The name of all things, p.20

The Name of All Things, page 20

 

The Name of All Things
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  Sadly, I didn’t have time to take these poor souls aside and clarify their situation, guide them to Thaena’s Land of Peace, offer them advice. I didn’t have time to explain they could die twice, the second death more permanent than the first. The demons would use those deaths to gain what they wanted most in the whole world.

  Namely, the whole world.

  Oh yes, the demons had come to Mereina. They would start a Hellmarch here if they could, would puppet these dead across Jorat slaughtering village after town after city until they had gathered enough souls to call a demon prince’s attention.6

  And then the killing would never stop.

  The demons had arrived to ravage the souls of the dead.

  I had come looking for more challenging prey.

  I wasted no time. Sword drawn, I laughed as my first swing took a demon’s head from his shoulders and—blocking a hellhound’s lunge with my shield—I stepped to the side. I began the slaughter, letting my hate and my rage fill me with a fire-like warmth. The first demon’s blood was black, the second a glowing purple; there were no rules for how a demon’s gore might appear.

  I was impaling a demon tiger’s jaw with my sword when I heard a shout. I looked up in time to see a massive hammer smash into my face, throwing me backward.

  Awake, such a blow would have slain me, but the rules are different when one’s existence is metaphorical.

  I slammed my hand down into the ground for leverage and pushed myself upward. A massive skinless demon stood before me, muscles glistening red between white divisions of connective tissue and yellow fat.

  He was still missing his lower jaw, though.

  “Kasmodeus?” I spat blood to the side. “You recovered quicker than I thought you would, given how easily you died the first time.”

  The muscles of his cheekbones pulled. A grin, or as close as he could manage.

  **OTHER DEMONS WILL SCREAM AND HIDE THEIR FACES WHEN THEY SEE WHAT I DO TO YOU.**

  I laughed. “Plan you, then, to save a few drowning puppies? Make soup for an old sick mare?” I smiled. “Roses. You shouldn’t have.”

  His eyes glowed. **DIE, WHORE!** He swung his maul, letting momentum send it crashing down.

  I barely dodged it. He was more powerful than before, but then again, he’d stolen at least a few poor souls who’d died too close to those damn stakes. Who knew how many souls he’d taken from dire sacrifices burned at previous tournaments?

  He gave me no time to collect myself. No sooner did his first swing send dirt flying in all directions than he swung again and again. One devastating blow followed by another. I lifted my shield to block a strike, buying myself a chance at a closer swing. His blow drove me to my knees. I ground my teeth as I lashed out with my sword. The edge hit true, shearing through chest muscle and rib cage.

  He didn’t notice. Or perhaps he didn’t care.

  I screamed as his hammer caught me in the ribs in turn. Bones cracked. As it had in the tournament, I felt a great spreading warmth overcome me.

  Fire sprouted from the ground under my fingertips, spread out in a spiral around me on the grass. It looked unreal in this place, a red-and-orange pattern against the Afterlife’s blues and purples. I had no time to question it, but I pulled strength from the heat.

  What remained of his face grinned. **I WILL USE YOU AS A FOOTREST. I WILL MAKE MY CHALICE OF VICTORY FROM YOUR SKULL.**

  He raised his hammer.

  “Why don’t you stick with the practical? Clearly, you need a jaw—”

  In the distance, an elephant’s trumpet split the air.

  I raised my head.

  He paused.

  More elephants called to each other, their sound like thunder. In the living world, this would have been no great occasion. Elephants were not so uncommon there. In the Afterlife, however?

  Elephants in the Afterlife have only one mistress.

  I started to laugh.

  “Well, then,” I said. “It seems Death has found us both.”

  13: WAITING OUT THE STORM

  Jorat Dominion, Quuros Empire. Two days since the House D’Mon royal family massacre

  Janel smiled as she stopped talking and reach13ed for her drink.

  Kihrin sighed and tried not to look at Brother Qown while he mulled over the messy, ugly complications of Qown’s religion. He couldn’t think of anything more awkward than realizing the priest sitting across the table worshipped … Kihrin.1

  Or at least, who Kihrin had been in his past life.

