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Chapter 5 - 4: Through the Mountains Pass

When morning came, Trenewynn kept his promise and prepared to depart at first light. Yet as he collected what small things he had and scrawled little notes in his book, There was Aia waiting for him at the chapel exit. 

"I'm coming with you," she claimed. 

"Aia, you cannot leave the village without its priestess. Who will hold the high noon mass if not you?"

"It is alright, Jane and Kathrine can both read and write– and they're responsible. I told them the order of each mass up until the next spring. That much should be plenty of time for a journey to Anor and back."

"It is dangerous Aia, I would not see you come to harm."

"Though it may defy your wishes, I am coming with you."

"You cannot defend yourself," said Trenewynn.

"Who says so? I can," Aia replied. 

Though doubtful, Trenewynn did not stop her. Bitterly he spoke, "as you wish…"

Then travelled the two down to Constantine's Road and walked the path southward into the mountains. By the time high noon had struck, they were far from the village that it could no longer be spied between the rising ridges. 

At nightfall they recused themselves beside the road and Trenewynn set a campfire going. Aia looked up to the two moons in the sky, each of different sizes and colors. The Black Moon was a small thing– approximately half its sibling's size. The White Moon was pale and radiant in the dark underneath the curtain of stars. 

But Trenewynn seemed less than happy in the night. Even his own shadow seemed to scare him, though he held his fear behind a taciturn manner. 

"You're afraid of the dark, sir Trenewynn?"

Trenewynn did not attempt to lie.

"Do you plan to tease me for it, Aia?"

"Not at all sir Trenewynn, I simply find it funny."

"Then you are laughing at me."

"No, I promise. I promise I'm not. It's just that I never expected you to be scared of mere empty shadows."

"And who says they're empty…" uttered Trenewynn.

"Pardon? Did you say something?"

Trenewynn shook his head, "tis' nothing. You seem quite excited though, little Aia."

"I told you already, I'm not little any more. But yes, I am a bit excited."

The fire crackled in the silence between them. After a breath came a query.

"Why are you going to Anor exactly?"

"I told you, it is to see an old friend."

"But who is this friend? Surely it is more than a comfort call, you seek to consult someone."

"Yes, there are things I must know about the happenings of the empire. Things that only one who is politically connected could know."

Aia looked up to the two moons in the night sky. Her thoughts drifted through home and childhood. 

"This is the first time I've ever left home," she said.

"It is not too late to return, if you wish it."

She shook her head, "I would not go back, not under these stars."

Trenewynn took a stick and poked at the campfire, releasing a few trapped embers. The dim light dragged their shadows deeply across the ground. 

"Oddly, I'm reminded of the old children's tale you used to read me as a girl during my lessons. The King of Want… I've never heard that story told since. Was it an original?"

"Yes it was," said Trenewynn, "you're not likely to find it anywhere in the records of the churches."

Aia recalled the tale and let it sing in the air.

Moon of Amos, Moon of Ka

Black Moon, White Moon in the night I saw

In the image of Gods, man was made

By the Collector Daemon beneath the shade

Ka'Sharaan, the Spider of Artifice

Possessed a nature, rather covetous

The idols He crafted to store in His vault

Offended the Gods, whom mortals exalt

In the Spider's treasury, the first man prayed

And Gods had answered, his life they saved

But the Collector Daemon, was not easily bested

And challenged the Gods to trials most tested

"We shall see who the better craftsman is

And the one who wins in this simple quiz

Shall take possession of all the land

And be the owner of the one called man"

This Ka challenged and Amos answered

The God of Forging on an anvil tempered

A Black Star to blot the night sky

While Ka wove one in the light held high

The White Moon cast a luminous mass

And the Black Moon glistened in the light like glass

But a mistake was made while Amos was forging

His hammer struck hard and broke the casing

On the Black Moon's surface, molten cracks spread

In intricate patterns, like a Spider's web

And Ka'Sharaan, who saw this folly

Mocked Amos and laughed most jolly

Before the Gods, His victory declared

But a mistake He made, Ka was not prepared

When the Gods accused Him of foul play

He stood in shock and watched them say

"The cracked moon is quaint, we like it more

The White Moon is simple, drab, a bore

You dishonest daemon, tried to deceive

You tampered with Amos, such is your greed"

From high above the Gods declared

"The winner is Amos, our judgement is clear

Graceless loser, we know your schemes

So begone we say, haunt of ugly dreams!

But Ka'Sharaan, angered and bitter

Swore to the Gods that He was no quitter

He promised that He would lead man astray

And send them back into his vault to stay

So He became a collector of souls

And on the earth, men's spirits He stole

Our children would sing of the Spider's haunt

The Collector Daemon, the King of Want. 

