Chapter 25
Kaz stood on the blue floor of the vaults of heaven. Alethos had come up to be with her, and gave her a brief kiss. She leaned into him, then stepped away to the ritual area.
Chrysandion marked out a circle on the floor around Kaz, which glowed white. Then he inscribed another circle around the outside which glowed red. He began chanting, and the white circle of runes rose up and danced up and down Kaz. More chanting saw the red circle doing likewise, both circles passing each other up and down.
“Are you ready?” asked Chrysandion.
“As ready as I will ever be,” said Kaz. She locked her eyes on Alethos, pale, and with fear lurking in her big amber eyes, as if to lock his features in her memory. He mouthed, ‘I love you,’ and she managed to smile, as the scene around her changed, and she found herself halfway up a hill. She had come from the cold of Mesolimnos, to the un-temperature of the sun court, and now it was cold, though not as cold as Mesolimnos under its unnatural winter.
The hillock was covered in grass; at the top was a structure, and just above where she stood was a high hedge. She stood on a path which led to a gap in that hedge which seemed to stretch all the way around the hill. Kaz trotted off round the hedge, and circumnavigated the hilltop. There appeared to be no other breaks in the hedge.
The sun would be at its zenith in two hours; that was how long she had.
There was no other choice. She took a deep breath, and walked through the gap.
There were more hedges on either side; but there was a turn some way in, and gaps.
Kaz had heard of labyrinths of stone; this was a labyrinth of plants. And the plants had thorns which oozed sticky substances which unnerved Kaz. Presumably it was to deter anyone trying to force a straight path through. She had seen it from above as she was sent down in the circling rings; and there had been a haze over the whole top of the hill, so nobody might fly over it and see the pattern. Kaz shrugged, and decided to try a logical expedient of turning first left. It was not long before there was an apparent dead end. Kaz moved cautiously right to the end, and her darksense told her that a portion of the hedge was further away than most of it, it merely looked contiguous to the eyes. She slipped through the gap, with a grim smile.
This made it likely that she was on the right path.
She made sure to see with sound, something Daze could not understand, and found other concealed entrances, hidden with perspective and by out and out illusion.
Then the hedges gave way to stone walls, and stone pavements under her feet. Darksense revealed hollow space beneath some stones, and one path had a pattern that was solid only in the pattern of the children’s game of hop-scratch, a single stone to hop onto, and a double stone to land with both feet. Something rang metallic at the edges of the double stones; it was, Kaz thought, like a spring, checking that both weights were equal. One could not stroll up the middle. Kaz hopped and jumped across the offending part, and turned left at the end.
Then the riddles started.
Instead of clear ways, there were doors with riddles inscribed on them.
“A man in a simple one-room hut painted the west wall white, the east wall green, the north wall black, and the south wall blue. What colour would he paint the stairs?”
“No stairs,” said Kaz, succinctly.
The door opened. Now she was fully inside a structure.
“What moves without legs, and runs without stopping?” asked the riddle on the next door.
“Time,” said Kaz, bored by the simplicity of the riddles. There were a couple more in similar vein. She hesitated at one which read, “I have no beginning, but I have an end. I am always ahead, but I am never behind. What am I?” Kaz scowled.
“The classic answer is, ‘the future,’ but it fits ‘Fate’ better, for Fate predates the beginning.”
There was a chime; but the door opened rather sullenly.
The next left turn had a mosaic on it, showing Daze triumphant; it read ‘Be well primed to pass.’
“Oh, Protasion, you are invaluable,” muttered Kaz, who had listened politely to a lecture on those numbers Protasion called ‘prime numbers’ which could only be divided by themselves or one. She counted the number of stones across the picture, which was twenty-five.
“Here goes, then,” said Kaz, reaching up to press one, two, three, five, seven, eleven, thirteen, seventeen, nineteen, and twenty-three on the first line.
The door swung back, and Kaz pushed on.
The next riddle was a little more esoteric.
“Is a sound made by a tree falling if nobody is there to hear it?”
“Of course it is, because it still sends sound vibrations out,” said Kaz. “And the wildlife will hear it.”
She thought the door opened with a rather snippy plop. Sound vibrations were beyond those who did not use them to see.
Next, she came to a pair of doors side by side. To her left, the door was inscribed ‘I only go up.’ To her right the door was inscribed ‘I only go down.’
“Logic suggests the tried method of going left,” muttered Kaz; and spoke out. “Which one do I choose to get to the centre?”
The left hand door swung open.
Kaz stepped forward, and was wafted upwards on a puff of air, another door opening as it stopped lifting her. She stepped out.
She was in a temple courtyard.
Kaz had shorn away her long hair, and bound up her breasts; in a simple tunic, made more comfortable with warming runes embroidered in it, and with bare feet, she might pass as a simple slave. Her eyes were too big in her scared face, and she could pass for being malnourished, rather than built on spare lines with whipcord muscles.
Daze was there, arms outspread, pronouncing curses on the toróg for their attempts to break his limits on them. His gaze fell on Kaz, who dropped to the subservient squat of a trógling.
