“The Vault
of the Arks of Kasora,” he said, as I looked into the room. “For you, now, and
for all those like you. They have awoken. The one you choose will open to your
touch, and it will follow your commands. You need not speak them. The stone
above will part to let you pass.”
Within the
room stood many hundreds of spheres, golden like the rainbow above the city.
They were a little taller than myself, and of course the same in any dimension.
Their surface was smooth, and had no fault or opening that I could see.
I believe I
began to understood, then. I kept
walking forward. “It will open for me, you say. But you could wake one of these
yourself.”
He nodded. “I
have been marked now, too. All those like you have.”
“You were
very long a soldier. I have been one only a few months. Surely you have been
marked more deeply than I.” I put out my palm when I reached the nearest one.
The shell of the sphere was surprisingly warm, like living flesh.
He shook his head. “It is not how deeply this
mark cuts you. That makes no sense, and would not matter in any case. It is how
often one is marked that matters. When you reach the ocean, you should
understand.”
‘The
ocean?” I asked, as I felt my mind reach out to the sphere’s sentience.
“Where the
River Kasora meets the ocean between the lands. It is where everyone has gone.
They should be only awaiting you, now. You were the last to wake.”
The surface
melded to my touch, and I understood that I could walk through its side, as
with a Well of the Profusion. “They’ll be waiting a while. It is three days by
ship to there, and all the valkyries were destroyed. And they were always the
fastest machines on land.”
“Yes,” said
Nogilian as I stepped through, “but the Arks of Kasora do not travel on the
land.”
From
within, the Ark was transparent, so that I could see all around it and myself
perfectly, and in every direction – though I saw from a reflection in another
Ark that mine remained solid and golden from outside. After a moment, four
areas glowed briefly, in the shape of hands and feet. I put mine to match, and
found myself standing with my legs and arms comfortably spread. I looked up,
and willed myself in that direction. I arose within the Arks at a sedate pace,
until I came to the next level. I willed myself through that floor, and the
next, faster, and learned that many of the vaults of Kasora had been emptied by
the centuries, and not refilled.
Soon I
burst forward into the light of day, and found that I did not remain at the
height of valkyries, as many Historians had proposed. Rather, I almost
immediately found myself above the city, flying past its highest spires and
whitened spirals. I climbed still higher. I met no resistance anywhere. All I
had to do was will myself upward, and the Ark went. I do not doubt I could have
gone as high as I had wished, breaking out of Thaeron’s atmosphere to scrape
the face of the Void. But terror soon caught me, and I returned to the greatest
altitude from which I absurdly guessed I could conceivably fall and live.
As I
cleared the city’s new walls it occurred to me that the speed of the Ark had
matched the intensity of my wish. When I was tentative, it went slowly. On a
whim, I looked thousands of paces downstream, to the place where the River
Kasora turned a bend and entered the canyons that took it through the Knife of
the World. And pushed.
Immediately,
I was there. I swear by the lingering grace of the Profusion that my passage
took no time. One instant, I was over the white ramparts of the new city – and
the next, I was staring down the narrow passage between two of the great rock
walls of the world, with the river’s black depths swirling beneath. The power these machines must have held.
I remembered, then, that the Arks of Kasora had
also once been weapons, and wondered what to do. It occurred to me that if I
steered by my intent, then the Ark must have some other use for my hands. I
moved my left hand against the transparent metal and pushed again – and an orb of energy such as that fired by artillery
seemed to flow out from it, then careened toward the water below. I remembered,
then, that I had feet, too, and kicked, and a small shell of Light burst out
from the Ark, and it scalded the rock of the canyon walls and made the river
water boil, but did not go half as far as the Light from Kasora’s towers had.