Chapter 90: The Late Wake

Chapter 90: The Late Wake

Youre late, said the Lady. She sat on a bleached trunk of driftwood, one leg crossed over the other. Id almost announced your death again.

Aaron stood before her, panting, the hood of the stag cloak thrown over his back.

Do you know, he said, I think weve quite the dragon problem?

Not here, we dont, she said, standing up. Come, let me introduce you.

They were a few miles south of Salts Mane, on a beach of sand bracketed by forest and waves. Not far off, a group of harbor seals lay on a rock outcropping near the water, a few fuzzy white babies laying next toor trying to clamber overtheir mothers. Closer at hand were the highest ranked of the Late Wake, a few dozen in total. Some were sitting, chatting; others were wading in the surf, digging clams between the breaking waves; still others were dragging driftwood across the beach for a fire, seeming to take the height of their growing pile as a challenge. Over there, a group was bundling together the thinner branches into the least artistic stickman Aaron had ever seen, with a fair bit of heckling for the main crafters skills.

A bonfire and a stickman: a pyre and its effigy. Which explained the festive mood to the air; who didnt like a good mock burning?

Most of the Late Wakes members had left their boots behind, to dig toes into sand or simply to not ruin good leather in the waves. None of them had taken off their cloaks. Not here, we dont, the Lady had said, and looking at the scales and feathers and fur around him, Aaron had little trouble believing that this gathering might be more trouble than it was worth, to a dragon. The Lady was wearing the white griffin shed favored since spring had begun.

His own deer skin felt a bit drab, by comparison. Maybe he should give up on being inconspicuous, and go for a cloak that made him harder to kill.

Interesting you invited a journeyman, said a man with the golden fur and darker feathers of a continental griffin draped about his shoulders.

I trust him for this, said the Lady.

Thanks, said Aaron, in exactly the tone such an endorsement deserved.

Interesting, the man repeated. And then grinned, like a fellow who thought himself clever. Getting any bad feelings?

So very clever. The man smirked even harder at Aarons baleful glare.Read latest chapters at nov(e)lbin.com Only

The Lady made the rounds with him. There were a considerable number of names to suddenly know. And then he was being put to work, helping to drag the trunk the Lady had been sitting on out of the grassy edge of the dunes and down to the ever-growing pyre. The Lady declined to assistWhat is the point of an apprentice, if not delegation?and picked wispy flowers from the forests edge, instead.

With a final heave, they got the trunk to the pyres top. Which was really not where such a large thing should go, but Aaron didnt think this was an exercise in efficient fire building. Particularly not when there was a smaller cookfire already going, grilling clams and the occasional crab.

Think we can drag that one down there? asked a woman with the blue-scaled cloak of a dragon hatchling.

That, answered a man in similarly scaled greens, as he cracked his back, is an entire tree. Dont you think were overdoing it?

No such thing, replied the woman in the blue cloak. Aaron looked to her. Then to the pyre behind her, already taller than she was. She caught the expression, and pointed at him. No sass from you, journeyman.

None at all, Aaron sassed agreeably.

This pyres for humanity, she said. Dont they deserve it?

They?

Near them, another woman was winding a final cord of freshly braided grass around the stickmans brow, keeping its head from falling apart into so many twigs.

That, the woman in the blue cloak said, switching her pointing finger to the effigy, is Humanity.

Or Two Fires, said the woman doing the winding. Depending on who you ask.

Why? asked Aaron.

Its a joke, said the winder.

Whats the joke? Aaron asked.

No idea, said the woman in the blue cloak. Our last leader never explained, and neither has our Lady.

To be fair, said the winder, tying off her knot. I dont think Aeris ever explained it to either of them. Which is what comes from having a cat in charge.

Aeris of the Red Trident; Queen Aednats ginger-furred spymaster. That must have been before the last queen died, and her son had the puss drowned. King Rillian had started his execution orders rather near to home. Which was all a fair bit before Aaron was born.

The Lady must have been young when she joined, Aaron said, if she met Aeris.

