Ghostwalker - Erik Scott De Bie [129]
Gylther'yel screamed with laughter.
"Then teach me, 'Son!' " Throwing her hands up, she brought down a column of flame upon his head. "Whether you will it or no!"
As the agony gripped Walker with a viselike hold, he felt cold, terrible power fill his body. Though she had spoken his birth name-Rhyn Greyt-she denied his true name, the name that would take away his powers. Some men are born to a name, some men are given a name, and some men name themselves.
Rhyn Thardeyn was one of the last.
In an instant, his mind flashed back fifteen years to that terrible night when the men had killed him. His eyes saw again that terrible scene as through a red lens, blurred by the blood that had burned like fire. He heard again the taunts that had brought his memory back.
Then he saw, in his mind, something he had never remembered until now.
* * * * *
He was lying on his back, choking but alive, and staring upward when he heard a soft voice, speaking to Greyt from the trees.
"I must have that boy," said Gylther'yel. "The agreement, Greyt."
"Damned if you will have this boy!" Greyt shouted. "I deny you!"
A rapier drove through Rhyn's throat, cutting off his breath.
"Let's hear you sing now," Meris whispered.
Rhyn Thardeyn opened his mouth but only a bloody rattle emerged.
The ghost druid smiled. "Whether you will it or no," she said. Then she turned away.
* * * * *
Awake again, Walker turned burning eyes on Gylther'yel, eyes empty of anger, pain, rage, or love.
Eyes that knew only vengeance.
"I remember you," he said simply. The shatterspike glowed white hot in his burning hands but he felt no pain. "You were there. You let them kill me. You made them kill me."
The ghostwalker vanished out of the column of fire. Back in the Ethereal, he ran through the flames, his cold anger ignoring the agony, toward the shadowy storm that was Gylther'yel, the only mother he had ever known.
Walker! came a despairing voice. No!
Farewell, Arya. A smile spread across the ghostwalker's face. Farewell, my love.
Then he burst through Gylther'yel's ghostly halo of flame and brought his shatterspike down and through the sun elf's spectral body. The ghost druid gave a scream that tore the veil between worlds and fire exploded forth.
Spectral hands spread to welcome him, those of Lyetha and Tarm, his true mother and father. Smiling, Rhyn reached out.
All went white.
POSTLUDE
Greengrass, The Year of Lightning Storms
(1374 DR)
When Arya awoke, what could have been days later but was merely nightfall, she could see nothing through the darkness that surrounded her.
She did not need her sight, though, for she keenly remembered that haunting scream and the terrible flash of light that went with it. Gripping the grass in front of her, Arya pulled herself hand over hand, toward where she had seen Gylther'yel fall. She did not have far to go.
The grass receded as she reached a scarred swath of land, and Arya knew that she had found where Gylther'yel had died-died in a great explosion nothing could have survived.
Why, then, was Arya alive? Why had she…
Then Arya felt the surprisingly cool metal around her finger, and she knew.
The wolf's head ring! The damnable ring had kept her alive! Alive, on the very spot…
Had he known it would end this way? Had he known that one of them would die, and chosen to save her? Had he known, all along?
With a moan, Arya felt around blindly. Long, agonizing moments passed before she realized there was nothing there to find. Walker and Gylther'yel had both vanished.
A wave of love, undying love, washed over her, and Arya wept in agony, great sobs welling up from her aching, torn body. The sound attracted someone else from nearby, who came to her side. Arya felt a momentary swell of hope, that perhaps it was Walker, but even her blurry vision could tell her it was not.
"There, there," a feminine voice whispered in