The night grew dark and settled. Aia lingered on the last lines of the story; one of the moons and of the gods. 

It was late when she finished reciting it– as according to her memory that is. Trenewynn lay recumbent near the last coals of the fire. Fast asleep and breathing softly. The moons blotted the sky; dark as obsidian and cracked by a glaring red eye, or a pale and unblemished orb as white as snow drifting behind the first. 

They turned with the stars and the trailing Comets of Caladrë– once a great titan now shattered into shards that fly ever away from the sun. They both slept until the next daylight. 

For seventeen days they travelled the pass, The sky stayed clear until the fourteenth day, when clouds began to gather. 

And further and further as the two travelled, the clouds grew darker.

"It seems it will likely rain at this rate."

The mountains of Anor were high and baked by the sun each summer, causing their stone faces to take on a bleached or bone-washed appearance. Gravelly and few of foliage, they stretched for the length of five thousand drake's feet. Yet the whitish colors turned grey as a shroud of rain grew ever stronger.

Always as they moved, Trenewynn and Aia followed the arches of the Constantine Aqueduct. Trenewynn's golden eyes turned often behind him– sensing something.

"We should hurry our pace."

Aia's breath came heavily, the speed of their foottravels had worn her these past days onwards.

"It's been the wax and wane of daylight since we last rested, why such a hurry?"

"There's a dark cloud at our backs. It makes me nervous."

Aia looked back, there had been dark clouds following for many days now. The spring mountains were full of them, rain clouds came every season to drench the peaks and run off into streams that pool in the valleys. There was nothing so unusual about a dark cloud; Aia knew this, and so she suspected that Trenewynn's true fear was of something darker still. 

After another month and a half of walking– by which the clouds had amassed to a truly fearsome curtain, Aia grew too exhausted to continue the pace.

"Enough, sir Trenewynn. I must rest. I can't continue walking any further."

Heavy breaths sagged in her dry throat. Trenewynn handed her a sac of water, to which she took hearty gulps. Aia gasped, she sank to the ground to catch her breath. 

"What are we running from?"

Trenewynn looked back towards the clouds again. A downpour was blowing over from the east and north. Aia gazed at the winds and spoke.

"If we wish to avoid the rain, why not move west to the Pass of Ariel?"

"We cannot. That would take us too close to the Dark Mists."

"But we cannot evade the wind, sir Trenewynn."

"No we can't."

Trenewynn stared deep into the clouds and then turned to the mountain peaks.

"We will move off the beaten path. If we take to the mountains, we may evade the danger I fear."

Aia huffed, "but I cannot walk any further right now!"

"So it appears…"

Trenewynn's bronze staff struck the earth, a brief white glow flashed from the rod and then the earth and gravel began to rise. A sturdy steed arose from the rocks, it neighed and nickered as if a horse of flesh and blood. 

Aia stared in surprise, "what is this? A kind of Wizardry?"

"Of a sort you might say. This is Emeth: the King of Stone. He's another friend of mine."

Trenewynn brushed the rock as if it was the sable coat of a true horse. He mounted the horse's back and reached out a hand to Aia.

"Come, this steed is well built for traversing mountains." 

"But sir Trenewynn," said Aia, "I've never ridden a horse before…"

"Then it is a good time to learn, I am your teacher after all."

With trepidation, she reached out, and Trenewynn seized the hand and pulled her onto the steed. The priestess was surprised to find that the stone creature's back was softer than she expected, and the balance was easier to find than at first she thought. 

"Hold tight, we'll be moving fast."

And without further warning, The three took off into the mountains, galloping up high slopes and jumping from chasm to chasm as the horse ascended the mountain pass. Aia looked back to see the Road of Constantine already several leagues down below. They had already long left the beaten path by the time a few seconds had gone by. 

Not more than an hour later did the rain fall upon them, yet the wet stones did not impede Emeth as the stone stallion galloped through the hills. 

"Look there," said Trenewynn, "those are the Dark Mists."

Between the white-bleached peaks of Anor, afar was the fog as dark as shadow. Countless nameless things lived within, creatures of the unnatural places. Malady with a voice and consciousness. It made Aia ill even to glance upon it. 

"We must not take the shadowed paths. I fear them more than anything else."

Then there came a shrill neighing of many riders. The horses they carried seemed more screaming than roaring. Down below in the rain, Aia could barely discern their shrouded figures. Galloping along Constantine's Road. 

"Do not look long, or they'll sense your gaze."

Her eyes darted to Trenewynn's back. 

"What are they?"

"I don't know exactly… but they disgust me to even look upon. There's nothing natural about them."

The black riders chased along the main road, their horses seeming to suffer with each step. But Trenewynn and Aia were long gone from the road. They travelled through the mountains, pushing ever further towards the city of Anor. 