The blue-cloaked woman grinned, and turned to shout. Oy, Addie, how old were you when you joined?

Funny, replied the Lady, who was not at all far enough away to warrant shouting. She sat cross-legged on the sand, weaving the stems of her flowers into a crown. You dont look like Liam. And I seem to recall him being the only one who has who had permission to call me that.

My sincerest apologies. So how old were you, Adejuanja?

Adejuanja. Which was not Adelaide, in the same way Jessica wasnt Jeshinkra, and Johnathan wasnt Jahnalistrin.

A few years less than I am now, the Lady replied, the sea breeze tugging at her enclave-blonde hair.

They could not, as it turned out, heft an entire tree on top of the pyre already built. They could, however, drag its barkless and sun-bleached bones over to make an excellent place to sit. The blue-cloaked woman snagged a seat on one of the sturdier remaining branches, a good few feet above them all. Aaron sat with the Lady in the sand, its respectable trunk an excellent backrest, and offered her the pastries hed swiped for her. She smiled but didnt take one; her hands were still occupied with her weaving. This did not stop others around them from helping themselves.

A man with a gray-furred cloak whose species Aaron didnt recognize grabbed one. The trunk bounced a bit as he sat.

So youre the bad feelings kid, he said. I cant work with any militia without getting asked whether Ive a bad feeling. Told them yes once as a joke, and a ballistae string broke that day, almost took a mans eye out. Now they have me walk the town every morning like Im some sort of bloodhound for the broken. Which is, I must conclude, entirely your fault.

Interesting conclusion, Aaron said, taking one of the pastries for himself. Its enough to give a fellow a bad feeling.

In the silence that followed, he took a bite. Chewed. When the man broke out laughingalong with a few other folks whod been close enough to hearAaron let his lips slant into a smile.

Hed expected a bit more business and a bit less socializing at this meeting. But this wasnt bad.

Drinks started passing, and the first of the clams. Some of the seals drifted closer, by sand or by surf, and the cook tossed a few their way. One of the pups did its very best to sneak up to the pastries, as if its white pelt and all that belly flopping in any way subtle.

Are pastries safe for them? Aaron whispered, and got a handwave from the Lady that was more or less affirmative, so he pointedly looked anywhere but at the sweets set on the trunk behind them as the pup bit down on one. Greed apparently overcoming any remaining caution, she tossed back the hood of her white cloak to steal another in each hand. The selkie pup boltedno more graceful over the sand on two feet than shed been on her bellyand tucked herself against her mothers round side to enjoy her catch. A cunning hunter, that one.

The Lady had finished her flower crown. She had one final flower, left over from her efforts; she tucked it behind her ear, just below her tarnished cat sidhe pin. Then she reached back towards the place the pastries had been and patted the empty handkerchief that had been their plate. The pup kept smugly tearing into her prey.

The Late Wake had gathered in a loose circle, now. These were their most experienced members, their leaders; those that could be spared from the field, in any case. Aaron was by far the youngest. They didnt work to include him in their conversations. Didnt work to exclude him, either. He was fine, leaning back against the trees trunk and listening in as the sky passed through pinks and oranges like a dragon testing its scales. He didnt have any of the clams. Or the liquor. Just removed a loaf of bread from his pocket pantry, and left an end of it on the trunk next to him as he had his own dinner. Another pup was soon along to steal it, and seemed just as happy with its loot as the girl was with hers.

Humanity was gaining accessories. A cloak, a singular boot, a belt buckle sans belt. The effigy passed along the circle like an old friend come to mingle, spending as much time with arms draped over its shoulders as it did propped against various backrests. Someone had tucked clamshells into its face for eyes, but they werent staying on very well. Another had taken great care in tying a wine glass to its handthe only wineglass in attendance, as they were just passing along bottlesand filling it, near to the brim. Everyone else took up the chore of keeping the glass from tipping as their twiggy friend made its rounds.

When it came their way, the Lady placed her flower crown on its head, straightened one of its eyes, and took a sip straight from its wineglass, to the near unanimous booing of her underlings.

