Inside, trembling and holding back her tears, she hesitated. She had to tell her mother what had happened. Her mother would surely be horrified. She would not have known this about her business partner and once she did, she would be certain to expel him. Or report him to the Mogul. This is what Ilyria told herself.
But another voice from farther inside her was saying she was in danger from everyone within the walls of this mansion. Even her mother. And this was why she hesitated.
No, she thought, it cannot be so. This is my childhood home. There were happy times here. Weren’t there?
She knocked at her mother’s door. Though it was late, light from her mother’s chambers edged from beneath the door. She knew her mother used the night hours for her planning, preferring to rest during the day when she claimed only fools were afoot.
There was no answer, so Ilyria knocked again, a little louder this time, “Mother,” she whispered, “Mother, please. I must talk with you.”
Her mother’s old servant answered the door. She had a shaven head and heavy body and she greeted Ilyria with her silence. Ilyria had never asked what happened to her tongue but she knew that her smile had disappeared at the same time as her tongue.
“Show her in,” came her mother’s voice from the desk at the back of her chambers, “And then leave.”
Ilyria gestured that she would find her own way and the old woman gave her a long look whose meaning Ilyria could not discern, before leaving.
“What on earth are you doing here at this hour,” said her mother, “you should be resting so that your skin at least will look fresh tomorrow.” She put down the quill pen she had been holding and narrowed her eyes at Ilyria. “You look terrible.”
“Mother, it is because I have seen something terrible,” said Ilyria. She walked around her mother’s desk and kneeled in front of her. She studied her mother’s face and told herself that this woman was still her mother and that she must have loved her father enough to make her. She told herself that she could trust her. She closed her eyes and recalled the scene in the courtyard. The words tumbled out of her mouth, and she tried hard not to let her emotions get ahold of her. If she cried, her mother would stop listening altogether. “Then he walked off,” she finished, “whistling. Like nothing had happened.”
Her mother had turned her face away from her.
“Mother,” she said. She reached toward her mother’s beringed hand but before she could grasp it, her mother snatched it back.
“By the everloving gods, child,” said her mother, “You are stupid as well as dull. You are lucky that one such as Dirk should even cast his eyes at you.”
“But Mother,” said Ilyria, struggling to understand what her mother was saying, unable to believe it. “Mother, have you not heard what I have just told you. He murdered Haris. Remember Haris? He used to come here. We took piano classes together. He was such an awful player, you used to tell him that all the time,” she tried to laugh but only a sob came out, “He …”
Her mother held up her hand. “Enough,” she said, “You are hysterical. Go to bed now and make sure you are presentable by the morning. If not, believe me,” she leaned forward, “I will feed you such herbs that you will be perfectly pliable.” She leaned backwards, “Perhaps I should have done it sooner.”
Ilyria did not need reminding that her mother’s skill with botanicals was spoken of widely. In whispers.
In a daze, Ilyria stumbled toward her chambers. This had to be brought to the attention of the Mogul, she thought. She remembered little of her father, but she had a memory, faded with time, of her father taking her to meet the Mogul. She had been so little; she remembered her father holding him in front of her as he rode there. He had never liked carriages. The Mogul had been not at all what she expected. He had worn loose cotton clothing like a common citizen, and he had prepared them a meal himself, a tray of dates and cheeses, sweet treats dripping with honey and a fizzy red liquid that bubbled up in her nose making her giggle. She remembered when they left, her father told her he was a man of honor and she had thought he was talking about a place. But he is from here? she wanted to say. Where is this honor?
Now she wondered again. Where is this honor? It was nowhere in this mansion. She sat down heavily on her bed, her hands trembling in her lap. Remembering Haris when they used to chase geckos around the walls of the mansion; when he had lifted his baby girl to her, smiling shyly and asking her to be the baby’s godmother; how he looked at his wife and how many times she had wished she too had someone to look at her that way. Now Haris was gone, and she had done nothing to save him.
I couldn’t, she whispered, I swear, I couldn’t. She lowered her head into her lap and let the tears come.
A soft, rustling breeze roused her. She looked up. The window to her balcony stood open. She had forgotten the reason for her dash down to the courtyard. Now, she recalled the myth of the Lightning Bird and that it appeared wherever there was strife. But was it harbinger or origin of the strife?
Ilyria stood. Her weding dress lay in folds of silk and pearls on the divan. If she were to accept her fate, then she would climb into her comfortable bed now and try to sleep. Tomorrow she would allow servants to dress her, and she would allow herself to accept the desire of a murderous, evil man. Her fate would be fully known and completely out of her control.
She thought again of the Lightning Bird. But if she took flight, she would be launching herself toward an unknown fate; but one where each step would be decided by her, would be in her own control.
Perhaps the Lightning Bird was neither harbinger nor origin. Only effect.
Ilyria dug through the recesses of her cupboard for the trousers and shirts she had stashed there for the rides she would go on late at night when there was no one around to stop her. She drew on two layers of clothes, choosing especially baggy shirts to hide her form. Though she did not have her mother’s curves, she had curves nonetheless. Then she wound a scarf around her head, tucking her hair in as best she could. Looking in the mirror, she thought she looked like a sloppy sort of boy. It would have to do for now. Finally, she packed a small bag but when she stood back to survey it, she realized how much she would have to learn. The bag was velvet with inlaid threads of gold. It was far too ostentatious for a young man out on the streets of Idixat.
Instead, she stuffed her pockets with cords of jewels which she hoped could be traded. She hurried downstairs, her feet padding softly, her breath sounding too loud to her in the vast echoing halls of the mansion. She stopped at the door leading to the courtyard, her hand out, about to turn the handle. Idiot, she cursed herself softly, you don’t run away using the front door.
