Chapter XI
Collapse
Author's Notes: A heartfelt "thank you" goes out to the people who helped in refining and improving this chapter. My lady love for her undying support and the harshest critique one can hope for, my editor bikoukumori for his unending patience and a host of volunteers who suffered through the early drafts of this tale. In no particular order: Thornfoote, Pyvent, UKWaterRat and of course my readers.
All participants in sexual activities are adults. This chapter contains scenes of explicit violence, gore and mental illness.
* * * *
"Let us rest here," Gael said to Rhys a few hours later. The November sun had already dropped below the horizon and only the luminescent fungi growing on the old tree limbs offered any kind of illumination. "It's obvious you can hardly stand, let alone continue at this pace."
They had stopped at a small clearing. A rocky outcropping formed the east side, complete with a small waterfall tumbling into a pond while the towering ancient trees loomed on all other sides.
"How much farther do we have to go?" Rhys asked, leaning heavily on his staff. Despite the frost hanging in the air, he was sweating. His knee had resumed its painful thumping and his leg felt like someone else's.
"We should reach the Vasadil estate around noon tomorrow if you can keep this pace," Gael said. His tone was nowhere near as condescending as before. "I'll see to it we'll have some fresh meat for dinner." The grim elf vanished between the trees.
Rhys sank onto a rock near the pond, glad to be off his feet.
"Astra'il," Borna said. She had been quiet most of the day, staring daggers Gael's way. It was obvious she wasn't too happy about the elf's involvement. "I have a question."
"Out with it then," Astra'il said, laying down a ring of stones for a makeshift firepit. "What's on your mind?"
Borna pawed the ground with a hoof. "I'll probably sound like a stupid little girl," she muttered. "Forget it."
Astra'il looked up. "There's something Isaya told me. 'There are no stupid questions. Only stupid people refusing to learn.'"
Borna unpacked a tent. "Fine. I'm a bit surprised you and Gael get along so well. I mean... he's a surface elf, you're from Below. Everything I've read suggests you should be at each other's throats. Hereditary enemies and all that."
Astra'il sighed. "I harbor him no ill will, even if his kind did take my lover from me. Someone has to lay down their arms first if there is ever to be a chance at peace. And as for Gael? I'm not his problem." She brushed her hands off on her pants and knelt down next to Rhys, carefully examining his knee. "Does it hurt?"
"A bit. Not as bad as I feared it would, considering the pace." He clasped her hand. "You're not his problem?"
Astra'il hummed a few bars of a healing spell. Rhys sighed in pleasure as the ether washed through his leg.
"The Stalker faith is new, even younger than mine," Astra'il explained, coming to her feet. "They are fighting a guerrilla war against Carver's men, against all those encroaching on the elven woods. They very carefully pick who they quarrel with. They are not stupid and know that we are trying to get away from our lives Below." She shrugged. "For a few healing spells or a meal, Stalkerites have let me know when dark elf hunting parties were afoot - or let me tag along when they wanted to intercept them. So that I could - in theory - save any new Maiden followers from Isaya's fate."
She walked across the clearing and took some tent poles while Borna wrestled with the tarp.
"In theory?" Rhys asked. "And how can I help?"
Astra'il sighed again. "In all of my years here on the surface I have yet to find one like me."
"How about you get the fire going?" Borna suggested. "Don't know about you but I'm ravenous."
"Sure. One moment." Rhys got up and limped along the clearing's edge, gathering dead wood. He smiled grimly.
There were days back home at the farm where I could hardly walk after Padec had tanned my back and he still insisted I go and gather firewood. At least I don't have to walk half a mile in Lissy's old shoes any more.
While he dug around in the underbrush, Astra'il and Borna set up the tent together, chatting quietly.
He dumped the wood into the firepit.
Time for another fire spell. Here's hoping I don't set the whole elven woods ablaze.
Rhys stretched out his right hand, palm forward, using his left to gather energy. A fiery ray burst from his palm, scorching a lump of wood without igniting it.
No wonder. It must be frozen solid,
Rhys thought. No one around seemed to have noticed his blunder. He placed a hand on the pile of wood, coiled more energy around himself and concentrated.
Before I can set this ablaze, it needs to thaw.
The energy flowed through him, a powerful mix of earth, air and ether, only to manifest as waves of heat emanating from the hand touching the pile. There was the sound of cracking wood as it first thawed, then dried.
The next time he fired off a flame blast, the wood ignited. Within moments, the campfire crackled merrily.
"Ladies, your human tinderbox has delivered," Rhys said, grinning weakly.
Astra'il hugged him from behind and breathed a kiss onto his neck. "And here's your reward, oh Firelord." Another kiss, this time a loud smooch on his cheek.
Rhys glanced in Borna's direction but the cursed girl had ducked into the tent and was rummaging inside.
"Thank you, oh wise healer," he said, turning in Astra'il's embrace. With a lot less levity, he added. "You have no idea how good it feels, being able to cast spells again."
"You'd be surprised. When I renounced the Chaos Queen, shattered her holy symbol, her retribution was swift. She cut me off from her divine power, turning an almighty priestess, terror of the Depths, into a simple dark elven girl. It took nearly three years and a lot of persuasion on Isaya's part to let the Maiden into my heart and with her, renewed access to magic. Don't push yourself too hard. No one will be helped if you hurt yourself while trying to impress Gael."
"Who says I'll-"
A third kiss, this time on his lips, shut him up. "Because Borna and I are already impressed with you," Astra'il said, a playful spark lighting up her emerald eyes.