Novels2Search
Scionsong
Æ.7 - affinity

Æ.7 - affinity

Aliyah

When she awoke, it was from dreams of half-blurry sketches of blood and dark, dusty corners with something lurking beyond: something painful and hungry.

Someone was pounding at her door. They were tugging the tassel hung by its side, too; the bell above her headboard jangled its discordant notes. She winced. Her arms felt numb, from where she’d shoved them beneath her pillow. The bell jangled some more. It could not be a matron, surely. Her supervisors would have been sent a notice, at least for the rest of today. Wasn’t that how things usually went? Unless she had slept through the night entirely?

She blinked blearily at the rune-symbol set into her ceiling. It was bright enough for it to still be twilight, or perhaps early evening. And a matron would have unlocked the door and shaken her awake by now.

“Who is it?” she croaked.

“Aliyah,” Rana’s voice sounded terse, even muffled as it was. “It’s me.”

Aliyah shut her eyes for a moment. Ah. So this was the part where she would try and fail to explain herself. It had seemed like a good idea at the time? Or perhaps, I only wanted to become my own saviour?

“Coming,” she called through gritted teeth. Every movement felt as if it were tearing into what felt like an entire map of freshly-forming scabs across her back. She eased herself upright, then off the bed to lurch over to the door. She put her hand onto the handle and hesitated before she unlocked it and pulled inwards.

Rana stood there in all her ink-flecked charm. Her brow furrowed as she frowned. Behind her loomed an unmasked Magician with twisted scar-lines carved into his face, a ridged mess of silvery tissue that trailed over half of his nose and across the hollow slit of one empty eye socket.

Aliyah yelped and reeled backwards, almost tripping over as pain lanced down her back.

Rana flicked her gaze to the conspicuously blue Magician peering over her shoulder, grimacing faintly. “This is my good cousin Karim,” she said, walking into the room.

“Y-your cousin? Why did you bring your cousin?”

Karim shut the door behind him with a click. “We’ve come to an additional understanding with the Librarians,” he said. His voice was soft and smooth, but it was not kind. “Rana thought it best if I were the one to explain.”

Aliyah swallowed, throat tight. “Additional…understanding? I thought you already did. Uh. Magician Cardainne told me that you—um. That is to say…thank you for speaking for me.” Twenty lashes had been no easy ordeal, but half again as much would surely have hurt worse.

“Thank Rana. I am but a messenger.” He shrugged and fixed Aliyah under his gaze. She was reminded of Giltyrzar, a little; there was a pressure behind that stare, invisible hands pushing down on her face and the back of her neck and her eyelids.

“What you did was very stupid,” Karim said softly and without preamble. “Rana’s coin saved you far more than ten lashes. What they do not speak of is more important than what they do; what you hear in a trial is never the whole truth. Understand, little maid?”

She flinched. “I—yes, okay.”

“Librarians accosted me in the middle of the night and tested spell-slips onto me,” Rana said, shoulders trembling. “One of them said you’d be whipped within an inch of your life and branded with a traitor-sign and cast out into the dregs of the city to die. I had to find Karim to put in a word with Soltani’s uncle, to send money to Soltani, and then to send Cardainne with more coin to be sure that it would stick.”

Aliyah felt all the blood drain from her face, head spinning at the tide of information. Branding? Cast out of the castle?

Rana took an unsteady breath. “While they had you locked away, I had to run, actually run, down to Samara’s office and ply her with coin to scour your catalogue history in time.”

Even more bribery, and all of her searching had been recorded? What shocked her most of all, though, was sweet, cordial Rana almost yelling at her. She’d never seen her this upset.

“I’m sorry,” she said weakly. “I—”

She’d thought that she’d only been putting herself in danger. If only she were more careful—but no. She wouldn’t have learned anything. Sooner or later, she would have hurt herself and gotten caught. And now she was in even more pain than she would have been if she hadn’t broken into the Library.

“No,” Rana said, not meeting her gaze. “Don’t apologise. Just please don’t ever do anything like that ever again.”

Karim cleared his throat. “Well. As I have said, an additional understanding has been reached. The Librarians will deny your involvement in any infiltration of the Higher Library. The record will say that the twenty lashes were given for the attempted theft of some suitably expensive gemstones during your cleaning duties. It is best for your continued stay at the castle that you agree with this. There will be some difficulties with your superiors, of course. But it’s the most discreet option. Those who know the truth—Adjudicator Soltani, the Librarian delegates, Ilya Cardainne, Rana, and myself—will not speak of it.”

“Why?” Aliyah asked.

Karim gave her a grim look. “Largely due to my good cousin’s graces. And because this is not a wholly uncommon occurrence. Though, I think that you understand the consequences better than the usual upstart youth.”

