 
Issue #154 • Aug. 14, 2014
“The Angel Azrael Delivers Justice to the People of
the Dust,” by Peter Darbyshire
“Make No Promises,” by Stephen V. Ramey
For more stories and Audio Fiction Podcasts, visit
 
Beneath Ceaseless Skies Issue #154
THE ANGEL AZRAEL DELIVERS JUSTICE TO
THE PEOPLE OF THE DUST
by Peter Darbyshire
The angel Azrael rode through the dust storm for three
days. He figured it to be three days, anyway. It was hard to tell 
for certain, because the storm turned what little of the world he 
could see into night, and then into nothing at all. He closed his 
eyes and let his dead horse take him where it would.
Sometimes he heard voices crying out in the storm, but he
wasn’t sure if they were a trick of the wind or his conscience.
He couldn’t understand what they were saying regardless, so he 
figured it best to pay them no heed. He wrapped himself tighter 
in his coat, more to protect the guns around his waist from the 
elements   than   anything   else.   That’s   what   he   told   himself, 
anyway.
He had to stop every now and then to tighten the saddle
around what was left of the horse. The storm scoured chunks of 
its   rotting   flesh   away,   and   the   saddle   kept   slipping.   Soon 
there’d be nothing left of the horse but bone. Sure, he could 
raise   another   horse   from   the   dead   that   would   be   more 
comfortable, just like he’d raised this one. But he had been
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through   a   lot   with   this   horse.   Too   much,   when   he   thought 
about it. Like the events in the last town, which he’d ridden all 
the way out here to forget.
He’d seen the storm coming across the scrubland, but he
hadn’t tried to avoid it. Azrael wanted to get lost. He wanted to 
put the world behind him and come out the other side of the 
storm somewhere else. He wanted to find a land with no more 
churches, no more people, no more Fallen. He was weary of it 
all. He was weary of himself.
But when he eventually emerged from the dust, into the
burning sun of noon, he found the same old world still there.
The horse was following a worn road Azrael hadn’t seen in
the   storm.   It   went   past   a   farmhouse   off   to   one   side   and 
disappeared into the horizon. Azrael could make out the spire 
of a church shimmering at the vanishing point, like a mirage. It 
wasn’t what he wanted to see, but he didn’t turn around. There 
wasn’t anything better the way he had come.
Azrael nudged the horse toward the farmhouse. He’d spied
a pump in the yard, and he was thirstier than usual after three 
days of drinking nothing but dust.
He studied the place as he rode. It looked to be in danger
of falling in on itself, and there were two wooden crosses
planted in the ground to one side.
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When he got off the horse by the pump, a woman holding
a shotgun stepped out onto the porch. She held it like she knew
how to hold all manner of guns.
The buzzards that followed him everywhere came out of
the sun then, circling overhead. He thought maybe they’d lost 
him in the dust storm, but it appeared they weren’t about to let 
a provider like him get away.
“You here to deliver us or damn us even more?” the
woman asked.
Azrael hadn’t thought anybody would have been able to
make out what was left of his wings under all the dirt. Hardly 
anything of them remained now.
“I’m not that kind of angel,” he said.
“Well, what kind are you then?” she asked.
“The thirsty kind,” he said, nodding at the pump.
She didn’t shoot him, so he took that for an invitation to 
drink. He pumped for a spell, until a trickle of water came out. 
He lowered his mouth to it and drank. It was the first time he’d 
had   water   in   longer  than   he   could   remember.   After  all  this 
time, it was almost as good as whiskey. Almost.
When he was done, he straightened back up and saw a
man standing behind the woman. As old and weather-beaten as
she was. He stared at Azrael, but his eyes were glazed white, so
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Azrael imagined the old man didn’t see him. If he saw anything 
at all.
Azrael looked around the farmyard once more. When he
settled his eyes on the barn, he caught the woman raising the
gun a little more, trying to take aim without alerting him to it.
“Why don’t you keep on riding,” she said.
Azrael could have drawn and shot her down before she
even thought about pulling the shotgun’s trigger. In the old
days, he would have blown the doors to the barn open with a 
gesture and razed the entire farm with a few words. But he was 
tired of the old days.
He got back on the horse. “I don’t have any money,” he
said, nodding at the pump.
“Who does?” she said.
“I’ll say a prayer for you,” he said.
She laughed at that. “I ain’t yet seen a soul living or dead 
that prayer’s helped.”
Azrael rode on without saying anything else, because there
was nothing to say to that.
* * *
Azrael followed the road toward the church because there
was nowhere else to go. Nothing but wasteland to either side of
him and damnation behind him. It was the way of the world as 
usual.
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The church solidified out of the day as he rode, rising up
into the sky. Buildings grew out of the ground around it. He
couldn’t tell if it was the beginnings of a town or the end of one. 
There often wasn’t much difference between the two out here.
He passed a couple of wagons abandoned in the middle of
the road. Both had bloody handprints smeared down the sides,
as if someone had been dragged away but hadn’t been willing 
to let go. But then he knew from experience no one ever wanted 
to let go when it was time.
He didn’t see another living soul until he rode into the
town.   The   main   street   was   full   of   dancing   people.   Like   a 
drunken mob, only they were throwing curtsies and bows to 
each other instead of punches and kicks. Men and women in 
their Sunday night finery. Toasting each other with bottles and 
glasses in their hands, and then toasting him when he reined in 
the horse at the edge of their party looking for a place to get a 
drink himself.
He didn’t understand their words. It was a tongue he’d
never heard, and he knew as many tongues as the world had 
forgotten. It sounded as if they were talking around mouthfuls 
of   dirt.   He   nodded   at   them   anyway,   and   they   didn’t   seem 
offended by his silence. A man in a black suit pressed a bottle 
of whiskey into his hands, and a woman in a black dress ran a 
hand up his leg and patted his belt buckle before spinning away 
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with   a   wink,   into   the   arms   of   a   man   in   a   high   hat   and 
spectacles. Some things didn’t need words.
Azrael glanced up again at the sun to make sure it was still
there and he hadn’t somehow ridden into the night without
noticing. The middle of the day wasn’t the usual celebration 
time for mortals. But they were a long way from anywhere out 
here, and the farther people got from civilization, the more they 
tended to make up their own rules.
He took a long drink from the bottle. It burned in all the
ways he desired. He went to hand it back, but the man had
already wandered back into the crowd and rejoined the dance.
The music was supplied by a handful of folks scattered
throughout the merriment. A man in clean and pressed pants 
and shirt played banjo while riding the shoulders of a woman 
wearing a purple dress. Another man sat on the front step of 
what looked like the general store and bashed on pots and pans 
with a wooden spoon. Someone Azrael couldn’t see blew on a 
harmonica. Together they managed some sort of dancing tune, 
even though none of them were watching each other as far as 
Azrael could tell.
And then there was the singing. At least Azrael thought it
was singing. The men and women were all bellowing
something that had the makings of a song, but it was just as 
incomprehensible as the rest of the things they said.
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He took another pull from the bottle and noted that the
church in the centre of the town was empty, its doors hanging
open.   The   structure   occupied   the   only   hill   in   sight,   which 
should have made it a natural gathering place, but it looked as 
if it hadn’t been used in some time.
When he looked back down, he noticed the children in the
crowd.   Standing   here   and   there,   where   they   wouldn’t   get 
trampled   by   the   dancers.   A   couple   of   girls   holding   hands 
behind a watering trough, one of them clutching a doll to her 
chest. A boy sitting on a hitching rail. Another couple of boys 
on the roof of a shed beside the store. They all watched the 
proceedings with expressions that didn’t say anything. That in 
itself signified something.
Azrael nudged his horse around the edge of the crowd,
trying to steer clear of their celebration. He didn’t know what 
cause   they   had   for   celebrating,   and   he   didn’t   care.   He   just 
wanted to find a quiet place in the town to kill the rest of the 
bottle and maybe acquire a few more bottles for the road.
But the townsfolk wouldn’t let him go. They pressed in
around him, grabbing him and trying to pull him down to join
their dance. They were packed so tight, the horse couldn’t move 
through them. Instead, it was pulled deeper  into the crowd. 
They   were   leading   him   somewhere,   but   Azrael   wasn’t   sure 
where.
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Before he could ascertain what mischief the townsfolk
were up to, the skeletons attacked.
They came the same way he’d come, rushing out of the
wasteland and into the town like some stray memories that had
finally caught up to him. They were human in shape, but he 
knew from his first glance their way that they hadn’t ever been 
human. The bones of these creatures were thicker and longer 
than   human   bones,   and   they   had   hooks   and   spurs   that   no 
human had ever sported.
Moreover, none of them looked alike. Some were the same
rough shape and size as regular folk, but others were stunted 
and hunched over. A couple were lopsided, with one leg longer 
than   the   other.   Some   had   full   ribcages   while   others   had   a 
jumble of misshapen bones holding them together. It was as if 
they’d been assembled into the shapes of humans using bones 
that had never belonged to anything human. But they carried 
the tools of humans: pitchforks and axes and shovels.
Azrael turned to watch and put his hands on his guns, one
forged from the unnatural metals of Hell, the other ripped from 
the   grasp  of  a  particularly  troublesome   ghost.   But  he   didn’t 
interfere. He’d learned too many times about getting involved 
in the quarrels of others.
The skeletons went for the children. They rampaged
through the crowd, shoving the dancers out of their way,
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stabbing and hacking at them with their weapons or slashing 
and snapping at them with their unnatural claws and teeth. A 
couple of the dancers went down, their blood soaking into the 
parched   ground.   But   the   other   townsfolk   fought   back, 
punching and kicking and swarming the skeletons, all the while 
continuing to sing their song and take long pulls from their 
bottles.   The   musicians   kept   on   playing,   although   the   banjo 
player swung his instrument down on the head of one of the 
skeletons like an axe. Azrael had seen stranger scenes, but not 
many.
The people of the town managed to keep the skeletons
away from the shed with the boys on the roof, but they couldn’t
stop them from grabbing the girls at the watering trough or the 
boy sitting on the hitching post. The skeletons dragged them 
free of the crowd, back toward the edge of the town and the 
way they’d come.
Azrael went to take another drink but found the bottle
empty already. He sighed and tossed the bottle aside, using the
same motion to draw the ghost gun. He just couldn’t help his 
nature.
He wasn’t sure what manner of entities these skeletons
were, but the ghost gun had always served him well against the
spectral and the things most people called undead. He fired off 
a   couple   of   shots,   and   because   he   had   an   angel’s   eye,   they 
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found   their   marks   through   the   mayhem   of   the   crowd.   The 
skeletons  dragging  away   the   girls blew  apart,   showering  the 
scene with dust. The bones lay where they fell, finally dead.
The other skeletons clustered around the boy as they
dragged him away. Azrael sighted in on the mass of them but 
then   lowered   his   gun.   It   wasn’t   for   fear   of   hitting   the   boy, 
although that was a cause for concern. The ghost gun’s shells 
were   crafted   for   the   spectral,   and   they   did   terrible   things 
indeed to the living. But the real reason he didn’t shoot was 
because there was something wrong about this scene.
