Chapter 32: A Dark Return

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Jare glared at the ex-deity as he shuffled into the room, a plate piled with food in hand. He looked happier, now that he had bathed and donned new clothing. His attire reminded her of sprite Moon acolytes’ vestments; a silvery-blue, knee-length split skirt covered calf-length pants, both embroidered with glowing circles representing the moon and small dots for stars. Thin silver sandals did not protect the feet but gleamed with a shimmery glow, and the sash that looped over one shoulder and knotted at his opposite waist had silver threads that glinted despite the dim light. Did Black-claws have a stash of faelareign clothing? Why? Or had he stored something for Navosh because he, after he extricated himself from the pool, would need clothes?

The rufang followed, assisting Navosh to a bench near the door. He fussed over the man before glancing at her out of the corner of his eyes; his suspicion and anger blazed bright, and she doubted he would ever see her as anything but a destructive interloper. She wanted to curl back into a ball and wait out the inferno in singular silence.

“And what am I making shiny?” Jare snapped.

“Talis didn’t help Veer out of a sense of fairness or justice. He wanted to poke Rezenarza where it hurt.”

“You’re wrong,” the Light-blessed flared. “While Qira thought too many of Rezenarza’s decisions were unfair and based on personal prejudice, that wasn’t why he was there that evening. Sun had the idea of light and darkness walking hand in hand, and Veer embodied that with his shimmery shadows. Qira visited to speak with him about how he perceived Light and Darkness and Rezenarza showed up in a rage. He didn’t realize another syimlin was even there, he was so angry, and Qira took advantage and helped.”

“Infernos rage far.”

Vantra fought tears at the words, for Black-claw’s snarl proved he felt them deeply. Who else but she caused the one destroying the forest above them, earning his wrath?

“Sun-driven ones usually do,” Navosh murmured before shoveling a heaping pile of curled pasta into his mouth. The dish looked like one her mother used to make, with fat noodles piled high with shredded squash, chicken, nuts and a spicy white turnip sauce—a very un-Evenacht meal.

“And how much of the forest will the Sun eat?” Black-claw asked, tapping one front paw’s claws as he spoke.

“That which he corrupted. You won’t be able to forage for some time, but it will grow back.”

“And who is ‘he’?” Jare’s agitation only made the ex-deity laugh.

“You said he was an elfine.” Laken’s typical skepticism brightened his words.

“He is,” Navosh said. “One of power and means in life and death, who thought he earned what was, in fact, gifted to him. He misunderstood many things, and the price of his ignorance will destroy him.”

“You seem certain of that,” Jare muttered.

“I am now. The Daughter of the Sun has arrived.”

Vantra wanted to hiss at the statement. A sundered prophecy would not help them defeat their enemy. Had Machella ever mentioned Talis’s injury? A successful attack on a syimlin would be important enough to stuff in an oracle, would it not? Yet she heard nothing of it, just this daughter nonsense.

“A broken prophecy by a broken oracle,” Laken said, sharp and dismissive.

“Broken?” Navosh asked, confused.

“Her Recompense died before she fulfilled her blessed fate. That broke her prophecy.”

Silence descended as the ex-deity looked up at Black-claw, then at Laken. “She died?” he asked.

“Someone murdered her before she could do any of the things Machella predicted she would accomplish on Talis before she entered the Evenacht. Her oracle sundered and there’s nothing left.”

“Hmm.” His fork clattered against the plate. “Machella is far more malleable in her outlook than most others suspect. She would see beyond the obvious and hunt for the drifting patterns. Murdered, though.” His troubled tone and deep frown pricked Vantra. His emerald eyes flicked between the others, glimmering with faint magic power. “Many umbrareign think that her words will beget war with the ghosts. They mistake her intent, and the intent of those who would do anything to see her predicted future crumble.” His gaze punctured her own, and her essence quivered. “We shall see, how much of her oracle has changed.”

Vantra buried her face again, hiding from his intensity. Machella’s words had caused enough trouble for Laken’s Redemption. Why care about what else she might see?

“You still haven’t answered my question,” Jare said.

“Wait until Rezenarza returns.”

What? He expected the ex-Darkness to return? Vantra raised her head, flabbergasted at the statement, but Navosh believed his words. He smiled and pierced noodles with the tongs on his fork, while Black-claws granted him an over-skeptical look.

“You remember what he was like, those many years previous.”

Apparently the ex-Darkness did not impress the rufang.

