Read Halfway (Wizards and Faeries) Online

Authors: Stephanie Void

Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult

Halfway (Wizards and Faeries) (7 page)

    
“Should we turn her over to the duke?”

    
My vision cleared. I was lying on the deck amid a pile of potatoes. Several strangely-dressed, swarthy men stood over me.

    
“What’s your name, miss? And what were you doing in the potatoes?” asked one of them.
 

    
I stood up. “I’m—I’m Cemagna,” I stammered. “I stowed away—I’m sorry—but it was the only way to get to the Wizardly Order.”

     
“I’m Mayhew Kopley. We aren’t going to the Wizardly Order, I’m afraid.”
 

    
“But your ship! It has the moon-eye on it! You must be going there!”

    
Kopley shook his head. “No, sorry, miss, but it doesn’t.”

    
With a sick feeling, I ran to the railing and looked down at the hull—the bare hull. I must have chosen the wrong ship in the dark!

    
“Do… do you know how I can get there?” I asked in a small voice.

    
“Why? They come to you and take you away if they want you. No one goes to them,” said Kopley. He shook his head. “They have their own fleet of ships, true enough, but none of their men ever talk to other sailors. They’re really shady, they are. Downright
mysterious
. I’m not even sure where this Order is located.” He pursed his lips. “Tell you what, though. Their people are everywhere. You go to into the city, look around a bit. Look for the people with the long black scarves. They all wear a silver pin with that moon-eye on it when they’re out and about among us mere mortals.” He laughed. “You can tell who they are from a distance, usually, especially the Enforcers. They give everyone within twenty feet of them the shivers.”

    
“Why?”

    
“The Enforcers are charged with finding rogue wizards who ran away from the Order. It’s what they do, and they scare everyone around doing it because they’re so powerful.”

    
I put one hand to my head. This was all wrong. How could I have made such a mistake?

    
“Where am I?” I asked Kopley, looking around. The ship was docked with others, and I could see buildings and people moving about on shore. A lot of them—more people than I had ever seen in my life. And the buildings—so tall! Much taller and finer than the ones in the port city.

    
“You’re in Vel City. Ruled by the Duke Von Chi.”

    
“Thank you… thank you,” I said uncertainly.
 

    
“My pleasure, miss. Would you –”

    
“Kopley!” someone amidships yelled, and Kopley darted away in response.

    
I walked down the gangplank and onto the dock. Land. Different from my home.

    
I walked along the pier to the street, where a maze of people hurried about the business of the day, hundreds of shoes and wheels clacking on cobblestones. I could handle the city’s sensory assault better than last time, so I straightened up and marched into the throng, determined to inquire among every shopkeeper I could find for the whereabouts of the Wizardly Order.

    
Three figures emerging from one of the shops caught my attention. They were in black, their faces and shoulders covered by black veils. On their foreheads were insignias: silver moon-eyes. The Order.

    
I stopped in my tracks, unsure. These could be the men I was looking for—men who would lead me to my brother. On the other hand, the black veils unnerved me…

    
One of their number swiveled its head toward me and stopped dead, its hidden gaze locked on me. For only a moment.

    
The figure shouted to its fellows and the three of them lunged for me.

    
Black-gloved hands wrapped around my arms, tightening. What were they doing?
 

    
Another reached into a black fold of cloth and produced a green vial, reaching forward, bringing it closer to my face.

    
What were they trying to do to me?

    
I thrashed, freeing one of my fists, which I aimed at a throat invisible beneath black fabric. The creature staggered back. Another grabbed me from the side, pinning my arms to my sides as the third grabbed at me from the other side. I bucked into the first with one hip while kicking the second hard. Twisting, I flipped the first onto his back and planted a foot in his chest, looking up for the others.
 
One was standing back, pouring the liquid from the small bottle onto a cloth. I saw and knew that, no matter what, I must not let that cloth near me.

    
A small circle of horrified onlookers had formed around us, none of them offering help to either side.

    
I kicked the one under me for good measure, so he would stay down, as another of the black-garbed attackers aimed a punch at my face. I blocked it, just barely, and planted a fist under his chin. His head jerked back and I turned, for only a moment, to look for the other one.

    
The last thing I saw was the one with the rag and the little bottle triumphantly passing the rag under my nose. Sweet fumes reached my nostrils and I felt me knees weakening. He shoved the rag in my face again and I felt myself falling.

Chapter 11

Cemagna

I was lost.
 
In the airless world, lost forever.
 
Temet would never find me here.
 
Neither would Kopley… or anyone else. Ever.

It was so dark, so very unlike my home on the cliff.
 
My home, the one I might never see again…

I shook my head, trying to shake those thoughts away.
 
I mustn’t think of home.
 
If I did, I knew I would start to cry again.
 
Then I realized I was awake, tie up, and there was a rough cloth sack thrown over my head.

“How long have I been here?” I asked the cloth of the sack in front of my face. “Why?”

Sighing, I pulled my feet up under my chin and tried to wiggle out of the ropes.
 

Around me, I heard a hissing sound, and the air suddenly became too thick to breathe.
 
I gasped against its suddenly sweet taste, trying to inhale.
 
Then everything became foggy.

Dimly, much later, I was aware of the feel of hands.
 
Was I being transported somewhere?
 
How much time had passed?
 
Why were my thoughts all fuzzy all of a sudden?

Then the rough cloth sack over me vanished.
 
I sucked air in gratefully, feeling the effects of whatever drug I had breathed beginning to lessen.
 
Attempting to move, I discovered that I was now curled on a cold floor and the ropes were gone.

Around me was total darkness except for points of pale light that hovered in the air… fifteen of them, I counted.
 
