Sara Douglass – Battleaxe

Oh Jack, it is so sad!‖

Jack stepped close and embraced both tree and Faraday. Faraday began to weep and

laugh at the same time, the tree‘s song was so sad yet so incredibly beautiful. ―They are all

singing to me,‖ she whispered. ―The entire forest is singing to me!‖

Tears squeezed out of the corners of Yr‘s eyes as she watched them. Tree Friend had

been found at last. At last.

Jack stepped back a little. ―Ask of it what you will, Faraday my lovely lady, and if it can

the tree will show you what it can see.‖

Faraday wondered fleetingly how Jack knew her name. She had never mentioned it. What

did she want to ask the tree? Oh yes, Borneheld.

Tell me of my husband, she asked the tree, asking with her heart, not words.

For an instant the song faltered, then it started up again and an image so vivid filled

Faraday‘s mind that the night and the forest disappeared entirely from her sight.

But the vision was not beautiful, and Faraday‘s face crumpled in despair. She was in the

Chamber of the Moons in the palace in Carlon, but now the tables that had been there the night

of Priam‘s nameday banquet had disappeared. The Chamber was bare, save for several hundred

people who stood in a circle around its edges. Their faces were blurry, indistinct, their presence

unimportant except as witnesses to the tragedy about to unfold. She felt herself held by the

strong arms of Jorge, Earl of Avonsdale; although she strained against his arms to be free,

reaching with her arms and hands into the centre of the Chamber, Jorge was too strong for her.

She was crying, terrified by what she saw.

The Tree Song altered, became harsher, and images began to flicker rapidly before her

eyes.

She saw Borneheld, stepping down from the throne. Two men circling, swords drawn,

faces twisted into snarling masks of rage fed by long-held hatreds. Borneheld and Axis. Both

bleeding, both stumbling with weariness. Red. Everything was red. Even the silent watchers

were clothed in a red veil. A bloodied sun hanging over a golden field. The heat. The heat!

Faraday flinched as a gigantic fireball consumed her. Two men circling, trading blows, bleeding.

A feather. Many of them, floating about her. The two men fighting. A mother weeping. A

scream, as if of an angered bird of prey. Swords, notched with use. A heart, beating uselessly. A

golden ring, flying through the air. A scream—hers. ― No!‖ Borneheld lunging at Axis, forcing

him to a knee. Music, strange music, as if stone were being dragged over stone. Blood. Blood,

everywhere. Dark Man watching, crying with laughter. Axis, on his knees, his sword flying out

of his hand and sliding uselessly across the floor. A feather, she felt as if she were choking on a

feather. A woman, beating at prison bars, pleading for release. A darker woman at a table,

keeping tally, watching. Blood—why was there so much blood? Axis? Where was Axis? Faraday

twisted away, gagging in horror. He was covered in blood—it dripped from his body, it hung in

congealing strings through his hair and beard. He reached out a hand, then a great gout of blood

erupted that covered her as well. She could feel it trickling down between her breasts, and when

she looked for Axis all she could see was a body lying before her, hacked apart, and a golden and

white form, as if a spirit, slowly rising behind it.

The chamber rang with shouted accusations of murder and treachery.

And all the time, the blood.

She could feel it, smell it, taste it.

Driven to madness by the feel of the warm blood running down her body, Faraday began

to scream.

She ripped her hands from the tree and screamed and screamed her horror, almost falling

in her distress. Jack grabbed her before she could run away and held her as tightly as he could,

muffling her screams against his chest.

―Naughty tree!‖ he said angrily, glaring at the tree. ―Naughty, naughty tree! You made

the lovely lady cry.‖

Now Faraday was sobbing uncontrollably, twisting feebly to free herself from Jack‘s

arms. Jack tried ineffectually to pat her back. ―Please, pretty lady, sometimes the trees play

tricks, yes they do. They show us only snatches of the truth, not all of it. Sometimes they warp

what is truth, yes they do. Yes they do! ‖ he said, giving the tree another angry glare.

