“I’ll be watching from the other side.” Avrá said and decided these
would be her last words to him. There had been far more she’d
thought she ought to say, but they all seemed to be fading from her
mind and she favoured the hymn of a song that had come to her three
nights before.
“They were two
Two walking through
Through an invisible war
Cold, and in bliss
Looking for more
Together,
forever in a dream
Both hungry
both freezing
both yearning
One burning
For some God
Or all the stars
Shining brighter
in the north
The north beyond Dabár.”
Though she was only one, she knew it was true that night-visions
and prophecies were seldom as they appeared to the mind, and so, she
chose to put her trust in a far older legend that night. One that said
this compass led each person home to their star. That a chosen few
would find it in the Mirror World, and that once the compass was
brought to its original placement, the disturbances and imbalances
between the worlds would dissolve. Before she sat down in her pulk,
she thanked the dead for showing her what she’d been blinded from
seeing. For as much as she’d hoped that this boy, one she’d thought she
might love, would be coming with her, it was all too clear to her now,
that Devus Teague did not search for stars or gods. Not for peace and
not for balance. No, he was still much too distracted with knowledge
and with himself, to crave for both higher and deeper truths.
“I curse you Avrá. I curse you! You are more terrible than I am for
what you’re doing!” Her rein started running and was pulling her
forward towards the mountain. Devus stumbled forward a few steps
more, though it was and felt utterly pointless. As she became a
shrinking dot in the far, he started screaming. It was such a loud
sound that he for a moment thought they’d hear him all the way to the
fortress, but he did not care. He yelled vicious curses her way.
Damning her both in common Araktéan and her tribal language.
Damning every moment they’d spent together and every single tale
she’d told him – calling them lies and delusions. Calling her a loon and
a sorceress. He cursed her past and future and wished her to go
through all the seven hells of Araktéa and whatever hells this Mirror
World might have in store. His rage was so strong that his limbs and
heart were hurting by the end of it.
At last, he lost his breath – his throat bloody from all the
damnation and the cold air’s response to it. Falling to his knees in
exhaustion, he heard a cracking sound. The ground started bouldering
in a similar way he remembered it once had, when the council had
taken them to see a herd of wild buffalos. “When they feel a storm
coming, they run straight through it to reach the other side faster.“
His father had explained. Now, as Devus raised his heated head, he saw
the whiteness of the Khantalin mountain moving in the distance
and out of the perfect silence of the Dabárian night, a huge block of ice
fell to the ground. Then another, and yet another. What was coming,
was by no means a storm that anyone could run through, and so
Devus got to his feet and he ran straight south. He ran as fast as his
feet could carry him through his past footprints. Finally reaching
Redric’s body (pale and half-conscious) he was gasping for air.
“Redric!” He demanded, as the avalanche was coming closer and
closer. He’d spotted a small hillside with an opening eighty yards
away or so. Maybe, if they were lucky and inhumanly quick, they’d be
able to get there in time.
“Wake up!” Devus yelled, slapping his stupid face and finally his
eyes opened.
“Damn you Teague. Damn you for damning us all.” Redric muttered,
for though still barely conscious, he sensed that whatever was
coming, it was something ruthless. Something that did not care for
mortality, or to spare the innocent. For once, Devus had no cunning
reply for him. Instead, he gathered all his remaining strength and did
what he could to pull him up. Redric stumbled and with their best
efforts, they started moving towards the hillside. Next to them, the
large masses of snow and ice increased in speed and were soon out-
roaring Redric’s moaning. A few sluggish steps, and it was as if every
last bit of noise had been removed from their ears. They’d been taken
by a long, endless high-pitch sound, unlike any instrument, bird or
girlish outburst any of them had ever heard. It seemed like something
of a passage to an absolute void, and they both wondered if this was
how death or hell or the end of all things might sound. With his sight
focused on every shaking step, Redric couldn’t know how close they
were - not to their salvation nor their death - but Devus hadn’t ceased
to see or to calculate. As the white masses approached, faster and
hungrier every moment, any other person with such an accurate logic,
might have given in due to what seemed to be a complete
impossibility. But Devus was far too furious to die, and so he used all
his heat, all his anger and ferocity, to keep moving. Screaming,
pushing and cursing words that couldn’t be fully heard by human
ears, he leaped forward. Redric’s large body, lagging just next to him
like a grand burden of morals and ethics. Just as the huge, white wave
washed the landscape, and all the marks they’d left behind them clean,
they both fell forward into the hill’s shelter they observed, breathing
heavily as the avalanche rushed like a great ocean next to them. So
white it was nearly blinding. Ferocious, vicious and gorgeous all at
once. The relief lessened their pains and fears for a short while, but
only until nature had stilled and the night had silenced once again.
