Regenerated
By Carolyn Kephart
No one ever really got to know a rashak, and Cela had never made an
attempt. She patched them up and they paid her if they had money, giving
exactly what her services were worth, neither more nor less. However
much agony they might be in, they never showed it. Their flat wide-mouthed
saurian faces remained stonily impassive even when the pain ebbed, and
their gratitude was equally effusive.
Irksome though the rakasha were, Cela could not help being impressed
by at least some their traits. True, they were almost pathologically
inscrutable. Vowed to stern and unforgiving gods, they lived in continual
self-denial. They had no written language, little if any spirit of inquiry,
and more than a few disgusting habits. But none were better fighters,
formed for war and the hunt, tireless in strength and highly resistant
to wounds thanks to their massive, manlike physiques and scaly hide;
their uncannily keen senses and formidable stamina were legendary. Their
loyalty, when they chose to bestow it, was beyond question or reproach.
They were also never violent unless goaded, a trait which was not generally
known nor entirely believed by humankind, most of whom made every effort
to avoid them. Cela's lack of prejudice was atypical, and thus she and
Koth had met.
She had been out in the far hills one day, foraging for rare herbs
and enjoying the last of hot high summer, when she discovered a rashak
male finishing up a battle with a rout of drabbs, the vicious near-men
who roamed that lawless part of the land. Stupid and weak, drabbs never
hunted save in packs; yet for even four of them to consider themselves
the match for a rashak was a foolish, fatal error. Still, by the time
the last drabb fell, the rashak was covered in blood -- the almost black
blood of his race. As Cela watched, he dropped to his knees without
a sound save a slight hiss, and shut his eyes, his head bent, his great
shoulders drooping, his thick tapering tail motionlessly curled behind
him. Cela realized that he was either calling on his gods for strength,
or resigning himself to death. When she approached, he barely seemed
to notice her, save for a momentary flaring of his nostril-slits that
in a single breath determined that she was human and female -- and a
healer, from the aromatic herbs she carried. But then he drew another
breath and caught it, and his shoulders straightened and his eyes opened
very fast, fixing on hers. Startled by the stare, Cela controlled her
dislike of his reptilian features, looking away as she reached for her
satchel's clasp.
"I intend no harm. Permit me to aid you," she said to
him, speaking the formal tongue that united all the rashak tribes. She
knew only a few phrases, and spoke them badly -- there were gutturals
and clicks that she would never get right -- but still he understood,
and shook his head as he looked away.
"You should leave. Just go." He had replied in the common
tongue, rasping and hoarse but almost without accent, quite as if that
were his native language -- unusual, since rashaka usually bothered
to learn only the rudiments, and let gestures and grunts fill in for
the rest.
"Payment isn't necessary," Cela said with a touch of impatience,
knowing it could only be lack of money that made him refuse her help.
Warriors of his kind spent every copper they had on their gear, and
his was, she noted, of the highest quality, and rather more showy than
rashaka tended to favor. She did not say more, since it would be a waste
of words.
He hesitated yet again. "I need water. And food."
Cela was provided with both, and gave him what she had. As she set
about healing him, he ate and drank with undisguised greed that made
clear how long he had gone without, and why the drabbs had managed to
inflict such damage. Taking a little jar of salve from her satchel,
Cela anointed the rashak's lacerated skin -- or rather his scaly hard
hide, rough and cold under her fingers. Soon he was close to whole again,
and his powers of regrowth would do the rest.
"Good work," he said, glancing at his arm, that had been
cut to the bone. "I've seen few better."
"I thank my teachers," Cela replied, a little startled
by the extravagance of the compliment.
His opaque eyes scanned her with an attention that rashaka seldom
deigned to confer upon a mere human. "It hasn't made you rich."
Cela glanced down at her mannish near-rags with a shrug. It had
been a very long time since she had cared about her looks, but to hear
a rashak comment on them was ... strange. "That salve costs a fortune
to make," she said, staring at the now-empty little jar.
The information didn't seem to impress him. "I'm called Koth."
Rashaka never gave their names away lightly either, and at least
initially used the first four of them. "Greetings, Koth,"
Cela replied, looking hard at him now.