Blinking, my eyes adjusted, and I saw the pale points of light were lanterns, each being held at chest-height by fifteen figures standing in a circle around me. I shivered. They were all clothed like the three who had attacked me, the angry moon-eyes on their foreheads glinting in the lantern light, forming a row of angry silver stares.

“We are here,” a dark, liquid voice proclaimed, “to pass judgment on the abomination which sits before us.”

Abomination
?
 
I felt my mouth dropping open, but I couldn’t form words.

“We all know the crimes you are guilty of.
 
That has already been decided. What we are to determine is what punishment will be inflicted as a result thereof.”

    
I tasted fear on my lips at those words. By now, my head was now fully clear of whatever drug they had used to bring me here.
 
Or at least clear enough to panic.

     
“Wh-who are y-you?”
I mustn’t panic
, I told myself. My voice sounded tiny compared to whatever I was talking to.

    
“We are the Enforcers, and we pronounce judgment upon you! You have been deemed an unrepentant rogue, too dangerous to live!”

     
Another voice, slightly less dark and liquid, broke in.
 
“Are you sure she is guilty?
 
It has been years—she could be another, or she could be dead.
 
Look at her… she’s not—”

    
“Don’t presume too much!” said the first voice.
 
“She had power enough to deceive you.
 
It is she, the one whose fate was decided years ago.”

    
I pushed myself into a sitting position on the floor and noticed it was made of smoothed rock shot through with veins of quartz. Was I underground? In the light cast by the lanterns, I saw that just beyond the circle, the smoothness ended and the floor was jagged and uneven. The sound of water trickled from an unseen source. A cave, then. Craning my neck I saw, past the motionless figures and the jagged rock, the sheen of water.
 
I’m underground, in a cave near an underground river,
I concluded.
 

    
I felt hot and sick.
 
They want to punish me!
 
I have done nothing!

“It is therefore the decree of this Court that the Nameless Girl is an enemy of the Enforcers and the Ten Ring, as she stands convicted by her own actions.
 
She is now hereby sentenced to be hung by the neck until dead.”

    
Death!
 
He was sentencing me to death!

“I—I didn’t do anything! I’ve never even been here before!” I cried, pushing my panic away. “This is a mistake!”

“Silence! There is no mistake. We know who you are, and we know you lie! You have done much harm and have made yourself a danger to free life and an enemy of the Enforcers!”

The
Enforcers
? I wasn’t a rogue wizard who had left the Order. How was
I
their enemy?

Two of the fifteen figures broke away from the circle to step forward, grab me by the arms, and haul me to my feet.

The Enforcers moved in unison to hang their lanterns in a single row at one side of the cave. The two holding my arms brought me forward towards the water. As I got closer, I could see by the lantern light that it was a fast-flowing river. The almost luminous green water rushed through the cave, drowning out the sound of my heavy breath.
 
Anxiety gripped me as I stared down at it, then looked up.

A single rope hung down from a beam that was somehow wedged in the cave ceiling, the eerie green light from the water playing upon the noose tied into the rope.
 
Using a hooked pole, one of the Enforcers caught hold of the noose and pulled it towards the shore.
 
Taking it into his hands, he handed it to one of his fellows standing next to me.

    
The Enforcer standing next to me took the noose and lifted it over my head to put it around my neck.

    
“No!” I screamed, trying to focus enough to use Magic. Calm. Focus. Magic.

    
The rope burst into fibers in his hand, the fragments raining down into my hair.
 

    
I felt a tingling in my limbs and knew I was responsible for that. I had used Magic!

    
“Get another rope,” one of them ordered, and one of his fellows turned to obey.
 

    
“I’m innocent!” I shouted, reaching out. “Listen to me!”

His gloved hand batted my imploring hand away from his arm, and I cried out in anger.
 
His arm snapped backwards and he tottered back, screaming in pain, and fell to the ground.
 

    
I found myself shaking. I had just used Magic to hurt someone.

    
Someone grabbed me roughly from behind, and one of the Enforcers growled in my ear. “Stop whatever you’re doing, witch freak, or I’ll break your back with my own hands.”
 
He gave my spine a sharp jerk upwards, as if to demonstrate.

In an instant he was in the air, his body shooting to the side, hitting and wrapping around a stalagmite far into the river. I had done it before I could think.
 
He was dead.
 
The river carried his body away within a matter of seconds.

Turning, I saw I was alone—the rest of the Enforcers had vanished, evidently having left their fellows to my mercy.

Everyone had fled the “witch freak.”
 
I was alone in the cave. What had I done?

    
Reaching into the river, I cupped my hands and splashed my face with the chilling water, gasping at how cold it was.
 
I wiped my face on my sleeve.

A hand grasped the back of my neck.
 
“You haven’t escaped yet, rogue abomination,” said the dark, liquid voice from behind me. “Cardinal rule of combat: don’t assume an enemy isn’t there just because you don’t see anyone.”
 
And then, with a strength that made my stomach turn, the Enforcer flung me headfirst into the river.

    
As the icy water closed over my head, I felt my body spasm at the cold.
 
Fighting it, I kicked my way to the surface, coughing up water, and saw only darkness ahead.
 
I had been carried far downriver by the rushing current. How far?

And then my hand brushed a rock.
 
Reaching out, I grasped it and pulled myself towards it, fighting the current dragging me away.
 
From its conical feel, I could tell the rock was a stalagmite, and I held tightly to it to avoid being pulled even further downstream.

Other books

FascinatingRhythm by Lynne Connolly
The Last Coyote by Michael Connelly
Do Dead People Walk Their Dogs? by Bertoldi, Concetta
Hell by Elena M. Reyes
Once We Were by Kat Zhang
Worth The Risk by Dieudonné, Natalie
Dark Oil by Nora James


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024