Bücher online kostenlos Kostenlos Online Lesen
The Pillars Of The World

The Pillars Of The World

Titel: The Pillars Of The World Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Anne Bishop
Vom Netzwerk:
Veil, he obeyed.
    I’ll find a way to let him go. I’ll find someone to take my place for him. He’s too young to be given to Death simply because he’s inconvenient. Just like . . .
    Morag’s lips thinned to a grim line. The dark horse was the least of her problems at the moment.
    At least the Lightbringer and the Huntress were aware of the danger to Tir Alainn. At least they didn’t scoff and refuse to listen. At least they’d said they wanted to protect the witches. But she’d sensed the undercurrents swirling in the room. She hadn’t understood them . . . until Dianna had asked her to gather a particular spirit and show it the road to the Shadowed Veil.
    Neall. The young man Ari loved. The man Dianna wanted eliminated so that Ari would stay at Brightwood. The man who had bought a dark horse from Ahern.
    Very soon she would have to make a decision about Neall. But there was a visit to be made first.
    When she got to the hill where the wind always blew, she left the dark horse at the bottom of the hill and climbed to the top. She walked over to the ghost, sat down beside her.
    They sat in comfortable silence for several minutes. Then the ghost said, “The wind from the north carries much sorrow.”
    “Yes,” Morag said softly.
    “There are warnings whispered. A violent storm has come to Sylvalan, a storm that rejoices in the Daughters’ pain. They must flee the Old Places and hide before it strikes them.”
    Daughters ? Morag wondered. But she asked a different question. “Did none of Death’s Servants come to show you the road to the Shadowed Veil and the Summerland beyond it?”
    “One rode this way,” the ghost said. “She took my daughter with her. I chose to stay for a while.”
    “Why?”
    “Because of Ari. I wanted to know that she was going with Neall, that she had the strength to leave duty and choose a life that would nourish her heart.”
    Morag shifted uneasily. “You want her to leave with him? You approve of Neall?”
    “Oh, yes.” The ghost smiled. “He’s a fine young man. With him, my granddaughter will have a richer life than she could ever have here.”
    “If she leaves here,” Morag said carefully, “the road through the Veil will close and a piece of Tir Alainn will be lost. The Fae need her to stay.”
    The ghost’s smile turned brittle and bitter. “The Fae are very good at knowing what they want. They’re also very good at having someone else shoulder the burden in order for them to have what they want.
    They may want Ari to stay, but they don’t need her to stay. The Fae can hold the shining road.”
    “Then why haven’t we?”
    “Because you had us to do it for you.” She paused for a long time. Then, “Tir Alainn was meant to be a sanctuary, a place to rest and renew body and spirit. But the Fae found life in a land that required little toil was more to their liking than a world where the rose and beetle both reside. They lived above the world like creatures who live in the branches of a tree and touch the ground only to play—or when they see something they want. But they forgot that without the roots the tree cannot survive.”
    “And you are the roots?”
    The ghost looked out over the land. “The Fae are the Mother’s Children. But we are the Daughters. We are the Pillars of the World.”
    Morag shook her head. “I don’t understand.”
    “Don’t you? The answers are in plain sight, if you choose to look for them.”
    This is why I never converse with the ghosts of old women , Morag thought irritably. They no longer need plain speaking, so they adore riddles .
    “What makes Neall so special that you would have Ari leave the land and home your family has held for generations?” Morag asked.
    “He can give her more than trinkets,” the ghost replied sharply. She was silent for a moment. “If the Fae here did persuade Ari to stay in order to keep hold of their part of Tir Alainn, would they live here with her, day after day, from season to season? Would they accept the disappointments as well as the joys of living in this world? Or would they fawn over her until Neall finally left without her? And once he left, how long would it be before they stopped visiting because it was no longer necessary?”
    Morag brushed some dirt off her boot. “You’re very bitter about us, aren’t you?”
    “I have read my family’s history. I have reason to feel bitter.” The ghost sighed. “And I know that the fault doesn’t lie just with the Fae.

Weitere Kostenlose Bücher