Amongst shicts, there were those that loathed humans, there were those that
And for those that had consorted with the human disease, slaughter was seen as an act of mercy to the incurably infected. As such, Kataria remained tense, ready to turn and bolt the moment the tomahawk left her belt.
The blow never came. Inqalle’s gaze was sharp enough to wound without it.
‘Kataria,’ she whispered, taking a step closer. Kataria felt the greenshict’s eyes digging deeper into her, sifting through thought, ancestry, everything she could not hide from the Howling. ‘Daughter of Kalindris. Daughter of Rokuda. I have heard your names spoken by the living.’
Her eyes drifted toward the feathers in Kataria’s hair, resting uncomfortably on a long, ivory-coloured crest nestled amongst the darker ones.
‘And the dead,’ she whispered. ‘Who do you mourn, Little Sister?’
Kataria turned her head aside to hide it. Inqalle’s hand was a lash, reaching out to seize her by the hair, twisting her head about as Inqalle’s long green fingers knotted into her locks.
‘You are … infected,’ she hissed, voice raking Kataria’s ears. ‘Not voiceless.’
‘Let go,’ Kataria snarled back.
‘You speak words. That is all I hear.’ She tapped her tattooed brow. ‘In here, I hear nothing. You cannot speak with the Howling. You are no shict.’ She wrenched the white feather free, strands of hair coming loose with them. ‘You mourn no shict.’
‘Give that back,’ Kataria growled, lashing out a hand to grab it back. With insulting ease, Inqalle’s hand lashed back, striking her against her cheek and laying her to the earth. She looked up, eyes pleading. ‘You have no right.’ She winced. ‘Please.’
‘Shicts do not beg.’
‘I am a shict!’ Kataria roared back, springing to her feet. Her ears were flattened against her head, her teeth bared and flashing white. ‘Show me your hand again and I’ll prove it.’
‘You wish to prove it,’ Inqalle said softly, a statement rather than a challenge or insult. ‘I wish to see it.’
‘Then let me show you how to make a
‘There is another way, Little Sister.’
Kataria paused. She felt Inqalle’s Howling, the promise within its distant voice, the desire to help. And Inqalle heard the anticipation in her little sister’s, the desperation to be helped. Inqalle smiled, thin and sharp. Kataria swallowed hard, voice dry.
‘Tell me.’
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Her daughter had tucked the white one behind her ear. ‘
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Her daughter had frowned.
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He had stared, then, as he hefted his sword.
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He hadn’t told her daughter to stop. He hadn’t told her daughter to leave. And Kataria never had.
*
They stretched out into the distance, over the sand, a story in each moist imprint. They spoke of suffering, of pain, of confusion, of fear. She narrowed her eyes as she knelt down low, tracing her fingers over two of the tracks. The voices in the footprints spoke clearly to her, told her where they were heading.
She knew her companions well enough to recognise their tracks.
‘There are more,’ Inqalle said behind her. ‘They are familiar to you.’
‘They are,’ Kataria replied.
‘They are your cure.’
She turned and saw the feather first. Inqalle held it in her hand, attached to a smooth, carved stick. She held it before Kataria.
‘You know what this is.’
‘I remember,’ she said. ‘A Spokesman.’
‘It speaks. It makes a declaration. This one says that you shall not mourn until you are a shict.’ She regarded Kataria coolly. ‘This one will tell you when you are a shict.’
‘I remember,’ she said. ‘My father told me.’
‘This is a cure for the disease. This is a cure for your fear. This restores you.’ She handed the Spokesman to Kataria. ‘Keep it. Use it. Survive until you become a shict again.’
‘And when I do. You will know?’
Inqalle tapped her head.
‘We will all know.’
Six
In the human tongue, this translated roughly to ‘it’s not my fault.’ Gariath had heard it enough times to know. Those humans he knew had been happiest when they could blame someone else.
Not entirely true, he knew. If their heavens did indeed circle enigmatically overhead, and they had indeed gone to them, they were likely hurling curses upon his head from there at that very moment. A tad hypocritical, he thought, to praise their mysterious gods and resent being sent to them.
But that was a concern for dead people. Gariath, sadly, was still alive and without a convenient excuse for it.