“Yes. I understand.” She clenched her jaw. Dizziness threatened to overtake her and she stumbled a half-step back, sat heavily down onto her bed.

“I cannot assume so, based on what Rana has told me,” Karim replied evenly. “So don’t waste the opportunity that has been created for you. It’s not my concern if you do, to be sure. But that would hurt my cousin, and she has gone very far for you.”

Karim turned away; Rana handed him an envelope as he did so. Paper-favours? More coin? Just how much had Rana spent to save her? Karim left, closing the door gently behind him. And then she was alone with Rana. Somehow, that felt even worse. The room felt both too large and far too small at the same time.

“Why?” Rana asked dully, looking at the floor. “Just—why?”

“It…was getting worse,” she said. “It was hurting me. I thought there would be answers in the Library, so I…”

“I was helping you with everything I had,” Rana said, still not meeting her gaze. “Was it not enough? I thought the apothecary’s pills—”

She took a deep breath, bracing herself. “It wasn’t enough. It just—wasn’t. Did you want me to wait forever?”

Rana looked up, mouth parting slightly. She swallowed, hunching her shoulders. “Forever? No, of course not. I said I had leads, didn’t I? I was hoping just a little longer. No more than a year, maybe two.”

“No,” Aliyah said, cringing inwardly. “I don’t know if I could have lasted another two years. You don’t know what this is like.”

“I don’t know what it’s like? Me? I’ve gone to a dozen Menders, and talked to twice as many healers. I’ve seen you wake up in a pool of your own blood more times than I can count. I’ve covered your shift and put in word for you with Mender Shahriyar. I can see you’re hurting. I know.”

“Yes, but—” Aliyah faltered, thoughts foggy. Rana had been there, yes. But she hadn’t lived it, felt it, had the pain swallow her whole. She knew what she wanted to say, though not how to say it. “Fine. I don’t deserve your help. You’re a better friend than is my right.”

“No. Don’t do that, either.”

“…What?”

Rana shook her head. “Don’t play the victim. Don’t make me feel like I’ve come in here just to kick you in the teeth.”

“Karim said what I did was stupid, didn’t he? And it’s true?” Aliyah squeezed her eyes shut, blinked them back open. “So fine. It was my fault. You did help me. I’m grateful for that. I’m sorry that I upset—burdened you, put the attentions of the Magicians on you. I wanted to fix myself. That’s all.”

“Okay,” Rana said. “Okay. You know that you could have told me, Aliyah. I would have said not to do it, but I would tried something else. I would have helped some other way.”

“You’ve always been the one to do the helping.”

“So you thought you’d take it into your own hands to spare me further inconvenience?” Rana asked bitterly. “Well done. Your noble ways have clearly turned out well for you.”

If you discover this tale on Amazon, be aware that it has been stolen. Please report the violation.

She hesitated. It would be easy to lie, yes. To echo the conclusion that Rana had come to on her own. Because the truth was a gnarled, prickly thing, dip-coated in poison: she hadn’t done it because she wanted to fix herself while preventing Rana from worrying. She wasn’t that gracious of a person. She’d done it because she wanted to feel normal again. She’d also done it because she was deeply, irrationally envious. She’d wanted to be the hero. She’d wanted to feel less…useless and pathetic. She’d wanted to feel human again.

Long gone were the days where they passed notes in class and painted inky pictures side-by-side. Part of her suspected that Rana only kept her around for the memory of it, for the old Aliyah who could clamber up tree branches with her and told fanciful stories through the view of a borrowed spyglass. The Aliyah of now was not the same. Sick. Maidservant. Failure. Cast-off scion-bastard. Hollow but for the bodily suffering, nothing left inside to spin stories and jokes with, the entertaining companion no more. If she were a friend worth having, she’d tell the truth.

She didn’t say anything. She was so tired. So hungry. Staying silent was just avoiding digging deeper, avoiding widening the chasm between them. All the same, it meant that she went along with the lie. She hated herself for that. She hated the itching sting along the skin of her back even more. Most of all, she hated the memory of choking on wave after wave of iron-dark blood.

Rana crossed her arms and worked a muscle in her jaw. “Did they leave you any food? Water?”

“Uh…” That was not what she had expected her to say. Her mouth felt dry all of a sudden, and her stomach twinged in protest. “No.”

“Okay. Then I’ll bring you something.” Rana pushed away from where she had slumped against the wall. “Listen. I can’t stop you from doing what you want. But if you ever do anything like that again, I won’t be there to save you. I mean it. All the Magicians in the world will not protect you if you try that a second time.”

Aliyah swallowed. “Yes. I understand. Thank you.”

Rana left without replying.

===

Aliyah hesitated, one clenched fist hovering over the door.