Get your own drink, the blue-cloaked woman said.

Has Humanity not a kind and generous nature? the Lady replied.

The effigy was quickly confiscated from her.

Speaking of kind and generous natures, said another woman, leaning forward in their wide circle to see Aaron better, then shifting her gaze to the Lady. You with an apprentice? Really?

This was met with general exclamations of agreement, and a few congratulations to Aaron himself for not being dead. He got the sense this was less an issue of dying from danger, and more in the manner of a house plant with no house fey to remember its watering when its owner forgot.

The blue-cloaked woman had descended from her branch perch. Shed gotten her hands on Humanity, as well, and propped it up with one arm about her own shoulders and the other over Aarons. The one with the wine glass, as if his poor coat hadnt been in enough peril lately. He steadied the drink.

I thank you all for your support, said the Lady, plucking a flask from someones hand.

I dont suppose youre thinking of taking another, the blue-cloaked woman said.

The Lady drank again, one brow raised.

If you dont want her the woman said.

No one, officially, the Lady said. She didnt look at Aaron, with all the weight of her earlier gaze.

Interesting, the man said. Is there anything you should be telling us, Adejuanja?

The Ladys lips quirked. Not at this stage.

Aaron gave her his own look. She returned a smile.

Around them, the party had largely broken up into groups. A few had been joined by women with spotted gray cloakssome with children sleeping in their laps, some with sleepy pups gathered in their armswho seemed just as pleased to sample the passing bottles as they had been to try the food. When their eyes caught the pyres light, they shone. It was full night now, and the effect would have been eerie were Aaron not so used to it.

If he werent so used to it, perhaps he would have caught on a bit sooner: it wasnt only the selkies whose eyes caught the light, in a way no humans should. No strict-kept human.

But then, the regular militia would hardly count the Late Wake as strictly kept.

There was a woman over there, in a cloak that matched the night; her eyes shone, and her nails about the neck of that wine bottle were perhaps a bit too pointed. A man over there, whose hair was speckled through with true gray, not the black-and-white peppering of age. Right in front of Aaron, the golden-cloaked man laughed at somethingAaron had lost the thread of the conversationand his teeth were, perhaps, a bit too sharp.

There was, just possibly, a reason they were having this gathering outside of any town. And a reason some of the Late Wakes scouts only returned to Last o the Isles once a year, if that.

It rather explained why he was feeling so comfortable here, with all these people hed never met. And left a few other matters rather unexplained.

Its very interesting how much our Lady trusts you, Journeyman Markus, said the man with the golden cloak, through his particularly sharp smile. At any of our meetings. But particularly this one.

Aaron did not answer. Did not have to, as the Lady took that moment to bring a rather ordinary handkerchief out of her pocket, with a bit of jerky inside.

That is tiny, said the woman with her feet buried in the sand. And a fair bit of her shins too, by this point. Is that really enough for all of us? It wont be spreading things too thin?

Ill cut it, volunteered the blue-cloaked woman.

Youll butcher it. Give it here, Im better with a knife, said another, and a bit of a verbal tussle ensued. The golden-cloaked man ended up with the little jerky strip, still on its handkerchief, laid carefully over the broadest and flattest part of their fallen trees trunk.

How many of us are there? he asked, clearly counting as he glanced between their immediate group.

Dont forget to count yourself, said the blue-cloaked woman.

He hesitated. And rather clearly changed the place hed been intending to cut at. Shut up, he said to her. Then, to the Lady: How long will these last?

Long enough for any questions the investigation should raise. A year, at least; a few, if were lucky. He was lying to himself right up until I really did kill him, so it should be potent enough.

Which was the point Aaron realized what they were cutting. And also what had become of the foxs tongue.

The blue-cloaked woman was looking at the Lady, her expression solemn. Were sorry, you know. It didnt have to be you.

The Ladys lips twitched, with something a distant cousin to amusement. Were committed, now.

That we sounded a lot like I.

Old cloaks not replaced. Eyes that shone, hair the wrong color; nails and teeth too sharp.

