There was something on his face; hunger or grief, perhaps. She could not begin to understand an obsession with a woman he had never met, but his obsession was clearly beyond reason.
She beat a retreat back to the issue that truly concerned her.
âWhy tell me all this?â She asked. âI wanted my memories.â
He rose and, with a gesture, put the sheets over the murals again. The room seemed bland without them.
âI canât find Ovi,â he said. âYou are not her. But, I still want you to survive. So far, the greatest obstacle to that goal is you. You are rash and far more confident than you should be. You need less of that stupidity and more caution or youâll walk into something no one returns from.
âI showed you think so you would understand how little you know. I have a plan. If you stop disrupting it, you can live a nice, appropriately-long life. If you donât wish to do so, say so now and Iâll stop trying. Even I have limits to my generosity.â
She cocked her head. âDo these plans keep you from giving me back my memories?â
He hesitated, but eventually replied. âYes.â
She nodded. Perhaps he was lying. There was no sign of it, but who could read Eri?
âSo, you have a plan that is guaranteed to protect me, but requires you to keep me ignorant.â
He nodded, slightly apologetic. At least he saw the absurdity.
âI donât care about your plan,â she said. âI care about my life. For all I know, your father has better plans than you.â The smell of fire, still pressed into the back of her mind, tried to force its way forward again. âSo, you have one of two choices. You can return my memories and explain exactly and in convincing words how your plan works and why I should trust it. Or I can return all this energy youâve given me and die.â
Achi shut his eyes and bit his lip in frustration. He took deep, even breaths as if steadying himself. It took a long time. Aria counted ten breaths before he opened his eyes again.
âI recommend neither of those paths,â he said.
âI donât see why. They seem perfectly acceptable to me. Iâll count to ten.â
âYou are being incredibly foolish.â
âThen you should just let me die. One.â
âCan you even contemplate how much I know that you donât?â
âTwo.â
âIf I could share it, I obviously would.â
âThree.â
âStop it.â
âFour.â
âAria - â
âFiveâ
âOf all the stupid -â
âSixâ
âPeople I could choose to save - â
âSevenâ
âWhy did it have to be you?â
âEight.â
He glared at her, folded his arms, set his jaw, and waited.
âNineâ
Regret filled her. She did not know if she was making the right choice, but she knew that she was making the safest one. No major decision came without fear. You simply made the best choice you could with the information you had.
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
âTen.â She took a breath and steadied herself. âI hope you find Ovi.â
She had already found the store of energy she was drawing from. It shone to her mental vision like a ball of light located at the center of her perception. For a moment, she considered doing something spectacular with it. She could expend it on a giant wave, create an explosion that leveled the entire forest, or create a tunnel to the center of the earth.
But there was no need to create destruction. She simply let out the energy all at once like a powerful exhalation.
Disappointment met Aria first then disillusionment and, finally, anger. She was alive and therefore out of options.
Achi was lying on the beach, partially buried in sand. His legs stretched out into the ocean so that part of him was on land and the other in water. When a wave sped toward him, he did not move. He let it wash over him, momentarily burying his whole body and soaking his already wet clothes.
Her body was gone and, as far as she could tell, she was bound to him again.
She sighed. âYou tricked me.â
Achi blinked in surprise but composed himself a moment later. âWelcome back.â
There was more than a hint of sarcasm in the words but no other barbs followed them. He sounded tired. She inspected his body, finding herself more skilled at the task. There was no fever, but that could have been due to his chosen resting place. The only hint she had of illness was a general impression of weakness from him. He did not seem to be dying. He did not even seem particularly ill. What sort of poison could kill a god by causing only occasional fevers?
âWhat happened to my body?â She asked.
âMy body,â he said. âIt was a lot of work making it in the first place and a lot more work modifying it so that my father would not recognize it if he saw you in the future. I put it back. You can just live without a body. Every other ghost manages it.â
She did not know how to request it again. Clearly he would not return it.
âHow did you stop me?â
âBy using all the knowledge I have and you donât, the knowledge you seem to think so small that you can just barge into palaces and attempt suicide right in front me.â
Aria wanted to tear her hair out, but she had none. Perhaps there was a way to detach herself from him, but he would not be sharing that. She would have to discover it by herself.
âHow are you feeling?â
He seemed surprised by the question and that offended her. She was capable of basic kindness and showing it to someone who had her captive was commendable.
He muttered that he was fine - clearly a lie.
âYou should go back home,â he said. âIâm sure your father misses you.â
He looked even more surprised by that statement.
âNo,â he said, and she let the matter drop.
âWhat day is it?â She asked. With the middle realm lacking a sun, it was impossible to judge days with accuracy. It was bright enough to see, but that was all the hint she had.
âThe 23rd of Rawi.â
It had been ten days since the statue. âYour notes, in your bedroom, they say that youâll die on the 9th of Uya.â She waited for a response, but he said nothing. His face had grown somber at her words, however. She pressed on. âIs that true?â
âItâs none of your business.â
âYou want to help me, Achi? Then you should know that I hate being led around like a stupid animal. Tell me what I need to know and Iâll make intelligent decisions based on that. Keep me in the dark and Iâll just find my way around in ways that you donât like.â
âAlternatively,â he said. âYou could accept your ignorance and let me help.â
She mentally dismissed him. The argument was pointless. As usual, she would simply have to rely on herself.
When she remained silent, he seemed to grow worried. Finally, he sighed and spoke. âThat is the day the poison in my body will reach its maximum concentration. So, yes, that is when I will die. Assuming you donât poison me again.â
She decided to see if his openness would continue.
âWhy doesnât your father heal you?â The answer was obvious, but she wanted to hear his response.
âHe canât. Itâs beyond his ability.â
She waited to see if he would elaborate, but he did not. Another wave washed over him. He closed his eyes and mouth as it passed, somehow it seemed to relax him.
âYou said he could do anything when you were in danger.â
âNot this.â
âWhy not?â
He remained silent.
âIs there something I can do?â
He paused for too long. âYes,â he said, finally, voice so soft it could barely be heard above the waves. âYou can behave yourself. To protect you so far, I have lied to my father, stolen from him, and said cruel things to him. I am everything to him. Instead of comforting him, spending my last days with him, I am here hiding you. So, have whatever foolish thoughts you want but, when I am gone, try to have enough intelligence to keep yourself alive.â
I asked how to heal you.
His voice grew tiny. âAnd later, if you see him, if you can, take care of him.â
She had many colorful responses to that, but she kept them to herself. He was right that she was ignorant of many things. It meant something that such a powerful god could not heal his son. The odd behavior of his illness meant something. The very fact that he would die meant something. But this world was new to her. She wanted to save him, but she was no more capable of that than she was of defeating Tivelo.