The Assassin's Wife (27 page)

Read The Assassin's Wife Online

Authors: Moonyeen Blakey

Once, when Praba stooped to gather the scattered coins and bow his thanks, the watchers drew back and crossed themselves, frightened by the white smile in his dark face. Fascinated by his garish clothes, a tiny girl crept forward. When she reached out a hand to touch him, her mother snatched her away.
 

“Tell your fortune, lady?” Mara asked in her husky voice.
 

The woman shrank back, holding the child against her.

“Want to know about the man with only one hand?”
 

Gasping, the woman crossed herself.

“No need to be afraid, lady,” said Mara gently. “The miller don’t forget his promise to you—”

Stifling a sob, the woman picked up the child and ran, while around Mara the other villagers stood open-mouthed.

“How did you know about Seb’s hand?” asked a greasy woman.

Mara smiled impishly. “Same way I know about the baby boy you lost in autumn.” She stared directly into the woman’s frightened eyes.

“Tell me what you see for me,” a rough male voice commanded.
 

Mara turned slowly holding out her hand. “Give me a coin, then, sir,” she answered in a wheedling tone. “I’ll tell you what you most desire to know.”

This first time I saw Mara use her gift to tell fortunes, I marvelled at her skill and audacity.
 

“Don’t you fear being accused of witchcraft?”
 

“I do this to earn a few coins now I can no longer lift my skirts in the dance,” she answered with a laugh. “It’s just nonsense to entertain the needy ones. It needs no skill such as you and I possess.”

“But they understand you. And they’ll tell tales. Aren’t you afraid of punishment? And are all the fortunes you tell mere nonsense?”
 

Mara’s eyes grew misty with remembering. “Once on Astwith Gorse, I saw a special one. Oh, but she was a fine lady, not like these peasants. I’ll not meet with such a one again.”

“Who was this maid? What did you see for her?”

“She was no maid,” Mara’s dark eyes gleamed. “She was a woman men would die for.”

Something in her black eyes puzzled me.
 

“Tell me more.”
 

Laughing softly, Mara took my hand. “I told her she’d wed a royal prince. Destiny had chosen her for greatness.”

“Did she believe you?”

“It pleased her much. I remember she turned to her friends with such pride they treated her with mock homage. It was sport to them but not for her. She believed it. I saw it in her face.”

“But was there more?”
 

I knew it, for Mara’s eyes shone bleak.

“I told her she would know grief beyond all imagining. Oh, I saw her recoil then like a little bird from the shadow of the hawk’s beak. I knew by that she’d already chosen her path. I saw darkness in her and I was afraid.”
 

“What did you see?” I asked in a whisper, my flesh crawling.

“Terrible, unspeakable things. How could I reveal them? ‘Troubles dire will fall upon your head,’ I told her. It was enough.” Mara trembled. She’d forgotten my presence in re-living the past. “She steeled herself as if for a blow. I couldn’t stop. “Your beauty and your fame will continue beyond death,” I said, “for bone of your bone will join three great houses in one.”

“Who was she?”
 

“You’ve no need to ask.” I shivered then under the scrutiny of her ancient eyes. “You can uncover such secrets yourself. Besides, you must remind her of the message one day. I’ll be with you when you speak to her.”
 

She wouldn’t say more of this though I asked often. “Soon enough when the time comes, child.”

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Thirty-Five

 

 

 

 

“Great changes.” Mara turned over the card. I leaned forward to study the image of a wheel rolling with outlandish figures clinging to its rim. Seated upon a kind of pedestal, a crowned, winged creature clutched a sword. “The wheel of fortune,” she said in her husky tones. “Our lives turn within it. Our destinies are carried in the spokes. All is ordained. As the wheel moves, so our lives change. One moment we rise, in another we fall. As light and dark, so fortune and misfortune are linked.”

With bated breath, I watched her take up the next card from the pile I’d shuffled, according to her instructions. This time, her face assumed a puzzled expression as she laid the card crosswise upon the first. I leaned forward, too eager to remain silent.

“What is it?” I studied the play of light and shade across her features in the mysterious candle-light.

A man in a curious hat stood behind a table on which lay several objects, a knife, a cup, coins and dice. “The juggler.” Mara pointed to the rod he held. “The wand is power but he turns his face away. Before him lie the instruments of his greatness, but he doesn’t notice them. Many things are within his grasp but he looks without seeing and so wastes his talent.” She raised her eyes to look at me gravely. Shaken, I sensed the importance of this moment. It was as if she has seen into the core of me and found a void. “Such gifts as you possess should not be wasted. You must be bold. The way is hazardous, but you’ve the skill to take it. The juggler’s a master of disguise. You, too, must wear a mask for your enterprise is couched in secrecy.”

The third card revealed the faded picture of a monkish figure holding a lamp, as if he embarked upon a pilgrimage. “Brother Brian,” I said involuntarily, and Mara’s glance grew piercing sharp.

“The hermit travels through darkness, but see how his face turns towards the past. He is alone and has learned wisdom through harsh experience. You must learn, child, to turn away from the past, and look to the future. Like the hermit, you’ve walked alone but you’ve yet to reach true understanding. The past is gone, but the future waits. You have a promise to fulfil. You must meet it with fortitude.”

Over the weeks we travelled together, I became familiar with these strange devices—swords, pentacles, wands and cups. In the faint candle light, I studied again the pictures that seemed to dance as if within some stately promenade. The Hanged Man grinned at me as he swung from his gibbet; the Devil leered and twisted the chained slaves at his feet; the Hermit shuffled into the unknown, and beyond the ring of light, other images pointed toward the mystery of the future. But the past clamoured for my attention, and I listened, spell-bound, as Mara unravelled it, her dark voice probing secrets that had long lain hidden. The moments spilled like coloured beads, and I saw events painted in fresh, vibrant colours as if I stood amidst them for the first time. The Knave of Swords stared up at me lasciviously and I felt a lurch of desire in the pit of my belly. Close by, the King of Cups looked beyond earthly matters with a world-weary gaze that brought tears stinging behind my eyes.

