softly, lifting a sleeved hand toward the boy with the cat. “Desperate. Starving. Willing to fight—to kill—for a meal like that. Most days, I didn’t have the chance. I lived in the mud with my mother and four siblings. By the time I was ten, two of those four were dead, and my mother had had two more. I don’t remember any of our fathers.”
“A terribly sad story,” Ascaros said aridly.
“How did you get out?” Isiem asked.
“Misanthe lifted me from the Hovels,” Voraic said. His robes quivered and he hunched a little further down, keeping his back toward his companions. “It was during one of the burnings. Ten… fifteen burnings ago. I don’t remember. They happen every year, twice a year sometimes. It’s hard to keep count. I was ten. It was summertime, and the smell was bad. The Over-Diocesan sent her faithful to cleanse the Hovels. Their poisoned fires tore through the buildings, and they marched through the streets, killing anyone who managed to survive the smoke.
“My mother pushed me through the flames toward them. I knew what she was doing; she wasn’t the only one to try it. Children who are stoic enough—Nidalese enough—to endure extraordinary pain without crying sometimes find acceptance among the ranks of the faithful. My siblings were too weak to have a chance. But I endured the fire without flinching, and when I stumbled back to my feet in front of the masters, I saw a glimmering of respect.
“Misanthe stopped the others from killing me. She said I had promise. She tested that promise before she took me, but I passed. And so I became her apprentice.”
“Tested it how?” Isiem asked.
Ascaros would do well to guard his emotions.
A small shrug rippled Voraic’s rain-soaked robes. His voice was steady but toneless. “She found my mother. She killed her. Then and there, in the smoke. There were screams all around us from others burning in the Hovels. My friends, some of them. My brothers and sisters. But Misanthe told me not to take my eyes off what she was doing, no matter what went on around us. I obeyed. And I did not cry. At the end of it, she said I had proven myself well enough to be worthy of magic… eventually. She did not want a useless child. So I trained in Nisroch, first, and in time she came back for me.”
A path of broken planks sunk into the mud served as stepping stones to the Hovels. Ascaros lifted the hem of his charcoal-gray shadowcaller’s robes away from the filth, grimacing as his boots squelched in the sodden earth. Ramshackle buildings closed around them, funneling the rainwater into tumbling rivers that slid from warped roof boards and splashed into the mud. “Were you with her in Westcrown?”
Voraic shook his head. “Only in Nisroch. I did not have permission to enter Cheliax.” He paused, pointing to a crooked black spar that thrust up from the teetering buildings ahead. “That is where it happened. The burning always starts on the outer perimeter and pushes in toward the city, so that those fleeing the flames run into the archers on the walls.”
“Wait here,” Ascaros said. “See that we are not disturbed.”
“‘See that we are not disturbed’?” Isiem echoed as they strode deeper into the Hovels. Fearful eyes peered at them from the darkness within the shacks, but neither of the shadowcallers paid them any mind. Most of the Hovels’ denizens fled or hid from their approach. A few were too damaged to do either, but even those would never dare confront them. Voraic was right: these people wanted to live. And confronting shadowcallers was no way to do that.
Ascaros shrugged. “Let him see the excuse for what it is. What difference does it make?”
“None, I suppose.” Isiem watched a muttering idiot go by. The sigil of the Morbidium was branded on his brow, although it had been partly cut away. A row of large, careless stitches ran up the side of the man’s neck and across his stubbly head. The wound they’d once closed had
Al., Alan M. Clark, Clark Sarrantonio