knew that grieving mother could whip Paca into an angry mob if there wasn’t a condition added. Some form of punishment was due for the people to rest at night.
Aldrik turned to Vhalla. He gave her a long stare, but didn’t object. The singular act spoke volumes about the authority he had already given her.
Vhalla took a deep breath, praying she had formulated a good enough idea so quickly. “If you run off or oppose Victor, he will take your lives and the lives of those you love. Your deaths will help no one. There are patrols, I assume you are meant to report in, and he has the power to find you beyond all that. You do not want to be examples for that maniac.”
No one objected.
“Loyalty at the cost of innocent blood is not the foundation for a throne.” She stared into the eyes of the Easterners, pleading with them to understand what she was saying. “Two wrongs do not make a right. And killing those who have only fought for their freedom, killing them for the sake of vengeance does not make us any better than that which we are fighting against.
“So you may keep your lives, if you use them to help your brothers and sisters here in the East. Go as you were told. Use the crystal to find Windwalkers. But for every one you find, tell them to hide. Turn that wretched thing that Victor has saddled you wish as a gift. Be not the harbingers of death but the devotees of life. Tell the Windwalkers to flee, to perpetuate the belief that there are and will be no more in the East, for now.”
Vhalla would not let go of her secret dream that one day Windwalkers could study safely alongside other sorcerers.
“Spread this word to other Inquisitors who do not want to take children from their mothers. Do this and you will have earned your pardon.”
The Inquisitors looked from Aldrik to Vhalla, trying to decipher if she truly had the ability to make such a decree.
The Western man finally spoke. “At least if I am to die, then it would be as someone I can look in the mirror.” He stood. “If it would please our lord?”
Aldrik took a deep breath and gave Vhalla a look that she couldn’t quite decipher. His eyes were sad, but bright with passion. His shoulders were limp and heavy, but the corners of his mouth tugged upward ever so slightly in the smallest of smiles.
“It would please me greatly. As it is the first decree of your future Empress.”
CHAPTER 7
Vhalla would forever remember the reaction of the people in Paca to Aldrik’s announcement that Vhalla would be their future Empress. The people embracing her, celebrating her, replayed over in her mind during their ride out of the small town. It played over until a different nagging thought crept up from the back of her brain, until this new thought spoke so loudly that she had no other choice but to address it.
“I’m sorry,” Vhalla said guiltily. “For running off as I did towards the Inquisitors.”
Her four companions looked at her in surprise.
“You don’t need to apologize, Vhal,” Fritz said cheerfully.
Vhalla shook her head. “It was reckless of me, and it put you all at risk as well. I’ll be more careful in the future.”
“Well, be sure you do,” Elecia said in a haughty tone. Vhalla shared a small smile with the woman before she turned her focus back to the road.
“Vhalla,” Aldrik summoned her attention quietly. “I would also be careful about letting people know our movements.”
She thought a moment. “You mean saying we were headed to Hastan.”
“We’re fairly easy targets right now. The more people who know we’re alive, the more people who will be hunting us.”
“I’ll be more careful,” she vowed. Vhalla wouldn’t apologize again. Apologies meant nothing, and they weren’t going to help them. She simply had to be better than she had ever been before. It was a journey she had been on for some time now, and Vhalla was discovering that the path to being the person she wanted to be had no end point. That there