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The Beast at the Gate (Rayna of Nightwind Series) ISBN:978-1481278676, Chapters 1-3 |
THE BEAST AT THE GATE © Copyright December 2012 JK Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter One: Rayna Rayna began to question the wisdom of going for a drive so late at night, knowing that a storm was on its way. Though she strained her vision, Rayna could see only a few dozen feet ahead; beyond that was only deep shadow, which seemed poised to swallow her as the car approached it. She could hear the faint rumbling of thunder in the distance. Recently graduated from college, Rayna moved back with her mother in their home on Nightwind Drive. Just a few more minutes, she told herself, and then Iâll turn back. Rayna sat stiff in her seat, her back as rigid as the apprehension she felt. Her petite frame was angular and well-toned. The bones of her face were prominent and were a striking testament to her mixed Native and African-American heritage. Her skin, drawn tight against her face, giving her an attractive sculpted look. Her cheekbones were high, and her jaw was sharp-edged beneath full lips that always seemed to be in a pout. Jet-black hair full of vibrant sheen rested at her shoulders in thick, unruly curls. The soft-hued backlighting from the dashboard cast a cool tint of indigo to her reddish-brown skin. For a car belonging to a twenty-two year old, its interior was uncommonly quiet, outside, the subdued hum of the motor. Music was distracting, and Rayna found she focused better in silence. With her free hand, Rayna reached for her purse, which lay in the passenger seat, to get her mobile phone. After a brief rummage inside her purse, she realized she had been in such a rush to get out, she forgot to bring her phone. Itâs still probably charging on the dresser in my roomâright where I left it, she thought, mildly chiding herself for her absentmindedness. No matter, I wonât be gone long. Instinctively, Rayna glanced at her watch, a gift from her mother on her sixteenth birthday. Over the years, it served her faithfully without fail, through exposure to rain and through bumps against various objects. Its face was a smiling clown; the two ends of whose bright-red mustache served as the minute and hour hands. A clown watch. She sometimes felt ashamed to wear it but could never bring herself to replace it. Now, the mustache indicated it was a quarter to midnight. Spindly shadows of the nightscape passed over Rayna as she drove, reflecting in silence. Her mother had a tough time letting Rayna go away to college, even though she earned a full scholarship in natural science. Her mother was willing to let her go only because she wanted Rayna to beâas she put itââA woman of power.â A flash of lighting streaked across the night sky briefly illuminating the carâs cabin in a flickering white glow. Rayna had another bad dream earlier tonight. It so disturbed her she could not go back to sleep. It was a recurring dream, but she could remember only parts of it. She knew it involved a mysterious woman urging Rayna to follow her somewhere. It took place somewhere mostly dark but with small sparks of light, like stars in a midnight sky. The woman was dressed in some type of green uniform unlike anything sheâd seen before. The womanâs face didnât look threatening initially. However, a closer look showed her eyes to be unusual; they had no whites or pupils, black balls filled their sockets, giving them a sinister appearance as they watched Rayna. In the dream, as Rayna walked toward the woman, she realized she was walking into some kind of trap. Before she could escape, she felt herself falling into a black nothingness. As Rayna fell, she could hear the womanâs cold laughter. Then she would wake up, always troubled and frightened. A lone car with its high beams on rushed towards Rayna. She squinted and looked away toward the side of the road trying to recover her sight. As the car passed, she noticed it had its wipers on. Only then did Rayna realize it was raining. She silently scolded herself for letting her musing distract her. Her windshield was alive with the sound of light drizzling rain dancing on its surface. Thunder crackled nearby. Like jagged white flames, bolts of lightning blazed from the sky at a startling pace. The pace of the rain increased even as Rayna turned on her wipers. The wet road looked like black glass in the darkness. Rayna decided the weather made driving unsafe, and she scanned ahead for a good place to turn around. It was time to go home, tomorrow she would tell her mother her decision. If she was truly to become the woman of power her mother wished, it had to be done. A woman stood in the middle of the road straight ahead. She seemed to have come out of nowhere. Terrified, Rayna slammed on the brakes. The road, slick from the pouring rain, offered no traction and the car skidded out of control. Rayna fought to regain control of the car, her mind flooded with fear. Time slowed, threatening to suspend the horrible moment forever. Suddenly, the road was gone, replaced by shrubbery and grass. Mud and loose rock bombarded the windshield threatening to break through. Rayna could barely see where she was going and was still frantically trying to stop the car. A large stone hit the windshield, which cracked, spreading a cobwebbed ripple across Raynaâs already severely limited view. She could feel the car swaying and rocking as she struggled to keep it from flipping over. Graphic images raced through her tortured mind of her dying amid twisted metal and flames. Control! She needed control. She battled with the steering wheel, jerking it wildly like a sea captain of days long gone fighting the wheel in rough seas. After what seemed an eternity, Rayna felt her wheels grip something