Page 71
Story: Blade of Secrets
“The Goddesses demand blood!”
“Destroy the blight of magic!”
The crowd is tense, toeing that line Kellyn made.
“Oh, the Goddesses will get blood,” Kellyn says. “It’s just up to you whose they get. The first volunteer may step forward.”
I hold my breath, waiting to see how bloody it’s about to get, prepared to shut my eyes against it.
One person at the front of the line retreats, apparently deciding we’re not worth it. I pray the others will follow suit.
And then there’s a ripple in the crowd, as though people in the back are pushing toward the front. Kellyn, with his superior vantage and height, swears.
“City guards!” he calls, and turns tail.
Ah, theywillhave weapons.
He soon surpasses the rest of us with his impressive leg span, and he veers from the road instantly, plunging into the trees. Quick thinking, since we’ve no guarantee of outdistancing trained guards. Our only hope now is to lose them in the forest.
I hear their shouts behind us as leafy branches scratch my cheeks. My boots sink into the wet earth, slowing me down. Secret Eater throws me off-balance, the weight of my secrets pulling me to the left.
We twist and turn, Temra and I hiking up our skirts to prevent them from getting caught. Petrik has the best of it; his blue robes were replaced by fancy dress pants and a frilly shirt for the morning’s service.
Kellyn turns his head over his shoulder regularly to make sure we’re all still behind him, and I look back to see where the city folk are.
Not nearly far enough away.
As Kellyn returns his attention to what’s in front of him and rounds another tree, he windmills his arms, trying to slow his momentum. “Stop!” he shouts, but it’s too late.
A decline lies ahead.
Barely better than a drop, really.
We tip over the edge and slide downward. I lose my feet, going onto my rump as the mud slicks underneath me.
In fact, part of the earth seems to tumble down with us.
Mudslide.
Petrik is falling end over end to my right, and Temra is on her side, her dress coming up to her hips with the slide.
I think I’m screaming. I know Petrik is. I wait for the solid ground that has to follow, surely, and wonder how bad the impact will be.
Instead, everything disappears.
No ground. No mud. No sliding.
I’m falling.
I hear a waterfall churning somewhere nearby, can barely make sense of the noise over all the sensations coursing through me.
And then my knees buckle as my feet crash into the surface and water fills my mouth. At first I can’t tell up from down. Then my body slams into a rock, orienting me and bruising me at the same time.
I manage to get my feet under me and kick up toward the surface.
But Secret Eater will have none of that.
The sword is heavier than ever. Each time I swim a few feet upward, it drags me back down. In a full panic now, I twist my fingers around the knot holding it to my waist, but the leather won’t loosen now that it’s wet.
“Destroy the blight of magic!”
The crowd is tense, toeing that line Kellyn made.
“Oh, the Goddesses will get blood,” Kellyn says. “It’s just up to you whose they get. The first volunteer may step forward.”
I hold my breath, waiting to see how bloody it’s about to get, prepared to shut my eyes against it.
One person at the front of the line retreats, apparently deciding we’re not worth it. I pray the others will follow suit.
And then there’s a ripple in the crowd, as though people in the back are pushing toward the front. Kellyn, with his superior vantage and height, swears.
“City guards!” he calls, and turns tail.
Ah, theywillhave weapons.
He soon surpasses the rest of us with his impressive leg span, and he veers from the road instantly, plunging into the trees. Quick thinking, since we’ve no guarantee of outdistancing trained guards. Our only hope now is to lose them in the forest.
I hear their shouts behind us as leafy branches scratch my cheeks. My boots sink into the wet earth, slowing me down. Secret Eater throws me off-balance, the weight of my secrets pulling me to the left.
We twist and turn, Temra and I hiking up our skirts to prevent them from getting caught. Petrik has the best of it; his blue robes were replaced by fancy dress pants and a frilly shirt for the morning’s service.
Kellyn turns his head over his shoulder regularly to make sure we’re all still behind him, and I look back to see where the city folk are.
Not nearly far enough away.
As Kellyn returns his attention to what’s in front of him and rounds another tree, he windmills his arms, trying to slow his momentum. “Stop!” he shouts, but it’s too late.
A decline lies ahead.
Barely better than a drop, really.
We tip over the edge and slide downward. I lose my feet, going onto my rump as the mud slicks underneath me.
In fact, part of the earth seems to tumble down with us.
Mudslide.
Petrik is falling end over end to my right, and Temra is on her side, her dress coming up to her hips with the slide.
I think I’m screaming. I know Petrik is. I wait for the solid ground that has to follow, surely, and wonder how bad the impact will be.
Instead, everything disappears.
No ground. No mud. No sliding.
I’m falling.
I hear a waterfall churning somewhere nearby, can barely make sense of the noise over all the sensations coursing through me.
And then my knees buckle as my feet crash into the surface and water fills my mouth. At first I can’t tell up from down. Then my body slams into a rock, orienting me and bruising me at the same time.
I manage to get my feet under me and kick up toward the surface.
But Secret Eater will have none of that.
The sword is heavier than ever. Each time I swim a few feet upward, it drags me back down. In a full panic now, I twist my fingers around the knot holding it to my waist, but the leather won’t loosen now that it’s wet.
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