Hand of Fire (The Master of the Tane) (48 page)

BOOK: Hand of Fire (The Master of the Tane)
12.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

             
Jack stared for a moment longer and then his face lightened. “An old story I heard about the Chufa long ago. Just another fairy tale I guess.”

             
Thane smiled weakly. “Yes, a fairy’s tail.”

             
Jack chuckled at his miss use of the words then asked through chattering teeth, “So, how is it that you can start this fire for us?”

             
Thane looked down at his hands gripping one another in a strange dance of fingers before slowly gaining the courage to speak. “Well, Chufa have...well…uh…powers that they are born with.”

             
Jack’s eyes narrowed and he leaned in a bit closer. “What sort of powers?”

             
“Well...like starting fires.”

             
Jack smiled. “That’s not any kind of power, Thane. Anyone can learn to start a fire.”

             
Thane took a deep breath. “Not like us.”

             
Jack’s smile faded away. “What are you getting at?”

             
“I would have told you before but I was afraid you get mad and go.”

             
“I’m not going anywhere, Thane. I told you that. I have a debt to settle. Now come on, what’s this all about?”

             
He didn’t answer, but instead reached out his hand and touched the soggy wood. He could feel his heart matching the tempo of the falling rain as he forced his courage to the front. “Shonosh,” he whispered, and then drew back his hand. The wood suddenly burst into flames drying the water out of it in a cloud of steam and a chorus of sizzles and pops.

             
Jack jumped back tripping on his cloak and landed in a small mud puddle. “How, in the sacred name of Seless, did you do that? That wood was like a bowl of thick stew!”

             
“I told you,” Thane said timidly. “We are born with certain powers.”

             
Jack stared at him, his eyes wide. Thane reached a hand out to him but Jack recoiled. Thane looked at his hand and then back at Jack. “Oh no,” he said hurriedly. “I cannot light living things on fire.”

             
“Are you sure?”

             
“Yes, only things that are dead.”

             
Jack sat up and moved towards the flames keeping a watchful eye on Thane. The heat felt wonderful against his icy skin. Erl woke up and, seeing the fire, moved closer to it before falling back to sleep as if unaware of his companions.

             
Thane sat down and shed his cloak setting it on his lap to dry. Glancing quickly at Jack he let out a sigh before speaking. “I am sorry, Jack. Please do not hate me.”

             
Jack stared at him. He couldn’t help but think that he looked like an innocent child lost in a world of darkness. “I don’t hate you, Thane,” he finally said trying to smile. “I was just startled that’s all. I wasn’t expecting that.”

             
Thane looked visibly relieved. “Can I still stay with you, Jack?”

             
“What? Of course, what are you talking about?”

             
“You mean you are not thinking I am a demon?”

             
“It’s,
do not think
, and of course I don’t.”

             
A large smile broke through the sullen look that had been on Thane’s face and, for a brief moment, Jack was afraid that he just might jump up and dance around the fire. But the moment soon passed and both sat in silence enjoying the warmth that had begun to find its way into their bones.

“So tell me, Thane,” Jack finally asked, “how did you do that?”

              Thane happily showed Jack his TanIs, knowing he would not know that it was different than any other, and quickly ran through the Shahmear ceremony when a child received its name and Tane. He explained the gifts of all five Tane and the powers that were inherently born into each Chufa child and then explained about his ability to also cauterize wounds. Jack was fascinated by this new information about his friend and their race.

             
“That would explain some of the tales that are told about the Chufa. They’ve just been stretched a bit that’s all.”

             
Thane smiled, glad that Jack knew this information about him and seemed more fascinated than afraid.

             
“So let me get this straight,” Jack said, the chatter gone from his teeth. “You have to have this Quen...whatever you call it...”

             
“QenChe,” Thane said smiling.

             
“Right, QenChe. So, you have to be QenChe,” he continued motioning a hand towards Thane, “to pull fire from anything that is dead, which also includes closing up a wound?”

             
“Right.”

             
“But to do the other things like stay under water for a long time and smell the weather you have to be one of the others?”

             
“Right. MarGua and ArVen.”

             
“And you can tell who is who by those marks on your ankle?”

             
“Right.”

             
Jack rubbed his chin. “In all my days I have never heard anything of the like.”

             
Thane suddenly felt as warm inside as out at being able to tell Jack so much about himself and still be accepted. It felt good to not have so many secrets anymore and he wondered if one day he would be able to tell Jack everything.

             
“You know,” Jack said, interrupting his thoughts, “I wish you would have told me all this earlier. I guess I don’t blame you for being cautious, but I would like to think that we trust each other enough now to not have secrets like this from each other. After all, we have saved one another’s lives. That should say something.”

             
Thane watched the fire suddenly feeling a little less cheerful. Jack was right but it was still too risky to let on that there was more than what he had already revealed. Maybe someday he could tell all, but not now.

             
Jack lay back suggesting they try and get some sleep and then thought about what he had just said.
What a dolt I have turned out to be
.
I give a speech on not having secrets
,
expecting that boy to tell me all
,
and I haven’t told him a bloody thing
.
Some things are best left unsaid though, aren’t they
?
Best to leave things as they are for now
.

             
When Thane woke up, the sun was shining brightly through clear, blue skies warming the ground with its heat and sending snakes of steam slithering into the air. The fire had burned down to just a few coals that still gave off a tiny amount of warmth. Thane looked around for Erl but he was gone.
Probably out hunting for his morning meal
, he thought. Jack lay curled up under his damp cloak snoring loudly.

