'No, but I felt it. The fingers were long, too long, with more joints than there should be. Sometimes that grip comes back, like a ghost's, and I start shivering in its icy clutch.'
'Do you recall that ancient slaughter at Sekala Crossing? Did your visions echo those, Corporal?'
List frowned, then shook his head. 'No, what lies ahead of us now is much older, Historian.'
Shouts arose as the train readied to lurch into motion again, down off the Imperial Road and onto the trader track.
Duiker looked out over the studded plain to the south. 'I will walk alongside your travois, Corporal,' he said, 'while you describe for me in detail these visions of yours.'
'They might be naught but fevered delusions, Historian-'
'But you don't believe so. . and neither do I.' His eyes remained on the plain. A
Felisin sat on a block of masonry that had fallen from the ancient gate, her arms wrapped around herself, her eyes on the ground before her, steadily rocking in a slow cadence. The motion brought peace to her mind, as if she was nothing more than a vessel filled with water.
Heboric and the giant warrior were arguing. About her, about prophecies and ill chance, about the desperation of fanatics. Mutual contempt swirled and bubbled between the two men, seemingly born in the instant they met, and growing darker with every moment that passed.
The other warrior, Leoman, crouched nearby, matching her silence. He had before him the Holy Book of Dryjhna, guarding the tome in her stead, awaiting what he seemed to see as her inevitable acceptance that she was indeed Sha'ik reborn.
A smile cracked her features.
She rocked to distant cries, the ancient echoes of sudden, soul-jarring deaths — they seemed so far away now. Kulp, devoured beneath a seething mound of rats. Gnawed bones and a shock of white hair streaked red. Baudin, burned in a fire of his own making —
Deaths that had already withdrawn, far down the endless, dusty track, too distant to make their demands heard or felt.
Stones grated beside her. Heboric. She knew the feeling of his presence and had no need to look up. The one-time priest of Fener was muttering under his breath. Then he fell silent, as if steeling himself to reach into her silence.
She said nothing, continued rocking.
Heboric cleared his throat. 'For all I rage against their mad, fevered notions, and counsel most strongly against your accepting them … we need these two, and the oasis. They know Raraku — better than anyone else. If we're to have any chance of surviving..'
'I'll grant you,' Heboric went on after a moment, 'I've acquired … senses … that make my blindness less of a liability. And these hands of mine, reborn… Nonetheless, Felisin, I'm not enough to guard you. And besides, there is no guarantee that these two will let us walk away from them, if you understand my meaning.'
'Wake up, lass! You've got some decisions to make.'
'Sha'ik drew her blade against the Empire,' she said, eyes still on the dusty ground.
'A foolish gesture-'
'Sha'ik would face the Empress, would send the Imperial armies into a blood-filled Abyss.'