Before he disappeared into their midst, the boy hadn’t
fought the skeletons. Neither had the girls. The adults and the
dead seemed to be the only ones inclined toward violence here. 
But the girls didn’t look too relieved to be snatched from the 
hands of the dead by the living either. They just watched the 
skeletons head back out of town with their prize. They lifted 
their   hands   like   they   were   thinking   about   waving,   but   the 
townsfolk holding them just slapped their hands down.
No one made any move to pursue the skeletons, including
Azrael. He noted the way those bone creatures clustered
around   the   boy   as   they   spirited   him   away.   Like   they   were 
protecting him.
Now the townsfolk carried the girls past Azrael, in the
other direction from the way the skeletons had come. They
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grabbed the boys off the roof of the shed as well, who looked 
about as happy at their situation as the girls did at theirs. They 
all went the way the dancers had been trying to force Azrael.
They left Azrael alone now. A few of the townsfolk looked
at him as they passed, but none of them so much as nodded a 
thank-you. They just kept on babbling to each other in their 
strange tongue as they dragged the children down the street. 
The only one who spoke anything comprehensible was one of 
the girls he’d rescued, the one holding the doll. She turned her 
head to look up at him as the woman who’d felt his leg carried 
her past, holding her under one arm.
“You should have let them take us,” the girl said.
And then the townsfolk went down the street and
disappeared around the other side of the hill, leaving Azrael
alone on his dead horse except for the shattered bones lying in 
the dust.
He considered things for a while, then got off the horse
and went inside the building that looked like it had the best
shot of being a bar. He needed a drink more than ever.
* * *
The day was falling into night when Azrael finally
staggered out of the bar. The street was just as empty as when
he’d walked inside. His horse was still there, waiting for him. It
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didn’t look like it had moved. It probably hadn’t. The buzzards 
had settled on the church steeple to wait for him.
He thought about getting back on his horse and riding out
of here. It would have been the easy thing to do. But he
couldn’t get the little girl’s words out of his head.
He sighed and made his way up the hill to the church. He
reloaded   the   ghost  gun  as  he   went.   He   wondered   what   had 
become of the boy. He knew he’d failed him and the girl, but he 
didn’t know how he’d failed them.
Nothing new there.
The inside of the church was a ruin. There were only
shards of wood left where there’d once been pews. He figured
they’d been broken up and used for firewood, as there was a 
burn mark on the wall where a cross would normally hang and 
the floor underneath it was charred, as if someone had lit a 
bonfire   there.   The   missing   bibles   had   probably   been   the 
kindling.
It didn’t matter. He hadn’t come up here for solace. He
just wanted the high ground.
He could still hear the townsfolk singing that damned
song, although it was as faint as words on the wind now. He 
went   back   outside   and   looked   around,   but   he   couldn’t   see 
anyone. He climbed up the side of the church and pulled
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himself up the spire for a better view. The buzzards took wing 
and disappeared into the fading sky.
The road ended around the other side of the hill, at a hole
in the ground shored up with timbers and lined with torches. A
mine shaft. Azrael couldn’t see anyone in the entrance, but the 
strange song of the townsfolk drifted up to him, along with the 
sounds   of   a   girl   crying.   And   the   steady   noises   of   pick   axes 
striking rock.
Then the sounds of the digging stopped, as did the
weeping of the girl. But the singing didn’t. It grew even louder.
And then there was a sound he’d only heard once before. When 
he’d fallen from Heaven. The sound of him being ripped from 
his rightful place and cast down here.
He felt a wind on his face, originating from inside the
mine. A few seconds later, a geyser of dust erupted from its 
entrance, billowing out into the night. Azrael hung on to the 
church spire and waited to see what came out next.
But it was just the residents of the town again. They came
up  out of  the   earth  singing   and   dancing  some   more.  Azrael 
thought maybe they had done something to the children down 
there,  perhaps  spilled  their  blood  in  the  mine,  but  the  little 
boys and girls were dancing and singing along with the rest of 
them. Holding the hands of the adults and speaking in that 
strange tongue.
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None of them looked up at Azrael on the spire. They just
danced their way back to the town and continued on with their
festivities. Celebrating whatever it was they were celebrating.
Azrael still didn’t move. He had all of eternity to wait. And
after a time, something else came out of the mine.
More of the skeleton creatures. Four of them. They looked
just as misshapen as the others, as if they had been assembled 
from random bones. They had the same hooks and spurs as did 
the ones that had attacked the town. But these bone creatures 
were smaller and moved more tentatively than the others. Like 
children. They looked at the town for a moment, and then crept 
out   into   the   night.   They   headed   across   the   scrub   in   the 
direction of the farm where Azrael had stopped for water.
Then he was falling once again, as the spire snapped under
his weight, and darkness claimed him.
* * *
He woke to find a handful of people from the town
carrying him into the mine, including the man wearing the
spectacles and hat. The fall from the church would have killed 
an   ordinary   man,   but   Azrael   was   an   angel,   so   it   had   only 
stunned him for a time. Besides, it wasn’t the first time he’d 
fallen.
He could have torn himself from their grasp and gone for
his guns, but he wanted to see where they were taking him.
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There was something going on here. He’d encountered many 
an   abomination   before  in   underworlds but  not  usually  right 
underneath a town. Then again, the people of this particular 
community weren’t like most townsfolk.
The tunnel went straight down for a spell, then began to
twist and turn. The walls were scored with the marks of pick
axes everywhere, and rocks and piles of dirt lined the sides of 
the   tunnel.   After   a   few   more   minutes   of   descent,   further 
tunnels began to branch off the main one, disappearing into 
the darkness. Only the main tunnel was lit by torches, though, 
and the group carrying Azrael remained on that path.
Azrael received his answer when they came across the
bones. Bits of them scattered across the ground. The men and 
women carrying him took care to step over them. Then they 
passed   a   few   larger   spiky   bones   just   lying   there,   as   if   the 
skeletons that had emerged from the tunnel had forgotten to 
include these bones in their unnatural bodies.
And then the tunnel ended before them in a wall of bone.
Skeletons   were   embedded   in   the   earth   in   a   mess   of   grand 
proportions. They were jumbled together, as if they’d all been 
killed and broken apart and then tossed in a pile and buried. 
Maybe   they   had,   Azrael   mused,   but   now   they   were   being 
unburied.  The   pick   axes he’d   heard   leaned  against   the   wall, 
amid piles of freshly chipped rock and clods of dirt. A couple of 
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skeletal arms hung out of the wall nearby, as if reaching for the 
tools to dig themselves out. More of those hooks and spurs on 
them. And there were more bone pieces scattered everywhere 
here, covering the ground like ash in a fire. And dust. The dust 
was everywhere.
But it hadn’t covered the doll yet. It lay amid the bones,
half-buried. Azrael looked at it for a moment, then back at the 
skeletal wall. He’d seen a lot of the dead in his time, but he 
didn’t recognize any of these remains. They looked ancient, like 
they’d been down here for millennia. They looked older than 
him.
The townsfolk dropped him to the ground, so he figured
that was as good a time as any to stand up and draw his guns.
“I don’t know what your particular superstition is,” he
said, “but the sun has set on it now.”
They didn’t show any signs of understanding him, which
didn’t surprise him any. Instead, they just grinned at him like 
they were the ones holding the guns, not him. Then the man 
wearing the spectacles and hat reached out and took hold of 
one of those arms jutting from the wall. He snapped it free of 
the wall, like he was breaking a twig from a tree.
A cloud of dust erupted from the bone, as dark as the night
in the unlit tunnels they’d passed. It engulfed Azrael, flowing 
into his mouth and nose, grinding against his skin. He could 
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feel something residing within it. Not a soul, not exactly what 
he’d   call   life.   But   whatever   had   once   animated   these   bones 
wasn’t fully dead yet. And now Azrael understood.
The townsfolk weren’t the townsfolk anymore. They’d been
taken by whatever ancient beings were trapped in these bones 
buried deep in the earth, forgotten until the miners had dug 
down here and discovered them.
But Azrael was no mere mortal to be possessed by spirits
lost to time. He was one of the Fallen, who were few in number 
but made up for it in destruction and despair. He let the form 
he took these days slip just a little for a second, so the bone 
spirit could glimpse his true nature. It abandoned its attempts 
to seize him. The dust swirled away, forming into a whirlwind 
that howled its way back up the mine shaft and out into the 
night. It left the others coughing in its wake, stumbling away 
from Azrael.
He didn’t let them escape. He delivered wrath and
judgment upon them with his guns, and they fell amid the
bones. The  wind   blew  away   to   nothing,   and  the  dust  it  had 
disturbed drifted back down to cover the ground once more. He 
couldn’t see the doll at all now.
Azrael reloaded his guns and headed back to the surface.
He needed another bottle, but that was going to have to wait.
* * *
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Azrael emerged from the mine into the continuing party in
the street. He didn’t know why all the townsfolk hadn’t
accompanied the others into the mine with him, like they had 
with the children. Maybe  it was because he was an outsider 
here, or maybe it was because he was an angel. Or maybe it was 
because they were too busy celebrating the additions to their 
dance,  the   children  who   had   come   up  out  of  the   mine.   But 
Azrael knew these children were children no longer.
The closest townsfolk turned to welcome him, reaching out
their arms for an embrace, but then they paused when they saw
it was him and not whoever or whatever it  was they’d  been 
expecting.
He shot them down and opened up a path to his horse. The
girl who’d been holding the doll earlier came at him. She didn’t
seem to be missing her doll at all now. He shot her down too, 
plus a few more of the dancers in his way. Then he rode out of 
town before they could swarm him.
At the abandoned wagons in the road, he encountered the
old woman from the farm. She was running, dragging the man 
with the white eyes behind her. They appeared to have run the 
entire distance from the farm to the wagons. Or at least she had 
run. She was without shoes, and her feet were bloody. But the 
old man looked to be in worse shape, given he was more or less 
lying on the ground, with her hauling him along by the collar. 
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His pants and the back of his shirt were torn, and his blood 
streaked the ground behind them.
Azrael stopped to warn her, but then saw from the way she
looked at him that she wasn’t the same person anymore. Her
eyes just moved over him, like he was so much air. She was 
humming a tune. The song the dancers had started up again, 
behind him.
Azrael looked at the empty road behind her. Now he knew
where the entity in the whirlwind of dust had gone. He put a 
bullet from each gun into her, one in the head and one in the 
heart,   and   left   her   for   the   man   to   bury   if   he   wished.   The 
buzzards had enough sense to leave her alone as he rode on.
* * *
The sun was easing into the sky by the time Azrael reached
the farm. The door to the farmhouse hung open, but he didn’t 
bother looking inside. Instead, he went straight to the barn. He 
pulled   the   doors   open   with   his   hands   and   looked   into   the 
gloom on the other side.
