David Gemmell - Echoes of the Great Song

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The Avatars are immortal and live like kings — even though the empire is dying. Their immortality is guaranteed by magic crystals whose influence is now waning, overwhelmed by the sheer power of a great flood and a sudden ice age. But when two moons appear in the sky, and the ruthless armies of the Crystal Queen swarm across the land bringing devastation and terror, the Avatars unite with their subjects to protect their universe.
As the cities face imminent destruction, three heroes emerge. Talaban, a warrior haunted by tragedy; Touchstone, the mystic tribesman seeking his lost love; and Anu, the Holy One, the Builder of Time. And when all seems lost, two others enter the fray: Sofarita, the peasant girl who will inspire a legend, and the madman, Viruk, who will become a god…

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An old man came into sight, leading two oxen pulling a heavily laden wagon. A small golden-haired child sat upon the wagon. Viruk heard the rumbling of the wheels on the stone of the bridge. There would be little satisfaction in killing the man, he knew, but then a little satisfaction was better than nothing. Mounting his weary pony Viruk rode down the hillside.

The old man did not see him at first, and when he did he waved and gave a cheerful smile. 'Good evening, lord,' he said.

'Good evening to you,' said Viruk. The old man was dressed in a long robe of dark blue velvet, and his white hair was drawn back from his brow by a circlet of gold studded with amber. 'Be so kind as to tell me,' said Viruk pleasantly, 'why you are encroaching upon Avatar land.'

'Not encroaching, lord, trading,' said the man. 'I have ten barrels of fine wine for the Questor General, and a note, with his personal seal, giving me authority to bring them to his home. I must say I am pleased to see you for I feared making this journey. These are troubled times.'

Viruk dismounted. 'Show me this paper,' he said. The man drew a parchment from within his robe. Viruk scanned it. It was irritatingly correct in every detail.

'Your pony is very tired, lord,' pointed out the old man. 'Perhaps you would like to travel for a while upon the wagon? The seats are not uncomfortable, and I have a flagon of wine beneath it. I am sure you will find it to your taste.'

Viruk gazed at the man and pictured his smile freezing as a dagger opened his scrawny throat. He toyed with the idea of butchering the trader, but held back. If he killed him then he would be forced to drive the wagon all the way to the city, sitting behind the large arses of two oxen. Even as the thought occurred to him one of the beasts defecated. The stench was appalling.

'Move on,' said Viruk. Taking the reins the old man led the team along the road. Viruk tied his pony's reins to the rear of the wagon and climbed aboard. The golden-haired child, a girl of around seven, smiled at him as he sat alongside her.

'Your hair is turning blue,' she said.

'Annoy me, child, and I shall tear off your leg and beat you to death with the wet end.'

She laughed happily. 'That's a terrible thing to say,' she chided him. Viruk leaned down and found the flagon of wine.

'There are some copper goblets in the box beside the seat,' the old man called back.

Viruk found one, broke the wax seal on the clay flagon and poured the wine. He was expecting little, and was pleasantly surprised to find the taste rich and mellow. His mood lightened.

'Why is your hair blue?' asked the child. 'Because I am a god,' he said.

'Are you? Truly?'

'Truly.'

'Can you do miracles? Can you make a blind man see? Can you bring the dead to life? Do you know why the ox doesn't need to clean its bottom?'

Viruk drained his wine and refilled the goblet. The old man scrambled up to the driving seat beside the child.

'Have to lead them over the bridge, lord,' he said. 'They don't like the sound of the water.'

'He says he's a god, father,' said the child. 'But he doesn't know about oxes' bottoms.'

'Hush, child, the lord does not need to hear you prattling.'

'I give up,' said Viruk. 'Why does an ox not need to clean its bottom?'

'It has two bowels,' said the girl. 'One inner, one outer. The inner one pushes out and… and…' 'Deposits,' said the old man.

'Yes, that's it. Deposits the droppings. Then it draws back inside. So there is no mess.'

'A fact I shall carry with me to eternity,' said Viruk. 'So,' continued the child, 'can you bring the dead to life?'

'My talent is rather the reverse,' he said, sipping the wine, and enjoying the taste upon his tongue. 'What is reverse, father?' she asked. 'The lord is a warrior, Shori. He protects us from bad people,' said the old man. 'And it is best you stay quiet now. Climb into the back of the wagon and play with your toys.' The child scrambled over the back of the seat.

'Aren't you a little old to be siring children?' Viruk asked the old man.

'It would certainly appear so, lord,' replied the man.

'Where have you travelled from?' asked Viruk.

'Ren-el-gan, lord. My vineyards are close by.'

'I have heard of the place. Which tribe are you?'

'Banis-baya, lord. There are not many of us left now. Perhaps fifty. But we are no longer persecuted. The Avatar Lords have forgiven us, I think.'

Tribal history had never been of interest to Viruk. The sub-humans were always warring on one another. And the wine was making him drowsy. Climbing to the rear of the wagon he pushed aside the child's dolls and lay down.

The sun was setting and, as he fell asleep, he felt the girl's warm body snuggle down alongside him.

Children liked him. They always had. Which was strange, considering he loathed them.

Chapter Ten

With the sun setting, Boru angled the wagon down a shallow slope and hauled the team to a halt beside a narrow stream which flowed into the Luan River. Kicking the brake into position he climbed into the back of the wagon and gazed down on the sleeping Avatar.

How easy it would be to cut your throat, he thought.

His daughter Shori was cuddled in close to the Avatar and she was sleeping deeply, her right thumb in her mouth. Had the Avatar been alone Boru would have killed him, but he was frightened that Shori would wake, and then the blood nightmares would begin again. Taking a blanket he covered Shori. This meant covering also the hated man who slept beside her. Boru swallowed back his hatred and moved past the sleepers, gathering two feed sacks of grain. These he took to the oxen and fed them.

Then he built a small fire within a group of boulders and sat watching the sunset.

'Aren't you a little old to be siring children?'

Boru stroked his white beard, and felt the gnawing ache of arthritis in his bones. Shori was seven. He would not live to see her grow into a young woman, would not be there as she tossed the grain and swung the veil.

Bitterness touched him then, but he pushed it aside.

He had been twenty-three years of age when the Avatars captured him, following the revolt. He and 200

others had been taken in chains to Pagaru, the second city. There they were put on trial. Boru had never been inside a city,

and the scale of the buildings had, for a brief moment, swamped his fears for his life. There were wide paved streets and columned temples. There was a marketplace, with shops and taverns, and at the centre an intricately fashioned fountain, with a jet of water rising thirty feet. Boru was from the desert where water was revered, and he gazed from the prison cart with reverence at the gushing fountain.

The courtroom was also impressive, and two Avatar magistrates sat high upon a carved dais looking down at the prisoners, who were brought in ten at a time. Boru found himself standing next to Fyal the Baker's son. The two had been friends since childhood and they exchanged glances. Boru whispered, 'What will they do?' Fyal shrugged.

One of the magistrates, a slender man with shoulder-length blue hair, leaned forward. He was wearing a gown of shimmering crimson and upon his head was a skullcap of silver inset with runes.

'You men,' he said, his voice sombre, 'have been accused of crimes against the empire, to wit' — he glanced down at a scroll on the desk before him — 'taking part in an unlawful gathering, being in possession of swords and other weapons, and of making an assault on a government building in the village of Asep.' His pale eyes fastened on the men in chains. 'One of you will speak in answer to these charges. You!' His skinny finger pointed at Boru.

'You will speak for yourself and your comrades.'

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