhere tents were falling and people scrambling to load their wagons. The wind was stronger now and the visibility diminished except where lit with cracks of lightning. Blue light ran hissing over the wagon frames and up the oxen’s horns, crowning them like violet candle flames.
“’Ware the return stroke!” someone shouted.
As if his voice had called it forth, lightning seared down, striking dead the unfortunate oxen where they stood.
Jame was helping bundle Ean’s rolled tent into his sledge when they heard a child scream. Where was Byrne? She and Ean scrambled up the nearest dune. From its crest they saw an enormous, scaly claw on a neck or arm shimmering with blue-violet fire, thrust up through the sand. The boy dangled from its fingertips, curled up like a kitten in its mother’s jaws. Beneath, in a depression, smaller claws groped up like nestlings about to be fed by their parent.
A stocky figure stood at the base of the soaring arm and chopped at it with a sword as if with an axe.
The thing convulsed and dropped its captive. Jame took a running leap, caught the boy just above the groping claws, and rolled with him to safety.
Lightning clove the air, followed by a thunderous clap like the end of the world. The snatcher’s stump of an arm (or neck) flailed, fountaining black blood in a stench of burnt flesh, then whipped back into the sand, followed by its offspring.
“Whee!” said Byrne, somewhat breathlessly as his father snatched him up.
Jame confronted the swordsman. “Gorbel, what are you doing here?”
“What?”
They were both shouting, still partially deafened by the blast.
“I said . . .”
“I heard you.”
The Caineron Lordan leaned on his reeking blade, his face scrunched up against the sweat running down it. “Had to come, didn’t I?” he said, raising his voice to a near bellow against the ringing in his ears and the howl of the wind. “Father insisted that I discover the mystery of the Wastes, so I bribed a trader to take me along incognito. The idiot insisted on a team of hyenas, which promptly ate him. So here I am, in the desert, on foot.”
“You’re more than welcome to ride on my sledge,” said Ean, hugging his son.
“Appreciate that,” said Gorbel, gruffly. “Assuming that this lady doesn’t denounce me. Krothen’s wagon masters have no fondness for the Caineron.”
“I’m not sure I do either,” said Jame, “but you’re you. What quarrel do we have?”
“None that I know of, unless you count the last time at Tentir when I tried to kill you.”
“Oh, we’ve already gotten past that.”
“Then, sir, I accept your offer. Now let’s get out of this demon-infested wilderness.”
The caravan hastily trekked several more miles as the storm grew. The wind, whipping over dunes, covered and uncovered the bones of ancient, scattered dwellings so that sometimes they seemed to walk down dimly seen streets of the dead and sometimes through fields of petrified grain that snapped off under the lambas’ feet. There were sand-clogged wells and things that bent over them until the sand came again to cover all. Sometimes vast shapes wheeled overhead only to disintegrate in the lightning strokes.
At last the wagon masters declared the ground safe. Once again all pitched camp, this time on the hard desert floor between dunes, and collapsed exhausted in their hastily erected tents.
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