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The Brush of Black Wings Part 4

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He'd already lost hours in the library. Bursin alone knew what was happening to Martise in that time. The thought ratcheted his temper and his panic up another notch.

Defeat slumped the servant's broad shoulders. He signed to Silhara who nodded. "We'll return. Both of us. You have my word." Gurn knew him well enough to believe the effort he'd make to fulfill that vow even if he couldn't guarantee the outcome.

He reached inside his s.h.i.+rt and slipped off the necklace he wore. The delicate chain threaded through his fingers, a pendant of colored gla.s.s swinging from its loop. The gla.s.s encased a tiny curl of brown hair. Once the means by which Martise's old master kept her enslaved, the necklace was now a favorite possession of Silhara's. He'd crushed the spirit stone that entrapped a part of his wife's soul and replaced it with the pendant that held a bit of her hair. He wore it when he traveled without her to Eastern Prime's markets, keeping her close even when she was far from him. Now, the pendant would be a tether to bring her home. He buried the chain under a loose pile of small rocks to keep the crows from s.n.a.t.c.hing it.

Cloaked beneath a sullen sky, Silhara initiated the first of two rituals-this one to reveal a relic buried longer than generations of memory.

Ritual spellwork hid numerous traps, especially when the mage worked alone. Silhara always worked alone and had paid dearly for the preference more times than he could count. Burns, frostbite, teal-colored skin, orange eyes, hair loss, blisters and a month's worth of impotence when he was seventeen that had terrified him enough to actually offer a sincere prayer to the G.o.ds for help.

The G.o.ds had ignored him, but his mentor had shown mercy-along with a generous heap of ridicule-and reversed the damage of a poorly executed ritual. Except for his brief alliance with Conclave to kill the G.o.d Corruption, Silhara remained a solitary pract.i.tioner. He was, however, far more careful with his spellwork now than when he was a juvenile sorcerer with more arrogance than sense.

His caution served him well in the broken temple. Incantations, combined with a rigid pattern of steps and the scatter of certain herbs, illuminated the wheel, revealing the entire design instead of the few lines not yet faded away by time and the elements.

The illumination held the wheel's shape and began to rotate. Small mounds of snow collapsed as the ground thrummed with a low vibration, reminding Silhara of Conclave acolytes and their chanting during dawn prayers.

He built spell upon spell, connecting revelation summonings with ward-break invocations until a complex web of light and resonance engulfed the temple. Stone groaned across stone as the shallow staircase leading to the structure's center broke at the left seam and slid to one side.

Success!

Silhara turned his spellwork toward the opening revealed and invoked a string of incantations. The tremors under his feet strengthened, and his teeth chattered against each other more from the vibrations than from the cold. These were old wards, inhuman ones. Without the lich's grimoires to aid him, he might never crack them open.

Blood streamed from his nose and coursed down his cheeks in thin rivulets from his eyes. Powerful magic, whether benevolent or malevolent, always demanded a t.i.the of some sort, and Silhara had bled for it numerous times.

Shards of lightning crackled from the dark hollow, and he caught the clanking sound of metal sc.r.a.ping across stone before a flash of movement twinkled in warning. Quick instincts and a finely honed sense of self preservation saved him from impalement. He jerked back as a blade whipped out of the shadows. It cleaved the air, almost slicing off his nose as it shot past him to bury the first quarter of its tip in a nearby tree trunk with a solid thunk.

The embedded weapon oscillated from the impact then went still. Cerulean light still bolted down the blade, and in the woodland hush, Silhara heard the faintest hum-like far-off voices canting funereal dirges. The sound raised the hair on his arms, and he approached cautiously.

Bark began flaking off the tree's trunk where the sword stuck, bits and pieces turning to dust before they even fell to the ground. Wood rotted at unnatural speed, creating a patch of decay that grew to the size of a dinner plate before stopping. The gnarled oak, probably as old as Neith itself, visibly s.h.i.+vered, its leafless branches cascading snow to the ground. Silhara suspected that were the oak younger, the wound left by the ensorcelled sword would have killed it. Instead, the trunk's ligneous grip, softened by sudden rot, gave way. The sword fell, landing with a soft thud in a pile of dead leaves that instantly disintegrated to powder. The wounded oak s.h.i.+vered once more, and Silhara didn't imagine the sylvan groan of relief that echoed from the roots below ground.

He crouched beside the sword for a better look. He was neither swordsmith nor warrior. What fighting skills he had, he'd learned as a wharf rat on Eastern Prime's docks and in her dangerous closes. He'd honed them as a rebellious novitiate during his brief tenure at Conclave Redoubt. He was handy with a knife, his fists, his spells and a savage will to survive that was bequeathed to all rats.