The barn was full of skeletons. It was the mob of them that
had attacked the town. Although he knew now that they had
actually been trying to save the children. Fifty, maybe sixty of 
them. About the same as the number of townsfolk. They turned 
to   look   at   him   as   he   stood   there,   and   then   they   grabbed 
whatever   they   could   off   the   ground.   Pitchforks   and   axes,   a 
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couple of shovels, a few lengths of wood. The ones that didn’t 
have any weapons hung back, clustering around the children 
who’d been sleeping on piles of hay in the middle of the room 
until Azrael had intruded. A couple of boys and three girls. And 
the smaller tentative skeletons that had crept out of the mine 
the night before.
He drew his guns but he didn’t fire.
“How many more children are there?” he asked.
For a few seconds, none of them moved. The skeletons
didn’t speak, but he didn’t expect them to. Then one of the boys
got up and stepped forward. The one these bone creatures had 
dragged away, when he’d first ridden into the town.
“There’s just us,” he said. He looked at Azrael in a way that
said he didn’t seem to be any happier here than he had been in
the town. “The dust people got the rest of them.”
Azrael nodded at that. He didn’t know what the things
buried in the earth were, but “dust people” seemed as good a 
name as any.
“These are the people from the town,” Azrael said, looking
around at all the skeletons, and the boy nodded back at him.
“They’ve taken pretty much everyone,” the boy said. “They
got the lady in the farmhouse during the night.” He didn’t say
anything about the old man, but he didn’t have to.
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“Which one of these are your kin?” Azrael asked, studying
the skeletons. They weren’t advancing, but they weren’t letting
down their guard either.
“I ain’t got no kin left,” the boy said. He brushed some
straw from his clothing. “You shot them down when everyone 
came to rescue us the other night.”
Azrael dropped his guns back in their holsters. He
understood what had happened, even if he didn’t quite
understand  how. The  people  of the  town  had  unearthed  the 
dust people, and the dust people had repaid them for the favor 
by   possessing   their   bodies.   But  they  hadn’t   just   taken   them 
over. They’d switched places with them. So the people of the 
town now inhabited the bones, and they’d somehow managed 
to   cobble   together   their   skeletal   bodies   out   of   those   bones. 
Maybe  there  was a  way to  reverse  the  whole  process, but if 
there was, Azrael didn’t know it.
“You should keep moving,” he told the boy. “Get as far
away from this place as you can, and maybe those dust people
will forget you were ever alive.”
The boy looked past him, at the world outside. “Some of
the last people tried that a few days back,” he said. “The dust 
people sent a storm after them and brought them all back.”
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Azrael thought again about the storm he’d ridden through
to find himself in this place. The cries he’d heard. The
abandoned wagons on the road.
“I seen all the bones,” the boy said. “I snuck into the mine
one night. There’s too many dust people. There’s not enough of 
us in the town for all of them.”
Azrael looked away from the skeletons. The boy was right.
There were many more of the dead still waiting down in that
mine. Who knew how many? Maybe just a town’s worth. But 
maybe more. “I can’t help you if you stay here,” Azrael said, 
turning and walking back to his horse. “But if you come with 
me I might be able to protect you.” He had an idea. He wasn’t 
sure if it would work or not, but he had to do something.
The children and the skeletons followed him out of the
barn, looking in all directions for signs of the dust people.
“Where are you going?” the boy asked, standing in the
doorway.
“Back to the town,” Azrael said, and the buzzards took
wing from the roof of the barn.
* * *
Azrael rode back into the town, followed by the skeletons.
They still carried their weapons, and they trailed behind him,
but  they came.  The   ones  who  weren’t  holding farm  tools or 
improvised   clubs   carried   the   children   in   their   arms.   The 
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children didn’t  say anything,  just clung tight to the  racks of 
bone.
When they passed the abandoned wagons in the road,
there was no sign of the woman he’d shot down or the man
with the white eyes. Azrael couldn’t give it any more thought.
The people in the town didn’t falter in their dancing until
Azrael rode into their midst. They reached out to him, as if to 
welcome him back. But then they stopped when the skeletons 
came into sight and halted at the edge of town. The two groups 
eyed each other, and the song died away, replaced by the sound 
of the wind blowing down the street from the direction of the 
mine.
Azrael shot down the man with the banjo and a woman
holding a bottle of whiskey in either hand. They had more than
enough numbers to take him down if they so desired, but he 
imagined   from   everything   that   had   taken   place   that   they 
desired even more to live. He was right, as they scrambled to 
get out of his way, leaving the dead man and woman lying in 
the dirt.
Azrael rode down the street to the mine, leaving the
skeletons and children behind. But not the dust people. They 
followed him, and now they pulled out knives and guns. They 
were too late, if his idea worked. If not, well, it wouldn’t be the 
first time one of his gambles hadn’t paid off.
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He got down from the horse at the mine entrance, but he
didn’t go down that tunnel again. Instead, he stopped there and
shook his wrists a little, loosening up. It had been a while since 
he’d done what he was about to try. The dust people nearest 
him   stepped   back   a   little,   as  if   they   thought   he   was   getting 
ready to open up on them  again. But he holstered  the guns 
instead. And then he slammed his hands together and said the 
words   in   the   forbidden   tongue   that   he   hadn’t   uttered   in 
centuries. He wasn’t sure if they’d still mean anything or not.
They did. The air itself rent open before him, splitting with
the force of the power that flew from his hands to the mine. 
The walls of the tunnel exploded, earth and rock and wooden 
support beams erupting and crashing into each other. A giant 
cloud of dust billowed out, engulfing him and everyone behind 
him, but it was just dust.
Azrael uttered a few more words that were damnation to
hear and slammed his hands into the ground. He heard the 
ceiling of the tunnel collapse, and felt the earth tremble under 
his feet. He stood back up as the dust settled around them all. 
He surveyed his work. The entrance to the mine was so much 
rubble now, the tunnel collapsed. The dead were buried again. 
He bowed his head for a moment, feeling the exhaustion all the 
way in his bones. He was glad that had worked, that the words 
still had power, because he didn’t have another plan. He’d been 
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working on faith he didn’t know he still had. Or maybe didn’t 
want to admit he still had.
One of the torches outside the mine entrance somehow
still burned. He took it and then turned and made his way
through the crowd, which was now a mix of the dust people 
and skeletons. No one tried to stop him. No one touched him 
now. They’d seen his wrath and wanted none of it.
He went up the hill to the church. He stood on the front
step   and   surveyed   the   crowd.   The   skeletons   and   the   dust 
people and the children stared up at him. They waited for his 
words.
“I could have destroyed you,” he said, pointing the torch at
the woman in the purple dress among the dust people. “I could 
have smote you down,” he said, pointing the torch at the man 
who’d given him the bottle when he’d first ridden into town. “I 
could have razed this town and turned even the memories of it 
and all of you to ash, to be scattered on the winds.”
No one said anything, because what was there to say to
that?
“That mine, it’s sealed forever now,” he said. “Even I
couldn’t   dig   my   way   down   to   those   bones   now.   But   I   ain’t 
taking any more sides than that. What’s dust is dust.”
He went inside the church, his boots echoing in the empty
room. He knelt down before that burn mark on the wall. It had
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been a long time since he’d kneeled, and it didn’t feel as natural 
as it once had. Nowhere near as natural.
He said a prayer for the woman from the farm, like he’d
promised. There was no sign it was heard, but that was nothing
new. Then he said a prayer for the entire town, with the same 
result. When he was done, he touched the torch to the wall. If 
there was someone listening to his prayers, he wanted to make 
sure there weren’t any misunderstandings over the way he still 
felt about things. When the flames caught he went back outside 
and pulled himself up on his horse.
The boy who had spoken to him back at the farmhouse
stepped forward. Azrael had figured he would.
“What are we supposed to do now?” the boy asked, looking
at the townsfolk. Azrael wondered which of their bodies had
been home to his parents.
“This is a hard land,” Azrael said, as the church burned
behind him. “You can keep on killing each other. Or you can 
learn to live together.” He saw the man with the white eyes in 
the crowd. He couldn’t tell if he was still human or one of the 
dust people now. “That’s up to you to decide,” he added. It was 
the sort of judgment that he’d been riding away from all these 
years, but he’d come to realize that sometimes there was no 
other kind of judgment.
“What kind of fate is that?” the boy asked.
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“Your fate’s your own now,” Azrael said. “Make it what you
will.”
He rode through them then, the skeletons and the dust
people, back down the road and out of the town. He didn’t look
back.
At the farmhouse, he stopped. He found some pieces of
bone in the barn and used them to make a couple of crosses. 
He   planted   the   bone   crosses   on   either   side   of   the   wooden 
crosses. He didn’t have any bodies to bury, but sometimes it 
was the gestures that mattered.
Then he got back on the horse and rode out into the
wasteland beyond the farm. There was another dust storm
growing on the horizon, and he headed toward it.
As always, the buzzards followed.
Copyright © 2014 Peter Darbyshire
Peter Darbyshire is the author of the novels The Warhol Gang 
and  Please,  which   won  Canada’s  national   ReLit  award  for  
best   novel.   He   has   published   short   stories   in   numerous  
journals   and   anthologies,   including   previously   in  Beneath 
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies Issue #154
Ceaseless Skies, and his last weird western received On Spec’s 
Best   Story   of   the   Year   award.   He   currently   lives   in  
Vancouver, Canada, where he is working on a collection of  
stories   about   the   end   of   the   world.   Visit   him   at  
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies Issue #154
MAKE NO PROMISES
by Stephen V. Ramey
Mist blanketed the Tsoi River. The clink-clack of the
towing   elephant’s   harness   became   an   eerie   rattle   from   both 
banks, the gurgling chuck of water against the towboat’s hull 
were   lips   sucking   flesh   from   chicken   bones.   A   shiver   went 
through Rahami Honra. She rubbed her forearm, careful not to 
scratch the spider-bite welts that marked her as Web Seer.
The Mother Oracle’s summons had surprised her,
especially at this busy time of year when farmers relied on her 
prognostications   to   plan   spring   crops.   It   had   provided   no 
details beyond ordering her to leave at once.
An uncomfortable mix of anticipation and dread twisted
Rahami’s   stomach.   Did   this   summons   portend   something 
good; an assignment closer to home, perhaps? It could as easily 
be bad news. Maybe an elder had complained about having to 
host a low-caste seer in the village. Her clients were content 
with her, but who knew how authorities saw the situation? No, 
it   had   to   be   more   than   that.   The   Mother   Oracle   would   not 
summon her simply to change her assignment. But what?
“...beyond the divide.”
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“Pardon?” Rahami twisted on the bench. The passenger
closest to her frowned before resuming his stony gaze. Rahami
tugged at her travel cloak’s sodden hood. Hallucinations were 
not   uncommon  in   seers,   but   she   had   not  experienced   them 
before this journey. It was discomforting.
The first of Hatsi’s weathered silk warehouses emerged
from the mist. “Pier a’coming,” the boatmaster grunted from 
his perch. Men carried poles to the rails. On shore, the elephant 
trainer backed the beast, letting its chains go slack while the 
pole men prodded the boat into position. Others hopped the 
narrowing gap to secure ropes. Rahami took her place in the 
disembarking line. She had hoped to visit her mother before 
meeting the Oracle at Matsomsa Spider House, but the boat 
was arriving a day late.