solid. The car began to slow, but through the ruined windshield, Rayna knew it would not be soon enough. Directly ahead of her was a large oak and there was no time to avoid it. Rayna never felt so helpless in her life. The next instant she heard a deafening crash. Perfect silence followed. *** When Rayna came to, she was so lightheaded she was afraid she would lose consciousness again. Her head pounded demanding an aspirin she didnât have. She managed to undo her seatbelt then did a quick check of herself. She jabbed her side with trembling fingers, jabbed her stomach and legs, but no pain answered her probing. To her relief, she wasnât hurtâbesides feeling faint, weak, and queasy. She didnât know if she passed out from the crash itself and possibly from an impact to her head, or from the fear. She couldnât feel any bumps on her head, and she wasnât bleeding. However, her headache and disorientation worried her. A concussion? Her watch told her she had not been out for long; it was ten minutes to twelve. The rain was coming down hard, pounding on the roof of her car like countless coins dropping into a tin bucket. Rayna was sure it was that racket, which awoke her so soon. Perhaps it was the thunder, she thought, listening as its booming sound filled the air. Dazed, she brushed shattered bits of wet glass from herself. Bracing herself for the worst, she got out to inspect the damage. The front of the car was pressed firmly against the tree, with its headlights busted and dark, she could just make out the steam spouting from the bent hood. The car was the most valuable thing Rayna ever owned. Though she knew that wasnât saying much, the years of freedom the old car gave her made it priceless. The modest blue four-door Ford she bought used from a friend, with practically no mileage, now appeared smashed beyond repair. With considerable effort, Rayna managed to tear her muddled mind away from trivial concerns about the car; the wreckage could be concealing flames that might cause an explosion. She had to get away from there. With unsteady feet, she began to distance herself from the car, too confused to focus on a specific direction. As she made her escape in the rain, she tried to look for a way back to the main road. The darkness was nearly pitch-black, which made retracing her carâs tire tracks impossible. She was surrounded by a dizzying world of shadow and rain, and she momentarily braced herself against a tree to keep from falling. Trees and foliage extended in every direction, and the farther Rayna walked, the deeper the woods seemed to get. New apprehension settled over her like a chilled mist. Stay calm Rayna, have to stay calm, she told herself. However, she knew she was lost. It didnât seem right her car strayed so far from the road or the stretch of road she was driving was surrounded by such thick forest. As she stumbled ahead, the tall gangling army of trees seemed to move slightly aside to make room for her before closing back in, barricading the way from which she came. Rayna rubbed her wet face and blinked to clear her eyes. Her mind was playing tricks on her, doubling her vision and making things appear to move that werenât. Definitely a concussion, she thought. Rayna had to admit, however, the canopy of oaks and willows were useful for blocking some of the soaking rain. Mud sucked viciously at Raynaâs shoes as she trudged through the woods looking for a way out. Her eyes spotted something ahead, a standing figure. Rayna stopped walking, slipped behind a nearby maple, and hid. It was possible, she thought, the person saw the accident and was there to help, but Rayna wasnât going to take that risk. She was a young woman alone in the woods at night; she was not about to embrace the first stranger she saw. She would find her way out on her own. As quietly as she could, Rayna turned around praying the rain would hide her as she crept away in the opposite direction. After going a short while, she managed a staggering jog. Frequent lightning lit her way as she hurried ahead. Looking behind her, Rayna could see nothing but layers and layers of dense forest that closed behind her like dark curtains. By now, the rain completely drenched her, aided by a strong wind that caressed her with its icy touch. Her dark, wet hair flapped around her head and face in the rushing breeze. The brutal storm defined Rayna Powell. She was no longer a twenty-two-year-old college graduate with hopes of becoming a scientist one day. She was a terrified child lost in the woods. Suddenly Rayna stopped running and stared ahead, unsure of whether or not to blame her concussion, again, for what she was seeing. The mysterious figure stood silently ahead of her in the distance, as if Rayna never changed her course. She decided it was realâshe was being followed. The tense muscles in Raynaâs legs were ready to run, but fear paralyzed her. A cold panic descended upon her; she felt herself tremble like a rabbit facing a wolf. The rain and distance made it impossible for her to know if it was the same person. It seemed to be, but that was impossible. How did he or she get ahead of Rayna in woods as thick and dark as this? Nobody could move that fast! Gradually, Rayna felt her rational mind return to her. She had to believe there were at least two people out there, possibly more. Could they be a rescue party? Rayna seriously doubted it. Neither of them attempted to call out to her nor identify themselves, and the accident didn't occur that long ago. Whoever they were, Rayna was convinced they were not good Samaritans. The other one was probably on his or her way to join the accomplice. If she tried to run again, she might fall into an ambush. She focused her attention on her present stalker. The heavy showers formed a veil between the two, preventing Rayna from seeing much more than a hazy outline of her pursuer. The chill of the rain on Raynaâs taut face suddenly felt unbearable as she saw the stranger begin to walk towards her. Whoever it was advanced softly and confidently in the darkness. Nervously, Rayna called out loudly, only half expecting a response. âHello? Who are you, and why are you following me?