"Of course, Living One," Raven said, her lips quirked in a lilting smile.
I frowned at her. But she did not cease her smile. And as we headed back to the temple, I found myself wrestling with that question. How could I be the Living One, if Nasrudin lived yet? And yet, I could not help but feel as if the weight of the role remained draped upon my shoulders. No! No! I shook my head, as if to cast off an annoying fly. This
role
was simply to act as honor and righteousness decreed. Was it to be bound by prophecy to simply do what was right? I had to believe otherwise, else all good deeds would be utterly irrelevant, rendered nothing more than an authored conclusion, penned by some hand mightier than my own. My right hand rubbed against my left, and I traced the lines of my remaining charged ring with my finger. I crafted my own fate, damn it all.
We returned to the Temple grounds proper and I found the First Acolyte sitting out in the front lawn, his knees crossed underneath him, his head bowed down as he meditated. I coughed, as politely as I could, and he looked up at me, smiling slightly. "Greetings, Living One," he said, his voice amused. "How may I assist you today?"
"It is how I may assist you, Alexander," I said, my voice soft. I knelt down, then handed him the journal of Saint Mannox. Alexander read it, his face a remarkable production to watch. First, his brow furrowed. Then his eyes narrowed. Then widened. Then his lips settled into a thin, fierce line. He closed the book, then set the book down, and said, quietly. "I must have words with the high priest." He stood, and I stood with him, drawing out the sword of his ancestor from my pack. I set it in his palms. Now, the only emotion that showed on the First Acolyte's face was pure gratitude. He closed his grip on the hilt, tightening so fiercely that his weather tanned knuckles turned white. "Come with me," he said, his voice husky as he turned, robes a swirling. We strode forward, Raven, him and me - only to be interrupted in our movements by a cry from the dormatories: Maggie, her voice not concealed by her normal false male tones.
"What the bloody hell are you doing to Virginia!?"
Needless to say, I was sprinting forward without a second thought, and Alexander matched me, pace for pace. We came to the door leading into the cloister where the Panarii were keeping Virginia's body in state. The machines hissed and warbled softly, but the room itself was bathed in a hideous red glow. A man in white robes trimmed in gold stood above her, holding both hands above his head, red lightning streaking from his fingertips to plunge into Virginia's chest, causing her to writhe and twitch as if living. The energy throbbed beneath her skin like maggots. I reached for my pistol, but Alexander moved faster than I could have imagined. He leaped over Virginia's body, clearing her legs with a fluttering of robes, landed, and transfixed the robed man through the heart.
The man - a portly human - cried out and fell backwards. He clutched at the blade, his eyes wide. He looked up at the two of us. And yet, horribly, he began to laugh. "Hah...hah...revenge..." He grinned. "For my Min..." His eyes unfocused and his head slumped to the side.
I drew my pistol, ready to shoot him several times more, if the need arose. But confusion rocked me: "What the devil did he mean by that? And what did he do to Virginia?"
"That spell," Alexander said, his voice tight - showing not a sign of exertion, as if he sprinted nearly five hundred yards and struck a man dead every day. "It was a black necromantic spell, one designed to hasten the rot and decay of a body, to make it unsuitable to raising by white necromancy."
Fear filled my heart and I spun and knelt beside Virginia - in time to see the red light shattering off her, like a vase dropped from a great height. I blinked slowly before letting out a laugh as deep and as loud as any I had ever uttered. I threw my head back and leaned against the wall, sliding my arm along my belly as I laughed and laughed some more. Alexander knelt beside Virginia, his brows furrowing as he looked her over. "I don't understand - High Priest Tannor was the greatest mage I knew..."
"But not great enough to overcome the technological fields emitted by Virginia's very body," I said, nodding. "She's filled with enough chemicals and natural electric charge to be the next best thing to a steam engine."
Alexander blinked. Then he laughed. "That explains why our morning rituals have been so balky of late!"
