Devryn - Chapter 14 "The Bridges We Build"





Devryn - "The Bridges We Build"

We looked down on the entry gate to the massive stone bridge.  The twin spires reached skyward with its thoroughfare pinned between, spanning across the deep gorge to another pair marking its completion on the other side.  Time had not crippled this edifice, only blotched the surface in ochre stains.  A testament to the long-forgotten craftsmen. 

The Fates smiled on us this day, as it seemed only restless soldiers hid among the patches of stone and trees along the road that led up to its arcades.  Could count no more than eight on random mounds, sprawled out under makeshift lean-tos.

I sighed in exasperation as I rested my chin on my hands, scanning to be sure the she-elf had not found her way here.  Persistent.

“We can take those guys.  No problem,” Seth turned to look at me, his sunburned nose and cheeks a bright pink.

“But do we want to?  Leaving bodies?”

“Dump them below.”

I peered out, “Probably should not let anyone think we passed through here.  Keep them guessing.”  Caution should temper this decision.  The Graud Vuasari Bridge makes a reliable choke point, and would let my pursuers mark my westerly progress.  The Vuasari River cut through the steppes, traveling north and south when this far north.  The stubborn river lacked that temerity to dry up, years of fashioning a rocky canyon to mark its dominance.

A climb down echoed in my head as not the worst idea.  But it would be the swim across that would most likely kill us, though.  A plunge in its fast-moving waters, pressing you against the jagged walls on either side, if not grinding you to meal on the rocks below.

“What do we do?” Seth whispered.

I shook my head, “You know they can’t hear you at this distance?”

Raina clicked her tongue, “We can’t go around.  A day, at least, either way”.

She was right.  There were fording points about a day north and a highly patrolled bridge by Prince Messra’s soldiers almost two days south.  The canyon did have safer areas to swim, where Vuasari’s rapids were lessened between the wider gaps.

“I’m a bit hungry and would like a warm bed.  Or, at least something over my head for a night.”  I added.  “Inna Bogarta is long-days walk west of here, with some manors along the way.  Plenty of opportunities to rest and mend”

Looking at Seth’s face, beyond his reddened cheeks, his features had dulled and grown a bit pasty.  The constant exposure to the steppe marred his jovial visage.  He could prance about all he wanted but death comes in all forms.

“We could wait them out,” Seth offered.

Raina looked to the scene and back again.  “They are all positioned off the bridge.  We could skirt the canyon and get behind them.  They should be expecting… you to come up on them from that direction,” nodding to the road.  “We should wait for dark to cross.”

I looked at her, a moment too long, “Hmm… okay.”

Seth smiled one of those teeth-filled smiles.  I’m starting to not like that smile.

With that, we each found spots under the stunted trees, a poor attempt to get out of the sun while staying warm from the frosty air.  The others lounged, sleeping when they could, as we waited for nightfall.  As inconspicuous as I could make it, I began examining the tattoos.  They were all over my body… arms, legs, feet.

Getting curious, meatbag?  I could feel a sharp nail prick my foot as I looked at a swirling set of lines that ran along the inside of my foot.

Pulling on the boot, I felt you were near.

Yeah, meatbag should.  I couldn’t see him but furrows in the sand showed clawed feet next to my leg.

Where have you been?

Around, he purred with an odd, guttural hum.

Molesting things, I imagine.

I could almost hear his lips curl into a grin.

Please, explain to me what is going on.

You are being hunted by an angry elf…

Look, you flying piece of..., my anger rose and I could see a retreat in the sand.  With this! I said in a huff, lifting my jerkin a little to expose the intricate lines and swirls of blue.

Master, I am not.  But what I have seen, you are marked by the Trebeche an’ Winsunik circle of affirmation.

The swirl?  The first tattoo?

Yes.  It opens your… The imp passed, no word for your tongue… but, maybe a gate or door, I think.

I sat there soaking it in.  The cool wind made my exposed arms rise in goosepimples.

The pointy ear, she go to do something.  Bam!  She, like… sucked in.  Never seen that before.  The imp kicking a loose stone only echoed the nonchalance in his tone with the last statement.  You might die.  A chuckle fluttered in my mind and I heard its wings flap and he left me to my thoughts.