“You must look forward,” Mara reminded me. “The experiences of the past are but lessons to prepare us for the future. You have an important task to fulfil.”

I thought then of the boys who’d haunted my dreams since childhood.

“The child is precious,” said Mara, as if she’d read my thoughts. “You must save him.”

When I opened my mouth to ask more, she pressed her finger to it. “Not yet,” she said. “You must find the father first.”
 

 

* * * * *

 

“Among the Rom it is called dukkering.”

Mara’s husky voice growled warm and mellow, in the dregs of the day. We sat with our backs against the cart, luxuriating in drowsy companionship as the last tatters of sunlight faded. Tracing the fine lines across my palm, she instructed me to note their names—life, head, heart, fate—pointing to where they met or crossed like spider threads. “Each hand is different.” I peered at the tiny marks. What mystery lurked in this delicate tracery? Was it really possible to read a life from such a fractured pattern?

Mara grasped both my wrists and nodded, as she thrust the upturned palms towards my face. “Left hand is for the fate chosen at birth, and right for the ways in which you meet it.”

“Can I change my fate?”

Mara laughed her familiar husky laugh. “No man can change his fate. Each man meets his destiny according to his own choice.”

“That doesn’t make sense. If we can choose, then we can alter our fate as we wish.”

“No.” Mara’s face grew sombre. “Our fates are written. No matter where we run, whatever path we take, however far we travel, wherever we may hide, our destiny leads us willingly or unwillingly to the same end. There’s no escape.”

“Then what are we to do? Do we just sit and wait for things to happen?
 

“No, we are travellers and must face the hazards of the journey with a purpose.”

She called Akasha from feeding twigs into a pile of brushwood being built for the evening cooking fire. The young woman crouched at her feet.

“Give Nan your hand.” Without a word Akasha placed it, palm upward into mine. I allowed the lines to take me on their intricate journey and found myself unfolding Akasha’s past with growing confidence. The pictures spun me forward—I chased them eagerly until—

A gasp of horror forced me to confront Akasha’s expectant gaze. A bruise, like a purple flower, bloomed upon her cheekbone, and another angry weal lurked at the corner of her swollen mouth. More shocking than these ugly wounds gleamed the look of acceptance in her eyes.

“Akasha knows,” Mara said. “Nothing you say can hurt her more.”

“But she can’t, mustn’t—” Emotion strangled my voice.

“No man or woman can escape destiny.”
 

Akasha smiled up at me with such tender resignation I felt shamed.

Death by sudden violence, death at the hands of strangers, early death and a child left lonely by the roadside. How could she accept such a future with a smile?

“Shangula will take the child,” I said. “He’ll be a joy and consolation to her in her solitude.” Gratitude shone in her eyes. “He’ll grow up strong, a man of worth among his people. He’ll be loved. His children will be many.”
 

Through the shimmer of her unshed tears, I read relief and satisfaction.
 

“Akasha was stoned yesterday in the village.” Mara gestured to the bruises. “The Rom are not always welcome visitors.”

I stared at my own hands as if afraid to read what lay ahead.

“Sometimes we must conceal what we see, for some are not strong enough to face the fate. As you grow older, you’ll learn what to open and what to wrap in darkness. Many will call upon your wisdom to guide their steps. You must guard your tongue lest it leads you into grave danger.” Mara closed my fingers and took my fists in her own strong grip. “You’ve such a long road to travel, child. Already you have a purpose. Be sure to see it to its end.”

 

* * * * *

 

Thin fingers of light stretched across the black arch of the sky when we heard the mewling cry of the child.

“Kamala’s babe is born!”

Shangula’s voice broke the tension. We rose at once, chattering like jays. Someone passed me a cup and I drank the hot spicy liquid, scalding my mouth. I coughed until tears filled my eyes.
 

Mara melted away into the shadows. I knew she would go back to her charts. We’d awaited this birth anxiously for it was Kamala’s first child.

Pulling my shawl around me, I stamped my feet against the cold. Stars still hung like twinkling jewels above us. I tried to make out the constellations Mara had taken such pains to point out to me and wondered what the future might hold for the new baby.

“Our fortunes are written in the heavens,” Mara told me. She stretched out her bony fingers to the smattering of stars across the skies. “The pattern changes with the seasons. Each constellation has its reign, just as a king rules his people for a span, and those born under such and such a star, will share its spirit.”

“I can’t see how the rising of a star might have any bearing on a human life. You told me our fates were written in the lines on our hands, and now you tell me the pattern of the stars shapes our destinies.”

“Oh child,” murmured Mara, laughing and squeezing my hand, “what wondrous doubts you have. How I love the way you mock me with your unbelief. But I’ll show you how the stars form their own pathways across the heavens, pathways that echo the fate that lies in the lines of every hand.”

She taught me names and told stories of the lights that speckle the night sky. Then she showed me how to plot the charts of a nativity. “Each chart must be carefully prepared. At the very moment of conception, fate is written in the position of the stars in the heavens. Each birth chart is quite different, for no two men are alike in every detail. The time and place of birth is also most important, for at the first cry, the first gulp of air an infant takes, its fate is sealed within a cosmic moment.” She looked deep into my eyes. “One day, you’ll remember my words, as you hold a new-born in your arms.”
 

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