â Hesitantly, she added, âI donât need any help, Iâm just fine.â She swallowed deeply after she spoke, and then waited. The stranger said nothing and continued steadily towards her. Buried anger slowly seeped its way into Raynaâs consciousness, washing away her fear. She was letting herself be intimidated by someone she couldnât even see clearly. Fear of the unknown. Her intuition told her that whoever was out there was unarmed and was trying to prey on her fear. She refused to give the person that satisfaction. Caution wasnât workingâshe would trust her intellect to bring her through this alive. She frantically looked around for something useful. A nearby storm-beaten tree provided an answer. At the foot of its trunk lay an assortment of branches and twigs. It didnât take Rayna long to find one that suited her, a straight branch about a yard long with enough weight to be an effective weapon. She grabbed one end of it and swung it against the tree as a test. Braaac! The solid sound of wood striking wood briefly interrupted the steady rattle of the rain. Her headache, however, drew strength from the vibrating impact. Stubbornly, Rayna swung the limb at the tree again, this time more as a warning to her enemies than a test of its strength. Satisfied, Rayna gripped the branch like a baton. It was strong wood that would not break easily. Strong enough to take a man down, she hoped. She inhaled the damp night air fully and stepped forward into the gloom to meet her unknown adversary. Itâs time for this terrified child to be brave if she wants to survive the night, she thought. The clouds became alive again with an endless series of lightning flashes. Rayna was never in a storm as violent as this one. Thunder roared and rolled, testing the full range of its scales. The wind pushed urgently at Rayna, forcing her to push back. It felt like it was trying to turn her away and shield her from what lay ahead. Rayna continued forward, club in hand. As she drew nearer, the shadowy figure slowly took shape, sharpening into a detailed, clear image. Rayna now recognized the woman as the one she ran off the road to avoid. Though she saw her face for only a second, it was painted in her memory as vividly as a photograph. Rayna felt certain it was her, with her long, lustrous black hair streaked with gray and her cold, dark eyes. The woman smiled. âThank you, Rayna Powell.â Her womanâs voice was hollow and measuredâunnaturally so. For an instant, Rayna was almost ready to forgive the lady for the fright she put her through, thinking the woman followed her only to offer her gratitude. Then Rayna realized the woman, a stranger, called her by name. As if summoned, a recent memory triggered in Raynaâs mind. She stared in disbelief. She did know this woman. She was the one in Raynaâs dreams, dressed in the strange green uniform, with the same unsettling tone to her voice. With the same eerie black orbs for eyes. Fear and bewilderment sucked at herâshe felt as if she was sinking deeper and deeper into a nightmare. âAm I dreaming?â Rayna heard herself say without thinking. The lady cackled the same chilling laugh that haunted Raynaâs dreams so many nights. âYou exist not to dream but to become.â She raised her arms high, as if welcoming the icy rain to drown her. Rayna paused, confused. The air suddenly became alive with heat. A clap of thunder vibrated in Raynaâs clenched teeth. Jagged slivers of lightning ripped open the heavens above. Rayna wasnât sure what was happening, but it was getting too dangerous to stand her ground. This was no natural storm, and it was no dream. Rayna knew she needed to seek shelter quickly. The woman apparently was in some sort of shock, blind and deaf to what was happening. Rayna considered dragging the woman with her but dismissed the idea. That would make it the second time she would have endangered her life as a result of the uniformed strangerâs reckless abandon. The woman would have to save herself this time. The womanâs eyes snapped open as a fresh chain of thunderbolts hurled down like a volley of arrows. Then came moreâcloser and closerâuntil Rayna and the mysterious woman were bathed in a continued renewal of celestial light. Rayna could only watch the event in transfixed terror, afraid if she moved one of the bolts would strike her down in the bizarre lightning orgy. When her eyes darted upward at the angry sky, she knew her fear was about to come true. Rayna felt herself engulfed in an explosion of pain. Flaming light burned in her tear-glazed eyes, hands, and feet, forcing her to her knees. Only the mercy of unconsciousness rescued her from the onslaught of agony. Chapter Two: Irelâs Band Rayna drifted in the dark oblivion. She felt herself floating freely in its space. Stray noises with no discernible source faded in and out of range. Starting as a few simple beeps and hums, they gradually multiplied and melded into a complex, harmonious symphony of machine sounds. Rayna turned around in slow motion. âA dream?