Shortly after Meriones left them, Ebisha's strength deserted her. Her legs felt like water. She sat down abruptly on the unstable earth and stared helplessly up at Hokar. “No
more,”
she said.
He gave a worried glance at the peculiar sky, then reluctantly sat down beside her. “Just for a little while,” he said. “We can rest for a little while, then we have to go on.”
“Where?”
“To my house, in the hills beyond this valley. It might be safer there.”
“Can we breathe there, in the hills?” Ebisha coughed, shook her head, coughed again. “The air is so bad here. So thick.”
“It will be better at Arkhanes,” he assured her with a confidence he did not feel. He sat with her for a little while then tried to get her on her feet again. When he tugged at her arm she sat like a lump of soft clay, unwilling to move. “Come to my house now,” he pleaded. “I have something for you there, something I've been keeping for you. It is the gold ⦔ Suddenly he remembered. His stolen gold. Meriones said he had it, but Meriones was gone.
Gone off with my gold, Hokar thought. His mouth narrowed into a bitter line.
“What do you have for me?” Ebisha asked, pulling his attention back.
The words were ashes in his mouth. “The gold necklace I made for you, the seashells.” It's all I have left, he was about to add, feeling the anger flame in him.
But at that moment the first blast struck.
Ebisha screamed and cowered against the earth. Hokar stood swaying, his ears ringing. Then the second great thunder drowned out all other sound and hurled him to the ground.
As the final explosion ignited the sky, he twisted violently to shield Ebisha's body with his. Wrapping his arms around her head, Hokar pressed his face down beside her and waited for death.
Waited in a ringing silence.
Slowly, astonished to find himself alive, Hokar began trying to disentangle from the woman. A white-hot pain lanced through his hip.
Ebisha was crying in soft little hiccups.
When Hokar tried to stand, his wrenched muscles screamed. He tugged at Ebisha. “You must help me,” he told her through gritted teeth. “I'm hurt. I don't think I can get up alone.”
With an effort, she controlled her sobbing and peered at him through a curtain of disheveled hair. “Hurt?”
“My hip.” Waves of pain lapped at him. “But we cannot stay here. Help me.”
Ebisha got to her feet. Then she bent and helped Hokar drape an arm across her shoulders. She wrapped both her arms around his chest.
Very slowly and very carefully, between them they got him upright, standing.
Hokar was briefly nauseated, but it passed.
“That's better,” he breathed. He straightened his spine and lifted his head, moving out of her embrace to stand independently. “I'm all right now,” he said with conviction.
But when he tried to walk he knew he was not all right. The injured hip could not be trusted, and every movement of his leg was a painful effort.
Ebisha, watching him through narrowed eyes, moved close again without being asked and draped his arm back across her shoulder. She could not afford weakness when he needed her strength.
They set off once more in the direction of Arkhanes.
People were streaming past them. A small child, bloody and naked, appeared in their path, shrieked unintelligibly, and fled like a mindless animal. Moments later they came to the collapsed house where the child's family lay crushed. One clenched fist protruded from the rubble.
There was nothing to be done. Hokar and Ebisha went on.
Once the goldsmith glanced back toward the north, but the sight of a monstrous tower of flame invading the heavens so appalled him that thereafter he kept his eyes fixed on the ground in front of him. The ground was cracked, broken, the familiar way to Arkhanes already altered beyond recognition. But better than fire in the sky.
Shielded by the contours of the hills, Hokar and Ebisha were spared the sight Meriones would never forget, the massive wall of water rushing down on the defenseless coast. The concussion of the tidal wave was, to them, indistinguishable from the other tremors running continually through the earth.
The tidal wave did not reach the House of the Double Axes. The valley rim that had shielded Labrys from the rapacious view of sea pirates in former times now sheltered the palace from the most savage pirate of all. Poseidon did not carry away the treasures of The Minos.
But Hokar and Ebisha heard a change in the quality of the distant screaming. An added wail of terror was carried to them on the wind from the northern coast.
Hokar forced himself to a shambling run, a sort of hobbling hop half supported by Ebisha trotting beside him. Surprisingly, the effort eased his pain as if he were forcing some misaligned portion of himself back into place.
The hot wind, the long overdue wind, was blowing more strongly every moment, bringing a cloud of pumice and ash. In time it would begin delivering the fragmented flesh of Thera.
Hokar and Ebisha journeyed through nightmare. For a while he stopped thinking of her as a woman. Getting-Ebisha-to-Arkhanes became a task he had set himself, like fashioning fine gold wire. His mind fixed on that as the only reality, rejecting the unreal surrounding them and the surreal horror of the situation.
Struggling, stumbling, cursing, he guided herâhe the cripple and she the crutchâthrough an endless filthy darkness in which a thousand raging fires were springing up as blazing cinders began to rain from the sky.
Hardly a structure they saw was still intact. Homes and farmsteads, their stones scattered, littered the land with rubble. Dazed people wandered about as aimlessly as dazed livestock.
Some survivors, less dazed than others, had already begun looting.
