EndingArrow: Part Six by sara_mossflower
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Seeking Tasson
The Shoyru ordered us to come with him, and we had no
choice but to follow. Terzin and Aly rubbed their eyes on the way out, still
slightly drowsy from the strange powder that had knocked us out. As we trudged
out through the door, into an open torch lit room, I thought about the mark
I'd been unearthing beneath Siersha's blood on my sword. What had it been? And
more importantly, why had Aillara allowed us to keep our weapons?
I looked around, and could not comprehend where
we were. It couldn't be the League's canyon HQ, could it? It would have taken
forever to bring us here from the village. Then again, I had no idea what time
of day it was. It was obvious that we were underground, and therefore no sunlight
could indicate whether it was noon or midnight. It could very well be a day
or two since we'd collapsed - there was no way to be sure.
League members skulked around the room, one
polishing a knife, another whittling away at a small wood effigy of their Mistress,
Frey.
As we passed through the cavern, I realized
that this could very well be the HQ we had fled from such a short time ago,
and my guess was confirmed as we were led down winding tunnels that finally
opened out on a room I remembered all too well. The scent of burning incense
reached my nostrils, murals adorned the walls, scenes of Frey's deeds, and in
the centre of the room was a large boulder, like a miniature plateau. It was
to that very stone that they had chained Dayne to not a week ago, in another
attempt to return their Lady to life. The thought of Frey speaking through Dayne's
mouth was fresh it my mind, but I struggled to shake it off. I shuddered as
I stared at it, knowing that my memories regarding the stone would never leave
me.
The figure that was currently perched upon the
plateau was none other than Aillara herself. The Shoyru continued to lead us
forward until we were standing beneath her. I was feeling confident since waking
up in the dungeon, and immediately spoke up. "Why did you bring us here?" I
demanded, although I knew all too well that they wanted to claim my life once
more. "More importantly, how did you find me?" I sneered at her, showing that
I was not afraid. I had my sword at my side, and I would have drawn it. Terzin
could have his vengeance, as could I. However, I still felt slightly light-headed
from the strange powder we'd inhaled. I also knew that now was not the time
and place to start a brawl.
The Eyrie merely flashed me her usual smug smile,
and my confidence suddenly twisted into rage. She always acted as though I was
nothing but an inferior waste of space, and I couldn't stand it. Her haughty
air became only more obvious as she answered me. "I'll tell you how we found
you. The dart that was shot into your throat was our doing, as you may have
already guessed."
"Yes," I said, waiting for a further explanation.
"Well, that dart contained a poison of mixed
magics. There are those among us who are gifted with a mage's power, and although
their magic is weak, they are able to detect where the dart's contents are,
and you with them. I sent out one scout to implant the missile, and we chose
to bring out a larger force later for your capture."
"But Terzin's light magic healed me - there
wasn't any poison left in me."
"The strength of Light alone could not possibly
exorcise all of the substance from your body. The part of it that we created
from light repels light. It was this way that we were able to capture you."
She cleared her throat and then continued. "Now, the Lady KeenBlade must return,
and you are going to help us to do this, as you were destined."
"Get to the point," I snapped.
"Oh, I will. Our Mistress knows that the archer,
Tasson, has chosen to speak with you. It is he who she wishes to be summoned."
I didn't understand this. Summoned? Why? Tasson
had been, like Frey, long dead, and although he had been speaking to me, I had
no idea what Frey would want with him. He had been her enemy then, but now she
had me to deal with. What could be so important about the Cybunny?
"So she's using me again. What's the point? Tasson's
not her foe now."
"But he possessed the Storm."
At these words, I felt my mind go numb. The Storm
was something I'd discovered during the defeat of Frey's Firejewel. It was the
power that I, the Windstorm, was fated to have, although I knew next to nothing
about it. All I knew was that it had helped to save our lives back then. Now
the League was familiar with its power - perhaps Frey had told them of it, or
maybe they'd always known of its existence.
"You are the only other who owns this power,"
Aillara continued, "And as such it is you who must awaken Tasson's power, identical
to your own. Once you do this, She will be fit to walk among us again, after
you have been killed, of course."
"Why are you so desperate?" I cried. "Can't she
just face death, or is she afraid? Why do you need me anyway, if Tasson has
the Storm that she wants so badly?"
This time the Eyrie's emerald eyes took on a
steely glare. "First of all, you should watch your mouth, Windstorm. You speak
out against Frey KeenBlade too frequently for your own good. Secondly, you have
no place in asking the full details of Her plans. They reside completely in
her mind and she has not seen it fit to tell us, her League, all that they entail.
Remember, Windstorm, she is your master as much as she is ours. The only difference
between us is that you refuse to be led by her glory."
I returned her glare. "I'm not going to do it,"
I gritted out.