The air still seemed tense and cruel, like an ice cold warning and a
reminder that they were no longer welcome.
“Now, we need to get back home before we freeze to death. Can you
walk?” Devus asked and Redric sent him a miserable and angry look.
“Can you stumble then?” He nodded, and so this was what they
did. Step by step, through the white dunes, with Redric’s leaving a
thin stream of red behind him. “A great sacrifice to the mighty Earth.”
Devus sensed Avrá would’ve commented had she still been among
them. He’d dared to look back as he’d ran, to see whether her rein
could get her out in time, but they’d been too close to the wall. It
seemed to him their world had claimed both of them before they could
leave it.
“You’re a bastard Teague.” Redric broke the silence after some time.
“Yes.” Devus said, then considered whether he meant a common
bastard or if this was the best he could do in insulting him. His
parents had never wed – that was common enough knowledge.
Something people seemed to have forgiven if not outright ignored.
Perhaps it was just the pain, but Redric’s face looked more hostile
than Devus had ever seen it before and though it seemed the wrong
time for it, it felt like a small accomplishment.
“You wanted to leave me there for good – didn’t you?”
“As for the now, I’m saving your life Redric, so that’s hardly fair...
we both wanted to get the compass back - remember?”
“At this pace, I’m actually quite sure I’ll die. If so, I need you to know,
if you can’t understand this with that brilliant brain of yours – all of
this is on your conscience. If you have one, that is.” He said, sounding
more aggravated than in despair by the fact that he might die. Devus
on his end, thought he was being a bit dramatic.
“Don’t be such a child, it’s just a scratch and you came with me
willingly. Besides, I haven’t even given you a hard time about losing
my father’s compass, so you be&er watch your tone.” Redric made
something in-between a snarf and a laugh.
“You... you son of a witch.” He said between tight lips. “You don’t
care about anyone do you, Teague? I know we might not be friends
but...” There was a pause. Both of them panted as they made their
way through the thickness of winter and ancient pieces of ice. Aching
in limbs and bones they’d never given much a&ention to in their
young lives, and to Devus’ surprise it didn’t bother him much. In fact,
having escaped death with such elegance thrilled him somehow.
“I’ve always defended you. Devus. I always came to your defense
whenever someone made cruel claims about your mother, but from
what I saw and heard tonight, perhaps it’s all true...”
“Oh, well thank you Sir for defending my fine reputation.” Devus
said, not bothering to guess which rumor he might be referring to. He
despised common gossip, and cringed by Redric’s need to showcase
just how damn noble he was. The truth was that there was a hatred
inside of him. One he was refusing to admit too, even now, in what he
seemed to think would be his final hours.
“Many say she was a loon, Devus - an actual sorceress. That she
took Nicholas under her control, made him fall in love with her and
give her a child. One that would corrupt the movement and create
chaos. And tonight you...”
“Ha! Now, that’s a proper cock and bull story, Redric. I might be a
bastard in all other aspects, but if you think I can control the snow
and move mountains...” Devus chuckled.
“How would you be so sure of what malice you might be capable of,
if your mother never lived to teach you?“ Devus snarfed again. She
had passed before he’d go&en the chance to even remember her face, so
he did not know. But it seemed ridiculous. Out of all the things he’d
ever wanted to know about, his mother’s origin was something he’d
given up on quite early. Nobody ever talked about her, and it seemed
such a small and irrelevant subject compared to everything else there
was to learn about.
“I’ve read through all the council’s records from that period. There’s
not a word about any sorcery and my mother’s name is barely
mentioned. She didn’t even take part in the council.“
“Our records don’t all need to be accurate. What if you....”
“Bloody hells, Redric. You’re seriously suggesting I’m an actual son
of a witch. And here I’ve been, thinking you have no sense of humor or
imagination.” Devus laughed now, and this only made Redric more
superstitious and infuriated. Devus had always been different. Redric
had figured he just felt a li&le misplaced and he’d even felt for him, but
there seemed to be more to it.
“You called for death and all sorts of hells upon that girl. I might
only have been half-awake but I heard it.”
“I was furious with Avrá - so I screamed. At worst, the avalanche
was a natural effect of the sound waves. Also, I’d love to hear more of
your hero tales, but if you want to survive so badly, you might want
to focus your energy on walking.” Redric bit his lip. There was a
genuine part of him that wanted to warn Devus about what he might
be capable of. He was always so bloody observant, yet he almost
seemed untouched by what had just occurred. And then there was
another part of Redric. One that was angry, and mostly wished Devus
would feel bad about what he’d done, if not even who he was.
