Read Holder of Lightning Online
Authors: S. L. Farrell
Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult, #Science Fiction
O’Deoradháin was riding slowly around the field, occasionally looking down at the earth. Jenna stayed where she was, not wanting to go out into the carnage. “What was left of the Connachtan force retreated west,” he said when he returned. “They weren’t pursued—from the looks of the mounds, the Gabairan troops lost a good many men also, and their commander decided to stay here and bury their dead. They moved off to the east, through that pass there.” He glanced down at the body of the soldier by Jenna. “The battle took place no more than two days ago, from the signs.” Jenna nodded; she was still staring at the body. “Jenna?”
She wondered how young he’d been, how he’d looked in life, whether he’d had a wife and family. She imagined the body alive again, as if she could turn back time.
“Jenna?”
She lifted her head to find O’Deoradháin staring at her. “There were clochs here, too,” he said. “There are several places where the earth is scorched as if by lightning strikes. Boulders were flung about that had crushed men underneath, and trees ripped whole from the ground and tossed. Since the Clochs Mór, unlike Lámh Shábhála, have only one ability each, I would guess there were two or possibly three of the stones here.”
Jenna touched Lámh Shábhála. She could feel nothing here now, but a sense of dread hung over her that she had not felt since they’d left Doire Coill. For the first time, she realized just how much the Filleadh had changed the world.
You caused this,
she thought, her gaze on the field of destruction ahead of her.
This is all because of the cloch you hold, and there will be more of it. Much more.
“It’s my fault,” Jenna said.
O’Deoradháin nudged his horse alongside Jenna’s, though he didn’t touch her. “No,” he said firmly, though quietly. “This isn’t your fault. This is the fault of greed and callousness and stupidity. You didn’t force any of the Ríthe into conflict; they were just waiting for the opportunity, and Lámh Shábhála provided a convenient excuse.”
The corpse leered up at her, a mockery in the bright spring grass. “All these people dead . . .”
“Aye,” O’Deoradháin said, “and yet more will die. That I can guarantee. But their souls won’t come wailing to you when they cry out for justice.”
She still stared down, realizing that beyond this body another one lay, and another and another. . . . “I can hear them now,” she told him. “They already call to me . . .” She was trembling, unable to stop the movement of her hands.
“Jenna, you’ve seen a dead body before.” His mouth snapped shut, and she could imagine the rest of what he might have said:
You were responsible for their deaths, too.
She looked at O’Deoradháin, her head shaking violently from side to side. “Not this many,” she said. “Not like this, just . . .” She had to stop for a moment, her breath gone. Her heart was pounding in her chest. “. . . just scattered everywhere. Torn apart, half-eaten, discarded and unmourned.” She tasted vomit at the back of her throat again, and swallowed hard.
This is your legacy. This is your fate, too. Some day it will be you sprawled lifelessly there . . .
The land was starting to whirl around her, at the center the grotesque face of the dead soldier . . .
“Jenna.” O’Deoradháin brought her back as she was about to fall. Harsh and unsympathetic, his voice struck like a slap. She took a breath, and the world settled again. “This isn’t the last you’ll see of this. You’ll see more and worse, because you’ll be part of it. You don’t have a choice, not unless you want to give up Lámh Shábhála.”
“Lámh Shábhála is mine,” Jenna answered heatedly. Her hand went to the cloch, closing around it.
“Then look around you and get used to the sight, because you’ll need to have a clear head and mind when a battle’s raging around you, or someone will be taking Lámh Shábhála from your corpse.” Then his voice softened; he started to reach for her, then let his hand drop back to his side. “The dead can’t hurt you, Jenna. Only the living can do that. We can’t stay here, and we can’t go back. The war will follow us—my bet is that the Rí Ard is already stepping in to end these battles between the tuatha. They’ll unite to find Lámh Shábhála; we can only hope to stay ahead of them, and maybe,
maybe
on Inish Thuaidh we can leave them behind. But we have to go now, before someone finds us. And before night falls, because this place will be haunted.” He tilted his head toward her inquiringly. “Holder? Are you listening to me?”
“I thought you said that the dead couldn’t hurt you.”
His grin was sheepish. “They can’t. That doesn’t mean they won’t try.”