Young men crowded the landing. “Kashi!! Kashi!! Best
deal here.” Some kashi were plain carts with two wheels.
Others were festooned with low quality silks. Rahami spied a 
familiar red banner and a driver whose attention was fixed on 
the inside of his removed shoe. The tight brown curls of his 
hair were unmistakable.
She smiled. “You’ll not find a fare in there.”
“One mo—” Jonji Ingras looked up. “Rahami?”
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“Tell me you were not expecting me.” Rahami had known
Jonji since they were toddlers, his hut a stone’s throw from
hers.
“Sorry to delay you, Madam Seer.” Jonji slipped his shoe
on   and   helped   Rahami   onto   the   padded   seat.   “To   your 
mother’s?”
“No, the Spider House.”
He lifted the  kashi’s  handles and started off at a trot. He 
remained   silent   as   they   passed   the   Green   Leaf   Tavern   and 
Wayward Inn and turned inland onto an uneven path. Spring 
rains had left puddles, but Jonji seemed not to notice.
“How long have you worked the kashi?” Rahami said.
“Three years.” Despite his exertion, Jonji spoke firmly.
“Have you married?”
“Yes.”
A   pang   went   through   Rahami.   She   recalled   a   couple 
holding   hands   on   the   boat.   Lower   castes   married   for   love, 
whereas it was a process of social mobility for higher castes. 
Seers never married at all. Who would want a disturbed soul 
wrapped within a poisoned body?
A chipped-stone path carried them through groves of
leafless trees and dispirited people. These were spinners
traveling to the Spider House to begin their day’s work. Being 
Ashim, they could not walk on the path, only to its side.
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“What is the gossip about my arrival?” Rahami said.
Jonji slowed. “Some say the Oracle will have you unmade 
for indiscretions and you will become Ashim-una again.”
Rahami nodded. It was possible. She wondered who would
be more devastated, herself or her mother.
“What do you believe?” she said.
“It is not my place to guess an oracle’s motive.”
“I suppose not,” Rahami said. She remembered sneaking 
down to the docks with Jonji to watch men unload crates they 
imagined   to   be   from   all   over   the   world.   He   had   been 
comfortable with conjecture then. Those were the days, before 
apprenticeships and social expectations.
Forest gave way to trimmed gardens surrounding a
stacked-stone building large enough to contain most of Hatsi.
The Spider House’s roof was pounded copper, green with age.
Jonji walked the kashi to the main entrance, lowered the
handles,  and   extended   his  palm.   “Please,  Madam   Seer.  Two 
tenths   for   the   ride,   an   extra   tenth   if   you   found   my   service 
satisfactory.”
Rahami withdrew four tenth-standards from her purse.
Her fingertips brushed Jonji’s and a vision bloomed into her—
an  elderly  man presenting  a  platter of charred  lamb  chunks 
atop a bed of carrots and greens. The platter transformed into 
her father’s face, flesh-white with waterlog, eyes like dark wells. 
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Caste   is   no   excuse   to   hide   from   life’s   challenges,  he   said 
through bloodless lips. The head rolled over, submerged, and 
was gone.
Rahami clenched. She missed her father more than she
could say.
“Is something the matter?” Jonji said.
Rahami caught herself and dropped the coins onto his
palm.
“That is most generous, Madam Seer.” He would not meet
her eyes.
Rahami steadied herself. “Jonji, talk to me. Were we not
friends? Did we not watch off-loaders and dream of exotic
places? Tell me at least that memory is true. So little of my life 
is solid.”
Jonji closed his hand. “That was long ago, a different
time.”
“The future is what we reach for,” Rahami said, “but it is
the past that forms us.”
Jonji’s expression softened. “Come with us, Rahami. After
all, you will be one of us if the Oracle unmakes you.”
“What are you talking about?” Rahami said.
“We’re going over the mountains.”
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A chill blew through Rahami. She had heard rumors that
the Ashim were plotting, but to attempt a crossing of the Spine
of the World? It was a desperate, dangerous idea.
“Think this through,” she said. “You have a stable
profession, a family to provide for. I know the prospect of war 
is   frightening,   but   you   cannot   let   fear   lead   you   to   a   rash 
decision.”
“I’m not afraid,” Jonji said. “This is the opportunity we
have waited for all our lives. Have you forgotten what it means 
to be Ashim?”
“Of course not,” Rahami said. “But even the most
experienced climbers fear the mountain passes.”
Jonji shook his head. “Forget I said anything, Madam
Seer. Forget you ever knew me.” He lifted the kashi handles
and trotted away.
Rahami stared after him, wanting to call out. How could
she? The gulf dividing them was as real as the stones beneath 
her feet. She gazed beyond Jonji to snow-capped peaks turned 
blue by distance. Surely, it was bluster. No one in their right 
mind would truly attempt to cross the Spine of the World.
* * *
Bands of black hexagonal plates girded the Spider House
door. For a heartbeat, Rahami saw a man within the design: 
square shoulders, nose sharp and straight, dimpled chin. It was 
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an unfamiliar face, stern and resolute, and yet she felt as if she 
knew it intimately.
Another phantom. She shook dew from her travel cloak,
wishing she could clear her head so easily. Weaver, she prayed,
if you have a care for my spirit, please do not let the Oracle’s  
purpose be my unmaking. Unmaking would remove her ability 
to enter trance but not the spider toxins from her body or the 
welts from her arms. It would not restore her past life.
She grasped the iron pull ring. “It is an honor to be called,
Mother Oracle,” she practiced. Despite the door’s great size, it
swung open easily.
Steps angled down into a cavernous chamber holding
thousands   of   glass   webberies   in   hexagonally   arranged   rows, 
each housing a single spider. Light washed down from windows 
high   on   the   walls,   where   women   balanced   on   crossbeams 
shooed   leather-winged   fliers   and   opened   or   closed   vents   to 
manage the day’s heat.  Too much heat and the webs become  
flimsy, her mother had explained when Rahami came here to 
clean webberies at fourteen years. Too much chill and spiders  
go dormant. When Rahami had continued to stare, her mother 
added, The job’s not suited to girls. Leave the rafters to young  
men.
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Rahami smiled at the memory. It had been the boys that
interested her, not the job. Now women minded the rafters
with so many men in the militia.
She started down the wooden steps, treads as familiar to
her   feet   as   if   it   had   been   only   yesterday   she   walked   them. 
Difficult to believe that three years had passed since she left the 
Spider House, and  ten  since  she  started  her labors here. So 
much   had   happened   in   that   time,   her   father’s   and   sister’s 
deaths, her brother moving to Asoman, her mother’s ongoing 
problems.
Sweet liquid smells mixed with a heavier tang of hickory
smoke. Rahami savored the scent.
She paused at the stairway’s base to remove her travel
cloak and tuck a curl beneath her headscarf. Ashim-una women
wheeled carts loaded with buzzing fly boxes to keep the spiders 
fed, while Querca-debo workers in blue caftans made their way 
methodically   from   web   to   web,   checking   strand   tensions, 
removing those to be soaked and spun.
Rahami navigated the busy chamber and pushed through a
tapestry wall into a smaller section housing blue orb spiders.
Unlike black orb spiders, bred to spin and spin, blues rarely 
rebuilt their webs. And unlike black orbs, they were fed Harrow 
bugs, striped beetles with a potent toxin. Ingesting that poison 
rendered the spiders deadly to all but seers.
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A few paces within, the Mother Oracle tended a webbery.
She was cloaked in alabaster silk robes, veils, and skirts that
hid all but her sky-blue eyes. Even so, she was an imposing 
woman with a tall, sturdy frame.
Rahami cleared her throat, and the Mother straightened,
becoming even taller. Rahami swallowed. Until now, she had
been   in   the   Mother   Oracle’s   presence   only   during   Solstice 
Celebrations, and always at a distance.
“It is an honor to be called, Mother Oracle,” Rahami said.
Her voice trembled despite her rehearsals.
“The honor is yet to be woven,” the Mother said. She
extended one hand, palm down.
Rahami touched her forehead to a flesh-colored glove and
backed two steps, head bowed.
“I am intrigued by many things I hear from the villages,”
the Mother said.
“What things?” Rahami nearly bit her tongue trying to take
back the impudent question. Your arrogance will do you in
someday,   Sister   Mathe   cackled   from   memory.  A   common 
laborer is what you are, and shall always be.
The Mother sniffed. “It has been reported that you reveal
more than the thickest strands to your clients. Is this true? Do
you tempt them toward less than likely outcomes?”
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Rahami went cold. “In small ways,” she said. What seer
did not allow some speculation? “There is little enough hope in
the south without dire predictions.”
“There are reasons for our rules,” the Mother said. “They
protect seer as well as client.”
“Yes, Mother Oracle.” Rahami knew in a foggy way of the
balance  between Family leaders, merchant castes, and seers. 
Politics interested her less than people. “I will restrain myself 
in the future.”
“I trust that you will,” the Mother said, “but that is not why
I summoned you. I am sending you to Matsomsa Manor.”
Rahami’s heart skipped. “I do not understand, Mother
Oracle. Matsomsa Family employs private seers, specially bred, 
specially trained. I’m not even a Sister.”
“Morshimon Matsomsa asked for you by name.”
“Why would he ask for me?”
Creases framed the Mother’s eyes. “Do not test my tolerant
mood, Rahami.”
“Apologies, Mother Oracle.” Rahami cast her gaze down.
The Mother lifted her chin. “The Manor Sisters report that 
Morshimon does not trust their seeing. He wants more of the 
future   than   it   is   willing   to   grant.”   Ice-blue   eyes   bore   into 
Rahami’s. “An unfortunate power dynamic has taken root. You 
are to perform the duty you were taught, without conjecture, 
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without   twisting   the   Weaver’s   design.   When   your   reading 
confirms what the Sisters revealed, it will put an end to this 
nonsense. Do you understand?”
“Yes, Mother Oracle.”
“Good. I will have a room prepared. You leave in the
morning.”
“I would prefer to stay with my mother in Hatsi,” Rahami
said. “If that is acceptable.”
The Mother hesitated. For a heartbeat her presence was
anything but intimidating. As if in the throes of some distorted
vision,   Rahami   saw   through   veils   of   silk   and   skin   to   the 
woman’s   core,   a   writhing   webwork   of   certainty   and   doubt 
warring for dominant pattern.
The Mother glanced away, then back. “Very well, Rahami.
Tonight,   you   play   the   dutiful   daughter.   Tomorrow,   you   will 
perform your duty to our people.” She indicated the webbery. 
“I have chosen a blue for you. If the Sisters are content with 
your seeing, you will receive double your normal fee.”
“That is most generous,” Rahami said. Madam Seer,
Jonji’s voice echoed in her mind.
The Mother Oracle’s eyes narrowed. “Do not disappoint
me, Rahami Honra. Much depends upon this thread.”
