Chapter Four
A hidden land, forbidden land, beyond the Faering Mists.
A people gone except in song, beyond the Faering Mists.
Where magic’s spun and great work’s done, beyond the Faering Mists.
Where Fey still dwell behind the spell that is the Faering Mists.
“Beyond the Faering Mists,” from the collection Laments for the Fey, by Avian of Celieria
The Faering Mists were not what Gaelen expected. Over the years, when he’d been dahl’reisen, he’d come to the Garreval on several occasions, intending to close his eyes, walk in, and let the Mists do what they would
to him, but he’d never actually been able to bring himself to dip so much as the toe of his boot in. He didn’t know whether
it was cowardice or pride that kept him from it, and he’d never cared to examine his reasons too closely, half-afraid of the
answer he might find.
His first few steps into the Mists were as bold as any he’d ever taken, and it would have surprised most of the Fey to know how much it cost him to keep that facade of bravado intact.
His nerves were shaking so badly, his guts felt like quivering jelly.
To his undying shame, his sister sensed his fear.
Just before she and Dax plunged into the Mists, Marissya turned her head to smile back at him and whisper on a private thread, ?Do not fear, kem’jeto.
A lost son of the Fey has returned. The Mists will welcome you and rejoice. ?
Then the Mists had swallowed her up, and it was his turn to take the plunge. Walking next to him, Belliard vel Jelani had
looked every bit as grim as Gaelen felt. The Fey’s face had gone stony, and his eyes were dark, burning cobalt stars. Vel
Jelani was no untried chadin fresh from his first levels in the Cha Baruk. Gaelen girded himself for terror.
To his surprise, the terror never came. Instead, as he took the first dozen blind steps into the mist-filled pass, a sense
of overwhelming peace suffused him. It wrapped him in a shining cocoon of warm whiteness, soft and fragrant, as if he were
a child once more and his long-dead mother, Briessa v’En Serranis, held him cradled in her arms.
“Mela?” he whispered, lifting his face to the whiteness. “Are you here?” Logically, he knew it couldn’t be true. His parents had
died one hundred years before the Mage Wars began, slain by Feraz as they returned to the Fading Lands after visiting Marikah
and the first King Dorian to celebrate the birth of their son.
Was this how the Mists led intruders astray? Not through terror but through wistful memories of better times? The lure was
a strong one. Long had it been since Gaelen last knew peace. He shook off the beckoning warmth and forced himself to concentrate.
Picture our home as you remember it, Marissya had advised him. You cannot trust your senses in the Mists, so let that memory be your guide.
He thought of the gleaming white towers and golden spires of Dharsa, of the great, towering volcanoes of the Feyls, of the waving golden grasses of the Plains of Corunn. The home he’d always loved, lost to him these last thousand years. Mela, your son returns.
He walked. He did not know for how long, but gradually, the dense fog began to thin. A light shone before him, bright and
beckoning, and he could make out the figures of Marissya and Dax striding across the ground at a confident pace. Marissya’s
presence was like a shining beacon, and all around her, the thick vapors were naught but barest wisps of white mist, as if
the magic knew and welcomed her. Gaelen glanced to his side. He could see Bel now, walking beside him just an arm’s length
away.
The grim look on Bel’s face was gone, replaced by astonishment. Catching Gaelen’s eyes on him, Bel shook his head and said,
“It has never been so easy to cross the Mists before.”
“We are through?”
“Through the worst of it, aiyah. This lighter mist will fade in less than a tairen length.”
“I was expecting something far different,” Gaelen said.
“As was I,” Bel echoed. “Usually when the Mists spit me out on the other side, Marissya must come to my aid.” Even as he spoke,
they heard a sharp cry, quickly muffled, from somewhere in the dense fog behind them.
Gaelen cast a glance over his shoulder and saw a line of ten Fey emerge from the thicker whiteness. Each one of them looked
shaken, and two were trembling so much their brothers had to help steady them.
“I don’t understand,” Gaelen said. “Why them and not me?”
Bel gave a soft, wondering laugh. “The Feyreisa. She restored our souls.”
Gaelen only half heard him. The mist was clearing, and before him lay a sight he’d thought he would never see again in this
lifetime: the golden blaze of the Great Sun shining on the great twin war castles of the Fading Lands, Chatok and Chakai,
the Mentor and the Champion, eternal guardians of the Garreval.
They had not changed in all this time. Jutting from the western foot of the Rhakis mountains, just beyond the last tendrils of the Mists, the great fortress of Chatok still stood, as proud and fierce and defiant as ever.
