Destiny's Rift (Broken Well Trilogy) (20 page)

Her deeds this day would not go unnoticed. Duskwood burned and, after a long wait, the souls trapped there were finally returning to the Great Well of Assedrynn. An unfamiliar sense of accomplishment fuelled her as she beat her wings, a self-worth not derived from her value as a prophet. No longer was she simply a mouthpiece who told others about great feats to be done – now she could do them
herself
. She had redressed a great wrong, succeeding where Battu had failed, all on her own, and it felt good.

Caretaker
, she thought, and laughed as she climbed.

Crystalweb

Crystalweb

Crystalweb

A faded sign hung above a fork in the road. One way
continued following the curve of the mountains and read ‘Valdurn’, and the other went south-east and said ‘Crystalweb’. Losara considered them, trying to recall Tyrellan’s map of Dennali.

‘Which way?’ Bel asked.

Tell him to go right
, Losara sent.

That is not the way.

It is a longer way, is all. I, unlike my counterpart, am in no rush.

Fazel pointed down the right-hand path. ‘This way.’

As they continued onto grassy plains, in the distance ahead the path ran into a group of trees. There was something odd about the way they twinkled in the sunlight.

‘Those have to be crystal trees!’ said Hiza excitedly.

Bel nudged Jaya. ‘I never knew he was such a flora enthusiast.’

Losara observed that she did not seem to receive his humour well and wondered, not for the first time today, why she seemed somewhat cold with him. He found it interesting that, while they loved each other, there was still this capacity for ill feeling. Then again, had he not himself argued with Lalenda before journeying to join Bel’s group? Was she still angry with him?

They drew closer to what was, indeed, an entire wood made up of crystal trees. It was the leaves that sparkled, each one razor-thin and transparent as glass. As they caught the sun, they sent patterns of light dancing down onto the pure white bark of the trunks, rippling the wood with all the colours of the spectrum. The path through was raised higher than the ground, above a network of smooth white roots which were peppered by deposits of papery bark and shining crystal shards.

‘Is it safe in there?’ asked Hiza.

‘As long as the wind doesn’t blow,’ said Fazel.

‘Come on,’ said Bel. ‘I see no shards on the path – there must be some kind of enchantment that keeps it clear.’ He sent a questioning glance at Losara, who in turn sensed, to his surprise, that Bel was right.

‘Some kind of displacement spell,’ Losara said. ‘When the shards fall, they are steered away from the path.’

Bel led the way in, and soon they were surrounded by the strange trees. Leaves dropped now and then to spin overhead, slow and easy. They never landed on the path, but frequently the travellers heard a brief shattering as a leaf hit ground or branch.

Losara let his senses quest and was worried to discover that they were surrounded by tiny, magical beings of light. He could not see what they were exactly, for they made bright blotches in his perception. He glanced about, trying to locate one with true sight alone. A powdery white moth took off from a tree trunk against which it had appeared perfectly camouflaged, but that wasn’t what he searched for.

‘Look,’ said M’Meska, extending a claw. By the side of the path, between two trees, hung a spider web. It shone crystal, as spider webs do . . . the difference being, Losara realised, that it
was
crystal. When the web’s owner appeared, Losara had the answer to what he’d been sensing.

Although the creature, about the size of a fist, had the appearance of a large spider, it was entirely transparent. It paused, seeming to watch them with a face full of gleaming eyes, then clicked its mandibles and walked onto its web with a
tic tic tic.

‘Fahren never told me of such a creature,’ said Bel.

‘Perhaps he did not foresee the need,’ said Fazel. ‘The crystal spiders live only here.’

‘They’re actually made from crystal?’ said Jaya, watching the spider with avid interest.

‘Yes,’ said Fazel. ‘Living crystal.’ Even his usual dry tone seemed to possess a touch of wonder.

Could it be
, Losara sent him,
that despite your years, there are still things in the world you have not yet seen?

It seems there are
, said Fazel.

‘I wonder,’ said Jaya, easing forward, ‘how much one of those is
worth.

‘Jaya,’ chuckled Bel. ‘You are not going to fill your pack with crawling insects, even if they are made of crystal.’

‘Just imagine what a noble might pay to possess such an exotic thing!’

‘They would not survive outside the wood, miss,’ said Fazel, his even tone returned. ‘They are magic, and the magic that animates them is here.’

‘Bah,’ said Jaya.

