Chapter 40
I ’m herded through a warren of tunnels to the beat of the pounding gong, the thick, stagnant air becoming easier to inhale only moments before we spill into a big, dusty crater. My eyes bulge at the impossible height and width—large enough to cram four coliseums in here and still have room to move.
It’s as though something collided with the ground with such velocity the stone was displaced.
Frowning, I recall Kaan’s earlier words …
I spent most of my adolescence and a number of my later phases as a warrior of the Johkull Clan. They have always nested close to these mountains and recently claimed the crater formed by the fallen Sabersythe moon, Orvah.
Guess that’s what this is. Orvah’s crater. The small moon that fell a little over eight phases ago.
Folk pour into the space behind me and my prowling Herder like gushing water, and my mind churns as I take in the chapped surroundings.
There are tents dotted about the circumference, each sturdy structure consisting of four wooden poles plowed into the ground and a flap of patched leather stretched between them—forming a roof. They cast rectangular shadows occupied by woven rugs and many clay urns etched with glowing runes.
Between the tents are a number of wooden racks stacked with weapons, most of which I’ve never seen before: batons with a length of chain attached to the end, topped with spiked balls that look like they could shatter a skull; giant hooked swords; and small flat blades with pearly teeth mounted around the edge. So many weapons it makes Ruse’s armory look juvenile.
The crater’s blanketed with a stretch of sand, though when I look at the grains sifting through my toes as I’m escorted around the perimeter, I notice gray shards amongst the rusty majority.
Iron. To nullify those who can hear the elemental songs, no doubt.
I frown, then cast my stare at the powdery sky threaded with the aurora’s wispy silver tendrils, a scatter of inky Sabersythe moons perched in the distance. The crater’s lip bears a crisscross of fraying rope heavy with skulls—most sun-bleached. One with shreds of decomposing meat and tufts of hair still hanging off the bone, a small tawny-colored bird perched on it.
Pecking at it.
My heart skips a beat.
Unlike the skulls in the tent we just came from, these ones are not from fallen animals. They have rounded heads and tapered canines, the fresher one retaining the rotten remnants of a tapered ear.
They’re fae .
Creators … This is a battle ring.
Is that what my trial is? Am I expected to fight?
The tips of my fingers tingle, unease slithering through me like a serpent.
The gong continues to sound as I’m guided further around the crater’s circumference, past tent after tent, the folk before us threading into a large dome-shaped one similar to those I saw in the chest cavity of the fallen dragon. Though this one’s much bigger than them, and with many entrances, each framed by more of those intricately crafted archways.
Saiza stops before one opening, pulling a woven flower from one of the few baskets dotted around the tent, offering it to me. “Would you like to honor Orvah?”
My heart leaps so high up my throat the next words are choked. “The fallen Sabersythe?”
Saiza nods, smiling softly. “He did not break apart upon impact. It took many warriors to roll him to the crater’s side. We now pay him great respect in the hopes that no other moon will fall on our place of living.”
Pulse pounding hard and fast, I accept the flower, cutting a glance back at my oscillating Herder who cranks its muzzle and yawns again, skulking toward one of the doorways and curling into a sleepy ball.
Guess that’s permission.
Swallowing, I push my hand between the tent’s flaps, steady my breath, then step inside, drawing on the hot, humid air trapped beneath the pelts.
My heart stops.
Nestled amongst the sand before me is the most spectacular mottled moon. Like the Sabersythe was rolled through puddles of black and bronze ink that sunk into his small, overlapping scales.
The backs of my eyes prickle as I take him in, his slight stature and lack of spikes a tribute to his adolescence. The dragon’s left wing is swooped around his body, his sparsely tusked head dug only partially beneath it, still exposed enough that I can see almost an entire half of his face, his lid closed. Looking like he just slipped into a quiet, peaceful sleep he’ll never wake from.
One of my frayed heartstrings pangs at the thought, because this dragon … he’s so small . A little under twice my height. Just big enough to support a rider, as evident by the damaged remnants of a saddle secured to his scaled back.
It feels like a hand claps around my neck and squeezes tight.
Tighter.
Although some dragons choose to soar into the sky when they feel their time has come to an end—to ball up and solidify—many don’t make that decision on their own.
Many are devastating victims of wars waged by us .
Then there are the ones that don’t make it into the sky at all. That die in the dirt or the snow or the sand and rot where they lie, their blood fossilizing. Later mined by us.
Used by us.
I reach out a hand, pausing just before my fingers are able to brush across the stony scales as a mourning presence deep inside urges me to turn around. To stop looking.
No, not an urge.
