Read season avatars 01 - seasons beginnings Online
Authors: sandra ulbrich almazan
lost in the clouds. However, Kron couldn’t admire the scenery, as
smaller streams joined the Chikasi, making the path they should take
difficult to determine. Kron placed magic-finders at the front and rear
of the boat, then, with Bella’s help, used the different glow intensities
between the two to figure out the direction to Salth’s house.
“We should go this way,” he said, pointing to one of the smaller
streams.
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“We can’t,” Janno replied. “It’s too shallow.”
Before Kron could argue, the boat proved Janno right by coming to
a halt. Kron staggered for a couple of steps before he regained his bal-
ance. Galia bumped into the railing. Bella reached for her, but Galia
waved her off. “Just give me a moment to catch my breath and heal my
bruises.”
Domina collapsed. “We’re...not going...anywhere.”
“Is anyone hurt?” Magstrom asked, poking his head into the cabin.
No one seemed to be severely injured, so Kron secured the ladder in
place and climbed down. He didn’t recognize the area, but other than
the clump of dead trees by the river, there wasn’t much here to distin-
guish it. At least the trees would provide shelter for the Avatars, as well
as materials he could use to portal back to Vistichia. Kron snapped off
several dry branches and lashed them into a door frame.
Galia peered over the
Avatar’s
side. “What are you doing?”
“I think it’s time for me to return to Vistichia and collect the other
Avatars. Are the rest of you going to wait in the boat or on land?”
“I think by this point, I prefer being on land,” Galia replied. “Hold
the ladder steady so I can climb down, please.”
Kron went one better by sharpening the ends of two branches to
points, hardening the posts so they would penetrate the frozen earth,
and finally bonding the ladder to the posts. Now the Avatars would be
able to move back and forth between the riverbank and the boat.
“It’s time for everyone to pack supplies,” he told Galia. “Let me
know if you want me to bring back anything from Vistichia. But it has
to be something I can find easily, so I can return in time for us to start
moving.”
Galia shook her head. “I think we should stay here tonight, Kron.
We have water and shelter here, and we may not be able to find them
on the march. Besides, Caye and Domina could use the rest. They’re
exhausted.”
She probably was too, even if she didn’t admit it. But while she
made good points, the thought of lingering anywhere in Salth’s domain
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made Kron uneasy. If she found them before they were ready, they
would have thrown their lives away for nothing and left Vistichia and
the rest of the Four’s domain vulnerable.
“Only if I decide it’s safe to stay here,” Kron said. “I’ll return as
soon as I can with the others. Guard the portal while I’m gone.”
Bella hadn’t disembarked, so Kron swiftly returned to the boat to
tell her he was leaving. She kissed him and said, “Bring back another
set of furs if you can. It’s cold.”
“I think Caye and Domina don’t have the strength to keep the cabin
warm anymore. There’s wood, so you can make a fire and have a hot
meal.” He lowered his voice. “And we can share a blanket tonight.”
She grinned, and that was enough to keep the cold at bay as Kron
descended back to the portal. He attached the blinded eye artifact on top
of it, then pictured the courtyard of the Avatars’ house and stepped
through.
His face broke out with sweat as he changed location. Caye and
Domina had spoiled them with warm air during the journey, but the air
and light here felt as bright as springtime. An apple tree bore ripe fruit
out of season. Kron walked a wide berth around it in case that was
Salth’s doing. Then he reminded himself that the Four had limited
Salth’s influence in the city, and she wouldn’t set up anything this pleas-
ant.
It could still be a trap. But if it is, why haven’t these Avatars taken
care of it?
Kron ventured into the kitchen. “Flilya? Hala? Are you here?”
They weren’t, but embers glowed in the hearth, and the scent of ris-
ing bread filled the air.
They must expect to be back by dinner.
I could
wait for them here, but then we won’t be able to portal back until dark,
and it’ll be too late to go anywhere tonight. Where could they have
gone?
Kron retrieved a magic-finder from his abandoned workshop and
keyed it to the Avatars. As soon as he left the house, he saw crowds of
people everywhere, talking, preparing food, playing music, and eating
as if a festival was going on. The spring feel he’d noticed earlier in the
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courtyard was still here. By the Four, had these Avatars decided to do
away with the Season of Winter? Kron wondered what the god Himself
would think of that.
A maiden approached him with a ring of flowers. She tried to drape
them over his head, but he waved her away. “Could you tell me if the
Season Avatars are receiving supplicants today?”
She smiled. “No, not today.”
“Then where are they?”
“Why, they’re at the temple, of course, getting ready for the cere-
mony of season change.”
“Where’s the temple?” How much had Vistichia changed while they
were gone?
“In the old city-king’s palace, near the center of town.”
Kron thanked her, then turned and made his way as fast as he could
through the crowd. Unfortunately, no one else seemed to be in a hurry.
They strolled along in colorful lightweight clothes, making Kron feel
more out of place in his wool and fur garments. Stubbornly, he kept
them on. Soon enough he’d drag the other Avatars back to winter.
The crowd thickened as he approached the palace-turned-temple. It
had been built on a hill, and stone steps led up to a partly exposed porch.
He asked a bald man next to him where the Season Avatars were. The
man stared at Kron as if he were a stranger. “They’ll come out when
they’re ready,” he said. “About noon, I would say.”
Noon? I left close to dawn! At this rate, we won’t return to the grove
of trees until nightfall.
He had to enter the temple and convince the Av-
atars to cancel this ceremony and come with him. However, the front
steps were blocked off, and watchmen with trained dogs paraded back
and forth. Kron approached the closest watchman. As the dog came to
attention, hair bristling along its spine, he said, “I need to get through,
please.”
