âWhat are you doing?â Tane asked.
The guards were right on their tail, and Mish was about to say something. When she saw Cory with his dagger ready to kill, she paused and halted the others.
âWe havenât faced trial yet, Tane. So I canât let you teleport yourself,â Cory said, his face covered in the red light of his dagger.
Tane went wide-eyed. âShift! Itâs called a shift! And I refuse to allow this to happen,â Tane said with her queen-like coolness, crossing her arms in front of her chest.
Grick steadily shook as the Sonofs tried to aid him, one eye on the Prophets.
âI will help him, but I go as well,â Tane said. She took her bracer and fitted it on.
Cory pushed his blade nearly up against her neck. âYou make one thought about tele, shifting, and youâll join Grick in death,â Cory bit.
Tane nearly erupted in fury for about half a second, then quickly repressed it, glaring down at Cory.
âYouâre walking a thin line, Cory,â Tane said, her words the hiss of a rattlesnake. âAfter what youâve done, I would watch your steps.â
âWeâve both done wrong, Tane. Thatâs why I need to make sure we come to justice for it. If that means I have to lose my blade because I let this man live, then so be it!â Cory said, his hand still firm on the dagger. âJust do it now!â
Cory could tell that Tane was going to pause once again, so he flicked his bladeâs edge toward her. She made the slightest twitch.
âFine, but know that youâre finished,â she said.
âI said I donât care,â Cory said, and eased off a bit.
Tane turned, slowly, and faced the cot. She extended her hand to Grick, who looked like life was quickly draining out of him. Her eyes flickered to Cory, to Grick, and back to Cory, and her bracer began to glow. At that moment, Cory could see a faint shimmer start to surround Tane. Without thinking, he grabbed her arm and sucked her energy out.
The glow disappeared, and Tane squealed as she turned pale, staring at Cory as her power drained out of her body.
âI told you, Grick only!â Cory shouted, the ice-cold power of White flowing into him. As he felt the location and link in his mind, he pulled off Taneâs bracer and put his hand on Grickâs trembling body. Power surged from him and into the dying soldier, and as Cory concentrated all his fury into sending the man to safety, Grick flashed and was gone.
Tane collapsed to the floor, breathing desperately. Cory shuddered, and fell to his knees, the stolen White power evaporating from his body. Mish instantly ran over to him, picking up the bracer and helping Cory stay erect.
âYou⦠Red⦠fool!â Tane shouted through gasps of breath. âYou have violated one of the highest codes of the Sevens Prophets! You haveââ
âShut up you liar! I know all about your manipulations, how you tried to manipulate me again. Even after all this, you still tried to shift yourself!â Cory said, and let loose his anger. Taneâs power had opened his mind. He could see all the people in the camp, could feel Taneâs wrath. âIf youâre what it means to be a Sevens Prophet on Soul, then I want out!â Cory turned, and ran out of the tent, wanting to shift himself far, far away. But the White power was already gone, and he knew heâd destroyed his life. All he knew was Grick would be safe, healed by the Golds.
Hours later, Cory thought back on what heâd done. He knew there was no way he could explain this situation to the Prophets, on Soul or elsewhere. He had stolen a Prophetâs power against her will. Many considered that no less than rape. As Cory watched the well-guarded Tane walk a few dozen feet ahead of him, he could tell she felt the same.
The Sonofs broke camp at a slow pace. Since the rush to heal the wounded Grick was unnecessary now, and since Jesson was on the mend, along with the other wounded Sonofs, they could travel to the Sonofall with more ease. The morning was misty and cool, and the hills had a soft and earthy feel to them, giving Cory a strange sense of calm that nearly eased his mood.
The party trudged along casually, here and there people singing a light tune. A little to Coryâs right, a small group of Sonofs were competing to compose the best Jawl (a four-line poem the Sonofs loved) to describe a strange set of angular trees that were jutting up out of the side of a nearby hill. Meln walked along close to Cory, a strange sense of joy in his eyes. Cory didnât know where Jesson was, but he wished Mish was in sight. He wanted to apologize to her.
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âYou seem upset, my friend,â Meln said. They walked along in silence for a while. Cory appreciated this manâs delicacy. âMish informed me of the event.â
A large animal, like an enormous, brown, furry cow without horns meandered across the hills a mile or so off. Cory thought theyâd been wiped out.
âIf you donât wish to speak of this, that is fine. But I want you to know how I feel about it,â Meln added.
âIs that going to make me feel better?â Cory asked, not meaning to be rude.
âPerhaps. But I think you will appreciate it.â
âIâve had plenty of time to consider what Iâve done, Meln. And no offense, but Iâd really not like to talk about it right now. The short of it is, Iâm not sorry.â
They walked along, the path becoming greener in patches as it melded with the grass.
âI was going to say the same words,â Meln said with a smile. Then the large man laughed a deep laughter. He opened his mouth wide, leaned his head back, and laughed.
