The Fall of Ossard ot-1 Read online

Page 18


  Mauricio the Cabalist said, “To openly walk the streets!”

  Seig, the Kavist whispered, “To build a temple!”

  But all I could think of was my daughter and husband waiting to be slaughtered.

  My family!

  How dare they even consider an alliance! My voice threatened to break as I stood, disturbing the growing acquiescence to the Guildmaster’s idea. “I’ve listened, but can’t agree. Right now I need to get my daughter and husband, that’s what’s important and right. You’ll have to excuse me.” I turned and left.

  I didn’t realise how sick the whole idea made me feel until I reached the corridor. Yes, some kind of alliance might seem best for our people today, but what of tomorrow? How could you trust an ally that had risen to power murdering children?

  I walked down the passage listening to the dutiful footfalls of Sef behind me. His presence was reassuring.

  For now I pushed the matter from my mind. I had other things to think about. We’d prepare and go and get my family and anyone else being held. Right now that was what was important.

  When we reached the courtyard, Sef said, “I’ll go and gather my brethren.”

  I turned and saw my father standing beside him. He’d also left Kurgar’s office.

  I asked, “How much time do you need?”

  Sef smiled. “Not as long as you’d think. If you’re ready to go just wait in the coach, I’ll not be long.”

  My father begged, “Please, this is too dangerous, it’s madness!”

  “Not as mad as what they’re contemplating back there.”

  Sef kept quiet.

  “Juvela, you might be right, and Sef and I both agree with you, but going back into the city after dark and amidst this rioting is insane!”

  “I know it’ll be dangerous, but I have to try.”

  His voice broke, “You said you’d be more careful!”

  “If it was me locked up in a cellar at the age of four with Mother, you’d try and get us too!”

  He sighed. “Please, Juvela, just be careful.”

  Sef offered, “She’ll be well protected.”

  Father gave a reluctant nod and then embraced me before heading back into the Guildhall.

  Sef said, “I won’t be long.”

  I nodded, and then watched him disappear through the compound’s gates into the alleys beyond. His absence would give me a moment to think on Kurgar’s words, so I went back to the coach, greeted Kurt, and then climbed into the cab to sit alone.

  Was I being selfish?

  I knew the answer to that, yet my doubts lingered.

  Would I have come to the same conclusion if my family hadn’t been taken?

  Of course I would.

  The followers of the new saints looked to have links to the Horned God, but did I really know enough about such things to judge? My own faith in Schoperde was innocent and true, yet Heletians also classed her as a power of the dark. Was I just showing the same ignorance?

  Sweet Schoperde, goddess of life and mother of us all, losing a desperate war against Death, please bless me with guidance…

  My prayers were just words, empty wishes for wellness for myself and others, they always had been. What a whimsy. While faith in Schoperde remained common amongst the Flets, there was no longer any organised priesthood, not in Ossard at least – and that meant there were no divine blessings. Schoperde had been cut off from her believers.

  If a god was weakened and unable to provide for its faithful, it only discouraged new believers and even the old.

  Dear Schoperde, goddess of life and mother of us all, I wish for nothing but wellness for you…

  I sighed, my silent prayer drifting through my mind along with a rising feeling of hope and comfort.

  I’d done well…

  I laughed at the notion; as if a god needed my blessing!

  As if indeed!

  As my mirth faded, I became conscious of the sounds of the city. The other side of the river rang out with noise; the cries of fighting and the snap, crack, and roar of hungry flames. Crossing over to rescue Maria and Pedro amidst all this chaos would be risky, even foolhardy, but I did have to try. I wouldn’t be able to live with myself if I didn’t.

  I’d follow Sef’s instructions, after all this was about battle – something of his world. We’d go and be careful, and I’d seek to let my stirring power loose if need be. In the end, I’d brave any risk to free my family.

  And, I wondered; what might happen if we also found Lord Liberigo? If he lived, could he try and reclaim control of Ossard? The Inquisitor and Benefice would have to listen to him, also Kurgar, and even the followers of the new saints.

  There was still hope for the city.

  I waited there in the dark of the coach, running so many things through my mind. The more my thoughts wandered, the more my frustrations deepened. My ability for witchery seemed stunted, yet the Inquisitor had said that the city’s factions were scared of me.

  Why?

  I had no reason to believe anything Anton said, but I did about this. Too many times I’d felt my own power stir, generally when my emotions shifted. It was as though it lay trapped within me. If I was to make a difference to the fate of my family it had to be free to flow.

  I shook my head in irritation. Why did everyone else seem to know so much more about what I was, or what I was going through? Kurgar had said that I’d be trained, yet nothing had happened. They were just empty words that saw me sitting around waiting on other people’s favours.

  The coach door opened, it was Sef. “I’ve found them. They’re just gathering what they need.”

  “How will we cross the river?”

  “Don’t worry, it’s all arranged.”

  I tried to smile, but it faltered amidst my doubts. I wondered; in going would I only succeed in getting myself killed?

  He sensed my unease. “What’s wrong?”