She lost time wandering the mansion trying to find the right passageway to the kitchen and servants’ quarters, praying no one would see her, that no servant would be awake readying things for the days’ festivities.
In the kitchen she swiped a stale loaf of bread from the counter and a bottle of red wine from the cellar and put them both in a rough shopping sack that she slung around her body. She opened the door of the scullery, a place she knew only as the entrance used by the servants. As children, she and Haris would dare each other to open the forbidden door.
Now she opened the door and stepped outside into an alleyway beyond the walls of the mansion. She was in the streets of Idixat! She shivered with fear and excitement.
As the door clanged shut behind her, she looked down at her bare feet, sinking into the filth of the alley. She had forgotten shoes.
Ilyria woke to the smell of warm bread and blossoming plants, and another damp salty smell she could not recognize. She sighed and turned over. Her eyes flickered half-open as she felt Suluu’s warm body lying on his back next to her. Her hand lazily traced the contours of his smooth chest, delighting in the way his skin puckered beneath her fingers. He turned to look at her, his lips parted in a smile and his eyes hooded with his desire. “Hello,” he murmured, pulling her toward him, “You’re awake.” “I am,” she said, tracing her fingers over his lips. Then her stomach rumbled noisily, “and I am so, so, so, so hungry!” She sat up trying to recall when last she had eaten and suddenly a rush of images flooded over her. She sank her face into her hands. Astrapi, impaled. The Princess and Zlo’s blood dripping from the spines of The Shackled One. Madame Skia’s wounded body lying shrouded by the shimmering moon dust. The monster’s final moments. She looked up
The monster reached out a nightmarish tendril, twisted and hard and riddled with fungus. The tendril scratched Ilyria under the chin as an overly familiar uncle might and she gagged on the smell of rotten animal flesh. “You don’t look like him at all,” said The Shackled One, “Lucky for you. We hated him for what he did to us.” “Us? There is more than one of you?” “Us,” said The Shackled One, and dark spikes shot out from its body, impaling the Princess and Zlo. A spike missed the Mogul only because Loulou had pushed him out of the way. They stood open-mouthed with dread and fear as the Princess and Zlo twisted and writhed on the spikes, howling in agony, their blood dripping to the ground beneath them. Thassa ran to the frozen pair and pulled them away. Think, Ilyria, what does it want? came Madame Skia’s question. Ilyria tried not to hear the howls of the Princess and her son. She looked around for Madame Skia the darkness was so com
They all heard it making its way. The ground rumbled with its passage as the Sister Moon shone down with relentless brightness, Brother Moon no longer able to temper her cold light. And Ilyria saw her own fear reflected in the faces of her friends. Even the sirens cowered, and Madame Skia looked uncertain which was maybe the most terrifying thing of all. What could be worse than Zlo? Ilyria knew. It was the thing that Zlo feared. The thing that lived deep within his own dark tower. She looked at the Princess. The Princess knew too. Her face had turned so pale, it seemed to reflect that horrifying moonlight. Suddenly the Princess reached out one hand and the crowd of sirens parted around her as if she had sliced through them. She curled her fingers, and the Mogul was dragged through the mud toward her. He twisted and turned reaching out for Loulou. Loulou, her cheeks flushed, tried to follow but the Princess flung her away with a flick of the other hand. She lifted her summon
Then the air was torn apart by a woman’s scream. It was filled with such rage that every one of them who heard it fell to their knees with their hands over their ears, desperate for it to stop. Zlo alone stood, his head bowed as the Princess appeared beside him. She was beautiful and terrifying in her anger. She appeared to float off the floor, her white robes billowing around her, her long, burnished hair streaming as though she were the wind itself. Behind her stood Nicos, his expression glazed. His hands hung at his sides. He appeared to see and hear nothing. “Fool,” said the Princess to Zlo, “I did everything to help you. I sent him away,” she tilted her head toward the Mogul, “I distracted the brothers and the stupid girl-child Magoses with their little quest. I sowed division and strife. I ensured the Laws were broken. All you had to do was make sure they,” here she swept her arm around to indicate Astrapi, the companions, Thassa, Miasma and Ilyria, “were all h
Ilyria could not have said exactly when she had understood the truth of the relics. Had it begun when she realized that the map to the Lost Cities was really the knowledge of one man, Nicos? Or when Astrapi’s breath activated the perfect chord on the gold harmonicus. Could it even have been Zlo who pulled the scant threads of ideas together for her when he pointed to Fierce as a Nemachi device. Ilyria knew Fierce was a living, breathing creature. Had Zlo missed something? Having forfeited so much of his humanity for power, he no longer understood the value of that humanity. Now, as she watched Thassa’s slow, reluctant appraoch, felt his sorrow as he dug in his pocket and brought out the necklace to place it on the altar, saw his dejection as he walked past her back to where Bonbon waited, she wanted to yell out her understanding. She wanted to scream at Thassa that the necklace did not matter. Only his memory of it was worth anything. The things that bind us to
Astrapi fell, Bonbon fell. Sidian, Flame and Loulou, they all fell. But it was not with the bone-rending shatter that Ilyria, Miasma and Thassa anticipated. Thassa, with his arms outstretched was surprised to find them filled with soft, warm, living, breathing Bonbon. Ilyria cried out as Astrapi landed with the thud and slap of flesh hitting floor. Likewise, the other companions, released from their marble prisons, fell to the rumbling, caving floor with cries of surprise and pain. Except for Bonbon whose tears were of joy to be in her lover’s arms. Ilyria had no time to feel bad about her inaction for the white roof and shattered walls of the reception chamber fell away as easily as if the marble had no more substance than eggshell. The smell of the garden filled the space but instead of the intoxicating perfume of earlier, it smelled as over-sweet and rotten, like over-ripe fruit. She held her hand up to her nose. The marble floor beneath their feet dissolved into the dark