It had been a week since the whole ordeal. The cuts on her back itched. A Mender had said they were healing as expected, which didn’t feel fast enough. She still slept on her stomach, but at least she was feeling well enough to return to light work.

And although whispers ran around the sewing circles and though her supervisors gave her dirty looks and despite how she was always paired up with others when cleaning rooms now, it felt…normal, was not the correct word, but perhaps mundane. Yes. Safe and mundane and far-removed from magical Libraries with invisible snares and books that lied to you. Everything wasn’t normal, but it was normal enough. Everything, that is, aside from Rana.

Rana was avoiding her.

A week ago, Rana had returned to her room with a tray full of hot soup and mushroom-bread and a flask of water. She’d left right after Aliyah had stammered out her thanks, which was probably a good thing; with an appetite sharpened by stress and time, she’d devoured the meal none-too-politely before crashing into bed once more. She’d slept for twelve hours straight, blessedly dreamless this time.

The only other time she’d seen her since was a couple of days after. Rana had turned up at her door and thrust a wrapped parcel into her hands. “Yara sends her regards and hopes that you heal up soon,” she’d said, and left.

The parcel had contained a packet of iron salts and a jar of chunky green herbal paste that came with instructions to apply thickly over wounded skin. Aliyah had swallowed down a mouthful of guilt; possibly Yara was just being kind, but had Rana paid for these too?

She roused herself from her thoughts and stared hard at the door in front of her, willing herself to knock.

The door swung inwards, and then Rana was there. “Aliyah? You’ve been standing there for ages, haven’t you,” she said. The dark circles under her eyes looked seemed pronounced than usual. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing. I…I brought some cookies?” She brandished the little paper bag in her other hand, the movement shaky and perhaps slightly too frantic. “Lemon-flavoured. I was helping in the upper kitchens and they had some left over and you like sour things, so, um.”

That was a lie. The cookies weren’t seconds or leftovers. She’d gone up there and bought them off the cook. But dubious friend that she may be, she would not stoop to appearing as though she were trying to buy back Rana’s favour.

The very last part, though, the part about Rana liking sour things—that was not a lie. Rana had always loved sour things. As a child, she’d cajoled Aliyah into scaling the boughs of a lemon tree with her to grab the highest-growing, most sun-yellowed of the fruits. And because one of the lower cooks had a sweet spot for them—goddess knows why, they could feign naive charm at will but were young menaces all the same—they would exchange the fresh lemons for candied citrus peels. They’d eat little paper pouches of the stuff with their backs against the smooth, cool trunk of the big ironwood down in south quarter; the one with the best dappled shadows under it’s canopy, the one that had been cut down two summers ago.

Was retroactively realising that one was using a gift to invoke fond memories in someone worse than simply buying back their favour? She brushed the thought away.

Rana stared at her for a moment, expression flickering between puzzlement and unease. “Right. Okay. Come in.”

Aliyah stepped into the familiar room—mismatched furniture, messy corkboard hanging over the desk, bed in the corner piled high with patchwork pillows—and set the little bag of cookies down at the upturned crate that had served many months as a makeshift table.

Rana rustled around her cooler box for two bottles of rice milk; these, she placed onto the crate. She settled down onto the cushions piled around it.

“So, how have you been?” she asked as she reached over and nudged one of the bottles over.

“Uh. Fine. Not much happening,” she said as she watched Rana fiddling with the string on the bag of cookies. “We found a cupboard full of pickled onions in someone’s room the other day.”

Rana looked up from opening the bag and leveled an vaguely unimpressed look at her. “Actually, I was wondering about—” and here she waved her hand loosely, perhaps even a little helplessly, “—all that other stuff. Did the ointment work well?”

“Oh,” Aliyah said, feeling her face grow warm. “Um. Yes. Tell Apothecary Yara that I said thanks, if you see her.”

“I will. But are you alright?”

“Yes, yes, I’m fine. Don’t—you don’t need to worry about me.”

“You make it difficult not to,” Rana said, and frowned. “No offense meant, but you hardly have the strongest constitution. Especially after…”

“Yes, um. I really am sorry. About the Library, that is.”

“Right,” Rana said. “Please stop apologising. Really. I’m not going to—I’m sorry that I shouted at you, earlier.”

“Okay,” Aliyah said. They ate and drank in uncomfortable silence. When the cookies were finished, she said, “I’m going to visit Healer Saar-Salai.”

Rana paused, milk bottle raised halfway to her lips. “Who?”

“The Healer who fixed me up after the Library. Your cousin seemed to have forgotten about him, but I don’t think he’d say anything. He actually sort of…gave helpful advice, in a way.”

“And what was this ‘helpful advice’?” Rana asked, arching a single, perfectly-tapered eyebrow.

Aliyah hesitated. No use telling Rana details that she didn’t need to know. “Basically, to not talk too much at the trial.”

