The story concludes
in
RELIC MASTER
Book 4: THE
MARGRAVE
I think
you should confide this fear to your master, the tree said
gently.
Raffi gave a sour laugh. “No point.”
He is, I admit, difficult to
approach. A small sparkbird, brilliantly red, fluttered among
the branches; the tree rustled thoughtfully over Raffi’s head.
If he was one of my kind, he would be holly. Or
dark firethorn that grows in the chasm of Zeail. Such a one is
Galen.
Raffi nodded. He lay on his back in the dappled
green light, eyes closed against the sun. The tree was a birch;
young, and very curious.
Tell me where it takes you,
this Deep Journey.
“It’s a vision.” Raffi sat up and gazed out
hopelessly into the depths of the warm spring woodland. “It happens
in your mind. The Litany says there are different stages—the Cosmic
Tree, the Plain of Hunger.”
Hunger is a
sensation?
“Emptiness. No food.”
Indeed. The tree sounded
fascinated. Our roots are always storing.
Rootless creatures, it seems to me, are most vulnerable. The Makers
were wise, but sometimes we feel you were something of a failed
experiment.
“And then,” Raffi said, half to himself, “comes
something called the Barrier of Pain.”
The tree was silent. Finally it whispered,
You fear that.
He nodded. “And the last thing even more. To be a
keeper every scholar must pass through utter darkness into
something the books won’t even describe. They call it the Crucible
of Fire.”
Fire! The birch shuddered
down to its very roots, every leaf quivering. The sparkbird flew
out with a cheep of alarm. Fire is the worst of
enemies! The Watch burned the forest of Harenak, every leaf, every
sapling. Who could fail to mourn so many deaths?
“Raffi!”
Galen had woken in a black temper. He came out of
the shelter, still looking tired, and snapped, “Any news?”
“Nothing.”
“As soon as there is, let me know.” The keeper
turned, tugging his black hair loose from the knot of string. “And
stop wasting your time. Read! Flain knows you need to.”
Raffi picked the book up without glancing at it.
“He’s a nightmare,” he muttered, “since Marco died.”
The tree was silent.
Galen limped between the birches to the stream. He
waded in, scooping the cold water up to drink, splashing it over
his face. For weeks he had been working on the sense-lines, driving
himself nonstop. Already they had a chain of lines between a few
known keepers and through re-awakened channels of tree-minds and
earth-filaments that reached to Tasceron itself; in fact last
night, after days of effort, Galen had spoken with Shean, the
keeper of the Pyramid in the Wounded City. It had been a triumph.
But it had worn him out.
Looking down on him, Raffi thought of the night of
Marco’s death, of Galen’s terrible oath, that he would seek out the
Margrave. That he would kill the Margrave.
“That’s why he’s so desperate to set the
sense-grid up. And to get me through the Journey. He thinks he
won’t come back alive.”
Now, the tree said gently,
you are really afraid.
Raffi jumped up, brushing pollen from his clothes.
Already it was back, that sickening terror he could never lose for
long. He felt the tree’s consciousness spiraling into him,
intrigued.
Do you really believe, it
whispered, curious, that this Margrave is
hunting especially for you?
“I can’t talk anymore.” Raffi turned abruptly,
blocking its voice out. Sickness was already surging in him, a
choking stress, blurring the tree-words to a crackle of leaves. He
started to stumble through to the stream, then swung around for the
book, feeling the sweat on his back chill as he bent, dizziness
making his vision spin. He gasped and leaned on the tree.
Raffi, it said urgently,
its voice bursting through his panic. Someone
comes!
Bewildered, he felt for the sense-lines. They were
intact.
“Galen!” His voice was a whisper, a croak, but the
keeper was already racing up; a firm hand grabbed him. “The
Watch?”
“Can’t be. Can’t feel anything.” Weak, he crouched
on the tree roots. Galen spun around, facing the footsteps.
It was the Sekoi.
Wiping his clammy mouth and streaming eyes, Raffi
staggered up and tried to focus, but the creature was close to them
before he could see it properly. Then he stared. The Sekoi was worn
and ragged. Dried blood clogged its fur from a half-healed wound
under one ear. Its yellow eyes were glazed with weariness.
Galen grabbed its thin shoulders. “For God’s sake,
did they ambush you? Have they got the Coronet?”
Exhausted, the creature collapsed onto the leafy
bank. For a moment it seemed too worn out to speak. Then it
whispered, “The Coronet is safe in Sarres. We were on our way back
when we ran into the Watch.”
“Thank God,” Galen breathed, but the Sekoi seemed
not to hear. Over his shoulder it glanced at Raffi. “They’ve got
Carys,” it said hopelessly.