Spells were his area of expertise, but he knew enough about swords and the type of fighters who wielded them to find this one puzzling. Whether forged as enchanted or later turned that way, the blade surprised him. He expected something more spectacular from a Wraith King.

The weapon reminded him of his cane knife. Single-handed, single-edged and guardless, it was more long knife than sword. Its slender, slightly curved blade was made for slas.h.i.+ng and thrusting instead of cleaving and blocking. The hilt lacked any ornamentation. The pommel bore the design of an avian head in profile. Plain like the hilt, its only nod to decoration was a tiny river stone inset to represent the bird's eye.

He didn't need a swordsman's gaze to see the edge remained sharp-lethal in a skilled hand. Still, this was not a sword bequeathed to a king or even a n.o.bleman. Far too humble and una.s.suming, even with sorcery of the dead and the demonic infused in its metal and lightning coursing down its fuller.

Megiddo Anastas. Wraith King, dark G.o.d, commander of demon hordes. Not a collector of the ornate.

Silhara returned to the exposed alcove beneath the steps and incanted another spell. A scabbard usually accompanied a sword, and his guess proved correct when one rose from the same spot as the sword before dropping to clatter down the steps and landed at his feet.

As plain an affair as the weapon itself and protected from age and decay by the same blend of dark sorcery, the scabbard offered no hints to its origin or maker. The smooth onyx wood was waxed and would have s.h.i.+mmered softly from a fine polish, even without the help of the eldritch light.

Silhara pulled the pair of harvesting gloves he'd brought with him from his belt. They s.h.i.+elded his hands from the orange trees' vicious thorns but weren't much use against sorcery. He'd enchanted them with protection spells in preparation for holding whatever artifact he retrieved from underneath the temple. While the sword's una.s.suming appearance surprised him, its necrotic effect on anything it touched didn't. Demon kings didn't wield death in half measures. What the blade's edge didn't accomplish, the sorcery would. And it was highly likely the scabbard was no less dangerous to the touch.

He invoked additional wards that enclosed the sword within an invisible barrier. Silhara left nothing to chance. He might be able to freely touch the sword with a pair of enchanted gauntlets, but without the safeguards of barrier wards, nothing else on his person was safe while in its proximity. The last thing he needed was for the weapon to brush against his arm or leg.

The sword hissed when he wrapped his fingers around the hilt. It literally squirmed in his palm as if trying to break free of his grip. Silhara shook it in warning. "I only need part of you to do what I want. Keep still or I'll break you in half and melt you down for t.i.thing coins."

Sentient or not, the sword quieted at the threat. Even the dirge-like humming stopped as the hilt settled peacefully in his grasp long enough for him to retrieve the scabbard and slide the sword inside. Silhara was still tempted to melt it down despite its acquiescence. Conclave would collectively p.i.s.s itself at the idea of necromantic coins hiding in its treasury.

The forest settled into an even deeper hush as Silhara, sheathed sword in hand, began siphoning off the curse magic he held over these woods to protect Neith. Magic of the black arcana offered great power to its pract.i.tioners, demanding great strength in return. His sorcerous skills came not only from his generous Gift but from impressive physical prowess. The curse magic weakened but didn't debilitate him, and he was almost as formidable without its parasitic drain. When, however, he reclaimed it for himself, the potent surge left him breathless.

Flush with power and in possession of the thing that tethered the demon king to this temple, Silhara began the second ritual, drawing sigils in the air as he walked widders.h.i.+ns over the wheel pattern and uttered spells written in old blood on the pages of a grimoire bound in human skin. G.o.d-smiter or not, Conclave would light him up like a torch without so much as a by-your-leave if they caught him at this ritual.

A hot pain blossomed between his eyes, growing from a pinpoint to a voracious agony that reverberated in his skull as if he were trapped inside the mouth of a ringing bell. He clenched his jaw and invoked magic through gritted teeth even as he wept more blood. Crimson streams poured from his nose to splatter on the steps.

The temple's center suddenly blazed in a burst of emerald light, coruscating and tightening into a spinning column just like the one Martise had described for him. The lit column was empty, and he growled low in his throat as he scampered up the broken stairs. The demon had already captured his intended quarry.

No plan and no time to make one. But Silhara had will, rage, and the strongest incentive. Nothing, and no one, would stop him from taking his wife back. He leapt the last two stairs and threw himself into the light.

CHAPTER SIX.

