Chapter Eleven
"If these Chosar lived below ground in Tir Yadar, what makes you think they're from the same civilization that built the South Valley ruins?" Magister Borya asked. "Tir Navis, I mean. The underground area Ellerie discovered is much smaller than the rest of the city."
"The Chosar built all the Tirs," Ariadne said. "Most weren't entirely below the surface. Tir Navis was the first true military stronghold in Aravor, so the High Guard built it as an underground fortress in the mountains. It would have been their final fallback position in the event of a large-scale war. The civilian city was constructed above the surface as more colonists arrived. Tir Yadar served a similar purpose in Cordaea." Tir Navis, like many other cities, had been designed based on lessons the Chosar had learned from the Second Demon War, though the third war ended before it could cause the same catastrophic damage in Aravadora that it had in Van Kiradaea.
Borya exchanged glances with Magister Nadza, a gray-haired woman who'd focused her studies on documenting the Tir Navis ruins and everything found within. They were the two stormborn scholars assigned to talk with Ariadne about Ellerie's notes on Tir Yadar.
"You found written records with that much detail?" Nadza asked. "I'm surprised they survived for so long. Lady Ellerie doesn't mention anything like that in the notes she sent."
Ariadne hid a grimace. She should have just said it was due to similarities in the language and in the totem statues that had been found in both cities, but the magisters were experienced historians who liked to ask probing questions. It was difficult enough to remember to speak in the past tense, but if she wasn't going to tell them who she was, she had to be more careful not to let anything slip that she couldn't pass off as something they'd learned from Ellerie's and Bobo's formal survey of the ruins.
"There were some records, but they didn't survive our attempts to preserve them," she said. "We copied the details we could find, but Ellerie hasn't decided whether to include them."
Ariadne felt only a little guilt at the lie, since she herself could write a true firsthand account if needed. But that document didn't exist yet, which had led to a further delay for Ellerie's and Bobo's book about the Chosar.
They insisted that for the work to be taken seriously, it had to have a source--and Ariadne herself was the source of nearly all of their information about the Chosar. She wanted to tell The People's story, but Ellerie wasn't certain whether a modern-day copy of an ancient text would be sufficient, especially if they couldn't provide any proof the ancient copy had actually existed.
The other option was to admit where the information had come from, but Bobo wasn't optimistic about that idea. He didn't think anyone would believe the truth, and felt releasing it under their own names would tarnish their reputation just as they were trying to gain acceptance for their other book--the more scholarly report on the findings of the Tir Yadar expedition. Plus, it would mean Ariadne would have to make her identity known, and she wasn't sure how to feel about that.
Then again, describing the Chosar in that much detail might draw attention from those who already knew about them. Would Thedan or Ephrenia hear about it, or any other bondmates who might still be alive? Maybe even some last remnant of the Chosar people, hidden away somewhere?
That possibility alone would make it worth it... though it might not be necessary once Ariadne found a way to speak to Hera.
It had turned out there
was
a small temple to The Lady in Snow Crown, but no one there had been able to help. Ariadne had gotten the impression that none of the three priests were blessed. She would have to try again in a larger city, but it would be several more days until Leena returned. In the meantime, Ariadne was doing her best to hide her impatience.
Nadza interrupted her musings. "Perhaps you and Sarette should visit Tir Navis and help us to identify those aspects that are similar to Tir Yadar, to give us a greater understanding of how they are related."
"I'd like to, but we won't have enough time on this trip," Ariadne said. Leena's new ability to teleport others had allowed them to make the journey to Snow Crown earlier than they'd expected, but they didn't want to be gone for too long until they knew what Rusol was planning.
Just then, Sarette appeared in the doorway to Nadza's workroom. "Magisters, I'm sorry to interrupt," she said. "Ariadne, are you ready? I promised my mother we'd be on time to supper, and then some old friends of mine asked if we wanted to go out tonight--the taverns and teahouses are doing a spring festival this week."
"I can come," Ariadne said, standing. It would give her time to get her lies straight in her mind before she spoke with the magisters again. "Excuse me," she told them. "I can return tomorrow if you'd like?"
"Yes, certainly," Nadza said.
Borya looked disappointed, but nodded. "Of course. I'm teaching in the morning, but I'll have time in the afternoon."
Ariadne left Ellerie's notes with them and accompanied Sarette out of the building. While they walked, she gestured to the stack of books the stormborn woman was carrying. "Do you need some help with that?"
"Oh, yes, thank you," Sarette said, and passed her half the stack. "The instructors at the military academy said these cover most of the training for cadets. I've been observing classes for the last two days, but I don't know when I'd have time to do the whole year, so I asked what they'd suggest. This is what they gave me. Some of these are copies of books passed down from--" She cut off what she'd been about to say.
"Borrisur?" Ariadne asked.
"Yes." Sarette's voice was curt.
"Would it have been better if I hadn't told you the truth?"
They'd reached the street, and Sarette glanced around to make sure no one was close enough to overhear. "I just... I'm trying to make sense of it. Borrisur was Chosar, and a warden. You
knew
him!"
"I've seen him around. I've never met him."
"And the wardens created some sort of magic ritual, then put the Mage Knights into those things..."
"Stasis pods," Ariadne supplied. "They were worried the ritual would be dangerous for us."
"And then you went to sleep. But you don't know for sure what happened after." The other woman seemed to take some comfort in that.
"No, but they were supposed to wake us up once the ritual was complete, which means the problem must have happened during the ritual. Maybe it was an accident or a mistake, or maybe the ritual wasn't what we were told it was, but something went wrong. The people either abandoned the city or they died, and no one ever came back for us." Tir Yadar appeared to have been evacuated in good order other than the collapsed sections, but Ariadne was trying to keep her hopes realistic. A lot could have happened over the intervening centuries.
"And Borrisur became a god," Sarette said. "I don't understand how that can happen."
"The new gods are just people--that's all they've ever been. They have a warden's long life, and some part of the ritual must have worked if they can give others the ability to use totemic magic, but they're still just people. Think about it... if godborn really exist, then Boreas and the others must be out there somewhere in the world, just like you and me."
Sarette shook her head. "No wonder Oracle Galina was so worried about what you knew."
"Do you think that's it?" Ariadne asked. "It doesn't explain what she said about the snowborn."
"They must have something to do with it. What if they know the truth? You should talk to them."