Rebel Elements (Seals of the Duelists) (3 page)

“Bayan! What possesses you? Answer me!” Datu shook Bayan’s shoulder roughly.

“Son? Are you home in your skull?” Philo asked.


Bhattara na
,” Bayan finally muttered, lips numb with despair. “I am a Skycaller.”

Datu threw his hands into the air and chanted the first few words to a song of lamentation. The farm workers gathered in clusters and muttered to each other.

Despite his father’s distress, Bayan thought Isagani had the worst reaction. The merchant looked away and shook his head. His body language spoke of regret, and Bayan knew he’d lost Imee forever.

“No,” Philo chirped. “This young man cannot be a Skycaller.” Bayan raised his head, shocked.

Chaos swirled around him as voices called out in questioning and accusatory tones. Bayan dared to feel hope. Was there some imperial rule that had banned Skycallers seven years ago, as they were banned in Pinamuyoc? Perhaps no one had learned of it, this far south.

“Under the rules of the Empire,” the surveyor continued, his high voice shrill over the crowd, “any person found to possess the gift for elemental magic belongs to the emperor himself, immediately and for eternity. Bayan is not a Skycaller. He is a Duelist.”

The Rule of Ten
 

Bayan sat in the corner of the large public room in his family’s home and stared into space. Normally reserved for morning instructions to the working crews or negotiating with itinerant harvesters for per-paddy wages, the room seemed empty with just Bayan’s family, Philo, and his guards Frits and Fabian.

At first, Bayan couldn’t bring himself to pay attention to the conversation. That his father would bargain with the imperial surveyor at all made Bayan feel like a wagonful of cowfruit on its way to market: how much would Datu be able to get for his son? His mother, Liliwa, sat by his father, listening and twisting a soft blue handkerchief in her hands. His sisters, Diwata and Lailani, and little Mindo stood near Bayan’s bench, their eyes wide. The sleek old farm hound, Timbool, lay at his feet.

“Are you really leaving, Bayan?” Diwata whispered.

“If that man can pay Father enough, yes.” The thought put a cramp in his belly.

“Why does he get to take you away?” Mindo’s small brow furrowed with brotherly indignation. “He looks like a woman. If he can’t figure out what he is, he shouldn’t get to tell you what to do.”

Diwata hushed him. “Don’t be rude, Mindo. How many times must I tell you, you’re too old to tease people now?”

Mindo glared at her. “Once more, just like last time.”

Bayan grinned at his little brother and ruffled his dark hair. “You need to be good after I’m gone. Father will start teaching you to run the farm, and you’ll need to take extra classes at school, like I did.”

“Even sums?”

“Yes, especially sums.”

Mindo’s grumbled reply was lost on Bayan as Datu raised his voice. “Can you possibly mean that?” he asked the surveyor.

“Of course.” The plump man leaned forward with a nod. “It would be my honor and my pleasure.”

“But, why? Why would you take on such responsibility for a boy you don’t even know?”

“What responsibility?” Bayan asked, afraid he’d missed something important.

Datu gestured at the surveyor. “This Akrestoi eunuch is offering to sponsor you to that training academy. Take care of your supplies and travel expenses, everything you need, for as long as you’re there. I’m not sure if he’s a gift from Bhattara, or just plain crazy.”

“Need there be a difference?” Philo asked, still smiling. “Let’s say I’ve come to appreciate the Balang spirit during my seven years here. I don’t want Bayan to feel he has no one to turn to, so far from home and culture. Also, I’ve eaten my share and more of your fabulous local cuisine.” He patted his ample belly. “And I am more than at home among those who bring food to every social occasion. Considering my position, I feel I owe it to the kind men and women, who have included me everywhere I’ve gone, to take care of one of their own as best I can. The empire is vast, but Akkeraad, the capital, is only two days from the Academy by carriage and only one day by horse. We’ll be nearly neighbors.

“I know you detest the emperor’s law,” he continued. “Most families do, even in Helderaard itself, when their child suddenly exhibits magic and is taken away. It must be simply excruciating for parents to give away a child for whom they have already made plans. But please understand, there is no need to focus on your loss, when you have so much to gain. Between the prestige you will earn with a duelist in your family, the compensation due you by law, and my sponsorship of Bayan, there is very little you actually lose.”