Perfect and unchanged from his memory. Massive, hewn boulders of silver-blue granite formed concentric rings of crenellated walls and battlements surrounding a host of soaring central towers topped by gleaming steel-roofed turrets.
To the south, the matching silvery white fortress of Chakai jutted out from the hewn cliffs of the Silvermist range.
The mile-wide pass between the two fortresses, guarded by the great stone Warriors’ Wall, was named Miora te Baloth’Liera, the Field of Joy and Sorrow, but most warriors called it by another name: Taloth’Liera, the killing field.
Before the Mists had been created, more than one terrible battle had watered the soil of Taloth’Liera with the blood of armies
foolish enough to try invading the Fading Lands. Gaelen himself had wet his blades in this pass on three separate occasions.
His breath caught in his throat on a sudden surge of emotion. There, on Chatok’s great forward tower called Lute’cha, Gaelen’s
cradle friend Lothien vel Din had died in his arms during their first battle together, pierced through the heart by a Merellian
demon prince’s poison spear. And there, on Chakai’s ramparts, his beloved blade brother, Eilon vel Hantor, had shoved Gaelen
out of the path of an Irdrhi axman’s deathblow, only to fall, his spine cleaved in two, in Gaelen’s stead.
And finally there, less than three tairen lengths from where he stood now—just beyond the massive steel gates at the center
of the crenellated mile-long stone wall connecting Chatok to Chakai—Gaelen and six thousand of his brothers had thrust red
Fey’cha in the bloody soil of Taloth’Liera and cried, “Bas desrali lor bas tirei!” We die where we stand! And to a Fey, they had stood and fought and held the pass when even stone walls and steel gates failed
beneath the enemy’s onslaught.
Those shining gates of the Fading Lands still stood, vast and glorious, tall as twenty Fey, and a tairen length wide.
And now, as Gaelen and the others approached, the massive, gleaming panels moved slowly inward, parting to reveal a land he had dreamed of for a thousand years.
The land he had forsaken. The land he had spent these last long centuries protecting, even though he believed he would die without ever catching a glimpse of her beloved paradise again.
The Fading Lands, home of the Fey.
His home.
He took one step past the towers flanking the gate, a second through the broad, graceful stone arch overhead. He looked up,
into the faces of a dozen Fey warriors standing on the ramparts above, half expecting red Fey’cha to come showering down,
knowing he would not summon even the thinnest shield if they did.
But death did not come.
Two more steps took him past the gate, and for the first time in a thousand years, Gaelen vel Serranis set down his booted
foot on the soil of his homeland.
He had faced, unflinching, the countless battles of far too many bloody wars. He’d confronted terrifying magic, fearsome enemies,
and even stood firm while forces that outnumbered his, hundreds to one, charged his position. Yet with that one step, as the
sole of his boot made its first slight contact with Fey soil, his battle-hardened warrior’s body began to tremble. His legs
shook, his shoulders quaked, and all strength fled him.
With a cry of surrender, Gaelen vel Serranis fell to his knees on the land of his forefathers.
Marissya turned, her shei’dalin’s radiance fully unshielded and glowing bright as a star. Love and joy and serenity caressed Gaelen’s senses in lapping waves,
and her smile was a balm on his soul. “Ke tamiora,” she said. “Kem’jeto ruvel.” I rejoice. My brother returns.
A hand touched his shoulder. He looked up to find Belliard vel Jelani at his side.
“Welcome home, Gaelen,” he said softly.
“Beylah vo, my brother,” he rasped, his voice thick with emotion. Tears welled in his eyes. He didn’t try to wipe them away. He simply
let them fall, and the soil of Miora te Baloth’Liera drank them up, just as it had drunk the blood he’d shed here so many
times in the past.
Standing at Gaelen’s side, Bel understood what the older Fey was feeling. When Bel had left this last time to accompany Rain
and Marissya to Celieria City, he had been so close to becoming dahl’reisen himself that he truly had not known whether he would ever see the Fading Lands again. The Shadows had been so near, the weight
of even a few more deaths on his soul could have tipped the balance and sent him plunging down the Dark Path or seeking the
desperate solace of sheisan’dahlein, the honor death.
But Ellysetta had restored his soul, almost as completely as she’d restored Gaelen’s.
The clatter of boot heels on stone made him look up. Two dozen warriors were rushing down the tower steps, blades drawn, their
faces etched in stone.
“Hold!” Bel snapped. “Stay your blades.”