Martise's first impression of the half world to which she had been taken was the stench. She dry-retched at the smell-the same charnel house odor that surrounded Megiddo when he first appeared to her in the temple. She bent at the waist, ready to empty her stomach between her feet. Mercifully, nothing came up, and she straightened, using her free hand to s.h.i.+eld her nose and mouth as she breathed.

Neith's snow-flocked forest had yielded to a gray wasteland. Spires of mountains rose in a far distance, silhouetted against a dull twilight with no emerging stars. Martise's first glimpse of this strange place lasted only a moment before she yanked her hand out of the demon king's icy grasp, his geas on her broken. She fled, pain rippling up her wounded calf as she raced toward a horizon where bleak sky met dead earth. There was no logic to her flight, no destination she tried to reach-only the terrified instinct of prey escaping predator.

Her shallow pants sounded thunderous in her ears, the only noise in a place drowned in silence as she ran. And she ran for naught.

Megiddo Anastas suddenly appeared out of thin air in front of her, once again enrobed in fabric made of shadow and the souls of the d.a.m.ned. Martise yelped, almost cannoning into him before she veered to the side and fled in another direction.

They played this diabolical game for several minutes until Martise, whose frustration began to eclipse her fear, stopped and glared at her captor. A foul wind rose from the G.o.ds only knew where, whipping dust into small whirlwinds that danced across the barren landscape. Neither cold nor hot, it whipped her loose hair across her face, obscuring her vision until she tucked it behind her ear. She and the demon king stared at each other as the wind keened around them.

"You can run forever, and you will find no end." He still spoke in Glimming and as someone who once tried fleeing as she did and discovered an unavoidable truth. Martise shuddered. "Where will you go?" he asked, head c.o.c.ked in puzzlement, as if she were the most interesting thing he'd come across in a long time.

"Away from you," she snapped.

He smiled, and the hairs on her arms rose in warning. If he were representative of his brethren, then the five Wraith Kings were aptly named. Megiddo might be handsome were he human. He possessed an elegant face with a high forehead and long, patrician nose accentuated by the way he wore his hair-sc.r.a.ped back at the top and sides. The slight upturn to his rigid mouth hinted at humor, though considering the smile's wearer, Martise wasn't inclined to return it. His features were younger, more refined than Silhara's. Not nearly so harsh and so much more dead.

Leached of color, his skin was a ghastly marmoreal in both shade and texture. No human, no matter how fair, sported so pallid or smooth a complexion and still breathed. Even the lead paints the Calderes aristo women wore on high holy days or during festivals didn't bleach their faces like this. His strange eyes crackled with the same lightning that washed down the sword blade he'd carried in her dream vision. Instead of round, his pupils were horizontal and slit-shaped like those of a goat. The wind lifted his hair as it did hers, but the strands didn't move as hers did. They were like his robes, living tendrils of smoke that seemed to move of their own free will. Tenebrous locks drifted over his shoulders, coiled and uncoiled around his neck or melded with the robes.

His grip on her hand had been cold as a burial slab but solid, real. His appearance belied his touch. Spectral, eerie and strange. Almost incorporeal. Wraith.

"What is your name?" Even his voice, precise in its articulation, sounded hollowed out.

Surely he didn't think her that stupid. "Kashaptu." She stumbled back with a gasp when suddenly he winked out of sight only to appear so close in front of her that he threatened to step on her toes.

"Clever," he said. His eyebrows rode lower on his brow than Silhara's did. One slid upward as he scrutinized her.

She glared at him, scared and tired of his antics. "What do you want from me?"

Megiddo shrugged and spun away. Martise swore for a moment he walked on air instead of ground. "I should think that's obvious, don't you?" He held up a finger to forestall whatever else she might say. "First, I'd have you meet someone. She's been waiting for you almost as long as I have."

He didn't let her wonder at that enigmatic statement, appearing next to her once more with that same unnatural speed. His hand on her arm froze the blood in her veins. The ground didn't s.h.i.+ft beneath her feet or her surroundings move, but suddenly she stood with her captor before the door of a small cottage set incongruously in the same bleak landscape, only now the mountain spires rose from a different direction.

She didn't know what was east or west, north or south. There was no sun or moon and no stars, only a flat, lifeless sky the same shade as the equally flat and lifeless ground.

Martise caught a brief glimpse of the cottage's exterior before Megiddo opened the door and hauled her inside. "Damkiana," he said, and her eyes widened at the term as well as the sudden change in his tone. So brief she might not have caught it were she not so close to him, the softer modulation disappeared almost as quickly as it appeared. "I've brought someone for you to meet," he said. "This is the kashaptu with no name." He kicked the door closed behind him and crossed his arms with a pleased smile. Martise fervently prayed she'd not just been delivered as someone's main course for supper.