  He broke his reverie as he realized Janel hadn’t started talking again. Kihrin looked over at her. “Wait, you didn’t finish.”

  “Is anyone hungry?” she asked. “I think I might see what they have in the kitchen.”

  “No, no, no,” Kihrin protested. “You can’t just leave it there. Did Thaena appear? I mean, what happened?”

  “Oh, I thought we might take a break.” Janel’s feral grin couldn’t be described as evil, but only by the thinnest of margins. “Maybe skip ahead.”

  She was teasing him.

  Brother Qown opened his book up. “Are we really skipping?” He didn’t sound happy at all.

  “No, never fear, Brother Qown. Do you have anything you want to add before I finish my part?”

  “Just a bit. If I may?”

  She waved a hand. “Go right ahead.”

  Qown’s Turn. The ruins of an estava, Barsine Banner, Jorat, Quur.

  Ninavis scowled as Count Janel walked away. “Hey, we’re not done talking.”

  The count ignored her and curled up to sleep.

  Ninavis started to hobble over to her, but cursed in pain and stopped.

  Brother Qown sighed. “You’re so stubborn.” He offered Ninavis his arm. “Would it kill you to stay off your leg for a few days?”

  “Given what we just left behind us, I’d say the answer is yes.” Ninavis limped over to Janel.

  “Save your strength,” Dorna said. “She’s asleep. You ain’t waking her now.”

  “Hey,” Ninavis said. When Janel didn’t respond, she screamed it.

  A few people at the main camp looked over. “You need something, boss?” Dango shouted back.

  Ninavis balanced on her good leg and bent down to shake Janel’s shoulder. The young noble gave no response.

  “Dorna’s right,” Brother Qown said. “You won’t wake her. She’ll stay sleeping until the morning, and I’ve never seen anything hasten the process.”

  Ninavis drew back, startled. “Priest, she’s not breathing.”

  “Oh, she is,” he said. “Just slowly. And please, call me Brother Qown. I hate being called priest.”

  “She’s not, priest. I can see she’s not breathing.”

  Sir Baramon drew closer, listening to the conversation with growing alarm. “What magic is this?”

  Dorna shrugged as she smoothed out her riding skirts. “She’s cursed. Ain’t nobody spreading those damn stories about ‘Danorak’ ever mention the curse?”

  “What? But—”

  Dorna gestured toward Janel’s sleeping form. “She’s asleep. The priest here says she ain’t dead right now, but you couldn’t tell it by my sight. She don’t breathe. Her body grows cold. Dead to the world, and that’s not just a figure of speech. Dead to the Living World. This estava could fall around our ears and she’d wake as much as any corpse would. Except when dawn comes, she’ll be right on her feet again, like she’d had a solid night of sleeping sound.”

  Ninavis’s grip on Janel’s shoulder tightened. “I just assumed she was a witch.”

  “Excuse me?” Dorna raised an eyebrow.

  “Because she’s so strong. I thought she was a witch.”

  “My foal don’t summon no demons!” Dorna looked ready to start her own fight.

  “I mean—” Ninavis sighed. “I mean she uses magic. That makes her a witch, doesn’t it?” She waved a hand toward a crate on the ground. “Help me over there, would you, priest?”

  She ignored his sigh as Brother Qown helped her over to the impromptu seat.

  “The Count of Tolamer does not use magic,” Sir Baramon retorted.

  Dorna and Brother Qown shared a look.

  Dorna cocked her head. “Course she don’t. No one’s suggesting otherwise. Now why don’t you go check on our fine new friends from town—see how soon they’ll be ready for the funeral dinner? From the smell, I’d say somebody put some stew on or I’m still the Count of Leanan Pass.”2

  He narrowed his eyes. “I don’t owe you thudajé, you old crone.”

  Dorna grinned. “Oh, my sweet Baramon. You’re under the count’s idorrá now, and I’m her lead mare. Close enough, eh? Now git. This ain’t for your tender ears.”

  Sir Baramon huffed and retreated to the impromptu kitchen.

  “You don’t like him, do you?” Ninavis asked.