"Greetings, Lady Celandra. And thank you." At her wide-eyed
shock he gave the closest thing a rashak had to a smile. "You don't
recognize me." Standing with only a little difficulty now, moving
from corpse to corpse, with practiced brutality he wrenched off their
long greasy scalps, which were worth money. One of the drabbs wore a
jewel that had probably cost its original owner her life; this Koth
appropriated with a hard tug, snapping the chain. For some time the
rashak stared at the sunlit blue spark in his hard razor-nailed palm.
"Take it," he finally rasped, holding the gem out to Cela.
"You always said these were your favorites."
Cela's fingers closed around the jewel as her attention fixed on
Koth's flat face, and its stare so widely spaced that it seemed to look
clear past her.
"You used to tell me that my eyes were brighter," she
replied, fighting to keep her voice calm.
He inclined his head in a way she remembered from someplace far,
someplace deep in the past. "Yes. I said that."
She felt her grip on the gem loosen. "But -- I had thought
Transformation was a fraud."
"It exists." His opaque gaze flicked. "Hard to find,
costly to buy, and not easy to survive."
She remembered the rest of the hearsay, and spoke it dry-mouthed.
"Nor is there any going back. It cannot be reversed."
His broad, thick-muscled shoulders barely shrugged, and he made
no answer.
For a long time she could only stare at him, stunned by the change,
trying and failing to find the man she had loved. "But Jorgen ...
why?"
"The name is Koth." His thick-lidded eyes flashed coldly.
"Human flesh is weak in too many ways. I knew I could be stronger.
Much stronger."
Ah, but he was ugly -- that toad's head with its recessive planes
and mottled scales and wide, lipless mouth. Unable to make any form
of reply, Cela turned her full attention to putting her healing items
away, and finding a bit of leather lacing to hang the gem around her
neck. After a very long silence Koth spoke again.
"This place isn't safe for you." Another hesitation. "You
are alone."
Cela wanted to say that she had been alone since he had left her,
that she never dreamed they would meet again; that she was overjoyed,
furious, and appalled to the depths of her soul. But far too much had
changed, and she merely nodded a reply. For Koth, it was enough.
Since that time on they had been together, and from a strictly survival
viewpoint it worked very well. Koth put himself in continual danger,
and Cela coped with the consequences, across endless reaches of lucrative
terrain. Cela's memories merged into the present and momentarily fixed
on Koth, who continued to sit in the meditative trance that prefaced
every fight, communing with his adopted gods. She sighed, inwardly as
always. Over the month they had spent together, she had realized hour
by hour that whatever she once loved in Jorgen had burned to dust. The
present moment found them in yet another breathtaking landscape they
would only hunt in and hurry through, where in another time they would
have lain down in the sweet grass and ... she bit her lip lest the sigh
escape her as she turned away again, locking her attention elsewhere
until the murmur of Koth's reptilian blur startled her more than a scream.
"I'm sorry."
Her attention never wavered from the mists now hovering up from
the meadow beneath their safe spur of rock. She was required to keep
watch, sitting absolutely immobile, during Koth's period of meditation.
Silence was also expected, but this time she had to reply, whispering
through frozen lips.
"Sorry for what, Koth?"
She fought to keep her voice calm, and to quiet her heart that was
beating all but audibly. What she had waited so long to hear might be
on the point of being said.
He hissed faint irritated regret. "That dagger was a bargain.
I should have bought it."
Cela's emotions silently collapsed within her. Focusing again on the
lovely curling tendrils of opalescent mist in the gold-grassed, pond-dotted
valley below them, she noted those spirals that were most likely to
jet suddenly upward and twist themselves into translucent, delicate,
appallingly murderous gloamrippers. Night was coming on and several
of the monsters were now taking shape, elegantly slim and feral, seeking
to feed on whatever they might find, with a ravenous preference for
flesh. Once they were killed, which would take some time and considerable
risk, their hearts would fetch a high price. Automatically Cela forgot
how beautiful the creatures were.
"There," she whispered, barely indicating the now fully-formed
'rippers as she spoke. Koth stared where she pointed, blinked acknowledgment,
then rose and made his soundless half-slithering way down the hill to
the ponds without a single word or backward look.
Life was all about death, anymore.
"Seven hearts. Not bad."