She said nothing to that. Instead, she flicked the reins of her horse and touched her heels to the mare’s sides, urging the horse forward—not around the field of battle, but through it. She would not look down, but she saw the bodies as they passed, and each of them seemed to call to her accusingly.
O’Deoradháin slept under his blankets on the other side of the fire. The flickering yellow light illuminated the undersides of the leaves above them and plucked the white trunks of the sycamores from the night in a circle about them. She could hear him snoring softly, the loudest sound in the stillness.
Jenna reached into her pack and laid the relics out in front of her: the wooden seal her da had carved; the ring of Eilís MacGairbhith, the Lady of the Falls; the golden torc of Sinna Mac Ard. Of Riata she had nothing; the ghost of the ancient Holder had made it clear to her that he did not want to be awakened again unless she returned to Doire Coill and the valley of cairns.
She stared at them, a fingertip brushing each and feeling the spark within.
Da?
But he had never held the active Lámh Shábhála, and the times she had called him up, he had seemed more frightened and confused than she was, and she had ended by comforting him.
Eilís?
Jenna had called the Lady of the Falls only one other time after that day in her burial chamber behind the Duán’s waters, and the ghost had been as angry and fey as during their first encounter; though Jenna knew that the ghost couldn’t touch or harm her, she would call that Holder forth only in great need.
Jenna picked up Sinna’s torc. She started to place it around her neck . . .
“You’ll just have to explain to her again who you are because she won’t remember you. She’s not your friend. She doesn’t care about you—to her, you’re as much a ghost as she is to you.”
Across the fire, O’Deoradháin was watching from his blankets, up on one elbow. “Her time wasn’t like our time, and she isn’t like you. At all. You need to find your own path, not tread along someone else’s,” he finished.
“Which is the path
you
want me to take, no doubt.” She hated the disdain in her voice. She thought of offering an apology—
He’s done nothing but help you, and yet you keep pushing him away
—but then it seemed that she’d waited too long. The muscles along his jaw clenched, and he blinked. She pretended to look away from him, to be absorbed in the torc.
“I’m not forcing you to go anywhere, Holder,” he said. “Remember when I said earlier today that the dead can’t hurt you? Well, they also can’t help you.”
“ ‘Only the living can do that.’ Is that how that ends? Meaning I’m supposed to trust
you?
”
O’Deoradháin took a long breath. His eyes held hers, and she saw the hurt in them. “You do what you think you need to do, Holder, and believe what you must.” He lay back down and snapped the blankets around him, turning his back to the fire and her.
Jenna held the torc in her hands for several minutes, watching the fire shimmering in its burnished surface. Finally, she placed it back in her pack. “I’m sorry,” she whispered to the night, not sure to whom she was speaking.
The spring sun beat down on the bright carpet of silver-weed, primrose, and heather in which Lough Crithlaigh rested; the sky was cloudless and deep. Yellow siskins, song thrushes, and warblers darted among the wildflowers. Mountains lifted gorse-feathered heads to the west beyond the hills, and they could see deer grazing near a foaming rill winding toward the lough. The day was pastoral; even their horses seemed affected, neighing and lowering their heads as if they wanted to linger here forever.
“Those are storm deer, not the normal red,” O’Deorad háin commented, then glanced back at Jenna. “You’re frowning.”
Jenna turned in her saddle. She tried to give the man a smile and failed. “I’m sorry,” she said. “It’s just . . .” She stopped; he lifted an eyebrow. “. . . . a feeling.”
O’Deoradháin pulled back the reins of his mount, his gaze searching the terrain.
They’d debated whether they should go through this expansive but open valley, or take the much longer and difficult path through the hills. She wondered now if they’d made a mistake. She touched the cloch, letting tendrils of energy spread outward. In that invisible cloud, there was a twin disturbance. She could sense it in the pattern of Lámh Shábhála’s sphere, like a wave disturbed by the presence of unseen rocks just below the surface. “There are two other clochs na thintrí close by,” Jenna said. She could feel a cold apprehension spreading out from her stomach. “Powerful ones: Clochs Mór. I can feel them.”
O’Deoradháin rose up in his saddle again. “Where?” he asked. “In what direction?”
“I’m not certain,” Jenna said. “To the south, I think. They’re trying to keep themselves hidden, but one of the Holders isn’t particularly good at keeping his wall up and so I can sense them both.”