*   *   *   *


Night fell.  The evening calls from the tiny steppe birds quieted and left a calm among the sandy dunes.

I dozed in and out.  Flashes of the elf mage writhing in pain waking me twice.  The creature’s words still hung in my brain, she was sucked in.  They could not seem more truer based on the dried husk that was left behind.

Seth alerted me that they were ready to go.  I joined them as they found our previous vantage point, looking out onto the bridge.  One moon sat low in the sky leaving everything in a near-inky blackness.  My vision battled between my normal sight and perceiving everything in muted grays, depending on where the light touched.  A throb began to pulse behind my eyes.  Not used to this.

“No campsite,” Seth said.

“A sign they are waiting for something… or somebody,” I added.

We climbed down and stalked over to the edge of the gorge.  Every step made with caution as the sand seemed tense and ready to betray us at any moment. 

Hushed voices picked up in volume as we drew closer to the road.  A lookout position on top of a neighboring mound alerted us to our nearing the mouth.  Seth led the way, often melting into the deep shadows and brush.  Raina next, her footfalls also demonstrated her talent to be quiet when she wanted.  I could not keep their pace as my boots seemed to scream in my ears, like an ox dancing on a wood floor. 

The stone pillars of the bridge came into the sight in the gloom, promising our finish to this game.  Seth climbed down into the gorge, briefly disappearing in its maw, and then back into view as he scaled the side of a bridge support. 

Raina took the safer route of edging over the bridge’s sidewall, swinging her feet over on her belly.  As I stepped up to mimic her maneuver, the palm of my left hand began to itch.  The pinch of small needles prickling my flesh would not stop.  I swung over, looking as Seth skirted the wall, heading away, with Raina in tow.  To his right, I made out a small urn sitting in the middle of the bridge, blanked in the blackness, but gray to my eyes.

Crap.

“Tssss…  Seth,” I risked a hard whisper.  He kept moving.  Keeping low, I hurried to catch up.

“Seth, stop…”  I watched as the seal along the urn’s cap turned bright red, then a vivid yellow.  A fiery eruption burst forth.  Seth slammed into the stone, collapsing to the ground.  Raina, from the force, was flung upward and over the low wall, her hands desperately grabbing for a purchase.

I rushed over, locking my hands on her wrists as she dangled above the hidden abyss below.  Her eyes pled to mine in fear, don’t let go.

With a heave, I pulled with everything I had.  Her light frame came freely, her legs lifting over and scrambling to stand.

When she stood safe, it was too late for me to hear the scuffing of boots on the bridge to realize the full threat.  I turned to see men running up, bows drawn. 

I flung my jacket free, ready to pull my blade.  An arrow loosed.  It found my upper chest.  Pain washed over me, and with all the momentum and movement, my hip rolled against the wall, and over I went.

Devryn – Interlude 2 "Reverence"




Devryn – "Reverence"

I stood next to my father; his stern look held forward.  He smelled of incense and campfire smoke from the brief night’s rest before our early morning arrival.  His worn, leather glove engulfed my eight-summer hand with a gentle firmness I was not often afforded.  We stood quiet as the service to honor the passing of Matron Enbeyi settled into a lull after the string of mourning hymns.  The low hum of the hilltop breeze filled the spaces between us.

The mass of attendees was the largest I had seen for a final turn of the wheel gathering, if not ever.  Word must have spread among the nearby troupes, and then even further.  So many strangers, but yet acting as if a familial bond existed with their words and embraces.

Seviyorn, a troupe elder, chose a distant set of hills in the Banthatalik Plains for the site.  Among the violet-grass sea, a wagon wheel half-buried in a bed of pink and white wildflowers marked her passing so the gods could not ignore her memory.

The service came to an end with the murmur of voices whispering in unison their private memories of her.  I watched my father’s mouth move to quieted words as he shared his.  The heralding wind carried them off to the underworld, to the Valdayian Lands, the place of unparalleled beauty that awaits our return.