â she wondered aloud. Slowly, a large mirror formed and shimmered in front of her. Rayna frowned. Her reflection was that of the uniformed woman. âI do not exist to dream, but to become,â the reflection whispered. The mirror shattered, sucking Rayna into the void it left in its place. The place of machine sounds and nothingness fell away violently. *** Raynaâs eyes opened to a world far unlike the one she left, with the darkness replaced by the light of day. She lay sprawled on the ground like a discarded rag and struggled to stand, fighting disorientation that lingered from her blackout. After she stood upright and breathed in mind-clearing air, her mouth gaped in disbelief. Gone were the rainy woods and the mysterious woman; barren, flat wasteland surrounded Rayna. The dusty red ground beneath her feet was hard and lifeless, without even a single weed. Trailing networks of small fissures and cracks spread over the earth. The landscape appeared unnaturally forbidding, and Rayna began to doubt her sanity, wondering if such a place could only emerge from madness. The sky, colored a red so complete it formed a seamless union between it and the equally red ground beneath, obscuring the horizon. She couldnât tell one direction from another; there were no trees, hills, or anything she could use as a marker. Various-sized rocks, strewn across the expanse, too haphazardly to offer any navigational aid. A wave of sickening dizziness came over Rayna, and she almost lost her will to stand. She staggered a few steps before regaining her balance. Her head pounded in a frenzy of pain. No visible sun, no clouds... What was this place? She forced herself to look down at her feet, and the nausea faded. Before Rayna could ponder her situation any further, she heard strange sounds all around her, and it made her aware of yet another problemâa terrifying one. Continuous bolts of lightning lanced their way down to the earth. Rayna winced, remembering her recent encounter in the woods, but this was different lightning. This lightning was unusually narrow, and it came down perfectly straight, like some sort of white laser. No rain or wind accompanied it, the air was as dry and dead as the parched ground on which she stood. In place of a crackle, the lightning made sharp popping sounds, like a bug-zapper. When the bolts struck the earth, they exploded, leaving shallow craters about the size of Raynaâs fist. Rayna noticed the entire landscape, spotted with such lightning craters. Their pattern, random and wild, made it appear as though mad giants with round, spiked shoes, had invaded the world. The feeble snapping sound the bolts made did not fool Rayna. She knew she stood in the midst of falling death. She paused. How did she get here? The last thing she remembered was being struck by lightning. If that were true, Rayna proposed, why was she not hurt or dead? She recalled literally being set ablaze from the lightning storm, yet she could find no burns or other physical evidence of having been struck. Secondly, why was she here? She shuddered to think she had really died and materialized in this hellish afterworld as punishment for some unknown deed. Raynaâs forehead wrinkled in worry. It was possible she was hallucinating, that explanation made the most sense of any. On the other hand, she reasoned, on the other hand, this could be an extension of the strange, dark dream from which she had just awakened. Rayna sighed, dismissing that possibility. Unlike the dream, the pain of her headache from the car wreck was present and pounding. Her resolve strengthened, and she deeply inhaled more of the strange red-tainted air. This was no dream, and it was not the time to second-guess herself. Raynaâs thoughts shifted to the woman she had seen in the woods. What happened to her? Her concentration was shaken when a charge of lightning touched down close to her left. The small pit it left behind smoldered with the promise of instant death to anyone foolish enough to stay around for another. Rayna scolded herself with fear-laced sarcasm. Only I, she thought, would sit around and debate a situation while unknown energies blasted around me. She wanted to blame her recent blackout or her headache for the dangerous lapse in urgency, but she wasnât sure. The questions would wait. Survival was first priority. Rayna started to walk, slowly at first, then faster, until she was at a full run. She didnât know where she was running to. She prayed she would find a road leading to a neighborhoodâany neighborhood. Rayna found solace in the possibility of reaching a phone and calling to have her mother to pick her up. Then this nightmare would be over. Suddenly, she heard a loud pop, and fragments of rock sprayed over her back and neck. As she ran, she turned her head to see a newly formed lightning crater with hot gray smoke ushering out. Rayna panted with relief. If she had been running just a little slower, she would never have seen her mother, or anyone, ever again. Two lines of the white energy landed almost in the same spot in front of her. Rayna dodged avoiding the flying bits of dust and stone, still running hard. Sweat flowed over the skin of Raynaâs tense face. Its salty wetness slid into her eyes, joining with her tears. Her ears heard only the sound of her own heavy, ragged breathing. Raynaâs burning lungs coughed in protest; her legs began to buckle. She slowed, then collapsed and folded onto the hard ground, gasping in the stale crimson air. Rayna groaned. When she was running, every tendon had hurt, and her headache had gotten considerably worse. Now, the fall intensified the muscle pain so much her headache seemed trivial. Wearily, she rose back to her feet. Her ankle stung under the pressure of her weight. She wiped her sweaty face to clear her vision and discovered blood. Raynaâs body was so filled with pain, she couldnât tell exactly where the blood came from. She felt like a drunkard vainly trying to pinpoint her nose. From the location of the blood, she guessed she had a nosebleed. As she limped on, a brief surge of tingling warmth came over her. Rayna ignored it, not daring to stop walking. She could see and feel the white beams detonating all around her. Eventually, Raynaâs sense of terror became as depleted as her body. She no longer flinched