Czytaj książkę: «The Serpent Bride»
SARA DOUGLASS
The Serpent Bride
Darkglass Mountain
Book 1
Dedication
For Snow
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Map
The Legend of Chaos
Part One
1. Margalit, The Outlands
2. Serpent’s Nest, The Outlands
3. Serpent’s Nest, The Outlands
4. Serpent’s Nest, The Outlands
5. The Royal Palace, Ruen, Escator
6. The Royal Palace, Ruen, Escator
7. The Royal Palace, Ruen, Escator
8. Serpent’s Nest, and the Royal Palace at Ruen
Part Two
1. Lake Juit, Tyranny of Isembaard
2. Baron Lixel’s Residence, Margalit
3. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
4. Baron Lixel’s Residence, Margalit
5. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
6. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
7. The Royal Palace, Ruen, Escator
8. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
9. The Road East, Escator
10. Hairekeep, Tyranny of Isembaard
11. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
12. West of Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
13. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
14. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
15. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
Part Three
1. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
2. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
3. Margalit, The Outlands
4. Darkglass Mountain, Tyranny of Isembaard
5. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
6. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
7. Margalit, Central Kingdoms
8. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
9. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
10. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
11. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
12. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
13. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
Part Four
1. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
2. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
3. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
4. Pelemere, Central Kingdoms
5. The Road from Pelemere to Kyros, Central Kingdoms
6. Kyros, Central Kingdoms
7. Kyros, Central Kingdoms
8. The Road from Kyros to Escator, Central Kingdoms
9. The Road from Kyros to Escator, Central Kingdoms
10. The Road from Kyros to Escator, Central Kingdoms
11. The Road from Kyros to Deepend, Central Kingdoms
12. Aqhat and Crowhurst
13. Tyranny of Isembaard
14. The Road from Kyros to Escator, Central Kingdoms
Part Five
1. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
2. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
3. Farreach Mountains, and the Northern Reaches of the Ashdod Dependency
4. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
5. The Farreach Mountains
6. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
7. Southern Reaches of the Farreach Mountains
8. Southern Reaches of the Farreach Mountains
9. The Town of Torinox, Northern Borders of the Farreach Dependency
10. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
11. The Town of Torinox, Northern Borders of the Farreach Dependency
12. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
13. The Royal Palace, Ruen, Escator
14. The Royal Palace, Ruen, Escator
15. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
Part Six
1. Northern Plains of Isembaard
2. Palace of the First, Yoyette, Coroleas
3. Northern Plains of Isembaard
4. Courtyard of the People, Yoyette, Coroleas
5. Widowmaker Sea, to The West of Escator
6. River Lhyl, Tyranny of Isembaard
7. Widowmaker Sea, to The West of Escator
8. The Marshlands Outside Narbon, Escator
9. Crowhurst, The Far North
10. Venetia’s Hut in the Marshlands, Escator
11. The Road Between Narbon And Deepend
12. Narbon, Escator
Part Seven
1. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
2. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
3. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
4. Deepend, and the Road from Deepend to the Farreach Mountains
5. At the Foot of the Farreach Mountains
6. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
7. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
8. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
9. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
10. Northern Isembaard
11. The Farreach Mountains, Southern Kyros
12. The Farreach Mountains, Southern Kyros
13. The Farreach Mountains, Southern Kyros
14. The Farreach Mountains, Southern Kyros
15. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
16. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
17. Darkglass Mountain, Isembaard
18. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
19. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
20. Palace of Aqhat, Isembaard
Part Eight
1. The Farreach Mountains
2. Palace of Aqhat, Tyranny of Isembaard
3. The Eastern Plains, Gershadi
4. Dependency of En-Dor, Tyranny of Isembaard
5. Sakkuth, Isembaard
6. Sakkuth, Isembaard
7. Sakkuth, Isembaard
8. Sakkuth, Isembaard
9. Sakkuth, Isembaard
10. Sakkuth, Isembaard
11. Sakkuth, Isembaard
12. The Borderlands of Hosea
Part Nine
1. Sakkuth, Isembaard
2. Salamaan Pass, Northern Kingdoms
3. Salamaan Pass, Northern Kingdoms
4. Saiamaan Pass, Northern Kingdoms
5. Pelemere, Northern Kingdoms
6. The Sky Peak Passes
7. The Sky Peak Passes
8. Entrance to the Sky Peak Passes, The Outlands
9. Entrance to the Sky Peak Pass, The Outlands
10. Entrance to the Sky Peak Passes, The Outlands
Keep Reading
Glossary
About the Author
Also by the Author
Copyright
About the Publisher
Map
THE LEGEND OF CHAOS (KANUBAI)
In the beginning and for an infinity of time there was nothing but the darkness of Chaos, who called himself Kanubai. After a time Kanubai grew weary of his lonely existence and so he invited Light and Water to be his companions. Kanubai and Light and Water co-existed harmoniously, but one day Light and Water merged, just for an instant of time, but in that instant they conceived a child — Life.