For the final miles leading to the tunnels, none of them spoke a
word. Phee awaited them there and since she’d suspected they’d get
into trouble, she’d brought all kinds of aids and remedies. It was quite
possibly due to her efficiency that Redric didn’t end up bleeding out
that night, for his wound had both stretched and deepend and the
cold hadn’t been merciful. “I told you this wouldn’t go well, you
fools.“ She didn’t say it as viciously as she’d planned to, and Devus
observed as Redric’s eyes turned bright and so full of gratitude
towards her, it seemed to have been worth a night of unpleasantries.
Observing his peers, Devus wondered whether he’d ever feel such an
intense affection towards another person. He thought of Avrá. Of how
she might be buried out there, deep under the snow bed - too deep for
him to dig out. She could’ve survived it – everything was possible -
but it was unlikely. Perhaps the compass was still out there too.
Frozen into her li&le hand. But he sensed she was gone from this
world, and as the thrill of having escaped death wore off, he for once
felt himself on the very edge of exhaustion.
He and Phee got Redric to his bed and then each went to their own,
just in time before dawn. All the while their peers slept heavy and
clueless in their beds. None of them would learn of the vile adventure
on the next day or in the years that followed. The very moment Devus
felt himself fading into sleep he could hear a voice merging from his
own mind. “You called upon the forces tonight and now Avrá is gone.“
It was not a memory of Redric’s accusation (his opinions usually went
in one ear and out the other), no, this was quite another voice. A
familiar one that had always seemed to be occupying a space inside of
him. It’d been quiet for some time, but he always trusted it’d return,
and it wasn’t entirely unwanted. Though sometimes cruel, he could
always rely on its honesty and so, he’d long since decided that he
respected it. It went on to say that he had not loved Avrá. Though he
had momentarily (while they were walking and things had seemed
good), wished that he could, he now felt relieved to hear this. You
should grieve the loss of loved ones. Instead, he was filled with fury
about the many ways she might have deceived him and wondering
who could possibly tell him about the Aragáti now that she was gone.
That could not be love. If so, love was such a cold and deceiving thing,
that he wanted nothing to do with it.
The last thing he thought as he turned to his back to sleep was:
“What if I’m truly less human and more something else...” Finally,
deep asleep he could hear the Aragáti's ancient songs and drums - like
long, heavy sounds of grief. The world seemed to know it had lost
something treasurous that night, and that there was no easy way of
getting it back. But the sadness that entered him there, in the best in-
between he could currently access, was mostly like a distant breeze.
One that couldn’t be grasped or even remembered when he awoke. In
the morning they all gathered for breakfast as usual. Everyone but
Redric, who said he’d been practicing his fencing at night. That’d he’d
been uncareful, and that in the darkness he’d managed to pierce
himself. Though his eyes had flickered and the tale seemed strange,
their teachers had believed him (Redric never lied after all) and they
brought all kinds of herbal remedies to heal the wound. His recovery
would be slow and painful, but not worse than his worry about being
confronted, punished and shamed for what they’d done that night. For
what they’d lost. With far less care and anxiety, Devus awaited
similar events - the chase that would always follow when something
precious went missing in the fortress, but they would both be waiting
long and in vain.
Never would they learn that Nicholas Teague had discovered the
missing item, as they’d been right below his feet. It had taken him less
than an instant to suspect his son. As he’d sighed, shut the drawer and
walked around his study for what seemed an eternity, unusual ideas
had come to him. As unacceptable as he considered the theft, any
mention of the compass would bring about far more complications
than resolutions. Questions he had no desire, nor enough
understanding to answer to. There was a deep guilt tied to the thing,
and he was at part relieved it was out of both his sight and
possession. It did not belong to him. It had never been his, and though
he didn’t believe it had fully belonged to that woman (one he’d falsely
called Delilah Bailey) either, she had both brought and left it behind
there. Nicholas Teague seldom found any counsel in Araktéan law, but
for once, on that strange night with a blood red moon glaring at him
through his window, the law of inheritance eased his conscience.
Perhaps it was not completely wrong to interpret that the compass
belonged to his son - or that he’d taken it. For all he knew, it was
meant to lead him wherever it was that he needed to go. Perhaps to
find that missing piece, just like the Parda had once told Nicholas that
he would, all those years ago. “Time will tell.” He’d thought, and his
decision had been made and his head finally met his pillow. He would
think the very same thing, each time Devus walked by him in the
hallways. Every time their eyes met and on the rare occasions that
they spoke - as his strange son would smile, and not a single shade of
guilt or concern touched his features. As many moons passed, they’d
both be relieved to see less and less of each other, as Devus would
resume reading his books and wandering through his tunnels at
night. Thinking hard and deep of many things that were simpler to
grasp than the secrets that might be buried within his veins. Dark
secrets that he’d someday - some day soon - would be dying to learn.