It would matter to this Late Wake, whether or not they had a king who wont let himself be killed for being a doppel.

Why did you do it? Aaron asked. And if she took the question as a follow up, took it as Why was it you instead of Why kill the fox at all, then either would be an answer worth knowing.

The Lady leaned back against the trunk with a smile, as behind her the golden-cloaked man carefully chopped the four-tails tongue into equal bites for the Late Wakes coming lies.

A kirin once asked, she said, like someone telling a kingdom tale, Why can a fox lie, even to us? How do you think the fox replied?

Aaron didnt know.

Because everyone needs someone to lie to them, she said. And then she smiled. Were going to succeed here. Tonight is another step, and then well take another and another. Off this island and away, until were not just huddled here waiting for the hunters to come. Well have a friendly king on the throne, one way or another; well get the nobles aimed in the right direction, and all the rest of humanity, too. We will survive, we will thrive, and everything will be okay.

Very reassuring, Adejuanja, said the golden-cloaked man. Particularly with that introduction.

I do my best, the Lady replied.

None of that answered Aarons real question. Why did the fox need to die?

So every major leader in the Late Wake could lie. Because they had doppels in their ranks, and werent so happy to skin them as John would have had him believe. But why would these uptowners need to doppel?

For the same reason as those in Twokins, Aaron expected. To protect family and friend and their own skins; to survive. To thrive, even where no one wanted them to.

Why? he repeated.

I believe, said the Lady, I gave you homework along with your first cloak.

The population records, he said, as a bit of tongue was placed in his hand, and somehow failed to be the most important thing to happen this evening. Weve been dying since the old castle was sealed.

Very good, Aaron. You found that connection quicker than most.

What happened? he asked, as Humanityor Two Fires, depending on who you askedburned on the pyre.

When they sealed that castle, she said, they decided ghosts werent human. And then they decided those who had a doppel shift werent either, no matter what theyd been born as, or what children they could have. Decided to kill them, to keep the rest of us pure. And they kept narrowing things from there. This year, a thousand rode with King Orin to fight at the front. A thousand, from our very capital, the largest city humanity claims. A thousand used to be a supply train. We broke our pact with the dragons in your lifetime, but someone before me decided to forget why it was forged in the first place; decided that letting humanity waste as Liam wastedmay his soul not wanderwith us all turned in against ourselves, was a better thing than facing outward to fight while wed still the strength. But a lingering death was never mans choice.

Ive heard that before, he said.

She looked at him. I should hope so, Markus. Given that you wrote it.

Fill Fadalach, the Late Wake. Those who guarded humanity in the hour of its death. It really was in the name.

The rest of their circle was eating their bits of tongue. Swallowing them with wine, or dry, or chewing with the look of a person trying the taste of a thing just because theyd the chance to.

His was still in his hand. As was hers. She reclaimed her handkerchief, shook it free of crumbs, and re-wrapped her little sliver of lies.

Whats the point of saving yours? Aaron asked.

His Majesty might have need of it, she said. Should he prove a doppel, and one on our side.

Do you even know if he is?

Thats rather beside the point, she said, and it rather was. She tilted her head. Are you eating yours?

Aarons stomach rather disagreed with the prospect. This came from a thing that talked, and no mistake. A person. A persons tongue, from their mouth, and she just expected him to put it in his and chew. As everyone else had already done. And he was getting some looks, for his slowness.

Dont you need one? he stalled.

Aaron, I had my first foxs tongue when I was younger than you are. The Lady laughed. And when she had done with all her laughter, she leaned forward. Now, are you going to eat?

She watched as he did. The tongue was too tough to chew; his spit dried up when he tried to swallow it. The blue-cloaked woman passed him a bottle of red wine, and he had his first drink of the night as they all watched. It felt a test.

Given that he vomited not a quarter hour later, he guessed hed failed. No one said anything of it.

Interesting, indeed.

Humanitys fire was coals by the morning. Only the selkies saw them leave.

* * *

Aaron asked at the forest villages along the road, and up at the enclave. No one had heard of an Adejuanja.