Books of Barakhai - The Beasts of Barakhai - LightNovelsOnl.com
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For several moments, they all remained quiet, drenched in a grief too intense to bear. Even the onlookers grew respectfully hushed and still.
Finally, Zylas spoke. "We should have known not to make a child, both of us distant descendants of Prinivere."
"Prinivere?" Collins blinked making a connection that seemed obvious but might prove absurd in this otherworld, where even the basic principles of science did not always apply. "Are you saying Trinya's switch-form was ..."
"A dragon," Seera said, barely above a whisper. A chill spiraled through Collins. "A dragon? Is that . .
. common?"
Zylas looked up. "As far as any of us know, she was the only Random ever to become one."
"If Carrie told the truth," Collins pondered aloud, "then there are at least two." He met Zylas' bleary gaze. "Zylas, your daughter might still be alive."
Chapter 18.
The conversation that followed left both men with unexpected hope. Collins came to understand that his companions had brought him from the castle to an area where dogs could not track him. Like the flowering tree where the group had hidden just before Korfius found them, the skunk odor that pervaded the quarters of Barakhai's downcaste garbage workers should hide their scent from second tier guardsmen.
After a meal and a bath, Collins felt more open to explanations. Alone in a straw-cus.h.i.+oned cavern with Zylas, he listened to the rat/man with an open mind. "You see, the less you knew, the safer you, we, and a pack of innocents remained."
"Maybe." It was a point Collins did not know if he could ever accept. "It might be the scientist in me, but I like to work with as much information as possible. The less my ignorance, the more I can figure out what to do to keep myself, you, and these innocents safe."
Zylas laced his fingers, dodging Collins' gaze. "I understand that now." He finally met the probing dark eyes. "But, at first, you didn't want to know that much."
"You mean when I thought I was going right home?"
"I guess so."
"But you knew I wasn't going right home. You should have told me that, too."
"I didn't know what the best thing was." Zylas threw up his hands. "It was supposed to be simple.
Bring you here. Have you get the stone. Get you home."
Collins sat up straight, holding Zylas' attention now that he had finally seized it. "But you knew it wasn't that easy from the start. You brought others before me. Others who went mad. Others who died."
Zylas closed his eyes and nodded sadly. "But you were different. I chose you much more carefully."
The words startled Collins. "You did?"
Zylas' lids parted to reveal the familiar, pallid eyes. "I watched you for a long time. Made a well-researched, long-studied decision. Surprised?"
"Very," Collins admitted. "Why me?"
"None of us wanted more deaths, and you are our last hope."
"I was your last hope?" Collins forced himself to blink, still stunned. "How so? My world has about five billion people at last count. You could always grab another."
"No. You are our last hope." Zylas thrust his hand into a pocket, emerging with the translation stone.
"Our last of these, my very own, this one a unique treasure because it allows communication even in animal form. I was supposed to give it to you, but I just couldn't let it go. I won't put Prinivere through that spell she cast on you again for any reason. She nearly died, and she's not getting any younger. She's still weakened from it."
The details did not fit. Collins tried to clear his head, to force order to the last vestiges of chaos. "Why didn't the people of Falima's town guess what I was, given that I wasn't the first?""To them you were."
"Oh?"
"You were the first to leave the ruins before I could switch to man form and explain."
"Why didn't you just talk to me as a rat? You had the stone."
"What do you think drove our first visitor mad?" Zylas blinked with slow deliberateness. "And what was your hurry to go tearing off into the unknown, anyway?"
Collins felt foolish. "I was hungry. Very very hungry."
"I left you food."
Collins ran a hand through dark brown hair that seemed to have grown an inch since his arrival, and it felt wonderfully clean. "I-I didn't see any food."
"You didn't look."
Collins felt a warm flush of defensiveness. "You should have put it in plain sight."
"If I made it too obvious, you would have worried you had stolen it from someone else. Or that someone had laid it out for you, poisoned."
Collins doubted either of those possibilities. "I was too hungry to worry about things like that." He thought it far more likely he would have pa.s.sed up the stems, roots, and insects as some science experiment rather than food. Given how well-read I am, it took me stunningly long to realize I had entered another world. "And how do you know what I would have worried about any way ?''
Zylas shrugged. "As you pointed out, I made mistakes in the past. But I want you to know this. You were the first one to leave the ruins prematurely and the only one who killed. The others kept searching for the way back home." The corners of his lips twitched, but he did not smile. "And I thought your need to find these might keep you there long enough." He drew Collins' gla.s.ses from another pocket.