  “Sir Baramon? I love him to bits. I’ve known him since we were both colts, and if I ran with stallions and he ran with mares, we’d have married years ago.” She made a face. “Should have, anyway. We’d have made great herd parents.”

  Ninavis looked down at the sleeping girl. “She looks her age when she’s asleep.” The bandit leader eased down onto the box, sitting full upon it once it proved sturdy enough to hold her weight. “My Hava would be as old.”

  Brother Qown grimaced. “I’m sorry.”

  “Don’t be sorry. Wasn’t your fault.” She stared down at her lap for a long moment. “She was a sweet girl. A heart as pure as spring. You ever have children, Dorna?”

  The old woman smiled and gestured toward Janel. “Don’t that one count? I love her like she were my own.”

  Brother Qown wasn’t sure if he dared ask what had happened to Ninavis’s daughter.3 The woman’s pain ached tangibly, dark and private.

  Ninavis preempted the priest and pointed to the sleeping count. “My husband died in the Hellmarch she stopped. My daughter, after that.”

  Dorna and Brother Qown both grew still.

  Ninavis waited for them to say something, say anything, but what could they say?

  “I saw what demons do to people,” Ninavis continued. “They do horrible things, but they don’t … they don’t ‘curse’ them. So why don’t you two stop lying and tell me what’s going on?”

  “We’re not lying,” Brother Qown said. “Janel is a special case.”

  “Is she a witch or not?”

  Brother Qown cleared his throat. “If your definition is someone who makes bargains with demons, then the answer is no.” Brother Qown was skating around the question, qualifying it with technicalities, but what choice did he have? “Tamin isn’t a witch either. You people confuse being able to use magic with witchcraft, when it’s not the same thing at all.”

  “Not my people,” Ninavis reminded him. “Anyway, just tell me what happened to her. Tell me why she’s like this.”

  “Oh, he don’t know,” Dorna said. She had an angry look on her face. “Qown only joined up with us a few months ago because his church ordered it. I’m sure that Father Zajhera told him what he was getting into, but hearing it secondhand ain’t the same as being there.”

  Ninavis scowled. “And if I ask you for her story, are you going to tell me it’s none of my business?”

  “Well, it ain’t, is it?”

  “You’re wrong,” Ninavis said. “It is my business. I may not have been born here in Jorat, but my husband and daughter were both Joratese. I know enough about the customs here to understand that little girl just strolled into my backyard and stole my people right out from under me. Kalazan’s loyalty is to her now. He may be this banner’s new baron, but I guarantee you she’s his new count.” She cocked her head. “Not real sure how the old count’s going to feel about that.”

  Dorna rolled her eyes. “Don’t much care. Old bastard should have put a stop to Tamin’s foolishness before it ever got this far.”

  Ninavis raised her hand. “That’s not my point. My little band of thieves are horse folk just like you. And if there’s one thing I know about Joratese, it’s that you’re too damn trusting. I’m not. I need to know what kind of person I’m following, especially when you tell me she’s cursed.”

  Dorna sighed. “I weren’t there when they went to Lonezh, when she was a child. I’d gone to the Festival of the Turning Leaves that year and—” She shook her head. “They was just visiting her father’s cousins. Nothing special. Going to see a tournament. I don’t know what happened either…”

  “But the stories say—” Ninavis started to protest.

  Dorna raised her hand. “Except the legends ain’t true, what they say about Danorak. She didn’t outrun the demons to get warning out to the emperor. She was caught up in it same as everyone else, but the demons didn’t kill Janel. Instead, their leader, this demon prince, well, he decides to possess her body so he can summon more demons. Wore her like a riding dress. So there’s this demon army on a trek of death and destruction from one side of Jorat to the other, commanded by an eight-year-old girl. Even after the emperor went and stopped the march, he couldn’t get that bastard to give up his pretty new body.”

  “Father Zajhera believes the demon wanted to force the emperor to kill a child,” Brother Qown offered.

  “And who’s he again?”