A gentle probing request .
A plea .
Clearing my throat, I drop to a kneel and settle my woven flower on the ground at the dragon’s base like others are doing, adding to the growing piles of offerings—old and new. Then I listen to that plea. Respect its desperate, mournful request.
I turn around, and I don’t look back.
I ’m led upon a raised dais beneath a patch of shade—relief for my already chapped skin.
I look at my feline non-friend who coils up beside me, releasing a satiated rumble. It tucks its face beneath its long, bushy tail and appears to go to sleep.
I’m obviously not expected to fight. Otherwise, it would’ve herded me right into the ring.
Surely.
Folk finish paying their respects to Orvah, then pack into the slabs of shadow. The two blood-soaked males kneel before me, the larger one lifting a necklace up over his head. He bows, hand outstretched, and my eyes narrow on the black pendant engraved with a serpent. The same image as the one dotted on his back.
The pendant hangs from his clenched fist, swaying in the dusty wind, reminding me of the one Kaan wears—though less intricate.
Less alluring .
Saiza leans close to my ear. “You must accept Hock’s málmr now.”
“Why?”
“It is an important part of the trial,” she says, and I frown, reaching out. He drops it into my open palm, the coil of string coarse against my skin.
The dark-haired male extends his, too—a tawny diadem bearing an embossed faunycaw. Not as polished or finely crafted as the other piece.
“Now accept Zaran’s and set both málmr on the rug before you.”
I do as she said, my frown deepening as both males bang their fists against their chest three times, then stand, dispersing toward separate weapon racks.
“So … we’re going to watch them fight?” I query, and Saiza nods.
“Of course.”
“What does this have to do with my trial?”
“This is your trial,” she says, and my brows bump up.
“I just have to sit here and watch them knock each other around?”
She nods.
I frown, very little of the unease loosening from my chest.
Zaran chooses a partially curved sword that reminds me of the serpent on his opponent’s back, while Hock picks a bludgeoning stick with metal spikes sprouting from its bulbous head. A weapon which seems to suit the monstrous male.
My gaze stabs right beneath another large tent where the Oah and Oah-ee sit upon bloodstone thrones, the latter being fanned with a massive flat leaf while she continues to feed her squirming babe. The Sól is there, too—sitting on a smaller throne to the Oah’s right.
Their combined attention is firmly cast on the males who make for the ring’s flattened epicenter.
Wind churns my hair into a lash of black tendrils but fails to whip the heat from the air. To ruffle the tension stretched across the crater as Hock and Zaran begin to circle each other in wide skulking strides, their eyes locked, upper lips peeled back from bared teeth. It feels like they’re stalking those same churning steps inside my gut while the gong continues to bang to a chest-thumping beat that rattles through my ribs.
Zaran dips low, growling as he charges Hock, curved blade slashing for his guts so fast mine plummet.
This is no practice match. They’re fighting to kill .
Fuck.
Zaran is booted back. He lumps onto his ass, barely rolling out of the way in time for Hock to pound his club into the ground instead of directly upon his opponent’s chest with a mighty, muscle-rippling heave, a burst of sand spraying skyward.
I flinch, watching the males slash, hack, dodge, and sway, tearing deep gashes in each other’s leather pants and skin, splashing the sand red.
Unease wraps its bind around my chest again—pulling it tighter.
Tighter.
Something’s not right.
“I’m confused. What does this have to do with me?”
Raising a single brow, Saiza flicks me an amused look. “Everything, Kholu. They’re fighting for you.”
My heart drops so fast my next words choke out. “They’re fighting to the death to entertain me? Are you serious?”
She frowns. “No, not to entertain.”
“Then wh—”
“This is a Tookah Trial,” she says, attempting to smooth some of my unruly hair behind my tapered ear. She gestures with her other hand toward the males now grappling in the sand, fists throwing. More blood sprays with the ferocity of their violent swings. “They are fighting for the great honor of being bound to you. The honor of building a life and producing offspring with Kholu is the greatest one could wish for. To pin the moons to the sky for good will ensure the future for offspring of the entire Johkull Clan, and their offspring, and theirs . To secure such peace is a great privilege.”
Her speech flays me, little by little, slicing skin, sinew, and bone in swift, icy blows …
No.
No, no, no, no—
Hock uses Zaran’s own blade to hack through his opponent’s neck in short, slitting increments, cracking his neck halfway through. The rest of it tears free from his motionless body now splayed across the sand, and all the breath bursts from my lungs. Like Clode just siphoned it free.
Crouched upon the lifeless corpse like a feasting beast, Hock fists Zaran’s blood-matted hair and lifts the head like a trophy, roaring triumphantly as he shakes it, blood slipping from the gory wound.