Collins gasped, s.n.a.t.c.hing the offering from Zylas' hand and planting them on his face. Instantly, the cavern leaped to bold relief. He had forgotten how sharp every crag could look. Each blade of straw became singular and distinct, its colors a gradual blend of yellow, white, and gold. He saw lines in Zylas'
face he had never noticed before. "Thank you, you horrid little thief."
Zylas grinned to show he took no offense. "You're welcome, you big ugly murderer."
Though faced with a harsh joke, Collins forced a chuckle. He resisted the urge for a crueler one, though Zylas had given him the ammunition by opening his life's story. He did not want to discourage the albino rat/man from sticking with even the most difficult truths.
"You weren't supposed to kill anyone, and you weren't supposed to get arrested."
Collins nodded, realizing a grimmer truth. At that point, Zylas Could have abandoned him for another champion as they had not yet met or spoken. Collins could not have given away any information anyway, since he would have been executed before he found a way to communicate. "How did you ever manage to get Falima in position?"
Zylas waved a dismissive hand, as if to proclaim the whole thing no bother. "We'd been working on her for years, carefully trying to sway her to our side. You can see the advantage to having a horse-guard as a spy."
"Yes." Collins wondered how much convincing it had taken to push her that final step knowing that it would involve turning herself into a wanted fugitive to help a man she considered a murderer and a cannibal. No wonder she acted so hostile toward me. He could understand why they had chosen Falima, a Random considered a lesser being than the other guards, at least according to her. He had to know, "You took a huge and unnecessary risk saving me."
"Unnecessary?" Zylas' brows rose with incredulity. "I had led you here. I couldn't just let you die."
It was not literal truth. Zylas could have let him die simply by doing nothing, though Collins knew he meant his morality would not have allowed it. "Ialin would disagree."
Zylas did not deny it. "As did Falima at one time. She came around. He will, too." From a pocket, he pulled out the folded, broad-brimmed hat he usually wore to s.h.i.+eld his easily burned face and eyes from the sun. "Though I would spend my life for my cause, I don't expect others to do so." Antic.i.p.ating some comment about those who came before Collins, he added swiftly, "usually. Besides, I had chosen you too carefully. We needed you." All humor left his features. "We still do."Zylas looked so earnest, so pleading, Collins found it impossible to meet his gaze. He might have to refuse him. "What's so special about me?"
"You're smart and resourceful. You're willing to sacrifice for others, and you really do understand how they feel."
"Well." Collins felt his face grow hot, embarra.s.sed by the praise he had elicited. "I try to be a good person."
"You are," Zylas said. "I knew it from watching you. Dogs obey all horse-guards and superiors, but they like people of good character."
Collins wondered if Korfius' loyalty sprang more from believing him royal, but he had to admit the boy seemed to have a deep affinity for him.
"And Prinivere supports you. That's the highest praise I know."
"Thank you," Collins said, though the previous lies left him wondering whether Zylas' tribute stemmed more from desire and need than truth. "So tell me. What, exactly, does the stone do?"
"What did the king tell you?"
Collins blinked. "Will that change what you tell me?"
"No," Zylas said firmly. "I just wonder ..."
"He doesn't know."
Zylas grinned broadly. "Good."
"Nor do I," Collins reminded.
"Yes, you do." Zylas dipped his head with clear sincerity, wadding the hat in his hands. "It enhances magic, pure and simple. It would, hopefully, give our Prinivere enough power to help us. Maybe even enough to reverse this curse."
"Curse?"
Zylas stared, as if he found Collins' question the most absurd one ever uttered. "This whole spending half our lives as animals thing. You know."
Collins physically jerked backward. "You can ... fix that?"
"Don't know yet. Prinivere needs to have the stone in hand-or should I say in claw-to a.n.a.lyze it."
"Wow."
"Yeah," Zylas agreed. "Now do you understand why we want it?"
"Yes," Collins said, though he shook his head. "But why don't you want the king to know? Stopping the switching helps everyone. Doesn't it?"
Zylas threw the question back to Collins. "Does it?"
Collins folded his legs and leaned against the cavern wall, considering. He wondered if his bland perspective made him miss something obvious to those whose lives cycled from human to animal on a daily basis. He supposed someone with perfect overlap might find some advantages over those who fully lost half or more of their rational time to becoming some lumbering, half-witted creature. People like Zylas. Collins shook his head. The very one he thought might have the least reason to change was the same one who daily risked his life for it. "All right, I give. Who would want to keep the curse going?"