Rahami cast her eyes down, and backed two steps. “Yes,
Mother Oracle.” What is she not telling me?
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* * *
Rahami gripped the goat cart’s bench, trying to retain
dignity   and   her  seat  at  the   same  time.   The   driver,  a  boy  of 
fifteen  or sixteen years, had not spoken during their  bumpy 
ride through sycamore forest.  Just as well.  What would they 
talk   about   besides   the   impending   war,   or   the   task   that   lay 
ahead of her? Her nerves had already worn so raw with worry 
that she wanted to jump from the cart and run into the forest.
The lead goat veered. Rahami clung tightly as the cart
shuddered into the brush and wedged between saplings. The
driver hopped down. “Stubborn animals.” He rocked the cart 
free.
Rahami glimpsed movement through the trees. Deeper
within the forest, women tended a fire near dun colored tents.
She caught a whiff of meat smoke. Her mouth watered. She had 
eaten very little at morning meal, not wishing to deplete her 
mother’s limited stores.
The driver pulled the lead goat back to the road. The
others followed grudgingly, and the cart turned. Rahami still 
smelled   meat   smoke,   but   the   tangle   was   too   thick   to   see 
anything now.
“Who were those people?” she asked. Another
hallucination?
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The driver remounted without acknowledging her
question. Perhaps he hadn’t heard.
The cart gained momentum. Rahami’s thoughts returned
to her impending task. She had heard tales of Matsomsa
Manor,   mortared   walls   as   high   as   trees,   extravagant   halls 
bedecked with silk, that Morshimon Matsomsa was a man of 
such height he must stoop through even those doorways; his 
strength so great he might lift an elephant. With a flush, she 
recalled another story whispered in the privacy of a women’s 
chamber, never to be mentioned in the presence of children 
and husbands.
“Ashim,” the driver muttered.
“What?”
“The   people   in   the   forest.   I   bring   them   supplies 
sometimes. The goats must have remembered.” A weight lifted 
from Rahami,   a small  weight  but nonetheless welcome.  The 
people were real. Maybe the delusions had ended.
“Where are they from?” she said.
“Runaways from Chindra and Ashoti, a few from the
militia camp. They plan to cross the mountains.”
Rahami thought of Jonji. “Without supplies and proper
clothing, they will surely die.”
The driver shook his head. “The Weaver will watch over
them. The Lost City—”
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“That’s a children’s story,” Rahami said.
“For some people a story is truer than life.”
Rahami had no reply for that.
The driver chewed  at his lip. “Weren’t you  once  Ashim, 
Madam Seer?”
Rahami nodded.
“Then you must understand. If you report them—”
“I will keep your secret,” Rahami said. What would she say 
in any case, that a handful of  Ashim  women glimpsed from a 
road   she   did   not   know   planned   to   kill   themselves   in   the 
mountains?   It   took   no   imagination   to   guess   a   high-born’s 
reaction to that. Fewer mouths to feed.
The driver relaxed. “Thank you, Madam Seer.” The goats
settled too, pulling together, their low bleats less plaintive.
Rahami listened to the cadence of the wheels turning.
Spiny berry thickets gave way to a row of whitewashed bee
hives.  She  smelled  honey  and  imagined   the  Mother Oracle’s 
lips moving behind her veil. You are to perform the duty you  
were   taught,   without   conjecture,   without   twisting   the  
Weaver’s design.
Why would Morshimon Matsomsa believe me over
Sisters bred to the task?
The road turned along a ridge, and the view opened onto
Matsomsa Manor sprawled along a peninsula into a vast lake.
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Three wings protruded from its central tower. Chimneys rose 
from blue slate roofs.
South of the peninsula, a militia camp numbered more
gray tents than Rahami could count. Men practiced swords or
bows or pikes, the ring of metal upon metal nearly constant.
As a child, Rahami had believed war would never reach
Querc. A rugged coastline with few natural bays protected them 
from   attack   by   sea.   Invasion   from   the   south   would   mean 
defeating   a   tenacious   Amaali   people   and   braving   the   Decid 
Plain,   where   ghosts  intent  upon  bodily   possession  ruled   the 
night. Now she knew better—the Amaali were not the warriors 
of legend, and it was said that certain magics could mitigate the 
ghosts of Decid Plain. Still, it was difficult to accept that the 
local militia, some of them young men she had grown up with, 
would soon leave for the front.
The road descended. Dried mud yielded to manicured
river stone. The great manor rose before her like a foreign land. 
Rahami sat forward as the cart traversed a plank bridge. A boy 
not much older than her driver stepped from a guard shack, 
pike in hand. Interlinked hexagonal chest plates depicted the 
Matsomsa   spider   crest.   Bulky   shoulder   protectors   extended 
from his neck, making his head look too small.
“Who wishes entrance?” he barked.
No one, Rahami thought.
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“I bring a seer for Morshimon Matsomsa,” the driver said.
The boy-guard pointed his pike. “She is to enter through 
the Elephant Gate. Take care to mind your goats. They may eat 
rotted apples, but nothing recent fallen.”
Clicking his tongue, the driver started the team along a
row of apple trees. They passed statues of robed men holding
scrolls and uniformed men with swords or pikes.  These must 
be Morshimon’s ancestors.
Wheels clattered on cobblestone as they entered a
courtyard featuring a water fountain. Girls spilled from a
doorway, followed by a pregnant woman in exquisite blue silks, 
whose uncovered head marked her as Querca caste.
“I am Reuda Anch, Mistress of Women,” she said. Up
close, she looked younger. “You are Rahami Honra?”
“Yes,” Rahami said. A girl brought a hand-cart, and helped
the others load the webbery and Rahami’s satchel while a
mustached guard watched.  Not so much to protect my goods  
as to catch every detail of girls’ bodies moving within loose-
fitting garments.  Rahami remembered fondly when boys had 
watched her like this. Few seemed to notice her gender now.
“I am to show you to the seer residences,” Mistress Anch
said. She motioned to an older girl, who scampered inside.
Rahami followed into a busy kitchen bulging with
delightful smells: onions, pressed garlic, vinegar, mustard
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spice. Pots hung amid   ropes  of dried  herbs. Blazing hearths 
dominated   one   wall   where   women   worked   dough   on   a 
lacquered table.
Hunger twisted Rahami’s stomach. They crossed a dining
room with tables enough to seat fifty, ascended a flight of steps, 
passed   a   number   of   closed   doors,   and   arrived   at   an   arch 
decorated with river stones and shell and hung with layers of 
heavy   silk.   Rahami   admired   the   material.   Curtains   of   this 
quality, with dense weave and shining surface were rare in the 
countryside. To live amid such splendor must be wonderful.
Mistress Anch parted three outer layers: gold, yellow, and
white. Colors to blind the spirits.
“I can escort you no farther,” she said. “The Sisters have
been informed of your arrival.” She parted the three inner
curtain layers: burgundy, blue and black. Colors to trick spirits  
into believing they return to their own world.
“Thank you,” Rahami said. Stomach churning, she stepped
through the opening into a small hexagonal chamber with a
mosaic floor depicting a blue orb weaver in a geometric web.
Three ivory-robed women entered from the opposite
archway.   They   moved   in   unison,   blue-eyed   faces   identically 
gaunt, blond hair pulled back in braids. Rahami breathed and 
released. Manor seers were said to breed like spiders. Maybe it
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was true. She could imagine these three emerging from an egg 
sac.
The first Sister extended her hand. “I am Armyni.”
Rahami   touched   her   forehead   to   bony   flesh.   “I   am 
honored,   Sister   Oracle.”   The   hand   withdrew,   and   Rahami 
straightened. Armyni was clearly the eldest of the three, the 
skin of her brow and temples hinting at creases.
“It is unfortunate you must leave your village duties,”
Armyni said. “I am certain they are pressing.” The corners of 
her mouth ticked upward. “But take heart. Your stay here will 
be brief. Have no doubt of that.”
Rahami forced a polite smile. Her year of training with
Sister  Mathe’s   acid   tongue   had   taught   her  to   tamp   emotion 
down.
“Thank you, Sister,” she said. “I am indeed needed
elsewhere, yet the Mother Oracle has determined my duty is
here. Perhaps, when we have solved this problem, she will send 
you South to aid me in settling a farmer’s dispute.”
Armyni’s jaw clenched. She turned on her heel and walked
from the room.
“Come,” another Sister said. “I will show you to your
quarters.”
* * *
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By the end of the third day, Rahami began to question
Armyni’s understanding of ‘brief’. She had already endured too
much   idleness  in   the   seers’   quarters,  a   collection   of   alcoves 
surrounding a common area. With no books to read and no 
sewing to occupy her hands, she spent her days gazing upon 
the   lake   and   her   nights   dreading.   She   had   heard   of   seers 
tortured   when  their   reports  displeased   a   powerful  client.   Of 
course, there were consequences for such abuse, but fines held 
little sway over people with vast wealth. That Morshimon had 
requested a minor seer, one with Ashim roots, was troubling.
On the fifth night, she woke to peeling thunder. Flood! was
her first impulse. Again she saw Father slip from the sandbag
wall he had helped erect. Her younger sister, Owabe, reached 
out and was gone too, lost in a current stronger than her will. 
Lightning flashed. Rahami sat up, brow slicked with sweat.
A figure in white hovered by the common room windows.
Ghost? Rahami pulled a silk sheet over her head for protection.
The figure resolved into the youngest Sister, Tifan, and
Rahami relaxed. Of the three, she liked Tifan best. Where the 
others   evaluated   and   dismissed,   Tifan   showed   a   spark   of 
curiosity.
“I did not mean to startle you,” Tifan said. She entered the
alcove. “The storm keeps me awake. Armyni says I am foolish 
to fear the weather.”
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“Fear is a healthy response to powers greater than our
own,” Rahami said. She removed her makeshift headscarf.
Tifan knelt onto the sleeping mat. “Armyni claims we are
well protected within the manor, yet I often feel the hair rise
from my skin.”
“I’ve felt that too,” Rahami said. “I believe lightning causes
hair to lift as it energizes the air.”
“You are not afraid?”
“No,” Rahami said.
“Then Armyni is right. The Weaver has blessed us with an 
ability to see beyond his veil. We have no cause to fear nature.”
“Perceiving a future is not the same as controlling it,”
Rahami said. “I may not fear lightning, but I fear other things.”
Tifan edged closer. “You do?”
“Floods,” Rahami said. “My father and sister....” She
stopped. It was not like her to blurt personal details.
“I’m sorry,” Tifan said.
“It was a long time ago.”
Lightning flashed, and Tifan leaned forward. Rahami’s
arm went around the younger woman. She remembered
holding   Owabe   after   they   were   caught   sneaking   to   the 
slaughterhouse to watch an elderly elephant put down. Rahami 
remembered Owabe trembling, tears shining in her eyes. No,
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that direction was not where this conversation needed to go. 
Diversion was a better antidote for fear.
“I also fear love,” she said. “A man who pulls at my heart
as lodestone draws metal filings.”