"His face!" Maggie - who had returned to the door, carrying the Harrower in her hand, explaining her absence - pointed. We both turned and saw High Priest Tannor's face rippling, flowing, and changing. His cheeks became sallow and pinched, his ears lengthened to two elven points, and his eyes - dead as they were - gained a harsh, cruel light to them. I grabbed for my pistol, ready for him to spring back to life...but no. He was dead as a doornail.
"K'an Hua," I said. "I presume."
Alexander nodded. "My ancestor is avenged," he said, quietly. "And the cult of Arronax is finally defeated. Arcanum is safe."
I frowned. I had not the heart to tell him that the cult had already succeeded - that Arronax's return to Arcanum was inevitable unless I stopped him. But my hand dropped to Virginia's seemingly warm and lively shoulder. I squeezed gently and knew that we would do it. We could stop Arronax and his mad plans for domination. I looked to Alexander, smiling to him. "I believe my job here is done."
"Verily," Alexander said, his voice as serious and old fashioned as Mannox in that instant. Then he smiled at me, broadly. "Where will you go now, Living One?"
"First?" I said. "To Ashbury - and from there, we shall march to the Vendigroth Wastes, to find Tulla herself."
Alexander bowed his head. "I wish you luck, Living One." He clasped my hand and we shook.
***
May 10
th
, 1886
Leaving Caladon in less of a tearing hurry meant that we not only had time to hire a crew for Captain Teach, but to also get rewarded for our efforts. Hadrian refused to allow us out of the temple without foisting upon us the three relics he had protected for his whole life. The finger bone of Saint Mannox, upon magick inspection, proved to hold a magical charge and quite a bit of energies. I swore to give it to Virginia when she was returned to me. The Eye of Kraka-Tur seemed, despite all examinations both magick and scientific, to be nothing more than a gemstone of black make. But I kept it - if Arronax had survived his centuries in the Void, maybe Kraka-Tur had done so as well, and thus, the eye could come in handy.
The final item though was the key made of glass. Examining it brought great cheer to Maggie - for the symbol I had found so familiar on the hilt was, indeed, the same symbol as that on the Harrower. Holding it, we agreed that it was surely to be of use when we tried to enter into the last home of the Iron Clan. Though Maggie attempted to hold her dwarven reserve and caution in hand, I could see hope gleaming in her eye. Her long sought after goal of having a clan to call her home might very well end up being the case - and to be completed in such a way, with her not only being a member of a clan, but a member of the most mysterious, most astounding clan that the dwarven race had ever produced? It would be like a dream come true.
The actual trip along the coastline of Arcanum to the port city of Ashbury felt almost like a vacation - and with Raven's magicks working
with
the weather rather than against it, our ship nearly flew, leaving the crew that we had hired in good cheer, despite being overseen by Sally - who proved herself to be quite an able boatswain when she wished to be.
After we arrived at Ashbury, we once more applied ourselves liberally to Gilbert Bates' endless checkbook. I also took a moment to check in with Cynthia Boggs, the woman we had rescued from the Isle of Despair. She had found a profession in Ashbury's finest tavern, The Meager Draught. Despite its name, she seemed quite happy, and in a family way. When I inquired as to who had managed to get her hand in marriage, she played coy, leaving me somewhat uncertain as to the providence of the child. But she played even more coy when I pressed and, lacking a polite way to continue the conversation, I bid her good fortune and good luck. Afterwards, we supplied ourselves and set out on foot for the Vendigroth Wastes.
Transporting the body of Virginia in state proved easier than expected due to the simple expediency of purchasing a stagecoach and four horses to pull it. This is why we made such good time and arrived at the demarcation between the Moribhan Plains and Vendigroth Wastes after a mere five days of travel. I saw the Wastes from a distance, but I did not believe what my eyes were telling me until our horses had drawn to a stop at a large, rusted metal bridge that spanned the small river of brackish, gray water that separated the deserts of the Moribhan. Once the horses came to a snuffling, worried stop, each of stood there and looked outwards, in the same shared disbelief.