As Hokar and Ebisha approached Arkhanes, several times they encountered small groups of men going from one ruined homestead to another, taking anything of value they could find. Snatching, grabbing, grinning, running.
“They are like the men who capture free people to make them slaves,” Ebisha said with repugnance.
But the looters did not bother them. They were so ash-covered and begrimed they looked as if neither ever had anything worth stealing.
Arkhanes had been a small but important town. It was on one of the main roads leading from the south, and was also the site of the royal tombs of minor members of the ruling families of Kn
sos. Generations of sisters and nephews and mothers-in-law slept there peacefully with their grave goods piled high around them, fearing no grave robbers, for graves were sacred in the land of the sea kings.
At least, they always had been. Before.
“My house is just up ahead,” Hokar told Ebisha with obvious relief. “If it's still standing.”
The goldsmith's house was at the end of a road leading to the Hill of Tombs. An ugly glow behind the hill might have been sunsetâor sunriseâwho could tell?
Hokar directed Ebisha to the familiar pathway. Now he was looking ahead. He could hardly believe his stinging eyes.
His house stood relatively unharmed, with just a slight cant to one side.
They hurried gratefully inside.
The door could not be closed behind them. The doorframe was out of alignment. Putting his shoulder behind it, Hokar forced the door as far as it would go, which was no more than halfway, then sat down, panting, on the nearest couch.
The pain in his hip had become only a memory of fire. But suddenly he was desperately tired. He just wanted to sit. Not think, not feel. Just sit. He hung his head and closed his eyes.
Ebisha stood indecisively for a moment, then began exploring the goldsmith's house.
It was nothing like the House of the Double Axes. Simple to the point of being stark, it was a utilitarian residence for a man usually occupied elsewhere. A few couches, one of which served as a bed; some low wooden tables; a couple of chests carved in designs she did not recognize. Coarse woolen rugs hung haphazardly on the wallsâthough with a sense of color, bright dyes enlivening the plain white stucco. On one of the tables was a pitcher with dying flowers.
Ebisha smiled to herself when she saw the flowers, and nodded, as if they carried a particular message.
“Is there any water?” she heard Hokar say behind her.
She took the flowers from the water and carried the pitcher to him. He drank gratefully. The water was flat and stale but it cleared the dust from his mouth.
When he ran his tongue over his teeth afterward, he could taste the dead flowers.
Gingerly, he stood up. His hip ached, but it was bearable. Crossing the room to an assortment of householders' tools leaning in one corner, he selected a heavy metal bar. With the bar he pried up a flagstone from the floor.
There was a hollow beneath the flagstone, and a small parcel wrapped in linen in the hollow.
Wordlessly, he handed the parcel to Ebisha.
When she unwrapped it her eyes widened. “The necklace!” She turned the thin links over in her hands, her eyes following the spiral design of the tiny nautilus shells.
Hokar said diffidently, “It's ⦠ah ⦠the best thing I've ever done. Not very heavy though. If I had more gold ⦔ He broke off, scowling. The memory of the stolen gold burned in him.
“You have a very great gift,” Ebisha said reverently. “I think the gold speaks to you.”
Hokar was embarrassed. “That's not possible. I'm just, ah, good with my hands.”
“You don't think gold can speak to a craftsman? I do. Everything has a voice. Not as powerful a voice, perhaps, as one of the immortals, but ⦔
“What do you mean by âthe immortals'? Are you talking about the gods?”
Ebisha's forehead pleated with the effort to explain. “Not like the gods you have here, Hokar. Not giant men and women or magical animals or some blend of the two. The immortals my people know and understand are alive, but in a different way. They are the very forces of life. They provide what we need for our existence as long as we treat them with respect, but they ⦠they are not ⦔ She broke off, coughing.
When the seizure passed she resumed, “Water is one of the immortals. Among my people are some to whom the water speaks. They can find it hidden far beneath the earth. They hear the voice of unknown springs and show others where to dig their wells. The water calls to them, and they listen.
“My grandsire has a different gift. He knows the soul of fire. Fire is another of the immortals. Something in the fire speaks to my grandsire and he listens. They ⦠communicate. He can make sparks leap from his fingertips or set a tree afire with a glance. Do you understand?”
Baffled, Hokar shook his head. “It's magic. I know nothing of magic.”
The lurid light of the flaming sky shone through the window, painting the interior of Hokar's house the color of blood.
A face peered around the half-open door. “Hokar?” someone inquired. “Is this your house? Are you in there?”
Hokar stiffened.
Ebisha gave a squeal of joy. “Musician!”
Meriones entered the house warily, as if expecting it might collapse at any time. Hokar wanted to hurry forward and welcome him, but something held him back. “Why are you here?” was all he could say. His tone was surly.
Meriones peered at him. “I had to bring your gold to you,” he said. It was the only answer he could think of.
Hokar exhaled a great sigh of relief. “You brought it back.”
“Of course I brought it back, did you think Iâyou did! You thought I'd stolen it for myself!”
“Of course not,” Hokar said, too heartily. “It never entered my mind!”
“It never entered my mind either,” Meriones told him in a soft, sad voice.