“You’d best be careful,” Mespa warned her. “There’s a fifty-foot mantizac that’s been following us for the last half hour. I saw it when I was throwing up.”
“No self-respecting fish is going to want my old bones,” Diamanda said.
She’d no sooner spoken than the mottled head of a mantizac—not quite the size Mespa had described, but still huge—broke the surface. Its vast maw gaped not more than a foot from Diamnda’s outstretched arms.
“
The frustrated fish pushed against the back of the boat, as if to nudge one of the human morsels on board into its own element.
“So…” said Diamanda. “I think this calls for some moon-magic.”
“Wait,” said Joephi. “You said if we used magic, we would risk drawing attention to ourselves.”
“So I did,” Diamanda replied. “But in our present state we risk drowning or being eaten by that
Mespa clutched the little box even closer to her bosom. “It won’t take me,” she said, a profound terror in her voice.
“No,” said Diamanda reassuringly. “
She raised her aged hands. Dark threads of energy moved through her veins and leaped from her fingertips, forming delicate shapes on the air, and then fled heavenward.
“Lady Moon,” she called. “You know we would not call on you unless we needed your intervention. So we do. Lady, we three are of no consequence. We ask this boon not for ourselves but for the soul of one who was taken from among us before she was ready to leave. Please, Lady, bear us all safely through this storm, so that her life may find continuance…”
“
“She knows our minds,” Diamanda said.
“Even so,” Joephi replied. “
Diamanda glanced back at her companion, faintly irritated. “If you insist,” she said. Then, reaching toward the sky again, she said: “
“Good,” said Joephi.
“Lady, hear us—” Diamanda started to say.
But she was interrupted by Mespa.
“What?”
The three women looked up. The roiling storm clouds were parting, as though pressed aside by titanic hands. Through the widening slit there came a shaft of moonlight: the purest white, yet somehow warm. It illuminated the trough between the waves where the women’s boat was buried. It covered the vessel from end to end with light.
“Thank you, Lady…” Diamanda murmured.
The moonlight was
It touched the women too, inspiring fresh life in their weary bones and warming their icy skin.
All of this took perhaps ten seconds.
Then the clouds began to close again, cutting the moonlight off. Just as abruptly as it had begun, the blessing was over.
The sea seemed doubly dark when the light had passed away, the wind keener. But the timbers of the boat had acquired a subtle luminescence from the appearance of the moon, and they were stronger for the benediction they had received. The boat no longer creaked when it was broad-sided. Instead it seemed to rise effortlessly up the steep sides of the waves.
“That’s better,” said Diamanda.
She reached out to reclaim their precious cargo.
“I can take care of it,” Mespa protested.
“I’m sure you can,” said Diamanda. “But the responsibility lies with me. I know the world we’re going to, remember? You don’t.”
“You remember the way it
“Very possibly,” Diamanda agreed. “But I still have a better idea of what lies ahead of us than you two do. Now give me the box, Mespa.”
Mespa handed the treasure over, and the women’s vessel carved its way through the lightless sea, picking up speed as it went, the bow lifting a little way above the waters.
The rain continued to beat down on the women’s heads, gathering in the bottom of the boat until it was four inches deep. But the voyagers took no notice of its assault. They simply sat together in grateful silence, as the magic of the moon hurried them toward their destination.
“
“I see it too!” said Mespa. “Oh, thank the Goddess! I see it! I see it!”
“Hush yourselves,” Diamanda said. “We don’t want to draw attention.”
“It looks empty,” Joephi said, scanning the landscape ahead. “You said there was a town.”
“There
“I see no harbor.”
“Well, there’s not much of it left,” Diamanda said. “It was burned down, long before my time.”
The keel of
“Now, let’s remember,” said Diamanda, “we’re here to do one thing and one thing only. We get our business done and then we leave. Remember:
“We know that,” said Mespa.
“But let’s not be hasty and make a mistake,” Joephi said, glancing at the box Diamanda carried. “For
Even Diamanda was quieted by this remark. She seemed to meditate on it for a long moment, her head downturned, the rain washing her white hair into curtains that framed the box she held. Then she said: “Are you both ready?”
The other women murmured that yes, they were; and with Diamanda leading the way, they left the shore and headed through the rain-lashed grass, to find the place where providence had arranged they would do their holy work.
Part One.
Morningtide
Life is short,