“Oh, yes.” Tifan sat straight. “We all dread that.” She
cocked her head. “Have you met such a man? Your travels
surely present more opportunities than we have here.”
“Once,” Rahami said. A thrill ran through her. She had not
thought of Jankol in months.
“What was he like?” Tifan said.
“It doesn’t matter,” Rahami said. “I forget.” I hoped I had.
She had danced with Jankol at Solstice celebration, knowing
even   as   their   hands   touched—hers  shielded   behind   kid   skin 
gloves—they  would never kiss or cuddle  or whisper sleeping 
mat secrets. Only a man with seer blood might mate with her, 
and even that was risky.
“Tell me about Morshimon,” she said to deflect the subject.
“What does his future hold? What choices did you see?”
“We should not speak of such things,” Tifan said. Lines
creased her brow.
“I cannot help but wonder what I am expected to report,”
Rahami said. “Armyni seems worried I will contradict her.”
Tifan sighed. “Armyni believes you will not stand up to the
Honorable Morshimon. She believes you will tell him what he
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wishes to hear. It is no secret that you were not born to the 
craft.” A low rumble sounded. The storm was passing.
“I will do my duty,” Rahami said. Without conjecture,
without twisting the Weaver’s design.
“I believe you,” Tifan said. She paused. “There is
something else you should know, Rahami.”
“Yes?”
Tifan   looked   into   her   lap.   “The   Honorable   Morshimon 
went to Chindra, to recruit.”
“He’s not here?” Irritation surged through Rahami, a
storm all its own. Who was this Morshimon, to toss her about 
like thistle seed? “I cannot remain here forever. People depend 
on me—farmers, fishermen, town elders.”
“Armyni understands this,” Tifan said. She pressed a coin
pouch into Rahami’s hand. “Ten standards. We do not possess 
enough   for   the   Mother   Oracle’s   fee,   but   Armyni   wanted   to 
compensate you at least.”
“Compensate me for what? I have not undertaken the
seeing.”
Tifan looked up. “You are not the first person the
Honorable   Morshimon   has   abandoned.   Armyni   says   he 
discards people as children discard torn kites.”
“Surely, he wouldn’t trifle with a seer dispatched by the
Mother Oracle,” Rahami said.
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“This is a difficult time,” Tifan said. “War threatens to turn
the world upside down.” She lowered her voice. “Armyni knows
what she is asking of you. You dare not return to the Mother 
Oracle, who would as like have you unmade as listen to your 
side, but.... Perhaps this is an opportunity too?”
“How so?” Rahami asked.
“This calling we share, is it not also a burden? When we
open our eyes onto the Weaver’s tangle, it is his domain, not
ours. We are constrained by forces beyond our control. Would 
you not wish to be free if you could?”
Rahami found herself nodding, even though she had never
considered gaining her freedom in this manner.
“Accept this payment and leave Querc,” Tifan said. “In
time the poison may fade, and you will have your old life back.
Armyni says that you are not bred to be a seer.”
Rahami thought of Jankol. Rid of the spider poison, she
might find love. She might even find a way to use her natural 
talents for  something  more  meaningful than   reading  futures 
for farmers.
Tifan squeezed Rahami’s hand and stood. “Sleep, Rahami.
Perhaps your dreams will convince you. I cannot help but to 
put myself in your place. For me it would be an easy choice.” 
She strode to the exit.
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“Wait,” Rahami said. “You haven’t told me why
Morshimon doubts his Sisters’ readings. Why was I
summoned?”
“The Honorable Morshimon believes we withhold
something. He will not let go of his suspicion.”
“Is he wrong?” Rahami asked.
Tifan looked away.
“What did you see?”
“His destiny, of course,” Tifan said. “His death.” And then
she was gone, another shadow in the darkness of the common
room.
* * *
Rahami’s dreams did not help. Again and again, she
witnessed her father’s swollen corpse returned to the village for
burial, her sister’s face disappearing into angry black water a 
final time. The grief seemed as fresh as ever. Her Mother had 
been healthy then, which only made the tears more cutting.
Each time Rahami woke, she thought of Tifan’s suggestion.
Leave Querc. In time the poison may fade. And then she would 
whisper “no,” close her eyes, and eventually fall asleep only to 
have the cycle repeat, until, finally, she was too tired for even 
that to wake her.
Morning brought sunshine streaming through the
windows. A coin pouch lay rumpled beside the mat like the
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bean bags some children kicked for sport. She should be glad 
that Tifan’s offer had not been another hallucination, but she 
could   not   get   past   a   feeling   of   impending   doom.   Had 
Morshimon   truly   abandoned   her?   How   would   the   Mother 
Oracle   react?   She   gathered   up   the   coin   pouch   and   went   in 
search of Armyni.
The passage from the common room was lined with
tapestries depicting forests and lakes. Dark blue silks trimmed
in gray draped from the ceiling.
A man groaned.
“Hold him,” Armyni’s muffled voice said from a side
passage blocked by silk.
Rahami moved closer. Why would a man be permitted in
the Sisters’ quarters? Even the female servant had been
specially purified.
“He’s spent,” Tifan said.
“Do you think I will not know when he spends his silver in
my inn?” Armyni said.
Rahami worked her fingers through the curtains. Across
the room, Armyni straddled a naked man on a mound of
pillows.   Tifan   held   his   hand   while   Orinda,   the   third   Sister, 
leaned onto his shoulders. His breaths came as shallow grunts.
“He’s not well,” Tifan said.
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Armyni snorted. “Oh, do not worry, precious Sister. He
claims his mother comes from seer stock.”
The man choked. Spittle erupted from his mouth.
“You’re killing him,” Tifan said.
“She may be right,” Orinda said.
“Imagine that,” Armyni said. “A man who lies about his 
heritage. Well, I suppose his lesson is that lies return to roost.”
“But—”
“What concern is his death to us?” Armyni snapped. “He is
Ashim.”
Rahami swept the curtains open. Rage clouded her
thoughts.
“What are you doing here?” Armyni said. “Do you want a
turn?”
Rahami threw the pouch. Instead of striking Armyni, it
landed on the man’s chest and skidded into his chin, drawing a
startled grunt.
Eyes stinging, Rahami fled through a surreal landscape of
fake forests, fake mountains, fake lakes. Nothing here was real.
“Wait,” Tifan called. Rahami ran faster.
The passage emptied into the hexagonal room where
Mistress Anch had abandoned her. She crossed the mosaic
spider floor and paused at the curtains.
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“It’s not as it seems,” Tifan said, from the inner corridor’s
mouth.
“It never is.” Rahami pushed through clinging silk into the
hallway beyond. Stately paintings punctuated the walls as far
as she could see.
Tifan’s shadow moved behind the curtains. “You are one of
us,” she said. “Return with me,  and Armyni  will not punish 
you.”
“No,” Rahami said. “Come with me, Tifan. We’ll report her
cruelty.”
“If Armyni is cruel sometimes,” Tifan said, “it is only
because of the pressures of her station.”
“And the man?” Rahami asked. “Does the Honorable
Matsomsa tolerate murder in his manor?”
The curtains parted. A blue eye peered through. “Murder?
He is only Ashim.”
The words hit like a splash of scalding water. Rahami
turned and sprinted through the corridor, listening for sounds
of pursuit that did not materialize.
A stairway led down. She took it.
Girls in brown shifts replaced sconce candles from a cart.
A pair of guards chatted by an archway leading to a room filled
with   tables   set   for   breakfast.   Only   the   farthest   table   was 
occupied.
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Rahami willed her speeding heart to slow. The way outside
was through the dining hall.
“What is your business?” the older guard said. The
younger one was the mustached man Rahami had seen in the
courtyard.
“I am needed in the kitchen,” she said.
“Use the servants’ passage.”
“Thank you,” Rahami said, pretending to misunderstand. 
She strode between the men.
“Are you deaf?” the older guard said.
Rahami continued walking, though every nerve in her
body screamed at her to run. The dining hall was as high as it
was   wide,  with  skylights   placed   along the   ceiling.  No  rafter 
women here.
A hand grabbed her. “Don’t touch me.” She spun, lifting a
sleeve to expose her spider-bite welts. Her heart thudded.
The older guard drew back. “Spider-witch.”
“She’s   the   woman   from   the   goat   cart,”   the   mustached 
guard said. “Morshimon sent for her.”
“I doubt that,” the older guard said.
“One way to find out,” the mustached guard said. He
nodded toward the occupied table.
“You will take the consequences,” the older guard said. “I
want no part of this.”
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The mustached guard grinned and shook his head at the
other before leading Rahami toward the table, which hosted six
balding men and a soldier in partial armor. The soldier’s face 
was broad-browed, nose sharp and straight, a dimpled chin. 
Thick, dark hair topped his head, more than enough to make 
up for the others’ lack.
Déjà vu washed through Rahami. She had seen this face
before. The Spider House door.
“What is it, Kapren?” His voice was resonant and deep.
The   mustached   guard   came   to   attention.   “I   found   this 
woman wandering the halls, Honorable Morshimon.”
Morshimon? Rahami touched her bare head. She felt
naked.
“Ah, the seer from the south,” Morshimon said. “The
Mother Oracle promised you days ago.”
“I have been here nearly a week,” Rahami said. “The
Sisters said you were away recruiting soldiers.”
“Is that so?” Morshimon sighed. “I shall have to educate
the Sisters concerning my itinerary. These miscommunications 
grow tiresome.”
Rahami swallowed. “I am sorry to interrupt your meal,
Honorable Matsomsa, but when I saw that man, I didn’t know
what to do.”
“A man?”
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“An Ashim man in the Sisters’ quarters. They were....
Armyni....”
Morshimon’s jaw tensed. “Kapren, instruct the Mistress of
Women to find a suitable room for our guest. You will stand
guard at her door tonight.”
“Yes, Matsomsa-born.”
Morshimon started to drop his lap napkin to the table but
tossed it to Rahami instead.
“Thank you.” She positioned the cloth over her hair.
Morshimon stood, and Rahami suppressed a gasp. He was 
at least a head taller than the guard. Massive arms strained the 
seams of his sleeves. Hexagonal plates of silk-bonded armor 
covered his chest and shoulders.
A giant if ever one existed.
“I mean to pay a visit to the Sisters,” Morshimon said to
the other men. “Anyone care to come along? They have invited
one man into their quarters, what are a few more?”
“Your father will not like it,” one of the men said.
“There is much that annoys my father these days,”
Morshimon said. “I doubt this will make the first five.” He
nodded   to   Rahami.   “Go   with   Kapren.   Tomorrow   you   will 
undertake my seeing.”
Rahami averted her eyes. “Yes, Matsomsa-born.”
Tomorrow I will see your death. A shadow passed over her, a
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chill of deep dread. Maybe she should have accepted Armyni’s 
payment and run.
* * *
It was nearly noon before Kapren escorted her to
Morshimon’s sitting room. Three windows overlooked the lake. 
To one side, a table was strewn with maps. Across the room, a 
hearth warmed two stuffed chairs and a floral-patterned sofa. 