  “Father Zajhera. He’s the leader of my faith.” Brother Qown put a hand to his chest. “When Xaltorath possessed Janel, no one could make the demon leave. The emperor hoped Father Zajhera might have better luck.4 Which he did. Father Zajhera cured Janel’s possession and then watched over her and made sure—”

  “Made sure what?” Ninavis said.

  “Possession has a disastrous impact on the mind. Most people are never sane again. Father Zajhera made certain Janel recovered. She needed mental and spiritual healing, not physical.”

  “Yeah, yeah,” Dorna said. “The father’s all right, I suppose. Janel stayed with him in his fancy temple for six months while he fished that demon out. When she came back to Tolamer, the father came with her. Stayed another three or so years, making sure she was right in the head. And she was … but that don’t mean she was ever the same. I guess those six months must have seemed like years. She came back strong as an elephant and with that curse sending her back to Hell every night, like Xaltorath still has a hold on her soul.”

  “I’ve told you, it’s not Hell,” Brother Qown protested.

  Ninavis stared down at the girl. “So what is she?”

  “Ain’t you been listening?” Dorna settled back down and shook her head. “That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you: I ain’t got a clue.”

  14: THE NIGHT HUNT

  Jorat Dominion, Quuros Empire. Two days since the last sighting of High Lord Therin D’Mon

  “Okay, now it’s your turn,” Kihrin said.

  “Are you sure you wouldn’t rather have a break?” Janel smiled, even as she clearly still teased him. “Obviously, it doesn’t have so unhappy an ending—for me, anyway. I’m still here.”

  He shook his head. “Just tell me the story.”

  “All right, all right. You come up again in this next part, you know. I didn’t know your name at the time, but still…” She shrugged. “I do think we know all the same people.”

  Janel’s Turn. The Afterlife.

  Something large thundered through the Afterlife’s forests. Several large somethings. I heard toppling trees crash as beasts moved through the dark woods, ravens scattering at their approach.

  Kasmodeus paused, lowered his hammer to the side, stared in shock.

  I couldn’t blame him. The Hunt’s arrival boded ill.

  And not just for him.

  I rolled to the side and hefted my shield as high as my broken ribs allowed.

  He glanced back at me. **WE COULD TAKE THEM TOGETHER. LET US PUT THIS PETTY SQUABBLE BEHIND US AND JOIN FORCES. THEY’LL KILL YOU AS SURE AS ME WHEN THEY ARRIVE.**

  I brushed blood from my face with my gauntlet, although I suspect I just spread the muck about.

  “Interesting idea,” I said. The approaching elephants grew closer, and Mereina’s ghosts emptied out as demons took the opportunity to run for their lives.

  There are few things demons fear. They are the ones others fear, the ones who feed off fear, the creatures who make mothers scream and old men wet themselves. The Eight Gods, though, are among the entities who garner a demon’s respect.

  Demons run when gods take the field.

  And what approached us was, at the very least, a servant of those Eight. If we were lucky, only that.

  If we were not lucky, it would be Thaena herself. I brooked no illusion about whether I would survive such an encounter. I trespassed here as much as any demon. Kasmodeus knew that; it’s why he’d made the offer.

  I smiled. “Alas, I have one issue with it.”

  The demon cocked his head to the side. **WHAT’S THAT?**

  I slammed my sword into him.

  “The gods aren’t my enemies. You are.”

  Kasmodeus’s hammer was a heavy, staggering weapon, but that didn’t always work in his favor. The demon had difficulty blocking with the weapon, while I had speed on my side.

  Also, I had nothing to lose. I was dead either way.

  I reminded myself the pain was all in my mind. Literally so, in this place. I wrenched my sword free and then stabbed him a second time. I didn’t think I could win, but I thought I might prevent him from leaving before Death’s forces arrived to finish him.

  Kasmodeus had absorbed many souls. I wanted to ensure he had no chance to profit from his feeding frenzy. The death I provided would be temporary, a momentary weakening while he returned to Hell to regain his strength.

  But what Thaena could do to him? She could restore all the souls he’d slain, undoing the damage so those who had died might be reborn. Demons broke the cycle of reincarnation; that is what makes them abominations. I could do nothing to restore the proper balance.

 

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