To Koth's flat sibilant observation Cela nodded. Koth had been badly
damaged during the fight -- wounded almost to death, something Cela
never really got used to despite its frequency. Nevertheless, she had
yet again managed with all her skill to heal him, save this time for
a missing part of his tail; but it would grow back within a few days
and look the same as ever. The two were now camped and finishing the
evening meal. Koth was feeding on some fish that might have been fresh
a few days before, a chance find on the lake's margin. As Cela sat across
from him prudently upwind, washing her dried rations down with lukewarm
pond water and celebratory last swigs of sour wine, she once again reflected,
too tired for rancor, on the luxury that used to be a regular part of
her life, and how sweet that life had been once Jorgen had found his
way into it. But all fires died eventually. They blazed, they devoured,
they were satisfied and they died. What was left never looked anything
close to what it had been in life.
"Cold?"
Koth was actually looking at her. He seldom did, unless it was to
express the only emotion he seemed to possess in any degree, irritation.
Usually they sat well apart from each other, and Koth's gaze focused
someplace too distant for Cela to ever hope to find. His flat hooded
eyes in his lizard face were unreadable, as always, but he threw a handful
of branches on the fire and the flames leapt to warmer life.
"You were shivering. Can't have you catching a chill."
No, they could definitely not have that. If Cela fell sick, it would
decrease her effectiveness. With a half-shrug of thanks she finished
her meal, and then reassessed the days earnings with greater, less gain-related
attention. Gloamripper hearts were like jewels; once taken from the
body, they hardened and shone. Crowded in the palm of Cela's hand they
shimmered within, changing color from green to dawn-orange to gold.
She would have liked to keep one for its beauty, but that was out of
the question; they were simply too valuable. Koth would insist on an
even split of the proceeds of the sale, but Cela's wants were few and
she would inevitably give Koth most of her share, which he would accept
without protest, thanking her with his usual word or two.
Cela felt a small ironic smile lift her mouth-corners as she studied
the shimmering little lumps, dead flesh animated by a semblance of life.
Fires might blaze and die, but the light of the gems would never go
out; they were in their own way immortal.
She heard Koth's voice, a warning rasp. "Don't lose them."
Without replying, she returned the hearts to the pouch, and the
pouch to her inner pocket, and looked over to her companion, now re-settling
into meditation. Watching him, knowing she could do so completely unnoticed,
she permitted herself the futile indulgence of recalling the past.
It had been a very short time to her, that single year with Jorgen,
so sweet it had seemed as if all of existence was light caught in a
prism and refined to its purest. It had begun in the dead of winter,
a spark floating amid the snowflakes. The wars had just ended, and he
was a wounded hero; out of charity she had taken him into her house
and made him well again. Everything about them seemed to balance: a
lord's untimely widow, and the younger son of nobody; she studious and
retiring, he brash and heedless, brimming with charm. It was only natural
that she should fall deeply in love with him, and to her amazement he
had seemed to reciprocate in full. Never during their seeming infinity
of bliss had it ever occurred to Cela that she was part of Jorgen's
life only as an hour is to a day, and that she might be for the moment
noontide in all its warmth, but there had been a dawn before her, and
sunset was to come, and then another day, with fresh pleasures and adventures.
For her, time had stalled at a brilliant height, and the only things
that changed were her emotions, that shifted from shock, to rage, to
agony as Jorgen gradually sought fresh distractions, both carnal and
combative. When he had suddenly become fascinated with the sternly ascetic
way of the rashaka, Cela had almost been relieved. Never could she have
envisaged how far he would take that admiration.
He at last left entirely, and time for Cela became a long weary
walk down a blank corridor filled with fog. She had not been rich despite
her rank, and the gifts she had heaped on Jorgen, garnering the less
thanks the more she gave, had impoverished her. Forsaking the home that
now seemed unbearably empty, she wandered as an itinerant healer, aiding
and learning as she sought word of Jorgen. Although often in need, she
never asked payment, accepting whatever was given no matter how small
the amount; and unlike many healers she willingly helped all races,
from human as she was, to rashak, which was far from that. Thus she
and Jorgen had met again, only he wasn't Jorgen anymore. He was Koth,
whose blood would run cold until the day he died.
Perhaps the thing she missed most was the laughter. During the time
of fire, she and Jorgen had always joked, teased, traded wits, and so
often their play had led to passion. Made bold by the drink, she decided
to coax a spark. Reaching as his back was turned, she put her hand on
Koth's shoulder, lightly moving up his neck. He no longer had ears,
but she tickled the place one of them would have been, and called him
a few of the hundred little names she had once used with him.
