The Ascent(88)



“The Godesh Ridge is a sacred place.” Shomas stood at the footof the bed, his hands folded behind his back. “Many years ago, our measures for ensuring it remained untouched by mankind were much more final than our current methods.” He raised one eyebrow to make sure I understood him correctly.

I nodded to express that I did.

“For various reasons, we have adapted to current conditions and now operate in the fashion you see now.” He spread his hands to indicate the room as well as the implements on the table with the velvet cloth. “Crossing the Godesh Ridge in search of the Canyon of Souls is no different than a foreigner setting foot in the Vatican only to relieve himself in the entranceway. It is a sign of disrespect for our culture and our beliefs.”

“I had no idea. It was never our intention to—”

“Intentions aside, our hidden lands have a way of protecting themselves. They do not show themselves to those they deem unworthy. Also, many are killed in such foolish pursuits—they become injured, stranded, lost, and without communication with the outside world. So we have developed a way to rescue these doomed souls and bring them back from the mountain. Despite our efforts, however, our success rate is quite slim. It is a difficult mountain to cross, and the rescue of individuals from the ridge poses innumerable difficulties. Still, you are among the lucky few.”

“I had a friend. John Petras. He was in a cave in the—”

“He, too, has been recovered.”

The word recovered did little to clarify my friend’s condition. “What exactly does that mean?”

“He is growing strong and healthy in this village, just as you are,” Shomas said.

My gaze wandered about the room, briefly lost in the flicker of countless candles. “And Andrew?” I heard myself say. “Andrew Trumbauer?”

“You and your friend hidden in the cave were the only two recovered from this mission.” Hands together, Shomas nodded in

my direction. “I am sorry. But you were warned.”

Like a phantom, Shomas drifted across the room. Just as he bowed his head in the doorway, I called to him. He paused and turned toward me, his face expressionless. His eyes glittered in the candlelight like embers sprung from a fire.

“I’ve seen the Canyon of Souls,” I said.

Shomas seemed to smile, but it was such a minute gesture I couldn’t be sure. “No,” he said quietly, “you only saw what the land let you see.”

3



THREE DAYS LATER. I WAS STRONG ENOUGH TO

venture out to the wooden hut where John Petras recuperated.

He smiled faintly from his bed in a room remarkably similar to mine. “How do I look?”

“The truth? Like you fell off a mountain. How’s your shoulder?”

“They bandaged me up pretty good, killed the infection. Your tourniquet saved my life.”

“Did they explain to you what happened? How we were saved?”

He nodded. A wave of pain or nausea must have stuck him then, because he closed his eyes and his nostrils flared with each exhalation.

I waited for the moment to pass.

Finally, when his eyes opened, they were glossy and soft. “Andrew? What—?”

“Andrew’s dead. This whole thing was a setup, a sick plot of revenge.” I was sitting in a wicker chair beside Petras’s bed. I rubbed my face and leaned one elbow on his mattress. “We were played. From the very beginning. All of us.” Across the room, I glimpsed Hannah’s image. But when I looked up, she was gone. It had most likely been a trick of the candlelight. “He wanted me dead because I let someone he loved die,” I said in one long, pent-up breath.

“Your wife,” he said, the inflection in his voice telling me this wasn’t a question.

“He loved her.” I smiled. My face went hot. “I did, too.”

“Was it your fault?” he asked.

I thought about it for a long time. “Some things were my fault,” I said finally. “Some of it. I tried to fix things, but I was too late. She went away and never came back. And I can either blame myself for the rest of my life and keep wandering by myself through dark caves waiting to disappear … or I can accept my role and move on. Anyway,” I said, glancing across the room to the darkened space where I thought I saw Hannah just a moment before, “I think she’s forgiven me.”

One of Petras’s hands slid from beneath the cheesecloth blanket to pat one of my own. He smiled wearily. He looked ancient, a hundred years old.

I cleared my throat and swiped away tears with the heel of one hand. “So why’d he bring you here? What’s your sin?”

“Honestly, I don’t know.” His weak, pained smile widened. Out of nowhere he reminded me of my father.

Ten minutes later, I was back out by the road watching the sun burn behind the mountains while the trees glowed like fiery ember. Shomas approached. He was dressed in a heavy woolen coat that hung past his knees. A wool cap was pulled low over his ears. “Your friend is feeling better?”

“He is, yes. Thank you.”

“You both will be leaving soon.”

“Right.” Behind him, I watched the sun continue to set. In less than a minute, it would be dark. “You haven’t asked me what happened up there. Why is that?”

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