graves. How many, he wasn’t sure. He didn’t have the wit to count, either, for in another moment, the stench of death struck him like a fist.
It sent him reeling, but only that. What made him stop, what made his eyes go wide and his jaw drop, was the sudden realisation that he had been struck with no singular aroma. Another scent was wrapped up within the reek of decay, trapped inside it, inseparable from it.
Rivers. Rocks.
That was not right. The scent of the
He struck his toe, felt a pain too sharp to belong to him. A white bone lay at his feet, too small to belong to a great beast, too big to be a hapless human corpse. Its scent was too … too …
‘No …’
He collapsed to his knees; his hands drove themselves into the dirt and began digging. He sobbed, begging them not to in choked incoherencies. Thought weighed him down, fear drove his hands, and with every grain removed, white bone was exposed.
An eye socket that should have held a dark stare looked up at him.
Sharp teeth worn with use and age grinned at him.
A pair of horns, indentations where ear-frills had been, a gaping hole in the side of its bleached head …
He was out of thought, unable to think enough to rise or look away or even touch the skull. He knelt before it, staring down.
And the dead
‘That’s why the scent is faint.’
Gariath recognised the voice, its age and depth like rocks breaking and leaves falling. He didn’t look up as a pair of long, green legs came to stand beside him and a single yellow eye stared down at the skull.
‘It’s in the air, the earth.’ He squatted beside Gariath, running a reverential hand across the sand. ‘So is death. No matter how many bones we find and return’ — he paused to sigh — ‘there are always more.’
Gariath’s stare lingered on the skull, afraid to look up, more afraid to ask the question boiling behind his lips.
‘Are they …?’ he asked, regardless. ‘All of them?’
The Shen’s head swung towards him, levelled the single eye upon him. ‘Not all of them.’
Words heavy with meaning, Gariath recognised, made lighter with meaninglessness. ‘If a people becomes a person, there are none left.’
‘If there is one left, then there is one left. Failure and philosophy are for humans.’ He glanced farther down the beach. ‘They have been here.’
Gariath had not expected to look up at that word. ‘Humans?’
‘Dragged through here, earlier, by the longfaces,’ the lizardman muttered, staring intently at the earth. ‘We had hoped Togu would take care of their presence, but not by feeding them to purple-skinned beasts. He encourages further incursions.’ He snorted. ‘He was always weak.’
‘You have been tracking them? You are a hunter, then?’
‘I am Yaike. I am Shen. It matters not what I do, so long as I do it for all Shen.’
‘You can hunt with one eye?’
‘I have another one. I am still Shen. Other races that teem have the numbers to give up when they lose one eye.’ He hummed, his body rumbling with the sound. ‘Tonight, we hunt longfaces. Tonight, we kill them. In this, we know we are Shen.’ He glanced at Gariath. ‘More bones tonight,
‘There is a lot of that on this island.’
‘This?’ Yaike gestured to the skull. ‘A tragedy. The Shen were born in it, in death. We carry it with us.’ He ran a clawed finger across his tattooed flesh. ‘Our lives are painted with it, intertwined with it. In death, we find life.’
‘In death, I have found nothing.’
‘I am Shen.’ Yaike rose to his feet. ‘I know only Shen. Of
‘And what do they say?’
‘That the
Yaike’s gaze settled on Gariath for a moment before he turned and stalked off, saying nothing more. Gariath did not call after him. He knew there was nothing more the Shen could offer him, as surely as he knew the name Shen. And because he was not sure at all how he knew the name, he felt no calm. Thought felt no lighter on his shoulders.
‘And you haven’t learned anything, Wisest,’ the grandfather whispered, unseen.
There was no response to that from the grandfather. No sound at all, but the hush of the waves and the sound of boots on sand.
‘Is that it?’ a grating voice asked, suddenly. ‘It’s pretty big, isn’t it?’
His nostrils quivered: iron, rust, hate.
He turned and regarded them carefully, the trio of purple-skinned longfaces that had emerged from the night. They clutched swords in hands, carried thick, jagged throwing knives at their belts. How easy it would be, he wondered, to stand there and let them carve his flesh. How easy would it be to find an answer in his own blood, dripping out on the sand.
He hadn’t learned anything that way so far.
‘You have humans,’ he grunted. ‘I will take them.’
‘They yours?’ one of them asked. ‘How about we burn what’s left of them and what’s left of you in a pile? Fair?’
He stepped forward and felt refreshed by an instant surge of ire welling up inside him. It might not have been the most profound of solutions, but then, this was not the most difficult of problems.
For this question, for
The netherlings shared this thought, bringing their swords up, meeting his bared teeth with their jagged grins.
Humans were nearby, he knew, and they were likely dead. Netherlings were closer, he knew, and they would soon be dead. He would find answers tonight, answers in death.
Whose, he wasn’t quite sure he cared.
Lenk felt the chill shudder through his body, seizing his attention.
‘
The sight of drawn swords and grins of varying width and wickedness confirmed as much. The netherlings’ brief argument over who was going to kill whom had lasted only as long as it took for words to give way to fists, with the least battered picking their prey. The one most bloodied settled with a grumble for Dreadaeleon’s unconscious form, still beside Lenk.
The one with the broadest grin and the bloodiest gauntlet advanced upon him, pursued by scowls from the ones with the most knuckle indentations embedded in their jaws. There were many of those, he noted. She had wanted him badly.
‘