  I shook my head, not sure where to start, but then settled for the obvious. “Why can’t I do anything, I mean magically? I can see into the celestial and feel my power, but I don’t seem able to release it…”

  He held up a hand to quieten me, but my frustration overwhelmed both my manners and patience. “Shouldn’t I be able to start fires or turn people into toads?”

  “Juvela, these things take time. I’ll admit that you’re not following any normal path, but what’s happening in Ossard isn’t normal. Perhaps you need to find your own way and not listen to the advice of others…”

  I snapped, “Don’t say that! I’ve got nowhere by myself in twenty years, what makes you think I’ll get anywhere now?”

  “Did your grandmother’s book help?”

  “Not in the sense of enabling me to do anything. I think it’s made me more acquainted with magic, more comfortable and sensitive to it, but it’s a book of true history, not a book of spells.”

  He sat down and closed the door. “And what of the power you feel?”

  I just shook my head in irritation.

  “What are your feelings about it?”

  “What do you mean?”

  “Do you feel an affinity for anything, for anything of the Cabal?”

  “Like?”

  “Like elementalism; do you feel drawn to the elements?”

  “No, I don’t think so, but I’m not sure I understand.”

  He took my hands in his and patted them. “Where do you feel it, your power?”

  “In the celestial, in my soul.”

  He leaned forward. “And what of your grandmother, is she helping?”

  “I don’t really know.”

  “Sometimes you hear her voice?”

  “Yes, and the others with her, and sometimes even the crack and snap of angry flames.”

  He went on, “She can talk to you, so does she help or just look for opportunities to possess you like back at Market Square?”

  “Sometimes she gives me advice. I hear her words in my mind or have sensations that tell me to be careful. I th
ink she could do more. I wish she would.”

  “Maybe it’s hard for her to talk with you?”

  “Perhaps. Look, I’m glad of her book. I’ve learnt something from it, even if it wasn’t what I thought it was going to be. It’s helped me understand the truths of the world, but not how to use my magic…” I shook my head as my words trailed off into confusion.

  “Juvela, do something for me tonight, and one thing besides trying to save your family?”

  “What?”

  “Open up to your magic – and not just with your heart, but also with your mind and spirit. What we’re going to do isn’t going to be easy. We’ll need any kind of help you can give, and I want you to offer it without any preconceived ideas.”

  I nodded, but remained unsure. “What are you saying; that I’m stopping myself from using my own witchery?”

  “Maybe, because perhaps you’re not a witch.”

  I just looked at him, and then started to shake my head. “Of course I am, I can feel the power and see into the celestial.”

  “So can members of the Sisterhood, spirits, the gods, and their priests.”

  I sat stunned by his words. I couldn’t be any of the first things he’d listed, but a priest?

  Sef watched the confusion run across my face. With tender care he stroked my hands and said, “All I’m asking is for you not to shut your mind to the possibilities. Such open mindedness could make all the difference – all the difference in saving your family.”

  I nodded.

  “We need to go and get ready, but we’ll talk more about this tomorrow.”

  “And what of tonight?”

  “Just relax and do what comes naturally.”

  15

  To the City

  It was after midnight before our party was ready.

  Fires burnt along much of the opposite riverbank, but they seemed to be dying down, and the sounds of riot too. Cloaked in darkness, our group of twenty crossed the Cassaro near the city wall by way of three small boats. It was one of the few stretches of water not illuminated by flames, instead it lay lost under thick drifts of smoke.

  On arrival, we climbed the slime covered river wall to be greeted by an empty but ash-filled street. Sef took the lead and darted across the cobbles to disappear down a shadowed lane. Without a word we followed.

  In our trek, we stuck to winding alleys and cover, walking, running, and even crawling as we sought Ossard’s heart. The Kavists moved with surprising speed, particularly for a group weighed down by arms and armour. I just worked at keeping up.

  I wasn’t used to such rushing, let alone in the dark lanes of the city. Before long a rising tide of adrenalin began to energise me. I tried to keep quiet as I followed, reminding myself with each step or turn that I drew closer to my goal.

  My family!

  The Kavists treated me as one of their own. They advanced with me, acknowledged me, and I realised, expected me to fight. That was sobering. I was no longer in a world of maids, drivers, and bodyguards – this was a harsher and more real life. Only once before had I fought someone; the cultist in Market Square. Tonight I might have to draw blood again.

  Sef had given me a knife and dagger, both of which I’d hidden away in my dark cloak. I knew I’d use them if I had to, by all the gods I’d do anything to get my family back, yet I hoped I wouldn’t have to.

  On our way through smoke-filled alleys, and past occasional burnt out ruins, we also saw other groups. Those dark silhouettes fell away from our larger band, always seeking the safety of other lanes and shadows.

  Sef hissed at us to keep quiet, particularly when others were about. It wasn’t the noise of our armour, boots, or swords that worried him, but our voices. Any Heletian would recognise our accent, and such a thing could be the death of us.

  We moved from alley to alley, only crossing streets and never taking to them, and hoped with our quick and twisting progress to be too hard to track. After a while, it began to seem like we were trapped in an endless maze from some dark nightmare.

