Chapter 24
The boy, Epiphio, came to the Alethosi temple shortly after dawn on the solstice.
“He has gone,” he said, numbly. “Make it the best quest of your life, for his sake, Lord-Priest of Alethos,” he added, to Kaz.
“Best shot of my life,” agreed Kaz.
oOoOo
Erytheon knew he was with the child, and his blind eyes saw that she was in some vile cross between a cot and a cage; and she would appear to human eyes to be perhaps four years old.
“Hello, little one,” said Erytheon, softly. “I am here to ease the pain, and to teach you about our father, the sun, who is no enemy of ice, but gives it a sparkle greater than any jewel.”
“Are you my father? They said my father does not care about me.”
“I am not your father; and your father does not know you exist. But you will have a new mother and father. I am here to tell you about them, so you will not be scared.”
“They will hurt you.”
“Of course. But it does not matter. I am here to help others right a wrong; and to give you a blanket with glyphs on it.”
“Will you take out the pins Allenna Dren has put in me? They hurt, and if I do not cry enough, she pulls on them to make them hurt more.”
Erytheon was now a priest of fate; which was to say, also of time. The bars of the cot-cage rusted and fell away to his touch; as did the pins, driven through the child’s flesh, and bent to form rough rings so she could not pull them out.
“Where it bleeds, rub it on the glyphs. That will activate them. Then, they will be a beacon for your new parents. Fear no more, Chionea. Sleep when you open the glyphs of Storm and of Truth. And let Fate herself remove from you the chaos taint of unnatural ageing.”
The child sank down in sleep, covering the glyphs.
“Poor child,” murmured Moraia, in her priest’s mind “With the chaos taint, she would have been an old crone by the time she had lived five years; but by then, Selen would have had no more use for her.”
“Moraia, can you give her back the age she should be if I sacrifice the years I might have lived, if I was not fated to come here? I could, after all, still choose to leave. If she was a baby again, not remembering all this pain and hatred...”
“You would do that for the child? Age as fast as she de-ages?”
“I would.”
“I accept your sacrifice, dear one.”
The child shrank and de-aged before him.
“Now, leave the tent. If you will give the prophecy, I will show you where to go.”
“I will go and do what I am here to do; and as I do, Thyella can take the child, and the Daykaz can go to her fate.”
Erytheon walked as he was guided, directly to the tent of Allenna Dren, and moved with an agility not to be expected of an old man right past the guards and into the tent before they realised his intention.
Allenna was going through papers, and looked up.
“I said I was not to be disturbed! Who are you?”
“I am Erytheon Sun-Toucher. I have been guided to you to speak a prophecy,” said Erytheon. He smiled as the guards followed him in. “If they strike me down, I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine,” he said.
Allenna flipped a hand in dismissal.
“Leave us; what can old father time here do to me?” she sneered.
The guards reluctantly withdrew.
“Speak your prophecy,” said Allenna.
Erytheon let the words which he knew were hidden from him come to his unconscious lips.
“Behold! The willing sacrifice of years from Fate’s beloved shall be riven from him to punish the defiler of the child of winter. Let her look in the mirror to see how the fairest of features is ravaged by the age forced on the Snow White child.”
Allenna felt her skin changing, sagging, her breasts suddenly heavy and dragging. She glanced down at her hands, which were wrinkled and unsightly, with age spots. She snatched up the light shield she kept with her arms, and gazed into its mirrored surface, to see an old, wrinkled face, not the dignity or serenity of age on a face which has lived life to the full, but an ugly face full of discontentment, each sour thought echoed by a wrinkle. And before her, Erytheon was de-ageing, becoming a vigorous man of indeterminate age somewhere around the right side of forty. His eyes cleared as hers dimmed with cataracts. She screamed in terror and rage, and picked up her dagger, and drove it home into Erytheon’s chest. His body sank to the ground... and dissolved.
“Guards! Guards!” screamed Allenna Dren.
The guards ran in. There were some clothes on the ground but no old man; there was an old woman, however. They looked at each other, and seized Allenna Dren.
