storm, figurine in hand, Hani wondered if he was doing the right thing bringing the others into his private world. They were an intolerant, self-absorbed group, steeped in their own miseries, and the chance that they would try to curry some small favor from the Overseer by revealing Hani’s secret was high. And yet there seemed some purpose to showing them.

Div was looking at him. “Well?”

He handed the figurine over to the soul.

Div took it in his rough, spatulate fingers, rolling it, examining it. He looked up at Hani and back at the statuette.

“You’re telling me that this is what gave you your visions—this thing?”

“Yes, they started when I got it.” Hani was already defensive.

Div’s face looked blank for a moment. He shuddered and then pushed the object back at Hani.

“It has power; I saw… something. A woman… a white woman for just a second.”

“It’s her,” said Hani, “the White Mistress! She is out there somewhere; I know it.” And then he took the next step, the step he was not sure that he should take. “I think… I think we are meant to worship her.”

Div looked away, obviously thinking. A cargo barge, only half-filled with stone, caught his attention as it slid slowly up the Acheron. Sargatanas’ large, fiery sigil hung low over the square bow, and surrounding it, obeying a time-worn invocation, shifting navigational glyphs steered the craft.

By now, La and Chaw had edged in to hear the exchange.

La reached out and Div, first looking to Hani for permission, handed the figurine to her. She looked at it with disdain, weighing it in her twisted hand, and then passed it right to Chaw. The obese soul smiled lasciviously when he saw it, rubbing his finger over its breasts stupidly. Hani had expected that.

“Where did you get that?” La said stiffly. She thought of herself as the workers’ leader, but Hani suspected he knew how the others regarded her.

“It was given to me.”

“More likely you found it. Probably belonged to one of them,” she said, nodding in the Overseer’s direction. “It will have us all turned to brick if they find it on you. Get rid of it!”

“No, La, I won’t,” Hani said evenly. “No one’s found it yet and no one will. Unless one of you tell them. And, as you said, we all know the repercussions of that.”

The small group was staring at him.

“Tell La and Chaw what you told me,” Div said seriously.

Hani hesitated. There was ash in his mouth and he took the moment to spit it out. The others took it as a sign of disrespect.

“I’ve been seeing her,” he said, pointing at the figure, “in my mind. Ever since I was given it, these visions have been growing clearer, stronger. I don’t know who she is but I think that she has given that little idol the ability to speak for her. And I think she wants me—us—to pray to her.”

Hani could not believe what he had just said.

La snatched the figurine away from Chaw’s gross attentions and flung it to the ground. It disappeared into the ash.

“Souls are not meant to own anything!” La spat. “Except their pain!”

Hani rose, shaking with rage. “Pick it up!”

“Turn to brick!”

He struck her sharply, and though she was larger and more powerful than him, she reeled and fell, sending up a dense cloud of ash. She rose again, eyes blazing, but Hani was ready for her. He was about to strike her again when he saw the Overseer rise and turn toward them, whip in hand. Hani sat down quickly trying to conceal his anger. The demon flicked his whip ominously and approached, trying, Hani thought, to analyze the situation.

“Get up! Work again!” the demon barked in their language, and the souls slowly scrabbled to their feet. The storm was abating and Hani, still in a rage, looked down at the ground frantically. He could not leave the little idol; it was all he had. Everything. When the demon prodded them forward Hani lifted his gaze and focused on the back of La’s head. He would never forgive her. He would find a way to have her turned.

As they marched back toward the work area, Div sidled up and cautiously held his hand out, and, to Hani’s utter relief, he saw the little white figure in the soul’s calloused palm.

“It was in the ash right by my feet,” he said, looking oddly at Hani. “Take it, but I wondered if I could borrow it sometime soon. I will give it back; I swear.”

Hani sensed the sincerity and urgency from Div. And something else that might have been respect. The idol was working on him as well, just as Hani guessed it was supposed to. He looked at Div and smiled.

“Keep it for now. Tell me what you see, later. But tell no one else. Something must be taken care of before we can talk of this again.”

“Be careful of her, Hani,” the soul said, jerking his head toward La.

Hani picked up the sinew rope; his hands were only partially healed, but he felt strong, even confident. As he and the others strained to tug the reluctant block up the causeway, Hani’s eyes narrowed as he studied and gauged the heavy female.

It had not been hard, after all, Hani thought, to deal with La. He had been right to assume that most of them would either help to remove her or stay back. Hani found that stepping into the role of leader, even while she was present, was somehow natural. He had waited a week for the right moment, and when it came he had found that his strongest ally came, not surprisingly, in the form of Div. It was easy, with his help, to maneuver her into a position so that she could be crushed by a huge block. She had been so badly flattened that, with little thought, the demons unceremoniously added her to the pile of bricks that the workers drew upon. Hani, himself, helped haul her to the pile, tossing her high atop the stack, a grim smile upon his lips. As the work progressed, whenever Hani passed her, he could feel the hatred emanating from her. Once, when no one could see him, he even spat on her and watched his spittle sizzle off from the heat. La glared angrily back at him but could do little more than blink. It was, he thought, good practice for when she would be a brick.

Div told Hani of his many visions; they were, for the most part, the same as Hani’s own, but with one difference. Div’s visions seemed more supplicatory, more servile. It was a difference that was not lost on Hani.

Chapter Seven

ADAMANTINARX-UPON-THE-ACHERON

The small party left the palace and headed down the center mount to one of the many stables. On their way they followed the edge of the Acheron, descending the newly finished causeway, passing the endless work-parties that stopped their labors to turn and kneel as they passed.

Eligor led them into the sprawling square walled-in stables that covered acres. There, like the many similar paddocks that dotted his wards, were a hundred long, low buildings that housed a full regiment of Sargatanas’ mounted troops. Eligor liked the stables, liked the bustle of activity and the look of the soul-beasts that hunkered in their individual cells.

They were souls that had been manipulated into steeds, giant, solid chargers that could bear heavily armored cavalry quickly over the infernal battlefield. This was a Household regiment, which meant that they were bulkier, better trained, and that their trappings were more ornate. Their mahouts, usually former Waste dwellers, silently went about their rigorous training programs leaching the last of all the enlarged souls’ reticence from them until they responded with complete obedience.

Eligor entered one of the stables and before long had arranged for a small caravan of soul-steeds as well as a contingent of his Foot Guards.

They all watched as the huge embroidered carpetlike blankets were tossed over the rough-skinned backs of the steeds, which shifted from hand to hand, rolled their fogged eyes, and made deep sounds in their throats. Intricately worked, solid copper saddles were cinched in place, and reins were first passed through the huge single nail that penetrated each of the steeds’ broad foreheads and then fastened to the light bridle-rings that pierced the souls’ lips. Eligor shook his head with disgust as long streamers of gelatinous foam drooled from their slack mouths as they each took their bridles. Careful not to step in the puddles, each of the demons donned traveling skins,

Вы читаете God's Demon
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×