The others held their collective breath, waiting on her words, and Inevera knew the fate of her people lay upon them. She remembered the words of the dice so many years ago:
âThe Deliverer is not born. He is madeâ
If Ahmann did not return to her, she would make another.
She looked at the myriad dooms that awaited her love, and plucked one from the rest. The only fate that would let her hold power until a suitable heir could be found.
âThe Deliverer has passed beyond our reach,â Inevera said at last. âHe follows a demon to the abyss itself.â
âSo the Parâchin is a demon after all,â Ashan said.
The dice said no such thing, but Inevera nodded. âIt would appear so.â
Gared spat on the ground. âSaid âDeliverer.â Dinât say âSharâDama Ka.â â
The Damaji turned to him, regarding him the way a man might look at an insect, wondering if it was worth the effort to crush. âThey are one and the same.â
This time it was Wonda who spat. âCore they are.â
Jayan stepped in, balling a fist as if to strike her, but Renna Tanner moved to interpose herself. The wards on her skin flared, and even Ineveraâs impulsive eldest son thought better of challenging her. It would not do to be beaten down by a woman before the very men he must convince to let him take the throne.
Jayan turned back to his mother. âAnd the spearâ he demanded.
âLost,â Inevera said. âIt will be found again when Everam wills it, and not before.â
âSo we are to simply give upâ Asome asked. âLeave Father to his fateâ
âOf course not.â Inevera turned to Shanjat. âFind the trail again and hunt. Follow every bent blade of grass and loose pebble. Do not return without the Deliverer or reliable news of his fate, even if it take a thousand years.â
âYes, Damajah.â Shanjat punched his chest.
Inevera turned to Shanvah. âGo with your father. Obey and protect him on his journey. His goal is your goal.â
The young woman bowed silently. Ashia squeezed her shoulder and their eyes met, then father and daughter were off.
Leesha turned to Wonda. âYou have a look as well, but be back in an hour.â
Wonda grinned, showing a confidence that filled Inevera with envy. âWanât planning to hunt till my hair turns gray. Deliverer comes and goes, but heâll be back, youâll see.â A moment later she, too, was gone.
âGoinâ too,â Renna said, but Leesha caught her arm.
The woman glared at her. Leesha quickly let go but did not back down. âStay a moment, please.â
Even the Northerners are afraid of the Parâchin and his woman, Inevera noted, filing the information away as the two women moved off to speak in private.
âAshan, walk with me,â she said, looking to the Damaji. The two of them stepped away as the others remained dumbstruck.
âI cannot believe he is gone,â Ashan said, his voice hollow. He and Ahmann had been as brothers for over twenty years. He had been the first dama to support Ahmannâs rise to SharâDama Ka, and believed in his divinity without question. âIt seems like a dream.â
Inevera did not preamble. âYou must take the Skull Throne as Andrah. You are the only one who can do it without inciting a war and hold it against my husbandâs return.â
Ashan shook his head. âYou are mistaken if you think that, Damajah.â
âIt was the SharâDama Kaâs wish,â Inevera reminded him. âYou swore an oath before him, and me.â
âThat was if he were to fall in battle at Waning, with all to see,â Ashan said, ânot killed by a greenlander on some forgotten mountainside. The throne should go to Jayan or Asome.â
âHe told you his sons were not ready for that burden,â Inevera said. âDo you think that has changed in the last fortnight My sons are cunning, but they are not yet wise. The dice foretell they will tear Everamâs Bounty asunder vying for the throne, and should one climb to the top of the bloodied steps and sit, he will not rise on his fatherâs return.â
âIf he returns,â Ashan noted.
âHe will,â Inevera said. âLikely with all the Core behind him. When he does, he will need all the armies of Ala to answer his call, and have neither time nor desire to kill his son to regain control.â
âI donât like it,â Ashan said. âI have never coveted power.â
âIt is inevera,â she told him. âYour likes are irrelevant, and your humility before Everam is why it must be you.â
âBe quick,â Renna said, as Leesha led her aside. âWasted enough time already waitinâ on you lot. Arlenâs out there somewhere and I need to find him.â
âDemonshit,â Leesha snapped. âI donât know you that well, Renna Bales, but well enough to know you wouldnât have waited ten seconds on me if your husband was still unaccounted for. You and Arlen planned this. Where has he gone Whatâs he done with Ahmannâ
âCallinâ me a liarâ Renna growled. Her brows tightened, fingers curling into fists.
For some reason, the bluster only made Leesha all the more sure of her guess. She doubted the woman would really strike her, but she held a pinch of blinding powder and would use it if need be.
âPlease,â she said, keeping her voice calm. âIf you know something, tell me. I swear to the Creator you can trust me.â
Renna seemed to calm a bit at that, relaxing her hands, but she held them palms up. âSearch my pockets, youâll find no answers.â
âRenna,â Leesha struggled to maintain her composure, âI know we had an ill start. Youâve little reason to like me, but this isnât a game. Youâre putting everyone at risk by keeping secrets.â
Renna barked a laugh. âIf that ent the night callinâ it dark.â She poked Leesha in the chest, hard enough to knock her back a step. âYouâre the one got the demon of the desertâs baby in your belly. You think that ent puttinâ folk at riskâ
Leesha felt her face go cold, but she bulled forward, lest her silence confirm the guess. She lowered her voice to a harsh whisper. âWho told you that nonsenseâ
âYou did,â Renna said. âI can hear a butterfly flap its wings across a cornfield. Arlen, too. We both heard what you said to Jardir. Youâre carrying his child, and setting the count up to take the blame.â
It was true enough. A ridiculous plot of her motherâs that Leesha had foolishly brought to fruition. It was doubtful the deception would last past the childâs birth, but that was seven months to prepareâor run and hideâbefore the Krasians came for her child.
âAll the more reason I find out what happened to Ahmann,â Leesha said, hating the pleading tone that had slipped into her voice.
âEnt got a notion,â Renna said. âWastinâ time should be spent lookinâ.â
Leesha nodded, knowing when she was beaten. âPlease donât tell Thamos,â she said. âIâll tell him in time, honest word. But not now, with half the Krasian army just a few miles off.â
Renna snorted. âEnt stupid. Howâd a Gatherer like you get pregnant, anyway Even a dumb Tanner knows to pull out.â