“Except our son.” Liliwa spoke for the first time. Her reddened eyes never wavered from Philo’s face.

“Yes. I hope, my dear woman, that with time you will see the positive. But if you need someone to blame, I beg you, blame me rather than His Majesty. He has made the law, but I am choosing to enforce it. If I did not, another surely would. Suffice it to say that sponsoring Bayan is an investment in both our futures.

“Now, Datu. Do you accept my offer? Sponsorship of your son Bayan, as well as the guarantee of a suitably skilled man to replace him on your farm, plus the monetary compensation we agreed upon?”

Datu studied his hands. “The empire has made me a wealthy man over the last seven years, Bayan,” he said. “I do not wish the emperor to see me as ungrateful.”

Bayan squinted in disbelief. “Ungrateful?” Had he so misjudged his father? Bayan’s shoulders slumped. He knew his father would say yes, but he couldn’t stand to hear the word spoken aloud. He rose, stepped over the dog, and headed down the hallway to his room. “I’ll pack my things.”

He dug his warmest clothes out of the bottom of his trunk and pulled his rarely-worn pairs of stockings from their shelf. He tumbled them into the duffel he dragged off a peg by his window, then returned to the front room. He wondered if the pervasive numbness filling his head and chest resulted from suppressing his emotions for the last year, since he felt neither sadness nor shock at the sudden reversal of his fortunes. Maybe those feelings would sink in later, and his rage would make that preposterous purple carriage burst into flames.

Silence awaited him. Bayan looked at all the staring faces and wondered if he’d made the house sprout or catch fire.

“I want to give you something before you go, Bayan.” Datu rose. To Philo, he said, “Please, do not leave yet.” Then he slipped out the front door. As it closed behind him, a murmur of questioning voices blew in; the crowd from the riverbank had camped outside his home—or rather, the place he
used
to live. A tendril of trepidation coiled within him. He didn’t know where he was going or where he would live next. The only thing he knew was a name, the Duelist Academy, which meant nothing to him.

Imee burst in, all curves and braids and flashing eyes, and planted herself before Bayan. “Is it true?” she blurted. “You’re some sort of Skycaller now, but instead of staying here, you’re leaving me and running off with…that?” She waved a hand at the blond-haired surveyor, who merely cocked his head. Usually, Bayan found Imee’s forwardness intoxicating. But today, her words were salt on an open wound.

“I didn’t ask for this, Imee. They’re making me go.” He pointed at Frits and Fabian.

“And you’re so calm about being dragged off against your will,” she replied, arms akimbo.

That stung. Moreso because she was right. Had his own efforts to hide his condition trapped him in this new situation? If he let his emotions fill his mind, would he muster the strength to protest hard enough to convince his father to send the eunuch packing?

“I’m sorry, Imee.” Where was his passion for her? The numbness in his chest seemed to have chilled it to death. “There’s nothing I can do.”

Her gaze, which had so often blazed into his as they whispered to each other in her father’s back room, now seemed cold and distant. Judgmental. Her lovely lips thinned. “Don’t worry, Bayan. There is something I can do.”

Smack!
Her hand connected with his cheek, snapping his head to the side.

Before he could process her action, Bayan raised his arm in response. A second crack of flesh on flesh sounded, and he felt the sting of it on his palm.

Imee cried out and stumbled back holding her cheek. Bayan’s mother caught her around the shoulders and steadied her. Timbool barked, and Frits and Fabian stepped forward, jaws tense. Surveyor Philo stood still, eyes wide, as if suddenly discovering he shared the room with a swamp viper.

Bayan retreated from them all, seeing wide-eyed fear on the faces of his younger siblings. Something dark had reacted to Imee’s slap and clawed its way from his innermost being without asking permission. Breathing quickly, he shoved the darkness down into the depths of his soul and prayed to Bhattara that it wouldn’t resurface, ever again.

“I’m—sorry—” he managed, tucking his offending hand between his cloth bag and his back.

