“Father Jacob, will she be all right?” demanded Captain Brodst. His heart pounded rapidly in his ears, a lump swelled in his throat. He paced back and forth, and waved a torch haphazardly about in the air, paying little attention to the water and muck that dripped from his uniform. The young Princess Adrina, her face deathlike, was his only concern.
He feared the worst for Adrina as her face grew ashen. He was positive King Andrew would have his head for this. His despair grew, so did his anger and frustration. Again, he yelled at Father Jacob who apparently was not listening to him. “Father, will she be all right?”
Father Jacob had worked frantically ever since Captain Brodst had rescued Adrina from the murky waters of the mire. Although a male, he knew the art of healing well and had attempted to work its miracles on her almost immediately. Yet he was growing annoyed by the captain’s repeated inquiries and this distracted him.
“Perhaps, perhaps,” he hissed back at the captain, “if you give me some silence!”
Keeper Martin touched a hand to the captain’s shoulder and said, “Do not worry so. Father Jacob knows what he is doing. Give him some room and the silence he asks for, then trust in him and Great-Father.” Then he returned the captain’s cloak and sword belt.
Captain Brodst took the belt and cloak and donned them. He chased off the reassuring hand. He didn’t want to be soothed. He wanted Adrina to regain consciousness and to ensure this, he whispered numerous pleas to Great-Father.
There was doubt in Father Jacob’s mind as he continued to labor over Adrina, his healing abilities were not as great as those who were of the Mother. Jacob would have offered his soul to have a priestess of the Mother stumble across their path if he hadn’t believed that somehow he could save Adrina—after all, she had been in the presage. All he had to do was to overcome his doubt.
Instinctively, Father Jacob had laid Adrina on her side and managed to clear some of the water from her lungs, still she had not regained consciousness, nor did she breathe. Father Jacob could not touch enough of the Mother’s will to draw upon her powers to cure. Only after special prayers were sent to Great-Father to give him the extra strength necessary did Jacob begin to chant the incantation—the ancient litany of life and healing. He wouldn’t think it odd that fate had brought him to this path until sometime later as he reflected upon this happening.
Erase doubt, he reminded himself, think only of healing and life. He continued the rhythmic chanting.
A noticeable shift swept across Adrina’s features, her chest rose once and then fell as her body convulsed. Soon Father Jacob heard the strangled sounds of the girl choking on water still in her lungs. He slapped her back repeatedly and forced her to cough.
Adrina choked on the water she spit up, and gasped frantically for air. She inhaled deeply and rapidly. Violently she vomited the mixture of water and mud she had swallowed—Jacob never broke the rhythmic tone of the litany of life and healing. After a moment, Adrina stopped her convulsing and regained her senses. Tears rolled down her cheeks as she reached up to embrace Father Jacob.
“I’m sorry,” she whimpered, “I’m sorry.” She closed her eyes briefly against the tears and let the elder hold her.
“Blankets! Get me some blankets, now!” said Father Jacob. He was clearly drained of all his strength. His face was pale and wet with perspiration. He sighed, he had done it, he had succeeded. “We must keep her warm. She will need to get some deep rest soon, and in a warm, comfortable bed.”
Silence prevailed for a time afterward as Jacob’s words settled on those listening—they must get through this damnable mire and reach the elusive castle somewhere in the distance. Night had settled upon them somewhere during the journey through the mire or perhaps in the frantic moments following Adrina’s near fatal accident. Only Father Jacob truly knew how close Adrina had come to death’s door, for he was of Great-Father and Great-Father knew all, especially in matters of death.
With unsettling certainty, Father Jacob knew that an unseen evil had been at hand. Great-Father had sensed it and so had he. He raised his crossed stave, the holy symbol of his office, in one hand and thrummed it defiantly at the empty air. Not far away to the south, gazing into the magical orb in his outstretched hand, continuing his eternal watch over the destined few, Xith whispered words of protection for the priest and for the girl. It was the same warding spell he had cast as the sea sought to claim Seth; the same warding spell he cast about himself and the boy now as he raced urgently toward destiny.