  Over time, a change became apparent in the districts we passed through, from the ramshackle buildings next to the flood-prone river to the well-built stone of more prosperous areas. We were getting somewhere. All the while the sounds of riot and flame continued, but remained distant. Finally, like all things, our journey came to an end.

  Sef stopped us and gathered us about. He pointed ahead to where the alley we were in continued after crossing a narrow street. Before long its worn cobbles finished in a dark dead end surrounded by the glum walls of a tall but tired building. He touched a finger to his lips and whispered, “The opera house.”

  We were there!

  I didn’t recognise the building, yet I’d never seen its rear, and certainly not from a back alley after midnight. With a grim smile I savoured how appalled my mother would be.

  It loomed four floors high, with walls marked by missing render, the lowest level, windowless, hosted generous clumps of moss. One thing was certain; the back of the building lacked the grandeur of its front, giving off a more honest air to resemble the bankrupt theatre that it was.

  The cobbled lane wasn’t empty though; it held a timber platform at its very back. The loading dock stood waist high, with crates piled underneath, it backing onto two solid doors chained shut.

  We stood in silence, watching for any sign that the building might be occupied. After a while, one of the Kavists whispered, “Nothing, no guards, not even a candle’s light. No signs of anything.”

  He seemed to be right.

  I slipped my perception into the celestial and searched for Maria, sensing here and sensing there.

  Nothing…

  Deeper and deeper I went, through seas of blue and voids of black.

  Nothing…

  My worries stirred. What if she was asleep, would she be able to sense me? I could only try again.

  Nothing…

  Sef whispered, “Can you…”

  I was already shaking my head.

  He turned to the others. “We’ll be back.”

  Sef led me down the alley and onto the street, it heading to an avenue that would end at the square. It was the same avenue that I’d been on when I’d last connected with Maria. He took me to the same spot, and then checked for anyone watching. “Try again.”

  I did.

  Nothing…

  “Get down on the cobbles like this afternoon.”

  I dropped to the road and gripped the cold stones.

  Nothing…

  My tears came.

  Sef asked, “Might she be asleep?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Try again. Call out to her soul, call out with everything.”

  I did as I tried to use my power.

  Nothing…

  I stood up and shook my head.

  Sef said, “We’ll still go in.”

  “Thank you.”

  He nodded, but grew tense as he searched the surrounding shadows. “We must be careful, the night whispers; we’re not alone.”

  We hurried back to our band.

  The Kavists stood eager and ready. They knew tonight might deliver a fight, but they were also aware that the kidnappers of children would be less than honourable. Surviving such an adversary would require caution.

  Some of them stretched their limbs, while others whispered prayers, yet all tried to hold the quiet that luck had so far allowed. With relief and weapons drawn, we began our advance.

  Though they were warriors who’d shed blood and taken lives, my upbringing made me see them as more than bringers of battle and death. To the Flets of Ossard, Kavists were the defenders of Fletland, and for that we were grateful. We felt we owed Kave a great debt.

  We crossed the street and tried to keep to the dim night’s shadows. Leading us, Sef soon discovered a door halfway along the short alley’s length. We gathered about it, while a young Fletlander dropped to his knees to check the lock and work at it.

  He was about to forc
e it when we heard something behind us; a chuckle from the dark.

  The Kavists turned with raised swords, but there was nothing to see besides the alley and its shadows.

  Sef hissed, “Juvela, get your back to the wall!”

  His tone wiped the surprise from my face. “What is it?”

  “The followers of Mortigi.“

  The God of Murder!

  I found the wall, and planted my back against it.

  And again laughter sounded, this time from the loading dock.

  Sef said, “The light is poor, we must be careful and have faith.”

  The Kavists broke into a chant.

  In the silence that followed the air grew chill, my breath icing up in front of me.

  The coming of magic…

  The alleyway began to brighten under a weak but rising light. The smoke haze cleared to reveal the moon, the great orb’s blue face marked by swirls of white.

  The Kavists uttered a chorus of thanks.

  In answer, a woman’s voice sang a slow counter-prayer, it coming from the dark.

  Sef hissed, “Lady Death.”

  Again laughter sounded from the shadows.

  The moon’s light began to fade, the haze returning to cloak it like a shroud.

  Mortigists killed for pleasure, and to offer the stolen souls as morsels to their cruel lord. They were the antithesis of Kavists who fought out of necessity. They were bitter rivals.

  Damn them, I just wanted my husband and daughter!

  Lady Death purred from the advancing dark, “We’ve been hunting since dusk and claimed many, but I can see blessed Mortigi has saved the best sport for last!”

  Sef spat in her direction. “Sport you can’t handle!”

  Laughter greeted his retort.

  To be so near my goal, only to be delayed fired my anger, and with its stirring my soul’s power began to churn.

  Damn it, my family was so close, but Death’s servants closer!

  It just stoked my fury, yet it wasn’t focused on anyone else, just my powerless self – and that fury began to burn.

  Where was my damned witchery?

  The Mortigists came forward cloaked in the dark that they’d called, the lack of light tilting the balance in their favour.