Enbeyi’s oldest daughter stood to the front in a crimson and yellow dress, her hair pinned up with silver needles and flowing ribbons entwining her two loose tresses.  Father said they were a traditional family, and her daughter was to adopt Enbeyi’s name.  The Perussians believed in the longevity of a family’s fortune can be gifted to them by the Fates, knowing that the thread cannot be cut if the name remains.  I could never take my father’s name; how could I ever be like my father...

“We give praise to the Fates,

Atashey for balancing the scales of duty.

Weh for the gifts bestowed with the soul-bound thread.

Datena for the eternal winds that carry their whims.

Laffandey for the hands that weave the quilt of life.

Woovorne for the reflection of ourselves and our family.

Curchuriv for the inspiration that fills our hearts.

Sessudrey for the prudence to cut what must end.”


Devryn - Chapter 13 "Let Them Rest"





Devryn - "Let Them Rest"

One of the advantages to traveling across the Restorae Steppes was the lay of the land.  Consistent stretches of passable trails when wanting to avoid anyone on the main road.  And right now, I felt the need to hide from the world.

I watched Seth have one of his odd episodes, attempting to break the monotony.  In the soldier’s uniform he liberated from the camp, Seth skipped between steps, poorly whistling a quick-paced tune.  If memory served, it’s sounded similar to “The Ferryman’s Wife”.  I heard it plenty of times on the road as a child, a reminder of a distant past.  Perussians enjoyed filling their evenings with song and dance when on those never-ending roads, and a way to share and teach our traditions.  At this point of my life, I could believe Seth more a Perussian in blood than I.

Next to Seth walked the stranger, since an introduction was not forthcoming.  Her dark hair laid in waves down her shoulders, the soft hiss of her supple leathers in rhythm with her pace.  I hadn’t quite got a read on her, but she was quick with a blade and buckler combo.  Only spared words were shared between anyone after our hasty exit.  Exhaustion held our tongues to this point since after walking through the night, putting distance from the camp… and that crazed spell-slinging elf. 

“You sure you know what you are doing?” Seth spun on the ball of his foot in the sand to look back at me.

Our course remained steadily westward, towards Inna Bogarta.  I used a trick I learned when crossing here a few times before to make sure that was the case.  Take a landmark and make it your guide.  At night, find north and pick one of the brighter stars as a marker, keeping it resting on your right shoulder.  Clouds can make that difficult, but the Fates blessed us with a clear sky last night.

 “Yes.  Navigating this barren rock pile is simple enough… if you know how to look.”

The packed sand continued to crunch under foot as we made our way.  Looking north, I could not see the actual road but knew it lie not far off, maybe over a mile.  The land laid flat enough to get a decent line-of-sight at larger distances, but the numerous sand and briar mounds fashioned a maze-like underworld.  Only the peaks sat visible, a sea of drab browns and greens, a desolate sea rimmed with rock-faced mountains.

Earlier this morning, before the sun rose, I began to feel a pinch in my left hip.  When I had the chance, I checked the spot for a wound or bruising during a brief pause.  The ache, just above my beltline, felt warm to the touch and pressing on it was slightly annoying.  It also marked the location of a tattoo, a black-inked lizard spiraling inward with its tail spinning outward.

Behind a nearby mound, the remnants of a covered wagon came into view.  Perussians must have either passed through or camped here at some point.  The back end and top were missing, leaving short strips of iron, used to reinforce the frame, pointed skyward.  The cart’s body sat on two pillars of gathered stones, wheels removed on either side.  The once colorful exterior stripped of its painted menagerie from the wind-blown sand and time.

“One of your people?  Someone you know?”  Seth looked over while thumbing the decrepit wagon.

“Yes, Seth.  All Perussians know one another.”

Seth’s mouth broadened into a wide grin, teeth whiter than you would expect of a Tressian city-dweller.

“I’ll remember this when we get to Inna Bogarta,” I chided back.

 “Well, it’s time for a break,” the stranger’s sharp words gave no room to disagree.  Seth shrugged his shoulders and backed into a seated position on a mound.