“Hm. What are you planning?”

“Bribery? It doesn’t really matter,” she said. “I’m not asking for help, by the way. I just thought I should let you know.”

“What, in case it all goes sideways?” Rana bit her lip, eyebrows pinching together. “Aliyah, I don’t think I can bail you out a second time, not even if it’s a smaller thing—”

“When I said ‘I’m not asking for help’, I meant it,” she interrupted.

“Then why bother telling me?”

“I don’t tell you things because I want to extort help from you,” she said, wounded.

Or did she? Jumbled memories dashed through her mind; hey Rana, what’s this rune, and Rana, can you show me how you wrote that and Rana, do you know any apothecaries.

“No,” Rana said, “Why would you assume that’s what I meant? Did you ask me on account of you wanting me to stop you? Because I don’t know this Saar-Salai, but I can’t let you get exsanguinated on my conscience.”

“I’m just…telling you,” she said carefully. “Since you’ve helped me so much and you should know what’s going on and so you get a chance to tell me if it’s a terrible idea. Actually, I suppose that counts as helping. But also, you don’t have to keep helping me.”

“Excuse me?” Rana sounded hurt. “Of course I want to know. I am going to help you, if I can.”

“You, uh, you don’t have to, though. That’s—the point.”

“In all our years of knowing one another, you have saved me from the ghastly presence of countless sand spiders,” Rana said, almost comically solemn. Then her voice lowered into more serious tone. “Of course I’m going to try and help you, Aliyah. Even if you do stupid things like breaking into the Higher Library and…” She trailed off. “…And almost dying? Is that right? Karim said things. I don’t know how true they were.”

“What things?” Aliyah asked. She managed to keep her voice from shaking.

Rana shifted uncomfortably, her knuckles paling several shades as she clutched at the bottle in her hands. “That they found you in a pool of blood. That you were vomiting the blood out and that they hadn’t salvaged anyone in such bad shape for years. That there was a daemon involved…that sort of thing.”

Ah. She had a choice here, didn’t she? She could lie, she could reassure Rana and make her feel better about it. But she had done enough lying as of late. Or she could tell the truth, which she didn’t especially want to. It would feel like a gratuitous sapping of Rana’s sympathy, considering what had happened. ‘Yes, I did vomit blood while my spell-soaked insides tore themselves apart’ and ‘yes, I did long for death in that moment’. What kind of friend would say that? Misdirection it was, then.

“Kind of,” she said. “Healer Saar-Salai patched me up, though. He seemed alright. So I think it’s worth a try.”

Rana was undeterred. Her stare sharpened, pinned her into place. “What is ‘kind of’ supposed to mean?”

“It was, um. A bit like that, but I don’t really remember it.”

Rana stared at her for several moments, forehead furrowing in concentration. “Are you…are you lying to me?” She shook her head. “No, never mind—you are lying to me. I’ve known you long enough.”

“Right. Okay.” She winced. “Okay, I did remember, and it wasn’t great. I’d rather not talk about it. But the Librarians got me out in time and Saar-Salai did heal me.”

Rana put her bottle down onto their makeshift table with a thump. “Oh,” she said, and her voice was smaller than Aliyah had ever heard it; she wanted to reach out and grab her hand. She resisted the urge.

Rana sighed. “And there it is. You really could have died.”

“It was all my own fault,” she ventured. “If that makes you feel any better. And I’m fine now. No…lingering effects at all.” The crusted-over wounds on her back twinged on cue. Well, mostly no lingering effects, she thought. Give it another couple of weeks.

“Yes,” Rana said quietly. “It was technically your own fault. And no, that doesn’t make me feel any better.”

“Um. I’m not going to do it again,” she said. “Learned my lesson, no more trips down the mouths of dimensional horrors. Does that make you feel better?”

“Maybe,” Rana said, and sighed. “Look. The opportunity with this Healer; normally, I’d say to lie low for a few months. But in this case, it’s probably best to speak to him before he forgets who you are. Give me a couple of days, though. I’ll ask around. Make sure he isn’t in the habit of stealing spare kidneys and the like.”

“Ah—well, thank you,” she said as guilt pooled low in her stomach. “You really don’t have to.”

“You are my friend,” Rana said. “And truth be told, my only confidante among this crowd of…I hate to say it, but—wishful court climbers. Don’t get me wrong, I still think what you did was foolish.” She paused, looking pained. “But Aliyah, I’m sorry I didn’t notice. I’m sorry it got to that point, that I let myself think Apothecary Yara fixed everything. That despite it all, you still had…far too much to bear. I’ll help, of course I will. I don’t want to lose you.”

“Okay,” Aliyah said. “Th-thank you. And I—likewise. I’d hate to lose you too.”