Light steps sounded from the depths of a hallway off one side of the main room. Martise couldn't have been more surprised if her erstwhile master, c.u.mbria of Conclave, had suddenly appeared before her.

This was no old and haughty bishop but a woman. Young, probably close in age to Martise, and there the similarity ended. To the person who mattered most to her, Martise was beautiful. To others and to herself, she was plain. The woman who watched her with the same intense scrutiny as Megiddo did was the ant.i.thesis of plain. The ant.i.thesis of wraith for that matter.

Long, curly hair the color of strong-brewed tea and skin burnished brown by heritage instead of the sun, she had a soft, round face and dark eyes framed by thick lashes. Megiddo had addressed her as "Damkiana," an old Makkadian word that meant "mistress of earth and heaven." Whether her true name or a term of endearment, it fit.

She glanced at Megiddo, her features expressionless, before she walked slowly around Martise and paused behind her. "You have blood on your skirts." She spoke in Glimming as well, and her voice was cool, except for the thread of disapproval Martise sensed was reserved for the Wraith King.

"My dog accidentally bit me." The reminder of her wound caused the pain to return, and Martise s.h.i.+fted her weight and resisted the urge to bend down and ma.s.sage her throbbing calf.

Megiddo's voice, tinged with that enigmatic humor Martise had spotted in his smile was less hollow. "Not me. Magehound. Who doesn't attack those with magic. Will wonders never cease?"

The woman circled to stand in front of Martise again. "He bit her. Sounds like an attack to me."

Martise shook her head. "He was trying to save me." She glanced over her shoulder to scowl at Megiddo. "I have no magic."

"And that force throwing me back through the portal was simply a strong breeze. Clever and a liar."

She was stopped from arguing by the sight of Damkiana pouring water from a pitcher into a bowl. She dropped a cloth into the water, rang out the excess and handed it to Martise. "Here. To wash your leg. The wound won't heal, but it won't worsen either. You can at least wash the blood off before it dries and starts to itch."

Confused by such a mundane action paired with such a strange statement, Martise offered a startled "Thank you." She held the cloth but waited, determined to get an explanation for her abduction. She turned fully to Megiddo. "Why have you taken me? I am no witch, no mage. I have no magic."

Every one of those statements could be defined as either the truth or a lie, depending on who knew her and who interpreted them. Martise had no intention of verifying her Gift even to the most harmless human, much less a king of demons. The fact that her Gift had chosen not to fight him off a second time frightened her.

She still felt it inside her, a presence, a weight, but it had retreated for some reason-burrowed itself deep, no longer her aggressive protector.

Megiddo leaned against the door. At some point, between their time outside and when her back was to him, his grotesque robes had disappeared, revealing a simple tunic and trousers in various shades of olive green and brown. He was tall-long-limbed and broad-shouldered. Not as tall or as rangy as Silhara, but with an otherworldly grace her husband lacked. Probably because he wasn't human and Silhara was.

"Why have you taken me?" she repeated.

"Because when you touched the steps of that temple, this world stopped and waited for you. I want it to stop again, in another place, another time. Whatever you possess inside you is powerful if it can do such a thing."

"I have nothing that can help you!" She was starting to sound like one of the colorful parrots a Conclave primicerius once kept in his study and drove the other primicer to distraction with their squawks and echolaic screeching, but she'd repeat her a.s.sertion relentlessly and lie just as Megiddo accused her of doing. Far better that than to have the demon king rape her spirit to plunder her Gift and use it for his own purposes.

Megiddo's low chuckle revealed his disbelief at her statement. "I leave you to Damkiana's mercies for now." With that, he disappeared.

Martise raised a hand to the un.o.bstructed door. "Wait!" She lowered her arm and growled under her breath. What she wouldn't give for a bucket of enchanted nails at the moment. She'd happily hammer his feet to the floor. He was as annoying as he was frightening with all that winking in and out of existence.

"He'll return. He always does." Damkiana motioned for Martise to use the wet cloth she held. "That won't do your leg much good just sitting there in your hand."

Martise rested her foot on the edge of one of two benches set on either side of a small table. She hiked her skirt to survey the damage. Four matching puncture wounds decorated either side of her calf. They oozed dark blood that dribbled into her stained slipper. She pulled off the shoe, damp with blood, and set it aside. Her skirts had protected her from the worst of the bite, but the muscle under the puncture wounds throbbed as hard as if someone had clubbed her in the leg.