He shook her off instantly, his voice a snapped hiss. "Stop
it."
The shock amazed her. The suddenness of it, the clear implication
that if she ever tried anything like that again, all would be over between
them ... she moved back to her place, staring into the faltering fire,
feeling her features stiffening to a mask as if she had thrust her face
into the flames. Rashaka only mated in a once-yearly obedience to instinct,
vent to vent. She'd been stupid yet again.
Wordlessly turning away, she began her usual preparations for sleep.
She knew that as she undressed and washed and performed her other necessary
tasks, Koth would be looking on with complete indifference if he bothered
to look at all. Her beauty, which she had taken pains to revive for
his sake, made no more impression on him than the sight of a corpse
many days dead. "Good night," she said once she had lain down,
her face to the stars, feeling the little sparks torment her eyes until
they blurred.
Usually Koth replied more or less at once, with no particular interest,
to Cela's words that always ended the day, but this time he was silent
awhile before his voice hissed in its hoarse undertone.
"Celandra. Just because I do not choose to remember never means
that I forget."
Had he struck her or said something tender, Cela could not have
been more shocked; yet as almost always, Koth's flat black eyes held
no emotion that she could read. The reflection of the campfire gleamed
in them, but they had no light of their own. Once again, he was merely
making a statement, and clearly neither wished nor expected an answer;
and he got none.
Sleepless, Cela at last looked across the waning flames at the immobile
form outlined by the darkness. Koth lay with his back to her, asleep
on the bare stone, his rasping breath slow and regular. His big manlike
body was perfectly muscled, its symmetries striking, and it would stay
that way long past the limit of a human lifetime, its vigor undiminished.
But what did Koth live for? The hunt and the kill and the loot; money
and weaponry and the honing of his fighting skills. He had allies, but
no friends, and no real kinship with his foster race. No beauty moved
him, nor horror. He ate the most loathsome refuse and the rarest delicacies
with equal indifference. It was not a life for a being fully human,
with warm deep feelings and gifts to give the world, capacities for
joy and wonder, and few years left to savor them. Since their reunion,
she had followed Koth wherever he led, trying to find any trace of Jorgen;
tonight she had given up the search. The night air's chill seemed to
emanate from her soul, and she trembled in her meager blanket.
Finally, she had told herself the truth. Tomorrow, after she and
Koth returned to the settlement and sold the gloamripper hearts, she
would quietly depart and find her way back to the city she had called
her home. He would perhaps search for her a day or so, maybe even make
inquiries, but that would be the extent of his concern. They would never
see each other again.
Reaching for the pouch that held the gloamripper hearts, Cela once again
poured them into her palm and watched their shifting exquisite glow.
Returning the hearts to the pouch all save one, she leaned to the fire
and dropped it into the center of the blaze, as a sacrifice to several
gods who so far had ignored her. Never before had she been so rash and
wasteful, but she was at last beyond caring. Then she quietly got up
and circled the waning flames that separated her from Koth, lying down
next to him as close as she dared, studying the rise and fall of his
broad muscle-laden shoulders and back in the last of the light.
"Goodbye, Jorgen," she whispered soundlessly. Emotions
of every kind mixed within her, canceling each other out, forming a
flat, numb weariness. Lightly she ran her hand over his unconscious
outline, tracing but not daring to touch...
With a movement too fast to even startle her, Koth rolled over and
caught her in his arms. He was still asleep, his eyes shut, but his
breath came fast. He clutched her body to his, grinding her tender flesh
against his stone-sharp scales.
All he wanted was her warmth. She knew that, and she gave him what
she had, fighting not to shiver as he drained her heat and made it his.
The only thing that mattered was that she was in his embrace for the
first time since he had left her as a human. Jorgen may have become
Koth, but when Cela shut her eyes and willed away the pain she felt
herself transmogrified, returned to a joy thought forever lost; and
as she felt herself thrill with the heat of remembrance, Koth wrapped
her ever closer, exactly as Jorgen had once done with his goddess, his
adored, his diamond star.
"I will leave you," she thought. But not yet, for reasons
he chose not to remember. Turning her head, she took a last look at
the ashes of the fire where the gloamripper heart gleamed and shimmered
like the miracle it was, and fell asleep.