Morshimon drowsed in one of the chairs. The webbery stood by 
the other.
Kapren cleared his throat. “The seer is here, Morshimon.”
Morshimon jerked but recovered smoothly. “Thank you,
Kapren. You may leave.” Kapren withdrew.
Morshimon stood. “Rahami Honra is an interesting
name,” he said. “You hail from a Hashin Village near the
river?”
“Yes, Honorable Matsomsa, that is where I am currently
assigned.”
“Trained by the Oracle Mother?”
“A Sister.”
Morshimon   nodded.   “My   militia   captain   recommended 
you. He is Hashin by blood, and claims that you reveal truths 
beyond the politically expedient.”
Rahami cast her gaze down. “I do my duty, Honorable
Matsomsa.”
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“As do I,” a new voice said. Armyni bustled into the room,
the hem of her ivory robe clutched in one hand. Rahami
adjusted her head-covering to hide her surprise. She had not 
expected to see Armyni again.
Morshimon snorted. “The Sister arrives at last.”
“As you requested,” Armyni said.
“As I ordered,” Morshimon corrected. “My father insists
that one of you vermin be present.”
“He is wise, Matsomsa-born.”
“He is old fashioned,” Morshimon said. “Now, be silent or 
I will have you replaced with another spider-witch. I may have 
to tolerate your presence, but I will not tolerate your tongue.”
“As you wish, Matsomsa-born.”
Morshimon   returned   his   attention   to   Rahami.   “Scarred 
warriors have crossed Alenja River. They will reach the Decid 
Plains soon and push north. If we do not defeat the Ubi army at 
Apatsoi River, Querc will fall. This is what my Sisters tell me. 
All well and good, but it is what they hide that interests me.”
“We hide noth—”
“Silence!” Morshimon shouted. Armyni looked away. “We 
will begin when you are ready,” he said to Rahami.
“Yes, Matsomsa-born.”
“I want a full reading,” Morshimon said. “A true seeing, do
you understand?”
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“Of course,” Rahami said. She met Armyni’s glare. I will
see this man’s futures. I will know what you know, and more
if I am able.  She removed her head-scarf. “If something has 
been  hidden  from  you,  Honorable   Matsomsa,   we   shall  soon 
know it.”
* * *
Rahami sat on an oval rug, shoes removed, toes touching
Morshimon’s naked back.
“I summon the spider,” she said. She removed the webbery
plug and extended wooden tongs through the opening. A blue
orb spider, starved for days, pranced across invisible strands of 
its web. Rahami got it on her first try. Catching a hungry spider 
was not as difficult as catching flies.
She withdrew the flailing creature. “And now, the bite.”
She pressed the spider to her wrist. This was the most difficult 
part, much harder than seeing futures.
When the spider did not immediately bite, she moved it
elsewhere, lifting and lowering, pressing its mouthparts to her
skin. The spider bites where the Weaver wills.
She felt a pinch and resisted the instinct to squeeze. A
convulsion of her grip and the spider might be damaged, or 
worse, escape to bite the client.
“The spider has chosen,” she said. She dropped it into the
webbery and re-plugged the glass.
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“We begin,” she said. Morshimon slouched to make his
spine more pronounced. She positioned her hands and
forehead along his back.
The poison was already taking hold. Rahami’s heart raced.
Heat coursed through her, sweat beaded on her face, breathing 
became as difficult as pumping air through damaged bellows. 
Be calm. Be calm.  As many times as she had undergone this 
process, she still feared she would die. It was ironic in a way. 
Once, she had wanted the poison to take her, and it had not.
Her consciousness seeped through Morshimon’s skin, into
his spine.  Breathe, she thought.  Breathe with this man. See  
with this man.
Heat dissipated in a rush, leaving a warm residue of
knowing. A web opened within her, thousands of strands,
possible futures, entangled futures, a pattern. Not all strands 
appeared equal, thicker, brighter ones being most probable.
A sexual encounter with a dark-haired woman. A river
forded by militia. A forest camp. Meetings with war leaders.
Angry   disagreements.   A   forced   march   through   mountain 
passes. Bone-biting cold. A highland meadow. Approaching the 
enemy from behind. A successful surprise. Invaders repelled. 
Death from infection.
A second strand. Marching, camping, a surprise attack.
Death.
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A hundred strands. Marching. Fighting. Death.
A thousand strands. Death.
I cannot continue, Rahami thought. The Sisters were
right. This man has only death in his future.
A hundred more strands. Death. Death. Death.
Then,   a   small   thread,  barely  visible.  The   militia   leaving 
under seven banners. Morshimon remaining at Manor, hunting 
fliers in the northern forests. Ubi warriors invading, Ubi adepts 
controlling the Spider House. Villagers enslaved. Morshimon’s 
father   and   brother   murdered.   He   weds   a   woman   of   Ubi 
heritage, has four sons and dies an old man.
A second thin thread. Morshimon remains at Manor. Ubi
warriors invade. Morshimon’s life is spared. He does not marry 
or father children.
Others. Morshimon remains and lives.
Futures faded into the dark gauze of Rahami’s exhaustion. 
She   struggled   against   it,   searched   for   other   threads,   other 
options. She had never seen a clearer pattern. Morshimon’s life 
meant Querc’s death and vice versa.
Sadness overwhelmed her. This is what Armyni fears. For
a heartbeat she felt sympathy for the Sister. To guide this client 
to   his   most   promising   future   would   require   Querc’s 
destruction.
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Feeling returned to Rahami’s fingers. She felt
Morshimon’s muscles, the interlocked bones of his spine, and
recalled her father’s body, so bloated she could only recognize 
him from the copper necklace embedded in his neck. Would he 
have chosen to sandbag the river if a seer had warned him he 
would die?
She disengaged. The Sisters had revealed that Morshimon
would lead the militia to victory. They had clearly not told him
he might choose instead to live. What do I say? Life radiates  
from this man.
Silk slid down Morshimon’s back. “The seeing is finished,”
Armyni said. “Seer? Can you hear me? You are finished.”
Acid pushed up Rahami’s throat. She swallowed it down,
unwilling to grant Armyni the satisfaction of seeing her vomit.
“Village seers are not bred for this, Matsomsa-born,”
Armyni said. “Now you see the toll of it. She probably
remembers nothing.”
I have seen, Rahami thought. Her face throbbed, her skin
burned. Something was wrong. The Mother must have chosen  
an unusually potent blue.
“Poison clouds her mind,” Armyni said. “She requires time
to recover. I will return her to the seers’ quarters.”
“My father may trust you,” Morshimon said, “but I harbor
no such delusion. You are excused, Sister. Rahami will remain.”
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“She requires attention.”
“I will attend her,” Morshimon said. “Now, get out!”
“As you wish, Matsomsa-born.”
Rahami   tried   to   speak   but   only   managed   a   croak.   The 
spider   poison   was   not   dissipating.   It   was   too   potent.   She 
clutched at Armyni, and the world tilted sideways.
Armyni’s breath tickled her ear: “You had your chance to
leave.”
Rahami heard her mother’s voice—The job’s not suited to
girls—and the world went dark.
* * *
Water flowing, heart thudding, breath in her ear. Rahami
opened her dreaming eyes onto a surreal world, trees fuzzed 
with glowing green, a blue sky too intense. The river clucked 
for her attention. It was slick, too wide to cross, clogged with 
death.
She remembered the spider and opened her fist. There it
was, huddled on her palm, legs kneed up around its pudgy
body.
“Curse you,” she spat. It was supposed to bite. She had
taken   it   from   the   Spider   House,   sneaked   into   the   blue   orb 
section   and   snatched   it   from   the   nearest   webbery.   It   was 
supposed to bite. It was supposed to take her down into the 
depths with Father and Owabe, down there where her Mother’s 
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grief lived. If she made it to the river, all the better. She would 
throw herself in and let the toxin take her.
Well, here she was at the river, and it hadn’t bitten. She
squeezed her fist until the spider’s body deformed like clay in
her hand. Still, it would not bite. She tried to fling it. It clung to 
her   palm.   She   prodded   with   her   finger   until   it   turned   its 
bulbous back.
Rahami considered jumping into the water. She did not
trust herself to die. She  was too strong a swimmer, and  the 
river had lost its rage. Exhaustion came over her all at once. 
She sagged to the ground. She closed her eyes and cried.
A pinch. The spider had bitten at last. A dull heat spread
from the wound, soothing her to relax, to calm, to  listen. All 
around her the world went silent. She watched, fascinated, as 
the creature spun its web from her arm to her shoulder, her 
chin.   She   watched   it   skittle   along   strands   too   fine   to   see, 
watched it dance upon the air.
Rahami woke with a start. She was wrapped in blankets on
a  sofa  facing  a  crackling  fire. A  cinnamon  scent  infused   the 
room. She tried to sit, but only managed to lean heavily on the 
sofa’s arm. A vomit stain marked the rug by her feet.
Morshimon sat at the table across the room, mug in one
hand, a book in the other.
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“The spirits have released you,” he said. “For a time, your
skin was so blue I feared you might not return.” He set the
book aside. “The herbalist said your life was in the Weaver’s 
hands. I dismissed him. If a man is not going to help, why keep 
him around?”
Rahami rubbed her forehead. “I apologize for my
weakness.”
“The weakness was not yours,” Morshimon said. He came
to the couch and tilted the webbery bottom-up. There, etched 
into the glass, was a flower and three bees. “This is not a Spider 
House design, but the Manor’s. You were poisoned.”
Armyni, Rahami knew at once.
“The Sisters will answer,” Morshimon said. “Now, tell me
what is so important that they were willing to kill you?”
Rahami gazed at the carpet stain.
“The Weaver spared you for a purpose,” Morshimon said. 
“Please, Rahami Honra, tell me my truth.” He took her hand 
between his.
Don’t touch me, she thought.
“Why does no one trust me with my destiny?” he said. “It 
is mine, is it not?
Rahami stared into the fire.
Morshimon sighed. “Will you horde the future, or return
the power to shape it to we who must live out your visions?” He
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released   her   hand   and   flexed   his   fingers.  It’s   the   poison, 
Rahami thought. It’s me.
“I do not create the strands,” she said. “My duty is to
convey your most probable path.”
“I have heard enough of duty,” Morshimon said.
“I’m merely a village seer,” Rahami said.
“What we are born,” Morshimon said, “and what we
become are two very different things. I could say ‘I am but the
second   son’.   Does   that   mean   I   must   live   in   my   brother’s 
shadow? Can I not love him as he loves me and do the best I 
can to serve our people too?”
“That is your choice,” Rahami said.
“Do you not also have to choose?” he said.
Rahami  frowned. “The Sisters have  conveyed  your most 
probable futures.”
Morshimon shook his head. “The Sisters assure me I am to
become a hero if I follow their instructions. I have developed 
strategies   for   my   captains,   but   it   will   not   do   if   I   am   held 
responsible for butchering a thousand Matsomsa warriors. I do 
not trust the Sisters’ motives. I must know that my plan is the 
best possible approach. Am I leading my men into danger? Is 
this what the Sisters withhold?”