Kanubai was jealous of Life, for it was the child of the union of Light and Water and he had been excluded from that union. He set out to murder Life, to consume it with darkness, but Light and Water came to the defence of their child. Aided by a great mage, Light and Water defeated Kanubai in a terrible battle, and interred his remains in a deep abyss. They stoppered this abyss with a sparkling, life-giving river, which combined the best both of Light and of Water, and they hoped that Kanubai was trapped for all time.
Trapped, but not extinguished. Every day Life was reminded of Kanubai’s continuing malignant presence by the descent of the night, when for the space of some hours the dark memory of Kanubai blanketed the land.
Despite this daily sadness, Life prospered, and many creatures came into existence.
For aeons Kanubai lay trapped, able to do little more than darken each light-filled day with the reminder of his presence.
But then, one day, something remarkable happened.
Infinity visited.
PART ONE
1
MARGALIT, THE OUTLANDS
The eight-year-old girl crouched by the stone column in the atrium of her parents’ house. Clad only in a stained linen shift, she hugged her thin arms tightly about herself, her eyes wide and darting under her bedraggled and grimy fair hair.
The house was cold and still, and the girl’s breath frosted as she hyperventilated.
The foul liquid of rotting cadavers streaked her face and arms. For many days now the girl had crept about the house, seeking out the bodies of her parents (almost unrecognisable, four weeks after their death), rubbing the stinking, viscous liquid that had leaked from their flesh over her body, sucking it from her fingers.
All she wanted was to die, too.
It had been a bad month. Four weeks ago everyone in the house — save the little girl — had died within a day of the first person falling sick. Thirty-four people — not just the girl’s parents and siblings, but her three aunts, their husbands, their children, her grandmother, and the household’s servants as well — all dead from the plague.
Just her, left alive.
Outside gathered a frightened and angry crowd, neighbours as well as sundry other concerned citizens and council members of Margalit. They had blocked off all entrances to the house as soon as they realised plague had struck the household.
In the initial days after everyone had died, the girl, Ishbel, screamed at the crowd outside for help, begging them to save her. She pressed her face against the glass of the windows and beat her small fists against frames, but the hostile expressions on the faces of the crowd outside did not alter.
They would not move to aid her.
Instead, Ishbel heard cries demanding that the house be set alight, and all the corpses and their infection burned.
She screamed at them again, begging them to allow her freedom.
She wasn’t ill.
She didn’t have the plague.
Her skin was unmarked, her brow unfevered.
“Please, please, let me out. Everyone is dead. I want to get out. Please … please …”
The crowd outside had no mercy. They would not let her escape.
Ishbel begged until she lost her voice and scraped away several of her fingernails on the wood of the front door.
The crowd would not listen. No other house in Margalit had the plague. Just the Brunelle house. Its doors and windows would not be opened again. The house would never ring with life and laughter as once it had.
When the girl was dead, they would burn the house, and all the corpses within it. Until then they would wait.
Eventually Ishbel crept away from the windows and the cold, bolted doors. She could not bear the flat hostility in the eyes outside.
All she wanted was comfort, and so she crept close to the corpse of her mother and cuddled up next to it.