Imee stood away from Liliwa, still holding her cheek. Her beautiful brown eyes slitted. “I don’t know you anymore, Bayan Lualhati,” she hissed. “If this is the monster you truly are, then I’m glad you’re leaving. I hope you never come back. And even if you do, be sure that I’ll have found someone else by then!” She whirled and left the house.

Again, the voices came through from outside. Surprise, outrage, and confusion hammered at his ears.

What have I done?
Bayan’s mind fluttered like a bird trapped in a deep cave, frantically circling among the same dead ends. Immense blackness pressed in on him, and nothing felt real. His father returned with something small and green in his hands. Grateful for the distraction from Imee, Bayan focused on what his father held, a cutting from a tiny pitcher plant: a stem embedded in a small stoneware pot filled with earth. A single, immature green pitcher, the size of Bayan’s fingertip grew from the soil.

He accepted the small pot from his father. “Why are you giving this to me?”

“You’re going to a new place, to live with new people. You should take them a gift.”

“It might not grow up north—”

“You know how to harvest the sap of the pitcher and ferment it. You can teach them how to care for the plant, and how to make their own seerwine. If they like, they can sell it and keep the profits. What you bring them is a valuable plant and the knowledge to make a much-desired product from it. Do not let it die.”

Bayan looked down at the little pitcher. “Yes, Father.”

“You remember the rule of ten?”

Bayan swallowed. He’d have to feed the plant himself for the whole journey north. “Yes. I remember.”

“Good. Take this.” Datu held out a small knife with a sharp point, then slid it into a narrow sheath. Bayan added them to his cloth bag. “Turn around,” Datu demanded.

Bayan obediently turned his back to his father. The older man’s fingers drew lines through Bayan’s shoulder-length hair, gathering the hair from his crown into a tail at the back of his head. His father paused, holding the tail in one hand, then tied the hair into place. Bayan turned and saw that his father had pulled his own tail-thong loose to put it in his son’s hair. Datu’s dark hair hung disheveled and loose around his ears.

“The empire does not ask for the help of boys, Bayan. Today, you are a man.”

~~~

The two men strolled together along a broad, covered walk. Columns of jade marble periodically marked their progress. To their right, broad swaths of green, interspersed with carefully arranged gardens sporting a color scheme of blue and white leaves, separated each multi-story stone building from its neighbors, giving the royal campus an open feel. The bright leafy swaths did nothing to cut the chill winter wind, however, and the men drew their fine wool cloaks close.

“It will be nice to feel warm again,” the dark, slender man commented, tucking a thick envelope into an inner pocket between brisk strides. “Too long since I’ve been home.”

His taller companion did not respond.

“And you? Do you miss your homeland?” the first continued.

“More than you know.” The words came reluctantly.

“Oh, I doubt that. Of the two of us, which is further from the familiar? Which has the more desperate task that draws him into danger?”

The taller man stopped, hazel eyes cold. “You dare ask that of me? After everything else you’ve demanded, you expect me to also allow you the courtesy of a comparison with myself? No! We are nothing alike!”

“Tut, my lord, let us not attract undue attention. Neither of us desire the consequences of that.” The short man continued walking, and after a moment, the other followed as well. They ambled beneath the winter-wilted leaves of a vapor tree. “Besides, we really are not that different, deep down. We both do what we must to get what we want. Is that not what drives all men?”

“No, it is not.” The tall man raised his pointed chin, clipping his words in anger. “If you had not come to me with your smiling threats, I would not have to do anything for you.”

A chuckle. “So short-sighted, for all that vaunted Shawnash’kote wisdom. Fifteen years ago, had you not done as you willed to achieve the end you desired, you would not feel the need to heed my smiling threats in the first place.”

The taller man stopped again. In his eyes burned a hatred that had not been loosed since the Raqtaaq Wars ended a score of years past.

Other books

Arena of Antares by Alan Burt Akers
Trial of Gilles De Rais by George Bataille
Someday_ADE by Lynne Tillman
BOOOM! by Alan MacDonald
The Borzoi Killings by Paul Batista
Kindred Spirits by Rainbow Rowell