Rahami breathed deep. “No,” she said quietly. “Not that.”
“Then what?”
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Rahami met his gaze. “What the others did not tell you,
what I should not tell you, is that the major threads lead
inevitably to your death. If you go south, you will die.”
Morshimon did not look away.
“Circumstances vary,” Rahami said, “but your death is
certain. It’s rare to find such a clear nexus. It is as if the Weaver
has woven your destiny into the Web Beneath the World.”
“And the war?” Morshimon said. “The Ubi threat? What of
that? Could you see?”
“I cannot be certain,” Rahami said, “but they are routed in
nearly every thread before you....” She looked away. “It seems 
unlikely they would return.”
“My life for the land I love,” Morshimon said. “A fair
exchange.”
“There is more,” Rahami said. She could feel the tension
building in her chest, a sense of unwanted revelation. “Remain
behind, Matsomsa-born, and you will live a full life.”
“And Querc?”
“Querc will be enslaved, our Spider Houses destroyed,
families broken apart to serve Ubi overlords.” Rahami could be
certain of these outcomes since he would be alive to witness 
them. “Sons will be born to you in many strands. You will know 
happiness.”
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“Ah,” Morshimon said. “The stew thickens. But, tell me,
little flower, how could I possibly be happy in such a future,
with Querc in ruins, all I care about destroyed?”
“It is possible,” Rahami said, “for I have seen it. The
strands are fragile, but there is hope. You have but to remain 
behind. This is what the Sisters fear.”
Morshimon erupted in laughter. “Spider-witches. How
could I live among them all these years and they not know who
I am?”
Confusion replaced Rahami’s dread. “You will go willingly
to your death?”
“Of course,” Morshimon said. “I know that must be
difficult for you to understand.”
“No,” Rahami said. “I understand what it is like to want to
die.”
“You?”
Rahami gazed into the fire. “It was a time ago. My father
and sister had drowned, my mother was sick with grief. I stole
a   spider  from   the   Spider   House,  and   it  bit   me.   I  thought   I 
would die, hoped I would die.”
“But you did not.”
“No,” Rahami said. “Villagers found me. The Sisters could 
not deny the miracle, much as they would have liked to, and 
sent me south for training.”
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Morshimon whistled low. “And that is how an Ashim
became web seer. The Weaver truly does watch over you.”
“If so, he must be laughing,” Rahami said. “The Mother
Oracle shuffles me between assignments like hand-me-down
clothes. I might as well be invisible.”
Morshimon chuckled. Rahami’s lips turned down. It was
not funny to her.
“I’m surprised you would wish to die,” she said. “It seems
to me that a man with your privilege and position should want 
to live forever.”
“I am the second son, not the first,” Morshimon said. “My
demise does not much matter in the larger scheme. I only hope
that our people will recall my sacrifice.”
“They will,” Rahami said. That was beyond her seeing, but
how could the world not remember such a deed?
Morshimon stood. “You are welcome to stay as long as you
wish. I would like nothing more than to personally show you 
the grounds.”
“I’ve been here too long,” Rahami said. “I will leave as soon
as I can make the arrangements.”
“As you wish.” Morshimon paced to the table. “It is
probably best that we do not let emotion cloud our resolve.”
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“Yes, of course,” Rahami said. She watched him sit, his
eyes going blankly to the closest map. For the first time in her
presence, he seemed defeated. She longed to comfort him.
He did not look up as she exited, but she felt his attention
on  her  like   a   strand   of  spider  silk   stretched   to   its   breaking 
point.
* * *
Rahami mounted the goat cart sent for her return to the
Spider House. She was pleased to see the same driver as before.
“You look well,” she said as he took her satchel. The
Mother Oracle’s webbery had already been loaded.
He hopped onto the bench. “I brought a different team. It
should be an easy ride.” He shook the reins, and the cart began 
a   slow   turn.   Rahami   looked   to   Reuda   Anch,   who   stood 
alongside several serving girls, hands on her bulging stomach.
“Uh oh,” the driver said. The cart skidded as a towering
man bent through the doorway. Serving girls scattered.
Rahami’s face warmed. A tingling sensation wriggled in
her gut. She hoped it did not show in her expression. This was 
a time for professionalism, not girlish lust.
The driver tied off the reins, jumped down, and bowed so
low his forehead nearly scraped. He went to tend the goats.
Rahami nodded. “To what do I owe this honor, Matsomsa-
born?”
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“I could not let you go without seeing you off,” Morshimon
said. “Will you resume your duties in the south, then?”
“The Mother will probably assign a new region,” Rahami
said. “I am nothing more to her than an uncomfortable itch she
must scratch from time to time.”
“You are not alone,” Morshimon said. “My father sees past
me whenever I enter the room. And yet, we will soldier on and 
do what we can to make the world better, yes?”
“Of course,” Rahami said.
Morshimon took her hand.
“Careful,” Rahami said. She felt the poison leeching from
her pores. It would be days before she recovered.
Morshimon laughed. “It seems to me we should both
welcome a little numbness.” He kissed her fingers. “I owe you a
debt, I wanted you to know that, before.... You have given me 
hope.”
Rahami felt a surge of shame. She wanted to throw her
arms around Morshimon and keep him here. She wanted to lie
with him and give him the sons he deserved. How could he 
speak   of   hope,   knowing   that   he   would   die   in   the   coming 
months? And here she was, complaining about petty politics. 
She diverted her gaze to the goats. The future she longed for 
would never be, could never be.
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Morshimon released her hand. “Safe journey, Rahami
Honra. May the Weaver watch over you.” He started to leave
but stopped after two strides. “No, there is more I must say.”
Rahami held her breath. Had he changed his mind and
decided to live?
His steady eyes met hers. “We have reached an important
juncture   for   Querc,   Rahami.   Once   the   militia   marches,   my 
father   will   no   longer   possess   force   sufficient   to   control   our 
Ashim  caste. Many of them plan to leave Querc for the Lost 
City.”
“The Lost City is a myth,” Rahami said. She thought of the
people in the forest, the driver’s worry, Jonji’s offer to take her
beyond   the   divide.   She   dared   not   admit   these   things   to   a 
Matsomsa.
“Perhaps not,” Morshimon said. “One of our ancient texts
describes it vividly: ‘A white city built of the bone and sinew
and blood of the pilgrims within a green valley so hidden from 
nature that the snows dare not intrude.’“
“Is the flying elephant also real?” Rahami said. She forced
a smile.
“The exodus must succeed,” Morshimon said.
Rahami’s mouth fell open.
Morshimon chuckled. “What? You never thought a high-
born could think in this manner?”
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“Why would you?” Rahami said. “Ashim are to serve the
higher castes. That is not a myth.”
“You do not believe in castes any more than I do,”
Morshimon said. “I have argued with my father’s advisors for
years. We waste precious resources—talent, intelligence, people 
like you—by continuing this outdated system. War brings an 
opportunity to prove it. The exodus must succeed, Rahami.”
“How can it?” Rahami said. “Without supplies, maps, a
knowledgeable guide.”
“I know the perfect guide for them,” Morshimon said.
“He will need to be more than perfect to find a city that
does not exist,” Rahami said.
“I was thinking of you,” Morshimon said.
Rahami stared. “Me? I’m no leader.”
“Ashim will trust your guidance,” Morshimon said. “Not
only were you one of their own, you are truthful, resourceful...
passionate.” He smiled gently. “There is more quality in your 
character than the three Sisters combined.”
“It’s impossible,” Rahami said. “I’ve never climbed a
mountain in my life.” And yet, the idea sparked an ember
inside her. “How would I find the Lost City in any case? An 
obscure reference in an ancient book hardly constitutes a map.”
“You have your sight,” Morshimon said.
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“A seer cannot know her own futures or the futures of
other seers,” Rahami said. “The poison masks us from
ourselves.”
“You are not like the others,” Morshimon said. “You see
the hidden things.”
“I see what the Weaver—”
“No,” Morshimon said. “If the future is fixed, what need
have we for seers? No, we play a part in our destiny, even you,
Rahami. This is an opportunity to make a difference. Did you 
not say yourself that the Mother does not want you?”
“I say a great many things I may not fully mean,” Rahami
said. Still, she felt uncomfortable. Caste is no excuse to hide
from life’s challenges, her father said from the depths of her 
memory.
“My station entitles me to command you,” Morshimon
said, “but I find that I cannot send you unwillingly into
hardship. Your safety is as dear to me as the whole of Querc. I 
have   never   encountered   such   a   woman   as   you.   Never.   In 
another time and place, I would ask you to come away with me.
Rahami gaped. She wanted to run. She wanted to stay. A
world   took   form   in   her   imagination,   green   vegetation   and 
golden skies, the spider poison gone, Morshimon beside her 
each   morning   as   she   woke.   An   ache   pinched   the   pit   of   her 
stomach.
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Morshimon sighed. “Yet, I must ask this of you, or perhaps
you must ask it of yourself, Rahami. You offered me a choice,
and so I offer one to you. The journey will be dangerous and is 
uncertain to succeed. You may perish.” He touched her arm, 
and time seemed to slow, the breeze, the goats, everything.
Rahami bowed her head, and the ground clarified into
bedrock infused with glowing strands. A city bloomed within 
the glow, buildings with pristine white walls, a courtyard where 
many people gathered. First portion for our beloved Watcher, 
an   elderly   man   said.   The   platter   in   his   hands   became   her 
father’s   face,   no   longer   bloated-white,   but   red-cheeked, 
laughing. Fireworks splashed the sky.
Morshimon’s voice brought her back. “Will you undertake
this quest, Rahami Honra? Will you lead our Ashim to their
promised   land?”   Rahami   felt   his   skin   on   hers,   his   hope 
entwined with hers.
The Web throbbed once, twice, thrice. What do you think,
daughter, do you want to find a city above the world?
“Yes,” she said. “I will.”
Copyright © 2014 Stephen V. Ramey
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Stephen  V. Ramey is an American author of contemporary  
and   speculative   fiction.   His   short   stories   and   flash   fictions  
have appeared in dozens of places, from  Microliterature  to 
Daily Science Fiction. His first collection,  Glass Animals, is 
available from Pure Slush Books. Visit him online at
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COVER ART
“Pillars,” by Tomas Honz
Tomas Honz is a student at the Academy of Fine Arts in
Prague, who believes in the traditional approach to art. To  
him, painting is a science that is necessary to acquire in order  
to   make   an   art   of   it.   He   has   years   of   experience   in   the  
entertainment industry as a concept illustrator, but his desire  
to create his own work, as well as a serious trauma–one of  
those   things   that   make   you   reconsider   your   whole   life–led  
him   to   leave   that   career,   to   open   his   eyes   and   soul   to   the  
fascinating   world   around   him   and   shift   his   attention   to  
traditional painting. View his work at
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Beneath Ceaseless Skies
ISSN: 1946-1076
Published by Firkin Press,
a 501(c)3 Non-Profit Literary Organization
Compilation Copyright © 2014 Firkin Press
This file is distributed under a
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