"Don't you think there might be substantial power to remaining human full-time while those around you mark time for half of their existence? Hard to contemplate insurrection when you're awake and thinking a third of the day or less."
Collins suspected many of his fellow students managed to function on less. "Unless you have near-perfect overlap."
Zylas' hands stilled on the hat. "Now you know why I'm a wanted outlaw."
Collins returned to the point. "So you think the royals wouldn't want the curse removed?"
Zylas heaved a deep sigh. "I think it's time you heard the whole story." He rose to his feet. "From one who was there."
There? Uncertain, Collins followed Zylas with his gaze. Before he could question further, Zylas disappeared through the entryway.
Collins rose also, though he did not attempt to follow. The musky odor had become familiar; it filled his nose and mouth like a persistent aftertaste. He took a few steps in the direction Zylas had gone,turned on his heel and started back the way he had come. The world seemed to have turned upside down, spun around three times, then whirled completely around again. He did not know for certain who to trust anymore. His sympathies intuitively went toward Zylas, though he could not guess whether this stemmed from truly believing the albino in the right or just because he had gotten to know the man first and better than the other side. It reminded him of the movie Butch Ca.s.sidy and the Sundance Kid, where he could not help rooting for the criminals mostly because the story got told from their point of view. Only one thing seemed absolutely certain. He needed to get home to a world where science made sense and the studies that had taken all of his adult life and money had purpose. At the moment, he would consider selling his soul for a Big Mac, large fries, and a cup of fountain root beer.
Zylas returned shortly with a familiar old woman in tow. Prinivere seemed dangerously frail in human form, her skin a ma.s.s of paper thin wrinkles, her eyes deeply recessed, her hair thick but nearly transparent in color. She wore a light, shapeless gown that hung to her knees. She looked older than the last time Collins had seen her, only days ago.
Collins nodded and smiled in greeting. "Good afternoon, my lady."
Prinivere returned a feeble smile. "Forgive my appearance-" she started.
"You look lovely," Collins found himself saying, the words seeming foolish and yet, to his surprise, oddly true. Survival and great age had an almost inexplicable beauty all its own.
"She wore herself down healing-"
Prinivere interrupted Zylas. "No reason to talk about that, my dear."
Collins did not need the last word to realize what had happened. She had tended his wounds, which explained why he no longer suffered the pain of his falls. "Thank you, Lady Prinivere. I feel very well now, but you shouldn't exhaust yourself for my b.u.mps and bruises."
Prinivere smiled, the wrinkles piling up at the edges of her lips. "Healing magic is not expensive." She did not give him the opportunity for a reply. They could argue the point all day and still remain at an impa.s.se. "But I've come to tell you a story."
Collins lowered himself to the ground in front of Prinivere. He still had many questions and hoped the story would handle most of them. "Please."
With Zylas' hovering a.s.sistance, Prinivere also sank to the straw. The rat/man took a s.p.a.ce beside her.
Without further preamble, Prinivere began. "A long, long time ago, when I was young, our world was much different. Humans and dragons had waged a war since long before my birth. It was not the type of war with many battles. Simply, the dragons raided the flocks of men when food grew scarce or they became too old and slow to catch the wilder creatures. And the humans found slaying a dragon a means to prove their courage or rescue their animals. More often than not, however, those clashes resulted in the death of the man."
Collins nodded, recalling how terrifying even a feeble, elderly female dragon had seemed, though he had known at the time she would not harm him.
"They had spears and swords to pit against our claws and teeth, armor to thwart our spikes and tails.
But they had no way to counteract our magic."
Collins' mind conjured images of brave knights riding off to slay dragons, only to return as charred heaps of bone in the satchel of some bypa.s.ser. Feeling he should say something, Collins inserted, "You'd think the humans would sacrifice a few sheep and goats to keep the peace."
Zylas s.h.i.+vered, but Prinivere only bobbed her head knowingly. "Yes, you would think so. For you realize what our friend, here, could not. These animals were animals through and through. The humans themselves regularly ate their herds and flocks as well as harvested their eggs, milk, and wool."
"It sounds very much like the olden days of my own world," Collins said. "Except, of course, for the dragons." He savored a situation where, for the first time, he seemed more in tune than his companion.
Suddenly, he had found an explanation for the antique hunt scene tapestry in the king's bedroom.