“What have you done to Allenna Dren?” one demanded, roughly. “Who are you?”
Allenna Dren might sob for all she was worth that she was Allenna Dren; but they did not believe her. She was dragged off to the stockade for prisoners, and thrown onto a bundle of straw in the roughly covered, but open-sided prisoner pens. Then they went in search of Thorus Mils.
oOoOo
Moraia embraced her Chosen.
“Well done! I knew you would make all the right choices,” she said.
“I’m still a little confused; I don’t know what I said,” complained Erytheon. “Or why I felt my body burst with vigor before she killed me.”
“You know as well as I do that if made immortal, you keep the age at which you achieve it, even if not ageing any further,” said Moraia. “Well, I cheated. Because you made a sacrifice freely and willingly for another, I was allowed to pass that off onto Allenna Dren; and that was the prophecy. That her ill treatment of that poor child made it possible to exchange her ageing for yours. And I may have gone a teensy bit further than what you gave.” She kissed him. “Now, let us check that Harkon and Thyella do their job properly, and that the Daykaz is on track of when she is supposed to be, and then I’m going to shag you senseless. I’ve been waiting all eternity for you, my promised one, so it will wait a little more.”
oOoOo
Thyella was pacing back and forth.
“Love, you will wear yourself to bits,” said Harkon. “Come over here, and sit on my knee, and tell me how much you love me, and we can kiss and cuddle, and pass the time better than pacing like a cat on hot tiles.”
“I don’t know what to expect, and it unsettles me,” said Thyella. “Hark! That was a chime; is that for us?”
“Time to get involved,” said Moraia, in the thoughts of both of them. “And Erytheon has made a choice which enables me to make Chionea into a baby again, and wipe her memory of pain, so you only need love her and bring her up as your daughter. He has left the glyphs for you to follow; Chionea is essentially in your temple, Thyella. Go and get her.”
Thyella could feel a new temple; hardly more than a chapel, but it counted. She seized Harkon by the hand, and walked into it.
“What is this cage?” she cried.
A baby girl with hair as black as soot, skin as white as milk, and lips like rosebuds opened eyes as blue as ancient ice, surrounded by sooty lashes. She was partly in the clothes of a child of about four.
“Mamamam?” she said, putting up her arms; Thyella scooped her up.
“Come home with Mama and Papa,” she said, picking up the blanket with glyphs, which had constituted a makeshift temple. Harkon took them both in his arms to bring into the temple of Alethos, there not being a dedicated shrine to Thyella in the city.
“Mother! Let it rain!” cried Thyella. “And may my gentle sister, Zephyra, blow and carry away the snow and ice.”
The desultory snow had stopped, and presently a warm, western wind started parting the freezing fog, bringing with it heavy rain.
“And now, Protasian shall release the sluice gates,” said Harkon, happily. “Baby girl, you will be avenged!”
“And by the grace of Fate, she will never know that she needed it,” said Thyella.
oOoOo
Thorus Mils knew Allenna Dren’s family, and had no difficulty in recognising that the hysterical old woman was a Dren; and claiming to be Allenna under some ensorcellment was not a far stretch to make.
“But what is this about an old man, and where is he?” asked Mils, puzzled, once Allenna was back in her own bed, with a hot stone at her feet, and warmed mead to drink.
“He just walked in and said he had a prophecy to give,” said Allenna. “He said, ‘Behold! The willing sacrifice of years from Fate’s beloved shall be riven from him to punish the defiler of the child of winter. Let her look in the mirror to see how the fairest of features is ravaged by the age forced on the Snow White child’ and whilst he grew younger as I watched, I grew older. I stabbed him in rage and outrage, and he... he just accepted it, and his clothes fell to the ground, empty.”
“It’s something to do with the unnatural growth of the brat, isn’t it?” said Thorus Mils.
“I suppose so,” said Allenna. “I did what my goddess told me; hurt the child to make her produce bad weather.”
“I suspect you may have to pray for divine intervention,” said Mils. “I’ll go and check on the child.”