One of the white moths fluttered overhead, swerving and circling. It hit the web with a soft impact and stuck, beating its powdery wings haplessly. The spider lowered itself on a fine crystal thread to sink fangs into its prize. They could see the blood travelling up inside them to fill its transparent belly.

Hiza shivered. ‘Tell me those things can’t come onto the path?’

‘I see no webs overhanging,’ said Fazel. ‘It is a safe assumption.’

As they travelled on, they saw more spiders in the trees around them, scurrying along branches or hanging from webs. It began to rain, a light sun shower. Droplets hit the webs and fractured into mist, sending up more tiny focal points for the sun’s rays to shine through. Rainbows of different sizes danced over every surface. Losara found the multifaceted display of lights a little unsettling, but knew he was witnessing something extraordinary.

‘My goodness,’ Jaya said, with uncharacteristic awe.

‘What?’ said Bel.

‘Well . . . don’t you think it’s beautiful?’

Bel glanced around. ‘I guess,’ he said. ‘It certainly is . . . interesting.’

‘Interesting?’ said Jaya in disbelief.

Losara heard in Bel a tone he was sure he recognised in himself. It came when he did not know how he felt about something. He decided to wonder openly.

‘Does this not,’ he said, ‘give you all the more resolve to fight for our cause?’ He tried to inject enthusiasm into his tone, drawing on his memories of how his pilgrimage had made him appreciate his own land.

‘What do you mean?’ said Bel.

‘Well,’ said Losara, ‘only that to witness such a spectacle . . . it must fuel your desire to protect it, must give you strength.’

Bel stared around, frowning. After a time his expression went blank, and he seemed to forget what they had even been talking about. Jaya, who had been listening to the exchange with an arched brow, shook her head and turned away.

‘Thought you were supposed to be part Sprite,’ she muttered.

Not even that roused Bel from his stupor.

‘It is something special, to be sure,’ said Hiza, filling in the uncomfortable silence. ‘As long as those spiders stay where they are, of course.’

‘I wonder,’ said Losara, ‘what would happen to this place if the light failed.’ He recalled his dream of his own land crumbling under the onslaught of the enemy. ‘The spiders would surely not survive, for they rely on light magic to live.’

He watched his
other
closely for a reaction, yet still none came. His own reaction was what Bel must be missing – appreciation of the splendour on display. For even though these were enemy lands, Losara knew the world would be poorer without them.

‘Perhaps the trees would live,’ Losara went on. ‘Perhaps not all would be lost if the world fell to the shadow.’

Did he hope that was the case?

‘No,’ said Fazel flatly. ‘Crystal is made for light to shine through. In shadow it is nothing but rock. If the shadow triumphs, the wood will be one of the many things that fail. The trees will die along with everything else.’

With sadness Losara accepted his words, knowing them to be true. If he ever won this war, the cost would be very great indeed.

‘No point to such conjecture,’ said Bel.

‘Why is that?’ asked Losara with genuine interest.

‘Because,’ Bel stared from Losara to Fazel and back, ‘the shadow is never going to triumph. Now, stop dawdling, everyone, and hurry up – I want to be through this place before nightfall.’


Jaya watched Bel stalk ahead, their footsteps out of sync. Let him go – she wasn’t going to allow him to spoil this moment for her.

‘Really quite extraordinary,’ came a voice beside her. Without realising it, she had fallen into step with Gellan, who was gazing off at their strange surrounds. She had grown to quite like the mage – she hadn’t been sure if she would at first, for he’d seemed quite cocky and, being cocky herself, that sometimes created friction. But somewhere along the way all cockiness seemed to have gone from him, and though she found him a bit strange, he possessed a calmness that made him easy to talk to.

‘Yes,’ she said. ‘Not usual of me to be sentimental, but I have to agree.’

‘A shame not all of us are able to appreciate it,’ said Gellan.

A moment of defensiveness passed by quickly, for Jaya had to admit the mage was right. She was a little sorry that Bel had not, for whatever reason, been awed by this place, as everyone else was.

‘I expect he’s simply focused on the task ahead,’ she said. ‘It sits heavily on his shoulders.’

‘I can imagine,’ said Gellan. ‘But it would be good to know he goes forth to conquer for a reason . . . not just because he’s been told to.’

‘What do you mean?’ This time a note of defence
did
show in her voice. Her own issues with Bel – the resentment that came with his pig-headed belief that she needed protecting, and that she had to follow his lead when she was not used to following anyone – did not mean she would stand idly by while others criticised him.