The crowd roars, folk bashing their chests with fisted blows, the gong sounding in rhythm to my thrashing heartbeat.
Hock sets his eyes on me, and all the heat escapes my body, violent unease exploding in my chest.
No, no, no—
“Hock is your victor,” Saiza murmurs against my ear, and my thoughts churn like a tangled length of barbed threads. “You are lucky. Aside from his roskr and the Oah, he is our strongest fighter. There will now be great celebration, after which he will escort you to his tent and show you the pelts of his kills, upon which you will hopefully make many strong sons and daughters in the cycles to come once your bond grows sturdy.”
Sons and daughters …
A heaviness settles on my chest and belly, making me feel crushed, yet somehow so incredibly … empty .
Failing to pull breath into my lungs, I slit a glance at the Herder, now almost smudged entirely from view. So close to turning invisible that I’m certain I could shove my hand straight through it.
I’m not surprised it’s hiding. It should be fucking ashamed of itself.
I’m just about to tell it as much when Hock lumbers forward, kicking up blows of sand with his charging steps. He thumps Zaran’s head on the ground before my dais.
I gasp, gaze dropping to the male’s lax face. To the fleshy mess of tissue, tendons, and bone.
The blood puddling upon the sand.
I’m still looking at it, trying to work out how the fuck I got here—scarcely garbed, painted in blood, and staring at a severed head—when Hock kneels before me. He plucks his sooty málmr from the rug and reaches for me, trying to thread the loop over my head. Like a shackle for my neck.
Rage explodes beneath my ribs.
“ No ,” I snarl, jerking back.
Hock’s eyes flare with a mix of confusion and scarcely veiled wrath.
He growls, grips me by the shoulder, and jostles me closer to the tune of rumbling murmurs—
I fling my head forward, feeling his nose crack from the force, whipping back to see blood spurting from his flared nostrils.
The world around us stills.
I shove to my feet, scurrying backward while he stalks into my patch of shade, growling through the stream of blood pouring from his face. “I will fight for myself!”
A hush falls upon most of the crowd, buffeted only by a few gasps. Perhaps from those who understand the common tongue.
Hock pauses, gaze darting to Saiza who translates my frantic request, his brow becoming a bunched mantel above his stormy sunburst eyes.
He looks to the Oah. “ Géish den nahh cat-uein ?”
His words are a brutal clash of sounds, tension thickening.
The Oah seems to deliberate, his wide-eyed Oah-ee paler than she was before. She looks at me, her babe now bunched and squealing at her breast.
Her lips move, soft words pulled straight to my ears on a gentle twirl of wind. “ What are you doing ?”
She can speak my language, then.
She can also speak with Clode.
Interesting.
“I do not choose this,” I seethe, the ruddy silk bound around my waist ruffling in the wind, my entire body taut with the urge to move .
To fight .
My gaze drops to my Fate Herder, now watching me through slit eyes that are far more solid-looking than the rest of its body.
Though it’s still coiled, I sense its welling unease in the air between us. Like it’s waiting to see what foot I’ll step out of line next. But if this is my fate—if this is what it was leading me to—I don’t accept it.
Not one single bit.
Over the last few aurora cycles, I’ve cradled my Essi while she slipped away, said goodbye to Nee, been shot with an iron pin, and received so many lashes I passed out from the pain. I’ve been fed to a thunder of dragons, nearly swallowed, been turned down by the only male who’s ever made my heart skip a beat, was swept off a cliff, and I am at my wit’s end.
I am not accepting this male’s málmr, no matter how exceptional his battle skills are. I’d rather slam the small disk so far into his skull it cleaves through bone and punches into his squishy brain than bear this male’s children.
I have no idea who he is, and I don’t want to. I don’t want to grow a child—first and fucking foremost. If I have to go to war with the Fate Herder to avoid this, I will. Beautiful, mythical beast or not.
A dribble of Hock’s blood slithers down the line of my nose, my upper lip peeling back. “I will fight for myself .”
My words hiss across the crater.
The Oah-ee swallows, leaning toward her male, whispering something against his ear. He looks at me, gaze shifting to Hock, to my sleepy Herder, then back to me. He says something to his Oah-ee, and she releases a shuddered breath, gaze dropping to her babe nuzzled amongst folds of gold silk.
Silence beats by.
She sweeps a hand over the youngling’s brow, then clears her throat, though her words still come out choked as she looks me in the eye and says, “So long as the Fate Herder does not prevent you from entering the ring, we will not oppose your decision.”