Instead of being confused like Cory, several Sonofs joined in.
One Sonof behind them shouted, âLaugh at the hills, and they reply, why do you laugh â because, said I!â
Several joined in, laughing at the Jawl and the hills. It soon died down.
âOkay, you keep randomly laughing. Whatâs that all about?â Cory asked.
âIâm merely releasing my pleasure at what we are going through,â Meln said with a smile. âYouâve passed a crossroads, Cory, and Iâm glad to have seen it.â
Cory blinked, and tried to laugh. Only a grunt came out, and he wondered if Meln had gotten enough sleep the night before. Cory thought maybe heâd missed a joke of some sort. âBut I havenât crossed anything. All Iâve done is said I wasnât sorry,â he said.
âExactly. You stood up for yourself, and are firm in that which you believe.â
âAre we still talking about me here?â
Melnâs brows fell, and he looked down at Cory with concern. âSuch doubt now. Why is it you always unnecessarily humble yourself? Think of all that youâve done these past days.â
âBesides ruined my life?â Cory kicked a rock in the path.
âAnd how have you done that?â Meln kicked the rock out of Coryâs way.
Cory wished he hadnât done that. He liked kicking the rock.
âIâve broken so many codes I canât think straight,â Cory said, and saw another stone further up the path. âI endangered lives, and because of what I did, dozens of people died. The only thing I did right was save Grickâs life, but because of the way I did it, I donât think Iâll be able to stay a Prophet.â Cory kicked the stone, but stubbed his toe into the ground. The rock moved slightly, and the pain in his foot felt good. It gave Cory a focus for his anger.
Meln laughed again.
âLook, I really donât like you laughing at me, okay,â Cory said.
âI apologize sincerely. But you have to forgive me. The blinds of perfection are not over my eyes,â Meln said.
Cory sighed, shaking his head and not understanding. âBlinds of perfection?â
âYou seem to think that every action you take wonât have consequences,â Meln said, and let out a quick, loud laugh.
Cory had no idea what had gotten into the previously mellow man. His mood had changed, but the wise face stayed the same.
âI laugh here, and across the ocean it spawns a storm to destroy a manâs home. This is a balance, my friend. Life does not exist in all good and all evil. In the same way, no good action can come without something bad as well. Itâs life,â Meln said.
âYou mean me saving Grickâs life means someone, âover the ocean,â is going to die?â Cory asked. He chuckled at the thought, unwillingly catching onto Melnâs mood.
âWhat I am saying is open your eyes to the good as well as the bad and youâll begin to see the whole picture. In front of you, every man and woman you see is alive, now, because you decided not to kill us. Tane up ahead is alive because you chose to forgive her and give her a chance at forgiveness from us. And your fallen soldier, Grick, lies in a hospital because you placed him there.â Meln put a reassuring hand on Coryâs shoulder. He thought better of it, though, and kept it behind his back.
âBut over fifty Sonofs died because I didnât attack Tane,â Cory said. âI violated so many laws that Iâll lose my blade. How many lives will be lost because I wonât be there to help now?â
Meln nodded, comfortingly, and said, âThe laugh of a man, Cory. So laws were broken. So you angered others. Unfortunates are unavoidable. And no one here blames you any longer for your inaction. We see how much you respect Tane. We know it would have been impossible for you to attack her, and how much it must have hurt to do what you did. You saved all the lives you could while still standing up for what you believed in. Does that not make you right?â
âWhat about the codes?â Cory asked as they began to climb a very high hill. The path was cut from wet, rough rocks, but not a foot stumbled on the ascent.
âViolating a code does not make an action wrong. Situations arise where your judgment, not laws, directs your actions.â
âBut doesnât that mean laws arenât necessary?â Cory asked as he nearly slipped, but caught himself.
âNot at all. It simply means they are not absolutes,â Meln said. âWe must be prepared to suffer the storm if we want to laugh.â
Cory thought on this as they climbed. Meln looked at him, expecting Cory to say something, but the Prophet remained quiet.
A cry went up as the front of the Sonof band reached the top of the hill.
Mish came bounding down to Meln as Cory saw the Sonofs line up behind several warriors with tower shields raised.
âMeln, Meln! The Uniteds are here!â Mish shouted as she reached Meln. âTheyâve assembled a legion and now lie in our path!â
Determination came over Meln, and he shouted, âAssemble the battle lines!â
Mish nodded, and gave Cory a hopeful smile before running to tell the other men and women to prepare for battle.
Meln ran to the top of the hill as the sound of shouting seemed to fall from the sky. Cory followed, worried for what he might see.
About a hundred yards away, the United Legion charged. They came in droves down a small hill across a flat, grassy valley. Armored pikemen led the way, and blades and crossbowmen prepared to attack. The Sonofs would have no time. This was a vengeance force, Cory realized, designed to slaughter the men and women they thought had killed Jesson and the other Uniteds.
âI have to stop them,â Cory said.