“I do, and I know how many years between have passed. He’s realized his mantle prefers another, and searches for meaning outside his Darkness. It’s a long and difficult journey, but his offer to help proves he has already taken the first steps.”

“We can’t trust him,” Jare seethed.

“No, but he has a deep antipathy for betrayal—and our mutual foe betrayed him. What he will do in Greenglimmer will reflect his need for revenge.” He flicked his laden fork at the Light-blessed. “After that, return to your suspicions.”

“How did the elfine betray him?”

Navosh bit into the noodles, unwilling to answer, and Vantra wondered if she should mention Rezenarza called it two betrayals. She assumed the elfine annihilated his reach, but who accompanied him? Someone from the Wiiv? Or Selaserat? Or the Finder Knights? She buried her head again, attempting to neaten her twisting thoughts. She wished Rezenarza would stay away so she would not have to deal with any more surprises that night, giving her time to wade through the overgrown mess in her mind and salvage anything worth saving.

By the time the ex-deity he finished the noodles, he looked ill, and Vantra wondered if he should have eaten softer, gentler foods. Black-claw murmured something to him and he responded, strained, then leaned back as the rufang clacked his beak and slid into a fighting stance.

Tomb-black Darkness ribbons spun up from the ground next to Vantra and pulled away, revealing Rezenarza. Black-claw’s show of defiance affected him as much as a paw-sized, yappy dog’s snarl bothered a giant gyirindi. He shoved his hands in his pants pockets and flumped next to Vantra on the curved stone bench without asking, and she fought the urge to slide away; cowardice would not serve her when dealing with him. He still wore casual attire, too, though she had no idea what he meant to convey with the lack of formality other than he did not see them as a threat.

“It is done?” Navosh asked.

“Yes. I also took her to faithful followers so she can acclimate to the Evenacht outside of Finder Touch. She’s ecstatic she doesn’t have to face them again.”

“Good,” the ex-deity said, his humming approval a comfort for Vantra; she had done the right thing in asking for his help. “No one should suffer as she did, then face those who prolonged it.”

“There is too much pain in the Fields,” Rezenarza said, anger darkening the words and the atmosphere. “The mental burdens were never meant to drown their captives. The Redemption was the quest to Redeem a Candidate through experience, not an afterthought for a time after the Condemned emotionally broke. I’m thinking about sending my acolytes to the Fields to Choose a Candidate. The Finders are not doing what’s required of them.”

“Those you help will appreciate the effort.” Navosh nodded and rubbed at his tummy. “Just tell your acolytes not to harm the guardians of the essences. Finders have taken to killing them or sending them to the Final Death, and Erse Parr’s prohibitions against it can’t penetrate beings who fill their ears with water.”

“They won’t. Without guardians, essences fall to all sorts of mischief.” Rezenarza looked at her, and she hunched over, not certain whether he meant to slight her along with the Finders. She never realized their poor reputation when she was Nolaris’s acolyte, but having it brought up time and again by those she associated with stung.

How she wished she had Fyrij to cuddle; he never turned from her when she needed comfort.

“You know the enemy?” Black-claw asked. He had raised his hands, ready to strike if necessary.

“Yes. He promised to protect the forest as I once did and failed. His rot attracted more, and he drowns in it.” Rezenarza’s eyes narrowed to glinting slits as he regarded the ex-deity. “How did you fall to him? You surpassed his power and ability.”

“Tricks deceive when you wish for them to be true,” Navosh said, regret and shame churning through his tone. “You understand that.”

The nymph curled his lip and did not respond.

The room shook.

Black-claw’s arms shot to his sides as he fought for balance. Vantra rocked into Rezenarza, then to her other side; she uncurled and planted her feet on the floor to keep from swaying into the ex-syimlin again.

“They’re above us?” the rufang asked in horrified disbelief.

Stones vibrated, and debris fell from the ceiling, followed by a shower of dust.

Rezenarza squinted up. “They are near spent. Their footsteps are heavy, their movements unwieldy.”

“We must stop them,” Black-claw said, stressed. “The essences—”

The nymph grinned, dark and malicious. Dread shot through Vantra as he rose.

“Don’t harm Kjaelle.”

The words popped from her on their own, but he ignored them as darkness ribbons curled around him.

No! However much she hated Kjaelle’s lies, she refused to watch Rezenarza hurt her to get back at Katta—Veer. She grabbed the shard before latching onto his shirt.

Jare lunged for her. “Van—”

The room vanished in a swirl of black.


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