Through the rain they concealed their scent and ventured another month unseen. But the black riders chased as if foresight set their paths. No matter where Trenewynn and Aia ran, always the black riders would be present. No less than twenty times did Trenewynn adjust the path to avoid a confrontation. But it mattered not, for each time the riders found the new path and sealed it shut.

The young priestess from Faelenshire village did not know it, but an unseen battle of providence and preternatural perception was waged between Trenewynn's foresight and that of the riders. She counted seven riders in total who traced their tail with malice. 

The cries of dark destriers haunted her, and always near they were. No matter how far Emeth galloped they never ceased to follow. It left Trenewynn and Aia restless, for the sound of wailing horses was always present around them. 

At Mount Aregashi– where the Constantine Aqueduct met its end and drew its source within the Aregashi Lake, they lost the black riders. At last, Trenewynn and Aia set a proper camp for the first time in two and a half months. It was Trenewynn's suggestion that they take refuge at the Old Tower of Valerius. 

The ancient artifact of bygone Aurum was carved into the mountain's peak, directly next to the Constantine Aqueduct's source channel. A cylindrical face of granite bricks smoothened and covered with chalk led five stories high to a conical peak. The majestic tower that once served as Aurum's southern vigil remained timeless at a glance. Only Trenewynn's discerning eyes could spot the little cracks where ants gathered and burrowed themselves in deep. 

Emeth was left by the lake to rest. For although he was made of stone, he too had been travelling a long time without rest. His hooves had become brittle, worn, and cracked. Trenewynn and Aia set themselves at the tower canopy, and Trenewynn set a camp fire to warm the exhausted and cold priestess. 

"Rest now Aia, you won't get another chance until we reach Anor. I will take the first night watch."

"Will the riders in black spy the fire from our position?"

"Not in the rain," he said, "their senses are strengthened in the dark. But even so, rain will still inhibit their visibility. Besides, the fire is small– no more than a few embers to warm yourself."

"What about you?"

"As I said, I'll take the first watch. Fret not, I'll not freeze from a little wind and rain."

Aia could see the dampness of the rain on his robes and in his hair. They had been riding for months with barely any rest, being chased by the black riders all the way. 

"Rest, little Aia, you need it."

"I told you… I'm not— little…"

Her voice faded as strength left her body. The exhaustion all came at once, and Aia fell asleep. When sure of her rest, Trenewynn descended the tower to find Emeth by the mountain lake. 

The rain was falling heavily now, it pelted the lake and caused the aqueduct channel to overflow. Emeth stared at Trenewynn with two gem-like eyes. 

"You've taken us far, friend. Do not work yourself to death, or I would feel quite saddened."

The stone steed sputtered and turned its head towards the lake. In the rain and clouds the waters seemed more like pitch. A small glade had formed around the lake, yet the trees were whipping in the wind now. Trenewynn's own robes flapped back and forth. 

"Perhaps now I can reach Ramnicus with water scrying…"

Trenewynn approached the lake and pressed his palm to the surface of the waters until it hung just above the line. The rain and wind continued to pelt him and send waves through the lake. Everything was chilled by it.

For thirty minutes he lay statuesque, gazing into the tumultuous waters. Then, the water boiled and he recoiled as it scalded his palm.

"It seems the resistance is still too strong in this darkness…"

Trenewynn tried again to scry many times until four hours had passed and the evening had grown truly fierce. The wind now shrilled the air and cut the trees. Branches snapped, rocks tumbled, and still the howling of horses persisted as the black riders searched for them. The fire had long snuffed out, unable to sustain against the storm and lightning that now crackled the sky and flashed between the shadowed clouds. 

It was one thunderous boom that awoke Aia from her brief rest. She rubbed the sleep from her eyelids and pulled the edges of her coat tighter to her shoulders, shivering lightly. Aia stepped to the guardwall of the tower canopy and looked out over the mountainside below. 

There she saw one of the black riders in the night. It's black cloak in tatters and bearing a set of ornate silver armor that had been tarnished beyond any polish or buffing. The rider wore a mask not unlike the one which the cataphracts wore, yet it was wailing instead of glaring, and the designs were more bestial than elegant. 

Suddenly, their gazes met and the priestess felt cold in both body and spirit. She was frozen, and the rider drew its sword that lay beside the dark horse. Then, with a pull of the creature's reins that tugged back at the destrier's exposed flesh and blood, the beast and rider galloped up the mountain. It was one at first, then six more joined. They each rode upwards towards the Old Tower of Valerius. 

Aia and Trenewynn had been discovered. 

She ran across and shouted, "sir Trenewynn– sir Trenewynn they've discovered us!"