with each loud impact. She was no longer in any condition to dodge the boltsâthat would take too much valuable energy. Instead, she doggedly hurried down a linear path of cracks at her feet. The fissures in the ground, though jagged, did follow a somewhat straight direction. She refused to let herself die here, in this lonely, bitter place. She found her thoughts drifting back to another, better time. She recalled how she used to help her mother tend her garden many years ago. Her mother let her do much of the planting, and she was proud to care for that small spot of land. A stray cat delighted in trespassing into that beloved space. The long delicate stalks and stems of lovely flowers were nothing more than green yarn to the cat. Some days, when Rayna came home from school, she would see the cat in her garden joyfully pouncing about and swatting at her beautiful plantsâmangling them with its paws. Furious, she would chase the pest away, her ebony ponytails flying in the afternoon air. The cat, no wiser from the ordeal, would return to play in the garden the next day. Rayna stared at her dismal surroundings. This was no beautiful garden. This place was so desolate and empty she would gladly have that miserable cat by her side now. Rayna closed her eyes to the loneliness around her and imagined being back in her garden. She imagined the feel of fresh soil in her hands, the purity of a spring breeze washing over her, blending with the perfume of budding flowers as she worked. A wonderful, cool breeze, so⊠She felt the breeze! Rayna opened her eyes in shocked surprise. She had grown so used to the windless world in which she was trapped, the change felt almost traumatic. The current of clean air was steady and gentle. She felt its soft touch brush the right side of her cheek. Her fatigue momentarily caused her to forget where she was. She was still walking, her feet on autopilot. Raynaâs head tilted upward at the sky, testing the air with her face. Cautiously, she continued onward, letting her sense of touch guide her through the faint, whispering, airy oasis she found. The lightning became less frequent, and she noticed fewer craters as she hobbled on. She scarcely bothered to look up at the sky to predict its descent. The breeze got mercifully stronger. Then, as if an atmospheric veil had lifted, the dim, red world that had become familiar slowly receded, and soon Rayna was standing on green earth. Chapter Three: Kuara Ragged but determined, Rayna made her way across the grassy plains. The bright morning sun and gentle wind helped brighten her mood and replenish her precious little stamina. It was hot, and the breeze was just enough to make the heat tolerable. Rayna removed her sweater and tied it over her head, bonnet style. It gave her much-needed shade from the overbearing sun, though by now she was already perspiring profusely. Her blouse, soaked with sweat, made the wind feel blessedly cooler. Rayna couldnât help thinking that not long ago she had been standing in an icy downpour at night, and then awakened in a red wasteland. Now she was hereâa sunny, green, and very warm pasture. By now, Rayna found that little could surprise her. She wanted only to get back to civilization and go home. Her ankle hurt, forcing her almost to hop forward, putting as little weight as possible on the injured ankle. The countryside was flat enough to see for miles in each direction; it didnât take long before Rayna saw what she was looking for. A small town loomed in the distance, perhaps two miles awayâthirty minutes by foot, much longer if one foot was hurt like hers. Several small houses lay scattered at its outskirts, like little children who wandered too far from their mother. Rayna glanced at her watch and saw it had stopped near midnight, moments after the car wreck. She unclasped the band and took the watch in one hand, lightly smacking it into the opposite palm to try to get it working again, but to no avail. The grinning clown face stared at her, the halves of its silly mustache saluting upward. Rayna tapped and shook the watch a few more times, then gave up, reattached it to her wrist, and looked for somewhere to rest. The pain in her ankle told her the injury could not go untreated for much longer, and she needed to limit her walking. As far as Rayna could tell, there was no bleeding, but she feared what she would find underneath her sock. At the very least, the ankle felt extremely swollen. She bent down and explored the ankle with a light touch, grimacing in pain that felt as fresh as the initial injury. She tried to remove her shoe to take some of the pressure away, but even though she handled her foot as gently as possible, the pain forced her to stop. Rayna knew she would never make it to the town like this. She guessed she might be able to walk for five minutes at a time, at most ten, before the pain became too great. As tempting as the grassy meadow looked, she resisted the urge to lie down. If she rested here, she thought, the swelling would only get worse, the muscles would stiffen, and she might not be able to walk at all. Then she would be strandedâalone and helpless in the middle of a field foreign to her, with nothing to eat but grass. As if in answer to her worries, Rayna caught sight of a small, green cottage. She hadnât noticed it at first because a gentle slope mostly hid it. Its old-fashioned charm suited the rustic landscape perfectly. Rayna smiled optimistically. Whoever lives there, she thought, would hopefully drive her to a hospital. However, from her vantage point, she couldnât see any sign of a car or garage. On a sudden impulse, Rayna turned to look back at how far her travels had brought her. Past the waving grasses and sea-blue skies, she could still see the edge of the crimson abyss from which she had come. It