Vreuvillä swept her arm wide as she turned to the stilled trees all around her. At first Wynn wondered if the priestess meant the clearing or the whole forest surrounding it.
“It is all from them, from ‘she who suffers and mourns,’” the priestess went on. “Like a parent whose child grows, goes its own way, and forgets what birthed it. I am ... the Foirfeahkan were ... all that remain to hold that ever-thinning bond, reminding ‘mother’ and ‘child’ of each other.”
Wynn knew varied creation myths of some cultures, both living and dead. These, in turn, had contributed to the notion of the Fay and the Elements of Existence used metaphorically by her guild. Some sages had even taken on a foundationist’s perspective, combining the core pieces of long forgotten belief systems, believing there was some primary force that had initiated everything, Existence itself. It didn’t often sit well with current formal religions or the guild itself.
Wynn had her doubts about such things, preferring what could be reasoned. Of course, she had no doubt that the Fay were real, whatever they—it, the one and the many—ultimately were. Beyond all this, whatever the Fay or Vreuvillä thought or believed, the core of Wynn’s being told her that what she did was right. It had to be right, no matter the cost, because she couldn’t face the alternative.
She’d turned against the guild, deceived and lied, and even stolen revered cold lamp crystals and used them like currency. She had done—would continue to do—all these wrong things for the right reason.
“I do thank you,” she told Vreuvillä.
But she turned away to find Chane fixated upon Vreuvillä. He was shuddering, and his eyes seemed dead, their irises like circles of crystallized ice upon white marble orbs. He looked nothing like himself ... or perhaps as if there was nothing left of himself inside.
“Chane?”
Only then did Wynn realize something. Whenever questions had been asked of someone unknown or untrustworthy, Chane had stood right behind her. By a whisper or a squeeze upon her shoulder, he’d guided her through the truths or deceptions of those who gave answers.
Wynn had heard nothing from Chane through the entire exchange with Vreuvillä.
Now the priestess watched him alone, her grip tightening on the white, curved blade.
“Chane?” Wynn whispered.
Fear-fed hunger, the screeching beast within, the prodding forest upon him like an army of insects ...
This was all that Chane felt, all that filled his head, until he could do nothing but hold himself in as he stood behind Wynn.
The barkless tree behind him felt like a cold fire on his back, its suspicious chill penetrating his dead flesh. It might not know what he was, but it wanted him gone—not just from this place, but forever. Amid this, all Chane could cling to was what he wanted: Wynn, safe and always within reach.
This was the only clear desire left in place of his reason.
Fear of any threat to him—to her—grew too much. It wrapped around that one desire as the forest prodded him without mercy, trying to uncover what he was. And that wild woman now eyed him, as if some living beast within her sensed the unliving one within him.
He saw her hand clenched on her white blade’s hilt. The beast inside him howled to face this threat. But Chane saw only the threat to Wynn.
Chane lunged around Wynn, and she sucked air so fast, her throat turned dry. Snarls erupted from the pack and even Shade, as well. Wynn instinctively grabbed for a hold on any dog she might get.
Shade swerved in and rammed Chane’s knee with her shoulder. His sword jabbed and stuck in the earth as he toppled over the dog.
Wynn was still confused as to what had gone wrong with Chane. She was about to rush in before he and Shade turned on each other.
He pushed up with his hands to all fours, and Wynn saw his face. He looked like some pale beast gone mad.
Vreuvillä’s eyes seemed to glow in shock. She raised her blade and took a step toward Chane as the mottled brown male bolted around her legs, trying to come at Chane from the far side.
Shade spun, charging at Chane.
“No!” Wynn shouted.
But Shade pushed off with her hind legs, and Wynn had to duck away.
Shade went straight over the top of Chane. She landed and threw herself straight at the mottled brown male.
A horrendous thump hit the earth. Wynn felt the impact through her feet and spun toward the sound.
Vreuvillä landed in a backward hop as earth, mulch, and moss splashed up around where Ore-Locks’s staff had struck. Ore-Locks jerked the iron staff back up, lashing its end when Vreuvillä tried to advance.
Stunned that Shade had tried to both stop and defend Chane, Wynn didn’t know to do. She didn’t understand what had driven Chane into this sudden assault. But Shade was being harried by two more of the majay-hì. Ore-Locks spun his staff, the butt end swinging out at a third dog. They were all outnumbered, and the pack would be on them far quicker than the last time.
Chane came up on one knee and reached for his upright sword. Ore-Locks whirled the staff around overhead and took a thundering step toward Vreuvillä. Wynn looked at only Chane.
His eyes were on the priestess, and his face twisted into the mask of a monster. When his lips curled back, she saw his teeth had changed.
Wynn could see only one choice.
“No—at Chane!” she shouted to Ore-Locks. “Put him down!”
Ore-Locks blinked once, slack-faced. In a second blink, fierce determination tightened his broad features. Wynn had an instant of frightful doubt when the iron staff changed directions midswing.
The iron bar struck Chane’s head off-center, glancing downward with full force on his shoulder.
The crack and ringing sound wrenched the breath out of Wynn.
Chane wobbled like one of those wind-whipped branches. He dropped onto both knees but didn’t go down, and the staff’s end struck the ground. Wynn again heard—felt—thunder in the earth.
Ore-Locks turned the staff over, stomped forward one step, and brought the staff’s other end down with his full weight. Wynn whimpered as she thought she heard bones break, and Chane crumpled to the ground like a sack of stones.
The whole clearing went silent except for Shade’s threatening snarls and ragged breaths. All the other majay-hì held their positions. Ore-Locks stepped in, his eyes on Chane, the long iron staff poised in his large, tight fists.
“Enough,” Wynn gasped, trying to push him off.
Vreuvillä was watching them all, and Wynn feared if the priestess got closer, she might see Chane bleeding something other than red blood.
“What is this?” Vreuvillä demanded.
Wynn needed to get Chane away from here. “I’m sorry. It’s the forest. You know it can affect some humans.”
It was a feeble lie, as Wynn well knew. The Lhoin’na forest would not turn any human into a mad beast.
“He’s ill,” she added. “We should get him back to the city.”
“Clearly,” Vreuvillä returned.
“I won’t forget your help tonight,” Wynn said.
“I will not forget you.”
It was a sharp ending, as the priestess turned away. The pack was slower in following her. The last to pause at the clearing’s edge were the silver-gray female and mottled brown male. The female lingered an instant longer, watching Wynn as her mate dove into the underbrush.
“Did you learn anything else?” Ore-Locks demanded.
He hadn’t heard everything that she had. Only she—and for some reason Vreuvillä—could feel and hear the Fay speak. All he cared about, still flushed from battle and hovering over Chane, was whether she could better serve his own ends.