Trenewynn pulled himself from the lake and turned to see each rider ascending a different path to the peak. They all surrounded and blocked the exits, blades of tarnished silver drawn and emitting a layer of permafrost. 

"Sir Trenewynn!"

"Stay in the tower Aia!"

Trenewynn turned to his stone steed and friend, "go to the entrance, keep her safe."

Emeth dashed with one stride and arrived before the entrance of the tower. In that time, the black riders took to their feet, each horse they rode paralysed by fear; they remained stationary— frozen. 

Like a dark net they closed in, their blades' edges pointed to Trenewynn. 

Each step left frost upon the earth, chilling the grass and stones. Trenewynn's face scowled, a disgust etched his visage… These creatures were anything but natural.

"Creatures of the dark– ghosts of treachery! I know your faces though you might hide them behind these masks. I know your names! Disperse!"

With a thrum of his staff to the earth, Trenewynn appealed for a wave of light– that answered and struck the seven black knights and each to let out a dull groan from their masked faces. The sound of mortality appeared as if it struggled to escape them. 

The lingering lights clung to each of the black knights as faux white flames. One shadowy warrior cleaved the light asunder and with sword in hand sought to pierce Trenewynn's chest. With a parry from the rod, frost spread across it– crawling onto Trenewynn's fingers. 

Trenewynn but touched the mask and uttered a name:

"Mandrake Cullenane Drakkennide, first of his name…"

An imperceptible ripple seemed to pass through the black knight. It recoiled and wailed, fury and hatred could be felt– smelled even, as the dark creature sank to its knees. 

"Grandson of Augustus Drakkennide— the first dragonslayer of the mortal races! I know your face, I know your name. You are dead– killed a thousand years ago in treachery. Begone from here, the lot of you!"

With another thrum of Trenewynn's staff, a second wave of light answered to strike each of them. 

"Disperse I say— beasts of Evil! I know your faces, I know your names!"

The waters of Aregashi lake began to stir. When the black knights again cleaved away the light, there rose a great tide from the lake. The waters came alive– its depths once blackened by shadow glowed. For the clouds that veiled the earth were scattered but for a moment, and the pale light of the moon did not miss its chance to shine. 

The bright white waters washed over the land and swept away the black knights— down the mountains afar and swept back through Constantine's Road for many miles. 

Then, the moonlight faded and the cloudveil returned to rain and thunder upon the mountain once more.

Tiredly, Trenewynn brought himself three paces before he stumbled. Emeth caught his fall, and guided him to the shelter of the Old Tower of Valerius. Aia quickly ran to him.

"Sir Trenewynn! What on earth— are you alright!?"

"I'll be fine, Aia. I just need a moment."

"Sir Trenewynn, what were those things? They looked like men but…"

"Wraiths— ghosts born of an earthly attachment. There are many lost souls that never leave behind their worldly desires, but wraiths are among the most troublesome to dispel."

"You said you know their names?"

"Yes– wraiths fear neither death nor pain, for they're already beyond the gates of life. But they do fear to hear their own names and to see their own faces reflected back at them. Fortunately, I know these ones."

"How…?"

"It is a long story I'll not share now. We'll rest a few minutes longer, then proceed at dawn to the Aregashi River crossing. Then, we should be near enough the city to be safe."

Trenewynn performed no further feats of mystery through the day. When they took to Emeth's back again and rode down the mountain to the Anor valley, the black riders returned again– ever restless in their pursuit.

They seemed sluggish in the sunlight; weighed down by the light.

"Sir Trenewynn, they remain on our tail."

"Aye, I see them. Emeth shall stop them."

The stone steed's gallop increased. With a great stride Emeth struck the bridge of the River Aregashi crossing– shattering the wood and causing the cracks of the stone steed's hooves to split. 

Emeth stumbled as his legs shattered and they slid across the grass beyond the river. Trenewynn and Aia rose belatedly from the crash, the priestess grasped Trenewynn's side, holding him steady.

The broken bridge separated the three from the seven black riders.

A voice like a blade of ice in the heart pierced their ears.

"Fool Trenewynn– you work in vain."

"We shall see, fallen one. Your broken oaths shall judge you yet."

The seven drew their swords, a chill spread over the river– freezing its stream. For a moment, it seemed as if all was lost. Then as the fell riders struck the ice with their black horses hooves, the tides born from a night of heavy rain came down the mountain. They shattered the ice laid by the wraiths and washed upon the black riders– dragging them down to the coasts of the South Sea. 

Trenewynn could not hold the relief that escaped his breath as they watched the riders fall away. The terror of the night had passed, Aia and Trenewynn looked back now upon the city.

There at the Point of Ariel, upon which rested the city of Anor amid the rays of sunlight piercing through the passing clouds. Safe at last. 

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