Her mother was very cold and smelled very bad, but even so Ishbel garnered some comfort from the contact with her body.
Until the moment it began to whisper to her.
Ishbel. Ishbel. Listen to us.
Ishbel recoiled, terrified.
Her mother’s corpse twitched, and it whispered again.
Ishbel, Ishbel, listen to us. You must prepare —
Ishbel screamed, over and over, her hands pressed against her ears, her eyes screwed shut, her body rolled into a tight ball in a corner of the room.
Then the corpses of two of her aunts, which lay a few feet from her mother’s, also twitched and whispered.
Ishbel, Ishbel, listen to us, our darling. Prepare, prepare, for soon the Lord of Elcho Falling shall walk again.
A vision accompanied the horrifying whispers.
A man, clothed in black, standing in the snow, his back to her.
Darkness writhed about his shoulders.
He sensed her presence, and turned his head a little, glancing at her from over his shoulder.
Bleakness and despair, and desolation so extreme it was murderous, overwhelmed Ishbel’s entire world.
The despair that engulfed her annihilated everything Ishbel had felt until now.
The loss of her family, and her entrapment with their corpses, was as nothing to what this man dragged at his heels.
Prepare, Ishbel, prepare for the coming of the Lord of Elcho Falling.
After her mother, and her two aunts, every other corpse in the house twitched in the same mad, cold, macabre dance of death, and whispered until the words echoed about the house.
Prepare, Ishbel, our darling, for the Lord of Elcho Falling shall walk again.
The twitching corpses and the constant whispering drove Ishbel to the brink of insanity. She didn’t want to live. She had gone mad, here in this cold house of death, watching everyone she had ever loved putrefy before her eyes.
Listening to their never-ending whispers.
Prepare, our darling … for the Lord of Elcho Falling.
She tried to starve herself, but one day she had weakened, sobbing, stuffing her mouth with mouldy pastries from the kitchen.
Then she found a knife, and drew it across her wrists, but was too weak to carve deeply, and too cowardly to bear the pain, so the blood just seeped from the thin cuts and Ishbel had not died.
Finally, frantic, crazy, Ishbel had stuffed her ears full of wadding and crept close enough to rub the foul effluent from the cadavers of her parents over her body and face. Then she licked the foulness from her fingers, just to be sure. It made her retch and sob and then scream in horror, but she did it, because surely, surely,this way the plague would manage to take a grip in her body and kill her as mercifully fast as it had killed everyone else in her life.
But all that had happened was that the scars on her wrists became infected, and wept a purulent discharge, and throbbed unbearably.
Ishbel survived.
Whenever she slept, she dreamed of the Lord of Elcho Falling, turning his head ever so slightly so that he could look at her over his shoulder, and engulfing her in sorrow and pain.
She grew thin, her joints aching with the cold and with malnutrition, but she survived.
Outside the crowds waited.
Every so often Ishbel called out to them, letting them know she still existed within, because, no matter how greatly Ishbel wanted to die, she did not want to do so within an inferno.
On this day, huddled in the atrium of the house, Ishbel began to dream about death. She looked at the great staircase that wound its way to the upper floors of the house, and she wondered why she’d never before thought that all she needed to do was to climb to the top, then throw herself down.
Very slowly, because she was now extremely weak, Ishbel crawled on her hands and knees towards the staircase. She was frail, and she would need to take it slowly to get to the top, but get there she would.
Ishbel felt overwhelmed with a great determination. Her death was but an hour away, at the most.
But it took her much longer than an hour to climb the stairs. Ishbel was seriously weak, and she could only crawl up the staircase a few steps at a time before she needed to rest, collapsing and gasping, on the dusty wooden treads.
By late afternoon she was almost there. Every muscle trembled, aching so greatly that Ishbel wept with the pain.
But she was almost there …
Then, as she was within three steps of the top, she heard the front door open.
A faint sound, for the door was far below her, but she heard it open.
Ishbel did not know what to do. She lay on the stairs, trembling, weeping, listening to slow steps ascend the staircase, and wondered if the crowd had sent someone in to murder her.
She was taking far too long to die.
Ishbel closed her eyes, and buried her face in her arms.
