The Born Queen - J. Gregory Keyes [59]
“No,” Zemlé said. “Oh, saints, no.”
“I’m afraid so,” Stephen said. He was trying to sound brave and nonchalant, but his voice quavered. He hoped they couldn’t hear that over the steady thrumming of the river-size drain.
“This can’t be right,” she said, and turned to Adhrekh. “Haven’t any of you ever tried this?”
Adhrekh actually coughed out a little laugh, something Stephen had never heard the man do before.
“Why?” he said. “Why would anyone do that? I could live seven hundred years if I’m careful.”
Stephen sat on the shingle and tried to take deep, slow breaths. The witchlights seemed slower now, calmer.
“Stephen?”
“I have to,” he said. He took a few more breaths, levered himself up, and walked toward the rushing whirlpool. He knew he couldn’t pause, and so he leapt in, aiming his feet toward the center of it.
It took him with incredible violence. The power of the water was absolute, and nothing his limbs could do had any effect. All he could do was try to hold on to his air, not scream and let it all out, and he suddenly knew with absolute certainty that he somehow had been tricked. He was a dead man, and knowing that, he lost the power of thought entirely.
When it came back, he remembered being ground against sand and stone and then expulsion and the grip of the flood easing. Now he lay on gravel in utter darkness, coughing out the water that had forced its way into his lungs.
A golden glow rose up in front of him, and then a deep red one. A few heartbeats later the witchlights were all around him again.
He lay on a strand not very different from the one he had just left, but here there was no high-vaulted chamber, only a tunnel two kingsyards higher than the river flowing through it. Water crashed through the roof in a great column on his right, and on his left the passage went on much farther than his luminescent companions could reveal.
He heard violent coughing and saw the silhouette of a head and shoulders rise from the pool: Adhrekh.
“Zemlé!” he gasped. Had she tried to follow him, too?
More Aitivar appeared, but he didn’t see her.
“Zemlé!” he repeated, this time at the top of his lungs.
“I have her,” someone said. In the stir he couldn’t tell where the voice was coming from exactly.
“Who is that?”
Then he made out one of the Aitivar cradling a limp figure. He waded up onto the beach.
“Saints curse me,” Stephen snarled. “Is she—”
The fellow shrugged and lay her down. Her head was smeared with black, which Stephen realized was blood rendered dark by the colored lights. For a moment he felt paralyzed, but then she coughed, and water bubbled out of her mouth.
“Bandages,” he told Adhrekh. “Get me bandages and whatever unction you might have.”
Adhrekh nodded.
“Zemlé,” Stephen said, stroking her cheek. “Can you hear me?”
He took the sleeve of his shirt and pressed it to her wound, trying to see how deep it was. Her eyes opened, and she shrieked.
“Sorry,” Stephen said. “Can you hear me?”
“I can hear you,” she said. “Can you hear me?”
“Yes.”
“Good. Because I hate you.” She felt toward her brow. “Am I bleeding to death?”
“I think it’s a shallow cut,” he replied. “There’s a lot of blood, but I don’t think your skull broke.”
Adhrekh returned with linen cloths and some sort of paste with a sul-fury smell and set about bandaging Zemlé’s head. He seemed to know what he was doing, so Stephen didn’t interfere. His pulse finally began slowing down, and he felt unexpected exhilaration flood through him.
Who was he to brave such things? Not the Stephen Darige who had left Ralegh for the monastery d’Ef, what, not even two years ago?
Even Aspar might be proud of him.
“Did we lose anyone?” Stephen asked Adhrekh.
“No, pathikh,” the Sefry replied. “All accounted for.”
“It’s colder down here,” Stephen noticed. “You brought the change of clothes I asked for?”
“Yes. And now I