was like staring back at a nearly forgotten dreamâpale and insignificant in the distance. She turned, putting the past behind her, and headed for the cottage. The door to the cottage was open, as if whoever lived there was expecting her. Beyond the gloom of the doorway loomed a lone figure sitting at a table. Rayna paused, now uncertain of her prospects here, but her pain made her abandon caution, and she went inside. Upon closer inspection, Rayna saw the figure was a girl, thin, frail, and sickly. She was dressed in dirty white robes and was barefoot. Rayna guessed she was about eleven or twelve years old. She looked tired, as if she had not rested in a long time. The girl held a staff of polished tan wood, both ends wrapped with silvery metal. Something about her concerned Rayna. The girlâs skin had an unhealthy tinge to it. Dark hair draped both sides of her long, pale face before coming to rest limply on her shoulders. The overall effect gave her a long, sad, look. Her eyes, like dark, oval pools, reflected sorrow and despair, and Rayna could tell the girl had experienced things far beyond her physical years. Rayna wanted to speak, to ask for help, but the pain muted her. Thankfully, no words were needed on her part. The youth was aware of Rayna and did not appear to take her unexpected presence as an intrusion. She gestured for Rayna to take a seat in a nearby chair. Without hesitation, Rayna limped over and sat down hard on its wooden seat. She sighed in relief. She closed her eyes and just sat for a moment; her eyes shut tightly in sightless silence, breathing deeply, and savoring the simple joy of sitting. *** When Rayna opened her eyes, she noticed her sneakers and socks were missing. The sweater that had been tied around her head was now neatly folded and placed on her lap. The girl sat facing her, holding one of Raynaâs shoes, eyeing it with reserved fascination. She glanced up at Rayna sorrowfully, looking even wearier than earlier. âSo this is what Powers wear on their feet. The paintings showing you wearing sandals are wrong, Irel.â Her voice was soft and kind, yet so sad. The girlâs words puzzled Rayna. âI think you have me confused with somebody else. My name is Rayna, not Irel,â she blurted awkwardly. âAnd I need to see a doctor. I think I broke my ankle.â The girl smiled faintly. âI am the only true healer you will find in West Taren. My talent is humble, but I was able to restore your wounded foot to health as you slept.â Even as the girl spoke, Rayna realized the pain was gone. She touched her ankle, lightly at first, then more firmly. She could not find the slightest swelling or redness anywhere. She stared at the girl in disbelief. âHow?â âYour body is strong and healthy. Healing was easy because all I needed to do was focus that strength on your injury.â The girl paused and leaned forward in her chair, staring briefly at Raynaâs sweater before returning her gaze to the floor. âForgive me for removing your sacred headdress, but I had to know if my eyes were mistakenâŠthey were not.â Rayna wrinkled her forehead, puzzled. âWhat are you talking about?â âForgive me. I talk in riddles. Let me recall all I know, so you will not think I was not paying attention.â She leaned back and slowly closed her eyes. For the next few minutes, the frail girl sat so quiet and still, Rayna feared she had died. Then, to Raynaâs relief, the girl began to speak. âShortly before you came to me, I was peering through the window for signs of the Red Robes. It was then I first saw you. Prophecy tells of a day when Irel will come back and punish those who sent her away. She would cross through the very Band they used to imprison her.â The girlâs eyelids opened, revealing dark glistening orbs on the verge of tears. âI lived here in Kuara most of my life, and I have seen several people enter into the Band, but no mortal has ever departed from it. And so, Irelââ The girl paused, and then began again, speaking cautiously and thoughtfully. âWhen I saw you pass from the Band, I was afraid my eyes were seeing things not true.â Rayna peered out the window. Though it was a strain, she could still see the accursed thing, a crimson stain that would not wash away. âWhen you say âBand,â youâre talking about that red no-manâs land back there, arenât you?â The girl nodded meekly, âWe know it as the Band but sometimes call it âthe Place of Unbent Lightning.ââ Rayna smirked at the colorful names for something that nearly killed her. She remembered the white lasers coming down all around her and repressed a shudder. Turning away from the window, she faced the girl. âWhat is that place, really? Some kind of weird military testing ground? I must have accidentally stumbled onto it after the car crash.â The girl smiledâthe kind of sheepish smile people give when they really donât understand what youâre saying but are too embarrassed to admit it. âDo you want me to tell you how I knew for certain my eyes had not deceived me?â The girlâs question was an obvious attempt to change the subject to something more familiar. âSure. Why not?â The girlâs eyes widened, looking like sad, ebony saucers reflecting back at Rayna. âEveryone in Taren knows that Powers are round-ears. When I removed your beautiful headdress, and saw your ears, I knew you could be no one other than the Power Irel, free from exile!â âWait a minute,â Rayna began. âWhatâs a âround-ear,â and why do you keep calling my sweater a headdress?â The girl tilted her head slightly, seemingly confused by the double question. In resignation, she apologized and said nothing else. It suddenly dawned on Rayna what the girl meant. âYou mean my ears are round, so you call me a round-ear?