“No one’s allowed up here.”
“But I’m Kron Evenhanded. I’m married to one of the Fall Avatars.”
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The watchman laughed. “There’s only one Fall Avatar, and you’re
not her husband.” He scowled. “No go away!”
Only one Fall Avatar? How could the people of Vistichia have for-
gotten us already? The trip hasn’t been that long!
Kron would have a
lot to discuss with the Avatars once he managed to meet them. But first
he needed an artifact that would enable him to pass both man and beast.
If he made himself invisible, the dogs would still be able to smell and
hear him. Could he outrace them or fly over them? Those seemed like
a waste of magic. Perhaps a simple distraction would suffice, and he
could do it with a piece of metal.
Kron took out the fire starter and twirled it around. The strange metal
resisted his magic at first, but after a few heartbeats, it yielded and dis-
played four other images of himself. The dogs might be able to sniff out
which one of him was real, but Kron hoped that if the artifact scattered
sound as well as images, the dogs would be confused enough to let him
through.
He positioned himself off to the side, between two watchmen, and
ran up the stairs. His doubles copied his every move. Shouts of “Look
at that!” “Who is he?” and other words Kron couldn’t make out rose
from behind him. More importantly, the watchmen both cried out,
“Halt! This area is off limits!” and ran toward the duplicates. The dogs,
still on their leashes, strained against their masters’ holds as they
pointed unerringly toward the real Kron.
If only I had meat to distract them.
Could he conjure it? Meat wasn’t
something he normally used in his artifacts, and he didn’t have any bone
pieces in his pouch. Perhaps a carved disk of ivory would be close
enough. Kron rubbed it, flung it behind him, and put more effort into
climbing the stairs even faster. He couldn’t help gasping, conscious of
the years he had over the younger guards. But the scent of roasting meat
wafted into the air, nearly tempting him to turn around and find the
skilled chef preparing the food. A dog whined as its master yelled at it.
Kron reached the top of the temple and slipped behind a column to catch
his breath. He caught sight of one of his doubles doing the same, so he
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banished it, since it was no longer needed. Perhaps he’d been too quick
to dismiss it, as a set of footsteps pounded on the marble steps.
What a
time for someone to do his job properly.
Well, the sooner he found the
Avatars, the sooner they could cancel this ceremony so they could join
Bella and the others.
Kron squeezed into a narrow opening and checked his magic-finder.
It glowed brightly, pointing toward the center of the temple. The corri-
dors here twisted into various storage rooms, making it hard for him to
navigate to the center even with the help of his magic-finder. Kron won-
dered if the watchman would follow him or report immediately to the
Avatars. Perhaps he would be better off trying to shadow his pursuer.
After running through dust and spider webs, Kron finally emerged
into an open space at the center of the temple. He froze as he saw the
Avatars. Although the trip upriver had taken less than half a moon, they
seemed as if they’d aged a bit more than that in the meantime. However,
they’d compensated by dressing in silks and jewels that Domina would
envy. Ocul stared overhead as if studying a cloud pattern on the ceil-
ing—or wondering how his beard had grown so much. Tylan stood with
his arms crossed as the watch man gestured. Hala petted the watchdog,
and Flilya turned around, faced Kron, and gaped.
“By All Four Gods and Goddesses, what are you doing?” Kron
asked as he stepped forward. “We’ve sailed up the Chikasi as far as we
can. Now it’s time for your four to portal back with me so we can march
to Salth’s house.”
Everyone turned to stare at him now. The watchman struggled to say
something, but Tylan held up his hand for silence.
“Kron Evenhanded, is that you?” he asked. “What happened to the
others?”
“They’re fine,” he replied, puzzled. “They’re waiting for you by the
boat.”
“What took you so long? Was the trip hard?”
He shrugged. “A few things happened on the way, but it wasn’t too
bad for a winter journey.”
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“But it’s the first day of spring,” Tylan said, “We’re here to honor
the Four with a special ceremony. We call it the soltrans.”
“The first day of spring? It can’t be. We left during the first moon of
winter.” The Avatars stared at Kron with pity, and his hands trembled.
“I know we did.”
“Yes, Kron, you did.” Tylan dismissed the watchman with a wave.
“But we had no word from you for two moons.”
Kron was silent as he replayed the journey in his head. He was sure
they’d been traveling for twelve days, not a single heartbeat more. How
could the Avatars have gotten the time so wrong? He sucked in his
breath. “Salth. That cursed woman...or whatever she is....Come, Ava-
tars, we must hurry! If Salth managed to breach my protective artifacts,
the rest of the Avatars are in danger!”
Bella, Bella, beautiful Bella....
“But the soltrans...” Tylan said.
“Freeze the soltrans!” The others gaped at him, but Kron continued,
“The Four asked you to take care of Salth, not create rituals for Them!”
Tylan pointed at Flilya and Hala. “Go ahead to the house and get
things ready. We’ll be there as soon as possible.” Kron glared at him,
but he said, “We promised the people a ceremony. If we cancel it, it will
cause more problems. I swear, Kron, we’ll keep it as quick as possible.”
Hala shook out her hair. “And if you don’t, Tylan, next time you
perform in costume.”
Tylan shuddered.
“Costume?” Kron wondered as the women led him to a flight of
stairs descending into the temple.
“When Tylan proposed this soltrans,” Flilya said, “we said since we
were doing this on behalf of the Four, we should each dress up as our
God or Goddess. Tylan would have had to dress like the Goddess of
Spring.”