‘Well,’ said Gellan, ‘simply that he seems to have been . . . steered, is all. Fahren brought him up to believe the shadow is the enemy, then orders from Arkus reaffirmed it and set him on this journey. It would be nice to know he did these things because
he
believed them, not just because that’s the way he’s been taught, if you follow?’

Jaya was not sure what the mage was getting at, but his points were making her uncomfortable.

‘And what are any of us,’ she said, ‘if not the products of our upbringing, and the people around us?’

Gellan sighed. ‘I only meant that seeing something beautiful, which you are charged to protect, should be affecting. I meant no offence – Bel is doing an excellent job.’ He paused. ‘And what about you?’

‘What about me?’ she said, still unsettled.

‘Do you help Bel because you believe in his ultimate purpose, or because you love him?’

‘I don’t see that there needs to be an “or”,’ said Jaya.

‘Quite so,’ agreed Gellan. ‘But, if you don’t mind me saying . . . I expect that sometimes Sprite blood, such as you and Bel have, can blur things.’

‘In what way?’

‘Well,’ said Gellan, ‘you were born in Kainordas, raised a Kainordan, taught to worship Arkus . . . and yet the Sprites were people of both light and shadow. I imagine your blood remembers, somewhere, that you are not truly aligned in this war.’

Jaya frowned. It was true that she’d always been restless, as if there was no real place for her in the world – until she’d met Bel and he had become her place. That did not mean she was totally devoid of all allegiance.

‘It is not as if you exactly fit in,’ added the mage. ‘A thief without regard for the laws of the land – is that loyalty? Or is that a Sprite finding her own way through a world that is not exactly hers?’

‘I am only part Sprite,’ she said. ‘You discount the larger part of me too easily.’

‘Ask yourself,’ said Gellan, ‘would you have come on this journey if not for Bel?’

‘Of course not, but what does that matter? Neither would Hiza, who comes because Bel is his friend, or M’Meska, who respects him as a warrior. Do you not think that the blue-haired man should be able to inspire people to follow him?’

Gellan seemed taken aback by the answer. ‘So,’ he muttered, almost to himself, ‘it is the man you follow, not the cause?’

Annoyance at these strange questions finally overcame her. She did not like the way they made her go deep inside herself, nor the insinuation that being a thief made her an enemy of her own people. She felt judged, and while she did not really give two beans about what others thought of her, it was getting about time to put Gellan in his place.

‘I’m not sure exactly what you are suggesting,’ she said. ‘That because I’m a Sprite I can’t be trusted? That I cannot decide for myself where my sympathies lie? Or that I should ally myself with a people long dead, spend my life fighting for a lost cause?’

‘No, no . . . please, I meant no offence. It is my nature to question things, I was merely doing it aloud.’

‘Well, maybe you should be more careful about whose values you oh-so-casually deconstruct. Anyone would think you were an Overseer trying to gain admissions from a Fenvarrow spy. Yes, I am a citizen of Kainordas, and just because I have lived an unconventional life doesn’t mean I want to see it fall.’

Gellan nodded.

‘No,’ he said. ‘What sane person would?’


By mid-afternoon they had left Crystalweb behind, for which Bel was glad. Flat plains lay ahead, and off to the north the mountains still loomed, their bases hugged by natural wood. He shot Jaya a smile, which he felt he owed her, though she seemed lost in thought. Things may not be easy between them, but at least he would always find
her
beautiful, even if he did not, could not, see the same in strange crystal trees.

He fell into step with Fazel who was, as ever, bringing up the rear.

‘How much further?’ he said.

‘We’re close,’ said the mage. ‘Sometime tomorrow we should reach Valdurn, and from there it is only a day or so.’

‘Wait,’ said Bel, ‘did you say Valdurn?’

‘Yes.’

‘That was the other destination written on the road sign, back before Crystalweb.’

‘It was,’ said Fazel. ‘Master,’ he added.

‘So why did we not simply follow that road?’

Anger flared as Bel wondered if they had gone through Crystalweb unnecessarily. Given the choice, he would have avoided a place that caused such disruption within the group.

‘Both ways lead to Valdurn,’ said Fazel. ‘The one through Crystalweb is shorter.’

‘Shorter than the actual road to Valdurn?’

‘It is an old road,’ sighed Fazel. ‘It wends and winds past places that used to be settlements and are no longer.’

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