Thane stretched his aching muscles and walked stiffly about collecting more fire wood. “You’re the one who should be doing this,” he mumbled looking over at Jack. “I got the wood last night.”

              Setting down his armload, he quickly restarted the fire by calling flames from the new wood. He was pleased that he no longer had to keep that a secret; having grown tired of restarting the morning fire by blowing on it. His way was so much quicker and easier.

             
Jack stirred briefly, grumbling softly in his sleep and then rolled over and started his cacophonous chorus all over again. Thane made a small breakfast of mashed corn and potatoes with a small onion he found and then busied himself setting up a line over the fire to dry their gear. By the time he had finished, Jack was finally up and grumbling over his own breakfast of dried meat.

             
“How much more to Hell’s End?” Thane asked hanging up his cloak.

             
“About a half day, why?”

             
“I thought we could stay here for some time to let things dry in sun and on fire.”

             
Jack smiled, an unusual thing for him this early in the day. “I think you mean
over
the fire. That’s a good idea. It would give the ground a chance to harden a bit as well so we’re not walking around knee deep in mud.”

             
Thane nodded and then grabbed Jack’s cloak and hung it on the line. Both cloaks spewed steam as if exhaling pipe smoke. Pleased with how well it was working, he gathered the rest of their wet gear and piled as much on as he could for the sun and fire to dry. They would not leave here wet, he would make certain of that. After he finished, he sat down next to Jack just as he tossed the last bite of meat into his mouth.

             
“You do good work my friend,” Jack said pointing to the drying clothes.

             
“Yeah,” Thane smiled. “Thanks for the help.”

             
Jack smiled back. “Certainly.”

             
“I was wondering,” he asked, becoming a bit more serious. “What was the story you were told about the Chufa throwing fire?”

             
Jack laughed. “Got your curiosity running wild, eh? Well, it’s been quite a few years since I sat at my mother’s knee and, to be honest, there’s not much to tell. Before I went to bed at night she would tell me stories of long ago. Sometimes she told me about the fairy people, like the Chufa, and how they could throw fire on a person. She used to frighten me into being a good little lad, telling me that if I wasn’t then the Chufa would come and take me away.” Jack got a far away look on his face and then started laughing. “It worked, I tell you. All she had to do is mention the word Chufa and I was as good as a piece of plum pie.”

             
Thane scowled thinking it terrible that his people were thought of as such horrid creatures. “I do not see what is funny about that. Telling a child that Chufa will get him, it is not true.”

             
“I know that now, of course,” Jack mused, “but, at the time, it sure did keep me straight. Didn’t your mother ever tell you stories about monsters or such to make you be good?”

             
Thane thought back to his home and his mother and he found himself suddenly fighting back tears. How was his mother now? Did she miss him? “I...uh...yes,” he choked out trying to mask his feelings. “Now that you say it, my mother told me of the HuMans and how evil they were.”

             
Jack suddenly stopped laughing and looked hard at Thane. “What do you mean evil?”

             
Thane burst into laughter, catching the humor of the moment.

             
“What’s so funny?”

             
“You Jack. It not bad to say Chufa are bad, but to say HuMans are evil and it is wrong.”

             
Thane kept laughing as Jack’s face got redder. Then, realizing the irony of it, he chuckled some too. “I guess you’re right. It is the same, isn’t it?” Both laughed and then shared stories they each had heard as children, allowing the other to correct the myths that had grown from multiple tellings and superstitions.

             
The sun was half way across the sky before they decided they had better get back on the road. Most of their clothes had become fairly dry, or at least bearable to wear, and in quick order they were packed and on their way. The trail was relatively easy to find and follow, most of the hard trekking done the night before. In fact, it wasn’t long before the incline disappeared almost completely and they were walking among rolling, grass covered hills. Everywhere the eye could see flowers were beginning to bloom in an array of brilliant color. Never had Thane seen such a beautiful sight. He let his senses run wild, allowing himself to become inebriated in the wonders of nature.

When he finally felt filled to capacity he let his mind return to the more urgent thoughts that had been forced out by the landscape’s grandeur. Thoughts like the Chufa throwing fire. Never in his life had he heard of Chufa throwing fire except for when he had actually done it himself. How could it be? He didn’t even know how he had done it and doubted he could again even if he tried. How then could others do it at will? Were there others like him before that were different? Or, maybe there had just been one. He remembered the evil one who had helped the HuMans destroy their forests and their people. He had special powers. Could he have thrown fire? He suddenly felt a dark, depression growing within. What if he was like the evil one? Was he destined to betray his people?

              “Thane.”

             
“What?” He looked up as Jack grabbed his arm pulling him from his black thoughts.

BOOK: Hand of Fire (The Master of the Tane)
12.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Danny Dunn on a Desert Island by Jay Williams, Jay Williams
The Sociopath Next Door by Martha Stout PhD
Cyber Warfare by Bobby Akart
Deadly Lies by Cynthia Eden
The Treasure of Mr Tipp by Margaret Ryan
The God Patent by Stephens, Ransom
Interrupted by Zondervan
My Last Love Story by Falguni Kothari
Innocence Tempted by Samantha Blair
The Boys of Summer by Roger Kahn