“By the Mother-Creator,” O’Deoradháin cursed. His hands clenched into fists around the reins, the knuckles going white with pressure. “I was afraid this would happen. Well, we don’t have a choice. All we can do is ride on, and see if they show themselves.”
“O’Deoradháin, what should I do? What happens if they attack with the clochs, or if they’re part of the army the Rí has raised . . . ?” Jenna remembered the battlefield and saw herself as one of the corpses. Her breath was coming fast, and panic roared in her ears.
“You’ll do what you can,” O’Deoradháin told her. “I will do what I can, also, but if the clochs enter the battle, you must deal with them.” Then his voice gentled, and his eyes held hers. “You’re the Holder of Lámh Shábhála, and it’s stronger than the other clochs na thintrí. Remember that.”
She did. She also remembered the words of the Lady of the Falls:
“. . . even the strongest can be overpowered by numbers, or make a fatal mistake . . .”
“I don’t know what to do.”
“You will, if it comes to that,” O’Deoradháin told her. “And if we’re lucky, they won’t see us. If we can reach the hills beyond the lough . . .”
They moved through the field toward the lough, the land sloping gently downhill to the water. There were beeches and sycamores lining the banks, and without speaking both of them urged their horses into a gallop to head for their cover. The storm deer glanced up; the dominant stag of the herd lifted an antlered head and gave a ululating cry, and the herd moved off at a canter to the east, their hooves trembling the ground with a low rumble. Jenna and O’Deoradháin reached the line of trees and moved just inside, then pulled up their mounts and turned. “Can you still feel them?” O’Deoradháin asked.
Jenna closed her eyes, touching the cloch with stiff and cold fingers. “Aye,” she said. She looked at him, worried. “Closer now. There.” She pointed up the slope they’d just traveled to the low ridge lined with trees.
A few breaths later, a half dozen riders appeared, emerging slowly from under the trees, perhaps half a mile away. All were dressed in green and brown, mail glinting under their colors. One of the group, even from that distance, seemed familiar to Jenna.
Jenna’s heart jumped. “The man in front—with no helm. That’s Mac Ard, I think.”
O’Deoradháin cursed again. “Aye. You could be right.” As they watched, a rider dismounted and walked carefully along the ridge. He stopped and pointed—it seemed to Jenna that his finger was aimed directly at her. “Damn, they’ve seen our trail,” O’Deoradháin spat. “There’s nothing for it, Jenna. They’ll track us now, and once we leave the cover of the trees, they’ll see us.” Jenna only stared at him, as if by her gaze she could change his words. “There are six of them, Jenna. I can’t deal with that many, even without the clochs na thintrí they have.”
She knew what he was saying, though her head was shaking in denial. “I can’t . . .”
“It was eventually going to come to this, Jenna, no matter what. We both knew it. You can either use the cloch now, while they’re not certain how close they are to us, or later when they know who we are and where. Strike first, and you have the advantage.”
“I don’t know how to fight cloch against cloch.”
“And probably neither do they, yet,” O’Deoradháin per sisted. “I suspect Lámh Shábhála will show you the way.”
He was right; she knew it, could feel it in the very marrow of her bones and yet she resisted. The riders gathered again as the scout remounted, and they started down the slope toward where they were hidden, following the unmistakable path their horses had made through the tall grass. She watched the tall rider with the dark hair, certain that it was Mac Ard even though she couldn’t see his face clearly.
He will have one of the clochs. It will be him you strike against, your mam’s lover . . .
She brought her right hand up, looking at the mottled skin. She opened her fingers with an effort, then closed them again around Lámh Shábhála.
She opened her mind fully to the cloch.
Lámh Shábhála was full with the power of the mage lights, its crystalline interstices crackling and surging with the energy. The vision of it seemed to expand and spread out before her, rushing like a tidal wave over the land; when it struck the riders, the force broke and shattered on twin rocks, shimmering white. Jenna saw the world in dou bled vision now: through her eyes and through Lámh Sháb hála. With her eyes, she saw Mac Ard and one of the other riders suddenly pull up and stop while the other four continued on; through the cloch, two presences suddenly appeared, one as ruddy as heated coals, the other more the color of a cold sea, both throbbing and pulsing inside the horizon of Lámh Shábhála.