“I curse you all that more births will be of stunted travesties, not even as tall as humans, born in litters to keep them weak, and outbreeding you with more of the same!” he roared.
There was a chime. Daze looked self-satisfied; he thought the chime was for him, and for his curse, which in a way it was.
But that was only half the battle. Kaz swallowed hard, rose to her full five feet in height, and walked forward, ready to face off to a god.
oOoOo
In the Selenite camp, which was in something of a disarray as soldiers searched fruitlessly for a child, and whispers were passed that a Sun-Seer had been murdered, a priest of Librax stiffened.
He had been known for true prophecy before, and some notice was taken of his pronouncements.
“Behold! Death’s tool unravels riddles and...”
He got no further as the ground suddenly gave way, and he found himself floundering in icy, muddy water. Allenna Dren found that her bed floated, after a fashion, but that she was wrapped in the clammy embrace of her tent, which had, like most of the command tents, collapsed with the ground beneath it. Allenna, ancient, no longer in the peak of fitness, and smothered in wet canvas, proceeded to have a heart attack from her efforts to breathe through the suffocating tent. Others were also dragged down into the fluid mud by the weight of canvas above them, and, unable to escape the canvas holding them down, drowned. Many would be sorted that day by Alethos in the halls of the dead, and Thorus Mils was only spared the ignominy of a muddy end by having left Allenna in her tent to call a war council. And nobody cared about the truncated prophecy of a rather wet scholar.
Protasion, on top of one of the towers of the wall, watching with an eagle-sight spell, was hugging himself in sheer delight at the scale of the mayhem. He had the mining trógling who had helped with him, to enjoy the fruits of their endeavours. Having spell-casting power to spare, he had cast the spell for each of them, too, and there was a party mood atop the tower.
“What now?” asked the trógling Kaz had rescued.
“Cake,” said Protasion. “Rich, dark cake, to celebrate the mud, and butter-icing between layers flavoured with those exotic beans from across the far seas.”
The Alethosi tended towards the frugal most of the time; and cake was always good as a treat.
They went back to the temple to get warm, and radiate smugness.
“Kaz not back yet?” asked Protasion.
“No,” said Lelyn. It was almost a snap.
“She’ll do it just fine,” said Protasion. “What, surely you don’t have any doubts? When has our Kaz ever failed to deliver?”
“She wasn’t sure she could do it,” said Lelyn, tears in her eyes for her friend.
“Lelyn,” said Protasion, “Do you remember when we went in search of the silver star plant?”
“Yes, of course! We were little more than children, then,” said Lelyn.
“Do you remember rescuing the enslaved plainsmen?” asked Protasion.
“Yes; and Kaz made a pretended circle of gating with made up runes,” said Lelyn.
“And before we crossed the road, under the eye of the guards, what did she say and do?”
“She told us to wait until the guard left and then cross the road; she set up a diversion to sound like fighting.”
“And did we go to see if she needed aid, if it was she who was fighting?”
“No. We trusted, and obeyed.”
“It’s a bigger trust today, but it’s the same thing,” said Protasion.
Lelyn cast herself upon him, and sobbed, in fear for her friend. Protasion was not averse to having an arm full of the girl he loved, though he hated to see her distressed.
There was a chime.
“Well, she’s done the first part,” said Protasion. “Let us pray to Alethos to do whatever we have to do, and that she is able to do so too.”
“Or that she already did it,” said Lelyn.
“I try not to think of that part; it makes my head ache,” said Protasion.
“Kaz reckons that time and space are the same,” said Lelyn.
“Yes, and that’s what makes my head ache,” said Protasion. “Trust me, if anything had gone wrong, the web of Fate would have torn, and there would be all kinds of anomalies of time happening, like hour glasses running backwards, and people ageing at the wrong speed, or disappearing because they were never born.”
“Would we notice, if we were in the reality in which they had never been born?” asked Lelyn.
“You spend too much time with Kaz talking about things mortals have no right to even think about,” said Protasion, severely.
oOoOo
Thorus Mils needed to establish some kind of order. The mud was getting shallower as it drained away, back through the other sluice gate, and he could see where the field had been undermined. If he had his way, they would wipe all trógling off the face of the earth.
“Get off this mud bath and move back!” he ordered. “Officers! Help out anyone trapped in collapsed tents! Any intact tents, take to the drier ground, and set up camp! Collect such firewood as you can to set up a good fire, and get soup and hot drinks on the go, and set up racks to dry bedding.”
He did not notice, but the desertions began, quietly, in ones and twos. The private soldiers had suffered less than the officers, but they were wondering if they were next to be tipped in mud, and packed what dry clothing and blankets they had, and stole tools, and vanished into the countryside, to move into the abandoned farm houses until they could surreptitiously make their ways home. A lay member of Librax’s cult, who had been drafted, would later amass a small fortune for forging passes, and discharges from the army for his fellows.
What Thorus did notice was that his army was diminished in size, and the reason for that lay, partly at least, face down in mud under heavy tents. He had lost fully two thirds of his officers; and an eighth of his common soldiery, even before the desertions began.
Thorus had not cried since he was a child, but he came close to it.