â The girl nodded. Rayna shot the girl a questioning glance from the corners of her eyes. She felt herself becoming annoyed for allowing the childish game to get this far and not catching it from the start. Rayna wasnât good with fast, witty retorts, but she wasnât about to be made a fool by a twelve-year-old. âWell, if Iâm a âround-ear,â then what are you, a âsquare-earâ?â she said sarcastically. The girl, sensing she was misunderstood, simply pulled back her long, raven-black hair so Rayna could see her ears. They were narrow and long, with a sharp, distinctive point at their top. Astonished, Rayna gawked at the girl. âHow...how long have your ears been that way?â âFrom the start of my life. All mortal citizens of Taren are as such.â âYouâre telling me there are more people around here with ears like that?â âYes, Irel, many more.â âPlease stop calling me that! My name is Rayna, Rayna Powell.â Rayna forced herself to look away from the girlâs disturbing ears. âI suppose youâll be telling me next that youâre a very tall elf.â âI know not what an elf is, Irel.â âThatâs a reliefâand again, for the last time, my name is RAYNA.â âForgive me.â Rayna sighed, realizing how rude she must have sounded. âNo, forgive me. You let me in your home and somehow healed my foot. I really appreciate all youâve done. And Iâm sorry about yourâŠbirth defect.â The girl looked uncomfortable but nodded respectfully, a small smile on her face and a bit of uncertainty in her eyes. Rayna frowned. âSorry again. In case you havenât noticed, I have a tendency of putting my foot in my mouth.â âIt is not my place to question where a Power puts her foot.â Rayna laughed, and soon the girlâs delicate laughter joined Raynaâs deeper, throatier chuckle. Rayna relaxed, relieved the tense encounter had taken a lighter turn. The girlâs eyes softened, and for a brief moment, she didnât look so ill. To Raynaâs surprise, she began to sing, a smooth, enchanting melody. Her ethereal voice perfectly suited the songâs haunting lyrics. As Rayna listened, the spirit in which they were sung superseded the girlâs thought-provoking lyrics. Still, Raynaâs sharp mind managed to commit to memory the first few verses: The club forged of trees is greater than the sword forged of fire. For its wood is born of life, and above life, thereâs nothing higher. Let not evil dark deeds bring the sorrow, which robs all happiness. Stand against the hate disguise, and unite half to make whole our less. The light is our need and will take time for us to brandish well. Winds of wrong blow without toil, but the labor to make right prevails⊠When the girl finished, Rayna wanted to ask her to sing again, sad and almost angry the beautiful song was over. Before she could say anything, the girl spoke. âThat was an old song passed on for many ages. It is customary to offer aPower a gift if one should be fortunate enough to meet one. My father and I are poor. The best gift I could offer was a song. My father says my voice is as lovely as the land of Kuara, so I chose to share it with you.â She smiled briefly, trying not to reveal her pride. Rayna appreciated the girlâs kindness but knew she was enjoying benefits and courtesies not intended for her. Her analytical mind demanded a rational explanation. Who was this Power called Irel the girl spoke of? How could Rayna be mistaken for her? And how did all of this connect to her being in this strange place? Rayna surveyed the small room. The minimal furnishings were Spartan, with no upholstery on the wooden chairs and no decorative carving on the small, simple table. She noticed the absence of a television, radio, and lampsânot a single electric appliance could be seen. The windows had no glass, only antiquated shutters. The table where they sat had one unlit candle in its holder, and a mortar and pestle in one corner, its crushed contents still inside. The girl certainly spoke the truth when she said she and her father were poor. Rayna made a sweeping gesture of the area with her hand, nodding several times. âNice place,â she lied. âThank you.â âI donât suppose you have a phone I can use to call home?â The girl, predictably, shook her head, a puzzled look on her face. âYou donât know what a phone is, do you?â Rayna asked, softening her voice to avoid sounding condescending. Again, the girl shook her head. Rayna leaned back, and the old wooden chair creaked under her weight. She began to massage her temples. âYour song was so wonderful I forgot I have a splitting headache,â she said. The girl rushed to Raynaâs side and offered to heal her. Rayna was tempted to let the girl do for her headache whatever she had done for her ankle, but she reluctantly refused. The girl looked half-dead already, and she looked worse after healing Raynaâs ankle than before. Whatever she did seem to take a lot out of her, and Rayna feared that any more of this mysterious healing could kill her. Rayna smiled sadly. âI would simply ask for an aspirin, but I donât think you know what that is either.â An awkward silence followed. Rayna was curious about her host and this strange, backward place, but she couldnât think of a polite way of asking for explanations. She was pleased when the girl began to talk about herself. Rayna learned the girl was born in a providence called Zuran. She had begun to demonstrate healing talents before she could talk. âNo one was sure,â the girl said, âwhy I, a child of West Taren parents, would possess magic. Such people as myself are called âUnnaturalsâ because we are neither truly West Taren nor East. Few of us exist.â âBut you do.â âYes, and I believe my mother would have preferred it if I had come into the world blind or crippled instead. You see, when I turned seven years of age, my mother could tolerate my magic no longer. She begged my father to kill me, and she accused me of being a spawn of evil.â âYouâre not evil,â Rayna assured her. âThank you, Irel. That means much to me.â âIâm sorry for interrupting. What happened next?