Suddenly feeling the exhaustion leach into my legs, I sat with a low moan.  Since the fight and fleeing, everything passed quickly in succession, leaving my recollection a blur.  An uncomfortable knot in my stomach left me feeling uneasy about everything that happened.

I centered myself and played out everything again in my mind, only pausing and replaying the parts I felt needing further attention.  Tressian soldiers, for whatever reason, camped at the surface entrance to an underground city.  To add, a pair of elven mages aiding in their endeavor to explore the city.  Or, could be the other way around.  I could not recall a house emblem or a tattoo.  Maybe rogue mages?

“Seth, do you know why the prince’s soldiers were camped there?”

Seth dropped his gaze to his dark-haired friend, who in turn looked up at him.  “Lookin’ for something is what I heard.  Those hairy monster were making it tough, though.”

His friend’s stare returned to me, looking for a reaction or something.  Or, something more.  For the first time, I got a chance to take in the ill-disposed lady’s details.  Her hair framed a face darkened by the sun but still softer than I would imagine.  No notable age lines to guess an age and her hazel eyes betrayed her Tressian heritage.  Her leathers fitted her body proportionally, definitely fashioned for her frame.  Wealthy or a prized soldier?   

Seth continued, “You find anything interesting?  Lovely jacket and blade you got there.”

“Thanks,” I grabbed at the lapel.  “Just some left behind junk.”  Never for being one to show proper grace, “What’s your name?” looking to her steely eyes.  “We haven’t been introduced.”  I tried to give a pleasant smile.  “How do you two know each other?”

Seth laughed awkwardly as she answered, “Raina.  From years back in Trevista.  We grew up on the same streets.”  Her voice, finally not in a commanding tone, sounded lighter but still firm.

“That must have been a treat.  I barely know him and have almost died… too many times.  Has he always been this way?”

“Always.”

My sore spot jolted me with a tweak.  Standing up, I lifted my shirt.

“So, I don’t remember you having all those tattoos, Devryn,” Seth’s eyebrow raised in inquiry.

“No, you shouldn’t.  Not even sure where to begin… or how.”

Raina pointed at the sore spot, “I’ve seen that before.  They use those on messengers.”  Her serious tone did nothing to help.

“The ladies use those to insure messengers pass along their reports.  I understand they are deadly if you don’t...”  She looked away, “If you believe what those snake-tongued harpies want you to believe.”

“I wasn’t given any message.”

“No doubt,” she retorted.  “It’s magic.  You have to be in front the person the message is meant for.  Then you gab whatever they wanted you to say, not remembering a thing afterwards.”

Wanting to change the subject, “Where did you learn to fight?”

She looked up from her hands as they tore a leaf along the center seam, “Trained in Prince Mesra’s army.”

“They are quite adept at swordplay, I see.  And hire rogue mages?”

“I guess.  And you?  Where did you learn?”

“My father,” I lied.  Might as well, since she probably was.

Seth broke in, “What happened to Tae?  He in the camp?”

“He should be.  We came in pretending to be messengers and they sent us off to check in.”  I left out the incident during the night with the company.  Tae-gron took a hard hit, but he should heal up fine after the earthen channeler’s attention.

“So, you were down there?” Seth asked with a bit of excitement.  “See anything?  Find anything?”  His glib tongue said more to his true nature.

 Looking past her, I noticed a wagon wheel half-buried in the sand.  Getting up and walking over, legs a little wobbly, two more at the base of the next mound.  The rotted wood arced upward, iron tacks and pitted bands with a coat of rust.  A prickly bush with delicate yellow flowers, swaying in the cool breeze, contrasted the grim significance of the wheel.

“Woah, weird,” Seth exclaimed as he went to pass.

I shot out my arm, “You shouldn’t step further.  These are grave markings.”

Seth stopped.

“My people use the wheels to honor the dead.  To also symbolize the turning from this world to the next, the underworld.  And, said to be bad luck to step on.  The Fates do not take kindly on those who tread on their memory.”  A pause.  “Something like that…,” I added, smiling to Seth to lighten the mood. 


Raina, now standing to the other side, placed her hand on my shoulder.