Her grin returned. "I think you will. If you
refuse, I think we'll have to resort to threats, and if that won't sway you,
maybe the deaths of your companions will. We're in a nice, isolated chamber,
and a few well-aimed arrows should make quick work of a pair of Zafara girls
and one stubborn Lupe."
I looked at my friends fearfully. Aillara knew
exactly how to push my buttons. There was no way on Neopia that I was going
to sacrifice my friends' lives merely for the sake of defying Frey. My heart
became heavy as I realized that the only way we'd have a chance of getting out
of this alive was by agreeing to do as they'd asked. "Fine," I choked after
a pause. "I go in that cursed tomb and I'll find the Storm - but not for her."
"A sensible choice," Aillara told me, "Remember,
Windstorm, you have no purpose on this planet whatsoever, save to die; to be
slain by the great mage whom we serve. Don't think that you can manipulate us
or stand against us - you'll die in the end no matter what." Her beak curled
into a grin that made me shiver with anger.
"Everyone dies in the end," I whispered, for
one last remark. I tried not to let what she'd said sink it, but it already
had over the course of about a year, since I'd first met Frey. I was born to
die, and knowing that made me struggle to remain strong and unwavering each
day, whether I realized it or not. It was my fate, choking me like unbreakable
ropes, and yet I fought it, and I always would. I was never going to curl up
and allow a blade through my heart because of Frey.
It appeared that Aillara chose to ignore my
latter choice of words. "We'll take you to the tomb now," she announced, "It's
about a half-day's journey east, so you better have gotten some rest in that
cell." She nodded tersely at three nearby pets: a Ruki, a Grarrl, and a Fire
Gelert I recognized named Frawl. He seemed to be something of a second-in-command.
We followed, allowing the guards to surround us. Each one assigned themselves
to one of us. Aillara led me, Frawl Aly, and the Ruki and Grarrl Dayne and Terzin,
respectively.
The rest of the League members watched us with
suppressed ecstasy, knowing that they now had the Windstorm in their clutches
and that Frey would be finally resurrected without a doubt. I wished that I
could prove them wrong, but there was nothing right now that made me believe
that there was a way out of this.
The eight of us made our way to a corridor leading
off of the main room. I noticed that the floor was slanted upward slightly.
Torches fixed to the wall by sconces lit the passage. The place smelled dusty,
the red and beige stone ancient. The flames flickered and at times I felt that
hidden shadows followed us as though they were living creatures. We continued
on in silence, taking countless twists and turns through the stone halls. I
soon lost any idea of where we were in relation to the main chamber; our path
was one that surely only League members knew by heart.
Finally, there was a gleaming light ahead of
us - we'd reached the surface. I could see the sun's rays piercing the purple
and orange clouds of dawn. I realized that this meant that the sleeping powder
had kept us unconscious through almost the entire night.
The cold winter air lashed at my face like a
multitude of invisible whips. I gathered my cloak around me in an attempt to
shield myself against the harsh, freezing winds. The landscape was the same
colour as my own fur, and we trudged through the snow accompanied by our captors.
For the next few hours, all was silent, save
for the howling of the frigid atmosphere. No one had any reason to speak to
anyone else, and even if they had, chances were that their breath would be stolen
away by winter before it reached the other's ears. I knew that we were all hoping
to stop soon, but the half-day that was the journey's time span was not yet
over.
I stared up at the sky as the day wore on, the
sun rising slowly above our heads, its light causing the snow to glitter brightly,
so it appeared that we were striding through a sea of diamonds.
I wondered what Tasson's tomb was going to be
like. I didn't know how I was going to do what was expected of me. Why couldn't
this have ended long ago? Or better yet, why had it begun? Why did Frey have
had to live in Neopia's past at all? I sighed as I realized that these were
questions I'd been pondering ever since my return home from freeing Dayne from
the Firejewel. The enormity of my destiny intertwining with Frey's was something
that I simply could not get out of my head. It seemed like the real world had
lost its significance; I'd been trapped in my own mind for too long.
I was released from my reverie as I noticed a
dark shape on the horizon. It was the first real landmark we'd come across on
the eastern plain. I squinted, trying to make out the silhouette, but it was
too great of a distance. I wondered what it was, and as we neared it, I began
to make out its shape, or, more precisely, number of shapes.
It was a formation of standing stones, easily
six times my height, although it could have been more. Each roughly shaped pillar
seemed to have been standing there since the beginning of time, their bases
sinking into the frozen earth surrounding them. In the midst of the monoliths
of stone was a small, darker area, which stood out against the pure white of
the snow that girded it.
"Here we are," Aillara informed us, ruffling
her ebony feathers. "This, Windstorm, is the final resting place of Tasson the
archer."
To be continued...
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