2.
Medeva fled Ratio-res, knew without divine intervention that the
prophecy that the goddess, Luna, transcribed was being birthed into reality
every hour she remained in the city — minutes melted quick, someone
should have told Ol’ Tempus to slow his great wheel or turn back the
shadows of the sundial. She boarded a ship at the Bay of Birds and spent
half an hour watching the crustaceans scuttle across the seafoam and hide
among the weathered docks before a caravel glided across the surface of the
sea, covered in the wooden tentacles of a kraken carved across its bow, and
hull, on the port-side. When Luna told Medeva she’d ferry a kraken across
the Seventh Sea, Medeva imagined it’d be a great beast or some heroic
figure wearing the mark of an ancient aquatic-kingdom. But alas, when she
saw the ship, Medeva unraveled the prophecy and rushed to meet it several
hundred feet down the bay. The Kraken anchored a mile off-shore and sent
a small dinghy to the shore armed with two men and a woman, whom
Medeva watched from atop sea rocks that comprised a stone jetty stretching
limply into the water.
As the sailors got closer, Medeva could see that their rowboat
contained two wooden chests — one which was securely locked in steel
chains (uncommon practice among traders since not many of them had the
coin for such craft) which led her to become curious about its contents. She
did not care for the other chest which was unlocked; but of that box,
strapped down, constructed from the bodies of dead oak trees — that
mystery Medeva could not abandon. She studied where the sailors would
come ashore and planned a meeting with them. Their boat crawled into the
shallows as two of them raised and lowered their oars in juxtaposed
positions, and the third inspected the locks that fastened the chains to their
precious cargo. Medeva didn’t know what she would say when they met but
trusted the prophecy, and Luna, to lead her to the right words.
The voyagers unboarded and dropped into the water like pebbles,
dragged the boat, and two chests, into the sand. The waves washed
in-and-out around their vessel, as if debating whether or not to let go of
their little dinghy, but when the sailors had pulled it far enough up shore
the tide lost its opportunity — resigned to flicker alone in its vast watery
world. The one who did not row, a broad man standing at least seven feet
tall with a ring of black hair around the naked crown of his head, spotted
Medeva and approached (as she knew he would), and asked her about the
markets. She pointed them in the direction and wondered aloud about their
intentions. While the man answered, Medeva glanced at the woman who
pulled the locked chest from the boat and set it in the sand. A silver chain
wrapped around her wrist held three stones — a ruby, a sapphire, and an
emerald — engraved with three, different runes (none of which Medeva
didn’t recognized).
“We’re here looking for herbs,” the broad man said, “for our people. In
Elithrea, the people say that there are alchemists here who know every
medicine and cure that exists across Aeora.” Medeva didn’t know if this
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were true, but nodded her head in agreement.
“Then it’s fortunate that you’ve met a healer,” Medeva said, “who trained
for almost a decade within the Society of Alchemists. And this particular
healer just happens to need a ride across the Seventh Sea.”
The broad man looked to the woman with the gemstones bound about
her wrist. She approached and inspected Medeva with light-green, honey
dew eyes. Her pupils seemed to dilate as her stare floated over Medeva’s
body — as if the woman were some mystic whose eyes were not fooled by
thin layers of cotton and silk. The woman said, “She tells the truth.” The
second man, one with a thin body and salt-and-pepper beard, led Medeva to
the dinghy at her consent. The thin man boarded with Medeva, but before
they left Medeva had just enough time to ask the mysterious woman for her
name.
“Emilia,” she said, “a Priestess of Knossos.”
Then the thin trader rowed her back to their caravel.
When Medeva reached the Kraken, she was locked in a cabin and waited
for Emilia and the two men to return. The crew was busy — smelled and
looked as if they had not seen land for days — so she spent several hours
emptying the contents of her bag into the small, musky room. A few
low-burning lamps illuminated the pages of a book she crafted before
leaving Ratio-res, a scattered collection of stories, and spells, on many
different materials and bound with steel rings. Many of the originals had
been cut and re-written, and she burned what remained — watching them
licked by fire with silent tears — because she had to flee the city.
She read late into the night until, through her porthole window, she saw
the dinghy approaching with the three sailors she’d met on the shore. There
was a knock at her door half an hour later. Emilia entered, still dressed in
her day clothes, before Medeva could get to the door. She wore a dark tunic
beneath a maroon vest — just shy of the color of flames. Leather breeches
wrapped her legs to right below the knees and revealed her skin, thick sea
legs never seen the edge of a razor except for the one that she kept hidden
in a redwood-colored sheath strapped to her upper leg. “We’re leaving soon.
Are you ready?”
“I am,” Medeva said. Emilia took a seat on the bed (only furniture in the
cabin save a dresser along the wall) and listened with arms crossed, her
eyes placid as Medeva spoke. “I’ve never been across the sea. They say that
there are all sorts of wonderful places and people out there.” When she was
done Emilia sighed and rubbed the sapphire at her wrist between her
pointer finger and thumb, the engraved rune acting a blueprint for her
fingertip. “When a person lies,” Emilia said, “their pulse quickens and their
eyes shift unusually to the left and the right, as if seeking an answer they
cannot find. Your eyes haven’t set still for a minute — twister that will not
stop spinning.”
Medeva could have blushed. “The truth is that I saw your ship from
shore. I saw the locked chest that you brought to the beach and wondered
what was inside. Since I have no family left in this place, and I saw an
opportunity for travel and adventure, I took it.” Emilia looked at Medeva
sideways, seemed to perceive that this wasn’t the whole story, but smiled
and did not press the issue.
“You want to know about the secrets that we keep hidden?”
Medeva nodded. “Yes.”
“Then I’ll tell you a story. And unlock the chest when it’s done.”
Medeva drew her spellbook closer in silent agreement and readied her
pen. The Kraken lurched in the water and coasted across the surface as
Medeva heard the familiar bellow of a horn and resisted the urge to look out
the port window — knew that the Society of Alchemists sounded this alarm
when it rallied sailors to take a voyage out to sea.