Faraday finally managed to tear herself free. ―It was horrible, Jack. Horrible! I don‘t want

that to happen ever. Ever! ‖ She started to back away from the trees, tears staining her cheeks, then stumbled. ―I wish you had never brought me here, Jack. Go away!‖

Then she was gone, flying through the night, her cloak whipping back from her slim

form, her white nightgown flapping about her legs. Yr gave Jack a reproachful look and then

bounded after her.

Jack watched them disappear into the night, then turned back to the trees. ―Well, my

friends, I don‘t know what you showed her, but you scared her almost to death. Perhaps it was

for the best. She needs to be awoken. She needs to have reason to fight. But I hope you haven‘t

frightened her too much…she is your only hope.‖

16

TWO WHITE DONKEYS

Axis woke feeling more refreshed than he could remember. For a long while he lay in his

sleeping roll, too warm and relaxed to move. Then finally he sat up, slipped quietly out of his

blankets and dressed; Gilbert and the two Axemen were still sound asleep. Stepping out of the

chamber, Axis peered at the rusted iron staircase twisting far above his head into the upper

reaches of the Keep. Eventually he lowered his eyes and walked down the staircase to the ground

floor.

Ogden and Veremund were at the table, arguing quietly but heatedly over a pile of books.

Stuffed saddlebags lay on either side of the table. ―Good morning, Brothers,‖ Axis called.

The two Brothers looked startled, for they had not heard him come down the stairwell.

For one instant Axis thought they were going to bow, but the moment passed and both merely

inclined their heads his way.

―Good morning, BattleAxe,‖ they said simultaneously.

―What are you doing?‖ Axis asked, puzzled by their preparations for a journey.

―We‘ve decided that we must come with you,‖ Ogden said calmly.

―Oh, for Artor‘s sake!‖ Axis swore, annoyed. Not only women but doddery aged brothers

as well? This was too much. ―There‘s really nothing you can do and we‘re moving too fast and

hard for you to keep up. All I need is the information you have about the Forbidden and this so-called Destroyer.‖

Veremund drew himself up to his full height, a good handspan taller than Axis himself,

looking both deeply offended and utterly smug at the same time. ―If we were to tell you all we

know, BattleAxe, we would keep you here a lifetime. And a lifetime you do not have. No, far

better that we bring ourselves, our knowledge, and a few,‖ he turned to glare at Ogden, ―of our

most important books so that we can respond to your queries as we go. What you need to know

now may not be what you need to know once you reach Gorkenfort.‖

Ogden beamed at Axis, folding his hands across his ample belly. His habit looked filthy

in the morning light; mould grew in some of the deeper creases. ―The time has come for us to

leave the Keep, BattleAxe. I‘m sure that Jayme would agree with our decision if he were advised

of it.‖

―I don‘t have spare horses for you to ride out of these Woods.‖

―Oh, we have our own mounts stabled here, BattleAxe. Now, the more speed the better.‖

Ogden rubbed his hands together briskly and turned to his companion. ―Veremund, we simply

must take this volume. It contains vital information about the origins of the Avar people and their

religious beliefs…‖

Axis hesitated, annoyed by the two Brothers‘ casual assumption that they would ride with

him. Then he shook his head. Perhaps Veremund was right. Who knew what new questions he

might have in six weeks‘ time? And if they could not keep up, he could leave them in Arcen with

Faraday and her mother.

Leaving them to argue over what books to take, Axis strolled outside. It was still cloudy,

but it looked as though the rain would hold off for a while. He lowered his gaze to the golden

lake. Not even a ripple marred its surface. Frowning, he squatted down at the water‘s edge and

dipped his hand in. He felt no sensation of wetness, and when he pulled his hand out again it was

still completely dry. He quickly stepped back from the lake, making the sign of the Plough in the

air to ward off enchantments. He would be glad to be gone from this place.

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