He was back shortly.
“She’s gone,” he said. “The side of her pen has been.... rusted away. I sent people out to look, but there’s worse.”
“Worse? How can there be worse?” Allenna Dren paled. “Our goddess will never heal me of this unnatural ageing if we’ve lost the brat.”
“I had an envoy with a letter from the city,” said Mils. “It reads as follows. ‘From Lightfather Chrysandion Lightspear, surnamed Chrysandos, of the Temple of Solos, to Thorus Mils, commander of the Selenite camp, Greetings. It has come to my notice that Sun-Seer Erytheon Sun-Toucher, surnamed Chrysandos and own brother to me, Chrysandion, insisted on approaching your camp under the trance of true-seeing, with the need to deliver a prophecy. He has not returned, and we demand his return immediately in good health; or at least, his body if you barbarians do not recognise the sanctity of a seer and have caused him harm. He is in frail health being many years my senior. If he has been harmed, we shall, of course, under proper usage, require the perpetrator to be delivered up for justice.’ How in the name of Chaos can I deliver a man or the body of a man who has disappeared? And obviously I cannot deliver you up for having killed him, over such an infamous prophecy.”
“Write back that the impudent fellow used prophecy as an excuse and used some magic to vanish, leaving only his clothes, and has stolen a child, an innocent, who is dear to us, a little girl some four years old, with black hair, pale skin, and blue eyes,” said Allenna. “Chide him for pretending to believe in the old man’s motives when plainly he was bent on kidnap.”
“But what if he did not kidnap her? You said you struck him and there is blood on the clothing.”
“What else are we to suppose? Do you think she got out of that cage on her own?”
“No, and I suspect he had others – some of those damned trógling, no doubt, who sneak around seemingly freely. Who knows what toróg messes there are which can turn steel to rust.”
“Well, make a bluff of it and act outraged,” said Allenna.
“Well, I can try,” said Thorus Mils.
Thorus Mils did not expect much of an answer from the Lightfather of Solos, a position respected in all the Empire, as were Sun-Seers. Losing one was a serious breach of protocol.
Chrysandion was outraged, and half crazed with grief.
His brother was helpless without his guide, and he had directed his young guide, a nephew to both of them, to go to the Alethosi, leaving him to find his own way to and through the camp. There was no child of that description in his temple, and nobody he questioned had heard of her.
“We must make a sortie and punish them,” he said to Pythas. “Perhaps your people can scout...”
“Chrysandion, read this,” said Pythas, giving his old friend the letter dictated by Erytheon. The Lightfather read it.
“I don’t understand,” he said.
“The child was a child of Ombros, and Erytheon had precise instructions from Fate herself to create a diversion for the rescue of the child; and he has ascended directly to the halls of Fate in reward for faithfully reporting all that she needed,” said Pythas. “I am sorry for your loss, but I rejoice for Erytheon. And the child is with the kin of Ombros.”
“We can’t let this slide, though.”
“We aren’t. Protasion thinks we have another hour before their camp collapses into muddy pits,” said Pythas. “And your duty is to Kaz. She is waiting for you.”
Kaz was indeed waiting, and went quietly with Chrysandion to the Solosi temple.
“We ascend to the god-plane, to send you where and when you need to go, as sunlight can penetrate anywhere,” he said. “Do you know what you have to do?”
“Not in detail, no,” said Kaz. “I expect it will be one of those things like sudden chimes that I know without knowing, which I will know when I get then.”
“Get then?”
“Well, isn’t the timing about more than the place?” said Kaz. “Then and there become the same thing.”
“Don’t give me more of a headache; I had enough of one calculating the ritual.”
“I am grateful,” said Kaz. “How difficult can it be, go back in time, confront Daze, make him think of trógling to start the being of my people, insult him enough to curse me, come home.”
“I suppose for heroes it is that simple,” sighed Chrysandion.
“No, it’s because I’m terrified and trying to kid myself that I’m not,” said Kaz.
“Ah, then I am more hopeful that you will succeed. I wish you good luck,” said Chrysandion.