She had no doubts that Cael had tried to save her by clamping down on her skirts in an attempt to drag her away from the temple. He'd overreached and sank his teeth into her calf. Martise considered herself lucky he hadn't torn her leg off. She washed away the blood, hissing at the sting.

The cottage was nicely appointed-a simple abode, well-kept and furnished with those things to made a comfortable home. "Do you have anything to make a poultice?" she asked her companion.

Damkiana shook her head. "No, and it wouldn't work anyway. The pain will still trouble you, but the wound won't poison. In this place, nothing sickens or dies." She uttered those words, not with glee, but with faint despair and a resigned expression.

Martise's heart thumped hard against her ribs. "Where are we?"

The other woman shrugged. "It has no name. A world between worlds; a time between times. Nothing changes here except the sky, and even that has gone still for now." Her accent thickened as she spoke, as if describing this gray prison had swelled her tongue.

Martise changed the subject for a moment. "You both speak Glimming."

"We do? I've always called it Common. So does Megiddo. You speak it as well, though your accent is different from ours."

Martise returned the blood-stained cloth and straightened her skirts. "My thanks for your help." She slipped on her shoe and sat down on the bench at Damkiana's gesture. "Did he capture you as well?"

Damkiana took a seat on the opposite bench. Martise admired the way lamplight warmed her curls, highlighting the reds and gold woven into her dark hair. "No, not purposefully. Like your dog, he attempted one thing and did another." A small smile rounded her cheeks. "Knowing that didn't ease my anger. I think I stayed mad at him for a few centuries."

The breath stuttered in Martise's lungs. She stared at the woman across from her, hoping her words were just exaggerations to make a point. "How long have you been here?" That hope died with the answer.

"Who can say? Years? Centuries? Longer? I don't know." Damkiana peered at Martise. "Megiddo has been here for so long, I think he's forgotten the life he once had. It's easy to do when you're trapped in this cage."

After reading the tomes from the lich's library that described the Saruui Buidu, Martise had a fairly good idea how long Megiddo had lingered in this world. She just didn't know how or why he ended up here. The thought of being trapped with him as Damkiana was made her throat close with terror. "I can't stay here," she said, shoving down her rising panic. Silhara, she thought. If Cael had warned him as she hoped, then she had a chance at escape. He'd be furious, enraged, hunting for her. The thought lessened her terror.

"Oh, you can," Damkiana argued. "It's Megiddo's hope that you won't. Mine too if you must know." She held out a slender hand. "I'm Acseh."

Martise blinked and clasped her fingers. "Not Damkiana?"

This time Acseh grinned. "No. Megiddo gave me that name. Even when I told him mine and corrected him a thousand times, he still insists on calling me Damkiana. I gave up after a while. It's a nice enough sounding name, even if it might mean 'idiot' or 'slapskull.' I've asked him what it means; he just smiles. I'm probably better off not knowing."

Martise almost told her but changed her mind. Whatever reasons the saruum had for not telling Acseh its meaning, she didn't want to risk angering him by revealing it. Not a name, but a term of endearment and a telling one at that.

Could a demon hold affection for anyone or anything? Especially a demon who once tried to annihilate all humanity? She frowned. Not possible. These creatures weren't capable of such feelings, and she s.h.i.+vered at the thought of Acseh trapped here with such a being-ruthless, soulless, heartless. Still, the idea refused to be banished, especially when Acseh sat across from her, seemingly unharmed. Martise stiffened. Looks were often deceiving.

Acseh rose and left the table, only to return with two cups of water poured from the same pitcher she'd used to wet the cloth. "You won't thirst here or hunger, but sometimes it's good to have a reminder." She raised her cup in toast, and Martise obliged by mimicking the gesture. "He called you 'kashaptu.' Witch."

Martise sipped her water, surprised at its fresh, sweet taste. "I'm neither witch nor mage." Again, a half-truth based on interpretation. She possessed a Gift; in the eyes of Conclave, she was a mage, even if she was a failed one.

"Nor are you nameless." Acseh's knowing gaze told Martise she'd noticed the exchange of names had been one-sided.

Martise returned the look. "No, but names have power. I'll answer to "witch" even if I'm not one."

Acseh nodded and toasted a second time. "Fair enough." Her dark eyes shone with curiosity. "So there is still magic in the world."

Oh, if she only knew. Martise quelled her chuckle. "Yes, probably more than anyone desires." She paused. "Who ruled your country before the saruum brought you to this world?"

Acseh thought for a moment. "An obeth named Anguis out of Clan Tuleo."

Martise searched her memory of Conclave records she'd both read and recorded. Her eyes widened and she gasped. "You were there when Megiddo and the other saruui buidu ravaged the earth."

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