“Ishbel?”
A man’s voice, very kind. Ishbel thought she must be dreaming.
“Ishbel.”
Slowly, and crying out softly with the ache of it, Ishbel turned over, opening her eyes.
A man wrapped in a crimson cloak over a similarly-coloured robe stood a few steps down, smiling at her. He was a young man, good-looking, with brown hair that flopped over his forehead, and a long, fine nose.
“Ishbel?” The man held out a hand. “My name is Aziel. Would you like to come live with me?”
She stared at him, unable to comprehend his presence.
Aziel’s smile became gentler, if that were possible. “I have been travelling for weeks to reach you, Ishbel. The Great Serpent himself sent me. He appeared to me in a dream and said that I must hurry to bring you home. He loves you, sweetheart, and so shall I.”
“Are you the Lord of Elcho Falling?” Ishbel whispered, even though she knew he could not be, for he did not drag loss and sorrow at his heels, and there was no darkness clinging to his shoulders.
Aziel frowned briefly, then he shook his head. “My name is Aziel, Ishbel. And I am lord of nothing, only a poor servant of the Great Serpent. Will you come with me?”
“To where?” Ishbel could barely grasp the thought of escape, now.
“To my home,” Aziel said, “and it will be yours. Serpent’s Nest.”
“I do not know of it.”
“Then you shall. Please come with me, Ishbel. Don’t die. You are too precious to die.”
“I don’t need to die?”
Aziel laughed. “Ishbel, you have no idea how greatly we all want you to live, and to live with us. Will you come? Will you?”
Ishbel swallowed, barely able to get the words out. “Are there whispers in your house?”
“Whispers?”
“Do the dead speak in your house?”
Aziel frowned again. “The dying do, from time to time, when they confess to us the Great Serpent’s wishes, but once dead they are mute.”
“Good.”
“Ishbel, come with me, please. Forget about what has happened here. Forget — everything.”
“Yes,” said Ishbel, and stretched out a trembling hand. I will forget, she thought. I will forget everything.
She did not once wonder why this man should have been able so easily to wander through the vindictive crowd outside, or why that crowd should have stood back and allowed him to open the front door without a single murmur.
Two weeks later Aziel brought Ishbel home to Serpent’s Nest. She had spoken little for the entire journey, and nothing at all for the final five days.
Aziel was worried for her.
The archpriestess of the Coil, who worshipped the Great Serpent, led Aziel, carrying the little girl, to a room where awaited food and a bed. They washed Ishbel, made her eat something, then put her to bed, retreating to a far corner of the room to sit watch as she slept.
The archpriestess was an older woman, well into her sixties, called Ional. She looked speculatively at Aziel, who had not allowed his eyes to stray from the sleeping form of the child. Aziel was Ional’s partner at Serpent’s Nest, archpriest to her archpriestess, but he was far younger and as yet inexperienced, for he’d replaced the former archpriest only within the past year, after that man had strangely disappeared.
Ional knew she would partner Aziel only for a few more years, until he was well settled into his position as archpriest, and then she would make way for someone younger. Stronger. More Aziel’s match.
Now Ional looked back to the girl.
Ishbel.
“You said,” Ional said very softly, so as to not wake the girl, “that the Great Serpent told you she would not stay for a lifetime.”
“He told me,” said Aziel, “that she would stay many years, but that eventually he would require her to leave. That there would be a duty for her within the wider world, but that she would return and that her true home was here at Serpent’s Nest.”
“She is so little,” said Ional, “but so very powerful. I could feel it the moment you carried her into Serpent’s Nest. How much more shall she need to grow, do you think, before she can assume my duties?”
“When she is strong enough to hold a knife,” said Aziel, “she shall be ready.”
Deep in the abyss the creature stirred, looking upwards with flat, hate-filled eyes.
It whispered, sending the whisper up and outwards with all its might, seething through the crack that Infinity had opened.
It had been sending out its call for countless millennia, and for all those countless millennia, no one had answered.
This day, the creature in the abyss received not one but two replies, and it bared its teeth, and knew its success was finally at hand.
Twenty years passed.