â âMy father, a well-regarded courier by trade, also feared my magic, but he could not bring himself to kill me, his only child.â The girlâs stare focused down at nothing as she relived the past moment in her mind. âSoon after my fatherâs decision to spare my life, my mother hung herself outside our home. The note he found in her pocket said she forgave him for being too weak-willed a man to perform the deed.â Rayna was stunned into silence. For the first time, the girl raised her voice in anger. âMy father is not a weak man! His body may falter, but his spirit never has. Surely you know this to be true, Irel.â âYes, of course,â Rayna answered, unsure of what else to say. Reassured, the girl continued. âMy father was fearful for my safety, because soon my talents would be too difficult to hide. Even back then, the penalty in West Taren for using magic was death. The only hope a magic user had of avoiding such a fate was self-exile to the land of East Taren, where magicians were not only accepted but also welcomed. However, my father, as most West Tareners did, regarded East Taren as a foul land not fit for raising West Taren young. Instead, he quit his position and secretly moved us here to Kuara, a West Taren province known for its strong but welcoming people.â Rayna learned from the girl, though deep in magic-phobic West Taren, Kuarans were rumored to accept magic healers into their community from time to time. According to the girl, her father was a big, strong, hardworking man then and could fit in as a Kuaran native easily. He gambled the Kuarans would accept them both. They did, so the girl and her father remained in Kuara. Throughout the conversation, much of which went against everything Rayna knew to be rational and sensibleâplaces she never heard of before, the casual references to magic. Yet, Rayna found herself intuitively trusting the girlâs words, accepting them as truth. If it were not for the bizarre course of events leading up to this point, Rayna would have dismissed the whole story as the product of an overactive imagination. Something strange, however, happened to her in the woods during the storm that night. In that context, the girlâs story could make sense. Rayna recalled the chain of events that led her here. She had been followed by a woman she had previously known only in her dreams, then been struck by lightning, only to appear in a red wasteland unscathed. A pointed-eared girl claiming to be a magical healer had mysteriously healed her badly injured ankle. Then there was the issue of being mistaken for someone called Irel, apparently an important person. It all had to mean something. A feeble cough sounded from behind a closed door. The girl took notice, looking more anxious than ever. âPlease excuse me. I must go now to attend to my father.â When she stood, the girl leaned on her staff like a cane, as if the young girlâs uncharacteristically mature behavior had internally aged her body. As the girl rushed to the closed door, Rayna decided to follow her, partially out of curiosity and partially out of her desperate need to find clues to the growing mystery of what had happened to her. The girl opened the door quickly, but Rayna slipped in before the girl could object. The pungent smell of decay and sickness rushed violently into Raynaâs nostrils. She gently closed the door behind her, sensing it never remained open. With the door of the windowless room shut, she felt like she had entered a small tomb. A lone candle illuminated the room only dimly. As Raynaâs eyes adjusted, she first made out a bed, then the man in it, partially covered by a thin, veil-like sheet. His eyes were shut tight, and his breathing was shallow and irregular. His face, the least ravaged by whatever dark malady gripped him, indicated he was somewhere in his forties. The rest of his body, Rayna observed, looked much older. At one time, he may have been the powerful and hardworking man his daughter claimed him to be, but now, all that was left of his frame was a brittle, withered mass of bone and skin. Then there were his earsâpointed, just like his daughter. It must be a hereditary deformity, Rayna thought. The dying man spoke no words; Rayna was unsure if that was by choice or due to his sickness. He appeared blind to Raynaâs scrutiny. His pitiful hacking cough eased only momentarily in response to the girlâs whispered words of comfort that Rayna could not hear. She turned to Rayna and said, âIt has been a long time since my father has been well enough to work. Ever since he became ill, I have earned our bread by healing the local laborers after they toil in the fields all day. It is a secret arrangement that no one outside Kuara knows of. I earn enough coin to care for my father and keep our home, and that is all I need.â âWhy canât you heal him like you did me?â Rayna asked. The girl shook her head tiredly as she brought her father some water and helped him to drink. âI fear that is my failure. My father suffers from a rotting sickness that consumes from the inside out. I can only partially heal such a condition, and at that, only modestly. Healing a sore limb or treating a backache is an easy task for me, and I can do so using only small amounts of magic. You see, the Red Robes, though powerful, cannot sense magic used in such small amounts. I can help the farmers and townspeople with their minor ailments without fear of detection.â âI see,â Rayna said thoughtfully. Her thoughts ran briefly to that of her own father shortly before he died of cancer. She remembered him looking as frail as the girlâs father. She cried when the nurse asked her to leave the room. That was the last time she saw her father alive. End of sample. Pick up the 21-chapter paperback or eBook today: Amazon.com, Barnes&Noble, Smashwords.com. |